On Thu, Jun 29, 2006 at 12:10:14AM +0100, David Woodhouse wrote:
> 
> Cute idea, but I don't like the implementation much -- it would be
> better for it to be available in a general fashion from ACLs.

I looked at that first.  However, since (AFAICT) the ACL system works in a
accept/reject/defer logic, my understanding was that a fourth command would had
to be added to the underlying code specificaly for this feature.  Is this
appreciation correct?

> In
> particular, if I were to use it I'd want to use it _only_ for senders
> which are known to be SPF-afflicted. Those who didn't choose to break
> their email shouldn't get the 551 error.

Selective "redirecting" based purely on SPF-ness of sender is something I'm
already contemplating (I'll try to send a patch for that).

As for non-selective redirect, please note that:

  - It's not only useful to workaround SPF problems.  Other advantages include:

    - Huge saving in bandwidth / system load.

    - The final recipient isn't forced to blindly trust forwarder's mail as ham,
    so they can perform the delivery-time checks of their liking (greylisting,
    dnsbl, etc).

  - While it's not a common feature, some MTAs already support it.  sendmail
  comes with non-selective (per-user) redirection in the vanilla package.  
qpsmtp
  supports it with a plugin as well.

IMHO, it'd make sense to support both modes of operation.  What do you think?

-- 
Robert Millan

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