Latrell wrote:

Hi! All:

I'm using LOGIN smtp authentication. When I use client_send to send username 
and passwd,
I found special characters such as $ and ^ will cause authentication fail.
I've tried to use backslash to escape special character, but it seems not 
worked.
What are the all special characters recognized by exim.conf? How can I escape 
them?
Thanks in advance.

Best,
Latrell

Exim is highly RFC-compliant (at least until messed-about with).

While authentication need not use any part of an email address as the user's login identity, most folks do so,
hence it is wise to adhere to RFC-2822 throughout if at all possible.

Exim authentication quite aside, you can have trouble later if prohibited / seldom-seen characters find their way into a 'From:'.

There is a handy chart of what characters may appear in local_part published here:

http://www.remote.org/jochen/mail/info/chars.html

If you *must* use special characters, you may find that they can be made to work by doing a table or DB or SELECT string comparison such that Exim 'knows' it is not expected to handle an RFC-mandated 'local_part' (not 100% tested - see below).

MySQL, CDB, GDB, Berkeley, or flat-file lookup or lsearch examples are plentiful if you browse for them.

Here is a PostgreSQL example wherein the 'pg_send_login' has no relation to the user's email address, nor to their POP or IMAP login identity - it is just a string retrieved from a DB:

plain:
     driver = plaintext
     server_advertise_condition = ${if eq{$tls_cipher}{}{no}{yes}}
     public_name = PLAIN
     server_prompts = :
     server_condition = ${lookup pgsql{SELECT '1' FROM mailprof \
                WHERE pg_send_login='${quote_pgsql:$2}' \
                AND pg_send_pwclear='${quote_pgsql:$3}'} {yes}{no}}

This has not been tested with the characters you mention, but HAS been tested with multiple embedded '@', which are otherwise prohibited, so it may work for you.

HTH,

Bill Hacker







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