On Fri, Jun 16, 2006 at 02:33:57PM +0300, Odhiambo G. Washington said: > * On 16/06/06 11:57 +0100, Stephen Gran wrote: > | On Fri, Jun 16, 2006 at 01:24:25PM +0300, Odhiambo G. Washington said: > | > I have a server that I use for hosting websites. I simply give ftp > | > access and the customer just uploads their web content. The problem > | > comes in the name of some code used in these websites - they allow > | > http-put and http-post by spammers. > | > | This is better solved in apache, I would think - use a Limit directive > | to stop these customers from allowing spamming. If they fix the code, > | turn it back on. > > I cannot do this for several hundred web customers, or do you reckon I > should?;)
I use mod_template here, and it's easy enough to define a template that allows POST and PUT, and one that doesn't, and just change the Use line for a customer site depending on their code trustworthiness. > It sounds a draconian method. It is. Unfortunately, the customer isn't always right. -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Stephen Gran | UNIX is many things to many people, but | | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | it's never been everything to anybody. | | http://www.lobefin.net/~steve | | -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- ## List details at http://www.exim.org/mailman/listinfo/exim-users ## Exim details at http://www.exim.org/ ## Please use the Wiki with this list - http://www.exim.org/eximwiki/
