On Thu, Jun 22, 2006 at 08:37:01PM +0300, Odhiambo G. Washington wrote:
> Hello pple,
> 
> I have have a server which is where all deliveries are done. This server 
> is not advertised "anymore" in DNS, but spammers are still sending to 
> it in defiance of my TTL from DNS configuration.
> I know that most of my clients who use this server are located within
> my country (damn Kenya!).
> 
> I now want to block all connections to this server which originate 
> outside my country.
> 
> I have hit google hard and found two projects that were geared towards
> introducing the complexities (yes) of using GeoIP within Exim.
> 
> http://botanicus.net/dw/exim-python/exim-4.60py1.html
> http://pookey.co.uk/exim-geoip.xml
> 
> One seems recent enough, but both seem like they are un-maintained.
> I am running Exim 4.62 on all my servers.
> 
> Is there anyone out there using another variant of GeoIP blocking with 
> Exim that they'd be willing to share with the community (me ;))?

this strikes me as a really bad idea, but as with many
really bad ideas, it's trivial to implement in perl. grab
the Geo::IP perl module, and then put

    use Geo::IP;

    sub get_country_code_from_ip ($) {
        my $ip = shift;
        our $geoip;
        $geoip ||= new Geo::IP(GEOIP_STANDARD);
        return $geoip->country_code_by_addr($ip);
    }

in your startup perl module, then use,

    ${perl{get_country_code_from_ip}{$host_address}}

to obtain the country code in a string expansion.

-- 
``Computer-simulators, used to stage mock failures in the flight trainer,
  weren't working. This was a triumph of accurate simulation, but otherwise
  not amusing.'' (Gregg Easterbrook, on space shuttle development)

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