Thank you, Mark, for that very helpful and clear reply.

I have given this feedback to the people who created the original lists. I
have particularly recommended the use of regular_include_lists as I don't
believe they need the digest feature for their particular use-case.

Regards

Philip


On Tue, 7 Jul 2020 at 03:38, Mark Sapiro <m...@msapiro.net> wrote:

> On 7/6/20 6:57 AM, Philip Colmer wrote:
> > We have a number of "source" lists, e.g. listA, listB and listC. Each
> > of them has listZ as a member, with the intention that all posts to A,
> > B and C get replicated to Z.
> >
> > This all works until it gets to the point where posts to Z get emailed
> > out to the members of Z. This is currently failing because the gateway
> > mail system we are using is reporting "Duplicate header
> > 'Delivered-To'".
> >
> > Is there a setting or mechanism I can set in Mailman 2.1 that strips
> > the duplicate header or does anyone have any other suggestions on how
> > to resolve this?
>
>
> See the FAQ article at <https://wiki.list.org/x/4030540>. Mailman
> doesn't do well with lists that have both individuals and lists as
> members (I suspect that is the case here). The main reason for this is
> if you declare the parent list as an umbrella list, the individual
> members can't get password reminders, but if you don't, anyone can
> request a password reminder for the child list and it will be sent to
> that list. You can use header filter rules on the child list to discard
> password reminders, but that's another step.
>
> Then there is your issue to contend with which would seem to preclude
> having a list as a member of another list because of the way your
> outgoing mail service handles this. Note that the Delivered-To: headers
> are added by your incoming MTA upon delivery the the parent and then
> again upon delivery to the child. Mailman has no setting to strip those,
> but you could implement a custom handler to do this if it's your Mailman
> server. See <https://wiki.list.org/x/4030615> for info on custom handlers.
>
> If you aren't concerned about digest members of listZ You can use
> regular_include_lists to include, e.g. the non-digest members of listZ
> in posts to listA by including l...@example.com in the
> regular_include_lists setting of listA, and likewise for listB et al.
>
> This, along with some caveats is discussed in the FAQ at
> <https://wiki.list.org/x/4030540>.
>
> --
> Mark Sapiro <m...@msapiro.net>        The highway is for gamblers,
> San Francisco Bay Area, California    better use your sense - B. Dylan
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