Mate Wierdl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes on 1 March 1999 at 10:11:35 -0600
 > If you know the IP numbers, you can set RBLSMTPD to "", and then mail
 > is not blocked.  (I wonder how antirbl could be used for similar
 > purpose; am I supposed to run antirbl for each not-to-be-blocked domain?).

Look at the antirbl man page more closely; what you're supposed to do
is point it at a DNS domain that has records for d,c,b,a.domain.com
for each IP address a.b.c.d that you want to ANTI-block.  For a single
system this sounds like more trouble than just, say, a CDB database,
but on the other hand for a large complex network it sounds very
convenient.

(You can also anti-block by setting rblsmtpd to be null using
tcpserver, which overrides rblsmtpd.  This seems to be the most
convenient approach on a single system such as mine.)
-- 
David Dyer-Bennet                                              [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.ddb.com/~ddb (photos, sf) Minicon: http://www.mnstf.org/minicon
http://ouroboros.demesne.com/ The Ouroboros Bookworms
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