Bug#309792: exim4-config: Rewriting via /etc/email-addresses should be configurable to apply to only non-local mail.

2010-08-14 Thread Jens Seidel
On Sat, Apr 21, 2007 at 04:01:06PM +0200, Samuel Thibault wrote: How is this going ? I've just lost a bunch of emails just because my smarthost was broken and that all bounces where going to root-samy-samuel.thiba...@ens-lyon.org, hence lost too... Same for me: I just plugged my notebook to

Bug#309792: exim4-config: Rewriting via /etc/email-addresses should be configurable to apply to only non-local mail.

2007-06-19 Thread Marc Haber
I am forwarding this to pkg-exim4-users to solicit the opinion of the user base. Origimal bug report not snipped to give the others full view of the request. On Thu, May 19, 2005 at 08:11:22AM -0700, Steven E. Harris wrote: At present exim applies the /etc/email-addresses rewriting mechanism to

Bug#309792: exim4-config: Rewriting via /etc/email-addresses should be configurable to apply to only non-local mail.

2007-04-22 Thread Marc Haber
On Thu, May 19, 2005 at 08:11:22AM -0700, Steven E. Harris wrote: Supporting this rewrite-only-for-non-local scheme requires that the /etc/email-addresses rewrite rule be moved to the transport's headers_rewrite entry, as suggested in the Exim FAQ (Q0803). I use this technique in an older

Bug#309792: exim4-config: Rewriting via /etc/email-addresses should be configurable to apply to only non-local mail.

2005-05-30 Thread Marc Haber
tags #309792 confirmed thanks On Thu, May 19, 2005 at 08:11:22AM -0700, Steven E. Harris wrote: I found mention of a similar proposal in Bug 229911, but the submitter's proposal to limit the /etc/email-addresses rewriting was not properly addressed in the discussion that followed. This might

Bug#309792: exim4-config: Rewriting via /etc/email-addresses should be configurable to apply to only non-local mail.

2005-05-19 Thread Steven E. Harris
Package: exim4-config Version: 4.50-6 Severity: normal At present exim applies the /etc/email-addresses rewriting mechanism to all mail sent through the MTA. This causes interference with a setup that permits both local exchange of mail among local users and mail sent out to remote destinations