Hi folks,
my aim is to have something in the way of
myname.*: myname
for the local user myname, if this is possible to do in the alias file.
I would rather like to have it here than to change the conf. Possible?
Hardy
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Hi,
I asked in the past, if OCSP stapling can also be made with a list. This
part of code implementation is still not done for actual openssl or
gnutls implementations.
I found now a way to do it with plain config:
tls_certificate = ecdsa_chain.pem:rsa_chain.pem
tls_privatekey = ecdsa-key.pem:rsa
Hardy via Exim-users (Di 13 Feb 2018 09:44:38 CET):
> Hi folks,
>
> my aim is to have something in the way of
>
> myname.*: myname
>
> for the local user myname, if this is possible to do in the alias file. I
> would rather like to have it here than to change the conf. Possible?
You need to mo
Or even full expansion options - which puts huge power into the aliases file:
data = ${expand:${lookup{$local_part}lsearch{/etc/aliases}}}
Hope this is useful!
Merlin
--
Merlin Hartley
Computer Officer
MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit
University of Cambridge
Cambridge, CB2 0XY
United Kingdom
>
Thank you Heiko and Merlin,
lookups are my really weak point ;-) and my lack on a grasp on regex
hampers me even more. I know I should change this on the long run, but
for now your short term help is very much appreciated...
A one-time change to the conf is acceptable, of course.
I had hope
Please forgive me veering off topic a little for a moment, but in case it
helps you Hardy I find these two web sites really useful for testing
various flavours of regular expressions. (I think Exim uses PCRE if memory
serves?)
- https://www.debuggex.com/?flavor=pcre
- https://www.regextester
Hardy via Exim-users (Di 13 Feb 2018 11:40:11 CET):
…
> data = ${lookup{$local_part}dbm{/etc/exim/$domain.aliases.db}}
>
> Can I still do what I want with dbm, and how would I write the alias file
> for entries meaning
>
> myname[digits]: myname
As far as I know, DBM lookups do not work w
On 13/02/18 11:07, Mike Brudenell via Exim-users wrote:
> (I think Exim uses PCRE if memory
> serves?)
Yes.
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Hi all,
I'm setting up exim to process emails based on the existence of a set of
centrally managed forward files. So I have an accept router configured as
follows:
email_address_check:
driver = accept
condition = ${if exists{DOMAINS_DIR/$domain/$local_part/forward}}
verify_only
The issue
Mike Brudenell via Exim-users (Di 13 Feb 2018 12:07:56
CET):
> Please forgive me veering off topic a little for a moment, but in case it
> helps you Hardy I find these two web sites really useful for testing
> various flavours of regular expressions. (I think Exim uses PCRE if memory
> serves?)
>
On Tue, 13 Feb 2018, Hardy via Exim-users wrote:
Hi folks,
my aim is to have something in the way of
myname.*: myname
for the local user myname, if this is possible to do in the alias file. I
would rather like to have it here than to change the conf. Possible?
I wonder whether you are tryi
Hello,
It might be selinux that's preventing access to that file.
try running setenforce 0 and see if the error goes away.
Marius
On 13/2/2018 9:23 AM, Gabe da Silveira via Exim-users wrote:
Hi all,
I'm setting up exim to process emails based on the existence of a set of
centrally managed f
Gabe da Silveira via Exim-users (Di 13 Feb 2018 08:23:17
CET):
> Hi all,
>
> I'm setting up exim to process emails based on the existence of a set of
> centrally managed forward files. So I have an accept router configured as
> follows:
How did you test and what was the output?
--
Heiko
sig
On 2018-02-12 at 19:45 -0800, Ian Zimmerman via Exim-users wrote:
> I note with horror that now I am also a 'via Exim-users' despite
> intentionally NOT using DKIM for list messages, including this one.
> Why? Is the rewriting now done regardless?
Yes. I don't know who/why.
from_is_list has bee
On 2018-02-12 at 18:53 -0500, Phil Pennock via Exim-users wrote:
> > On 12/02/18 12:12, Martin Nicholas via Exim-users wrote:
> > > I notice this from "Exim-users Digest, Vol 165, Issue 9":
> I've subscribed another address to the mailing-list, in digest mode, to
> see what happens next time.
Iss
On Tue, Feb 13, 2018 at 4:15 AM, Marius Stan via Exim-users <
exim-users@exim.org> wrote:
> It might be selinux that's preventing access to that file.
> try running setenforce 0 and see if the error goes away.
>
That was it! This is the third time selinux has had me scratching my head,
hopefully
Hi,
I have two routers:
dnslookup:
driver = dnslookup
# domains = ! +local_domains # check mx for all domains
transport = remote_smtp
ignore_target_hosts = 0.0.0.0 : 127.0.0.0/8
self = pass
no_more
localuser:
driver = accept
condition = ${lookup sqlite {...}{yes}{no}}
transport
On 13.02.2018 13:14, Andrew C Aitchison via Exim-users wrote:
> On Tue, 13 Feb 2018, Hardy via Exim-users wrote:
>> my aim is to have something in the way of
>>
>> myname.*: myname
>>
>
> I wonder whether you are trying to implement a feature
> already explicitly supported in exim ?
>
> If you wa
Because exim4 by default disallows delivery to local host to prevent mail
loops.
When remote delivery fails, delivery will be attempted to a local user.
Thats why it doesn't fail with a valid user.
The ! +local_domains skips this router for local users, so remote delivery
isn't even attempted for
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