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De: Bill Kwok [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Enviado el: miércoles, 08 de noviembre de 2006 8:49Para:
qmailtoaster-list@qmailtoaster.comAsunto: Re: [qmailtoaster]
disabling CHKUSER_RCPT_MX?
I don't have much concern about it. Especially when some of the
senders / recipients use a not-that-standard
FWIW, one of the items on the 'future enhancements' list for qtp-newmodel is
to allow (easy) tailoring of chkuser. Thanks for the tip, Quinn, I think
that'll come in handy!
Quinn Comendant wrote:
Ok, that was easy enough. Actually instead of modifying the sleep length, I
found it more
Quinn Comendant wrote:
Is there an easy way to disable CHKUSER_RCPT_MX or do I need to recompile
chkuser?
It seems this one should be disabled by default. It is pretty annoying to be
sending an email to a couple dozen people and not be able to send because one
domain is wrong -- then
Is there an easy way to disable CHKUSER_RCPT_MX or do I need to recompile
chkuser?
It seems this one should be disabled by default. It is pretty annoying to be
sending an email to a couple dozen people and not be able to send because one
domain is wrong -- then having to go over the list
Quinn Comendant wrote:
Is there an easy way to disable CHKUSER_RCPT_MX or do I need to recompile
chkuser?
It seems this one should be disabled by default. It is pretty annoying to be
sending an email to a couple dozen people and not be able to send because one
domain is wrong -- then having
You have to rebuild qmail. See the procedure provided by Nick Hemmesch:
Nick Hemmesch wrote:
The easy way: rpm -Uvh qmail-toaster*.src.rpm cd /usr/src/redhat/SPECS (assuming you are using CentOS 4) edit qmail-toaster.spec find 'sleep 5' (should be line 606)
change 5 to 300 (5 seconds to
Ok, that was easy enough. Actually instead of modifying the sleep length, I
found it more convenient to just stop the rpmbuild job (control z) and edit
chkuser_settings.h, the restart the rpmbuild job (fg return).
Regarding disabling CHKUSER_RCPT_MX. And regrets to doing so? Works great for
I don't have much concern about it. Especially when some of the senders / recipients use a not-that-standard email ID, such as having '' or '/' characters in the email ID, you have to disable that rules anyway.
Best regards,Bill
On 11/8/06, Quinn Comendant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ok, that was