Sam,
On 2015-12-31 06:34, Sam Clippinger via spamdyke-users wrote:
Ah... you're confusing the "sender" address with the "From" address.
Dammit! . . I get caught with that every time I come back to look at
this stuff . .
The sender address is what appears in the logs.
Of course . .
Ah... you're confusing the "sender" address with the "From" address. The
sender address is what appears in the logs. The From address is what appears
in the message headers and is also what you see in your mail client. The two
are completely separate and spammers usually supply different (bog
People,
I thought of starting a new thread but the question relates to this
discussion so I thought I would revive it - see inline comments:
On 2015-06-21 04:57, Philip Rhoades via spamdyke-users wrote:
Sam,
On 2015-06-21 03:12, Sam Clippinger via spamdyke-users wrote:
Regex support is on
Sam,
On 2015-06-21 03:12, Sam Clippinger via spamdyke-users wrote:
Regex support is on the (rather lengthy) to-do list, but frankly it's
not a very high priority -- there's a lot of low-hanging fruit that
would be of much more benefit right now. Plus, since I'm not one of
the 10 people in the w
Regex support is on the (rather lengthy) to-do list, but frankly it's not a
very high priority -- there's a lot of low-hanging fruit that would be of much
more benefit right now. Plus, since I'm not one of the 10 people in the world
who completely understands regexes, I doubt I would actually u
Sam,
See inline comments:
On 2015-06-20 11:53, Sam Clippinger via spamdyke-users wrote:
You're correct spamdyke does not support regexes for any of its
options, but you can use a wildcard in a sender or recipient
white/blacklist file to match entire domains by prefixing the line
with an @ symb
You're correct spamdyke does not support regexes for any of its options, but
you can use a wildcard in a sender or recipient white/blacklist file to match
entire domains by prefixing the line with an @ symbol. For example:
@example.com
Full documentation here:
http://www.spamdyke
People,
As well as using GreyLite I have done my own thing for many years with
qmail-qfilter and a Ruby script (it started off as a Ruby learning
exercise . . ) - anyway for my white and black lists I was able to have
in the plain text files things like:
ad...@phillipsfinancial.com.au
admini