It is rumored that on or about 2002-05-29 11:26 AM -0400, Paul List 
Hess wrote as follows:
>At 10:54 AM -0400 5/29/02, Neil Herber wrote:
>>To do what you want, the following should work:
>>
>>hinet.net = error
>>
>>or
>>
>>*.hinet.net = error
>
>Thanks Neil!
>
>Would I need both of those entries to cover (for instance) 
>mail123.hinet.net as well as just hinet.net?
>
>Also, noting that you removed the brackets, would I still use 
>brackets for individual return-path entries I want to block, such as:
>
>    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> = error  ; virus'd 020516+
>
>                            - Paul

Paul

My experience with the router is "mixed" at best, so I would 
recommend testing any of my solutions. ;->

That warning aside, I think you would need both "hinet" entries to 
catch addresses with just the simple domain as well as those with 
subdomains. I have never tried an entry like "*hinet.net", but it 
might catch both, assuming that the wild card can also represent a 
period.

The <brackets> are usually used to indicate a local address or an 
address that you want to treat as local. However, in the SIMS docs, 
it shows antispam error routing in exactly the form you have 
specified above, so it should work.

-- 
Neil

Neil Herber, RGD
Corporate info at http://www.eton.ca/
Eton Systems, 15 Pinepoint Drive, Nepean, ON, Canada K2H 6B1
Tel: (613) 829-4668


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