On 14/02/2008 11:21 AM, Craig Dibble wrote:
Quoting Nigel Allen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On 14/02/2008 10:17 AM, Craig Dibble wrote:
I might be missing something, but IIRC you can just list the actual [EMAIL PROTECTED] in the access file and filter for allowed users that way.
Not rubbish at all - I'm afraid it's just not quite that simple.

Here's what we were using - masked for privacy:

abc.com RELAY
abc.com.au RELAY
abc.net RELAY
xyz.com.au RELAY

[EMAIL PROTECTED]   RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]    RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]     RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]     RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]     RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]       RELAY

To:aaa.com.au          "550 User unknown"

This resulted in everything for aaa.com.au being bounced "We do not relay".

Ok, I got you. Try reversing the logic:

To:aaa.com.au          "550 User unknown" (or simply aaa.com.au REJECT)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]    RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]     RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]     RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]     RELAY
[EMAIL PROTECTED]       RELAY

I seem to recall it operates on last match, not first.


Cracked it - here is the working solution (as we only relay "to" the customer and they do not use us for smtp)

To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] OK
To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] OK
To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] OK
To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] OK
To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] OK
To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] OK
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] OK

To:aaa.com.au          "550 User unknown"

HTH someone else.

Nigel


--
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/
Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html

Reply via email to