Looks like I might have solved my own issue.  The source of %internal_ips, 
%internal_domains is shown in several places and is the default value set up in 
the installation.  But when I break that into two members for the default 
outbound policy and that appears to work.  The two members are:

%internal_ips to !%internal_domains
%intenal_domains to !%internal_domains

But should I make that first member to be:

%internal_ips to !%internal_ips

I don’t know if that makes a significant difference or not.

~ Rob

On Apr 11, 2014, at 10:42 AM, Rob Tanner 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

I was using the default policy (any to any) and that world fine except when a 
user send mail to one or more of our internal mailing lists in a single message 
because that could generate anywhere from several hundred to a couple thousand 
messages to internal recipients.  Since they are mostly all internal 
destinations except for the few who might have set up forwarding to an 
off-campus email address, I thought that default outbound  policy might be the 
better choice when doing quotas.  Unfortunately, it seems to be failing to 
catch off-campus messages.

The policy has one member which was setup by default, %internal_ips, 
%internal_domains to !%internal_domains.  Under policy groups, internal_domains 
is defined as @linfield.edu<http://linfield.edu/> and internal_ips is defined 
as 10.0.0.0/8.  When I disable the default outbound policy (priority 2), the 
default policy has the next highest priority (5) and then messages are counted 
and quotas applied.

So, what am I missing?

Thanks



Rob Tanner
UNIX Services Manager
Linfield College, McMinnville Oregon

ITS will never ask you for your password.  Please don’t share yours with anyone!


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