VS>Речь шла об исходящей почте. Как тут поможет procmail?
Re: Filtering all incoming and outgoing mail
* From: Philip Guenther <guenther@gac.edu>
* To: "Sean A. Walberg" <sean@escape.ca>
* cc: procmail@informatik.rwth-aachen.de
* Date: Thu, 11 May 2000 23:39:05 -0500
* Message-Id: <200005120438.XAA12328@solen.gac.edu>
"Sean A. Walberg" <sean@escape.ca> writes:
>I've seen this question asked time and time again
>in the archives, but I
>seem to be doing something wrong here. I've got a
>machine that accepts
>mail on behalf of a few domains, and then forwards
>them to the appropriate
>mail server based on the mailertable and some
>dns-oddities.
>
>In /etc/sendmail.cf I have
>
>Mprocmail, P=/usr/bin/procmail, F=mSDFMhun,
>S=11, R=21,
> A=procmail -m $h $g $u
>
>S98
># Mail filtering
>R$*<@$+>$* $#procmail
>$@/etc/procmailrcs/filter.rc $:$1@$2procmail$3
>R$*<@$*.procmail>$* $1@<$2>$3 map back of
>procmail copy
If you want to send _all_ mail through procmail then
you need to swap
the order of the rules: you need to test for the
loop before you start
it again. I assume it's a typo in the first of the
rules that you lack
a period between "$2" and "procmail".
S98
# Mail filtering
R$*<@$*.procmail>$* $@ $1@<$2>$3 map back of
procmail copy
R$*<@$+>$* $@ $#procmail
$@/etc/procmailrcs/filter.rc $:$1@$2.procmail$3
Note the use of $@ to return from the ruleset. If
you have other rules
in ruleset S98 then you should move these two into
their own ruleset
which is called from S98.
Philip Guenther
--
WBW, Eugeny.
np: Cradle Of Filth - Suicide and other comforts
Hey! Let's do that 2,000-pound man thing. I'll be that Carl Reiner guy, and you be what's-his-face. -- Homer Simpson Homer vs. Patty and Selma