Am 27.09.2014 um 15:16 schrieb Klaipedaville on Google:
Alex: if it was
^From:.*\@.*\.tw$ it would not. $ is optional and it only means the end of expression, the rule works either with or without it in the problem I was trying to solve.
And again according to the man page, $ is usable:
"/^(.*)-outgoing@(.*)$/"
This is again an option ($), not a must, the rule would be valid either way.
you are a ignorant fool
[root@srv-rhsoft:~]$ postmap -q "From: bla@bla.tw" regexp:/home/harry/Desktop/bla.cf REJECT
[root@srv-rhsoft:~]$ postmap -q "From: bla@bla.twitter" regexp:/home/harry/Desktop/bla.cf REJECT
[root@srv-rhsoft:~]$ cat /home/harry/Desktop/bla.cf /^From:.*\@.*\.tw/ REJECT
[root@srv-rhsoft:~]$ postmap -q "From: bla@bla.tw" regexp:/home/harry/Desktop/bla.cf REJECT
[root@srv-rhsoft:~]$ postmap -q "From: bla@bla.twitter" regexp:/home/harry/Desktop/bla.cf
[root@srv-rhsoft:~]$ cat /home/harry/Desktop/bla.cf /^From:.*\@.*\.tw$/ REJECT
You seem to think that you are the worlds greatest regexp expert and to be frank it comes off as a bit arrogant.
knowledge often comes arrogant to ignorant people
I am not the world greatest regexp expert but definitely not the worst one
you are the worst one because you argue instead realize your error
My rules work the way I want and need them to work. Period.
no they don't damned
I have neither time no desire to prove that 2+2=4
no, but you telling us it's 5
I will not clutter this list speaking off Dovecot issues any more as I feel sorry for time wasted for list readers
please do so