On 9/26/2014 9:27 AM, Klaipedaville on Google wrote:
/^Subject:.**{5}SPAM*{5}/ REJECT No spammers allowed here. /^Subject:.*\*\*\*\*\*SPAM\*\*\*\*\*/ REJECT No spammers allowed. /\s**{5}SPAM*{5}/ REJECT No spamming hullababballos allowed. I think it may be this one above. From the postfix manuals"By default, matching is case-insensitive, and newlines are not treated as special characters. The behavior is controlled by flags, which are toggled by appending one or more of the following characters after the pattern: *i* (default: on) Toggles the case sensitivity flag. By default, matching is case insensitive." Case insensitive is declared by putting this /i at the end of a rule. Postfix has nothing to do with regular expressions (regexp) and regexp is not controlled by postfix.
Not true. Postfix regexp (and pcre) matches are case insensitive by default, adding the /i flag makes them case sensitive. This should be quite clear in the postfix docs quoted above. This documented default behavior may be different from other software you're familiar with.
You're welcome to discuss postfix header checks further on the postfix-users list.
-- Noel Jones