pkgsrc/mail/spamdyke/distinfo
schmonz 8a570f2200 Initial import of spamdyke 2.2.1.
spamdyke monitors incoming traffic, acting as a middleman between
qmail and the remote server. It catches the sender and recipient
addresses as they go by and logs them to syslog. If it sees something
it doesn't like (e.g. a blacklisted sender), it cuts the connection,
closes qmail and fakes the rest of the SMTP transaction with the
remote server. qmail thinks the remote server disconnected normally.
The remote server thinks qmail is rejecting the message. It's the
best of both worlds.

spamdyke can optionally reject the connection if the remote server's
reverse DNS entry does not exist, does not resolve, contains its
IP address and either contains a prohibited keyword (like "dynamic")
or ends in a country code; if the IP address, reverse DNS entry,
or envelope sender is listed in a blacklist; or if data is sent
before the SMTP greeting banner is displayed. spamdyke can also
limit recipients per connection, greylist for some or all domains,
and close connections that go idle or take too long.
2007-03-24 07:39:25 +00:00

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$NetBSD: distinfo,v 1.1.1.1 2007/03/24 07:39:25 schmonz Exp $
SHA1 (spamdyke-2.2.1.tgz) = 5ad8f0919d65244b8d141438274c8902ed7076f9
RMD160 (spamdyke-2.2.1.tgz) = c5d410739808f97eff5d9c0a80ccc3d7bd73bbd9
Size (spamdyke-2.2.1.tgz) = 37067 bytes
SHA1 (patch-aa) = 6dfe19bbe45db372a97e9711f7ed4969a4497f2a