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Bryan Costales, Claus Assmann, George Jansen, Gregory Shapiro

"sendmail, 4th Edition"

9.18 on page 810). First the full address is looked up, and then the network
portions on dot boundaries are looked up (192.168.2.5, then 192.168.2, then
192.168, then 192).
To put entries into the access database??™s source file, you prefix eachline witha literal
GreetPause and a colon. You then specify the host, domain, or IP address followed
by a tab,* then an ASCII representation of the number of milliseconds to wait.
For example:
GreetPause:host.domain 5000
GreetPause:domain 0
GreetPause:127.0.0.1 0
GreetPause:192.186.2 5000
Here, the first entry tells sendmail to wait 5,000 milliseconds (five seconds) before
issuing its initial greeting to host.domain (a hostname). The second entry tells
sendmail to not wait at all (zero milliseconds) for the domain listed. The third entry
tells sendmail to not wait when the connection is from the loopback interface (a memory
interface on the local machine). And the last line tells sendmail to wait 5,000 milliseconds
before sending its initial greeting to any host on the 192.168.2 network.
If a connecting client is not found in the access database, the wait used is taken from
the second argument to the FEATURE(greet_pause):
FEATURE(`greet_pause??, `ms_pause??)
* Unless you set a different column delimiter with the -t command-line switch for makemap.
This is the Title of the Book, eMatter Edition
Copyright ?© 2007 O??™Reilly & Associates, Inc.


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