From: Mike's List (mikelist@sky.net)
Date: Fri May 24 2002 - 12:42:48 EDT
Thanks to Dave and Lars...from /usr/lib/mail/README (which I didn't have)
DISCARD was the option I was looking for, low system resources used.
- Mike
The value part of the map can contain:
OK Accept mail even if other rules in the
running ruleset would reject it, for example,
if the domain name is unresolvable.
RELAY Accept mail addressed to the indicated domain or
received from the indicated domain for relaying
through your SMTP server. RELAY also serves as
an implicit OK for the other checks.
REJECT Reject the sender or recipient with a general
purpose message.
DISCARD Discard the message completely using the
$#discard mailer. If it is used in check_compat,
it affects only the designated recipient, not
the whole message as it does in all other cases.
This should only be used if really necessary.
### any text where ### is an RFC 821 compliant error code and
"any text" is a message to return for the command.
The string should be quoted to avoid surprises,
e.g., sendmail may remove spaces otherwise.
ERROR:### any text
as above, but useful to mark error messages as
such.
ERROR:D.S.N:### any text
where D.S.N is an RFC 1893 compliant error code
and the rest as above.
On Fri, 24 May 2002, Mike's List wrote:
> Is it possible to put /dev/null in your /etc/mail/access file?
>
> Just been to sendmail.org and I know you can use DISCARD to accept and
> discard incoming mail but is /dev/null works faster/allowable in access?
>
> domain.com DISCARD (know it's possible)
> domain.com /dev/null (equivalent to above or possible?)
>
>
>
> - Mike
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