Result for 195E96D0B7F020F6A2806530E8C7CE15BC54C69A

Query result

Key Value
FileName./etc/exim/exim-greylist.conf.inc
FileSize7875
MD5FD8AE400AC48D864FD32077FF55E01AA
SHA-1195E96D0B7F020F6A2806530E8C7CE15BC54C69A
SHA-2563303A053B1131E963F53CF718E661F118533DC2AB9F8E5C62D55B593D391486F
SSDEEP192:u6Lt8nlo/Gu/5cX5BKyoy+mjccZBeMWd1AB1zvB+gES1hSI:uQClo5/Mr1yN2LES1hSI
TLSHT123F18561A3CEAF3906F503E3BE0B95FA9758D13E0E2F5752788DC11837066259A2F2D0
hashlookup:parent-total11
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 11)

The searched file hash is included in 11 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD53800B674C99F8F59CC531E29C13CA3CD
PackageArcharmv7hl
PackageDescriptionExim is a message transfer agent (MTA) developed at the University of Cambridge for use on Unix systems connected to the Internet. It is freely available under the terms of the GNU General Public Licence. In style it is similar to Smail 3, but its facilities are more general. There is a great deal of flexibility in the way mail can be routed, and there are extensive facilities for checking incoming mail. Exim can be installed in place of sendmail, although the configuration of exim is quite different to that of sendmail.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameexim
PackageRelease7.fc34
PackageVersion4.94
SHA-10A257AD02B991960EF34CF89AFE0D623681D4768
SHA-2565CCC182A1E6491347263E5E801E744730786DA3E5187B68982D27F5CA28F9EC0
Key Value
MD5B300DB183998DAAC59DF11FB5FBE1BA0
PackageArchaarch64
PackageDescriptionThis package contains a simple example of how to do greylisting in Exim's ACL configuration. It contains a cron job to remove old entries from the greylisting database, and an ACL subroutine which needs to be included from the main exim.conf file. To enable greylisting, install this package and then uncomment the lines in Exim's configuration /etc/exim.conf which enable it. You need to uncomment at least two lines -- the '.include' directive which includes the new ACL subroutine, and the line which invokes the new subroutine. By default, this implementation only greylists mails which appears 'suspicious' in some way. During normal processing of the ACLs we collect a list of 'offended' which it's committed, which may include having SpamAssassin points, lacking a Message-ID: header, coming from a blacklisted host, etc. There are examples of these in the default configuration file, mostly commented out. These should be sufficient for you to you trigger greylisting for whatever 'offences' you can dream of, or even to make greylisting unconditional.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameexim-greylist
PackageRelease3.fc33
PackageVersion4.94
SHA-10BEB7010761322F2436A0422F564AA1EB6A6555E
SHA-256BC1EB6E03ACE148431F0E9B69EF56603532A1B033BD17F31B5F098EA77F72A32
Key Value
MD5582A883B38CAD9E16E7911AE6523C88B
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis package contains a simple example of how to do greylisting in Exim's ACL configuration. It contains a cron job to remove old entries from the greylisting database, and an ACL subroutine which needs to be included from the main exim.conf file. To enable greylisting, install this package and then uncomment the lines in Exim's configuration /etc/exim.conf which enable it. You need to uncomment at least two lines -- the '.include' directive which includes the new ACL subroutine, and the line which invokes the new subroutine. By default, this implementation only greylists mails which appears 'suspicious' in some way. During normal processing of the ACLs we collect a list of 'offended' which it's committed, which may include having SpamAssassin points, lacking a Message-ID: header, coming from a blacklisted host, etc. There are examples of these in the default configuration file, mostly commented out. These should be sufficient for you to you trigger greylisting for whatever 'offences' you can dream of, or even to make greylisting unconditional.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameexim-greylist
PackageRelease7.fc34
PackageVersion4.94
SHA-10A0557C77DF0ACBF9307D01F49B5B345B59B1249
SHA-256AA39A483427EDA4B5558F99AAF3C8D2E8AF12D75D69E0628780E095301EF98C9
Key Value
MD52594A975694458BEC854A92BA65F9F11
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis package contains a simple example of how to do greylisting in Exim's ACL configuration. It contains a cron job to remove old entries from the greylisting database, and an ACL subroutine which needs to be included from the main exim.conf file. To enable greylisting, install this package and then uncomment the lines in Exim's configuration /etc/exim.conf which enable it. You need to uncomment at least two lines -- the '.include' directive which includes the new ACL subroutine, and the line which invokes the new subroutine. By default, this implementation only greylists mails which appears 'suspicious' in some way. During normal processing of the ACLs we collect a list of 'offended' which it's committed, which may include having SpamAssassin points, lacking a Message-ID: header, coming from a blacklisted host, etc. There are examples of these in the default configuration file, mostly commented out. These should be sufficient for you to you trigger greylisting for whatever 'offences' you can dream of, or even to make greylisting unconditional.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameexim-greylist
PackageRelease2.el8
PackageVersion4.94.2
SHA-1E004EE49E7EAFEC069922337E62E25CE134243F7
SHA-256DF3B898D518472014ABBE194F17CE128B982F1AA6686079D078C51A5C05393E2
Key Value
MD5FE23A1C5F558475785396B6FD8311794
PackageArcharmv7hl
PackageDescriptionThis package contains a simple example of how to do greylisting in Exim's ACL configuration. It contains a cron job to remove old entries from the greylisting database, and an ACL subroutine which needs to be included from the main exim.conf file. To enable greylisting, install this package and then uncomment the lines in Exim's configuration /etc/exim.conf which enable it. You need to uncomment at least two lines -- the '.include' directive which includes the new ACL subroutine, and the line which invokes the new subroutine. By default, this implementation only greylists mails which appears 'suspicious' in some way. During normal processing of the ACLs we collect a list of 'offended' which it's committed, which may include having SpamAssassin points, lacking a Message-ID: header, coming from a blacklisted host, etc. There are examples of these in the default configuration file, mostly commented out. These should be sufficient for you to you trigger greylisting for whatever 'offences' you can dream of, or even to make greylisting unconditional.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameexim-greylist
PackageRelease3.fc33
PackageVersion4.94
SHA-14E73121C4D4A1C8FAC650B93DF496B2A7E6DB784
SHA-256803F380C8CC8B421CDA942C20FFCECCDE8B53FF93D516A526DBCE114716BD4B3
Key Value
MD5301C96A232DCF06086D0B1CC80484D30
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis package contains a simple example of how to do greylisting in Exim's ACL configuration. It contains a cron job to remove old entries from the greylisting database, and an ACL subroutine which needs to be included from the main exim.conf file. To enable greylisting, install this package and then uncomment the lines in Exim's configuration /etc/exim.conf which enable it. You need to uncomment at least two lines -- the '.include' directive which includes the new ACL subroutine, and the line which invokes the new subroutine. By default, this implementation only greylists mails which appears 'suspicious' in some way. During normal processing of the ACLs we collect a list of 'offended' which it's committed, which may include having SpamAssassin points, lacking a Message-ID: header, coming from a blacklisted host, etc. There are examples of these in the default configuration file, mostly commented out. These should be sufficient for you to you trigger greylisting for whatever 'offences' you can dream of, or even to make greylisting unconditional.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameexim-greylist
PackageRelease3.fc33
PackageVersion4.94
SHA-1EFC4EB86939558A9682C5AB25AB6D0146D87EF39
SHA-2562D5ABBD78131CF095548607122391DB3F8B22EC225BC36DE40F08161D387CBB6
Key Value
MD57C9012EA19ED72EB233F529EC22F214D
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis package contains a simple example of how to do greylisting in Exim's ACL configuration. It contains a cron job to remove old entries from the greylisting database, and an ACL subroutine which needs to be included from the main exim.conf file. To enable greylisting, install this package and then uncomment the lines in Exim's configuration /etc/exim.conf which enable it. You need to uncomment at least two lines -- the '.include' directive which includes the new ACL subroutine, and the line which invokes the new subroutine. By default, this implementation only greylists mails which appears 'suspicious' in some way. During normal processing of the ACLs we collect a list of 'offended' which it's committed, which may include having SpamAssassin points, lacking a Message-ID: header, coming from a blacklisted host, etc. There are examples of these in the default configuration file, mostly commented out. These should be sufficient for you to you trigger greylisting for whatever 'offences' you can dream of, or even to make greylisting unconditional.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameexim-greylist
PackageRelease1.el7
PackageVersion4.94.2
SHA-170D9EDD3638DFE6EF980D9C3C276608463E50F3F
SHA-256460FC0E5434F42B52025F08143DB4709B8FF1A40AC94561659ACE61427FB4327
Key Value
MD51FA83DDF472C7697411423878324B826
PackageArchs390x
PackageDescriptionThis package contains a simple example of how to do greylisting in Exim's ACL configuration. It contains a cron job to remove old entries from the greylisting database, and an ACL subroutine which needs to be included from the main exim.conf file. To enable greylisting, install this package and then uncomment the lines in Exim's configuration /etc/exim.conf which enable it. You need to uncomment at least two lines -- the '.include' directive which includes the new ACL subroutine, and the line which invokes the new subroutine. By default, this implementation only greylists mails which appears 'suspicious' in some way. During normal processing of the ACLs we collect a list of 'offended' which it's committed, which may include having SpamAssassin points, lacking a Message-ID: header, coming from a blacklisted host, etc. There are examples of these in the default configuration file, mostly commented out. These should be sufficient for you to you trigger greylisting for whatever 'offences' you can dream of, or even to make greylisting unconditional.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameexim-greylist
PackageRelease2.el8
PackageVersion4.94.2
SHA-157898E09B3F8B462F445BFC498031C548EE1B87D
SHA-2562C76DA8B17515A1398F3E59329D32CF3D26EF3792FEC65682118C1027FBC3AA7
Key Value
MD50C2B79C353122364A049DB999BB16C61
PackageArcharmv7hl
PackageDescriptionThis package contains a simple example of how to do greylisting in Exim's ACL configuration. It contains a cron job to remove old entries from the greylisting database, and an ACL subroutine which needs to be included from the main exim.conf file. To enable greylisting, install this package and then uncomment the lines in Exim's configuration /etc/exim.conf which enable it. You need to uncomment at least two lines -- the '.include' directive which includes the new ACL subroutine, and the line which invokes the new subroutine. By default, this implementation only greylists mails which appears 'suspicious' in some way. During normal processing of the ACLs we collect a list of 'offended' which it's committed, which may include having SpamAssassin points, lacking a Message-ID: header, coming from a blacklisted host, etc. There are examples of these in the default configuration file, mostly commented out. These should be sufficient for you to you trigger greylisting for whatever 'offences' you can dream of, or even to make greylisting unconditional.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameexim-greylist
PackageRelease7.fc34
PackageVersion4.94
SHA-142C3D594E40CBB5D405054DF3FF4C010F80FAC14
SHA-25666025798A8BC6C54A0887E92CE2C99B4FD542E5D3E595E3D4482919FADD9A838
Key Value
MD50F367DA5E323DCD2AA32AF20F6B0535E
PackageArchaarch64
PackageDescriptionThis package contains a simple example of how to do greylisting in Exim's ACL configuration. It contains a cron job to remove old entries from the greylisting database, and an ACL subroutine which needs to be included from the main exim.conf file. To enable greylisting, install this package and then uncomment the lines in Exim's configuration /etc/exim.conf which enable it. You need to uncomment at least two lines -- the '.include' directive which includes the new ACL subroutine, and the line which invokes the new subroutine. By default, this implementation only greylists mails which appears 'suspicious' in some way. During normal processing of the ACLs we collect a list of 'offended' which it's committed, which may include having SpamAssassin points, lacking a Message-ID: header, coming from a blacklisted host, etc. There are examples of these in the default configuration file, mostly commented out. These should be sufficient for you to you trigger greylisting for whatever 'offences' you can dream of, or even to make greylisting unconditional.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameexim-greylist
PackageRelease7.fc34
PackageVersion4.94
SHA-1C78D25D13408D4FE00E7A1A42F95941CE1CA8947
SHA-2561454CB24671475622BE032316C953820A09B3219E06CE948F80D09010DF1307F
Key Value
MD52B77430373521F685200EC859664D904
PackageArcharmv7hl
PackageDescriptionExim is a message transfer agent (MTA) developed at the University of Cambridge for use on Unix systems connected to the Internet. It is freely available under the terms of the GNU General Public Licence. In style it is similar to Smail 3, but its facilities are more general. There is a great deal of flexibility in the way mail can be routed, and there are extensive facilities for checking incoming mail. Exim can be installed in place of sendmail, although the configuration of exim is quite different to that of sendmail.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameexim
PackageRelease3.fc33
PackageVersion4.94
SHA-17CAC85AA0AD4F2A7A65AFBC8AEECE6121FEBB6DE
SHA-256E3F9029FA2DBFFB49789354BF389FE089B4C4599C9EFF5B33FB72438CBFF654A