Result for ECFED50FF4BCE4778B3AD38CE54F5231AA98C4DB

Query result

Key Value
FileNameexim-greylist.conf.inc
FileSize6120
MD5E52AC6EF1A87B54DE892A1C1B92B17FA
SHA-1ECFED50FF4BCE4778B3AD38CE54F5231AA98C4DB
SHA-25626C2951210E03E1613BE8FAB88E1FF26A37CE949243BA925CFAEEC5242A9AB79
SSDEEP96:wq1DbGY1/OFqscVgcXqCEcFBcDFBZMf/KkCoCf2cAB1YjAvBXgEf6QSI:wA/Gu//UcX5E4BcZBZMWd1AB1zvBXgEL
TLSHT187C16471A3CE9F2916E543E3BE07A9FA971CD03E0E2F5B56788DC1183706925962F2D0
hashlookup:parent-total15
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 15)

The searched file hash is included in 15 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5FD5D7BDB92C15090781BC44CF0B0280B
PackageArcharmv5tel
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
PackageRelease1.fc14
PackageVersion4.72
SHA-16DEA704AF88288AF4824A5849B2AF63B06CD9212
SHA-256A129E44A806EBC071E3920AAB8D319E54EE82804185B9E5FDF1787C55ED6BA8D
Key Value
MD53FB0D3C6572E0B7E7E87B1AA85E1DEF0
PackageArchs390x
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.
PackageMaintainerKoji
PackageNameexim
PackageRelease10.fc11
PackageVersion4.69
SHA-1E7AA3A26819CFC4BCC2F8A849C1F00E000B9D8AF
SHA-256271107D0C98F08E4943379DE181B625DC426DDB564C092BE26D8728DFAA2F99B
Key Value
MD50F8DDF72DDEA35158D28A912276B3FE4
PackageArcharmv5tel
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
PackageRelease2.fc13
PackageVersion4.71
SHA-1DE0B57A70673F4F52490E52CFFF9557EA01262A0
SHA-256E436F3056E61C1EB4927F8DC0BCB5F831639CF72538D5216902CC25DA3539236
Key Value
MD55A3501088034322992D78920B3E99EDD
PackageArchsparc64
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
PackageRelease17.fc12
PackageVersion4.69
SHA-17A7FEC3314EB8984B555BCEB080D71B7D2850C80
SHA-2566E78D60EA9B850F410CA9A675ABEB5434F80C31D19F2B6B2C55A3C5D2794BE71
Key Value
MD5206128CBF12FDCFD6E8F81A74FA6AE26
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.
PackageMaintainerKoji
PackageNameexim-greylist
PackageRelease10.fc11
PackageVersion4.69
SHA-17D9A5DAD3EAEE293153E2D73F9BDD51804435D34
SHA-25666D314F1FC3051C031CB1CDED0A6704DE16C1024CFD0A47A5D041AD26632397A
Key Value
MD5B67309DBE5D1088C1C5F142867ABD60F
PackageArchsparcv9
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
PackageRelease4.fc9
PackageVersion4.69
SHA-14032A6FAE41A712E3F1E1122CF1F2AF302844505
SHA-25631A38D32D67AE0581D521C5B87419FA725679E5B91D05E1E5CE3FB175ABE0EB5
Key Value
MD54EEBE724EA94FD628CA5D4D9D53AB9CC
PackageArchsparc64
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
PackageRelease4.fc9
PackageVersion4.69
SHA-1506B5C576548AF0EF33E9BEA0186353A08E6EEE6
SHA-2568973288960B92449FBE7B3774D10BAA4DAFA684FA378E8FE3750422C422F1D89
Key Value
MD5CA9800880D278749A02DE6FC8393E46D
PackageArchsparc64
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
PackageRelease4.fc9
PackageVersion4.69
SHA-168D289240DD41DDD83AF8E50813333BFD61F492B
SHA-256CC3CC14ECD004026DB60DB30AD28081D825C495474221CCE310CC987507E20EF
Key Value
MD57E1C98B6F898B9E3DA3F3FF0859A68B5
PackageArchsparc64
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
PackageRelease17.fc12
PackageVersion4.69
SHA-18FA57FDD6F75773E197ADF9665A21C56C6285911
SHA-256E573359FA820916E46D17761CC08606D3188798E0588BA479DCDE463541D3D63
Key Value
MD5D880C3B21BF2AE540767751902745933
PackageArcharmv5tel
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.fc13
PackageVersion4.71
SHA-19368866A3F749B766DBFC91C4A105037A065CDFE
SHA-256D5D2F94CE874BD9A35971061B592F05E56A603FB0904B66A6E6CACE52ECEBB18
Key Value
MD5F8DD8631DCC71459A1DA0C06365DF83E
PackageArchia64
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
PackageRelease4.fc9.1
PackageVersion4.69
SHA-18A376FC08A377728F0C8BA7126C3D7034E168503
SHA-25617B56E96099B5AB5D95ED591C1AEB721F74DC1DC5C5B84E4CD229D43141AD796
Key Value
MD5BC7C9BF9DB40503C3232217597FC3621
PackageArcharmv5tel
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.fc14
PackageVersion4.72
SHA-14B21B4A729C0C889FA553E681067561F17BBB7C2
SHA-256978AAFB88E892E445A1F53BD51F60CD73AA4451CD87E90E529F3D01AC2A3E1D3
Key Value
MD5CF85BA7DE6FCE1965B279892A5EDF6C8
PackageArchia64
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
PackageRelease4.fc9.1
PackageVersion4.69
SHA-1EEAC22ED2D1A3310C16889341A8C91164DF160BA
SHA-256B29C42EA3F0DE39767BD6D2F5E740A1EA082321F65453AD5CD65DC6C6A567C5B
Key Value
MD5DC9CE4E3C532ED52A7DB533590218607
PackageArchsparcv9
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
PackageRelease17.fc12
PackageVersion4.69
SHA-104BA790EA7F91CFF997233E4D4DEBDF6C66B41AC
SHA-25655BEB4A9C064D187CDA2B3BFB4E454CA746ED9C0C99C3AE97839E03C8124684A
Key Value
MD57D08819DC9CDF880A03325DA64EE9256
PackageArchia64
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
PackageRelease5.fc10
PackageVersion4.69
SHA-18BED77689BCBCAC24B30516FF5DF1684FAC0CD8A
SHA-2563254101224B2327CE62F604189BB3CD68B8D71B8CC51411AF944DDA05F9468B3