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PE1BIV > JNOS 02.03.12 23:29l 50 Lines 2416 Bytes #-5139 (0) @ WW
BID : 56349PE1BIV
Read: DK3UZ GUEST
Subj: Re: Rescanning ... Rewrite (kq6up)
Path: DB0FHN<DB0FOR<DB0SIF<DB0EAM<DB0ERF<IZ3LSV<IK2XDE<DB0RES<PI8CDR<PE1BIV
Sent: 120302/2052z @:PE1BIV.#YMD.NLD.EURO JNOS #:36087 $:56349pe1biv
In general a BBS will record which bulletin is forwarded to which forward
partner, where at least the old version of JNOS could scan the incomming
bulletins for the first 8 forward patners to already be in the R-lines in
the bulletin received.
JNOS will not offer that bulletin to the forward partners who obviously
already have it. So, if you delete a bulletin, the forward partner BBS
that initially did send it to you will not offer it again.
But then, if you look in the file 'history', you will find a list of all
the BIDs that were already received on your BBS (smtp bidcheck is on by
default) and will be rejected the next time the bulletin will be offered
to your BBS by another forward partner.
BTW, having your BBS check for forward partners in the R-lines from
incomming bulletins is 'bulletin check on' which is off by default.
As far as I know there is no way of sending bulletins through the rewrite
again after they have been stored in a bulletin area.
But, you can send smtp back to through the rewrite for a 2nd pass by
putting a 'r' at the end of the rule (one line) in the rewrite.
so "*@kq6up.something $1@kq6up r"
will have an incoming message address rewritten to whatever@kq6up and
then have the message be checked against rules in the rewrite another
time where it then might find "bla@kq6up bla" and have the message
address checked against the alias to see if there is a rule 'bla' or
if not have the message deposited in the mailbox file 'bla'.
Rgs, 73, Angela
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PE1BIV *** [44.137.77.49] *** IJMUIDEN - NL *** JO22hl *** CM44h *** M1SCH
AX25: pe1biv@pe1biv.#ymd.nld.euro ****** smtp: pe1biv_at_pe1biv.ampr.org
E-mail: pe1biv_at_gmail.com ************** Member from: IEEE, NADARS, PWGN
Packet Radio Homepage: http://http.pe1biv.ampr.org (Packet Radio)
: http://www.pe1biv.net (Internet)
I am opposed to my bulletins being placed on systems where these bulletins
can be publicly accessed by anyone, including search engines and spambots,
from the Internet, without that the user first has to logon to have access
to the system!
Having Packet bulletins on display on so many systems, where the sysops
think these bulletins are so important for the people outside of Amateur
Radio that they need to have access to them, quite often indefinitely, is
just ridiculous Internet polution!
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