Hi Catonga,
Code:
--> man hosts.allow
WI S
The access control language supports explicit wildcards:
ALL The universal wildcard, always matches.
HOSTS_ACCESS(5) HOSTS_ACCESS(5)
LOCAL Matches any host whose name does not contain a dot
character.
UNKNOWN
Matches any user whose name is unknown, and matches
any host whose name _ o_ r address are unknown. This
pattern should be used with care: host names may be
unavailable due to temporary name server problems.
A network address will be unavailable when the
software cannot figure out what type of network it
is talking to.
KNOWN Matches any user whose name is known, and matches
any host whose name _ a_ n_ d address are known. This
pattern should be used with care: host names may be
unavailable due to temporary name server problems.
A network address will be unavailable when the
software cannot figure out what type of network it
is talking to.
PARANOID
Matches any host whose name does not match its
address. When tcpd is built with -DPARANOID
(default mode), it drops requests from such clients
even before looking at the access control tables.
Build without -DPARANOID when you want more control
over such requests.
Vielleicht hilft folgendes:
smtp: LOCAL, rechner.WORKGROUP : allow
Gruß micha
[ 11. Juni 2001: Beitrag editiert von: micha ]
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