On Dec 5, 8:00 pm, "Sergio Cuéllar Valdés" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > 2007/12/5, Bob Goldberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > What exactly IS exim? > > > IOW: when I setup sendmail, I'm working with bash scripts. > > > when I setup an exim conf file - what exactly runs it? perl? > > Hello, > > you should better read a lot =) and make specific questions if you have. > > Best regards, > Sergio Cuellar >
Sergio, I appreciate you taking the time to reply to my post. For the past 5 days, i've been doing nothing but reading. I find most of the doc's to be bloated files, with little in the way of practical information. At the end of all this research, I STILL find myself trying to diagnose why my router isn't working; and it's a pretty darn simple router at that. getting useful error messages out of exim debug is worthless. So I thought, if I can run a simulation of whatever exim does, maybe I could stop in the middle & see just what's going on. I thought my question was very specific. What language is the exim conf file written for? is it perl, or is it an exim-specific language. ie: the command line [from my router] is: data = [EMAIL PROTECTED]/etc/exim4/email-accept} {:fail: User unknown }} what interpreter can I execute this line of code in to see what the heck it's doing? I can't lookup the proper syntax of the lookup command if I don't know the language it's based in. Here is what exim -debug says: lookup yielded: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: << this IS a valid email, and lsearch FOUND it. so far so good. expanded: :fail: User unknown << WHY does my statement expand to failure file is not a filter file << what file isn't a filter file, and what does that really mean?