There are several types of pattern that require Exim to know the name of the
remote host. These are either wildcard patterns or lookups by name. (If a
complete hostname is given without any wildcarding, it is used to find an IP
-address to match against, as described in the section &<<SECThoslispatip>>&
+address to match against, as described in section &<<SECThoslispatip>>&
above.)
If the remote host name is not already known when Exim encounters one of these
operator.
If the query contains a reference to &$sender_host_name$&, Exim automatically
-looks up the host name if has not already done so. (See section
+looks up the host name if it has not already done so. (See section
&<<SECThoslispatnam>>& for comments on finding host names.)
Historical note: prior to release 4.30, Exim would always attempt to find a
surrounding the colons is ignored. For example:
.code
aol.com: spammer1 : spammer2 : ^[0-9]+$ :
- spammer3 : spammer4
+ spammer3 : spammer4
.endd
As in all colon-separated lists in Exim, a colon can be included in an item by
doubling.
.endd
-.vitem &*hosts&~=&~*&<&'&~host&~list'&>
+.vitem &*hosts&~=&~*&<&'host&~list'&>
.cindex "&%hosts%& ACL condition"
.cindex "host" "ACL checking"
.cindex "&ACL;" "testing the client host"
TL/04 Bugzilla 1281 - Spec typo.
Bugzilla 1283 - Spec typo.
+ Bugzilla 1290 - Spec grammar fixes.
TL/05 Bugzilla 1285 - Spec omission, fix docbook errors for spec.txt creation.