[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] lists.xen.org Mailman configuration and DKIM
Matt Wilson writes ("Re: [Xen-devel] lists.xen.org Mailman configuration and DKIM"): > On Fri, Aug 03, 2012 at 07:44:30AM -0700, Ian Jackson wrote: > > That would be better than asking lists.xen.org to start violating the > > specified protocol. Now of course a SHOULD is not an absolute > > requirement. Perhaps mailing lists are a special case somehow; but if > > so I would expect this to be addressed in the relevant standards > > documents. I don't see any particular reason to think that > > lists.xen.org is somehow unusual. > > Ultimately I think that Mailman should verify DKIM signatures, provide > a new signature for the modified message (or have the outbound MTA do > the signing), and retain the origional DKIM signature as a trace. I > believe that this is in line with the recomendations for intermediary > email handlers like Mailman in RFC 5863 [4]. Of course, I don't know > if Gmail will rework their implementation to ignore the invalid > signature. At least one Mailman user reported success simply adding a > new signature and not stripping any header [5]. The solution to the broken DKIM implementations, or broken spec, must not be allowed to become "install more DKIM". That is making the problem worse, not better. > Personally, I think that stripping DKIM headers as a short term > workaround is less objectionable. So bottom line is you think that Gmail is violating a SHOULD NOT. And you are suggesting that the right fix for this is for us to also violate a SHOULD NOT. That can't be right. > If a test of removing DKIM headers to see if it helps with delivery to > Gmail is off the table, then perhaps configuring Mailman in a way that > doesn't break DKIM signatures would be an option? Amazon's signed > headers include date, from, to, cc, subject, message-id and > mime-version. If the subject manipulation of adding [Xen-devel] was > removed, the signature would likely still be valid. I don't think that would be popular and I don't think this is a good reason to do it. Personally I think these subject line prefixes are annoying and if it were my list it wouldn't have had them to start with. But if you want us to turn that off I think you need to get consensus for that. Ian. _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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