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25.4 Exploder Mailing Lists

When mailing lists get extremely large, they sometimes include the names of other lists at other sites as recipients. Those other lists are called exploder lists, because they cause the size of a list (the number of recipients) to explode . For example, consider the situation in Figure 25.1 .

Figure 25.1: Exploding a mailing list

Figure 25.1

This figure shows that a message sent to [email protected] will, in addition to its list of users, also be forwarded to [email protected] and [email protected] . But each of these recipients is also a mailing list. Like the original nuts list, they deliver to ordinary users and forward to other sites' mailing lists.

Unless exploding lists like this are correctly managed, problems that are both mysterious and difficult to solve can arise. A bad address in one of the distant exploding lists, for example, can cause a delivery error at a remote exploder site. If this happens, it is possible that the error notification will be sent to either the original list maintainer or (worse) the original submitter, although neither is in a position to correct such errors.

To ensure that error notification is sent to the person who is best able to handle the error, mailing list entries in the aliases file should be set up like the following. It is an approach to setting up a mailing list that is well suited for exploder sites.

list:           :include:/path/to/rebroadcast.list owner-list:     [email protected]

Here, the name of the mailing list is list and is used to explode by sending the incoming message to the users listed in rebroadcast.list . The envelope of the outgoing message will contain the address [email protected] , thus causing errors to be sent to the originating list maintainer rather than wrongly to someone on the local machine.


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