Created on 06-16-2008 08:30 AM
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Created on 06-16-2008 08:38 AM
(?i) c[i|1][a|4][i|l|1|!][i|l|1|!][s|z]This matches many derivatives of " cialis" which is now a common word in spam messages. I use (?i) to disable case sensitivity... don' t know if this is technically correct but it works. I inserted the white space in front of the word to prevent false matches with words such as specialist.
Bob - self proclaimed posting junkie!
See my Fortigate related scripts at: http://fortigate.camerabob.com
/ c[i|1][a|4][i|l|1|!][i|l|1|!][s|z]/i should do the trick. What you have is looking for one or no ' i' s at the beginning....question: using the above example, is there supposed to be whitespace between the first forward slash and the c? I used the above example, only I removed the white space. Only, now it picks up on the word " specialist" ... if I put the whitespace back in, will it not do that? Well to answer my question ... I put the whitespace back in, and now the word specialist get' s through. If only trying to understand perl regular expressions didn' t make my brain implode I probably would' ve figured that out. Thanks for the examples guys!
question: using the above example, is there supposed to be whitespace between the first forward slash and the c? I used the above example, only I removed the white space. Only, now it picks up on the word " specialist" ... if I put the whitespace back in, will it not do that? Well to answer my question ... I put the whitespace back in, and now the word specialist get' s through. If only trying to understand perl regular expressions didn' t make my brain implode I probably would' ve figured that out. Thanks for the examples guys!Yes maurixxx, in that pattern it is supposed that before the c letter there must be a whitespace. To match an exact word with or without whitespaces before or after and with the logic of the pattern, you can use word boundaries \b as aszujatovich suggested in his pattern: /\bc[i|1][a|4][i|l|1|!][i|l|1|!][s|z]/i would do the trick. Regards, Marco
zaskarThanks --------------------------------------------- Marco Scala Fortigate-200 2.80,build489,051027
ORIGINAL: Marco ScalaAloha again Marco, I recently ran into a new " problem" with banned words. I have the word " sex" blocked, but now we' re doing business with a guy named " Dan Sexton" So how would I block " sex" but allow " Sexton" ? I' m currently using the following expression: / s[e|3]x/i Would adding the \b (like so: /\bs ) do the trick? Mahalo!question: using the above example, is there supposed to be whitespace between the first forward slash and the c? I used the above example, only I removed the white space. Only, now it picks up on the word " specialist" ... if I put the whitespace back in, will it not do that? Well to answer my question ... I put the whitespace back in, and now the word specialist get' s through. If only trying to understand perl regular expressions didn' t make my brain implode I probably would' ve figured that out. Thanks for the examples guys!Yes maurixxx, in that pattern it is supposed that before the c letter there must be a whitespace. To match an exact word with or without whitespaces before or after and with the logic of the pattern, you can use word boundaries \b as aszujatovich suggested in his pattern: /\bc[i|1][a|4][i|l|1|!][i|l|1|!][s|z]/i would do the trick. Regards, Marco
I recently ran into a new " problem" with banned words. I have the word " sex" blocked, but now we' re doing business with a guy named " Dan Sexton" So how would I block " sex" but allow " Sexton" ? I' m currently using the following expression: / s[e|3]x/iI know this is old but may still help someone. What I did for cases like that is check for spaces before and after the word. For Ex: / s[e|3]xy? /i This will check for sex, s3x, sexy and s3xy but won' t trigger on names as in your example. I also suggest that you never give one term a score high enough to block a message on it' s own. You should try to have at least two positive matches before you block a message. This will prevent false positives. Each term that matches only scores once so if the term above has a score of 3 and the term is matched 10 times it only counts as a score of 3.
Created on 06-17-2008 06:33 AM
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