This is the last call for comments for the review of debconf templates for exim4. The reviewed templates will be sent on Thursday, May 31, 2007 to the package maintainer as a bug report and a mail will be sent to this list with "[BTS]" as a subject tag. --
Template: exim4/purge_spool Type: boolean Default: false _Description: Remove undelivered mails in spool directory? There are mails in the exim spool directory /var/spool/exim4/input which have not yet been delivered. Removing Exim will cause them to remain undelivered until Exim is re-installed. . If this option is not chosen, the spool directory is kept, allowing the messages in the queue to be delivered at a later date after re-installing Exim. Template: exim4/move_exim3_spool Type: boolean Default: false _Description: Move undelivered mails from exim(v3) to exim4 spool? There are some undelivered mails in exim(v3) (or exim-tls(v3)) spool directory /var/spool/exim/input/. . Choosing this option will move these messages to exim4's spool (/var/spool/exim4/input/) where they will be handled by exim4. . This works only one-way: Exim4 can handle exim(v3) spool but not vice-versa. You should move the messages only if you do not plan to go back to exim(v3). Otherwise, the messages should be moved manually at a later time. Template: exim4-base/drec Type: error _Description: Reconfigure exim4-config instead of this package Exim4 has its configuration factored out into a dedicated package, exim4-config. If you want to reconfigure Exim4, use 'dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config'.
Template: exim4/dc_eximconfig_configtype Type: select # Translators beware! the following six strings form a single # Choices menu. - Every one of these strings has to fit in a standard # 80 characters console, as the fancy screen setup takes up some space # try to keep below ~71 characters. # DO NOT USE commas (,) in Choices translations otherwise # this will break the choices shown to users __Choices: internet site; mail is sent and received directly using SMTP, mail sent by smarthost; received via SMTP or fetchmail, mail sent by smarthost; no local mail, local delivery only; not on a network, no configuration at this time Default: local delivery only; not on a network _Description: General type of mail configuration: Please select the mail server configuration type that best meets your needs. . Systems with dynamic IP addresses, including dialup systems, should generally be configured to send outgoing mail to another machine, called a 'smarthost' for delivery because many receiving systems on the Internet block incoming mail from dynamic IP addresses as spam protection. . A system with a dynamic IP address can receive its own mail, or local delivery can be disabled entirely (except mail for root and postmaster). Template: exim4/no_config Type: boolean Default: true _Description: Really leave the mail system unconfigured? Until the mail system is configured, it will be broken and cannot be used. Configuration at a later time can be done either by hand or by running 'dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config' as root. Template: exim4/mailname Type: string _Description: System mail name: The 'mail name' is the domain name used to 'qualify' mail addresses without a domain name. . This name will also be used by other programs. It should be the single, full domain name (FQDN). . For example, if a mail address on the local host is foo@domain.example, then the correct value for this option would be domain.example. . This name won't appear on From: lines of outgoing mails if rewriting is enabled. Template: exim4/dc_other_hostnames Type: string Default: _Description: Other destinations for which mail is accepted: Please enter a semicolon-separated list of recipient domains for which this machine should consider itself the final destination, apart from the local hostname (${fqdn}) and 'localhost'. These domains are commonly called 'local domains'. . Leaving this list blank will have Exim do no local deliveries. . By default all local domains will be treated identically. If both a.example and b.example are local domains, acc@a.example and acc@b.example will be delivered to the same final destination. If different domain names should be treated differently, it is necessary to edit the config files afterwards. Template: exim4/dc_relay_domains Type: string Default: _Description: Domains to relay mail for: Please enter a semicolon-separated list of recipient domains for which this system will relay mail, for example as a fallback MX or mail gateway. This means that this system will accept mail for these domains from anywhere on the Internet and deliver them according to local delivery rules. . Do not mention local domains here. Wildcards may be used. Template: exim4/dc_relay_nets Type: string Default: _Description: Machines to relay mail for: Please enter a semicolon-separated list of IP address ranges for which this system will arbitrarily relay mail, functioning as a smarthost. . You should use the standard address/prefix format (e.g. 194.222.242.0/24 or 5f03:1200:836f::/48). . If this system should not be a smarthost for any other host, leave this list blank. Template: exim4/dc_readhost Type: string _Description: Visible domain name for local users: The option to hide the local mail name in outgoing mail was enabled. It is therefore necessary to specify the domain name this system should use for the domain part of local users' sender addresses. Template: exim4/dc_smarthost Type: string _Description: IP address or host name of the outgoing smarthost: Please enter the IP address or the host name of a mail server that this system should use as outgoing smarthost. If the smarthost only accepts your mail on a port different from TCP/25, append two colons and the port number (for example smarthost.example::587 or 192.168.254.254::2525). Colons in IPv6 addresses need to be doubled. . If the smarthost requires authentication, please refer to /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz for notes about setting up SMTP authentication. Template: exim4/dc_postmaster Type: string _Description: Root and postmaster mail recipient: Mail for the 'postmaster', 'root', and other system accounts needs to be redirected to the user account of the actual system administrator. . If this value is left empty, such mail will be saved in /var/mail/mail, which is not recommended. . Note that postmaster's mail should be read on the system to which it is directed, rather than being forwarded elsewhere, so (at least one of) the users listed here should not redirect their mail off this machine. A 'real-' prefix can be used to force local delivery. . Multiple user names need to be separated by spaces. Template: exim4/dc_noalias_regenerate Type: boolean Default: false _Description: Overwrite existing /etc/aliases? An /etc/aliases file was found on the system, but it does not redirect mail for root to a user account, which is strongly recommended. . Accepting this option will cause /etc/aliases to be overwritten, and the old file will be renamed to aliases.O. Template: exim4/dc_local_interfaces Type: string Default: notset _Description: IP-addresses to listen on for incoming SMTP connections: Please enter a semicolon-separated list of IP addresses. The Exim SMTP listener daemon will listen on all IP addresses listed here. . An empty value will cause Exim to listen for connections on all available network interfaces. . If this system does only receive mail directly from local services like fetchmail or your mail program (MUA) talking to localhost (and not from other hosts), it is advisable to prohibit external connections to the local Exim. This can be accomplished by entering 127.0.0.1 here. This will disable listening on public network interfaces. Template: exim4/dc_minimaldns Type: boolean Default: false _Description: Keep number of DNS-queries minimal (Dial-on-Demand)? In normal mode of operation Exim does DNS lookups at startup, and when receiving or delivering messages. This is for logging purposes and allows keeping down the number of hard-coded values in the configuration. . If this system does not have a DNS full service resolver available at all times (for example if its Internet access is a dial-up line using dial-on-demand), this might have unwanted consequences. For example, starting up Exim or running the queue (even with no messages waiting) might trigger a costly dial-up-event. . This option should be selected if this system is using Dial-on-Demand. If it has always-on Internet access, this option should be disabled. Template: exim4/exim4-config-title Type: title _Description: Mail Server configuration Template: exim4/use_split_config Type: boolean _Description: Split configuration into small files? The Debian exim4 packages can either use 'unsplit configuration', a single monolithic file (/etc/exim4/exim4.conf.template) or 'split configuration', where the actual Exim configuration files are built from about 50 smaller files in /etc/exim4/conf.d/. . Unsplit configuration is better suited for large modifications and is generally more stable, whereas split configuration offers a comfortable way to make smaller modifications but is more fragile and might break if modified carelessly. . A more detailed discussion of split and unsplit configuration can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz. Template: exim4/hide_mailname Type: boolean _Description: Hide local mail name in outgoing mail? The headers of outgoing mail can be rewritten to make it appear to have been generated on a different system. If this option is chosen, '${mailname}', 'localhost' and '${dc_other_hostnames}' in From, Reply-To, Sender and Return-Path are rewritten. Template: exim4/dc_localdelivery Type: select __Choices: mbox format in /var/mail/, Maildir format in home directory Default: mbox format in /var/mail/ _Description: Delivery method for local mail: Exim is able to store locally delivered email in different formats. The most commonly used ones are mbox and Maildir. mbox uses a single file for the complete mail folder stored in /var/mail/. With Maildir format every single message is stored in a separate file in ~/Maildir/. . Please note that most mail tools in Debian expect the local delivery method to be mbox in their default.
Source: exim4 Section: mail Priority: standard Maintainer: Exim4 Maintainers <pkg-exim4-maintainers@lists.alioth.debian.org> Uploaders: Andreas Metzler <ametzler@debian.org>,Marc Haber <mh+debian-packages@zugschlus.de> Standards-Version: 3.7.2 Build-Depends: dpatch (>=2.0.10), debhelper (>= 5), po-debconf, bzip2, docbook-xsl, xsltproc, lynx, docbook-xml, libpcre3-dev, libldap2-dev, libpam0g-dev, libident-dev, libdb4.3-dev, libxmu-dev, libxt-dev, libxext-dev, libx11-dev, libxaw7-dev, libpq-dev, libmysqlclient15-dev, libsqlite3-dev, libperl-dev, libgnutls-dev, libsasl2-dev Package: exim4-base Architecture: any Priority: standard Conflicts: exim, exim-tls, exim4-daemon-light (<<${Upstream-Version}), exim4-daemon-heavy (<<${Upstream-Version}), exim4-daemon-custom (<<${Upstream-Version}) Replaces: exim, exim-tls, exim4-daemon-light, exim4-daemon-heavy, exim4-daemon-custom Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}, cron (>=3.0pl1-42), exim4-config (>=4.30) | exim4-config-2, adduser, netbase, lsb-base (>= 3.0-3) Recommends: psmisc Suggests: mail-reader, eximon4, exim4-doc-html|exim4-doc-info, gnutls-bin | openssl, file, libmail-spf-query-perl (>= 1.999-1) Description: support files for all exim MTA (v4) packages Exim (v4) is a mail transport agent. exim4-base provides the support files needed by all exim4 daemon packages. You need an additional package containing the main executable. The available packages are: . exim4-daemon-light exim4-daemon-heavy . If you build exim4 from the source package locally, you can also build an exim4-daemon-custom package tailored to your own feature set. . The Debian exim4 packages have their own web page, http://pkg-exim4.alioth.debian.org/. There is also a Debian-specific FAQ list. Information about the way the Debian packages are configured can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz, which additionally contains information about the way the Debian binary packages are built. The very extensive upstream documentation is shipped in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/spec.txt.gz. To repeat the debconf-driven configuration process in a standard setup, invoke dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config. There is a Debian-centered mailing list, pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org. Please ask Debian-specific questions there, and only write to the upstream exim-users mailing list if you are sure that your question is not Debian-specific. You can find the subscription web page on http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users . exim is a drop-in replacement for sendmail/mailq/rsmtp. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/ Package: exim4-config Architecture: all Priority: standard Provides: exim4-config-2 Conflicts: exim, exim-tls, exim4-config, exim4-config-2, bash (<< 2.05), exim4-daemon-light (<<4.63), exim4-daemon-heavy (<<4.63), ${MTA-Conflicts} Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}, adduser Description: configuration for the exim MTA (v4) Exim (v4) is a mail transport agent. exim4-config provides the configuration for the exim4 daemon packages. The configuration framework has been split off the main package to allow sites to replace the configuration scheme with their own without having to change the actual exim4 packages. . Sites with special configuration needs (having a lot of identically configured machines for example) can use this to distribute their own custom configuration via the packaging system, using the magic available with dpkg's conffile handling, without having to do local changes on all of these machines. . The Debian exim4 packages have their own web page, http://pkg-exim4.alioth.debian.org/. There is also a Debian-specific FAQ list. Information about the way the Debian packages are configured can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz, which additionally contains information about the way the Debian binary packages are built. The very extensive upstream documentation is shipped in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/spec.txt.gz. To repeat the debconf-driven configuration process in a standard setup, invoke dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config. There is a Debian-centered mailing list, pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org. Please ask Debian-specific questions there, and only write to the upstream exim-users mailing list if you are sure that your question is not Debian-specific. You can find the subscription web page on http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users . exim is a drop-in replacement for sendmail/mailq/rsmtp. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/ Package: exim4-daemon-light Architecture: any Priority: standard Provides: mail-transport-agent Conflicts: mail-transport-agent Replaces: mail-transport-agent, exim4-base (<= 4.61-1) Depends: exim4-base (>= ${Upstream-Version}), ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends} Description: lightweight exim MTA (v4) daemon Exim (v4) is a mail transport agent. This package contains the exim4 daemon with only basic features enabled. It works well with the standard setups that are provided by Debian and includes support for TLS encryption and the dlopen patch to allow dynamic loading of a local_scan function. . The Debian exim4 packages have their own web page, http://pkg-exim4.alioth.debian.org/. There is also a Debian-specific FAQ list. Information about the way the Debian packages are configured can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz, which additionally contains information about the way the Debian binary packages are built. The very extensive upstream documentation is shipped in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/spec.txt.gz. To repeat the debconf-driven configuration process in a standard setup, invoke dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config. There is a Debian-centered mailing list, pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org. Please ask Debian-specific questions there, and only write to the upstream exim-users mailing list if you are sure that your question is not Debian-specific. You can find the subscription web page on http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users . exim is a drop-in replacement for sendmail/mailq/rsmtp. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/ Package: exim4 Architecture: all Priority: standard Depends: ${misc:Depends}, debconf (>= 1.4.69) | cdebconf (>= 0.39), exim4-base (>= ${Upstream-Version}), exim4-daemon-light | exim4-daemon-heavy | exim4-daemon-custom Description: meta-package to ease exim MTA (v4) installation Exim (v4) is a mail transport agent. exim4 is the meta-package depending on the essential components for a basic exim4 installation. . The Debian exim4 packages have their own web page, http://pkg-exim4.alioth.debian.org/. There is also a Debian-specific FAQ list. Information about the way the Debian packages are configured can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz, which additionally contains information about the way the Debian binary packages are built. The very extensive upstream documentation is shipped in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/spec.txt.gz. To repeat the debconf-driven configuration process in a standard setup, invoke dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config. There is a Debian-centered mailing list, pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org. Please ask Debian-specific questions there, and only write to the upstream exim-users mailing list if you are sure that your question is not Debian-specific. You can find the subscription web page on http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users . exim is a drop-in replacement for sendmail/mailq/rsmtp. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/ Package: exim4-daemon-heavy Architecture: any Priority: optional Provides: mail-transport-agent Conflicts: mail-transport-agent Replaces: mail-transport-agent, exim4-base (<= 4.61-1) Depends: exim4-base (>= ${Upstream-Version}), ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends} Description: exim MTA (v4) daemon with extended features, including exiscan-acl Exim (v4) is a mail transport agent. This package contains the exim4 daemon with extended features. In addition to the features already supported by exim4-daemon-light, exim4-daemon-heavy includes LDAP, sqlite, PostgreSQL and MySQL data lookups, SASL and SPA SMTP authentication, embedded Perl interpreter, and the content scanning extension (formerly known as "exiscan-acl") for integration of virus scanners and spamassassin. . The Debian exim4 packages have their own web page, http://pkg-exim4.alioth.debian.org/. There is also a Debian-specific FAQ list. Information about the way the Debian packages are configured can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz, which additionally contains information about the way the Debian binary packages are built. The very extensive upstream documentation is shipped in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/spec.txt.gz. To repeat the debconf-driven configuration process in a standard setup, invoke dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config. There is a Debian-centered mailing list, pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org. Please ask Debian-specific questions there, and only write to the upstream exim-users mailing list if you are sure that your question is not Debian-specific. You can find the subscription web page on http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users . exim is a drop-in replacement for sendmail/mailq/rsmtp. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/ Package: exim4-daemon-custom Architecture: any Priority: optional Provides: mail-transport-agent Conflicts: mail-transport-agent Replaces: mail-transport-agent, exim4-base (<= 4.61-1) Depends: exim4-base (>= ${Upstream-Version}), ${shlibs:Depends}, ${misc:Depends} Description: custom exim MTA (v4) daemon with locally set features Exim (v4) is a mail transport agent. This package contains a custom-configured exim4 daemon compiled to local needs. This package is not part of official Debian, but can easily be built from the Debian source package. For information about the feature set compiled in, and for bug reports, please find out who built your package. . The Debian exim4 packages have their own web page, http://pkg-exim4.alioth.debian.org/. There is also a Debian-specific FAQ list. Information about the way the Debian packages are configured can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz, which additionally contains information about the way the Debian binary packages are built. The very extensive upstream documentation is shipped in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/spec.txt.gz. To repeat the debconf-driven configuration process in a standard setup, invoke dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config. There is a Debian-centered mailing list, pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org. Please ask Debian-specific questions there, and only write to the upstream exim-users mailing list if you are sure that your question is not Debian-specific. You can find the subscription web page on http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users . exim is a drop-in replacement for sendmail/mailq/rsmtp. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/ Package: eximon4 Architecture: any Priority: optional Conflicts: eximon Replaces: eximon Depends: ${shlibs:Depends}, exim4-base (>= 4.10) Description: monitor application for the exim MTA (v4) (X11 interface) Eximon is a helper program for the exim MTA (v4). It allows administrators to view the mail queue and logs, and perform a variety of actions on queued messages, such as freezing, bouncing and thawing messages. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/ Package: exim4-dbg Architecture: any Priority: extra Depends: exim4-base, exim4-config, eximon4 Description: debugging symbols for the exim MTA (v4) packages Exim (v4) is a mail transport agent. This package contains dbg debugging symbols for the binaries contained in the exim4 packages. The daemon packages have their own debug package. . The Debian exim4 packages have their own web page, http://pkg-exim4.alioth.debian.org/. There is also a Debian-specific FAQ list. Information about the way the Debian packages are configured can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz, which additionally contains information about the way the Debian binary packages are built. The very extensive upstream documentation is shipped in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/spec.txt.gz. To repeat the debconf-driven configuration process in a standard setup, invoke dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config. There is a Debian-centered mailing list, pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org. Please ask Debian-specific questions there, and only write to the upstream exim-users mailing list if you are sure that your question is not Debian-specific. You can find the subscription web page on http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users . exim is a drop-in replacement for sendmail/mailq/rsmtp. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/ Package: exim4-daemon-light-dbg Architecture: any Priority: extra Depends: exim4-daemon-light Description: debugging symbols for the exim MTA (v4) packages Exim (v4) is a mail transport agent. This package contains dbg debugging symbols for the binaries contained in the exim4-daemon-light package. . The Debian exim4 packages have their own web page, http://pkg-exim4.alioth.debian.org/. There is also a Debian-specific FAQ list. Information about the way the Debian packages are configured can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz, which additionally contains information about the way the Debian binary packages are built. The very extensive upstream documentation is shipped in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/spec.txt.gz. To repeat the debconf-driven configuration process in a standard setup, invoke dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config. There is a Debian-centered mailing list, pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org. Please ask Debian-specific questions there, and only write to the upstream exim-users mailing list if you are sure that your question is not Debian-specific. You can find the subscription web page on http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users . exim is a drop-in replacement for sendmail/mailq/rsmtp. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/ Package: exim4-daemon-heavy-dbg Architecture: any Priority: extra Depends: exim4-daemon-heavy Description: debugging symbols for the exim MTA (v4) packages Exim (v4) is a mail transport agent. This package contains dbg debugging symbols for the binaries contained in the exim4-daemon-heavy package. . The Debian exim4 packages have their own web page, http://pkg-exim4.alioth.debian.org/. There is also a Debian-specific FAQ list. Information about the way the Debian packages are configured can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz, which additionally contains information about the way the Debian binary packages are built. The very extensive upstream documentation is shipped in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/spec.txt.gz. To repeat the debconf-driven configuration process in a standard setup, invoke dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config. There is a Debian-centered mailing list, pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org. Please ask Debian-specific questions there, and only write to the upstream exim-users mailing list if you are sure that your question is not Debian-specific. You can find the subscription web page on http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users . exim is a drop-in replacement for sendmail/mailq/rsmtp. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/ Package: exim4-daemon-custom-dbg Architecture: any Priority: extra Depends: exim4-daemon-custom Description: debugging symbols for the exim MTA (v4) packages Exim (v4) is a mail transport agent. This package contains dbg debugging symbols for the binaries contained in the exim4-daemon-custom package. . The Debian exim4 packages have their own web page, http://pkg-exim4.alioth.debian.org/. There is also a Debian-specific FAQ list. Information about the way the Debian packages are configured can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz, which additionally contains information about the way the Debian binary packages are built. The very extensive upstream documentation is shipped in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/spec.txt.gz. To repeat the debconf-driven configuration process in a standard setup, invoke dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config. There is a Debian-centered mailing list, pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org. Please ask Debian-specific questions there, and only write to the upstream exim-users mailing list if you are sure that your question is not Debian-specific. You can find the subscription web page on http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users . exim is a drop-in replacement for sendmail/mailq/rsmtp. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/ Package: exim4-dev Architecture: any Priority: extra Description: header files for the exim MTA (v4) packages Exim (v4) is a mail transport agent. This package contains header files that can be used to compile code that is then dynamically linked to exim's local_scan interface. . The Debian exim4 packages have their own web page, http://pkg-exim4.alioth.debian.org/. There is also a Debian-specific FAQ list. Information about the way the Debian packages are configured can be found in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian.gz, which additionally contains information about the way the Debian binary packages are built. The very extensive upstream documentation is shipped in /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/spec.txt.gz. To repeat the debconf-driven configuration process in a standard setup, invoke dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config. There is a Debian-centered mailing list, pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org. Please ask Debian-specific questions there, and only write to the upstream exim-users mailing list if you are sure that your question is not Debian-specific. You can find the subscription web page on http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users . exim is a drop-in replacement for sendmail/mailq/rsmtp. . Upstream URL: http://www.exim.org/
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