This file is indexed.

/etc/couriergrey/whitelist_ip.dist is in couriergrey 0.3.2-5build1.

This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.

The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.

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#############################################################################
#
# This whitelist is copied from
# http://cvs.puremagic.com/viewcvs/greylisting/schema/whitelist_ip.txt
# 
# Couriergrey should fully support the format used there, but has some
# extensions to the format, to support class-less routing and IPv6 addresses.
#
# Due to the extensions, the following entries can be written as well:
#
# 192.168.0.0/16 # for all addresses from 192.168.0.0 to 192.168.255.255
# 172.16.0.0/12 # for addresses in the class B private network addresses
# 2001:abcd::/32 # for an IPv6 network
# ::ffff:192.168.0.0/112 # it is also valid to use mapped IPv4 addresses
#
#############################################################################

# This is a list of manual whitelist entries that have been discovered
# so far for various reasons.

# This is not meant to be a comprehensive list of all servers that should be 
# considered legitimate, merely a list of servers that for one reason or 
# another may either have some type of problem with the Greylisting method, 
# or because of a recognized need to avoid the delay that it may cause.

# These are common entries that most people using greylisting will probably 
# want to have.  If you happen to discover ones that aren't in this list, 
# or that the IP's in this list have changed, please let me know at 
# eharris@puremagic.com, after reading the next paragraph carefully.

# PLEASE NOTE - PLEASE NOTE - PLEASE NOTE - PLEASE NOTE - PLEASE NOTE
# Any submission for inclusion to this list should be accompanied by
# the IP's or address range of the mailservers that have a problem sending 
# to Greylisting servers, the name/url of the organization running these 
# problem servers, and a detail of the specific reason(s) why their systems
# have a problem with Greylisting, and also the type of mail server softare
# they are running (if known).

# Valid reasons for inclusion on this list are:
#   1. They have a pool of round-robin outbound mail servers that spans more 
#      than one /24 netblock.
#   2. They have software that considers a 4xx temporary mail failure to be
#      a permanent bounce.
#   3. Their mail servers retry delivery for 4xx failures continually with
#      no delay.
#   4. Their mail servers either don't retry at all, or have a very long 
#      retry delay (more than 5 hours).
#   5. The mail servers use a unique sender address for each delivery
#      attempt, even for the same piece of mail.  (also known as VERP).
#   6. The mail servers host high volume mailing lists with a general appeal
#      that try to track bounces by using a unique sender address for each
#      mail (also known as VERP).

# Generally, submissions of servers that do not meet at least one of the 
# above criteria will not be accepted for inclusion in this list.  This 
# includes servers that handle Greylisting ok, but that you consider 
# "legitimate", and don't want their mail delayed.  Since "legitimate" is a
# subjective distinction, I believe that those types of whitelist entries 
# are better left for individual administrators to decide.

# ****** IF YOU ARE USING A DIFFERENT IMPLEMENTATION THAN RELAYDELAY ******
# Before submitting a potential entry, please check that your implementation
# uses the 451 error code (not 450 or another 4xx code).  Some problems have
# been reported for sites like MSN/Hotmail, Prodigy, and various other 
# senders that appear to be having "weird" retry patterns (sometimes 
# resulting in bounces) when using code 450 or others.

# Because error code 450 is most commonly used for a mailbox lock failure,
# many sites seem to treat it as a very short duration failure, and will
# retry several times within seconds, and then bounce the mail, while they
# handle a code 451 more "normally".

# Here's an example command to use in a mysql shell to insert 
#   a whitelist entry (assumes defaults from dbdef.sql):
# INSERT INTO relaytofrom (relay_ip, record_expires, create_time) 
#   VALUES ('127.0.0.1', '9999-12-31 23:59:59', NOW());

127.0.0.1       # Of course we don't want to delay ourselves or local users
192.168         # Don't delay our private networks either
10              # Private net (class A)
172.16          # Another private net (inidividual entries, since can't
172.17          #   do a /12 netmask easily
172.18
172.19
172.20
172.21
172.22
172.23
172.24
172.25
172.26
172.27
172.28
172.29
172.30
172.31

# Public Servers

12.5.136.141    # Southwest Airlines (unique sender, no retry)
12.5.136.142    # Southwest Airlines (unique sender, no retry)
12.5.136.143    # Southwest Airlines (unique sender, no retry)
12.5.136.144    # Southwest Airlines (unique sender, no retry)
12.107.209.244	# kernel.org mailing lists (high traffic, unique sender per mail)
63.82.37.110	# SLmail
63.169.44.143	# Southwest Airlines (unique sender, no retry)
63.169.44.144	# Southwest Airlines (unique sender, no retry)
64.7.153.18     # sentex.ca (common pool)
64.12.137       # AOL (common pool) - http://postmaster.aol.com/servers/imo.html
64.12.138       # AOL (common pool)
64.124.204.39	# moveon.org (unique sender per attempt)
64.125.132.254  # collab.net (unique sender per attempt)
#64.233.162	# zproxy.gmail.com (common server pool, bad 451 handling?)
#64.233.170	# rproxy.gmail.com (common server pool, bad 451 handling?)
#64.233.182	# nproxy.gmail.com (common server pool, bad 451 handling?)
#64.233.184	# wproxy.gmail.com (common server pool, bad 451 handling?)
#65.82.241.160	# Groupwise?
66.94.237	# Yahoo Groups servers (common pool, no retry)
66.100.210.82	# Groupwise?
66.135.209      # Ebay (for time critical alerts)
66.135.197      # Ebay (common pool)
66.162.216.166	# Groupwise?
66.206.22.82	# PLEXOR
66.206.22.83	# PLEXOR
66.206.22.84	# PLEXOR
66.206.22.85	# PLEXOR
66.218.66       # Yahoo Groups servers (common pool, no retry)
66.218.67       # Yahoo Groups servers (common pool, no retry)
66.218.69       # Yahoo Groups servers (common pool, no retry)
#66.249.82	# gmail (common server pool, bad 451 handling)
66.27.51.218	# ljbtc.com (Groupwise)
#66.89.73.101	# Groupwise?
#68.15.115.88	# Groupwise?
#72.14.204      # qproxy.gmail.com (common server pool, bad 451 handling?)
152.163.225     # AOL (common pool)
194.245.101.88	# Joker.com (email forwarding server)
195.235.39.19	# Tid InfoMail Exchanger v2.20
195.238.2       # skynet.be (wierd retry pattern, common pool)
195.238.3       # skynet.be (wierd retry pattern, common pool)
#204.60.8.162	# Groupwise?
204.107.120.10	# Ameritrade (no retry)
205.188.139.136	# AOL (common pool)
205.188.139.137	# AOL (common pool)
205.188.144.207	# AOL (common pool)
205.188.144.208	# AOL (common pool)
205.188.156.66	# AOL (common pool)
205.188.157	# AOL (common pool)
205.188.159.7	# AOL (common pool)
205.206.231	# SecurityFocus.com (unique sender per attempt)
205.211.164.50	# sentex.ca (common pool)
207.115.63	# Prodigy (broken software that retries continually with no delay)
207.171.168	# Amazon.com (common pool)
207.171.180	# Amazon.com (common pool)
207.171.187	# Amazon.com (common pool)
207.171.188	# Amazon.com (common pool)
207.171.190	# Amazon.com (common pool)
#209.104.63	# Ticketmaster (poor retry config)
209.132.176.174 # sourceware.org mailing lists (high traffic, unique sender per mail)
211.29.132	# optusnet.com.au (wierd retry pattern and more than 48hrs)
213.136.52.31	# Mysql.com (unique sender)
#216.136.226.0	# Yahoo Mail?
#216.157.204.5	# Groupwise?
#216.239.56     # proxy.gmail.com (common server pool, bad 451 handling?)
217.158.50.178  # AXKit mailing list (unique sender per attempt)