.SH DESCRIPTION
.P
A list of local domains is supplied to the program (more or less)
-through the \fI\-\-domain\-query\fR option. Any addresses which
-forward to another address not contained in this list of local domains
-is considered a remote forward. Remote forwards can cause problems for
-a number of reasons, the most common of which are,
+through the \fI\-\-domain\-query\fR option. Any addresses in the list
+that forward to an address \fBnot\fR in the list are considered remote
+forwards. Remote forwards can cause problems for a number of reasons,
+the most common of which are,
.IP \(bu 2
If the sender has an SPF record authorizing his mail server to send
mail on his behalf, then when his message is forwarded by the
the set of all domains (i.e one column) that are local to the
server. See the default value for an example.
-Default: \(dqSELECT domain FROM domain WHERE domain <> 'ALL' ORDER BY domain;\(dq
+Default: \(dqSELECT domain FROM domain WHERE domain <> 'ALL' ORDER BY
+domain;\(dq
.IP \fB\-\-exclude-mx\fR,\ \fB-e\fR
The name of a mail exchanger, the forwards of whose domains we should
Default: The current user
+.SH CONFIGURATION FILE
+
+Any of the options above can be placed in a configuration file rather
+than passed on the command line. An example config file
+\fIdoc/list-remote-forwardsrc.example\fR is included with the
+source. You can edit it and rename it to either
+\fI$sysconfdir/list-remote-forwardsrc\fR or
+\fI~/.list-remote-forwardsrc\fR. The variable \fI$sysconfdir\fR is
+determined at build time and is typically \fI/etc\fR on UNIX systems.
+
.SH EXAMPLES
.nf