|
have you looked at this to see if there's any utility
for you?
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ramon Linan Sent: Wednesday, August 23, 2006 11:35 AM To: [email protected] Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Exchange question Thanks for your
help. I have found out more
about my problem. It looks like the
target exchange SMTP server is acting up, I can telnet sometimes and sometimes I
cant. Also sometimes I am able to telnet but it is really slow and sometimes it
even freezes on me. I am still
troubleshooting Thanks From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Al
Mulnick The implications are further down the troubleshooting
stack IMHO. If you cannot telnet to TCP 25 from the source Exchange
server to the target Exchange server, then you have a problem with
connectivity. You must be able to do this. Both directions. Until you can
successfully do this, then there is nothing more you can hope to
accomplish. You can check DNS as well, but you can also find out if basic
connectivity is functioning using the ip addresses. If it's not, and it
sounds like it's not, then you'll need to address that first.
Al On 8/22/06, Thank everyone for the
response…I am going nuts here, everything is a
mess. For some reason I cant
telnet into domain1 email server from domain2 , not only that , domain1 has 2
smtp server, one in the port 6000 and the other in the port 25. Also I send an
email to my personal account from domain2 and I got something like this in the
header: Mail from :
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Received: from servername.domain3.com
([ip address] helo=domain3.com So the
domain in the user's email address does not match the email server's domain…I am
wondering what are the implications of that… Thanks From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Brandon Pierce
Obviously if the
server is running out of space make sure you remediate that first. Second,
I would recommend if ServerA cannot send to ServerB, but the reverse is NOT
true, then I would suggest trying basic SMTP commands to ServerA from
ServerB. Check the following: 1) Is the server
responding to SMTP commands? 2) Can the
server accept and deliver the mail item to intended recipient?
3) Are the SMTP
queues clear in ESM? 4) Is DNS responding
correctly (A, PTR, SRV records present?)? Gut
feeling...DNS. That's my first
shot! From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On
Behalf Of Al Mulnick Have you
seen this already? On 8/22/06,
Thanks very much, I
think my second question was very easy J but wanted to confirm
it. The problem now is that
we have 500 mg in the hard drive but the smtp queue is still not delivering the
emails from one server to the other. We have 2 emails
servers, one holds domain1.com
and the other hold domain2.com.
domain1.com can send and receive
fine but domain2 cant send to domain2, the emails are stuck in the queue with
that domain, how do I troubleshoot that? Thanks From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Akomolafe, Deji Subject: RE:
[ActiveDir] Exchange question >>>minimum
amount of HD space needed for the smtp to
work? It depends mostly on
how busy is the server. >>> Also, if the hard
drive gets full will that stop the queue from delivering the
emails? Of
course.
From:
Hi, I have 2 emails server
in 2 different locations. All the sudden emails
are not coming from one server to the other, I found out that smtp queue folder
was in a hard drive that was running out of space.
Do you guys know what
is the minimum amount of HD space needed for the smtp to
work? Also, if the hard drive
gets full will that stop the queue from delivering the
emails? Thanks Rezuma |
- RE: [ActiveDir] Exchange question Alex Alborzfard
- RE: [ActiveDir] Exchange question Kitchens Arthur E
- RE: [ActiveDir] Exchange question Ramon Linan
- RE: [ActiveDir] Exchange question Alex Alborzfard
- RE: [ActiveDir] Exchange question Ramon Linan
- RE: [ActiveDir] Exchange question Alex Alborzfard
