> | > You don't relay for your ISP, you only accept for local delivery
> | I don't understand at all - I don't get what this setting is about? 
> Does
> | anyone ever relay for their ISP?  Isn't it the other way around, where
> | the  ISP relays for you?
>
> Precisely.  So you don't put sources which will require relaying in ispip.
> ISPIP is for connections that can legitimately relay TO you, and NOTHING
> else  as the documentation says -- it's for your ISP and your MX hosts to
> bypass RBL and SRS checks and you should omit your ISP if they do not act
> as an MX secondary for you.  As spammers target low priority (bigger
> number) MX hosts you probably should arrange to not have any MX 
> secondaries
> (even from your ISP), so ISPIP can be set to 'none' which of course will
> not match any ip address


I think I got it.  Thanks for the clarification everyone.  In my case, it 
was the webmail server that was started my on these issues.  It is sending 
email by SMTP through my MTA/ASSP, and was getting blocked because it wasn't 
the local IP.  Once I added it to the acceptAllMail, it worked fine.  But it 
highlighted my misunderstanding of IspIP and acceptAllMail.

Thanks again,

Eric





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