Andrew Lewis <[email protected]> (Di 15 Sep 2009 02:22:59 CEST): > > Indeed it is by design. If I get you right, if you get a NDN > > (none-delivery-notification, or for the discussion, any other type of > > message with empty sender, like out of office) which you can not > > delivery, you like to bounce that? That is a recipe for trouble, meaning > > you can play ping-pong all day long... Don't do it! > > I want to discourage administrators of remote mail systems that are using me > as a smarthost from sending these messages and if I direct the delivery > failure notifications at them they should at least be made aware that they
But I guess, they really need to send bounce messages. If my smarthost
would deny sending bounces, I'd change the smarthost.
You could - controled by an ACL rule - do a very strict recipient check
(callout) for messages deliverd with an empty envelope-from. This rises
the chance that you get them out, once you've accepted them.
But you never ever want to replace an empty envelope-from by anything
else than an empty envelope-from. Otherwise you're asking for trouble.
(Imagine, you change replace the envelope-from with a real address, you
deliver this message to the final destiation and for some reason
it generates a bounce message there. And their admin had the same idea
as you …)
Best regards from Dresden/Germany
Viele Grüße aus Dresden
Heiko Schlittermann
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