Title: Any problems with the inbound rules?

Dear all,

Recently I always got big problems, Queue manager shutdown several times in the past 3 days. When this occurred I only found the Queue Manager was in "Stopping Pending" status, now matter I stopped or restarted it, there was no response, I had to

Restart the computer and removed the "blocked" email.

I could find some messages in log file as below.

07:02 02:13 SMTP-(0000000000000000) Info - Adding Queue file d:\IMail\spool\Q87ab013b00001943.SMD

07:02 02:13 SMTP-(87ab013b00001943) processing d:\IMail\spool\Q87ab013b00001943.SMD

07:02 02:13 SMTP-(87ab013b00001943) Err - Exception handled in Rules, Step - 0 Rules step - f162628

07:02 02:13 SMTP-(87ab013b00001943) ERR 005 - Send message thread exception handled Step = 11271213

07:02 02:13 SMTP-(87ab013b00001943) ERR 005 - Fatal error - shutdown started

Any problems with our rules inbound?

Thanks in advance.

BR/Jobs


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Kevin Bilbee
Sent: Saturday, July 02, 2005 11:14 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [IMail Forum] OT: mx record is there, yet isn't


> I don't think the

> first name in an FQDN must be a domain name; I think it can

> also be a host.  For example, www.ebay.com is a FQDN, but the

> www refers to a host.  Similarly, in an internal LAN, you can

> refer to server.domainname, and that is a FQDN.  So

> mail.salemradiology.com could refer to a subdomain or to a

> record in the domain (such as an MX record).  Unless I give

> you context, you have no way of telling which.


You are correct that in that is can also be a host. But as to SMTP and mail

delivery what comes after the @ is considered to be a domain name. If you

want to deliver to a host then you should use an ip address after the @

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

I think yo are not fully understanding how DNS and SMTP interact. Most

people are used to anyting in front of the second . Seperator being a host.

After the second . Seperator it can be a domain.

There can be many many subdomains stacked on top of each other for instance

     Subdomain4.subdomain3.subdomain2.subdomain1.example.com and hosts can

be at all levels.

I suggest leaving this alone for a few days an reread this thread.

Kevin Bilbee




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