My test with postfix yielded:

Status: 5.4.4
Diagnostic-Code: X-Postfix; Name service error for name=abx.ca type=MX:
Malformed or unexpected name server reply


so at least it hard failed.

- mark


On 2016-02-28 12:07 AM, John Levine wrote:
>> What is an MTA supposed to do with a message addressed to a domain with
>> a NULL MX?
> 
> Reject it with a 556 status code and 5.1.10 enhanced status code.  If
> the message was already relayed, return a DSN if it makes sense.  See
> section 4.1.
> 
> You can also feel free to reject mail if the return address has a null
> MX since you can't reply; in that case it's status 550 and 5.7.27.
> 
>> I'm looking at some logs and seeing attempts to deliver email to lots of
>> domains with NULL MX enabled (that have been so for years) and wondering
>> if I can safely mine these logs and add all the originating MTA IPs to
>> an internal RBL.
> 
> That seems reasonable.  Any MTA that tries the A address if you
> publish a null MX (that's "domain MX 0 .") is so broken that it
> deserves to die if it's not already spamware.  There are plenty of
> MTAs that will sit on the message for a week hoping the next time they
> look up the MX it will be different, but I can't recall seeing any
> legitimate MTA for a long time that falls back to A if it finds an MX.
> 
> The RFC is new but the draft was kicking around since 2006, and was
> never controversial.
> 
> R's,
> John
> 

-- 
Mark Jeftovic, Founder & CEO, easyDNS Technologies Inc.
Company Website: http://easydns.com
Read my blog: http://markable.com
+1-416-535-8672 ext 225

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