HI.

I would like to share a specific issue that I had with greylisting at the sender side:

I manage several mail servers, most of them with MS Exchange 2003.
Some of the recipients that my customers send emails to, are using some sort of greylisting (I didn't check which method exactly).
One of the recipients domain is "technion.ac.il"
I have found that for some reason unknown yet, MS Exchange 2003 SP2 does not handle greylisting very well with default configuration, and in some scenarios the outbound mail to such domains is simply frozen and not sent. This could be due to timing issues or problems with specific greylisting method at the recipients side - I don't know the exact cause. I have found some workarounds at my side (sender) and tweaks to prevent this. However - the bottom line was the important emails (important for both sender and recipient) where delayed for more then 1 week, without any notification to sender nor recipient! I haven't asked MS to solve it yet because it is a bit difficult to reproduce the problems and describe to them, but even if/when the issue will be solved,
it won't be automatically fixed on all similar systems.

So:
* Greylisting is a nice idea, but does not always work as planned.
* I assume that this is not a single specific issue but does/will probably affect customers in other similar scenarios. * My point is that you should also take into account that greylisting might cause more severe problems and not only delays of few minutes,
and this should be added to the "cons" count against greylisting.
* You can say whatever you like or dislike about MS Exchange, but as we all know it is widely in use and non of us has control over other persons mail servers. * You can say: "that's a problem of the sending server, not mine (the recipient side)". I won't argue with that because I'm not sure what is the exact cause of such problems. But your customers (end users and management) might argue about important emails lost or delayed for days.

Bottom line:
* It's your choice weather to implement greylisting or not.
I recommend avoiding it if applicable and if you can get reasonable spam 
filtering without it.
The issue I have described should be counted as one of the "cons" against it.

For Your Info.
Yizhar
http://yizhar.mvps.org





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