Dear Glen,
What MUA are you using to send mail to your local server ? Did u
try to send mail on 587 port, try to send mail through telnet from your
local system within the lan.
And just watch the log tail -f /var/log/qmail/submission/current
Did you got nay error when you was trying to send mail to your
server through locally.
What is in /etc/tcprules.d/tcp.smtp paste it here. If you feel there is
a problem of spamdyke then you can disable for moment and try it to send
mails.
Regards,
Ganesh
On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 1:10 PM, Glen Vickers <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hello all,
>
>
>
> I’m having an issue I have yet to figure out. About a week or so ago my
> server stopped accepting incoming connections to send mail. I checked my
> router/firewall/port forwarding settings and all was correct. So I went
> inside our network (origionally the client was outside) and attempted to
> connect/send mail. Same error from client, unable to connect to mail
> server. So I attempted to telnet to both the external IP and internal IP
> addresses. Connection refused (using putty).
>
>
>
> I checked the logs after that and don’t see any reference to any IP address
> attempting to connect to port 25. I checked to see if IP tables had somehow
> been enabled on the machine. Nothing. I then checked for SELinux and ran
> nmap localhost and nmap *Domain* as well as nmap *hostname*. It says port
> 25 is open and taking requests yet I get connection refused at any location.
>
>
>
> To make things interesting, I’m able to email to any address that server
> holds. Just can’t reply/send out from any address the server holds. Any
> thoughts where I could look? The logs don’t even show an attempted
> connection.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Glen Vickers
>