Hi,
we're using Cyrus 2.3.8. Our primary Cyrus partition is getting full. We've
added another one and all new users are created there. Still we need to
move some users from the old one to the new one. I know how to do that
(rename user/xxx user/xxx new). I have successfully moved my own
Labdien Sebastian,
Wednesday, May 23, 2007, 10:53:58 AM, Jus rakstijat:
SH we're using Cyrus 2.3.8. Our primary Cyrus partition is getting full. We've
SH added another one and all new users are created there. Still we need to
SH move some users from the old one to the new one. I know how to do
On Tue, May 22, 2007 at 11:14:49AM -0400, Robert Banz wrote:
*security people seem to obsess on perfect solutions. It bothers me.
No, _real_ security people know that there is NO perfect solution. You
always have to balance the cost of the defenses with the cost of the
thing you want to
In the past week or so, we've had trouble with spam being delivered to
the wrong recipients. It's difficult to explain, so I'll use an example:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] and [EMAIL PROTECTED] are local users receiving
hundreds of spam per hour. None of it is addressed to them. Their
email
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
- --On Wednesday, May 23, 2007 09:37:59 AM -0400 Dana Canfield
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In the past week or so, we've had trouble with spam being delivered to
the wrong recipients. It's difficult to explain, so I'll use an example:
Does anyone
From Dana Canfield on Wednesday, May 23, 2007 9:38 AM
[EMAIL PROTECTED] and [EMAIL PROTECTED] are local users
receiving hundreds of spam per hour. None of it is addressed
to them. Their email addresses don't appear anywhere in the
message source. The messages in hackxx's account
Ah yes, I don't know why the whole bcc: notion didn't occur to me. Too
many long days this week, I guess. Thanks to all those who replied!
DC
Paul Engle wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
- --On Wednesday, May 23, 2007 09:37:59 AM -0400 Dana Canfield
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Recipient addresses don't have to appear anywhere in the message.
And in spam the To: header is often garbage. Ignore that.
Look at the system log records written by your MTA (Postfix?) to
see who the recipients were.
Joseph Brennan
Lead Email Systems Engineer
Columbia University Information
David S. Madole wrote:
If you are talking about the suggestion I made, which looked like this:
iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 22 \
-m state --state NEW \
-m recent --update --seconds 60 -j DROP
iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 22 \
-m state --state NEW \