On 13 February 2014 21:23, James Small jim.sm...@mail.com wrote:
Interested in what you’re using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using Postfix on Ubuntu, for mailing lists
B) Using Google Apps for Education for MX/SMTP
--
Dick Visser
System Networking Engineer
TERENA Secretariat
On Wed, Feb 19, 2014 at 10:54:14AM +0100, Gert Doering wrote:
Blocking by /64 by default is likely to get collateral damage. Enough
people do shared subnets with multiple customers in the same /64 - while
I won't recommend it, it is *done*, and blocking the whole /64 because
you have seen
On Feb 19, Daniel Roesen d...@cluenet.de wrote:
This is btw standard setup in the DOCSIS world. All CPEs get a single IP
out of a shared /64. In case the CPE is not a customer PC but a router
(most customers have that), of course DHCPv6-PD is used to issue
prefixes. Nevertheless, there is a
Hi Gert,
On Wed, 2014-02-19 at 10:54 +0100, Gert Doering wrote:
Hi,
On Wed, Feb 19, 2014 at 02:45:33PM +1000, Noel Butler wrote:
We block only by IP from whatever spam source is used (4, or 6), and
rbldnsd handles ipv6 nicely (albeit in /64's - fair enough too, since
most end users get
Hi Doug,
At 17:52 18-02-2014, Doug Barton wrote:
My point is that all the hooha about We can't do mail over IPv6
because we can't do IP address reputation seems to be nonsense.
There are plenty of ways to do spam filtering that don't involve
keeping a log of every single IP address that sends
On 02/18/2014 07:55 PM, SM wrote:
Hi Doug,
At 17:52 18-02-2014, Doug Barton wrote:
My point is that all the hooha about We can't do mail over IPv6
because we can't do IP address reputation seems to be nonsense. There
are plenty of ways to do spam filtering that don't involve keeping a
log of
Thus wrote emilio brambilla (emi...@ngi.it):
PS it's very odd to see so much sendmail on this list, where I would
bet to see something more cutting-edge even on the software side!
for infrastructure, you run bleeding edge for two reasons:
a) you have no choice, it's the only thing that will
On 17/02/2014 15:16, Ignatios Souvatzis wrote:
Not necessarily. All I'd imagine to do with UUCP can be done with
postfix and maybe transport tables; I've run a connection that way
for a couple of years.
This is rapidly turning into a contest of who's admitting to the greatest
MTA horrors.
On Mon, Feb 17, 2014 at 03:37:28PM +, Nick Hilliard wrote:
On 17/02/2014 15:16, Ignatios Souvatzis wrote:
Not necessarily. All I'd imagine to do with
I should maybe have added: e-mail over
UUCP can be done with
postfix and maybe transport tables; I've run a connection that way
for a
A) Using Postfix from Ubuntu.
Cheers,
Raoul
--
DI (FH) Raoul Bhatia M.Sc. | E-Mail. ra...@bhatia.at
Software Development and | Web. http://raoul.bhatia.at/
System Administration | Tel. +43 699 10132530
On 13-2-2014 21:23, James Small wrote:
Interested in what you’re using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using (product) from __ (vendor)
B) Using (service provider or “cloud solution”)
C) Elected not to implement SMTP over IPv6 at this time because
On 13 Feb 2014, at 20:23, James Small jim.sm...@mail.com
mailto:jim.sm...@mail.com wrote:
Interested in what you’re using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using (product) from __ (vendor)
B) Using (service provider or “cloud solution”)
C) Elected not to implement
A) postfix on Solaris
In the user environment we introduced later Exchange 2010 (on Windows, what
a surprise ;-).
But we have v4 hubs in between as neither our great IPv6 supporting firewall
with content AV scanning nor commercial AV/SPAM filtering appliances / SW
products (at least not the ones
Key 70EF9882: DEC2 C685 1ED4 C95A 145F 4300 6F64 7B00 70EF 9882
On Thu, 13 Feb 2014, James Small wrote:
Interested in what you?re using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using (product) from __ (vendor)
We are using postfix/exim from various Linux/*BSD distribution.
James Small jim.sm...@mail.com writes:
Interested in what you’re using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using (product) from __ (vendor)
postfix on Debian
Jens
--
| Foelderichstr. 40 | 13595
Le 13 févr. 2014 à 21:23, James Small a écrit :
Interested in what you’re using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using (product) from __ (vendor)
B) Using (service provider or “cloud solution”)
C) Elected not to implement SMTP over IPv6 at this time because
On Thu, Feb 13, 2014 at 03:23:21PM -0500, James Small wrote:
Interested in what you're using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using Postfix
rgds,
Sascha Luck
Interested in what you're using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using sendmail (product) from FreeBSD (vendor)
best regards,
Andreas
--
Telefónica Germany GmbH Co. OHG
Andreas Schwarz, NT NO BOTA BOIPFA
Überseering 33a, D-22297 Hamburg
fon: +49-40-23726-3892, fax:
A) Using Postfix (product) from Wietse (vendor)
B) Using AS57771 and AS12414 (service provider or “cloud solution”)
C) Elected not to implement SMTP over IPv6 at this time because N.A. Fully IPv6
capable (reason)
Sander
Hoi,
And for completeness ...
2014-02-13 12:31 GMT-08:00 Pim van Pelt p...@ipng.nl:
2014-02-13 12:23 GMT-08:00 James Small jim.sm...@mail.com:
Interested in what you're using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
Hard to answer your question. You are not giving a lot of context for
your inquiry,
On 13/02/2014 20:23, James Small wrote:
Interested in what you’re using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
Using Sendmail from FreeBSD.
Thanks,
Daniel.
C) Because our current vendor does not support it and anti-spam is seen as
mandatory within the business.
/JF
Postfix + Spamassassin
Postfix 2.9.5 on FreeBSD
best
Enno
On Thu, Feb 13, 2014 at 03:23:21PM -0500, James Small wrote:
Interested in what you're using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using (product) from __ (vendor)
B) Using (service provider or cloud solution)
C) Elected not
On 13. feb. 2014 21:23, James Small wrote:
Interested in what you’re using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using (product) from __ (vendor)
B) Using (service provider or “cloud solution”)
C) Elected not to implement SMTP over IPv6 at this time because
On 2014-02-13 at 15:23 -0500, James Small wrote:
Interested in what you're using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using (product) from __ (vendor)
Exim, from The Exim Maintainers; I'm one, and the mail between exim.org
and my own mail box routinely goes over IPv6.
To send,
Interested in what you’re using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using Postfix + OpenBSD
Солдатов Валерий, ЗАО Бэст Телеком.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
James Small said the following on 13/02/2014 21:23:
A) Using Postfix from CentOS
Ciao,
luigi
- --
/
+--[Luigi Rosa]--
\
Space travel is utter bilge.
--Richard Van Der Riet Woolley, 1956
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG
On Thu, Feb 13, 2014 at 03:23:21PM -0500, James Small wrote:
Interested in what you're using to send/receive SMTP over IPv6:
A) Using (product) from __ (vendor)
three systems where I'm (partially) responsible
1. A) Using postfix from NetBSD
2. partially A) (clients to
29 matches
Mail list logo