don't have anything else configured for sending mail
from this server.
If anyone can enlighten me as to what I am missing, I would really
appreciate it.
Thank you,
Paul
On 2021-10-20 23:24, Simon Harrison wrote:
On Wed, 20 Oct 2021 20:19:22 -0700
p...@mostlybsd.com wrote:
listen on lo0 filter "dkimsign_rsa"
I'm no expert on opensmtpd, but I have this in my conf:
listen on localhost filter "dkimsign"
Might be worth trying.
I looked at this, too. The
ater), I'm not clear on the
difference between requiring auth for the other servers or just having
the relay there available to send through and restrict access with pf
rules.
Though I am happy to hear input on this. Finding answers to these types
of questions on the 'Net has not yielded much for me.
Thank you,
Paul
On 2021-10-21 01:33, Martijn van Duren wrote:
A quick test shows that 'listen on socket' does the trick for me.
Could you show how you actually submit the mail to smtpd? Do you use
the
sendmail command, or are you using something else?
martijn@
Thank you, Martjin, that was all I really
, but I just
wanted to see if I could find some answers to these questions so I could
have a better understanding of my configurations.
Thank you!
Paul
ck of understanding of smtpd.conf,
because it seems like the signature is being added before the alias is
expanded (if that is correct term). In going through smtpd.conf(5), I
can't
figure out how to correct this.
Thank you very much.
Paul
On 2021-10-27 10:04, p...@mostlybsd.com wrote:
I have the following rules in /etc/mail/smtpd.conf
(non-applicable configurations redacted for brevity):
table aliases file:/etc/mail/aliases
filter "dkimsign_local_rsa" proc-exec "filter-dkimsign -z \
-d hostname.example.com -s 10172021 \
-k
that if a
subdomain is used in the email address and dkimsign is not configured
for the subdomain, then it will sign with the closest match, such as the
domain.
Thank you,
Paul
or makemap, but issuing these commands
doesn’t seem to change anything.
I’m sure there is more info I need to provide. I’m sorry, I can’t think what.
As you can see, I’m stumbling round in the dark a bit here.
Thanks,
Paul
ror reason=SSL
certificate check failed
Is the new version more restrictive that the old? Is there anything I'm missing
to achieve this functionality? Or is there a better way than what I'm attemptin?
Thanks for any help with this.
Paul
urious as to why this may have
happened ’though, if anybody cares to comment.
Thanks,
Paul.
> On 19/11/2023, at 2:20 PM, paul wrote:
>
> Hi list,
>
> Some time ago I set up opensmtpd on a debian device to forward emails to a
> remote mailserver for delivery. It's been working
relay backup rochefort.paulfariello.fr
accept from trusted-sources for any relay
--
Paul Fariello
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Is there a straightforward way to have OpenSMTPD query DNSBL service(s)
to reject messages from known servers?
Paul
Signing your messages with DKIM and supporting SPF should increase your
chances of avoiding the Google sin bin.
-Original Message-
From: Steve Conrad
To: misc@opensmtpd.org
Subject: OTish: Google calls me spam
Date: Mon, 15 Feb 2016 18:49:05 -0800
Has anyone else
"local_redirect" relay host smtp+notls://127.0.0.1:25
action "outbound" relay
match from socket action "local_redirect"
match for local action "local_mail"
match from any for any action "outbound"
The vio1 interface is on the private network and access is controlled
through PF.
Thank you!
Paul
y
match from socket action "local_redirect"
match for local action "local_mail"
match from any for any action "outbound"
Note that this server is a private network mail relay and vio1 is the
private interface with access controlled using PF.
I speculate others wil
the form of daily (or more frequent) Mail
Receiver-originated feedback reports that contain aggregate data on
message streams relevant to the Domain Owner. This information includes
data about messages that passed DMARC authentication as well as those
that did not.
Paul
[1] https://datatracker.
On 11/15/21 6:47 AM, Simon Harrison wrote:
https://unixsheikh.com/tutorials/arch-linux-mail-server-tutorial-part-2-opensmtpd-dovecot-dkimproxy-and-lets-encrypt.html
This one is some pre-6.4 version, so the smtpd.conf won't work.
Paul
On 2022-01-26 19:24, Ryan Kavanagh wrote:
On Wed, Jan 26, 2022 at 12:48:26PM -0800, Paul Pace wrote:
I'm trying to figure by going backwards where in the
Ubuntu/Debian/cron chain of packaging, configuring, compiling, or
coding this format actually comes from but I have a feeling this ends
up
On 2021-11-24 04:01, Martijn van Duren wrote:
On Tue, 2021-11-23 at 08:47 -0800, Paul Pace wrote:
Hello!
I have an Ubuntu 18.04 server running Postfix 3.3 that relays through
a
local OpenSMTPD mail relay on OpenBSD 7.0. Messages sent from system
messages and directly from mail command
rom, but I have a feeling this ends up being a long
goose chase.
Thank you,
Paul
[1] https://serverfault.com/q/1090902/153188
ed25519 }
So I went through and removed all quotation marks in my smtpd.conf and
the only ones that seem to be needed are the ones around pki related
locations.
Thank you,
Paul
Thank you,
Paul
On 2023-12-06 19:47, Paul Pace wrote:
Is there a way to limit messages sent per unit time?
Maybe it's just not possible in OpenSMTPD?
My use case is I have a small cluster of servers that use a single
server as an SMTP relay. One of the servers hosts stuffs that have a
somewhat higher
to the mail relay server IP address reputation.
On Sat, Dec 09, 2023 at 07:09:16AM -0800, Paul Pace wrote:
On 2023-12-06 19:47, Paul Pace wrote:
Is there a way to limit messages sent per unit time?
Maybe it's just not possible in OpenSMTPD?
My use case is I have a small cluster of servers that use
Is there a way to limit messages sent per unit time?
Thank you,
Paul
Web: https://www.blunix.com
Thank you,
Paul
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