Graham Leggett wrote:
You would probably have received much more helpful answers if you had
asked about a soure ip address instead of the source port.
Looking back, I did ask about a source IP address...?
Have a look at the subject of this thread. Many readers of this list probably
deleted
Every time my central SAN's restarts, everyone that Leaves a message on the
server has to download all of their emails again. What makes the client
program want to download the message again?
Possible pop3 server problem.
--
Reinaldo de Carvalho
http://korreio.sf.net
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Reinaldo de Carvalho
Sent: Friday, August 08, 2008 4:46 AM
To: Tait Grove; Postfix users
Subject: Re: Redownload Messages
Every time my central SAN's restarts, everyone that Leaves a message on
the
server
Justin Piszcz wrote, at 08/08/2008 07:53 AM:
On the server w/ postfix:
$ host 38.119.56.160
160.56.119.38.in-addr.arpa domain name pointer
mta700.testemail.newegg.com.
160.56.119.38.in-addr.arpa domain name pointer mta700.email.newegg.com.
When it re-connected (after greylisting, then it
Hi,
I am currently working on a project to reroute email to a server based
on the user part of the recipient address.
Like so:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
everything else@mydomain.com - everything else@mydomain.com
(stays
Please keep responses on the list:
Justin Piszcz wrote, at 08/08/2008 10:27 AM:
On Fri, 8 Aug 2008, Jorey Bump wrote:
Justin Piszcz wrote, at 08/08/2008 07:53 AM:
Multiple PTR records tend to be returned in a round robin fashion:
$ host 38.119.56.160
160.56.119.38.in-addr.arpa domain name
On Fri, 8 Aug 2008, Jorey Bump wrote:
Please keep responses on the list:
Justin Piszcz wrote, at 08/08/2008 10:27 AM:
On Fri, 8 Aug 2008, Jorey Bump wrote:
Justin Piszcz wrote, at 08/08/2008 07:53 AM:
Multiple PTR records tend to be returned in a round robin fashion:
$ host
Hello,
My mail server is taking about 15 seconds to accept an email and place it in
queue.
I did a test via telnet and after I end data with CRLF.CRLF I get
the 250 Ok: queued message around 10 to 20 seconds afterwards.
The server is quite idle so I am not sure what is going on
This is the log
Hello,
My mail server is taking about 15 seconds to accept an email and place it in
queue.
Try adding this to main.cf
disable_dns_lookups = yes
This message contains confidential information and is intended only for the
individual addressee(s) named above. If you are not an intended
* Marcelo Iturbe [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hello,
My mail server is taking about 15 seconds to accept an email and place it in
queue.
I did a test via telnet and after I end data with CRLF.CRLF I get
the 250 Ok: queued message around 10 to 20 seconds afterwards.
* DNS issues?
* busy with I/O?
*
Marcelo Iturbe:
I did a test via telnet and after I end data with CRLF.CRLF I get
the 250 Ok: queued message around 10 to 20 seconds afterwards.
Since you gave zero configuration information, you can try for
the following yourself:
1) You have a broken before-queue content filter.
2) Your
Hi,
I know this is simple, but I never had to do it, so wanna check myself...
For outbound mail, do transport entries supersede the relayhost
parameter in main.cf?
The reason I ask is, currently, I relay all outbound mail through our
outsourced anti-spam service (smtp.example1.com).
We
On 8/8/2008, Noel Jones ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
It looks as if you already consulted the documentation and just want
to confirm your interpretation of it. That's good, but say so next
time or you'll just be pointed back to the docs.
Heh... yeah, should have said so... but thanks for
Hi folks:
This is my first post to this list and my spanish isn't very good, so I
hope to be lucky getting help.
I'm running Postfix and LDAP as a backend authentication for users
within OpenXchange Server 5.
I need to apply certain restrictions (i.e. bcc_maps, recipient_access,
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