Jordi Espasa Clofent a écrit :
That is easy.
Have your users connect to the submission port, and let everyone
else connnect to the smtp port. Then, specify =o
content_filter=whatever
for the smtp port and not for the submission port.
Yes Wietse, I've considered this simple and clean
For some months I've been noticing on multiple servers that mail from a cron
job defined in the root's crontab takes 24 hours to get to it's destination.
It finally bugged me enough to have me take a look for the reason. This is
what I found in the maillog for each day:
Nov 29 03:15:58 den1
Emmett Culley:
For some months I've been noticing on multiple servers that mail
from a cron job defined in the root's crontab takes 24 hours to
get to it's destination. It finally bugged me enough to have me
take a look for the reason. This is what I found in the maillog
for each day:
Hello all,
I do not know whether here is the right place to ask this question or not,
but I would like to know if it is a good idea to perform offline e-mail
virus scanning. By offline, I mean a scenario in which e-mail filtering
management tools (like amavisd-new) do not hand out received e-mails
Hi Ali,
The scenario you're describing is not a good idea because you don't know
when you're users are going to check they're mail accounts. If you want a
scalable email checking system and after queue for avoiding slow responses
from you're smtpd daemons try amavisd-new.
Bye!!
Hello all,
I
Egoitz,
Hi
Thanks for your mail. I have used amavisd-new but unfortunately it can not
handle e-mail scanning in offline mode.
Anyway, thanks a lot.
Kind Regards
Ali Majdzadeh Kohbanani
2009/11/30 ego...@ramattack.net
Hi Ali,
The scenario you're describing is not a good idea because you don't
Hi,
You shouldn't never try to use amavisd that way. Just configure it as
content filter option in main.cf or build recipient access maps invoking
it with filter action and just do after queue scans.
Bye!
Egoitz,
Hi
Thanks for your mail. I have used amavisd-new but unfortunately it can not