Dear Tobias,

"Postfix rejects mail with "reject_unknown_client", even when a ptr record 
exist, but forward and reverse lookup are not identical.
In our logs we see this misconfiguration happen very often. When I activate 
blocking these clients, the reject rate nearly doubles."

While not having a ptr in DNS is just a bad behavior, there is no requirement 
at all forward and reverse lookup to be identical. You
will generate a lot of false positives (e.g. blocked mails from the correct 
senders) and your service quality for the customers will
go down.

Beyond that, there is no requirement that the originating IP address (nor the 
associated domain name) has to match with the MX
address to receive mails for these domains. Any many SOHO organizations are 
forced to send their SMTP traffic over the ISP SMTP
server, highly probably not related to their small corporate infrastructure at 
all.

Reserving a dedicated IP address for each domain handled is simply a waste of 
IP addresses for the community.

There are smarter ideas around then black and white approaches, such as SPF, 
but this is not the golden egg either.

-Kurt. 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Xaver Aerni
Sent: Saturday, March 19, 2005 11:53 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: AW: [swinog] Rejecting unknown/misconfigured mailclients

<snip>

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