Thank you. I've re-considered, and decided to go back to one instance. I'll
just find a "generic" domain name that will be used for all of my
applications. 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Shiloh Jennings
Sent: Monday, September 13, 2004 12:18 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [xmail] Re: Problem with multiple instances

I see what you are trying to do.  However, I think you will run into = more
trouble if you could actually do that.  XMail needs to call itself the =
name the server's IP will reverse dns lookup to.  That is the important
check done by those somewhat outdated spam filtering dns checks.  I have
never thought those dns checks worked effectively for filtering spam, but I
= know that some ISPs still try to do filtering using dns checks.  The old =
school dns checks tried to prevent email address spoofing, but largely
failed = to do that.  SPF is a solution that actually accomplishes what that
old school = dns check filters tried to do.  As a function of time, ISPs
will drop many = of the outdated dns checks in favor of newer tech like SPF.

The bottom line is that since many ISPs host several domains on a server =
and often a single IP address, you cannot be strict about the email =
address's domain name vs the hostname of the server.  All the dns check can
really = do is check to see that the server's hostname matches the hostname
shown on = a reverse dns lookup of the server's IP address.  For example, an
email = server may say it is mail.domain.com.  Assuming the server's IP was
1.2.3.4, = then
1.2.3.4 would need to have reverse dns resolving to mail.domain.com in =
order to be legit.  The email address should be a nonissue as long as the =
server's hostname matches its IP's reverse dns lookup.  If an additional dns
= check does force the server hostname (as given by the email server
software) = to match the domain name part of the email address, then there
will be = sizeable false positives resulting in countless dropped (but
legitimate) emails, because that would basically be mutually exclusive with
the first dns = check if the ISP hosted more than one domain per server.
Anyway, the way = XMail handles this is fine as long as ISPs are not being
stupid about their = dns checks on inbound email.  When an ISP does setup
something stupid that = ends up blocking email from big hosters, the ISP's
customers let them know = about it pretty quickly.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] =
On Behalf Of Michael Lugassy
Sent: Sunday, September 12, 2004 2:21 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [xmail] Re: Problem with multiple instances

Davide hi,

> Why this? I mean, what the end users really see is the From: header 
> and not the remote MTA from where the message came from (well, =
excluding
> Received: headers).

Spam filters sometimes compare the FROM: address to the actual mail = server
(using reverse DNS and other checks), Moreover, assuming I have 2 competing
clients on a single server, this = might look weird to users who do look at
the full headers.

Am I the only one who require such a feature?

Thanks Davide,

Michael.



- Davide

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