ram: > > On Tue, 2008-11-25 at 09:21 -0500, Wietse Venema wrote: > > > ram: > > > Our clients set up their mail forwarding to blackberry servers > > > The blackberry server is doing a ratelimit and mails get held up on our > > > servers > > > > > > I can easily configure multiple IP addresses on the machine. Can I > > > configure postfix to send using different bind addresses > > > > > > I know I can change the smtp_bind_address parameter through a script but > > > that seems stupid having to restart postfix everytime > > > > > > Also we can never evenly spread out the mails thru different IPS > > > > There is an example in QSHAPE_README that implements delays with > > a non-responding destination plus smtp_fallback_relay. This might > > do the job for Postfix < 2.5. > > > > Postfix 2.5 has outbound rate limits per destination. > > > > http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#default_destination_rate_delay > > > > You would use something like > > > > /etc/postfix/main.cf: > > smtp_destination_rate_delay=60 > > > > Or some other delay. This delay is enforced by the queue manager. > > > Delay is not an option for me , because customers dont want their > blackberry mails delayed :-(
Unfortunately, you can't have instantaneous delivery to example.com when the receiver enforces rate limits. Of course my 60 second example is just an example. You can reduce it to a number that is more appropriate. If you really believe that spreading out your source IP addresses is a solution, consider implementing it with network address translation. On the MTA host, map the client IP address+port to an address-range and port-range. Even if the NAT software uses sequential assignment (which is a bad idea afer this year's DNS debacle) it would spread your apparent source IP address over a range. If you want to choose the transport name based on the content or envelope attributes, use an access map or header/body_checks map and FILTER actions. /pattern1/ FILTER smtp1: /pattern2/ FILTER smtp2: .. Of course this delivers all mail via SMTP even if it should be delivered locally. Wietse