Sure, sure. I realize Google is Google and Postfix is Postfix.

My purpose in mailing to this list is questioning whether there are
additional steps I need to take when configuring my postfix server so that
my mail won't be blacklisted.

I'm reading a little on reverse DNS right now and it doesn't look like I
have it set up, so perhaps that's the issue.

Just thought I'd check with the postfix wizards out there who have more
experience configuring postfix servers than I do ;-)

--
ryan



On Thu, Jul 23, 2009 at 3:47 PM, Seth Mattinen <se...@rollernet.us> wrote:

> Ryan O'Toole wrote:
> >
> > However, when I send an email to one of those addresses it never arrives
> > to my gmail, though I can see that postfix received and forwarded it.
> >
> > mail.log:
> > Jul 23 18:46:05 izardry postfix/smtp[2039]: 6BF6C3F800AD:
> > to=<roto...@gmail.com <mailto:roto...@gmail.com>>,
> > orig_to=<i...@we-fi.org <mailto:i...@we-fi.org>>,
> > relay=gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com
> > <http://gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com>[209.85.222.77]:25, delay=1.8, \
> > delays=0.28/0.01/0.06/1.5, dsn=2.0.0, status=sent (250 2.0.0 OK
> > 1248374765 9si4113071pzk.44)
> >
> > I thought gmail was blocking my server, so I wrote a little perl script
> > to send an email from the server shell itself. This email arrived
> > immediately, but was marked as spam.
> >
> > Does anyone have any insights on what is going wrong here?
> >
>
> Besides "Google sucks"? ;)
>
> If Google's MX says it was accepted and it proceeds to disappear into
> nowhere land, there's very little you can do.
>
> ~Seth
>

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