> you are receiving a message and you start callback to the mx if he passes
> the rcpt test, but - the mx starts callback to you if you pass...
[...]
Actually that's not the case. The callback is done with MAIL FROM:<>
Blu.
> you are receiving a message and you start callback to the mx if he passes
> the rcpt test, but - the mx starts callback to you if you pass...
[...]
Actually that's not the case. The callback is done with MAIL FROM:<>
Blu.
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with a subj
r?
I do that. A call forward to the next server in the chain to verify the
recipient before accepting the mail from the sender. I use Exim though.
It even caches the recipient verification results to avoid unnecesary
traffic. I don't know if it is that easy with postfix, but surely it is
doable.
Blu.
r?
I do that. A call forward to the next server in the chain to verify the
recipient before accepting the mail from the sender. I use Exim though.
It even caches the recipient verification results to avoid unnecesary
traffic. I don't know if it is that easy with postfix, but surely it is
doable.
Blu.
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On Wed, Jun 23, 2004 at 09:01:24PM +1000, Russell Coker wrote:
> On Wed, 23 Jun 2004 18:23, Blu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Well yes. Maybe I oversimplified. What I do is a callback to the MX of
> > the envelope sender to see if it accepts mail to him/her. If not, the
>
On Wed, Jun 23, 2004 at 09:01:24PM +1000, Russell Coker wrote:
> On Wed, 23 Jun 2004 18:23, Blu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Well yes. Maybe I oversimplified. What I do is a callback to the MX of
> > the envelope sender to see if it accepts mail to him/her. If not, the
>
On Wed, Jun 23, 2004 at 10:26:49AM +0200, Adrian 'Dagurashibanipal' von Bidder
wrote:
> On Wednesday 23 June 2004 09.51, Blu wrote:
>
> > I run a number of public service servers and in the past, from the
> > perspective of an user of a server which blocks mail f
hats another
> story...
Well yes. Maybe I oversimplified. What I do is a callback to the MX of
the envelope sender to see if it accepts mail to him/her. If not, the
mail is rejected with an explicative 550.
Blu.
On Wed, Jun 23, 2004 at 08:32:17AM +0200, Adrian 'Dagurashibanipal' von Bidder
wrote:
> On Wednesday 23 June 2004 03.27, Blu wrote:
> > > > In my server, my policy is to reject mail from hosts which are
> > > > blocking me.
>
> > [...] blocking mai
On Wed, Jun 23, 2004 at 10:26:49AM +0200, Adrian 'Dagurashibanipal' von Bidder wrote:
> On Wednesday 23 June 2004 09.51, Blu wrote:
>
> > I run a number of public service servers and in the past, from the
> > perspective of an user of a server which blocks mail from mi
hats another
> story...
Well yes. Maybe I oversimplified. What I do is a callback to the MX of
the envelope sender to see if it accepts mail to him/her. If not, the
mail is rejected with an explicative 550.
Blu.
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On Wed, Jun 23, 2004 at 08:32:17AM +0200, Adrian 'Dagurashibanipal' von Bidder wrote:
> On Wednesday 23 June 2004 03.27, Blu wrote:
> > > > In my server, my policy is to reject mail from hosts which are
> > > > blocking me.
>
> > [...] blocking mai
o so.
Thanks for the compliment. In fact, blocking mail which cannot be
answered blocks a lot of forged sender spam too, something like 80%
here, being conservative.
Blu.
s a bounce with a 550 explaining that
their ISP is blocking legitimate email from us. A lot of customers are
not even aware of the fact that their ISP is blocking legitimate email
at their backs. I have been able to white list my server in a number
servers without moving a finger, just angry users calling customer
service.
Blu.
o so.
Thanks for the compliment. In fact, blocking mail which cannot be
answered blocks a lot of forged sender spam too, something like 80%
here, being conservative.
Blu.
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s a bounce with a 550 explaining that
their ISP is blocking legitimate email from us. A lot of customers are
not even aware of the fact that their ISP is blocking legitimate email
at their backs. I have been able to white list my server in a number
servers without moving a finger, just angry user
>
> no, postfix beats it.
>
> qmail WAS the fastest several years ago. then postfix arrived.
I use qmail, and the other big problem with it is, AFAIK, that it
accepts a message before checking if it has to be bounced. With forged
return email addresses one get a lot of bounced bounces. Very annoying.
Blu.
>
> no, postfix beats it.
>
> qmail WAS the fastest several years ago. then postfix arrived.
I use qmail, and the other big problem with it is, AFAIK, that it
accepts a message before checking if it has to be bounced. With forged
return email addresses one get a lot of bounced bounces. Very
side, it could be a hardware problem too, memory being the
principal suspect.
Blu.
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20 is blocked, the
server times out trying to connect.
With passive mode turned off, it is your ftp client which actively tries
to establish a data connection, maybe through another port.
Take a look at your firewall settings in case it is you who is blocking
port 20, if not, it is your ISP.
Blu.
20 is blocked, the
server times out trying to connect.
With passive mode turned off, it is your ftp client which actively tries
to establish a data connection, maybe through another port.
Take a look at your firewall settings in case it is you who is blocking
port 20, if not, it is your IS
ation files,
otherwise ipmasq will wipe them every time the connection is restarted.
A big plus is that ipmasq sanitizes the firewall with default
security rules, such as filtering packets comming through an external
interface with an "internal" source address, and things like that.
Blu.
ation files,
otherwise ipmasq will wipe them every time the connection is restarted.
A big plus is that ipmasq sanitizes the firewall with default
security rules, such as filtering packets comming through an external
interface with an "internal" source address, and things like that.
Blu.
On Tue, Jul 09, 2002 at 11:58:24AM +0800, Dan Jacobson wrote:
>
> My downloads are too fast, hogging the whole modem line. Is there any
> way to slow them down so I can read web pages at the same time?
You should read the Linux Advanced Routing & Traffic Control HOWTO at
http://la
p://lartc.org/
Blu.
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ow very well how to do it,
> thank you very much. I'd never, ever choose an ISP who considers their
> customers guilty by default.
I cannot agree more. It exists some kind of worldwide spam
psicosis and a tendency to cure the headache with the decapitation method.
Blu.
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