Hello!
Thank you for your help. I've found out it's the reverse on my IP sending my e-mails
to my old and
non-existing IP. I am a bit curious about this however:
#
NS
FAIL
Lame nameservers
ERROR: You have one or more lame nameservers. These are nameservers that do NOT answer
authoritativ
Hi,
check if you have the following in your /usr/local/etc/postfix/main.cf
mydomain = your-domain-here.com
mydestination = $myhostname, localhost.$mydomain, $mydomain
myorigin = $mydomain
and you might wanna add your new IP to to mynetworks =
mynetworks = 213.187.181.68 217.13.29.51 192.168.187.0
On Fri, Mar 14, 2003 at 10:34:09AM +0100, Janine C.Buorditez wrote:
>
> Hello!
>
> I just recieved a new IP, and modified my system and domain registrar accordingly.
>
> Everything appears to be working OK, except for my mailserver (Postfix SMTP).
> I can send but no longer receive e-mails---and
Hi,
I don't know how much you know about DNS so if I aim too low then ignore me
otherwise read on for a full explanation. I strongly suspect you're
suffering from the fact that your old address is simply cached on various
resolvers around the internet and you've just got to wait until it times out
o: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [URGENT] Bad MX record; very bad.
Hello!
I just recieved a new IP, and modified my system and domain registrar
accordingly.
Everything appears to be working OK, except for my mailserver (Postfix
SMTP). I can send but no longer receive e-mails---and I have no idea
what
Hello!
I just recieved a new IP, and modified my system and domain registrar accordingly.
Everything appears to be working OK, except for my mailserver (Postfix SMTP).
I can send but no longer receive e-mails---and I have no idea what's wrong here.
>>