Padmanabh Padaki wrote:
I have set up two relay servers - relay1 and relay2
Relay1 or relay2 accepts the mail from clients and delivers it to the outside
world..
What I actually want to do is this.
From client1 > relay1 -->relay2 ---> outside
world.
To make
thanks I can telnet in now I don't full understand the strace but I
showed me it was a network issue
Wietse Venema wrote:
gishaust:
[ Charset ISO-8859-1 unsupported, converting... ]
hi everyone,
I have been trying to telnet from my linux laptop using the following
command
telnet 192.***
I'm attempting to implement domainkeys using Jason Long's
dkfilter. (If I'd been more knowledgeable, I'd have done
DKIM instead, but I think my current problem may be unrelated
to domainkeys versus DKIM.)
I've been trying to follow these tutorials:
http://www.howtoforge.com/postfix_dkfilter_doma
Padmanabh Padaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
> Any assistance is greatly appreciated.
>
> I will be more than happy to send the main.cf file from both the
> servers or any info experts on this list want.
Refer to the instructions given to you when you joined this list. Or
read the DEBU
Noel Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
> Practice:
>
> Actual implementation will depend on your size and business model.
> Here (private network with ~1000 users), we tag+pass spam up to some
> SA score, higher scoring spam is discarded. Viruses are always
> discarded. Discarded mail
I have set up two relay servers - relay1 and relay2
Relay1 or relay2 accepts the mail from clients and delivers it to the outside
world..
What I actually want to do is this.
>From client1 > relay1 -->relay2 ---> outside
>world.
To make this work, I added rela
gishaust:
[ Charset ISO-8859-1 unsupported, converting... ]
> hi everyone,
>
> I have been trying to telnet from my linux laptop using the following
> command
>
> telnet 192.***.***.*** 25
>
> and the host keeps shutting me down I know it is something to postfix
> but I don't
> know why? but i
hi everyone,
I have been trying to telnet from my linux laptop using the following
command
telnet 192.***.***.*** 25
and the host keeps shutting me down I know it is something to postfix
but I don't
know why? but if I telnet into port 143 or 22 I can get into to the
server. I thought I mig
This problem also happens with CISCO routers (ie. not only PIX firewalls).
We had a similar problem with a CISCO 837 ADSL Router here. The firewall
checks "normal" behaviour for SMTP traffic & seems to interfere with ESMTP &
hence TLS etc.
Procedure to resolve it on the router is the same comma
I'm currently running a mail server, for my own use, on a VPS (Postfix
+Dovecot+Procmail on Gentoo). I've been toying with the idea of
moving back to a shared host though, mostly because I'm not sure what
level of skill is necessary to really run my own internet facing
server, and if I have
2008/9/12 Алексей Доморадов <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> Finally it's working!.
>> You where right. There was something interfering.
>> Turns out that our cisco firewall had some smtp fix-up feature
>> enabled. After disabling it i could telnet smtp from the outside as i
>> did from the inside.
>
> cisc
Ian R. Justman wrote:
Hi, all.
I was curious what best practices are nowadays for those who use
post-queue filtering if they elect not to keep
spam/virused/bad-attachment-laden messages, something which I found
myself having to do owing to my previous message (there's no way to
selectively
David Ballano wrote:
2008/9/12 Brian Evans - Postfix List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
[snip]
Do *not* list a domain in virtual_(mailbox|alias)_domains AND mydestination.
Doing so will cause issues and postfix will complain and possibly hand
off to the wrong delivery agent.
I put mydomain variable ins
Hi, all.
I was curious what best practices are nowadays for those who use
post-queue filtering if they elect not to keep
spam/virused/bad-attachment-laden messages, something which I found
myself having to do owing to my previous message (there's no way to
selectively disable pre-queueing on
2008/9/12 Brian Evans - Postfix List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> David Ballano wrote:
>> Hello people,
>>
>> I'm new Here, and I have a lot of questions for you, thanks in advance :)
>>
>>
>> I'm configuring a postfix 2.3 server in a debian etch, I'ts my first
>> time so I would like to do a simple con
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
Hi all
I can't reset his sals password.
What we want is let him send to our domain (he is phisicaly out of the
office), and let him to send outside (but all mails coming from this
person and goes to a diferent domain get defer)
So the user thinks he still can send ou
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello all.
I have got a situation where a user is autenticated against SASL to
let him send mails.
Now we want that this user is able to send only mails to our domain
and don't let him to send an email to a diferent doamin than ours.
is it posible ?
yes. As already
[EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb:
Hello all.
I have got a situation where a user is autenticated against SASL to
let him send mails.
Now we want that this user is able to send only mails to our domain
and don't let him to send an email to a diferent doamin than ours.
is it posible ?
thanks.
simple
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hello all.
>
> I have got a situation where a user is autenticated against SASL to
> let him send mails.
>
> Now we want that this user is able to send only mails to our domain
> and don't let him to send an email to a diferent doamin than ours.
>
> is it posible ?
>
> th
* [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Hello all.
>
> I have got a situation where a user is autenticated against SASL to
> let him send mails.
>
> Now we want that this user is able to send only mails to our domain
> and don't let him to send an email to a diferent doamin than ours.
>
> is
Hello all.
I have got a situation where a user is autenticated against SASL to
let him send mails.
Now we want that this user is able to send only mails to our domain
and don't let him to send an email to a diferent doamin than ours.
is it posible ?
thanks.
Bayer, Marko wrote:
Hello list,
our mail gateways seem to support DSN although the used version of postfix should
actually not support DSN (RFC3184). And so we don't want to send DSN
An external recipient received a DSN from our internal MS Exchange 2003 server.
and this has something to d
Hello list,
our mail gateways seem to support DSN although the used version of postfix
should
actually not support DSN (RFC3184). And so we don't want to send DSN
An external recipient received a DSN from our internal MS Exchange 2003 server.
First some information on our postfix mailsystem
o
David Ballano wrote:
> Hello people,
>
> I'm new Here, and I have a lot of questions for you, thanks in advance :)
>
>
> I'm configuring a postfix 2.3 server in a debian etch, I'ts my first
> time so I would like to do a simple configuration.
>
> I've been reading de documentation of postfix.org,
On Fri, Sep 12, 2008 at 7:59 AM, David Ballano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello people,
>
> I'm new Here, and I have a lot of questions for you, thanks in advance :)
>
>
> I'm configuring a postfix 2.3 server in a debian etch, I'ts my first
> time so I would like to do a simple configuration.
F
> Hello people,
>
> I'm new Here, and I have a lot of questions for you, thanks in advance :)
>
>
> I'm configuring a postfix 2.3 server in a debian etch, I'ts my first
> time so I would like to do a simple configuration.
>
> I've been reading de documentation of postfix.org, believe me.
>
>
Ian Masters:
> Hello,
>
> I've set up a local mail server with Postfix 2.3.3 and Dovecot 1.0.7 on
> CentOS 5.2.
>
> This is the first time I've used Postfix.
>
> I can send and receive local mail which, for the moment, is fine.
>
> When I tried to send a mail to an external mail address, the de
Hello people,
I'm new Here, and I have a lot of questions for you, thanks in advance :)
I'm configuring a postfix 2.3 server in a debian etch, I'ts my first
time so I would like to do a simple configuration.
I've been reading de documentation of postfix.org, believe me.
That is what I've don
Ian Masters skrev:
> Hello,
>
> I've set up a local mail server with Postfix 2.3.3 and Dovecot 1.0.7 on
> CentOS 5.2.
>
> This is the first time I've used Postfix.
>
> I can send and receive local mail which, for the moment, is fine.
>
> When I tried to send a mail to an external mail address,
Cc: Ian Masters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
- Original Message =0A> From: Ian Masters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>=0A> To:=
> Sent: Friday, September 12, 2008 5:14:36 AM=0A> Subject: Non-deliverable=
> Hello,
>
> I've set up a local mail server with Postfix 2.3.3 and Dovecot 1.0.7 on
> CentOS 5.2.
>
> This is the first time I've used Postfix.
>
> I can send and receive local mail which, for the moment, is fine.
>
> When I tried to send a mail to an external mail address, the delivery
> fail
Hello,
I've set up a local mail server with Postfix 2.3.3 and Dovecot 1.0.7 on
CentOS 5.2.
This is the first time I've used Postfix.
I can send and receive local mail which, for the moment, is fine.
When I tried to send a mail to an external mail address, the delivery
failed, but I did not get
.
Andrea Gozzi wrote:
On Thu, 2008-09-11 at 09:00 +0200, Andrea Gozzi wrote:
The REDIRECT check can easily be bypassed by changing the MAIL FROM: ,
so I configured the webmail to allow mail originating from the real
address only.
Unfortunately, someone might still try to connect directly to postfi
> Finally it's working!.
> You where right. There was something interfering.
> Turns out that our cisco firewall had some smtp fix-up feature
> enabled. After disabling it i could telnet smtp from the outside as i
> did from the inside.
cisco pix?
FYI
Question Background:
I have a Cisco PIX firew
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