Simon Morvan put forth on 10/31/2009 12:30 PM:
> And why shouldn't be able to use my own mail server behind my private
> residential ADSL line ?
You should be able to. Here's how to implement the outbound mail
portion to prevent mass rejections:
http://www.hardwarefreak.com/postfix-adsl-relay-c
On Sat, 31 Oct 2009, Alex wrote:
> smtpd_recipient_restrictions =
> reject_invalid_hostname,
> reject_non_fqdn_hostname,
> reject_non_fqdn_sender,
> reject_non_fqdn_recipient,
> reject_unknown_sender_domain,
> reject_unknown_recipient_domain,
>
mouss put forth on 10/31/2009 11:06 AM:
mouss, you rock.
> you can use a script if you prefer. the advantage of 'make' is that it
> only re-generates files when needed (source change).
The only likely changes would be adding another country. In this case,
would I just add the file name to the "
Noel Jones put forth on 10/31/2009 1:12 AM:
> Each lookup table requires overhead. 30 separate tables requires
> considerably more overhead than one table. The size of the dataset
> doesn't change, it's the overhead that gets smaller. The more
> concurrent smtpd processes running, the more it m
Hi all,
Hopefully I don't have the most frequently asked question, but I'm
spinning my wheels and perhaps followed some bad advice. I hoped
someone could look over my recipient restrictions to see if I'm making
some kind of mistake:
smtpd_recipient_restrictions =
reject_invalid_hostname,
On 2009-10-31 Noel Jones wrote:
> On 10/31/2009 10:36 AM, Ansgar Wiechers wrote:
>> There's also nothing wrong with a setup like this:
>>
>> 192.0.2.1 PTR uranus.example.com.
>> 192.0.2.1 PTR www.example.com.
>> 192.0.2.1 PTR ftp.example.com.
>> 192.0.2.1
Mikael Bak a écrit :
Larry Stone wrote:
On Fri, 30 Oct 2009, Mikael Bak wrote:
Simon Morvan wrote:
The last time I tried it, Zen included too many legitimate users behind
ADSL lines. The "Policy" behind PBL is a bit too restrictive. Maybe it
changed, I'll give it another try.
Stan Hoeppner a écrit :
> [snip]
>
> Thanks for the hints Noel. I may need them down the road, although not
> at the moment. Though I am curious and may play around with Makefile
> just to learn something.
>
you can use a script if you prefer. the advantage of 'make' is that it
only re-generat
On 10/31/2009 10:36 AM, Ansgar Wiechers wrote:
There's also nothing wrong with a setup like this:
192.0.2.1 PTR uranus.example.com.
192.0.2.1 PTR www.example.com.
192.0.2.1 PTR ftp.example.com.
192.0.2.1 PTR blog.example.com.
192.0.2.1 PT
On 2009-10-31 mouss wrote:
> Ansgar Wiechers a écrit :
>> On 2009-10-29 Phillip Smith wrote:
>>> Then a) it doesn't resolve perfectly -- it should resolve both ways.
>>> And b) any given IP address should only have *one* corresponding PTR
>>> record, not multiple PTR's. For one, it causes problems
Ansgar Wiechers a écrit :
> On 2009-10-29 Phillip Smith wrote:
Tell the admin of the remote domain to fix their PTR records and/or
MX helo configuration because in the meantime, you're going to have
to implement a dirty hack to make their server work.
>>> But the PTR needs no "fix".
Δημήτριος Καραπιπέρης a écrit :
> Hi there,
>
> I am running Postfix 2.6.5 with Amavisd-new 2.6.4
>
> I have a global content_filter statement and I override it on all
> mynetworks providing through amavisd-new
> dkim signing capability.
>
> Is there any way to do something similar with the sasl
Hi there,
I am running Postfix 2.6.5 with Amavisd-new 2.6.4
I have a global content_filter statement and I override it on all
mynetworks providing through amavisd-new
dkim signing capability.
Is there any way to do something similar with the sasl_authenticated users;
Thanks in advance
Dimit
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