* Jack Fredrikson :
>
>
> From: Robert Schetterer
> To: postfix-users@postfix.org
> Sent: Saturday, October 22, 2011 4:32 PM
> Subject: Re: Postfix, Sasl & Pam
>
> First up, my bad. The conf file is:
> /etc/postfix/sasl/smtp.conf
And that is wrong too. I suggest
On Saturday 22 October 2011 18:56:18 Jack Fredrikson wrote:
> From: /dev/rob0
> > http://wiki2.dovecot.org/HowTo/PostfixAndDovecotSASL
> > (or, as it says, wiki1 for Dovecot 1.x)
> > http://www.postfix.org/SASL_README.html#server_dovecot
>
> Do I really want to create a chroot jail? That's what t
On Sat, 22 Oct 2011 13:11:36 -0700 (PDT), Jack Fredrikson wrote:
/etc/postfix/sasl/sasl.conf file, since it's not referenced in
main.cf. Please advise.
postconf -d vs postconf -n ?
From: /dev/rob0
To: postfix-users@postfix.org
Sent: Saturday, October 22, 2011 6:57 PM
Subject: Re: Postfix, Sasl & Pam
> http://wiki2.dovecot.org/HowTo/PostfixAndDovecotSASL
> (or, as it says, wiki1 for Dovecot 1.x)
> http://www.postfix.org/SASL_README.html#server_dovecot
Do I really want to c
On Saturday 22 October 2011 15:44:50 Patrick Ben Koetter wrote:
> * Jack Fredrikson :
> > Hi;
> > I get this error:
> > dovecot: pop3-login: Disconnected (no auth attempts): rip
> > In googling this, it indicated that the problem might be in
> > postfix. So I poked around and became puzzled as to h
On 22/10/11 22:36, Jack Fredrikson wrote:
Add the postfix user to the sasl group (this makes sure that Postfix has
the permission to access saslauthd):
[root@example jack]# ls -al /usr/sbin/saslauthd
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 83848 Mar 17 2010 /usr/sbin/saslauthd
[root@example jack]# ls -al /et
From: Robert Schetterer
To: postfix-users@postfix.org
Sent: Saturday, October 22, 2011 4:32 PM
Subject: Re: Postfix, Sasl & Pam
First up, my bad. The conf file is:
/etc/postfix/sasl/smtp.conf
> is this debian/ubuntu ?
No. CentOS
> this is sometimes little prob
* Dilip Mishra // Viva :
> There are some destinations, which have undefined rate limits. I know that
> postfix marks the destinations as dead after a particular number of
> failures. My question is how is this value defined, and when does it retry a
> dead destination?
maximal_backoff_time = 4000
Am 22.10.2011 22:44, schrieb Patrick Ben Koetter:
> * Jack Fredrikson :
>> Hi;
>> I get this error:
>> dovecot: pop3-login: Disconnected (no auth attempts): rip
>> In googling this, it indicated that the problem might be in postfix. So I
>> poked around and became puzzled as to how postfix discover
* Jack Fredrikson :
> Hi;
> I get this error:
> dovecot: pop3-login: Disconnected (no auth attempts): rip
> In googling this, it indicated that the problem might be in postfix. So I
> poked around and became puzzled as to how postfix discovers my
> /etc/postfix/sasl/sasl.conf file, since it's not r
Am 22.10.2011 22:11, schrieb Jack Fredrikson:
> Hi;
> I get this error:
> dovecot: pop3-login: Disconnected (no auth attempts): rip
> In googling this, it indicated that the problem might be in postfix. So
> I poked around and became puzzled as to how postfix discovers my
> /etc/postfix/sasl/sasl.c
Hi;
I get this error:
dovecot: pop3-login: Disconnected (no auth attempts): rip
In googling this, it indicated that the problem might be in postfix. So I poked
around and became puzzled as to how postfix discovers my
/etc/postfix/sasl/sasl.conf file, since it's not referenced in main.cf. Please
From: Reindl Harald
To: postfix-users@postfix.org
Sent: Saturday, October 22, 2011 6:06 AM
Subject: Re: First Insallation, Bouncing Emails
I am still getting the following errors:
Oct 22 07:26:28 13gems dovecot: pop3-login: Disconnected (tried to use disabled
p
Wietse Venema:
> Dilip Mishra // Viva:
> > There are some destinations, which have undefined rate limits. I know that
> > postfix marks the destinations as dead after a particular number of
> > failures. My question is how is this value defined, and when does it retry a
> > dead destination?
>
> h
Dilip Mishra // Viva:
> There are some destinations, which have undefined rate limits. I know that
> postfix marks the destinations as dead after a particular number of
> failures. My question is how is this value defined, and when does it retry a
> dead destination?
http://www.postfix.org/TUNING_
There are some destinations, which have undefined rate limits. I know that
postfix marks the destinations as dead after a particular number of
failures. My question is how is this value defined, and when does it retry a
dead destination?
Also, does connection caching come to picture, if destinatio
Am 22.10.2011 11:50, schrieb Bastian Blank:
> On Fri, Oct 21, 2011 at 04:39:28PM +0200, Reindl Harald wrote:
>> i bet this is a debian system and your postfix is chrooted
>> "-" and "y" in this column is yes - change it to n and if i am
>> right complain debian why these dumb maintainers do not s
On Fri, Oct 21, 2011 at 05:16:04PM -0400, beno - wrote:
> Oct 21 08:20:44 example postfix/smtpd[23702]: connect from
> host.peakskillmediacenters.com[50.7.6.219]
> Oct 21 08:20:45 example postfix/smtpd[23702]: NOQUEUE: reject: RCPT from
> host.peakskillmediacenters.com[50.7.6.219]: 554 5.7.1 <
> dd
On Fri, Oct 21, 2011 at 04:39:28PM +0200, Reindl Harald wrote:
> i bet this is a debian system and your postfix is chrooted
> "-" and "y" in this column is yes - change it to n and if i am
> right complain debian why these dumb maintainers do not stop
> their chroot-default which leads to trouble m
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