Thanks to all of you for your detailed explanations, this was indeed
very helpful. :)
Have a happy new year guys.
Thank you.
Dennis
Am 29.12.2015 um 03:01 schrieb Bill Cole:
On 28 Dec 2015, at 19:15, Dennis Steinkamp wrote:
Hey there,
i read many times that 'myhostname' in the postfix conf
On 28 Dec 2015, at 19:15, Dennis Steinkamp wrote:
Hey there,
i read many times that 'myhostname' in the postfix configuration
should be the same as the ptr and some say even the same as the mx
record.
So i played around with it a little bit and figured, that even though
i ve set the 'myhostn
If I recall correctly, a lot of MTAs check to see that the PTR of your mail
server machine matches the FQDN of your mail server. If they don’t, the
connection would be terminated unless some sort of exception is entered in the
remote server’s configuration files. I worked for a company that di
On 29/12/15 13:15, Dennis Steinkamp wrote:
> i read many times that 'myhostname' in the postfix configuration should
> be the same as the ptr
Yes.
> and some say even the same as the mx record.
No, the MX of your domains is irrelevant to the ptr of your server. The
MX is only ever used for othe
Hey there,
i read many times that 'myhostname' in the postfix configuration should
be the same as the ptr and some say even the same as the mx record.
So i played around with it a little bit and figured, that even though i
ve set the 'myhostname' to mail.greatserver.com, whereas the hostname of
Gomes, Rich:
> Thanks to everyone for the informed and speedy replies!
> They definitely put me in the right direction.
>
> This worked perfectly:
>
> mynetworks = hash:/etc/postfix/access
Just be aware that this form only matches complete IP addresses.
The form "mynetworks = /file/name" suppor
Thanks to everyone for the informed and speedy replies!
They definitely put me in the right direction.
This worked perfectly:
mynetworks = hash:/etc/postfix/access
-Original Message-
From: owner-postfix-us...@postfix.org [mailto:owner-postfix-us...@postfix.org]
On Behalf Of Noel Jones
You could use smtpd_client_restrictions = check_client_access
cidr:/etc/postfix/access , and then use DUNNO
For each allowed IP/subnet (note the "cidr" db type)
This will pass on the restriction to next stack.
Then you finalize with 0.0.0.0/0 REJECT
I would suggest putting check_client_access in r
Gomes, Rich:
> Good day,
>
> I am making the switch from running Sendmail as an internal relay to using
> Postfix.
> With Sendmail, I can restrict relaying by IP using the /etc/mail/access file.
>
> I cannot seem to find an equivalent of this in Postfix.
http://www.postfix.org/BASIC_CONFIGURATI
On 12/28/2015 3:08 PM, Gomes, Rich wrote:
> Good day,
>
> I am making the switch from running Sendmail as an internal relay to using
> Postfix.
> With Sendmail, I can restrict relaying by IP using the /etc/mail/access file.
>
> I cannot seem to find an equivalent of this in Postfix.
>
> I have
Good day,
I am making the switch from running Sendmail as an internal relay to using
Postfix.
With Sendmail, I can restrict relaying by IP using the /etc/mail/access file.
I cannot seem to find an equivalent of this in Postfix.
I have read about using
smtpd_client_restrictions = check_client_ac
Sorry for the late reply
Thanks for the info, I appreciate it !
Dave.
-Original Message-
From: owner-postfix-us...@postfix.org
[mailto:owner-postfix-us...@postfix.org] On Behalf Of Wietse Venema
Sent: Sunday, November 29, 2015 12:15 PM
To: Postfix users
Subject: Re: combined backup and p
Well...
I will try always_bcc...
Thanks for all answers...
And happy New Year for everybody.
2015-12-28 14:58 GMT-02:00 Mike Coddington :
>
> > On Dec 28, 2015, at 11:29 AM, Gilberto Nunes
> wrote:
> >
> > Hello List
> >
> > Is there some way to store sent mail in a folder, using procmail or
> On Dec 28, 2015, at 11:29 AM, Gilberto Nunes
> wrote:
>
> Hello List
>
> Is there some way to store sent mail in a folder, using procmail or whatever?
> I try search in google but found nothing…
I would think that this is generally a function of your mail client (MUA) as
opposed to Postfix
Am 28.12.2015 um 17:29 schrieb Gilberto Nunes:
> Hello List
>
> Is there some way to store sent mail in a folder, using procmail or
> whatever?
> I try search in google but found nothing...
>
>
> Thanks a lot for any kind of help.
>
> --
>
> Gilberto Ferreira
>
>
in the future there maybe
On 28 Dec 2015, at 09:29, Gilberto Nunes wrote:
> Is there some way to store sent mail in a folder, using procmail or whatever?
Proemial is an LDA, so not with proemial. However, Postfix has an always bcc
setting.
Always_bcc = back...@mydomain.tld
--
On 20-12-2013 Wes Groleau wrote:
>On 12-2
Hello List
Is there some way to store sent mail in a folder, using procmail or
whatever?
I try search in google but found nothing...
Thanks a lot for any kind of help.
--
Gilberto Ferreira
Hi,
On Mon, Dec 28, 2015 at 12:17 AM, Bill Cole
wrote:
> On 27 Dec 2015, at 22:48, Alex wrote:
>
>> Hopefully the smtpd_sender_restrictions I posted above is correct, but
>> I will also have to either add the IPs to mynetworks or duplicate the
>> check_sender_access map in smtpd_recipient_restric
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