On 14 Jul 2017, at 09:41, Dominic Raferd wrote:
> Me:
>> Automated? Or is that something you do manually?
>
> Yes I have it automated
Oh, we'll that would be nifty to see what you've done if it's not too much
trouble.
--
Apple broke AppleScripting signatures in Mail.app, so no random signatur
> "WV" == Wietse Venema writes:
WV> This is how three years ago I solved IPv6 problems for all domains
WV> that have Google as an MX host.
Also works perfectly here.
Thanks!
-JimC
--
James Cloos OpenPGP: 0x997A9F17ED7DAEA6
On Fri, Jul 14, 2017 at 14:32 Miles Fidelman
wrote:
> I've had very good luck with Sympa
>
...
There's also groupserver, which does a good job of combining lists with
web-based forum-style access - and is particularly good if your users are
going to be setting up and managing their own lists.
Th
On Fri, Jul 14, 2017 at 14:01 Geert Stappers wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 14, 2017 at 02:41:07PM +, Tom Browder wrote:
> > I need an mailing list manager (MLM) and plan to eventually use GNU
> Mailman
> 3 (MM3). Until its installation process is easier, I would like to use an
> > interim MLM that i
I've had very good luck with Sympa - which is about the only industrial
strength open source list manager. It was developed, and is maintained
by a consortium of French universities, and aimed at large installations
(e.g., universities). It's probably overkill for small lists, and small
numbe
On Fri, Jul 14, 2017 at 02:41:07PM +, Tom Browder wrote:
> I need an mailing list manager (MLM) and plan to eventually use GNU Mailman
> 3 (MM3). Until its installation process is easier, I would like to use an
> interim MLM that is easiest to install. Ideally I would be able to import
> mail
On 14 July 2017 at 16:21, @lbutlr wrote:
> On 13 Jul 2017, at 15:05, Dominic Raferd wrote:
> > On 13 July 2017 at 21:06, @lbutlr wrote:
> >
> > I forward mail to a gmail user, but there are a lot of bounces from
> gmail. I don't honestly care about the ones that google says are spam, but
> rece
> On Jul 14, 2017, at 11:29 AM, @lbutlr wrote:
>
> Does it occur to you that there might possibly be a reason the default is
> 18000 and that reducing it by a couple of orders of magnitude is not
> something you should just do without knowing the ramifications?
>
> Do you even know what the s
On 14 Jul 2017, at 06:40, Tom Hudson wrote:
> Just to let you know, the problem appears to have been caused by the
> "daemon_timeout" being set far too low during our initial configuration. I
> know the default in postfix is 18000s but ours had been set to 60s!
> Increasing this to 600s appears to
> On Jul 14, 2017, at 4:16 AM, hyndavirap...@bel.co.in wrote:
>
> In cleanup process, i'm able to parse all the custom headers. but in qmgr
> process i'm not able to do that.
The queue manager is not the place for complex message content processing.
Your best bet is to write a milter or SMTP pro
On 13 Jul 2017, at 15:05, Dominic Raferd wrote:
> On 13 July 2017 at 21:06, @lbutlr wrote:
>
> I forward mail to a gmail user, but there are a lot of bounces from gmail. I
> don't honestly care about the ones that google says are spam, but recently
> I'm also getting DMARC failures on Facebook
I need an mailing list manager (MLM) and plan to eventually use GNU Mailman
3 (MM3). Until its installation process is easier, I would like to use an
interim MLM that is easiest to install. Ideally I would be able to import
mail from the interim MLM into MM3.
Note: I have installed MM2 in the pa
> On Jul 14, 2017, at 8:40 AM, Tom Hudson wrote:
>
> Thank you for all of your help so far with this issue.
>
> Just to let you know, the problem appears to have been caused by the
> "daemon_timeout" being set far too low during our initial configuration. I
> know the default in postfix is 1800
On 2017-07-14 13:46:15 (+0530), hyndavirap...@bel.co.in
wrote:
i have installed postfix 2.10 from source code.
That's getting a little long in the tooth.
we are sending mail to postfix server with custom headers. Based on
those headers, some actions need to be taken at mail server. For tha
Hi,
Thank you for all of your help so far with this issue.
Just to let you know, the problem appears to have been caused by the
"daemon_timeout" being set far too low during our initial configuration. I
know the default in postfix is 18000s but ours had been set to 60s!
Increasing this to 600s ap
On 14/07/17 10:28, Abi Askushi wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I was wondering what choices are there to block forged sender email
> addresses.
>
> I was thinking SPF could assist.
> The other option I saw is reject_sender_login_mismatch in postfix. *
> *
> Do you have any other suggestion?
>
> Many thanx
>
Abi Askushi skrev den 2017-07-14 11:28:
Do you have any other suggestion?
i do it with reject_sender_access from virtual alias maps after
permit_sasl_authenticated
real users can still use there sender alias without any issue, but no
forged is now possible
tested it with postfixadmin as
Hi all,
I was wondering what choices are there to block forged sender email
addresses.
I was thinking SPF could assist.
The other option I saw is reject_sender_login_mismatch in postfix.
Do you have any other suggestion?
Many thanx
Abi
Hi,
i have installed postfix 2.10 from source code. we are sending mail to
postfix server with custom headers. Based on those headers, some actions
need to be taken at mail server. For that purpose i'm customizing postfix
source code.
In cleanup process, i'm able to parse all the custom headers
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