On Wed, Feb 08, 2012 at 01:06:44AM -0500, N. Yaakov Ziskind wrote:
> DN Singh wrote (on Wed, Feb 08, 2012 at 10:50:50AM +0530):
> > The setting can be changed in the parameter
> > "smtpd_sender_restrictions" reject_unknown_sender_domain,
> > if it is necessary.
>
> That would let in *all* mail fr
Am 08.02.2012 07:06, schrieb N. Yaakov Ziskind:
> DN Singh wrote (on Wed, Feb 08, 2012 at 10:50:50AM +0530):
>> The setting can be changed in the parameter "smtpd_sender_restrictions"
>> reject_unknown_sender_domain, if it is necessary.
>
> That would let in *all* mail from nonexistent domains,
DN Singh wrote (on Wed, Feb 08, 2012 at 10:50:50AM +0530):
> The setting can be changed in the parameter "smtpd_sender_restrictions"
> reject_unknown_sender_domain, if it is necessary.
That would let in *all* mail from nonexistent domains, which I was
hoping to avoid.
> Postfix looks up the the d
The setting can be changed in the parameter "smtpd_sender_restrictions"
reject_unknown_sender_domain, if it is necessary.
Postfix looks up the the domain, and if it does not find any info, it
rejects the mail.
Anyways, the domain in the mail is indeed non-existent.
On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 9:45 AM,
A particular mailer, slightly broken, cannot send mail to a postfix
(2.7.0) box:
Feb 5 08:51:16 pizza postfix/smtpd[30453]: NOQUEUE: reject: RCPT from
chocolate .egps.com[38.119.130.7]: 450 4.1.8
: Sender address rejected: i
Domain not found; from=
to= proto=ESMTP helo=
Where the sample@domain