On 15.11.21 14:32, Greg Earle wrote:
I installed postgrey on a mail server host running Fedora, but for
some reason Postfix doesn't seem to want to talk to it.
why did you configure postgrey?
It's largely obsoleted with postfix' much better postscreen functionality
- weighed block/allowlists,
Greg Earle:
> What is the use of these "smtp" entries in "master.cf"?
>
> [root@isolar postfix]# grep -n -w ^smtp master.cf
> 12:smtp inet n - n - - smtpd
Above is the Postfix SMTP service (listens on on TCP port 25).
Many parameter names start with smtpd_
> 6
On 15 Nov 2021, at 15:08, Wietse Venema wrote:
Greg Earle:
[root@isolar postfix]# grep postgrey master.cf
-o { smtpd_recipient_restrictions=
permit_mynetworks,permit_sasl_authenticated,check_policy_service
unix:postgrey/socket,reject_rhsbl_helo
dbl.spamhaus.org,reject_rhsbl_reverse_client
db
Greg Earle:
> [root@isolar postfix]# grep postgrey master.cf
>-o { smtpd_recipient_restrictions=
> permit_mynetworks,permit_sasl_authenticated,check_policy_service
> unix:postgrey/socket,reject_rhsbl_helo
> dbl.spamhaus.org,reject_rhsbl_reverse_client
> dbl.spamhaus.org,reject_rhsbl_sender
I installed postgrey on a mail server host running Fedora, but for some
reason Postfix doesn't seem to want to talk to it.
It's running and has the listening socket open:
[root@isolar postfix]# ps -eq $(pgrep postgrey)
PID TTY TIME CMD
2228175 ?00:00:00 postgrey --unix
[ro