> Am 2013-04-19 12:28, schrieb nullnullachtfuenfz...@arcor.de:
> > The problem arises with mail originating from senders in
> > @B2.example.com to recipients in @A1.example.com.
> > Because the destination server in A also does a
> > smtpd_sender_restrictions=reject_unknown_sender_domain and
> > @B
Am 2013-04-19 12:28, schrieb nullnullachtfuenfz...@arcor.de:
The problem arises with mail originating from senders in
@B2.example.com to recipients in @A1.example.com.
Because the destination server in A also does a
smtpd_sender_restrictions=reject_unknown_sender_domain and
@B2.example.com is unk
> Your description is too sketchy. Please choose appropriate domain
> names under example.com, example.net, example.org, ... (if the real
> domain names are sensitive) that make it clear what sender and
> recipient addresses look like in each direction.
>
> You should be able to the right thing w
On Thu, Apr 18, 2013 at 10:32:25AM +0200, nullnullachtfuenfz...@arcor.de wrote:
> > What problem are you trying to solve (what is your actual end-goal)?
>
> The Postfix server has a multi instance setup.
>
> One instance receives only mail from senders in network A for
> recipients in network B a
- Original Nachricht
Von: Viktor Dukhovni
An: postfix-users@postfix.org
Datum: 17.04.2013 17:40
Betreff: Re: Routing Control of locally generated bounces in Postfix
> On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 12:11:52PM +0200, nullnullachtfuenfz...@arcor.de
> wrote:
>
> > my
On Wed, Apr 17, 2013 at 12:11:52PM +0200, nullnullachtfuenfz...@arcor.de wrote:
> my Question is: Is it possible to implement routing control of
> locally generated bounces in Postfix - WITHOUT impact to remotely
> generated bounces?
> And in case it is: How can this be accomplished?
What problem