Rance Hall wrote:
> both greylisting, and rbl checking don't work since ALL message come from
> the ip of the relaying server.
>
>
This really isn't a problem. Simply stop using rblsmtpd, and instead
change the scores inside SpamAssassin assigned to those RBLs to huge
values like 500.
Then c
Hello list,
since the kavdaemon-project seems to be dead (last release in 2003)
and Kaspersky developed an own socket interface for KAV, I decided to
test this one with qmail-scanner.
aveclient communicates with aveserver through a socket, so the virus
databases has not to be loaded for every sin
Hello everyone:
I've got a unique situation that might be interesting discussion.
I'm about to implement a mail server at home and my isp blocks all port 25
traffic both in and out.
I plan on using smtproutes to deal with the "out" portion of the port 25
block.
but I'm working on how to deal
Perfect, that answers my question. Thanks Anthony
On Aug 16, 2006, at 11:49 AM, Anthony Baratta wrote:
> When a Binary file is sent via email it must be converted to ASCII.
> This is done via MIME encoding. The encoding has an overhead, and
> that is the difference in the file sizes you are
When a Binary file is sent via email it must be converted to ASCII. This is
done via MIME encoding. The encoding has an overhead, and that is the
difference in the file sizes you are seeing.
-Original message-
From: MT [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 16 Aug 2006 10:42:51 -0700
To: qmail-sca
This maybe an easy one for veteran email administrators. This isn't
an isolated incident, it happens with each email that has an
attachment. Say I send an email to myself with an mp3 attachment.
The log reports this:
Aug 16 11:22:22 mail.cmc.com qmail-scanner[10831]: Clear:RC:0
(10.5.4.46):SA:0(