I'm not sure... as long as you whitelisted the IP address that's shown in the 
spamdyke log messages, that should do it.  Make sure the whitelist file is 
actually enabled in your spamdyke configuration file, of course.

The correct solution is to fix the sending server so the sender address comes 
from a valid domain, but I assume there's a reason why it isn't set up that way.

-- Sam Clippinger




On Jan 2, 2013, at 6:13 PM, Bruce Schreiber wrote:

> Sam,
> 
> We have a customer that runs a private mail server for his business that 
> wishes to send email to his Qmail hosted account.  The mail is blocked 
> with DENIED_SENDER_NO_MX.  I tried whitelisting the ip and no joy.  We 
> are now adding an MX record with a valid ip pointing at a server that 
> does not support mail.  Will that work?  Why did the whitelist fail?
> 
> Bruce
> -- 
> Bruce B Schreiber
> CTO, MaxMD
> 2200 Fletcher Ave, 5th Floor
> Fort Lee, NJ 07024
> 201 963 0005 office
> 917 532 4995 cell
> [email protected]
> www.max.md
> www.mdEmail.md
> _______________________________________________
> spamdyke-users mailing list
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> http://www.spamdyke.org/mailman/listinfo/spamdyke-users

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