Try seeing if you can use nslookup to find a currently blacklisted
address. At this very moment, 64.12.184.133 is in the spamcop bl.
Try doing
nslookup 133.184.12.64.bl.spamcop.net
and see if that returns an address.
Austin Weidner wrote:
Hmm, sounds like your resolv.conf is pointing to a nameserver that doesn't
allow recursion, and only answers queries about comcast.net addresses.
Either that or you are using comcast's nameservers, and they've decided to
block access to RBLs by their users. I'm a comcast subscriber at home, and
I would not be surprised if they did something so stupid in an attempt to
try to reduce load on their DNS servers.
Ignore the Comcast thing, that was a pure coincidence. My ISP is Comcast,
but that didn't have anything to do with the NS lookup that spamassassin
did. I think when it runs that test it does a random main domain or ISP
(I've seen sourceforge.net, linux.org, etc). Look I did it again:
-----------------
debug: is Net::DNS::Resolver available? yes
debug: Net::DNS version: 0.48
debug: trying (3) msn.com...
debug: looking up NS for 'msn.com'
debug: NS lookup of msn.com succeeded => Dns available (set dns_available to
hardcode)
debug: is DNS available? 1
-----------------
My /etc/resolv.conf file is pointing to my server providers nameservers.
These work find, because:
-----------------
[EMAIL PROTECTED] tmp]# nslookup msn.com
Server: xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx <-- my isp namesever
Address: xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx #53
Non-authoritative answer:
Name: msn.com
Address: 207.68.172.246
[EMAIL PROTECTED] tmp]#
-----------------
So this has really got me stumped. I am still getting:
debug: Running tests for priority: 500
debug: RBL: success for 0 of 12 queries
and then it fails all the tests. I don't think my Net::DNS is working
properly. I think it uses that when it does the RBL queries.
Any other tips?
Thanks, very frustrated here!!!