On Wed, 12 Oct 2011 04:00:21 -0500
Duane Hill <duih...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Wed, 12 Oct 2011 13:05:51 +0530
> "J. Bakshi" <joyd...@infoservices.in> wrote:
> 
> > On Tue, 11 Oct 2011 20:40:03 +0200
> > Jeroen Geilman <jer...@adaptr.nl> wrote:
> > 
> > > On 2011-10-11 09:52, Tõnu Samuel wrote:
> > > > On Tue, 2011-10-11 at 13:14 +0530, J. Bakshi wrote:
> > > >> Hello Kirill,
> > > >>
> > > >> I need incoming mail rejected for nore...@mail.com as well as a
> > > >> notification send to the user about the mail rejection.
> > > > Backscatter robot. You send mail to foo...@example.com.
> > > > example.com rejects your mail with "Over quota" or "on vacation".
> > > > You receive this message and send "we said NO REPLY!".
> > > > Example.com sends "over quota" again....
> > > 
> > > Nonsense. You REJECT the message and the remote server will (if 
> > > configured properly) not attempt further delivery.
> > > 
> > > A no-reply address is very common; this is why your earlier comment 
> > > about this needing to be read doesn't make much sense.
> > > The RFC lists clearly which addresses should go to a mailbox read 
> > > periodically by a human being; "noreply" is not one of them.
> > > 
> > > Of course, proper list or mass-mailing management consists of
> > > sending null senders in the first place, and/or utilizing VERP in
> > > outgoing email.
> > > 
> > > In the OP's case, it is trivially solved with a
> > > check_recipient_access map consisting of nothing but
> > > 
> > >      nore...@example.com     REJECT We said no!
> > > 
> > > At no point does the postfix system send a MESSAGE in response to 
> > > delivery attempts to this address - instead, it will reject the
> > > recipient.
> > > 
> > 
> > Thanks, Exactly what I am searching for.
> > 
> > So I have modified my main.cf as
> > 
> > ` ` ` `
> > smtpd_recipient_restrictions =
> >   permit_mynetworks,
> >   permit_sasl_authenticated,
> >   check_recipient_access hash:/etc/postfix/restrictioinincoming,
> >   reject_unauth_destination
> > 
> > ` ` ` ` `
> > 
> > and the /etc/postfix/restrictioinincoming has
> > 
> > ` ` ` ` 
> > nore...@mail.com   REJECT We said noreply!
> > ` ` ` `
> > 
> > then 
> > 
> > # postmap /etc/postfix/restrictioinincoming
> > # /etc/init.d/postfix restart
> > 
> > But still I can send mail at nore...@mail.com
> > 
> > Have I missed anything ?
> 
> Where was the message sent from? If the host you sent from is within
> mynetworks or authenticated, the message would have gone through.


Uh, ok... I have tested from a different domain and it is working perfectly 
fine.
So, how can I then also restrict mynetworks or authenticated for that particular
account ?

TIA

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