kernel.2k5 wrote:
Hi i tested as per yours instructions and found that as shown below :

400000004665b87e1cf0b2f4 CHKUSER accepted sender: from <[EMAIL PROTECTED]::> remote <www.myqmaildomain.com:unknown:127.0.0.1> rcpt <> : sender accepted @400000004665b87e2532cde4 CHKUSER relaying rcpt: from <[EMAIL PROTECTED]::> remote <www.myqmaildomain.com:unknown:127.0.0.1> rcpt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : client allowed to relay @400000004665b87e35c2eaa4 CHKUSER relaying rcpt: from <[EMAIL PROTECTED]::> remote <www.24x7cnssupport.com:unknown:127.0.0.1> rcpt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : client allowed to relay
@400000004665b87e3b8743f4 tcpserver: end 14586 status 0
@400000004665b87e3b875b64 tcpserver: status: 0/100


Then i go to yahoo and gmail acount .

In gmail i found the message in SPAM folder ????Why its like this????

yahoo no sign of receiving neither Spam nor Bulk ????why ??????

Apart ., what i seen above is
"<www.myqmaildomain.com:unknown:127.0.0.1> rcpt <> : sender accepted"
Don't worry about the "unknown" part. That's just the remote computer, since you're not doing DNS checks when contacting them. Finding your messages in the Spam folder is not uncommon, especially with a new mail server. If you move it to your regular inbox and report it as NOT SPAM, in the future it should not be put in the spam box. As far as the other providers.... I know AOL is especially strict with reverse DNS checks - if you don't have a reverse DNS entry, they bounce your message. They may do it silently now. In Yahoo, give it a few hours to make it's way into a folder, or for you to get a bounce message from them explaining why the message bounced. Once you work through a few of these headaches with the Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail, Earthlink, etc., providers you usually won't have to again.

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