On Aug 29, 2011, at 8:43 AM, Leo M. wrote:
Nope, the log shows a -I guess- normal session :
Sent mail to leo.m...@gmail.com (4245ms)
Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2011 14:39:43 +0200
From: leo.m...@gmail.com
To: leo.m...@gmail.com
Message-ID: <4e5b888f9c7e6_6a0482ece0c864...@e4r.local.mail>
Subject: Iscrizione completa!
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Redirected to http://0.0.0.0:3000/users/46
Completed 302 Found in 4711ms
The really weird thing is that I tried to send an email to a fake
address, and then, in that case I receive an email from Email Delivery
Subsystem, with the normal notice about an inexistent domain, so it
means that ActionMailer actually works, but for some reason I'm not
able
to receive the email I send to myself.
I can't see any evident clue in here, let me know if you see one :
Delivery to the following recipient failed permanently:
sdpaoks...@gmailasd.ca
Technical details of permanent failure:
DNS Error: Domain name not found
----- Original message -----
Received: by 10.227.38.22 with SMTP id z22mr2606056wbd.
7.1314614527794;
Mon, 29 Aug 2011 03:42:07 -0700 (PDT)
Return-Path: <leo.m...@gmail.com>
Received: from gmail.com (93-45-120-143.ip102.fastwebnet.it
[93.45.120.143])
by mx.google.com with ESMTPS id
fd4sm3622444wbb.30.2011.08.29.03.42.05
(version=TLSv1/SSLv3 cipher=OTHER);
Mon, 29 Aug 2011 03:42:06 -0700 (PDT)
Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2011 12:45:06 +0200
From: leo.m...@gmail.com
To: sdpaoks...@gmailasd.ca
Message-ID: <4e5b6db295886_6a0482f4651464...@e4r.local.mail>
Subject: Iscrizione completa!
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Is this mail being sent/received on a DSL/Cable modem? Your ISP may be
filtering mail sent directly by your computer as an anti-spam measure.
Since you entered an intentionally garbled address as a testing
measure, then your localhost might not have been able to forward it to
the next hop, and the error message may have come from whatever you
use for sendmail on your local computer.
In the case of a well-formed message, your machine may have sent it on
to the next mailserver in the chain, which would be your ISP, and they
looked at it, decided you were not a real server, and dropped it on
the floor without comment.
Now if you're sending from a real server with an MX record and
everything, then I have no idea.
Walter
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