On 29 Dec 2017, at 02:18, Matus UHLAR - fantomas wrote:
ssl usually means port 465 with implicit SSL, while 587 requires explicit
ssl (aka starttls).
On 29.12.17 07:43, @lbutlr wrote:
As I understand it port 465 was deprecated 20 years ago.
It holds on in some servers because old versions (l
> On Dec 29, 2017, at 9:43 AM, @lbutlr wrote:
>
> As I understand it port 465 was deprecated 20 years ago.
Strangely enough, it may get a second life:
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-uta-email-deep-12#section-3
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-uta-email-deep-12#section-3.3
On 29 Dec 2017, at 02:18, Matus UHLAR - fantomas wrote:
> ssl usually means port 465 with implicit SSL, while 587 requires explicit
> ssl (aka starttls).
As I understand it port 465 was deprecated 20 years ago.
It holds on in some servers because old versions (like pre 2010) of Microsoft
softwa
>> so, it connects on port 25...?
>
> apparently - did you look to master.cf if there's "-o syslog_name" option
> in the submission service?
Matus,
thanks for your help
no, no syslog:
# grep syslog master.cf
#
BUT, I got the user to EDIT her existing account and, alter server host
names from o
On 29.12.17 20:47, Voytek wrote:
On Fri, December 29, 2017 8:18 pm, Matus UHLAR - fantomas wrote:
ssl usually means port 465 with implicit SSL, while 587 requires explicit
ssl (aka starttls).
with Outlook 2010, it has: none/tls/ssl/auto
so it's the same as 2007. TLS means starttls and runt
On Fri, December 29, 2017 8:18 pm, Matus UHLAR - fantomas wrote:
> ssl usually means port 465 with implicit SSL, while 587 requires explicit
> ssl (aka starttls).
with Outlook 2010, it has: none/tls/ssl/auto
so, I've tried tls as well as ssl, just in case
> However, with default postfix/master
On 29.12.17 15:32, Voytek wrote:
smtpd_recipient_restrictions = reject_unknown_sender_domain,
reject_unknown_recipient_domain, reject_non_fqdn_sender,
reject_non_fqdn_recipient, reject_unlisted_recipient, permit_mynetworks,
check_sasl_access hash:/etc/postfix/sasl_access permit_sasl_authenticated
this might be off topic, I'm not sure if I have an issue with Postfix
setup - or just end user email client setup:
I have old postfix 2.1 server, migrating to new 3.x, copied over 2.1
/etc/postfix, all seemed OK till now trying to setup an Outlook 2010
client
as I don't have Outlook 2010 to hand,