Hmm, I noticed the same message in my amavis.log recently. However it
showed up only when spoofed mails were using a domain, that I am secondary
MX for. Maybe misconfigured sendmail? Made no diference to the way the
mails were handled. Spam stayed Spam.
Thanks for any insights.
.peter
On Th
Hello again,
has anybody any ideas to my problem?
See below.
regards Ralf
Clifton Royston schrieb:
> On Thu, Sep 17, 2009 at 01:27:07PM +0200, Ralf Heidenreich wrote:
>> Hello Clifton,
>>
>> thank you very much for your answer.
>> Is there another way to set the originating flag, for mails that
On Wed, Sep 16, 2009 at 09:19:24AM +0200, Ralf Heidenreich wrote:
> Hello Mark,
>
> the mailclients are connecting through the internet to my smtp on
> server-ip1 and server-ip2.
Ralf, a quick note: the IPs you list to authorize via my_networks need
to be the ones that your clients will connect
Hello Mark,
the mailclients are connecting through the internet to my smtp on
server-ip1 and server-ip2.
The following rule is in my main.cf:
smtpd_recipient_restrictions = permit_mynetworks,
reject_non_fqdn_recipient,
reject_non_
Ralf,
> logwatch reports me a lot of lines like this:
> Open relay? Nonlocal recips but, not originating.
> I have found a howto to avoid this.
> I have added the following lines to amavis.conf:
> -
> @mynetworks = qw( 127.0.0.0/8 [::1] [FE80::]/10 [FEC0::]/10 Server-IP1
> Server
Hello,
logwatch reports me a lot of lines like this:
Open relay? Nonlocal recips but, not originating.
I have found a howto to avoid this.
I have added the following lines to amavis.conf:
-
@mynetworks = qw( 127.0.0.0/8 [::1] [FE80::]/10 [FEC0::]/10 Server-IP1
Server-IP2 );
$pol