Jim,
I would suggest you put an IP number block into your router
to deny outgoing SMTP destined to the mailserver she is using.
But, frankly your really on legal thin ice here. I'm guessing
her manager asked you to do this rather than confronting her
directly. Probably because he's a bad ma
To debug this you need to kick up the logging on sendmail, add the loglevel
option to your sendmail options in rc.conf:
-O LogLevel=80
You will need a loglevel value fairly high, like 80. You can then watch or
just look at the sendmail log file:
/var/log/maillog
And see what is actually happ
On Thu, 16 Feb 2006 11:27:40 -0500
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >
> > > Jim Csoka wrote:
> > > > No...I ran make maps, as well as make install for the
> blacklist
> > feature,
> > > > and make restart.
> > > >
> > > > However, here is something interesting. When I access my
> > corporate
> > >
>
> > Jim Csoka wrote:
> > > No...I ran make maps, as well as make install for the
blacklist
> feature,
> > > and make restart.
> > >
> > > However, here is something interesting. When I access my
> corporate
> > > email via openwebmail, it functions as I would expectyou
> cannot send
> > >
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "James Csoka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Ken Stevenson"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc:
Sent: Thursday, February 16, 2006 10:55 AM
Subject: RE: Blocking an individual email address
>
> > Jim Csoka wro
> Jim Csoka wrote:
> > No...I ran make maps, as well as make install for the blacklist
feature,
> > and make restart.
> >
> > However, here is something interesting. When I access my
corporate
> > email via openwebmail, it functions as I would expectyou
cannot send
> > or receive to the given
- Original Message -
From: "Ken Stevenson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Jim Csoka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc:
Sent: Thursday, February 16, 2006 10:31 AM
Subject: Re: Blocking an individual email address
> Jim Csoka wrote:
> > No...I ran make maps,
Jim Csoka wrote:
No...I ran make maps, as well as make install for the blacklist feature,
and make restart.
However, here is something interesting. When I access my corporate
email via openwebmail, it functions as I would expectyou cannot send
or receive to the given address. However, w
Subject: Re: Blocking an individual email address
Lowell Gilbert wrote:
"James Csoka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
After reading the page you linked to, and looking at the examples, I
added
the line To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] REJECT (using my personal email), and it had
no
effect.
James Csoka wrote:
> After reading the page you linked to, and looking at the examples, I added
> the line To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] REJECT (using my personal email), and it had no
> effect. I can't find any good reason it didn't work, but it fails to
> prevent me from sending mail from inside my work
If you installed MailScanner from the ports, look to change:
/usr/local/etc/MailScanner/rules/spam.blacklist.rules
You can specify To, and From rules, there, maybe more. I am no expert.
Hope this helps,
-Derek
At 09:52 AM 2/15/2006, James Csoka wrote:
I am running a FreeBSD 5.4p10 mac
James Long wrote:
> > Date: Wed, 15 Feb 2006 10:52:26 -0500
> > From: "James Csoka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Subject: Blocking an individual email address
> > To:
> > Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
> >
> > I am running a FreeBSD 5.4p10 machine
> Date: Wed, 15 Feb 2006 10:52:26 -0500
> From: "James Csoka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Blocking an individual email address
> To:
> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>
> I am running a FreeBSD 5.4p10 machine at my office. It functions as o
Lowell Gilbert wrote:
"James Csoka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
After reading the page you linked to, and looking at the examples, I added
the line To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] REJECT (using my personal email), and it had no
effect. I can't find any good reason it didn't work, but it fails to
prevent
"James Csoka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> After reading the page you linked to, and looking at the examples, I added
> the line To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] REJECT (using my personal email), and it had no
> effect. I can't find any good reason it didn't work, but it fails to
> prevent me from sending m
In the last episode (Feb 15), James Csoka said:
> After reading the page you linked to, and looking at the examples, I
> added the line To:[EMAIL PROTECTED] REJECT (using my personal email),
> and it had no effect. I can't find any good reason it didn't work,
> but it fails to prevent me from send
me address.
any ideas?
- Original Message -
From: "Dan Nelson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "James Csoka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Freebsd - Questions"
Sent: Wednesday, February 15, 2006 11:12 AM
Subject: Re: Blocking an individual email addres
2006/2/15, Philip Hallstrom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> > I am running a FreeBSD 5.4p10 machine at my office. It functions as our
> > firewall and mailserver. I am running Mailscanner, which invokes
> > sendmail when necessary to process mail. Sendmail is not started by
> > defaultMailscanner i
I am running a FreeBSD 5.4p10 machine at my office. It functions as our
firewall and mailserver. I am running Mailscanner, which invokes
sendmail when necessary to process mail. Sendmail is not started by
defaultMailscanner invokes individual instances of it when it needs
to.
Here is m
On Wed, 2006-02-15 at 15:52, James Csoka wrote:
> I am running a FreeBSD 5.4p10 machine at my office. It functions as our
> firewall and mailserver. I am running Mailscanner, which invokes sendmail
> when necessary to process mail. Sendmail is not started by
> defaultMailscanner invokes i
In the last episode (Feb 15), James Csoka said:
> Okay...I think I answered part of my question. /etc/mail/access only
> governs mail relaying. Which would mean that of course, it wouldn't accept
> mail from that address, but would have no problem sending mail to it.
It covers local and outgoing
James Csoka wrote:
I am running a FreeBSD 5.4p10 machine at my office. It functions as our
firewall and mailserver. I am running Mailscanner, which invokes sendmail when
necessary to process mail. Sendmail is not started by defaultMailscanner
invokes individual instances of it when it n
Okay...I think I answered part of my question. /etc/mail/access only
governs mail relaying. Which would mean that of course, it wouldn't accept
mail from that address, but would have no problem sending mail to it.
Soany ideas on how I can simply block 1 particular email address,
without mark
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