WTF?
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: ('localhost', 10030)
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: (10030, 'localhost')
Dec 04 09:25:36 2012 qrunner(8680): reply: '220 mail01.foodmz.local ESMTP
Ecologic Institute ready\r\n'
Dec 04 09:25:36 2012 qrunner(8680): reply:
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: ('localhost', 10030)
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: (10030, 'localhost')
Dec 04 09:25:36 2012 qrunner(8680): reply: '220 mail01.foodmz.local
ESMTP Ecologic Institute ready\r\n'
It looks like localhost is being gray-listed, or
Karsten Becker writes:
WTF?
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: ('localhost', 10030)
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: (10030, 'localhost')
Dec 04 09:25:36 2012 qrunner(8680): reply: '220 mail01.foodmz.local
ESMTP Ecologic Institute ready\r\n'
Dec 04
* Stephen J. Turnbull step...@xemacs.org:
Karsten Becker writes:
WTF?
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: ('localhost', 10030)
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: (10030, 'localhost')
Dec 04 09:25:36 2012 qrunner(8680): reply: '220 mail01.foodmz.local
* Ralf Hildebrandt ralf.hildebra...@charite.de:
* Stephen J. Turnbull step...@xemacs.org:
Karsten Becker writes:
WTF?
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: ('localhost', 10030)
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: (10030, 'localhost')
Dec 04 09:25:36
On 12/04/2012 03:15 PM, Ralf Hildebrandt wrote:
Postfix presents it's banner 20 seconds after the connection has been
established.
Things to try:
* disable chroot for THAT smtpd on port 10030
* check that you have enough instances of that particular smtpd
(otherwise mailman must wait
* Karsten Becker karsten.bec...@ecologic.eu:
No, chroot, default number of processes (= 100, far away from that), no
restrictions...
127.0.0.1:10030 inetn - - - - smtpd
This one IS chrooted...
root@mail01.foodmz.local:/var/log/mailman# telnet localhost
Karsten Becker wrote:
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: ('localhost', 10030)
smtplib begins the connect process at 09:25:15
Dec 04 09:25:15 2012 qrunner(8680): connect: (10030, 'localhost')
at 09:25:15 smtplib has established a socket (connection) to port 10030
on
On 12/04/2012 07:39 PM, Mark Sapiro wrote:
I wrote the above before realizing that others had replied and the
issue was resolved. I'm posting it anyway just for the detailed
interpretation of the smtplib debug messages.
Thanks a lot anyway!
Regards
Karsten
--
Karsten Becker
Head of
Dear Mailman-users!
I would like to set a default value of header_filter_rules for new
lists. It would be something like this
DEFAULT_HEADER_FILTER_RULES = [('X-Spam-Flag: YES', 3, False)]
The purpose would be to discard all messages that are marked as spam.
I can't get this kind of default
Hello,
I am very new to Linux and Mailman. I have openSUSE 12.2 running on a 'box'
at home and I have Mailman 2.1.14 installed.
I am able to create a test-list either with the web interface or via command
line.
Not certain if Postfix is configured correctly.
My home ISP (Rogers.com)
Le 03/12/2012 19:00, Neil Carson a écrit :
I have been reading up on Mailman on http://list.org/ and
http://en.opensuse.org . Are there other good resources out on the web for
Mailman?
if you happen to read french, I'm a happy opensuse/mailman user and
blogged about it
Mikael Jokela wrote:
I would like to set a default value of header_filter_rules for new
lists. It would be something like this
DEFAULT_HEADER_FILTER_RULES = [('X-Spam-Flag: YES', 3, False)]
The purpose would be to discard all messages that are marked as spam.
header_filter_rules is set to the
Neil Carson wrote:
My home ISP (Rogers.com) does not allow customers to run a 'mailserver' and
prevents us from doing so by blocking (I believe) certain outgoing/incoming
ports etc.
Is there some way I can get around this restriction and actually send msgs
to/from my test-list via my home set
14 matches
Mail list logo