Just upgraded, QMT, Centos, iron and location.
I'm hoping someone has a link, how-to, on migrating qmt-mail-folders,
users, lists, aliases.
Failed to be recognized when scp -rp from oldhost:/home/vpopmail/
domains/eachone to newhost:/same...
I'm also getting no MX records found going one
On 05/21/2012 07:50 AM, Ev Batey WA6CRE wrote:
Just upgraded, QMT, Centos, iron and location.
I'm hoping someone has a link, how-to, on migrating qmt-mail-folders,
users, lists, aliases.
Failed to be recognized when scp -rp from
oldhost:/home/vpopmail/domains/eachone to newhost:/same...
I'm
I don't think so. I don't think you should have the same name twice in
your hosts file. I'm not sure off hand which address linux would return
in this case. (How would it know when to return which one?)
What makes this work is that one resolver (your local resolver) is used
when connected to
I am not sure I quite understand why it doesn't work and a resolver
is needed. If I do a dig it answers to the proper IP. It stands to
reason that I should be able to access that server through a web
browser, and it cannot. What is a resolver going to tell my system
On 05/21/2012 10:59 AM, Cecil Yother, Jr. wrote:
I am not sure I quite understand why it doesn't work and a resolver is
needed. If I do a dig it answers to the proper IP. It stands to reason
that I should be able to access that server through a web browser, and
it cannot. What is a resolver
On 05/21/2012 11:12 AM, Eric Shubert wrote:
On
05/21/2012 10:59 AM, Cecil Yother, Jr. wrote:
I am not sure I quite understand why it
doesn't work and a resolver is
needed. If I do a dig it answers to the proper IP. It stands
On 05/21/2012 11:14 AM, Cecil Yother, Jr. wrote:
On 05/21/2012 11:12 AM, Eric Shubert wrote:
On 05/21/2012 10:59 AM, Cecil Yother, Jr. wrote:
I am not sure I quite understand why it doesn't work and a resolver is
needed. If I do a dig it answers to the proper IP. It stands to reason
that I
On 05/21/2012 11:24 AM, Cecil Yother, Jr. wrote:
It resolves to the correct address, but will not answer. I just added
the LAN address, ie.
Listen 192.168.0.168:80
to the httpd.conf file and now it answers and I'm able to access the
pages, but it's not answering them via the WAN.
--
On 05/21/2012 11:46 AM, Eric Shubert wrote:
On
05/21/2012 11:24 AM, Cecil Yother, Jr. wrote:
It resolves to the correct address, but
will not answer. I just added
the LAN address, ie.
Listen
On 05/21/2012 11:59 AM, Cecil Yother, Jr. wrote:
On 05/21/2012 11:46 AM, Eric Shubert wrote:
On 05/21/2012 11:24 AM, Cecil Yother, Jr. wrote:
It resolves to the correct address, but will not answer. I just added
the LAN address, ie.
Listen 192.168.0.168:80
to the httpd.conf file and now
Thank you, notes below ..
On Mon, May 21, 2012 09:22, Eric Shubert wrote:
On 05/21/2012 07:50 AM, Ev Batey WA6CRE wrote:
Just upgraded, QMT, Centos, iron and location.
I'm hoping someone has a link, how-to, on migrating qmt-mail-folders,
users, lists, aliases.
Failed to be recognized when
On 05/21/2012 01:23 PM, Everett Batey (WA6CRE) wrote:
Thank you, notes below ..
On Mon, May 21, 2012 09:22, Eric Shubert wrote:
On 05/21/2012 07:50 AM, Ev Batey WA6CRE wrote:
Just upgraded, QMT, Centos, iron and location.
I'm hoping someone has a link, how-to, on migrating qmt-mail-folders,
Hello everyone
I am the owner of a growing hosting enterprise in my country (Perú),
and we are facing big rise on our client number.
As an efect of this we are seeying a rise in mail outbound in our
servers. Even thoug we put limits to hourly sending, having more than
9k clients, all
I can only think in one solution. Via iptables and src-nat. Not so-random,
but you can change your outbound IP address every minute. And AFAIK, once a
connection has been established, the nat table mantains the translation.
On Mon, May 21, 2012 at 5:42 PM, fmende...@terra.com wrote:
Hello
I don't know if rotating addresses is the best solution or not. It's
certainly not practical for small QMT installations.
I think in many (if not all or most) of these cases, the user's password
has been compromised. This is especially likely if it's possible to
configure a client insecurely
Eric:
Couldn't you try with fail2ban:
- Checking qmail logs http://wiki.qmailtoaster.com/index.php/Fail2Ban
- Checking spamdyke
logs http://notes.benv.junerules.com/qmail-spamdyke-and-fail2ban/ and also
Ernesto Vargas-Azofeifa
Senior Web Developer IT Manager
Macromedia Certified Cold
Hello Eric, thanks for your reply.
We do not have spam issues with our customers, what we have is a high
volume due to large clients number.
All meassures to void spam sending are taken, but the blocks are
being generated for large volume send from just a bunch of IPs (5)
which are the number
Hello Natalio,
do you have a precise example on how to implement this?
Thanks.
On lun 21/05/12 4:35 PM , Natalio Gatti nga...@gmail.com sent:
I can only think in one solution. Via iptables and src-nat. Not
so-random, but you can change your outbound IP address every minute.
And AFAIK,
Have you tried a DNS round robin solution?
On 05/21/2012 03:06 PM, fmende...@terra.com wrote:
Hello
Eric, thanks for your reply.
We do not have spam issues with our customers, what we have is a
high volume due to large clients number.
I was going to write that RR would be of no help, then it dawned on me.
You could set up a single submission server, then smtproute all outbound
messages from it to a DNS round robin set of sending agent machines.
Virtual machines would work nicely for this.
Goes to show, there's more than
On 05/21/2012 03:06 PM, fmende...@terra.com wrote:
Hello Eric, thanks for your reply.
We do not have spam issues with our customers, what we have is a high
volume due to large clients number.
With so many clients, the probability of compromised passwords is fairly
high. I wouldn't be very
Comments below..
On Mon, May 21, 2012 09:22, Eric Shubert wrote:
On 05/21/2012 07:50 AM, Ev Batey WA6CRE wrote:
Just upgraded, QMT, Centos, iron and location.
I'm hoping someone has a link, how-to, on migrating qmt-mail-folders,
users, lists, aliases.
Failed to be recognized when scp -rp
On 05/21/2012 06:56 PM, Everett Batey (WA6CRE) wrote:
Comments below..
On Mon, May 21, 2012 09:22, Eric Shubert wrote:
On 05/21/2012 07:50 AM, Ev Batey WA6CRE wrote:
Just upgraded, QMT, Centos, iron and location.
I'm hoping someone has a link, how-to, on migrating qmt-mail-folders,
users,
Hi all,
I am also a small ISP but I don't have such problems and I don't use a
cluster yet.
The easiest solution is normall the best one.
If you have a Storage try to implement a Load Balance with multiple mail
servers instead of a cluster.
This way you will be able to answer smtp/pop3 requests
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