My ISP has changed its spam detection policy, such that instead of
diverting incoming spam to a different mailbox, it now simply adds the
word 'SPAM:' to the header.
At present I can filter on this basis within my email client, but for
various reasons it would be better to do this within Xmail.
I
> *From:* "Catalin Gales"
>
> Roundcube is not an option
If you want an alternative to Roundcube, try NOCC.
http://nocc.sourceforge.net/
It's what I have on my server. Written purely in PHP, it can be a little
slow, but then I'm only using a very low power server. It may be faster
on yours.
In article <4b8dc831.13565.16a7...@xmail.lordynet.org>,
xm...@lordynet.org (David Lord) wrote:
> > Received: from technetium.cix.co.uk ([194.153.0.53]:43576)
It's still there. although a shadow of its former self.
> Anyway I can't see an actual mail loop, it's just the
> large number of received
I've been using quite an old version of xmail (1.25) quite successfully
for a couple of years on a Synology server.
It's been very reliable, but I get the odd message which sticks in the
spool with the following error:
>ErrCode = -163
>ErrString = Mail loop detected
>Message blocked by mail loop
Since a change of mail address (unrelated to xmail) some of my email from
a particular mailing list is being bounced with the following message:
>110 02/10 02/20 g...@bainb.com
>Last error: 5.6.1 554 5.6.1 Body type not supported by
>Remote Host
Does this look like a message from xmail or is it
In article <498198a5.1020...@amitrader.com>, r...@amitrader.com (Ralf)
wrote:
> Hmm... I think there are some misunderstandings here.
Possibly. My understanding was that SPF stopped emails coming from what
was apparently the wrong server for the domain.
e.g. my email address is g...@bainb.co.uk.
In article <49810994.4020...@amitrader.com>, r...@amitrader.com (Ralf)
wrote:
>
> Sorry Davide, but I _must_ use SPF. That's the policy here.
The problem with SPF is too many false positives.
For example, you might send me an email. I check the email using my
mobile phone, then reply.
But my mo
With my ARM-based Linux server I'm currently using NOCC (nocc.sourceforge.net)
which is PHP based and runs reasonably fast considering that it's on quite a
slow server. On a modern PC it should fly.
But there are plenty of native PC-based alternatives. One of the best that I've
come across is De