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-----Original Message-----
From: Uncle George [mailto:qmail@gatworks.com]
Sent: Monday, November 27, 2006 7:02 PM
To: dl@blackpacket.net
Cc: qmail@list.cr.yp.to
Subject: Re: Advanced tricks I use to get rid of spam using MX 4xx
>
> Some people think this should mean:
> -> TRY1: "MX5 is dead, MX10 is greylisting, MX15 is greylisting, MX20
> is greylisting"
> -> TRY2: "MX5 is dead, MX10 accepts message"
>
> While QMail thinks this should mean:
> -> TRY1: "MX5 is dead, MX10 is greylisting"
u really mean:
TRY1: "MX5 is dead, MX10 is greylisting, MX15 dont bother, MX20 dont
bother"
> -> TRY2: "MX10 accepts message"
>
> Is there a reason to go onto MX15 or MX20? MX10 says that it'll
> accept the mail, but that it's temporarily unable to do so. Trying
> the other MXes just generates additional unnecessary traffic.
Yes, maybe MX15 will accept the message! Maybe MX20 will accept the
message. You wont know till you try.
As the original poster stated, a long time ago, his service greylist's
everyone on the lowest MX. But apparently accepts, without greylisting,
on the next MX. This on the presumption that spammers will only try the
lowest MX, and ignore the higher MX's. Real MTA's, as per 2001 spec's,
would have tried at least the 2 very lowest MX's, if not the
preconfigured limit, or all of the MX's .
Its not for me to say what the reasons ( or reasonableness ) are for why
this SMTP strategy is acceptable for some. Or even why such matters have
to be codified in an RFC .
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