I have been trying to get onto these lists for a while now but I was unable to until David Wolfskill intervened and specifically allowed me in the records. Thanks David and others who replied to my earlier problems.

----- Original Message ----- From: "David Wolfskill" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Bob @ Brisbane" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, January 16, 2006 9:40 AM
Subject: Re: Fw: Testing


On Mon, Jan 16, 2006 at 08:57:29AM +1000, Bob @ Brisbane wrote:
Hi David
Could we use a hammer to smash the nut and just allow the IP address for
the time being.
It often takes weeks before APANA gets around to fixing anything.
My IP 203.3.126.224 is a fixed number and has been mine for some years.
Bob Willson

I'm (somewhat) sympathetic -- my IP address is residential DSL, but
static.  (I got it before the telco started using the PPPoE
abomination.)  Though I consider myself fortunate:  though they refuse
to "do DNS" for that IP address (meaning that they won't put something I
specify in their zone files, nor will they delegate the ability to be
authoritative for the in-addr.arpa entry in question to me), they do
have a consistent pair of A and PTR records.

Anyway, I did it; please re-test the failing condition.

Peace,
david   (current hat: [EMAIL PROTECTED])
--
David H. Wolfskill [EMAIL PROTECTED]
It is courteous to reduce quoted text to just that needed to establish context.

See http://www.catwhisker.org/~david/publickey.gpg for my public key.


Below this is a cut and pasted earlier message from David that describes the problem I faced.

On Sun, Jan 15, 2006 at 01:36:16PM +1000, Bob @ Brisbane wrote:
Hi David
Thanks for your interest and help.

I have used the address [EMAIL PROTECTED] and also the [EMAIL PROTECTED] address to send two email test letters from each address to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] and also [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Right.  And I see one message in the freebsd-test@ archive that you sent
to freebsd-test without a Cc: to postmaster@ (as well).

The first message I have that you sent to both was Message-Id
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, which hit mx1.freebsd.org at Jan
15 03:20:37 (UTC).

The reason mx1 gave for declining to accept it on behalf of freebsd-test
was "450 Client host rejected: cannot find your hostname".

And checking:

mx1(4.9-S)[8] host 203.185.225.22
Host not found.
mx1(4.9-S)[9]

Right.  (You may be thinking that "203.185.225.22" isn't a hostname.
While that is, in some senses, correct, it's not especially relevant.
More below.)

Here is a blurb I cobbled up a bit ago:

The SMTP server in this case, mx1.freebsd.org, is set up so that it
requires:

* that the IP address "reverse-resolve" to a hostname and

* that the hostname thus obtained resolve a set of IP addresses, one of
 which must match the IP address of the client and

* the (fully-qualified) hostname given in the SMTP conversation
 (either HELO or EHLO) must resolve a set of IP addresses, one of
 which must match the IP address of the client.

In the case in point (IP address 203.185.225.22, allocated to
POWERTEL LIMITED), the first condition fails to be met.  You have some
options:

* Use the ISP's designated mail relay host(s) (assuming, of course, that
 the machine(s) in question are set up to meet the above criteria).

* Relay the mail off of some other machine that meets the criteria.

* Finally, if neither of the above is workable, let me (postmaster@)
 know, and I can add that IP address to a list of "accepted" SMTP
 clients.  Please note that this won't be very useful if the IP address
 assignment is dynamic.

Since the mail from the Y! account worked, I don't see much point in
going over it.

Peace,
david   (current hat: [EMAIL PROTECTED])
--
David H. Wolfskill [EMAIL PROTECTED]
It is courteous to reduce quoted text to just that needed to establish context.

See http://www.catwhisker.org/~david/publickey.gpg for my public key.


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