On Thu, 3 May 2001, MaD dUCK wrote:
> but the server i made him try uses RBL extensively and did not refuse
> him. i think he's suffering more a client side problem... but i am a
> postfix expert, no clue about exim...
You're right! It was my configuration of exim. I had it doing hostname
lookup
also sprach Hall Stevenson (on Thu, 03 May 2001 02:19:43PM -0400):
> If your IP address has been flagged, this could be a reason.
but the server i made him try uses RBL extensively and did not refuse
him. i think he's suffering more a client side problem... but i am a
postfix expert, no clue about
> > > On what basis could a mail server decide which hosts it
> > > is going to allow to connect to it?
> >
> > ip addresses mostly...
>
> Could you expand on this? How would a mail server decide
> which IP addresses to block? Why would it suddenly decide
> that it doesn't like mine? :)
Mail se
also sprach David Steinberg (on Thu, 03 May 2001 11:09:37AM -0700):
> > are you behind a firewall?
> Yes, but I don't think it blocks outgoing 25/tcp connects.
no it doesn't. i saw your connects...
> Could you expand on this? How would a mail server decide which IP
> addresses to block? Why wou
On Thu, 3 May 2001, MaD dUCK wrote:
> are you behind a firewall?
Yes, but I don't think it blocks outgoing 25/tcp connects.
> try to telnet to port 25 of mail.madduck.net - if you get a refusal,
> then you have a problem on your side and i think you might have a
> firewall that blocks outgoing 2
also sprach David Steinberg (on Thu, 03 May 2001 10:05:44AM -0700):
> When it tries to connect to a mail server, the connection is either
> refused or just hangs and then times out. Just to test, I also tried
> using telnet to connect to port 25 of the same hosts. Same thing: either
> "telnet: Un
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