>>>>> "Piete" == Piete Brooks <Piete.Brooks@???> writes:
Piete> Trying alternative MX RRs is not what he asked about -- it was specifically
Piete> when having received "connection refused" that was the concern ...
Yes, that's correct.
Anyway, I found out why I wasn't sure it was working. Look at this:
%nslookup -type=any ccmail.comsat.com
Name Server: ro.ctd.comsat.com
Address: 134.133.40.45
ccmail.comsat.com preference = 20, mail exchanger = ccmail.cmc.comsat.com
ccmail.comsat.com preference = 10, mail exchanger = misnt1.cws.comsat.com
misnt1.cws.comsat.com internet address = 134.133.176.130
So there's 2 MX records. But look at this:
% nslookup ccmail.cmc
Name Server: ro.ctd.comsat.com
Address: 134.133.40.45
Non-authoritative answer:
Name: misnt1.cws.comsat.com
Address: 134.133.176.130
Aliases: ccmail.cmc.comsat.com
So the second MX is really to the same address as the first!
Obviously this is broken. Apparantly exim treats this as if there was
really only a single MX record, which is fine, although it seems to
suggest code robustness above and beyond the call of duty.