On Thu, 8 Feb 2001 10:42:13 +0000 (GMT), Philip Hazel
<ph10@???> wrote:
>On Mon, 5 Feb 2001, Marc Haber wrote:
>> When a mail from outside comes in on A, and the primary MX for that
>> domain refuses the message, our postmaster gets the bounce.
>
>What I don't understand is why this happens. Why doesn't the bounce go
>back to the message's sender?
It goes back to the message's sender, and is copied to postmaster.
This is _generally_ a feature, but not for all cases.
I will probably implement a router that fails certain addresses (> 80
% of the annoying bounces are caused by about 15 addresses) on the
mail gate without actually trying to deliver them..
>> Is there a way to make exim trying immediately (after RCPT, but before
>> DATA of an incoming message) if the recipient's address is
>> deliverable, refusing the incoming mesage if not?
>
>The new callback verify stuff can do this.
This sounds nice. Are the results of the callback cached by exim in
some way, or is a new callback being done for each message coming in
for an address? If the address verifies, is the message delivered
through the connection opened for address verification, or is a new
connection used for that?
hosts listed in sender_verify_hosts_callback are hosts where incoming
mail is to be delivered to, or where mail is coming in from?
Greetings
Marc
--
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Marc Haber | " Questions are the | Mailadresse im Header
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Nordisch by Nature | Lt. Worf, TNG "Rightful Heir" | Fax: *49 721 966 31 29