Author: W B Hacker Date: To: exim users Subject: Re: [exim] Unable to send email from email clients
Mike Cardwell wrote: > Marian D(urkovic( wrote:
>
>>>> as a public-facing MTA really, really does need to have a fixed-IP
>>>> with a valid PTR RR
>>> It doesn't matter how many times you say this, it's simply not true.
>>> No RFC requires this. This is you saying "I think a public-facing
>>> MTA really, really does need to have a fixed-IP with a valid PTR RR".
>>> Please express such things as opinions, and not as universally
>>> accepted facts or technical requirements, which is what they, however
>>> unintentionally, come across as.
>>>
>>> And, yes, I know I'll get my usual bounce from your mail server when
>>> it throws away yet another perfectly legitimate non-spam email,
>>> because I dare to send email from my home ADSL connection, starting
>>> the email in RFC1918 space, with no matching reverse DNS.
>> Sorry, but I fail to understand what point you're trying to make.
>> Your *public facing* MTA does have a valid PTR RR and your
>> envelope from doesn't use RFC1918 either. So your real problem is
>> most probably the fact, that your HELO uses completely different
>> domain than the PTR points to:
>
> Which could easily be fixed by adding this to the smtp transport:
>
> helo_data = ${lookup dnsdb{ptr=$sending_ip_address}}
>
Really?
How does the fix-all-the-ills-of-the-world dnsb get around the issue that
zen.co.uk runs a de-facto 'spam-friendly' dynamic-IP block, to wit:
82.69.0.0/17
.. that permits outbound from *anything* destined for port 25 - zombots
apparently not excluded?
Read their online ToS. Weep.
Then thank Martin for bringing that little faux pas to the attention of the
community.