On 2015-08-21, Jeremy McSpadden <jeremy@???> wrote:
> Did you just admit it was spam ..
>
> --
> Jeremy McSpadden | Flux Labs
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> On Aug 21, 2015, at 12:02 PM, Julian Bradfield <jcb@???<mailto:jcb@inf.ed.ac.uk>> wrote:
>
> How can I throttle the number of delivery attempts to a given
> recipient domain (NOT per MX)? Say, no more than one delivery attempt
> every 5 minutes.
>
> One of my users has her mail forwarded to gmail, and since gmail
> (correctly) recognizes that lots of it is spam, it rate-limits me in
> my attempts to send it - and then since all of it gets re-tried every
> time the queue is run, it takes hours or days to get back to being
> able to send mail to gmail without delay.
Perhaps you can detect that the email is of remote origin and and send
those emails out via a different public ip address, so if it gets snarled
up, locally sourced email isn't hurt. and noone else cares. and you have
a number of options.
user:
My emails atren't arriving on time!
admin:
They are mostly spam: see Acceptable Use. This is not my problem.
How about I give you a new email address?
How about you forward your gmail account to your mailbox here instead?
Due to a couple of bugs in exim the interface parameter (of the SMTP
transport) should be a string expansion (so that ther retry records
will be tagged to that ip address) and the ip address should
be a constant (else email from the queue can bleed onto the wrong
IP address). So use a string expansion that always returns the same
value.
--
\_(ツ)_