On Thu, 2008-03-20 at 08:55 -0700, Dale Farnsworth wrote: > > If you don't have valid forward and reverse DNS for the IP you're sending > > from, a fair number of places will give you a 500-series error. There are > > good reasons for doing that, since mail from a place that has invalid DNS is > > much more likely to be spam. Get a domain name of some type; go through > > dyndns.org if you're small-time. Don't neglect reverse DNS! If "host > > deepan.example.org" gets you "1.2.3.4", but "host 1.2.3.4" > > returns "SERVFAIL", then your reverse DNS is not set. Unset reverse DNS > > means you can't send mail to AOL and probably yahoo users. NOTE: forward > > and reverse DNS do not have to match, they just have to be valid names. Lots > > of times, they don't match (yay for multiple domains on one box). > > The requirement I've seen for AOL (and others) is that reverse DNS must > be set, AND that forward DNS on the name returned by reverse DNS must > point back to your IP address. In other words, while you may have as > many forward DNS entries as you want, there *must* be a forward DNS > entry that matches your reverse DNS entry. > > Of course, this is independent of sendmail configuration. ---- and since AOL adopted it, I have adopted the same philosophy for all mail servers that I administrate too. It's been a good strategy. I use postfix though, it's been easier to integrate a fairly sophisticated strategy in deciding mail I will accept for delivery. Craig --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss