Mail drops into spam box of yahoo from a single domain
The mails are reaching from all my domains (hosted in same server) to yahoo properly when tested. But all the mails from a particular domain out of many domains hosted in the server sent to yahoo reaches yahoo's spam box. The host says that this problem is nothing to do with them since it works fine for all other domains. Suggestions on this are welcome.
Hi,
I need to send alert mail from AIX to mail server.
My mail server IP is 192.168.0.10
so I've add /etc/hosts as below
192.168.0.10 mydomain1.com
the I try to send mail to myname@mydomain1.com it's OK
Then I need to send mail to myname@mydomain2.com too.
so I've... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
I am new to Linux kernel.
we have a c file that counts the no. of sends and received packets in each interface, and indicate the user about the error/drop ration of incoming and outgoing packets.
in our Linux box , the incoming packets are dropped at random interval.
we have our... (1 Reply)
hi all,
i need to email the output of a command to a google or yahoo account.
am using debian lenny 5.
can someone please help me on this ? (5 Replies)
Dear Expert,
i have linux box that is running in the windows domain, BUT did not being a member of the domain. as I am not the System Administrator so I have no control on the server in the network, such as modify dns entry , add the linux box in AD and domain record and so on that relevant.
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I suppose, Yahoo is running Unix servers for Yahoo Mail and other services.
The key issue is,
Yahoo Mail is
1-level sign in,
2-level sign out
unfortunately, other Yahoo Service accessed with the same login / password are 1-level sign out, 1-level sign in.
The following are my... (0 Replies)
hi,
im very new to perl and im having problems with a module. my comptuer is behind a firewall and i dont know how to work this problem out. i tried passing my proxy parameters (ip, port, user, pass) to my environment variables but it doesnt seem to work. heres the almost exact code from the... (0 Replies)
Hi All,
I am new to unix. I want to know what are the steps to do in order to configure a unix server (Solaris 8) to send mails to the outside world. I also want to send attachments in the mail.
Thanks in advance
Zing (2 Replies)
hi, Gurus,
I need some help with sending mail out from my UNIX server:
It is running Solaris 2.6 and the sendmail version is 8.8.
Output of :/usr/lib/sendmail -d0.1 -bt < /dev/null
Version 8.8.8+Sun
Compiled with: LOG MATCHGECOS MIME7TO8 MIME8TO7 NAMED_BIND NDBM NETINET
... (5 Replies)
MAKEHOSTEDDOMAINS(8) Double Precision, Inc. MAKEHOSTEDDOMAINS(8)NAME
makehosteddomains - Build a database of hosted domains
SYNOPSIS
makehosteddomains
DESCRIPTION
makehosteddomains rebuilds the contents of the /etc/courier/hosteddomains.dat database from the contents of /etc/courier/hosteddomains.
This can be either a file or a directory. If it's a directory, the contents of all the files in this directory are simply concatenated. The
makehosteddomains script must be run in order for any changes to /etc/courier/hosteddomains to take effect.
The function of /etc/courier/hosteddomains is very similar to the one of /etc/courier/locals. Both configuration files specify a list of
domains that are considered to be local domains - domains whose mailboxes are stored locally.
The difference is that domains listed in /etc/courier/locals are removed from addresses before their mailbox is looked up. For example, if
the domain "example.com" is listed in /etc/courier/locals, then the address <user@example.com> is delivered to a local mailbox named
"user". If this domain is listed, instead, in /etc/courier/hosteddomains, then the address <user@example.com> is delivered to a local
mailbox named "user@example.com". Usually you would use /etc/courier/locals to specify domains that correspond to your local system
accounts, that are looked up in your system's password database. The /etc/courier/hosteddomains file is usually used when you have
database-based virtual domains, that are maintained via an LDAP or a MySQL server. The Courier mail server's LDAP and MySQL authentication
modules will use the full E-mail address to query the LDAP or MySQL server for the location of the local mailbox that correspond to the
E-mail address. The Courier mail server's authuserdb authentication module can also use full E-mail addresses.
Contents of hosteddomains
The file /etc/courier/hosteddomains simply contains a list of domains, one per line, for example:
domain.com
example.org
Each domain can optionally be followed by a single tab character, in order to specify an alias for a domain, for example:
domain.com
mail.domain.com<TAB>domain.com
example.com<TAB>domain.com
First, we list the domain "domain.com" as a hosted domain. Then, we also list the domain "mail.domain.com", which is an alias for
domain.com. The Courier mail server will take any address of the form <address@mail.domain.com>, rewrite it as <address@domain.com>, and
attempt to deliver the mail to a local mailbox for that name. The third entry does the same for "example.com"; mail addressed to
<address@example.com> is delivered to the local mailbox <address@domain.com>.
alias@hosteddomain
This is a special local mail delivery rule for hosteddomain-listed domains. This rule allows the Courier mail server accept mail to any
address@hosteddomain, where "hosteddomain" is a domain listed in the hosteddomains file, but there is no corresponding account for
address@hosteddomain. To provide delivery instructions for any non-existing address in a hosteddomain-listed domain:
1) Create the local address alias@hosteddomain. For example, if the hosteddomains file contains "example.com", create the local account
alias@example.com. This should be a normal account, with its own home directory, userid and groupid.
2) Create $HOME/.courier-default file in this account, containing the delivery instructions. See the dot-courier(5)[1] manual page for
available delivery instructions.
NOTE that alias@example.com must be a real account, not a mail alias. If you want to forward alias@example.com to another address, put
forwarding instructions in the .courier-default file. However, alias@example.com can be a clone of another account (with the same home
directory, userid, and groupid).
"WILDCARD DNS"
Wildcard DNS is supported for hosteddomains by placing a single period character before the domain name. For example, the hosted domain
entry ".domain.com" will cause the Courier mail server to accept mail for "anything.domain.com".
The Courier mail server will accept mail for <address@any.thing.domain.com> and attempt to deliver it to the local mailbox
<address@any.thing.domain.com>, and if that fails then attempt to deliver the mail to the local mailbox <address@.thing.domain.com>, then
finally <address@.domain.com>
Note
There is a period after the '@' character. If you want all mail for "any.thing.domain.com" to be delivered as though it were sent to
"domain.com", you should define an alias for the domain, for example:
domain.com
.domain.com<TAB>domain.com
SEE ALSO esmtpd(8)[2].
AUTHOR
Sam Varshavchik
Author
NOTES
1. dot-courier(5)
[set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/dot-courier.html
2. esmtpd(8)
[set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/esmtpd.html
Courier Mail Server 08/30/2011 MAKEHOSTEDDOMAINS(8)