Rod Dorman
2006-08-14 20:25:33 UTC
After searching thru the archives looking for reasons not to change
unknown_client_reject_code to 550 (changing the default of 450) I only
came across one that seemed semi reasonable.
That being with returning a 450 theres a possibility of discovering and
white listing the offending IP before the sending MTA gives up and the
mail is returned to their user.
As I see it that would require someone (i.e. me or my counterpart at the
sending MTA) to examine the logs, notice the problem, and get it fixed,
before the sending MTA gives up.
IMHO the odds of this happening are kinda small.
Since the majority of e-mail users today are members of the Church of
Instantaneous Propagation they'd want to find out about a problem sooner
rather than later.
I guess the best way of wrapping this up is to ask if anyone ever ran
into a problem with unknown_client_reject_code set to a 5xx permanent
error.
unknown_client_reject_code to 550 (changing the default of 450) I only
came across one that seemed semi reasonable.
That being with returning a 450 theres a possibility of discovering and
white listing the offending IP before the sending MTA gives up and the
mail is returned to their user.
As I see it that would require someone (i.e. me or my counterpart at the
sending MTA) to examine the logs, notice the problem, and get it fixed,
before the sending MTA gives up.
IMHO the odds of this happening are kinda small.
Since the majority of e-mail users today are members of the Church of
Instantaneous Propagation they'd want to find out about a problem sooner
rather than later.
I guess the best way of wrapping this up is to ask if anyone ever ran
into a problem with unknown_client_reject_code set to a 5xx permanent
error.
--
***@polylogics.com "The avalanche has already started, it is too
Rod Dorman late for the pebbles to vote." - Ambassador Kosh
***@polylogics.com "The avalanche has already started, it is too
Rod Dorman late for the pebbles to vote." - Ambassador Kosh