Many receipients |
Post Reply |
Author | |
Mark Reimer
Guest Group |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
Posted: 10 April 2003 at 12:57pm |
Inside my organization, we send out messages to all users. This causes spam filter to quarentine (or reject) most of them. I set the max number of receipients to well over my max number of users, and then we are o.k. Is there a way to have SpamFilter allow "global" messages from my local domain, to my local domain, but not allow a high number of receipients to local domain from an outside domain?
|
|
Bill Stewart
Guest Group |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
SpamFilter is not designed to be your outgoing mail server. It's designed to process incoming mail to your domain(s). |
|
LogSat
Admin Group Joined: 25 January 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4104 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
Mark, SpamFilter is designed to handle your *incoming* email only. Your local users (and admins...) should still have in their "outgoing SMTP server" settings in their email clients the address of your SMTP server, not SpamFilter. Roberto Franceschetti
|
|
George
Guest Group |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
I am had the same problem and I was using my outgoing server. The problem I had was when the emails went from the outgoing smtp server to the MX server (SpamFilter) before going to the pop server. I ended up hard coding the pop server to recieve all local address's from the smtp server instead of the MX server (SpamFilter). For Client domains I just added them in the Excluded Domains tap in the whitelisted section. I am still testing this software before I decide to purchase it. So far it great, not counting the issues that have already been posted. |
|
LogSat
Admin Group Joined: 25 January 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 4104 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
Hi George, SpamFilter should not be used as an outgoing SMTP server in a client's configuration. It is designed to be configured so that it can accept incoming email addressed to your domain(s), ex. zzzzz.com. It then forwards such emails to your SMTP incoming server. From what I could see, your configuration in that respect is correct. SpamFilter seems to be listening on mail2.zzzzz.com, which is listed as your primary MX record. SpamFilter should then be configured to forward to your existing SMTP server (on mail.zzzzz.com). We're not clear on why emails from your outgoing smtp server are going to the MX server (spamfilter) before being sent to the pop. Roberto Franceschetti |
|
Post Reply | |
Tweet
|
Forum Jump | Forum Permissions You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum |
This page was generated in 0.234 seconds.