Hi All,
Running W2K on two servers, one primary DNS, one secondary.
Using tools on dnsreport.com, I think I have it almost setup correctly. However, I received two "warnings" and was hoping someone here could show me how to fix them.
1) WARNING: One or more of your mailservers claims to be a host other than what it really is (the SMTP greeting should be a 3-digit code, followed by a space or a dash, then the host name). This probably won't cause any harm, but is a technical violation of RFC821 4.3.
mail.host1.com claims to be host host2.com.
Both hosts have their own zone's in W2K DNS setup, though they share the same IP address (want to nameserve for multiple domains using one server). I mainly do not want anyone to know host1.com is related to host2.com.
2) WARN: One or more of your mailservers does not accept mail in the domain literal format (user@[0.0.0.0]). Mailservers are technically required RFC1123 5.2.17 to accept mail to domain literals for any of its IP addresses. Not accepting domain literals can make it more difficult to test your mailserver, and can prevent you from receiving E-mail from people reporting problems with your mailserver. However, it is unlikely that any problems will occur if the domain literals are not accepted.
mail.host1.com's postmaster@[123.456.78.9] response:
>>> RCPT TO: <postmaster@[123.456.78.9]>
<<< 553 We do not relay non-local mail, sorry.
I am running Mercury Mail Server. I do not want people being able to use my server as a spam server, so I was told to disable relaying. Any suggestions?
Thanks in advance.
Running W2K on two servers, one primary DNS, one secondary.
Using tools on dnsreport.com, I think I have it almost setup correctly. However, I received two "warnings" and was hoping someone here could show me how to fix them.
1) WARNING: One or more of your mailservers claims to be a host other than what it really is (the SMTP greeting should be a 3-digit code, followed by a space or a dash, then the host name). This probably won't cause any harm, but is a technical violation of RFC821 4.3.
mail.host1.com claims to be host host2.com.
Both hosts have their own zone's in W2K DNS setup, though they share the same IP address (want to nameserve for multiple domains using one server). I mainly do not want anyone to know host1.com is related to host2.com.
2) WARN: One or more of your mailservers does not accept mail in the domain literal format (user@[0.0.0.0]). Mailservers are technically required RFC1123 5.2.17 to accept mail to domain literals for any of its IP addresses. Not accepting domain literals can make it more difficult to test your mailserver, and can prevent you from receiving E-mail from people reporting problems with your mailserver. However, it is unlikely that any problems will occur if the domain literals are not accepted.
mail.host1.com's postmaster@[123.456.78.9] response:
>>> RCPT TO: <postmaster@[123.456.78.9]>
<<< 553 We do not relay non-local mail, sorry.
I am running Mercury Mail Server. I do not want people being able to use my server as a spam server, so I was told to disable relaying. Any suggestions?
Thanks in advance.