Hi, sorry to jump on the back of your question kmagy, but I'm having exactly the same problems.
Almost all of the queues get stuck. Forcing connections doesn't help, unfreezing doesn't help...I've checked that we have reverse DNS set up and we're not on any black lists that I can find!!
Most of the emails in the queues are legitimate, some are spam. We are getting a spam filter soon!
Second, you're responding to my tagline. I'm guessing your new around here, so that's ok.
Now that we have an understanding on those two points, lets move on to the problem.
What OS and SP are you at? What SP/build on Exchange? Any special connectors? Have you protected your Exchange against relaying, i.e. read the FAQ's and followed the directions to not be a relay? Are the outbounds to all different sorts of domains, or particular ones?
I'm Certifiable, not certified.
It just means my answers are from experience, not a book.
I'm the new network admin here. They've been having problems for a while (had no admin as such for a while either). The server was a spam relay a while ago. Problems seem to have started since then apparently. But we're not on any black lists.
Some settings may have been changed to stop it being a spam relay....any ideas what?
What you should be checking for is to make sure that only the settings indicated are done, and that you don't have anything different from what they say to do. I thought that to be obvious, sorry.
I'm Certifiable, not certified.
It just means my answers are from experience, not a book.
I've looked in the FAQ section and followed the instructions to ensure we're not an open relay. All the settings are correct.
I've also looked at your link tyrobert, thanks. Unfortunatley, they all keep pointing to being an open relay server, which I'm sure we're not. I'm doing another test with ORDB.org, which should run tonight, to see if we are an open relay.
Is it your "servername.domain", or the server of the recipients server? A 4.4.7 usually indicates problems on the recipients end. Try contacting one of them to see if they've blacklisted your server.
And have you checked the DNS settings on your Exchange server? It should be pointing to your domains DNS server, which in turn should have forwarders to your ISP's servers.
I'm Certifiable, not certified.
It just means my answers are from experience, not a book.
You need to determine whether these are legitimate emails or others using your server to relay. Open SM, scroll down to the SMTP protocol queues, enumerate all the queues and see where the messages are sent from. If from your own users, then you are not an open relay. If from other users, then you are relaying emails for others.
Thanks for the suggestion peterpark. I looked at all the queues to see where the emails were originating from and they are all coming from internal addresses. They were actually all, apart from about 4 or 5, from the postmaster.
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