Patrick Shanahan wrote:
* Sloan <joe@tmsusa.com> [07-30-07 13:10]:
So, any host that has a lot of messages to send to users on your system will be banned, correct?
We frequently have occasion to send thousands of business-related messages to a single domain, and if they use some simple-minded smtp connection rate or traffic measurement, they would end up blocking us.
Heads would soon roll for that sort of nonsense.
and certainly should were that the case, but the idea is to ban those sites that have repeated rejections and/or refusals in a short period of time.
The purpose is to ban rogue sites that continually pound your system attempting access, to relay mail/spam and/or to deliver spam to you, not to stop or deter valid ligitimate connection attempts. Ligitimate sites will not spend this type of effort for access.
I'm curious about the mechanism by which fail2ban determines what is legitimate high volume mail, and what is spam... Unfortunately messages can bounce due to various causes on the receiving end, including users who have moved on but haven't let all their contacts know their new email address, or even hardware problems, network outages or configuration blunders. Joe -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org