Aristidis Fesarlis <
fesa...@gmail.com> wrote:
Well, just the obvious...
If the problem is "specific senders who send a lot of mail to us", why not
just whitelist them to skip over the checks.
Honestly, I gave that whole smf group (grey/sav/spf/zombie) a good run a few
years ago, but eventually gave up. If memory serves, the grey one was the
first to go. I don't remember any problems with it and sendmail, but dealing
with all the broken mailers out there just created a lot of work and didn't
really help in the long run.
Even if it worked as it should, too many people bitching about delays in the
receiving of the mail, work related mostly.
I mean it depends on the clients and what kind of mail you are processing
but these days with more people on smartphone type devices, they expect
their message to be delivered a few seconds after the send button is hit.
My opinion, keep the BAD_RCPT_THROTTLE and dump the greylisting, besides for
a few machine-gun spam sources which are easier to block via the access
table or firewall, the greylisting doesn't seem to help with spam and causes
too many problems with legit mail deliveries.
Or just start whitelisting the legit servers. I think the control file by
default was in /etc/mail/smfs/smf-grey.conf.
-bruce
b...@ripco.com