Community Discussions and Support

The perfect forum for general discussions or technical questions about Mercury Mail Server.

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LynnL posted May 21 '07 at 9:36 pm

It's all sorted [:D]

Turns out that it was just the password stuff in Mercury that had become corrupted - new password setting - job done.

Can't believe I have spent 5 days driving myself (and everyone else) mad over this.

Thanks again and hopefully back to another happy and trouble free five years of Mercury & Pegasus.
Oh! and once you sort out the licensing stuff - 5 mailboxes here please

Lynn
 

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HellasGuy posted Jun 2 '07 at 12:16 am

@

 

You posts and your sites deliver a quite considerable hype on something that's been around 3+ years now.

 

Question: what makes your "Hermes" better than the other 150+ plain-whitepaper Greylisting implementations available everywhere? 

THAT would be a really useful information to all of us...

 

Thank you!

 

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ldsandon posted Jun 30 '07 at 6:41 pm

After setting up ClamWall I just fount three files left, and they look to be left while the server was starting, and therefore ClamWall still was loading. It looks like to be some kind of time-out, then.

ClamWall can quarantine infected messages to a file system folder, what it can do is to quarantine them to a mailbox, and to check a file folder remotely is more cumbersome than checking a mailbox - and requires to have the right TCP ports open on both ends.

Thank you for your help.

 

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David Harris posted May 15 '07 at 5:56 am

[quote user="OldManRiver"]

  1. Move the Email to the appropriate mailbox (the rules tool does not always do this),

[/quote]

In that case you need to rework the rule. While there is a to-do list for Mercury, there aren't any known problems with the rule engine - it's been around for well over a decade now and is quite proven. If a rule isn't working the way you expect, then you need to reconsider the expression or terms you're using to trigger it.

As for the rest... You can proceed in one of two ways:

  1. You could create a rule that executes external program that does the processing you need.
  2. You could create a Mercury policy that passes the message off to an external program.
Extracting the attachment to the directory is probably possible using a rule (depends on whether or not the excel attachment explicitly includes a recognizable file extension, but it almost certainly will). Printing is a little more complicated - you *might* be able to do this from a "Run a prorgam" rule, but that depends on your system and the applications you have available. The policy or external program approach would give you the greatest flexibility in how you proceed.

Cheers!

-- David --

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David Harris posted May 14 '07 at 5:43 am

[quote user="Paul"]

This post in brief: To have the MercuryP POP3 Server give you your emails in the order they were received (FIFO) you must use FAT32. If you use NTFS they will be mixed up.

[/quote]

I just want to make it clear that you mustn't rely on the order of messages provided by a POP3 server  - ANY POP3 server, not just Mercury. The RFCs for the protocol make no mention of ordering, which means that there is no standard interpretation. If Mercury presents messages in a particular order because of a foible of the underlying file system, then that is an accident, not a matter of design.

Now, with the preceding paragraph in mind, it *would* be possible to add a degree of sorting to MercuryP - quite easy, in fact... But it would always have to be a specifically settable option. I'll take a look at the code and see just what might be practical.

Cheers!

-- David --

 
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Ben, most likely you're suffering a reverse lookup problem. To my knowledge, both Google and Microsoft require valid reverse lookups as to accept inbound e-mails. As stated above, youre HELO or EHLO needs to match your actual sending IP that in turn resolves when doing a reverse lookup. Check up on your own host and mailer, to see how it complies by using the DNS-Report at: .

Also, you say you don't worry too much about inbound, - you should! If your mailserver is reported as an open relay, you will be treated as a spammer. Now, since you most likely only will allow SMTP connections from the very same machine, insert Allow 127.0.0.1 into connection control options of MercuryS module. Since we serve many domains, we nearly only allow authenticated SMTP connections to relay, meaning to check the last two boxes on Connection Control in MercuryS. Besides the authenticated, some internal servers are allowed within connection Control, all else is thus only allowed to connect with inbound email to local addresses.

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David Harris posted May 16 '07 at 3:31 am

[quote user="bfluet"]Paul is dead on.  My ISP is Deltacom and it's their server address that is being written to the From header.[/quote]

What this indicates is that the message is going out without an FQDN (fully-qualified domain name) in the From: field. So, say the user's name is "Bill", the from: field is going out as "From: Bill" instead of "From: Bill@domain.com". The ISP will be running Sendmail, which normalizes messages that aren't conformant in this way (although what it does is not actually very useful).

For the life of me, I can't remember if this issue was ever resolved during the v4.5 development process or not - I certainly remember looking into it, but I can't remember what the outcome was. If I can get a chance this afternoon, I'll take another look at it, but if you find it still happens after v4.5 gets released, raise the issue here again and I'll look into it in more depth.

Cheers!

-- David --

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[quote user="SteveYates"] When delivering mail to a mailing list, Mercury resolves the MXs first and then tries to deliver messages destined for the same MX together in one SMTP session instead of separately.

 <snip>

T 20070509 092400 4641d236 Established ESMTP connection to 64.18.7.10
T 20070509 092400 4641d236 MAIL FROM:<Mary@example.org>
T 20070509 092400 4641d236 250 Ok
T 20070509 092400 4641d236 RCPT TO:<user@example.com>
T 20070509 092401 4641d236 250 Ok
T 20070509 092401 4641d236 RCPT TO:<user2@example.net>
W 20070509 092401 4641d236 451 Recipients not all at same mail host - psmtp[/quote]

Why doesn't postini allow this? And as a consequence why have the mailadmin set the same mx for both domains, if postini doesn't allow this behaviour?

Have you asked the postmaster at 64.18.7.10 about this issue?

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tok posted May 11 '07 at 12:33 pm

I don't think you need to install a email server for this, assuming your isp has a smtp-server  you can set smtp = <isp-smtp-server> in php.ini.

http://uk.php.net/mail



 

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I still use MercuryX to schedule collection of POP3 mail and sending SMTP mail via our ISP. We now have broadband, but still use a dial-up account when the broadband service is down. I run a batch file before starting and another batch file after stopping.

The 1st batch file contains the following line:
start "RASdial connect" /min /wait rasdial "<account-name>" <username> <password>

The 2nd batch file contains the following line:
start "RASdial disconnect" /min /wait rasdial "<account-name>" /disconnect

I've never experienced any problems with this method (OS: WinNT and Win2K).

I hope this is useful to you. Good Luck.

Stephen.

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PiS posted May 9 '07 at 4:30 pm

[quote user="yravi"] Our institution has 2 mail servers on different domains maintained by 2 ISP's across the globe.[/quote]

Email is routed based on mx-pointers within the dns. For your two domains, the mx-pointers either go to you ISP or to your XP machine.

If the mx-pointers point to your XP-machine all e-mails will be delivered to it, and received by using MercuryS, SMTP Server. 

If they point to your ISP, you can collect all the mail by the XP box, so that your users later can retrieve the emails. The module to use to download mail from your ISPs is MercuryD.

[quote user="yravi"]     vbsa.com
    vbsb.com[/quote]

Configure these two domains in "Configuration" | "Mercury Core Module Configuration" tab "Local domains"

[quote user="yravi"] we have 10 to 15 mail-id on each mail server. I want to configure my Windows XP box which is connected to Broad Band Internet connection and have installed mercury/32 on it to distribute mails to the clients on outlook express in the LAN. Bascially I want my XP system to work as a mails hub.

ex:
  
   info@vbsb.com
   hodphysics@vbsa.com

[/quote]

Under "Configuration" | "Manage Local users", you add mailboxes. A mailbox works like your mailbox by the road, it can receive mail addressed to many nick-names as long as the delivery address is correct. A delivery address is set up using aliases.

Under "Configurarion" | "Aliases", you tell that info@vbsa.com should go to the "real address" which is the local mailbox, you can also add any other alias to be delivered to the same mailbox (ie "Real Address".

Hope this helps

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PiS posted May 11 '07 at 11:51 am

[quote user="Methuselah"]
Local Users:
 Username=TechnoMail, Personal Name = Robin Martin

Core/Local Domain:
  LocalHost = YMCSERV, Internet name = technolib.coza

 Aliases:
  Alias=robin@technolib.coza, Real address=TechnoMail

THIS WORKS - via Mercury spooler only . . .  at last !![/quote]

My goodness, you're really good at trial and error. Now here is an explanation:
Real Address within the Alias configuration, is either

  1. A local mailbox, a local user in netware, (or later a local user in Windows AD)
  2. An off-host recipient - we call it a relay address then, since the email is relayed out of this system.

Configuration interfaces is hard to do that are so intuitive that someone with limited knowledge can set this up. As programmers it is also very hard to imagine, how someone not involved in the lingo reads the interfaces.
Nonetheless, you DID IT! Congratulations.

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dkocmoud posted May 22 '07 at 11:37 pm

Just to clarify:

  • MercuryS: SMTP Server module that receives incoming SMTP email from SMTP clients and from other SMTP servers.
  • MercuryC or MercuryE: SMTP Client module that sends outgoing SMTP email to other SMTP servers; MercuryC is a relay client that simply relays all outgoing mail to a specified SMTP server whereas MercuryE is an End-to-end delivery client that can do domain name resolution in order to contact the recipient's SMTP mail server and deliver the SMTP email message directly.
  • MercuryP: POP3 Server module provides new emails to POP3 clients
  • MercuryD: POP3 Client module downloads new emails from other POP3 hosts on behalf of your users

I recommend that you keep the "do not permit SMTP relaying of non-local mail" option enabled at all times.  Otherwise, your Mercury server will become known as an "open relay", which is a bad thing and which will get your Mercury server's IP address added to various blacklists.  Instead, I recommend adding your local subnet(s) to MercuryS's connection control's Allow column and optionally enabling the "strict relaying" option.  If you have any remote users that use public IP addresses outside of your control, then see about using SMTP authentication in Outlook when relaying email through Mercury.

 

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Welcome to the Community Support forum for the Mercury Mail Transport System.

What this forum IS: 

a place where you can ask questions and give answers, where Mercury

users can share their expertise and experience with each other for

the benefit of all.

What this forum IS NOT:

an official technical support forum. Whilst I and my test teams will

participate here as much as time permits, the fact that you post a

question does not create any formal obligation on us to answer it. We

will do our best to assist you as time and circumstance permits.

Rules for using this forum: This forum is provided as a community service: as such, certain rules apply.

  • No

    flames, outbursts, bad manners, slurs, abuse or rudeness. Discourteous

    behaviour will not be tolerated. Forum moderators will delete posts

    that breach this rule without notice or apology. Don't get me wrong:

    you're welcome to complain here - but if you do so, do it courteously

    and respectfully and we'll all get along fine.

  • No spam or advertising. Don't post irrelevant messages or advertise products unless they are directly relevant to Mercury.
  • No large attachments, please.
  • No wishlists please - not because we don't want them, but because there is another forum specifically intended for them.
  • No WareZ, no links to illegal download sites, no porn, no material that breaches copyright.

To participate in this forum, you must be a registered user of the site.

These rules notwithstanding, this forum is provided so that we can all help each other. Enjoy!

-- David Harris --
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mangrove posted Mar 13 '07 at 1:11 am

I know of three occasions where this happens:

  1. When two Mercury/32 processes are running simultaneously (by mistake) both are polling the same queue, leading to several identical mail being delivered.
  2. When using MercuryD (POP3 client) a mail might be too big, or a TCP/IP error might occur during the transaction. Then MercuryD won't delete the mail from the POP3 host, and it gets redownloaded at the next try. Try setting the timeout to a larger number, and increase the time between POP3 connections as needed.
  3. Some double-mail IMAP errors with Thunderbird can be solved by setting mail.server.serverX.max_cached_connections to 1 (where X is the number of the associated account, typically 2) in the Thunderbird configuration editor.
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