
On 01/25/2016 02:48 PM, Sascha Rissel wrote:
thanks for your answer. I just checked the bounce log.
And I discovered a lot of entries like:
Jan 25 18:33:24 2016 (2741) <BounceRunner at 12019976> processing 9 queued bounces Jan 25 18:33:24 2016 (2741) <my-list-name>: <some mail address> already scored a bounce for date 25-Jan-2016
...
where all mail addresses are from German Web.de and GMX. Both providers belong to the same company. Thinking about this, I remembered a bounce notification I received last week, where some of these addresses were set to disabled by Mailman, with the notification below.
Did GMX/Web.de maybe change their mail processing policies with the start of the new year?
Possibly. See below.
Below follows an excerpt from the bounce notification.
Bounce Mail:
<some_user@web.de>: host mx-ha02.web.de[212.227.17.8] refused to talk to me: 554-web.de (mxweb107) Nemesis ESMTP Service not available 554-No SMTP service 554-Bad DNS PTR resource record. 554 For explanation visit http://postmaster.web.de/error-messages?ip=62.75.175.182&c=rdns
OK. The recipient's mail exchange server is refusing your mail. web.de's explanation of this is at <http://postmaster.web.de/error-messages?ip=62.75.175.182&c=rdns#nordns>.
In simple terms, it claims your mail server is not properly configured. I don't know what your Mailman server's domain name is, but it appears from the error message that its IP is 62.75.175.182 and that IP has an rDNS PTR record to euve51864.serverprofi24.de.
In any case you need to ensure the IP address your server sends from has a rDNS (PTR) record pointing to its host name and that host name in turn needs an A record with the same IP address. Also, it should identify itself with this same name in the SMTP HELO or EHLO command.
According to the tool at <http://mxtoolbox.com/SuperTool.aspx?action=smtp%3a62.75.175.182&run=toolpage>, this is all OK, so I don't know why web.de is complaining. I suggest you use the form at <http://postmaster.web.de/en/contact/?ip=62.75.175.182&c=rdns> to ask them.
-- Mark Sapiro <mark@msapiro.net> The highway is for gamblers, San Francisco Bay Area, California better use your sense - B. Dylan