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Senseotech

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Nov 23, 2009
785
28
NC
I've set up Server 10.8 at home and (I think) correctly set up my domain registrar for my server at home. I'm using the mail service, and for the most part, it works great; I can check email perfectly with no connection errors. The problems arises when I send a test message from another non-domain account to one on my domain. Most of the time I receive the message within seconds, but sometimes, I can send a test message and not receive it for hours. It does eventually come through, but as I said, its several hours late. Any idea why this may be happening. My gut feeling is that its related to the DNS configuration on my registrar side since I honestly know very little about A and MX records and such, so I'm not even sure I'm correctly configured there.
 

hasenpfeffer

macrumors newbie
Nov 28, 2012
27
3
I'm not positive this is the problem, but you could look into greylisting. By default the postfix system has greylisting enabled which helps combat spam by forcing email servers to retry. The downside is at first email can take some time to get through.
 

Senseotech

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Nov 23, 2009
785
28
NC
I'm not positive this is the problem, but you could look into greylisting. By default the postfix system has greylisting enabled which helps combat spam by forcing email servers to retry. The downside is at first email can take some time to get through.

I whitelisted the addresses I was using for testing, and its not just incoming, outgoing mail takes hours to be delivered, if its delivered at all.
 

freejazz-man

macrumors regular
May 12, 2010
222
2
all you need is an mx record pointing to your mail server

this name must resolve to the mail server

if you think it's a DNS issue - debug with this site

http://www.intodns.com/

you can try and check the mail header to see if it's getting routed in a weird way (i.e. excessively)
 

David Paine

macrumors newbie
Mar 30, 2020
1
0
I would prefers you all to use that link https://dnschecker.org/domain-health-checker.php, the important part is that it checks which blacklist services have your A record and MX record IPs in them. Altogether it includes the DNS health test, MX record test, Mail (MX) record blacklist test, domain IP blacklist test, DMARC test, SMTP test for Mail records, and SPF records test. To have a complete report under one tool.
 
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