Changes

Jump to navigation Jump to search
5,422 bytes added ,  10:35, 13 April 2008
Line 783: Line 783:  
  signal-event email-update
 
  signal-event email-update
    +
=== Secondary/Backup Mail Server Considerations ===
 +
 +
Many people misunderstand the issues of using a secondary or backup
 +
mail server (backup MX) to hold your mail before it gets delivered
 +
to your SME Server. If you consider putting a backup mail server in
 +
place because you are concerned about lost mail because your internet
 +
connection may occasionally drop out, think again and consider the issues
 +
discussed below.
 +
 +
====What is ''Backup MX''====
 +
 +
A backup MX is a system whereby through your DNS records you tell other
 +
servers on the internet that in order to deliver mail to your domain they
 +
first need to try the primary MX record and if they fail to connect they
 +
can try to connect to one or more of your listed backup or secondary mail
 +
servers. See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MX_record
 +
 +
====The process of delivering email to your SME Server====
 +
 +
So lets look at how mail gets delivered with and without a
 +
''backup mx'' when your Internet link, ISP or server is down.
 +
 +
====='''Without''' a backup MX:=====
 +
 +
* The sending mail server cannot connect your server.
 +
* The sending mail server MUST queue the mail and try again later.
 +
* The mail stays on the sender's server.
 +
* The sender's server resends the mail at a later date.
 +
 +
''The requirement to re-queue is a fundamental part of the SMTP protocol -
 +
it is not optional. So, if your server is '''offline''' due to a link or ISP
 +
outage, '''the mail just stays at the sender's server until you are once
 +
again reachable'''.''
 +
 +
====='''With''' a backup MX:=====
 +
 +
* The sending mail server cannot contact your server
 +
* The sending mail server sends the mail to your secondary MX
 +
* The secondary MX queues the mail until your link/server is up
 +
* The mail is queued on an '''untrusted''' third-party mail server (''think about confidential mail between your company and some business partner'')
 +
* The sending mail server's administrator ''thinks'' it has been delivered, according to their logs
 +
* You have no, or little, visibility over the queued mail
 +
* When your link comes up, the secondary MX sends the mail on to your server
 +
* You have added more hops, more systems and more delay to the process
 +
 +
If you think that a backup MX will protect against broken mail servers
 +
which don't re-queue, you can't. Those servers will drop mail on the floor
 +
at random times, for example when ''their'' Internet link is down.
 +
 +
Those servers are also highly likely to never try your backup MX.
 +
 +
Thankfully those servers are mostly gone from the Internet, but adding a
 +
secondary MX doesn't really improve the chances that they won't drop mail
 +
destined for your server on the floor.
 +
 +
====Backup MX and SPAM Filtering====
 +
 +
On top of the issue, indicated above, there is another issue to consider
 +
and that is what happens with SPAM due to the use of a ''Backup MX''.
 +
 +
Your SME Server takes care of filtering a lot of SPAM by checking on the full
 +
username & domain at the time it is received.
 +
 +
For example if your server hosts '''example.com''' and someone sends
 +
mail to '''joeuser@example.com''', the server will '''only''' accept the mail
 +
if joeuser is a local user/alias/group/pseudonym on the server.
 +
Otherwise, the mail is rejected during the SMTP transaction.
 +
 +
A backup mail server however, generally does not have a full list of
 +
users against which it can check if it should accept the mail for the given
 +
domain. Hence it will accept mail for ''invalid'' users.
 +
 +
So:
 +
 +
* If you trust the secondary MX, you _will_ accept a lot of SPAM when the link comes up.
 +
* If you don't trust it, you will cause a lot of SPAM backscatter as the mail has been accepted at the secondary MX and then later bounced by you.
 +
* Stopping backscatter is why SME Server rejects invalid addresses during the initial SMTP transaction.
 +
 +
The SPAM backscatter can only be stopped if the secondary MX has a full list
 +
of users for your domain to allow filtering to occur.
 +
 +
But:
 +
 +
* You need to be able to configure this secondary MX with such user/domain lists
 +
* You need to maintain these secondary configurations when users are added/deleted from your primary server configuration
 +
* You need to test (regularly) if the secondary is successfully accepting/rejecting mail as required.
 +
 +
Quite a few sites have lost lots of mail through misconfigured backup MX servers. Unfortunately, the time when you find
 +
out they are misconfigured is when you go to use them, and then you find that the backup MX has changed configuration and bounced all of your mail.
 +
 +
Then you realise that this mail could have queued at the sender's site if there hadn't been a broken secondary MX bouncing the mail for you.
 +
 +
* If you bounce mail at your server, you have logs to show what's wrong.
 +
* If your secondary MX bounces your mail, you usually have no way to determine what happened other than via reports from the original senders that your mail bounced.
 +
 +
==== Summary ====
 +
 +
In summary, if your server/Internet connection is available most (let's say >90%) of
 +
the time, you are generally better off <u>without a secondary MX</u>.
 +
 +
If your server/link is down more than this (e.g. dialup), you should not be delivering mail
 +
directly to your server.
 +
 +
If you still want to consider setting up a seconday MX, ensure that:
 +
 +
* you have fully control of the configuration of each of the email gateways for your domain
 +
* each gateway can make decisions on whether to accept/reject mail for the users at the domain
       
<noinclude>[[Category:Howto]]</noinclude>
 
<noinclude>[[Category:Howto]]</noinclude>
374

edits

Navigation menu