Thanks till!
Assuming the example from 'man hostname', the hostname is ursula, the domainname is example.com, and the FQDN is ursula.example.com. In that case,...
The "web" part of webmail should give you a hint. :p Port 80 and 443, both TCP.
The problem seems to be with your DNS servers. I can't query anything about your domain designoutput.net. It looks like your glue records point...
Is this site the only issue? It doesn't accept connections from me, either. In this case, the issue is at their end. That is the nameserver...
Some ISPs support bonding/multilink ADSL connections. Check with yours, and googling for the same will reveal some info about it. It won't give...
I meant to add that if you find out the name of your ISP's mail server, you can just set postfix to send mail out through it to bypass the block....
From the information you've given, I suspect your server is on a Bigpond connection. They definitely do block port 25 outbound on most...
The most likely reason for that error is the ISP that hosts your server is blocking outbound connections on port 25. I'm guessing you're using a...
Creating an access list of authorised senders is good practice to stop your email server being abused by spammers. So, you need to tell postfix...
Generally it's 'make uninstall', but it depends on what the coder decided to add to the Makefile.
Where is the server in comparison to where you are sending email from, network wise? Are you on the same LAN, or are you across the internet...
I still think you're on the wrong track with worrying about the tproxy. It's bound to the IPv6 address on your system, and unless you have...
I think you might be not quite catching on to what is happening in that diagram, and in the original howto. The "real servers" are the application...
Separate names with a comma.