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    transport-email unable to send to GMail recipient

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    • C Offline
      CJ @JamfoFL
      last edited by

      @JamfoFL After a bunch of back and forth with tech support they said that the emails are getting sent to /dev/null and they have no idea why. Now I have to wait for more senior techs to investigate and attempt to figure out the issue.

      JamfoFLJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • JamfoFLJ Offline
        JamfoFL @CJ
        last edited by

        @CJ Yeesh... I have my fingers and toes crossed that they can figure out what is going on for you, or at least give us more info for a place to look!

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        • C Offline
          CJ @JamfoFL
          last edited by

          @JamfoFL It turns out that the issue is because XCP-ng sends HELO 127.0.0.1 and the SMTP server considers that suspicious and spammy. Therefore the email gets dropped.

          TrueNAS appears to use a HELO of the server name, which is apparently acceptable to the SMTP server. Which is odd as support wanted me to use a HELO of the actual SMTP server.

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          • olivierlambertO Online
            olivierlambert Vates 🪐 Co-Founder CEO
            last edited by

            Is there anything we can do on our side?

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            • A Offline
              Andrew Top contributor @olivierlambert
              last edited by

              @CJ @olivierlambert Looking at the RFC, the SMTP HELO command needs to be followed by a domain name, not an IP address.

              Testing my XO (source) install, it does send the host/domain name of the XO machine in the HELO message and not 127.0.0.1. So the the question is, why is your install sending 127.0.0.1 or why is the SMTP server seeing that in the HELO message.

              I also test XCP-ng (which uses ssmtp) and it also sent the name, not IP.

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              • C Offline
                CJ @Andrew
                last edited by CJ

                @Andrew @olivierlambert If anyone can provide me with the proper place to look for logs, etc, I can attempt to determine what's going on. My XOA is a source install as well.

                Also, now that I know what's causing the problem, I can use my own domain to review the test messages as they still work.

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                • olivierlambertO Online
                  olivierlambert Vates 🪐 Co-Founder CEO
                  last edited by

                  So if XO from sources it's NOT XOA 😉 (XOA is only meant for the virtual appliance we deliver). I'll be curious to see if you have the same issue with XOA, that would help to rule out a XO-related issue 🙂

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                  • C Offline
                    CJ @olivierlambert
                    last edited by

                    @olivierlambert Sorry, didn't realize.

                    How can I test it in XOA? I don't have the transport-email plugin.

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                    • C Offline
                      CJ @Andrew
                      last edited by

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                      • C Offline
                        CJ @Andrew
                        last edited by CJ

                        @Andrew I think I figured out why it's happening. It looks like NodeMailer is getting the hostname and because mine isn't a FQDN then it sets the default hostname to 127.0.0.1

                        https://github.com/nodemailer/nodemailer/blob/master/lib/smtp-connection/index.js#L1788

                        Is your hostname a FQDN?

                        Apparently Debian thinks hostname should not return a FQDN. https://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-reference/ch03.en.html#_the_hostname

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                        • C Offline
                          CJ @CJ
                          last edited by

                          @olivierlambert @Andrew That did it. If the hostname of the machine doesn't contain a . then NodeMailer sets it to 127.0.0.1 and therefore sends helo 127.0.0.1 when it connects to the SMTP server.

                          It looks like if a client name is passed to NodeMailer it skips this check, so would it be possible for XO to expose the field as an optional parameter?

                          julien-fJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • olivierlambertO Online
                            olivierlambert Vates 🪐 Co-Founder CEO
                            last edited by

                            Thanks for your feedback, let me add @julien-f in the convo

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                            • julien-fJ Offline
                              julien-f Vates 🪐 Co-Founder XO Team @CJ
                              last edited by

                              @CJ Which field would you want to be optional? 🤔

                              C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • C Offline
                                CJ @julien-f
                                last edited by

                                @julien-f The client hostname, although I don't know that that's really the best solution. This seems like a weird edge case that doesn't seem to affect most people.

                                Right now I've added the domain to my /etc/hostname file even though it's against Debian convention.

                                julien-fJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • julien-fJ Offline
                                  julien-f Vates 🪐 Co-Founder XO Team @CJ
                                  last edited by

                                  @CJ Please test the branch email-local-hostname which make the local hostname configurable and keep me posted.

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