On 3/20/2007 12:59, Tim Casten wrote: > Glad to see this post. We current have a cuda in front of our mail server > and are now purchasing one for the listserver. > For starters each list will have to be a user in the cuda. > And I believe that is all that will be needed to be done. > Just my opinion like I said we have not set ours up yet. > We have been using a Barracuda Spam Firewall as the MX host for both our central email service and our list service for approximately 18 months. For the nd.edu domain (our central email service), the Barracuda is configured to perform LDAP validation of recipient addresses, unify email aliases using the user's enterprise userid, and create quarantine accounts for individual users. Individual users may change their spam settings, up to and including disabling spam filtering for their own accounts. For the listserv.nd.edu and lists.alumni.nd.edu domains (virtual hosts on the same server), the Barracuda is configured to use per-domain (global), rather than per-user, quarantine. To do this, we had to specify an address to which "quarantined" messages are delivered. We created a mailbox for this purpose on our central email service. I check this mailbox once or twice a day. After redirecting legitimate delivery error messages to the appropriate owner- addresses, I sort the remaining messages by subject line and visually scan for anything that appears to be legitimate. This takes only a few minutes a day, and I seldom find anything. On those rare occasions when I find a legitimate message, I redirect the message to the original recipient address. We chose this approach because we have nearly 60,000 lists on the server, most created by automated processes, rather than as a result of specific requests from individual list owners, and because it is simply not feasible to use per-user quarantine when the recipient domain is a list server. -- Paul Russell, Senior Systems Administrator OIT Messaging Services Team University of Notre Dame [log in to unmask]