|
[x]
Posted via EE Mobile
|
|
| Search, ask, and monitor your questions on the go with EE Mobile. Visit Experts Exchange from your mobile device and never be out of touch again. |
|
|
|
|
|
[x]
The Solution Rating System
|
|
| With so many solutions, how can you tell which solutions are most likely to help you and which ones are not? To provide you with a tool to use, we rate our solutions based on various elements that most accurately determine if a solution is a quality solution. To explain what factors affect the solution rating, here are the elements we take into consideration when formulating our solution rating. - The Grade of the Solution
- The Zone Rank of the Expert Providing the Solution
- The Number of Author and Expert Comments
- The Number of Experts Contributing
- The Feedback of the Community
Your Input Matters Because of the way the system is set up, the most important variable in this equation is you. As a member of Experts Exchange, you are able to cast your vote on the quality of the solutions in regard to how complete, accurate, helpful and easy to understand each solution is. When you provide your feedback, each rating is adjusted accordingly. So, if you see a solution that has a poor rating that you think is a good solution, let us know by rating it. As you do, the rating will be adjusted and will become more accurate for other members of our site. If you have any suggestions that you would like to make for our rating system, please ask a question in the Suggestions Zone of Community Support. Thank you! |
|
|
|
|
Asked by zmagyar in Linux Networking, Computer Servers
We have installed a new server recently. When majority of the configuration was done it turned out that a different domain name will be used for the server. The server name had been changed in the obvious places (/etc/hostname, etc). At the end did a grep in /etc for the old domain name which resulted no hits.
The server was started then and operates since months. But recently we have realised that some outgoing mails refused by the recipient server. Checking the reason it turned out that all mail servers using reverse DNS lookup are rejecting our emails as our server still reports the old domain by some reason. Checked the exim config and the name is set correctly there as well.
During the investigation I did a tracerout to the server from my PC and even that reports back the old domain (but with the correct IP). Also noticed that doing an iftop reports several connections to the old domain name.
I have no clue where else the new domain needs to be changed. Is there any idea?
Debian is running on a box with a very minimal config for Apache, PHP and Mysql. If any more info is needed for the answer please ask.
20091028-EE-VQP-86 - Hierarchy / EE_QW_3_20080625