Some mail coming in without attachments
Michael St. Laurent
mikes at hartwellcorp.com
Tue Dec 5 17:34:44 GMT 2006
And this did start around the time that I upgraded to the most recent
version of MailScanner... I'm running 4.57 now and still seeing the
problem. The TNEF versions we're using are:
tnef-1.4.3-1
perl-Convert-TNEF-0.17-1
Are these too old perhaps?
-----Original Message-----
From: mailscanner-bounces at lists.mailscanner.info
[mailto:mailscanner-bounces at lists.mailscanner.info] On Behalf Of Alex
Neuman van der Hans
Sent: Friday, December 01, 2006 3:48 PM
To: MailScanner discussion
Subject: Re: Some mail coming in without attachments
It means the attachment is probably tnef encoded and the webmail program
was probably smart enough to deal with it.
I had a problem once with a braindead M-Sexchange admin who insisted on
RTF'ing all outgoing mail. The latest MailScanner version does replace
tnef-encoded mail with its own non-tnef-encoded version, so you might
want to look into that.
Michael St. Laurent wrote:
> I thought the same thing at first but the attachment went through when
> it was sent to a web mail account.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: mailscanner-bounces at lists.mailscanner.info
> [mailto:mailscanner-bounces at lists.mailscanner.info] On Behalf Of Scott
> Silva
> Sent: Friday, December 01, 2006 11:11 AM
> To: mailscanner at lists.mailscanner.info
> Subject: Re: Some mail coming in without attachments
>
> Michael St. Laurent spake the following on 12/1/2006 9:37 AM:
>> I've got two reports of emails being delivered without the Word
> document
>> attachments they were sent with. Several attempts to send each of
> them
>> and each time the mail was delivered but there was no attachment.
>>
>> Redhat Linux 9:
>> MailScanner-4.56.8-1 from the RPM install
>> ClamAV 0.88.6 & SpamAssassin 3.1.7 from the easy installation package
>>
>> These packages were updated to the latest versions only a few weeks
>> ago. So far the only other problem reported is a higher instance of
>> virus mails getting through to the secondary virus scanner (which is
>> running on the internal Exchange server).
>>
> Look for the obvious things like tnef encoded files being sent from an
> outlook
> user to an outlook express user. You really need to look at the
message
> source
> and see if the attachments really aren't there.
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