Help
GavinWraith (26) 1563 posts |
Not sure if this is the right thread but I certainly need some advice from the community. Since 12:35 on 07/04/2015 I have been unable to send or receive email, but browsing has been unaffected. Hence I use this medium to ask if anybody has experienced similar symptoms. I use RO 5.21 on an Rpi2. I use Messenger 7.08 and NetFetch 3.66, set up so that I can review the emails waiting for me on mail.plus.net before deciding to download them. Alas, now NetFetch says “Connection refused” and when I try to send emails (SMTP server is relay.plus.net) it says “Authentication rejected”. A chap on the PlusNet support team says that nothing has changed their end, and that my settings for usernames, passwords, server-names, ports etc are all correct. He cannot understand what the problem is. The most likely explanation, I think, is that NetFetch has suddenly started to send wrong headers because of possible bit-rot. NetFetch and Messenger live on the SD card. I have a backup copy on a memory stick. … At last! I have replaced NetFetch by the backup copy and it is working again. |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8170 posts |
You don’t require the info, but others might so here we go. Simplify. Use telnet to connect to port 25. On a PC that’s “telnet relay.plus.net 25”. If it is the secure version the port is 900something. The server will respond with a prompt. You can work through the whole sequence in a command line session: |
Chris Evans (457) 1614 posts |
Glad to hear you have it working now. I did like your comment “A chap on the PlusNet support team says that nothing has changed their end” I’ve been told that quite a few times over the years and then found out the statement was economical with the truth! Plusnet does though have a better than average reputation. |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
Isn’t that the standard first line of support – we’ve done nothing, it must be something at your end… |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8170 posts |
You’ve checked everything. Fault. Call BT. (leave check routine running) For BT, feel free to substitute Virgin, Talk Talk, EasyNet, and Anyway, about that document… |
Chris Mahoney (1684) 2165 posts |
That reminds me of an experience with a bank. Website “version 1” allowed passwords in excess of eight characters. V2 changed that to an eight-character maximum (why?!) but only enforced it for password changes and not logins, so existing passwords continued to work. A couple of years later, “V3” rolled around and suddenly rejected longer passwords. Naturally the bank’s support line was adamant that I must be using the wrong password since it’s “always” had an eight-character limit… |