

Ever wonder what mail servers people run? I found myself wondering what the
top universities used, so I wrote a lame little script to go and query the
top 50 schools from this list, find out their mail servers, and then netcat
to them to see what they respond with.
The results were interesting. I was specifically wondering how the war
between Sendmail and
Postfix
was going. As expected, Sendmail is still winning, but Postfix seems to be
holding its own.
220 perseus.services.brown.edu ESMTP Sendmail X.X.X; Tue, 9 May 2006 17:06:13 -0400 (EDT) 220 mailhub4.dartmouth.edu ESMTP Sendmail 8.13.5/DND2.0/8.13.5; Tue, 9 May 2006 17:06:16 -0400 220 ns3.br.harvard.edu ESMTP Postfix 220 nisc.net.isc.upenn.edu ESMTP Postfix 220 emfw1.Princeton.EDU ESMTP (0ebdea0d60768e14e7c57b1a3713dd99) 220 mr5.its.yale.edu ESMTP server ready at Tue, 9 May 2006 17:06:18 -0400 220 MIT.EDU ESMTP Sendmail (no collect or third party calls) at Tue, 9 May 2006 17:06:19 -0400 (EDT) 220 water-ox.its.caltech.edu ESMTP Postfix 220 mx4.stanford.edu ESMTP Postfix 220-pohl.acpub.duke.edu ESMTP Duke University Sendmail 8.12.10/Duke-5.0.0; 220 MailRouter-2.wustl.edu ESMTP Mirapoint 3.5.8-GR; Tue, 9 May 2006 16:06:26 -0500 (CDT) 220 relay.it.northwestern.edu ESMTP Postfix 220 ipex2.johnshopkins.edu ESMTP
So out of 36 responses I got 7 with Postfix in the banner. If we take that
highly unscientific sample and call it legit, we’re looking at roughly 20%
of top-50 universities using Postfix. Not bad.
Aside from the MTA war, though, it was just interesting to see what these
guys were putting in their banners. Check out the Princeton one, for example
— they have some sort of secret message encoded with MD5 in theirs. And MIT
points out that they don’t want any collect or third party calls. Nice.
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