NinerNet Communications™
System Status

Server and System Status

NC036: Messages bouncing to fnbzambia.co.zm

26 November 2025 23:20:30 +0000

We have had an ongoing problem with email messages sent to fnbzambia.co.zm over the last few weeks. This is despite our best efforts and the fact that 99% of the rest of our email is handled smoothly.

After asking an FNB client to liaise with FNB over the problem (because they don’t have a working “postmaster” address), we received an email through them from FNB showing that they don’t know how the Internet works. They went to the trouble of telling them that their web server was in multiple blacklist, despite the fact that we obviously send our email through a mail server.

We also found out that the company through which we send some of our mail had some DNS problems a few weeks ago, which explains why some email to fnbzambia.co.zm was bounced.

So we have removed the block that we had instituted on emails to some fnbzambia.co.zm addresses under the assumption that they will now get through. This included an email address to which clients had to send invoices to prove something or another that has to be proved.

Hopefully the problem has now been resolved.

NC036: New DNS entries needed for domains NOT hosted with us

20 November 2025 05:41:07 +0000

If any messages you are sending through us result in a bounce messages that reads as follows:

From header sender domain not verified (DOMAIN.COM)
On your Sending > Verified Senders page
verify the sender domain or email to be allowed to send.

This means you are not hosting your DNS with us.

You need to go to your DNS provider and add the following two CNAME records so that your messages get through:

em460536.DOMAIN.COM
s2g-return.niner.net

s460536._domainkey.DOMAIN.COM
s2g-dkim.niner.net

Of course, DOMAIN.COM must be your actual domain.

If you rely on forwarding any messages to another domain, your senders will likely get the same bounce message. The solution is to stop the forwarding.

Please let us know when you have added the two new records, and we will complete the process.


Updated, 2025-11-21: Added word to title to clarify (because if the domain was hosted with us we’d have the power to change it) and added a missing underscore to the record you need to add. Sorry for that!

NC036: Mail queue back to normal

14 November 2025 19:46:46 +0000

After about an hour and a half of managing resources on the mail server (NC036), we have cleared the mail queue and processed all of the email that was delayed.

As far as we can tell, these incidents are caused by the mail server being overloaded. Recent statistics showed that at certain times about 80% of the mail received by our mail server was spam. I don’t want to appear like I am cherry-picking statistics to make it look worse than it really is, but the statistics amaze even me, who has been running mail servers for 29 years. At other times the spam load decreases, of course, but at other times, of the 100 messages we receive in any given unit of time, 80 of the messages are spam. So at those times the server cannot keep up with the flow of email into the server, because the server is busy scanning all the messages to determine if they are spam, and while it’s doing that ten more new messages arrive. Then it finishes processing that spam message and starts processing the first of the ten new messages waiting, and so the process goes.

Yes, we could increase the memory on the server, but this isn’t cheap, isn’t instant and can be further disruptive, and we know for some of our bigger clients, your invoices have increased this year. The money available to us is not unlimited, just as your wallets are not unlimited.

The mail server woes are not related to the nameserver work we’re doing. They are three different machines in three different data centres on three different continents. Gone are the days back in the nineties when we ran everything on one physical server, when we had problems communicating with our clients if the one server had a problem unrelated to email; when that happened, the unrelated problem meant we couldn’t also update this server blog (which didn’t exists back then!), so everybody was in the dark until we fixed the problem. Now, we at least have the real-time monitor and this status blog, but even those have limitations; you’ll notice that the statistics for server NC036 (the mail server) show it as having been up for 99.997% in the last 24 hours, which supposedly means the mail server was down for only 2.5 seconds! If that’s all it was down for, people wouldn’t have time to write emails explaining their problems! So the real-time monitor isn’t 100% accurate (even though it is close), and even the monitoring didn’t alert us when it should have. This resulted in the delay in clearing up the mail queue.

The point of this long blog post is to describe the challenges that we face some days, and to let you know we’re not sitting back doing nothing, while you wonder what’s happening to your email. Thank-you for your attention.

NC036: Battling spam on the mail server

14 November 2025 17:15:44 +0000

We are battling an overload of spam on the mail server (NC036). We will have the issue cleared soon and will post an update when we do. Apologies for the inconvenience.

NC033 & NC035: Progress report 1

14 November 2025 08:12:07 +0000

This is one of those operations that takes only a few minutes if you’ve done it a thousand times before. 🙂 But we’ve sort of addressed the imminent possible problem of our secondary mail relay service changing one of their requirements. To be frank, although this maintenance needed (and still needs) to be done, we’ve instead done a lot of manual work that has addressed the immediate problem before the weekend.

But we do need to spin up two new nameservers; it’s been at the top of our list for some time, and will greatly improve how you will be able to manage the nameservice for your domains. Since we last did this a few years ago we’ve found that we have greater choice of software and methods than we had before, and so we’re going to take some time over the weekend to evaluate a number of different options. Finishing the maintenance over the weekend will also ensure that we avoid stepping on anybody’s toes in the middle of their changing their DNS.

We will finish over the weekend and continue to post further updates here. Thank-you for your patience.

NC033 & NC035: Nameservers undergoing replacement

13 November 2025 14:33:24 +0000

We need to replace our two nameservers (NC033 and NC035) in short order. Under normal circumstances this would be a seamless operation, of which we could just notify you after the fact. However, we always notify you of planned maintenance in advance anyway, but in this case we are under a tight deadline to do this due to changed requirements at our secondary mail relay service.

Our plan is to carry out this operation over the next few hours. It’s unclear whether SMTP2GO’s deadline is in the UTC time zone or in New Zealand where the company is located. If the deadline is in the UTC time zone then we’ll be finished long before the deadline. There will be no downtime, but if there is any interruption if will be for some outbound email. We will work to avoid this and implement workarounds if necessary.

There will be a new look with a new control panel next time you log into dns.niner.net. In one of our next few posts we will post screenshots of the new control panel so that you know what to expect.

If you have any questions, please contact NinerNet support. We will post updates as necessary as work progresses. Thank-you.

NC036: Mail server recovered

6 November 2025 17:33:55 +0000

Following a slowdown on the mail server, the queue had been cleared and everything is back to normal. Apologies for the interruption.

NinerNet home page

Systems at a Glance:


Loc.SystemStatusPing
Server NC023, London, United Kingdom (Relay server), INTERNAL.NC023InternalUp?
Server NC028, Vancouver, Canada (Monitoring server), INTERNAL.NC028InternalUp?
Server NC031, New York, United States of America (Web server), INTERNAL.NC031InternalUp?
Server NC033, Toronto, Canada (Primary nameserver), OPERATIONAL.NC033OperationalUp?
Server NC034, Lusaka, Zambia (Phone server), INTERNAL.NC034InternalUp?
Server NC035, Sydney, Australia (Secondary nameserver), OPERATIONAL.NC035OperationalUp?
Server NC036, Amsterdam, Netherlands (Mail server), OPERATIONAL.NC036OperationalUp?
Server NC040, Toronto, Canada (Web server), INTERNAL.NC040InternalUp?
Server NC041, New York, United States of America (Web server), OPERATIONAL.NC041OperationalUp?
Server NC042, Seattle, United States of America (Status website), OPERATIONAL.NC042OperationalUp?

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