On Sun, Apr 09, 2000 at 10:44:58AM -0500, ktb wrote: > I'm making my first attempt at running electronic mail. I have exim, > fetchmail and mutt installed. Right now I'm attempting to send mail. From > what I understand exim is the program that sends the mail out from mutt.
That is correct. > Anyway when I try to send mail to my local isp this is some of the error > messages I get in /var/log/exim/mainlog: <error messages snipped> > I don't know exactly what this means but it seems to me that somehow mutt or > exim is sending out the host name of my computer and the mail is rejected by > my isp. I've looked through the /etc/exim.conf file (I used the default > example file) and the .muttrc file and don't see how this all works. How > can I get around this problem? How can I change the sender domain and have > it be valid? It is indeed a header problem. Your system hasn't yet been told how to rewrite the message headers to match what your ISP wants to see. This is done in your /etc/exim.conf file. The section that controls header rewrite is at the very end of the sample file. Here's that portion from my /etc/exim.conf: ###################################################################### # REWRITE CONFIGURATION # ###################################################################### [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] bcfrF [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] bcfrF # End of file The username on my box here is mike And reznaeous is my username at Earthlink. So the two lines here rewrite the message headers to reflect that. The 'bcfrF' at the end of each line controls which header lines to rewrite - in this case it's pretty much *all* of the header that gets rewritten. And that should get you at least on track. If you need any further explanation, let me know and I'll see what I can do. -- Mike Werner KA8YSD | "Where do you want to go today?" ICQ# 12934898 | "As far from Redmond as possible!" '91 GS500E | Morgantown WV | Only dead fish go with the flow.