> My ISP is Telerama.com in Pgh. Pa. When I set up > exim, I used telerama.com as the smtp. I also said > to use "telerama.com" as the domain name after the "@" > on outgoing mail. Now when I send email to anyone > at telerama.com it gets sent back because the "name" > is not found at telerama.com. What did I do wrong? > How do I fix? >
my ISP is bezeqint.net and its mail server is mail.bezeqint.net. Attached my /etc/exim.conf and /etc/email-addresses. Although this setup is not perfect it works most of the time. Please note that rakefet is not a qualified domain name although one might think it is when reading thsese files. rakefet is the name that I have given to my machine. [02:47:38 /tmp]$ cat /etc/exim.conf # This is the main exim configuration file. # It was originally generated by `eximconfig', part of the exim package # distributed with Debian, but it may edited by the mail system administrator. # This file originally generated by eximconfig at Wed Sep 20 12:48:40 IDT 2000 # See exim info section for details of the things that can be configured here. # Please see the manual for a complete list # of all the runtime configuration options that can be included in a # configuration file. # This file is divided into several parts, all but the last of which are # terminated by a line containing the word "end". The parts must appear # in the correct order, and all must be present (even if some of them are # in fact empty). Blank lines, and lines starting with # are ignored. ###################################################################### # MAIN CONFIGURATION SETTINGS # ###################################################################### # Specify the domain you want to be added to all unqualified addresses # here. Unqualified addresses are accepted only from local callers by # default. See the receiver_unqualified_{hosts,nets} options if you want # to permit unqualified addresses from remote sources. If this option is # not set, the primary_hostname value is used for qualification. qualify_domain = rakefet # If you want unqualified recipient addresses to be qualified with a different # domain to unqualified sender addresses, specify the recipient domain here. # If this option is not set, the qualify_domain value is used. # qualify_recipient = # Specify your local domains as a colon-separated list here. If this option # is not set (i.e. not mentioned in the configuration file), the # qualify_recipient value is used as the only local domain. If you do not want # to do any local deliveries, uncomment the following line, but do not supply # any data for it. This sets local_domains to an empty string, which is not # the same as not mentioning it at all. An empty string specifies that there # are no local domains; not setting it at all causes the default value (the # setting of qualify_recipient) to be used. local_domains = localhost:rakefet # Allow mail addressed to our hostname, or to our IP address. local_domains_include_host = true local_domains_include_host_literals = true # Domains we relay for; that is domains that aren't considered local but we # accept mail for them. #relay_domains = # If this is uncommented, we accept and relay mail for all domains we are # in the DNS as an MX for. #relay_domains_include_local_mx = true # No local deliveries will ever be run under the uids of these users (a colon- # separated list). An attempt to do so gets changed so that it runs under the # uid of "nobody" instead. This is a paranoic safety catch. Note the default # setting means you cannot deliver mail addressed to root as if it were a # normal user. This isn't usually a problem, as most sites have an alias for # root that redirects such mail to a human administrator. never_users = root # The setting below causes Exim to do a reverse DNS lookup on all incoming # IP calls, in order to get the true host name. If you feel this is too # expensive, you can specify the networks for which a lookup is done, or # remove the setting entirely. host_lookup = * # The setting below would, if uncommented, cause Exim to check the syntax of # all the headers that are supposed to contain email addresses (To:, From:, # etc). This reduces the level of bounced bounces considerably. # headers_check_syntax # Exim contains support for the Realtime Blocking List (RBL) that is being # maintained as part of the DNS. See http://maps.vix.com/rbl/ for # background. Uncommenting the following line will make Exim reject mail # from any host whose IP address is blacklisted in the RBL at maps.vix.com. #rbl_domains = rbl.maps.vix.com #rbl_reject_recipients = false #rbl_warn_header = true # The setting below allows your host to be used as a mail relay only by # localhost: it locks out the use of your host as a mail relay by any # other host. See the section of the manual entitled "Control of relaying" # for more info. host_accept_relay = localhost # If you want Exim to support the "percent hack" for all your local domains, # uncomment the following line. This is the feature by which mail addressed # to [EMAIL PROTECTED] (where z is one of your local domains) is locally rerouted to # [EMAIL PROTECTED] and sent on. Otherwise x%y is treated as an ordinary local part # percent_hack_domains=* # If this option is set, then any process that is running as one of the # listed users may pass a message to Exim and specify the sender's # address using the "-f" command line option, without Exim's adding a # "Sender" header. trusted_users = mail # If this option is true, the SMTP command VRFY is supported on incoming # SMTP connections; otherwise it is not. smtp_verify = false # Some operating systems use the "gecos" field in the system password file # to hold other information in addition to users' real names. Exim looks up # this field when it is creating "sender" and "from" headers. If these options # are set, exim uses "gecos_pattern" to parse the gecos field, and then # expands "gecos_name" as the user's name. $1 etc refer to sub-fields matched # by the pattern. gecos_pattern = ^([^,:]*) gecos_name = $1 # This sets the maximum number of messages that will be accepted in one # connection. The default is 10, which is probably enough for most purposes, # but is too low on dialup SMTP systems, which often have many more mails # queued for them when they connect. smtp_accept_queue_per_connection = 1000 # Send a mail to the postmaster when a message is frozen. There are many # reasons this could happen; one is if exim cannot deliver a mail with no # return address (normally a bounce) another that may be common on dialup # systems is if a DNS lookup of a smarthost fails. Read the documentation # for more details: you might like to look at the auto_thaw option freeze_tell_mailmaster = true # This string defines the contents of the \`Received' message header that # is added to each message, except for the timestamp, which is automatically # added on at the end, preceded by a semicolon. The string is expanded each # time it is used. received_header_text = "Received: \ ${if def:sender_rcvhost {from ${sender_rcvhost}\n\t}\ {${if def:sender_ident {from ${sender_ident} }}\ ${if def:sender_helo_name {(helo=${sender_helo_name})\n\t}}}}\ by ${primary_hostname} \ ${if def:received_protocol {with ${received_protocol}}} \ (Exim ${version_number} #${compile_number} (Debian))\n\t\ id ${message_id}\ ${if def:received_for {\n\tfor <$received_for>}}" # This would make exim advertise the 8BIT-MIME option. According to # RFC1652, this means it will take an 8bit message, and ensure it gets # delivered correctly. exim won't do this: it is entirely 8bit clean # but won't do any conversion if the next hop isn't. Therefore, if you # set this option you are asking exim to lie and not be RFC # compliant. But some people want it. #accept_8bitmime = true end ###################################################################### # TRANSPORTS CONFIGURATION # ###################################################################### # ORDER DOES NOT MATTER # # Only one appropriate transport is called for each delivery. # ###################################################################### # This transport is used for local delivery to user mailboxes. On debian # systems group mail is used so we can write to the /var/spool/mail # directory. (The alternative, which most other unixes use, is to deliver # as the user's own group, into a sticky-bitted directory) local_delivery: driver = appendfile group = mail mode = 0660 mode_fail_narrower = false envelope_to_add = true file = /var/spool/mail/${local_part} # This transport is used for handling pipe addresses generated by # alias or .forward files. If the pipe generates any standard output, # it is returned to the sender of the message as a delivery error. Set # return_fail_output instead if you want this to happen only when the # pipe fails to complete normally. address_pipe: driver = pipe return_output # This transport is used for handling file addresses generated by alias # or .forward files. address_file: driver = appendfile # This transport is used for handling file addresses generated by alias # or .forward files if the path ends in "/", which causes it to be treated # as a directory name rather than a file name. Each message is then delivered # to a unique file in the directory. If instead you want all such deliveries to # be in the "maildir" format that is used by some other mail software, # uncomment the final option below. If this is done, the directory specified # in the .forward or alias file is the base maildir directory. # # Should you want to be able to specify either maildir or non-maildir # directory-style deliveries, then you must set up yet another transport, # called address_directory2. This is used if the path ends in "//" so should # be the one used for maildir, as the double slash suggests another level # of directory. In the absence of address_directory2, paths ending in // # are passed to address_directory. address_directory: driver = appendfile no_from_hack prefix = "" suffix = "" # maildir_format # This transport is used for handling autoreplies generated by the filtering # option of the forwardfile director. address_reply: driver = autoreply # This transport is used for procmail procmail_pipe: driver = pipe command = "/usr/bin/procmail -d ${local_part}" return_path_add delivery_date_add envelope_to_add check_string = "From " escape_string = ">From " user = $local_part group = mail # This transport is used for delivering messages over SMTP connections. remote_smtp: driver = smtp end ###################################################################### # DIRECTORS CONFIGURATION # # Specifies how local addresses are handled # ###################################################################### # ORDER DOES MATTER # # A local address is passed to each in turn until it is accepted. # ###################################################################### # This allows local delivery to be forced, avoiding alias files and # forwarding. real_local: prefix = real- driver = localuser transport = local_delivery # This director handles aliasing using a traditional /etc/aliases file. # If any of your aliases expand to pipes or files, you will need to set # up a user and a group for these deliveries to run under. You can do # this by uncommenting the "user" option below (changing the user name # as appropriate) and adding a "group" option if necessary. system_aliases: driver = aliasfile file_transport = address_file pipe_transport = address_pipe file = /etc/aliases search_type = lsearch # user = list # Uncomment the above line if you are running smartlist # This director runs procmail for users who have a .procmailrc file procmail: driver = localuser transport = procmail_pipe require_files = ${local_part}:+${home}:+${home}/.procmailrc:+/usr/bin/procmai l no_verify # This director handles forwarding using traditional .forward files. # It also allows mail filtering when a forward file starts with the # string "# Exim filter": to disable filtering, uncomment the "filter" # option. The check_ancestor option means that if the forward file # generates an address that is an ancestor of the current one, the # current one gets passed on instead. This covers the case where A is # aliased to B and B has a .forward file pointing to A. # For standard debian setup of one group per user, it is acceptable---normal # even---for .forward to be group writable. If you have everyone in one # group, you should comment out the "modemask" line. Without it, the exim # default of 022 will apply, which is probably what you want. userforward: driver = forwardfile file_transport = address_file pipe_transport = address_pipe reply_transport = address_reply no_verify check_ancestor file = .forward modemask = 002 filter # This director matches local user mailboxes. localuser: driver = localuser transport = local_delivery end ###################################################################### # ROUTERS CONFIGURATION # # Specifies how remote addresses are handled # ###################################################################### # ORDER DOES MATTER # # A remote address is passed to each in turn until it is accepted. # ###################################################################### # Remote addresses are those with a domain that does not match any item # in the "local_domains" setting above. # Send all mail to a smarthost smarthost: driver = domainlist transport = remote_smtp route_list = "* mail.bezeqint.net bydns_a" end ###################################################################### # RETRY CONFIGURATION # ###################################################################### # This single retry rule applies to all domains and all errors. It specifies # retries every 15 minutes for 2 hours, then increasing retry intervals, # starting at 2 hours and increasing each time by a factor of 1.5, up to 16 # hours, then retries every 8 hours until 4 days have passed since the first # failed delivery. # Domain Error Retries # ------ ----- ------- * * F,2h,15m; G,16h,2h,1.5; F,4d,8h end ###################################################################### # REWRITE CONFIGURATION # ###################################################################### # There are no rewriting specifications in this default configuration file. # This rewriting rule is particularly useful for dialup users who # don't have their own domain, but could be useful for anyone. # It looks up the real address of all local users in a file [EMAIL PROTECTED] ${lookup{$1}lsearch{/etc/email-addresses}\ {$value}fail} bcfrF # End of Exim configuration file [02:51:35 /tmp]$ cat /etc/email-addresses # /etc/email-addresses # # This file contains email addresses to use for outgoing mail. Any local # part not in here will be qualified by the system domain as normal. # # It should contain lines of the form: # #user: [EMAIL PROTECTED] #otheruser: [EMAIL PROTECTED] shaul [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- > --- > Christopher W. Aiken, Scenery Hill, Pa, USA > chris at cwaiken dot com, www.cwaiken.com > Current O/S: Debian 2.2 GNU/Linux > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null > -- Shaul Karl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- Shaul Karl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>