These dynamic 1024 and above are on the client side and you don't want to
open them up on the firewall for mail.
If on NT, use "netstat -a -n" to find out what is open on your mail server
and go from there.. I have an IMail server behind a firewall and it works
with no problems. For troubleshooting, if your firewall can do it, log the
outgoing dropped packets.
Dan F
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Len Conrad
Sent: Monday, March 26, 2001 11:51 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [IMail Forum] Out at sea...cannot find a port!
>Do you mean *just* port 1024 or all ports greater than 1024?
> means "greater than" as in "above 1024" or maybe
>This port we did not have open. We have the standard ports open for:
It's not a port, its the RANGE of ip's above 1024, tcp, outgoing.
And I'm talking about network security (router/firewall), not host
security (on the host machine).
Len
http://MenAndMice.com/DNS-training : In Austin, TX; SFO, CA; Paris,
FR
http://BIND8NT.MEIway.com : ISC BIND 8.2.3 "NT3" for NT4 & W2K
http://IMGate.MEIway.com : Build free, hi-perf, anti-abuse mail gateways
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