What happens when you type:
telnet localhost 110
Does it respond with a line that looks something like:
Trying xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx...
Connected to mailhost.
Escape character is '^]'.
+OK QPOP (version 3.0b18) at mailhost starting.
??
As for users, QPopper uses the same list of users that you can see
in /etc/passwd. Also, be sure to read the documentation that comes with
QPopper as there are some Linux specific options that need to be set
when you run the ./configure command. (If you're using shadow passwords
for instance.)
-Steve
On Thu, Sep 09, 1999 at 08:21:24AM +0430, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Dear Steve
>
> Thank you for your suggestion about QPopper . I downloded the source and
> compiled it to popper binary file .
>
>
> 1 - I copied qpopper binary file to /sbin
>
> 2 - In /etc/inetd.conf added
>
> pop3 stream tcp nowait root /sbin/popper popper -s
>
> 3 - In etc/services
>
> pop3 110/tcp #Post Office
>
> 4 - restated linux .
>
> But nothing , it does not accept pop3 connections.
> Does it need separate accounts for POP3 users and does it need other
> configurations ?
>
>
> Sincerely , Siamak
>
>
> On Tue, 7 Sep 1999, Steve Shah wrote:
>
> > QPopper is great. It's free from Qualcomm at www.eudora.com/freeware
> >
> > -Steve
>
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-net" in
> the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
______________________________________________________________________________
Steve Shah ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) | Alteon Web Systems Inc. (Developer/Sysadmin)
http://www.alteon.com | Voice: 408.360.5653 Fax: 408.360.5500
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Life is best measured in beats per minute. How alive are you? -SjS
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