On Mon, July 13, 2009 18:05, Jaime Kikpole wrote:
When RT sends an email to me, it is coming from
r...@atlas.cairodurham.org. I am trying to make that say
r...@cns.cairodurham.org, instead.
postconf -e 'myorigin=cns.cairodurham.org'
postconf -e 'myhostname=atlas.cairodurham.org'
more
On Mon, July 13, 2009 19:34, Noel Jones wrote:
Don't use a CNAME in a mail address.
hmm i belived it was just for the mx to not be a cname ?
--
xpoint
Jaime Kikpole a écrit :
On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 1:47 PM, Victor
Duchovnivictor.ducho...@morganstanley.com wrote:
Don't use a CNAME in a mail address.
Why not? After all, how would you handle vhosts if you can't send as
the CNAME record?
since when CNAME was needed for vhosts?
alice
Jaime Kikpole wrote:
I just migrated most users from one server to another one. However, a
few things still need to work on the first server. One of them is a
web-based program named Request Tracker (RT).
When RT sends an email to me, it is coming from
r...@atlas.cairodurham.org. I am trying
On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 12:34:00PM -0500, Noel Jones wrote:
Jaime Kikpole wrote:
I just migrated most users from one server to another one. However, a
few things still need to work on the first server. One of them is a
web-based program named Request Tracker (RT).
When RT sends an email to
On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 1:47 PM, Victor
Duchovnivictor.ducho...@morganstanley.com wrote:
Don't use a CNAME in a mail address.
Why not? After all, how would you handle vhosts if you can't send as
the CNAME record?
Sendmail often rewrites these. Postfix typically leaves CNAME domains
alone.
Jaime Kikpole wrote:
On Mon, Jul 13, 2009 at 1:47 PM, Victor
Duchovnivictor.ducho...@morganstanley.com wrote:
Don't use a CNAME in a mail address.
Why not? After all, how would you handle vhosts if you can't send as
the CNAME record?
Sendmail often rewrites these. Postfix typically leaves