RE: Checking Exim4 for being open relay server?

2004-03-12 Thread Mark McRitchie
I could use orbs, but that would mean it would have to go into the wild, and if it is, they would put it in their db as an open relay. Stick the server on a net addressable IP then from a command prompt type: $ telnet relay-test.mail-abuse.org They're server will connect back to you and

Checking Exim4 for being open relay server?

2004-03-11 Thread Mark C
Hi, I'm just migrating from a redhat 7.2 sendmail server to a debian woody Exim 4 server, at the moment the server is on a restricted internal ip range, so it's not open to the wild yet, Can anyone tell me of the best way to check to make sure 100% that it is not an open relay, reading the

Re: Checking Exim4 for being open relay server?

2004-03-11 Thread Alan Chandler
On Thursday 11 March 2004 18:45, Mark C wrote: Hi, I'm just migrating from a redhat 7.2 sendmail server to a debian woody Exim 4 server, at the moment the server is on a restricted internal ip range, so it's not open to the wild yet, Can anyone tell me of the best way to check to make sure

Re: Checking Exim4 for being open relay server?

2004-03-11 Thread Bill Moseley
On Thu, Mar 11, 2004 at 06:45:08PM +, Mark C wrote: Hi, I'm just migrating from a redhat 7.2 sendmail server to a debian woody Exim 4 server, at the moment the server is on a restricted internal ip range, so it's not open to the wild yet, Can anyone tell me of the best way to check to

Re: Checking Exim4 for being open relay server?

2004-03-11 Thread Mark C
On Thu, 2004-03-11 at 19:08, Alan Chandler wrote: I am not sure if this will help you, but do a man exim and check out the -bh option damn, I even read the man pages, oh well must get some glasses :) Cheers to both of you, will give it a go. Mark -- Microsoft's version of 'integration'