oh I see, thanks a lot for your info.
nadia007 wrote:
>
> Yayad;
>
> You're right, but what I did is I changed the port. Instead of using port
> 25 I used a different port (any other port not being used will work). The
> proxy utilizes port 25. So all the filtering and virus scanning occurs
lol... Well I guess I found an alternative method to doing the same thing
the IMAP authentication would of done! I'm just happy that I got everything
on my system just the way I like. ;)
nadia
Peter Warasin wrote:
>
> hi
>
> nadia007 wrote:
>> Well... I'm excited to say that my theory wo
Yayad;
You're right, but what I did is I changed the port. Instead of using port
25 I used a different port (any other port not being used will work). The
proxy utilizes port 25. So all the filtering and virus scanning occurs on
port 25.
Yayad wrote:
>
> if i'm not mistaken, if you use por
Peter Warasin wrote:
> hi
>
> nadia007 wrote:
>> Well... I'm excited to say that my theory worked like a charm!!!
>
> great!! that's good to know.
>
>
> btw:
> you additionally could use imap authentication (proxy>smtp>advanced),
> if you enable this, users can use the firewall as an smtp rela
hi
nadia007 wrote:
> Well... I'm excited to say that my theory worked like a charm!!!
great!! that's good to know.
btw:
you additionally could use imap authentication (proxy>smtp>advanced),
if you enable this, users can use the firewall as an smtp relay using
smtp authentication. the credentia
if i'm not mistaken, if you use portforward for smtp, then the antispam
would not work.
nadia007 wrote:
>
> Well... I'm excited to say that my theory worked like a charm!!!
>
> By creating a portforwarding rule on EFW I was able to get my users to
> bypass the proxy and relay their messages
Well... I'm excited to say that my theory worked like a charm!!!
By creating a portforwarding rule on EFW I was able to get my users to
bypass the proxy and relay their messages off the mail server directly. The
mail server will only relay messages that pass authentication, so even if
people kn
Peter;
Thanks for the reply! At the moment we do have our users relaying through
their individual ISP's. Unfortunately this method isn't very reliable.
Most of the ISP now days only allow users that are on their network to relay
on their network. So when our user's are at a remote location us
hi
nadia007 wrote:
> also send and receive just fine. Unfortunately my remote users that are
> using their outlook and using either using IMAP or POP3 are having a very
> difficult time sending email through the mail server.
> postfix/smtpd[4496]: NOQUEUE: reject: RCPT from unknown[208.11.90.100
I have my mail server on the orange zone (192.168.100.x). My internal users
can send and receive mail just fine. Users using the webmail interface can
also send and receive just fine. Unfortunately my remote users that are
using their outlook and using either using IMAP or POP3 are having a ver
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