Enviado por Samsung Mobile
Mensagem original
De : Phil Pennock
Data:
Para: Rob Gunther
Cc: exim-users@exim.org
Assunto: Re: [exim] Manual route / lookup troubles
On 2013-04-02 at 23:49 +0900, Rob Gunther wrote:
> The part I'm having trouble with is, bounce
On 2013-04-02 at 23:49 +0900, Rob Gunther wrote:
> The part I'm having trouble with is, bounce handling. I try and deliver,
> if the recipient server rejects the message and I need to process a bounce
> I run into a problem for some domains (which I host, and need to manual
> route)
>
> For a few
I've been doing some limited testing with Exim for a couple of weeks.
I've got exim running on port 25 & port 26.
Port 26 is protected via a firewall and will only allow connections from
another server that does the spam protection, Exim handles the final
delivery to client servers.
Messages fro
Hello,
Thanks all for the response, there are many ways to solve this. It took
me a while to figure out which would be the best and most simple. While
I was doing that I cam across "
router/150_exim4-config_hubbed_hosts". I then created
"/etc/exim4/hubbed_hosts" with an entry like this: "mydoma
>> I would like to know how to create a manual route which decides that a
>> certain smtp host points to a certain ip address. For example
>> smtp1.mydomain.org points to 222.333.444.555. Ignoring what could be
>> found through a dns lookup.
You need to make sure that the relay host is also
* on the Wed, May 23, 2007 at 05:09:10PM -0700, Jeroen van Aart wrote:
> Mike Cardwell wrote:
>> I don't think this is possible within Exim it's self. You're probably
>> best off just sticking it in your hosts file. Eg /etc/hosts:
>>
>> 222.333.444.555 smtp1.mydomain.org
> I tried this some time a
Quoting Jeroen van Aart:
>> http://www.exim.org/eximwiki/DontObfuscate
> I am sorry for not describing my exact problem. The problem is that exim
I think this was more about using "222.333.444.555" and
"smtp1.mydomain.org" instead of the real values.
> does a dns lookup for smtp1.mydomain.org a
On Wed, 23 May 2007, Jeroen van Aart wrote:
> Mike Cardwell wrote:
> > I don't think this is possible within Exim it's self. You're probably
> > best off just sticking it in your hosts file. Eg /etc/hosts:
> >
> > 222.333.444.555 smtp1.mydomain.org
>
> I tried this some time ago, but apparent
Marc Sherman wrote:
> http://exim.org/exim-html-4.67/doc/html/spec_html/ch20.html
I read this before, but it didn't seem to provide a solution.
> http://www.exim.org/eximwiki/DontObfuscate
I am sorry for not describing my exact problem. The problem is that exim
does a dns lookup for smtp1.mydo
* on the Wed, May 23, 2007 at 02:34:22PM -0700, Jeroen van Aart wrote:
> I would like to know how to create a manual route which decides that a
> certain smtp host points to a certain ip address. For example
> smtp1.mydomain.org points to 222.333.444.555. Ignoring what could be
> found through
Jeroen van Aart wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I would like to know how to create a manual route which decides that a
> certain smtp host points to a certain ip address. For example
> smtp1.mydomain.org points to 222.333.444.555. Ignoring what could be
> found through a dns lookup.
http://exim.org/exim-h
Hello,
I would like to know how to create a manual route which decides that a
certain smtp host points to a certain ip address. For example
smtp1.mydomain.org points to 222.333.444.555. Ignoring what could be
found through a dns lookup.
Thank you,
Jeroen
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