On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 12:02 PM, Ben Scott wrote:
> ... Sendmail ... /etc/mail/genericstable:
>bscott dragonh...@gmail.com
>
> I presume Postfix has a similar capability. Exim may as well. Anyone?
I'm disappointined nobody has posted an answer to the above. I'm
changing the subje
On Wed, Jan 21, 2009 at 10:02 AM, Ben Scott wrote:
> The goal here is to configure one's MTA (Mail Transfer Agent) such
> that mail from a local-only email address gets rewritten to an valid
> public Internet email address.
>
...
> How does one do this in Postfix and/or Exim?
>
>From the Webmi
On 2009-01-21 10:02 AM, Ben Scott wrote:
>How does one do this in Postfix and/or Exim?
postfix (main.cf):
myhostname = foo.example.com
-Bill
--
Bill McGonigle, Owner Work: 603.448.4440
BFC Computing, LLC Home: 603.448.1668
b...@bfccomputing.com Cell: 603
Ben Scott wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 20, 2009 at 12:02 PM, Ben Scott wrote:
>
>> ... Sendmail ... /etc/mail/genericstable:
>>bscott dragonh...@gmail.com
>>
>> I presume Postfix has a similar capability. Exim may as well. Anyone?
>>
>
> I'm disappointined nobody has posted an answe
At least one person is confused here (me); possibly everybody. :-)
The scenario here (for me, and I believe the OP) is rewriting email
addresses, not masquerading as a different host.
Two have people suggested a config directive for Postfix:
myhostname = foo.example.com
Now, I
On Wed, Jan 21, 2009 at 1:06 PM, Ben Scott wrote:
> At least one person is confused here (me); possibly everybody. :-)
All covered in http://www.postfix.org/ADDRESS_REWRITING_README.html
> The scenario here (for me, and I believe the OP) is rewriting email
> addresses, not masquerading as a
On Wed, Jan 21, 2009 at 2:03 PM, Thomas Charron wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 21, 2009 at 1:06 PM, Ben Scott wrote:
> > At least one person is confused here (me); possibly everybody. :-)
>
> All covered in http://www.postfix.org/ADDRESS_REWRITING_README.html
Or more specifically:
http://www.postfix
On 2009-01-21 1:06 PM, Ben Scott wrote:
>The scenario here (for me, and the OP) is rewriting email addresses,
> not masquerading as a different host.:)
Righto, and certainly you can do that with address rewriting, but why
not setup the MUA properly in the first place? I understand your edge
On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 11:25 AM, Bill McGonigle wrote:
> On 2009-01-21 1:06 PM, Ben Scott wrote:
> >The scenario here (for me, and the OP) is rewriting email addresses,
> > not masquerading as a different host.:)
>
> Righto, and certainly you can do that with address rewriting, but why
> not
On Wed, 2009-01-21 at 13:06 -0500, Ben Scott wrote:
> At least one person is confused here (me); possibly everybody. :-)
>
> The scenario here (for me, and I believe the OP) is rewriting email
> addresses, not masquerading as a different host.
>
> Two have people suggested a config directive
On 2009-01-21 1:06 PM, Ben Scott wrote:
>So, what I want to do is tell my MTA to rewrite and some
> variants to. My MTA can keep on using
> for its hostname, but I want it to modify the
> reverse-path.
>
OK, at work now, so I can check my server... here's what I've got (as an
example):
v
On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 11:25 AM, Bill McGonigle wrote:
> Righto, and certainly you can do that with address rewriting, but why not
> setup the MUA properly in the first place?
For traditional Unix systems, the MUA is not responsible for
building the email address. That's the job of the MTA (o
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