Hi,
At 18:19 11.2.2001 -0500, Kari Suomela wrote:
I am still having a problem getting selective relaying to work. Here is
my smtp file:
service smtp
{
disable = no
socket_type = stream
protocol= tcp
wait = no
user = qmaild
server = /var/qmail/bin/tcp-env
Kari Suomela [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
CC Switch to tcpserver.
I have looked at it and it seems overkill for a small server. As I also
have pretty well everything else working ok under xinetd, I'd like to
solve this last issue.
It's not overkill. tcpserver is particularly well suited
I am still having a problem getting selective relaying to work. Here is
my smtp file:
service smtp
{
disable = no
socket_type = stream
protocol= tcp
wait = no
user = qmaild
server = /var/qmail/bin/tcp-env
server_args = /var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd
env
Kari Suomela [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am still having a problem getting selective relaying to work. Here is
my smtp file:
Looks like xinetd.
How would I properly allow relaying from our local net, and block
others?
Switch to tcpserver. Chances are you can get it set up correctly in
As a very new qmail guy (1 day) I would recommend the url:
http://www.palomine.net/qmail/selectiverelay.html
Had me in and out in 10 minutes, switching from inetd to tcpserver
(thanks chris Johnson if your on this list!).
Only caveat I ran into was 127.0.0.1 (localhost) has to go in there
too
Sunday February 11 2001 21:03, Charles Cazabon wrote to All:
CC Looks like xinetd.
How would I properly allow relaying from our local net, and block
others?
CC Switch to tcpserver. Chances are you can get it set up correctly
CC in
CC thirty minutes or less if you follow Life with