Over the course of the day I have been corresponding with a provider over
configurations on part of one of my systems.
We sent/received a number of messages (at least 20).
During a call to this provider, I discovered that one message did not
arrive.
Expecting some reason for this I checked the
Mike Canty wrote:
Over the course of the day I have been corresponding with a provider over
configurations on part of one of my systems.
We sent/received a number of messages (at least 20).
During a call to this provider, I discovered that one message did not
arrive.
Expecting some reason
Hi Jake/Eric,
I think my cousin who was installing this server had installed Mail Service
from server Configuration. Please find output of the command mention below:
postfix:x:89:89::/var/spool/postfix:/sbin/nologin
This show postfix was installed on my server. How do I remove the same? Also
on
amit IKF wrote:
Hi Jake/Eric,
I think my cousin who was installing this server had installed Mail
Service from server Configuration. Please find output of the command
mention below:
postfix:x:89:89::/var/spool/postfix:/sbin/nologin
This show postfix was installed on my server. How do I
Mike Canty wrote:
Over the course of the day I have been corresponding with a provider over
configurations on part of one of my systems.
We sent/received a number of messages (at least 20).
During a call to this provider, I discovered that one message did not
arrive.
Expecting some reason
Seeing the traffic recently about uninstalling postfix and dovecot and
making sure UID 89 is available brings up a question I have had.
What it so special about UID 89? Is it something more than just
most of the mail systems have a common heritage and someone in the early
years picked a random
Hi Jake,
Please see the output below:
[r...@amitip ~]# yum remove postfix dovecot
Loaded plugins: fastestmirror
Setting up Remove Process
No Match for argument: postfix
No Match for argument: dovecot
No Packages marked for removal
[r...@amitip ~]# userdel postfix
userdel: user postfix does not
amit IKF wrote:
Hi Jake,
Please see the output below:
[r...@amitip ~]# yum remove postfix dovecot
Loaded plugins: fastestmirror
Setting up Remove Process
No Match for argument: postfix
No Match for argument: dovecot
No Packages marked for removal
[r...@amitip ~]# userdel postfix
userdel: user
This doesn't look like the same error to me.
Is exim installed perhaps? Remove that as well:
# rpm -e exim --nodeps
amit IKF wrote:
Hi Jake,
Please see the output below:
[r...@amitip ~]# yum remove postfix dovecot
Loaded plugins: fastestmirror
Setting up Remove Process
No Match for argument:
Return Receipt
Your [qmailtoaster] Installation Fail
document:
Hi Eric,
Exim is not installed. Please find output below:
[r...@amitip qmailtoaster]# rpm -e exim --nodeps
error: package exim is not installed
Regards,
Amit
On Thu, Aug 27, 2009 at 5:50 PM, Eric Shubert e...@shubes.net wrote:
This doesn't look like the same error to me.
Is exim installed
Hi Jake,
I had run the dependency. Please find output for the same below:
Parsing package install arguments
Package autoconf-2.59-12.noarch already installed and latest version
Package automake-1.9.6-2.1.noarch already installed and latest version
Package automake17-1.7.9-7.noarch already
Hi jake,
Also find some more details below:
[r...@amitip qmailtoaster]# yum install *libf2c*
Loaded plugins: fastestmirror
Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile
* base: centos.aol.in
* updates: mirrors.hns.net.in
* addons: mirrors.hns.net.in
* extras: mirrors.hns.net.in
Setting up
Phil Leinhauser wrote:
Seeing the traffic recently
about uninstalling postfix and dovecot and
making sure UID
89 is available brings up a question I have had.
What it so special about UID 89? Is it something more than
just most
of the mail systems have a common heritage and
someone in the
amit IKF wrote:
No package compat-libf2c available.
No package compat-libgcc available.
These aren't on my COS5.3 toaster. I wouldn't be concerned with them.
--
-Eric 'shubes'
-
Qmailtoaster is sponsored by
There's no telling what your cousin might have done. You could be
piecemealing this together for quite some time.
This is your present problem:
checking for gcc... gcc
checking for C compiler default output... configure: error: C compiler
cannot create executables
You might try modifying
I am not even sure how to ask this question... but here goes.
I have a server that is outside my domain , outside my netwrok that i am
running a perl script on to monitor my websites -- from the outside.
ok the perl works - but it is to send an email to me -- inside my network
the emails
I suspect it's some RDNS or MX that's getting you. You might try a telnet mail
from that server or even a regular mail client. It may reveal the problem
quickly. Use the same addresses th perl uses.
-Original Message-
From: Jim Shupert jshup...@pps-inc.com
Sent: Thursday, August 27,
Even after fixing the clock and timezone etc,
Fresh install, now on two seperate boxes, and a Virtual machine,
I get the same error:
your /var/qmt/install-all , contact provider
The boxes vary, One is a Dualcore Intel the second is an AMD64, both
have 4 Gb ram, 500Gb HDD, etc
Good idea.
What distro/ver and MTA are you running on the external host?
Phil Leinhauser wrote:
I suspect it's some RDNS or MX that's getting you. You might try a
telnet mail from that server or even a regular mail client. It may
reveal the problem quickly. Use the same addresses th perl
Also noted that, on the first reboot, as usual it brings up the setup
for firewall, network etc
After setting the IP to statik and netmask etc,
The Interface does not come up, I have to run ifup eth0
I have since modified this to be enabled at Boot , as I checked the
Tricube wrote:
Also noted that, on the first reboot, as usual it brings up the
setup for firewall, network etc
After setting the IP to statik and netmask etc,
The Interface does not come up, I have to run ifup eth0
I have since modified this to be enabled at Boot , as I checked the
it is centos 4.7 running sendmail ( what came with it ) I started to
install postfix because I am a bit more farmilur with that than send mail.
Postfix was what i was using before i found -- the best mailserver
solution of qmailtoaster...
anyways
I can email with a client ( evolution ) and
That's not telling us much. I sure don't know, and don't care to know
sendmail. If you'd try using postfix again we might be of more help. For
what you need, postfix isn't a bad choice. Certainly better than sendmail.
Jim Shupert wrote:
it is centos 4.7 running sendmail ( what came with it )
Hey Jim,
I just happened to be doing this today, so here are my notes on how to
set up postfix to send mail out from a generic server, like for logwatch
output and such (that would otherwise go to r...@localhost).
{replace what's in braces, and remove braces}
# yum install postfix
# yum
Figures there'd be a type-o or two.
smtp_tls_session/cache should be smtp_tls_session_cache
Eric Shubert wrote:
Hey Jim,
I just happened to be doing this today, so here are my notes on how to
set up postfix to send mail out from a generic server, like for logwatch
output and such (that would
Please help how to solved this problem, my qmail server doing spam bot
--
MESSAGE NUMBER 144860
--
Received: (qmail 26019 invoked by uid 30); 26 Aug 2009 21:18:10 -
To: undisclosed-recipients: ;
Subject: Employment Opportunity.
MIME-Version: 1.0
Date: Thu, 27 Aug
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