Kurtis Mullins ha scritto: > Well, I tried switching my port over to 4500. Now I can access it. > Unfortunately I don't think I get a proper response because my email client > cannot use it to send mail. When my email client tests it though, it seems > like its going to work fine. Also, I can telnet into it (port 4500) from > home and it lets me connect.
Telnetting you should see: 220 <host> SMTP Server (JAMES SMTP Server <version>) ready <DATE> and then you can try with: EHLO <yourhost> MAIL FROM: <[email protected]> RCPT TO: <[email protected]> DATA yourmessage . QUIT If this works then you have to check your client settings because james is working fine. Stefano > Stefano Bagnara-2 wrote: >> Kurtis Mullins ha scritto: >>> Okay, I tried a traceroute and it works fine. I can connect to my port 80 >>> (http), 110 (pop), 8080 (tomcat) all just fine. The problem occurs when I >>> attempt to connect to port 25 -- that is when I get the "No route to >>> host" >>> error. However, if I SSH into the box and then do a "telnet localhost >>> 25", >>> it works just fine. >>> >>> I'm going to take your advice though and make sure my port isn't blocked. >>> My >>> ISP doesn't seem to block it but perhaps it could be an IPTables >>> configuration issue as someone else mentioned. >> It is probably blocked from your home provider and your university. >> It is highly suggested for providers to block all traffic to port 25 >> except for their own smtp relaying server, so that they can check email >> abuse and block them. It is not an uncommon practice. >> >> Stefano >> >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] >> For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] >> >> >> > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
