To avoid taking over someone else's thread I will move this discussion to 
another one. Thank you for the recommendation of perdition. I will 
definately give that a shot. I looked at the documentation for this product 
and did not see a way to filter incoming http requests. Is there another 
package that will do that? Here is the scenario:

I would like to completely move my Exchange 2003 server and multiple postfix 
servers behind the firewall. I have implemented a postfix/MailScanner e-mail 
gateway that routes all smtp traffic for each server using one incoming IP 
address. POP3 and HTTP requests are still going directly to the servers. I 
would like to have all SMTP, POP3 and HTTP/HTTPS traffic routed in the same 
manner. The postfix servers aren't such a big deal but the Exchange server 
makes me a little nervous.

I can't move to perdition unless I am ready with the HTTP/HTTPS 
implementation as well. My users use the same address for both. Thanks again 
for all of your help!


On 7/24/05, John Turner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:If you are looking for 
something that can "proxy" IMAP/POP sessions
try Perdition.

http://www.vergenet.net/linux 
> 
> /perdition/
> 
> I have used it in front of several real backend IMAP/POP servers.
> 
> John
> 
> On Jul 24, 2005, at 10:11 PM, Douglas Ward wrote:
> 
> 
> > Does squid only work for outgoing connections? Is there a package
> > that could
> > be used to forward incoming POP3 and HTTP requests to multiple
> > internal
> > e-mail servers?
> >
>
--
TriLUG mailing list        : http://www.trilug.org/mailman/listinfo/trilug
TriLUG Organizational FAQ  : http://trilug.org/faq/
TriLUG Member Services FAQ : http://members.trilug.org/services_faq/
TriLUG PGP Keyring         : http://trilug.org/~chrish/trilug.asc

Reply via email to