And I thought it was just me....
Yeah.. Check for typos... I managed to create a cbd file instead of cdb.
Took me an hour or so to track it down too!
Adam
At 01:14 PM 11/22/00 -0800, Chris Bunnell wrote:
>I just wanted to share my rather embarrassing experience with this same type
>of problem:
>
>I was seeing the same thing. I ended up having a friend look at my tcp.smtp
>file. Within seconds he said, "Uhh, is that supposed to be spelled that
>way? Or did you F**K up?" I couldn't believe my eyes. I had misspelled
>RELAYCLIENT !!!! DUHHHH!!! What an idiot !
>:)
>
>As soon as I spelled it right, it worked fine!
>
>Chris Bunnell
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Michael T. Babcock" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Cc: "Peter Green" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Wednesday, November 22, 2000 12:38 PM
>Subject: Re: 553 sorry, that domain isn't in my list of allowed
>rcpthosts(#5.7.1)
>
>
> > > RE: 553 sorry, that domain isn't in my list of allowed rcpthosts(#5.7.1)
> > > [...]
> > > rcpthosts has NOTHING to do whatsoever with relaying. What does ``TCP''
>mean
> > > exactly?
> >
> > It has a lot to do with the problem at hand though. If your tcpserver
>rules say
> > ":accept" but not ":accept,RELAYCLIENT=\"\"", then you'll only accept mail
>to
> > domains in rcpthosts. The fact that they're getting this error means
>they're
> > not allowed to relay -- the rcpthosts is being checked as a last check
>before
> > denying the request ... but you knew that ;-).
> > --
> > Michael T. Babcock, C.T.O. FibreSpeed
> > http://www.fibrespeed.net/~mbabcock
> >
> >
> >