apologies for further questions on the same topic. I am using Mutt with exim and fetchmail with a dial-up account with an isp - panix.com. i originally configured with the "interactive" exim configuration utility and for a while, everything worked fine. when i installed gnome, it caused a few problems...when i, unintentionally, invoked Tkmail, more config problems developed. specifically, i can no longer sendmail. I have been trying to modify the /etc/exim.conf file manually, following the advices offered on the list, but i have not been able to remedy the problem, so one more time, a very similar question. I have modified the settings per previous advice: qualify_domains = panix.com qualify_recipient = localhost local_domains = localhost with these settings, i am still unable to send mail, this is via telnet to isp. my computer does not have a fully qualified domain name, my user name on my computer is pe, the user name at the isp is mickle, and the e-mail address is [EMAIL PROTECTED] my computer or "system" name is PIENO. if, using mutt, i send e-mail to myself <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, i get a delivery failed message addressed to my local address [EMAIL PROTECTED] indicating that the address [EMAIL PROTECTED] failed after a long failure period. apologies again...any thoughts, Peter
On Tue, 8 Jun 1999, Marc Mongeon wrote: > These three settings are important in exim.conf: > > qualify_domain = ihug.co.nz > qualify_recipient = localhost > local_domains = localhost > > Assuming your computer does not have a fully-qualified domain name (most > dial-up users don't). > If you do have a FQDN, use that instead of localhost. So, people who want to > send mail to you > will send it to [EMAIL PROTECTED] You will use fetchmail to relay the mail > from your POP account > to the local machine (tell fetchmail that you want to send it to [EMAIL > PROTECTED]). You will send > mail to local users by addressing it to [EMAIL PROTECTED] or just user, and > the mail will be routed > locally. You will send mail to non-local users by addressing it to [EMAIL > PROTECTED], and > the recipient will see [EMAIL PROTECTED] in the "From:" field. Does that > sound like what you wanted? > > Marc > > ---------- > Marc Mongeon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Unix Specialist > Ban-Koe Systems > 9100 W Bloomington Fwy > Bloomington, MN 55431-2200 > (612)888-0123, x417 | FAX: (612)888-3344 > ---------- > "It's such a fine line between clever and stupid." > -- David St. Hubbins and Nigel Tufnel of "Spinal Tap" > > > >>> Matthew Gregan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 06/08 10:21 AM >>> > Greetings... > > I've tried searching the debian-user list archive already, and found some > messages which probably contain the answer I'm after, but it seems that the > actual messages aren't available, so I can't read them... (It was working a > week ago when I last tried, but not yesterday or today...) > > Anyway, this should be an easy problem to solve for somebody. I've played > around with eximconfig a bit, but I can't find how to solve the problem. > > I'm using exim and fetchmail for my mail delivery. Exim is setup using option > 2 in eximconfig (recommended for dialup systems). Everything is working fine, > I can receive email and send it fine, except if I try and send email to > people on my ISP. The problem is that outgoing emails have their addresses > rewritten as @ihug.co.nz, and my mail system classes these emails as local, > so it tries to deliver them on my machine and fails. > > I thought I'd fixed this by stopping ihug.co.nz being considered local, but > then email generated by cronjobs and such were finding their way to my > provider ([EMAIL PROTECTED] - since the outgoing mails were having their > addresses rewritten). > > I think it should be a simple fix to solve this, but I don't know what it > is... I've checked howtos but they only seem to cover other MTAs. :-/ > > Thanks in advance. > -- > Matthew Gregan [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null > > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null > >