On Wed, Nov 15, 2006 at 01:39:21AM -0500, Chris Metzler wrote: > > Hi, > > I'm having trouble configuring exim4. My situation -- that is, what I > want exim4 to do -- *can't* be that unusual; so I'm sure I'm missing > something fairly obvious. But I've played around with exim4's > configuration via "dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config" a zillion times and > cannot get there. I've Googled and skimmed the exim4 FAQ without much > success yet -- lots of stuff, but nothing that looks obviously like > the solution here. Next up is digging into the exim4 specification in > detail. I really don't want to that if I don't have to -- I mean, if > that's what I have to do to solve this problem, I will; but I'm hoping > that I'm just missing something with "dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config" > and this can be solved more easily than skipping sleep, since right now > I'm effectively working 15 hours a day and sleeptime is pretty much the > only free time I have anymore. > > Here's my situation and what I want: > > 1. I have a machine with no domain of its own, in the sense that I > haven't registered a domain or anything like that. My ISP is > speakeasy.net. Outgoing email goes to a smarthost. Incoming email > is pulled in by fetchmail and handed off to exim4. > > 2. Various users on this machine have email adresses registered with > the ISP of the form [EMAIL PROTECTED] When one of my > local users sends an outgoing email, exim4 appends "@speakeasy.net" > to the local username. > > 3. Likewise, if you were to send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED], > fetchmail on my machine should eventually grab it and pass it to exim4 here. > This apparently means that when I've configured exim4 using dpkg- > reconfigure, I need to tell exim4 that "speakeasy.net" should be added to > the list of domains for which this machine should consider itself the final > destination. If I don't do that, then when exim4 receives from fetchmail > an email for [EMAIL PROTECTED], exim4 immediately passes that > email back on to the ISP's smarthost (because we aren't a final destination > for "@speakeasy.net"), and around and around we go.
I think the problem may lie in your fetchmail configuration. Have you got something like: user [EMAIL PROTECTED] password abcdef is jim here ^^^^^^^^^^^ in .fetchmailrc? > > 4. But if I do that -- if I tell exim4 that "speakeasy.net" should be > added to the list of domains for which this machine should consider itself > the final destination, then that means I'm unable to send email to other > users of this ISP that have nothing to do with my machine (since they all > have addresses like [EMAIL PROTECTED]). Right now, if I > send an email to [EMAIL PROTECTED], exim4 notes that it's > been told that *I'm* the end destination for email to the domain > speakeasy.net, and cheerily reminds me that there's no one on this > machine by that username. > > Is there a simple solution to this? Or is it time for me to roll my > sleeves up and learn exim4 in more detail? If someone can clarify what > I'm doing wrong through dpkg-reconfigure, or point me at some helpful > documentation, I'd be very grateful. > > Thanks for , > > -c > > -- > Chris Metzler [EMAIL PROTECTED] > (remove "snip-me." to email) > > "As a child I understood how to give; I have forgotten this grace since I > have become civilized." - Chief Luther Standing Bear -- David Jardine "Running Debian GNU/Linux and loving every minute of it." -L. von Sacher-M.(1835-1895) -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]