A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far way, someone said...
> I'm running Debian 2.2/unstable with imapd and exim. Both are running
> and I am able to read my mails. But I am not able to send mails
> because I am not allowed to relay... I would appreciate a quick 'n
> dirty howto from someone on th
Didn't this come uip earlier today?
Just select option 1 in eximconfig, enter your domain name when asked,
enter the local IP address range and don't allow relaying.
--
Patrick "sig free and joyful"" Kirk
GSM: +44 7876 560 646
ICQ: 42219699
On Fri, Aug 10, 2001 at 09:30:54PM +0200, Martin Puaschitz wrote:
| Hi!
|
| I'm running Debian 2.2/unstable with imapd and exim. Both are running and I
| am able to read my mails. But I am not able to send mails because I am not
| allowed to relay... I would appreciate a quick 'n dirty howto from
Hi!
I'm running Debian 2.2/unstable with imapd and exim. Both are running and I
am able to read my mails. But I am not able to send mails because I am not
allowed to relay... I would appreciate a quick 'n dirty howto from someone
on
the list, because it is very hard to read man's and other pages b
On Fri, Aug 10, 2001 at 02:52:30PM +0200, Martin Puaschitz wrote:
> Szenario: My uptime is 24/7; the server is also the local intranet router
> for my windows clients. I have three users who want to access exim from the
> local intranet. Beside this, there are about 4 users (all regular unix-users)
Hi!
I'm running Debian 2.2/unstable with imapd and exim. Both are running and I
am able to read my mails. But I am not able to send mails because I am not
allowed to relay... I would appreciate a quick 'n dirty howto from someone on
the list, because it is very hard to read man's and other pages b
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