You use SMTP authentication through postfix or sendmail. Google [ mail
authentication relay ] and you should find lots of howtos.
I'm setting it up to use a sasldb to authenticate external users in
order to keep them apart from UNIX users. Be very certain that you use
STARTTLS or some form
I would like to see this too. Sometimes the user is less trustworthy
than the device. Not that I have any ideas on how to do this, but I
maybe locking the client id to the user id.
Mike
On 01/31/2013 07:56 AM, Dale J Chatham wrote:
> If you can't predict the IP, I am not aware of a way to do
On 01/28/2013 09:46 PM, Patrick Boutilier wrote:
On 01/28/2013 09:39 PM, Andrew Morgan wrote:
On Mon, 28 Jan 2013, Patrick Boutilier wrote:
On 01/27/2013 09:03 PM, Andrew Morgan wrote:
On Sat, 5 Jan 2013, Patrick Lamaiziere wrote:
Helo,
We use cyrus-imapd on Centos 6 at work and I've got t
If you can't predict the IP, I am not aware of a way to do what you want.
Try using authentication to verify the user, not the device.
On 01/31/2013 12:22 AM, Ram wrote:
> On 01/30/2013 08:11 PM, Dale J Chatham wrote:
>> If a Linux box, best place is likely /etc/hosts.deny
>>
>> http://linux.ab
On 01/31/2013 07:18 AM, John wrote:
On 31/01/13 10:41, Patrick Boutilier wrote:
Try syncserver:ALL instead of csync:ALL
That was it. Thank you.
My build included tcp_wrappers just because it always has. But, as the
OS has deprecated it some time ago, I think that I should rebuild
without it
On 31/01/13 10:41, Patrick Boutilier wrote:
>
> Try syncserver:ALL instead of csync:ALL
>
That was it. Thank you.
My build included tcp_wrappers just because it always has. But, as the
OS has deprecated it some time ago, I think that I should rebuild
without it. I presume there's nothing in Cyr
On 01/31/2013 06:13 AM, John wrote:
On 29/01/13 16:16, Patrick Boutilier wrote:
What are the contents of /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny ?
Sorry, been away on something else. I thought for a second there that's
what it would be but it isn't. I've appended config file output and some
ot
On 29/01/13 16:16, Patrick Boutilier wrote:
>
> What are the contents of /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny ?
>
>
>
Sorry, been away on something else. I thought for a second there that's
what it would be but it isn't. I've appended config file output and some
other information below.
# cat /e