to conditionally route incoming mail based
on the envelope recipient address?
(Basically I want migrated users to start getting their mail from the new box,
while the other users continue to connect to the old server)
I looked in the ports tree and didn't see an smtp proxy per se. Also the relayd
manpage
in the ports tree and didn't see an smtp proxy per se. Also
the relayd manpage seemed relevant but I've never used that daemon
before and thus am not sure.
I'm a newbie in this area, so any suggestions/guidance would be
greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance.
:-)
Dre
Never tried myself
On Jul 7, 2011, at 1:42 PM, IT Guy wrote:
Hi all,
I'm in the process of migrating our company from a certain proprietary mail
system to a new OpenBSD mailserver (IMAP + Postfix).
I'd like to be able to migrate our users one at a time rather than do the
whole company in one fell swoop.
Does
know of a good/easy way to conditionally route incoming mail based
on the envelope recipient address?
(Basically I want migrated users to start getting their mail from the new box,
while the other users continue to connect to the old server)
I looked in the ports tree and didn't see an smtp
Hello,
I'm looking for a smtp proxy. The idea is, that the proxy checks the
smtp session (if everything is valid and forward the information to an
exchange-server). The forwards should happen step-by-step (the smtp
proxy should be able to drop to be able to deny the recipient). The mail
itself
On Wed, 9 Aug 2006 13:21:23 +0200, openbsd misc wrote:
Hello,
I'm looking for a smtp proxy. The idea is, that the proxy checks the
smtp session (if everything is valid and forward the information to an
exchange-server). The forwards should happen step-by-step (the smtp
proxy should be able
openbsd misc schrieb:
Hello,
I'm looking for a smtp proxy. The idea is, that the proxy checks the
smtp session (if everything is valid and forward the information to an
exchange-server). The forwards should happen step-by-step (the smtp
proxy should be able to drop to be able to deny
openbsd misc schrieb:
Hello,
I'm looking for a smtp proxy. The idea is, that the proxy checks the
smtp session (if everything is valid and forward the information to
an
exchange-server). The forwards should happen step-by-step (the smtp
proxy should be able to drop to be able to deny
Hi,
use a standard smtp daemon (sendmail, postfix or whatever) and put the
spooling directory in a ramdisk :-)
Don't bother with the ramdisk. disk is cheap and fast compared
to smtp.
OpenBSD spamd in front of a cluster of sendmail/postfix running
boxes which have the
From the behaviour you describe, your design takes an effort at
tearing down just about the nicest part of SMTP: its resilience
against network outages.
On 8/9/06, openbsd misc [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
the smtp proxy should not be allowed to queue a message, else the
size of the ramdisk would
On Wed, Aug 09, 2006 at 04:52:21PM +0200, openbsd misc wrote:
openbsd misc schrieb:
Hello,
I'm looking for a smtp proxy. The idea is, that the proxy checks the
smtp session (if everything is valid and forward the information
to an exchange-server). The forwards should happen step
Hi,
use a standard smtp daemon (sendmail, postfix or whatever) and put
the
spooling directory in a ramdisk :-)
Don't bother with the ramdisk. disk is cheap and fast compared
to smtp.
OpenBSD spamd in front of a cluster of sendmail/postfix running
boxes which have the
On Wed, Aug 09, 2006 at 06:50:18PM +0200, openbsd misc wrote:
Don't bother with the ramdisk. disk is cheap and fast compared
to smtp.
Should be the last word in this thread as far as mail is concerned.
The only thing I can use is a ramdisk. I want it to run on a wrap
system.
The only thing I can use is a ramdisk. I want it to run on a wrap
system. Writing to the cf card is not an option, and all I have
are 128MB RAM. There are only two options:
Yuck. just get a couple of real (small) systems and carp 'em.
if you can't afford that see below..
- forward
(and, hence, NFS) - slip can be used
to abuse serial lines as network cables, and the CF adapter is likely to
plug into something that groks IDE somewhere.
However, if all this fails, what you're looking for could be called a
'transparent smtp proxy'; Google gives quite a few hits, and the very
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