Hello.
I need to duplicate all incoming mail on several user accounts to another
mailbox, yet delivering this mail to the destination mailbox intact.
How should I do this ?
On sendmail, I was doing that via .forward, but on xmail forwarding to mail
to several users including own address
Hi there.
In the user's folder inside 'MAILROOT'/domains/yourdomain.com/ put a
file named 'mailproc.tab'.
Inside that file put two directives; one is the redirection and the
other tells xmail to drop mail into the current user's mailbox. Example
below:
redirect [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Members iam having a problem quite peculiar
I installed the xmail server in a organization
It worked quite fine for two daya Now the mail server is not recieving mails locally
unless i restart the mail server
I cannot go on restart the server on and on
What is the problem
-
To unsubscribe from
Is there any other SMTP or POP program running on that machine?
I might imagine when you restart the machine, xmail comes first and then
other smtp program which blocks xmail port 25 110.
Check it out...
Otherwise you'll have to check the logs and come up with more details
problem description.
Is it possible to run XMail's SMTP server on port 25 and another one at the
same time as well? The issue is that some ISP (earthlink and now bellsouth)
are blocking their subscribers from using outgoing port 25 to send email to
any server but those of the ISP.
As soon as I heard of this I
If they are blocking you from connecting to other servers on port 25
then changing yours to another port will make no difference. They are
filtering on where you are connecting to, not from.
Now if it's incoming connections to your smtp server on port 25 that
they are blocking then yes you
Our server is @ Hurricane Electric, they cannot block any of my ports.
What im saying is that more than one ISP blocks the outgoing PORTS of the
subscribers. By listening on multiple ports you could configure your email
software to use an alternate port and send email without any problems.
They can't block outgoing ports because those are dynamically assigned
most of the time. What they can do is look at the port you are trying to
connect to, such as SMTP 25. So yes they are blocking outgoing
connections, but not based upon where you are coming from, but where you
are going to.
Bill Healy wrote:
They can't block outgoing ports because those are dynamically assigned
most of the time. What they can do is look at the port you are trying to
connect to, such as SMTP 25. So yes they are blocking outgoing
connections, but not based upon where you are coming from, but where