Well, what clients do you want courier to relay for you? If it is a class of IP's (e.g. 192.168.1.x) you can, I believe, put that in the smtpaccess file. If you have a small number of clients just enter the IP's yourself one-by-one. Whatever you do, you don't want to relay for any arbitrary IP unless, of course, you want to show up on the various mail abuse lists ;-)
--Tony On Mon, 2002-01-21 at 09:59, Szalay Attila wrote: > Hi! > > On Sun, 20 Jan 2002, Sam Varshavchik wrote: > > Move your domain names from locals to hosteddomains, and then rename each > > account in postgres from 'username' to 'username@domain'. Each mail > > client will have to be reconfigured to use userid 'username@domain' to log > > in, of course. > Thank you, it worked! > Now i've run into an other serious trouble: > in the smtpaccess file i have only the local host and one ip address to > relay for. All other addresses are refused to send mail for me with error > relaying denied. > How can I fix this? > > -- > Szalay Attila <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Linux System Administrator > Globalservice Kft. / http://mrwas.globalservice.hu > Mobil: (20) 9 441 372 > > > _______________________________________________ > courier-users mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Unsubscribe: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/courier-users -- Tony Bibbs | Life is a moderately good play [EMAIL PROTECTED] | with a bad 3rd act. 515.554.8046 | _______________________________________________ courier-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/courier-users
