IIRC, you do not need the SMTP connector.  I only have the Default SMTP
Virtual Server on mine, and it sends mail and receives it just fine
(disclaimer: your setup may be different than mine, so you may need it.
Don't delete stuff from your server without first testing it).  What do you
have under the default SMTP virtual server properties?  Look under Delivery,
outbound security.  What options do you have checked?

Ben Winzenz, MCSE
Network/Systems Administrator
Peregrine Systems, Inc.

 -----Original Message-----
From:   Patrick Rouse [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent:   Thursday, August 23, 2001 1:42 AM
To:     MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject:        Still a bit fuzzy

Single Exchange 2000 Server, behind firewall, connected via DSL, AD DNS,
ISP has the Public DNS.

I'm still a bit fuzzy on the way that Exchange 2000 uses SMTP to
send/receive messages.  I get more than a few of these per day and it
doesn't seem normal, because a lot come from well known domain names, i.e.
hotmail.com...

Your message did not reach some or all of the intended recipients.

      Subject:  RE: updates
      Sent:     8/22/2001 3:03 PM

The following recipient(s) could not be reached:

      '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' on 8/22/2001 3:03 PM
            Your mail system could not find a way to successfully
communicate with the destination system. Please notify your administrator.
            <mail.ocasf.org #5.5.0>

I have:

Administrative Groups, Servers, Server Name, Protocols, SMTP, Default SMTP
Virtual Server.

Also:

Routing Groups, Site Name, Connectors, SMTP Connector. 

Do I need both of these to send/receive emails, or is one left over from
Exchange 5.5?  Confused or just a long day... Thanks.
 




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