Hello,
Use Linuxconf:
- Control Panel/Control Service activity, enable sendmail.
- Control files and systems/Configure Linuxconf modules, enable sendmail
- Network/Sendmail/masquerading rules, add a new entry
In the "from", type "@localhost" (replace localhost by your localhost ;)
In the new from, type "@isp.com"
Jean-Michel Dault
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Sun, 1 Aug 1999, Jacek Andreas Matulla wrote:
> Date: Sun, 1 Aug 1999 23:59:37 +0200
> From: Jacek Andreas Matulla <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [expert] Sendmail...
>
> Hi all,
>
> well I just wanted to configure sendmail...but unfortunetly it's not that easy.
> What I want is, that sendmail will deliver local mail immediatly and masqurade
> for outgoing mail. I have a dial-up account. Then it should remap local
> adressas to other adresses known in the internet.
>
> local1 > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> I'm somehow disappointed, because all worked time ago with an older version of
> sendmail, but now I have sendmail-8.9.3-9mdk, and of course the old
> configuration .mc file does not work with this version. Sendmail simply does
> not do anything.
>
> So I tried to use linuxconf, and somehow succeeded, but it does not work as it
> should. I do not know where to enter the localhost and where to enter the
> provider's server to masquarade as. As I said it works somehow for now, but the
> problem is that I have to run sendmail -q when connected. That's allright, but
> when fetchmail receives some mail and I disconnect sendmail does not do
> anything with the received mails, they stay in /var/spool/mqueue untill I run
> sendmail -q again, so sendmail moves the mail to the /var/spool/mail/user.
> I remember that this worked automatically before. Can someone help?
>
> BTW before I could use a genericstable, but as I said sendmail ignores all this.
>
>
> TIA
>
> Jacek
>