It's actually a bit more complicated than that with an allow list for certain internal IP ranges, but the end result is that only ~10 or so people who send very low volumes of mail use it directly as an SMTP server (SMTP AUTH required) and all of that traffic is then routed through the actual SMTP server (that deals with the outside world) which also handles all the mail generated by web messaging.
-Jeff


At 11:57 AM 2/26/2004 -0800, you wrote:



> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Jeff Andreou
> Sent: Thursday, February 26, 2004 11:57 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [IMail Forum] Load testing
>
>
> Our current setup has iMail running primarily as a POP3 server, relaying
> mail only for local hosts with a separate SMTP server running

I *hope* this means you are not using Realy For Local Hosts, but rather No
Mail Relay

> exim for the
> majority of our clients.  We'd like to switch to iMail either as one
> machine running both POP and SMTP or with our current setup of a separate
> machine for SMTP and POP but want to do some load testing first.  Does
> anyone know of a good utility or set of utilities for testing
> SMTP and POP3
> loads?  The preference would be for a freeware/open source
> testing utility...
> -Jeff
>


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