yes i can, but SMTP AUTH shouldn't be an issue because James should
recognize the IP as James......and not try to relay......
give me a few minutes
----- Original Message -----
From: "Noel J. Bergman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "James Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, December 09, 2002 1:20 PM
Subject: RE: James installation and launch
> Randy,
>
> > I've never been able to send email to user@[24.240.241.4]
>
> Really? That is odd. I just did it. I sent e-mail to
> noel@[www.xxx.yyy.zzz] using the IP address of our public server. The log
> entry says:
>
> 09/12/02 13:48:37 INFO smtpserver: Successfully spooled mail from
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] for [noel@[www.xxx.yyy.zzz]]
>
> I just retrieved that e-mail from the server. Here is the header:
>
> Received: from xxxxxxxxxxxxxx ([11.22.33.44])
> by mail.devtech.com (JAMES SMTP Server 2.1a1-cvs) with SMTP ID
426
> for <noel@[www.xxx.yyy.zzz]>;
> Mon, 9 Dec 2002 13:48:36 -0500 (EST)
>
> The addresses are munged just to prevent annoying spam scrappers.
>
> > James: Handling mail for: 24.240.241.4
>
> Well, that looks right.
>
> > host 24.240.241.4 says: 530 Authentication Required
>
> Hmmm ... I don't run with SMTP AUTH. The code is:
>
> String toDomain = recipientAddress.getHost();
> if (!theConfigData.getMailServer().isLocalServer(toDomain))
> { ... 530 ...}
>
> which is the same code we use in RecipientIsLocal:
>
> return mailetContext.isLocalServer(recipient.getHost())
> && mailetContext.isLocalUser(recipient.getUser());
>
> and, the latter just worked for me.
>
> Can you test your configuration without SMTP AUTH, and see if the behavior
> changes?
>
> --- Noel
>
>
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