Hello folks,
I retyped the subject above from memory, so apologies if it doesn't match my original thread perfectly. I wanted to post this to the list, for the benefit of the list archives, as well as a candidate for the FAQ-O-Matic. My problem: Mailman was not sending email to any remote addresses, only to local users. My solution: QMail was not relaying from localhost. I thought it was, but I had omitted on important step. I have written up the following as an explaination of what to do if you're struggling with Mailman and QMail, and running QMail from DJB's tcpserver. The following pertains to installations running QMail from tcpserver. If you're running QMail, and you're having problems with Mailman sending remote email, perform the following test from your server: user@host$ telnet localhost 25 Trying 127.0.0.1... Connected to localhost. Escape character is '^]'. 220 hostname.mydomain.com ESMTP (it will be waiting for input - type the following) HELO mydomain.com 250 hostname.mydomain.com (it will once again be waiting, follow with:) MAIL FROM: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 250 ok (again, follow with:) RCPT TO: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 553 sorry, that domain isn't in my list of allowed rcpthosts (#5.7.1) If you see the above 553 response, your QMail server will not relay from localhost. This causes big problems with Mailman. If you do _not_ see a 553 response, your problem isn't that QMail can't relay from localhost. "OK, I got a 553 when I tried that, what do I do?" Well, you need to tell tcpserver that localhost is OK to relay from. This should work for you: 1) 'cd' into /etc, and create a file called /etc/tcp.smtp, with the following contents: # Allow localhost to relay 127.:allow,RELAYCLIENT="" 2) Create the database for tcpserver to use: tcprules tcp.smtp.cdb tcp.smtp.temp < tcp.smtp 3) Configure tcpserver to consult that database whenever someone establishes an SMTP session to your server by editting whatever startup script you use on your system. On my systems it is /etc/rc.local, it may be /etc/rc.d/init.d/tcpserver on yours. It's totally dependant on what OS you're running, and what style of startup scripts you're using. Ultimately, you need to start tcpserver with the following additional option: -x/etc/tcp.smtp.cdb 4) Restart tcpserver, and try the above localhost test again. It should reply with a "250 ok" message, instead of the "553 sorry, that domain isn't in my list of allowed rcpthosts" error you got before. This solved my problems. As I said before, I thought I had this nailed down, but I had simply forgotten to regenerate the tcp.smtp database. Doh. Many thanks to all the helpful folks that pointed me in the right direction. :) Benny ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The onions are irritating my buttocks." - Sluggy Freelance 10-12-1998 ------------------------------------------------------ Mailman-Users maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-users