qmail Digest 9 Aug 1999 10:00:01 -0000 Issue 723

Topics (messages 28713 through 28733):

Installing Qmail
        28713 by: "Waterfront Internet Service" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
        28717 by: Kevin Waterson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Qmail Problems
        28714 by: "Waterfront Internet Service" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Sendmail
        28715 by: "Deb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
        28716 by: Magnus Bodin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

qmail-smtpd /w rblsmtpd causing load avg 9/9/9
        28718 by: "Robert Wojciechowski Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

secondary MX on a Qmail host.
        28719 by: Dongping Deng <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
        28720 by: "Timothy L. Mayo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

smtpd help!
        28721 by: "Matt Heatley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
        28722 by: Jim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
        28723 by: Jim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
        28730 by: "B. Bogart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Aliases
        28724 by: "Waterfront Internet Service" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
        28731 by: Anand Buddhdev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

E-mail only clients
        28725 by: Jason Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

qmail/sshd question
        28726 by: "steve j. kondik" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
        28727 by: "steve j. kondik" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Qmail Options
        28728 by: "Waterfront Internet Service" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
        28729 by: Chris Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Selective POP3 redirection ?
        28732 by: Rich Aldridge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Serial Mail
        28733 by: Shashi Dahal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Administrivia:

To subscribe to the digest, e-mail:
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe from the digest, e-mail:
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To bug my human owner, e-mail:
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To post to the list, e-mail:
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]


----------------------------------------------------------------------


Hi,
 
I am currently running sendmail but wish to change to qmail.
 
I have read the instructions but they all say how to upgrade from sendmail to qmail. I want to delete sendmail as if it never existed and install qmail as if I never had a mail program installed. I know I will loose any messages that are in sendmails queue. Is this possible and how?
 
Regards,
Steve




Waterfront Internet Service wrote:

> Hi, I am currently running sendmail but wish to change to qmail. I
> have read the instructions but they all say how to upgrade from
> sendmail to qmail. I want to delete sendmail as if it never existed
> and install qmail as if I never had a mail program installed. I know I
> will loose any messages that are in sendmails queue. Is this possible
> and how?
>
> What Operating System?





Hi,
 
I have just tried to setup qmail, unsuccessfully!
 
I wanted to use Maildir to store the mail which I got working ok, the only problem I was having was trying to receive mail and trying to send mail outside of my domain.
 
I could send local mail ok but when I tried to pick it up it said there were no new messages. I assume it was accessing the old /var/spool/mail for message. Could not work out how to tell qmail to access /Maildir
 
Trying to send mail outside of my domain resulted in a message saying " ..... no relay" I checked the FAQ and did what it said, changed the line in inetd.conf, edited hosts.allow and added tcp-env: 203.57.50.: setenv = RELAYCLIENT but I still couldn't relay.
 
Help!
 
Regards,
 
Steve




Once Qmail is installed and running okay can I remove the var/spool/mail directory and the sendmail directory?




On Mon, 9 Aug 1999, Deb wrote:

> Once Qmail is installed and running okay can I remove the var/spool/mail directory 
>and the sendmail directory?

yes. 

--
"MOST USELESS site of the year 1998" --> http://x42.com/urlcalc/





Hello,

I am using qmail from tcpserver, with the line:

echo -n "(qmail-smtpd via tcpserver) "
    supervise /var/qmail/supervise/tcpserver-qmail-smtpd \
        /usr/local/bin/tcpserver -c 10 -u $QMAILDUID -g $NOFILESGID \
        -x /etc/tcprules.d/qmail-smtpd.cdb \
        0 smtp \
        /usr/local/bin/rblsmtpd -rrbl.maps.vix.com \
        /usr/local/bin/rblsmtpd -rdul.maps.vix.com \
        /var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd 2>&1 &


Everything seems fine, and the machine is humming along, until I notice a
load average of 9/9/9!  I was tracing it down, but ps, top, etc did not show
ANYTHING using CPU time.. but what I did notice from 'ps ax' was:

24408  ?  S    0:00 /usr/local/bin/rblsmtpd -rrbl.maps.vix.com
/usr/local/bin/r
. (3 more)
24431  ?  D    0:00 /usr/local/bin/rblsmtpd -rdul.maps.vix.com
/var/qmail/bin/q
24432  ?  D    0:00 /usr/local/bin/rblsmtpd -rdul.maps.vix.com
/var/qmail/bin/q
24434  ?  D    0:00 /usr/local/bin/rblsmtpd -rrbl.maps.vix.com
/usr/local/bin/r
. (2 more)
24453  ?  D    0:00 /usr/local/bin/rblsmtpd -rrbl.maps.vix.com
/usr/local/bin/r

I killed these, and my load avg went back down.  What caused this?

Thanks,

Robert




-----Original Message-----
From: Chris Johnson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, April 23, 1999 10:47 AM
Subject: Re: secondary MX on a Qmail host.

>them.org should be in control/rcpthosts *only*. That's the only
configuration
>required.

>Chris

I have a machine qm1.asimba.com which acts as a secondary MX. The only
purpose for it is to move mail to the primary mail server after the
primary server is up. I have the primary mail server entry in rcpthosts
file. But it didn't quite work. We shut down the primary mail server.
Qm1.asimba.com receives the messages destined to the primary mail
server, marks them as remote. Somehow qmail keeps trying every few
seconds til it accumulates so many hops, it started to bounce.  Do you
have any clues? 

Here's some sample message
============================================================ 
Hi. This is the qmail-send program at qm1.asimba.com.
I'm afraid I wasn't able to deliver your message to the following
addresses.
This is a permanent error; I've given up. Sorry it didn't work out.

<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
209.0.108.110 failed after I sent the message.
Remote host said: 554 too many hops, this message is looping (#5.4.6)

--- Below this line is a copy of the message.

Return-Path: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Received: (qmail 4348 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:49:08 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:49:08 -0000
Received: (qmail 4333 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:49:03 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:49:03 -0000
Received: (qmail 4233 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:48:28 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:48:28 -0000
Received: (qmail 4046 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:42 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:42 -0000
Received: (qmail 4042 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:42 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:42 -0000
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Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:32 -0000
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Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:32 -0000
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Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:26 -0000
Received: (qmail 3982 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:26 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:26 -0000
Received: (qmail 3907 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
Received: (qmail 3904 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
Received: (qmail 3901 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
Received: (qmail 3898 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:00 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:00 -0000
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Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:45 -0000
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Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:40 -0000
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Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:34 -0000
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Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:29 -0000
Received: (qmail 3783 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:29 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:29 -0000
Received: (qmail 3750 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:24 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:24 -0000
Received: (qmail 3717 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:18 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:18 -0000
Received: (qmail 3694 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:13 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:13 -0000
Received: (qmail 3631 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:48 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:48 -0000
Received: (qmail 3627 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:48 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:48 -0000
Received: (qmail 3603 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:42 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:42 -0000
Received: (qmail 3585 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:37 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:37 -0000
Received: (qmail 3541 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:27 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:27 -0000
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  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:22 -0000
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  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:16 -0000
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  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:16 -0000
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  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:06 -0000
Received: (qmail 3421 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:06 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:06 -0000
Received: (qmail 3418 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:06 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:06 -0000
Received: (qmail 3385 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:00 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:00 -0000
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Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:44:50 -0000
Received: (qmail 3343 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:44:50 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:44:50 -0000
Received: (qmail 3340 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:44:49 -0000
Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:44:49 -0000
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  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:43:27 -0000
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Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:42:49 -0000
Received: (qmail 3012 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:42:48 -0000
Received: from web106.yahoomail.com (205.180.60.73)
  by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:42:48 -0000
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Received: from [63.192.133.31] by web106.yahoomail.com; Sun, 08 Aug
1999 12:38:04 PDT










First of all, qm1.asimba.com is NOT a secondary MX host.  The only MX
recored for asimba.com points to smtp.asimba.com which is a CNAME for
ms1.asimba.com.

Before you do ANYTHING with qm1.asimba.com, fix your DNS so that it
matches either:

asimba.com.     IN MX 10        smtp.asimba.com.
smtp.asimba.com.        IN A    209.0.108.112
ms1.asimba.com.         IN A    209.0.108.112

or:

asimba.com.     IN MX 10        ms1.asimba.com.
ms1.asimba.com. IN A            209.0.108.112

Then, add another MX record for asimba.com like this:

asimba.com.     IN MX 20        qm1.asimba.com.

What you have right now is a mess.  The above will straighten it out and
get things working correctly.

On Sun, 8 Aug 1999, Dongping Deng wrote:

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Chris Johnson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, April 23, 1999 10:47 AM
> Subject: Re: secondary MX on a Qmail host.
> 
> >them.org should be in control/rcpthosts *only*. That's the only
> configuration
> >required.
> 
> >Chris
> 
> I have a machine qm1.asimba.com which acts as a secondary MX. The only
> purpose for it is to move mail to the primary mail server after the
> primary server is up. I have the primary mail server entry in rcpthosts
> file. But it didn't quite work. We shut down the primary mail server.
> Qm1.asimba.com receives the messages destined to the primary mail
> server, marks them as remote. Somehow qmail keeps trying every few
> seconds til it accumulates so many hops, it started to bounce.  Do you
> have any clues? 
> 
> Here's some sample message
> ============================================================ 
> Hi. This is the qmail-send program at qm1.asimba.com.
> I'm afraid I wasn't able to deliver your message to the following
> addresses.
> This is a permanent error; I've given up. Sorry it didn't work out.
> 
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> 209.0.108.110 failed after I sent the message.
> Remote host said: 554 too many hops, this message is looping (#5.4.6)
> 
> --- Below this line is a copy of the message.
> 
> Return-Path: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Received: (qmail 4348 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:49:08 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:49:08 -0000
> Received: (qmail 4333 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:49:03 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:49:03 -0000
> Received: (qmail 4233 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:48:28 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:48:28 -0000
> Received: (qmail 4046 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:42 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:42 -0000
> Received: (qmail 4042 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:42 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:42 -0000
> Received: (qmail 4013 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:32 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:32 -0000
> Received: (qmail 4010 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:32 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:32 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3985 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:26 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:26 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3982 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:26 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:26 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3907 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3904 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3901 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:01 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3898 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:47:00 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:47:00 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3843 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:45 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:45 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3821 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:40 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:40 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3795 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:34 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:34 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3786 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:29 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:29 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3783 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:29 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:29 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3750 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:24 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:24 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3717 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:18 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:18 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3694 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:46:13 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:46:13 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3631 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:48 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:48 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3627 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:48 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:48 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3603 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:42 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:42 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3585 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:37 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:37 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3541 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:27 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:27 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3517 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:22 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:22 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3498 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:16 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:16 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3493 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:16 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:16 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3425 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:06 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:06 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3421 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:06 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:06 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3418 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:06 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:06 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3385 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:45:00 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:45:00 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3347 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:44:50 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:44:50 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3343 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:44:50 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:44:50 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3340 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:44:49 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:44:49 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3320 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:44:44 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:44:44 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3317 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:44:44 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:44:44 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3237 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:44:09 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:44:09 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3232 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:44:09 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:44:09 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3196 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:43:53 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:43:53 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3174 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:43:38 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:43:38 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3152 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:43:32 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:43:32 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3130 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:43:27 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:43:27 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3120 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:43:26 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:43:26 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3098 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:43:20 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:43:20 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3073 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:43:05 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:43:05 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3060 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:42:59 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:42:59 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3018 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:42:49 -0000
> Received: from ccdsf110.ccdsf.com (HELO qm1.asimba.com) (209.0.108.110)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:42:49 -0000
> Received: (qmail 3012 invoked from network); 8 Aug 1999 18:42:48 -0000
> Received: from web106.yahoomail.com (205.180.60.73)
>   by 166.90.135.14 with SMTP; 8 Aug 1999 18:42:48 -0000
> Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Received: from [63.192.133.31] by web106.yahoomail.com; Sun, 08 Aug
> 1999 12:38:04 PDT
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 

---------------------------------
Timothy L. Mayo                         mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Senior Systems Administrator
localconnect(sm)
http://www.localconnect.net/

The National Business Network Inc.      http://www.nb.net/
One Monroeville Center, Suite 850
Monroeville, PA  15146
(412) 810-8888 Phone
(412) 810-8886 Fax





Ok, I believe I've read everything available about configuring smtpd with
qmail for selective relaying.  Now, I can't seem to get anything to work :).

The problem seems to be that *something* (though I can't figure out what) is
listening on port 25.  If I change to port 24 everything works fine. I need
to figure out what is running but I just can't seem do it.. is there a
command that lists port and process?  netstat doesn't seem to do it.

My inetd.conf file,the output of ps waux, and the qmail startup lines are
included below...

ANY help is greatly appreciated at this point.... The basic problem is that
even when I don't start qmail I have *something* listening on port 25... if
I use nmap (a portscanner) on my server it shows port 25 as "filtered"

Any ideas?  I'm about at the end of my rope.. thanks!!

Matt

============================================================
Error rec'd in Outlook mail client:

Unable to connect to the Server:...

(whether or not qmail-smtp is started)

============================================================
qmail and qmail-smtpd are started via:
QMAILDUID=`id -u qmaild`
NOFILESGID=`id -g qmaild`

    supervise /var/supervise/qmail/send /var/qmail/rc |
        setuser qmaill cyclog /var/log/qmail &

    supervise /var/supervise/qmail/smtpd tcpserver -v -x/etc/tcp.smtp.cdb \
        -u$QMAILDUID -g$NOFILESGID 0 smtp \
        recordio /var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd 2>&1 | setuser qmaill accustamp
| \
        setuser qmaill cyclog /var/log/qmail/smtpd &
============================================================
My inetd.conf(with comments removed):
# See "man 8 inetd" for more information.
#
time    stream  tcp     nowait  root    internal

time    dgram   udp     wait    root    internal

ftp     stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  wu.ftpd -a

telnet  stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.telnetd

shell   stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.rshd -L

login   stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.rlogind

talk    dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.talkd

ntalk   dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.talkd

imap    stream  tcp     nowait  cyrus   /usr/cyrus/bin/imapd    imapd

finger  stream  tcp     nowait  nobody  /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.fingerd -w

http-rman       stream  tcp     nowait.10000    nobody  /usr/sbin/tcpd  
/usr/sbin/http-rman

rplay   dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  rplayd -t 30 -c 60 -s
16384 -F0 --inetd

midinet stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.midinetd
============================================================
My output of ps waux (if I don't start qmail):
USER       PID %CPU %MEM  SIZE   RSS TTY STAT START   TIME COMMAND
nobody     104  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
/opt/apache/bin/httpd
nobody     105  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
/opt/apache/bin/httpd
nobody     106  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
/opt/apache/bin/httpd
nobody     107  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
/opt/apache/bin/httpd
nobody     108  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
/opt/apache/bin/httpd
root         1  0.1  0.3   260   168  ?  S    18:36   0:03 init [2]
root         2  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kflushd)
root         3  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kpiod)
root         4  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kswapd)
root         5  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (md_thread)
root        12  0.0  0.5   764   244  ?  S    18:36   0:00 update (bdflush)
root        74  0.0  1.1   948   552  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/syslogd
root        78  0.0  1.5  1136   732  ?  S    18:36   0:00
/usr/sbin/klogd -c 1
root       101  0.0  0.9   912   460  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/inetd
root       102  0.0  2.9  3448  1400  ?  S    18:36   0:00
/opt/apache/bin/httpd
root       137  0.0  1.7  1412   796  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/nmbd -D
root       138  0.0  1.4  1376   684  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/nmbd -D
root       139  0.0  1.6  1764   752  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/smbd -D
root       146  0.0  1.5  1528   728  ?  S    18:36   0:00 sh ./RUN_SYBASE
root       147  0.0 14.6 15964  6840  ?  S    18:36   0:01
/opt/sybase/bin/dataserver -d/data/master.dat -sSYBASE -e/data/errorlog -i/o
pt/sybase
root       149  0.0  1.1   912   516  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/cron
root       151  0.1  1.2  1224   584  ?  S    18:36   0:03
/usr/local/sbin/sshd
root       152  0.0  0.7   768   340   1 S    18:36   0:00
/sbin/mingetty --noclear tty1
root       153  0.0  0.7   768   340   2 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
tty2
root       154  0.0  0.7   768   340   3 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
tty3
root       155  0.0  0.7   768   340   4 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
tty4
root       156  0.0  0.7   768   340   5 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
tty5
root       157  0.0  0.7   768   340   6 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
tty6
root       209  0.0  1.5  1272   704  ?  S    19:09   0:00 in.telnetd
root       210  0.1  2.6  1908  1264  p0 S    19:09   0:00 -bash
root       255  0.0  1.1   948   532  p0 R    19:13   0:00 ps waux





netstat -a will show you all open ports *including listening servers.*

Also try:
lsof -i |



On Sun, 8 Aug 1999, Matt Heatley wrote:

> Ok, I believe I've read everything available about configuring smtpd with
> qmail for selective relaying.  Now, I can't seem to get anything to work :).
> 
> The problem seems to be that *something* (though I can't figure out what) is
> listening on port 25.  If I change to port 24 everything works fine. I need
> to figure out what is running but I just can't seem do it.. is there a
> command that lists port and process?  netstat doesn't seem to do it.
> 
> My inetd.conf file,the output of ps waux, and the qmail startup lines are
> included below...
> 
> ANY help is greatly appreciated at this point.... The basic problem is that
> even when I don't start qmail I have *something* listening on port 25... if
> I use nmap (a portscanner) on my server it shows port 25 as "filtered"
> 
> Any ideas?  I'm about at the end of my rope.. thanks!!
> 
> Matt
> 
> ============================================================
> Error rec'd in Outlook mail client:
> 
> Unable to connect to the Server:...
> 
> (whether or not qmail-smtp is started)
> 
> ============================================================
> qmail and qmail-smtpd are started via:
> QMAILDUID=`id -u qmaild`
> NOFILESGID=`id -g qmaild`
> 
>     supervise /var/supervise/qmail/send /var/qmail/rc |
>         setuser qmaill cyclog /var/log/qmail &
> 
>     supervise /var/supervise/qmail/smtpd tcpserver -v -x/etc/tcp.smtp.cdb \
>         -u$QMAILDUID -g$NOFILESGID 0 smtp \
>         recordio /var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd 2>&1 | setuser qmaill accustamp
> | \
>         setuser qmaill cyclog /var/log/qmail/smtpd &
> ============================================================
> My inetd.conf(with comments removed):
> # See "man 8 inetd" for more information.
> #
> time  stream  tcp     nowait  root    internal
> 
> time  dgram   udp     wait    root    internal
> 
> ftp   stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  wu.ftpd -a
> 
> telnet        stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.telnetd
> 
> shell stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.rshd -L
> 
> login stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.rlogind
> 
> talk  dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.talkd
> 
> ntalk dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.talkd
> 
> imap  stream  tcp     nowait  cyrus   /usr/cyrus/bin/imapd    imapd
> 
> finger        stream  tcp     nowait  nobody  /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.fingerd -w
> 
> http-rman     stream  tcp     nowait.10000    nobody  /usr/sbin/tcpd  
>/usr/sbin/http-rman
> 
> rplay dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  rplayd -t 30 -c 60 -s
> 16384 -F0 --inetd
> 
> midinet       stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.midinetd
> ============================================================
> My output of ps waux (if I don't start qmail):
> USER       PID %CPU %MEM  SIZE   RSS TTY STAT START   TIME COMMAND
> nobody     104  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> nobody     105  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> nobody     106  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> nobody     107  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> nobody     108  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> root         1  0.1  0.3   260   168  ?  S    18:36   0:03 init [2]
> root         2  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kflushd)
> root         3  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kpiod)
> root         4  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kswapd)
> root         5  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (md_thread)
> root        12  0.0  0.5   764   244  ?  S    18:36   0:00 update (bdflush)
> root        74  0.0  1.1   948   552  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/syslogd
> root        78  0.0  1.5  1136   732  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /usr/sbin/klogd -c 1
> root       101  0.0  0.9   912   460  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/inetd
> root       102  0.0  2.9  3448  1400  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> root       137  0.0  1.7  1412   796  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/nmbd -D
> root       138  0.0  1.4  1376   684  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/nmbd -D
> root       139  0.0  1.6  1764   752  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/smbd -D
> root       146  0.0  1.5  1528   728  ?  S    18:36   0:00 sh ./RUN_SYBASE
> root       147  0.0 14.6 15964  6840  ?  S    18:36   0:01
> /opt/sybase/bin/dataserver -d/data/master.dat -sSYBASE -e/data/errorlog -i/o
> pt/sybase
> root       149  0.0  1.1   912   516  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/cron
> root       151  0.1  1.2  1224   584  ?  S    18:36   0:03
> /usr/local/sbin/sshd
> root       152  0.0  0.7   768   340   1 S    18:36   0:00
> /sbin/mingetty --noclear tty1
> root       153  0.0  0.7   768   340   2 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> tty2
> root       154  0.0  0.7   768   340   3 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> tty3
> root       155  0.0  0.7   768   340   4 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> tty4
> root       156  0.0  0.7   768   340   5 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> tty5
> root       157  0.0  0.7   768   340   6 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> tty6
> root       209  0.0  1.5  1272   704  ?  S    19:09   0:00 in.telnetd
> root       210  0.1  2.6  1908  1264  p0 S    19:09   0:00 -bash
> root       255  0.0  1.1   948   532  p0 R    19:13   0:00 ps waux
> 





Oops, sorry about that last pipe char on that lsof line.  That was a typo.
:)


On Sun, 8 Aug 1999, Jim wrote:

> netstat -a will show you all open ports *including listening servers.*
> 
> Also try:
> lsof -i |
> 
> 
> 
> On Sun, 8 Aug 1999, Matt Heatley wrote:
> 
> > Ok, I believe I've read everything available about configuring smtpd with
> > qmail for selective relaying.  Now, I can't seem to get anything to work :).
> > 
> > The problem seems to be that *something* (though I can't figure out what) is
> > listening on port 25.  If I change to port 24 everything works fine. I need
> > to figure out what is running but I just can't seem do it.. is there a
> > command that lists port and process?  netstat doesn't seem to do it.
> > 
> > My inetd.conf file,the output of ps waux, and the qmail startup lines are
> > included below...
> > 
> > ANY help is greatly appreciated at this point.... The basic problem is that
> > even when I don't start qmail I have *something* listening on port 25... if
> > I use nmap (a portscanner) on my server it shows port 25 as "filtered"
> > 
> > Any ideas?  I'm about at the end of my rope.. thanks!!
> > 
> > Matt
> > 
> > ============================================================
> > Error rec'd in Outlook mail client:
> > 
> > Unable to connect to the Server:...
> > 
> > (whether or not qmail-smtp is started)
> > 
> > ============================================================
> > qmail and qmail-smtpd are started via:
> > QMAILDUID=`id -u qmaild`
> > NOFILESGID=`id -g qmaild`
> > 
> >     supervise /var/supervise/qmail/send /var/qmail/rc |
> >         setuser qmaill cyclog /var/log/qmail &
> > 
> >     supervise /var/supervise/qmail/smtpd tcpserver -v -x/etc/tcp.smtp.cdb \
> >         -u$QMAILDUID -g$NOFILESGID 0 smtp \
> >         recordio /var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd 2>&1 | setuser qmaill accustamp
> > | \
> >         setuser qmaill cyclog /var/log/qmail/smtpd &
> > ============================================================
> > My inetd.conf(with comments removed):
> > # See "man 8 inetd" for more information.
> > #
> > time        stream  tcp     nowait  root    internal
> > 
> > time        dgram   udp     wait    root    internal
> > 
> > ftp stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  wu.ftpd -a
> > 
> > telnet      stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.telnetd
> > 
> > shell       stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.rshd -L
> > 
> > login       stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.rlogind
> > 
> > talk        dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.talkd
> > 
> > ntalk       dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.talkd
> > 
> > imap        stream  tcp     nowait  cyrus   /usr/cyrus/bin/imapd    imapd
> > 
> > finger      stream  tcp     nowait  nobody  /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.fingerd -w
> > 
> > http-rman   stream  tcp     nowait.10000    nobody  /usr/sbin/tcpd  
>/usr/sbin/http-rman
> > 
> > rplay       dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  rplayd -t 30 -c 60 -s
> > 16384 -F0 --inetd
> > 
> > midinet     stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.midinetd
> > ============================================================
> > My output of ps waux (if I don't start qmail):
> > USER       PID %CPU %MEM  SIZE   RSS TTY STAT START   TIME COMMAND
> > nobody     104  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> > /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> > nobody     105  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> > /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> > nobody     106  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> > /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> > nobody     107  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> > /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> > nobody     108  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> > /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> > root         1  0.1  0.3   260   168  ?  S    18:36   0:03 init [2]
> > root         2  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kflushd)
> > root         3  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kpiod)
> > root         4  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kswapd)
> > root         5  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (md_thread)
> > root        12  0.0  0.5   764   244  ?  S    18:36   0:00 update (bdflush)
> > root        74  0.0  1.1   948   552  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/syslogd
> > root        78  0.0  1.5  1136   732  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> > /usr/sbin/klogd -c 1
> > root       101  0.0  0.9   912   460  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/inetd
> > root       102  0.0  2.9  3448  1400  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> > /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> > root       137  0.0  1.7  1412   796  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/nmbd -D
> > root       138  0.0  1.4  1376   684  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/nmbd -D
> > root       139  0.0  1.6  1764   752  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/smbd -D
> > root       146  0.0  1.5  1528   728  ?  S    18:36   0:00 sh ./RUN_SYBASE
> > root       147  0.0 14.6 15964  6840  ?  S    18:36   0:01
> > /opt/sybase/bin/dataserver -d/data/master.dat -sSYBASE -e/data/errorlog -i/o
> > pt/sybase
> > root       149  0.0  1.1   912   516  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/cron
> > root       151  0.1  1.2  1224   584  ?  S    18:36   0:03
> > /usr/local/sbin/sshd
> > root       152  0.0  0.7   768   340   1 S    18:36   0:00
> > /sbin/mingetty --noclear tty1
> > root       153  0.0  0.7   768   340   2 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> > tty2
> > root       154  0.0  0.7   768   340   3 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> > tty3
> > root       155  0.0  0.7   768   340   4 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> > tty4
> > root       156  0.0  0.7   768   340   5 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> > tty5
> > root       157  0.0  0.7   768   340   6 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> > tty6
> > root       209  0.0  1.5  1272   704  ?  S    19:09   0:00 in.telnetd
> > root       210  0.1  2.6  1908  1264  p0 S    19:09   0:00 -bash
> > root       255  0.0  1.1   948   532  p0 R    19:13   0:00 ps waux
> > 
> 





I had this same problem starting a few days ago.  Turns out, without telling any of its
customers, mindspring has stopped allowing access SMTP servers other than their own.  
Your
server may work, mine did.  Unfortunately, even if it does you'll never get to it 
through
mindspring.  If you telnet to port 25 of you server from mindspring there will be no 
response.

For a little more informatio look at http://help.mindspring.com/modules/01400/01424.htm

Hope you haven't spent too long with this yet,
Ben

Matt Heatley wrote:

> Ok, I believe I've read everything available about configuring smtpd with
> qmail for selective relaying.  Now, I can't seem to get anything to work :).
>
> The problem seems to be that *something* (though I can't figure out what) is
> listening on port 25.  If I change to port 24 everything works fine. I need
> to figure out what is running but I just can't seem do it.. is there a
> command that lists port and process?  netstat doesn't seem to do it.
>
> My inetd.conf file,the output of ps waux, and the qmail startup lines are
> included below...
>
> ANY help is greatly appreciated at this point.... The basic problem is that
> even when I don't start qmail I have *something* listening on port 25... if
> I use nmap (a portscanner) on my server it shows port 25 as "filtered"
>
> Any ideas?  I'm about at the end of my rope.. thanks!!
>
> Matt
>
> ============================================================
> Error rec'd in Outlook mail client:
>
> Unable to connect to the Server:...
>
> (whether or not qmail-smtp is started)
>
> ============================================================
> qmail and qmail-smtpd are started via:
> QMAILDUID=`id -u qmaild`
> NOFILESGID=`id -g qmaild`
>
>     supervise /var/supervise/qmail/send /var/qmail/rc |
>         setuser qmaill cyclog /var/log/qmail &
>
>     supervise /var/supervise/qmail/smtpd tcpserver -v -x/etc/tcp.smtp.cdb \
>         -u$QMAILDUID -g$NOFILESGID 0 smtp \
>         recordio /var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd 2>&1 | setuser qmaill accustamp
> | \
>         setuser qmaill cyclog /var/log/qmail/smtpd &
> ============================================================
> My inetd.conf(with comments removed):
> # See "man 8 inetd" for more information.
> #
> time    stream  tcp     nowait  root    internal
>
> time    dgram   udp     wait    root    internal
>
> ftp     stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  wu.ftpd -a
>
> telnet  stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.telnetd
>
> shell   stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.rshd -L
>
> login   stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.rlogind
>
> talk    dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.talkd
>
> ntalk   dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.talkd
>
> imap    stream  tcp     nowait  cyrus   /usr/cyrus/bin/imapd    imapd
>
> finger  stream  tcp     nowait  nobody  /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.fingerd -w
>
> http-rman       stream  tcp     nowait.10000    nobody  /usr/sbin/tcpd  
>/usr/sbin/http-rman
>
> rplay   dgram   udp     wait    root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  rplayd -t 30 -c 60 -s
> 16384 -F0 --inetd
>
> midinet stream  tcp     nowait  root    /usr/sbin/tcpd  in.midinetd
> ============================================================
> My output of ps waux (if I don't start qmail):
> USER       PID %CPU %MEM  SIZE   RSS TTY STAT START   TIME COMMAND
> nobody     104  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> nobody     105  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> nobody     106  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> nobody     107  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> nobody     108  0.0  2.9  3460  1384  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> root         1  0.1  0.3   260   168  ?  S    18:36   0:03 init [2]
> root         2  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kflushd)
> root         3  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kpiod)
> root         4  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (kswapd)
> root         5  0.0  0.0     0     0  ?  SW   18:36   0:00 (md_thread)
> root        12  0.0  0.5   764   244  ?  S    18:36   0:00 update (bdflush)
> root        74  0.0  1.1   948   552  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/syslogd
> root        78  0.0  1.5  1136   732  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /usr/sbin/klogd -c 1
> root       101  0.0  0.9   912   460  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/inetd
> root       102  0.0  2.9  3448  1400  ?  S    18:36   0:00
> /opt/apache/bin/httpd
> root       137  0.0  1.7  1412   796  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/nmbd -D
> root       138  0.0  1.4  1376   684  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/nmbd -D
> root       139  0.0  1.6  1764   752  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/smbd -D
> root       146  0.0  1.5  1528   728  ?  S    18:36   0:00 sh ./RUN_SYBASE
> root       147  0.0 14.6 15964  6840  ?  S    18:36   0:01
> /opt/sybase/bin/dataserver -d/data/master.dat -sSYBASE -e/data/errorlog -i/o
> pt/sybase
> root       149  0.0  1.1   912   516  ?  S    18:36   0:00 /usr/sbin/cron
> root       151  0.1  1.2  1224   584  ?  S    18:36   0:03
> /usr/local/sbin/sshd
> root       152  0.0  0.7   768   340   1 S    18:36   0:00
> /sbin/mingetty --noclear tty1
> root       153  0.0  0.7   768   340   2 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> tty2
> root       154  0.0  0.7   768   340   3 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> tty3
> root       155  0.0  0.7   768   340   4 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> tty4
> root       156  0.0  0.7   768   340   5 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> tty5
> root       157  0.0  0.7   768   340   6 S    18:36   0:00 /sbin/mingetty
> tty6
> root       209  0.0  1.5  1272   704  ?  S    19:09   0:00 in.telnetd
> root       210  0.1  2.6  1908  1264  p0 S    19:09   0:00 -bash
> root       255  0.0  1.1   948   532  p0 R    19:13   0:00 ps waux





Hi,
 
I am having trouble using /etc/aliases.
 
I have installed fastforward and followed the instructions on setting it up.
 
When I send mail to an aliased name and check the log i get the following;
 
Unable_to_open_/var/qmail/bin/fastforward_-d_/etc/aliases.cdb:_file_does_not_exist (#4.2.1)
 
Regards,
 
Steve




On Mon, Aug 09, 1999 at 11:04:40AM +1000, Waterfront Internet Service wrote:
  
>    Hi, I am having trouble using /etc/aliases. I have installed
>    fastforward and followed the instructions on setting it up. When I
>    send mail to an aliased name and check the log i get the
>    following; Unable_to_open_/var/qmail/bin/fastforward_-d_/etc/aliases.c
>    db:_file_does_not_exist (#4.2.1) Regards, Steve

You appear to have missed one step. You must run
/var/qmail/bin/newaliases to create /etc/aliases.cdb.

-- 
See complete headers for more info




Hello,

I am configuring my new Internet System in such a way that i will also have
users, subscribed for e-mail only service. So i would like to have
mail-servers in a way that these users will have access to them, but
they cannot browse the net.

I am thinking of making a different server for these users and have
mail messages delivered to outer world through my major mail server.
These users will dial to this server (with multiple serial card) and
will have SMTP/POP access.

Any other idea?

TIA

Jason






thanks for the help with my last question, now i have another simple
question.. couldn't find any info about this but im sure its been done many
times.  ssh is the only way for users to access my system, now what would be
the best way to have sshd check the users mail upon initial login?  it seems
to only want to check /var/spool/mail and im using Maildirs.

thanks in advance,
-steve




nevermind, just made a script to do it. ;>

-steve

On 08/08/99 @ 11:03PM, steve j. kondik wrote:
> thanks for the help with my last question, now i have another simple
> question.. couldn't find any info about this but im sure its been done many
> times.  ssh is the only way for users to access my system, now what would be
> the best way to have sshd check the users mail upon initial login?  it seems
> to only want to check /var/spool/mail and im using Maildirs.
> 
> thanks in advance,
> -steve




Hi,
 
Just wondering where the options file is for Qmail? I have searched for it but can't seem to find one. Sendmail's equilivent is /etc/sendmail.cf
 
Can anyone help with aliasing? I have tried it with fastforward but I get an error in my maillog saying /var/qmail/bin/fastforward_-d_/etc/aliases.cdb_file_not_found for every user to I try and send an email to as their aliases.
 
Regards,
 
Steve




On Mon, Aug 09, 1999 at 03:37:23PM +1000, Waterfront Internet Service wrote:
> Just wondering where the options file is for Qmail? I have searched for it
> but can't seem to find one. Sendmail's equilivent is /etc/sendmail.cf

qmail isn't sendmail. Have you read *any* of the documentation? You're not
going to get any help unless you've shown that you've made at least a minimal
effort on your own.

> Can anyone help with aliasing? I have tried it with fastforward but I get an
> error in my maillog saying
> /var/qmail/bin/fastforward_-d_/etc/aliases.cdb_file_not_found for every user
> to I try and send an email to as their aliases.

What does the .qmail file from which you call fastforward look like?

Chris




Hi,

I was wondering if there were any add-ons to qmail for doing selective
POP3 redirection. I have found that using a package called netpipes,
running under tcpserver, I am able to achieve total redirection from one
server to another, but what about selectively ?

I had thought about storing username:hostname pairs in a file or
database, and writing a wrapper which would run qmail-popup (etc.) if
the user was local, or running netpipes if the user was remote, in order
to hand them off to the correct server (the server where their mail is
sitting). This does not seem as straightforward as I would like though.

The other idea I have would be to modify qmail-pop3d somehow, so that
when authentication had been done under checkpassword on the main mail
server, a session could then be established with a remote server.

Does anyone else have any existing code , or other ideas about how I
might be able to achieve this ?

The "rationale" for doing this is that if I have to migrate from one
server to another, I want to be able to provide a transparant service to
users, whilst moving mailboxes.

Thanks for any help.

Regards,

Rich Aldridge,
Cable Internet,
Telewest Communications.





Dear All,
        
I use Redhat 5.2 with qmail as the MTA. I am using the AUTOTURN feature
from serialmail-0.75 for on of my clinet who uses Win NT Exchange Server.
For About a week, everything worked fine, but now it is not working.

Maillog shows that the mails are the mails are handled by autoturn and
autoturn delivers it to the specied directory:

/var/qmail/autoturn/ip.add.res./new/

When the client sends mail, it is successful. But instead of our server
initiating an smtp connection back to the client and sending mail, it does
nothing. Why is this happening ??

Another question is are there any special logs ?? I mean where are the logs ??

Any suggestions or suggestions to RTFM will be appretiated, if that is in
the Manual.


Shashi




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