Hi Qmail gurus!

Ive been running for about 6 months or so on a small network that houses 
about 3 class C's.  The tcp.smtp file was easy and self explanitory.

Now a 60,000 user sendmail *shudder* machine has been dropped in my lap, 
and I want to install qmail on it.  My only hangup is the tcp.smtp 
file.. Since they are still on the old mbox format, I cannot use 
relay-ctrl with pop3d.. :(

Back in nov/dec of last year you could *not* use a domain name in the 
tcp.smtp file to allow relaying, it was all IP based.  I see in the 
ucspi-tcp CHANGELOG:

20000311
       ui: switched to prot; so setgid() is preceded by setgroups().
       ui: tcpserver supports -U.
-->        ui: tcpserver supports hostname rules. <---
       ui: tcprulescheck now uses environment variables.

I have searched the archives and the website to find only IP examples 
for the tcp.smtp file.  LWQ and the tcpserver manpages only have IP 
addressed in the tcp.smtp file...  Nobody seems to have any other info 
on hostname based relaying rules.

My question: Does ucspi-tcp support hostnames?  If so, would they be 
added as:

domain.com:allow,RELAYCLIENT=""
or
.domain.com:allow,RELAYCLIENT=""

Believe me, I would much rather just add the class C's, but we partnered 
with a much larger (and crappier) company to offer nationwide dialup 
access, and I dont want to add all of *their* class C's.  I would really 
like to take the old sendmail access file and chop it up into a sutable 
tcp.smtp file for qmail to use.  Hopefully im not the only idiot asking 
this question.

Thanks much! qmail rox!

Frank

Reply via email to