Michael Handiboe wrote:
Michael Handiboe wrote:
Jake Vickers wrote:
recipients at a time. If this is the case, you may want to add a
rule at the top for his IP address to not use the chkuser checks,
just like the 127 entry does.
Wow, lotsa CHKUSER stuff in the web-archives...
And I think I've solved it. Won't know for sure until my customer
sends his thousands of messages again.
Just a question about the tcp.smtp file... how exactly to interpret it?
127. applies rules only to the mail server host itself (or 'local'
mail? So what's the difference?)
a.b.c.d applies rules to only mail sent from a.b.c.d to the mail host
and then the
:allow line applies to everyone? OR everyone not explicitly listed
above?
127 is for local emails, such as the webmail (SquirrelMail).
a.b.c.d applies for that specific IP address.
:allow is for any connection that does not fall under the first rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
QmailToaster hosted by: VR Hosted <http://www.vr.org>
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]