Michael Morak @ 2015-11-02T11:36:18 +0100:
> Hi,
>
> I meant that you specify a value as a *number* like this:
>
> "relay backup 20"
That is really meant to be a server name, not a number:
/usr/src/usr.sbin/smtpd/parse.y:645
opt_relay : BACKUP STRING {
Hi,
I meant that you specify a value as a *number* like this:
"relay backup 20"
and then, the backup server would relay to all MXs where the value is
lower than 20. However, since you didn't specify a value (which, as I
read it, should be a number), all mail gets relayed via the default
server n
Michael Morak @ 2015-11-01T18:40:01 +0100:
> Hi Daniel,
>
> as far as I've seen from the manual, the syntax is "relay [backup
> [mx]]" and the description says: "Accepted mails are only relayed
> through servers with a lower preference value in the MX record for the
> domain than the one specified
Hi Daniel,
as far as I've seen from the manual, the syntax is "relay [backup
[mx]]" and the description says: "Accepted mails are only relayed
through servers with a lower preference value in the MX record for the
domain than the one specified in mx. If mx is not specified, the
default server name
LÉVAI Dániel @ 2015-10-31T10:24:35 +0100:
> Hi!
>
> I'm trying to setup a simple backup mx on OpenBSD 5.8-stable, but so far
> it seems more of a burden than a "simple" task :)
>
> smtpd.conf:
> 8<
> pki hostname certificate "/etc/ssl/smtpd_cert.pem
Hi!
I'm trying to setup a simple backup mx on OpenBSD 5.8-stable, but so far
it seems more of a burden than a "simple" task :)
smtpd.conf:
8<
pki hostname certificate "/etc/ssl/smtpd_cert.pem"
pki hostname key "/etc/ssl/private/smtpd_key.pem"
liste