* Thomas Ackermann t...@tja-server.de:
Hello,
i seem to be unable to set the smtpd_client_restrictions Variable!
In master.cf, there is an option for smtps that sets this to
permit_sasl_authenticated,reject.
In main.cf, i try to set this to reject_invalid_hostname.
In postconf -n the
Thomas Ackermann wrote:
Hello,
i seem to be unable to set the smtpd_client_restrictions Variable!
In master.cf, there is an option for smtps that sets this to
permit_sasl_authenticated,reject.
In main.cf, i try to set this to reject_invalid_hostname.
In postconf -n the variable is empty!
Ralf Hildebrandt schrieb:
postconf -n shows main.cf settings, not master.cf settings
Why not use:
postconf -e smtpd_client_restrictions=reject_invalid_hostname
But as far as i understand, this just sets the variable in main.cf - and
there, it is already included!
To show this:
Brian Evans - Postfix List schrieb:
'Postconf -d' means show me the DEFAULTS not what is current.
Uh..
I already feared a realy stupid mistake on my side :)
I used it in this sense, so far - but assumed that this default will be
overwritten (and displayed) when actually set in main.cf
On 20.01.2009 16:07 Thomas Ackermann wrote:
...
r...@localhost:/etc/postfix,$ postconf -d smtpd_client_restrictions
smtpd_client_restrictions =
man postconf:
-d Print default parameter settings instead of actual settings.
use `postconf smtpd_client_restrictions` to see your current
Thomas Ackermann a écrit :
Brian Evans - Postfix List schrieb:
'Postconf -d' means show me the DEFAULTS not what is current.
Uh..
I already feared a realy stupid mistake on my side :)
I used it in this sense, so far - but assumed that this default will be
overwritten (and