> Verify that is it is enabled first. If it isn't, then there is > something else we need to look for. Yes there is a valid reason for having > it enabled. The system is designed to allow only people that are > authenticated to the mail system, to send mail. If you don't > authenticate via POP3, it won't send your mail. As for a way around, he > could see if he could set localhost as an excluded host to check.
Hi Jonathan, here's what I heard back from the sysadmin: >We're not even using SMTP, it just calls sendmail from the command line. >> >> >> > Hi, we're not doing that.. sorry. >> > >> >> Err, you mean you don't have pop before smtp option set? Or something else? >> >> Thanks for the fast reply by the way, and I really appreciate everything >> you've done for us here at SDF. >> >> /andrew It seems that the same problem might be happening that you describe though right? I'm in a little over my head here, but does any of this make sense? Thanks again for your prompt replies in sorting this out, /andrew ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: SlickEdit Inc. Develop an edge. The most comprehensive and flexible code editor you can use. Code faster. C/C++, C#, Java, HTML, XML, many more. FREE 30-Day Trial. www.slickedit.com/sourceforge -- squirrelmail-users mailing list List Address: [EMAIL PROTECTED] List Archives: http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum_id=2995 List Info: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/squirrelmail-users