Reverse lookup won't do you any good for people on the road connecting
from various locations. SMTP Auth is your only choice right now.
Bill
>----------
>From: John Kielkopf[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Friday, May 11, 2001 2:26 PM
>To: Davide Libenzi
>Cc: XMail Mailing list
>Subject: Re: SMTP Auth
>
>Well, actually, I finally got POP3 working with reverse lookup, so I no
>longer needed to provide the domain in the user field. (needed to get a
>patch from MS, part of SP2)
>
>I just finished modifying SMTPSvr.cpp to work the same, now that I'll be
>forced to use SMTP Auth... Didn't want to waste time doing it if the
>functionality was already there.
>
>Thanks,
>John
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Davide Libenzi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: "John Kielkopf" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Cc: "XMail Mailing list" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Friday, May 11, 2001 4:10 PM
>Subject: RE: SMTP Auth
>
>
>>
>> On 11-May-2001 John Kielkopf wrote:
>> > Well, having no other choice, I'll have to try the SMTP Auth route.
>> >
>> > However, it appears when authenticating, the user's domain is not pulled
>from
>> > SMTPS.szSvrDomain, so you need to supply the full username and domain
>when
>> > authenticating. Is this correct?
>>
>> Yes John,
>>
>> same as POP3.
>> I don't remember which MUA does not like '@' , so You can use ':' instead
>> ( maybe it's Eudora ).
>> Let's wait before making Your users to use SMTP auth coz maybe I'll go to
>> implement SMTP after POP3 auth.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> - Davide
>>
>>
>
>