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Re: Sendmail Spam
- From: <karlp ourldsfamily com>
- To: Redhat Install <redhat-install-list redhat com>
- Subject: Re: Sendmail Spam
- Date: Sat, 17 Feb 2001 12:21:32 -0700 (MST)
Thanks Bob. It seems to work so far.
Karl L. Pearson
Senior Consulting Systems Analyst
Senior Consulting Database Analyst
karlp ourldsfamily com
On Sat, 17 Feb 2001, Bob McClure Jr wrote:
Yes, it is possible. Add lines to your /etc/mail/access file with
your domain(s) and the keyword RELAY. If your server serves the
213.45.67.xx domain, add this line:
213.45.67 RELAY
If it serves, say, two class C domains, then:
213.45.66 RELAY
213.45.67 RELAY
Then do a "make" while /etc/mail is your current directory, and the
access.db will be rebuilt. Then
kill -HUP `head -1 /var/run/sendmail.pid`
to put it into effect.
On Thu, Feb 15, 2001 at 10:36:49PM -0700, Karl Pearson wrote:
> If someone uses port 25 as a relay host to send email all over, how can I
> configure sendmail to accept outbound emails from within my own network
> only?
>
> Is it even possible?
>
> Karl Pearson
> Senior uniVerse Database Analyst
> Senior Unix/NT/Win Analyst
> karlp colubs com
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Cheers,
--
Bob McClure, Jr. | In theory,
Bobcat Open Systems, Inc. | what works in theory will work in practice.
robertmcclure earthlink net | In practice, it doesn't.
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