Jim Flanagan wrote:
DATA 354 End data with <CR><LF>.<CR><LF> Test mail from a telnet session. . 250 Ok: queued as CDBF3D440 QUIT
Server accepts mails from localhost
/var/log/mail shows...
Jan 15 11:12:07 cammee postfix/smtpd[23919]: connect from localhost[127.0.0.1] Jan 15 11:13:03 cammee postfix/smtpd[23919]: CDBF3D440: client=localhost[127.0.0.1] Jan 15 11:13:29 cammee postfix/cleanup[23922]: CDBF3D440: message-id=<20060115171234.CDBF3D440@mail.example.com> Jan 15 11:13:29 cammee postfix/qmgr[23866]: CDBF3D440: from=
, size=365, nrcpt=1 (queue active) Jan 15 11:13:29 cammee postfix/smtp[23923]: connect to 127.0.0.1[127.0.0.1]: Connection refused (port 10024)
Maybe it would be a good idea to start amavisd-new? It seems your content-filter on port 10024 (standard port for amavisd-new is not working. rcamavisd status? rcamavisd start? log entries after starting? Send another testmail now. if it works: postsuper -R ALL
OK, I have my nat router set to issue addresses to 192.168.1.110/120. The new server is 192.168.1.117.
Just give the server a static ip, do not use a dynamic one, lest some day all your forwarded ports on your router point to a different pc and not your server.
I'm not sure at this point what to name my server. The default install uses linux.local. On my old machine I have been usung successfully something like that, myserver.local, and had postfix using example.com as masquerade_domain.
example.com is a domain name that is used exclusively for examples. Just set up a name and stick with it. You probably want to access your server from the internet side later, so set up a ddns name (dyndns.org, no-ip.org etc.). Sandy -- List replies only please! Please address PMs to: news-reply2 (@) japantest (.) homelinux (.) com