"Sandip" == Sandip P Deshmukh <Sandip> writes: Sandip> Shyamal Prasad wrote: >> What are qualify_domain and qualify_recipent set to at the top >> of your exim.conf file? If you say 'deshmukh.work' for any of >> them I'd be pretty confident that you've found your (next? :-) >> problem. >> Sandip> for qualify_domain it says Sandip> deshmukh.work. qualify_receipient line is commented Sandip> out. could you elaborate a bit more here?
Ah! Now we are getting some where. By setting qualify_domain to deshmukh.work you have told exim to use deshmukh.work as the default domain name added to unqualified addresses in outgoing mail. As a result, if you username on the Debian box is deshmukh, your return path is going to look like "[EMAIL PROTECTED]". This being an invalid domain it is likely that it is being bounced somewhere. But the bounce will never get back to you since there is no routable return address. I would recommend the following settings: - qualify_domain should be a real domain where you can get real email (escortsmumbai.com should work since you really are deshmukh <at> escortsmumbai.com). - qualify_receipient should be set to the hostname of your Debian box (leave out any domain part, just use a pure host name). This allows delivery of mail to local users. - local_domains should be set to the string "localhost:hostname" where you should use your hostname for the second word. Basically, what this does is set a valid return address in many headers, and also allows mail to be sent to local users on the Debian box. You could mail "deshmukh@localhost" without going to the smtp server, but mail to "deshmukh <at> escortsmumbai.com" would jump to the SMTP server with a valid return path of "deshmukh <at> escortsmumbai.com". Finally, edit /etc/email-addresses and and map your user id (I assumed it was deshmukh above) to your real public email address where you recieve public mail (which I assumed above is "deshmukh <at> escortsmumbai.com"). If you do this, exim will automatically transform your "From" header on all outgoing email to something people really want to have. Once you do this, email should go wherever you want, and to the outside world your originating mail will look like it was from deshmukh <at> escortsmumbai.com (or whatever you have chosen above). After you get this working you can take the next step (which I see you have started on) of running fetchmail or some such client to get your email from a POP or IMAP server that actually does receive mail for [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> PS: I took the liberty of trying to send a test message to the >> address you used above that had a broken From header. >> Sandip> what address do you mean? sorry - i am confused here! It was deshmukh <at> zapho.net if I remember right. The one where you were not able to send mail to. Maybe it never did get to you. Anyway, good luck! I think you are almost there. When I started using Debian some 18 months ago (after 6 - 7 years of being a dedicated Slackware user) exim was all new to me and I told myself that someday I would sit down and figure out what was really going on. Thanks to you, I've got started :-) Cheers! Shyamal -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]