On Fri, Feb 25, 2000 at 05:39:08AM +0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote > Hi ! > > Is it possibble to masquarade my e-mail to the outside world from > my LAN ? I'll tell you exactly what I wanted to say. I have a local > LAN, one e-mail address. I have set up a local DNS and ipchains > rules but I stopped at sendmail. I want to relay mail for the local > machines and put the mail into a queue if it goes to the inet but > deliver immediatelly inside the LAN. The domain has the name > "linbase.org" (not registreted) so all of the outgoing mails have to > have "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" (the valid mail address) at the From: > and in the Reply-to: fields, not [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Please, help me, how to setup this ! I welcome any URLs, RTFMs, > HOWTOs if it's apart from the "official" docs in the distros, > because I have already read through them but (maybe I'm too dumb > or overlooked something) found nothing to my special problem. > Does anyone has a working solution to the situation like this ? If > you have a solution with Exim I would welcome it too. > Thanx a lot, > Ago >
I do this with exim; we have two dialup accounts, and a local LAN. We want outgoing mail to have our dial-up account name in From and Reply-To, but we want local mail (including mail addressed to the dial-up account names) delivered directly. We also want to be able to send mail to other dial-up users at our ISP. What I've done is this: - Listed our ISP mail host name in local_domains in /etc/exim.conf: local_domains = localhost:*.localnet:isp.net.au - Added a special director that handles locally-generated mail for one of our dialup accounts, at the head of the list of directors: dialup_localusers: driver = aliasfile domains = isp.net.au file = /etc/exim/isp-addresses search_type = lsearch /etc/exim/isp-addresses is a regular alias file that maps ISP account names to local usernames (or other addresses), like this: huiac: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Added another director after that one, that deals with any other customers of our ISP: dialup_otherusers: driver = smartuser domains = isp.net.au transport = remote_smtp - If I had accounts at more than one ISP, I'd need to create a separate alias file and two directors (local users/other ISP users) for each ISP. - Use a smarthost (our ISP) for delivering non-local mail; as the local machine is mailserver for our entire LAN, this is the only entry in the ROUTERS section of /etc/exim.conf: smarthost: driver = domainlist transport = remote_smtp route_list = "* mail.isp.net.au bydns_a" If I wanted to deliver mail to other machines on my internal LAN, I'd need an additional router ahead of this one to handle those. - Added rewriting rules to replace our local LAN addresses with the appropriate ISP account addresses in any headers: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ${lookup{$1}lsearch{/etc/exim/outgoing-addresses}\ {$value}fail} Fh /etc/exim/outgoing-addresses contains lines like this: john [EMAIL PROTECTED] This example replaces the address [EMAIL PROTECTED] with [EMAIL PROTECTED] in all headers except envelope "To:" headers. Simpler schemes are possible, but this is the only one I've devised so far that will deliver locally-generated mail addressed to one of my dial-up accounts (e.g., <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) as local mail (i.e., without going via my ISP's mailserver), deals with multiple dial-up account names and also correctly delivers mail to other people's accounts on my ISP. John P. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Oh - I - you know - my job is to fear everything." - Bill Gates in Denmark