My ISP is soon to make changes to its email system, and as a result I need to change my exim setup. Basically, whereas the host I used to send out email used to be "adam.ist.flinders.edu.au", it now is "mail.infoeng.flinders.edu.au". A quick "grep adam exim.conf" gave me: route_list = "* adam.ist.flinders.edu.au bydns_a" so I changed this to: route_list = "* mail.infoeng.flinders.edu.au bydns_a" and then did "/etc/init.d/exim restart".
Surely this is all I need to do I thought. But when I sent off a test message and looked at /var/log/exim/mainlog it had: 2000-06-13 08:56:03 131dal-0001s8-00 <= [EMAIL PROTECTED] U=mark P=local S=1016 [EMAIL PROTECTED] 2000-06-13 08:56:06 131dal-0001s8-00 => [EMAIL PROTECTED] R=smarthost T=r emote_smtp H=adam.ist.flinders.edu.au [129.96.1.21] 2000-06-13 08:56:06 131dal-0001s8-00 Completed So it is still using adam.ist.flinders.edu.au!!!!!! What is wrong? I thought perhaps this invocation of exim is via the inetd??? But if I look at inetd.conf I see: #disabled#smtp stream tcp nowait mail /usr/sbin/exim exim -bs which would suggest that exim is disabled through this mechanism???? I'm confused. Any hints? Thanks, Mark. P.S. I read this list via the archives, which means a delay, so please cc replies to me. Thanks. -- _/~~~~~~~~\___/~~~~~~\____________________________________________________ ____/~~\_____/~~\__/~~\__________________________Mark_Phillips____________ ____/~~\_____/[EMAIL PROTECTED] ____/~~\HE___/~~\__/~~\APTAIN_____________________________________________ ____/~~\______/~~~~~~\____________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ "They told me I was gullible ... and I believed them!"