On Sun, Jul 08, 2001 at 10:53:07PM -0700, Craig Dickson wrote: > I tried that when I was first configuring exim, but it didn't work for > me. I ended up just letting exim consider itself an "internet site", > i.e. if mail is going from me to foo.com, exim goes straight to > foo.com's mail server to deliver it, rather than going through my ISP's > servers (or Yahoo's, since I normally use my Yahoo account for most > purposes).
That is strange. Try again. # cd /etc # cp exim.conf exim.conf.keep # eximconfig ... do it again (select 2) # diff -u exim.conf.keep exim.conf New exim.conf file should have something like following: smarthost: driver = domainlist transport = remote_smtp route_list = "* 192.168.1.1 bydns_a" Here 192.168.1.1 is IP of smart host > I was afraid this might not work due to overly-enthusiastic > spam blockers not accepting mail from ISP end-user dynamic-address > ranges, but so far it hasn't been a problem. Understood. -- ~\^o^/~~~ ~\^.^/~~~ ~\^*^/~~~ ~\^_^/~~~ ~\^+^/~~~ ~\^:^/~~~ ~\^v^/~~~ + Osamu Aoki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, GnuPG-key: 1024D/D5DE453D + + My debian quick-reference, http://www.aokiconsulting.com/quick/ +