On 10/6/2008, Brian Evans - Postfix List ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: >> I'm going to be writing up instructions for users who will be using >> these new domains how to set up their mail clients (Thunderbird mainly, >> but I also include instructions for the Microsoft clients)... so I >> wanted to confirm that I can use the hosts 'smtp.example1.com' and >> 'smtp.example2.com' for their SMTP (outbound) server setting in their >> clients.
> This depends if you permit_mynetworks and permit_sasl_authenticated > before any reject actions. According to the postconf -n output I included, yes I do... >> It will be awkward to tell a user to put smtp.fred.com for their >> outbound server setting, if their email address is [EMAIL PROTECTED], don't >> you think? > Think hosted domain. Server can only have one name, but serves several. > MXs that check only care if the sending domain matches in DNS as being > responsible, preferably an A or MX record. > > Will bogus mails get rejected at the source? Maybe, though some > postmasters care not, some actually do check. I was just wanting some clarification - I know the answer has to be yes (look at how many shared hosting solutions are out there) - so why is it not possible to just get a yes or no answer? Can I set up DNS (and MX records) for several different domains to point to the same postfix instance/host/IP address and reference that same postfix instance/host/IP by different DNS host names (smtp.example1.com, smtp.example2.com, etc), and have everything just work? I'm guessing, 'Of COURSE, dummy!' is the right answer? I guess the question is just too simplistic and basic, so my apologies... -- Best regards, Charles