A possible solution here is to get exim to have it's own password file,
ie /etc/eximpasswd or something, containing lines almost identicle to
that in /etc/passwd, this way the users would have access to exim but
not be actual system users.
The other alternative is to use something like PAM or LD
Folks,
I have a problem I believe I have covered all the technical problems, now
I need actual implementation. This is commercial, but with a twist.
I am looking for vendors ;-)
We have offices in Delhi, US, UK, and Switzerland. We shall call them IN,
US, UK, CH (what else?)
Mail services are
Hello,
I am going to set up some mail account,
and I don't want them to exist in my system.
solution would be virtual mails based on some sql server,
i know that qmail has almost well-documented ability to do
so using mysql server.
My problem is that I would prefer exim mailer,
and as far as I know
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Is there any way that I can get a inetd service to bind to 1 IP address
> only??
I don't know if inetd can do that but xinetd can.
--
Francois Deppierraz student
http://www.ctrlaltdel.ch
ICQ: 176 770 09
Is there any way that I can get a inetd service to bind to 1 IP address
only??
ie we have a box running with severla IP's/subnets running on it, however
I want one service to be available only to 1 subnet,
I realise I could always block the service with ipchains, but I'd prefer
just to get the
> That sounds very possible, the network at home is masqueraded by a
>little 486 router I have setup, (ipchains). and the workstation at work has
>a real IP. It'd be great if you could dig out that info and let me know.
>
Nick;
Here is my /etc/ppp/ip-up.d/00ipmasq which I use on my ppp conn
6 matches
Mail list logo