At 09:49 AM 6/27/2000 -0700, Jeremy C. Reed wrote:
I use gnu-pop3d with a bunch of patches I made that hopefully get rid of
the instability problems and add capability for virtual domains. But I
haven't built a Debian package of my patched gnu-pop3d. For more
information about my setup visit:
http
At 09:49 AM 6/27/2000 -0700, Jeremy C. Reed wrote:
>I use gnu-pop3d with a bunch of patches I made that hopefully get rid of
>the instability problems and add capability for virtual domains. But I
>haven't built a Debian package of my patched gnu-pop3d. For more
>information about my setup visit:
On Mon, Jun 26, 2000 at 10:03:05PM +0200, Dariush Pietrzak wrote:
> Hello,
> which packaged with debian pop3d would you people recommend?
> which one do you use?
qmail with pop3d and friends seems to be pretty solid in my short experience
with them. I've not got hundreds of users, but it's said
I'ld recommend Cucipop due to it's security record. That's what I use.
Just don't look at the source code. :)
At 10:03 PM 6/26/00 +0200, Dariush Pietrzak wrote:
>Hello,
>which packaged with debian pop3d would you people recommend?
> which one do you use?
+---
On Mon, Jun 26, 2000 at 10:03:05PM +0200, Dariush Pietrzak wrote:
> Hello,
> which packaged with debian pop3d would you people recommend?
> which one do you use?
qmail with pop3d and friends seems to be pretty solid in my short experience
with them. I've not got hundreds of users, but it's said
I'ld recommend Cucipop due to it's security record. That's what I use.
Just don't look at the source code. :)
At 10:03 PM 6/26/00 +0200, Dariush Pietrzak wrote:
>Hello,
>which packaged with debian pop3d would you people recommend?
> which one do you use?
+--
Greetings, All:
I don't know what I did, thanks no doubt to a low caffeine level, but my
problem's changed enough to get me some clues. Now, when I bind to the
internet IP address, I can get connections from the world but not from
127.0.0.1. Ugh. It's enough for now...
Thanks to all who took t
On Tue, Jun 27, 2000 at 10:51:58AM -0400, Chester Hosey wrote:
> Are you binding to a specific IP address (eg, 127.0.0.1), or just 0.0.0.0?
> If you bind to a specific IP, only packets coming in on that interface
> will actually appear.
I've tried binding to the machine's internet IP address and
Greetings, All:
I don't know what I did, thanks no doubt to a low caffeine level, but my
problem's changed enough to get me some clues. Now, when I bind to the
internet IP address, I can get connections from the world but not from
127.0.0.1. Ugh. It's enough for now...
Thanks to all who took
On Tue, Jun 27, 2000 at 10:51:58AM -0400, Chester Hosey wrote:
> Are you binding to a specific IP address (eg, 127.0.0.1), or just 0.0.0.0?
> If you bind to a specific IP, only packets coming in on that interface
> will actually appear.
I've tried binding to the machine's internet IP address an
On Mon, 26 Jun 2000, Dariush Pietrzak wrote:
> gnu-pop3d has been removed from debian due to it's instability.
Where can I find more information about gnu-pop3d being removed from
Debian?
> and of course how would one host virtual e-mail domains (one IP, one UID)
I use gnu-pop3d with a bunch of
Any suggestions as to what might be causing this? It's a debian 1.3
system (I know, I know).
Jun 24 14:04:33 cs2 kernel: RPC: rpc_doio sending evil packet:
Jun 24 14:04:33 cs2 kernel: a1c8d23e 0100
0100
Jun 24 14:04:33 cs2 kernel: RPC:
On Mon, 26 Jun 2000, Art Sackett wrote:
> Greetings, All:
>
> Please forgive me if this is documented somewhere -- a pointer to the
> documentation would be greatly appreciated!
>
> I've got a custom (just wrote it) standalone TCP/IP server daemon that
> listens
> on a high port and works f
On Mon, 26 Jun 2000, Dariush Pietrzak wrote:
> gnu-pop3d has been removed from debian due to it's instability.
Where can I find more information about gnu-pop3d being removed from
Debian?
> and of course how would one host virtual e-mail domains (one IP, one UID)
I use gnu-pop3d with a bunch o
Any suggestions as to what might be causing this? It's a debian 1.3
system (I know, I know).
Jun 24 14:04:33 cs2 kernel: RPC: rpc_doio sending evil packet:
Jun 24 14:04:33 cs2 kernel: a1c8d23e 0100
0100
Jun 24 14:04:33 cs2 kernel: RPC
On Mon, 26 Jun 2000, Art Sackett wrote:
> Greetings, All:
>
> Please forgive me if this is documented somewhere -- a pointer to the
> documentation would be greatly appreciated!
>
> I've got a custom (just wrote it) standalone TCP/IP server daemon that listens
> on a high port and works fin
On Tue, Jun 27, 2000 at 06:26:27PM +0800, Sanjeev Gupta wrote:
> Art,
>
> How does the server get fired off? inetd? Stand alone? hosts.allow is
> used by tcpd, only if use tcpd explicitly to start the server.
It's a standalone. It would be started by a script in /etc/init.d/something if
I co
Art,
How does the server get fired off? inetd? Stand alone? hosts.allow is
used by tcpd, only if use tcpd explicitly to start the server.
Can you connect via telnet locally?
-- Ghane
At 01:06 PM 6/26/2000 -0600, Art Sackett wrote:
Greetings, All:
Please forgive me if this is documented somewhe
On Tue, Jun 27, 2000 at 06:26:27PM +0800, Sanjeev Gupta wrote:
> Art,
>
> How does the server get fired off? inetd? Stand alone? hosts.allow is
> used by tcpd, only if use tcpd explicitly to start the server.
It's a standalone. It would be started by a script in /etc/init.d/something if
I c
Art,
How does the server get fired off? inetd? Stand alone? hosts.allow is
used by tcpd, only if use tcpd explicitly to start the server.
Can you connect via telnet locally?
-- Ghane
At 01:06 PM 6/26/2000 -0600, Art Sackett wrote:
>Greetings, All:
>
>Please forgive me if this is documented
Greetings, All:
Please forgive me if this is documented somewhere -- a pointer to the
documentation would be greatly appreciated!
I've got a custom (just wrote it) standalone TCP/IP server daemon that listens
on a high port and works fine servicing connections from localhost. However,
when I t
Hello,
which packaged with debian pop3d would you people recommend?
which one do you use?
apt-cache search pop3d on potato shows only gnu-pop3d and cyrus-pop3,
cyrus ain't best choice - it's non-free, and as cyrus's manual says -
it's designed for closed hosts, hosting only as e-mail serv
Greetings, All:
Please forgive me if this is documented somewhere -- a pointer to the
documentation would be greatly appreciated!
I've got a custom (just wrote it) standalone TCP/IP server daemon that listens
on a high port and works fine servicing connections from localhost. However,
when I
Hello,
which packaged with debian pop3d would you people recommend?
which one do you use?
apt-cache search pop3d on potato shows only gnu-pop3d and cyrus-pop3,
cyrus ain't best choice - it's non-free, and as cyrus's manual says -
it's designed for closed hosts, hosting only as e-mail ser
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