On Sunday 25 September 2011 10:51:05 John Hinton wrote:
> On 9/25/2011 10:56 AM, /dev/rob0 wrote:
> > On Sunday 25 September 2011 07:27:59 Phill Edwards wrote:
> >>> Where did you look? A source install of Postfix using default
> >>> paths places an /etc/postfix/aliases file.
> >>
> >> I installed
On Sun, Sep 25, 2011 at 9:46 AM, Reindl Harald wrote:
>
>
> Am 25.09.2011 17:51, schrieb John Hinton:
>> On 9/25/2011 10:56 AM, /dev/rob0 wrote:
>>> On Sunday 25 September 2011 07:27:59 Phill Edwards wrote:
> Where did you look? A source install of Postfix using default
> paths places an /
Am 25.09.2011 17:51, schrieb John Hinton:
> On 9/25/2011 10:56 AM, /dev/rob0 wrote:
>> On Sunday 25 September 2011 07:27:59 Phill Edwards wrote:
Where did you look? A source install of Postfix using default
paths places an /etc/postfix/aliases file.
>>> I installed from CentOS RPMs. The
On 9/25/2011 10:56 AM, /dev/rob0 wrote:
On Sunday 25 September 2011 07:27:59 Phill Edwards wrote:
Where did you look? A source install of Postfix using default
paths places an /etc/postfix/aliases file.
I installed from CentOS RPMs. The version I have is
postfix-2.3.3-2.3.el5_6.
FYI that vers
On Sunday 25 September 2011 07:27:59 Phill Edwards wrote:
> > Where did you look? A source install of Postfix using default
> > paths places an /etc/postfix/aliases file.
>
> I installed from CentOS RPMs. The version I have is
> postfix-2.3.3-2.3.el5_6.
FYI that version was EOL in 2009.
> /etc/
On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 22:27:59 +1000, Phill Edwards wrote:
Where did you look? A source install of Postfix using default paths
places an /etc/postfix/aliases file.
I installed from CentOS RPMs. The version I have is
postfix-2.3.3-2.3.el5_6.
/etc/postfix contains these files:
access
> Where did you look? A source install of Postfix using default paths
> places an /etc/postfix/aliases file.
I installed from CentOS RPMs. The version I have is postfix-2.3.3-2.3.el5_6.
/etc/postfix contains these files:
access header_checksmain.cf.rpmsave postfix-script trans
On Saturday 24 September 2011 21:04:41 Phill Edwards wrote:
> I ended up fixing the problem by running:
> # touch /etc/aliases
> # newaliases
>
> Shouldn't postfix create a default aliases file? Or at least
> include a sample one somewhere as part of the install?
Where did you look? A source inst
I have just installed postfix on one of my servers purely in order to get
email output from cron jobs. I have installed postifx previously on other
servers nad had no problems. But on this installation I found that no
messages could be delivered because there was no aliases file. I was seeing
this