Noel Jones:
> > Cons: you are going to see the routers internal interface on every
> > connection, this configuration discards any filter or rate that you
> > may use based on IP address.
>
> **DANGER**
> Using SNAT is an easy way to make yourself an open relay. One must
> insure that the router's
On 1/10/2014 3:25 PM, Alfonso Alejandro Reyes Jiménez wrote:
> On 1/10/14, 9:18 AM, Andy Rowe wrote:
>>
>> #
>>
> I understand that you want to keep the connection on that belongs to
> each router right?
>
> if so your issue is because you have asymmetric routing and may be
> your firewall is bloc
On 1/10/14, 9:18 AM, Andy Rowe wrote:
Hello:
I have a production mail / web server for a couple very low volume
domains. (CentOS 6.4, apache, postfix) I have a production exchange
server for another small domain. I want to set the CentOS server up to
serve mail to its current clients as wel
> -Original Message-
> From: owner-postfix-us...@postfix.org [mailto:owner-postfix-
> us...@postfix.org] On Behalf Of Noel Jones
> Sent: Friday, January 10, 2014 10:33 AM
> To: postfix-users@postfix.org
> Subject: Re: two routers into postfix
>
> On 1/10/2014
On 1/10/2014 9:18 AM, Andy Rowe wrote:
> Hello:
>
> I have a production mail / web server for a couple very low volume
> domains. (CentOS 6.4, apache, postfix) I have a production exchange
> server for another small domain. I want to set the CentOS server up
> to serve mail to its current clients
Hello:
I have a production mail / web server for a couple very low volume
domains. (CentOS 6.4, apache, postfix) I have a production exchange
server for another small domain. I want to set the CentOS server up to
serve mail to its current clients as well as act as a gateway for
content filtering