On Fri, 7 Jul 2000, Nancy Pettigrew wrote:
> Hi Dave,
> relay_domains is set to *.
> host_accept_relay is set to one specific IP address.
host_accept_relay controls from which host you will accept mail for
domains other than those listed in either local_domains and
relay_domains..
By setting relay_domains = *, you make host_accept_relay irrelevant,
becuase you indicate you are willing to acccept and delivery mail for
any domain..
Generally you would only want to include domains for which you are a
backup MX in relay_domains. (or leave it empty and use
relay_domains_include_local_mx, which will tell exim to relay for any
domain that has an MX record pointing at the local host)
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Dave C. [mailto:djc@microwave.com]
> Sent: Friday, July 07, 2000 10:07 AM
> To: Nancy Pettigrew
> Cc: exim-users@???
> Subject: RE: [Exim] using the -bh option to test exim
>
>
>
> On Thu, 6 Jul 2000, Nancy Pettigrew wrote:
>
> > > If that isn't the problem, try posting the full output of
> > > exim -d 9 -bh 1.2.3.4
> > > to us here, and someone should be able to help..
> >
> > I expected the session to croak at the beginning, but there's no check of
> > the host_accept_relay option, as far as I can tell.
> > Here are the gory details...
> >
> > configure file:
> > host_accept_relay = 123.456.789.0
>
> <snip>
>
> > RCPT TO:who@???
> > SMTP<< RCPT TO:who@???
> > aol.com in local_domains? no (end of list)
> > aol.com in relay_domains? yes (matched *)
>
> What do you have relay_domains set to? Apparently somehow it includes
> aol.com..
>
>
>
>
>
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