Szerző: Phil Pennock Dátum: Címzett: chuckee CC: exim-users Tárgy: Re: [exim] How to have port 80 open, along with a website?
On 2008-01-14 at 15:18 -0800, chuckee wrote: > Because port 587 is for authenticated SMTP, I do not think I can or should
> use it for this.
To clear up a misconception: port 587 is for mail submission. It isn't
strictly true to say that 587 is authenticated and 25 isn't. It happens
that some programs get confused by unexpected authentication on port 25
so it's safer to keep that to 587. It happens that authentication on
port 587 is a Best Current Practice. Not a standard, but not something
that should be *lightly* ignored. Considered and rejected on the basis
of hard evidence of a working alternative approach, fine.
If you're happy with your authentication and access control scheme, then
you're free to use it on port 587. The key point is that 587 strictly
indicates initial mail submission and the server is free to, indeed
should, apply any and all fix-ups and initial submission policy controls
on that port without worrying about various remote MTAs -- the only
clients to be concerned with are within the server operator's
administrative domain. Which, for a commercial provider, is rather
broad.
RFCs:
4409 Message Submission for Mail
-- this is the port 587 RFC, obsoleting RFC 2476
5068 Email Submission Operations: Access and Accountability Requirements
-- aka BCP 134
But no, as explained there's no tenable way to have SMTP and HTTP share
a port; you're stuck using a second IP address with a new hostname.