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Date:      Thu, 04 Dec 2003 16:09:57 -0500
From:      Marty Landman <MLandman@face2interface.com>
To:        iaccounts@northnetworks.ca
Cc:        FreeBSD-Questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: running freebsd with sendmail and qpopper
Message-ID:  <6.0.0.22.0.20031204160908.069d0e08@pop.face2interface.com>

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First, Steve it's great of you to go to all this effort. Thanks in advance. 
Now I wonder if you'll be surprised at how early in the procedure things 
fell apart for me. :)

At 09:53 PM 12/3/2003, Steve Bertrand wrote:

>ie. In some cases, you could send a mail message to steve@192.168.0.1,
>and if the server is listening for incoming mail (sendmail) then it may
>pick it up and deliver it to a local user.

My lan is set up as follows. My workstation 192.168.0.1 runs windows xp and 
shares its dialup connection through ics. In its host file it maps my fbsd 
box 192.168.0.7 to the server name swamisalami. This allows me to ftp, ssh, 
and also browse to http://swamisalami from my workstation and afaik any 
other box on the lan.

I use eudora as my email client on the workstation and set up a personality 
for root@SwamiSalami. I was able to successfully send the following

 From root@SwamiSalami.face2interface.domain Thu Dec  4 15:12:30 2003
X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Version 6.0.0.22
Date: Thu, 04 Dec 2003 15:13:12 -0500
To: root@SwamiSalami.face2interface.domain,
    marty@SwamiSalami.face2interface.domain
From: Marty Landman <root@SwamiSalami.face2interface.domain>
Subject: testing
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed

This is a test. If this were an actual email...

Ohhhhhhhhh.


 >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

However, I don't know how to receive email from outside my lan on the fbsd 
box, nor how to send mail from the fbsd box to other locations.

Besides that I just managed to delete a user's mailbox and don't know how 
to recreate it. But that just seems to be an omen of how much trouble this 
is going to take overall. Just part of the learning hyperbola, uh curve -- 
yeah.

*update* - I received one of the test email msgs; apparently mail (or 
sendmail) created the /var/mail/marty file on the fly, then removed it 
again once I deleted the msg. btw, what is the cockamamie mbox thingie 
about and how do I manage it? uh, sorry about the value judgement implied 
in that stmt.

>You can try this with the  #dig command:

Thx, this seems a bit more informative in a way than #whois.

>- the IP of your mail server is 192.168.0.10

How do I find out what sendmail's ip adr is? What about the mail server 
that Eudora uses on the winxp box, does that enter into this if I want to 
be able to send/receive email on the internet from the fbsd box?

>- your default gateway for your network is 192.168.0.1

AFAIK that's right since this is the winxp/dialup shared box's ip.

>- your mail server name is mail.example.com

Now I'm lost. Do you mean the name of my ISP's email server?

>1> Set up DNS on the server
># cd /etc/namedb
># chmod 744 make-localhost
># ./make-localhost

Question here since I'm so new. Looks like make-localhost's an exec that 
I've just executed. But when I created /tmp/scratch

FreeB ./tmp/scratch
./tmp/scratch: Command not found.
FreeB more /tmp/scratch
#!/bin/sh
echo Hello World

># ee named.conf
>Add the following to the bottom of the file:
>
>zone "example.com" {
>         type master;
>         file "example.com.zone";
>         allow-update { none; };
>};

Stopped here since I'm unclear about how to sub for "example.com" but am 
leaving the rest of your instructions intact for followup.

Marty


>Then, up near the top of the file, make the following changes to this
>section:
>
># Remove the // from this line:
>//      forward only;
>
># and remove the /* and the */ from this section, and change the
>127.0.0.1 to the IP address of your ISP DNS server:
>/*
>         forwarders {
>                 127.0.0.1;
>         };
>*/
>
>Now create a zone file for this zone:
>
># ee /etc/namedb/example.com.zone
>
>Add the following information to this empty file:
>
>--- start clip here ---
>
>$TTL 360      ; Default cached time to live for all records
>
>example.com.    IN      SOA     ns.example.com. admin@example.com.
>                         (
>                                 2003120401; Serial
>                                 172800  ; Refresh every 2 days
>                                 3600    ; Retry every hour
>                                 1728000 ; Expire every 20 days
>                                 172800 ); Minimum 2 days
>
>@       IN      NS      ns.example.com.
>
>; Set the Mail Exchange record
>
>@       IN MX   10      mail.example.com.
>
>ns      IN A            192.168.0.10
>mail    IN A            192.168.0.10
>client  IN A            192.168.0.25
>router  IN A            192.168.0.1
>
>--- end clip ---
>
>Now, tell your name server to look to itself for resolution of names:
>
># echo "search example.com" > /etc/resolv.conf
># echo "nameserver 127.0.0.1" >> /etc/resolv.conf
>
>Now go configure your windows or whatever client computers to use
>192.168.0.10 as it's DNS server.
>
>2> Start the nameserver and load it at startup:
># /usr/sbin/named
>
>Now, add the following 2 lines to your /etc/rc.conf file:
>
>named_enable="YES"
>named_program="/usr/sbin/named"
>
>3> Configure sendmail
># cd /etc/mail
># echo "example.com" > relay-domains
># echo "example.com" > local-host-names
># echo "192.168.0 RELAY" > access
>
>4> Reload sendmail
># kill -HUP `cat /var/run/sendmail.pid`
>or just reboot
>
>5> Add some users on the mail server
># man adduser
>
>6> Install qpopper
># cd /usr/ports/mail/qpopperpop3 stream tcp nowait root
>/usr/local/libexec/qpopper qpopper -R -s -c -T 300
># make install clean
>
># ee /etc/inetd.conf
>Add the following line under the existing pop3 line in this file. Keep
>the existing one commented. (Note that if the mail line break breaks the
>line, it should be on a single line when entered in the file)
>
>pop3 stream tcp nowait root /usr/local/libexec/qpopper qpopper -R -s -c
>-T 300
>
>7> Reload inetd
># kill -HUP `cat /var/run/inetd.pid`
>or just reboot
>
>8> Try sending the user an email (whilst logged into the server console
>or ssh)
>
># mail -s "This is a test" user@example.com
># This is the body of the message. The last line in a command
># line mail will always be the '.' character to denote the end
># of a message
># .
>
>9> Check to see if sendmail delivered it to the users mailbox.
># ll /var/mail | grep user
>
>If his file has more than 0 bytes in it, then he's got mail.
>
>10> Configure your client machine to check email
>You can set up a new account in outlook or evolution, mozilla or what
>have you, just configure it with the account name the same as the user
>name, and the pop3 and smtp servers both as mail.example.com. This will
>resolve because as described in section 1, you have already configured
>this machine to look to your DNS server, who has authority to resolve
>the example.com domain.
>
>11> Check && send email
>If you receive email for this user into the account, then thank god -- I
>didn't overlook anything, and you didn't miss any small things in this
>howto.
>
>Now, using your main (real, outside) email account, send a message back
>to this list to tell us that things are working.(Don't forget to change
>the smtp server to the new box first)
>
>YOU WILL NOT be able to send email to the outside world from the new
>test account, as when it gets to us, we will respond to someone who
>honestly owns the domain, which won't be you.
>
>Please advise on any errors or omissions. All of this was done from
>memory (well, almost all).
>
>Cheers,
>
>Steve
>
>
> > Marty Landman   Face 2 Interface Inc 845-679-9387
> > Sign On Required: Web membership software for your site
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> >
> > _______________________________________________
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>--
>
>Steve Bertrand
>President/CTO,
>Northumberland Network Services
>
>t: 905.352.2688
>w: www.northnetworks.ca



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