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Date:      Tue, 02 Jul 2002 17:13:07 -0400
From:      Brendan McAlpine <bmcalpine@macconnect.com>
To:        <knappster@knappster.net>, <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Mail question
Message-ID:  <B9478FA3.17AC1%bmcalpine@macconnect.com>
In-Reply-To: <1025638290.31883.4.camel@cobtech10.cob.rit.edu>

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Qmail is the way to go.

Easy to set up and configure, and you can set up relay based on pop
authentication.

That is to say, once your user checks his mail account on the server, he can
send from that IP for a certain period of time before he has to check his
mail again and re-authenticate (time period is usually 60 minutes).

Brendan

> From: Andrew Knapp <knappster@knappster.net>
> Reply-To: knappster@knappster.net
> Date: 02 Jul 2002 15:31:27 -0400
> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> Subject: Mail question
> 
> I'm looking into setting up a mail server for my employer, and I'm
> running into a brick wall. I'm looking for a mail program (sendmail,
> qmail, doesn't matter) that will allow relaying based on the
> authentication of the client to the server. Everything I have seen so
> far is IP based, but that becomes unruly with users that are on dialup
> (i.e., don't have a static IP address). I'm planning on using IMAP as my
> main protocol with which to get mail, and running FreeBSD as my server
> OS.
> 
> Any Suggestions?
> 
> Thanks,
> Andy Knapp
> 
> 
> 
> 
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