From owner-freebsd-questions Thu Mar 28 5: 2:13 2002 Delivered-To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Received: from lv.raad.tartu.ee (lv.raad.tartu.ee [194.126.106.110]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 4C51937B419 for ; Thu, 28 Mar 2002 05:02:07 -0800 (PST) Received: Message by Barricade lv.raad.tartu.ee with ESMTP id g2SD22u16387; Thu, 28 Mar 2002 15:02:03 +0200 Message-Id: <200203281302.g2SD22u16387@lv.raad.tartu.ee> Received: from SpoolDir by INFO (Mercury 1.48); 28 Mar 02 15:00:56 +0200 From: "Toomas Aas" Organization: Tartu City Government To: "Scott Gerhardt" , freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Date: Thu, 28 Mar 2002 15:00:48 +0200 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT Subject: Re: Error Messages In-reply-to: X-info: Headers changed by Barricade Sender: owner-freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk List-ID: List-Archive: (Web Archive) List-Help: (List Instructions) List-Subscribe: List-Unsubscribe: X-Loop: FreeBSD.ORG Hi Scott! On 26 Mar 02 at 10:35 you wrote: > I'm running Postfix 1.1.5 on FreeBSD 4.5-Release > > For SMTP-AUTH, I installed Cyrus-SASL using the Postfix port last week and > everything seems to be functioning fine, BUT I noticed that my console and > messages logs were filled with the following warning messages: > > What is wrong or misconfigured? > > > > > Mar 26 10:00:49 blue postfix/smtpd[30157]: KERBEROS_V4: can't access srvtab > file /etc/srvtab: No such file or directory FWIW, I started to get similar messages after upgrading SASL 1.5.24 to 1.5.27. I'm using SASL for authenticating users to Cyrus IMAP server and I don't have Kerberos authentication enabled in any of the configuration files. I'm using sasldb authentication and it works fine. To get rid of the messages, I just created empty /etc/srvtab -- Toomas Aas | toomas.aas@raad.tartu.ee | http://www.raad.tartu.ee/~toomas/ * How can you tell when you've run out of invisible ink? To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message