Date: Fri, 25 Jun 1999 10:39:11 -0400 From: Mark Conway Wirt <mark@intrepid.net> To: "Mike Avery (on the road)" <mavery@mail.otherwhen.com>, freebsd-isp@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: why not uucp, instead of smtp and static ip? Message-ID: <19990625103911.D14126@intrepid.net> In-Reply-To: <27FC8C472BE@mail.otherwhen.com>; from Mike Avery (on the road) on Fri, Jun 25, 1999 at 08:39:19AM -0000 References: <19990624195332.F1893@daemon.ninth-circle.org>; <19990625085803.A14126@intrepid.net> <27FC8C472BE@mail.otherwhen.com>
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On Fri, Jun 25, 1999 at 08:39:19AM -0000, Mike Avery (on the road) wrote: > > If someone is running Exchange, Lotus Notes, Groupwise, > Sendmail, or even Mercury, they are trying to run their own email > services. And it would seem to be easiest if they have a fixed IP > address. > > Even if you can remap the IP address for mail.mycustomer.com in > DNS on the fly, the changes will take a while to propogate.... it > seems better to give these people a static IP, even if it is a pain. > > Or - do you have a better solution? Something like UUCP is a better solution. I can run the primary (and only) MX for the domain and spool it up via UUCP. [UUCP over TCP is the way to go, BTW]. Why is this better?: 1) No need for static addresses. 2) No potentially confusing "Unable to deliver..." messages if the customer doesn't retrieve their mail for a long time. --Mark To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-isp" in the body of the message
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