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Christopher Negus

"Linux Bible, 2008 Edition: Boot up to Ubuntu, Fedora, KNOPPIX, Debian, openSUSE, and 11 Other Distributions"

???
 Mail name: Enter the name of your mail server here.
 IP addresses: Clear this box (or leave it empty if it is already so) so that Exim will listen
on all local IP addresses.
 Destinations to accept mail for: Enter any domains that your server will be accepting
mail for. Be sure to separate them with colons, and not commas or spaces.
 Domains to relay for: Enter the names of any domains that your machine will relay
mail for, meaning that it can receive mail from them but then passes it on. In most
cases, you will not want to enter anything here.
 Machines to relay for: Enter the IP address ranges of any client machines that you
want your server to accept mail from. Another (safer) option is to leave this empty and
require clients to authenticate using SMTP authentication. SMTP authentication is best
performed over an encrypted connection, so this process is described in the security
section at the end of this chapter.
 Keep DNS queries to a minimum: No.
3. This configuration uses Maildrop for local mail delivery. Maildrop can deliver messages to
the Maildir-style folders that Courier is expecting, and can also handle basic sorting and
filtering (as described in the ???Configuring Mail Clients??? section). This package is not
installed by default, so install it as follows:
# apt-get install maildrop
676
Running Servers Part V
4.


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