sender rejected
Carsten Burghardt
carsten at cburghardt.com
Tue May 4 10:41:35 CEST 2010
Zitat von skipmorse at gmail.com:
> On Apr 30, 2010 9:17am, Christian Tardif
> <christian.tardif at servinfo.ca> wrote:
>
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>> On 30/04/10 01:39 AM, Carsten Burghardt wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>
>> I have multi domain setup where all users are identical. So i added
>> the additional domains in the virtual table as @domain2.com @domain.com
>> However if I try to send a mail as me at domain2.com the sender is
>> rejected. If I add me at domain2.com as an alias to the user (in the
>> addressbook) it works. I do not really understand this but maybe
>> somebody can shed some light on this.
>
>
>
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>> What I understand you want to do is provide a domain alias so any mail
>> sent to someone at domain2.com would end up in someone at domain.com, right?
>
>
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>> There's a wiki for that:
>> http://wiki.kolab.org/index.php/Managing_Domain_aliases
>
>
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>> I haven't been able to do it with Method #1. But Method #2 is really
>> simple as well.
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>
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>> All you have to do is edit /kolab/etc/kolab/templates/virtual.template
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>> In your example, that would be:
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>> domain2.com anything
>
>> @domain2.com @domain.com
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>> Save, and propagate changes with (as root): /kolab/sbin/kolabconf
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>> That's it! I just done it five minutes ago! :-)
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>
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>> --
>
> I'm not sure if this is exactly the same thing, but I have some
> users that need to be able to send email that appear to be coming
> from a different email address that maps to a shared folder.
>
> Inside the network it isn't an issue because we're on the 'trusted
> network' list or whatever it's called. The issue was doing it
> outside the network. To allow authenticated users to do this (it's
> not allowed by default I guess, we'd get a 'sender address
> rejected') I had to modify the main.cf.template:
>
> smtpd_sender_restrictions = permit_mynetworks,
> permit_sasl_authenticated, <-- that's the line I added
> check_policy_service unix:private/kolabpolicy
>
>
> It doesn't quite sound like what you're wanting to do, but maybe...
> my issue was I *think* that shared folders don't have a 'delegates'
> option, I'm guessing if I were to use a group user, and assigned
> delegates that way that it would have just worked. But, I haven't
> tested that...
That actually did the trick. I noticed that I could send emails from
the localhost (e.g. through Horde) but not via remote.
permit_sasl_authenticated fixed that. Thanks!
Carsten
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