On 02/16/2010 08:21 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote: > Tim wrote: > >> I'm not talking about IP addresses, I mean email addresses. Presume >> that I am tim@localhost on my machine, and I masquerade my mail to >> change localhost to the domain name of my ISP (e.g. example.com), and I >> (now) send out my mail as tim@xxxxxxxxxxx, to save me from configuring >> my mail clients. But, *I* shouldn't do that, because I am not user >> "tim" on my ISP, some other person has that ISP mail account. > But you can configure it so that tim@localhost gets mapped to gayleard@xxxxxxxxxx bu your mail server. It is also possible to map all users except for specific ones to all go out as gayleard@xxxxxxxxxxx Normally root does not get changed. I don't remember if postmaster does. > That is exactly my problem. > I am "tim" on my own machines, but "gayleard@xxxxxxxxxx" to my ISP. > >> Masquerading has to be done with due care, as with just about all >> aspects of running a mail server attached to the public internet. > > I must admit I am still not clear about the purpose of masquerading. > What is a concrete situation where it might make sense? > You have a local network network that sends all outside mail through one mail server. The internal mail address may be something like lab1.foo.net, but mail headed for the Internet must be from foo.net or even bar.net in order for return messages to reach the proper mail server. For a home network, you may want different local accounts to go out through different ISP's mail servers. The need for running a masquerading mail server on a home system has become rare with the use of always on broadband connections. Also. mail clients like Thunderbird send the outgoing messages directly to the proper mail server without any name re-writing being necessary. For home networks, there is seldom a need for the local mail server to connect ot the Internet at all. > Incidentally, I don't think I am running a mail SERVER > as I understand that term. > I collect all my email from external mail servers with fetchmail . > > By default, Fedora runs Sendmail to handle locally generated mail from things like cron jobs. Depending how you have Fetchmail set up, it may also handle delivering the messages that Fetchmail gets. Fetchmail can be configured to rewrite fetched mail to a local mail address. One final note - for most home networks, Sendmail is overkill - you don't need most of the features. You may want to look into one of the lighter alternatives. Mikkel -- Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for thou art crunchy and taste good with Ketchup!
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