Mailing List ArchiveSupport open source code!
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]tlug: Quest for e-mail
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: tlug: Quest for e-mail
- From: Dave Gutteridge <dave@example.com>
- Date: Tue, 10 Nov 1998 15:04:44
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
- In-Reply-To: <19981110142340A.hakamada@example.com>
- References: <Your message of "Tue, 10 Nov 1998 14:09:34 +0900 (JST)"<Pine.LNX.3.96LJ1.1b7.981110140625.11973c-100000@example.com><Pine.LNX.3.96LJ1.1b7.981110140625.11973c-100000@example.com>
- Reply-To: tlug@example.com
- Sender: owner-tlug@example.com
Hello All. This thread is now officially migrating from advocacy to the main list, as it has now taken on a more technical nature. A very basic technical nature mind you. My pursuit of making my Linux machine into a mail server has exposed me to the fact that i'm even more clueless than i thought i was. Hopefully i'll turn that around after answering Stephens questions (which will raise more questions, so please read on!) Stephen asked: >Tell us >1. Where you want to get mail from >2. Where you want to send it to >3. How you think it's supposed to get there >4. Where the world thinks your mailbox is now >5. Where you want it to be, if different >6. Where you want folders saved >and what the role of the "mail server" is in all this. Okay, the deal is that I have two web sites on this Linux machine all set up and ready to go. One of them is the "d-rave.com" site that i have in my little sig file at the bottom of this letter. This is my personal site which i just use to experiment with exactly this kind of stuff and also for my amusement(Please don't go there yet as it's still pretty lame while i'm trying to get everything running!). The other site is, or at least will be, for more serious concerns. Now, what I'm trying to accomplish is have it so that I can use the ".com" addresses as an e-mail address. So, for example, i could have "me@example.com". This is where i thought the mail server came in. I thought a mail server was a thing like an FTP server, or like the web pages i set up, where i would be able to set up a few perameters in some config files or through an interface, and then be able to access these e-mail addresses by remote machines. I thought mail would come to this machine, be stored there, and then give it to me when i asked for it from, say, my PC at home. Jim gave me a pointer or two, so i tried what he said: Jim wrote: >There are lots of ways. This is Unix. :-) Here's one. By convention, mail >servers hang around listening on port 25, ready to accept connections from >other hosts. Try doing 'telnet localhost 25' in an attempt to make a >connection to that port on your own machine. If you get "connection >refused" there probably isn't a server running. Otherwise you may be >rewarded with a banner that gives clues to the type/version of server >running on your machine. (Read the NAG.) I typed in telnet localhost 25 at my prompt (for those of you just tuning in, these days i interface with my Red Hat 5.1 machine by telnet), and here's the response i got: Trying 127.0.0.1... Connected to localhost. Escape character is '^]'. 220 linuxserver.rainbow.co.jp DSMTP ESMTP Server v2.2i As suspected, there is a mail server already running and getting mail from nobody and sending it to nobody. So now, what i'm looking to do get this thing to understand that i want to use my registered domain names to create mail addresses, and be able to send and recieve mail with them. One thing i didn't mention before - my original Red Hat box with CDs and manual are somewhere out at the end of the Chuo line while a friend of mine borrows them and wrestles with it on his own computer. So... Is there a reference on the web which will give me a bit of a "how to" on mail servers? Is my understanding of mail servers still off base? I'm wondering if i should be asking different questions. And this is from left field: I was poking around under the hood a bit, typing "help" to find out what commands there were and what they did. And i came across this: help NOOP 214-NOOP 214-No operation. Does nothing at all. 214 OK Why would there be a command that does nothing at all? Thanks for reading. i hope you can give me a pointer or two. ________________________________ Dave Gutteridge 3D Computer Animation Specialist e-mail: dave@example.com http://www.d-rave.com ________________________________ ---------------------------------------------------------------- Next Nomikai: 20 November, 19:30 Tengu TokyoEkiMae 03-3275-3691 Next Technical Meeting: 12 December, 12:30 HSBC Securities Office ---------------------------------------------------------------- more info: http://tlug.linux.or.jp Sponsors: PHT, HSBC Securities
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: tlug: Quest for e-mail
- From: Jonathan Byrne - 3Web <jq@example.com>
- Re: tlug: Quest for e-mail
- From: Howard Abbey <habbey@example.com>
- References:
- Re: tlug: XFree86-DGA extension
- From: Scott Stone <sstone@example.com>
- Re: tlug: XFree86-DGA extension
- From: Takeshi Hakamada <hakamada@example.com>
Home | Main Index | Thread Index
- Prev by Date: Re: tlug: XFree86-DGA extension
- Next by Date: Re: tlug: XFree86-DGA extension
- Prev by thread: Re: tlug: XFree86-DGA extension
- Next by thread: Re: tlug: Quest for e-mail
- Index(es):
Home Page Mailing List Linux and Japan TLUG Members Links