Oh cool. What I did was open a Google Apps account for my domain (chimpymail.com) and then used fetchmail to pull the mail down - that way Google did the spam filtering - too bad they charge real money new accounts now.
I'd be happy to host it on GORVAX if somebody helped me set it up...
Sampsa
On 19 Mar 2015, at 16:52, Robert Armstrong <bob at jfcl.com> wrote:
Yes, LEGATO is running one. You can send mail to "user at node.decnet.org",
where "user" and "node" are your HECnet node name and your local user name.
I've been tempted to kill it - it spends most of its time processing SPAM
- but for the moment it's still working.
Bob
Yes, LEGATO is running one. You can send mail to "user at node.decnet.org",
where "user" and "node" are your HECnet node name and your local user name.
I've been tempted to kill it - it spends most of its time processing SPAM
- but for the moment it's still working.
Bob
Yes, LEGATO is running one. You can send mail to "user at node.decnet.org",
where "user" and "node" are your HECnet node name and your local user name.
I've been tempted to kill it - it spends most of its time processing SPAM
- but for the moment it's still working.
Bob
Yes, LEGATO is running one. You can send mail to "user at node.decnet.org",
where "user" and "node" are your HECnet node name and your local user name.
I've been tempted to kill it - it spends most of its time processing SPAM
- but for the moment it's still working.
Bob
Yes, LEGATO is running one. You can send mail to "user at node.decnet.org",
where "user" and "node" are your HECnet node name and your local user name.
I've been tempted to kill it - it spends most of its time processing SPAM
- but for the moment it's still working.
Bob
On Mar 19, 2015, at 12:32 PM, Sampsa Laine <sampsa at mac.com> wrote:
Guys,
Is anyone running a mail gateway between HECnet and the Internet?
Just asking out of interest, CHIMPY:: used to be able to gateway mail but the new ISP doesn't like the address formats so drops the outgoing mails..
A possible solution to that issue is not to relay via the ISP, but to have your local mail agent deliver directly to the recipient. That assumes the ISP doesn t block port 25, of course.
paul
Guys,
Is anyone running a mail gateway between HECnet and the Internet?
Just asking out of interest, CHIMPY:: used to be able to gateway mail but the new ISP doesn't like the address formats so drops the outgoing mails..
Sampsa
El 19/03/2015, a les 15:38, Steve Davidson <steve at davidson.net> va escriure:
SGC:: is a level 1 router and SGC:: is an area router. SGC:: is functioning normally but SG1:: is not. Apparenty the TOY clock is not functioning. When that happens the default boot device reverts to the Ethernet port. In SG1::'s case, booting using the Ethernet port results in booting into the STRGTE:: cluster for maintenance purposes and no Multinet and no area router. I will try to install/configure Multinet in this variant sometime today - remotely.
Ouch, that sounds like a dead DS1287A...
As you probably know, the DS12887A is a drop-in replacement, and it is easily available (11,52 at Farnell).
SGC:: is a level 1 router and SGC:: is an area router. SGC:: is functioning normally but SG1:: is not. Apparenty the TOY clock is not functioning. When that happens the default boot device reverts to the Ethernet port. In SG1::'s case, booting using the Ethernet port results in booting into the STRGTE:: cluster for maintenance purposes and no Multinet and no area router. I will try to install/configure Multinet in this variant sometime today - remotely.
-Steve
Sent from my iPhone
On Mar 19, 2015, at 07:18, <Paul_Koning at Dell.com> <Paul_Koning at Dell.com> wrote:
On Mar 18, 2015, at 5:00 PM, Jordi Guillaumes i Pons <jg at jordi.guillaumes.name> wrote:
...
Now I'm a little bit lost. I think a node must be configured as an Area router to be able to route between two areas via the multinet link.
There are two reasons why a node may have to be an area router:
1. If it needs to have other nodes that are in a different area as neighbors
2. If you want to be able to see the area routing tables
But if your neighbor is in the same area as you, the whole network is reachable to any node type (endnode, L1 router, area router). The L1 router doesn t have a map of the areas, but instead it sends all out-of-area traffic to the nearest L2 router which is represented in the L1 routing data by the entry for address 0.
The datalink type is not a factor here; Multinet is no different from any other point to point link in this respect.
paul
On Mar 18, 2015, at 5:00 PM, Jordi Guillaumes i Pons <jg at jordi.guillaumes.name> wrote:
...
Now I'm a little bit lost. I think a node must be configured as an Area router to be able to route between two areas via the multinet link.
There are two reasons why a node may have to be an area router:
1. If it needs to have other nodes that are in a different area as neighbors
2. If you want to be able to see the area routing tables
But if your neighbor is in the same area as you, the whole network is reachable to any node type (endnode, L1 router, area router). The L1 router doesn t have a map of the areas, but instead it sends all out-of-area traffic to the nearest L2 router which is represented in the L1 routing data by the entry for address 0.
The datalink type is not a factor here; Multinet is no different from any other point to point link in this respect.
paul