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Sat, 11 Feb 1995 03:20:00 +0100 |
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Message of Fri, 10 Feb 1995 17:55:07 EST from LISTSERV
give-and-take forum < [log in to unmask]> |
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On Fri, 10 Feb 1995 17:55:07 EST Roger Fajman <[log in to unmask]> said:
>It seems to me that there could be a much easier way to tell
>LISTSERV-NJE what to do with messages that could be sent by BITNET or
>the Internet. Rather than having to track down and install an
>unsupported exit that doesn't offer all the reasonable options, how
>about some simple LISTSERV parameters to handle the normal cases? Exits
>ought to be reserved for the unusual cases. I would like to say what to
>do with Internet addresses in my own domain, Internet addresses in other
>domains, and whether to pay attention to the :interconnect value in
>DOMAIN NAMES.
A few clarifications:
- If LISTSERV is properly configured, your local domain's mail is always
delivered locally. You don't need to use the exit for that. I think the
problem is that many sites were configured before they were connected
to BITNET. Thus, they probably only have NJE addresses in things like
the LOCAL variable.
- LISTSERV doesn't use DOMAIN NAMES any longer, it uses SERVICE NAMES.
SERVICE NAMES defines the mapping between domains and hosts for the
purposes of bulk delivery.
- The exit was indeed introduced to solve special cases, before INTERBIT
even existed. DOMAIN NAMES specified a number of gateways for the
various domains. Then MCVAX was closed and INTERBIT was introduced, and
DOMAIN NAMES was updated to reflect this. At the time, INTERBIT was the
officially recommended way to deliver Internet mail; the first version
of SMTP on VM didn't support MX records, etc. When people started doing
their own Internet deliveries, the exit was there to make this
possible. About a year ago (after the release of 1.8a, unfortunately) I
added support for an "INTERBIT" configuration option that lets you
select the local host for such deliveries. With version 1.8b, you will
just let USE_NJE default to 0 and this will activate a number of
options to minimize BITNET usage, including the use of the local node
for Internet deliveries by default.
Eric
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