Xref: utzoo comp.mail.sendmail:3289 comp.unix.sysv386:8460 Newsgroups: comp.mail.sendmail,comp.unix.sysv386 Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!torsqnt!geac!censor!comspec!scocan!david From: david@sco.COM (David Fiander) Subject: Re: SCO Unix sendmail initialization problem Organization: SCO Canada, Inc. Date: Mon, 27 May 1991 13:59:24 GMT Message-ID: <1991May27.143614.7239@sco.COM> Originator: david@dybbuk.scocan.sco.COM References: <7647@spdcc.SPDCC.COM> Sender: news@sco.COM (News administration) In article <7647@spdcc.SPDCC.COM> rbraun@spdcc.COM (Rich Braun) writes: >SCO ships the system with mmdf, and there may be an interaction problem >with the mmdfdeliver daemon which is always there sitting in the >background. I'd just as soon dump mmdf entirely, though SCO's This is your problem exactly. If you really want to run sendmail, you have to uninstall mmdf, because they both attempt to listen for SMTP connections (actually the inetd and sendmail both attempt to listen). >documentation implies that mmdf is superior and one should dump >sendmail instead. If mmdf is superior, then my first question is "How >can I make it communicate with remote sendmail daemons?" and my second >is "Why doesn't mmdf handle domain name service?" In reverse order: You cannot configure the version of mmdf that you are running to talk to the nameserver. This has been corrected in the next release of SCO MMDF. The way to get mmdf to communicate with remote sendmail daemons is to properly configure MMDF to do so. Since you have been spending all your time trying to fix you perceived sendmail problems, you probably haven't worked very hard on MMDF (that's not a flame, I would have done the same thing). MMDF is only better that sendmail in one (very important) way: normal human beings can understand how to configure it in about 15 minutes, and can read the configuration files without having the manual beside them. Aside from that, MMDF and Sendmail solve basically the same problem in basically the same way. > >I'd like to hear from anyone who has had to set up e-mail on a TCP/IP- >based LAN containing SCO Unix systems mixed with others (AIX, NCR, and >so on), using a sendmail daemon on a non-SCO system to relay mail to You're talking to one (but we didn't relay things through sendmail to the Internet, just the rest of UUCPnet, but the idea is the same for the MMDF nodes). >the Internet via UUCP. (I've got my domain name server set up to >recognize systems on a domain called "kronos.com", and I've got SCO >sendmail configured to relay all mail addressed to external domains >to a given system on the LAN that knows how to pass it along to >the world-wide Internet.) This is very trivial to do with MMDF as well. Phone SCO support and ask for the fax-pack which describes configuring SCO MMDF in a TCP/IP environment (it's also been posted to this newsgroup at least once). -- David J. Fiander SCO MMDF Development Team SCO Canada, Inc.