Les Mikesell wrote: > Sendmail should fall back to A records if no MX exists, and it should > accept any names you've added to /etc/mail/local-host-names (requires a > sendmail restart) as local regardless of what DNS says. If you want > network-local mail delivered to some other machine you can define > MAIL_HUB in sendmail.mc with approximately the same syntax as SMART_HOST > (i.e. use []'s around literal IPs or hostnames where you want to skip > the MX lookup). Then mail determined to be local will go to the > MAIL_HUB and you can still send outside mail to a different SMART_HOST. Thanks, I'll try that and tell you what happens. As I said, it used to be simple to forward logwatch to a local machine. (I'm thinking 2 or 3 years ago, possibly pre-Fedora, on Redhat systems.) I'm not sure what has changed. >> Also on that system, you will need to make it a POP3/IMAP >> server so you can retrieve mail. I'm actually running a dovecot/IMAP server on the machine, alfred, that I want the email sent to. I read my email on my laptops from this server. This works beautifully. -- Timothy Murphy e-mail: gayleard /at/ eircom.net tel: +353-86-2336090, +353-1-2842366 s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list