On Sat, 2005-11-05 at 19:22 -0500, Sam Drinkard wrote: > On Sun, 2005-11-06 at 00:37 +0100, Alexander Dalloz wrote: > > > > > Maybe I wasn't clear enough: You explicitly enabled the MSA with > > authentication enforced and TLSMTA (SMTPS), so the MTA is disabled if > > not explicitly instructed to run by a dedicated DAEMON_OPTIONS line. No, > > that didn't change for a long time. To avoid a listener on an IPv6 > > enabled interface is a different matter. A the sendmail.mc in its > > commented way shows, you can selective say whether to have an IPv4 MTA > > listener or IPv6 one, or both. Btw. the default sendmail.mc shipping > > with FreeBSD has those commented IP version splitted DAEMON_OPTIONS > > definitions. > > > > More is explained in cf/README. > Not sure I completely follow you Alexander. Are you saying that by > enabling the TSLMTA / SMTPS , that *disables* the normal mta daemon? > I do however need the MSA, but in an unauthenticated mode, as my home > ISP blocks port 25. I was under the impression after reading the > sendmail.mc that the MSA would be a non-authenticated operation. > Perhaps I need to go back and re-read the sendmail.mc. Yes, as I > recall on 4.9 BSD, the choice between ipv4 and ipv6 were two separate > options.. That is what is running on my mailserver now. One other > question while on the subject of mail, I believe I did a yum search > for qpopper, or some other pop agent, and nothing shows up. I did > find the latest version of qpopper at the Qualcomm website, I believe. > I assume there is no available pop agent in the base distribution of > CentOS is there? ---- dovecot and cyrus-imapd are 2 imap/pop3 servers included in CentOS 4 distribution. Qpopper is neither distributed, maintained or updated as part of CentOS. I would heavily recommend that you use dovecot or cyrus- imapd (my preference is for cyrus-imapd but many believe dovecot is easier). You can have TLS/MTA and normal MTA on the same system, they must both be specifically enabled as Alexander has suggested. Craig -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.