This is the mail archive of the
cygwin-talk@cygwin.com
mailing list for the cygwin project.
Re: how does mailx work
- From: Carlo Florendo <list-subscriber at hq dot astra dot ph>
- To: Talk Amongst Yourselves <cygwin-talk at cygwin dot com>
- Date: Fri, 29 Apr 2005 09:46:06 +0800
- Subject: Re: how does mailx work
- References: <SERRANOyPzGNsokLQ8a00000158@SERRANO.CAM.ARTIMI.COM>
- Reply-to: Talk Amongst Yourselves <cygwin-talk at cygwin dot com>
Dave Korn wrote:
----Original Message----
Hello,
I've searched the net for mailing lists regarding mailx but there seems
to be none. Then why ask about it in cygwin-talk? Well, since it is
off-topic on the cygwin list and I might as well try my luck here, where
all of you are intelligent.
Here's the question: How does mailx know which MX to use? I've got a
linux box with the hostname test.mybox.org. Now, whenever I invoke
"mail <user>@mybox.org", it delivers the mail to <user>'s mailbox in the
local machine. How come it thinks that mybox.com is the local machine?
The local machine is test.mybox.org but *not* mybox.org.
Any ideas?
MX records tend to be per-domain rather than per-host anyway. Your local
dns server will presumably be returning a suitable record. Show us the
output from
dig @localhost mybox.org in mx
cheers,
DaveK
Btw, my boxes that end with [m y b o x] <dot> [o r g] are machines that
are not connected to the net. I set up the domains for testing. After
some googling, I realized that here is a real m y b o x.o r g domain.
So, to prevent search engines from web-spidering this posting and
relating it to the real m y bo x <dot> org, I type the name with
spaces. I and the institution I work for are not in anyway related to
the owners nor managers of that domain. All the setup was plain
coincidence.
I must probably change my test domain names now since I might be
infringing copyrights or trademarks.
Here's the result of dig. I did a vim search and relpace on the output
so please read M Y B O X as what it should be, w/out the spaces.
dig @192.168.10.10 m y b o X <dot> org in mx
; <<>> DiG 9.3.0 <<>> @192.168.10.10 M Y B O X.org in mx
;; global options: printcmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 51995
;; flags: qr aa rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 2, AUTHORITY: 1, ADDITIONAL: 3
;; QUESTION SECTION:
;M Y B O X.org. IN MX
;; ANSWER SECTION:
M Y B O X.org. 259200 IN MX 10 mail.M Y B O X.org.
M Y B O X.org. 259200 IN MX 20 mail2.M Y B O X.org.
;; AUTHORITY SECTION:
M Y B O X.org. 259200 IN NS ns1.M Y B O X.org.
;; ADDITIONAL SECTION:
mail.M Y B O X.org. 259200 IN A 192.168.10.6
mail2.M Y B O X.org. 259200 IN A 192.168.10.7
ns1.M Y B O X.org. 259200 IN A 192.168.10.10
;; Query time: 1 msec
;; SERVER: 192.168.10.10#53(192.168.10.10)
;; WHEN: Fri Apr 29 10:20:20 2005
;; MSG SIZE rcvd: 138
HTH.
btw, [m y b o x] <dot> [o r g] is a local machine which is not connected
to the net. I set up the domains for testing. After some googling, I
realized that here is a real m y b o x.or g domain. However, I and the
institution I work for are not in anyway related to the owners nor
managers of that domain. All the setup was plain coincidence.
I must probably change my domain names now since I might be infringing
copyrights or trademarks.
Thanks!
Gee, you cygwin gurus are my favorite, really :)
Best Regards,
Carlo
--
Carlo Florendo
Astra Philippines Inc.
www.astra.ph