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On 4/12/06, James H H Lampert <jamesl@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > I'm not entirely sure of this, but I *think* the mail > server is *outside* the firewall (again, the one in the > Linksys router), while the AS/400 that's sending the email > is most definitely *inside* the firewall. This is not a good practice; the mail server should be protected by the firewall, particularly as it is a Windows server. I am kind of curious to find out why it was done, if indded it is the case. I have seen instances when a company has an external mail server AND an internal mail server, with the external one serving essentially as anti-spam/anti-virus and not keeping any mail. But having all of the corporate mail stored outside the firewall seems dangerous. And I *am* certain that when we had relaying enabled under > the old mail server, it *was* by IP address. Relaying is much safer when the mail server is behind the firewall, because only the internal network can get to it to relay. Setting up NAT and publishing the mail server is very straight-forward; the firewall gui likely has a wizard to do it. -- Tom Jedrzejewicz tomjedrz@xxxxxxxxx
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