T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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998.1 | Depends on your SMTP access! | FLASK2::SYSTEM | Nigel Bridport @REO | Fri Apr 11 1997 13:02 | 12 |
|
I think that this is controlled by your local MTS Manager
(MTSMGR@<area code>).
He should be able to modify the particular entry to re-route your
messages or just set autoforward up in VMSmail.
The forwarding address would depend on how your VMSmail account
has access to the internet. What typical smtp address would you
use for this ?
Nigel.
|
998.2 | tried a few routing alternatives already. | BEAVER::MCKEATING | | Fri Apr 11 1997 13:56 | 20 |
| The problem is the router setting is something like mckeating@nesbit@vmsmail
When a mail with attachments goes through the router they get the usual
'unable to convert to ASCII data of type FOREIGN' message displayed. It is
as though the router knows what the target is and causes the attachments to be
removed.
they tried setting the address to [email protected] in the router
but I then did not get the messages at all:-
/R=NESBIT.AYO.DEC.COM/U=RMCKEATING/@mts.dec.com
unable to transfer, unrecogniszed recipient name.
so my guess was that there is something wrong with the router entry. OR as
you said in .1 it could be at the pop3 server end. trial and error takes
too long and I can loose message if the target is not set correctly...
thanks so far,
Bob
|
998.3 | Are you using MR ? | FLASK2::SYSTEM | Nigel Bridport @REO | Fri Apr 11 1997 15:17 | 31 |
|
Which router are you talking about. If it is Digital's MTS, then it
is going to be Message Router based. Message routing in MR is
handled by DDS. DDS defines where your mail account is and would
typically hold something like ("User@Mailbox@Node")
From your entry "mckeating@nesbit@vmsmail", it looks like you are
using a MRGATE on the local node to DDS that forwards the message
to NESBIT::MCKEATING. The attachment handling is handled by
MRgate in this case as MRgate knows what message types can be
received by VMSmail from MR.
If you want to redirect your DDS entry to you new SMTP account,
you need to change the DDS entry to point to your local SMTP/Internet
gateway and it would look something like:
"[email protected]"@<smtp gateway>@<gateway node>
Note the use of the quotes around your SMTP address.
In this scenario, my address would be:
"[email protected]"@exchange
TS, part of MR, would resolve the @Exchange term and be able to post
the mail to the appropriate gateway.
Of course, if you are not using MR and routing via some other product,
then ignore this as it is completely irrelavent *8-)
Nige.
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998.4 | re Am I using MR? | BEAVER::MCKEATING | | Fri Apr 11 1997 16:16 | 11 |
| I think i'm using MR. When I send mail out to allin 1 I use
"MTS$" = "AYOMTS::MRGATE::"
The local IM&T helpdesk reconfigure the mail address when I call them
up. They are not much help, you really have to tell them exactly what
to do when you call up. (not much help then is it:-))
i'll forward your note onto the help desk and see if they can get it to work.
thanks in advance,
Bob
|
998.5 | @INTERNET | PARZVL::ogodhcp-123-40-174.ogo.dec.com::kennedy | nuncam non paratus | Fri Apr 11 1997 19:26 | 11 |
| The Helpdesk really should know how to do this.
All it needs is to set your MTS entry to:
[email protected]@INTERNET
In this case "INTERNET" really means a gateway to
SMTP mail, internal or external.
Using @INTERNET should assure your mail will go
through the nearest PMDF gateway (PMDF is the
product we use to interface MTS & SMTP mail).
|
998.6 | [email protected]@INTERNET Success Thanks | BEAVER::MCKEATING | | Mon Apr 14 1997 15:47 | 6 |
| thanks for the feedback. From my initial testing it looks like setting
it to [email protected]@INTERNET works!!!
now I have no excuses when I don't get attachments:-(
Bob
|