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On 10/24/06, lgoodbar@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx <lgoodbar@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
We have a corporate project to migrate our mailboxes from Exchange 2000 to Exchange 2003. Part of the migration process is a discussion over allowing anonymous relaying from the internal network. Our iSeries is configured to use the Exchange server as its relay point. If corporate decides to use a form of SMTP relay authentication, does OS400 support this natively (SMTP with MSF)? How about running our own relay/SMTP server? We're at V5R2, and most of our email is handled with Brad Stone's MAILTOOL.
Rich's idea (I think) is to have the SMTP server send mail directly rather than relaying through Exchange. If the message is to an internal person, the Exchange server should accept it because it is not a relay. If the message is to another domain, the SMTP server will contact that domain and deliver the message directly. The SMTP out from the System i will need to be allowed out the firewall. The most straight-forward solution is to harangue the Exchange admins to allow relay from the System i. You can certainly certify that the System i will not allow relaying. One thought .. frame the issue as their problem. Ideally, the System i would authenticate SMTP, but it doesn't. The System i (and several other systems) are going to be sending emails; the functionality is required by the business. Their choice is to have the mail routed directly out the firewall, or out through the Exchange framework. I wager they will want the latter, as long as you can certify that it is secure. Good luck!
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