Date: Thu, 23 Mar 2006 08:28:35 -0700 From: Steve Camp <steve@camp.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Cc: Steve Camp <steve@aslan.camp.com> Subject: e-mail relaying without forwarding the entire message? Message-ID: <20060323082835.A9959@aslan.camp.com>
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When one MTA attempts to deliver an e-mail message to another MTA, the conversation looks something like: -> HELO somedomain.com <- 250 Hello somedomain.com -> MAIL FROM: <sender@somedomain.com> <- 250 2.1.0 Sender ok -> RCPT TO: <recipient@otherdomain.com> <- 250 2.1.5 Recipient ok -> DATA <- 354 Enter mail ... <- 250 2.0.0 Message accepted for delivery My question involves redirecting the sending MTA to a different receiving MTA. Rather than the initial receiving MTA having to accept the entire message (all the DATA) and then forward it on to another MTA, the initial receiving MTA simply "redirects" the sending MTA to another MTA -- preferably the MTA that actually handles the e-mail for "recipient@otherdomain.com". The conversation that I envision would look something like: -> MAIL FROM: <sender@somedomain.com> <- 250 2.1.0 Sender ok -> RCPT TO: <recipient@otherdomain.com> <- XYZ X.W.V Go See someotherserver.otherdomain.com for <recipient@otherdomain.com> Is such a redirection possible? Is it hard to configure? Have I just described "relaying"? It seems to me that such a "redirect" would be useful (by keeping bandwidth low on the primary MX for a domain) if an organization handles such a large volume of e-mail that it has an "e-mail server farm", or if a geographically disparate organization has multiple e-mail servers all connected directly to the internet (well, probably each through a separate firewall). Regards, -- Steve Camp steve@camp.com
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