whatmeworry
IS-IT--Management
Hi, I am desperately trying to setup the Internet Mail Service on Exchange 5.5, but unfortunately have very little Exchange experience. When trying to install it, I am using File<New Other<Internet Mail Service. This is running on Windows 2000 server.
This method of setup forces me to use the Internet Mail Wizard, which at the second step gives me the error, "The Internet Mail Service requires the DNS name to be configured on BLAH. To configure the domain name, use the network icon in the control panel on BLAH, or select another server.
My intent is to be able to use the Exchange server to send and receive email. I assume I need the Internet Mail Service to do so.
I am using a T1 ISP, and I have another host company that is handling the DNS for foo.tv (the domain I want to use for mail addresses), and foo.tv's MX record is currently pointed at the Exchange server's IP.
Is there a way to hook up the Internet Mail Service to utilize entries in a hosts file, or the non-local DNS? I would really like to use the hosts file as opposed to a local DNS server setup b/c it is much easier; so if you are recommending local DNS, could you please suggest entries for exchange to foo.tv compatibility?
Right now the DNS in the TCP/IP settings is looking at foo.tv's DNS servers, where the MX record that points to Exchange is.
Thank you for your help, I really just feel like throwing the computer out the window at this point, maybe your advice can prevent such drastic measures from being taken. =P
This method of setup forces me to use the Internet Mail Wizard, which at the second step gives me the error, "The Internet Mail Service requires the DNS name to be configured on BLAH. To configure the domain name, use the network icon in the control panel on BLAH, or select another server.
My intent is to be able to use the Exchange server to send and receive email. I assume I need the Internet Mail Service to do so.
I am using a T1 ISP, and I have another host company that is handling the DNS for foo.tv (the domain I want to use for mail addresses), and foo.tv's MX record is currently pointed at the Exchange server's IP.
Is there a way to hook up the Internet Mail Service to utilize entries in a hosts file, or the non-local DNS? I would really like to use the hosts file as opposed to a local DNS server setup b/c it is much easier; so if you are recommending local DNS, could you please suggest entries for exchange to foo.tv compatibility?
Right now the DNS in the TCP/IP settings is looking at foo.tv's DNS servers, where the MX record that points to Exchange is.
Thank you for your help, I really just feel like throwing the computer out the window at this point, maybe your advice can prevent such drastic measures from being taken. =P