Here's the deal....
I have a home LAN sharing an @home cable connection via a D-LINK 4-port router/gateway (with NAT based firewall ). No machines on the LAN can send or recieve email through the @home mail server. All machines on the LAN can, however, use Yahoo and Hotmail (POP3 and SMTP versions), can play various games, can use file-sharing apps, can surf http, and can use IRC (after opening up port 113). My LAN can do EVERYTHING except @home email
Additionally, when any one machine is connected directly to the cable modem, and that computer name is changed to the one @home gave me, it can send/recieve via the @home servers. (Normally, the D-link has the @home computer name, and domain name)
The message I get with Eudora: "cannot resolve server (mail)" so on and so forth.
I have tried countless configurations - opening up various ports (auth, pop3, smtp, and DNS) through to all machines, to no avail. I have also spent days searching the web on this topic and have learned alot - but apparently not enough.....
This leads me to believe that @home uses some sort of authentication that only a non-LAN connected machine can provide. The @home mail server is maybe not accepting the info from my router? (computer name, domain, ip address)
Could this be because I have not purchased IP adresses for extra machines on the LAN?
Any comments/solutions to this issue would be VERY GREATLY APPRECIATED!!!!
Thanks
npowell
I have a home LAN sharing an @home cable connection via a D-LINK 4-port router/gateway (with NAT based firewall ). No machines on the LAN can send or recieve email through the @home mail server. All machines on the LAN can, however, use Yahoo and Hotmail (POP3 and SMTP versions), can play various games, can use file-sharing apps, can surf http, and can use IRC (after opening up port 113). My LAN can do EVERYTHING except @home email
Additionally, when any one machine is connected directly to the cable modem, and that computer name is changed to the one @home gave me, it can send/recieve via the @home servers. (Normally, the D-link has the @home computer name, and domain name)
The message I get with Eudora: "cannot resolve server (mail)" so on and so forth.
I have tried countless configurations - opening up various ports (auth, pop3, smtp, and DNS) through to all machines, to no avail. I have also spent days searching the web on this topic and have learned alot - but apparently not enough.....
This leads me to believe that @home uses some sort of authentication that only a non-LAN connected machine can provide. The @home mail server is maybe not accepting the info from my router? (computer name, domain, ip address)
Could this be because I have not purchased IP adresses for extra machines on the LAN?
Any comments/solutions to this issue would be VERY GREATLY APPRECIATED!!!!
Thanks
npowell