|
Home > Archive > microsoft.public.exchange2000.admin > October 2002 > Can send, but not receive email
You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread.
To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to
this thread please [click here]
| Author |
Can send, but not receive email
|
|
|
| Greetings. I've set up a soho, got W2K serv. with AD,
native mode. We have DSL, HW router, with ports 25, 80,
53, and 110 being forwarded to server. Web site (IIS 5)
works fine. We can send email to the outside world and
internally too, but CANNOT RECEIVE.
i feel like a big dummy. if we cannot receive email soon,
we're toast.
please, any thoughts appreciated...
TIA ;>
dave
| |
| Mark Fugatt 2002-10-05, 8:35 pm |
| Dave
Do you have an MX record created on a public DNS server that points to your
public IP address, here is an article that explains how to connect Exchange
2000 to the Internet:
http://www.msexchange.org/pages/articles.asp?art=612
Hope this helps
--
Mark Fugatt
Pentech Office Solutions Inc
www.exchangetrainer.com and www.4mcts.com
Visit www.msexchange.org for practical information on Microsoft Exchange
--- Please respond to this newsgroup and not directly via Email ---
"dave" <dave@ohveryhotmail.com> wrote in message
news:af7601c24e3e$b1dcc650$9ae
62ecf@tkmsftngxa02...
> Greetings. I've set up a soho, got W2K serv. with AD,
> native mode. We have DSL, HW router, with ports 25, 80,
> 53, and 110 being forwarded to server. Web site (IIS 5)
> works fine. We can send email to the outside world and
> internally too, but CANNOT RECEIVE.
>
> i feel like a big dummy. if we cannot receive email soon,
> we're toast.
>
> please, any thoughts appreciated...
>
> TIA ;>
>
> dave
| |
|
| Oh wow, thanx for replying quickly. i read that good
article last week (honest!). but am a bit confused: i'm
doing all the DNS from here, i.e both internally
(domain.local) and externally (domain.com). In the .com
forward lookup, i created an A record, "mail.domain.com"
and pointed it to the static IP, and then created an MX,
pointing to server (hostname.domain.com). seem right? do i
still have to contact earthlink for an MX?
TIA
-dave
***
>Dave
>
>Do you have an MX record created on a public DNS server
that points to your
>public IP address, here is an article that explains how
to connect Exchange
>2000 to the Internet:
>http://www.msexchange.org/pages/articles.asp?art=612
>
>Hope this helps
>
>--
>Mark Fugatt
>Pentech Office Solutions Inc
>www.exchangetrainer.com and www.4mcts.com
>Visit www.msexchange.org for practical information on
Microsoft Exchange
>
>--- Please respond to this newsgroup and not directly via
Email ---
>"dave" <dave@ohveryhotmail.com> wrote in message
> news:af7601c24e3e$b1dcc650$9ae
62ecf@tkmsftngxa02...
>> Greetings. I've set up a soho, got W2K serv. with AD,
>> native mode. We have DSL, HW router, with ports 25, 80,
>> 53, and 110 being forwarded to server. Web site (IIS 5)
>> works fine. We can send email to the outside world and
>> internally too, but CANNOT RECEIVE.
>>
>> i feel like a big dummy. if we cannot receive email
soon,
>> we're toast.
>>
>> please, any thoughts appreciated...
>>
>> TIA ;>
>>
>> dave
>
>
>.
>
| |
| Mark Fugatt 2002-10-05, 8:35 pm |
| Dave
You will need to contact someone who has the ability to host your external
DNS, so Earthlink may have to do it for you, if you look at
www.dnsreport.com and enter your domain name it will tell you how your
public DNS records are configured.
Hope this helps
--
Mark Fugatt
"dave" <dave@soveryhotmail.com> wrote in message
news:920901c24e42$036cdf70$a5e
62ecf@tkmsftngxa07...
> Oh wow, thanx for replying quickly. i read that good
> article last week (honest!). but am a bit confused: i'm
> doing all the DNS from here, i.e both internally
> (domain.local) and externally (domain.com). In the .com
> forward lookup, i created an A record, "mail.domain.com"
> and pointed it to the static IP, and then created an MX,
> pointing to server (hostname.domain.com). seem right? do i
> still have to contact earthlink for an MX?
>
> TIA
>
> -dave
>
> ***
>
> >Dave
> >
> >Do you have an MX record created on a public DNS server
> that points to your
> >public IP address, here is an article that explains how
> to connect Exchange
> >2000 to the Internet:
> >http://www.msexchange.org/pages/articles.asp?art=612
> >
> >Hope this helps
> >
> >--
> >Mark Fugatt
> >Pentech Office Solutions Inc
> >www.exchangetrainer.com and www.4mcts.com
> >Visit www.msexchange.org for practical information on
> Microsoft Exchange
> >
> >--- Please respond to this newsgroup and not directly via
> Email ---
> >"dave" <dave@ohveryhotmail.com> wrote in message
> > news:af7601c24e3e$b1dcc650$9ae
62ecf@tkmsftngxa02...
> >> Greetings. I've set up a soho, got W2K serv. with AD,
> >> native mode. We have DSL, HW router, with ports 25, 80,
> >> 53, and 110 being forwarded to server. Web site (IIS 5)
> >> works fine. We can send email to the outside world and
> >> internally too, but CANNOT RECEIVE.
> >>
> >> i feel like a big dummy. if we cannot receive email
> soon,
> >> we're toast.
> >>
> >> please, any thoughts appreciated...
> >>
> >> TIA ;>
> >>
> >> dave
> >
> >
> >.
> >
|
|
|
|
|