Subj : Nothing in Outbound Area ?
To : Mvan Le
From : Paul Quinn
Date : Thu Sep 14 2006 03:27 pm
Hi! Mvan,
On Wed, 13 Sep 06, you wrote to me:
ML>> Policy 4, Section 2.2 - "How to Obtain a node number" does not
[ ...trimmed.. ]
PQ>> What happens if you use a 1:343/999 -aka- instead?
PQ>> (Or, insert your nearest NC's Net number... for the
PQ>> purposes of the exercise.)
ML> Unless the procedure's to use node 999 ...
That's the intent of P4, surely.
ML> Nope. BinkleyTerm refuses to operate with an unlisted address.
Apparently from your testing, then, it appears that BT does _not_ comply with
P4 and should not be used. Mmm.
ML> From my understanding if it's a valid address then it might get
ML> routed. But 0:0/0 or -/-1 or even 1:65535/65535 shouldn't, and the
ML> destination system's mail processor should place those messages to a
ML> defined BAD_AREA.
It (node/999 outbound) ought to route to the NC. There's no problem there, if
it's ever delivered (marked as 'direct' flavour).
ML> The applicant would then contact their NC by phone to let them know
ML> mail's waiting. Or they could simply wait until the NC inspects their
ML> BAD_AREA.
ML> For the purpose of applying for a node address, an applicant should
ML> only need to demonstrate that their system can send Netmail.
I never had to phone no stinking NC. The first time I did was just a few years
back, to organise a sysop piss-up.
In your case, and if you can do BinkD, then I suggest you try a BSO-style
mailer that can do both dial-up and IP like: Argus or Radius (forget about
Taurus as it's dead-meat, now). Being more modern software I'm sure they (it,
in reality) won't have a silly need to modify your local copy of the nodelist,
just get them (it) to execute to 'waiting for caller' mode.
Cheers,
Paul.
--- Radius 4.010/21.01.2005(Final)
* Origin: Fuor yeers argo i cudnot spel occifer; nkow i are won. (3:640/384)