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8
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9 <HTML>
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10 <HEAD>
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11 <TITLE>MasqMail - Manual
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12 </TITLE>
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13 </HEAD>
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14 <BODY TEXT="#000000" LINK="#0000ff" BGCOLOR="#ffffff">
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15
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16 <center>
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17 <table width="80%">
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18 <tr><td>
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19 <table width="100%" bgcolor="#0000aa" cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0>
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20 <tr>
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21 <td>
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22 <a href="manual.html">
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23 <img width="20" src = "../images/u_arrow.gif" alt = "manual">
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24 </a>
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25 </td>
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26 <td align=center width="100%"><font size="6" color = "#ffffff">Installation</font></td>
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27 <td>
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28 <a href="./options.html">
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29 <img width="20" src = "../images/r_arrow.gif" alt = "Options">
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30 </a>
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31 </td>
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32 </tr>
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33 </table>
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34
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35
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36 <p>You need a user and a group for masqmail to run, I suggest user
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37 'mail' and group 'trusted'. Say:</p>
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38
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39 <pre>
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40 groupadd -g 42 trusted
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41 useradd -u 42 -g 42 -d / -s /bin/sh -c "Mail Transfer Agent" mail
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42 </pre>
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43
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44 <p>If you use other names than <i>mail</i> and <i>trusted</i> use the options
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45 described below for configure. The 42 is just a suggestion, you can
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46 use any number you like, but preferably one < 100. It does not have
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47 to be the same for the user 'mail' and the group 'trusted'.</p>
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48
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49 <p>Compliling is a matter of the usual procedure:</p>
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50
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51 In the source directory, after unpacking do:<br>
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52
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53 <pre>
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54 ./configure
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55 make
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56 make install
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57 </pre>
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58
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59 <p>Optionally, after you have called make, you can make some tests in
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60 the tests directory. Read the README in that directory for
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61 instructions.</p>
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62
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63 <h4>Additional options for configure:</h4>
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64
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65 <p>
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66 <b>--with-user=USER</b> sets the user as which MasqMail will run. Default is
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67 <i>mail</i>. USER has to exist before you 'make install'.
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68 </p><p>
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69 <b>--with-group=GROUP</b> sets the group as which MasqMail will run. Default
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70 is <i>trusted</i>. GROUP has to exist before you 'make install'.
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71 </p><p>
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72 <b>--with-logdir=LOGDIR</b> sets the directory where MasqMail stores its log
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73 files. It will be created if it does not exist. Default is /var/masqmail/.
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74 </p><p>
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75 <b>--with-spooldir=SPOOLDIR</b> sets the directory where MasqMail stores its
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76 spool files. It will be created if it does not exist. Default is
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77 /var/spool/masqmail/.
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78 </p><p>
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79 <b>--enable-auth</b> enables ESMTP AUTH support (disabled by default)
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80 </p><p>
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81 <b>--disable-pop3</b> disables pop3 support (enabled by default)
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82 </p>
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83
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84 <h4>After make install</h4>
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85
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86 <p>
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87 You can also use these instructions to omit 'make install' if you do
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88 not want to use it.
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89 </p><p>
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90 Check that 'make install' worked correctly. The following command:
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91 </p><p><pre>
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92 ls -ld /usr/sbin/masqmail /var/masqmail/ /var/spool/masqmail /var/spool/masqmail/input
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93 </pre></p><p>
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94 should give output similar to
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95 </p><p>
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96 <pre>
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97 -rwsr-xr-x 1 root root 86955 Oct 14 14:27 /usr/sbin/masqmail
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98 drwxr-xr-x 2 mail trusted 1024 Oct 14 14:29 /var/masqmail/
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99 drwxr-xr-x 3 mail trusted 1024 Oct 14 14:27 /var/spool/masqmail
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100 drwxr-xr-x 2 mail trusted 1024 Oct 14 18:32 /var/spool/masqmail/input
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101 drwxr-xr-x 2 mail trusted 1024 Oct 14 18:32 /var/spool/masqmail/popuidl
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102 </pre>
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103 </p>
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104 <p>
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105 (important is the set-user-id bit for /usr/sbin/masqmail and the
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106 ownership of all items).
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107 </p>
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108
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109 <p>Edit the configuration files. You can use the files from the
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110 examples directory as a template. Copy masqmail.conf to
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111 /etc/maqmail.conf, the others to the location given in
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112 masqmail.conf.</p>
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113
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114 <p>If you already have an MTA (eg. sendmail) installed, move that to
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115 another location:</p>
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116
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117 mv /usr/sbin/sendmail /usr/sbin/sendmail.orig<br>
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118
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119 <p>Then make a link to the new MTA:</p>
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120
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121 <pre>
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122 ln -s /usr/sbin/masqmail /usr/sbin/sendmail
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123 </pre>
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124
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125 <p>Now every mailer that used to call sendmail will now call
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126 masqmail. You can now kill your old sendmail if it is running and
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127 start masqmail. Usually this is done with the startup scripts. For
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128 SuSE this would be (as root):</p>
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129
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130 <pre>
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131 /sbin/init.d/sendmail stop
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132 /sbin/init.d/sendmail start
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133 </pre>
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134
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135 <p>or shorter:</p>
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136
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137 <pre>
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138 /sbin/init.d/sendmail restart<br>
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139 </pre>
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140
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141 <p>You can also start it with:</p>
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142
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143 <pre>
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144 /usr/sbin/sendmail -bd -q30m<br>
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145 </pre>
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146
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147 <p>You can also let it be called from inetd (with the -bs option), but
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148 this is untested.</p>
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149
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150 <h4>Configuring for online delivery</h4>
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151
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152 <p>Now you have to set up the online configuration. The trick is to
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153 tell your ip-up script the connection name. You could use the IP
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154 number of the far side of the ppp link, but this is a pain and may
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155 change each time. But you can give it an additional argument via pppd
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156 with ipparam. Somewhere in your dial up script you have a line similar
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157 to:</p>
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158
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159 <pre>
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160 /usr/sbin/pppd /dev/ttyS1 connect "/usr/sbin/chat -t 90 -f
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161 ${CHATFILE}" -d -d -d user user@somewhere file ${OPTIONS}
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162 </pre>
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163
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164 <p>Just add 'ipparam FastNet' in the command line for pppd if your ISP
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165 has the name FastNet. The ip-up script will then get 'FastNet' as a
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166 sixth parameter. In your ip-up script you can then call masqmail with</p>
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167
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168 <pre>
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169 /usr/sbin/masqmail -qo $6
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170 </pre>
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171
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172 <p>instead of 'sendmail -q', if you had that in the script
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173 before. Masqmail will then read the route configuration specified for
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174 the connection name 'FastNet' and deliver the mail destined to the
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175 internet. See the <a href="config.html">configuration manual</a> on how
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176 to write a route configuration or use one of the examples as a
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177 template. <em>I do not know how do configure that for an ISDN adapter,
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178 but I am sure you will find something similar in the man
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179 pages.</em></p>
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180
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181 <p>If you want mail that is received by masqmail from your local
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182 net to be delivered immediately using the route configuration, you
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183 have two possibilities:<p>
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184
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185 <p>
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186 <ul>
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187
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188 <li>if you are using the masqdialer system, you just have to set the
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189 variables <b>online_detect</b> to <i>mserver</i> and
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190 <b>mserver_iface</b> to the interface mserver is listening to.</li>
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191
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192 <li>otherwise you have to add two commands in your ip-up script:<br>
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193 echo -n $6 > /tmp/connect_route<br> chmod 644 /tmp/connect_route<br>
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194 and you have to remove the file <i>/tmp/connect_route</i> in your
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195 ip-down script:<br> rm /tmp/connect_route.<br> Then you have to set
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196 <b>online_detect</b> to <i>file</i> and <b>online_file</b> to
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197 <i>/tmp/connect_route</i>. </li>
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198
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199 </ul>
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200 </p>
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201
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202 <p>See the route documentation for more.</p>
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203 </td></tr>
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204
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205 <tr><td>
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206 <p>
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207 <hr>
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208 <address><a href = "mailto:kurth@innominate.de">Oliver Kurth</a></address>
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209 Last modified: Tue May 30 15:19:56 CEST 2000
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210 <br>
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211 This page was created using <a href="http://www.freddyfrog.com/hacks/genpage/">Genpage</a> - Version: 1.0.6
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212 </p>
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213
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214 </table>
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215 </center>
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216
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217 </BODY>
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218 </HEAD>
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219
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