Bonsoir,
J'ai installé ce logiciel et j'ai pu mettre mon portable en réseau avec mon PC. Jusqu'ici, pas de problème, le partage se fait très bien. Par contre, il me semble que la réception d'e-mails est plus laborieuse qu'avant et cela sur les 2 appareils! L'IP du portable est le même que sur le PC, tout cela suivant les indications du concepteur de "Proxy"'. Ne serait-il pas + logique que l'IP du portable soit différent de celui du PC, du moins, au niveau de la réception?
Léonard
Proxy d'Analogx
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Bonsoir,
L'IP du PC est 192.168.0.1 et celui du portable 192.168.0.2
Malgré cela, quand j'active la réception de courrier sur le portable, via Outlook 2000, le message est: "Reception de courrier sur 192.168.0.1" et ensuite " Un délai d'attente a eu lieu lors de la communication avec le serveur. Compte 192.168.0.1, Serveur POP3 192.168.0.1 N° de l'erreur: 0x800ccc19"
L'envoi ne semble pas donner de problèmes.
Merci,
Léonard
L'IP du PC est 192.168.0.1 et celui du portable 192.168.0.2
Malgré cela, quand j'active la réception de courrier sur le portable, via Outlook 2000, le message est: "Reception de courrier sur 192.168.0.1" et ensuite " Un délai d'attente a eu lieu lors de la communication avec le serveur. Compte 192.168.0.1, Serveur POP3 192.168.0.1 N° de l'erreur: 0x800ccc19"
L'envoi ne semble pas donner de problèmes.
Merci,
Léonard
Dans l'help du log, voici ce que tu as :
<UL><LI>1ère possibilité :</UL>
<TABLE BORDER=0 ALIGN=CENTER WIDTH=85%><TR><TD><font size=-1><b>Citation :</b></font></TD></TR></TABLE><TABLE BORDER=1 CELLPADDING=10 BORDERCOLOR=#FF0000 ALIGN=CENTER WIDTH=85%><TR BGCOLOR=#F3F2F4><TD><FONT SIZE=-1>If you want to try the normal method, open up the 'Configure' menu, and select
'Configure Email Alias's'; you'll be presented with the email account
configuration area. Select 'Add' from the menu; this is where you will enter
in the servers you check your email from... First, you need to enter the email
address that people send messages to, like 'bob@domain.com'. Next, you need to
set the POP3 server, which is where your email program goes when it receives
email; normally this will be something along the lines of 'pop3.domain.com' or
'mail.domain.com'. Finally, you need to set the SMTP server, which is what
your emails are sent through, which in the above example could be something
like 'smtp.domain.com'. Now, it's important to note that not every service uses
two different names for the server, you might check both POP3 and SMTP from
the same server; in this case you can just leave the SMTP field blank. That's
it for the proxy! Now you have added email support for this particular user.</FONT></TD></TR></TABLE>
<UL><LI>2ème possibilité : </UL>
<TABLE BORDER=0 ALIGN=CENTER WIDTH=85%><TR><TD><font size=-1><b>Citation :</b></font></TD></TR></TABLE><TABLE BORDER=1 CELLPADDING=10 BORDERCOLOR=#FF0000 ALIGN=CENTER WIDTH=85%><TR BGCOLOR=#F3F2F4><TD><FONT SIZE=-1>Now you need to set up the configuration of the email program you use; this
varies from program to program, but you need to go to wherever you enter both
the servers that the program checks. Now, instead of entering 'mail.domain.com'
or whatever your mailserver is, you'll enter the IP address of your proxy
server, such as '10.0.0.1'. It's important to note that you won't need to
change the port settings in the email program, since the proxy uses the same
ports a normal server would. Also, you will set both the SMTP, as well as the
POP3 servers to the same IP address; the proxy will make sure they get to the
correct place. Now, let's check out your configuration; try sending an email
to yourself... If everything is configured properly, they you should be good
to go!
One more thing to note about email; it will only support using a certain
username once; for example, you can't have <a href="mailto:bill@homecomputer.com">bill@homecomputer.com</a> and
<a href="mailto:bill@workcomputer.com;">bill@workcomputer.com;</a> but you can have <a href="mailto:bill@homecomputer.com">bill@homecomputer.com</a> and <a href="mailto:sue@another.com.">sue@another.com.</a>
In most cases this shouldn't be a problem for users, since most people have
different usernames for each account... The reason I decided to do it this way
was to make it easier to configure email programs, but there's always a minus.</FONT></TD></TR></TABLE>
<IMG SRC="/images/smiles/wink_smile46.gif">
<UL><LI>1ère possibilité :</UL>
<TABLE BORDER=0 ALIGN=CENTER WIDTH=85%><TR><TD><font size=-1><b>Citation :</b></font></TD></TR></TABLE><TABLE BORDER=1 CELLPADDING=10 BORDERCOLOR=#FF0000 ALIGN=CENTER WIDTH=85%><TR BGCOLOR=#F3F2F4><TD><FONT SIZE=-1>If you want to try the normal method, open up the 'Configure' menu, and select
'Configure Email Alias's'; you'll be presented with the email account
configuration area. Select 'Add' from the menu; this is where you will enter
in the servers you check your email from... First, you need to enter the email
address that people send messages to, like 'bob@domain.com'. Next, you need to
set the POP3 server, which is where your email program goes when it receives
email; normally this will be something along the lines of 'pop3.domain.com' or
'mail.domain.com'. Finally, you need to set the SMTP server, which is what
your emails are sent through, which in the above example could be something
like 'smtp.domain.com'. Now, it's important to note that not every service uses
two different names for the server, you might check both POP3 and SMTP from
the same server; in this case you can just leave the SMTP field blank. That's
it for the proxy! Now you have added email support for this particular user.</FONT></TD></TR></TABLE>
<UL><LI>2ème possibilité : </UL>
<TABLE BORDER=0 ALIGN=CENTER WIDTH=85%><TR><TD><font size=-1><b>Citation :</b></font></TD></TR></TABLE><TABLE BORDER=1 CELLPADDING=10 BORDERCOLOR=#FF0000 ALIGN=CENTER WIDTH=85%><TR BGCOLOR=#F3F2F4><TD><FONT SIZE=-1>Now you need to set up the configuration of the email program you use; this
varies from program to program, but you need to go to wherever you enter both
the servers that the program checks. Now, instead of entering 'mail.domain.com'
or whatever your mailserver is, you'll enter the IP address of your proxy
server, such as '10.0.0.1'. It's important to note that you won't need to
change the port settings in the email program, since the proxy uses the same
ports a normal server would. Also, you will set both the SMTP, as well as the
POP3 servers to the same IP address; the proxy will make sure they get to the
correct place. Now, let's check out your configuration; try sending an email
to yourself... If everything is configured properly, they you should be good
to go!
One more thing to note about email; it will only support using a certain
username once; for example, you can't have <a href="mailto:bill@homecomputer.com">bill@homecomputer.com</a> and
<a href="mailto:bill@workcomputer.com;">bill@workcomputer.com;</a> but you can have <a href="mailto:bill@homecomputer.com">bill@homecomputer.com</a> and <a href="mailto:sue@another.com.">sue@another.com.</a>
In most cases this shouldn't be a problem for users, since most people have
different usernames for each account... The reason I decided to do it this way
was to make it easier to configure email programs, but there's always a minus.</FONT></TD></TR></TABLE>
<IMG SRC="/images/smiles/wink_smile46.gif">
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