HI Tom; These guys are correct, your mail server is not exchanging any authentication but expecting it. WHM and Cpanel use different mail tools depending in what exactly is available and embraced/installed by your hoster. http://www.cpanel.net/products/cpanelwhm/features.html If you have it, use the WHM mail troubleshooter: http://www.webhostingresourcekit.com/flash/whm/whm10_x_mail.html Most web hosters use the WHM mail tool because of the many issues with insecure mail scripts cgi hacked. This simply means that your server is sending mail FROM ITSELF (not necessarily for/to the domain) using WHM. 1) MX for your domain (so that your new server will be used for MAIL XFER [if you are already using another mail service and have a 0 or 1 priority MX record, just add a second MX for your offsite mailer IP machinename (which MUST match the reverse in-addr-arpa IP address and name the server presents itself as PER the RFC)] http://www.gregrobert.com/mxsetup.php 2) Mailer to allow specific IP addresses to access and relay without authentication. If you find you are not using WHM, but have another mail server, it's going to be configurable within Cpanel or WHM also. This is generally in /etc/mail or /etc/postfix and is usually called *relay* something. But refer to specific documentation for your mail transport tool. I.E. google "How do I configure relay hosts in postfix" for instance. GoDaddy does have ssh or ftp. You can change configuration files with ftp, where you generally would be vim editing the file and restarting the mail daemon. Generally CPanel and WHM have tools to manage everything available on the server. I am familiar with setting up Cpanel and WHM on servers as well as working within them for various shops through the years. If you have questions you can email or call me off list. So much of the specifics of your hoster are guessed by us, wouldn't this question best be crafted and packaged for their support email or process? On Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 7:07 PM, Eric Shubert wrote: > On 10/17/2010 06:40 PM, Matt Graham wrote: > >> From: Tom Ostlund >> >>> I am using cpanel and whm. >>> Does anyone know why I would be getting the following error: >>> >>> This mail server requires authentication when attempting to send to >>> a non-local e-mail address. Please check your mail client settings >>> >> >> Your mail client is attempting to send mail via a box that is configured >> to >> only relay mail that's been authenticated via user/password or whatever. >> Make >> sure your mail client is using the appropriate SMTP server. Also try >> setting >> "this mail server requires authentication" to true, and make sure that the >> user/password you enter in that part of the mail client are correct for >> the >> SMTP server. >> >> It's hard to be more specific since I don't know what client you're using. >> This doesn't have much of anything to do with websites, either. >> >> Is there something that I need to add to the dns zone to make this >>> work? >>> >> >> I'd say this is barking up the wrong tree, unless you're trying to send >> mail >> to a domain that doesn't have an MX record. That should give you a >> totally >> different error message though. >> >> > That sounds good to me (the mail server is requiring authentication). The > best solution is to configure the client (a web app I presume?) to > authenticate (provide a user/pw). If the web app (client) can't handle that, > it is sometimes possible to configure the MTA to allow submissions from a > specific IP address (127.0.0.1 for instance if the MTA is on the same host > as the web app). I don't know if cpanel or whm lets you do that or not. > Might need CLI. > > -- > -Eric 'shubes' > > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss > -- Skype: 6022393392 Fax: 6233211450 ATT: 5037544452 Phoenix Linux Security Team http://www.it-clowns.com *"Great things are not done by impulse but a series of small things brought together." -Van Gogh*