Virtual MTAs allow you to group multiple IP addresses into a "pool," which helps distribute traffic and protect your sending reputation.
The configuration file is hierarchical. It usually follows this order: sample powermta configuration file
<source 127.0.0.1> always-allow-relaying yes process-x-virtual-mta yes Virtual MTAs allow you to group multiple IP
dkim-sign domain example.com selector1 dkim-keyfile /etc/pmta/dkim/example.com/selector1.pem dkim-identity @example.com dkim-headers From:To:Subject:Date:Message-ID dkim-signature-expiration 7d dkim-sign sample powermta configuration file
# "api-source" for HTTP API access <source api-source> accept 127.0.0.1 accept 192.168.1.50 relay true </source>
Virtual MTAs allow you to group multiple IP addresses into a "pool," which helps distribute traffic and protect your sending reputation.
The configuration file is hierarchical. It usually follows this order:
<source 127.0.0.1> always-allow-relaying yes process-x-virtual-mta yes
dkim-sign domain example.com selector1 dkim-keyfile /etc/pmta/dkim/example.com/selector1.pem dkim-identity @example.com dkim-headers From:To:Subject:Date:Message-ID dkim-signature-expiration 7d dkim-sign
# "api-source" for HTTP API access <source api-source> accept 127.0.0.1 accept 192.168.1.50 relay true </source>