Tony Bibbs wrote: >Makes sense to use the domain name. > >Ok, so I have this setup and I try testing this by creating a maildir >called couriertest and another called bounces. I then edit >.courier-test-default to have "./couriertest" and .courier to have >"./bounces" and then I run: > >perftest1 1000 "couriertest-test-1 couriertest-test-2 ... >couriertest-test-5" > >and I get nothing at all in /home/courierusers/couriertest/new nor in >/home/courierusers/bounces > >How does one troubleshoot this (where does courier store it's log >files)? > >Oh, and I just realized I'm did a reply instead of reply-all...oops. > >--Tony > >On Thu, 2002-01-17 at 13:02, Sysop wrote: > >>Tony Bibbs wrote: >> >>>hmm, ok. That makes more sense to me. >>> >>>so in your example your mysqldb record would look like this: >>> >>>id: hosting >>>crypt: foo >>>name: hosting >>>uid: 3 >>>gid: 4 >>>home: /home/mailusers >>>maildir: [EMAIL PROTECTED]/maildir >>> >>>of course that's assuming the mailusers userid is 3 and groupid is 4. >>>Is that right? >>> >>Close, but I don't supply the maildir setting, just home directory. >> Courier is smart enough to know to deliver to Maildir. Also, I give >>the full name, [EMAIL PROTECTED] becuase I host multiple domains, and I >>would like to be able to have fred@foo and fred@bar be different people. >> >> >> > > You know, it's been too long since I've done a fresh install of courier, I dont' remember what I did for the testing. Perhaps somebody on the list will have that.
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