On Wed, Jan 08, 2003 at 11:56:05AM -0500, Tobias Eigen wrote: > It does seem a bit wonky but these are journals that usually require an > expensive subscription that third world researchers can't afford. The > university of Trieste has negotiated a special deal which essentially > extends their own site license to registered users of their specially > configured www4mail web-to-email service.
Ah, a layer 9 problem - I should have thought of that :-) > I'd really like to find a simple solution that allows me to leave the > rest of my server configuration untouched (we have 500 domains hosted > here and several very large mailing lists) but limit the capability of > one domain's users to send email to addresses other than the www4mail > address. You say 'courier' but presumably it's sqwebmail that you are using? If so there is another partial solution: sqwebmail calls a shell script 'sendit.sh' when it wants to send a mail, so you could modify that script to enforce your policy. That would give you control of outbound, but not inbound. Otherwise, if you don't want to replace qmail as your MTA, then you will have to work out how to alter qmail (not courier) to do what you want. > Another thought is that we've been planning for some time to install > some type of spam protection on our server. Would it be feasible/useful > to think of doing this at the same time? Another qmail issue. You could see if you can integrate it with spamassassin (www.spamassassin.org). Regards, Brian. ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.NET email is sponsored by: SourceForge Enterprise Edition + IBM + LinuxWorld = Something 2 See! http://www.vasoftware.com _______________________________________________ courier-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/courier-users
