> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Graham
> Leggett
>
> Mitch (WebCob) wrote:
>
> > It's not a function of courier, but of the operating system and file systems
> > underlying it.
>
> In this case, the mailbox accounts are to be separate from the system
> accounts, as a result this can only be done with the mailserver, and not
> the OS or any filesystem.
>
> Regards,
> Graham
> --

Hi Graham.
Like doing it with NFS, I would maintain it is a function of the filesystem and
how you manage it, but you haven't really defined cluster here (that I can
remember), so maybe you are looking for something different.

If you are looking for redundancy (local or global), and failover (local or
global) then you are still looking at issues that are probably best served by
existing methods - there are other alternatives to NFS (Coda, AFS, etc.) which
are better for widely distributed operation than NFS perhaps - and there are
failover methods using DNS for global and ARP for local - but ALL of this is
more of a "high-availability" question than a mail server question...

UNLESS you are asking how do I have [EMAIL PROTECTED] go to a server in idaho and
[EMAIL PROTECTED] go to a server in california in which case I think I need to
understand your meaning of "cluster"

m/



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