The trouble with using a .courier-default file (as I've sadly
discovered) is that you end up receiving all email, even those which
can't possibly be delivered.  Of course, the emails that can't be
delivered get bounced; but my experience is that the DSN's are
undeliverable and so sit in the queue for ages.

So if one of the addresses "goes bad", create a .courier-thatextension and /dev/null it. It's not as good as a bounce, but then again, you know it's bad and it's not like anyone else should be using it...


But it is a valid point. :-)

best,
Jeff



-------------------------------------------------------
This SF.Net email is sponsored by: SourceForge.net Broadband
Sign-up now for SourceForge Broadband and get the fastest
6.0/768 connection for only $19.95/mo for the first 3 months!
http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=2562&alloc_id=6184&op=click
_______________________________________________
courier-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/courier-users

Reply via email to