Eric N. Valor writes:
On Thu, 2004-07-15 at 04:05, Sam Varshavchik wrote:Eric N. Valor writes:
> corporate people who do not have a local UNIX account on this machine.
> > This is the error I get in mail.log:
> > Jul 15 01:19:34 server postfix/pipe[30047]: A19497FE2: to=<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> relay=maildrop, delay=10, status=bounced (user unknown. Command output:
> Invalid user specified. )
> > My /etc/courier/userdb is thus:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] mail=/path/user/
> > My postfix master.cf uses:
You are missing a valid userdb entry. A valid userdb entry contains the account's home directory, the numeric userid, and the numberic groupid.
Ok. So for a hosted or virtual domain (which is incidentally the same domain as the machine itself, if that makes a difference), would I use the UID/GID and home directory of the courier user since no one has a local UNIX account?
Thanks again.
I'm going to ask you a multiple choice question. You will have to figure out the answer on your own. Given the stated userid, groupid, and the home directory in a userdb record, the userid and the groupid:
1) Must match the actual uid and the gid of the defined home directory on the filesystem, or
2) Does not have any relation to the actual uid and the gid of the defined home directory on the filesystem.
What do you think makes the most sense?
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