On Mon, 26 Aug 2002, Boniforti Flavio wrote:
> > Hello all! > I've got to implement a server for a particular situation. > > I've got some remote sites connecting to my central MAIN LAN. > IN this MAIN LAN I house the mailserver of our company, which is quite > large. > I want to install "local" mailservers in our remote offices, so that > they don't have to send mail directly to our central mailserver if the > recipient is also in the same office as the sender's. > > Example: > User [EMAIL PROTECTED] resides in REMOTE-01 > User [EMAIL PROTECTED] resides in REMOTE-01 > > When the user FOO sends an E-Mail to user BAR, that E-Mail has to be > delivered "locally", so it doesn't generate traffic towards my central > E-Mail server, altough their mailboxes reside on that central server. I > was thinking about some sort of "duplicate" mailboxes, one on the > central server (for incoming mail from other domains) and the *same* > mailbox on their local NT server. This one should be able to establish > if that user has to be delivered locally or that it has to be forwarded > to our main mailserver. > > Would Xmail do that job? either you split domains : @remote1.mydomain.com , @remote2.mydomain.com or you keep a central server. you cannot split a domain through different servers if you do not design subdomains. - Davide - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe xmail" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] For general help: send the line "help" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
