On Wed, 8 Jan 2003, Alen Ladavac wrote:

>
> Hi Frederik,
>
> The situation is simple. Imagine an office that is connected to internet
> using a dialup (mydomain.local). There is an external rented server that
> runs 24/7 (standard web hosting system) that serves the web and collects all
> mails for the main domain (mydomain.com). Now, I want the users to be able
> to pick their mail both from home (using mydomain.com POP3 server), and from
> the office (using mydomain.local POP3 server). In fact I need to setup
> something like "mail mirroring", where any mail existing on .com exists on
> ..local as well, so that users can pick it up even if the office is not
> online currently. The users would explicitly delete mails using their own
> POP3 clients from both .com (when at home) and .local server (when in the
> office), so that they can have one copy of mail in the office and one at
> home.
>
> If this works out, I can also shortcut the .com delivery from the inside to
> copy directly to .local, even when offline, etc. But the part that the
> messages are not deleted from .com by .local pickup is essential here.
>
> I hope this explanation is understandable.

You need IMAP. I'm pretty sure that somewhere I saw an IMAP server that
used a POP3 connection to expose the IMAP protocol. I tried to search it
but without success.



- Davide

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