Yes, it was an alias.

Ultimately I ended-up removing the alias from the MySQL database directly through SQL commands. I had to read through the dbmail source code to learn how to do that. I first tried to fix the dbmail-users code to address the matter, but I ultimately gave up and just ran the SQL commands.

I was able to remove many other aliases for other users. I just had a problem removing that one alias for that one user.

Thanks,

Lee.


On 07/01/2015 06:40 AM, Harald Leithner wrote:
Are you sure its an alias and not an Forward?

try to use dbmail-users -c <username> -T <alias>

if this fails, check the database, you should find the entry in the dbmail_aliases table.

bye

Harald

Am 02.06.2015 um 00:34 schrieb Lee Howard:
I am unable to remove aliases with:

dbmail-users -c <username> -S <alias>

I run it, and it says "Done", but if I immediately run dbmail-users -l I
can still see the alias there.

Is this a known problem?  What is the right way to remove an alias?

Thanks,

Lee.
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