Thanks. I was beginning to think that no one understood what I wrote. I'd love to make all my users change to fully qualified name, but that's going to be exceptionally difficult with the number I have and time alloted.
I'm looking at using perdition to act as the front end and "append" any domain that it needs to, to the username. Maybe I'll look at making a patch to the IMAP server such that you can define client_idnr to IP address. -- David A. Niblett | email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Network Administrator | Phone: (352) 334-3400 Gainesville Regional Utilities | Web: http://www.gru.net/ -----Original Message----- From: Blake Mitchell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, May 24, 2005 4:28 PM To: DBMail mailinglist Subject: Re: [Dbmail] Question about Virtual Domains It's a simple matter of having enough information to figure out who a person is. If you have identical user names for different domains, and they are different people, then you need some other piece of identifying information to figure out the domain. Be it a separate port or IP, or a domain in the login, there has to be something to tell these people apart. DBMail uses a unique login, which is definitely a simpler way to deal with things. So the only way to get what you want is to have a separate install of dbmail for each of your domains. Not optimal in my opinion. If there is no way to convince your users they need to use their full email address as a login, you may just be better off sticking with what you have now. Niblett, David A wrote: > I understand the client_idnr field, but I don't understand how IMAP > will determine when user 'xyz' from domain1 logs in and user 'xyz' > from domain2 logs in. Right now I run a separate IP per domain, and > unless I force all my users to connect with [EMAIL PROTECTED] (which > most likely won't happen) then I may be stuck here. > > -- > David A. Niblett | email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Network Administrator | Phone: (352) 334-3400 > Gainesville Regional Utilities | Web: http://www.gru.net/ > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Curtis Maurand [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Monday, May 23, 2005 1:36 PM > To: DBMail mailinglist > Subject: Re: [Dbmail] Question about Virtual Domains > > > Yes, it does work. I do it now. dbmail has a field for client id. > > each user has an alias, but all of my users have a user name of their > email address and an alias that is also their email address, you can set > up multiple email addresses for each customer. > > I'm using postfix/dbmail/amavisd-new/spamassassin/clamav The same > things that the barracuda networks gizmo uses (they don't use dbmail). > > Curtis > > > Niblett, David A wrote: > > >>I really hope that I'm missing something here. How does DBMail deal >>with virtual domains? >> >>User: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>User: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> >>Right now, unfortunately, most all my users would log in >>as 'xyz' with POP server of 'mail.domain1.com'. >> >>Currently I have to run 3 IP addresses on a very old NTMail server in >>order to deal with virtual domains. Can I do the same in DBMail, or >>how do I set it up to distinguish between the two users? >> >>-- >>David A. Niblett | email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>Network Administrator | Phone: (352) 334-3400 >>Gainesville Regional Utilities | Web: http://www.gru.net/ >> >>_______________________________________________ >>Dbmail mailing list >>[email protected] https://mailman.fastxs.nl/mailman/listinfo/dbmail >> >> >> > > > > _______________________________________________ > Dbmail mailing list > [email protected] https://mailman.fastxs.nl/mailman/listinfo/dbmail > _______________________________________________ > Dbmail mailing list > [email protected] https://mailman.fastxs.nl/mailman/listinfo/dbmail _______________________________________________ Dbmail mailing list [email protected] https://mailman.fastxs.nl/mailman/listinfo/dbmail
