> > On Mon, 16 Dec 1996, Tim Sailer wrote: > > > Now that exim is making it's debut in Debian, I'd like to try it out... > > I looked at the docs from it's home site, but the Virtual Domain stuff > > was not real obvious. Can someone who is using it (anyone?) post > > a quick example on setting up a virtual domain?
[ snip ] > We do virtual domains with POP3 here by using a custom local mailer > and a modified version of qpopper. > > The first step is to create a virtual_pop transport, then a virtual_pop > director, e.g. This seems crazy to me. Originally, this was that approach I was going to take. However, I didn't want to be forced to run a different MTA other than smail. Not that smail's all that great, but it's the beast I'm familiar with. Also, smail supposedly supports virtual domains, but you have to run multiple copies of it... which wasn't all that appealing. What I eventually settled on was to have it all done by elm's filter(1). The reason for this was because I realized that I didn't need virtual POP interfaces, I needed virtual addresses and that was it. In fact, I concluded that having accounts like "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" was a bad idea since they're not directly mapped to an individual and that the login and password would be probably known by several individuals at SomeCompany as the job of handling the "info" mail got passed on from employee to employee. So, I figured that what I really wanted were *aliases* that would send "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" to some single individual on the system. I was able to pull this off by aliasing names like "info" and "sales" to myself. Then, in my .elm/filter-rules file, I'd put lines like: if To contains "client1.com" and not To contains "jemenake" forward jjones if To contains "client2.com" and not To contains "jemenake" forward bsmith ... This worked like a charm! However, I wanted to take myself out of the loop. Now, filter supposedly allows for you to specify a certain rules file with the "-f" option. So, I tried putting the following in my /etc/aliases file: info: "|/usr/bin/filter -f /etc/virt-aliases.filter" But this doesn't seem to work (smail and filter are REAL finnicky about permissions and ownerships of files and what UID they're running as). Any ideas or comments? - Joe -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]