first of all you have to understand that the MTA has nothing to do with POP3, a MTA will only do (E)SMTP
If you want to do the quick&dirty approach (which is not very scalable and secure) you could simply add each user as a real user to the system, and create aliases from the [EMAIL PROTECTED] to the actual username on the box. If you then install a pop-daemon (pop3d in debian iirc) your users can get their mail via POP3 using their system-username and -password. Et voila, on the MTA-side everey MTA I know is capable of aliases, so there should be no problems. For ease of configuration you should consider using the debian-standard exim for this purpose. The tricky part starts when you don't want your mailusers to also have a system-account, I'll have this to do myself in the near future... hth, &rw On Thu, 23 Mar 2000 07:56:06 CST, "Brooks R. Robinson" writes: >Greetings, > I am looking at changing an in-house e-mail system from an ugly combina >tion >of outsourced collection/forwarding and JSMail on an NT server to linux. We >have an ADSL line coming in, and I can handle all of the DNS and network >stuff through the firewall, but I drop the ball at mail. We have about 100 >clients using Microsoft Outlook, but our legacy address format is >[EMAIL PROTECTED] I can't change the address format, and I'd like to >leave POP3 in place. Which MTA is the best given my limitation? > >Thanks, > >Brooks > > > > >-- >Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/ >null > Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 -- / Robert Waldner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | Phone: +43 1 89933 0 Fax x533 \ \ KPNQwest/AT tech staff | Diefenbachg. 35 A-1150 Wien /