On Friday 22 September 2006 13:04, Heiko Schlittermann took the opportunity to 
say:
> Hello,
>
> Magnus Holmgren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (Fr 22 Sep 2006 12:56:37 CEST):
> ...
>
> > It's easy for mail with a single recipient or which originates locally.
> > It's more difficult when multiple mails are being sent to the same remote
> > host but from different local domains. But when I think about it, it
> > should be possible to make Exim separate them into different connections.
>
> probably I'm missing some point, but the OP wanted to select the
> outgoing IP based on the /sender/ domain.  And there should be exacly
> /one/ sender domain, shouldn't?

Yes. Or no. Maybe I'm making things unnecessarily complicated, but let's say 
that you have two customers (each with their own domain and associated IP 
address), and that some of their users for some reason have .forward files 
that point to two gmail addresses. If [EMAIL PROTECTED] sends mail to 
[EMAIL PROTECTED], then at least I would want the server to connect to 
gmail's MX from company-b's address, just like if someone from the outside 
sent mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] And if someone from the outside sends a 
mail to both user1 and user2 you'd have to make Exim deliver separate copies 
through separate connections from the respective interfaces. At least if you 
want to maintain an illusion of two physically distinct servers.

-- 
Magnus Holmgren        [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                       (No Cc of list mail needed, thanks)

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