Rick,

An easy way to do 1-to-many would be to use a mailet matcher such as this:

<mailet match="[EMAIL PROTECTED]
" class="Forward">
<forwardto> [EMAIL PROTECTED] </forwardto>
<forwardto> [EMAIL PROTECTED] </forwardto>
<forwardto> [EMAIL PROTECTED] </forwardto>
<forwardto> [EMAIL PROTECTED] </forwardto>
<forwardto> [EMAIL PROTECTED] </forwardto>
</mailet>

Just put that near the beginning of your root processor and you are good to go. The mailing list would be better if you want people to be able to get on or off the list though.

I'm also using the same thing to do many-to-1 relationships since I haven't had time to discover the joys of the JDBCVirtualUserTable yet.

<mailet match="[EMAIL PROTECTED]
,[EMAIL PROTECTED]
,[EMAIL PROTECTED]
,[EMAIL PROTECTED]
,[EMAIL PROTECTED]
,[EMAIL PROTECTED]
" class="Forward">
<forwardto> [EMAIL PROTECTED] </forwardto>
</mailet>

Just another option.

Good luck.



Eric Weidner
Sr. Engineer
EJB Solutions Inc.
http://www.ejbsolutions.com

Rick Grashel wrote:

Noel,

Thanks for the quick response. I most likely will use the mailing list
as the 1-to-many alias->recipients mechanism. That looks to be the
least invasive way to do it.






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