Create a .qmail file in their home directory with a # in it... Also you can get to any archives from Qmail's home page at www.qmail.org -- Doug ~username/.qmail # "Jay D. Dyson" wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > > On Thu, 29 Jul 1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > I've looked through FAQ and I don't save every message posted to the > > list and I'm also unaware of an archive, so perhaps either pointing me > > to a searchable archive, or an FAQ containing this information would be > > more helpful then your line below. > > Well, you can't do it via /etc/aliases. Not with Qmail. > > I suppose ln -s /dev/null /var/mail/username will do. > > - -Jay > > ( ______ > )) .--- "There's always time for a good cup of coffee" ---. >===<--. > C|~~| (>--- Jay D. Dyson - [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---<) | = |-' > `--' `- Superman had Kryptonite, I have NT. Life is real. -' `-----' > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: 2.6.2 > > iQCVAwUBN6BoS82OVDpaKXD9AQE2pwQAl/VkxBZCxhW3ie54KFQQkGCbUsf7h9el > SjjOtP8ndpJxrP1bwk0wG1yv8G7/r8a9whbwuDj+tsAbPwQ/kZoQfjBLf8YSvEvB > nXbTbw8EmdMQl8xGKzbM5gtAVA/lBQHST88gaUGf18AkJQPbtcN2k/Or4KWp7viR > SLYQu3WVQ7s= > =93Xw > -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
