No.  In order for example.com mail to be delivered on the first
machine, it must believe in its heart of hearts that *it* is
example.com.  And if it does, then any addresses it does not recognize 
will bounce.  Instead, you need to catch undefined addresses, and
simply forward them to the same address on the other machine, where
presumably they will be delivered or bounced.

Adam D . McKenna writes:
 > Isn't this the same as a smarthost?
 > 
 > put the following in /var/qmail/control/smtproutes:
 > 
 > :mailserver2.example.com
 > 
 > where this is the address of your second mail server.
 > 
 > --Adam
 > 
 > On Fri, Oct 08, 1999 at 09:37:17AM -0400, Russell Nelson wrote:
 > > Jan Stanik writes:
 > >  >         I need set same domain on two mailservers: when user does 
 > >  > not exist on first server, mail will be route to next one. Is it 
 > >  > possible?
 > > 
 > > Sure.
 > > 
 > > echo '|forward "$[EMAIL PROTECTED]"' >~alias/.qmail-default
 > > 
 > > -- 
 > > -russ nelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  http://russnelson.com
 > > Crynwr sells support for free software  | PGPok | Government schools are so
 > > 521 Pleasant Valley Rd. | +1 315 268 1925 voice | bad that any rank amateur
 > > Potsdam, NY 13676-3213  | +1 315 268 9201 FAX   | can outdo them. Homeschool!
 > > 

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