Thank you, for the very helpful information.
However I have a couple more questions, if you don't mind.
You say to put the |/path/to/script in the .qmail file. When you say the
.qmail file are you referring to individual users .qmail or is there a
parent .qmail somewhere else? (Similar to ~/.bashrc and if that doesn't
exist then it will use /etc/bashrc).
What kind of x86 computing power would it take to support 10,000 active
e-mail users?
Thank You,
.:: Nathan Cook [ [EMAIL PROTECTED] ] ::.
PCS Edventures.com
Systems & Network Administrator :: Programmer
[ phone - 208.343.3110 ][ pager - 208.387.9983 ]
----- Original Message -----
From: "Peter van Dijk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Qmail List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2001 10:52 AM
Subject: Re: Two easy questions.
> On Thu, Feb 15, 2001 at 10:29:08AM -0700, Nathan Cook wrote:
> > 1) It seems like qmail has been in the same version for years now. Is
this
> > because it needs no further development or no one is working on it any
more?
>
> djb seems to think it needs no further development. Any additional
> features you need can be downloaded from www.qmail.org. Few real bugs
> have been discovered in qmail.
>
> Basically, I'd run anything but a *very* busy server without any
> patches.
>
> > 2) I need to have a php or perl script filter through all incoming
messages
> > to a specific domain rather than it just doing the default delivery
method.
> > Is this possible? If so, how?
>
> Put
>
> |/path/to/script
>
> in .qmail. Done.
>
> Greetz, Peter.
>