This way you'll leave the mail in the queue and after 7 days it will be
bounced. Instead you can put in the domain's qmail-default path to maildir
and when the client pays, use maildirtosmtp to send them the mail. I think
this should solve the problem, I haven't tried it.

Milen

> man dot-qmail:
>
> SAFE QMAIL EDITING
>           Incoming messages can arrive at any moment.  If you want to
>           safely edit your .qmail file, first set the sticky bit on
>           your home directory:
>
>                chmod +t $HOME
>
>           qmail-local will temporarily defer delivery of any message
>           to you if your home directory is sticky (or group-writable
>           or other-writable, which should never happen).  Make sure to
>
>                chmod -t $HOME
>
>           when you are done!  It's a good idea to test your new .qmail
>           file as follows:
>
>                qmail-local -n $USER ~ $USER '' '' '' '' ./Mailbox
>
> I have no idea if mail will follow the usual timeout schedule if it's
being
> deferred because of this.
>
> HTH,
>
> J.
>
> From: "Mike K" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Is there a way that I could set a whole domain to a 'hold' status,
> > so all of the mail waits for them, until the hold is removed?
>
>

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