Jeremy,

I have someone else that manages my server. I did not 'just convert'. I
have been using qmailadmin for a few years now and have the near latest
version. I have perhaps a thousand email accounts running right now
under the non-mysql method. I wouldn't do anything to disrupt that in
advance of knowing exactly how to link the two.

Is there any instruction material anywhere showing for instance what the
names of the tables / fields must be? Where in qmail or vpop the
information about connecting to the database is kept? Is there a way to
test that things are working before one switches over. In other words,
is there an SQL / NON-SQL config setting that I could toggle where I
could revert if something wasn't working.

Your thoughts?

Jay

-----Original Message-----
From: Jeremy Kitchen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Sunday, October 24, 2004 12:46 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [qmailadmin] MySQL Usage



On Sun, October 24, 2004 2:00 am, Admin said:
> Jeremy,
>
>
> Well, I'd like users and their passwords to be stored in a db table so

> I could manage them with my own client front end. That's the main 
> thing I'm shooting for right now. There may be other possibilities but

> right now that's my desire.

that's how vpopmail's mysql functionality works.  qmailadmin can manage
this without any changes (just recompile qmailadmin if you've just
converted)

-Jeremy

-- 
Jeremy Kitchen ++ Systems Administrator ++ Inter7 Internet Technologies,
Inc.
  [EMAIL PROTECTED] ++ www.inter7.com ++ 866.528.3530 ++ 815.776.9465
int'l
        kitchen @ #qmail #gentoo on EFnet ++ scriptkitchen.com/qmail


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