Quoting Alan Brown ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> On Sun, 21 Sep 2003, Richard Gration wrote:
...
> There are _hacks_ to do this, but if the original poster wants it, he's
> better off moving to a pop3/imap server which can handle it
> semi-natively.
Yes.

> People, qpopper is good at what it does (SMALL, SIMPLE(*) server pop3
> facilities), but let's keep it that way, rather than trying to turn it
> into a marching band.
> 
> 
> (*) Emphasis on small and simple. I wouldn't use it past 1500 users, or
> for trying to pull half the stunts people are attempting here. If you
> want pop3 users to provide [EMAIL PROTECTED] and have mapping, use a server
> designed from the ground up for virtual domain facilities.

Damn, I'll have to remove it from the 4 million user plus systems I've
built before.  See also nick christenson's paper on his work at Earthlink.

(and yes, mail.local and qpopper were hacked some, but mostly for
auth and to handle NFS based storage).


Best answer to orig question:
virtusertable maps "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" to info-domain1
and client pops in as that.

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