On 11-Mar-2009, at 14:24, Noel Jones wrote:
No, this is on the existing gateway. Generic rewriting is for
outgoing mail.
http://www.postfix.org/ADDRESS_REWRITING_README.html#generic
Ah. Too bad there is not a similar option for local only mail, then I
could use it to solve my multiple del
LuKreme wrote:
On 11-Mar-2009, at 09:14, Noel Jones wrote:
You can optionally use a pcre smtp_generic_maps to rewrite the
recipient back to the original domain.
main.cf
smtp_generic_maps = pcre:/etc/postfix/smtp_generic.pcre
smtp_generic.pcre:
/^(.*)@new\.example\.com$/ $...@example.com
Th
On Wednesday, March 11, 2009 at 21:02 CET,
LuKreme wrote:
> On 11-Mar-2009, at 09:14, Noel Jones wrote:
> >You can optionally use a pcre smtp_generic_maps to rewrite the
> >recipient back to the original domain.
> >main.cf
> >smtp_generic_maps = pcre:/etc/postfix/smtp_generic.pcre
> >
> >s
On 11-Mar-2009, at 09:14, Noel Jones wrote:
You can optionally use a pcre smtp_generic_maps to rewrite the
recipient back to the original domain.
main.cf
smtp_generic_maps = pcre:/etc/postfix/smtp_generic.pcre
smtp_generic.pcre:
/^(.*)@new\.example\.com$/ $...@example.com
This would need t
Philip wrote:
Hello,
We are testing a new mail system and I want to duplicate mail flow to
the new system at the same time allow flow to the exist system.
To send mail to an additional destination, you need to add an
additional recipient. Use virtual_alias_maps to add a second
recipient,
Hello,
We are testing a new mail system and I want to duplicate mail flow to the
new system at the same time allow flow to the exist system.
/ - CurrentMailhost.example.com (running Postfix)
@example.com -
\ - NewMailhost.example.com (running Postfix)