post...@corwyn.net a écrit :
> [snip]
>
> So while recipient_delimited works "out of the box" it doesn't quite do
> what I want (hence why I provided not only what wasn't working, but a
> detailed explanation of what I wanted to solve.)
>
but you didn't talk about folders in your post, did you?
At 12:47 PM 2/12/2009, Victor Duchovni wrote:
On Thu, Feb 12, 2009 at 12:33:57PM -0500, post...@corwyn.net wrote:
> At 04:28 AM 2/12/2009, mouss wrote:
>> recipient_delimiter works "out of the box". there is no need to change
>> your tables, your sql statements nor add users.
This up to your LDA
On Thu, Feb 12, 2009 at 12:33:57PM -0500, post...@corwyn.net wrote:
> At 04:28 AM 2/12/2009, mouss wrote:
>> recipient_delimiter works "out of the box". there is no need to change
>> your tables, your sql statements nor add users.
>
> The problem is I don't know what the "out of the box" behavior
At 04:28 AM 2/12/2009, mouss wrote:
recipient_delimiter works "out of the box". there is no need to change
your tables, your sql statements nor add users.
The problem is I don't know what the "out of the box" behavior should be.
If I set recipient_delimiter = + then mail to u...@example.com,
post...@corwyn.net a écrit :
>
>
> OK, so I've become intrigued with recipient delimiters.
>
> My users are currently stored in a mysql database, 'postfix'. The table
> format is as postfixadmin sets it up, so in the username is the user
> email address u...@example.com
>
> Before I started t
OK, so I've become intrigued with recipient delimiters.
My users are currently stored in a mysql database, 'postfix'. The
table format is as postfixadmin sets it up, so in the username is
the user email address u...@example.com
Before I started tinkering, email to u...@example.com worked.