Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Nicholas Harring
Bruno Negro wrote: Hi all, I have to solve the famous problem of splitting a unique domain into 2 remote machines. One machine gonna be the MX for the domain but will contain only part of the e-mail accounts. The other half of the e-mail accounts will be configured in the

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Bruno Negrão
I can't see how you could actually want this. Are you planning on then putting some sort of imap proxy in front of the box to direct logins to the correct place? What does this do for you that a cluster with shared storage doesn't? Hi Nick, What a "cluster with shared storage" means? Where

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Nicholas Harring
Bruno Negro wrote: I can't see how you could actually want this. Are you planning on then putting some sort of imap proxy in front of the box to direct logins to the correct place? What does this do for you that a cluster with shared storage doesn't? Hi Nick, What a

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Itamar Reis Peixoto
Pra que voce quer fazer isto Bruno ? - Original Message - From: Bruno Negrão To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, August 23, 2004 2:39 PM Subject: Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines? I can't see how you could actually want this. Are you

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Bruno Negrão
Nick, The qmail-ldap patch appears to offer a clean solution for this problem since it creates an ldap for the email accounts that can be share amongst the corporate email servers. When qmail-ldap wants to deliver a message to a local user, it checks in the ldap database for the properti

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Bruno Negrão
Hi Itamar, Pra que voce quer fazer isto Bruno ? (he is asking me why would I want to do this) To answer it i'll have to explain a little about my network. Here where i'm working is the central node of a big network. We are the mailserver for some companys that are connected to us through

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Itamar Reis Peixoto
Yes, I understand. I don´t know how to make it, Try qmail-ldap. - Original Message - From: Bruno Negrão [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, August 23, 2004 3:36 PM Subject: Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines? Hi Itamar, Pra que voce quer fazer

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Rick Romero
How about 2 qmail installs? After you install qmail once, change conf-qmail to have a qmail2. make setup check again, and you have a 2nd qmail install. In there, change smtproutes to point your domain to your 2nd server. Then for each user that exists on the 2nd server, make a .qmail-default

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Itamar Reis Peixoto
other solution is creating a subdomain in second machine and add an alias on the first machine to forward the message to second machine. - Original Message - From: Rick Romero [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, August 23, 2004 4:08 PM Subject: Re: [vchkpw] How to

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Bruno Negrão
How about 2 qmail installs? After you install qmail once, change conf-qmail to have a qmail2. make setup check again, and you have a 2nd qmail install. In there, change smtproutes to point your domain to your 2nd server. Then for each user that exists on the 2nd server, make a

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Rick Romero
On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 14:44, Bruno Negrão wrote: How about 2 qmail installs? After you install qmail once, change conf-qmail to have a qmail2. make setup check again, and you have a 2nd qmail install. In there, change smtproutes to point your domain to your 2nd server. Then for

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Rick Romero
On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 14:57, Rick Romero wrote: On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 14:44, Bruno Negrão wrote: How about 2 qmail installs? After you install qmail once, change conf-qmail to have a qmail2. make setup check again, and you have a 2nd qmail install. In there, change smtproutes to

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Bruno Negrão
Hi Rick, Rick, are you currently using this? For a whole domain. Not per user. I can't get you, what you mean for a whole domain, not per user? I want to split a whole domain... (??) You told you have to create a .qmail file on the 1st server for every account that is configured on the 2nd

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Rick Romero
On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 15:18, Bruno Negrão wrote: Hi Rick, Rick, are you currently using this? For a whole domain. Not per user. I can't get you, what you mean for a whole domain, not per user? \ :) I use the 2nd qmail install for forwarding a whole domain, not an individual user

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Jean Wainer
Just out of curiosity, Rick.. On Mon, 23 Aug 2004 15:41:09 -0500 Rick Romero [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 15:18, Bruno Negrão wrote: Hi Rick, Rick, are you currently using this? For a whole domain. Not per user. I can't get you, what you mean for a whole

Re: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Rick Romero
On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 12:53, Jean Wainer wrote: Just out of curiosity, Rick.. On Mon, 23 Aug 2004 15:41:09 -0500 Rick Romero [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 15:18, Bruno Negrão wrote: Hi Rick, Rick, are you currently using this? For a whole domain.

RE: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines?

2004-08-23 Thread Shouguan Lin
-Original Message- From: Bruno Negrão [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, August 20, 2004 2:10 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [vchkpw] How to Split a domain into 2 machines? Hi all, I have to solve the famous problem of splitting a unique domain into 2 remote machines.