> I have tried adding the domain(eg example.com via vqadmin), adding an
> smtproutes entry, then creating an .qmail-default:
>
> |/usr/bin/spamc -f -u spamd |forward "$DEFAULT"@example.com
>
> But the message fails (loops):
>
> 2003-05-28 16:33:10.422753500 delivery 10263: failure:
> This_messag
On Wed, 2003-05-28 at 07:05, Rick Macdougall wrote:
> Hi,
>
> You can not do it that way.
>
> The only way I can see to do it is to set up a dummy sub-domain and
> forward the mail to that sub-domain...
>
> ie - domain.com mx = your server, mail2.domain.com mx = real server
>
> .qmail-default
Hi,
You can not do it that way.
The only way I can see to do it is to set up a dummy sub-domain and
forward the mail to that sub-domain...
ie - domain.com mx = your server, mail2.domain.com mx = real server
.qmail-default =
|/usr/bin/spamc -f -u spamd |forward "$DEFAULT"@mail2.domain.com
Regar
I have multiple domains running on one server, and have been asked to
accept mail for a domain, parse it with spamassassin, then forward to
remote mail server.
I have tried adding the domain(eg example.com via vqadmin), adding an
smtproutes entry, then creating an .qmail-default:
|/usr/bin/spamc