Ken Jones wrote:
> Lars Uhlmann wrote:
>> We only need this mailbox for »qmailadmin« to log in. Is it possible to
>> treat this account as non existing? I've tried a domain-global
>> '.qmail-postmaster' (... bounce-no-mailbox) and a '.qmail' (same content)
>> inside the folder 'postmaster' but noth
Ken Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:I've been thinking of setting up all new domains with thisway. Nobody really reads postmaster email.I do see the occasional person who does, but it's rare. I like the 'set the bounce flag' idea suggested in this thread. Postmaster should have the bounce message
At 16.47 09/05/2006, you wrote:
Easiest thing to do is add a .qmail file in the postmaster directory
stating '|/bin/true delete' to scrap the message [just sets it as
deleted by default].
Now I'd imagine the main frontline you'd want to investigate is
chkuser.c if you use it. By line 567, it
On May 9, 2006, at 7:56 AM, Ken Jones wrote:
Then put a single # character in the file. qmail-local treats a
single # charater as "delete the email".
If you want to bounce it, put this in instead:
|/var/qmail/bin/bouncesaying 'invalid account'
You can change the 'invalid account' message to a
Lars Uhlmann wrote:
We only need this mailbox for »qmailadmin« to log in. Is it possible to
treat this account as non existing? I've tried a domain-global
'.qmail-postmaster' (... bounce-no-mailbox) and a '.qmail' (same content)
inside the folder 'postmaster' but nothing worked.
regards
Lars
Easiest thing to do is add a .qmail file in the postmaster directory stating '|/bin/true delete' to scrap the message [just sets it as deleted by default].Now I'd imagine the main frontline you'd want to investigate is chkuser.c if you use it. By line 567, it's got a user and domain split. Under