On 8/10/04 at 15:38, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> At 1:58 PM -0700 8/10/04, Christopher Bort wrote:
> >
> >Also, you don't really need the '<local>' in your router entry.
> 
> Apparently, the <local> was throwing things off.  Once I removed 
> that, all was well.
> 
> The router tester showed
> 
>   Local (AmericusUser)
> 
> without <local> in there, and
> 
>   AmericusUser at Local()
> 
> with <local>.
> 
> I'm not really sure what the difference is, but the first works and 
> the second doesn't.

According to the router docs, the <local> tag is for routing 'Unified
Domain-Wide Accounts', where you want all messages address to any address
in a given domain to be delivered to a single local account. The router
entry for that would be:

domain.tld = <local>local-account

'Unified Domain-Wide Accounts' is the only section in the docs where the
<local> tag is mentioned so, AFAIK, it has no other use. I'd guess that
since your router entry had an address alias with both local and domain
parts (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>), SIMS got confused when it matched the address on
a router line that tried to map it to a unified domain-wide account.

-- 
                   Christopher Bort | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
            Webmaster, Global Homes | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                      <http://www.globalhomes.com/>

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