On Wed 28 April 2004, 3:38:26 +1000, Marten Gallagher wrote: > I run NAV and that is covered by chaining proxies malarky.
I used to run NAV to check downloaded email for viruses and I assume that is what you are referring to (as opposed to the standard virus protection of files on disk). Although it complicated the user name that TB! needed to send, and I think I had to change the port number on Popfile, it worked perfectly well. > My system works throiugh a router firewall and I don't see it mentioned > as to how to get POPFile to work throught that as well. If it is something like a personal firewall that needs to be configured for specific applications to connect through, then you will simply need to set rules that allow Popfile to connect out. > But my main question is: what if I have more than one POP mail server? > Is the chaining set up separately for each account in TB and therefore > it is irrelevant? I have 3 POP mail servers. Each TB! account sends the following as the user name "<popserver N>:<username N>" (without angle brackets or quotations) to 127.0.0.1. -- Robin Anson Using The Bat! v2.04.7 on Windows XP 5.1 Build 2600 Service Pack 1 ________________________________________________ Current version is 2.10.01 | 'Using TBUDL' information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html

