Angel,
You CANNOT use the NT DB for the 2 machines. This would cause each system to
have the same set of users on each and if a message comes to 1, it will put
the message into that machines users mailbox. The user would have to check
BOTH machines to see all of his mail (assuming each has an equal chance of
being the receiver when mail is incoming). If you use a different DB, then
you would add some users to 1 computer and the rest to the other.
Daniel Donnelly
Ipswitch Technical Support
________________________________________________________
See our Knowledge Base at http://support.ipswitch.com/kb
----- Original Message -----
From: "Angel Castillo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 28, 2000 10:27 AM
Subject: RE: [IMail Forum] Peer List Servers
> Len,
>
> Ok, I understand that each machine will have it's own hostname, but what
I'm
> still not clear on is how IMail will determine what accounts are on let's
> say machine 1 vs. machine 2? Oh wait a minute...it's determined by how
many
> users I switch to point to the other box (hostname) by configuring their
> e-mail clients to point to that box right? So in reality...both machines
> are using the same NT database on our domain that it's on, but the
accounts
> that are verified on each machine are based off what users have in their
> e-mail clients in regards to which one their accessing for mail...is that
> correct?
>
> --------------------------------------------------------
> Angel Castillo Jobs.com
> IMail Systems Administrator www.jobs.com
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] Voice: (214) 273-7629
> "When you love what you do...you're alive!"
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Len Conrad
> Sent: Tuesday, March 28, 2000 2:53 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [IMail Forum] Peer List Servers
>
>
>
> >Ok, I understand what needs to be done in order to configure IMail as a
> Peer
> >Server. What's not very clear is how do I split the user accounts on my
> >domain to be identified on each server? I mean the whole concept of peer
> >servers is that it's on the same domain but each server holds a portion
of
> >the user accounts.
>
> Same domain, ok, but different hostnames. The user accounts database
> remains private to each peered Imail server.
>
> >Well, if both IMail servers are BDC's and they both
> >share the NT database with our PDC how do we split them up once the
servers
> >are configured as Peer Servers, so that they each have a portion of the
> >database? Or does each server pretty much share the same user database?
>
> Imail peering addresses one very specific issue, and that is only
> load-sharing of inbound SMTP traffic among 2 or more Imail machines. The
> Imail machines will then use VRFY to find the Imail machine where the user
> account is. This requires enabling VRFY on all Imail machines, which is
> not advisable in general as VRFY is used by spammers for harvesting mail
> accounts.
>
> There is no sharing of a unified a Imail accounts database between Imail
> peered servers, even if those Imail accounts are stored on the same
> physical, external-to-Imail database.
>
> Each Imail server maintains and knows about only its own mail accounts
> independently of the other peered Imail servers, no matter where/how those
> accounts are stored.
>
> Imail users must still know and use the hostname of the Imail machine
where
> their account is. Imail peering does operate for web messaging, POP3, or
> SMTP AUTH.
>
> Len
>
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