I do not see any documentation on the website, nor in the FAQ, about how this is handled. The concern I have is that so many mail systems of UNIX origin handle this poorly, so I want to make sure I'm not heading down a dead end path.
1. How does Cyrus-IMAP handle multiple domains on the same mail server? In particular, [EMAIL PROTECTED] and [EMAIL PROTECTED] being totally different, must be different mailboxes, and must login distinctively, preferrably as "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" and as "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" respectively (not "bob1" and "bob2"). Is this done so transparently with Cyrus-IMAP that it didn't even need mention? Or is it not done at all? Also, is there a way to allow an administrative access that applies to just users of a specific domain? 2. How does Cyrus-IMAP handle tagged email addresses? What I mean are addresses with "-" (or in some configurations "+") appended to the LHS of the email address, followed by some arbitrary identifiers the user establishes. Currently in my shell based email setup, a user can set up a .forward-foo file which specifies how the mail tagged with -foo is handled or where delivered. If the .forward-foo files does not exist then it is just handled as if it was not tagged, by the "Delivered-To:" header still includes the tag. Will Cyrus-IMAP deliver these tagged addresses into different mailboxes, inboxes, or folders, if they exist? Will it still deliver to the principle mailbox if not? Or will it try to create tha tagged folder if it does not exist? Also, Is there a way for the user to specify a forwarding address instead of a local delivery? FYI: my MTA is Postfix. -- ----------------------------------------------------------------- | Phil Howard - KA9WGN | Dallas | http://linuxhomepage.com/ | | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | Texas, USA | http://ka9wgn.ham.org/ | -----------------------------------------------------------------