On Sat, 24 Apr 1999, Giulio Orsero wrote:
> >>>Well, can I use a domain name as a second part? As example:
> >>>foo.com:foo1.com
> >>>Will then qmail send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] to [EMAIL PROTECTED] ?
> >>No, try this instead:
> >>virtualdomains:
> >>foo.com:alias-foo
> >>~alias/.qmail-foo-default
> >>|forward $[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Thanx. I'll do it. Right now I got loopes w/ somth. like this,but I hope 
fix this in the  nearest future.:)

> >Actually, it might just be a whole lot easier to go in to the qmail user's
> >directory, and edit the .qmail file to say "&[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
> I thought he wanted to do this for every user at foo.com, and that "bob" was
> just an example; so it would be quite time consuming to edit every user's
> .qmail file :-)
yes.that was "just an example".:)

Actualy I use non-existent in the dns domain at our home LAN. There are 3
PCs in the LAN & we connect to the internet via dialup to my server at
work. The connection could be open from 2 mashines - my or my friend. 
1st  time I had idea to redirect the mail to my_fake_domain.ru to the same
user on my server - that was why I asked about domain redirection.

Now I wanna make better thing - just make mail work to the both ends.
I add the following to the smtproutes:
my_fake_domain.ru:192.168.4.120
So the bounces are returned to the sender on the fake_domain,not to me.
But anyhow user on the my_fake_domain.ru have to be masqueraded as a user
of my server or some hosts will return bounces like "sender domain must
exist" . 

Bye.Olli.

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