Re: rewrite recipients after /etc/aliases is processed

2008-12-31 Thread Hanspeter Kunz
On Wed, 2008-12-31 at 08:50 -0500, Wietse Venema wrote: > Hanspeter Kunz: > > well, my intention was to use /etc/aliases for forwarding mail adresses > > like root, webmaster, logcheck, etc. to real users. This would be > > different users on every host. That's why I want first to > > process /etc/

Re: rewrite recipients after /etc/aliases is processed

2008-12-31 Thread Wietse Venema
Hanspeter Kunz: > well, my intention was to use /etc/aliases for forwarding mail adresses > like root, webmaster, logcheck, etc. to real users. This would be > different users on every host. That's why I want first to > process /etc/aliases and then route the mail to our central mail server. /etc/

Re: rewrite recipients after /etc/aliases is processed

2008-12-31 Thread Hanspeter Kunz
On Wed, 2008-12-31 at 14:28 +0100, mouss wrote: > Hanspeter Kunz a écrit : > > Hi all, > > > > I'm trying to figure out how I can deliver mail > > > > usern...@examplehost.example.com > > > > to a central mail server (smtp.example.com) without setting > > > > myorigin = $mydomain > > > > on th

Re: rewrite recipients after /etc/aliases is processed

2008-12-31 Thread mouss
Hanspeter Kunz a écrit : > Hi all, > > I'm trying to figure out how I can deliver mail > > usern...@examplehost.example.com > > to a central mail server (smtp.example.com) without setting > > myorigin = $mydomain > > on the example host, because I would like to see where the mail > originiated

rewrite recipients after /etc/aliases is processed

2008-12-31 Thread Hanspeter Kunz
Hi all, I'm trying to figure out how I can deliver mail usern...@examplehost.example.com to a central mail server (smtp.example.com) without setting myorigin = $mydomain on the example host, because I would like to see where the mail originiated or was originally sent to in the sender address.