Sam Clippinger, you are right, but I think some clarification is needed. It would be wonderfull if `id -g name` gave the id of the group with the name 'name', but that is not how id works. name is a user and 'id -g' will always give the id of the principal group associated with name. Usually when qmail first is installed that group will be 'nobody'. That group is not supposed to be used with any access rights to files. I solved the problem by replacing `id -g qmaild` with the number found in /etc/group
server:/# grep qmaild /etc/group qmaild:x:1005:qmaild which is 1005 _______________________________________________ spamdyke-users mailing list spamdyke-users@spamdyke.org http://www.spamdyke.org/mailman/listinfo/spamdyke-users