Ferd writes:
> there is just one more question. Does it somehow interfere with pop or
> imap?
I don't run pop or imap, but I can't think of any reason why it should.
/etc/aliases has been in Unix for decades.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Hasler)
Dancing Horse Hill
Elmwood, WI
John Hasler wrote:
>
> > In short, I'd like to do some user name mapping that's it. The mail
> > should be received by an existing user of course.
>
> Put lines like this in /etc/aliases:
>
> john.hasler: john
Thanks a lot to all of you! Seems to work. However, there is just one
more question.
On Thu, Aug 12, 1999 at 07:21:49PM +0200, Ferdinand Schinagl wrote:
> Hi dear mail wizards,
>
> can sombody tell me how to do the following with my debian installation:
> For at least some maybe even all of the accounts on our server I'd like
> to have it receive emails addressed to it in a more f
Ferd writes;
> ...a dot inside the users name.
Not a problem.
> In short, I'd like to do some user name mapping that's it. The mail
> should be received by an existing user of course.
Put lines like this in /etc/aliases:
john.hasler: john
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Hasler)
Dancing
Hi dear mail wizards,
can sombody tell me how to do the following with my debian installation:
For at least some maybe even all of the accounts on our server I'd like
to have it receive emails addressed to it in a more formal naming
convention. Means the "machine" should transport mail addressed t
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