1. Install Mercury/32 to c:\Mercury. The Internet name for this system will be Domain1.com. When creating the domains create a domain account for the domain2. This setup will use all the protocols that you need to use for domain1. The domain account will point to a local user name like domain2. dm=domain2 : domain2.com
2. Install Mercury/32 to Mercdom2. The "Internet name for this system" will be domain2.com. When creating the protocols you need MercuryC and MercuryD and if you are going to have a separate userbase then you'll probably need MercuryI and/or MercuryP. MercuryC will point at MercuryS of the primary installation which will handle all outbound mail. MercuryD will download mail via POP3 from the DOMAIN2 user on the primary system. You will use the X-Envelope-To: header exclusively to deliver the mail and so the username is blank and the default user is the postmaster account username on the second system.
Now mail sent to user@domain2.com is received via MercuryS on the primary system. Core sees the domain of the email address and puts the mail into the DOMAIN2 user account with the original RCPT TO: address in the X-Envelope-To: header.
Mail is downloaded by MercuryD, sees the X-Envelope-To: email address and passes this to the queue as a MG*.QCF/QDF file pair.
Core processes the queue files and any email message containing a address matching the local domain is then processed by core by first checking if there is an alias. If not it checks is to see if it is to postmaster or maiser, then it checks to see if it's a mailing list address and finally it checks to see if there is a local user by that name.
If the mail it to a mailing list then it's transferred to maiser for processing.
This is pretty much what I do with the domains tstephenson.com, novell-tstephenson.com and ubunto-tstephenson.com that are all pointed to the same IP address. Each of these domains have their own userbase and mailing lists. In this case though each of these are running on a separate system running Netware and Linux.
<p>1.&nbsp; Install Mercury/32 to c:\Mercury.&nbsp; The Internet name for this system will be Domain1.com.&nbsp; When creating the domains create a domain account for the domain2.&nbsp; This setup will use all the protocols that you need to use for domain1. The domain account will point to a local user name like domain2.&nbsp; dm=domain2&nbsp; :&nbsp; domain2.com</p><p>2.&nbsp; Install Mercury/32 to Mercdom2.&nbsp; The "Internet name for this system" will be domain2.com.&nbsp; When creating the protocols you need MercuryC and MercuryD and if you are going to have a separate userbase then you'll probably need MercuryI and/or MercuryP.&nbsp; MercuryC will point at MercuryS of the primary installation which will handle all outbound mail.&nbsp; MercuryD will download mail via POP3 from the DOMAIN2 user on the primary system.&nbsp; You will use the X-Envelope-To: header exclusively to deliver the mail and so the username is blank and the default user is the postmaster account username on the second system.</p><p>Now mail sent to user@domain2.com is received via MercuryS&nbsp; on the primary system.&nbsp; Core sees the domain of the email address and puts the mail into the DOMAIN2 user account with the original RCPT TO: address in the X-Envelope-To: header.&nbsp; </p><p>Mail is downloaded by MercuryD, sees the X-Envelope-To: email address and passes this to the queue as a MG*.QCF/QDF file pair.&nbsp; </p><p>Core processes the queue files and any email message containing a address matching the local domain is then processed by core by first checking if there is an alias.&nbsp; If not it checks is to see if it is to postmaster or maiser, then it checks to see if it's a mailing list address and finally it checks to see if there is a local user by that name.&nbsp; </p><p>If the mail it to a mailing list then it's transferred to maiser for processing. </p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>This is pretty much what I do with the domains tstephenson.com, novell-tstephenson.com and ubunto-tstephenson.com that are all pointed to the same IP address.&nbsp; Each of these domains have their own userbase and mailing lists.&nbsp; In this case though each of these are running on a separate system running Netware and Linux.
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