The only requirements are that the second instance be completely separate from the first. For example, I run two instances on my workstation. I installed one in c:\mercury and the other in c:\merwin. One instance is working with Netware, the other with Windows. Both of these instances are getting their mail via a third gateway Mercury/32 system using domain mailboxes, one via MercuryD and the other via MercuryS. Both instances are sending mail via MercuryC to the gateway server.
As long as you keep them separate, you'll have no problems. The servers (MercuryS, MercuryB, MercuryI and MercuryP) must be running on different ports if you only have a single TCP/IP IP address bound on the system.
In your case I would suspect that you would be running MercuryS, MercuryD and MercuryP on the second instance for the users to get/send their mail and if so you are going to have to something other than port 25 and 110. Of course this will vary since you could use the other server for sending and/or use Pegasus Mail which does not need to use any POP3 or SMTP setup. The system is really flexible and it really does depend on what you are really trying to do.
<p>The only requirements are that the second instance be completely separate from the first.&nbsp; For example, I run two instances on my workstation.&nbsp; I installed one in c:\mercury and the other in c:\merwin.&nbsp; One instance is working with Netware, the other with Windows.&nbsp; Both of these instances are getting their mail via a third gateway Mercury/32 system using domain mailboxes, one via MercuryD and the other via MercuryS.&nbsp; Both instances are sending mail via MercuryC to the gateway server.</p><p>As long as you keep them separate, you'll have no problems.&nbsp; The servers (MercuryS, MercuryB, MercuryI and MercuryP) must be running on different ports if you only have a single TCP/IP IP address bound on the system.</p><p>In your case I would suspect that you would be running&nbsp; MercuryS, MercuryD and MercuryP on the second instance for the users to get/send their mail and if so you are going to have to something other than port 25 and 110.&nbsp; Of course this will vary since you could use the other server for sending and/or use Pegasus Mail which does not need to use any POP3 or SMTP setup.&nbsp; The system is really flexible and it really does depend on what you are really trying to do.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>