> How do I setup mercury to foward a domain that it is not hosting
Mercury/32 currently does not provide MX services. David's looking into this for a future enhancement but until that happens here's 3 possible work arounds.
These are NOT a true MX host function since it does not queue and wait for the receiving system to be online to send the mail. That said, WSMTPEx will keep retrying if the connection to the server and port cannot be made. I have not tested how long it will continue retrying.
1. First of all is the simplest, you simply re-write the domain in the mercury.ini [Rewrite] section.
[Rewrite]
none-tstephenson.com: [192.168.1.3]
I really was surprised when this one worked since it truly simple and has been there
all along. You learn something new every day. The brackets are required when using
an IP address. This forwards all mail for anyuser@none-stephenson.com to
anyuser@[192.168.1.3] using the normal Mercury/32 send process via port 25.
Works quite well when using MercuryE, cannot work when using MercuryC unless the
IP address is a routable IP address. You must re-boot Mercury/32 for each change
since this is only read at startup.
2. The second one is the daemon MercFwd and it essentially does the same thing as
the rewrite but this can be done dynamically by changing the domains section. The
[Domains] entry of
daemon:c:\mercury\mercfwd.dll;[192.168.1.3]: none-tstephenson.com
does essentially the same thing as the rewrite above. Again it uses Mercury to deliver
the mail via port 25 and so you cannot use this with MercuryC when using non-
routable IP addresses.
3. The third one is the program WSMTPEx.exe (SMTPEX.NLM for Netware) and this a a
separate program that takes mail for a email account and forwards it to any port and
any hostname/IP address. I use this with my domains to forward the mail to a Linux
system (must use high ports as non-root) and to a second instance of Mercury/32
running on my system (can't share port 25) Here's a sample of the ini file I use for
forwarding all mail to Mercury/32 running on Ubuntu v8.10 and Wine.
# You can rename this tool, but name of following section must remain [WSMTPEx]
[WSMTPEx]
Version=0.10
# TCP port, on which SMTP server listens
Port=8025
# Number of seconds to delay between searches for emails
LoopDelay=30
# Folder, under which is most of user's mailboxes
UserFolder=
Domains=1
# Users mail address domain part
Domain1=linux-tstephenson.com
LogName=c:\Mercury\WSMTPEx.log
SMTPServer=192.168.1.4
MailBoxes=1
Badmails=c:\pmail\mail\BadMail
[linux-tstephenson.com]
# When user name start with "DM:", WSMTPEx will try to find SMTP envelope address in mail file
Mb1addr=dm:ubunto
Mb1dir=c:\pmail\mail\ubunto
This takes all the mail in the domain account "UBUNTO" and sends it to port 8025 on
192.168.1.4 to be received by MercuryS. The directory BADMAIL I have specified
must exist. You can run multiple instances of this tool and and it can be run as a
service. If run as a service and running multiple instances the name of the program
should be changed. I use WSE-UBUNTO to rename the program and ini file for this
one.
Many thanks to Petr Jaklin for the development of these tools. You can get these
tools at the community download areas or directly from Petr Jaklin's site
http://www.3net.cz/software/softe.htm
> How do I setup mercury to foward a domain that it is not hosting
Mercury/32 currently does not provide MX services.  David's looking into this for a future enhancement but until that happens here's 3 possible work arounds.   
These are NOT a true MX host function since it does not queue and wait for the receiving system to be online to send the mail.  That said, WSMTPEx will keep retrying if the connection to the server and port cannot be made.  I have not tested how long it will continue retrying.   
1.  First of all is the simplest, you simply re-write the domain in the mercury.ini [Rewrite] section.
[Rewrite]
none-tstephenson.com: [192.168.1.3]
I really was surprised when this one worked since it truly simple and has been there
all along.  You learn something new every day.  The brackets are required when using
an IP address.  This forwards all mail for anyuser@none-stephenson.com to
anyuser@[192.168.1.3] using the normal Mercury/32 send process via port 25. 
Works quite well when using MercuryE, cannot work when using MercuryC unless the
IP address is a routable IP address.  You must re-boot Mercury/32 for each change
since this is only read at startup.  
2.  The second one is the daemon MercFwd and it essentially does the same thing as
the rewrite but this can be done dynamically by changing the domains section.  The
[Domains] entry of  
daemon:c:\mercury\mercfwd.dll;[192.168.1.3]: none-tstephenson.com
does essentially the same thing as the rewrite above.  Again it uses Mercury to deliver
the mail via port 25 and so you cannot use this with MercuryC when using non-
routable IP addresses.  
3.  The third one is the program WSMTPEx.exe (SMTPEX.NLM for Netware)  and this a a
separate program that takes mail for a email account and forwards it to any port and
any hostname/IP address.  I use this with my domains to forward the mail to a Linux
system (must use high ports as non-root) and to a second instance of Mercury/32
running on my system (can't share port 25)  Here's a sample of the ini file I use for
forwarding all mail to Mercury/32 running on Ubuntu v8.10 and Wine.  
 #  You can rename this tool, but name of following section must remain [WSMTPEx]
[WSMTPEx]
Version=0.10
#  TCP port, on which SMTP server listens
Port=8025
#  Number of seconds to delay between searches for emails
LoopDelay=30
#  Folder, under which is most of user's mailboxes
UserFolder=
Domains=1
# Users mail address domain part
Domain1=linux-tstephenson.com
LogName=c:\Mercury\WSMTPEx.log
SMTPServer=192.168.1.4
MailBoxes=1
Badmails=c:\pmail\mail\BadMail
[linux-tstephenson.com]
# When user name start with "DM:", WSMTPEx will try to find SMTP envelope address in mail file
Mb1addr=dm:ubunto
Mb1dir=c:\pmail\mail\ubunto
This takes all the mail in the domain account "UBUNTO"  and sends it to port 8025 on
192.168.1.4 to be received by MercuryS.  The directory BADMAIL I have specified
must exist.  You can run multiple instances of this tool and and it can be run as a
service.  If run as a service and running multiple instances the name of the program
should be changed.  I use WSE-UBUNTO to rename the program and ini file for this
one.  
Many thanks to Petr Jaklin for the development of these tools.  You can get these
tools at the community download areas or directly from Petr Jaklin's site
http://www.3net.cz/software/softe.htm