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Date:      Wed, 3 Oct 2001 01:34:37 +0200
From:      Bernd Walter <ticso@mail.cicely.de>
To:        Nate Williams <nate@yogotech.com>
Cc:        Julian Elischer <julian@elischer.org>, "Daniel O'Connor" <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>, Lyndon Nerenberg <lyndon@atg.aciworldwide.com>, current@FreeBSD.ORG, Garrett Wollman <wollman@khavrinen.lcs.mit.edu>
Subject:   Re: uucp user shell and home directory
Message-ID:  <20011003013436.A27951@cicely20.cicely.de>
In-Reply-To: <15290.8711.449917.768672@nomad.yogotech.com>; from nate@yogotech.com on Tue, Oct 02, 2001 at 02:22:31PM -0600
References:  <15290.5260.610951.681033@nomad.yogotech.com> <Pine.BSF.4.21.0110021415090.92100-100000@InterJet.elischer.org> <15290.8711.449917.768672@nomad.yogotech.com>

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On Tue, Oct 02, 2001 at 02:22:31PM -0600, Nate Williams wrote:
> > > POP3 is a mail retriever, designed to retrieve mail for a single user.
> > > It preserves all of the necessary information that a 'receiver' needs.
> > > 
> > > Now, if you're doing something that POP3 was never intended to do (ie;
> > > handle multiple users with a single mailbox), then we're talking
> > > something completely different.  This isn't something POP3 was designed
> > > to do.
> > 
> > exactly my point..
> > fetchmail/pop does not do what uucp does...  (pull mail between hops on 
> > the mail delivery path).
> 
> POP3 pulls mail fine, as long as the mail is for a single user.

Yes - that's what it's designed for.
POP3 isn't a MTA->MTA transport.
SMTP and UUCP rmail are.

> > > The problem isn't a fetchmail/POP3 problem.  It's trying to stuff
> > > multiple users into a single account.  UUCP doesn't 'solve' this problem
> > > anymore, since you still need the ability to have multiple 'user'
> > > accounts at the ISP, even with UUCP.
> > 
> > No, uucp dosn't require this.. it will just pass on the envelope
> > information withuot trying to interpret it..
> > i.e. it does this correctly (assuming you set it up correctly)
> 
> It requires that you setup a new domain, which POP3 does not.  A new
> domain is only 'useful' if you have multiple user accounts, otherwise
> it's un-necessary.  (Although, some people like to have their own
> domain, this can be done using POP3 fine if the domain has only one user
> account).

You don't need a new domain.

-- 
B.Walter              COSMO-Project         http://www.cosmo-project.de
ticso@cicely.de         Usergroup           info@cosmo-project.de


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