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Barney Desmond wrote:

> This is a little unclear. I interpret that to mean mail sent from your
> server, from u...@a.com, should appear to come from u...@b.com, so
> that the return-path will be at b.com - is this correct? You then said
> you want "to rewrite the destination address on its way out", but
> that'd be inconsistent.

Not quite. I want the recipient's Reply button to send to u...@b.com
when replying to mail received from u...@a.com. I don't really care how
it's done. Rewriting the source address as the mail is received would
do, as would rewriting the destination address as the reply is sent.

> generic_maps are for rewriting local addresses on outgoing mail, as 
> documented:
> http://www.postfix.org/ADDRESS_REWRITING_README.html#generic

I read that and evidently misunderstood it. I got the outgoing mail
part, but I thought it was for rewriting remote addresses.

>> I sent mail to myself at gmail, expecting it to come here
> 
> That sounds like you want to rewrite the recipient address

Exactly.

> The canonical and generic maps will affect the envelope address/es and
> From/To headers

That's what I thought too. But canonical-sender seems to do just
Return-Path. Unless I've done something wrong.

> The documentation doesn't
> suggest to me that it will parse and modify any other headers.

Doesn't to me either and thanks for looking. I was hoping someone could
tell me I'm wrong...

- --
Glenn English
g...@slsware.com

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