I want a method of silently and transperantly archiving emails based on external domain. I want each domain to be associated with a customer, and each customer may have multiple domains.
I want to use Exchange Public folders for storing this archive, with each customer becoming a mail enabled public folder, with multiple email addresses assigned to that folder based on their external domain, i.e. microsoft....@mydomain.com, microsoft.com...@mydomain.com etc etc. It needs to be accessible from Outlook for the organisation. Nothing exists that I could find that can be installed on Exchange to handle it, there are no transport methods available in Exchange 2007 or 2010 that are able to do this. I also don't want a program that stores outside Exchange (GFI for instance). Since Exchange is such a PITA its easier for either an Exchange application to do it, or a mail proxy to transparently cc or bcc the mail flow to an internal domain with the user becoming the external domain allowing the creation of matching email addresses on the public folders and normal mail routing will store the emails. Also, of nil importants is archiving or journaling laws, I don't expect the solution to meet tampering criteria. The method I spoke of would be ideal, its a simple copy email, split domain of external address, and create a new address with the external domain becoming the user at the local domain then fed back into the Exchange organisation. I was hoping Postfix had the flexibility to do something like this. On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 4:25 AM, Victor Duchovni < victor.ducho...@morganstanley.com> wrote: > On Tue, Feb 16, 2010 at 02:13:11PM +1000, P1aGu3 wrote: > > > For example: > > The organisation has mydomain.com as their $mydomain. > > They email someone at postfix.org. Or someone from postfix.org emails > > someone at mydomain.com > > The filter box matches the To/From as not being in $mydomain and creates > a > > copy of the email and sends it to postfix....@mydomain.com which is > handled > > by the authorative mail server. > > You cannot route mail based on mail headers. This message arrives in your > mailbox, but your address is not listed in mail headers. If you route > it to the header address you will repost it to this list, create a loop, > and get unsubscribed pretty quickly, after annoying a lot of subscribers. > > If your requirements are applicable to the envelope sender address and > envelope recipients instead. > > You really should explain the underlying problem you are trying to solve > not your idea of how to solve it. > > -- > Viktor. > > P.S. Morgan Stanley is looking for a New York City based, Senior Unix > system/email administrator to architect and sustain our perimeter email > environment. If you are interested, please drop me a note. >