I believe procmail does this.  I do not use it, but I remember reading it in
a document somewhere.  I would try there.

Darrell Wright
----- Original Message -----
From: "Goran Blazic" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, August 04, 2000 2:22 PM
Subject: What a mess...


: Hi...
:
: I have a problem for wich I haven't got a clue on where to start looking
for
: a possible sollution...
: There is this company that wanted to have mails coming to their domain...
: (slofit.si). Ok, no problem, a virtual mail domain... But no, they had to
go
: ask their internet provider first, and what they did is forward all mail
for
: this domain (slofit.si) into a single mailbox!?!.
: So the company has been using this setup for some time (haven't got the
: faintest idea for how long) and now they are asking me to fix this, but
they
: still want to use this single mailbox at their internet providers server.
: They are using a dialup link, so I was thinking of setting up a qmail
server
: on a local machine and allowing mail from the local network to be relayed
: outwards... This is all well, but what about the incoming mail?
:
: My idea is: Get the mails from the mailbox and inject them into qmail...
Is
: this possible? I dont really have the time to test this and try it out, so
I
: hope someone will have some info for me...
:
: Thanks, Goran
:
: The documentation said to install Windows NT 4.0 or better - so I
installed
: Linux 2.2.13!
:

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