I solved the problem..  I appreciate everyone's help in pointing me
towards the solution...

And, the solution was ...  *drum roll please*

Permissions on the internet-facing machine...

When I built both machines, I couldn't do them at the same time.  As a
result, I apparently built things in a differnet order on both
machines.  The gid of the qmail group was different on the
customer-facing machine..  I'm not 100% sure *why* this was a problem,
but it was...  I added an additional group on the internet-facing
machine and put the relevant users into it..  This fixed everything
instantly...  :)

Again, thanks for the help..  !

Anyone know an easy way to find all of the files owned by a specific
user/group so they can be put in a list and chowned to a new
user/group?  After this, I'm thinking it would be best to assign a
static uid/gid scheme for my qmail machines (outside of the normal user
scope) so this doesn't happen in the future...

-- 
---------------------------
Jason 'XenoPhage' Frisvold
Engine / Technology Programmer
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
RedHat Certified - RHCE # 803004140609871
MySQL Pro Certified - ID# 207171862
MySQL Core Certified - ID# 205982910
---------------------------
"Something mysterious is formed, born in the silent void. Waiting alone
and unmoving, it is at once still and yet in constant motion. It is the
source of all programs. I do not know its name, so I will call it the
Tao of Programming."

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