Is this action just restore the ownership and re-enforce the UID/GID to the
file/directory?
This is because, let's say on the old machine the UID/GID of
vpopmail:vchkpw is 1000:1000 and on the new machine is vpopmail:vchkpw
1200:1234
Thanks.
> Not in all cases. You may well use another UID/GID for vpopmail on the
> other machine (which you can supply to configure) but then you need to
> change permissions of the files (preferably on the new machine) by
> doing (as root!)
>
> # chown -R vpopmail:vchkpw [pathtovpopmail]/domains
>
> Note: for this to work, the system already needs to have the vpopmail
> user and vchkpw group installed.
>
>
>
> Best regards,
> Gabriel