So, if I define my own director and specify as driver pipe, my own drirector
is a specialized version of pipe?
Bye
Oliver
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Greg Ward [
mailto:gward@mems-exchange.org]
Gesendet: Montag, 29. Oktober 2001 22:58
An: Oliver Fischer
Cc: 'exim-users@???'
Betreff: Re: [Exim] Defining my own director
On 29 October 2001, Oliver Fischer said:
> If I define my own director like this:
>
> imap_delivery:
> driver = pipe
> command = "/usr/local/cyrus/bin/deliver ${localpart}"
> return_path_add
> return_output
That defines a *transport*, not a *director*. Where is this snippet in
your exim.conf file? If it's between the first and second occurence of
"end", it's a transport.
Here's one way to think about it: "pipe" is a class of transports, and
-- for your configuration -- "imap_delivery" is one instance of that
class. Every Exim installation can define as many "pipe" transports as
the admin wishes; only you have this exact "imap_delivery" transport.
(Well, in theory. It looks pretty mundane, so you're probably not the
*only* one.)
Generally, whenever you want to add some new functionality to your Exim
server, you have to define *two* new things: a transport (to do the
actual work) and a director or router (to step in and say, "I know how
to handle this message"). (Whether you define a director or router
depends on whether the address in question is local; that distinction is
going away in Exim 4.)
So, you also need to define a director that will probably look something
like this:
imap_director:
driver = localuser
transport = imap_delivery
(This will make any message for a localpart that corresponds to a user
ID in /etc/passwd [or local equivalent] be handled by your imap_delivery
transport, which in turn pipes them to /usr/local/cyrus/bin/deliver.
Read about the "smartuser" director if you don't have a 1:1
correspondence between /etc/passwd users and IMAP users.)
Hope this helps --
Greg
--
Greg Ward - software developer gward@???
MEMS Exchange http://www.mems-exchange.org