[Exim] Rewriting outgoing addresses

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Author: Tim Wiser
Date:  
To: exim-users
Subject: [Exim] Rewriting outgoing addresses
Hi,

Our server is running Exim 3.33 and consists of around seventy accounts.
Until now we've used the convention of "first name plus surname initial" for
our email address local parts. However, with the growth of the company and
so forth we've had to look at this convention again. We would like to move
towards using "first name.surname". The problem is that I don't really
relish the thought of visiting every PC in the company to change the
settings on the email clients.

I'm wondering if it's possible to rewrite outgoing emails with the new
format. Can someone suggest a way to make Exim take the existing format
local part (eg. bobm) and pick up the actual name from either a list (eg.
bob.monkhouse) and then rewrite the outgoing message to contain the new
format local part?

Any ideas appreciated :-)


--
Tim Wiser
IT Support Specialist
Pennine Healthcare Ltd (Derby, UK)

Online support can be found on the company
intranet at http://intranet/support

----- Original Message -----
From: "Tony Earnshaw" <tonni@???>
To: <exim-users@???>
Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2003 1:17 PM
Subject: Re: [Exim] Performance comparison, LDAP vs. lsearch


> tor, 2003-01-23 kl. 07:46 skrev Christian Balzer:
>
> > I'm trying to get a rough, rule of thumb, ballpark figure of where
> > the break even point of doing lsearch local file lookups versus ones
> > to a remote LDAP database might be.
>
> My two Eurocents' worth, since I'm an avowed LDAP user anyway. The main
> reason is, that an LDAP directory is a magic box into which you can
> stuff anything about anyone/-thing in an organization once and for all
> and administer it centrally. You can not only incorporate al you'd
> normally find in a NIS+ database, but much more.
>
> 1: I use Exim 4 tcp-based ldaps search/retrieve for users, passwords,
> groups, forwarding, aliases etc. I've noticed (is in the spec too) that
> the first search of a session is s l o w , second and subsequent are
> lightning fast. Not only Exim but also (Openldap 2.1.10) LDAP cache the
> results. Moreover, LDAP search attributes can be indexed for faster
> access.
>
> 2: Remote LDAP directories, or relevant parts of the tree, can be
> replicated locally on your mail server for faster access.
>
> 3: If you implement point 2, you can use ldapi with Exim 4 with Unix
> socket LDAP connections (Openldap), thus avoiding use of tcp altogether.
>
> 4: If you don't want to use LDAP or SQL, you can still use dbm databases
> with Exim, which are indexed and a lot faster than linear lsearch
> searches.
>
> My main argument for LDAP is ease of central administration, with GUI
> administration, if you want it.
>
> Best,
>
> Tony
>
> --
>
> Tony Earnshaw
>
> When all's said and done ...
> there's nothing left to say or do.
>
> e-post: tonni@???
> www: http://www.billy.demon.nl
>
>
>
>
> --
>
> ## List details at http://www.exim.org/mailman/listinfo/exim-users Exim

details at http://www.exim.org/ ##
>
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