On Thu, 11 May 2000, Javier Llopis wrote:
there is no HTTP 1.1 equivalent for POP. So we end up with 99% of our domains having a different IP address each, in which case who _cares_ if we also use that IP address for the web server?
Are we really wasting IP address space?
Hasn't anybody run into this situation? If so, how are you dealing with it?
Use one big POP3 server for all of your customers, and either use "standardized" pop-login names (ie, customercorp01, customercorp02, othercorp 01, othercorp02, etc) and entries in the alias file to point to them. It even makes sense to point mail.customerdomain.com as a cname to your mail.provider.whatever so that if there's a change you don't have to reconfigure all MUA's. As for ftp, it's easily solved by creating different home directories for different logins (don't forget to chroot them). So your customers will not get their own hostname in the login prompt, no big deal.... ;-) Nils - ----------------------------------------------------------------- - n@work Internet Informationssysteme GmbH Tel +49 40 23880900 Spaldingstrasse 160d Fax +49 40 23880929 20097 Hamburg, Germany http://www.work.de/