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Each of the PMDF systems which will be exchanging mail via 
BSMTP will need one incoming BSMTP channel 
and an outgoing BSMTP channel for each of the remote PMDF 
systems. The channel definitions should be along the lines of:
      bsin_gateway smtp bsin.host0 bsout_remote1 smtp master user bsmtp daemon host1 BSOUT-REMOTE1 bsout_remote2 smtp master user bsmtp daemon host2 BSOUT-REMOTE2 ... bsout_remoteN smtp master user bsmtp daemon hostN BSOUT-REMOTEN  | 
host0 is the name of the local PMDF host, 
as used by the other remote PMDF systems, and 
host1, host2, ..., 
hostN are the host names of the remote PMDF 
systems. The strings remote1, 
remote2, ..., remoteN, and 
REMOTE1, ..., REMOTE2, and 
REMOTEN are arbitrary and need just be distinct 
from one another.
With the above definitions, the channel bsout_ 
remote1 will bundle up its BSMTP parcels and send them on to 
the fixed address bsmtp@host1. Likewise for the 
remaining BSOUT channels.
The rewrite rules appear as
      domain1 $U%$H@BSOUT-REMOTE1$Nbsout_remote1 .domain1 $U%$H$D@BSOUT-REMOTE1$Nbsout_remote1 domain2 $U%$H@BSOUT-REMOTE2$Nbsout_remote2 .domain2 $U%$H$D@BSOUT-REMOTE2$Nbsout_remote2 ... domainN $U%$H@BSOUT-REMOTEN$Nbsout_remoteN .domainN $U%$H$D@BSOUT-REMOTEN$Nbsout_remoteN  | 
domain1, domain2, 
..., domainN are the domain names of the remote 
PMDF systems.
Finally, add to the FORWARD mapping table the entry
      FORWARD bsmtp@host0 bsmtp@bsin.host0$Y$D  | 
host0 is the host name for the 
local PMDF system which will be used by the BSOUT channels 
on the remote PMDF systems. That way, when they send BSMTP parcels to 
bsmtp@host0, it will be forwarded on to the 
local bsin_gateway channel.2
For example, assume that the example.com domain will be 
exchanging BSMTP traffic with the example.co.uk domain via the PMDF 
hosts hub.example.com and athena.example.co.uk. Then hub.example.com 
would have the configuration
      example.co.uk $U%$H@BSOUT-REMOTE1$Nbsout_remote1 .example.co.uk $U%$H$D@BSOUT-REMOTE1$Nbsout_remote1 ... bsin_gateway smtp bsin.hub.example.com bsout_remote1 smtp master user bsmtp daemon athena.example.co.uk BSOUT-REMOTE1  | 
FORWARD mapping table entry
      FORWARD bsmtp@hub.example.com bsmtp@bsin.hub.example.com$Y$D  | 
The system athena.example.co.uk would have the configuration
      example.com $U%$H@BSOUT-REMOTE1$Nbsout_remote1 .example.com $U%$H$D@BSOUT-REMOTE1$Nbsout_remote1 ... bsin_gateway smtp bsin.athena.example.co.uk bsout_remote1 smtp master user bsmtp daemon hub.example.com BSOUT-REMOTE1  | 
FORWARD mapping table entry
      FORWARD bsmtp@athena.example.co.uk bsmtp@bsin.athena.example.co.uk$Y$D  | 
With the above configurations, when a user on hub.example.com sends 
mail to user@example.co.uk, the message is routed to the 
bsout_remote1 channel. That channel will package the 
message up into a BSMTP parcel and send that parcel on to 
bsmtp@athena.example.co.uk. Owing to the 
$Nbsout_remote1 tag in the example.co.uk 
rewrite rules, those rewrite rules will be ignored when the 
bsout_remote1 channel enqueues the message. Instead, the 
normal rewrite rules for example.co.uk will take effect 
and route the message containing the parcel out to the WAN 
(e.g., the Internet).
Note that the outbound BSMTP channels can construct 
application/batch-smtp message parts containing multiple messages. As 
such, sites may want to use the after channel keyword on 
their BSOUT channels. So doing may prove advantageous for 
sites who want to bundle their mail up into large parcels and send 
those parcels only once every few minutes, hours, or days. Also, the 
ATTEMPT_TRANSACTIONS_PER_SESSION channel option might be 
used with the BSOUT channels to prevent cases where, under 
heavy load, a BSOUT channel just runs continuously bundling into a 
single parcel messages queuing up to be sent out. This option puts an 
upper limit on the number of messages placed in a single parcel and 
forces the channel to close a parcel, send it along, and start a new 
parcel when there are lots of messages to bundle up.
      2  Any of several mechanisms might be 
        used to accomplish this forwarding. The most efficient is the use of an 
        alias when 
    
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