03-21-2014
Thanks to all for your answers. I really appreciate it.
@corona688...Indeed it is a proxy into our private nets. Excellent point...
@Perderabo - Excellent...this makes sense too. I had the DROP and REJECT functionality 'switched' in my original understanding. What you described makes perfect sense and explains to me what I was asking and what is going on.
Thanks
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
imapproxyd
IMAPPROXYD(8) IMAP proxy daemon IMAPPROXYD(8)
NAME
imapproxyd - IMAP proxy daemon
SYNOPSIS
imapproxyd [ -f <config file name> ] [ -p <pidfile name> ]
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the imapproxyd command. This manual page was written for the Debian distribution because the original
program does not have a manual page.
UP-ImapProxy proxies IMAP transactions between an IMAP client and an IMAP server. The general idea is that the client should never know
that it is not talking to the real IMAP server, but ImapProxy caches server connections.
ImapProxy was written to compensate for webmail clients that are unable to maintain persistent connections to an IMAP server. Most webmail
clients need to log in to an IMAP server for nearly every single transaction; This behaviour can cause tragic performance problems on the
IMAP server. ImapProxy tries to deal with this problem by leaving server connections open for a short time after a webmail client logs
out. When the webmail client connects again, ImapProxy will determine if there is a cached connection available and reuse it if possible.
FILES
By default, UP-ImapProxy reads /etc/imapproxy.conf on startup. This can be changed by using the -f option
Unless foreground_mode has been enabled, UP-ImapProxy will write its PID to to a PID-file. It defaults to /var/run/imapproxy.pid, but can
be overridden with the -p option
SEE ALSO
pimpstat(8),
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Jose Luis Tallon <jltallon@adv-solutions.net>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).
Dave McMurtrie Mar 12, 2004 IMAPPROXYD(8)