Hi, On Wed, Aug 06, 2003 at 03:03:07PM +0200, Bernhard R. Link wrote:
> * Steve Lamb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [030806 13:43]: > > On Wed, 6 Aug 2003 13:10:03 +0200 > > "Bernhard R. Link" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > If mutt spoke SMTP, it would be a MTA itself. (Perhaps still missing > > > the proper interface to link /usr/lib/sendmail to mutt, but that would > > > be the lesser part). > > > > No, it would not. It would be using another method of accessing an > > MTA. > > Just because Mozilla speaks HTTP, HTTPS and FTP doesn't make it a web > > server, > > a secure web server and an ftp server. > > Perhaps we disagree what MTA means. I consider for example ssmpt to be a > MTA. (And judging from the package-description, it's maintainer seems > to believe the same). So netscape and pine, both of which contain an SMTP /client/, are MTAs?? Your definition does not seem to be shared by many people then. Generally, an MTA is able to do the MX lookup, has a queue, and a few methods of injecting messages into that queue, perhaps via /usr/lib/sendmail -t or through SMTP. I would not consider anything that contains a SMTP client an MTA. A proxy that handles port 25 is no MTA either. Such strict definitions ('talks SMTP') are generally not very useful. Cheers, Emile. -- E-Advies - Emile van Bergen [EMAIL PROTECTED] tel. +31 (0)70 3906153 http://www.e-advies.nl