Here's the exim setup I have for my dialup system, and it works brilliantly (I recieve on an average 700 messages daily for all the Linux, Debian newsgroups I'm subscribed to):
1. Have exmh activated via xinetd for dynamic startup. 2. Have atd start my dialup connection using pon 1 every hour. 3. 2 minutes later, atd starts up fetchmail to retrieve my email from various pop email servers I have over the internet. This dumps the mail to localhost (ie exmh takes the dump). 4. Have qpopper set up so that on any pop email client that I use (ie most UNIX and MS Windows email-programs) can then *quickly* grab the mail stored locally in exmh and transfer it to my email client on my home's LAN. 5. Of course, when I reply, it is sent to my exmh server. I have never had an issue with exmh getting the mail routed on out to my ISP's SMTP server, even if the dialup connection is not going. This might be due to the fact that I also have diald setup. The most trouble I have ever had was from not having all my PC's running the correct time on their systems - this really causes email to do strange things ! The advantage of this setup is no matter how large of an email I am receiving or sending (lots of attachments), it appears to get sent instantly, but then exmh can take the time it needs to get the large data transmitted over the slow 56k modem connection. Even so, the most latency I've seen is due to the hourly ISP connection I have set up. On 10-Nov-98 Moore, Paul wrote: > Hi, > There seems to be a lot of talk about moving to Exim as the default > mailer for Debian. While I feel like I should support Exim (as I used to > go to Cambridge, whwre it was developed :-) I was concerned when I > initially looked at it by the statement in the (version 2) manual > (section 39, "Intermittently connected hosts") where it says "Exim was > designed for use on permanently connected hosts, and so it is not > particularly well-suited for use in an intermittently connected > environment." > > As I have a single-user home PC with dial-up access to my ISP, I fall > squarely into the category of users for whom Exim is "not particularly > well-suited". Is this a real problem, or is Exim a good mailer for > dial-up systems? > > In theory, I like Exim, not least for the clear and comprehensive > manual, but I really don't want to spend a long time fighting the > system's assumptions just to get it set up... > > Thanks, > Paul Moore. > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < > /dev/null ---------------------------------- E-Mail: Geoffrey L. Brimhall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: 11-Nov-98 Time: 15:02:34 This message was sent by XFMail ----------------------------------