On Tue, Jun 25, 2002 at 10:41:31PM -0400, Daniel Barclay wrote: > > > > From: Hans Ekbrand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > ... > > On Mon, Jun 24, 2002 at 11:31:06PM -0400, Daniel Barclay wrote: > ... > > > I'd like to have a local POP server that, when queried, queries another > > > POP server and looks at a local mail file, and then serves the combined > > > set of messages to the POP client. > > > ... > > Why not ISP->fetchmail->exim->[procmail->~/mail->]local IMAP->netscape? > > Is that fetchmail for everything or fetchmail downloading just my > mailing-list messages? > > > If that's for everything, it doesn't quite do what I want: I don't > want to fetch the non-mailing-list messages unless I'm fetching them > into Netscape. > > > I don't think I mentioned another constraint: My home machine is not > on line all the time, so I can't use a POP server there to be able to > check mail from elsewhere (at any time). > > That's why I want to leave some mail on my ISP's machine. > > > Going through several servers would be okay, but I want the non-mailing-list > messages to remain on my ISP's POP server, accessible from work (or > anywhere), > until I retrieve them from home.
1. Continue to fetch mailing-list mail with cron/ftp. 2. install a local imap server. 3. Whenever you want to read non-mailing-list mail from home with netscape, run fetchmail which will download that mail from your isp. 4. I think fetchmail must be helped by a MTA listening at port 25 or a MDA to deliver the mail to your spool file (or to ~/mail) 5. Your local imap server will then see the mail and can serve it to netscape. -- Note that I use Debian version 3.0 Linux emac140 2.4.17 #1 sön feb 10 20:21:22 CET 2002 i686 unknown Hans Ekbrand
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