Derrick 'dman' Hudson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003:08:18:00:57:59-0400] scribed: > On Fri, Aug 15, 2003 at 08:22:52PM -0500, Michael D Schleif wrote: > [...] > > | There must be something that exim can/does do that procmail cannot? > > exim is an MTA (Mail Transfer Agent) that also includes an LDA (Local > Delivery Agent). > > procmail is an LDA. > > exim does a lot that procmail can't do, and procmail isn't intended to > do. procmail can do things that exim can't (for example, changing a > message via a filter, such as spamassassin, and then making delivery > decisions based on the external program's output).
OK > | What do you think? > > Use the mail handling chain that works best for you. If you aren't > using any of exim's mail processing capabilities for mail you receive, > then eliminate it from the equation and have fetchmail hand the > messages directly to procmail. (you'll still want (need) exim > installed for handling mail that originates locally (ie from cron jobs > and the like) and potentially for sending mail (depends on your MUA > and whether or not you use programs like reportbug)) I was wondering more in line of bouncing messages for malformed headers, and that ilk. Of course, I need something to act as MTA; but, what I am unclear about is that which exim contributes as LDA that cannot -- readily -- be accomplished via procmail. What are reasons to continue to use exim -- or equivalent -- between fetchmail and procmail? What do you think? -- Best Regards, mds mds resource 877.596.8237 - Dare to fix things before they break . . . - Our capacity for understanding is inversely proportional to how much we think we know. The more I know, the more I know I don't know . . . --
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