Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote: >> On Tue, Sep 22, 2009 at 09:39:14PM -0700, Steve Lamb wrote: >>> Considering the class of machine this is (highly portable, >>> personal machine) it is highly unlikely that it would ever needs a >>> resident MTA.
> Odd. My highly portable, personal laptop runs an MTA (which doubles as an > MDA) that I use for sending both local and remote mail. The MTA just uses my > VPS as a smarthost for remote mail, but it handles local mail so I can get > notifications from cron, anacron, at, etc. And yet I fail to see why this is directed at me. Also I don't get this fetish for having mail delivered locally. nullmailer works just fine forwarding to a smarthost. Add in an alias for r...@localhost to your remote mail and the mail is now somewhere you normally get mail. Local just adds to the workload needlessle. > All UNIX and Linux boxes should have an MTA. It doesn't always need to > listen > on 25 or 587, but both postfix and exim4 support that. Which is what "non-resident" means. If the program isn't resident in memory it can't very well be listening to ports, now can it? Which is what I told the OP. Dunno why everyone's bouncing on my case. I'm not the one who wants to deliver local. I've already got my stuff sorted out, thanks. -- Steve C. Lamb | But who decides what they dream? PGP Key: 8B6E99C5 | And dream I do... -------------------------------+---------------------------------------------
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