On Tue, 2003-10-07 at 16:25, Paul E Condon wrote: > On Tue, Oct 07, 2003 at 11:50:58AM +0530, Ashish Ariga wrote: > > On Sat, 2003-10-04 at 17:42, Brian Potkin wrote: > > > On Sat, Oct 04, 2003 at 04:31:01PM +0530, Ashish Ariga wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > Hi, > > > > > > > > Today is the first time I typed the words "mutt". I have been using > > > > 1. Periodic checking for pop mail ("fetch-mail") doesn't work in spite > > of pop_* being set. Should I set spoolfile to pop:// instead ? > > > configure fetchmail separately from mutt, and setup mutt to look for > incoming mail in the standard location: /var/spool/mail/<username> , > and configure it to run periodically. I use fetchmailconf to do this, > but fetchmailconf does nasty things under sarge on my system, be warned > if you are using sarge (and maybe sid, not know, i'm to timid to try) > > other ways may work as well or better, but my impression is that mutt is > supposed to be a simple mail reader, not a means of controling other > aspects of the mail delivery chain.
Alternatively you could bind the f12 key to fetchmail as I have: macro index <f12> "!fetchmail\n" fetchmailconf is working fine in sid (used it yesterday). For running fetchmail periodically I am using gnome's inbox monitor applet (execute fetchmail before each update). I prefer not to use the daemon method (/etc/fetchmailrc) as this method allows running fetchmail manually without becoming root. crontab is good too (crontab -u). -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]