Lars-Johan Liman <[email protected]> writes: > Being an old Sendmail MTA geek, I use a different approach entirely. > > I have a local MTA (now Postfix, as Sendmail is more or less abandonware > these days) on my machine, and use a "header_dependent_relay" database > to make Postfix select the right account based on the From: line. GNUS > just drops the mail on /usr/bin/sedmail (which is Postfix - aargh! ;-) ) > and lets it deal with the problem. Postfix then acts as an SMTP client > vis-a-vis my various (three) different accounts. > > "If all you have is a hammer ...", and my hammer is my MTA. :-) > > Note: I'm not saying this is better in any way, I'm merely adding to the > list of available options, should anyone else be as crazy as I am. ;-)
Oof! I run my own mail servers, also using postfix, but it just seems like it would be overkill to have yet another postfix instance running on my local machine. I send from two accounts, which are on different machines, so I can't even do this trick on a remote server. Don't you run into trouble sending mail from a local machine? _______________________________________________ info-gnus-english mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/info-gnus-english
