On 05/31@18:57, Rocco Rutte wrote: > Hi, > > * Nick Stewart [05/31/02 18:36:09 CEST] wrote: > > Would someone please give me possible reasons why some of > > my mail is not delivered. By "not delivered" I mean that > > not only does the desired recipient not get the mail but I > > get no form of responce what so ever. No "unable to > > deliver mail because..." messages, zip, zilch, nada. > > > The only obvious pattern I can see is that the mail only > > seems to "disappear" when sent to an address on a network > > (what kind of netwrk, I don't know). > > All you can is try to contact the responsible postmaster - > sounds stupid since you can't deliver any mail, I know. > Maybe the receipent can do something about it. If there's no > error message from mutt and no kind of error report (neither > from your nor from their MTA), I can't even guess what a > possible reason could be. > > Cheers, Rocco
Great. I've ask the recipient to ask the postmaster from more information. I have two more queries (apologies in advance for their mundane nature): 1. I am running mutt on my SuSE linux pc a home as under a "user" account. I am using sendmail and fetchmail to do the dirty work. My method of sending mail is this: After mutt has given me the "mail sent" message I become superuser and type $ sendmail -q My question is: Is this standard proceedure? Or should mutt be telling sendmail "hey, send this mail now" to which sendmail responds "sure sending mail now"? If so how should I configure this considering I'm using mutt as a "user" so I don't get those annoying "permission denied" messages. Also where should I change the config in my ~/.muttrc or /etc/Muttrc? 2. With regard to undelivered mail. I was told to set envelope_from but when I set it in /etc/Muttrc I get X-Athentification-Warning hearders on my mail. Is this because I need to set my user account to trusted user? if so how?