-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Friday, December 7 at 09:41 PM, quoth Mauro Sacchetto: >I made some experiments more. >If I put in my .muttrc: >send-hook .* 'my_hdr From: spiderman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >exim4 sends correctly the message, >and in the header I read the new address. SO, >it doesn'r re-writes the original, true address. >But if I put into: >send-hook .* 'my_hdr From: spiderman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >send-hook '~t debian$' 'my_hdr From: samiel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>' >(for I've: set hostname="debian") >in local email I find again an ever my right external address. >Why in the first case the field "From" is changed >as I ask to Mutt, and in the second one not?
This sounds like something you should more likely be asking the exim mailing list. That said, to prove for a fact whether it's mutt or exim, try replacing your hooks with this: send-hook .* 'my_hdr From: samiel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>' If your mail still has the wrong header, then there's nothing mutt can do about it. Exim is likely rewriting things that use the form "@hostname" (where "hostname" is the local machine's hostname), since those are technically illegal according to the SMTP RFC (2822). ~Kyle - -- You cannot reason a person out of a position he did not reason himself into in the first place. -- Jonathan Swift -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Comment: Thank you for using encryption! iD8DBQFHWbP+BkIOoMqOI14RAirFAJ0a21Xe4MCxggBm7gExsVLeyoBIAwCgs8AB jpriOIOAANCOrOBAyZpMiFY= =OjaL -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----