On Sat, Mar 22, 2008 at 09:01:48AM +0900, Stephen J. Turnbull wrote: > > >>>>> "Sylvain" == Sylvain Beucler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > On Wed, Mar 19, 2008 at 09:55:11PM -0400, Stefan Monnier wrote: > > > >> >> All email sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] should not go to Mailman, > > >> >> but instead it should be forwarded to > > >> >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > >> >> > > >> >> Then all mail currently sent from Emacsbugs to the > > >> >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list should be distributed to > > >> >> the members of the bug-gnu-emacs mailing list. > > > >> > Well, there's no magic. The only working > > >> > "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" adress is "[EMAIL PROTECTED]", > > >> > so if you want to make that one point to somewhere else, we need to > > >> > rename the Mailman mailing list. > > I don't think this is true. AFAIK Mailman knows nothing and cares > less about the envelope recipient. > > So you should currently have an alias (sendmail-style, and I'm kinda > guessing here, depends on Mailman version and suchlike) > > bug-gnu-emacs: "|/var/lib/mailman/bin/mailman post > bug-gnu-emacs" > > Change that to > > bug-gnu-emacs: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > bug-gnu-emacs-really: "|/var/lib/mailman/bin/mailman post bug-gnu-emacs" > > Obviously you need the right configuration of the debbugs program at > emacsbugs.donarmstrong.com, pointing back to "bug-gnu-emacs-really". > Season nomenclature to taste (-recipients made line-length 82 columns ;-). > > Note that you now have three addresses where spam can get into the > pipeline. I don't know how these "internal" addresses leak out, but > they sometimes do. So you may wish to restrict the envelope sender to > bug-gnu-emacs-really to be "emacsbugs". You probably also want to > ensure that traffic to "submit" always goes via the "bug-gnu-emacs" > alias, or you need to make "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" be an > alias of bug-gnu-emacs in the Mailman interface.
Hi, We don't have root access to the lists.gnu.org computer, so this kind of thing is outside our reach. Please contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] to see if they can do something. Consider that lists.gnu.org hosts thousands of lists - this is mass-hosting. There isn't a series of hand-made aliases, but a set of custom Exim rules that deliver all @gnu.org and @nongnu.org to Mailman or other places (such as fencepost) dependending on various factors. -- Sylvain