Re: mutt with Qmail

1999-10-11 Thread Chris Green

On Sun, Oct 10, 1999 at 04:56:08PM -0400, Subba Rao wrote:
> Is anyone using this combination, on their Linux system?
> Qmail is delivering the mail to ~/Maildir, as it is supposed to.
> I want to read the mail. How do I configure mutt to read these
> notes?
> 
I use mutt with qmail, it works fine.  I can't remember the exact
commands you have to put in the .muttrc file but it's well documented.
Mail me as [EMAIL PROTECTED] if you can't work it out and I'll
reply to you from home.

-- 
Chris Green ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  Home: [EMAIL PROTECTED]   Work: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  WWW: http://www.isbd.co.uk/



Re: how to play a soundfile for incoming mail?

1999-10-11 Thread Ralf Hildebrandt

On Sun, Oct 10, 1999 at 03:11:55PM -0500, David DeSimone wrote:

> > Doesnt mutt allow some hook to define a soundfile i.s.o. the beep?
> 
> No.
But I think that would be a great idea. 
I admit, though, that this would provide YAWTSOINTF (yet another way to
shoot oneself in the foot). 

-- 
Ralf Hildebrandt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> www.stahl.bau.tu-bs.de/~hildeb
If all the salmon caught in Canada in one year were laid end to end
across the Sahara Desert, the smell would be absolutely awful.


 PGP signature


Re: Editing a bounced message

1999-10-11 Thread Stasinos Konstantopoulos

Op zo. 10 okt 1999 14:54:21 zei rex:

> I'd change the sendmail call in .muttrc to call a shell script to allow
> me to edit the message before calling sendmail, but I don't know how
> to pass the message to the shell script. IOW, I don't know how/where 
> sendmail is getting the message.

man sendmail(1):

  With no flags, sendmail reads its standard input up to an end-of-file
  or a line consisting only of a single dot and sends a copy of the
  message found there to all of the addresses listed.  It
  determines the network(s) to use based on the syntax and contents of
  the addresses.

> The line in .muttrc is
> set sendmail="usr/lib/sendmail -oi -oem"
> I can't find any docs on what "-oi" and "-oem" do.

man sendmail(1):

  There are also a number of processing options that may be set.
  Normally these will only be used by a system administrator.  Options
  may be set either on the command line using the -o flag (for short
  names), the -O flag (for long names), or in the configuration file.

I don't know what these two options do, you'can try taking a peek in
/etc/mail/sendmail.conf (comment-documented configuration file).

So what I suggest your script does is:

- redirect stdin of your script into a temp file.
- vi the tempfile
- redirect sendmail's stdin from the tempfile
- remove the tempfile

best of luck,

stasinos



Re: how to play a soundfile for incoming mail?

1999-10-11 Thread Brian Salter-Duke

On Mon, Oct 11, 1999 at 10:36:11AM +0200, Ralf Hildebrandt wrote:
> On Sun, Oct 10, 1999 at 03:11:55PM -0500, David DeSimone wrote:
> 
> > > Doesnt mutt allow some hook to define a soundfile i.s.o. the beep?
> > 
> > No.
> But I think that would be a great idea. 
> I admit, though, that this would provide YAWTSOINTF (yet another way to
> shoot oneself in the foot). 

And it would not be bloat, would it? Or YATWDNRN (yet another thing we
do not really need).
 
> -- 
> Ralf Hildebrandt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> www.stahl.bau.tu-bs.de/~hildeb
> If all the salmon caught in Canada in one year were laid end to end
> across the Sahara Desert, the smell would be absolutely awful.
> 

Brian.
-- 
Associate Professor Brian Salter-Duke (Brian Duke)
Chemistry, Faculty of Science, IT and Education, Northern Territory University,
  Darwin, NT 0909, Australia.  Phone 08-89466702. Fax 08-89466847
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  http://www.smps.ntu.edu.au/school/compchem.html



Re: how to play a soundfile for incoming mail?

1999-10-11 Thread Thomas Roessler

On 1999-10-11 10:36:11 +0200, Ralf Hildebrandt wrote:

> But I think that would be a great idea. 

No thanks.  (Or, maybe, in mutt for Nintendos.)


Actually, use xmailbox instead, which permis you to do precisely
such things.




Potential user needing an answer.

1999-10-11 Thread Brian Hudgins

I'm searching for a mail user agent that will physically attach files to
emails for Unix shell/script commands.  After trying sendmail to attach
files and having them appear as the body of the mail message I am looking
for other options.  Is mutt capable of attaching files to Unix e-mail while
running from console shell/script commands and if so, what version would
best be suited to that type of platform?  

Thanks for any help you can offer.


Brian Hudgins
Programming and Systems
AccuDocs LLC
205.443.4154
800.874.7028
www.accudocs.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  



Re: Potential user needing an answer.

1999-10-11 Thread Ralf Hildebrandt

On Fri, Oct 08, 1999 at 01:56:08PM -0500, Brian Hudgins wrote:
> I'm searching for a mail user agent that will physically attach files to
> emails for Unix shell/script commands.

That's a good one :) Use a stapler on your monitor, will you?

> After trying sendmail to attach files and having them appear as the
> body of the mail message I am looking for other options.  Is mutt
> capable of attaching files to Unix e-mail while running from console
> shell/script commands and if so, what version would best be suited
> to that type of platform?   

Yes. RTFM (www.mutt.org).

% mutt -a filename -s subject [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null

But I'd use mpack/munpack for such simple purposes if I were you.

-- 
Ralf Hildebrandt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> www.stahl.bau.tu-bs.de/~hildeb
God does not play dice.
-- Einstein



Re: how to play a soundfile for incoming mail?

1999-10-11 Thread Ralf Hildebrandt

On Mon, Oct 11, 1999 at 11:53:33AM +0200, Thomas Roessler wrote:

> No thanks.  (Or, maybe, in mutt for Nintendos.)
When is that due? :) But then I'd rather wait for mutt for Windows CE
on the Dreamcast.

> Actually, use xmailbox instead, which permis you to do precisely
> such things.

I'll just stick with gbuffy (which still can't play sounds like xbuffy
could =:( )  

-- 
Ralf Hildebrandt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> www.stahl.bau.tu-bs.de/~hildeb
Treat your password like your toothbrush. Don't let anybody else use it,
and get a new one every six months. --Clifford Stoll



pattern search & aliases

1999-10-11 Thread Lars Broemer

When using aliases mutt displays in the browse mode the senders 
real name. If you do something like this: 

alias Barny Barny Gumbel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

and you receive a message from [EMAIL PROTECTED] it looks like this:

 48 Sep 19 Barny Gumbel ( 185)  Flaming Moe

If you now try to display only messages from Barny using l ~f Barny 
mutt will not find messages which matches the pattern. To do
this you have to type something like l ~f duff because mutt only 
appraise the original mail headers. 

Is there a way to tell mutt to use the alias as substitute for original
from header?

thanks,
Lars



Re: pattern search & aliases

1999-10-11 Thread Jan Houtsma

On Mon, Oct 11, 1999 at 12:36:15PM +0200, Lars Broemer wrote:
> When using aliases mutt displays in the browse mode the senders
> real name.
 
Sorry if this is already in the HowTo, but i am very busy today and 
lazy too, so i just ask you if you dont mind.

How do i "browse" the aliases???

Thanks!

jan



Colors

1999-10-11 Thread Subba Rao

How do I get colors to work in Xterm? The "showrgb" command lists the color that are 
available.
I can create Xterm with various colors. The color setting in .muttrc, do not seem to 
be working.

Any idea, how I can get colors to work in Mutt?

Thank you in advance.

Subba Rao
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
==
Disclaimer - I question and speak for myself.

http://pws.prserv.net/truemax/
__




Re: pattern search & aliases

1999-10-11 Thread Mikko Hänninen

Jan Houtsma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on Mon, 11 Oct 1999:
> How do i "browse" the aliases???

Press TAB in the To: or Cc: prompt.


Mikko
-- 
// Mikko Hänninen, aka. Wizzu  //  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  //  http://www.iki.fi/wiz/
// The Corrs list maintainer  //   net.freak  //   DALnet IRC operator /
// Interests: roleplaying, Linux, the Net, fantasy & scifi, the Corrs /
Bumper sticker: I brake for no apparent reason.



Re: pattern search & aliases

1999-10-11 Thread Sean Rima

Hi Mikko!

On Mon, 11 Oct 1999, Mikko Hänninen wrote:

> Jan Houtsma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on Mon, 11 Oct 1999:
> > How do i "browse" the aliases???
> 
> Press TAB in the To: or Cc: prompt.
> 
Excellent, I often wondered that myself :)

Sean

 PGP signature


macro: :x!y ???

1999-10-11 Thread Uli Suppa

Hi there,

I've got a question about macros, I want to define ( + X) in vi - mode, to save 
the message and send it.
But sorry, I don't know how ! Please somebody help me !!!

The most times I do not attach or envoke PGP so it would be much easier.

cu, uli.

 PGP signature


unable to use IMAP

1999-10-11 Thread Raju K V

hi,

I had reported this problem previously, but received no satisfactory
answer. I usually read mails after popping them from the mail server.
Since the server's POP support is not reliable, I thought of using IMAP.
when I change folders to {canine}INBOX (i have also tried {canine}inbox,
{canine}/var/spool/mail/rajukv), I see no mails, but I am sure that
there are mails because I can pop mails from the same server. The funny
thing is when I am an in {canine}INBOX and a new mail arrives, I see a
message "New mail in mailbox" but the mail is not displayed. I put one
mail folder from my local machine to the mail server and tried to access
it using IMAP. still same problem.

Can somebody tell me the problem? Or is there some way by which I can
produce debug info when I try to access a IMAP folder?

Thanks in advance,
Raju



Re: Editing a bounced message

1999-10-11 Thread rex

On Mon, Oct 11, 1999 at 07:07:32AM +, winfried szukalski wrote:
> I use the script you are looking for together with
[...]

Thanks much, Winfried. I have adapted your script to call the editor
only when the message is bounced. The script resides in /home/rex/bin
and is named "bounce." .muttrc has 
set sendmail="/home/rex/bin/bounce"

#=> bounce <
#! /bin/sh
# adapted from a script by Winfried Szukalski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
# allows editing a bounced ("b") message before sending it.
from_file=${HOME}/.sendit_pre
POSTTOOL=/usr/lib/sendmail
POSTARGS="-oi -oem -t"
cat > ${from_file}
if (grep "Resent-From: $USER@" ${from_file})
 then
   $VISUAL ${from_file}
fi   
${POSTTOOL} ${POSTARGS} < ${from_file} 
rm -f ${from_file}
#> end bounce <=

In normal use, bounce is transparent. If a message is bounced, the
presence of "Resent-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]" in the header triggers the
"if (grep ..." and my editor (XJed) opens the message.

The ability to edit a bounced message is very useful for listowners
using LISTSERV(tm) for moderated lists.

-rex



Re: unable to use IMAP

1999-10-11 Thread Brendan Cully

On Monday, 11 October 1999 at 19:02, Raju K V wrote:
> hi,
> 
> I had reported this problem previously, but received no satisfactory
> answer. I usually read mails after popping them from the mail server.
> Since the server's POP support is not reliable, I thought of using IMAP.
> when I change folders to {canine}INBOX (i have also tried {canine}inbox,
> {canine}/var/spool/mail/rajukv), I see no mails, but I am sure that
> there are mails because I can pop mails from the same server. The funny
> thing is when I am an in {canine}INBOX and a new mail arrives, I see a
> message "New mail in mailbox" but the mail is not displayed. I put one
> mail folder from my local machine to the mail server and tried to access
> it using IMAP. still same problem.
> 
> Can somebody tell me the problem? Or is there some way by which I can
> produce debug info when I try to access a IMAP folder?

If mutt was compiled with --enable-debug, then you can run mutt -d4 and
a log file will be written to ~/.muttdebug0 (up to five are created - 0
is the most recent, the others are rotated). If you can get this to
work, please send me a copy of the log. Blank out the password if you're
using cleartext login (I really should prevent mutt from logging the
password...)
-- 
Brendan Cully <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | OLD SKOOL ROOLZ
"I hope I don't win|  .-_|\ 
 The rules say to bring a friend   | / \
 I don't have any" | Perth ->*.--._/



Re: Colors

1999-10-11 Thread Jeremy Blosser

Subba Rao [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
> How do I get colors to work in Xterm? The "showrgb" command lists the
> color that are available.  I can create Xterm with various colors. The
> color setting in .muttrc, do not seem to be working.

Make sure your $TERM is set to a term that's defined to have colors, such
as xterm-color.

-- 
Jeremy Blosser   |   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   |   http://jblosser.firinn.org/
-+-+--
"If Microsoft can change and compete on quality, I've won." -- L. Torvalds

 PGP signature


sending mail

1999-10-11 Thread John Poltorak

How do I find out exactly what mutt is piping into sendmail when I
select 'send' after composing an email?
Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Precedence: bulk

I'm having problems getting my version of sendmail for OS/2 sending
out my mail, and think it has something to do with the formatting of
the headers.

Is there any way to fill in the option for

H?x?Full-Name: ?


Are there any debug options I can switch on in mutt?

--
John



List of options in muttrc

1999-10-11 Thread John Poltorak

Can anyone tell me where I can find a definitive list of options
available in muttrc?
Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Precedence: bulk


--

John



Re: List of options in muttrc

1999-10-11 Thread Jeremy Blosser

John Poltorak [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
> Can anyone tell me where I can find a definitive list of options
> available in muttrc?

In the manual.

http://www.mutt.org/doc/manual/

-- 
Jeremy Blosser   |   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   |   http://jblosser.firinn.org/
-+-+--
"If Microsoft can change and compete on quality, I've won." -- L. Torvalds

 PGP signature


Re: sending mail

1999-10-11 Thread Robert Chien

On Mon, Oct 11, 1999 at 06:24:02PM +0100, John Poltorak wrote:
> How do I find out exactly what mutt is piping into sendmail when I
> select 'send' after composing an email?
> 
> Are there any debug options I can switch on in mutt?

try:

set sendmail=echo

Robert



Re: sending mail

1999-10-11 Thread rutger

On Mon, Oct 11, 1999 at 10:55:18AM -0700, Robert Chien wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 11, 1999 at 06:24:02PM +0100, John Poltorak wrote:
> > How do I find out exactly what mutt is piping into sendmail when I
> > select 'send' after composing an email?
> > 
> > Are there any debug options I can switch on in mutt?
> 
> try:
> 
> set sendmail=echo

I think

set sendmail=cat

would be more succesful :)

-- 
Rutger Nijlunsing, rutger @ null.net - Linux! --
Don't BiCapitalize without extremely good reason: it messes up the natural
human-eyeball search order -- Your Friendly Neighborhood Archive Maintainers
+31-40 --- ^X^S^X^Cs



Re: sending mail

1999-10-11 Thread Tim Walberg

On 10/11/1999 20:43 +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>  On Mon, Oct 11, 1999 at 10:55:18AM -0700, Robert Chien wrote:
>>  > On Mon, Oct 11, 1999 at 06:24:02PM +0100, John Poltorak wrote:
>>  > > How do I find out exactly what mutt is piping into sendmail when I
>>  > > select 'send' after composing an email?
>>  > > 
>>  > > Are there any debug options I can switch on in mutt?
>>  > 
>>  > try:
>>  > 
>>  > set sendmail=echo
>>  
>>  I think
>>  
>>  set sendmail=cat
>>  
>>  would be more succesful :)
>>  

nope... 'sendmail=cat' will likely result int all kinds
of error messages about cat not recognizing the command
line options that sendmail uses and not being able
to find files and such. I think 'sendmail="echo --"' is
probably best - to get past echo complaining about invalid
arguments too...

tw



-- 
+--+--+
| Tim Walberg  | Phone: 847-782-2472  |
| TERAbridge Technologies Corp | FAX:   847-623-1717  |
| 1375 Tri-State Parkway   | [EMAIL PROTECTED]  |
| Gurnee, IL 60031 | 800-SKY-TEL2 PIN 9353299 |
+--+--+

 PGP signature


Re: New Mail in the file Browser?

1999-10-11 Thread David DeSimone

Richard Hitier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> [Mutt doesn't show new messages if you look at the folder, then quit,
>  leaving messages marked as new.]

For mbox folders, that is true.  It's considered too slow to open and
rummage through the folders every time you are curious if there is new
mail in the browser.  So Mutt simply looks at the time-stamp on the
folder file, and if it is newer than the last time the folder was
examined, Mutt considers there to be new mail.

If you use maildir folders, Mutt can do a quick check to see if there is
anything in the "new" subdirectory of the folder.  Then it would work
the way you want.

-- 
David DeSimone   | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   |  that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard  |  found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
UX WTEC Engineer |PGP: 5B 47 34 9F 3B 9A B0 0D  AB A6 15 F1 BB BE 8C 44



Re: Colors

1999-10-11 Thread David DeSimone

Subba Rao <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> How do I get colors to work in Xterm?  The "showrgb" command lists the
> color that are available.  I can create Xterm with various colors. 
> The color setting in .muttrc, do not seem to be working.

Do you mean that you cannot change the colors at all, or that you can't
put something like "color normal Grey50 MidnightBlue" into your .muttrc
and have it work?

If the former, consult the FAQ.

If the latter, you will probably find this useful:

In your X resources file, you can define some colors for use in Xterm:

XTerm*color0:   Grey50
XTerm*color1:   MidnightBlue

Then in your .muttrc you can reference these colors:

color normal color0 color1

Doesn't that sound like fun?  Not really.  :)

-- 
David DeSimone   | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   |  that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard  |  found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
UX WTEC Engineer |PGP: 5B 47 34 9F 3B 9A B0 0D  AB A6 15 F1 BB BE 8C 44



Re: macro: :x!y ???

1999-10-11 Thread David DeSimone

Uli Suppa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I've got a question about macros, I want to define ( + X) in
> vi-mode, to save the message and send it.

Mutt is not running in vi-mode.  It is running a completely separate
program, called "vi", that does not understand anything about Mutt's
macros, and in fact, they don't really talk to each other at all.  So
you can't define a key that will make the editor exit, then have Mutt
continue.

You could do like I do, and bind your  key to the send-message
function.  Hitting  is pretty easy.

-- 
David DeSimone   | "The doctrine of human equality reposes on this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   |  that there is no man really clever who has not
Hewlett-Packard  |  found that he is stupid." -- Gilbert K. Chesterson
UX WTEC Engineer |PGP: 5B 47 34 9F 3B 9A B0 0D  AB A6 15 F1 BB BE 8C 44



Re: Random Sigs

1999-10-11 Thread Don Blaheta

Quoth Loren Schooley:
> Yet another good one. Thanks for all the angles, guys!

Another slightly fancier one is attached to this message; usage info in
the comments.

-- 
-=-Don [EMAIL PROTECTED]=-=--=-
"All snakes who wish to remain in Ireland will please raise their right
hands." -- Saint Patrick


#!/usr/local/bin/perl
# randsig
# © 1999 by Don Blaheta, freely licensed under terms of GPL.
#
# Make a file called ".randsig" in your home directory, with the
# various random signatures separated by blank lines.  Lines starting
# with # are ignored.  Call this script to output a random one.
#
# Fancy use #1: Make a macro in your editor program to call the script
# and put the output in the current file's signature.  In vi, 
#   :map = /^-- $
jdG:r!randsig
''
# should work (assuming there's already a signature present).
#
# Fancy use #2: Keep multiple signature files.  For each special-purpose
# sig file, put it in a file called .randsig.NAME in your home
# directory, where NAME is something you pick; then call "randsig NAME"
# and only quotes from that file will be selected.  With no arguments,
# randsig will search all such files.

# Edit this line!  Try to keep it to 76 characters or less.
$sigline = 
  '-=-Your [EMAIL PROTECTED]=-=--=-';

$home =  $ENV{"HOME"};
$sigfile = "$home/.randsig";

if (@ARGV) {#use an alternate randsig file
  $filepref = shift @ARGV;
  $filepref = "$sigfile.$filepref";
} else { $filepref = "$sigfile"; }

@files = glob("$filepref*");

srand;
$tot = 0;

foreach $file (@files) {
  open(FI, $file) or next;
  @sig = undef;
  while () {
$sig[$#sig + 1] = tell if /^$/;
  }
  $randnum = int rand($tot + $#sig);
  next if $randnum < $tot;
  $randnum -= $tot;
  seek(FI, $sig[$randnum], SEEK_SET) or die "Can't seek, aborting script";
  undef $msg;
  while() {
next if /^\#/;
last if /^$/;
$msg .= $_;
  }
  $tot += $#sig;
}

# prints the random sig to the screen
print STDOUT "$sigline\n$msg";

# Uncomment to make it write to your ~/.plan file; note that if you do
# this, changes made directly to the ~/.plan will not persist!
#open (PLAN,">$home/.plan");
#print (PLAN "See my office and home phone above.  For further ");
#print (PLAN "info on how to\nget in touch, try my Web page.\n");
#print PLAN "\n$sigline\n$msg";
#close PLAN;

# Uncomment to save the signature to a ~/.sig file
#open (SIG,">$home/.sig");
#print SIG "-- \n$sigline\n$msg";
#close SIG;



[Announce] 1.0pre4 is there

1999-10-11 Thread Thomas Roessler

I've just uploaded mutt 1.0pre4 to ftp.mutt.org/pub/mutt/.  I
sincerely hope that this is the last version from the release
candidate series.

Please try this versions and report any problems to this list ASAP.
Distributors should _not_ use this version, since I hope to be able
to release 1.0 this week.

Thanks.

 PGP signature


WOB: telnet via port 80 (java?)

1999-10-11 Thread Ken W

Sorry for the WOB, but at my new job I only have access via the
firewall through port 80 and I am goig insane not having my email up.
Does anyone know of any way to telnet via port 80, as in maybe a
java-based telnet in a web browser?

Thanks.


-Ken

-- 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]AIM: ScopusFest



Re: WOB: telnet via port 80 (java?)

1999-10-11 Thread Fairlight

On Mon, Oct 11, 1999 at 06:13:57PM -0400, Ken W cogitated:
> Sorry for the WOB, but at my new job I only have access via the
> firewall through port 80 and I am goig insane not having my email up.
> Does anyone know of any way to telnet via port 80, as in maybe a
> java-based telnet in a web browser?

As the other person said, you can have someone set up a telnetd on port 80
somewhere.  However, since that may be difficult:

www.tridia.com  look at the CrossTie product.  Please keep in mind it's
commercial and must be run on the target machine to log into.  It does have
an advantage if the target server already has a server on port 80 though.
:)  

mark->
-- 
Fairlight->   |||[EMAIL PROTECTED]  | Fairlight Consulting
  __/\__  ||| "I'm talking for free...   | http://www.fairlite.com
 <__<>__> |||   It's a New Religion..."  | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
\/||| PGP Public Key available via finger @iglou, or Key servers



Re: WOB: telnet via port 80 (java?)

1999-10-11 Thread Mark Luntzel

find a friend on the outside who is willing to run telnet on port 80 for you - its 
trivial to setup. other than that, not sure where to go for the broswer-based thing 
you describe. 

On Mon, Oct 11, 1999 at 06:13:57PM -0400, Ken W wrote:
> Sorry for the WOB, but at my new job I only have access via the
> firewall through port 80 and I am goig insane not having my email up.
> Does anyone know of any way to telnet via port 80, as in maybe a
> java-based telnet in a web browser?
> 
> Thanks.
> 
> 
> -Ken
> 
> -- 
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]AIM: ScopusFest

-- 
<*krusty*> you are hating.com director of user taunting



Re: WOB: telnet via port 80 (java?)

1999-10-11 Thread Jeremy Blosser

Ken W [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
> Sorry for the WOB, but at my new job I only have access via the
> firewall through port 80 and I am goig insane not having my email up.
> Does anyone know of any way to telnet via port 80, as in maybe a
> java-based telnet in a web browser?

http://www.first.gmd.de/persons/leo/java/Telnet/ has a java based telnet
client, but I'm not sure if that's really going to work for you.

If you've got any box on the outside accessible, you could forward
connections to that box on port 80 to your mail box on port 23.

-- 
Jeremy Blosser   |   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   |   http://jblosser.firinn.org/
-+-+--
"If Microsoft can change and compete on quality, I've won." -- L. Torvalds

 PGP signature


Re: unable to use IMAP

1999-10-11 Thread Raju K V

hi,

I am attaching the .muttdebug0 which I got after running mutt -d4. The
password has been blanked out.

Mutt 1.0pre3i started at Tue Oct 12 10:16:18 1999
.
Debugging at level 4.

mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 1
mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 2
mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 3
mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 4
mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 5
mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 6
mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 7
mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 8
mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 9
mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 10
mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 11
mutt_alloc_color(): Color pairs used so far: 12

is_from(): parsing: rajukv Mon Oct 11 20:16:05 1999
is_from(): got return path: rajukv
is_from(): month=9, day=11, hr=20, min=16, sec=5, yr=99.

is_from(): parsing: rajukv Mon Oct 11 20:16:05 1999
is_from(): got return path: rajukv
is_from(): month=9, day=11, hr=20, min=16, sec=5, yr=99.

is_from(): parsing: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tue Oct 12 09:16:01 1999
is_from(): got return path: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
is_from(): month=9, day=12, hr=9, min=16, sec=1, yr=99.
read_rfc822_header(): no date found, using received time from msg separator
mutt_index_menu[512]: Got op 81
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* OK canine.wipinfo.soft.net IMAP4rev1 v12.250 server ready
mutt_socket_write():a CAPABILITY
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* CAPABILITY IMAP4 IMAP4REV1 NAMESPACE IDLE SCAN SORT 
MAILBOX-REFERRALS LOGIN-REFERRALS AUTH=LOGIN THREAD=ORDEREDSUBJECT
mutt_socket_read_line_d():a OK CAPABILITY completed
mutt_socket_write():a0001 LOGIN "rajukv" ""
mutt_socket_read_line_d():a0001 OK LOGIN completed
mutt_socket_write():a0002 LIST "" ""
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* LIST (\NoSelect) "/" ""
mutt_socket_read_line_d():a0002 OK LIST completed
mutt_socket_write():a0003 SELECT "/var/spool/mail/rajukv"
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* 5 EXISTS
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* 0 RECENT
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* OK [UIDVALIDITY 939709642] UID validity status
imap_unhandle_untagged(): unhandled request: OK [UIDVALIDITY 939709642] UID validity 
status
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* OK [UIDNEXT 6] Predicted next UID
imap_unhandle_untagged(): unhandled request: OK [UIDNEXT 6] Predicted next UID
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* FLAGS (\Answered \Flagged \Deleted \Draft \Seen)
imap_unhandle_untagged(): unhandled request: FLAGS (\Answered \Flagged \Deleted \Draft 
\Seen)
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* OK [PERMANENTFLAGS (\* \Answered \Flagged \Deleted \Draft 
\Seen)] Permanent flags
imap_unhandle_untagged(): unhandled request: OK [PERMANENTFLAGS (\* \Answered \Flagged 
\Deleted \Draft \Seen)] Permanent flags
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* OK [UNSEEN 1] first unseen message in 
/var/spool/mail/rajukv
imap_unhandle_untagged(): unhandled request: OK [UNSEEN 1] first unseen message in 
/var/spool/mail/rajukv
mutt_socket_read_line_d():a0003 OK [READ-WRITE] SELECT completed
mutt_socket_write():a0004 FETCH 1:5 (FLAGS INTERNALDATE RFC822.SIZE 
BODY.PEEK[HEADER.FIELDS (DATE FROM SUBJECT TO CC MESSAGE-ID REFERENCES CONTENT-TYPE 
IN-REPLY-TO REPLY-TO)])
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* 1 FETCH (FLAGS () INTERNALDATE "12-Oct-1999 11:18:49 
+0530" RFC822.SIZE 2865 BODY[HEADER.FIELDS ("DATE" "FROM" "SUBJECT" "TO" "CC" 
"MESSAGE-ID" "REFERENCES" "CONTENT-TYPE" "IN-REPLY-TO" "REPLY-TO")] {414}
fetching message 1
mutt_socket_read_line_d():)
imap_parse_fetch(): bogus FLAGS entry: 
imap_open_mailbox(): msgcount is 0
mutt_socket_write():a0005 NOOP
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* 2 FETCH (FLAGS () INTERNALDATE "12-Oct-1999 11:27:15 
+0530" RFC822.SIZE 67482 BODY[HEADER.FIELDS ("DATE" "FROM" "SUBJECT" "TO" "CC" 
"MESSAGE-ID" "REFERENCES" "CONTENT-TYPE" "IN-REPLY-TO" "REPLY-TO")] {274}
mutt_socket_read_line_d():Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mutt_socket_read_line_d():Date: 12 Oct 1999 03:59:02 -
mutt_socket_read_line_d():Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
mutt_socket_read_line_d():To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mutt_socket_read_line_d():From: freshmeat daemon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
mutt_socket_read_line_d():Subject: [fm/news] newsletter for Oct 11th 1999, 23:59
mutt_socket_read_line_d():
mutt_socket_read_line_d():)
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* 3 FETCH (FLAGS () INTERNALDATE "12-Oct-1999 11:31:09 
+0530" RFC822.SIZE 13984 BODY[HEADER.FIELDS ("DATE" "FROM" "SUBJECT" "TO" "CC" 
"MESSAGE-ID" "REFERENCES" "CONTENT-TYPE" "IN-REPLY-TO" "REPLY-TO")] {220}
mutt_socket_read_line_d():Date:   Mon, 11 Oct 1999 20:15:11 -0400 (EDT)
mutt_socket_read_line_d():From: Joe Lizzi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
mutt_socket_read_line_d():Message-Id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
mutt_socket_read_line_d():To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mutt_socket_read_line_d():Subject: Missing SCSI Disks
mutt_socket_read_line_d():
mutt_socket_read_line_d():)
mutt_socket_read_line_d():* 4 FETCH (FLAGS () INTERNALDATE "12-Oct-1999 11:53:27 
+0530" RFC822.SIZE 4676 BODY[HEADER.FIELDS ("DATE" "FROM" "SUBJECT" "TO" "CC" 
"MESSAGE-ID" "REFERENCES" "CONTENT-TY

Question about "message status flag"

1999-10-11 Thread Norbert Gruener

Hello,

I am using Mutt version 0.96.4i and I have the following question. When I go
into a mailfolder, then I can see in the index list on certain mails the
"mail status flag" like a "s" for PGP-signed  or a "P" for
PGP-encrypted. But I cannot see a "K" for `contains a PGP-key' ???  

If I go to a mail which includes a PGP key and type "v" to see the
attachments, then I see that there is a PGP-key included.  And after I
return from the attachment menu, this mail is now marked with "K"  !!!

But I think, if Mutt is able to know that a mail is signed, then it should
be able to register that the mail includes a PGP key.

Is there anything I have to "switch on" or  "define" or to "set" in my
profile?

Any help or information is appreciated.

Best Regards,

Norbert
-- 
   +--+
   | Norbert E. Gruener   E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] |
   | MPI fuer Astrophysik PGP encrypted mail preferred|
   | WWW: http://www.MPA-Garching.MPG.DE/~nog/|
   | PGPprint(RSA):  66 64 C0 D0 6F 1A 16 02  C2 C6 37 83 3A 5F 88 9B |
   | PGPprint(DH): EBBF 02ED 1B91 39C3 5FB9  4D2F 9478 E224 334C 34CD |
   +--+

 PGP signature