At 1153475703 past the epoch, Derek Broughton wrote:
> And to answer the actual question, Ritesh, the problem
> seems to be with your understanding of Maildirs. NEVER
> deliver mail to the "cur" directory. Incoming mail goes
> to the "new" subdirectory.
Indeed: additionally, cur or new should no
On Sat, Jul 22, 2006 at 06:34:41PM +0530, Ritesh Raj Sarraf wrote:
> Michael Olbrich on Saturday 22 Jul 2006 14:55 wrote:
>
> > /var/mail/ unless ORGMAIL or DEFAULT is set (man procmailrc).
>
> Yes. So my .procmailrc, at that time, had Maildir/cur as DEFAULT.
> The procmail logs showed that the m
Michael Olbrich on Saturday 22 Jul 2006 14:55 wrote:
> /var/mail/ unless ORGMAIL or DEFAULT is set (man procmailrc).
Yes. So my .procmailrc, at that time, had Maildir/cur as DEFAULT.
The procmail logs showed that the mail was copied there. But there was no such
file as mentioned in the procmail l
On Sat, Jul 22, 2006 at 01:45:17AM +0530, Ritesh Raj Sarraf wrote:
> > You needn't consider the cur/new stuff in procmail. Simply say Maildir/
> >
> This is something I was missing. My .procmailrc has only "Maildir" and not the
> trailing "/"
The trailing "/" is only necessary if the mailbox does
Hi Ritesh
My first recipe is:-
:0 c : $HOME/inc.lock
* ^From:.*
* ^Subject:.*
*!X-Spam-Status:
$HOME/mail/incm.`date +%Y.%m`
It's there to keep a copy of all my incoming email. I only ever look at
it when if I accidentally delete a message in my Inbox,or mess up a
procmail recipe,all too easy t
Derek Broughton on Friday 21 Jul 2006 18:18 wrote:
> Sure it is - but it's within our rights to make him at least use google to
> find the answer when we send it back to the list. I won't CC posters who
> can't be bothered to subscribe, either. The list is supposed to be
> collaborative, and ask
Alexandre Rossi on Friday 21 Jul 2006 17:16 wrote:
>
>> 3) Why is this happening and where might have the lost mails gone ?
>
> Try to put a catch-all rule at the end of your .procmailrc .
> Did you put a slash at the end of your procmail rule to instruct
> procmail to use the Maildir format?
>
On Fri, Jul 21, 2006 at 09:48:11 -0300, Derek Broughton wrote:
> Florian Kulzer wrote:
>
> > On Fri, Jul 21, 2006 at 16:58:13 +0900, Gernot Hassenpflug wrote:
>
> >> Listen up! If you want answers to your personal troubles, pay a
> >> consultant. On this list people collaborate on solutions to pr
Florian Kulzer wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 21, 2006 at 16:58:13 +0900, Gernot Hassenpflug wrote:
>> Listen up! If you want answers to your personal troubles, pay a
>> consultant. On this list people collaborate on solutions to problems, and
>> share the answers. You cannot expect people to put in an ext
Anders Breindahl wrote:
> I'm using a similar setup, with the exception that I'm not using
> maildir (what is it good for, again?):
I know that was in jest, but for the benefit of newbies, it's the _reliable_
way to keep mail. mbox is a seriously flawed concept.
--
derek
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, e
Mihira Fernando wrote:
> Ritesh Raj Sarraf wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> On my laptop I run Postfix to send mails. I receive mails from my
>> gmail account using fetchmail.
> [snip]
>
> Why bother with all this ? Use an email client like Thunderbird directly
> with gmail to handle your mail.
>
Because it
Hi,
On my laptop I run Postfix to send mails. I receive mails from my
gmail account using fetchmail.
I'm using Maildir format for mail storage. In Postfix, I'm using
procmail for mail delivery.
I've also set certain rules in my .procmailrc file to filter mails.
I use the very same setup for u
> On 7/21/06, Mihira Fernando <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Ritesh Raj Sarraf wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > On my laptop I run Postfix to send mails. I receive mails from my
> > > gmail account using fetchmail.
> > [snip]
> >
> > Why bother with all this ? Use an email client like Thunderbird direc
I don't think that using postfix for such a mail system is good. It's
enough to use nbsmtp or esmtp, while delivering mail via fetchmail and
procmail.
On Fri, Jul 21, 2006 at 01:05:42PM +0530, Ritesh Raj Sarraf wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On my laptop I run Postfix to send mails. I receive mails from my
>
On 7/21/06, Johannes Wiedersich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
To OP: This is not laptop specific. You might have better asked at
debian-user.
I'm asking this to know how the laptop users handle mails. Surely most
people will having multiple accounts and fetching mails to the laptop.
You can s
Gernot Hassenpflug wrote:
> Listen up! If you want answers to your personal troubles, pay a consultant.
> On this list people collaborate on solutions to problems, and share the
> answers. You cannot expect people to put in an extra Cc just for you,
> do your bit and subscribe to the list. If you d
On Fri, Jul 21, 2006 at 16:58:13 +0900, Gernot Hassenpflug wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > On my laptop I run Postfix to send mails. I receive mails from my
> > gmail account using fetchmail. /snipped/
>
> Listen up! If you want answers to your personal troubles, pay a consultant.
> On this list people co
On 2006-07-21 1305, Ritesh Raj Sarraf wrote:
> On my laptop I run Postfix to send mails. I receive mails from my
> gmail account using fetchmail.
>
> I'm using Maildir format for mail storage. In Postfix, I'm using
> procmail for mail delivery.
> I've also set certain rules in my .procmailrc file
On 7/21/06, Mihira Fernando <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Ritesh Raj Sarraf wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On my laptop I run Postfix to send mails. I receive mails from my
> gmail account using fetchmail.
[snip]
Why bother with all this ? Use an email client like Thunderbird directly
with gmail to handle your m
Ritesh Raj Sarraf wrote:
Hi,
On my laptop I run Postfix to send mails. I receive mails from my
gmail account using fetchmail.
[snip]
Why bother with all this ? Use an email client like Thunderbird directly
with gmail to handle your mail.
--
Random Quotes From Megas XLR
Coop: You see? The my
> Hi,
>
> On my laptop I run Postfix to send mails. I receive mails from my
> gmail account using fetchmail. /snipped/
Listen up! If you want answers to your personal troubles, pay a consultant.
On this list people collaborate on solutions to problems, and share the
answers. You cannot expect peo
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