On 9/15/06, David Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Forget it, I gave up on ssmtp as it is the problem. I've now gone to postfix
and it is so much easier. Setting up postfix involed 3 simple steps. Setting
relayhost in /etc/postfix/main.cf and creating .forward files in root and
normal user direct
On 9/14/06, David Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
Hmm, it turns out that setting MAILTO=root in my own user's crontab makes it send mail. MAILTO=root is already in /etc/cron/crontab by the way so this is all very strange.
I tried setting MAILTO=david and that didn't work. I decided ssmtp might
On 9/14/06, David Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 9/14/06, Neil Bothwick <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Thu, 14 Sep 2006 14:43:30 -0700, David Grant wrote:> Cron is sending out an email for jobs run as user root, but not for cron> jobs run as my normal user? Yet the funny thing is, when cron ru
On 9/14/06, Neil Bothwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Thu, 14 Sep 2006 14:43:30 -0700, David Grant wrote:> Cron is sending out an email for jobs run as user root, but not for cron> jobs run as my normal user? Yet the funny thing is, when cron runs jobs
> as normal user, it still actually sends th
On Thu, 14 Sep 2006 14:43:30 -0700, David Grant wrote:
> Cron is sending out an email for jobs run as user root, but not for cron
> jobs run as my normal user? Yet the funny thing is, when cron runs jobs
> as normal user, it still actually sends the mail to root
> (see /etc/crontab).
You seem to
Cron is sending out an email for jobs run as user root, but not for cron jobs run as my normal user? Yet the funny thing is, when cron runs jobs as normal user, it still actually sends the mail to root (see /etc/crontab). And on the command line, I see the same thing either way:
Sep 14 14:43:01 son
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