On Tue, Feb 04, 2014 at 09:50:17AM +0100, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 04, 2014 at 12:37:14AM +0100, Alexander Hall wrote:
> > On 02/04/14 00:27, Simon Drewitz wrote:
> > >Hi misc@,
> > >
> > >I have set up mail(1) so that it forwards mails such as the output of
> > >/etc/daily to my mail ac
On Tue, Feb 04, 2014 at 12:37:14AM +0100, Alexander Hall wrote:
> On 02/04/14 00:27, Simon Drewitz wrote:
> >Hi misc@,
> >
> >I have set up mail(1) so that it forwards mails such as the output of
> >/etc/daily to my mail account and now I want to encrypt these mails
> >using my public gpg-key. The
On 02/04/14 00:27, Simon Drewitz wrote:
> Hi misc@,
>
> I have set up mail(1) so that it forwards mails such as the output of
> /etc/daily to my mail account and now I want to encrypt these mails
> using my public gpg-key. The best solution I have come up with is
> changing these two lines at the
On 02/04/14 00:27, Simon Drewitz wrote:
Hi misc@,
I have set up mail(1) so that it forwards mails such as the output of
/etc/daily to my mail account and now I want to encrypt these mails
using my public gpg-key. The best solution I have come up with is
changing these two lines at the end of /et
Hi misc@,
I have set up mail(1) so that it forwards mails such as the output of
/etc/daily to my mail account and now I want to encrypt these mails
using my public gpg-key. The best solution I have come up with is
changing these two lines at the end of /etc/daily:
- } 2>&1 | mail -s "`hostname` d
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