ged items" operation. Next, hit "s" to save the
messages to a folder:
t
t
t
;s
tags three items in the index and saves them all to a specified folder.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg31928/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
t's on). If you
DO want to use fetchmail, you could still do it if POP3 is set up on the
Exchange server. The one thing you will get nailed on is mettings and
appointments, there is still no good way to deal with this through mutt.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg31894/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
* Elimar Riesebieter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002-10-01 20:54]:
> On Thu, 26 Sep 2002 the mental interface of
> David Rock told:
>
> > * Michael Leone <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002-09-26 13:17]:
> > > Gregory Seidman said:
> [...]
> >
> > > Goo
t integrates with LDAP, but I know I have used
> Outlook Express to query a GAL via LDAP. If you need to configure a
> firewall or anything, LDAP access is port 389, I believe.
Look for muttldapquery.pl in the contribs. It does a good job connecting
to the LDAP on the Exchange server.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg31367/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
ll mails that other people have replied to *your*
emails, duh. I have to learn how to read.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg31118/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
* Johan Svedberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002-09-22 18:24]:
> On Sun, Sep 22, 2002 at 11:10:08AM -0500, David Rock wrote:
> > How about:
> > folder-hook . "color index green black '~Q'"
> >
> > According to section 4.2:
> > ~Q m
ailinglist has several people from *acc.umu.se alot of "wrong" mails
> get colored.
>
> So basically what I'm wondering is that if there is some way to get mutt
> to do "the right thing"?
How about:
folder-hook . "color index green black '~Q
ditor=vi"?
> now, that's a surprise.
>
> set editor="vi -u none"
> set editor="/usr/bin/vi -u none"
>
> any difference there?
I think he is referring to "explicite" as meaning setting editor= to
something, rather than take the editor default.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg31038/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
* Sven Guckes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002-09-17 16:18]:
> Sven [who keeps wondering if the maillists about other
>mailers get to see such requests *ever*]
There are other mailers?
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg30971/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
* Johan Almqvist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002-09-12 21:10]:
> * David Rock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [020912 21:02]:
> > When I group reply to a message, is there any way to remove my own
> > address from the recipient list?
>
> Mutt should do this for you if you have s
I know this has come up before, but I can't find it anywhere:
When I group reply to a message, is there any way to remove my own
address from the recipient list?
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg30933/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
Not exactly what you want, I think, but you could use -a and send it as
an attachment instead.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg30926/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
onnecting to Exchange 5.5 IMAP, no domain
information is necessary. Also, I didn't happen to notice what version of Mutt
you are using. The 1.2 branch has really bad IMAP support. You might want to
try the 1.3 or 1.4 branches if you aren't using them already.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ntab. The path
statement is rarely the same for your normal environment and your cron
environment. Also, you should be getting cron error messages mailed to
your mail spool. If not, try adding MAILTO=userid to your crontab to
force it. This way, you should be able to track down what it's doing (or
not doing).
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Wouldn't you just use my_hdr From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] to cover most of
this problem?
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
een.
>
> --Greg
Wow, I have been trying to figure this one out for a long time, thanks!
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg30111/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
? I have tried Star/OpenOffice
and Kword, but I was not aware of Abiword working with Word docs.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
E from mail to mail, set this
variable to ask-no or ask-yes.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
< /dev/null
Not sure about signing, though. Maybe setting up an auto_sign in muttrc?
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg28452/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
gt; echo memo | mutt $USER
> CTRl-D leaves shell
> done :-)
>
> you can make this a shell script, too:
> $ cat memo
> echo $* | mutt $USER
> $ memo buy cookies
Or even do it within mutt's shell escaping:
!echo memo | mutt $USER
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg27504/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
as you save to different
folders. Is there a way to track a thread across different folders
(maybe by message ids)?
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
n up
behind me. What you are probably looking for is "no".
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg26903/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
cs ;-).
http://junkfilter.zer0.org/
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg26819/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
ar in Evolution.
>
> http://www.ximian.com/products/connector/
>
It would be even nicer if there was a connector product that worked with
mutt instead of Evolution so that you could reply to appointments from
Outlook clients without using the web client or vmware.
--
David Rock
[EMAI
#x27;ll need to set
> PYTHONPATH to the lib directory of whatever you are using. This will let
> you run a script like lib/battlemech/design.py.
Win32 Python by default gets it's PYTHONPATH from the registry. Using a
PYTHONPATH environment variable will work, though.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg25617/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
in Windows, but not too
difficult. Cygwin also has a port of XFree86 4.1.0 that works pretty
well for Windows, and it's a lot cheaper than VMWare (it's free ;-)
http://www.cygwin.com/
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg24910/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
if you are using Exchange 2000 at work, the
client piece of Evolution (Ximian Gnome) is supposed to work fairly well
as an Outlook replacement, but it does cost money to get it (about $70
per seat, i think).
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ith mutt
> >and how this must be done? Is there a filter one can call from the
> >.muttrc-file?
I am using junkfilter and have been pretty happy with it.
http://junkfilter.zer0.org/
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg24590/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
this
> problem?
Are you always having problems deleting mails in this file? Maybe the
file is marked read-only? Try toggling this with the "%" keybinding.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg24297/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
On Mon, Feb 04, 2002 at 10:54:56PM -0600, Jeremy Blosser wrote:
> On Feb 04, David Rock [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
>
> Well, that's not the number one problem from me. I can use webmail to
> respond to and send appointments well enough, but I'd rather not have to
>
away from mutt, Evolution is supposed to have an
Outlook connection piece, but for sale only. I assume this is an
Exchange server licensing issue or just a way for Ximian to make some
money to keep themselves going. Unfortunately, this would mean not using
mutt. Isn't that missing the point?
On Sat, Jan 26, 2002 at 02:08:24PM -0800, Will Yardley wrote:
> David Rock wrote:
>
> > Looks like I found what the problem was. It appears to be related to
> > the format of the Maildir folders. What I would do with mbox if I
> > didn't have an existing folder was
idn't* do was create the subdirectory structure underneath (cur new
tmp).
I created the appropriate subdirs and this fixed everything.
As for errors in my .muttrc, thanks for pointing them out. just because
I was getting the result I wanted doesn't mean it was working correctly
;-)
e ~/.mutt/aliases
#Header line formatting for reading
ignore *
unignore From:
unignore To:
unignore Subject:
unignore Reply-To:
#Header lines
my_hdr From: David Rock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
my_hdr Reply-To: David Rock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
#parameter settings
set mbox_type=Maildir
set pa
e problem above, my
/var/spool/mail/username does not ask to move to my mbox location
anymore, even if I leave ~/Mail/inbox as an mbox format. What's going
on?
Thanks
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg23824/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
P to access the Exchange server at work and have been pretty
happy with it. You MUST be using a more current mutt, though (1.2.5i is
SEVERELY lacking in IMAP support)
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg23507/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
I was just wondering what the real differences were between maildir and
mbox formats? I know mbox is an appended file while maildir is a
separate directory for each mail (each what, exactly)?
What are the benefits of using one type over the other?
Thanks.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED
nd
bind using sasl authentication.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg23198/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
other nonsense to
reply to it, but this leaves me with a situation where ALL emails are
marked as read all the time because fetchmail polled the server, so it
becomes less obvious which emails are new.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg22979/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
has anyone seen a calendaring piece that will allow you to
respond to appointment requests from m$ exchange? From what I
understand, Evolution has an Exchange connector piece that you can
purchase, but I really want nothing to do with Evolution if I can help
it (although *anything* is better than Lookou
On Thu, Dec 27, 2001 at 02:17:53PM +0100, René Clerc wrote:
>
> And, since you're signing your list email, please upload your public
> key to the keyservers. So did I. Err... I did, didn't I? ;)
Yeah, you did ;-)
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg21992/pgp0.p
ng the current message as a template, or if
your mailbox file isn't too large, you could use :r within vim to read a
file into the current file.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
em all
> together.
>
> If you bounce a message that has a .doc attachment, the recipient gets a
> message with a .doc attachment.
This is the same result I get. I actually used bounce before I
discovered the mime_forward et al settings to pass along attachments.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTEC
g on this.
If you know that it's going to an Exchange user AND you are using vim,
you can call gpg through vim to ascii armor the text and send it as
plain text instead of encrypted. Then the Exchange server won't mangle
it.
(in vim)
:%!gpg -eas
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
msg20473/pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
d like they would if you
pull the info down using pop3. Is there a way, using mutt, to respond
to meeting requests?
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
_
Forward your email to your WAP phone at www.mail-x-change.com
... ;-)
You can use "Q" to query an external program for addresses. I do this
at work with a perl script that calls ldapsearch.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
_
Swap jobs without having to swap email addresses at www.mail-x-change.com
ot;!}par" to format until the end of the
paragraph) or set 'formatprg' to "par".
This would suggest that full justification is also not possible within
vim natively. I don't have par installed, so I can't test to see if it
would do it.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP signature
ack is you
need to know when it's necessary to do it ;-)
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
hanged to GnuPG. I guess it doesn't include my
> > key in the encryption by default. What's the prefered way of configuring
> > this with mutt?
I use this in my ~/.gnupg/options file:
encrypt-to
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
mutt # This sets the folder mutt
# to be the destination of
# the read mail when you leave
# the spool folder.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP signature
can work with stdin and
stdout. To be fair, I don't know how much of the same kind of thing
Emacs is capable of. I still think it's a great editor, but it's
awfully hard to go back ;-)
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP signature
On Mon, Aug 20, 2001 at 01:49:15PM -0400, darren chamberlain wrote:
> David Rock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said something to this effect on 08/20/2001:
> >
> > It's definitely not a failing of Postfix, I'm using it right now. ;-)
>
> David,
>
> My solu
ministrative decision
> on the part of the sysadmin, and not a postfix failing. My
> solution was: a) install procmail in $HOME (including formail)
> and b) run this shell script to start mutt:
It's definitely not a failing of Postfix, I'm using it right now. ;-)
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Fri, Aug 17, 2001 at 07:04:31PM -0700, Will Yardley wrote:
> David Rock wrote:
> > You should be able to remove his key from your keyring. I would
> > think that would fix it.
>
> yes that's what i would think too. but it doesn't appear to be there as
>
en
> receiving a message from him, but then get an error like this:
You should be able to remove his key from your keyring. I would
think that would fix it.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
an page, the option is '-E' (--pretty-print)
and the modifier is 'mail' which is a language filter for how
enscript should preprocess the print object.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
d your message cleartext, but ASCII armor it
before saving it. The way I do this is when using VIM to edit the
email I then use this commandline:
:%!gpg -esa
This will then prompt you for a key userid and return with an ASCII
armored version of your message. Then all you have to do is send it
as a normal clear message.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
you leave the mutt-spool folder. The trick is
to get the messages to mutt-spool in the first place. I use procmail for
that. I don't think there is any other good way for mutt to do it
itself.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
depreciated like the quad-option, so it's less likely to
disappear in the future.
BTW, this is an example of some cool stuff about vi. You can run any
text through any filter you want, not just gpg. If you aren't aware of
this, I suggest you read up on it, too. ;-)
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP signature
box-hook python-web-spool =python-web
mbox-hook vnc-list-spool=vnc-list
mbox-hook test-spool=inbox
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP signature
gt; for mutt says nothing about the muttrc file and there's no man page for
> muttrc, so I'm coming up with parameters from people's examples.
look at the man page for muttrc, not just the one for mutt.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP signature
at using the key instead of the Backspace key works
when the Backspace key doesn't. The key has always worked for me
to scroll down one line.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP signature
tt
to define which folders mutt should look in for new mail. I use
procmail to put the mail in these spool files. If I have new mail in
any of my spool files, pressing 'c' pops up the first one it finds and
then if there are more with mail, pressing 'c' again goes to the next o
have your session open
long enough for the mailcheck to take place, AND it displays only after
you do something (e.g. hit return, ls, whatever). It's not perfect, but
it's better than nothing.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
PGP signature
ge so that, when you
encrypt a message to someone else, it automatically encrypts to your id, too.
That way, you can read what you wrote later on.
Normally, this is only necessary if you are creating a copy of your
outgoing message (outbox, sent-mail, whatever) or if you are Cc-ing
to yourself.
--
Davi
ve
mail":~/shell-mail?"$_ has mail!"'
Bash supplies a default value for this variable,
but the location of the user mail files that it
uses is system dependent (e.g., /var/mail/$USER).
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED
on't find what you need until
after it smacks you in the nose ;-)
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-
version 3.12
GIT$>CS$ d-(?) s+:+>+: a- C++$ UL++> P+ L++(+++)>$
E---(-) W(+)-- N++ o? K- w--()$ O+ M-@ V-- PS PE Y PGP++@ t++@
5++@ X- R(+++) tv(
will be unable to read what you wrote.
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-
version 3.12
GIT$>CS$ d-(?) s+:+>+: a- C++$ UL++> P+ L++(+++)>$
E---(-) W(+)-- N++ o? K- w--()$ O+ M-@ V-- PS PE Y PGP++@ t++@
5++@ X- R(+++) tv(+) b+ DI++ D++ G e+(*)>
anaged to do
> so far is generate a key pair. Is there a pgp=on option that I should be
> putting in my ~/.muttrc, or something?
>
After you compose a message, try hitting "p" to bring up the encryption
menu, which should include sign, encrypt, etc.
You can mail me directly if yo
t; Pine(Ugh!) to read the mail in my ~/mail/ directory.
My first guess is that postfix is using a different default location for
the mail spool file.
check your muttrc for a set folder=~/Mail, maybe?
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-
version 3.12
GIT$>CS$ d-(?) s+:+>
ut how would it know if I'm moving to
> another thread or simply another message in the same thread?
There must be a way, since the ^d deletes an entire thread
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-
version 3.12
GIT$>CS$ d-(?) s+:+>+: a- C++$ UL++> P+ L
endmail logs in /var/log/maillog
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-
version 3.12
GIT$>CS$ d-(?) s+:+>+: a- C++$ UL++> P+ L++(+++)>$
E---(-) W(+)-- N++ o? K- w--()$ O+ M-@ V-- PS PE Y PGP++@ t++@
5++@ X- R(+++) tv(+) b+ DI++ D++ G e+(*)>
>
> What do I have to do ?
> Was there any option to include during the compiling phase?
What does your .muttrc look like?
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-
version 3.12
GIT$>CS$ d-(?) s+:+>+: a- C++$ UL++> P+ L++(+++)>$
E---(-) W(+)-- N+
Try using postfix instead of sendmail. The configuration is a lot easier.
http://www.postfix.org
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-
version 3.12
GIT$>CS$ d-(?) s+:+>+: a- C++$ UL++> P+ L++(+++)>$
E---(-) W(+)-- N++ o? K- w--()$ O+ M-@ V-- PS P
utgoing
mail to some application. You also lose some mail parsing capability
( a la procmail ).
--
David Rock
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-
version 3.12
GIT$>CS$ d-(?) s+:+>+: a- C++$ UL++> P+ L++(+++)>$
E---(-) W(+)-- N++ o? K- w--()$ O+ M-@ V-- PS PE Y
t; anyone tell what to do?
>
> Might be best to send the mail straight to me - the digest takes a day
> or to arrive.
Perhaps you need to verify what email address the system has you listed under. It is
possbile that the address you are sending your request from does not match the addr
76 matches
Mail list logo