upon has to be able to write to
your message store. When we built our imap solution, we decided on Courier
because we could do all sorts of neet things directly to its message store
with common tools. IIRC, most of the other imap servers use their own
format.
--
Jacob Kuntz
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[E
ies if
> it is interfaced through imap protocol.
>
I don't know why you would want to do it with mutt. There are tools on
http://cr.yp.to for doing this.
--
Jacob Kuntz
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://underworld.net/~jake
ds most common mailbox formats,
including Maildir. It also has the nice side effect of writing the Lines:
header.
--
Jacob Kuntz
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://underworld.net/~jake
ogram in the unix world, does not speak
smtp. It calls the program sendmail directly and pipes the message to it.
You want to install a sendmail replacement designed for this purpose. Look
for ssmtp on freshmeat.
--
Jacob Kuntz
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://underworld.net/~jake
from the secret journal of Jacob Kuntz ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> I've been using imap with mutt for some time, but there is one thing that I
> still can't figure out. How do I tell mutt to save sent messages to an imap
> folder?
>
> I have attched my .muttrc, with the c
I've been using imap with mutt for some time, but there is one thing that I
still can't figure out. How do I tell mutt to save sent messages to an imap
folder?
I have attched my .muttrc, with the comments stripped out.
--
Jacob Kuntz
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTE