> > On Mon, Jul 07, 2008 at 10:52:08PM -0700, Rem P Roberti wrote:
> >
> > > > Never get mail as root. In fact never use root unless you really have
> > > > to, but that is a more general point.
> > > >
> > > Understood. But I thought this entry (root: rem) in my aliases file
> > > would t
> On Mon, Jul 07, 2008 at 10:52:08PM -0700, Rem P Roberti wrote:
>
> > > Never get mail as root. In fact never use root unless you really have
> > > to, but that is a more general point.
> > >
> > Understood. But I thought this entry (root:rem) in my aliases file
> > would take care of
On Mon, Jul 07, 2008 at 10:52:08PM -0700, Rem P Roberti wrote:
> > Never get mail as root. In fact never use root unless you really have
> > to, but that is a more general point.
> >
> Understood. But I thought this entry (root: rem) in my aliases file
> would take care of that.
>
in root's
> >
> > I have mutt installed on two other freebsd computers. I fetch pop mail
> > via getmail, and procmail puts things where they belong. I just
> > installed freebsd 7.0 on another computer with what I thought were the
> > exact same settings for all of the mail programs involved. When I try
On Mon, Jul 07, 2008 at 10:32:54PM -0700, Rem P Roberti wrote:
>
> I have mutt installed on two other freebsd computers. I fetch pop mail
> via getmail, and procmail puts things where they belong. I just
> installed freebsd 7.0 on another computer with what I thought were the
> exact same settin
I have mutt installed on two other freebsd computers. I fetch pop mail
via getmail, and procmail puts things where they belong. I just
installed freebsd 7.0 on another computer with what I thought were the
exact same settings for all of the mail programs involved. When I try
to retrieve mail I