Re: mutt sources/binaries for SunOS 4.1.3

2001-03-26 Thread Thomas E. Dickey
On Sun, 25 Mar 2001, Wayne Chapeskie wrote: > On Fri, Mar 23, 2001 at 07:35:01AM +0530, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote: > > > > > % pre-compiled binaries? > > > > > ... but I'd like to encourage you to make your binaries available for the > > > next guy :-) > > > > Speaking of that, I do have

Desktop <-> Laptop mail data exchange

2001-03-26 Thread Daniel Kollar
Hi! Some weeks ago there was a discussion about desktop <-> laptop mail data exchange. The idea was to have on both systems the same mail data. It should be possible on both systems to get/read/move/delete and post messages. The mail dir on both systems should be updated automatically. Because I

Re: vim and mutt question

2001-03-26 Thread Horace G. Friend III
On Sun, Mar 25, 2001 at 12:35:42PM -0500, Wade A. Mosely wrote: > Timothy Legant wrote: > > You might not always want to move down 6 lines. Perhaps in the future > > you will add a new header (using my_hdr) to certain messages. You might > > want to consider the following instead: > > > > set edi

Re: GPG BAD Signature

2001-03-26 Thread Horace G. Friend III
Hi Adam, I'm no expert and just taking a wild stab at this. If the verification results in a BAD Signature, that simply means that the msg you have signed has been altered in some way before reaching it's destination -- that us in the mailing list. Have you tried testing your GPG by signing a f

Mutt, procmail, and sendmail

2001-03-26 Thread Wade A. Mosely
I want to use procmail to do some pre-processing of outgoing mail before sending. I have created an rcfile for procmail that does what I want called ~/.procoutrc which does the processing I want using formail and passes the mail to sendmail for sending. It works as I expect and want if I

Re: Mutt, procmail, and sendmail

2001-03-26 Thread Wade A. Mosely
BTW, one of the main things I am trying to accomplish is changing the recipient headers ("To:", "Cc:", "Bcc:") in outgoing messages Based upon their contents. Send-hooks don't seem to work to do this. >From /usr/local/doc/mutt/manual.txt : "... note that my_hdr commands which modify recipient he

Re: vim and mutt question

2001-03-26 Thread juergen . salk
X-Priority: 3 (Normal) X-Authenticated-Sender: #[EMAIL PROTECTED] X-Authenticated-IP: [134.60.50.4] Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> X-Mailer: WWW-Mail 1.5 (Global Message Exchange) X-Flags: 0001 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit "Horace G. Friend III" <[

No Subject

2001-03-26 Thread paradox
Wade A. Mosely wrote: > My problem is that I don't know what to use for ~/.muttrc in the > $sendmail variable. I tried > > set sendmail="cat | procmail ~/.procoutrc" > > It didn't work. That Mutt appends destination addresses to > the command line appears to be the issue. I am using t

no mailbox list when changing mailboxes

2001-03-26 Thread Chung, Ha-Nyung
In index, press "c" to open other mailboxes and "?" for list. But no mailboxes are shown in mailboxes dialog(?). With the same configuration files, before works mutt correctly. but from oneday, listing mailboxes doesn't work, at least it seems to do so. mailbox type is Maildir and I use qm

Re: your mail

2001-03-26 Thread Lars Hecking
> Well, passing the message to a very simple one line script seems > to work. I made a ~/.mutt/mailout (mode +x to make it > executable): > > #!/bin/sh > cat | procmail ~/.procoutrc > # End of ~/.mutt/mailout [Splutter] Useless Use of cat.

No Subject

2001-03-26 Thread paradox
Chung, Ha-Nyung wrote: > > In index, press "c" to open other mailboxes and "?" for > list. But no mailboxes are shown in mailboxes dialog(?). > With the same configuration files, before works mutt > correctly. but from oneday, listing mailboxes doesn't > work, at least it seems to do so. >

Mutt, procmail, and sendmail

2001-03-26 Thread Wade A. Mosely
Lars Hecking wrote: > > > Well, passing the message to a very simple one line script seems > > to work. I made a ~/.mutt/mailout (mode +x to make it > > executable): > > > > #!/bin/sh > > cat | procmail ~/.procoutrc > > # End of ~/.mutt/mailout > > > [Splutter] Usele

Re: Mutt, procmail, and sendmail

2001-03-26 Thread Lars Hecking
> > [Splutter] Useless Use of cat. > > > > > > Thanks, Lars, for that marvelously helpful comment. I didn't > find any better solution on my own, though. There is none. The problem, as you stated correctly, is that mutt passes sender and recipient addresses to $sendmail on the command l

Re: Mutt, procmail, and sendmail

2001-03-26 Thread Peter Pentchev
On Mon, Mar 26, 2001 at 11:09:22AM -0500, Wade A. Mosely wrote: > Lars Hecking wrote: > > > > > Well, passing the message to a very simple one line script seems > > > to work. I made a ~/.mutt/mailout (mode +x to make it > > > executable): > > > > > > #!/bin/sh > > > cat | procm

Re: no mailbox list when changing mailboxes

2001-03-26 Thread Tim Whitehead
Here's some applicable .muttrc options set spoolfile=~/Mailbox set sort_browser=alpha set folder_format="%N %F %2l %-8.8u %-8.8g %8s %d %f" tw Le jour Tue Mar 27, 2001 at 12:26:42AM +0900, Chung, Ha-Nyung ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) a ecrit... > > In index, press "c" to open other mailboxes and "

Re: hook? [SOLVED]

2001-03-26 Thread Andre Berger
* Andre Berger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 20010325 00:09 +0100: > I wonder if it's possible to execute the following command automatically > on all but "!" and my IO mailbox: > > "^T~A\nT!(~p|~P|~Q|~F)~d>2w\nd" I finally had the right idea this morning. What I wanted to do -- marking everything not d

Re: no mailbox list when changing mailboxes

2001-03-26 Thread Tim Whitehead
Sorry, my setup is a bit different than yours. I have fetchmail pulling my mail off students.wisc.edu and qmail puts it in ~/Mailbox. Sorry again. But the folder_format might help you. tw Le jour Mon Mar 26, 2001 at 11:13:37AM -0600, Tim Whitehead ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) a ecrit... > > Here's

Re: pager display and locale

2001-03-26 Thread Wilhelm Wienemann
Hello Erika! On Mon, 26 Mar 2001, Erika Pacholleck wrote: > The funny problem looks like this (I use the german): > The date is randomly displayed wrong when it come to a diaresis. > > Mär-24 > M.r-24 > Mär-24 > M.r-24 > M.r-24 > > If I know how the components work into it, I might find a solu

Fwd: Using mutt to sort mailboxes by thread

2001-03-26 Thread Andre Majorel
I have large mailboxes (archives of Usenet groups) that I would like to sort by thread. Thought of tagging all articles in the box and saving them to another mailbox (otT^;C) but how do you do that from a shell script (not interactively) ? -- André Majorel Work: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Home: <[EMAIL

Re: Mutt, procmail, and sendmail

2001-03-26 Thread Tony Collins
On Mon, Mar 26, 2001 at 09:23:42AM -0500, Wade A. Mosely wrote: Completely off-topic, I notice that your X-Operating-System header contains the kernel version and the uptime. What have you got in your .muttrc to make it put these things in your headers? Re Tony -- Is that an African or Europ

Re: Mutt, procmail, and sendmail [OT request]

2001-03-26 Thread Tim Whitehead
There should not be a space between `` because uptime includes a space. Actually I wish uptime had better formatting. They have two spaces before the amount of users and two spaces before load average (as well as a few others). If there is a way to remedy this, I'd be much obliged. Maybe if I k

Re: GPG BAD Signature

2001-03-26 Thread Aaron Schrab
At 15:48 -0500 25 Mar 2001, Adam Sherman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > This is a MIME-formatted message. If you see this text it means that your > E-mail software does not support MIME-formatted messages. Mutt doesn't include text like the above. > --=_693-985553325-1-3 That isn't a mutt-genera

Re: GPG BAD Signature

2001-03-26 Thread Adam Sherman
On Mon, Mar 26, 2001 at 05:39:42AM -0600, Aaron Schrab wrote: > At 15:48 -0500 25 Mar 2001, Adam Sherman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > This is a MIME-formatted message. If you see this text it means that your > > E-mail software does not support MIME-formatted messages. > > Mutt doesn't include

Re: GPG BAD Signature

2001-03-26 Thread Dave Murray
Try sending one without the signature, or an attached key. Regards, Dave PGP signature

Using mutt to sort mailboxes by thread

2001-03-26 Thread Andre Majorel
I have large mailboxes (archives of Usenet groups) that I would like to sort by thread. Thought of tagging all articles in the box and saving them to another mailbox (otT^;C) but how do you do that from a shell script (not interactively) ? -- André Majorel Work: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Home: <[EMAIL

Including Reply-To address when invoking mutt from a shell script

2001-03-26 Thread Cristian Gheorghe
Hi all, I need to sent automatic messages to some users following a nightly build. Can I pass some parameter to mutt so that I can specify a Reply-To address (which, of course is different than the address that I am using to send the message originally). Thank you, Cristian __

Re: Fwd: Using mutt to sort mailboxes by thread

2001-03-26 Thread David Champion
On 2001.03.26, in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Andre Majorel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I have large mailboxes (archives of Usenet groups) that I would > like to sort by thread. Thought of tagging all articles in the > box and saving them to another mailbox (otT^;C) but how do you > do that fr

Re: vim and mutt question

2001-03-26 Thread Horace G. Friend III
On Mon, Mar 26, 2001 at 04:40:20PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > "Horace G. Friend III" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > I would like to ask a question since the search command has a > > side-effect in the editor. Since the "-c ':$;?^$'" is a search command > > for a blank line, it leav

Re: Fwd: Using mutt to sort mailboxes by thread

2001-03-26 Thread Andre Majorel
On 2001-03-26 17:30 -0600, David Champion wrote: > On 2001.03.26, in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, > "Andre Majorel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I have large mailboxes (archives of Usenet groups) that I would > > like to sort by thread. Thought of tagging all articles in the > > box and saving the

Re: Mutt, procmail, and sendmail

2001-03-26 Thread Tony Collins
On Mon, Mar 26, 2001 at 05:54:15PM -0500, Wade A. Mosely wrote: > I use: > > my_hdr X-Operating-System: `uname -smr` `uptime | sed s/.*up/up/ \ >| sed s/,[[:space:]0-9]*users.*$//` > > It's probably clumsy, but it works! =) I don't mind how dodgy it looks, it works

Re: pager display and locale

2001-03-26 Thread Erika Pacholleck
( Mär-26-2001 ) Wilhelm Wienemann <--: > On Mon, 26 Mar 2001, Erika Pacholleck wrote: > > The funny problem looks like this (I use the german): > > The date is randomly displayed wrong when it come to a diaresis. > > Mär-24 > > M.r-24 > > Mär-24 > > M.r-24 > What's telling you the 'locale' command

Re: Mutt, procmail, and sendmail

2001-03-26 Thread Wade A. Mosely
Tony Collins wrote: > Completely off-topic, I notice that your X-Operating-System header contains > the kernel version and the uptime. What have you got in your .muttrc to > make it put these things in your headers? I use: my_hdr X-Operating-System: `uname -smr` `uptime | sed s/.*up/up/ \