> > Thank you very much. I spent a while researching but I did not find the answer in searches, I did not know to look at the MULTINET manual, I used the online help thinking that was enough. I will try to be more thorough. Bill
> > I looked in the Multinet 4.3 Users Guide and found "Reply-to" in the index > referring me to page 8-10 in the Administrators Guide. There I found: > > Quote: > > Specifying the REPLY_TO Header > > The MULTINET_SMTP_REPLY_TO logical name lets you specify the value for the > RFC822 REPLY-TO: header. For example to set your Reply-To: header to > fn...@flowers.com, use the command: > > $ DEFINE MULTINET_SMTP_REPLY_TO "fn...@flowers.com" > > This logical name only affects mail agents that use the SMTP% interface > (for > example OpenVMS and DECWindows mail). > > Endquote. > > In case it is not clear, you should define this logical name in DCL before > you > run VMS MAIL and it will then apply when you send mail to an address > prefixed > by SMTP%. > > I will add that you could probably use DEFINE /SYSTEM if you want this to > apply to all users on the system or you could put the command in a users > login.com if you only want it to apply to that particular user. If you > want to get really fancy, you can use lexical functions such as for example > F$GETJPI(0, "USERNAME") to come up with a single logical name definition > that > will work correctly for any user on the system without modification. > > I used the Multinet 4.3 manual because it happened to be handy. I imagine > the same applies any later version of Multinet and might also apply to some > but not all earlier versions. > > I will also repeat the warning that I often give, that the SMTP mail > interface > provided with Multinet is functional but not comprehensive. My feeling is > that > it is mainly there to be able to tick the box that says that SMTP is > supported. > If you want a top class email setup, you should install PMDF, from the same > company. > > Regards, > Peter Coghlan. >