Pavel Epifanov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > (Sorry for English) > Fetchmail delivers all mail to user it run under (preferrably not root) by > using MTA (sendmail,postfix,qmail...). So the format and location are > depending > from your MTA. I do have fetchmail run every 20 minutes by cron under my local > user and have several users configured with the same mail directory to have > different signatures and reply-to's. > > --- Evgeny Rachlenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Zdravstvujte uvajaemye kollegi. > > > > Vot reshil postavit' komputer chto by on sobiral moju pochtu izo vseh > > serverov , i accountov v odin jashik , a ja by zahodil na nego i smotrel na > > vse jeto bogatstvo . > > Zapustil fetchmail , on jeto skladyvaet neponjatno kuda , mojet i ne im > > jeto nujno sdelat' , podskajite plz.. > > hochu vse chitat' mutt(om).
man fetchmail(1):line 1804 The words `here' and `there' have useful English-like sig nificance. Normally `user eric is esr' would mean that mail for the remote user `eric' is to be delivered to `esr', but you can make this clearer by saying `user eric there is esr here', or reverse it by saying `user esr here is eric there' :line 1932 Here's a version of those two with more whitespace and some noise words: poll pop.provider.net proto pop3 user "jsmith", with password secret1, is "jsmith" here; poll other.provider.net proto pop2: user "John.Smith", with password "My^Hat", is "John.Smith" here; -- /wf.