On Tue, 30 Aug 2011 18:06:15 +0200 Matthias Andree <mand...@freebsd.org> wrote: > Once you have the necessary error handling in place in > your .procmailrc, a .mailfilter file of equal usefulness in maildrop > is shorter and more concise.
1. In the context of a FreeBSD port, there is absolutely nothing wrong with mail/procmail as it stands. That is to say, it compiles and runs on all supported OS releases and architectures. 2. I'd hazard a guess that procmail is used (with or without a view to it's "interesting" view of error handling) on a large number of systems. Whilst there have been recent, shall we say, discussions, on the viability of the ports tree, one should not expect to be punched into a nearby wall when attempting to lose such a piece of software when the issues, such as they are, are with the software itself, not the port. 3. Particularly when there's no magic tool to convert all the .procmailrc's out there to mail/whizzy-new-thing. 4. Assuming for a minute that y'all are just on a deprecation kick, there's considerably more interesting low-hanging fruit. gtk1, qt3, kde3, gnome1, etc.. etc.. 5. Don't make me put RUN_DEPENDS= procmail:${PORTSDIR}/mail/procmail somewhere in the bowels of autotools ;) #3 is the important point. If you do want to send mail/procmail to the great bitbucket in the sky, then please provide that magic tool. I'm sure lots of folks will be willing to test it for you. -aDe _______________________________________________ freebsd-ports@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-ports To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-ports-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"