>Definitely after I quit the editor. >I think _after_ the whatnow(1) prompt, as well, but it has long since >scrolled away. I don't remember the shell complaing about receiving an >unwanted 'send', so I think that whatnow received it. > >The mail did not go out to the person I was replying to, and the >copy cc'd to me also did not arrive.
Do you use "-push" to send? I almost think that no one should ever use that, but some people prefer it; it's very easy to have mail vanish that way. But, AFAICT, here's the sequence of events (this hasn't changed between 1.6 and now): - repl(1) calls the editor - Once that is done, it calls whatnow (in the same program, as a function) - If you type "send", it calls sendsbr(), which will call your postproc. If the postproc is successful, it will RENAME your draft using the backup prefix. It never deletes it. Now, if you specify -push AND -unique (don't ask me what that second flag does, I've never figured that out), before postproc is called it will rename it to a temp filename. Even then, though, it will still be around via the backup prefix. So I am really trying hard to see how the draft file could completely vanish, as nothing in nmh will ever delete it (AFAICT). --Ken _______________________________________________ Nmh-workers mailing list Nmh-workers@nongnu.org https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/nmh-workers