[newbie] Thank you to all that replied - that little script done the trick very groovy.....!

2003-11-15 Thread Paul Downey
Well I tried the little script, and with a few tweeks, I managed to get it
to do what I have been wanting all along...?
many many thanks to all that replied to my emails to the newbie lists.
another happy Linux user  (newbie.)

I am slowly weening my self off using Microsoft's soft ( hope that comment's
not too taboo).

Cheers.

Paul.


Could a small script like this help?

-
#!/bin/sh

# To activate the connection
ping -c 4 pop.myisp.com  /dev/null

# Wait 30 seconds
sleep 30s

# fetch you mails
/usr/bin/fetchmail -v -t 200 -D mydomain.co.uk -F
-

Try pinging pop.myisp.com to find out if the dial on demand connection
is activated.

If so, use the script in a cron job instead of calling fetchmail.

HTH

Adolfo


- Original Message - 
From: Adolfo Bello [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: MDK Mandrake [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, November 15, 2003 10:39 PM
Subject: Re: [newbie] Many thank's for your reply.


 On Sat, 2003-11-15 at 16:05, Derek Jennings wrote:
  On Saturday 15 Nov 2003 7:37 pm, Paul Downey wrote:
   Hi Derek,
  
   Thanks ever so much for your speedy reply, Your suggestions are great,
   If I understand you correctly, your suggestion / solution implies that
the
   dial-up /  ppp connection is running on the same machine that
fetchmail is.
   Therefore the dial up( if-up.local ) script calls fetchmail when it
has
   brought the modem link up...!
  
   I am not sure if I made my self clear, my apoligies...
   My dial-up connection is on another box ( a smoothwall / firewall )
and it
   is this box that has a modem
   attached to act as my gateway device.  ( dial on demand. )
  
   I run fetchmail on my mandrake 9.0 work station, and it times out with
a
   dns error
   I think this is due to the amout of time that the smoothwall box takes
to
   dial up my isp?
  
   I have looked into my Reply To setting in my LookOut Express
   Once again many thanks.
  
   Paul
  
  
 
  Ok Well in that case  you will not like my second suggestion either.
Running
  fetchmail  as a daemon would cause  your firewall to redial the modem
every 3
  minutes :-(
 
  I assume the firewall saves the packets it has received while it is
waiting
  for the modem to dial, so does the 3rd solution help?  (Using an
explicit IP
  address in fetchmail configuration)
 
  The other solution that comes to mind is to run fetchmail on your
firewall and
  save your mail on there. You could  run your cron job on the firewall
itself.
 
  derek

 Could a small script like this help?

 -
 #!/bin/sh

 # To activate the connection
 ping -c 4 pop.myisp.com  /dev/null

 # Wait 30 seconds
 sleep 30s

 # fetch you mails
 /usr/bin/fetchmail -v -t 200 -D mydomain.co.uk -F
 -

 Try pinging pop.myisp.com to find out if the dial on demand connection
 is activated.

 If so, use the script in a cron job instead of calling fetchmail.

 HTH

 Adolfo










 Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
 Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com



Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com


Re: [newbie] Thank you to all that replied - that little script done the trick very groovy.....!

2003-11-15 Thread Adolfo Bello
On Sat, 2003-11-15 at 19:46, Paul Downey wrote:
 Well I tried the little script, and with a few tweeks, I managed to get it
 to do what I have been wanting all along...?
 many many thanks to all that replied to my emails to the newbie lists.
 another happy Linux user  (newbie.)
 
 I am slowly weening my self off using Microsoft's soft ( hope that comment's
 not too taboo).
 
 Cheers.
 
 Paul.
 
 
 Could a small script like this help?
 
 -
 #!/bin/sh
 
 # To activate the connection
 ping -c 4 pop.myisp.com  /dev/null
 
 # Wait 30 seconds
 sleep 30s
 
 # fetch you mails
 /usr/bin/fetchmail -v -t 200 -D mydomain.co.uk -F
 -
 
 Try pinging pop.myisp.com to find out if the dial on demand connection
 is activated.
 
 If so, use the script in a cron job instead of calling fetchmail.
 
 HTH
 
 Adolfo
 
 
 - Original Message - 
 From: Adolfo Bello [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: MDK Mandrake [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Saturday, November 15, 2003 10:39 PM
 Subject: Re: [newbie] Many thank's for your reply.
 
 
  On Sat, 2003-11-15 at 16:05, Derek Jennings wrote:
   On Saturday 15 Nov 2003 7:37 pm, Paul Downey wrote:
Hi Derek,
   
Thanks ever so much for your speedy reply, Your suggestions are great,
If I understand you correctly, your suggestion / solution implies that
 the
dial-up /  ppp connection is running on the same machine that
 fetchmail is.
Therefore the dial up( if-up.local ) script calls fetchmail when it
 has
brought the modem link up...!
   
I am not sure if I made my self clear, my apoligies...
My dial-up connection is on another box ( a smoothwall / firewall )
 and it
is this box that has a modem
attached to act as my gateway device.  ( dial on demand. )
   
I run fetchmail on my mandrake 9.0 work station, and it times out with
 a
dns error
I think this is due to the amout of time that the smoothwall box takes
 to
dial up my isp?
   
I have looked into my Reply To setting in my LookOut Express
Once again many thanks.
   
Paul
   
   
  
   Ok Well in that case  you will not like my second suggestion either.
 Running
   fetchmail  as a daemon would cause  your firewall to redial the modem
 every 3
   minutes :-(
  
   I assume the firewall saves the packets it has received while it is
 waiting
   for the modem to dial, so does the 3rd solution help?  (Using an
 explicit IP
   address in fetchmail configuration)
  
   The other solution that comes to mind is to run fetchmail on your
 firewall and
   save your mail on there. You could  run your cron job on the firewall
 itself.
  
   derek
 
  Could a small script like this help?
 
  -
  #!/bin/sh
 
  # To activate the connection
  ping -c 4 pop.myisp.com  /dev/null
 
  # Wait 30 seconds
  sleep 30s
 
  # fetch you mails
  /usr/bin/fetchmail -v -t 200 -D mydomain.co.uk -F
  -
 
  Try pinging pop.myisp.com to find out if the dial on demand connection
  is activated.
 
  If so, use the script in a cron job instead of calling fetchmail.
 
  HTH
 
  Adolfo
 

Glad to know you got your problem solved.

See you around,

Adolfo


Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com