Clayton Brown wrote:
>
>I would like to remove @example.com from a list of mine.
>
>
>
>Meaning, I want to remove all the email addresses that has @example domain
>from that list.
>
>
>
>How do I do this, cause If I have would have to unsubscribe them manually it
>would take me days.
You can do
Good Morning
I am a mailman user and thank you.
I would like to remove @example.com from a list of mine.
Meaning, I want to remove all the email addresses that has @example domain
from that list.
How do I do this, cause If I have would have to unsubscribe them manually it
would take
On Jul 07, 2011, at 08:54 AM, Paul Wise wrote:
>On Wed, Jul 6, 2011 at 5:32 PM, Pavel Šimerda wrote:
>
>> Wouldn't it be nice to have some more reasonable way to present this
>> info to the user?
>
>Agreed.
>
>Does distutils have the equivalent of autoconf for checking for
>dependencies before sta
On Mon, Jul 11, 2011 at 5:47 PM, Barry Warsaw wrote:
> `master` and `runner` are a bit more problematic because they are pretty handy
> as separate commands. I don't think they belong under `bin/mailman` and since
> they're of internal use only, I would never expect them to be installed into
> /
On Mon, Jul 11, 2011 at 5:40 PM, Barry Warsaw wrote:
> I've thought about this on and off over the years and still think it's a good
> idea. No, MM3 does not have such a thing yet.
...
> Yep
Ok, great.
> but I'd like to understand the semantics first. Do messages to the list
> get bounced, an
On Jul 10, 2011, at 11:07 PM, Paul Wise wrote:
>I was looking at Mailman 3 to see how many of the Indymedia patches
>for Mailman 2 would be still needed.
>
>The first thing that struck me was how generic the files that were
>installed in $PATH. I would really recommend mm-master, mm-runner,
>mm-on
On Jul 11, 2011, at 12:22 AM, Paul Wise wrote:
>For the Indymedia Mailman 2 install, we have a patch that allowed list
>disabling (and later re-enabling). Disabled lists had their
>settings/archives saved, did not accept mail and were listed on a
>separate page to listinfo. For a long-lived large