> EOF on Unix systems is ctrl-D. The "." to end is an SMTP-ism, which makes
> no sense with the sendmail wrapper, as it isn't speaking SMTP. Yes, we
know
> the real sendmail does it, but that doesn't mean it isn't a broken design.
>
makes sense to me... using "." to end the mail seems weird to m
FCP Wong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Even if I just type "sendmail --help", it just carriage returns into the
> > > next line and hangs there indefinitely...
> >
> > Yep. It's waiting for an eof, just as qmail-inject does.
> >
> ok... may I know what character is the exit code? usually whe
> what happens when you go: echo To: me | /var/qmail/bin/sendmail
> ?
>
Nothing happens when I do this. In fact, I've almost got everything working
except for the sendmail wrapper... This is really weird...
Wong
Thanks for the answers... gotta couple more to verify...
> > Even if I just type "sendmail --help", it just carriage returns into the
> > next line and hangs there indefinitely...
>
> Yep. It's waiting for an eof, just as qmail-inject does.
>
ok... may I know what character is the exit code? usu
On Thu, Aug 24, 2000 at 11:50:27AM +0800, FCP Wong wrote:
> Hi
>
> What am I supposed to see when I run /var/qmail/bin/sendmail from the
> command line?
Nothing except an exit code, just as you do with qmail-inject.
> Even if I just type "sendmail --help", it just carriage returns into the
> ne
Hi
What am I supposed to see when I run /var/qmail/bin/sendmail from the
command line?
Even if I just type "sendmail --help", it just carriage returns into the
next line and hangs there indefinitely... Happens too for every other
combination of options I tried... qmail-inject works fine doing "e