I once wrote a very simple perl module which basically did outbound mail
queueing for very simple needs... But then I discovered my needs were a
bit more complex. LOL...
I second Ask's question - what's wrong with using exim?
David Favor wrote:
I'm looking for a simple alternative to exim,
On Tue, 2010-14-09 at 10:08 -0400, Matt Sergeant wrote:
I once wrote a very simple perl module which basically did outbound mail
queueing for very simple needs... But then I discovered my needs were a
bit more complex. LOL...
I second Ask's question - what's wrong with using exim?
I think
On Tue, 14 Sep 2010, David Favor wrote:
The problem is two fold.
1) I could never get a straight answer about the correct
configuration from the exim folks.
2) The config I have works for weeks to months, then develops
odd (bitrot) challenges which seem to relate to DNS MX server
Matt Sergeant wrote:
I once wrote a very simple perl module which basically did outbound mail
queueing for very simple needs... But then I discovered my needs were a
bit more complex. LOL...
I second Ask's question - what's wrong with using exim?
David Favor wrote:
I'm looking for a simple
Thoughts on the following changes to smtp-forward? These diffs were taken
against the svn smtp-forward checked out yesterday.
Thanks.
--- smtp-forward 2010-09-13 17:16:07.516676585 -0400
+++ /tmp/smtp-forward 2010-09-14 13:40:37.436676584 -0400
@@ -20,6 +20,13 @@
=cut
use Net::SMTP;
+use
On Sep 14, 2010, at 7:49, David Favor wrote:
My primary challenge with exim is it's difficult to understand
configuration system and the random nature of exim suffering
from bitrot.
We're using qmail at perl.org and at work we use postfix (because it came with
the box) and both are just
Hi,
On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 7:17 PM, Ask Bjørn Hansen a...@develooper.com wrote:
On Sep 14, 2010, at 7:49, David Favor wrote:
My primary challenge with exim is it's difficult to understand
configuration system and the random nature of exim suffering
from bitrot.
We're using qmail at