Re: procmail question

2002-10-23 Thread Roger
Around Wed,Oct 23 2002, at 10:47, Todd A. Jacobs, wrote: > On Tue, 22 Oct 2002, Roger wrote: > > > Actually, the MAILDIR is just a variable that doesn't set the defualt. Use > > the DEFAULT directive. As in: > > > > MAILDIR=$HOME/Mail > > DEFAULT=$MAILDIR I screwed up. Should have been: if yo

Re: procmail question

2002-10-23 Thread Todd A. Jacobs
On Tue, 22 Oct 2002, Roger wrote: > Actually, the MAILDIR is just a variable that doesn't set the defualt. Use > the DEFAULT directive. As in: > > MAILDIR=$HOME/Mail > DEFAULT=$MAILDIR Um, no. MAILDIR is the default path for delivery, DEFAULT is the default mailbox (defaults to $ORGMAIL), and O

Re: procmail question

2002-10-22 Thread Roger
Around Tue,Oct 22 2002, at 04:37, Todd A. Jacobs, wrote: > On Tue, 22 Oct 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > Pine allows me to change where it looks for mail, but is there a way to > > tell procmail to put incoming mail into a different file rather than > > /var/mail/username I would like to pi

Re: procmail question

2002-10-22 Thread Todd A. Jacobs
On Tue, 22 Oct 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Pine allows me to change where it looks for mail, but is there a way to > tell procmail to put incoming mail into a different file rather than > /var/mail/username I would like to pick up the Of course. In the delivery line, just put the path and fil

Re: procmail question

2002-10-22 Thread Andrew MacKenzie
> Hi, > I use pine for mail and fetchmail with procmail to pickup mail. > Pine allows me to change where it looks for mail, but is there > a way to tell procmail to put incoming mail into a different > file rather than /var/mail/username I would like to pick up the > mail and put it in /usr/local/l

procmail question

2002-10-22 Thread hanfamily
Hi, I use pine for mail and fetchmail with procmail to pickup mail. Pine allows me to change where it looks for mail, but is there a way to tell procmail to put incoming mail into a different file rather than /var/mail/username I would like to pick up the mail and put it in /usr/local/lib/mail so s

Re: Procmail question

2002-05-20 Thread Mike Burger
Should, yes. I've had a system or two, though, where it didn't. What I did, instead, was create a symlink in my homedir that pointed to /dev/null...call it "trashcan" I then used $HOME/trashcan, instead of /dev/null, and for whatever reason, it worked. On Sun, 19 May 2002, Bret Hughes wrote:

Procmail question

2002-05-19 Thread Bret Hughes
shouldn't this do the trick? I have never actually done this before. Never been so disgusted before either. :0: * ^From.*[EMAIL PROTECTED] /dev/null Bret ___ Redhat-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo

Re: Another Procmail Question (Solved)

2001-11-08 Thread William S. Page
The permissions on the files were 644 and changing them to 600 had no effect. However, the permissions on the account's home directory were "drwxrwxr-x" and changing them to "drwxr-xr-x" fixed the problem (the "chmod go-w,a+x ." command). Thanks. -Bill On 9 Nov 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: Another Procmail Question

2001-11-08 Thread David Talkington
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 William S. Page wrote: > I have one account on my system (RH7.1) that seems to ignore it's >procmail files. I copied a known working set of files (.procmailrc and >some basic spam removal recipes) to the account's home and changed the >ownership a

Re: Another Procmail Question

2001-11-08 Thread mikeirw
On 11-08-2001 09:02 pm, you wrote: > >I have one account on my system (RH7.1) that seems to ignore it's > procmail files. I copied a known working set of files (.procmailrc and > some basic spam removal recipes) to the account's home and changed the > ownership appropriately, but I see no e

Another Procmail Question

2001-11-08 Thread William S. Page
I have one account on my system (RH7.1) that seems to ignore it's procmail files. I copied a known working set of files (.procmailrc and some basic spam removal recipes) to the account's home and changed the ownership appropriately, but I see no evidence that procmail is being invoked (nothin

Re: Procmail Question

2000-09-22 Thread Chuck Mead
On Fri, 22 Sep 2000, Brian Schneider spewed into the bitstream: BS>I need to filter off of part of a message, how can I do this? Any help BS>would be appreciated. man procmailex -- Chuck Mead, CTO, LinuxMall.com [EMAIL PROTECTED] GnuPG Public Key Available: http://www.pgp.net/wwwkeys.html __

Procmail Question

2000-09-22 Thread Brian Schneider
I need to filter off of part of a message, how can I do this? Any help would be appreciated. Brian "If you're not one of us, you are one of them" Morpheus Brian Schneider [EMAIL PROTECTED]www.liberty.

RE: Procmail question

2000-05-25 Thread Mark Basil
You could also want to try this. :0 * $RECIP ?? ^^youmailbox@$DOMAIN { :0 [EMAIL PROTECTED] } Mark -Original Message- From: Edward Dekkers [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, May 22, 2000 8:21 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Procmail question I would

Re: Procmail question

2000-05-23 Thread Richard Harvey Chapman
On Tue, 23 May 2000, Edward Dekkers wrote: > :0c > * ^[EMAIL PROTECTED] > ! someuser@someaddress > > That's it. NOT! It's not working. Procmail is definately installed, but > doesn't seem to 'activate' to execute this rule. If you think procmail isn't even running, you may want to check the per

Procmail question

2000-05-22 Thread Edward Dekkers
I would normally ask this on the mailhelp list, but my mails to moongroup (and ONLY to moongroup) are bouncing. Basically, I'm going on holiday next month and would like a COPY of all incoming mails sent to another address. Don't worry, I'm not going to 'auto-respond' and all the rest of the crap

Re: simple procmail question

1998-05-13 Thread Eric Smith
Matt Warnock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > But I'd rather have procmail just deposit the mail (by > default) back into /var/spool/mail/matt (my system box) where I can read > it with any mail tool without customization. However, I fear this will > confuse procmail and send it in an infinite loop.

Re: simple procmail question

1998-05-12 Thread Fred Lenk
Here's one of my reciepies to have the mail forwarded to my regular mail box, as opposed to going to /dev/null for spam, or being sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED]: :0: * ^[EMAIL PROTECTED] | mail fred or instead of " | mail fred ", I can simply put the name of my mail folder "/var/spool/mail/fred" h

Re: simple procmail question

1998-05-11 Thread buntin
On Mon, 11 May 1998, Matt Warnock wrote: > Date: Mon, 11 May 1998 12:22:01 -0700 (PDT) > > I have been running procmail to archive mailing list stuff and sort > mailing list stuff from *real* mail. But I have not figured out how to > leave the regular mail alone. I presently have a default c

simple procmail question

1998-05-11 Thread Matt Warnock
On Mon, 11 May 1998, Raul Manuel Jorja wrote: > If you want to redistribute your mail to your local users you have to > use procmail and make a .procmail file like this: > > :0 > *^TO.*joe* > !joe > > :0 > *^TO.*jim* > !jim > > .. and so on... > > where joe, and jim are local users. > > do m