Tomas Kuliavas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > The original message was received at Sun, 9 Nov 2003 23:38:19
> +0800from
> > ABC.mydomain.com [127.0.0.1] ----- The following addresses had
> permanent
> > fatal errors -----"|/etc/smrsh/vacation keith" (reason:
> > Service unavailable) (expanded from: )
> > ----- Transcript of session follows -----smrsh: "vacation"
> not
> > available for sendmail programs (not a file)554 5.0.0 Service
> unavailable
> >
> > Did the above error message said vacatin plugin doesnot support
> sendmail?
>
> There was some error with program used for automatic replies.
> /usr/bin/vacation can be distributed separately from sendmail.
>
> whereis vacation
> which vacation
>
> These two are commands run on unix/linux machine, not questions.
>
> Also you must have user settings in Options->Personal Information.
> --
> Tomas
>
> Here is the output for the commands.
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] root]# whereis vacation
> vacation: /usr/bin/vacation
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] root]# which vacation
> /usr/bin/which: no vacation in
> (/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/bin/X11:/usr/X11R6/bin:/root/bin)
>
> So what should I do next?
----
"whereis" locates source/binary and manuals sections for specified files.
The supplied names are first stripped of leading pathname components
and any (single) trailing extension of the form .ext, for example, .c.
Prefixes of s. resulting from use of source code control are also
dealt with. whereis then attempts to locate the desired program in a
list of standard Linux places.
----
"which" returns the pathnames of the files which would be executed in the
current environment, had its arguments been given as commands in a
strictly POSIX-conformant shell. It does this by searching the PATH
for executable files matching the names of the arguments.
----
what kind of system you have? one program says that you have binary, and
second one denies that. "which" should return only program names. It
should not say "/usr/bin/which: no vacation in path". At least mine does
not do that.
Check if you have vacation program installed in /usr/bin
ls -l /usr/bin/vacation
--
Tomas
I'm running squirrelmail 1.4.0-1 on redhat8 and the vacation plugin is 1.41. Which had been installed on /usr/share/squirrelmail/plugin and a link '/usr/share/squirrelmail/plugin/vacation' was created under /usr/bin.
Thanks,
Keith
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