On Tue, Feb 08, 2000 at 12:43:19PM +0000, Green J M K wrote:
I have seen Debian installing before, asking about fetchmail, sendmail, god knows what else. That actually scared the sh*t out of me, since I've already had one install when sendmail bounced all my mail - I don't want that happening again.
Fetchmail in debian needs configuring manually at present, but that's no great chore (and fetchmailconf is there). Sendmail and exim both have fairly good config scripts, and will both deliver to /var/spool/mail/* by default (even though personally, I think that's a bit screwy).
When you're configuring fetchmail, make *sure* that you have it set not to bounce mail back to the sender if there's a problem, and test everything properly, and you'll be okay. Think before you act, that's the important thing.
FWIW, I have a number of 'users' here accepting mail, such as 'webmaster', 'gnome', etc., all getting stored in /var/spool/mail/{user}
Err... that's a slightly 'unusual' way of doing it... if you really want to have gnome@, webmaster@ etc, why not use aliases and then optionally procmail. Personally, I get around 150-200 e-mails a day, and I don't use separate e-mail addresses for different things - a well configured mail client helps enormously here. Take a long look at 'mutt' - its motto is 'yes, it can do it. Read the manual, backwards this time', and that kinda sums it up, really.
HTH,
Paul
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