Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > On Wed, 2006-05-17 at 00:24 +0200, Goswin von Brederlow wrote: >> Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: >> >> > On Tue, 2006-05-16 at 08:44 -0700, Don Armstrong wrote: >> >> On Tue, 16 May 2006, Ron Johnson wrote: >> >> > On the "home desktop" reportbug uses Python's smtp library to send >> >> > email directly to the ISP's smtp server. And that's a good thing, >> >> > because, for a long time, reportbug did not have that feature, and >> >> > people who don't know how to configure MTAs were not able to send >> >> > bug reports. >> >> >> >> reportbug sends mail to wherever it is configured; the default setup >> >> should be to send mail to bugs.debian.org, not the ISP's smtp server, >> >> since that can't be known in advance. [I don't know if this is the >> >> default now, but it should be the default.] >> > >> > bugs.d.o is the *destination*, not the journey. >> >> Isn't the default that reprotbug asks on the first run whether to use >> the local fetchmail / ISPs smpt or send to bugs.d.o now? > > OK, I'm confused. > > Isn't the question "How does the report gets from "the computer" > to bugs.d.o?"? > > sendmail or smtp library, right?
If you run "reportbug" without arguments it asks you questions on the first run: | Do you have a "mail transport agent" (MTA) like Exim, Postfix or SSMTP | configured on this computer? [Y|n|q|?]? n | Please enter the name of your SMTP host. Usually it's called something like | "mail.example.org" or "smtp.example.org". Just press ENTER if you don't have | one or don't know. | > which results in "smtphost bugs.debian.org" in the conffile. Maybe the default to the MTA question could be "N" instead. > When I first installed rb, it failed to work, because it wanted > to use sendmail, and the only way my PC sent mail to the outside > world was using my MUA pointing to smtp.<myisp>.net (because exim > was set up for local delivery only). > > Later on, I tried again, and found that they had added (or made > it more clear in "reportbug --configure") the ability to use the > user's ISP to transport the email. Yes, that is a new feature. MfG Goswin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]