In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Damir J. Naden) wrote: >Hi George Bonser; unless Mutt is confused, you wrote: >> On Sat, 19 Sep 1998, Johann Spies wrote: >> >> > I will support that. I have tried maybe a dozen times to get exim running >> > without success. The documentation most of the time explains some >> > technical detail that I am not interested in. I just want to know how to >> > set up the mail on my single PC with a dialup ppp connection to an ISP. >> >> And what I find so strange is that I have never had a problem getting exim >> running. > >I would have to second George here. I have set up my single PC w. the dial-up >connection without any problems. It ran the script at install and answering
Me Too. Additionally, Exim is quite easy to use when using complicated stuff as well. On the internet gateway system here at work I have the following features working: - local mail (i.e. to domain .ah.nl) gets delivered via the ethernet to a smarthost. - mail bound for *.xs4all.nl gets routed over an UUCP link, with the From: lines adjusted accordingly. - mail bound for the rest gets queued until the ISDN link comes up. - When the ISDN link comes up, a subtlely different exim config file is put into place, that doesn't queue, but thinks that it's a permanently connected internet host, and the queue is flushed. - When the ISDN link goes down again, the "dial-on-demand" config is put back, and exim queues everything again. - A cron job flushes the queue every hour, for the (unlikely!) case that the link hasn't been up for an hour, leaving outgoing messages gathering dust in the queue. I've also found the exim mailing list more than helpful whenever I got stuck. I've noticed that Exim's author is often the first to respond. Paul Slootman -- home: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | work: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | debian: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.wurtel.demon.nl | Murphy Software, Enschede, the Netherlands