Groumph <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

>       Could someone say me what the /etc/mailname file is made for ? Which
> program uses it ?
> And when ? I could not find any doc on it ...

>From the Debian policy manual:

=> 4.5. Mail transport agents
=> --------------------------
=> 
=>      Debian packages which process electronic mail, whether
=>      mail-user-agents (MUAs) or mail-transport-agents (MTAs), *must* make
=>      sure that they are compatible with the configuration decisions below.
=>      Failure to do this may result in lost mail, broken `From:' lines, and
=>      other serious brain damage!
=>
        [ snip ]
=>
=>      If you need to know what name to use (for example) on outgoing news
=>      and mail messages which are generated locally, you should use the file
=>      `/etc/mailname'. It will contain the portion after the username and
=>      `@' (at) sign for email addresses of users on the machine (followed by
=>      a newline).
=> 
=>      A package should check for the existence of this file. If it exists it
=>      should use it without comment. (An MTA's prompting configuration
=>      script may wish to prompt the user even if it finds this file exists.)
=>      If it does not exist it should prompt the user for the value and store
=>      it in `/etc/mailname' as well as using it in the package's
=>      configuration. The prompt should make it clear that the name will not
=>      just be used by that package. For example, in this situation the INN
=>      package says: 
=>    Please enter the `mail name' of your system.  This is the hostname
=>    portion of the address to be shown on outgoing news and mail messages.
=>    The default is <syshostname>, your system's host name.
=>    Mail name [`<syshostname>']:
=>      where <syshostname> is the output of `hostname --fqdn'.

--
David Zelinsky
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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