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]