On Tue, Jul 19, 2005 at 09:39:17AM -0400, Steve ? wrote: > > You shouldn't need any reference to SMTP in your procmailrc. All you have to > do > is simple. Have a procmailrc and a fetchmailrc in your local user directory. > Use > fetchmail via the same user that reads the e-mail.
I run fetchmail as a daemon. In the /etc/init.d/fetchmail stands: # Defaults DAEMON=/usr/bin/fetchmail CONFFILE=/etc/fetchmailrc OPTIONS="-f $CONFFILE" PIDFILE=/var/run/fetchmail/.fetchmail.pid UIDL=/var/mail/.fetchmail-UIDL-cache USER=fetchmail > Here is the start of my '~/home/.procmailrc' file, remember NO .forward file > is > needed, you should test it without any rules other than the one shown; > > MAILDIR=$HOME/Mail > DEFAULT=$MAILDIR/ > LOGFILE=$HOME/Mail/procmaillog > FORMAIL=/usr/bin/formail > SENDMAIL=/usr/sbin/sendmail Now I edit my .procmailrc like abowe. I moved the .forward file. I restart exim4 and fetchmail daemon, but nothing new happen. > Fetchmail should automatically hand e-mail off to Exim4. I didn't set up > anything for that to work. If one has a .prcomailrc in their ~/home then, > Exim4 > should automatically hand it off to procmail. > I'm assuming you're wanting a single drop ? This wouldn't work for a > multi-user > setup. Yes, I'm wanting a single drop. -- Regards, Paul ->->-> Debian Junior Project :-) :-) :-) :-) :-) :-) :-) :-) :-) http://www.ektf.hu/~Csanyi.Pal -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

