On 3/11/19 1:50 pm, Rick Thomas wrote:
See reply bottom posted...
On Sat, Nov 2, 2019, at 10:17 AM, Bob Weber wrote:
On 11/2/19 8:10 AM, Martin McCormick wrote:
Here is the setup. We are on a private vlan as in 192.168.x.x.
All local host names are resolved via hosts files. Messages to
go to the big wide world must go through Suddenlink's SMTP
smarthost and I definitely don't want to break that.
On rare occasions, I want to forward an email to the Mac
which normally doesn't send or receive emails. What would be the
simplest way to "forward" an email from the Linux box to the
Mac's mailer?
The Mac only needs to be able to receive, not send any
email.
Thank you
Martin WB5AGZ
Why not create a user on the Linux box to receive such emails and
have the MAC client connect to that user on the Linux box. You might
have to install a pop server (popa3d ... easiest to install and
configure) or imac server (dovecot-imapd ... harder to configure and
probably more than you need) on the Linux box if one isn't installed
already.
Your MAC would have to have an email client capable of connecting to
a pop or imac mailbox at the ip of the Linux box or host name in the
hosts file corresponding to the Linux box.
Hi Martin,
The setup Bob describes is exactly what I use for my family. Debian
linux box running dovecot receives email from our ISP via "fetchmail"
and sorts it out to separate accounts for each family member, who then
reads their mail on a Mac or PC using the native OS gui mail-reader on
their machine.
Feel free to ask me if you have any questions.
Hi Rick,
Why doesn't each user use the native reader to get the mail from the
ISP? What is the reason for the extra step?
I've never been able to quite figure out where I would need fetchmail in
my mail setup but every howto seems to mention it, so I am curious to
see if I am missing something.
Thanks
Enjoy!
Rick
--
Auntie Em: Hate you, Hate Kansas, Taking the dog. -Dorothy.