I need some advice.
What do you think is the best way to search through the archives?
I see a lot of people using htdig but if you want to secure the archives
and use many mailing lists then the additional administration weight is
big.
A colleague of mine suggested that we add to all the mailing
> Troy wrote:
> After I added an Explicit Reply to Address, I could not delete it out
> again, and changing the Directed field to "Poster" didn't seem to
> help either.
>
> Is this a bug, does anyone know of a fix or work around?
I am definitely not a guru, but I would login as the mailman use
Hi,
After I added an Explicit Reply to Address, I could
not delete it out again, and changing the Directed field to "Poster"
didn't seem to help either.
Is this a bug, does anyone know of a fix or work
around?
Thanks,
Troy
This is my first time posting to this list, and
hope I'm
On Tue, 24 Apr 2001 20:20:35 -0700 (PDT)
alex wetmore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, 24 Apr 2001, J C Lawrence wrote:
>> Codswhallop. Intelligent MTAs upon successfully connecting to an
>> MX will fork multiple queue runners to that target attempting to
>> deliver N parallel streams to t
Tanya Brethour ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said something that sounded like:
> Ok.. so I looked at withlist. There is one function that exists to change
> the password of any user you want. But its only specific to one list.
> So.. has anyone integrated this with changing passwords on ALL lists for a
> p
> I'm not sure how much that will help. People will either not read
> that or ignore it out of desperation. I've been thinking the
> sponsorship logos should remain, but should not be hyperlinked.
Richard Stallman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I think it is a good idea to take out t
> > Now, i was curious if there was anyway (besides forcing the subscriber)
> > to have the same password for all lists. So the email address is
> > associated to only one password no matter the number of lists?
>
> You need to look in the comments of `withlist` to figure this out.
Ok.. so I lo
On Wed, 25 Apr 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> the ports used by mailman in tcp/ip traffic should be 25 and 110 (smtp + pop).
> Are there any other ports used in connection with mailman ?
Mailman doesn't use POP. You'll need to have port 80 open if you expect
people ot use the web interface thou
Tanya Brethour ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said something that sounded like:
> I have set up around 4 mailing lists. In alot of cases, person X is signed
> up for all 4 lists. (FYI: all subscribers were added during list creation
> so random passwords were chosen).
I just went through this myself. I wrot
Hi, all.
This may sound stupid:
the ports used by mailman in tcp/ip traffic should be 25 and 110 (smtp + pop).
Are there any other ports used in connection with mailman ?
We intend to use mailman in a secure intranet,
where only the absolutely necessary ports will be active.
So far, it runs per
Is it possible to link mailman with a LDAP server ?
We already have a database where we can find potential subscribers to our
lists (currently sthg about 700 lists).
I'd like to allow the owners of list(s) to make subscribe users using this
database, avoiding them to have to look at users's a
On Tue, 24 Apr 2001, J C Lawrence wrote:
> > As an example, assume that your list has 1000 users on
> > hotmail.com. If you are sending messages with 2 recipients then
> > the best that your MTA can do is to batch two hotmail.com
> > recipients together.
>
> Codswhallop. Intelligent MTAs upon su
On Tue, Apr 24, 2001 at 08:29:35AM -0700, Steve Pirk wrote:
> I would do some tests on basic mail... Telent to the box on port 25
> and see how long it is before you get the greeting. Do the smae on the
> box to an outside machine. Both should be *very* fast. If they are
> not, look into reverse r
You can force the admin password again by using the $prefix/bin/mmsitepass
command.
# ./mmsitepass --help
Set the site password, prompting from the terminal.
The site password can be used in most if not all places that the list
administrator's password can be used, which in turn can be us
hello.
I have set up around 4 mailing lists. In alot of cases, person X is signed
up for all 4 lists. (FYI: all subscribers were added during list creation
so random passwords were chosen).
Now, i was curious if there was anyway (besides forcing the subscriber)
to have the same password for all
hello,
I was curious if anyone had some advice on how to import hypermail
archives into mailman archives.
Thanks!
Tanya
--
Mailman-Users maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-users
It's possible that I'm misunderstanding it.. But if you send a message to
6 people on a lits, with it set to 2, it would hand 3 queue's to sendmail
right?
Sendmail seems to deliver them a ton faster on my box when it doesn't have
a couple hundred in each one.. it clears its queues faster, becaus
> "DM" == Dan Mick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> Did crypt() or something change in Python 2.1? I'd been
>> running 2.0 / MailMan 2.0.3 before. Most of these lists have
>> existed since the pre-Mailman 2.0 days..
DM> Maybe your old Python included crypt() and the new one
Hi All,
I am new with mailman too and I am having the following problem:
- I created a list called EXAMPLE in lists.mydomain.com.br with 6
members, 5 of them in my own domain and other in otherdomain.com.br.
- The person outside my domain receive a error message that there
isn't a ma
On Tue, 24 Apr 2001 15:53:47 -0700 (PDT)
alex wetmore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, 24 Apr 2001, Erik Parker wrote:
>> > Is there a way to bump this down to say.. 2 people per
>> envelope? Vs.. The > 20 or 30 it seems to put in now?
>>
>> Sorry to waste your bandwidth, I found what I was
20 matches
Mail list logo