Thanks again.
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/ was the correct place. There was already a mailman
script there. I guess the problem was that I just didn't have a mailman
mailing list.
Thanks for being so much help.
Darren
Jon Carnes wrote:
You'll probably get a better response on a FreeBSD mailing li
Thank you very much for the help. The problem was that I didn't have a
mailman mailing list and I needed to start the mailmanctl daemon.
I wasn't aware of these changes to Mailman.
I have a new question, though. Where should I put the
"/usr/local/mailman/Mailman/bin/mailmanctl start" command
You'll probably get a better response on a FreeBSD mailing list... but
(from memory), the proper location for FreeBSD startup script is
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/
If that doesn't work you might try: man rc.conf
Good Luck - Jon Carnes
On Sun, 2003-12-28 at 20:15, backdoc wrote:
> Thank you very much fo
Read FAQ 3.14
It looks like either your cron daemon is not running (for Mailman
versions 2.0.x and below) - or your mailmanctl daemon is not runing (for
Mailman versions 2.1.x and above).
Jon Carnes
On Sun, 2003-12-28 at 10:29, backdoc wrote:
> Problem description:
>
> I can no longer sub
Problem description:
I can no longer subscribe to or send mail to my lists.
Here's some detail.
From the standpoint of being able to use the mailing lists (subscribe,
post messages, etc), the lists had been working for several weeks.
Then, spontaneously, all of the normal list server tasks q