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On Fri, May 31, 2002 at 11:07:45PM +0800, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
| +++ dman <Friday 31 May 2002 22:46>:
| > There are 2 ways you can change it. Do you have a FQDN? If so, just
| > change the hosts line to read
| > 127.0.0.1 THE.FQDN sidekick localhost
| > if not, then create an entry in /etc/email-addresses like this
| > ajlewis2: ajlewis2@???
|
| Why not use a mail client that talks smtp on port 25,
mutt is too cool to do that :-). (and this brings up the whole
MUA-is-not-MTA-and-doesn't-queue-properly-etc debate, of which I'm
clearly on the opposite side from you)
| or set the user she is sending mail as a trusted user, so that she
| can invoke sendmail -f from her mail client?
That's possible, if you want to go there. For a single-user box it's
probably not a problem. Using the /etc/email-addresses rewrite does
the trick without adding trusted users. Take your pick. (I'm not
wholly against this method, for a single-user box)
-D
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