* Robert Holtzman hol...@cox.net [2009-07-30 23:37]:
I'm running mutt 1.5.17+20080114. Everything I read online says mutt
is not an MTA but mutt -v shows +USE_SMTP. Is this
contradictory? Can someone further my education?
Thanks.
As the manual informs:
5. SMTP Support
Besides
The SMTP client is a new-ish addition. It doesn't make a real MTA out of
mutt, though, just a MUA that submits mail via SMTP like the GUI ones.
* Willy Sutrisno [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hi,
I just began trying this great MUA program, and I liked it very much.
But I have a small problem. Can anyone tell me how to use smtp server
in my mutt. In pine, there is a field where you can put your smtp
server, but in mutt I try to search it but
IMHO opnion you are asking the wrong questions.
Whay is it so difficult to use Postfix to receive SMTP
mail ? I do.
--
Regards
Cliff
* Willy Sutrisno [EMAIL PROTECTED] [15-12-2001 15:29]:
| I just began trying this great MUA program, and I liked it very
| much. But I have a small problem. Can anyone tell me how to use smtp
| server in my mutt. In pine, there is a field where you can put your
| smtp server, but in mutt I try
* René Clerc ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
set sendmail=/usr/sbin/sendmail -oem -oi
At least, that's what mine says. I use Postfix too, by the way. So
don't let the name fool you: this is actually a postfix binary, which
you should have too, when you installed Postfix.
Check out the manual.
* Willy Sutrisno [EMAIL PROTECTED] [15-12-2001 16:00]:
| * René Clerc ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
| set sendmail=/usr/sbin/sendmail -oem -oi
|
| At least, that's what mine says. I use Postfix too, by the way. So
| don't let the name fool you: this is actually a postfix binary, which
| you
OK, thats not what I mean. If you want me to set the variable like above. Its done
before I write the first email. I want to use my ISP provider SMTP server, so I need
the variable for it. I have done the search at Mutt manual, but they never say
anything about SMTP server, they do have
Ren? Clerc wrote:
Mutt requires an SMTP daemon running on the local machine. If you're
running postfix, as I conclude from your first post, why not use it?
In the other case, you could check out nullmailer or ssmtp. Links to
be found under Other Recommended Pages at the links page of