Am Mittwoch, 19. Mai 2004 21:43 schrieb Gordon Messmer: > Felix Maibaum wrote:
> If you set up your maildrop rules to use "spamc" as an xfilter, then you > can deliver mail directly to maildrop. It's best to do this... your > mail is less likely to be rejected. If courier won't accept a message > (for instance, because the sender's DNS went offline never to return), > that message will get stuck on your POP server, and fetchmail will > download it every time it checks, and generally waste a lot of bandwidth. > great, now the mail at least arrives on my system. The problem is, that it only arrives in the correct account if fetchmail is running as the user that it is fetching mail for. If I try to use system-wide fetchmail, then all mail ends up in the fetchmail users homedir, /var/run/fetchmail. any ideas about that? I suppose using smtp would help, but that brings me back to the original problem. regards felix ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by: Oracle 10g Get certified on the hottest thing ever to hit the market... Oracle 10g. Take an Oracle 10g class now, and we'll give you the exam FREE. http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=3149&alloc_id=8166&op=click _______________________________________________ courier-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/courier-users
