Mark Phillips wrote:
> Sean 'Shaleh' Perry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > enable /etc/email-address use. I use this so that mail from
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] becomes [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
...
> All in all, it is a bad idea --- so I'm told. The _correct_ solution,
> I was told, is to tell the truth about the "From:" address, ie keep it
> as [EMAIL PROTECTED], but to set the "Reply-To:" field to
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> So this is what I want to do, except I don't know how to do it. I
> could perhaps figure out how to do it in individual MUAs but I'd
> prefer a system wide, MUA independent, approach.
>
Exim can rewrite just the headers you want to rewrite.
Put your alias in the etc/email-addresses file (as was suggested earlier)
/and then edit the REWRITE CONFIGURATION to rewrite "r" , the reply header.
As you can see, I rewrite From: Reply-to: Sender: and Env-From: headers
######################################################################
# REWRITE CONFIGURATION #
######################################################################
# There are no rewriting specifications in this default configuration file.
# This rewriting rule is particularly useful for dialup users who
# don't have their own domain, but could be useful for anyone.
# It looks up the real address of all local users in a file
# s=sender, b=bcc, c=cc, f=from, r=reply-to, F=env-from, T=env-to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ${lookup{$1}lsearch{/etc/email-addresses}\
{$value}fail} frsF
# End of Exim configuration file
--
David Raeker-Jordan
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Harrisburg, PA, USA