On Mon, 13 Nov 2006, W B Hacker wrote: > > Three of the easiest involve little or no modification to Exim itself. > > 1) install a webmail service. There are plenty of those around, written in > PHP, > perl, python, ruby, etc. These are handy to have in any case. Pay attention > to > security. > > At least two, one in perl, another in python, are full-fledged web-resident > MUA's - IOW can handle POP/IMAP accounts on servers other than those on which > they reside as well as the 'local' ones (if any). > > One of these even instantiates its own bespoke https webserver, so no need for > Apache, etc. or interfering with an httpd that is doing web pages (not always > a > good idea on a mail server anyway). > > 2) Work from an ssh shell with the Unix/Linux basic mail functions. Not as > clumsy as it soudns if you have cut 'n paste terminla functionality. > > 3) Use a more fully-featured Unix mailer toolset, such as 'pine' or 'mutt'. > Several folks here do so. > > In all of the above cases, you are already 'resident' on the server, so the > adsl/dialup/<whatever> link is no longer of concern to the MTA and > 'automagically' disappears. >
4) Within exim may be the easiest of all: http://www.exim.org/exim-html-4.50/doc/html/FAQ.html#TOC286 -- -------------------------------------------------------- Dave Lugo [EMAIL PROTECTED] LC Unit #260 TINLC Have you hugged your firewall today? No spam, thanks. -------------------------------------------------------- Are you the police? . . . . No ma'am, we're sysadmins. -- ## List details at http://www.exim.org/mailman/listinfo/exim-users ## Exim details at http://www.exim.org/ ## Please use the Wiki with this list - http://www.exim.org/eximwiki/
