On Sat, Jun 29, 2013 at 3:36 PM, Martin Lambers <mar...@marlam.de> wrote: > That's right, these two files are handled separately. > > First the accounts from /etc/msmtprc are read, then the accounts from > ~/.msmtprc. Accounts in ~/.msmtprc override accounts of the same name > in /etc/msmtprc. Other than that, there is no connection between the > two files.
Let's see if I understood. If I've got two accounts, foo in /etc/msmtprc and bar in ~/.msmtprc, I can use both to send a message. Is that right? What I was up to was a bunch of users which all make use of the same server settings to send messages, just usernames and passwords are different. I thought I could set server preferences in /etc/msmtprc's 'defaults' section and username+password in each user's ~/.msmtprc. Is there another way to accomplish the same goal other than duplicate server settings for each user? Thanks, -- Lorenzo ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store. http://p.sf.net/sfu/windows-dev2dev _______________________________________________ msmtp-users mailing list msmtp-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/msmtp-users