On 10/01/07 10:47, Chris Bannister wrote: [snip] > > In muttrc I have: > > set sendmail="/usr/sbin/sendmail" > > I don't have that setting in my .muttrc > > It is a compile time setting > What is the output of: > mutt -v | grep sendmail > > for me it is: > SENDMAIL="/usr/sbin/sendmail" > > Did you compile mutt yourself? > > Check your logs for any error messages. > > I'm guessing that you need to use the smtp server of the isp you are > connected to. I don't think they'd throw your mail in the bit bucket. > They are probably rejecting it. > > Which distribution are you using? > Can you rec mail? > > I was sharing a computer using two ISP's. It was easy, with 'pppconfig' > to create two ISP accounts to use with 'pon' but I never got around to > figuring out how to automatically associate an smtp server for a given > pon command. (I cheated, and edited the appropriate field.) I'm guessing > that is at least one of your problems. > > Also, unfortunately, this is not the list to discuss postfix. There is a > ... ta daaaah! ... yup you guessed it ... a ... postfix-users mailing > list. Well, I presume it still exists. > > -- > Chris. > ======
It is solved. My problem was muttrc setting I was missing these two lines from the config. set use_from=yes set use_envelope_from=yes Yes, I compile mutt myself, it is Gentoo so I compile all distribution :-) When I enabled mail.loging I realized I have a problem with my muttrc. > set sendmail="/usr/sbin/sendmail" is just a MTA it already install on my machine so why not use it. -- #Joseph
