Larry Marshall wrote:
> 
> > I'm not sure if that's possible.
> 
> I'm not sure what in the message you don't think is possible so I
> can't comment on this.
> 
> > Although I have been wondering about that
> > myself. Fetchmail gets the mail from the ISP and passes passes the mail
> > off to procmail who then filters the messages and deposits them to their
> > prescribed destination. Those that are destined for my "Inbox" get
> > deposited in /var/spool/mail/$USER. Other messages that are defined in
> > .procmailrc are place in their respective folders in $HOME/mail where Pine
> > reads them.
> 
> Here, however, I think you're presuming too much.  There are many ways
> to skin this cat and procmail is only one of them.  I don't even have
> procmail setup and yet filter inbound mail heavily.  This could be
> part of my problem when using Pine (as you've suggested) but it will
> filter/distribute mail to a number of folders without even a hint of
> .procmailrc in my home directory.  Netscape doesn't even deal with
> standard mailrouting and everything gets dumped into ~/nsmail which
> holds the folders.
> 
> The problem I've seen with Pine has something to do with Pine's
> operation, not inbound mail in my view.  I suspect that it has to do
> with how the eXpunge command purges its buffer.  If I don't leave Pine
> loaded all the time I don't have the problem.  If I do, I can delete
> msgs and all of a sudden I can have as many as 3 copies of the same
> bunch of msgs back in the mail folders.  Since my normal operation is
> to D all msgs as I read them (except for those I want to keep which
> are filed into other folders) followed with an X before leaving the
> folder, these complete replica sets of the msgs I'd read a couple
> hours previously (and they're in the same order as they were when I
> read them) is easy to see.

Adding to my earlier one - it's now obvious that the fetchmail/procmail
combo will do what I want to do, all I have to do now is absorb the
fetchmail and procmail howtos simultaneously!!

Cheers

-- 
ICQ# 89345394     Mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
"The number of UNIX installations has grown to 10, with more expected"
(The UNIX Programmer's Manual, 2nd Edition, June 1972.)



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