Hi again!
...and then David @ BigFoot said...
% Hi, folks --
%
% I'm [finally!] drafting up a mutt FAQ entry on filtering incoming email
...
%
%
% TIA for any input you can provide, particularly for the last case. Did
% anyone ever write that IMAP filtering tool mentioned a few months back? :
David T-G <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on Thu, 27 Apr 2000:
> So far, I have found mention of
>
> procmail
> maildrop
> mailfilter
> sieve
> exim
... also qmail, you can have the .qmail-extension files in your home
dir with different delivery instructions for your
username-extension@host
On Thu, Apr 27, 2000 at 01:16:27AM -0400, David T-G wrote:
> Now, is mbox-hook what I want? The typical user is going to have all of
> his email dumped right into $MAIL and then want mutt to move Linux stuff
> here and mutt stuff there and cron jobs elsewhere, and I don't know that
> mbox-hook g
On Thu, Apr 27, 2000 at 01:16:27AM -0400, David T-G wrote:
> Hi, folks --
>
> I'm [finally!] drafting up a mutt FAQ entry on filtering incoming email
> to answer all of those "how do I get mutt to move my mail for me?"
> questions. So far, I have found mention of
>
> procmail
> maildrop
>
Op do. 27 apr 2000 01:16:27 zei David T-G:
> though I don't yet have (because I haven't yet looked) a URL for exim
http://www.exim.org/
> (and I know it's an MTA) and also of elm's filter (though I know it can
> lose mail and such).
apparently filter is no longer there since elm-2.5:
src$ fin
Hi, folks --
I'm [finally!] drafting up a mutt FAQ entry on filtering incoming email
to answer all of those "how do I get mutt to move my mail for me?"
questions. So far, I have found mention of
procmail
maildrop
mailfilter
sieve
exim
though I don't yet have (because I haven't yet lo