Oopps ... looks that I missed that one! Thanks!
-- Harald
Tjeerd Makel wrote:
> Hi Harald,
>
> I think you can use the "XMAIL_PID_DIR" environment variable? It is
> mentioned in the online XMail manual, it works for me on FreeBSD...
>
> Greets,
>
> Tjeerd Makel
>
>
> On 5/27/2007, "Harald Sc
Hi Harald -
You are right - I just tested it and had assumed that "pidfile=" set the
location. It's seems strange that it would be hard coded in any application
rather than parameterized. It sounds like the variable mentioned by Tjeerd
might be the way to go.
Jeff
Harald Schneider wrote: Hi
Hi Harald,
I think you can use the "XMAIL_PID_DIR" environment variable? It is
mentioned in the online XMail manual, it works for me on FreeBSD...
Greets,
Tjeerd Makel
On 5/27/2007, "Harald Schneider" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi Jeff,
>
>as far as I can see this just assigns the standard
Hi Jeff,
as far as I can see this just assigns the standard path to the .pid to a
variable which is used for the Kill command. It does not SET the -pid
file's location - right ?
IMHO it needs to be modified in the source. Any hints Davide ?
-- Harald
Jeff Buehler wrote:
> Hi Harald -
>
> It
Hi Harald -
It's all about the startup script on *BSD. There is no standard package
for Xmail (something I have thought about setting up numerous times) in
FreeBSD, so modifying a "default" template is not an issue. I place my
custom startup script in /usr/local/etc/rc.d - I believe this is at