Usually you can set the email address. With cron for example you can set the
MAILTO in /etc/crontab to cron@domain




----- Original Message -----
From: "S�nke Ruempler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 01, 2002 3:08 PM
Subject: [xmail] local mail handling


>
> hi there,
>
> is it possible that xmail sends local emails, even if there is no
"@domain"
> in the "To:" line?
> because many system services just write to "root", and not to root@domain.
>
> So xmail could try to send mail to root@RootDomain.
>
> Here is an email that arived me:
>
> <Failure Reason>
> Bad email address
> </Failure Reason>
>
> Below is reported the message header:
>
> >> Received: from /spool/local
> >> by ibis.city-map.de with [XMail 1.3 (Linux/Ix86) LMAIL Server]
> >> for <root> from <CronDaemon>;
> >> Tue, 01 Jan 2002 00:00:05 +0100
> >> From: root (Cron Daemon)
> >> To: root
> >> X-Cron-Env: <SHELL=/bin/bash>
> >> X-Cron-Env: <PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin>
> >> X-Cron-Env: <MAILTO=root>
> >> X-Cron-Env: <HOME=/>
> >> X-Cron-Env: <LOGNAME=root>
>
>
>
> -- Binary/unsupported file stripped by Listar --
> -- Type: application/x-pkcs7-signature
> -- File: smime.p7s
>
>
> -
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>

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