* making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? @ 2011-03-21 6:19 Eric Abrahamsen 2011-03-21 6:55 ` Erik Colson 2011-03-29 18:26 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 0 siblings, 2 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Eric Abrahamsen @ 2011-03-21 6:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ding I'm trying to make mail sending/receiving as non-blocking as possible. I was pleased with msmtp and having started using the sister program mpop to feed gnus mail. I read four different POP accounts and it was slow. Now I'm wondering how hard it would be to make the call to msmtp for outgoing mail asynchronous. Would it be possible just to dump the mail on msmtp, and have a callback that either pops up a buffer (for errors) or a message in the minibuffer (for success)? How difficult would that be? Thanks! Eric ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? 2011-03-21 6:19 making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? Eric Abrahamsen @ 2011-03-21 6:55 ` Erik Colson 2011-03-21 7:24 ` Eric Abrahamsen 2011-03-29 18:26 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 1 sibling, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Erik Colson @ 2011-03-21 6:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ding Ehlo, msmtp does not support queueing. Therefor it 'blocks' every mail client which sends mail through it. My opinion is that the fix should be msmtp to support queues. Of course asynchronous connections in gnus would be welcome, but in this case I think the problem is at msmtp's side. So the obvious solution is to move to postfix which added support for smtp-server selection based on the sender's address envelope in version 2.7 I think... PS: Look at "sender_dependent_default_transport_maps" in postfix documentation for this feature Best -- erik colson ecocode.net ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? 2011-03-21 6:55 ` Erik Colson @ 2011-03-21 7:24 ` Eric Abrahamsen 0 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Eric Abrahamsen @ 2011-03-21 7:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ding Erik Colson <eco@ecocode.net> writes: > Ehlo, > > msmtp does not support queueing. Therefor it 'blocks' every mail client > which sends mail through it. My opinion is that the fix should be msmtp > to support queues. > Of course asynchronous connections in gnus would be welcome, but in this > case I think the problem is at msmtp's side. > > So the obvious solution is to move to postfix which added support for > smtp-server selection based on the sender's address envelope in version > 2.7 I think... > > PS: Look at "sender_dependent_default_transport_maps" in postfix > documentation for this feature > > Best Thanks! Msmtp does come with a "queuing" script, but I don't know if it's queuing in the proper sense, that would allow it not to block, I'll take a look. Thanks for the hints! E ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? 2011-03-21 6:19 making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? Eric Abrahamsen 2011-03-21 6:55 ` Erik Colson @ 2011-03-29 18:26 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 2011-03-30 0:51 ` Eric Abrahamsen 1 sibling, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen @ 2011-03-29 18:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ding Eric Abrahamsen <eric@ericabrahamsen.net> writes: > Would it be possible just to dump the mail on msmtp, and have a > callback that either pops up a buffer (for errors) or a message in the > minibuffer (for success)? How difficult would that be? It sounds kinda complicated to me, and probably with not a lot of gain to be had. Unless you're sending massive amounts of massive emails. :-) -- (domestic pets only, the antidote for overdose, milk.) larsi@gnus.org * Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? 2011-03-29 18:26 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen @ 2011-03-30 0:51 ` Eric Abrahamsen 2011-03-30 6:38 ` Richard Riley 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Eric Abrahamsen @ 2011-03-30 0:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ding On Wed, Mar 30 2011, Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen wrote: > Eric Abrahamsen <eric@ericabrahamsen.net> writes: > >> Would it be possible just to dump the mail on msmtp, and have a >> callback that either pops up a buffer (for errors) or a message in the >> minibuffer (for success)? How difficult would that be? > > It sounds kinda complicated to me, and probably with not a lot of gain > to be had. Unless you're sending massive amounts of massive emails. :-) Fair enough! ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? 2011-03-30 0:51 ` Eric Abrahamsen @ 2011-03-30 6:38 ` Richard Riley 2011-03-30 9:36 ` Matthias Andree 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Richard Riley @ 2011-03-30 6:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ding Eric Abrahamsen <eric@ericabrahamsen.net> writes: > On Wed, Mar 30 2011, Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen wrote: > >> Eric Abrahamsen <eric@ericabrahamsen.net> writes: >> >>> Would it be possible just to dump the mail on msmtp, and have a >>> callback that either pops up a buffer (for errors) or a message in the >>> minibuffer (for success)? How difficult would that be? >> >> It sounds kinda complicated to me, and probably with not a lot of gain >> to be had. Unless you're sending massive amounts of massive emails. :-) > > Fair enough! > I used to use msmtp to talk to gmail - amongst others. The problem was the time it sometimes took - hanging gnus for upto 15 seconds or so. (Linux solution) So I went back to using exim4 : gnus dumps the send off to exim4 and exim does its stuff in the bg. Not without pain. Of course. Exim4 is up there with the worst when it comes to "simple tweaks" and enabling exim4 for multiple smarthosts proved impossible (for me) give or take despite some old configs out there in google land for exim1-3 but not 4. Why not use exim4s smtp send facility? Its a pain if you travel : here I sit on holiday and smtp ports for outgoing are blocked by the ISP and/or the hotel router. Gah! Using now only gmail servers I found a nice solution that might help some others. Yes, use exim4 smarthost. Use one of your gmail smtp servers for outgoing and so configure that in your exim4 smarthost setup. Normally it rewrites your "from" address to that of the owner of the smtp account. You an stop this by granting permission to other gmail accounts to use this account on its behalf. So if on account A I allow account B access then account B's "from address" may be listed in the outgoing email sent by A's SMTP server. This option is in account/additional email users via the gmail web interface. http://www.besttechie.net/2010/03/27/how-to-use-gmail-for-multiple-email-accounts/ This is not without risk if you're being spammy/trolling etc as the header details will still reveal the account name/owner of the SMTP server. I guess the solution in that case if you dont want that is to simply create an "anonymous" gmail account in order just to use that smtp service for that account from your other gmail accounts. Still, its another option and "works for me". ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? 2011-03-30 6:38 ` Richard Riley @ 2011-03-30 9:36 ` Matthias Andree 2011-03-30 12:01 ` Richard Riley 2011-03-30 19:22 ` making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? Leonidas Tsampros 0 siblings, 2 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Matthias Andree @ 2011-03-30 9:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ding On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 08:38:46AM +0200, Richard Riley wrote: > Not without pain. Of course. Exim4 is up there with the worst when it > comes to "simple tweaks" and enabling exim4 for multiple smarthosts > proved impossible (for me) give or take despite some old configs out > there in google land for exim1-3 but not 4. Why not use exim4s smtp send > facility? Its a pain if you travel : here I sit on holiday and smtp > ports for outgoing are blocked by the ISP and/or the hotel router. Gah! While I could offer you sample configs from my Cygwin installation, I've found out the hard way (this time on FreeBSD) that Exim4 has a very awkward lock-destination-sites behaviour that requires major manual interventions to purge the retry/site database to get mails unstuck, thus I decided I'm not going to install any more of that. While Postfix is a bit more of an effort to configure (enable sender-based authentication, enable sender-based relay, enable smtp (not smtpd)-side tls, enable smtp-side sasl, permit plaintext authentication on secure tls channels, set up all the maps, I find it's more transparent and has less magic special casing underneath that confuses the heck out of myself. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? 2011-03-30 9:36 ` Matthias Andree @ 2011-03-30 12:01 ` Richard Riley 2011-03-30 13:40 ` using Exim 4 w/ multiple smarthosts (was: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous?) Matthias Andree 2011-03-30 19:22 ` making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? Leonidas Tsampros 1 sibling, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Richard Riley @ 2011-03-30 12:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ding Matthias Andree <ma+gnus@dt.e-technik.uni-dortmund.de> writes: > On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 08:38:46AM +0200, Richard Riley wrote: >> Not without pain. Of course. Exim4 is up there with the worst when it >> comes to "simple tweaks" and enabling exim4 for multiple smarthosts >> proved impossible (for me) give or take despite some old configs out >> there in google land for exim1-3 but not 4. Why not use exim4s smtp send >> facility? Its a pain if you travel : here I sit on holiday and smtp >> ports for outgoing are blocked by the ISP and/or the hotel router. Gah! > > While I could offer you sample configs from my Cygwin installation, I've > found out the hard way (this time on FreeBSD) that Exim4 has a very > awkward lock-destination-sites behaviour that requires major manual > interventions to purge the retry/site database to get mails unstuck, > thus I decided I'm not going to install any more of that. > > While Postfix is a bit more of an effort to configure (enable > sender-based authentication, enable sender-based relay, enable smtp (not > smtpd)-side tls, enable smtp-side sasl, permit plaintext authentication > on secure tls channels, set up all the maps, I find it's more > transparent and has less magic special casing underneath that confuses > the heck out of myself. > Much as I dislike Exim4 docs, I have to stick up for it here. Using a single smarthost as I described is pretty straightforward. Clearing frozen mails caused by a destination refusing your mail because your IP is blacklisted or smtp ports are blocked is a google away. I did originally use the exim4 sendmail interpretation (having first had my business/home IP cleared out of spamhaus! It took about a day for all major email providers to get the updated spam lists and see my ip cleared) and that was great but of course my recent roaming adventures put paid to that and its back to gmail smtp smart hosts. -- ☘ http://www.shamrockirishbar.com, http://splash-of-open-sauce.blogspot.com/ http://www.richardriley.net ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* using Exim 4 w/ multiple smarthosts (was: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous?) 2011-03-30 12:01 ` Richard Riley @ 2011-03-30 13:40 ` Matthias Andree 2011-03-30 13:30 ` using Exim 4 w/ multiple smarthosts Richard Riley 0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Matthias Andree @ 2011-03-30 13:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Richard Riley, ding Am 30.03.2011 14:01, schrieb Richard Riley: > Matthias Andree <ma+gnus@dt.e-technik.uni-dortmund.de> writes: > >> On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 08:38:46AM +0200, Richard Riley wrote: >>> Not without pain. Of course. Exim4 is up there with the worst when it >>> comes to "simple tweaks" and enabling exim4 for multiple smarthosts >>> proved impossible (for me) give or take despite some old configs out >>> there in google land for exim1-3 but not 4. Why not use exim4s smtp send >>> facility? Its a pain if you travel : here I sit on holiday and smtp >>> ports for outgoing are blocked by the ISP and/or the hotel router. Gah! >> >> While I could offer you sample configs from my Cygwin installation, I've >> found out the hard way (this time on FreeBSD) that Exim4 has a very >> awkward lock-destination-sites behaviour that requires major manual >> interventions to purge the retry/site database to get mails unstuck, >> thus I decided I'm not going to install any more of that. >> >> While Postfix is a bit more of an effort to configure (enable >> sender-based authentication, enable sender-based relay, enable smtp (not >> smtpd)-side tls, enable smtp-side sasl, permit plaintext authentication >> on secure tls channels, set up all the maps, I find it's more >> transparent and has less magic special casing underneath that confuses >> the heck out of myself. >> > > Much as I dislike Exim4 docs, I have to stick up for it here. Using a > single smarthost as I described is pretty straightforward. The docs are quite detailed, however the hard-wired defaults and to a lesser extent the default configuration take you in for a few surprises. > Clearing frozen mails caused by a destination refusing your mail because > your IP is blacklisted or smtp ports are blocked is a google away. ...or just because the Exim4 host has been down for a while. BTST, and that takes users by surprise, so you need to figure out how to kick and purge /var/spool/exim/db/* so that exim actually tries again. It's not sufficient to use exim -qff in such situations. :-( The delay_after_cutoff=true default that can cause routers to get jammed and bounce all mail is quite unobvious... It's not Exim's TLS/SASL configuration or sender-dependent smarthost configuration, but exactly the retry-, wait- and delay_after_cutoff stuff. I haven't had such nasty effects as I've had with Exim's remote_smtp in a dozen years with Postfix. Anyways, here we go, a few comments inlined. Works for me with the default Exim configuration around it with Exim 4.70 on Cygwin 1.5 and 1.7 and Exim 4.75 on FreeBSD 8.2 (the original intent was to log everything while I had to use Outlook 2003 and didn't trust it and make sure that I know where the credentials are so that I could exclude them from or encrypt them for the networked backup). Note that Postfix supports per-sender authentication, too, not just per-smarthost authentication. In that case, Postfix figures out by itself that it can only reuse TLS connections for mail from the same sender. I wouldn't know how to tell Exim4 that. This snippet, however, probably would not exist had there been a Postfix port to Windows or Cygwin in 2007 :-) ######################################################################## # Exim 4 sender-dependent smarthosts: begin routers smarthost1: driver = manualroute domains = ! +local_domains senders = address1@example.org : address2@example.org transport = remote_smtp_ssl route_data = "mailhost1.example.net::587" # smarthost2 also for bounces (nothing between = and :) smarthost2: driver = manualroute domains = ! +local_domains senders = : domain2.example transport = remote_smtp_ssl route_data = "hermes2.example.org::587" # smarthost3 uses an autossh tunnel: smarthost_freebsd: driver = manualroute domains = ! +local_domains senders = FreeBSD.org transport = remote_smtp route_data = "localhost::1234" self = send # other stuff (forward, local delivery etc.) goes here. # the example configure file is quite sound. # ... begin transports # ... # note this is the simple way, all remote_smtp_ssl # routed mail requires TLS and AUTH and assumes # trusted certs in /etc/ssl/certs # remote_smtp_ssl: driver = smtp hosts_require_tls = * hosts_require_auth = * tls_verify_certificates = /etc/ssl/certs delay_after_cutoff = false # ... begin authenticators PLAIN: driver = plaintext server_set_id = $auth2 server_prompts = : server_condition = Authentication is not yet configured server_advertise_condition = ${if def:tls_cipher } client_send = "${extract{auth_plain}{${lookup{$host}lsearch{/usr/local/etc/exim/smtp_auth}{$value}fail}}}" ############################################################# ... the credentials are in the file /usr/local/etc/exim/smtp_auth (buried deep inside client_send) in the form mailhost1.example.net: auth_plain=^USERNAME^PASSWORD ######## HTH Matthias ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: using Exim 4 w/ multiple smarthosts 2011-03-30 13:40 ` using Exim 4 w/ multiple smarthosts (was: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous?) Matthias Andree @ 2011-03-30 13:30 ` Richard Riley 0 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Richard Riley @ 2011-03-30 13:30 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ding Matthias Andree <ma+gnus@dt.e-technik.uni-dortmund.de> writes: > Am 30.03.2011 14:01, schrieb Richard Riley: >> Matthias Andree <ma+gnus@dt.e-technik.uni-dortmund.de> writes: >> >>> On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 08:38:46AM +0200, Richard Riley wrote: >>>> Not without pain. Of course. Exim4 is up there with the worst when it >>>> comes to "simple tweaks" and enabling exim4 for multiple smarthosts >>>> proved impossible (for me) give or take despite some old configs out >>>> there in google land for exim1-3 but not 4. Why not use exim4s smtp send >>>> facility? Its a pain if you travel : here I sit on holiday and smtp >>>> ports for outgoing are blocked by the ISP and/or the hotel router. Gah! >>> >>> While I could offer you sample configs from my Cygwin installation, I've >>> found out the hard way (this time on FreeBSD) that Exim4 has a very >>> awkward lock-destination-sites behaviour that requires major manual >>> interventions to purge the retry/site database to get mails unstuck, >>> thus I decided I'm not going to install any more of that. >>> >>> While Postfix is a bit more of an effort to configure (enable >>> sender-based authentication, enable sender-based relay, enable smtp (not >>> smtpd)-side tls, enable smtp-side sasl, permit plaintext authentication >>> on secure tls channels, set up all the maps, I find it's more >>> transparent and has less magic special casing underneath that confuses >>> the heck out of myself. >>> >> >> Much as I dislike Exim4 docs, I have to stick up for it here. Using a >> single smarthost as I described is pretty straightforward. > > The docs are quite detailed, however the hard-wired defaults and to a > lesser extent the default configuration take you in for a few surprises. > >> Clearing frozen mails caused by a destination refusing your mail because >> your IP is blacklisted or smtp ports are blocked is a google away. > > ...or just because the Exim4 host has been down for a while. BTST, and > that takes users by surprise, so you need to figure out how to kick and > purge /var/spool/exim/db/* so that exim actually tries again. It's not > sufficient to use exim -qff in such situations. :-( > > The delay_after_cutoff=true default that can cause routers to get jammed > and bounce all mail is quite unobvious... > > It's not Exim's TLS/SASL configuration or sender-dependent smarthost > configuration, but exactly the retry-, wait- and delay_after_cutoff > stuff. I haven't had such nasty effects as I've had with Exim's > remote_smtp in a dozen years with Postfix. Anyways, here we go, a few > comments inlined. Works for me with the default Exim configuration > around it with Exim 4.70 on Cygwin 1.5 and 1.7 and Exim 4.75 on FreeBSD > 8.2 (the original intent was to log everything while I had to use > Outlook 2003 and didn't trust it and make sure that I know where the > credentials are so that I could exclude them from or encrypt them for > the networked backup). > > Note that Postfix supports per-sender authentication, too, not just > per-smarthost authentication. In that case, Postfix figures out by > itself that it can only reuse TLS connections for mail from the same > sender. I wouldn't know how to tell Exim4 that. > > This snippet, however, probably would not exist had there been a Postfix > port to Windows or Cygwin in 2007 :-) > > ######################################################################## > # Exim 4 sender-dependent smarthosts: > > begin routers > > smarthost1: > driver = manualroute > domains = ! +local_domains > senders = address1@example.org : address2@example.org > transport = remote_smtp_ssl > route_data = "mailhost1.example.net::587" > > # smarthost2 also for bounces (nothing between = and :) > smarthost2: > driver = manualroute > domains = ! +local_domains > senders = : domain2.example > transport = remote_smtp_ssl > route_data = "hermes2.example.org::587" > > # smarthost3 uses an autossh tunnel: > smarthost_freebsd: > driver = manualroute > domains = ! +local_domains > senders = FreeBSD.org > transport = remote_smtp > route_data = "localhost::1234" > self = send > > # other stuff (forward, local delivery etc.) goes here. > # the example configure file is quite sound. > > # ... > > begin transports > > # ... > > # note this is the simple way, all remote_smtp_ssl > # routed mail requires TLS and AUTH and assumes > # trusted certs in /etc/ssl/certs > # > remote_smtp_ssl: > driver = smtp > hosts_require_tls = * > hosts_require_auth = * > tls_verify_certificates = /etc/ssl/certs > delay_after_cutoff = false > > # ... > > begin authenticators > > PLAIN: > driver = plaintext > server_set_id = $auth2 > server_prompts = : > server_condition = Authentication is not yet configured > server_advertise_condition = ${if def:tls_cipher } > client_send = > "${extract{auth_plain}{${lookup{$host}lsearch{/usr/local/etc/exim/smtp_auth}{$value}fail}}}" > > ############################################################# > > ... the credentials are in the file /usr/local/etc/exim/smtp_auth > (buried deep inside client_send) in the form > > mailhost1.example.net: auth_plain=^USERNAME^PASSWORD > > ######## > > HTH > Matthias Interesting post, but I think this doesnt work with multiple gmail smtp servers since they are all keyed by the same smtp server name. It needs to be keyed by the from address. Hairy stuff all in all. I am surprised its not a default config example to be honest. I do have a set up in emacs for dynamically channging he smtp server and credentials based on from/posting style in emacs but of course this isnt asynchronous and causes an "intolerable" (aren't we spoiled these days? ;)) delay. -- ☘ http://www.shamrockirishbar.com, http://splash-of-open-sauce.blogspot.com/ http://www.richardriley.net ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? 2011-03-30 9:36 ` Matthias Andree 2011-03-30 12:01 ` Richard Riley @ 2011-03-30 19:22 ` Leonidas Tsampros 2011-03-31 19:34 ` Sivaram Neelakantan 1 sibling, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread From: Leonidas Tsampros @ 2011-03-30 19:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ding Matthias Andree <ma+gnus@dt.e-technik.uni-dortmund.de> writes: > On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 08:38:46AM +0200, Richard Riley wrote: >> Not without pain. Of course. Exim4 is up there with the worst when it >> comes to "simple tweaks" and enabling exim4 for multiple smarthosts >> proved impossible (for me) give or take despite some old configs out >> there in google land for exim1-3 but not 4. Why not use exim4s smtp send >> facility? Its a pain if you travel : here I sit on holiday and smtp >> ports for outgoing are blocked by the ISP and/or the hotel router. Gah! > > While I could offer you sample configs from my Cygwin installation, I've > found out the hard way (this time on FreeBSD) that Exim4 has a very > awkward lock-destination-sites behaviour that requires major manual > interventions to purge the retry/site database to get mails unstuck, > thus I decided I'm not going to install any more of that. > > While Postfix is a bit more of an effort to configure (enable > sender-based authentication, enable sender-based relay, enable smtp (not > smtpd)-side tls, enable smtp-side sasl, permit plaintext authentication > on secure tls channels, set up all the maps, I find it's more > transparent and has less magic special casing underneath that confuses > the heck out of myself. Hi guys, having tried to do the above, I eventually ended up using smtp.gmail.com as my only postfix smarthost with smtp-side sasl, relaying from there all of my sender addresses. (There are some buttons for this procedure on the gmail settings). Also, I ended up using this setup too http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/MultipleSMTPAccounts since I need to use other smtp servers occassionally too. Ping me offlist if you want sample postfix config, but I think it's dead easy to do. The only + of my suggestions is that it's the simplest outgoing email setup I could think of. I'm using this setup for the last 6 months and I'm pretty happy. Best Regards, Leonidas Tsampros ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? 2011-03-30 19:22 ` making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? Leonidas Tsampros @ 2011-03-31 19:34 ` Sivaram Neelakantan 0 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread From: Sivaram Neelakantan @ 2011-03-31 19:34 UTC (permalink / raw) To: ding On Thu, Mar 31 2011,Leonidas Tsampros wrote: [snipped 22 lines] > Hi guys, > > having tried to do the above, I eventually ended up using smtp.gmail.com > as my only postfix smarthost with smtp-side sasl, relaying from there > all of my sender addresses. (There are some buttons for this procedure > on the gmail settings). > > Also, I ended up using this setup too > > http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/MultipleSMTPAccounts > > since I need to use other smtp servers occassionally too. > > Ping me offlist if you want sample postfix config, but I think it's dead > easy to do. > > The only + of my suggestions is that it's the simplest outgoing email > setup I could think of. I'm using this setup for the last 6 months and > I'm pretty happy. > > Best Regards, > Leonidas Tsampros > > Why don't you update the emacswiki with your setup, if you have time? Possibly link it from the msmtp/multiplesmtpaccounts page? sivaram -- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2011-03-31 19:34 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 12+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2011-03-21 6:19 making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? Eric Abrahamsen 2011-03-21 6:55 ` Erik Colson 2011-03-21 7:24 ` Eric Abrahamsen 2011-03-29 18:26 ` Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen 2011-03-30 0:51 ` Eric Abrahamsen 2011-03-30 6:38 ` Richard Riley 2011-03-30 9:36 ` Matthias Andree 2011-03-30 12:01 ` Richard Riley 2011-03-30 13:40 ` using Exim 4 w/ multiple smarthosts (was: making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous?) Matthias Andree 2011-03-30 13:30 ` using Exim 4 w/ multiple smarthosts Richard Riley 2011-03-30 19:22 ` making sendmail call to msmtp asynchronous? Leonidas Tsampros 2011-03-31 19:34 ` Sivaram Neelakantan
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