Re: Solved : Re: Light-weight SMTP "server"

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David Rosenstrauch wrote:
On Fri, June 5, 2009 6:23 pm, Magnus Therning wrote:
Mike Sampson wrote:
I have used msmtp. From memory it just consists of a command line
utility
and a config file containing the mail server you want to use,
credentials if
used, etc. Worked well for me. There are quite a few tutorials on the
web
about using it with mutt.
It works beautifully.  I especially like the ability to have a per-user
configuration together with a system config (that beats ssmtp).  After
replacing dcron by fcron I can now get the cron-output mailed off the
machine
as well.

Just curious, by the way: msmtp isn't exactly an SMTP "server", correct? It's really just a sendmail replacement, right? (i.e., not a full-fledged
SMTP daemon, listening on port 25, etc.)

That is correct.

If that's the case, then I don't think I could use it to replace exim. By
using exim on my home server (configured to relay mail out to my ISP), I
can VPN in to the server from my laptop and then have Thunderbird on the
laptop send mail using the SMTP server on 10.1.0.1:25.  A simple sendmail
executable on the server wouldn't let me accomplish this.

No, it's not a drop-in replacement for exim, or any other SMTP _server_.

The one thing I realised a while back was that I didn't really _need_ a
full-fledged server.  I read all my email via IMAP and send via my ISP's
server.  However, some tools I use (e.g. cron and darcs) make use of a command
line too to send email (something like /usr/sbin/sendmail).

Why do you _need_ an SMTP server?
From the sounds of it you could use your ISP's server directly from the
laptop via the VPN connection.  Either that, or as another poster suggested,
use SSH port forwarding to get to the SMTP server.

/M

--
Magnus Therning                        (OpenPGP: 0xAB4DFBA4)
magnus@therning.org          Jabber: magnus@therning.org
http://therning.org/magnus         identi.ca|twitter: magthe



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