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Operating Systems OS X (Apple) fetchmail and postfix mail setup on Snow Leopard - request for guidance Post 302584931 by butterbaerchen on Monday 26th of December 2011 09:15:23 PM
Old 12-26-2011
that is exactly what I want to happen. I read that link just yesterday, thank you for posting it. Now, I have a file: /var/root/.forward
and it says: /dev/null (I have not found a root mailbox so far ... where do I create it and with which permissions etc?)
Smilie
and when I send mail to root from the commandline it gets rewritten to:
root @ mydomain.org and postfix sends it off... and it bounces.
and if I put roadie (my username) into that /var/root/.forward file instead of /dev/null - it gets rewritten to roadie @ mydomain.org - and, since that mail account actually exists on the server, - I do get the mail - but from fetchmail - not what I want - the mail should not leave the machine. Smilie

in the article it says to put username@localhost into roots .forward file. good, makes sense but still gets rewritten and sent out. I am reading on how mailqueue and local delivery actually works - but I am slow. Have not found a thread so far that tells how someone set it up in words I understand. What am I missing? ... is it the local_recipient_map in postfix and the postmap command? I get confused with virtual, forward, aliases and all of that.
to me it looks as if roadie and roadie @ domain.org are 2 different identities to postfix - where do I glue them together so that they share the /var/mail/roadie inbox file and local mail arrives direct and not via the mailserver of my hosting company? thank you for giving your time. I am learning heaps btw - great undertaking.

Last edited by butterbaerchen; 12-26-2011 at 10:19 PM.. Reason: flatten email address
 

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vacation(1)						      General Commands Manual						       vacation(1)

NAME
vacation - Informs senders of mail that recipient is absent SYNOPSIS
vacation -I The vacation command returns a message to the sender of a mail message, saying that the recipient is on vacation or otherwise absent. OPTIONS
Initializes the $HOME/.vacation.pag and $HOME/.vacation.dir files. Execute this option before you modify your $HOME/.forward file. DESCRIPTION
The vacation command accepts standard input and attempts to send a vacation message to the user specified in that input, which should be a mail message. The vacation command is usually invoked in your $HOME/.forward file, which is used to forward your mail to another username. When you want vacation messages to be sent to users who send you mail, enter the following in your $HOME/.forward file: user, "|vacation user" Replace user by your username. This allows mail sent to you to be both received by you and piped to the vacation command; vacation reads the mail message, determines the sender, and sends a reply. The sender receives a vacation message, and the original mail is waiting in your mailbox when you return. When vacation is invoked without the -I option, as in the file, it reads the first line from the standard input for a From line to deter- mine the sender. If this is not present, an error message is produced. (All properly formatted incoming mail should include a From line.) No vacation message is sent if the From header line indicates that the message is from Postmaster; from MAILER-DAEMON; if the initial From line includes the string -REQUEST@; or if a Precedence: bulk or Precedence: junk line is included in the header. You must initialize vacation for your username by issuing the command vacation -I before you can use the vacation command. The vacation command expects a $HOME/.vacation.msg file containing a message to be sent back to each sender. The file should be an entire message, including any desired headers, such as From or Subject. This message will be sent only once a week to each unique message sender. (If this file does not exist, vacation uses /usr/share/lib/vacation.def, a system-wide default vacation message, if it exists.) The names of people who have sent you messages are kept in the files $HOME/.vacation.pag and $HOME/.vacation.dir. These files are created when you initialize vacation for your username with vacation -I. EXAMPLES
If your username is myra and you want to send a message once a week to each person who has sent you mail, initialize vacation by entering: vacation -I Next, add the following line to your $HOME/.forward file (create this file if it does not exist): myra, "|vacation myra" If you want to send a vacation message other than the system default message in /usr/share/lib/vacation.def, create the file in your home directory and enter the message in it. For example: From: myra@k.table (Myra Louise Minter) Subject: I am on vacation. Delivered-By-the-Graces-Of: the Vacation program I am on vacation until October 1. If you have something urgent, please telephone Lucy or Sue. -- Myra FILES
System-wide default vacation message. Contains address to which mail is forwarded. Contains the names of people who have sent you mail while the vacation command was being used. Contains the names of people who have sent you mail while the vacation command was being used. Contains your personal vacation message. SEE ALSO
Commands: mail(1), mailx(1), sendmail(8) vacation(1)
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