6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Red Hat
Hello,
We have been looking for ways of implementing some redundancy on our postfix gateways in our company. We have 4 Postfix Gateways.
mail2.domain.ro 10
mail.domain.ro 20
mail1.domain.ro 30
mail3.domain.ro 40
On nslookup we have like this:
domain.ro MX preference = 10,... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: panaitescuionel
0 Replies
2. HP-UX
We have configured our mail unix server and can send out emails automatically from applications running on unix to different people in our company as well as outside our company. However there is an outside client who is not receiving these emails because the settings on their mail server cannot... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tenyhwa
4 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
i am new in AIX i am trying to write a script to take a backup for specific files on server to and check error log if backup success send email to administrator , script done except for sending mail , i try to configure sendmail on aix to use our exchange server to send emails but still get error... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ahmed_salah
0 Replies
4. Red Hat
we have an exchange server in company as excmailbocx.company.com
i wanna send mail using sendmail from redhat to my exchange mail account
how can it be possible? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: oguzhantrg
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Is it possible to configure the Solairs (2.6) mail client to get it's email from an MS Exchange server ? If so can soemone point me in the right direction.
Thanx
:confused: (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ianf
5 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi everyone
I am setting up my own web hosting and dns server - have got all the dns and web server things sorted out. I am wondering if anyone knows what I need to do to enable my customers to have their own pop and smtp access under their own domains which they host with me. I have two ip... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: alwayslearningunix
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mail::mboxparser::mail::convertable
MboxParser::Mail::Convertable(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation MboxParser::Mail::Convertable(3pm)
NAME
Mail::MboxParser::Mail::Convertable - convert mail for sending etc.
SYNOPSIS
use Mail::MboxParser;
[...]
# $msg is a Mail::MboxParser::Mail-object
my $mail = $msg->make_convertable;
$mail->delete_from_header('date', 'message-id');
$mail->replace_in_header('to', 'john.doe@foobar.com');
$mail->add_to_header( ['cc', 'john.does.brother@foobar.com'],
where => 'BEHIND' );
$mail->send('sendmail');
DESCRIPTION
This class adds means to convert an email object into something that could be send via SMTP, NNTP or dumped to a file or filehandle.
Therefore, methods are provided that change the structure of an email which includes adding and removing of header-fields, MIME-parts etc
and transforming them into objects of related modules.
Currently, only basic manipulation of the header and sending using Mail::Mailer is provided. More is to come soon.
This class works non-destructive. You first create a Convertable-object and do any modifications on this while the Mail-object from which
it was derived will not be touched.
METHODS
delete_from_header(header-fields)
Given a list of header-field names, these fields will be removed from the header. If you want to re-send a message, you could for
instance remove the cc-field cause otherwise the message would be carbon-copied to the addresses listed in the cc-field.
add_to_header(array-ref)
add_to_header(array-ref, where => 'BEFORE' | 'BEHIND')
add_to_header() takes a reference to a two-element list whose first element specifies the header-field to add or to add to while the
second elements specifies the data that should be added. 'where' specifies whether to add at the beginning or at the end of the header.
Defaults to 'BEHIND' if not given.
replace_in_header(header-field, new_data)
First element must be the header-field to be replaced while the second argument must be a string indicating what will be the new
content of the header-field.
send(command, args)
Literally inherited from Mail::Internet. Commands can be "mail" (using the UNIX-mail program), "sendmail" (using a configured sendmail
or compatible MTA like exim), "smtp" (for using Net::SMTP) and "test" which will only display what would be sent using /bin/echo.
Additional arguments will be passed on to Mail::Mailer->new() which is in fact what Mail::Internet->send() uses.
For more details, see Mail::Mailer
VERSION
This is version 0.55.
AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
Tassilo von Parseval <tassilo.von.parseval@rwth-aachen.de>
Copyright (c) 2001-2005 Tassilo von Parseval. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
Mail::Internet, Mail::Mailer
perl v5.12.3 2005-12-08 MboxParser::Mail::Convertable(3pm)