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Goofy mh problem



Try Jerry's solution first and see if it fits your needs.  I took it
a step further and compiled my own sendmail binary and then hooked
mh into it.  This way, I only had to configure sendmail for all my
email needs.

The main benefit I sought by using sendmail was the 'genericstable'
and the 'masquerade envelope' features.  smap might be another
alternative, but I already know sendmail ;-)

I used to have a document outlining how I set it all up.  Maybe I can dig
it out....

jc at trillian.mit.edu wrote:
> Hi; me again.  It occurs to  me  that  maybe  someone  here  will  be
> familiar  with the mh mailer, and might have a solution to one of the
> silliest email problems I've seen yet (and I've seen a lot of  them).
> I thought I'd give mh a try, after not using it for years, since it's
> now available on linux and bsd systems and seems to basically work.
> 
> However, when I started using mh  on  this  machine,  something  that
> rapidly  came to my attention was that a lot of people couldn't reply
> to my messages.  The reason turned out to  be  that  it  was  sending
> messages out with the header line like:
>    From: <jc at trillian.mit.edu>, <jc at localhost>
>    From: John Chambers <jc at localhost.mit.edu>
> In test that I've done sending myself messages,  I've  seen  both  of
> these.   Needless  to say, jc at localhost is of little use to people on
> other machines, and jc at localhost.mit.edu simply bounces.   The  first
> example  seems  to  work  with  most Unix-type mailers, but Microsoft
> mailers discard the first address and use the second one.  Duh!
> 
> One of the funny cases is that when mediaone users try  to  reply  to
> this,  their  mail  servers know how to deliver it, to someone called
> "jc" in their own system.  He knows about me and has forwarded  me  a
> few  messages,  but  I'd rather not bother him with messages intended
> for me.
> 
> Anyhow, several people who have used mh have told me  that  they  are
> sure  there's  a  simple  way  to  configure mh to send out the right
> return address.  Unfortunately, while they insist that  it's  simple,
> they  can't  actually tell me how to do it.  Something that you can't
> type isn't all that useful, no matter how simple it is.  We've  spent
> far too much time grovelling around in TFM pages, and not finding it.
> 
> Anyone know?  Or should I just dismiss mh as not usable yet?
> 
> (Funny thing is, on this machine, the /usr/bin/mail command does  the
> same thing.  But the hostname and uname commands give the correct DNS
> name for this machine.  Why both of these  mailers  do  something  so
> bogus  is a real mystery.  One of our linux machines at work does the
> same thing, and nobody there can diagnose it, either.  We have had  a
> couple  of  comments that soon the pwd command will start saying just
> ".", which is of course absolutely true.  ;-)
> 
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