- If you have enabled POP support and you want this to be the
- default method of accessing new mail, you will need to change
- the values of the variables "servers", "pophost", "localname",
- and possibly "mmailid".
-
- a) "servers" defines the server to which you send outgoing SMTP
- traffic.
-
- b) "pophost" defines the server that runs the POP daemon, and to
- which `inc' and `msgchk' will query for new mail.
-
- c) "localname" defines the hostname that nmh considers local.
- If not set, then nmh queries your OS for this value. You may
- want to change this if you wish your e-mail to appear as if it
- originated on the POP server.
-
- d) "mmailid" allows two different types of email address masquerading
- when it's set to be non-zero. The first type is GECOS-based
- masquerading. nmh will check if the user's pw_gecos field in the passwd
- is of the form:
-
- Full Name <fakeusername>
-
- If it is, the internal nmh routines that find the username and full
- name of that user will return "fakeusername" and "Full Name"
- respectively. This is useful if you want the messages you send to
- always appear to come from the name of an MTA alias rather than your
- actual account name. For instance, many organizations set up
- "First.Last" sendmail aliases for all users. If this is the case,
- the GECOS field for each user should look like:
-
- First [Middle] Last <First.Last>
-
- The other type of masquerading that mmailid turns on is envelope
- "From:" masquerading based on draft contents. When a user explicitly
- specifies a "From:" header in a message, nmh uses it rather than
- constructing its own. However, the SMTP envelope "From:" and the
- "Sender:" header are set to the user's real address. Turning on
- mmailid prevents this latter behavior. This is useful when the user
- wants to pretend to be sending mail "directly" from a remote POP3
- account, or when remote mail robots incorrectly use the envelope
- "From:" in preference to the body "From:" (or refuse to take action
- when the two don't match).
+ If, instead, all your mail sending and receiving occurs on a
+ remote POP/SMTP server, you will need to look at the values of the
+ variables "localname", "pophost", and "servers":
+
+ a) "localname" defines the hostname that nmh considers local.
+ If not set, then nmh queries your OS for this value. You will
+ want to change this if you wish your e-mail to appear as if it
+ originated on the POP server.
+
+ b) "pophost" defines the server that runs the POP daemon, and to
+ which `inc' and `msgchk' will always query for new mail.
+
+ c) "servers" defines the server to which you send outgoing SMTP
+ traffic.