T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
86.1 | COPY_SELF | IOSG::TALLETT | Mit Schuh bish hi | Mon Feb 24 1992 18:10 | 14 |
|
Hi there!
Gosh, a mail question that even I can answer!
The reason is probably because the user A has his VMSMAIL account
set up to send himself a copy of all mails sent.
See MAIL> HELP SET COPY_SELF
or type MAIL> SET COPY_SELF NOSEND
Regards,
Paul
|
86.2 | | KURTAN::WESTERBACK | After all, who is John Galt? | Mon Feb 24 1992 20:06 | 5 |
| Thanks, at first your answer didn't make sense to me, but after testing
I see that you're right! I didn't realise that user A's VMSMAIL setting
had any bearing on this problem.
Hans
|
86.3 | An explanation | IOSG::TALLETT | Mit Schuh bish hi | Tue Feb 25 1992 10:27 | 9 |
| Hi again!
I have it on good authority that depending on how you address
the mail to VMSMAIL (eg not if using MRGATE) then ALL-IN-1 actually
fires up VMSMAIL in the subprocess. That is why the settings have
a bearing.
Regards,
Paul
|
86.4 | Mounting one of my favourite soapboxes | FORTY2::ASH | Grahame Ash @REO | Tue Feb 25 1992 12:57 | 11 |
| This fact should be more widely-known. As Paul says, if a user sets MAIDES to
be VMSMAIL, then the SENDING process (which will be the Fetcher for remote
mail, real people for local mail) runs VMSMAIL in the subprocess. This can be
a pain if you just want to 'send a quick message'.
The same, of course, applies to the auto-forward argument. Users who insist on
getting their mail 'immediately' (by setting MAIDES = VMSMAIL, or AF to _user,
rather than setting AF via MRGATE) should be made aware that they are
penalising other users of the system.
grahame
|
86.5 | Unless Tony has already started... | AIMTEC::WICKS_A | Vote Bill'n'Opus for a weirder USA | Tue Feb 25 1992 16:59 | 8 |
| Grahame,
Now if we wrote a book everyone in the world would know the answers
to these life or death questions such as "why is C.TXT called C.TXT?"
Regards,
Andrew.D.Wicks
|