8.1 Mail to Local Login Users

Local login users usually receive mail in mbox format in ~/Mailbox and ~/.mail.[1] Or they receive mail in Maildir format in ~/Maildir/.

[1] For historical compatibility, some still use /var/spool/mail/username, but in this chapter I assume that you have at least moved your users' mailboxes into their home directories where they belong.

8.1.1 Local Delivery .qmail Files and Default Delivery Rules

In the simplest case, a user's .qmail file needs to contain only a single line to specify the user's mailbox, either the mbox format mailbox:

# deliver into $HOME/Mailbox ./Mailbox

or the Maildir:

# deliver into a file in $HOME/Maildir/ ./Maildir/

I suggest that every shell user should have a .qmail file (add it to the set of skeleton files that your adduser procedure creates), but for users who don't, be sure to set a reasonable default as the argument to qmail-start in /service/qmail/run, as described in Chapter 3.

8.1.2 Maildirs and Mail Clients

Although Maildirs have all sorts of advantages over mboxes, they are not supported in many mail clients. For the popular elm and pine clients, qmail provides small scripts, elq and pinq, which move mail from the Maildir into an mbox, then run the client. These use the maildir2mbox utility, which requires three environment variables to be set. MAIL is the mbox file, usually $HOME/Mailbox. MAILTMP is the name of a temporary file used to hold a copy of the updated mbox, which must be on the same filesystem as $MAIL, usually $HOME/Mailbox.tmp. MAILDIR is the name of the Maildir, usually $HOME/Maildir.

While these two scripts work adequately, in the long run if you're using Maildirs, you should use a Maildir client. Unix and Linux command-line users can try mutt, a nice freeware client, Courier IMAP (see Chapter 13), and IMAP clients including pine and the KDE mail client.



qmail
qmail
ISBN: 1565926285
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2006
Pages: 152

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