Mon, 24 Jul 2006 20:08:44 -0400
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Under unix, lsv_amin is a "bridge" program that is called by
sendmail, via an entry in /etc/aliases, for each individual inbound
mail piece. That makes it possible to pipe mail for LISTSERV to the
lsv_amin program.
Under Windows, lsv_amin isn't used. The SMTPL.EXE "listener" service
performs both the inbound mail function and the "bridge" to LISTSERV
all in one package, and it runs in the background as a service. You
can't pipe mail to SMTPL.EXE, so you're typically left with using
Blat (or a similar SMTP file sending program) to send the mail via SMTP.
Nathan
At 06:14 PM 7/24/2006 -0400, you wrote:
>I take it from Nathan's later comment this is not available in Windows
>(our platform of "choice"). I haven't been able to find any documentation
>about it, regardless. Where should I have been looking?
>
> >Long about 04:03 PM 7/24/2006, Nathan Brindle sent the following:
> >
> >Even easier to just pipe it to lsv-amin (with the right headers)...
> >
> > foreach $i (@files) {
> > system("cat $i | /usr/listserv/bin/lsv_amin -t listserv");
> > }
> >
> >Why send things to the mail queue that don't need to go there?
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