Summary: | bcc: without to: field should be valid | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | [Applications] kmail | Reporter: | Unknown <null> |
Component: | general | Assignee: | Karl-Heinz Zimmer <khz> |
Status: | RESOLVED FIXED | ||
Severity: | wishlist | CC: | bugz57, christopher_adams, gj, oded, patrick, Thomas.Kraemer |
Priority: | NOR | ||
Version: | unspecified | ||
Target Milestone: | --- | ||
Platform: | openSUSE | ||
OS: | Other | ||
Latest Commit: | Version Fixed In: |
Description
Unknown
2001-10-13 10:46:26 UTC
This bug still seems to be in KMail 1.5. Please remove it. Other mail-readers allow bcc-only mails, too! As a side note (current CVS as of 26062003) entering a single ";" into the To: field allows me to send a message with only BCC recipients (didn't test other characters...), so there seems to be no real technical reason for the current state... Patrick *** Bug 61307 has been marked as a duplicate of this bug. *** It appears that this bug (#33653) is not assigned to anyone. Also, the "workaround" noted in comment #2 above results in a bounce (undeliverable) from the mail server. Thanks, John *** Bug 63300 has been marked as a duplicate of this bug. *** Other email clients automaticly put the sender's email in the To field when there is only a Bcc field (and don't use it in the RCPT command, of course). Putting the sender's e-mail in the To field shouldn't be necessary, though -- for instance, both NetScape Messenger and MicroShaft Outhouse Excess don't require this. *** Bug 73728 has been marked as a duplicate of this bug. *** *** Bug 80843 has been marked as a duplicate of this bug. *** done. According to RFC 2822 it is allowed to specify a "group" of mailboxes containing zero entries. So we let KMSender use a "Undisclosed.Recipients: ;" specification when it gets to send a mail with empty To header. Of course KMComposer will still reject attempts to send mails with no recipients at all: there must be either a To or a CC or a BCC recipient. FIXED on KDE_HEAD, KDE_3_2_BRANCH, or both? Thanks, Norberto Just KDE HEAD, but backporting (if someone wants to do it) should be no problem. |