-mail-setup() {
- shell="$1"
- $shell sed -ri "s/MAIL_HOST=.*/MAIL_HOST=$new_host/" /a/bin/bash_unpublished/source-semi-priv
- $shell /a/bin/distro-setup/mail-setup exim4
-}
-
-mail-setup "$old_shell"
-
-sudo dd of=/etc/btrbk.conf <<'EOF'
-ssh_identity /root/.ssh/id_rsa
-# Just a guess that local7 is a good facility to pick.
-# It's a bit odd that the transaction log has to be logged to
-# a file or syslog, while other output is sent to std out.
-# The man does not mention a way for them to be together, but
-# I dunno if setting a log level like warn might also output
-# transaction info.
-transaction_syslog local7
-
-# so we only run one at a time
-lockfile /var/lock/btrbk.lock
-
-# default format of short does not accomidate hourly preservation setting
-timestamp_format long-iso
-
-# only make a snapshot if things have changed
-snapshot_create onchange
-# I could make this different from target_preserve,
-# if one disk had less space.
-# for now, keeping them equal.
-snapshot_preserve 36h 14d 8w 24m
-snapshot_preserve_min 4h
-snapshot_dir btrbk
-
-# so, total backups = ~89
-target_preserve 36h 14d 8w 24m
-target_preserve_min 4h
+# previously, I was checking to see if the new mail host
+# is on my home network, then changing my home dns
+# to resolve on the local network, so that I didnt
+# have to send traffic out to the internet or rely
+# on that. However, that breaks for a laptop that roams.
+# So, we could have a cronjob that updates that dns,
+# however, another solution is to just use ipv6,
+# and I prefer that.
+#
+# TODO: enable ipv6 for email. exim config setting disables it.
+# need to add vpn support. need to add firewall / routing.
+# I think exim will try ipv6 first, so no need to disable
+# ipv6 i think.