01-11-2008
Which MTA are you running (eg sendmail/postfix/other )?
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi All,
I am running an email server on a Linux machine. My goal is to set up in a way that I can use pop3 to retrieve mail from a Windows machine using Outlook. Now I can download the messages from the Linux email server, however I can not send out messages. I encounter this error:
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vtran4270
1 Replies
2. IP Networking
Hi,
I have a solaris 9 box, and 2 domains A.com and B.net. the machine is on B.net.
I am not able to send emails to @A.com using mail or mailx. after reading on sendmail,
there was something about relaying and editing the file /etc/mail/relay-domains.
Please let me know if this is what i... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: 0ktalmagik
1 Replies
3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi ,
I have one question, suppose i am a normal user and when i use 'w' command , it shows who is logged on and what they are doing .
Now i want to stop others users to know what i am doing accept the root ?
can i do this ?
thanks (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mobile01
5 Replies
4. Programming
how do you send a ".\n" in a smtp client?
>354 Send message, end with <CRLF>.<CRLF>
>.
>
i have already issued a "./n" but it doesnt work.
please help. thanks. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: grotesque
1 Replies
5. AIX
Hi All,
I have a unix box which is in a network with windows machine, I am able to send the mails to the user id's with in the unix box. I dont have Internet connection for this box, so I am not able to test if it can send mails to external network or not?
I want to know, if SMTP is already... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: balu_puttaganti
0 Replies
6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi All,
I have a unix box which is in a network with windows machine, I am able to send the mails to the user id's with in the unix box. I dont have Internet connection for this box, so I am not able to test if it can send mails to external network or not?
I want to know, if SMTP is already... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: balu_puttaganti
1 Replies
7. Red Hat
Hi all,
Please help to check weather the SMTP settings are configured or not on my LINUX server?
I want to send a mail to mailbox. I know that the target SMTP server has to be configured on LINUX box to do so.
How can i see weather it is configured or not?
--Ramesh Ch. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Raamc
3 Replies
8. Solaris
Hi all
I have a newly installed Oracle X2-4 server running Solaris 10 x86 with the latest patches.
I have one non-global zone configured running an Oracle DB instance.
After configuring IPMP failover between two NICs on the server and rebooting I am seeing the /var/adm/messages being flooded... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: notreallyhere
7 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
It is crazy when you just entered a command example sudo or su or even ps. It will flood your /var/log/messages. Please see duplicate entries except for the pid. At 1 specific time.
Thanks
$ cat b
Jan 13 17:09:05 SERVER1 bash: user1 as root:
Jan 13 17:09:05 SERVER1 bash: user1 as root:
Jan... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: invinzin21
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
mailwrapper
MAILWRAPPER(8) BSD System Manager's Manual MAILWRAPPER(8)
NAME
mailwrapper -- invoke appropriate MTA software based on configuration file
SYNOPSIS
Special. See below.
DESCRIPTION
Once upon time, the only Mail Transfer Agent (MTA) software easily available was ``sendmail''. This famous MTA was written by Eric Allman
and first appeared in 4.1BSD. The legacy of this MTA affected most Mail User Agents (MUAs) such as mail(1); the path and calling conventions
expected by ``sendmail'' were compiled in.
But times changed. On a modern NetBSD system, the administrator may wish to use one of several available MTAs.
It would be difficult to modify all MUA software typically available on a system, so most of the authors of alternative MTAs have written
their front end message submission programs that may appear in the place of /usr/sbin/sendmail, but still follow the same calling conventions
as ``sendmail''.
The ``sendmail'' MTA also typically has aliases named mailq(1) and newaliases(1) linked to it. The program knows to behave differently when
its argv[0] is ``mailq'' or ``newaliases'' and behaves appropriately. Typically, replacement MTAs provide similar functionality, either
through a program that also switches behavior based on calling name, or through a set of programs that provide similar functionality.
Although having replacement programs that plug replace ``sendmail'' helps in installing alternative MTAs, it essentially makes the configura-
tion of the system depend on hand installing new programs in /usr. This leads to configuration problems for many administrators, since they
may wish to install a new MTA without altering the system provided /usr. (This may be, for example, to avoid having upgrade problems when a
new version of the system is installed over the old.) They may also have a shared /usr among several machines, and may wish to avoid placing
implicit configuration information in a read-only /usr.
The mailwrapper program is designed to replace /usr/sbin/sendmail and to invoke an appropriate MTA based on configuration information placed
in /etc/mailer.conf. This permits the administrator to configure which MTA is to be invoked on the system at run time.
EXIT STATUS
mailwrapper exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
FILES
Configuration for mailwrapper is kept in /etc/mailer.conf. /usr/sbin/sendmail is typically set up as a symlink to mailwrapper which is not
usually invoked on its own.
DIAGNOSTICS
mailwrapper will print a diagnostic if its configuration file is missing or malformed, or does not contain a mapping for the name under which
it was invoked.
SEE ALSO
mail(1), mailq(1), newaliases(1), postfix(1), mailer.conf(5)
HISTORY
The mailwrapper program appeared in NetBSD 1.4.
AUTHORS
Perry E. Metzger <perry@piermont.com>
BUGS
The entire reason this program exists is a crock. Instead, a command for how to submit mail should be standardized, and all the ``behave
differently if invoked with a different name'' behavior of things like mailq(1) should go away.
BSD
April 10, 2010 BSD