Linux and UNIX Man Pages

Linux & Unix Commands - Search Man Pages

nullmailer(7) [debian man page]

nullmailer(7)						 Miscellaneous Information Manual					     nullmailer(7)

NAME
nullmailer - Overview of nullmailer documentation INTRODUCTION
nullmailer is a simple and secure relay-only mail transport agent. Documentation on how messages are reformatted and injected into the queue can be found in nullmailer-inject(1). Documentation on how mes- sages are actually inserted into the queue can be found in nullmailer-queue(8). The process of sending queued messages is described in nullmailer-send(8). The following table lists all the control files used by nullmailer. control file used by adminaddr nullmailer-queue defaultdomain nullmailer-inject defaulthost nullmailer-inject helohost nullmailer-send idhost nullmailer-inject me nullmailer-inject pausetime nullmailer-send remotes nullmailer-send sendtimeout nullmailer-send nullmailer(7)

Check Out this Related Man Page

nullmailer-inject(1)					      General Commands Manual					      nullmailer-inject(1)

NAME
nullmailer-inject - Reformat and inject a message into the queue. SYNOPSIS
nullmailer-inject [-a] [-b] [-e] [-f sender] [-h] [recipient [recipient ...]] DESCRIPTION
This program reads a email message from standard input, reformats its header to comply with RFC822, and sends the resulting message to the queue. HEADER FIELDS The following lines are parsed for recipient addresses: To, Cc, Bcc, Apparently-To, Resent-To, Resent-Cc, and Resent-Bcc. The following sender address lines are parsed and rewritten: Sender, From, Reply-To, Return-Path, Return-Receipt-To, Errors-To, Resent- Sender, Resent-From, and Resent-Reply-To. If the Return-Path header field is present and contains a single address, its contents will be used to set the envelope sender address. If the message contains any of the following fields, it is treated as a resent message: Resent-Sender, Resent-From, Resent-Reply-To, Resent-To, Resent-Cc, Resent-Bcc, Resent-Date, Resent-Message-ID. If the message is resent, only the recipient fields prefixed with Resent- are examined for addresses. Any occurrences of Bcc, Resent-Bcc, Return-Path, or Content-Length are discarded after they are parsed (if necessary). If the header lacks a Message-Id field, a unique string is generated and added to the message. If the header lacks a Date field, the cur- rent local date and time in RFC822 format is appended to the message. If the message has no To or Cc fields, the following line is appended to the message: Cc: recipient list not shown: ; ADDRESS LISTS Address lists are expected to follow the syntax set out in RFC822. The following is a simplified explanation of the syntax. An address list is list of addresses separated by commas. An individual address may have one of the following three forms: user@fqdn, com- ment<user@fqdn>, or phrase:address-list;. Any of the first two forms may be used within the address list of the third form. Any word con- taining special characters must be placed in double quotes and the special characters must be preceded with a backslash. Comments may be placed between addresses in parenthesis. All comments are ignored. Addresses lists are reformatted as they are parsed for ease of later re-parsing when the message reaches the destination(s). If an address is missing a fqdn, nullmailer-inject adds one. OPTIONS
-a Use only the command line arguments as recipient addresses. Ignore the header recipient lines. -b Use both the command line arguments and data from the message header as recipient addresses. -e Use either the command line arguments (if there are any) or data from the message header (if there are no arguments) as the recipi- ent addresses. -f sender Set the envelope sender address to sender . -h Use only data from the message header as the recipient addresses. -n Do not queue the message, but print the reformatted contents to standard output. -v Print out the envelope (sender and recipient addresses) preceding the message when printing the message to standard output. RETURN VALUE
Exits 0 if it was successful, otherwise it prints a diagnostic message to standard output and exits 1. ENVIRONMENT
The environment variable NULLMAILER_FLAGS is parsed and the behavior of nullmailer-inject is modified if any of the following letters are present: c Use "address (comment)" style in the generated From field instead of the default "comment <address>" style. f Ignore and remove any From header lines and always insert a generated one. i Ignore and remove any Message-Id header lines. s Ignore and remove any Return-Path header lines. t Insert a To line containing a list of the recipients if the header does not contain either a To or a Cc field. If the message is determined to be a resent message (see above), a Resent-To field is added if the header does not contain either a Resent-To or a Resent-Cc field. The user name is set by NULLMAILER_USER, MAILUSER, USER, or LOGNAME, whichever comes first. If none of the above are set the name is taken from the password file, or set to unknown if that fails. The host name is set by the canonicalized value of NULLMAILER_HOST, MAILHOST, or HOSTNAME, whichever comes first, or the defaulthost config file if none of the above are set (see below). The full name of the user is set by NULLMAILER_NAME, MAILNAME, or NAME, whichever comes first. The user and host name of the envelope sender default to the user and host name set above, but may be overridden by NULLMAILER_SUSER and NULLMAILER_SHOST. If NULLMAILER_QUEUE is set, the program named is used in place of nullmailer-queue to queue the formatted message. CONTROL FILES
When reading the following files, a single line is read and stripped of all leading and trailing whitespace characters. defaultdomain The content of this file is appended to any host name that does not contain a period (except localhost), including defaulthost and idhost. Defaults to the value of the /etc/mailname system file, if it exists, otherwise the literal name defauldomain. defaulthost The content of this file is appended to any address that is missing a host name. Defaults to the value of the /etc/mailname system file, if it exists, otherwise the literal name defaulthost. idhost The content of this file is used when building the message-id string for the message. Defaults to the canonicalized value of defaulthost. /etc/mailname The fully-qualifiled host name of the computer running nullmailer. Defaults to the literal name me. SEE ALSO
nullmailer-queue(8) NOTES
This document glosses over very many details of how address parsing and rewriting actually works (among other things). nullmailer-inject(1)
Man Page