Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Sendmail question
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Sendmail question Post 302090848 by Corona688 on Wednesday 27th of September 2006 04:49:36 PM
Old 09-27-2006
I didn't suggest that restarting would make it work, as much as, unlike other daemons, mail daemons are perfectly happy to sit and do nothing instead of politely dying when given settings they think are bad.

See if you can increase the logging level, to get the mail daemon to tell you more.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Sendmail question

I'm using sendmail to send a attachment which works good. I send the To Cc Subject Attachment. Question is does anyone know how to put a voting botton in the script when sending the email I want the Approve;Reject button. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Dan Savarino
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Sendmail question

How would I configure sendmail so that the INTERN group can only send email locally to xyz.com, while the EXTERN group can send email anywhere. Thanks for your help! (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Malbeuf
5 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Sendmail user question

Hi All I am trying to deal with a problem. Any suggestions would be helpful! I have sendmail running on a Redhat 8 box and is serving about 75 e-mail accounts. Version Info: OS:Red Hat Linux release 8.0 (Psyche) sendmail-8.12.8-9.80 sendmail-cf-8.12.8-9.80 There are a few users that... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: skotapal
0 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Sendmail question

I apologize for asking what I'm sure is a basic question, but I have an automated script that will send a file using sendmail to a list of e-mail accounts. When one or more of those e-mail accounts is bad, it bounces the message back to the account that is executing the script. How can I... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jake513
2 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Solaris 9 Sendmail Question

hello to all, I'm a newbie to configuring sendmail. I have a solaris 9 server that is also set up as a NIS master server. My 1st question is how do properly set up sendmail to work in conjuntion with NIS users, so I need to set up sendmail in a certain way or can I just set it up normally. Also... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: GLJ@USC
5 Replies

6. Solaris

Sendmail Question

Hi Guys, Quick question re sendmail and mail queues. If the sendmail deamon is stopped i.e. set up to execute and stop at certain intervals from crontab, and the sendmail command is invoked the mail is queued in the clientmqueue directory. Then the next time sendmail is executed the mails... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: KenLynch
2 Replies

7. Solaris

Sendmail Question

Yes Folks, Quick question. Is it possible to send multiple attachments with sendmail and if so how? Thinking here in terms of sending multiple .pdf files as attachments. I can do it with one but how do I do it for multiples. Slainte, (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: KenLynch
1 Replies

8. Solaris

sendmail question

Hello all, On my solaris 9 I have this process running smmsp 29138 1 0 Apr 17 ? 0:00 /usr/lib/sendmail -Ac -q15m root 29137 1 0 Apr 17 ? 0:00 /usr/lib/sendmail -q15m if i use the command /usr/bin/mconnect connecting to host localhost (127.0.0.1), port... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Hugues
0 Replies

9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

sendmail config question

I configured Solaris 10 server to send all mails to our exchange server via D{MTAHost} in submit.cf. but now I don't get internal messages like cron output. what can I do? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: amozofer
2 Replies

10. BSD

OpneBSD 5.3 sendmail question

I have a basic OpenBSD 5.3 system installed as 64 bit on an old Sun Blade 100. Yes, it does work fine! It has XFCE, R, Firefox 3.6, nano installed. I have to say that 5.3 is much better than 5.0 or 5.1, and R works very well on it. Anyway, onto the main question. Could someone provide me with... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: RichardET
2 Replies
CLUSTER.CONF(5)                                                       cluster                                                      CLUSTER.CONF(5)

NAME
cluster.conf - configuration file for cman and related daemons SYNOPSIS
/etc/cluster/cluster.conf DESCRIPTION
When cman_tool(8) starts the corosync(8) daemon, the cluster.conf data is read into the corosync in-memory database (confdb). The configu- ration is used by corosync, cman and other related cluster daemons and programs. When cman configures corosync with cluster.conf, the corosync.conf(5) file is not used. A basic cluster configuration is described below. Configuration options for other daemons/programs are described in their own man pages. ccs_tool(8) can be used to do some basic cluster.conf editing. The cluster.rng schema is used to validate cluster.conf. Unrecognized items will produce a warning during cluster startup, and invalid xml structure will cause the cluster startup to fail. See ccs_config_validate(8) and ccs_config_dump(8). Cluster The top level cluster section contains all other sections and has two required attributes: name The name of the cluster can be up to 15 characters long (16 including terminating null). It is important that this name be unique among clusters on the same network. config_version The config_version specifies the revision level of the file and should be increased each time the file is updated. <cluster name="alpha" config_version="1"> </cluster> Cluster Nodes The set of nodes that make up the cluster are defined in the clusternodes section which contains multiple clusternode sections. A clus- ternode has two required attributes: name The node name should correspond to the hostname on the network interface to be used for cluster communication. nodeid The node id must be greater than zero and unique. <cluster name="alpha" config_version="1"> <clusternodes> <clusternode name="node-01" nodeid="1"> </clusternode> <clusternode name="node-02" nodeid="2"> </clusternode> <clusternode name="node-03" nodeid="3"> </clusternode> </clusternodes> </cluster> Logging Cluster daemons use a common logging section to configure their loggging behavior. <cluster name="alpha" config_version="1"> <logging/> </cluster> Global settings apply to all: <logging debug="on"/> Per-daemon logging_daemon subsections override the global settings. Daemon names that can be configured include: corosync, qdiskd, groupd, fenced, dlm_controld, gfs_controld, rgmanager. <logging> <logging_daemon name="qdiskd" debug="on"/> <logging_daemon name="fenced" debug="on"/> </logging> Corosync daemon settings apply to all corosync subsystems by default, but subsystems can also be configured individually. These include CLM, CPG, MAIN, SERV, CMAN, TOTEM, QUORUM, CONFDB, CKPT, EVT. <logging> <logging_daemon name="corosync" subsys="QUORUM" debug="on"/> <logging_daemon name="corosync" subsys="CONFDB" debug="on"/> </logging> The attributes available at global, daemon and subsystem levels are: to_syslog enable/disable messages to syslog (yes/no), default "yes" to_logfile enable/disable messages to log file (yes/no), default "yes" syslog_facility facility used for syslog messages, default "daemon" syslog_priority messages at this level and up will be sent to syslog, default "info" logfile_priority messages at this level and up will be written to log file, default "info" logfile the log file name, default /var/log/cluster/<daemon>.log debug="on" a shortcut for logfile_priority="debug" EXAMPLE
An explicit configuration for the default settings would be: <logging to_syslog="yes" to_logfile="yes" syslog_facility="daemon" syslog_priority="info" logfile_priority="info"> <logging_daemon name="qdiskd" logfile="/var/log/cluster/qdiskd.log"/> <logging_daemon name="fenced" logfile="/var/log/cluster/fenced.log"/> <logging_daemon name="dlm_controld" logfile="/var/log/cluster/dlm_controld.log"/> <logging_daemon name="gfs_controld" logfile="/var/log/cluster/gfs_controld.log"/> <logging_daemon name="rgmanager" logfile="/var/log/cluster/rgmanager.log"/> <logging_daemon name="corosync" logfile="/var/log/cluster/corosync.log"/> </logging> To include debug messages (and above) from all daemons in their default log files, either of the following which are equivalent: <logging debug="on"/> <logging logfile_priority="debug"/> To exclude all log messages from syslog: <logging to_syslog="no"/> To disable logging to all log files: <logging to_file="no"/> To include debug messages (and above) from all daemons in syslog: <logging syslog_priority="debug"/> To limit syslog messages to error (and above), keeping info (and above) in log files (this logfile_priority setting is the default so could be omitted): <logging syslog_priority="error" logfile_priority="info"/> FILES
/etc/cluster/cluster.conf standard location of cluster configuration file /usr/share/cluster/cluster.rng standard location of cluster.conf schema SEE ALSO
ccs_tool(8), ccs_config_dump(8), ccs_config_validate(8), cman_tool(8), cman(5), qdisk(5), fenced(8), fence_node(8), dlm_controld(8), gfs_controld(8), rgmanager(8) cluster 2010-01-12 CLUSTER.CONF(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:10 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy