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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Why older administrators prefer sendmail ? Post 302517020 by sparcguy on Monday 25th of April 2011 10:27:44 PM
Old 04-25-2011
In my previous company when I worked we used microsoft exchange. Why? Because the business people understand how to use it and prefer it and ease of functionality. Some things unix are very good at like sending massive bulk emails, I've seen massive 900k emails going out no problem, we did a test on a mail product running on ms which crashed on a load of less than 100k mails.

But some things a unix mail server cannot do like setting your own vacation message. How do your business users who are usually non-technical babies set up their own vacation messages or change passwords without having to telnet or ssh to the server Smilie

In one of the other companies where I worked we used unix smtp and pop3 a very simple setup running off an old ultra250. But we often had business people coming to us all the time to set up their vacation messages and asking us to change their passwords for them. It was a small company with less than 30 employees, it was rather informal place & they were not very big on security so this practice quite acceptable but in big organizations like the one described above where I worked we had like 300,000 employees worldwide such a setup and practice will not work or be accepted.

So I guess there's no 1 size fits all out there. Different products are good for doing different things.

Last edited by sparcguy; 04-25-2011 at 11:38 PM..
 

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MAILER.CONF(5)						      BSD File Formats Manual						    MAILER.CONF(5)

NAME
mailer.conf -- configuration file for mailwrapper(8) DESCRIPTION
The file /etc/mail/mailer.conf contains a series of lines of the form name program [arguments ...] The first word of each line is the name of a program invoking mailwrapper(8). (For example, on a typical system /usr/sbin/sendmail would be a symbolic link to mailwrapper(8), as would newaliases(1) and mailq(1). Thus, name might be ``sendmail'' or ``newaliases'' etc.) The second word of each line is the name of the program to actually execute when the first name is invoked. The further arguments, if any, are passed to the program, followed by the arguments mailwrapper(8) was called with. The file may also contain comment lines, denoted by a '#' mark in the first column of any line. FILES
/etc/mail/mailer.conf EXAMPLES
This example shows how to set up mailer.conf to invoke the traditional sendmail(8) program: # Execute the "real" sendmail program located in # /usr/libexec/sendmail/sendmail sendmail /usr/libexec/sendmail/sendmail send-mail /usr/libexec/sendmail/sendmail mailq /usr/libexec/sendmail/sendmail newaliases /usr/libexec/sendmail/sendmail This example shows how to invoke a sendmail-workalike like Postfix in place of sendmail(8): # Emulate sendmail using postfix sendmail /usr/local/sbin/sendmail send-mail /usr/local/sbin/sendmail mailq /usr/local/sbin/sendmail newaliases /usr/local/sbin/sendmail This example shows how to invoke a sendmail-workalike with Exim (from ports) in place of sendmail(8): # Emulate sendmail using exim sendmail /usr/local/sbin/exim send-mail /usr/local/sbin/exim mailq /usr/local/sbin/exim -bp newaliases /usr/bin/true rmail /usr/local/sbin/exim -i -oee This example shows the use of the mini_sendmail package from ports in place of sendmail(8). Note the use of additional arguments. # Send outgoing mail to a smart relay using mini_sendmail sendmail /usr/local/bin/mini_sendmail -srelayhost send-mail /usr/local/bin/mini_sendmail -srelayhost SEE ALSO
mail(1), mailq(1), newaliases(1), mailwrapper(8), sendmail(8) postfix(1) (ports/mail/postfix), mini_sendmail(8) (ports/mail/mini_sendmail) HISTORY
mailer.conf 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 dif- ferently if invoked with a different name" behavior of things like mailq(1) should go away. BSD
October 8, 2010 BSD
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