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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Home email server setup - stuck Post 302848665 by bakunin on Thursday 29th of August 2013 05:18:58 PM
Old 08-29-2013
Quote:
Originally Posted by jalisco
As to the second question. I don't really know how it's set up. MTA = mail transfer agent? I thought that's what Postfix was? The server is not setup as a domain, e. g. the hostname is not the domain name.
Yes, postfix is one MTA (sendmail would be another, etc.). If you send mail your client sends it to your own MTA. This picks it up and transfers it to another MTA, this one maybe to yet another one, etc., finally the last MTA stores it and - upon request of the client of the recipient - sends it to the recipients client. Now, the next to last MTA in this chain has to know somehow that it has to transfer the mail to the last MTA for this to work. Therefore you have to make your system with postfix installed known to the MTA of your ISP (or whoever runs the next-to-last MTA, from which you get your mails) so that your MTA is being delivered the mails adressed to you(r domain).

Quote:
Originally Posted by jalisco
I have not setup a dns server, would that help? If so, I can try it. I didn't know if I needed to set that up as well.
Usually it works like this: you run "your.domain.com" and you have many systems in it. Your users have mail adresses "user@your.domain.com", but in fact they sit on "system1.your.domain.com", "system2.your.domain.com", etc.. This is done by setting up an MTA system like you did, say "mta.your.system.com" and then create a MX record, which states "mta.your.system.com" to be the mail exchange of "your.domain.com" and defining the all users there somehow (typically something like LDAP is used for this).

If you want to set up your own domain you would need a (at least one) static IP address first and then still would have to make your domain known. This means getting your (primary) DNS server (the one responsible for your domain) to be recognized at the ISPs DNS. They would probably hold "domain.com" and would now "delegate" the responsibility for "your.domain.com" to you.

I know, this all doesn't help you immediately, but i thought it would be a good idea to show the general ideas and concepts behind the mail (and DNS) system.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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RC.SENDMAIL(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					    RC.SENDMAIL(8)

NAME
rc.sendmail -- sendmail(8) startup script DESCRIPTION
The rc.sendmail script is used by /etc/rc at boot time to start sendmail(8). It is meant to be sendmail(8) specific and not a generic script for all MTAs. It is only called by /etc/rc if the rc.conf(5) mta_start_script variable is set to /etc/rc.sendmail. The rc.sendmail script can take an optional argument specifying the action to perform. The available actions are: start Starts both the MTA and the MSP queue runner. stop Stops both the MTA and the MSP queue runner. restart Restarts both the MTA and the MSP queue runner. start-mta Starts just the MTA. stop-mta Stops just the MTA. restart-mta Restarts just the MTA. start-mspq Starts just the MSP queue runner. stop-mspq Stops just the MSP queue runner. restart-mspq Restarts just the MSP queue runner. If no action is specified, start is assumed. The rc.sendmail script is also used by /etc/mail/Makefile to enable the Makefile's start, stop, and restart targets. RC.CONF VARIABLES The following variables affect the behavior of rc.sendmail. They are defined in /etc/defaults/rc.conf and can be changed in /etc/rc.conf. sendmail_enable (str) If set to ``YES'', run the sendmail(8) daemon at system boot time. If set to ``NO'', do not run a sendmail(8) daemon to listen for incoming network mail. This does not preclude a sendmail(8) daemon listening on the SMTP port of the loopback interface. The ``NONE'' option is deprecated and should not be used. It will be removed in a future release. sendmail_cert_create (str) If sendmail_enable is set to ``YES'', create a signed certificate /etc/mail/certs/host.cert representing /etc/mail/certs/host.key by the CA certificate in /etc/mail/certs/cacert.pem. This will enable connecting hosts to negotiate START- TLS allowing incoming email to be encrypted in transit. sendmail(8) needs to be configured to use these generated files. The default configuration in /etc/mail/freebsd.mc has the required options in it. sendmail_cert_cn (str) If sendmail_enable is set to ``YES'' and sendmail_cert_create is set to ``YES'', this is the Common Name (CN) of the certifi- cate that will be created. If sendmail_cert_cn is not set, the system's hostname will be used. If there is no hostname set, ``amnesiac'' will be used. sendmail_flags (str) If sendmail_enable is set to ``YES'', these are the flags to pass to the sendmail(8) daemon. sendmail_submit_enable (bool) If set to ``YES'' and sendmail_enable is set to ``NO'', run sendmail(8) using sendmail_submit_flags instead of sendmail_flags. This is intended to allow local mail submission via a localhost-only listening SMTP service required for running sendmail(8) as a non-set-user-ID binary. Note that this does not work inside jail(2) systems, as jails do not allow binding to just the localhost interface. sendmail_submit_flags (str) If sendmail_enable is set to ``NO'' and sendmail_submit_enable is set to ``YES'', these are the flags to pass to the sendmail(8) daemon. sendmail_outbound_enable (bool) If set to ``YES'' and both sendmail_enable and sendmail_submit_enable are set to ``NO'', run sendmail(8) using sendmail_outbound_flags instead of sendmail_flags. This is intended to allow local mail queue management for systems that do not offer a listening SMTP service. sendmail_outbound_flags (str) If both sendmail_enable and sendmail_submit_enable are set to ``NO'' and sendmail_outbound_enable is set to ``YES'', these are the flags to pass to the sendmail(8) daemon. sendmail_msp_queue_enable (bool) If set to ``YES'', start a client (MSP) queue runner sendmail(8) daemon at system boot time. As of sendmail 8.12, a separate queue is used for command line submissions. The client queue runner ensures that nothing is left behind in the submission queue. sendmail_msp_queue_flags (str) If sendmail_msp_queue_enable is set to ``YES'', these are the flags to pass to the sendmail(8) daemon. These variables are used to determine how the sendmail(8) daemons are started: # MTA if (${sendmail_enable} == NONE) # Do nothing else if (${sendmail_enable} == YES) start sendmail with ${sendmail_flags} else if (${sendmail_submit_enable} == YES) start sendmail with ${sendmail_submit_flags} else if (${sendmail_outbound_enable} == YES) start sendmail with ${sendmail_outbound_flags} endif # MSP Queue Runner if (${sendmail_enable} != NONE && [ -r /etc/mail/submit.cf] && ${sendmail_msp_queue_enable} == YES) start sendmail with ${sendmail_msp_queue_flags} endif To completely prevent any sendmail(8) daemons from starting, you must set the following variables in /etc/rc.conf: sendmail_enable="NO" sendmail_submit_enable="NO" sendmail_outbound_enable="NO" sendmail_msp_queue_enable="NO" SEE ALSO
rc.conf(5), rc(8), sendmail(8) HISTORY
The rc.sendmail file appeared in FreeBSD 4.6. BSD
October 19, 2013 BSD
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