12-18-2003
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
I've looked through the posts here and tried everything and cannot get sendmail to work properly. The server only needs to send and not receive mail. I need it to be routed through an open relay which has ip address of 10.126.35.8.
Here's what I've done so far:
I have amended... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: johnbrickell
1 Replies
2. Solaris
Hi,
I have sendmail configured on my SOLARIS 10 server. But right now, it uses
by default root@mysun.localdomain.
I wanted to change the default from field to a outside ISP address, so that I can send email to any outside internet email address without changing the FROM field...... because... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: callingrohit
5 Replies
3. Solaris
Puzzled; I have two Solaris systems, both running Solaris 5.8 and Sendmail version 8.11.7p1. One of the machines will not allow relaying (via anonymous connection to port 25). The other will allow relaying from anywhere to anywhere with impunity.
I can not find any fundemental difference in the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: fosteria
1 Replies
4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I trying to to run RT 3.6.7 on Solaris 10. I am using Sendmail v. 8.13.8. I'm using this guide from Sun:
http://www.sun.com/bigadmin/features...q_track_1.html
http://www.sun.com/bigadmin/features...q_track_2.html
uname -a
SunOS vpd1tst1no 5.10 Generic_127111-11 sun4u sparc... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Mariognarly
1 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
I want to use a config file as the base file and parse over the values of country and city parameters in the config file and generate separate config files as explained below.
I will be using the config file as mentioned below:
(config.txt)
country:a,b
city:1,2
type:b1... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: clazzic
1 Replies
6. Linux
Hi All,
I have a mail server A and a DNS Server B. I am trying to send mail from client C. I have configured the DNS entry in client in the file /etc/resolv.conf and restarted sendmail.
My issues : Send mail is working for sending mails to external domain like gmail or yahoo.
But the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jegaraman
0 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi I am new to shell scripting. There is a requirement to write a shell script to meet follwing needs.Prompt reply shall be highly appreciated.
script that will compare two config files and produce 2 outputs - actual config file and a report indicating changes made.
OS :Susi linux ver 10.3.
... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: muraliinfy04
4 Replies
8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
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
9. Red Hat
Hi folks,
I am trying to configure Apache webserver and also a virtual host inside this webserver.
For Global server config: /var/www/html/index.html
For virtual host config: /var/www/virtual/index.html
Both client10 & www10 are pointing to 192.168.122.10 IP address.
BUT, MY... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: freebird8z
1 Replies
10. Solaris
Hi all,
I have read about sendmail running as 2 separate process.
1 as a MSP, and the other as the real daemon or MTA.
In my current configuration,
the sendmail-client is disabled.
Both submit.cf and sendmail.cf are left as default untouch
I do not specified any mailhost... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: javanoob
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
extsmail.externals
EXTSMAIL.EXTERNALS(1) BSD General Commands Manual EXTSMAIL.EXTERNALS(1)
NAME
extsmail.externals -- configure which external commands to robustly send e-mail via
DESCRIPTION
extsmail.externals is used to configure extsmaild(1). It consists of one or more group declarations. Each group consists of zero or more
match / reject clauses followed by one or more external declarations. An external consists of one or more assignments of key = value pairs.
When sending messages extsmaild(1) first searches through the externals file, in order, for a group whose match / reject clauses match the
message in question. If a group does not contain any such clauses it automatically matches all messages. Match / reject clauses currently
match only against headers, and use standard POSiX extended regular expressions (see re_format(7) for more details). extsmaild(1) then tries
each external in the group, in order, to send the message successfully.
The grammar for this file is as follows:
group ::= { matches* external+ }
matches ::= match
| reject
match ::= MATCH HEADER string
reject ::= REJECT HEADER string
external ::= EXTERNAL ID { defn+ }
defn ::= ID = STRING
| ID = TIME
TIME ::= [0-9]+[dhms]
Valid assignments within an external are:
sendmail
Defines the external shell command used to send e-mail.
timeout
If extsmaild(1) is executed in daemon mode, this value defines the length of time that extsmaild(1) will retry this external before
giving up and trying the next external in the group. Times are specified as a number followed by d (days), h (hours) m (minutes), or
s (seconds). If extsmaild(1) is executed in batch mode, the timeout value is ignored.
FILES
The extsmail configuration file is searched for, in order, in the following locations:
~/.extsmail/externals
Per-user configuration.
/etc/extsmail/externals
System-wide configuration.
EXAMPLES
The simplest externals file sending e-mail via ssh(1) looks as follows:
group {
external mymachine {
sendmail = "/usr/bin/ssh -q -C -l user mymachine.net /usr/sbin/sendmail"
}
}
where mymachine is a human-friendly name given to an external (it does not effect processing), and user is the username on the remote machine
mymachine.net.
A more complex example using multiple groups, message matching, and multiple external commands looks as follows:
group {
match header "^To:.*@foo.com"
external foo {
sendmail = "/usr/bin/ssh -q -C -l user shell.foo.com /usr/sbin/sendmail"
}
}
group {
external mymachine {
sendmail = "/usr/bin/ssh -q -C -l user mymachine.net /usr/sbin/sendmail"
}
external bk {
sendmail = "/usr/bin/ssh -q -C -l user bk.mymachine.net /usr/sbin/sendmail"
}
}
SEE ALSO
extsmail(1), extsmail.conf(5), extsmaild(1)
AUTHORS
Laurence Tratt <http://tratt.net/laurie/>
BSD
November 2, 2008 BSD