151220Seric 251220Seric 357246Seric NEW SENDMAIL CONFIGURATION FILES 451220Seric 557246Seric Eric Allman <eric@CS.Berkeley.EDU> 651220Seric 7*65986Seric @(#)README 8.24 (Berkeley) 02/03/94 851220Seric 951220Seric 1057246SericThis document describes the sendmail configuration files being used 1163857Sericat Berkeley. These use features in the new (R8) sendmail, and although 1257246Sericthere is an ``OLDSENDMAIL'' mode, they haven't really been tested on 1357247Sericold versions of sendmail and cannot be expected to work well. 1451220Seric 1557246SericThese configuration files are probably not as general as previous 1665957Sericversions, and don't handle as many of the weird cases automagically. 1757246SericI was able to simplify by them for two reasons. First, the network 1857246Serichas become more consistent -- for example, at this point, everyone 1957246Sericon the internet is supposed to be running a name server, so hacks to 2057246Serichandle NIC-registered hosts can go away. Second, I assumed that a 2157246Sericsubdomain would be running SMTP internally -- UUCP is presumed to be 2257246Serica long-haul protocol. I realize that this is not universal, but it 2357246Sericdoes describe the vast majority of sites with which I am familiar, 2457246Sericincluding those outside the US. 2551220Seric 2665957SericOf course, the downside of this is that if you do live in a weird 2765957Sericworld, things are going to get weirder for you. I'm sorry about that, 2857246Sericbut at the time we at Berkeley had a problem, and it seemed like the 2957246Sericright thing to do. 3051220Seric 3157247SericThis package requires a post-V7 version of m4; if you are running the 3257247Seric4.2bsd, SysV.2, or 7th Edition version, I suggest finding a friend with 3357247Serica newer version. You can m4-expand on their system, then run locally. 3465002SericSunOS's /usr/5bin/m4 or BSD-Net/2's m4 both work. GNU m4 version 1.1 3565002Sericalso works. Unfortunately, I'm told that the M4 on BSDI 1.0 doesn't 3665002Sericwork -- you'll have to use a Net/2 or GNU version. 3751220Seric 3858284SericIF YOU DON'T HAVE A BERKELEY MAKE, don't despair! Just run 3964371Seric"m4 foo.mc > foo.cf" -- that should be all you need. There is also 4064371Serica fairly crude (but functional) Makefile.dist that works on the 4164371Sericold version of make. 4258284Seric 4358284SericTo get started, you may want to look at tcpproto.mc (for TCP-only 4464324Sericsites), uucpproto.mc (for UUCP-only sites), and clientproto.mc (for 4564324Sericclusters of clients using a single mail host). Others are versions 4658284Sericthat we use at Berkeley, although not all are in current use. For 4758284Sericexample, ucbarpa has gone away, but I've left ucbarpa.mc in because 4858284Sericit demonstrates some interesting techniques. 4958284Seric 5057246SericI'm not pretending that this README describes everything that these 5157246Sericconfiguration files can do; clever people can probably tweak them 5257246Sericto great effect. But it should get you started. 5357246Seric 5465509Seric******************************************************************* 5565509Seric*** BE SURE YOU CUSTOMIZE THESE FILES! They have some *** 5665509Seric*** Berkeley-specific assumptions built in, such as the name *** 5765509Seric*** of our UUCP-relay. You'll want to create your own domain *** 5865509Seric*** description, and use that in place of domain/Berkeley.m4. *** 5965509Seric******************************************************************* 6058087Seric 6165509Seric 6257246Seric+--------------------------+ 6357246Seric| INTRODUCTION AND EXAMPLE | 6457246Seric+--------------------------+ 6557246Seric 6657246SericConfiguration files are contained in the subdirectory "cf", with a 6757246Sericsuffix ".mc". They must be run through "m4" to produce a ".cf" file. 6857246Seric 6951220SericLet's examine a typical .mc file (cf/cs-exposed.mc): 7051220Seric 7151220Seric divert(-1) 7251220Seric # 7351220Seric # Copyright (c) 1983 Eric P. Allman 7451220Seric # Copyright (c) 1988 The Regents of the University of California. 7551220Seric # All rights reserved. 7651220Seric # 7751220Seric # Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted 7851220Seric # provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are 7951220Seric # duplicated in all such forms and that any documentation, 8051220Seric # advertising materials, and other materials related to such 8151220Seric # distribution and use acknowledge that the software was developed 8251220Seric # by the University of California, Berkeley. The name of the 8351220Seric # University may not be used to endorse or promote products derived 8451220Seric # from this software without specific prior written permission. 8551220Seric # THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR 8651220Seric # IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED 8751220Seric # WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. 8851220Seric # 8951220Seric 9057246SericThe divert(-1) will delete the crud in the resulting output file. 9157247SericThe copyright notice is what your lawyers require. Our lawyers require 9257246Sericthe one that I've included in my files. A copyleft is a copyright by 9357246Sericanother name. 9451220Seric 9557246SericThe next line MUST be 9657246Seric 9751220Seric include(`../m4/cf.m4') 9851220Seric 9957246SericThis will pull in the M4 macros you will need to make sense of 10057246Sericeverything else. As the saying goes, don't think about it, just 10157246Sericdo it. If you don't do it, don't bother reading the rest of this 10257246Sericfile. 10351220Seric 10456778Seric VERSIONID(`<SCCS or RCS version id>') 10551220Seric 10651220SericVERSIONID is a macro that stuffs the version information into the 10751220Sericresulting file. We use SCCS; you could use RCS, something else, or 10857246Sericomit it completely. This is not the same as the version id included 10957246Sericin SMTP greeting messages -- this is defined in m4/version.m4. 11051220Seric 11151268Seric DOMAIN(cs.exposed) 11251220Seric 11351220SericThis example exposes the host inside of the CS subdomain -- that is, 11451220Sericit doesn't try to hide the name of the workstation to the outside 11551220Sericworld. Changing this to DOMAIN(cs.hidden) would have made outgoing 11651220Sericmessages refer to "<username>@CS.Berkeley.EDU" instead of using the 11763857Sericlocal hostname. Internally this is effected by using 11857246Seric"MASQUERADE_AS(CS.Berkeley.EDU)". 11951220Seric 12051268Seric MAILER(smtp) 12151220Seric 12251309SericThese describe the mailers used at the default CS site site. The 12351309Sericlocal mailer is always included automatically. 12451220Seric 12558087Seric 12657246Seric+--------+ 12757246Seric| OSTYPE | 12857246Seric+--------+ 12957246Seric 13051220SericNote that cf/cs-exposed.mc omits an OSTYPE macro -- this assumes 13151220Sericdefault Computer Science Division environment. There are several 13257247Sericexplicit environments available: bsd4.3, bsd4.4, hpux, irix, osf1, 13357247Sericriscos4.5, sunos3.5, sunos4.1, and ultrix4.1. These change things 13457247Sericlike the location of the alias file and queue directory. Some of 13557247Sericthese files are identical to one another. 13651220Seric 13757246SericOperating system definitions are easy to write. They may define 13857246Sericthe following variables (everything defaults, so an ostype file 13957246Sericmay be empty). 14051220Seric 14157246SericALIAS_FILE [/etc/aliases] The location of the text version 14259761Seric of the alias file(s). It can be a comma-separated 14359761Seric list of names. 14457246SericHELP_FILE [/usr/lib/sendmail.hf] The name of the file 14557246Seric containing information printed in response to 14657246Seric the SMTP HELP command. 14757246SericQUEUE_DIR [/var/spool/mqueue] The directory containing 14857246Seric queue files. 14957246SericSTATUS_FILE [/etc/sendmail.st] The file containing status 15057246Seric information. 15158087SericLOCAL_MAILER_PATH [/bin/mail] The program used to deliver local mail. 15264153SericLOCAL_MAILER_FLAGS [rmn] The flags used by the local mailer. The 15364153Seric flags lsDFM are always included. 15463761SericLOCAL_MAILER_ARGS [mail -d $u] The arguments passed to deliver local 15563761Seric mail. 15658087SericLOCAL_SHELL_PATH [/bin/sh] The shell used to deliver piped email. 15763791SericLOCAL_SHELL_FLAGS [eu] The flags used by the shell mailer. The 15863791Seric flags lsDFM are always included. 15963791SericLOCAL_SHELL_ARGS [sh -c $u] The arguments passed to deliver "prog" 16063791Seric mail. 16158087SericUSENET_MAILER_PATH [/usr/lib/news/inews] The name of the program 16258087Seric used to submit news. 16358087SericUSENET_MAILER_FLAGS [rlsDFMmn] The mailer flags for the usenet mailer. 16458087SericUSENET_MAILER_ARGS [-m -h -n] The command line arguments for the 16558087Seric usenet mailer. 16665911SericUSENET_MAILER_MAX [100000] The maximum size of messages that will 16765911Seric be accepted by the usenet mailer. 16863857SericSMTP_MAILER_FLAGS [undefined] Flags added to SMTP mailer. Default 16963857Seric flags are `mDFMUX' (and `a' for esmtp mailer). 17065911SericSMTP_MAILER_MAX [undefined] The maximum size of messages that will 17165911Seric be transported using the smtp or esmtp mailers. 17263857SericUUCP_MAILER_FLAGS [undefined] Flags added to UUCP mailer. Default 17363857Seric flags are `DFMhuU' (and `m' for suucp mailer, minus 17463857Seric `U' for uucp-dom mailer). 17563761SericUUCP_MAILER_ARGS [uux - -r -z -a$f -gC $h!rmail ($u)] The arguments 17663761Seric passed to the UUCP mailer. 17763791SericUUCP_MAX_SIZE [100000] The maximum size message accepted for 17863791Seric transmission by the UUCP mailers. 17965911SericFAX_MAILER_PATH [/usr/local/lib/fax/mailfax] The program used to 18065911Seric submit FAX messages. 18165911SericFAX_MAILER_MAX [100000] The maximum size message accepted for 18265911Seric transmission by FAX. 18357246Seric 18457246Seric+---------+ 18557246Seric| DOMAINS | 18657246Seric+---------+ 18757246Seric 18857246SericYou will probably want to collect domain-dependent defines into one 18957246Sericfile, referenced by the DOMAIN macro. For example, our Berkeley 19057246Sericdomain file includes definitions for several internal distinguished 19157246Serichosts: 19257246Seric 19357246SericUUCP_RELAY The host that will forward UUCP-addressed email. 19457246Seric If not defined, all UUCP sites must be directly 19564028Seric connected. 19657246SericBITNET_RELAY The host that will forward BITNET-addressed email. 19757246Seric If not defined, the .BITNET pseudo-domain won't work. 19857246SericLOCAL_RELAY The site that will handle unqualified names -- that 19957246Seric is, names with out an @domain extension. If not set, 20057246Seric they are assumed to belong on this machine. This 20157246Seric allows you to have a central site to store a 20257246Seric company- or department-wide alias database. This 20357246Seric only works at small sites, and there are better 20464028Seric methods. 20557246Seric 20664028SericEach of these can be either ``mailer:hostname'' (in which case the 20764028Sericmailer is the internal mailer name, such as ``suucp'' and the hostname 20864028Sericis the name of the host as appropriate for that mailer) or just a 20964028Seric``hostname'', in which case a default mailer type (usually ``relay'', 21064153Serica variant on SMTP) is used. WARNING: if you have a wildcard MX 21164153Sericrecord matching your domain, you probably want to define these to 21264153Serichave a trailing dot so that you won't get the mail diverted back 21364153Sericto yourself. 21464028Seric 21557246SericThe domain file can also be used to define a domain name, if needed 21657982Seric(using "DD<domain>") and set certain site-wide features. If all hosts 21757982Sericat your site masquerade behind one email name, you could also use 21857982SericMASQUERADE_AS here. 21957246Seric 22058408SericYou do not have to define a domain -- in particular, if you are a 22158408Sericsingle machine sitting off somewhere, it is probably more work than 22258408Sericit's worth. This is just a mechanism for combining "domain dependent 22358408Sericknowledge" into one place. 22458408Seric 22557246Seric+---------+ 22657246Seric| MAILERS | 22757246Seric+---------+ 22857246Seric 22951220SericThere are fewer mailers supported in this version than the previous 23051220Sericversion, owing mostly to a simpler world. 23151220Seric 23251220Sericlocal The local and prog mailers. You will almost always 23351220Seric need these; the only exception is if you relay ALL 23457247Seric your mail to another site. This mailer is included 23557247Seric automatically. 23651220Seric 23751220Sericsmtp The Simple Mail Transport Protocol mailer. This does 23851220Seric not hide hosts behind a gateway or another other 23951220Seric such hack; it assumes a world where everyone is 24063761Seric running the name server. This file actually defines 24163761Seric three mailers: "smtp" for regular (old-style) SMTP to 24263761Seric other servers, "esmtp" for extended SMTP to other 24363761Seric servers, and "relay" for transmission to our 24463761Seric RELAY_HOST or MAILER_HUB. 24551220Seric 24651220Sericuucp The Unix-to-Unix Copy Program mailer. Actually, this 24751220Seric defines two mailers, "uucp" and "suucp". The latter 24851220Seric is for when you know that the UUCP mailer at the other 24951220Seric end can handle multiple recipients in one transfer. 25057246Seric When you invoke this, sendmail looks for all names in 25165218Seric the $=U class and sends them to the uucp-old mailer; all 25265218Seric names in the $=Y class are sent to uucp-new; and all 25365218Seric names in the $=Z class are sent to uucp-uudom. Note that 25457246Seric this is a function of what version of rmail runs on 25557246Seric the receiving end, and hence may be out of your control. 25665218Seric If smtp is defined, it also defines "uucp-dom" and 25765218Seric "uucp-uudom" mailers that use domain-style rewriting. 25865218Seric See the section below describing UUCP mailers in more 25965218Seric detail. 26051220Seric 26158087Sericusenet Usenet (network news) delivery. If this is specified, 26258087Seric an extra rule is added to ruleset 0 that forwards all 26358087Seric local email for users named ``group.usenet'' to the 26458087Seric ``inews'' program. Note that this works for all groups, 26558087Seric and may be considered a security problem. 26658087Seric 26758363Sericfax Facsimile transmission. This is experimental and based 26858363Seric on Sam Leffler's FlexFAX software. For more information, 26958363Seric see below. 27058087Seric 27165148Sericpop Post Office Protocol. 27258363Seric 27365148Seric 27457246Seric+----------+ 27557246Seric| FEATURES | 27657246Seric+----------+ 27751268Seric 27857246SericSpecial features can be requested using the "FEATURE" macro. For 27957246Sericexample, the .mc line: 28057246Seric 28157246Seric FEATURE(use_cw_file) 28257246Seric 28357246Serictells sendmail that you want to have it read an /etc/sendmail.cw 28458782Sericfile to get values for class $=w. The FEATURE may contain a single 28558782Sericoptional parameter -- for example: 28657246Seric 28758782Seric FEATURE(mailertable, dbm /usr/lib/mailertable) 28858782Seric 28958782SericAvailable features are: 29058782Seric 29157246Sericuse_cw_file Read the file /etc/sendmail.cw file to get alternate 29257246Seric names for this host. This might be used if you were 29357246Seric on a host that MXed for a dynamic set of other 29457246Seric hosts. If the set is static, just including the line 29557246Seric "Cw<name1> <name2> ..." is probably superior. 29658408Seric The actual filename can be overridden by redefining 29758408Seric confCW_FILE. 29864324Seric 29958087Sericredirect Reject all mail addressed to "address.REDIRECT" with 30058087Seric a ``551 User not local; please try <address>'' message. 30158087Seric If this is set, you can alias people who have left 30258087Seric to their new address with ".REDIRECT" appended. 30364324Seric 30458284Sericnouucp Don't do anything special with UUCP addresses at all. 30564324Seric 30659080Sericnocanonify Don't pass addresses to $[ ... $] for canonification. 30759080Seric This would generally only be used by sites that only 30859080Seric act as mail gateways or which have user agents that do 30964028Seric full canonification themselves. You may also want to 31064028Seric use "define(`confBIND_OPTS',`-DNSRCH -DEFNAMES')" to 31164028Seric turn off the usual resolver options that do a similar 31264028Seric thing. 31364324Seric 31458526Sericnotsticky By default, email sent to "user@local.host" are marked 31558526Seric as "sticky" -- that is, the local addresses aren't 31658526Seric matched against UDB and don't go through ruleset 5. 31758526Seric This features disables this treatment. It would 31858526Seric normally be used on network gateway machines. 31964324Seric 32058782Sericmailertable Include a "mailer table" which can be used to override 32158782Seric routing for particular domains. The argument of the 32258782Seric FEATURE may be the key definition. If none is specified, 32358782Seric the definition used is: 32464164Seric hash -o /etc/mailertable 32563761Seric Keys in this database are fully qualified domain names 32663761Seric or partial domains preceded by a dot -- for example, 32763761Seric "vangogh.CS.Berkeley.EDU" or ".CS.Berkeley.EDU". 32863761Seric Values must be of the form: 32958782Seric mailer:domain 33063761Seric where "mailer" is the internal mailer name, and "domain" 33163761Seric is where to send the message. These maps are not 33263761Seric reflected into the message header. 33364324Seric 33463761Sericdomaintable Include a "domain table" which can be used to provide 33563761Seric full domains on unqualified (single word) hosts. The 33663761Seric argument of the FEATURE may be the key definition. If 33763761Seric none is specified, the definition used is: 33864164Seric hash -o /etc/domaintable 33963761Seric The key in this table is the unqualified host name; the 34063761Seric value is the fully qualified domain. Anything in the 34163761Seric domaintable is reflected into headers; that is, this 34263761Seric is done in ruleset 3. 34364324Seric 34459034Sericbitdomain Look up bitnet hosts in a table to try to turn them into 34559034Seric internet addresses. The table can be built using the 34664153Seric bitdomain program contributed by John Gardiner Myers. 34759034Seric The argument of the FEATURE may be the key definition; if 34859034Seric none is specified, the definition used is: 34964164Seric hash -o /etc/bitdomain.db 35059034Seric Keys are the bitnet hostname; values are the corresponding 35159034Seric internet hostname. 35264324Seric 35359037Sericuucpdomain Similar feature for UUCP hosts. The default map definition 35459037Seric is: 35564164Seric hash -o /etc/uudomain.db 35659037Seric At the moment there is no automagic tool to build this 35759037Seric database. 35864324Seric 35960263Sericalways_add_domain 36060263Seric Include the local host domain even on locally delivered 36160263Seric mail. Normally it is not added unless it is already 36260263Seric present. 36364324Seric 36463761Sericallmasquerade If masquerading is enabled (using MASQUERADE_AS), this 36563761Seric feature will cause recipient addresses to also masquerade 36663761Seric as being from the masquerade host. Normally they get 36763761Seric the local hostname. Although this may be right for 36863761Seric ordinary users, it can break local aliases. For example, 36963761Seric if you send to "localalias", the originating sendmail will 37063761Seric find that alias and send to all members, but send the 37163761Seric message with "To: localalias@masqueradehost". Since that 37263761Seric alias likely does not exist, replies will fail. Use this 37363761Seric feature ONLY if you can guarantee that the ENTIRE 37463761Seric namespace on your masquerade host supersets all the 37563761Seric local entries. 37664324Seric 37764153Sericnodns We aren't running DNS at our site (for example, 37864153Seric we are UUCP-only connected). It's hard to consider 37964153Seric this a "feature", but hey, it had to go somewhere. 38057246Seric 38164324Sericnullclient This is a special case -- it creates a stripped down 38264324Seric configuration file containing nothing but support for 38364394Seric forwarding all mail to a central hub via a local 38464394Seric SMTP-based network. The argument is the name of that 38564394Seric hub. 38664394Seric 38764394Seric The only other feature that should be used in conjunction 38864394Seric with this one is "nocanonify" (this causes addresses to 38964394Seric be sent unqualified via the SMTP connection; normally 39064394Seric they are qualifed with the masquerade name, which 39164394Seric defaults to the name of the hub machine). No mailers 39264394Seric should be defined. No aliasing or forwarding is done. 39357246Seric 39464324Seric 39557246Seric+-------+ 39657246Seric| HACKS | 39757246Seric+-------+ 39857246Seric 39957246SericSome things just can't be called features. To make this clear, 40057247Sericthey go in the hack subdirectory and are referenced using the HACK 40157246Sericmacro. These will tend to be site-dependent. The release 40257246Sericincludes the Berkeley-dependent "cssubdomain" hack (that makes 40357246Sericsendmail accept local names in either Berkeley.EDU or CS.Berkeley.EDU; 40457246Sericthis is intended as a short-term aid while we move hosts into 40557246Sericsubdomains. 40657246Seric 40758087Seric 40857246Seric+--------------------+ 40957246Seric| SITE CONFIGURATION | 41057246Seric+--------------------+ 41157246Seric 41257246SericComplex sites will need more local configuration information, such as 41357246Sericlists of UUCP hosts they speak with directly. This can get a bit more 41457246Serictricky. For an example of a "complex" site, see cf/ucbvax.mc. 41557246Seric 41657246SericThe SITECONFIG macro allows you to indirectly reference site-dependent 41757246Sericconfiguration information stored in the siteconfig subdirectory. For 41857246Sericexample, the line 41957246Seric 42057246Seric SITECONFIG(uucp.ucbvax, ucbvax, U) 42157246Seric 42257246Sericreads the file uucp.ucbvax for local connection information. The 42357246Sericsecond parameter is the local name (in this case just "ucbvax" since 42457246Sericit is locally connected, and hence a UUCP hostname) and the name of 42557246Sericthe class in which to store the host information. Another SITECONFIG 42657246Sericline reads 42757246Seric 42857246Seric SITECONFIG(uucp.ucbarpa, ucbarpa.Berkeley.EDU, W) 42957246Seric 43057246SericThis says that the file uucp.ucbarpa contains the list of UUCP sites 43157246Sericconnected to ucbarpa.Berkeley.EDU. The $=W class will be used to 43257246Sericstore this list. [The machine ucbarpa is gone now, but I've left 43357246Sericthis out-of-date configuration file around to demonstrate how you 43457246Sericmight do this.] 43557246Seric 43657246SericThe siteconfig file (e.g., siteconfig/uucp.ucbvax.m4) contains nothing 43757246Sericmore than a sequence of SITE macros describing connectivity. For 43857246Sericexample: 43957246Seric 44057246Seric SITE(cnmat) 44157246Seric SITE(sgi olympus) 44257246Seric 44357246SericThe second example demonstrates that you can use two names on the 44457246Sericsame line; these are usually aliases for the same host (or are at 44557246Sericleast in the same company). 44657246Seric 44758087Seric 44865218Seric+--------------------+ 44965218Seric| USING UUCP MAILERS | 45065218Seric+--------------------+ 45165218Seric 45265218SericIt's hard to get UUCP mailers right because of the extremely ad hoc 45365218Sericnature of UUCP addressing. These config files are really designed 45465218Sericfor domain-based addressing, even for UUCP sites. 45565218Seric 45665218SericThere are four UUCP mailers available. The choice of which one to 45765218Sericuse is partly a matter of local preferences and what is running at 45865218Sericthe other end of your UUCP connection. Unlike good protocols that 45965218Sericdefine what will go over the wire, UUCP uses the policy that you 46065218Sericshould do what is right for the other end; if they change, you have 46165218Sericto change. This makes it hard to do the right thing, and discourages 46265218Sericpeople from updating their software. In general, if you can avoid 46365218SericUUCP, please do. 46465218Seric 46565218SericThe major choice is whether to go for a domainized scheme or a 46665218Sericnon-domainized scheme. This depends entirely on what the other 46765218Sericend will recognize. If at all possible, you should encourage the 46865218Sericother end to go to a domain-based system -- non-domainized addresses 46965218Sericdon't work entirely properly. 47065218Seric 47165218SericThe four mailers are: 47265218Seric 47365218Seric uucp-old (obsolete name: "uucp") 47465218Seric This is the oldest, the worst (but the closest to UUCP) way of 47565218Seric sending messages accros UUCP connections. It does bangify 47665218Seric everything and prepends $U (your UUCP name) to the sender's 47765218Seric address (which can already be a bang path itself). It can 47865218Seric only send to one address at a time, so it spends a lot of 47965218Seric time copying duplicates of messages. Avoid this if at all 48065218Seric possible. 48165218Seric 48265218Seric uucp-new (obsolete name: "suucp") 48365218Seric The same as above, except that it assumes that in one rmail 48465218Seric command you can specify several recipients. It still has a 48565218Seric lot of other problems. 48665218Seric 48765218Seric uucp-dom 48865218Seric This UUCP mailer keeps everything as domain addresses. 48965218Seric Basically, it uses the SMTP mailer rewriting rules. 49065218Seric 49165218Seric Unfortunately, a lot of UUCP mailer transport agents require 49265218Seric bangified addresses in the envelope, although you can use 49365218Seric domain-based addresses in the message header. (The envelope 49465218Seric shows up as the From_ line on UNIX mail.) So.... 49565218Seric 49665218Seric uucp-uudom 49765218Seric This is a cross between uucp-new (for the envelope addresses) 49865218Seric and uucp-dom (for the header addresses). It bangifies the 49965218Seric envelope sender (From_ line in messages) without adding the 50065218Seric local hostname, unless there is no host name on the address 50165218Seric at all (e.g., "wolf") or the host component is a UUCP host name 50265218Seric instead of a domain name ("somehost!wolf" instead of 50365218Seric "some.dom.ain!wolf"). 50465218Seric 50565218SericExamples: 50665218Seric 50765218SericWe are on host grasp.insa-lyon.fr (UUCP host name "grasp"). The 50865218Sericfollowing summarizes the sender rewriting for various mailers. 50965218Seric 51065218SericMailer sender rewriting in the envelope 51165218Seric------ ------ ------------------------- 51265218Sericuucp-{old,new} wolf grasp!wolf 51365218Sericuucp-dom wolf wolf@grasp.insa-lyon.fr 51465218Sericuucp-uudom wolf grasp.insa-lyon.fr!wolf 51565218Seric 51665218Sericuucp-{old,new} wolf@fr.net grasp!fr.net!wolf 51765218Sericuucp-dom wolf@fr.net wolf@fr.net 51865218Sericuucp-uudom wolf@fr.net fr.net!wolf 51965218Seric 52065218Sericuucp-{old,new} somehost!wolf grasp!somehost!wolf 52165218Sericuucp-dom somehost!wolf somehost!wolf@grasp.insa-lyon.fr 52265218Sericuucp-uudom somehost!wolf grasp.insa-lyon.fr!somehost!wolf 52365218Seric 52465218SericIf you are using one of the domainized UUCP mailers, you really want 52565218Sericto convert all UUCP addresses to domain format -- otherwise, it will 52665218Sericdo it for you (and probably not the way you expected). For example, 52765218Sericif you have the address foo!bar!baz (and you are not sending to foo), 52865218Sericthe heuristics will add the @uucp.relay.name or @local.host.name to 52965218Sericthis address. However, if you map foo to foo.host.name first, it 53065218Sericwill not add the local hostname. You can do this using the uucpdomain 53165218Sericfeature. 53265218Seric 53365218Seric 53457246Seric+-------------------+ 53557246Seric| TWEAKING RULESETS | 53657246Seric+-------------------+ 53757246Seric 53851268SericFor more complex configurations, you can define special rules. 53951268SericThe macro LOCAL_RULE_3 introduces rules that are used in canonicalizing 54051268Sericthe names. Any modifications made here are reflected in the header. 54151268Seric 54251268SericA common use is to convert old UUCP addreses to SMTP addresses using 54351268Sericthe UUCPSMTP macro. For example: 54451268Seric 54551268Seric LOCAL_RULE_3 54651268Seric UUCPSMTP(decvax, decvax.dec.com) 54751268Seric UUCPSMTP(research, research.att.com) 54851268Seric 54951268Sericwill cause addresses of the form "decvax!user" and "research!user" 55051268Sericto be converted to "user@decvax.dec.com" and "user@research.att.com" 55151268Sericrespectively. 55251268Seric 55365957SericThis could also be used to look up hosts in a database map: 55457246Seric 55557246Seric LOCAL_RULE_3 55657246Seric R$* < @ $+ > $* $: $1 < @ $(hostmap $2 $) > $3 55757246Seric 55857246SericThis map would be defined in the LOCAL_CONFIG portion, as shown below. 55957246Seric 56051268SericSimilarly, LOCAL_RULE_0 can be used to introduce new parsing rules. 56151268SericFor example, new rules are needed to parse hostnames that you accept 56251309Sericvia MX records. For example, you might have: 56351268Seric 56451309Seric LOCAL_RULE_0 565*65986Seric R$+ <@ host.dom.ain.> $#uucp $@ cnmat $: $1 < @ host.dom.ain.> 56651309Seric 56751309SericYou would use this if you had installed an MX record for cnmat.Berkeley.EDU 56851309Sericpointing at this host; this rule catches the message and forwards it on 56951309Sericusing UUCP. 57051309Seric 57158681SericYou can also tweak rulesets 1 and 2 using LOCAL_RULE_1 and LOCAL_RULE_2. 57258681SericThese rulesets are normally empty. 57358681Seric 57457246SericA similar macro is LOCAL_CONFIG. This introduces lines added after the 57557246Sericboilerplate option setting but before rulesets, and can be used to 57657945Sericdeclare local database maps or whatever. For example: 57751268Seric 57857246Seric LOCAL_CONFIG 57957246Seric Khostmap hash /etc/hostmap.db 58057246Seric Kyplocal nis -m hosts.byname 58151220Seric 58258087Seric 58357246Seric+---------------------------+ 58457246Seric| MASQUERADING AND RELAYING | 58557246Seric+---------------------------+ 58657246Seric 58757246SericYou can have your host masquerade as another using 58857246Seric 58957246Seric MASQUERADE_AS(host.domain) 59057246Seric 59165957SericThis causes outgoing SMTP mail to be labeled as coming from the 59257246Sericindicated domain, rather than $j. One normally masquerades as one 59365957Sericof one's own subdomains (for example, it's unlikely that I would 59457246Sericchoose to masquerade as an MIT site). 59557246Seric 59664153SericThe masquerade name is not normally canonified, so it is important 59764153Sericthat it be your One True Name, that is, fully qualified and not a 59864153SericCNAME. 59964153Seric 60057246Sericthere are always users that need to be "exposed" -- that is, their 60157246Sericinternal site name should be displayed instead of the masquerade name. 60257246SericRoot is an example. You can add users to this list using 60357246Seric 60457246Seric EXPOSED_USER(usernames) 60557246Seric 60657246SericThis adds users to class E; you could also use something like 60757246Seric 60857246Seric FE/etc/sendmail.cE 60957246Seric 61057246SericYou can also arrange to relay all unqualified names (that is, names 61157246Sericwithout @host) to a relay host. For example, if you have a central 61257246Sericemail server, you might relay to that host so that users don't have 61357246Sericto have .forward files or aliases. You can do this using 61457246Seric 61558071Seric define(`LOCAL_RELAY', mailer:hostname) 61657246Seric 61758071SericThe ``mailer:'' can be omitted, in which case the mailer defaults to 61858071Seric"smtp". There are some user names that you don't want relayed, perhaps 61958071Sericbecause of local aliases. A common example is root, which may be 62058071Sericlocally aliased. You can add entries to this list using 62157246Seric 62257246Seric LOCAL_USER(usernames) 62357246Seric 62457246SericThis adds users to class L; you could also use something like 62557246Seric 62657246Seric FL/etc/sendmail.cL 62757246Seric 62864153SericIf you want all incoming mail sent to a centralized hub, as for a 62964153Sericshared /var/spool/mail scheme, use 63057591Seric 63158071Seric define(`MAIL_HUB', mailer:hostname) 63257591Seric 63358071SericAgain, ``mailer:'' defaults to "smtp". If you define both LOCAL_RELAY 63458071Sericand MAIL_HUB, unqualified names and names in class L will be sent to 63558071Sericthe LOCAL_RELAY and other local names will be sent to MAIL_HUB. For 63658071Sericexample, if are on machine mastodon.CS.Berkeley.EDU, the following 63758071Sericcombinations of settings will have the indicated effects: 63857591Seric 63957591Sericemail sent to.... eric eric@mastodon.CS.Berkeley.EDU 64057591Seric 64157591SericLOCAL_RELAY set to mail.CS.Berkeley.EDU (delivered locally) 64257591Sericmail.CS.Berkeley.EDU 64357591Seric 64457591SericMAIL_HUB set to mammoth.CS.Berkeley.EDU mammoth.CS.Berkeley.EDU 64557591Sericmammoth.CS.Berkeley.EDU 64657591Seric 64757591SericBoth LOCAL_RELAY and mail.CS.Berkeley.EDU mammoth.CS.Berkeley.EDU 64857591SericMAIL_HUB set as above 64957591Seric 65064153SericIf you want all outgoing mail to go to a central relay site, define 65164153SericSMART_HOST as well. Briefly: 65258071Seric 65364153Seric LOCAL_RELAY applies to unqualifed names (e.g., "eric"). 65464153Seric MAIL_HUB applies to names qualified with the name of the 65564153Seric local host (e.g., "eric@mastodon.CS.Berkeley.EDU"). 65664153Seric SMART_HOST applies to names qualified with other hosts. 65764153Seric 65864153SericHowever, beware that other relays (e.g., UUCP_RELAY, BITNET_RELAY, and 65964153SericFAX_RELAY) take precedence over SMART_HOST, so if you really want 66064153Sericabsolutely everything to go to a single central site you will need to 66164153Sericunset all the other relays -- or better yet, find or build a minimal 66264153Sericconfig file that does this. 66364153Seric 66464153Seric 66558071Seric+-------------------------------+ 66658071Seric| NON-SMTP BASED CONFIGURATIONS | 66758071Seric+-------------------------------+ 66858071Seric 66958071SericThese configuration files are designed primarily for use by SMTP-based 67058071Sericsites. I don't pretend that they are well tuned for UUCP-only or 67158071SericUUCP-primarily nodes (the latter is defined as a small local net 67258071Sericconnected to the rest of the world via UUCP). However, there is one 67358071Serichook to handle some special cases. 67458071Seric 67558071SericYou can define a ``smart host'' that understands a richer address syntax 67658071Sericusing: 67758071Seric 67858071Seric define(`SMART_HOST', mailer:hostname) 67958071Seric 68064028SericIn this case, the ``mailer:'' defaults to "relay". Any messages that 68158071Sericcan't be handled using the usual UUCP rules are passed to this host. 68258071Seric 68358071SericIf you are on a local SMTP-based net that connects to the outside 68458071Sericworld via UUCP, you can use LOCAL_NET_CONFIG to add appropriate rules. 68558071SericFor example: 68658071Seric 68758071Seric define(`SMART_HOST', suucp:uunet) 68858071Seric LOCAL_NET_CONFIG 68963761Seric R$* < @ $* .$m. > $* $#smtp $@ $2.$m. $: $1 < @ $2.$m. > $3 69058071Seric 69158071SericThis will cause all names that end in your domain name ($m) via 69258071SericSMTP; anything else will be sent via suucp (smart UUCP) to uunet. 69363761SericIf you have FEATURE(nocanonify), you may need to omit the dots after 69463761Sericthe $m. If you are running a local DNS inside your domain which is 69563761Sericnot otherwise connected to the outside world, you probably want to 69663761Sericuse: 69758071Seric 69863761Seric define(`SMART_HOST', smtp:fire.wall.com) 69963761Seric LOCAL_NET_CONFIG 70063761Seric R$* < @ $* . > $* $#smtp $@ $2. $: $1 < @ $2. > $3 70158071Seric 70263761SericThat is, send directly only to things you found in your DNS lookup; 70363761Sericanything else goes through SMART_HOST. 70463761Seric 70564153SericIf you are not running DNS at all, it is important to use 70664153SericFEATURE(nodns) to avoid having sendmail queue everything waiting 70764153Sericfor the name server to come up. 70863761Seric 70964153Seric 71064259Seric+-----------+ 71164259Seric| WHO AM I? | 71264259Seric+-----------+ 71364259Seric 71464259SericNormally, the $j macro is automatically defined to be your fully 71564259Sericqualified domain name (FQDN). Sendmail does this by getting your 71664259Serichost name using gethostname and then calling gethostbyname on the 71764259Sericresult. For example, in some environments gethostname returns 71864259Sericonly the root of the host name (such as "foo"); gethostbyname is 71964259Sericsupposed to return the FQDN ("foo.bar.com"). In some (fairly rare) 72064259Sericcases, gethostbyname may fail to return the FQDN. In this case 72164259Sericyou MUST define confDOMAIN_NAME to be your fully qualified domain 72264259Sericname. This is usually done using: 72364259Seric 72464259Seric Dmbar.com 72564259Seric define(`confDOMAIN_NAME', `$w.$m')dnl 72664259Seric 72764259Seric 72864028Seric+--------------------+ 72964028Seric| USING MAILERTABLES | 73064028Seric+--------------------+ 73164028Seric 73264028SericTo use FEATURE(mailertable), you will have to create an external 73364028Sericdatabase containing the routing information for various domains. 73464028SericFor example, a mailertable file in text format might be: 73564028Seric 73664028Seric .my.domain xnet:%1.my.domain 73764028Seric uuhost1.my.domain suucp:uuhost1 73864028Seric .bitnet smtp:relay.bit.net 73964028Seric 74064028SericThis should normally be stored in /etc/mailertable. The actual 74164028Sericdatabase version of the mailertable is built using: 74264028Seric 74364028Seric makemap hash /etc/mailertable.db < /etc/mailertable 74464028Seric 74564028SericThe semantics are simple. Any LHS entry that does not begin with 74664028Serica dot matches the full host name indicated. LHS entries beginning 74764028Sericwith a dot match anything ending with that domain name -- that is, 74864028Sericthey can be thought of as having a leading "*" wildcard. Matching 74964028Sericis done in order of most-to-least qualified -- for example, even 75064028Sericthough ".my.domain" is listed first in the above example, an entry 75164028Sericof "uuhost1.my.domain" will match the second entry since it is 75264028Sericmore explicit. 75364028Seric 75464028SericThe RHS should always be a "mailer:host" pair. The mailer is the 75564028Sericconfiguration name of a mailer (that is, an `M' line in the 75664028Sericsendmail.cf file). The "host" will be the hostname passed to 75764028Sericthat mailer. In domain-based matches (that is, those with leading 75864028Sericdots) the "%1" may be used to interpolate the wildcarded part of 75964028Sericthe host name. For example, the first line above sends everything 76064028Sericaddressed to "anything.my.domain" to that same host name, but using 76164028Sericthe (presumably experimental) xnet mailer. 76264028Seric 76364028Seric 76464153Seric+--------------------------------+ 76564153Seric| USING USERDB TO MAP FULL NAMES | 76664153Seric+--------------------------------+ 76764153Seric 76864153SericThe user database was not originally intended for mapping full names 76964153Sericto login names (e.g., Eric.Allman => eric), but some people are using 77064153Sericit that way. (I would recommend that you set up aliases for this 77164153Sericpurpose instead -- since you can specify multiple alias files, this 77264153Sericis fairly easy.) The intent was to locate the default maildrop at 77364153Serica site, but allow you to override this by sending to a specific host. 77464153Seric 77564153SericIf you decide to set up the user database in this fashion, it is 77664153Sericimperative that you also specify FEATURE(notsticky) -- otherwise, 77764153Serice-mail sent to Full.Name@local.host.name will be rejected. 77864153Seric 77964259SericTo build the internal form of the user databae, use: 78064153Seric 78164259Seric makemap btree /usr/data/base.db < /usr/data/base.txt 78264259Seric 78364259Seric 78458363Seric+------------------+ 78558363Seric| FlexFAX SOFTWARE | 78658363Seric+------------------+ 78758363Seric 78858363SericSam Leffler's FlexFAX software is still in beta test -- but he expects a 78958363Sericpublic version out "later this week" [as of 3/1/93]. The following 79058363Sericblurb is direct from Sam: 79158363Seric 79264498Seric $Header: /usr/people/sam/fax/RCS/HOWTO,v 1.14 93/05/24 11:42:16 sam Exp $ 79358363Seric 79458363Seric How To Obtain This Software (in case all you get is this file) 79564498Seric -------------------------------------------------------------- 79658363Seric The source code is available for public ftp on 79764498Seric sgi.com sgi/fax/v2.1.src.tar.Z 79858363Seric (192.48.153.1) 79958363Seric 80058363Seric You can also obtain inst'able images for Silicon Graphics machines from 80164498Seric sgi.com sgi/fax/v2.1.inst.tar 80258363Seric (192.48.153.1) 80358363Seric 80458363Seric For example, 80558363Seric % ftp -n sgi.com 80658363Seric .... 80758363Seric ftp> user anonymous 80858363Seric ... <type in password> 80958363Seric ftp> cd sgi/fax 81058363Seric ftp> binary 81164498Seric ftp> get v2.1.src.tar.Z 81258363Seric 81364498Seric In general, the latest version of the 2.1 release of the software is 81464498Seric always available as "v2.1.src.tar.Z" or "v2.1.inst.tar" in the ftp 81564498Seric directory. This file is a link to the appropriate released version (so 81664498Seric don't waste your time retrieving the linked file as well!) Any files of 81764498Seric the form v2.1.*.patch are shell scripts that can be used to patch older 81864498Seric versions of the source code. For example, the file v2.1.0.patch would 81964498Seric contain patches to update v2.1.0.tar.Z. (Note to beta testers: this is 82064498Seric different than the naming conventions used during beta testing.) Patch 82164498Seric files only work to go between consecutive versions, so if you are 82264498Seric multiple versions behind the latest release, you will need to apply 82364498Seric each patch file between your current version and the latest. 82464498Seric 82564498Seric 82664498Seric Obtaining the Software by Electronic Mail 82764498Seric ----------------------------------------- 82864498Seric Do not send me requests for the software; they will be ignored (without 82964498Seric response). If you cannot use FTP at all, there is a service called 83064498Seric "ftpmail" available from gatekeeper.dec.com: you can send e-mail to 83164498Seric this machine and it will use FTP to retrieve files for you and send you 83264498Seric the files back again via e-mail. To find out more about the ftpmail 83358363Seric service, send a message to "ftpmail@gatekeeper.dec.com" whose body 83458363Seric consists of the single line "help". 83558363Seric 83664498Seric 83764498Seric Obtaining the Software Within Silicon Graphics 83864498Seric ---------------------------------------------- 83958363Seric Internal to Silicon Graphics there are inst'able images on the host 84064498Seric flake.asd in the directory /usr/dist. Thus you can do something like: 84158363Seric 84264498Seric % inst -f flake.asd.sgi.com:/usr/dist/flexfax 84358363Seric 84464498Seric to install the latest version of the software on your machine. 84558363Seric 84664498Seric 84764498Seric What to do Once You've Retrieved Stuff 84864498Seric -------------------------------------- 84958363Seric The external distributions come in a compressed or uncompressed tar 85058363Seric file. To extract the source distribution: 85158363Seric 85264498Seric % zcat v2.1.src.tar.Z | tar xf - 85358363Seric 85458363Seric (uncompress and extract individual files in current directory). To 85558363Seric unpack and install the client portion of the inst'able distribution: 85658363Seric 85758363Seric % mkdir dist 85864498Seric % cd dist; tar xf ../v2.1.inst.tar; cd .. 85958363Seric % inst -f dist/flexfax 86058363Seric ... 86158363Seric inst> go 86258363Seric 86358363Seric (Note, the dist subdirectory is because some versions of inst fail if 86464498Seric the files are in the current directory.) Server binaries are also 86564498Seric included in the inst'able images as flexfax.server.*. They are not 86664498Seric installed by default, so to get them also you need to do: 86758363Seric 86858363Seric % inst -f flexfax 86958363Seric ... 87058363Seric inst> install flexfax.server.* 87158363Seric inst> go 87258363Seric 87364498Seric The SGI binaries were built for Version 4.0.5H of the IRIX operating 87458363Seric system. They should work w/o problem on earlier versions of the 87558363Seric system, but I have not fully tested this. Also, note that to install a 87658363Seric server on an SGI machine, you need to have installed the Display 87758363Seric PostScript execution environment product (dps_eoe). Otherwise, the fax 87858363Seric server will not be able to convert PostScript to facsimile for 87958363Seric transmission. 88058363Seric 88164498Seric If you are working from the source distribution, look at the file 88264498Seric README in the top of the source tree. If you are working from the inst 88364498Seric images, the subsystem flexfax.man.readme contains the README file and 88464498Seric other useful pieces of information--the installed files are placed in 88564498Seric the directory /usr/local/doc/flexfax). Basically you will need to run 88664498Seric the faxaddmodem script to setup and configure your fax modem. Consult 88764498Seric the README file and the manual page for faxaddmodem for information. 88858363Seric 88958363Seric 89064498Seric FlexFAX Mail List 89164498Seric ----------------- 89258363Seric A mailing list for users of this software is located on sgi.com. 89358363Seric If you want to join this mailing list or have a list-related request 89458363Seric such as getting your name removed from it, send a request to 89558363Seric 89664498Seric majordomo@whizzer.wpd.sgi.com 89758363Seric 89864498Seric For example, to subscribe, send the line "subscribe flexfax" in 89964498Seric the body of your message. The line "help" will return a list of 90064498Seric the commands understood by the mailing list management software. 90164498Seric 90258363Seric Submissions (including bug reports) should be directed to: 90358363Seric 90458363Seric flexfax@sgi.com 90558363Seric 90664498Seric When corresponding about this software please always specify what 90764498Seric version you have, what system you're running on, and, if the problem is 90864498Seric specific to your modem, identify the modem and firmware revision. 90958363Seric 91064498Seric 91157945Seric+--------------------------------+ 91257945Seric| TWEAKING CONFIGURATION OPTIONS | 91357945Seric+--------------------------------+ 91457945Seric 91557945SericThere are a large number of configuration options that don't normally 91657945Sericneed to be changed. However, if you feel you need to tweak them, you 91757945Sericcan define the following M4 variables. This list is shown in four 91857945Sericcolumns: the name you define, the default value for that definition, 91957945Sericthe option or macro that is affected (either Ox for an option or Dx 92057945Sericfor a macro), and a brief description. Greater detail of the semantics 92157945Sericcan be found in the Installation and Operations Guide. 92257945Seric 92363582SericSome options are likely to be deprecated in future versions -- that is, 92463582Sericthe option is only included to provide back-compatibility. These are 92563582Sericmarked with "*". 92663582Seric 92765002SericRemember that these options are M4 variables, and hence may need to 92865002Sericbe quoted. In particular, arguments with commas will usually have to 92965002Sericbe ``double quoted, like this phrase'' to avoid having the comma 93065002Sericconfuse things. This is common for alias file definitions and for 93165002Sericthe read timeout. 93265002Seric 93357945SericM4 Variable Name Default Mac/Opt Description 93465002Seric================ ======= ======= =========== 93557945SericconfMAILER_NAME MAILER-DAEMON Dn The sender name used for 93657945Seric internally generated 93757945Seric outgoing messages. 93858681SericconfFROM_LINE From $g $d Dl The From_ line used when 93958681Seric sending to files or programs. 94057945SericconfFROM_HEADER $?x$x <$g>$|$g$. The format of an internally 94157945Seric Dq generated From: address. 94257945SericconfOPERATORS .:%@!^/[] Do Address operator characters. 94364153SericconfSMTP_LOGIN_MSG $j Sendmail $v/$Z ready at $b 94457945Seric De The initial (spontaneous) 94557945Seric SMTP greeting message. 94659743SericconfSEVEN_BIT_INPUT False O7 Force input to seven bits? 94757945SericconfALIAS_WAIT 10 Oa Wait (in minutes) for alias 94857945Seric file rebuild. 94958087SericconfMIN_FREE_BLOCKS 4 Ob Minimum number of free blocks 95058087Seric on queue filesystem to accept 95158087Seric SMTP mail. 95257945SericconfBLANK_SUB . OB Blank (space) substitution 95357945Seric character. 95465619SericconfCON_EXPENSIVE False Oc Avoid connecting immediately 95565619Seric to mailers marked expensive? 95657945SericconfCHECKPOINT_INTERVAL 10 OC Checkpoint queue files 95757945Seric every N recipients. 95857945SericconfDELIVERY_MODE background Od Default delivery mode. 95957945SericconfAUTO_REBUILD False OD Automatically rebuild 96057945Seric alias file if needed. 96157945SericconfERROR_MODE (undefined) Oe Error message mode. 96257945SericconfERROR_MESSAGE (undefined) OE Error message header/file. 96357945SericconfSAVE_FROM_LINES False Of Save extra leading 96457945Seric From_ lines. 96557945SericconfTEMP_FILE_MODE 0600 OF Temporary file mode. 96657945SericconfDEF_GROUP_ID 1 Og Default group id. 96757945SericconfMATCH_GECOS False OG Match GECOS field. 96857945SericconfMAX_HOP 17 Oh Maximum hop count. 96963582SericconfIGNORE_DOTS False Oi * Ignore dot as terminator 97057945Seric for incoming messages? 97157945SericconfBIND_OPTS (empty) OI Default options for BIND. 97263582SericconfMIME_FORMAT_ERRORS True Oj * Send error messages as MIME- 97359743Seric encapsulated messages per 97459743Seric RFC 1344. 97564153SericconfFORWARD_PATH (undefined) OJ The colon-separated list of 97664153Seric places to search for .forward 97764153Seric files. 97857945SericconfMCI_CACHE_SIZE 2 Ok Size of open connection cache. 97957945SericconfMCI_CACHE_TIMEOUT 5m OK Open connection cache timeout. 98063582SericconfUSE_ERRORS_TO False Ol * Use the Errors-To: header to 98163582Seric deliver error messages. This 98263582Seric should not be necessary because 98363582Seric of general acceptance of the 98463582Seric envelope/header distinction. 98557945SericconfLOG_LEVEL 9 OL Log level. 98657945SericconfME_TOO False Om Include sender in group 98757945Seric expansions. 98857945SericconfCHECK_ALIASES True On Check RHS of aliases when 98957945Seric running newaliases. 99063582SericconfOLD_STYLE_HEADERS True Oo * Assume that headers without 99157945Seric special chars are old style. 99258859SericconfDAEMON_OPTIONS (undefined) OO SMTP daemon options. 99358806SericconfPRIVACY_FLAGS authwarnings Op Privacy flags. 99457945SericconfCOPY_ERRORS_TO (undefined) OP Address for additional copies 99557945Seric of all error messages. 99657945SericconfQUEUE_FACTOR (undefined) Oq Slope of queue-only function 99758116SericconfREAD_TIMEOUT (undefined) Or SMTP read timeouts. 99863582SericconfSAFE_QUEUE True Os * Commit all messages to disk 99957945Seric before forking. 100058806SericconfMESSAGE_TIMEOUT 5d/4h OT Timeout for messages before 100158806Seric sending error/warning message. 100259317SericconfTIME_ZONE USE_SYSTEM Ot Time zone info -- can be 100357945Seric USE_SYSTEM to use the system's 100457945Seric idea, USE_TZ to use the user's 100557945Seric TZ envariable, or something 100657945Seric else to force that value. 100757945SericconfDEF_USER_ID 1 Ou Default user id. 100858718SericconfUSERDB_SPEC (undefined) OU User database specification. 100958859SericconfFALLBACK_MX (undefined) OV Fallback MX host. 101063857SericconfTRY_NULL_MX_LIST False Ow If we are the best MX for a 101163857Seric host and haven't made other 101263857Seric arrangements, try connecting 101363857Seric to the host directly; normally 101463857Seric this would be a config error. 101557945SericconfQUEUE_LA 8 Ox Load average at which queue-only 101657945Seric function kicks in. 101757945SericconfREFUSE_LA 12 OX Load average at which incoming 101857945Seric SMTP connections are refused. 101963582SericconfWORK_RECIPIENT_FACTOR 102063582Seric (undefined) Oy Cost of each recipient. 102163582SericconfSEPARATE_PROC False OY Run all deliveries in a 102257945Seric separate process. 102357945SericconfWORK_CLASS_FACTOR (undefined) Oz Priority multiplier for class. 102457945SericconfWORK_TIME_FACTOR (undefined) OZ Cost of each delivery attempt. 102558408SericconfCW_FILE /etc/sendmail.cw Name of file used to get the 102658408Seric Fw local additions to the $=w 102758408Seric class. 102864153SericconfSMTP_MAILER smtp - The mailer name used when 102963972Seric SMTP connectivity is required. 103063972Seric Either "smtp" or "esmtp". 103163999SericconfLOCAL_MAILER local - The mailer name used when 103263999Seric local connectivity is required. 103363999Seric Almost always "local". 103464028SericconfRELAY_MAILER relay - The default mailer name used 103564028Seric for relaying any mail (e.g., 103664028Seric to a BITNET_RELAY, a 103764028Seric SMART_HOST, or whatever). 103864028Seric This can reasonably be "suucp" 103964028Seric if you are on a UUCP-connected 104064028Seric site. 104164259SericconfDOMAIN_NAME (undefined) Dj If defined, sets $j. 104257945Seric 104358087Seric 104457246Seric+-----------+ 104557246Seric| HIERARCHY | 104657246Seric+-----------+ 104757246Seric 104851220SericWithin this directory are several subdirectories, to wit: 104951220Seric 105051220Sericm4 General support routines. These are typically 105151220Seric very important and should not be changed without 105257247Seric very careful consideration. 105351220Seric 105451220Sericcf The configuration files themselves. They have 105551220Seric ".mc" suffixes, and must be run through m4 to 105651220Seric become complete. The resulting output should 105751220Seric have a ".cf" suffix. 105851220Seric 105951220Sericostype Definitions describing a particular operating 106051220Seric system type. These should always be referenced 106151220Seric using the OSTYPE macro in the .mc file. Examples 106251220Seric include "bsd4.3", "bsd4.4", "sunos3.5", and 106351220Seric "sunos4.1". 106451220Seric 106551220Sericdomain Definitions describing a particular domain, referenced 106651220Seric using the DOMAIN macro in the .mc file. These are 106751220Seric site dependent; for example, we contribute "cs.exposed.m4" 106851220Seric and "cs.hidden.m4" which both describe hosts in the 106951220Seric CS.Berkeley.EDU subdomain; the former displays the local 107051220Seric hostname (e.g., mammoth.CS.Berkeley.EDU), whereas the 107151220Seric latter does its best to hide the identity of the local 107251220Seric workstation inside the CS subdomain. 107351220Seric 107451220Sericmailer Descriptions of mailers. These are referenced using 107551220Seric the MAILER macro in the .mc file. 107651220Seric 107751220Sericsh Shell files used when building the .cf file from the 107851220Seric .mc file in the cf subdirectory. 107951220Seric 108051220Sericfeature These hold special orthogonal features that you might 108151220Seric want to include. They should be referenced using 108251220Seric the FEATURE macro. 108351220Seric 108451220Serichack Local hacks. These can be referenced using the HACK 108551220Seric macro. They shouldn't be of more than voyeuristic 108651220Seric interest outside the .Berkeley.EDU domain, but who knows? 108765957Seric We've all got our own peccadillos. 108851220Seric 108951268Sericsiteconfig Site configuration -- e.g., tables of locally connected 109051268Seric UUCP sites. 109151220Seric 109251268Seric 109357246Seric+------------------------+ 109457246Seric| ADMINISTRATIVE DETAILS | 109557246Seric+------------------------+ 109651220Seric 109751220SericThe following sections detail usage of certain internal parts of the 109851220Sericsendmail.cf file. Read them carefully if you are trying to modify 109951220Sericthe current model. If you find the above descriptions adequate, these 110051220Sericshould be {boring, confusing, tedious, ridiculous} (pick one or more). 110151220Seric 110251220SericRULESETS (* means built in to sendmail) 110351220Seric 110451220Seric 0 * Parsing 110551220Seric 1 * Sender rewriting 110651220Seric 2 * Recipient rewriting 110751220Seric 3 * Canonicalization 110851220Seric 4 * Post cleanup 110954839Seric 5 * Local address rewrite (after aliasing) 111060539Seric 1x mailer rules (sender qualification) 111160539Seric 2x mailer rules (recipient qualification) 111264801Seric 3x mailer rules (sender header qualification) 111364801Seric 4x mailer rules (recipient header qualification) 111464801Seric 5x mailer subroutines (general) 111564801Seric 6x mailer subroutines (general) 111664801Seric 7x mailer subroutines (general) 111764801Seric 8x reserved 111860539Seric 90 Mailertable host stripping 111960892Seric 96 Bottom half of Ruleset 3 (ruleset 6 in old sendmail) 112060892Seric 97 Hook for recursive ruleset 0 call (ruleset 7 in old sendmail) 112163857Seric 98 Local part of ruleset 0 (ruleset 8 in old sendmail) 112251220Seric 112351220Seric 112451220SericMAILERS 112551220Seric 112651220Seric 0 local, prog local and program mailers 112765218Seric 1 [e]smtp, relay SMTP channel 112865218Seric 2 uucp-* UNIX-to-UNIX Copy Program 112958087Seric 3 netnews Network News delivery 113058363Seric 4 fax Sam Leffler's FlexFAX software 113151220Seric 113251220Seric 113351220SericMACROS 113451220Seric 113551220Seric A 113651220Seric B Bitnet Relay 113765182Seric C 113854839Seric D The local domain -- usually not needed 113951220Seric E 114058363Seric F FAX Relay 114151220Seric G 114257591Seric H mail Hub (for mail clusters) 114351220Seric I 114451220Seric J 114551220Seric K 114651220Seric L 114751220Seric M Masquerade (who I claim to be) 114851220Seric N 114951220Seric O 115051220Seric P 115151220Seric Q 115251220Seric R Relay (for unqualified names) 115358071Seric S Smart Host 115451220Seric T 115551309Seric U my UUCP name (if I have a UUCP connection) 115651309Seric V UUCP Relay (class V hosts) 115751220Seric W UUCP Relay (class W hosts) 115851220Seric X UUCP Relay (class X hosts) 115951309Seric Y UUCP Relay (all other hosts) 116051220Seric Z Version number 116151220Seric 116251220Seric 116351220SericCLASSES 116451220Seric 116551220Seric A 116651220Seric B 116751220Seric C 116851220Seric D 116957246Seric E addresses that should not seem to come from $M 117054839Seric F hosts we forward for 117151220Seric G 117251220Seric H 117351220Seric I 117451220Seric J 117551220Seric K 117651220Seric L addresses that should not be forwarded to $R 117751220Seric M 117851220Seric N 117951220Seric O operators that indicate network operations (cannot be in local names) 118060211Seric P top level pseudo-domains: BITNET, FAX, UUCP, etc. 118151220Seric Q 118251220Seric R 118351220Seric S 118451220Seric T 118551220Seric U locally connected UUCP hosts 118651309Seric V UUCP hosts connected to relay $V 118751309Seric W UUCP hosts connected to relay $W 118851309Seric X UUCP hosts connected to relay $X 118951309Seric Y locally connected smart UUCP hosts 119064153Seric Z locally connected domain-ized UUCP hosts 119154839Seric . the class containing only a dot 119251220Seric 119351220Seric 119451220SericM4 DIVERSIONS 119551220Seric 119658071Seric 1 Local host detection and resolution 119758071Seric 2 Local Ruleset 3 additions 119858071Seric 3 Local Ruleset 0 additions 119951268Seric 4 UUCP Ruleset 0 additions 120051309Seric 5 locally interpreted names (overrides $R) 120154839Seric 6 local configuration (at top of file) 120251220Seric 7 mailer definitions 120354839Seric 8 special local name recognition (late in ruleset 3) 120458681Seric 9 special local rulesets (1 and 2) 1205