1 2 SENDMAIL CONFIGURATION FILES 3 4This document describes the sendmail configuration files. It 5explains how to create a sendmail.cf file for use with sendmail. 6It also describes how to set options for sendmail which are explained 7in the Sendmail Installation and Operation guide (doc/op/op.me). 8 9To get started, you may want to look at tcpproto.mc (for TCP-only 10sites) and clientproto.mc (for clusters of clients using a single 11mail host), or the generic-*.mc files as operating system-specific 12examples. 13 14Table of Content: 15 16INTRODUCTION AND EXAMPLE 17A BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO M4 18FILE LOCATIONS 19OSTYPE 20DOMAINS 21MAILERS 22FEATURES 23HACKS 24SITE CONFIGURATION 25USING UUCP MAILERS 26TWEAKING RULESETS 27MASQUERADING AND RELAYING 28USING LDAP FOR ALIASES, MAPS, AND CLASSES 29LDAP ROUTING 30ANTI-SPAM CONFIGURATION CONTROL 31CONNECTION CONTROL 32STARTTLS 33SMTP AUTHENTICATION 34ADDING NEW MAILERS OR RULESETS 35ADDING NEW MAIL FILTERS 36QUEUE GROUP DEFINITIONS 37NON-SMTP BASED CONFIGURATIONS 38WHO AM I? 39ACCEPTING MAIL FOR MULTIPLE NAMES 40USING MAILERTABLES 41USING USERDB TO MAP FULL NAMES 42MISCELLANEOUS SPECIAL FEATURES 43SECURITY NOTES 44TWEAKING CONFIGURATION OPTIONS 45MESSAGE SUBMISSION PROGRAM 46FORMAT OF FILES AND MAPS 47DIRECTORY LAYOUT 48ADMINISTRATIVE DETAILS 49 50 51+--------------------------+ 52| INTRODUCTION AND EXAMPLE | 53+--------------------------+ 54 55Configuration files are contained in the subdirectory "cf", with a 56suffix ".mc". They must be run through "m4" to produce a ".cf" file. 57You must pre-load "cf.m4": 58 59 m4 ${CFDIR}/m4/cf.m4 config.mc > config.cf 60 61Alternatively, you can simply: 62 63 cd ${CFDIR}/cf 64 ./Build config.cf 65 66where ${CFDIR} is the root of the cf directory and config.mc is the 67name of your configuration file. If you are running a version of M4 68that understands the __file__ builtin (versions of GNU m4 >= 0.75 do 69this, but the versions distributed with 4.4BSD and derivatives do not) 70or the -I flag (ditto), then ${CFDIR} can be in an arbitrary directory. 71For "traditional" versions, ${CFDIR} ***MUST*** be "..", or you MUST 72use -D_CF_DIR_=/path/to/cf/dir/ -- note the trailing slash! For example: 73 74 m4 -D_CF_DIR_=${CFDIR}/ ${CFDIR}/m4/cf.m4 config.mc > config.cf 75 76Let's examine a typical .mc file: 77 78 divert(-1) 79 # 80 # Copyright (c) 1998-2005 Sendmail, Inc. and its suppliers. 81 # All rights reserved. 82 # Copyright (c) 1983 Eric P. Allman. All rights reserved. 83 # Copyright (c) 1988, 1993 84 # The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 85 # 86 # By using this file, you agree to the terms and conditions set 87 # forth in the LICENSE file which can be found at the top level of 88 # the sendmail distribution. 89 # 90 91 # 92 # This is a Berkeley-specific configuration file for HP-UX 9.x. 93 # It applies only to the Computer Science Division at Berkeley, 94 # and should not be used elsewhere. It is provided on the sendmail 95 # distribution as a sample only. To create your own configuration 96 # file, create an appropriate domain file in ../domain, change the 97 # `DOMAIN' macro below to reference that file, and copy the result 98 # to a name of your own choosing. 99 # 100 divert(0) 101 102The divert(-1) will delete the crud in the resulting output file. 103The copyright notice can be replaced by whatever your lawyers require; 104our lawyers require the one that is included in these files. A copyleft 105is a copyright by another name. The divert(0) restores regular output. 106 107 VERSIONID(`<SCCS or RCS version id>') 108 109VERSIONID is a macro that stuffs the version information into the 110resulting file. You could use SCCS, RCS, CVS, something else, or 111omit it completely. This is not the same as the version id included 112in SMTP greeting messages -- this is defined in m4/version.m4. 113 114 OSTYPE(`hpux9')dnl 115 116You must specify an OSTYPE to properly configure things such as the 117pathname of the help and status files, the flags needed for the local 118mailer, and other important things. If you omit it, you will get an 119error when you try to build the configuration. Look at the ostype 120directory for the list of known operating system types. 121 122 DOMAIN(`CS.Berkeley.EDU')dnl 123 124This example is specific to the Computer Science Division at Berkeley. 125You can use "DOMAIN(`generic')" to get a sufficiently bland definition 126that may well work for you, or you can create a customized domain 127definition appropriate for your environment. 128 129 MAILER(`local') 130 MAILER(`smtp') 131 132These describe the mailers used at the default CS site. The local 133mailer is always included automatically. Beware: MAILER declarations 134should only be followed by LOCAL_* sections. The general rules are 135that the order should be: 136 137 VERSIONID 138 OSTYPE 139 DOMAIN 140 FEATURE 141 local macro definitions 142 MAILER 143 LOCAL_CONFIG 144 LOCAL_RULE_* 145 LOCAL_RULESETS 146 147There are a few exceptions to this rule. Local macro definitions which 148influence a FEATURE() should be done before that feature. For example, 149a define(`PROCMAIL_MAILER_PATH', ...) should be done before 150FEATURE(`local_procmail'). 151 152******************************************************************* 153*** BE SURE YOU CUSTOMIZE THESE FILES! They have some *** 154*** Berkeley-specific assumptions built in, such as the name *** 155*** of their UUCP-relay. You'll want to create your own *** 156*** domain description, and use that in place of *** 157*** domain/Berkeley.EDU.m4. *** 158******************************************************************* 159 160 161+----------------------------+ 162| A BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO M4 | 163+----------------------------+ 164 165Sendmail uses the M4 macro processor to ``compile'' the configuration 166files. The most important thing to know is that M4 is stream-based, 167that is, it doesn't understand about lines. For this reason, in some 168places you may see the word ``dnl'', which stands for ``delete 169through newline''; essentially, it deletes all characters starting 170at the ``dnl'' up to and including the next newline character. In 171most cases sendmail uses this only to avoid lots of unnecessary 172blank lines in the output. 173 174Other important directives are define(A, B) which defines the macro 175``A'' to have value ``B''. Macros are expanded as they are read, so 176one normally quotes both values to prevent expansion. For example, 177 178 define(`SMART_HOST', `smart.foo.com') 179 180One word of warning: M4 macros are expanded even in lines that appear 181to be comments. For example, if you have 182 183 # See FEATURE(`foo') above 184 185it will not do what you expect, because the FEATURE(`foo') will be 186expanded. This also applies to 187 188 # And then define the $X macro to be the return address 189 190because ``define'' is an M4 keyword. If you want to use them, surround 191them with directed quotes, `like this'. 192 193Since m4 uses single quotes (opening "`" and closing "'") to quote 194arguments, those quotes can't be used in arguments. For example, 195it is not possible to define a rejection message containing a single 196quote. Usually there are simple workarounds by changing those 197messages; in the worst case it might be ok to change the value 198directly in the generated .cf file, which however is not advised. 199 200 201Notice: 202------- 203 204This package requires a post-V7 version of m4; if you are running the 2054.2bsd, SysV.2, or 7th Edition version. SunOS's /usr/5bin/m4 or 206BSD-Net/2's m4 both work. GNU m4 version 1.1 or later also works. 207Unfortunately, the M4 on BSDI 1.0 doesn't work -- you'll have to use a 208Net/2 or GNU version. GNU m4 is available from 209ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/m4/m4-1.4.tar.gz (check for the latest version). 210EXCEPTIONS: DEC's m4 on Digital UNIX 4.x is broken (3.x is fine). Use GNU 211m4 on this platform. 212 213 214+----------------+ 215| FILE LOCATIONS | 216+----------------+ 217 218sendmail 8.9 has introduced a new configuration directory for sendmail 219related files, /etc/mail. The new files available for sendmail 8.9 -- 220the class {R} /etc/mail/relay-domains and the access database 221/etc/mail/access -- take advantage of this new directory. Beginning with 2228.10, all files will use this directory by default (some options may be 223set by OSTYPE() files). This new directory should help to restore 224uniformity to sendmail's file locations. 225 226Below is a table of some of the common changes: 227 228Old filename New filename 229------------ ------------ 230/etc/bitdomain /etc/mail/bitdomain 231/etc/domaintable /etc/mail/domaintable 232/etc/genericstable /etc/mail/genericstable 233/etc/uudomain /etc/mail/uudomain 234/etc/virtusertable /etc/mail/virtusertable 235/etc/userdb /etc/mail/userdb 236 237/etc/aliases /etc/mail/aliases 238/etc/sendmail/aliases /etc/mail/aliases 239/etc/ucbmail/aliases /etc/mail/aliases 240/usr/adm/sendmail/aliases /etc/mail/aliases 241/usr/lib/aliases /etc/mail/aliases 242/usr/lib/mail/aliases /etc/mail/aliases 243/usr/ucblib/aliases /etc/mail/aliases 244 245/etc/sendmail.cw /etc/mail/local-host-names 246/etc/mail/sendmail.cw /etc/mail/local-host-names 247/etc/sendmail/sendmail.cw /etc/mail/local-host-names 248 249/etc/sendmail.ct /etc/mail/trusted-users 250 251/etc/sendmail.oE /etc/mail/error-header 252 253/etc/sendmail.hf /etc/mail/helpfile 254/etc/mail/sendmail.hf /etc/mail/helpfile 255/usr/ucblib/sendmail.hf /etc/mail/helpfile 256/etc/ucbmail/sendmail.hf /etc/mail/helpfile 257/usr/lib/sendmail.hf /etc/mail/helpfile 258/usr/share/lib/sendmail.hf /etc/mail/helpfile 259/usr/share/misc/sendmail.hf /etc/mail/helpfile 260/share/misc/sendmail.hf /etc/mail/helpfile 261 262/etc/service.switch /etc/mail/service.switch 263 264/etc/sendmail.st /etc/mail/statistics 265/etc/mail/sendmail.st /etc/mail/statistics 266/etc/mailer/sendmail.st /etc/mail/statistics 267/etc/sendmail/sendmail.st /etc/mail/statistics 268/usr/lib/sendmail.st /etc/mail/statistics 269/usr/ucblib/sendmail.st /etc/mail/statistics 270 271Note that all of these paths actually use a new m4 macro MAIL_SETTINGS_DIR 272to create the pathnames. The default value of this variable is 273`/etc/mail/'. If you set this macro to a different value, you MUST include 274a trailing slash. 275 276Notice: all filenames used in a .mc (or .cf) file should be absolute 277(starting at the root, i.e., with '/'). Relative filenames most 278likely cause surprises during operations (unless otherwise noted). 279 280 281+--------+ 282| OSTYPE | 283+--------+ 284 285You MUST define an operating system environment, or the configuration 286file build will puke. There are several environments available; look 287at the "ostype" directory for the current list. This macro changes 288things like the location of the alias file and queue directory. Some 289of these files are identical to one another. 290 291It is IMPERATIVE that the OSTYPE occur before any MAILER definitions. 292In general, the OSTYPE macro should go immediately after any version 293information, and MAILER definitions should always go last. 294 295Operating system definitions are usually easy to write. They may define 296the following variables (everything defaults, so an ostype file may be 297empty). Unfortunately, the list of configuration-supported systems is 298not as broad as the list of source-supported systems, since many of 299the source contributors do not include corresponding ostype files. 300 301ALIAS_FILE [/etc/mail/aliases] The location of the text version 302 of the alias file(s). It can be a comma-separated 303 list of names (but be sure you quote values with 304 commas in them -- for example, use 305 define(`ALIAS_FILE', `a,b') 306 to get "a" and "b" both listed as alias files; 307 otherwise the define() primitive only sees "a"). 308HELP_FILE [/etc/mail/helpfile] The name of the file 309 containing information printed in response to 310 the SMTP HELP command. 311QUEUE_DIR [/var/spool/mqueue] The directory containing 312 queue files. To use multiple queues, supply 313 a value ending with an asterisk. For 314 example, /var/spool/mqueue/qd* will use all of the 315 directories or symbolic links to directories 316 beginning with 'qd' in /var/spool/mqueue as queue 317 directories. The names 'qf', 'df', and 'xf' are 318 reserved as specific subdirectories for the 319 corresponding queue file types as explained in 320 doc/op/op.me. See also QUEUE GROUP DEFINITIONS. 321MSP_QUEUE_DIR [/var/spool/clientmqueue] The directory containing 322 queue files for the MSP (Mail Submission Program, 323 see sendmail/SECURITY). 324STATUS_FILE [/etc/mail/statistics] The file containing status 325 information. 326LOCAL_MAILER_PATH [/bin/mail] The program used to deliver local mail. 327LOCAL_MAILER_FLAGS [Prmn9] The flags used by the local mailer. The 328 flags lsDFMAw5:/|@q are always included. 329LOCAL_MAILER_ARGS [mail -d $u] The arguments passed to deliver local 330 mail. 331LOCAL_MAILER_MAX [undefined] If defined, the maximum size of local 332 mail that you are willing to accept. 333LOCAL_MAILER_MAXMSGS [undefined] If defined, the maximum number of 334 messages to deliver in a single connection. Only 335 useful for LMTP local mailers. 336LOCAL_MAILER_CHARSET [undefined] If defined, messages containing 8-bit data 337 that ARRIVE from an address that resolves to the 338 local mailer and which are converted to MIME will be 339 labeled with this character set. 340LOCAL_MAILER_EOL [undefined] If defined, the string to use as the 341 end of line for the local mailer. 342LOCAL_MAILER_DSN_DIAGNOSTIC_CODE 343 [X-Unix] The DSN Diagnostic-Code value for the 344 local mailer. This should be changed with care. 345LOCAL_SHELL_PATH [/bin/sh] The shell used to deliver piped email. 346LOCAL_SHELL_FLAGS [eu9] The flags used by the shell mailer. The 347 flags lsDFM are always included. 348LOCAL_SHELL_ARGS [sh -c $u] The arguments passed to deliver "prog" 349 mail. 350LOCAL_SHELL_DIR [$z:/] The directory search path in which the 351 shell should run. 352LOCAL_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the local mailer. 353USENET_MAILER_PATH [/usr/lib/news/inews] The name of the program 354 used to submit news. 355USENET_MAILER_FLAGS [rsDFMmn] The mailer flags for the usenet mailer. 356USENET_MAILER_ARGS [-m -h -n] The command line arguments for the 357 usenet mailer. NOTE: Some versions of inews 358 (such as those shipped with newer versions of INN) 359 use different flags. Double check the defaults 360 against the inews man page. 361USENET_MAILER_MAX [undefined] The maximum size of messages that will 362 be accepted by the usenet mailer. 363USENET_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the usenet mailer. 364SMTP_MAILER_FLAGS [undefined] Flags added to SMTP mailer. Default 365 flags are `mDFMuX' for all SMTP-based mailers; the 366 "esmtp" mailer adds `a'; "smtp8" adds `8'; and 367 "dsmtp" adds `%'. 368RELAY_MAILER_FLAGS [undefined] Flags added to the relay mailer. Default 369 flags are `mDFMuX' for all SMTP-based mailers; the 370 relay mailer adds `a8'. If this is not defined, 371 then SMTP_MAILER_FLAGS is used. 372SMTP_MAILER_MAX [undefined] The maximum size of messages that will 373 be transported using the smtp, smtp8, esmtp, or dsmtp 374 mailers. 375SMTP_MAILER_MAXMSGS [undefined] If defined, the maximum number of 376 messages to deliver in a single connection for the 377 smtp, smtp8, esmtp, or dsmtp mailers. 378SMTP_MAILER_MAXRCPTS [undefined] If defined, the maximum number of 379 recipients to deliver in a single connection for the 380 smtp, smtp8, esmtp, or dsmtp mailers. 381SMTP_MAILER_ARGS [TCP $h] The arguments passed to the smtp mailer. 382 About the only reason you would want to change this 383 would be to change the default port. 384ESMTP_MAILER_ARGS [TCP $h] The arguments passed to the esmtp mailer. 385SMTP8_MAILER_ARGS [TCP $h] The arguments passed to the smtp8 mailer. 386DSMTP_MAILER_ARGS [TCP $h] The arguments passed to the dsmtp mailer. 387RELAY_MAILER_ARGS [TCP $h] The arguments passed to the relay mailer. 388SMTP_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the smtp mailer. 389ESMTP_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the esmtp mailer. 390SMTP8_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the smtp8 mailer. 391DSMTP_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the dsmtp mailer. 392RELAY_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the relay mailer. 393RELAY_MAILER_MAXMSGS [undefined] If defined, the maximum number of 394 messages to deliver in a single connection for the 395 relay mailer. 396SMTP_MAILER_CHARSET [undefined] If defined, messages containing 8-bit data 397 that ARRIVE from an address that resolves to one of 398 the SMTP mailers and which are converted to MIME will 399 be labeled with this character set. 400UUCP_MAILER_PATH [/usr/bin/uux] The program used to send UUCP mail. 401UUCP_MAILER_FLAGS [undefined] Flags added to UUCP mailer. Default 402 flags are `DFMhuU' (and `m' for uucp-new mailer, 403 minus `U' for uucp-dom mailer). 404UUCP_MAILER_ARGS [uux - -r -z -a$g -gC $h!rmail ($u)] The arguments 405 passed to the UUCP mailer. 406UUCP_MAILER_MAX [100000] The maximum size message accepted for 407 transmission by the UUCP mailers. 408UUCP_MAILER_CHARSET [undefined] If defined, messages containing 8-bit data 409 that ARRIVE from an address that resolves to one of 410 the UUCP mailers and which are converted to MIME will 411 be labeled with this character set. 412UUCP_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the UUCP mailers. 413FAX_MAILER_PATH [/usr/local/lib/fax/mailfax] The program used to 414 submit FAX messages. 415FAX_MAILER_ARGS [mailfax $u $h $f] The arguments passed to the FAX 416 mailer. 417FAX_MAILER_MAX [100000] The maximum size message accepted for 418 transmission by FAX. 419POP_MAILER_PATH [/usr/lib/mh/spop] The pathname of the POP mailer. 420POP_MAILER_FLAGS [Penu] Flags added to POP mailer. Flags lsDFMq 421 are always added. 422POP_MAILER_ARGS [pop $u] The arguments passed to the POP mailer. 423POP_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the pop mailer. 424PROCMAIL_MAILER_PATH [/usr/local/bin/procmail] The path to the procmail 425 program. This is also used by 426 FEATURE(`local_procmail'). 427PROCMAIL_MAILER_FLAGS [SPhnu9] Flags added to Procmail mailer. Flags 428 DFM are always set. This is NOT used by 429 FEATURE(`local_procmail'); tweak LOCAL_MAILER_FLAGS 430 instead. 431PROCMAIL_MAILER_ARGS [procmail -Y -m $h $f $u] The arguments passed to 432 the Procmail mailer. This is NOT used by 433 FEATURE(`local_procmail'); tweak LOCAL_MAILER_ARGS 434 instead. 435PROCMAIL_MAILER_MAX [undefined] If set, the maximum size message that 436 will be accepted by the procmail mailer. 437PROCMAIL_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the procmail mailer. 438MAIL11_MAILER_PATH [/usr/etc/mail11] The path to the mail11 mailer. 439MAIL11_MAILER_FLAGS [nsFx] Flags for the mail11 mailer. 440MAIL11_MAILER_ARGS [mail11 $g $x $h $u] Arguments passed to the mail11 441 mailer. 442MAIL11_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the mail11 mailer. 443PH_MAILER_PATH [/usr/local/etc/phquery] The path to the phquery 444 program. 445PH_MAILER_FLAGS [ehmu] Flags for the phquery mailer. Flags nrDFM 446 are always set. 447PH_MAILER_ARGS [phquery -- $u] -- arguments to the phquery mailer. 448PH_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the ph mailer. 449CYRUS_MAILER_FLAGS [Ah5@/:|] The flags used by the cyrus mailer. The 450 flags lsDFMnPq are always included. 451CYRUS_MAILER_PATH [/usr/cyrus/bin/deliver] The program used to deliver 452 cyrus mail. 453CYRUS_MAILER_ARGS [deliver -e -m $h -- $u] The arguments passed 454 to deliver cyrus mail. 455CYRUS_MAILER_MAX [undefined] If set, the maximum size message that 456 will be accepted by the cyrus mailer. 457CYRUS_MAILER_USER [cyrus:mail] The user and group to become when 458 running the cyrus mailer. 459CYRUS_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the cyrus mailer. 460CYRUS_BB_MAILER_FLAGS [u] The flags used by the cyrusbb mailer. 461 The flags lsDFMnP are always included. 462CYRUS_BB_MAILER_ARGS [deliver -e -m $u] The arguments passed 463 to deliver cyrusbb mail. 464CYRUSV2_MAILER_FLAGS [A@/:|m] The flags used by the cyrusv2 mailer. The 465 flags lsDFMnqXz are always included. 466CYRUSV2_MAILER_MAXMSGS [undefined] If defined, the maximum number of 467 messages to deliver in a single connection for the 468 cyrusv2 mailer. 469CYRUSV2_MAILER_MAXRCPTS [undefined] If defined, the maximum number of 470 recipients to deliver in a single connection for the 471 cyrusv2 mailer. 472CYRUSV2_MAILER_ARGS [FILE /var/imap/socket/lmtp] The arguments passed 473 to the cyrusv2 mailer. This can be used to 474 change the name of the Unix domain socket, or 475 to switch to delivery via TCP (e.g., `TCP $h lmtp') 476CYRUSV2_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the cyrusv2 mailer. 477CYRUSV2_MAILER_CHARSET [undefined] If defined, messages containing 8-bit data 478 that ARRIVE from an address that resolves to one the 479 Cyrus mailer and which are converted to MIME will 480 be labeled with this character set. 481confEBINDIR [/usr/libexec] The directory for executables. 482 Currently used for FEATURE(`local_lmtp') and 483 FEATURE(`smrsh'). 484QPAGE_MAILER_FLAGS [mDFMs] The flags used by the qpage mailer. 485QPAGE_MAILER_PATH [/usr/local/bin/qpage] The program used to deliver 486 qpage mail. 487QPAGE_MAILER_ARGS [qpage -l0 -m -P$u] The arguments passed 488 to deliver qpage mail. 489QPAGE_MAILER_MAX [4096] If set, the maximum size message that 490 will be accepted by the qpage mailer. 491QPAGE_MAILER_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the qpage mailer. 492LOCAL_PROG_QGRP [undefined] The queue group for the prog mailer. 493 494Note: to tweak Name_MAILER_FLAGS use the macro MODIFY_MAILER_FLAGS: 495MODIFY_MAILER_FLAGS(`Name', `change') where Name is the first part 496of the macro Name_MAILER_FLAGS (note: that means Name is entirely in 497upper case) and change can be: flags that should be used directly 498(thus overriding the default value), or if it starts with `+' (`-') 499then those flags are added to (removed from) the default value. 500Example: 501 502 MODIFY_MAILER_FLAGS(`LOCAL', `+e') 503 504will add the flag `e' to LOCAL_MAILER_FLAGS. Notice: there are 505several smtp mailers all of which are manipulated individually. 506See the section MAILERS for the available mailer names. 507WARNING: The FEATUREs local_lmtp and local_procmail set LOCAL_MAILER_FLAGS 508unconditionally, i.e., without respecting any definitions in an 509OSTYPE setting. 510 511 512+---------+ 513| DOMAINS | 514+---------+ 515 516You will probably want to collect domain-dependent defines into one 517file, referenced by the DOMAIN macro. For example, the Berkeley 518domain file includes definitions for several internal distinguished 519hosts: 520 521UUCP_RELAY The host that will accept UUCP-addressed email. 522 If not defined, all UUCP sites must be directly 523 connected. 524BITNET_RELAY The host that will accept BITNET-addressed email. 525 If not defined, the .BITNET pseudo-domain won't work. 526DECNET_RELAY The host that will accept DECNET-addressed email. 527 If not defined, the .DECNET pseudo-domain and addresses 528 of the form node::user will not work. 529FAX_RELAY The host that will accept mail to the .FAX pseudo-domain. 530 The "fax" mailer overrides this value. 531LOCAL_RELAY The site that will handle unqualified names -- that 532 is, names without an @domain extension. 533 Normally MAIL_HUB is preferred for this function. 534 LOCAL_RELAY is mostly useful in conjunction with 535 FEATURE(`stickyhost') -- see the discussion of 536 stickyhost below. If not set, they are assumed to 537 belong on this machine. This allows you to have a 538 central site to store a company- or department-wide 539 alias database. This only works at small sites, 540 and only with some user agents. 541LUSER_RELAY The site that will handle lusers -- that is, apparently 542 local names that aren't local accounts or aliases. To 543 specify a local user instead of a site, set this to 544 ``local:username''. 545 546Any of these can be either ``mailer:hostname'' (in which case the 547mailer is the internal mailer name, such as ``uucp-new'' and the hostname 548is the name of the host as appropriate for that mailer) or just a 549``hostname'', in which case a default mailer type (usually ``relay'', 550a variant on SMTP) is used. WARNING: if you have a wildcard MX 551record matching your domain, you probably want to define these to 552have a trailing dot so that you won't get the mail diverted back 553to yourself. 554 555The domain file can also be used to define a domain name, if needed 556(using "DD<domain>") and set certain site-wide features. If all hosts 557at your site masquerade behind one email name, you could also use 558MASQUERADE_AS here. 559 560You do not have to define a domain -- in particular, if you are a 561single machine sitting off somewhere, it is probably more work than 562it's worth. This is just a mechanism for combining "domain dependent 563knowledge" into one place. 564 565 566+---------+ 567| MAILERS | 568+---------+ 569 570There are fewer mailers supported in this version than the previous 571version, owing mostly to a simpler world. As a general rule, put the 572MAILER definitions last in your .mc file. 573 574local The local and prog mailers. You will almost always 575 need these; the only exception is if you relay ALL 576 your mail to another site. This mailer is included 577 automatically. 578 579smtp The Simple Mail Transport Protocol mailer. This does 580 not hide hosts behind a gateway or another other 581 such hack; it assumes a world where everyone is 582 running the name server. This file actually defines 583 five mailers: "smtp" for regular (old-style) SMTP to 584 other servers, "esmtp" for extended SMTP to other 585 servers, "smtp8" to do SMTP to other servers without 586 converting 8-bit data to MIME (essentially, this is 587 your statement that you know the other end is 8-bit 588 clean even if it doesn't say so), "dsmtp" to do on 589 demand delivery, and "relay" for transmission to the 590 RELAY_HOST, LUSER_RELAY, or MAIL_HUB. 591 592uucp The UNIX-to-UNIX Copy Program mailer. Actually, this 593 defines two mailers, "uucp-old" (a.k.a. "uucp") and 594 "uucp-new" (a.k.a. "suucp"). The latter is for when you 595 know that the UUCP mailer at the other end can handle 596 multiple recipients in one transfer. If the smtp mailer 597 is included in your configuration, two other mailers 598 ("uucp-dom" and "uucp-uudom") are also defined [warning: you 599 MUST specify MAILER(`smtp') before MAILER(`uucp')]. When you 600 include the uucp mailer, sendmail looks for all names in 601 class {U} and sends them to the uucp-old mailer; all 602 names in class {Y} are sent to uucp-new; and all 603 names in class {Z} are sent to uucp-uudom. Note that 604 this is a function of what version of rmail runs on 605 the receiving end, and hence may be out of your control. 606 See the section below describing UUCP mailers in more 607 detail. 608 609usenet Usenet (network news) delivery. If this is specified, 610 an extra rule is added to ruleset 0 that forwards all 611 local email for users named ``group.usenet'' to the 612 ``inews'' program. Note that this works for all groups, 613 and may be considered a security problem. 614 615fax Facsimile transmission. This is experimental and based 616 on Sam Leffler's HylaFAX software. For more information, 617 see http://www.hylafax.org/. 618 619pop Post Office Protocol. 620 621procmail An interface to procmail (does not come with sendmail). 622 This is designed to be used in mailertables. For example, 623 a common question is "how do I forward all mail for a given 624 domain to a single person?". If you have this mailer 625 defined, you could set up a mailertable reading: 626 627 host.com procmail:/etc/procmailrcs/host.com 628 629 with the file /etc/procmailrcs/host.com reading: 630 631 :0 # forward mail for host.com 632 ! -oi -f $1 person@other.host 633 634 This would arrange for (anything)@host.com to be sent 635 to person@other.host. In a procmail script, $1 is the 636 name of the sender and $2 is the name of the recipient. 637 If you use this with FEATURE(`local_procmail'), the FEATURE 638 should be listed first. 639 640 Of course there are other ways to solve this particular 641 problem, e.g., a catch-all entry in a virtusertable. 642 643mail11 The DECnet mail11 mailer, useful only if you have the mail11 644 program from gatekeeper.dec.com:/pub/DEC/gwtools (and 645 DECnet, of course). This is for Phase IV DECnet support; 646 if you have Phase V at your site you may have additional 647 problems. 648 649phquery The phquery program. This is somewhat counterintuitively 650 referenced as the "ph" mailer internally. It can be used 651 to do CCSO name server lookups. The phquery program, which 652 this mailer uses, is distributed with the ph client. 653 654cyrus The cyrus and cyrusbb mailers. The cyrus mailer delivers to 655 a local cyrus user. this mailer can make use of the 656 "user+detail@local.host" syntax (see 657 FEATURE(`preserve_local_plus_detail')); it will deliver the 658 mail to the user's "detail" mailbox if the mailbox's ACL 659 permits. The cyrusbb mailer delivers to a system-wide 660 cyrus mailbox if the mailbox's ACL permits. The cyrus 661 mailer must be defined after the local mailer. 662 663cyrusv2 The mailer for Cyrus v2.x. The cyrusv2 mailer delivers to 664 local cyrus users via LMTP. This mailer can make use of the 665 "user+detail@local.host" syntax (see 666 FEATURE(`preserve_local_plus_detail')); it will deliver the 667 mail to the user's "detail" mailbox if the mailbox's ACL 668 permits. The cyrusv2 mailer must be defined after the 669 local mailer. 670 671qpage A mailer for QuickPage, a pager interface. See 672 http://www.qpage.org/ for further information. 673 674The local mailer accepts addresses of the form "user+detail", where 675the "+detail" is not used for mailbox matching but is available 676to certain local mail programs (in particular, see 677FEATURE(`local_procmail')). For example, "eric", "eric+sendmail", and 678"eric+sww" all indicate the same user, but additional arguments <null>, 679"sendmail", and "sww" may be provided for use in sorting mail. 680 681 682+----------+ 683| FEATURES | 684+----------+ 685 686Special features can be requested using the "FEATURE" macro. For 687example, the .mc line: 688 689 FEATURE(`use_cw_file') 690 691tells sendmail that you want to have it read an /etc/mail/local-host-names 692file to get values for class {w}. A FEATURE may contain up to 9 693optional parameters -- for example: 694 695 FEATURE(`mailertable', `dbm /usr/lib/mailertable') 696 697The default database map type for the table features can be set with 698 699 define(`DATABASE_MAP_TYPE', `dbm') 700 701which would set it to use ndbm databases. The default is the Berkeley DB 702hash database format. Note that you must still declare a database map type 703if you specify an argument to a FEATURE. DATABASE_MAP_TYPE is only used 704if no argument is given for the FEATURE. It must be specified before any 705feature that uses a map. 706 707Also, features which can take a map definition as an argument can also take 708the special keyword `LDAP'. If that keyword is used, the map will use the 709LDAP definition described in the ``USING LDAP FOR ALIASES, MAPS, AND 710CLASSES'' section below. 711 712Available features are: 713 714use_cw_file Read the file /etc/mail/local-host-names file to get 715 alternate names for this host. This might be used if you 716 were on a host that MXed for a dynamic set of other hosts. 717 If the set is static, just including the line "Cw<name1> 718 <name2> ..." (where the names are fully qualified domain 719 names) is probably superior. The actual filename can be 720 overridden by redefining confCW_FILE. 721 722use_ct_file Read the file /etc/mail/trusted-users file to get the 723 names of users that will be ``trusted'', that is, able to 724 set their envelope from address using -f without generating 725 a warning message. The actual filename can be overridden 726 by redefining confCT_FILE. 727 728redirect Reject all mail addressed to "address.REDIRECT" with 729 a ``551 User has moved; please try <address>'' message. 730 If this is set, you can alias people who have left 731 to their new address with ".REDIRECT" appended. 732 733nouucp Don't route UUCP addresses. This feature takes one 734 parameter: 735 `reject': reject addresses which have "!" in the local 736 part unless it originates from a system 737 that is allowed to relay. 738 `nospecial': don't do anything special with "!". 739 Warnings: 1. See the notice in the anti-spam section. 740 2. don't remove "!" from OperatorChars if `reject' is 741 given as parameter. 742 743nocanonify Don't pass addresses to $[ ... $] for canonification 744 by default, i.e., host/domain names are considered canonical, 745 except for unqualified names, which must not be used in this 746 mode (violation of the standard). It can be changed by 747 setting the DaemonPortOptions modifiers (M=). That is, 748 FEATURE(`nocanonify') will be overridden by setting the 749 'c' flag. Conversely, if FEATURE(`nocanonify') is not used, 750 it can be emulated by setting the 'C' flag 751 (DaemonPortOptions=Modifiers=C). This would generally only 752 be used by sites that only act as mail gateways or which have 753 user agents that do full canonification themselves. You may 754 also want to use 755 "define(`confBIND_OPTS', `-DNSRCH -DEFNAMES')" to turn off 756 the usual resolver options that do a similar thing. 757 758 An exception list for FEATURE(`nocanonify') can be 759 specified with CANONIFY_DOMAIN or CANONIFY_DOMAIN_FILE, 760 i.e., a list of domains which are nevertheless passed to 761 $[ ... $] for canonification. This is useful to turn on 762 canonification for local domains, e.g., use 763 CANONIFY_DOMAIN(`my.domain my') to canonify addresses 764 which end in "my.domain" or "my". 765 Another way to require canonification in the local 766 domain is CANONIFY_DOMAIN(`$=m'). 767 768 A trailing dot is added to addresses with more than 769 one component in it such that other features which 770 expect a trailing dot (e.g., virtusertable) will 771 still work. 772 773 If `canonify_hosts' is specified as parameter, i.e., 774 FEATURE(`nocanonify', `canonify_hosts'), then 775 addresses which have only a hostname, e.g., 776 <user@host>, will be canonified (and hopefully fully 777 qualified), too. 778 779stickyhost This feature is sometimes used with LOCAL_RELAY, 780 although it can be used for a different effect with 781 MAIL_HUB. 782 783 When used without MAIL_HUB, email sent to 784 "user@local.host" are marked as "sticky" -- that 785 is, the local addresses aren't matched against UDB, 786 don't go through ruleset 5, and are not forwarded to 787 the LOCAL_RELAY (if defined). 788 789 With MAIL_HUB, mail addressed to "user@local.host" 790 is forwarded to the mail hub, with the envelope 791 address still remaining "user@local.host". 792 Without stickyhost, the envelope would be changed 793 to "user@mail_hub", in order to protect against 794 mailing loops. 795 796mailertable Include a "mailer table" which can be used to override 797 routing for particular domains (which are not in class {w}, 798 i.e. local host names). The argument of the FEATURE may be 799 the key definition. If none is specified, the definition 800 used is: 801 802 hash /etc/mail/mailertable 803 804 Keys in this database are fully qualified domain names 805 or partial domains preceded by a dot -- for example, 806 "vangogh.CS.Berkeley.EDU" or ".CS.Berkeley.EDU". As a 807 special case of the latter, "." matches any domain not 808 covered by other keys. Values must be of the form: 809 mailer:domain 810 where "mailer" is the internal mailer name, and "domain" 811 is where to send the message. These maps are not 812 reflected into the message header. As a special case, 813 the forms: 814 local:user 815 will forward to the indicated user using the local mailer, 816 local: 817 will forward to the original user in the e-mail address 818 using the local mailer, and 819 error:code message 820 error:D.S.N:code message 821 will give an error message with the indicated SMTP reply 822 code and message, where D.S.N is an RFC 1893 compliant 823 error code. 824 825domaintable Include a "domain table" which can be used to provide 826 domain name mapping. Use of this should really be 827 limited to your own domains. It may be useful if you 828 change names (e.g., your company changes names from 829 oldname.com to newname.com). The argument of the 830 FEATURE may be the key definition. If none is specified, 831 the definition used is: 832 833 hash /etc/mail/domaintable 834 835 The key in this table is the domain name; the value is 836 the new (fully qualified) domain. Anything in the 837 domaintable is reflected into headers; that is, this 838 is done in ruleset 3. 839 840bitdomain Look up bitnet hosts in a table to try to turn them into 841 internet addresses. The table can be built using the 842 bitdomain program contributed by John Gardiner Myers. 843 The argument of the FEATURE may be the key definition; if 844 none is specified, the definition used is: 845 846 hash /etc/mail/bitdomain 847 848 Keys are the bitnet hostname; values are the corresponding 849 internet hostname. 850 851uucpdomain Similar feature for UUCP hosts. The default map definition 852 is: 853 854 hash /etc/mail/uudomain 855 856 At the moment there is no automagic tool to build this 857 database. 858 859always_add_domain 860 Include the local host domain even on locally delivered 861 mail. Normally it is not added on unqualified names. 862 However, if you use a shared message store but do not use 863 the same user name space everywhere, you may need the host 864 name on local names. An optional argument specifies 865 another domain to be added than the local. 866 867allmasquerade If masquerading is enabled (using MASQUERADE_AS), this 868 feature will cause recipient addresses to also masquerade 869 as being from the masquerade host. Normally they get 870 the local hostname. Although this may be right for 871 ordinary users, it can break local aliases. For example, 872 if you send to "localalias", the originating sendmail will 873 find that alias and send to all members, but send the 874 message with "To: localalias@masqueradehost". Since that 875 alias likely does not exist, replies will fail. Use this 876 feature ONLY if you can guarantee that the ENTIRE 877 namespace on your masquerade host supersets all the 878 local entries. 879 880limited_masquerade 881 Normally, any hosts listed in class {w} are masqueraded. If 882 this feature is given, only the hosts listed in class {M} (see 883 below: MASQUERADE_DOMAIN) are masqueraded. This is useful 884 if you have several domains with disjoint namespaces hosted 885 on the same machine. 886 887masquerade_entire_domain 888 If masquerading is enabled (using MASQUERADE_AS) and 889 MASQUERADE_DOMAIN (see below) is set, this feature will 890 cause addresses to be rewritten such that the masquerading 891 domains are actually entire domains to be hidden. All 892 hosts within the masquerading domains will be rewritten 893 to the masquerade name (used in MASQUERADE_AS). For example, 894 if you have: 895 896 MASQUERADE_AS(`masq.com') 897 MASQUERADE_DOMAIN(`foo.org') 898 MASQUERADE_DOMAIN(`bar.com') 899 900 then *foo.org and *bar.com are converted to masq.com. Without 901 this feature, only foo.org and bar.com are masqueraded. 902 903 NOTE: only domains within your jurisdiction and 904 current hierarchy should be masqueraded using this. 905 906local_no_masquerade 907 This feature prevents the local mailer from masquerading even 908 if MASQUERADE_AS is used. MASQUERADE_AS will only have effect 909 on addresses of mail going outside the local domain. 910 911masquerade_envelope 912 If masquerading is enabled (using MASQUERADE_AS) or the 913 genericstable is in use, this feature will cause envelope 914 addresses to also masquerade as being from the masquerade 915 host. Normally only the header addresses are masqueraded. 916 917genericstable This feature will cause unqualified addresses (i.e., without 918 a domain) and addresses with a domain listed in class {G} 919 to be looked up in a map and turned into another ("generic") 920 form, which can change both the domain name and the user name. 921 Notice: if you use an MSP (as it is default starting with 922 8.12), the MTA will only receive qualified addresses from the 923 MSP (as required by the RFCs). Hence you need to add your 924 domain to class {G}. This feature is similar to the userdb 925 functionality. The same types of addresses as for 926 masquerading are looked up, i.e., only header sender 927 addresses unless the allmasquerade and/or masquerade_envelope 928 features are given. Qualified addresses must have the domain 929 part in class {G}; entries can be added to this class by the 930 macros GENERICS_DOMAIN or GENERICS_DOMAIN_FILE (analogously 931 to MASQUERADE_DOMAIN and MASQUERADE_DOMAIN_FILE, see below). 932 933 The argument of FEATURE(`genericstable') may be the map 934 definition; the default map definition is: 935 936 hash /etc/mail/genericstable 937 938 The key for this table is either the full address, the domain 939 (with a leading @; the localpart is passed as first argument) 940 or the unqualified username (tried in the order mentioned); 941 the value is the new user address. If the new user address 942 does not include a domain, it will be qualified in the standard 943 manner, i.e., using $j or the masquerade name. Note that the 944 address being looked up must be fully qualified. For local 945 mail, it is necessary to use FEATURE(`always_add_domain') 946 for the addresses to be qualified. 947 The "+detail" of an address is passed as %1, so entries like 948 949 old+*@foo.org new+%1@example.com 950 gen+*@foo.org %1@example.com 951 952 and other forms are possible. 953 954generics_entire_domain 955 If the genericstable is enabled and GENERICS_DOMAIN or 956 GENERICS_DOMAIN_FILE is used, this feature will cause 957 addresses to be searched in the map if their domain 958 parts are subdomains of elements in class {G}. 959 960virtusertable A domain-specific form of aliasing, allowing multiple 961 virtual domains to be hosted on one machine. For example, 962 if the virtuser table contains: 963 964 info@foo.com foo-info 965 info@bar.com bar-info 966 joe@bar.com error:nouser 550 No such user here 967 jax@bar.com error:5.7.0:550 Address invalid 968 @baz.org jane@example.net 969 970 then mail addressed to info@foo.com will be sent to the 971 address foo-info, mail addressed to info@bar.com will be 972 delivered to bar-info, and mail addressed to anyone at baz.org 973 will be sent to jane@example.net, mail to joe@bar.com will 974 be rejected with the specified error message, and mail to 975 jax@bar.com will also have a RFC 1893 compliant error code 976 5.7.0. 977 978 The username from the original address is passed 979 as %1 allowing: 980 981 @foo.org %1@example.com 982 983 meaning someone@foo.org will be sent to someone@example.com. 984 Additionally, if the local part consists of "user+detail" 985 then "detail" is passed as %2 and "+detail" is passed as %3 986 when a match against user+* is attempted, so entries like 987 988 old+*@foo.org new+%2@example.com 989 gen+*@foo.org %2@example.com 990 +*@foo.org %1%3@example.com 991 X++@foo.org Z%3@example.com 992 @bar.org %1%3 993 994 and other forms are possible. Note: to preserve "+detail" 995 for a default case (@domain) %1%3 must be used as RHS. 996 There are two wildcards after "+": "+" matches only a non-empty 997 detail, "*" matches also empty details, e.g., user+@foo.org 998 matches +*@foo.org but not ++@foo.org. This can be used 999 to ensure that the parameters %2 and %3 are not empty. 1000 1001 All the host names on the left hand side (foo.com, bar.com, 1002 and baz.org) must be in class {w} or class {VirtHost}. The 1003 latter can be defined by the macros VIRTUSER_DOMAIN or 1004 VIRTUSER_DOMAIN_FILE (analogously to MASQUERADE_DOMAIN and 1005 MASQUERADE_DOMAIN_FILE, see below). If VIRTUSER_DOMAIN or 1006 VIRTUSER_DOMAIN_FILE is used, then the entries of class 1007 {VirtHost} are added to class {R}, i.e., relaying is allowed 1008 to (and from) those domains. The default map definition is: 1009 1010 hash /etc/mail/virtusertable 1011 1012 A new definition can be specified as the second argument of 1013 the FEATURE macro, such as 1014 1015 FEATURE(`virtusertable', `dbm /etc/mail/virtusers') 1016 1017virtuser_entire_domain 1018 If the virtusertable is enabled and VIRTUSER_DOMAIN or 1019 VIRTUSER_DOMAIN_FILE is used, this feature will cause 1020 addresses to be searched in the map if their domain 1021 parts are subdomains of elements in class {VirtHost}. 1022 1023ldap_routing Implement LDAP-based e-mail recipient routing according to 1024 the Internet Draft draft-lachman-laser-ldap-mail-routing-01. 1025 This provides a method to re-route addresses with a 1026 domain portion in class {LDAPRoute} to either a 1027 different mail host or a different address. Hosts can 1028 be added to this class using LDAPROUTE_DOMAIN and 1029 LDAPROUTE_DOMAIN_FILE (analogously to MASQUERADE_DOMAIN and 1030 MASQUERADE_DOMAIN_FILE, see below). 1031 1032 See the LDAP ROUTING section below for more information. 1033 1034nodns If you aren't running DNS at your site (for example, 1035 you are UUCP-only connected). It's hard to consider 1036 this a "feature", but hey, it had to go somewhere. 1037 Actually, as of 8.7 this is a no-op -- remove "dns" from 1038 the hosts service switch entry instead. 1039 1040nullclient This is a special case -- it creates a configuration file 1041 containing nothing but support for forwarding all mail to a 1042 central hub via a local SMTP-based network. The argument 1043 is the name of that hub. 1044 1045 The only other feature that should be used in conjunction 1046 with this one is FEATURE(`nocanonify'). No mailers 1047 should be defined. No aliasing or forwarding is done. 1048 1049local_lmtp Use an LMTP capable local mailer. The argument to this 1050 feature is the pathname of an LMTP capable mailer. By 1051 default, mail.local is used. This is expected to be the 1052 mail.local which came with the 8.9 distribution which is 1053 LMTP capable. The path to mail.local is set by the 1054 confEBINDIR m4 variable -- making the default 1055 LOCAL_MAILER_PATH /usr/libexec/mail.local. 1056 If a different LMTP capable mailer is used, its pathname 1057 can be specified as second parameter and the arguments 1058 passed to it (A=) as third parameter, e.g., 1059 1060 FEATURE(`local_lmtp', `/usr/local/bin/lmtp', `lmtp') 1061 1062 WARNING: This feature sets LOCAL_MAILER_FLAGS unconditionally, 1063 i.e., without respecting any definitions in an OSTYPE setting. 1064 1065local_procmail Use procmail or another delivery agent as the local mailer. 1066 The argument to this feature is the pathname of the 1067 delivery agent, which defaults to PROCMAIL_MAILER_PATH. 1068 Note that this does NOT use PROCMAIL_MAILER_FLAGS or 1069 PROCMAIL_MAILER_ARGS for the local mailer; tweak 1070 LOCAL_MAILER_FLAGS and LOCAL_MAILER_ARGS instead, or 1071 specify the appropriate parameters. When procmail is used, 1072 the local mailer can make use of the 1073 "user+indicator@local.host" syntax; normally the +indicator 1074 is just tossed, but by default it is passed as the -a 1075 argument to procmail. 1076 1077 This feature can take up to three arguments: 1078 1079 1. Path to the mailer program 1080 [default: /usr/local/bin/procmail] 1081 2. Argument vector including name of the program 1082 [default: procmail -Y -a $h -d $u] 1083 3. Flags for the mailer [default: SPfhn9] 1084 1085 Empty arguments cause the defaults to be taken. 1086 Note that if you are on a system with a broken 1087 setreuid() call, you may need to add -f $f to the procmail 1088 argument vector to pass the proper sender to procmail. 1089 1090 For example, this allows it to use the maildrop 1091 (http://www.flounder.net/~mrsam/maildrop/) mailer instead 1092 by specifying: 1093 1094 FEATURE(`local_procmail', `/usr/local/bin/maildrop', 1095 `maildrop -d $u') 1096 1097 or scanmails using: 1098 1099 FEATURE(`local_procmail', `/usr/local/bin/scanmails') 1100 1101 WARNING: This feature sets LOCAL_MAILER_FLAGS unconditionally, 1102 i.e., without respecting any definitions in an OSTYPE setting. 1103 1104bestmx_is_local Accept mail as though locally addressed for any host that 1105 lists us as the best possible MX record. This generates 1106 additional DNS traffic, but should be OK for low to 1107 medium traffic hosts. The argument may be a set of 1108 domains, which will limit the feature to only apply to 1109 these domains -- this will reduce unnecessary DNS 1110 traffic. THIS FEATURE IS FUNDAMENTALLY INCOMPATIBLE WITH 1111 WILDCARD MX RECORDS!!! If you have a wildcard MX record 1112 that matches your domain, you cannot use this feature. 1113 1114smrsh Use the SendMail Restricted SHell (smrsh) provided 1115 with the distribution instead of /bin/sh for mailing 1116 to programs. This improves the ability of the local 1117 system administrator to control what gets run via 1118 e-mail. If an argument is provided it is used as the 1119 pathname to smrsh; otherwise, the path defined by 1120 confEBINDIR is used for the smrsh binary -- by default, 1121 /usr/libexec/smrsh is assumed. 1122 1123promiscuous_relay 1124 By default, the sendmail configuration files do not permit 1125 mail relaying (that is, accepting mail from outside your 1126 local host (class {w}) and sending it to another host than 1127 your local host). This option sets your site to allow 1128 mail relaying from any site to any site. In almost all 1129 cases, it is better to control relaying more carefully 1130 with the access map, class {R}, or authentication. Domains 1131 can be added to class {R} by the macros RELAY_DOMAIN or 1132 RELAY_DOMAIN_FILE (analogously to MASQUERADE_DOMAIN and 1133 MASQUERADE_DOMAIN_FILE, see below). 1134 1135relay_entire_domain 1136 This option allows any host in your domain as defined by 1137 class {m} to use your server for relaying. Notice: make 1138 sure that your domain is not just a top level domain, 1139 e.g., com. This can happen if you give your host a name 1140 like example.com instead of host.example.com. 1141 1142relay_hosts_only 1143 By default, names that are listed as RELAY in the access 1144 db and class {R} are treated as domain names, not host names. 1145 For example, if you specify ``foo.com'', then mail to or 1146 from foo.com, abc.foo.com, or a.very.deep.domain.foo.com 1147 will all be accepted for relaying. This feature changes 1148 the behaviour to lookup individual host names only. 1149 1150relay_based_on_MX 1151 Turns on the ability to allow relaying based on the MX 1152 records of the host portion of an incoming recipient; that 1153 is, if an MX record for host foo.com points to your site, 1154 you will accept and relay mail addressed to foo.com. See 1155 description below for more information before using this 1156 feature. Also, see the KNOWNBUGS entry regarding bestmx 1157 map lookups. 1158 1159 FEATURE(`relay_based_on_MX') does not necessarily allow 1160 routing of these messages which you expect to be allowed, 1161 if route address syntax (or %-hack syntax) is used. If 1162 this is a problem, add entries to the access-table or use 1163 FEATURE(`loose_relay_check'). 1164 1165relay_mail_from 1166 Allows relaying if the mail sender is listed as RELAY in 1167 the access map. If an optional argument `domain' (this 1168 is the literal word `domain', not a placeholder) is given, 1169 relaying can be allowed just based on the domain portion 1170 of the sender address. This feature should only be used if 1171 absolutely necessary as the sender address can be easily 1172 forged. Use of this feature requires the "From:" tag to 1173 be used for the key in the access map; see the discussion 1174 of tags and FEATURE(`relay_mail_from') in the section on 1175 anti-spam configuration control. 1176 1177relay_local_from 1178 Allows relaying if the domain portion of the mail sender 1179 is a local host. This should only be used if absolutely 1180 necessary as it opens a window for spammers. Specifically, 1181 they can send mail to your mail server that claims to be 1182 from your domain (either directly or via a routed address), 1183 and you will go ahead and relay it out to arbitrary hosts 1184 on the Internet. 1185 1186accept_unqualified_senders 1187 Normally, MAIL FROM: commands in the SMTP session will be 1188 refused if the connection is a network connection and the 1189 sender address does not include a domain name. If your 1190 setup sends local mail unqualified (i.e., MAIL FROM:<joe>), 1191 you will need to use this feature to accept unqualified 1192 sender addresses. Setting the DaemonPortOptions modifier 1193 'u' overrides the default behavior, i.e., unqualified 1194 addresses are accepted even without this FEATURE. 1195 If this FEATURE is not used, the DaemonPortOptions modifier 1196 'f' can be used to enforce fully qualified addresses. 1197 1198accept_unresolvable_domains 1199 Normally, MAIL FROM: commands in the SMTP session will be 1200 refused if the host part of the argument to MAIL FROM: 1201 cannot be located in the host name service (e.g., an A or 1202 MX record in DNS). If you are inside a firewall that has 1203 only a limited view of the Internet host name space, this 1204 could cause problems. In this case you probably want to 1205 use this feature to accept all domains on input, even if 1206 they are unresolvable. 1207 1208access_db Turns on the access database feature. The access db gives 1209 you the ability to allow or refuse to accept mail from 1210 specified domains for administrative reasons. Moreover, 1211 it can control the behavior of sendmail in various situations. 1212 By default, the access database specification is: 1213 1214 hash -T<TMPF> /etc/mail/access 1215 1216 See the anti-spam configuration control section for further 1217 important information about this feature. Notice: 1218 "-T<TMPF>" is meant literal, do not replace it by anything. 1219 1220blacklist_recipients 1221 Turns on the ability to block incoming mail for certain 1222 recipient usernames, hostnames, or addresses. For 1223 example, you can block incoming mail to user nobody, 1224 host foo.mydomain.com, or guest@bar.mydomain.com. 1225 These specifications are put in the access db as 1226 described in the anti-spam configuration control section 1227 later in this document. 1228 1229delay_checks The rulesets check_mail and check_relay will not be called 1230 when a client connects or issues a MAIL command, respectively. 1231 Instead, those rulesets will be called by the check_rcpt 1232 ruleset; they will be skipped under certain circumstances. 1233 See "Delay all checks" in the anti-spam configuration control 1234 section. Note: this feature is incompatible to the versions 1235 in 8.10 and 8.11. 1236 1237use_client_ptr If this feature is enabled then check_relay will override 1238 its first argument with $&{client_ptr}. This is useful for 1239 rejections based on the unverified hostname of client, 1240 which turns on the same behavior as in earlier sendmail 1241 versions when delay_checks was not in use. See doc/op/op.* 1242 about check_relay, {client_name}, and {client_ptr}. 1243 1244dnsbl Turns on rejection of hosts found in an DNS based rejection 1245 list. The first is used as the domain in which blocked 1246 hosts are listed. A second argument can be used to change 1247 the default error message. Without that second argument, 1248 the error message will be 1249 Rejected: IP-ADDRESS listed at SERVER 1250 where IP-ADDRESS and SERVER are replaced by the appropriate 1251 information. By default, temporary lookup failures are 1252 ignored. This behavior can be changed by specifying a 1253 third argument, which must be either `t' or a full error 1254 message. See the anti-spam configuration control section for 1255 an example. The dnsbl feature can be included several times 1256 to query different DNS based rejection lists. See also 1257 enhdnsbl for an enhanced version. 1258 1259 Set the DNSBL_MAP mc option to change the default map 1260 definition from `host'. Set the DNSBL_MAP_OPT mc option 1261 to add additional options to the map specification used. 1262 1263 Some DNS based rejection lists cause failures if asked 1264 for AAAA records. If your sendmail version is compiled 1265 with IPv6 support (NETINET6) and you experience this 1266 problem, add 1267 1268 define(`DNSBL_MAP', `dns -R A') 1269 1270 before the first use of this feature. Alternatively you 1271 can use enhdnsbl instead (see below). Moreover, this 1272 statement can be used to reduce the number of DNS retries, 1273 e.g., 1274 1275 define(`DNSBL_MAP', `dns -R A -r2') 1276 1277 See below (EDNSBL_TO) for an explanation. 1278 1279enhdnsbl Enhanced version of dnsbl (see above). Further arguments 1280 (up to 5) can be used to specify specific return values 1281 from lookups. Temporary lookup failures are ignored unless 1282 a third argument is given, which must be either `t' or a full 1283 error message. By default, any successful lookup will 1284 generate an error. Otherwise the result of the lookup is 1285 compared with the supplied argument(s), and only if a match 1286 occurs an error is generated. For example, 1287 1288 FEATURE(`enhdnsbl', `dnsbl.example.com', `', `t', `127.0.0.2.') 1289 1290 will reject the e-mail if the lookup returns the value 1291 ``127.0.0.2.'', or generate a 451 response if the lookup 1292 temporarily failed. The arguments can contain metasymbols 1293 as they are allowed in the LHS of rules. As the example 1294 shows, the default values are also used if an empty argument, 1295 i.e., `', is specified. This feature requires that sendmail 1296 has been compiled with the flag DNSMAP (see sendmail/README). 1297 1298 Set the EDNSBL_TO mc option to change the DNS retry count 1299 from the default value of 5, this can be very useful when 1300 a DNS server is not responding, which in turn may cause 1301 clients to time out (an entry stating 1302 1303 did not issue MAIL/EXPN/VRFY/ETRN 1304 1305 will be logged). 1306 1307ratecontrol Enable simple ruleset to do connection rate control 1308 checking. This requires entries in access_db of the form 1309 1310 ClientRate:IP.ADD.RE.SS LIMIT 1311 1312 The RHS specifies the maximum number of connections 1313 (an integer number) over the time interval defined 1314 by ConnectionRateWindowSize, where 0 means unlimited. 1315 1316 Take the following example: 1317 1318 ClientRate:10.1.2.3 4 1319 ClientRate:127.0.0.1 0 1320 ClientRate: 10 1321 1322 10.1.2.3 can only make up to 4 connections, the 1323 general limit it 10, and 127.0.0.1 can make an unlimited 1324 number of connections per ConnectionRateWindowSize. 1325 1326 See also CONNECTION CONTROL. 1327 1328conncontrol Enable a simple check of the number of incoming SMTP 1329 connections. This requires entries in access_db of the 1330 form 1331 1332 ClientConn:IP.ADD.RE.SS LIMIT 1333 1334 The RHS specifies the maximum number of open connections 1335 (an integer number). 1336 1337 Take the following example: 1338 1339 ClientConn:10.1.2.3 4 1340 ClientConn:127.0.0.1 0 1341 ClientConn: 10 1342 1343 10.1.2.3 can only have up to 4 open connections, the 1344 general limit it 10, and 127.0.0.1 does not have any 1345 explicit limit. 1346 1347 See also CONNECTION CONTROL. 1348 1349mtamark Experimental support for "Marking Mail Transfer Agents in 1350 Reverse DNS with TXT RRs" (MTAMark), see 1351 draft-stumpf-dns-mtamark-01. Optional arguments are: 1352 1353 1. Error message, default: 1354 1355 550 Rejected: $&{client_addr} not listed as MTA 1356 1357 2. Temporary lookup failures are ignored unless a second 1358 argument is given, which must be either `t' or a full 1359 error message. 1360 1361 3. Lookup prefix, default: _perm._smtp._srv. This should 1362 not be changed unless the draft changes it. 1363 1364 Example: 1365 1366 FEATURE(`mtamark', `', `t') 1367 1368lookupdotdomain Look up also .domain in the access map. This allows to 1369 match only subdomains. It does not work well with 1370 FEATURE(`relay_hosts_only'), because most lookups for 1371 subdomains are suppressed by the latter feature. 1372 1373loose_relay_check 1374 Normally, if % addressing is used for a recipient, e.g. 1375 user%site@othersite, and othersite is in class {R}, the 1376 check_rcpt ruleset will strip @othersite and recheck 1377 user@site for relaying. This feature changes that 1378 behavior. It should not be needed for most installations. 1379 1380authinfo Provide a separate map for client side authentication 1381 information. See SMTP AUTHENTICATION for details. 1382 By default, the authinfo database specification is: 1383 1384 hash /etc/mail/authinfo 1385 1386preserve_luser_host 1387 Preserve the name of the recipient host if LUSER_RELAY is 1388 used. Without this option, the domain part of the 1389 recipient address will be replaced by the host specified as 1390 LUSER_RELAY. This feature only works if the hostname is 1391 passed to the mailer (see mailer triple in op.me). Note 1392 that in the default configuration the local mailer does not 1393 receive the hostname, i.e., the mailer triple has an empty 1394 hostname. 1395 1396preserve_local_plus_detail 1397 Preserve the +detail portion of the address when passing 1398 address to local delivery agent. Disables alias and 1399 .forward +detail stripping (e.g., given user+detail, only 1400 that address will be looked up in the alias file; user+* and 1401 user will not be looked up). Only use if the local 1402 delivery agent in use supports +detail addressing. 1403 1404compat_check Enable ruleset check_compat to look up pairs of addresses 1405 with the Compat: tag -- Compat:sender<@>recipient -- in the 1406 access map. Valid values for the RHS include 1407 DISCARD silently discard recipient 1408 TEMP: return a temporary error 1409 ERROR: return a permanent error 1410 In the last two cases, a 4xy/5xy SMTP reply code should 1411 follow the colon. 1412 1413no_default_msa Don't generate the default MSA daemon, i.e., 1414 DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Port=587,Name=MSA,M=E') 1415 To define a MSA daemon with other parameters, use this 1416 FEATURE and introduce new settings via DAEMON_OPTIONS(). 1417 1418msp Defines config file for Message Submission Program. 1419 See sendmail/SECURITY for details and cf/cf/submit.mc how 1420 to use it. An optional argument can be used to override 1421 the default of `[localhost]' to use as host to send all 1422 e-mails to. Note that MX records will be used if the 1423 specified hostname is not in square brackets (e.g., 1424 [hostname]). If `MSA' is specified as second argument then 1425 port 587 is used to contact the server. Example: 1426 1427 FEATURE(`msp', `', `MSA') 1428 1429 Some more hints about possible changes can be found below 1430 in the section MESSAGE SUBMISSION PROGRAM. 1431 1432 Note: Due to many problems, submit.mc uses 1433 1434 FEATURE(`msp', `[127.0.0.1]') 1435 1436 by default. If you have a machine with IPv6 only, 1437 change it to 1438 1439 FEATURE(`msp', `[IPv6:::1]') 1440 1441 If you want to continue using '[localhost]', (the behavior 1442 up to 8.12.6), use 1443 1444 FEATURE(`msp') 1445 1446queuegroup A simple example how to select a queue group based 1447 on the full e-mail address or the domain of the 1448 recipient. Selection is done via entries in the 1449 access map using the tag QGRP:, for example: 1450 1451 QGRP:example.com main 1452 QGRP:friend@some.org others 1453 QGRP:my.domain local 1454 1455 where "main", "others", and "local" are names of 1456 queue groups. If an argument is specified, it is used 1457 as default queue group. 1458 1459 Note: please read the warning in doc/op/op.me about 1460 queue groups and possible queue manipulations. 1461 1462greet_pause Adds the greet_pause ruleset which enables open proxy 1463 and SMTP slamming protection. The feature can take an 1464 argument specifying the milliseconds to wait: 1465 1466 FEATURE(`greet_pause', `5000') dnl 5 seconds 1467 1468 If FEATURE(`access_db') is enabled, an access database 1469 lookup with the GreetPause tag is done using client 1470 hostname, domain, IP address, or subnet to determine the 1471 pause time: 1472 1473 GreetPause:my.domain 0 1474 GreetPause:example.com 5000 1475 GreetPause:10.1.2 2000 1476 GreetPause:127.0.0.1 0 1477 1478 When using FEATURE(`access_db'), the optional 1479 FEATURE(`greet_pause') argument becomes the default if 1480 nothing is found in the access database. A ruleset called 1481 Local_greet_pause can be used for local modifications, e.g., 1482 1483 LOCAL_RULESETS 1484 SLocal_greet_pause 1485 R$* $: $&{daemon_flags} 1486 R$* a $* $# 0 1487 1488+-------+ 1489| HACKS | 1490+-------+ 1491 1492Some things just can't be called features. To make this clear, 1493they go in the hack subdirectory and are referenced using the HACK 1494macro. These will tend to be site-dependent. The release 1495includes the Berkeley-dependent "cssubdomain" hack (that makes 1496sendmail accept local names in either Berkeley.EDU or CS.Berkeley.EDU; 1497this is intended as a short-term aid while moving hosts into 1498subdomains. 1499 1500 1501+--------------------+ 1502| SITE CONFIGURATION | 1503+--------------------+ 1504 1505 ***************************************************** 1506 * This section is really obsolete, and is preserved * 1507 * only for back compatibility. You should plan on * 1508 * using mailertables for new installations. In * 1509 * particular, it doesn't work for the newer forms * 1510 * of UUCP mailers, such as uucp-uudom. * 1511 ***************************************************** 1512 1513Complex sites will need more local configuration information, such as 1514lists of UUCP hosts they speak with directly. This can get a bit more 1515tricky. For an example of a "complex" site, see cf/ucbvax.mc. 1516 1517The SITECONFIG macro allows you to indirectly reference site-dependent 1518configuration information stored in the siteconfig subdirectory. For 1519example, the line 1520 1521 SITECONFIG(`uucp.ucbvax', `ucbvax', `U') 1522 1523reads the file uucp.ucbvax for local connection information. The 1524second parameter is the local name (in this case just "ucbvax" since 1525it is locally connected, and hence a UUCP hostname). The third 1526parameter is the name of both a macro to store the local name (in 1527this case, {U}) and the name of the class (e.g., {U}) in which to store 1528the host information read from the file. Another SITECONFIG line reads 1529 1530 SITECONFIG(`uucp.ucbarpa', `ucbarpa.Berkeley.EDU', `W') 1531 1532This says that the file uucp.ucbarpa contains the list of UUCP sites 1533connected to ucbarpa.Berkeley.EDU. Class {W} will be used to 1534store this list, and $W is defined to be ucbarpa.Berkeley.EDU, that 1535is, the name of the relay to which the hosts listed in uucp.ucbarpa 1536are connected. [The machine ucbarpa is gone now, but this 1537out-of-date configuration file has been left around to demonstrate 1538how you might do this.] 1539 1540Note that the case of SITECONFIG with a third parameter of ``U'' is 1541special; the second parameter is assumed to be the UUCP name of the 1542local site, rather than the name of a remote site, and the UUCP name 1543is entered into class {w} (the list of local hostnames) as $U.UUCP. 1544 1545The siteconfig file (e.g., siteconfig/uucp.ucbvax.m4) contains nothing 1546more than a sequence of SITE macros describing connectivity. For 1547example: 1548 1549 SITE(`cnmat') 1550 SITE(`sgi olympus') 1551 1552The second example demonstrates that you can use two names on the 1553same line; these are usually aliases for the same host (or are at 1554least in the same company). 1555 1556The macro LOCAL_UUCP can be used to add rules into the generated 1557cf file at the place where MAILER(`uucp') inserts its rules. This 1558should only be used if really necessary. 1559 1560+--------------------+ 1561| USING UUCP MAILERS | 1562+--------------------+ 1563 1564It's hard to get UUCP mailers right because of the extremely ad hoc 1565nature of UUCP addressing. These config files are really designed 1566for domain-based addressing, even for UUCP sites. 1567 1568There are four UUCP mailers available. The choice of which one to 1569use is partly a matter of local preferences and what is running at 1570the other end of your UUCP connection. Unlike good protocols that 1571define what will go over the wire, UUCP uses the policy that you 1572should do what is right for the other end; if they change, you have 1573to change. This makes it hard to do the right thing, and discourages 1574people from updating their software. In general, if you can avoid 1575UUCP, please do. 1576 1577The major choice is whether to go for a domainized scheme or a 1578non-domainized scheme. This depends entirely on what the other 1579end will recognize. If at all possible, you should encourage the 1580other end to go to a domain-based system -- non-domainized addresses 1581don't work entirely properly. 1582 1583The four mailers are: 1584 1585 uucp-old (obsolete name: "uucp") 1586 This is the oldest, the worst (but the closest to UUCP) way of 1587 sending messages across UUCP connections. It does bangify 1588 everything and prepends $U (your UUCP name) to the sender's 1589 address (which can already be a bang path itself). It can 1590 only send to one address at a time, so it spends a lot of 1591 time copying duplicates of messages. Avoid this if at all 1592 possible. 1593 1594 uucp-new (obsolete name: "suucp") 1595 The same as above, except that it assumes that in one rmail 1596 command you can specify several recipients. It still has a 1597 lot of other problems. 1598 1599 uucp-dom 1600 This UUCP mailer keeps everything as domain addresses. 1601 Basically, it uses the SMTP mailer rewriting rules. This mailer 1602 is only included if MAILER(`smtp') is specified before 1603 MAILER(`uucp'). 1604 1605 Unfortunately, a lot of UUCP mailer transport agents require 1606 bangified addresses in the envelope, although you can use 1607 domain-based addresses in the message header. (The envelope 1608 shows up as the From_ line on UNIX mail.) So.... 1609 1610 uucp-uudom 1611 This is a cross between uucp-new (for the envelope addresses) 1612 and uucp-dom (for the header addresses). It bangifies the 1613 envelope sender (From_ line in messages) without adding the 1614 local hostname, unless there is no host name on the address 1615 at all (e.g., "wolf") or the host component is a UUCP host name 1616 instead of a domain name ("somehost!wolf" instead of 1617 "some.dom.ain!wolf"). This is also included only if MAILER(`smtp') 1618 is also specified earlier. 1619 1620Examples: 1621 1622On host grasp.insa-lyon.fr (UUCP host name "grasp"), the following 1623summarizes the sender rewriting for various mailers. 1624 1625Mailer sender rewriting in the envelope 1626------ ------ ------------------------- 1627uucp-{old,new} wolf grasp!wolf 1628uucp-dom wolf wolf@grasp.insa-lyon.fr 1629uucp-uudom wolf grasp.insa-lyon.fr!wolf 1630 1631uucp-{old,new} wolf@fr.net grasp!fr.net!wolf 1632uucp-dom wolf@fr.net wolf@fr.net 1633uucp-uudom wolf@fr.net fr.net!wolf 1634 1635uucp-{old,new} somehost!wolf grasp!somehost!wolf 1636uucp-dom somehost!wolf somehost!wolf@grasp.insa-lyon.fr 1637uucp-uudom somehost!wolf grasp.insa-lyon.fr!somehost!wolf 1638 1639If you are using one of the domainized UUCP mailers, you really want 1640to convert all UUCP addresses to domain format -- otherwise, it will 1641do it for you (and probably not the way you expected). For example, 1642if you have the address foo!bar!baz (and you are not sending to foo), 1643the heuristics will add the @uucp.relay.name or @local.host.name to 1644this address. However, if you map foo to foo.host.name first, it 1645will not add the local hostname. You can do this using the uucpdomain 1646feature. 1647 1648 1649+-------------------+ 1650| TWEAKING RULESETS | 1651+-------------------+ 1652 1653For more complex configurations, you can define special rules. 1654The macro LOCAL_RULE_3 introduces rules that are used in canonicalizing 1655the names. Any modifications made here are reflected in the header. 1656 1657A common use is to convert old UUCP addresses to SMTP addresses using 1658the UUCPSMTP macro. For example: 1659 1660 LOCAL_RULE_3 1661 UUCPSMTP(`decvax', `decvax.dec.com') 1662 UUCPSMTP(`research', `research.att.com') 1663 1664will cause addresses of the form "decvax!user" and "research!user" 1665to be converted to "user@decvax.dec.com" and "user@research.att.com" 1666respectively. 1667 1668This could also be used to look up hosts in a database map: 1669 1670 LOCAL_RULE_3 1671 R$* < @ $+ > $* $: $1 < @ $(hostmap $2 $) > $3 1672 1673This map would be defined in the LOCAL_CONFIG portion, as shown below. 1674 1675Similarly, LOCAL_RULE_0 can be used to introduce new parsing rules. 1676For example, new rules are needed to parse hostnames that you accept 1677via MX records. For example, you might have: 1678 1679 LOCAL_RULE_0 1680 R$+ <@ host.dom.ain.> $#uucp $@ cnmat $: $1 < @ host.dom.ain.> 1681 1682You would use this if you had installed an MX record for cnmat.Berkeley.EDU 1683pointing at this host; this rule catches the message and forwards it on 1684using UUCP. 1685 1686You can also tweak rulesets 1 and 2 using LOCAL_RULE_1 and LOCAL_RULE_2. 1687These rulesets are normally empty. 1688 1689A similar macro is LOCAL_CONFIG. This introduces lines added after the 1690boilerplate option setting but before rulesets. Do not declare rulesets in 1691the LOCAL_CONFIG section. It can be used to declare local database maps or 1692whatever. For example: 1693 1694 LOCAL_CONFIG 1695 Khostmap hash /etc/mail/hostmap 1696 Kyplocal nis -m hosts.byname 1697 1698 1699+---------------------------+ 1700| MASQUERADING AND RELAYING | 1701+---------------------------+ 1702 1703You can have your host masquerade as another using 1704 1705 MASQUERADE_AS(`host.domain') 1706 1707This causes mail being sent to be labeled as coming from the 1708indicated host.domain, rather than $j. One normally masquerades as 1709one of one's own subdomains (for example, it's unlikely that 1710Berkeley would choose to masquerade as an MIT site). This 1711behaviour is modified by a plethora of FEATUREs; in particular, see 1712masquerade_envelope, allmasquerade, limited_masquerade, and 1713masquerade_entire_domain. 1714 1715The masquerade name is not normally canonified, so it is important 1716that it be your One True Name, that is, fully qualified and not a 1717CNAME. However, if you use a CNAME, the receiving side may canonify 1718it for you, so don't think you can cheat CNAME mapping this way. 1719 1720Normally the only addresses that are masqueraded are those that come 1721from this host (that is, are either unqualified or in class {w}, the list 1722of local domain names). You can augment this list, which is realized 1723by class {M} using 1724 1725 MASQUERADE_DOMAIN(`otherhost.domain') 1726 1727The effect of this is that although mail to user@otherhost.domain 1728will not be delivered locally, any mail including any user@otherhost.domain 1729will, when relayed, be rewritten to have the MASQUERADE_AS address. 1730This can be a space-separated list of names. 1731 1732If these names are in a file, you can use 1733 1734 MASQUERADE_DOMAIN_FILE(`filename') 1735 1736to read the list of names from the indicated file (i.e., to add 1737elements to class {M}). 1738 1739To exempt hosts or subdomains from being masqueraded, you can use 1740 1741 MASQUERADE_EXCEPTION(`host.domain') 1742 1743This can come handy if you want to masquerade a whole domain 1744except for one (or a few) host(s). If these names are in a file, 1745you can use 1746 1747 MASQUERADE_EXCEPTION_FILE(`filename') 1748 1749Normally only header addresses are masqueraded. If you want to 1750masquerade the envelope as well, use 1751 1752 FEATURE(`masquerade_envelope') 1753 1754There are always users that need to be "exposed" -- that is, their 1755internal site name should be displayed instead of the masquerade name. 1756Root is an example (which has been "exposed" by default prior to 8.10). 1757You can add users to this list using 1758 1759 EXPOSED_USER(`usernames') 1760 1761This adds users to class {E}; you could also use 1762 1763 EXPOSED_USER_FILE(`filename') 1764 1765You can also arrange to relay all unqualified names (that is, names 1766without @host) to a relay host. For example, if you have a central 1767email server, you might relay to that host so that users don't have 1768to have .forward files or aliases. You can do this using 1769 1770 define(`LOCAL_RELAY', `mailer:hostname') 1771 1772The ``mailer:'' can be omitted, in which case the mailer defaults to 1773"relay". There are some user names that you don't want relayed, perhaps 1774because of local aliases. A common example is root, which may be 1775locally aliased. You can add entries to this list using 1776 1777 LOCAL_USER(`usernames') 1778 1779This adds users to class {L}; you could also use 1780 1781 LOCAL_USER_FILE(`filename') 1782 1783If you want all incoming mail sent to a centralized hub, as for a 1784shared /var/spool/mail scheme, use 1785 1786 define(`MAIL_HUB', `mailer:hostname') 1787 1788Again, ``mailer:'' defaults to "relay". If you define both LOCAL_RELAY 1789and MAIL_HUB _AND_ you have FEATURE(`stickyhost'), unqualified names will 1790be sent to the LOCAL_RELAY and other local names will be sent to MAIL_HUB. 1791Note: there is a (long standing) bug which keeps this combination from 1792working for addresses of the form user+detail. 1793Names in class {L} will be delivered locally, so you MUST have aliases or 1794.forward files for them. 1795 1796For example, if you are on machine mastodon.CS.Berkeley.EDU and you have 1797FEATURE(`stickyhost'), the following combinations of settings will have the 1798indicated effects: 1799 1800email sent to.... eric eric@mastodon.CS.Berkeley.EDU 1801 1802LOCAL_RELAY set to mail.CS.Berkeley.EDU (delivered locally) 1803mail.CS.Berkeley.EDU (no local aliasing) (aliasing done) 1804 1805MAIL_HUB set to mammoth.CS.Berkeley.EDU mammoth.CS.Berkeley.EDU 1806mammoth.CS.Berkeley.EDU (aliasing done) (aliasing done) 1807 1808Both LOCAL_RELAY and mail.CS.Berkeley.EDU mammoth.CS.Berkeley.EDU 1809MAIL_HUB set as above (no local aliasing) (aliasing done) 1810 1811If you do not have FEATURE(`stickyhost') set, then LOCAL_RELAY and 1812MAIL_HUB act identically, with MAIL_HUB taking precedence. 1813 1814If you want all outgoing mail to go to a central relay site, define 1815SMART_HOST as well. Briefly: 1816 1817 LOCAL_RELAY applies to unqualified names (e.g., "eric"). 1818 MAIL_HUB applies to names qualified with the name of the 1819 local host (e.g., "eric@mastodon.CS.Berkeley.EDU"). 1820 SMART_HOST applies to names qualified with other hosts or 1821 bracketed addresses (e.g., "eric@mastodon.CS.Berkeley.EDU" 1822 or "eric@[127.0.0.1]"). 1823 1824However, beware that other relays (e.g., UUCP_RELAY, BITNET_RELAY, 1825DECNET_RELAY, and FAX_RELAY) take precedence over SMART_HOST, so if you 1826really want absolutely everything to go to a single central site you will 1827need to unset all the other relays -- or better yet, find or build a 1828minimal config file that does this. 1829 1830For duplicate suppression to work properly, the host name is best 1831specified with a terminal dot: 1832 1833 define(`MAIL_HUB', `host.domain.') 1834 note the trailing dot ---^ 1835 1836 1837+-------------------------------------------+ 1838| USING LDAP FOR ALIASES, MAPS, AND CLASSES | 1839+-------------------------------------------+ 1840 1841LDAP can be used for aliases, maps, and classes by either specifying your 1842own LDAP map specification or using the built-in default LDAP map 1843specification. The built-in default specifications all provide lookups 1844which match against either the machine's fully qualified hostname (${j}) or 1845a "cluster". The cluster allows you to share LDAP entries among a large 1846number of machines without having to enter each of the machine names into 1847each LDAP entry. To set the LDAP cluster name to use for a particular 1848machine or set of machines, set the confLDAP_CLUSTER m4 variable to a 1849unique name. For example: 1850 1851 define(`confLDAP_CLUSTER', `Servers') 1852 1853Here, the word `Servers' will be the cluster name. As an example, assume 1854that smtp.sendmail.org, etrn.sendmail.org, and mx.sendmail.org all belong 1855to the Servers cluster. 1856 1857Some of the LDAP LDIF examples below show use of the Servers cluster. 1858Every entry must have either a sendmailMTAHost or sendmailMTACluster 1859attribute or it will be ignored. Be careful as mixing clusters and 1860individual host records can have surprising results (see the CAUTION 1861sections below). 1862 1863See the file cf/sendmail.schema for the actual LDAP schemas. Note that 1864this schema (and therefore the lookups and examples below) is experimental 1865at this point as it has had little public review. Therefore, it may change 1866in future versions. Feedback via sendmail-YYYY@support.sendmail.org is 1867encouraged (replace YYYY with the current year, e.g., 2005). 1868 1869------- 1870Aliases 1871------- 1872 1873The ALIAS_FILE (O AliasFile) option can be set to use LDAP for alias 1874lookups. To use the default schema, simply use: 1875 1876 define(`ALIAS_FILE', `ldap:') 1877 1878By doing so, you will use the default schema which expands to a map 1879declared as follows: 1880 1881 ldap -k (&(objectClass=sendmailMTAAliasObject) 1882 (sendmailMTAAliasGrouping=aliases) 1883 (|(sendmailMTACluster=${sendmailMTACluster}) 1884 (sendmailMTAHost=$j)) 1885 (sendmailMTAKey=%0)) 1886 -v sendmailMTAAliasValue,sendmailMTAAliasSearch:FILTER:sendmailMTAAliasObject,sendmailMTAAliasURL:URL:sendmailMTAAliasObject 1887 1888 1889NOTE: The macros shown above ${sendmailMTACluster} and $j are not actually 1890used when the binary expands the `ldap:' token as the AliasFile option is 1891not actually macro-expanded when read from the sendmail.cf file. 1892 1893Example LDAP LDIF entries might be: 1894 1895 dn: sendmailMTAKey=sendmail-list, dc=sendmail, dc=org 1896 objectClass: sendmailMTA 1897 objectClass: sendmailMTAAlias 1898 objectClass: sendmailMTAAliasObject 1899 sendmailMTAAliasGrouping: aliases 1900 sendmailMTAHost: etrn.sendmail.org 1901 sendmailMTAKey: sendmail-list 1902 sendmailMTAAliasValue: ca@example.org 1903 sendmailMTAAliasValue: eric 1904 sendmailMTAAliasValue: gshapiro@example.com 1905 1906 dn: sendmailMTAKey=owner-sendmail-list, dc=sendmail, dc=org 1907 objectClass: sendmailMTA 1908 objectClass: sendmailMTAAlias 1909 objectClass: sendmailMTAAliasObject 1910 sendmailMTAAliasGrouping: aliases 1911 sendmailMTAHost: etrn.sendmail.org 1912 sendmailMTAKey: owner-sendmail-list 1913 sendmailMTAAliasValue: eric 1914 1915 dn: sendmailMTAKey=postmaster, dc=sendmail, dc=org 1916 objectClass: sendmailMTA 1917 objectClass: sendmailMTAAlias 1918 objectClass: sendmailMTAAliasObject 1919 sendmailMTAAliasGrouping: aliases 1920 sendmailMTACluster: Servers 1921 sendmailMTAKey: postmaster 1922 sendmailMTAAliasValue: eric 1923 1924Here, the aliases sendmail-list and owner-sendmail-list will be available 1925only on etrn.sendmail.org but the postmaster alias will be available on 1926every machine in the Servers cluster (including etrn.sendmail.org). 1927 1928CAUTION: aliases are additive so that entries like these: 1929 1930 dn: sendmailMTAKey=bob, dc=sendmail, dc=org 1931 objectClass: sendmailMTA 1932 objectClass: sendmailMTAAlias 1933 objectClass: sendmailMTAAliasObject 1934 sendmailMTAAliasGrouping: aliases 1935 sendmailMTACluster: Servers 1936 sendmailMTAKey: bob 1937 sendmailMTAAliasValue: eric 1938 1939 dn: sendmailMTAKey=bobetrn, dc=sendmail, dc=org 1940 objectClass: sendmailMTA 1941 objectClass: sendmailMTAAlias 1942 objectClass: sendmailMTAAliasObject 1943 sendmailMTAAliasGrouping: aliases 1944 sendmailMTAHost: etrn.sendmail.org 1945 sendmailMTAKey: bob 1946 sendmailMTAAliasValue: gshapiro 1947 1948would mean that on all of the hosts in the cluster, mail to bob would go to 1949eric EXCEPT on etrn.sendmail.org in which case it would go to BOTH eric and 1950gshapiro. 1951 1952If you prefer not to use the default LDAP schema for your aliases, you can 1953specify the map parameters when setting ALIAS_FILE. For example: 1954 1955 define(`ALIAS_FILE', `ldap:-k (&(objectClass=mailGroup)(mail=%0)) -v mgrpRFC822MailMember') 1956 1957---- 1958Maps 1959---- 1960 1961FEATURE()'s which take an optional map definition argument (e.g., access, 1962mailertable, virtusertable, etc.) can instead take the special keyword 1963`LDAP', e.g.: 1964 1965 FEATURE(`access_db', `LDAP') 1966 FEATURE(`virtusertable', `LDAP') 1967 1968When this keyword is given, that map will use LDAP lookups consisting of 1969the objectClass sendmailMTAClassObject, the attribute sendmailMTAMapName 1970with the map name, a search attribute of sendmailMTAKey, and the value 1971attribute sendmailMTAMapValue. 1972 1973The values for sendmailMTAMapName are: 1974 1975 FEATURE() sendmailMTAMapName 1976 --------- ------------------ 1977 access_db access 1978 authinfo authinfo 1979 bitdomain bitdomain 1980 domaintable domain 1981 genericstable generics 1982 mailertable mailer 1983 uucpdomain uucpdomain 1984 virtusertable virtuser 1985 1986For example, FEATURE(`mailertable', `LDAP') would use the map definition: 1987 1988 Kmailertable ldap -k (&(objectClass=sendmailMTAMapObject) 1989 (sendmailMTAMapName=mailer) 1990 (|(sendmailMTACluster=${sendmailMTACluster}) 1991 (sendmailMTAHost=$j)) 1992 (sendmailMTAKey=%0)) 1993 -1 -v sendmailMTAMapValue,sendmailMTAMapSearch:FILTER:sendmailMTAMapObject,sendmailMTAMapURL:URL:sendmailMTAMapObject 1994 1995An example LDAP LDIF entry using this map might be: 1996 1997 dn: sendmailMTAMapName=mailer, dc=sendmail, dc=org 1998 objectClass: sendmailMTA 1999 objectClass: sendmailMTAMap 2000 sendmailMTACluster: Servers 2001 sendmailMTAMapName: mailer 2002 2003 dn: sendmailMTAKey=example.com, sendmailMTAMapName=mailer, dc=sendmail, dc=org 2004 objectClass: sendmailMTA 2005 objectClass: sendmailMTAMap 2006 objectClass: sendmailMTAMapObject 2007 sendmailMTAMapName: mailer 2008 sendmailMTACluster: Servers 2009 sendmailMTAKey: example.com 2010 sendmailMTAMapValue: relay:[smtp.example.com] 2011 2012CAUTION: If your LDAP database contains the record above and *ALSO* a host 2013specific record such as: 2014 2015 dn: sendmailMTAKey=example.com@etrn, sendmailMTAMapName=mailer, dc=sendmail, dc=org 2016 objectClass: sendmailMTA 2017 objectClass: sendmailMTAMap 2018 objectClass: sendmailMTAMapObject 2019 sendmailMTAMapName: mailer 2020 sendmailMTAHost: etrn.sendmail.org 2021 sendmailMTAKey: example.com 2022 sendmailMTAMapValue: relay:[mx.example.com] 2023 2024then these entries will give unexpected results. When the lookup is done 2025on etrn.sendmail.org, the effect is that there is *NO* match at all as maps 2026require a single match. Since the host etrn.sendmail.org is also in the 2027Servers cluster, LDAP would return two answers for the example.com map key 2028in which case sendmail would treat this as no match at all. 2029 2030If you prefer not to use the default LDAP schema for your maps, you can 2031specify the map parameters when using the FEATURE(). For example: 2032 2033 FEATURE(`access_db', `ldap:-1 -k (&(objectClass=mapDatabase)(key=%0)) -v value') 2034 2035------- 2036Classes 2037------- 2038 2039Normally, classes can be filled via files or programs. As of 8.12, they 2040can also be filled via map lookups using a new syntax: 2041 2042 F{ClassName}mapkey@mapclass:mapspec 2043 2044mapkey is optional and if not provided the map key will be empty. This can 2045be used with LDAP to read classes from LDAP. Note that the lookup is only 2046done when sendmail is initially started. Use the special value `@LDAP' to 2047use the default LDAP schema. For example: 2048 2049 RELAY_DOMAIN_FILE(`@LDAP') 2050 2051would put all of the attribute sendmailMTAClassValue values of LDAP records 2052with objectClass sendmailMTAClass and an attribute sendmailMTAClassName of 2053'R' into class $={R}. In other words, it is equivalent to the LDAP map 2054specification: 2055 2056 F{R}@ldap:-k (&(objectClass=sendmailMTAClass) 2057 (sendmailMTAClassName=R) 2058 (|(sendmailMTACluster=${sendmailMTACluster}) 2059 (sendmailMTAHost=$j))) 2060 -v sendmailMTAClassValue,sendmailMTAClassSearch:FILTER:sendmailMTAClass,sendmailMTAClassURL:URL:sendmailMTAClass 2061 2062NOTE: The macros shown above ${sendmailMTACluster} and $j are not actually 2063used when the binary expands the `@LDAP' token as class declarations are 2064not actually macro-expanded when read from the sendmail.cf file. 2065 2066This can be used with class related commands such as RELAY_DOMAIN_FILE(), 2067MASQUERADE_DOMAIN_FILE(), etc: 2068 2069 Command sendmailMTAClassName 2070 ------- -------------------- 2071 CANONIFY_DOMAIN_FILE() Canonify 2072 EXPOSED_USER_FILE() E 2073 GENERICS_DOMAIN_FILE() G 2074 LDAPROUTE_DOMAIN_FILE() LDAPRoute 2075 LDAPROUTE_EQUIVALENT_FILE() LDAPRouteEquiv 2076 LOCAL_USER_FILE() L 2077 MASQUERADE_DOMAIN_FILE() M 2078 MASQUERADE_EXCEPTION_FILE() N 2079 RELAY_DOMAIN_FILE() R 2080 VIRTUSER_DOMAIN_FILE() VirtHost 2081 2082You can also add your own as any 'F'ile class of the form: 2083 2084 F{ClassName}@LDAP 2085 ^^^^^^^^^ 2086will use "ClassName" for the sendmailMTAClassName. 2087 2088An example LDAP LDIF entry would look like: 2089 2090 dn: sendmailMTAClassName=R, dc=sendmail, dc=org 2091 objectClass: sendmailMTA 2092 objectClass: sendmailMTAClass 2093 sendmailMTACluster: Servers 2094 sendmailMTAClassName: R 2095 sendmailMTAClassValue: sendmail.org 2096 sendmailMTAClassValue: example.com 2097 sendmailMTAClassValue: 10.56.23 2098 2099CAUTION: If your LDAP database contains the record above and *ALSO* a host 2100specific record such as: 2101 2102 dn: sendmailMTAClassName=R@etrn.sendmail.org, dc=sendmail, dc=org 2103 objectClass: sendmailMTA 2104 objectClass: sendmailMTAClass 2105 sendmailMTAHost: etrn.sendmail.org 2106 sendmailMTAClassName: R 2107 sendmailMTAClassValue: example.com 2108 2109the result will be similar to the aliases caution above. When the lookup 2110is done on etrn.sendmail.org, $={R} would contain all of the entries (from 2111both the cluster match and the host match). In other words, the effective 2112is additive. 2113 2114If you prefer not to use the default LDAP schema for your classes, you can 2115specify the map parameters when using the class command. For example: 2116 2117 VIRTUSER_DOMAIN_FILE(`@ldap:-k (&(objectClass=virtHosts)(host=*)) -v host') 2118 2119Remember, macros can not be used in a class declaration as the binary does 2120not expand them. 2121 2122 2123+--------------+ 2124| LDAP ROUTING | 2125+--------------+ 2126 2127FEATURE(`ldap_routing') can be used to implement the IETF Internet Draft 2128LDAP Schema for Intranet Mail Routing 2129(draft-lachman-laser-ldap-mail-routing-01). This feature enables 2130LDAP-based rerouting of a particular address to either a different host 2131or a different address. The LDAP lookup is first attempted on the full 2132address (e.g., user@example.com) and then on the domain portion 2133(e.g., @example.com). Be sure to setup your domain for LDAP routing using 2134LDAPROUTE_DOMAIN(), e.g.: 2135 2136 LDAPROUTE_DOMAIN(`example.com') 2137 2138Additionally, you can specify equivalent domains for LDAP routing using 2139LDAPROUTE_EQUIVALENT() and LDAPROUTE_EQUIVALENT_FILE(). 'Equivalent' 2140hostnames are mapped to $M (the masqueraded hostname for the server) before 2141the LDAP query. For example, if the mail is addressed to 2142user@host1.example.com, normally the LDAP lookup would only be done for 2143'user@host1.example.com' and '@host1.example.com'. However, if 2144LDAPROUTE_EQUIVALENT(`host1.example.com') is used, the lookups would also be 2145done on 'user@example.com' and '@example.com' after attempting the 2146host1.example.com lookups. 2147 2148By default, the feature will use the schemas as specified in the draft 2149and will not reject addresses not found by the LDAP lookup. However, 2150this behavior can be changed by giving additional arguments to the FEATURE() 2151command: 2152 2153 FEATURE(`ldap_routing', <mailHost>, <mailRoutingAddress>, <bounce>, 2154 <detail>, <nodomain>, <tempfail>) 2155 2156where <mailHost> is a map definition describing how to lookup an alternative 2157mail host for a particular address; <mailRoutingAddress> is a map definition 2158describing how to lookup an alternative address for a particular address; 2159the <bounce> argument, if present and not the word "passthru", dictates 2160that mail should be bounced if neither a mailHost nor mailRoutingAddress 2161is found, if set to "sendertoo", the sender will be rejected if not 2162found in LDAP; and <detail> indicates what actions to take if the address 2163contains +detail information -- `strip' tries the lookup with the +detail 2164and if no matches are found, strips the +detail and tries the lookup again; 2165`preserve', does the same as `strip' but if a mailRoutingAddress match is 2166found, the +detail information is copied to the new address; the <nodomain> 2167argument, if present, will prevent the @domain lookup if the full 2168address is not found in LDAP; the <tempfail> argument, if set to 2169"tempfail", instructs the rules to give an SMTP 4XX temporary 2170error if the LDAP server gives the MTA a temporary failure, or if set to 2171"queue" (the default), the MTA will locally queue the mail. 2172 2173The default <mailHost> map definition is: 2174 2175 ldap -1 -T<TMPF> -v mailHost -k (&(objectClass=inetLocalMailRecipient) 2176 (mailLocalAddress=%0)) 2177 2178The default <mailRoutingAddress> map definition is: 2179 2180 ldap -1 -T<TMPF> -v mailRoutingAddress 2181 -k (&(objectClass=inetLocalMailRecipient) 2182 (mailLocalAddress=%0)) 2183 2184Note that neither includes the LDAP server hostname (-h server) or base DN 2185(-b o=org,c=COUNTRY), both necessary for LDAP queries. It is presumed that 2186your .mc file contains a setting for the confLDAP_DEFAULT_SPEC option with 2187these settings. If this is not the case, the map definitions should be 2188changed as described above. The "-T<TMPF>" is required in any user 2189specified map definition to catch temporary errors. 2190 2191The following possibilities exist as a result of an LDAP lookup on an 2192address: 2193 2194 mailHost is mailRoutingAddress is Results in 2195 ----------- --------------------- ---------- 2196 set to a set mail delivered to 2197 "local" host mailRoutingAddress 2198 2199 set to a not set delivered to 2200 "local" host original address 2201 2202 set to a set mailRoutingAddress 2203 remote host relayed to mailHost 2204 2205 set to a not set original address 2206 remote host relayed to mailHost 2207 2208 not set set mail delivered to 2209 mailRoutingAddress 2210 2211 not set not set delivered to 2212 original address *OR* 2213 bounced as unknown user 2214 2215The term "local" host above means the host specified is in class {w}. If 2216the result would mean sending the mail to a different host, that host is 2217looked up in the mailertable before delivery. 2218 2219Note that the last case depends on whether the third argument is given 2220to the FEATURE() command. The default is to deliver the message to the 2221original address. 2222 2223The LDAP entries should be set up with an objectClass of 2224inetLocalMailRecipient and the address be listed in a mailLocalAddress 2225attribute. If present, there must be only one mailHost attribute and it 2226must contain a fully qualified host name as its value. Similarly, if 2227present, there must be only one mailRoutingAddress attribute and it must 2228contain an RFC 822 compliant address. Some example LDAP records (in LDIF 2229format): 2230 2231 dn: uid=tom, o=example.com, c=US 2232 objectClass: inetLocalMailRecipient 2233 mailLocalAddress: tom@example.com 2234 mailRoutingAddress: thomas@mailhost.example.com 2235 2236This would deliver mail for tom@example.com to thomas@mailhost.example.com. 2237 2238 dn: uid=dick, o=example.com, c=US 2239 objectClass: inetLocalMailRecipient 2240 mailLocalAddress: dick@example.com 2241 mailHost: eng.example.com 2242 2243This would relay mail for dick@example.com to the same address but redirect 2244the mail to MX records listed for the host eng.example.com (unless the 2245mailertable overrides). 2246 2247 dn: uid=harry, o=example.com, c=US 2248 objectClass: inetLocalMailRecipient 2249 mailLocalAddress: harry@example.com 2250 mailHost: mktmail.example.com 2251 mailRoutingAddress: harry@mkt.example.com 2252 2253This would relay mail for harry@example.com to the MX records listed for 2254the host mktmail.example.com using the new address harry@mkt.example.com 2255when talking to that host. 2256 2257 dn: uid=virtual.example.com, o=example.com, c=US 2258 objectClass: inetLocalMailRecipient 2259 mailLocalAddress: @virtual.example.com 2260 mailHost: server.example.com 2261 mailRoutingAddress: virtual@example.com 2262 2263This would send all mail destined for any username @virtual.example.com to 2264the machine server.example.com's MX servers and deliver to the address 2265virtual@example.com on that relay machine. 2266 2267 2268+---------------------------------+ 2269| ANTI-SPAM CONFIGURATION CONTROL | 2270+---------------------------------+ 2271 2272The primary anti-spam features available in sendmail are: 2273 2274* Relaying is denied by default. 2275* Better checking on sender information. 2276* Access database. 2277* Header checks. 2278 2279Relaying (transmission of messages from a site outside your host (class 2280{w}) to another site except yours) is denied by default. Note that this 2281changed in sendmail 8.9; previous versions allowed relaying by default. 2282If you really want to revert to the old behaviour, you will need to use 2283FEATURE(`promiscuous_relay'). You can allow certain domains to relay 2284through your server by adding their domain name or IP address to class 2285{R} using RELAY_DOMAIN() and RELAY_DOMAIN_FILE() or via the access database 2286(described below). Note that IPv6 addresses must be prefaced with "IPv6:". 2287The file consists (like any other file based class) of entries listed on 2288separate lines, e.g., 2289 2290 sendmail.org 2291 128.32 2292 IPv6:2002:c0a8:02c7 2293 IPv6:2002:c0a8:51d2::23f4 2294 host.mydomain.com 2295 [UNIX:localhost] 2296 2297Notice: the last entry allows relaying for connections via a UNIX 2298socket to the MTA/MSP. This might be necessary if your configuration 2299doesn't allow relaying by other means in that case, e.g., by having 2300localhost.$m in class {R} (make sure $m is not just a top level 2301domain). 2302 2303If you use 2304 2305 FEATURE(`relay_entire_domain') 2306 2307then any host in any of your local domains (that is, class {m}) 2308will be relayed (that is, you will accept mail either to or from any 2309host in your domain). 2310 2311You can also allow relaying based on the MX records of the host 2312portion of an incoming recipient address by using 2313 2314 FEATURE(`relay_based_on_MX') 2315 2316For example, if your server receives a recipient of user@domain.com 2317and domain.com lists your server in its MX records, the mail will be 2318accepted for relay to domain.com. This feature may cause problems 2319if MX lookups for the recipient domain are slow or time out. In that 2320case, mail will be temporarily rejected. It is usually better to 2321maintain a list of hosts/domains for which the server acts as relay. 2322Note also that this feature will stop spammers from using your host 2323to relay spam but it will not stop outsiders from using your server 2324as a relay for their site (that is, they set up an MX record pointing 2325to your mail server, and you will relay mail addressed to them 2326without any prior arrangement). Along the same lines, 2327 2328 FEATURE(`relay_local_from') 2329 2330will allow relaying if the sender specifies a return path (i.e. 2331MAIL FROM:<user@domain>) domain which is a local domain. This is a 2332dangerous feature as it will allow spammers to spam using your mail 2333server by simply specifying a return address of user@your.domain.com. 2334It should not be used unless absolutely necessary. 2335A slightly better solution is 2336 2337 FEATURE(`relay_mail_from') 2338 2339which allows relaying if the mail sender is listed as RELAY in the 2340access map. If an optional argument `domain' (this is the literal 2341word `domain', not a placeholder) is given, the domain portion of 2342the mail sender is also checked to allowing relaying. This option 2343only works together with the tag From: for the LHS of the access 2344map entries. This feature allows spammers to abuse your mail server 2345by specifying a return address that you enabled in your access file. 2346This may be harder to figure out for spammers, but it should not 2347be used unless necessary. Instead use SMTP AUTH or STARTTLS to 2348allow relaying for roaming users. 2349 2350 2351If source routing is used in the recipient address (e.g., 2352RCPT TO:<user%site.com@othersite.com>), sendmail will check 2353user@site.com for relaying if othersite.com is an allowed relay host 2354in either class {R}, class {m} if FEATURE(`relay_entire_domain') is used, 2355or the access database if FEATURE(`access_db') is used. To prevent 2356the address from being stripped down, use: 2357 2358 FEATURE(`loose_relay_check') 2359 2360If you think you need to use this feature, you probably do not. This 2361should only be used for sites which have no control over the addresses 2362that they provide a gateway for. Use this FEATURE with caution as it 2363can allow spammers to relay through your server if not setup properly. 2364 2365NOTICE: It is possible to relay mail through a system which the anti-relay 2366rules do not prevent: the case of a system that does use FEATURE(`nouucp', 2367`nospecial') (system A) and relays local messages to a mail hub (e.g., via 2368LOCAL_RELAY or LUSER_RELAY) (system B). If system B doesn't use 2369FEATURE(`nouucp') at all, addresses of the form 2370<example.net!user@local.host> would be relayed to <user@example.net>. 2371System A doesn't recognize `!' as an address separator and therefore 2372forwards it to the mail hub which in turns relays it because it came from 2373a trusted local host. So if a mailserver allows UUCP (bang-format) 2374addresses, all systems from which it allows relaying should do the same 2375or reject those addresses. 2376 2377As of 8.9, sendmail will refuse mail if the MAIL FROM: parameter has 2378an unresolvable domain (i.e., one that DNS, your local name service, 2379or special case rules in ruleset 3 cannot locate). This also applies 2380to addresses that use domain literals, e.g., <user@[1.2.3.4]>, if the 2381IP address can't be mapped to a host name. If you want to continue 2382to accept such domains, e.g., because you are inside a firewall that 2383has only a limited view of the Internet host name space (note that you 2384will not be able to return mail to them unless you have some "smart 2385host" forwarder), use 2386 2387 FEATURE(`accept_unresolvable_domains') 2388 2389Alternatively, you can allow specific addresses by adding them to 2390the access map, e.g., 2391 2392 From:unresolvable.domain OK 2393 From:[1.2.3.4] OK 2394 From:[1.2.4] OK 2395 2396Notice: domains which are temporarily unresolvable are (temporarily) 2397rejected with a 451 reply code. If those domains should be accepted 2398(which is discouraged) then you can use 2399 2400 LOCAL_CONFIG 2401 C{ResOk}TEMP 2402 2403sendmail will also refuse mail if the MAIL FROM: parameter is not 2404fully qualified (i.e., contains a domain as well as a user). If you 2405want to continue to accept such senders, use 2406 2407 FEATURE(`accept_unqualified_senders') 2408 2409Setting the DaemonPortOptions modifier 'u' overrides the default behavior, 2410i.e., unqualified addresses are accepted even without this FEATURE. If 2411this FEATURE is not used, the DaemonPortOptions modifier 'f' can be used 2412to enforce fully qualified domain names. 2413 2414An ``access'' database can be created to accept or reject mail from 2415selected domains. For example, you may choose to reject all mail 2416originating from known spammers. To enable such a database, use 2417 2418 FEATURE(`access_db') 2419 2420Notice: the access database is applied to the envelope addresses 2421and the connection information, not to the header. 2422 2423The FEATURE macro can accept as second parameter the key file 2424definition for the database; for example 2425 2426 FEATURE(`access_db', `hash -T<TMPF> /etc/mail/access_map') 2427 2428Notice: If a second argument is specified it must contain the option 2429`-T<TMPF>' as shown above. The optional third and fourth parameters 2430may be `skip' or `lookupdotdomain'. The former enables SKIP as 2431value part (see below), the latter is another way to enable the 2432feature of the same name (see above). 2433 2434Remember, since /etc/mail/access is a database, after creating the text 2435file as described below, you must use makemap to create the database 2436map. For example: 2437 2438 makemap hash /etc/mail/access < /etc/mail/access 2439 2440The table itself uses e-mail addresses, domain names, and network 2441numbers as keys. Note that IPv6 addresses must be prefaced with "IPv6:". 2442For example, 2443 2444 From:spammer@aol.com REJECT 2445 From:cyberspammer.com REJECT 2446 Connect:cyberspammer.com REJECT 2447 Connect:TLD REJECT 2448 Connect:192.168.212 REJECT 2449 Connect:IPv6:2002:c0a8:02c7 RELAY 2450 Connect:IPv6:2002:c0a8:51d2::23f4 REJECT 2451 2452would refuse mail from spammer@aol.com, any user from cyberspammer.com 2453(or any host within the cyberspammer.com domain), any host in the entire 2454top level domain TLD, 192.168.212.* network, and the IPv6 address 24552002:c0a8:51d2::23f4. It would allow relay for the IPv6 network 24562002:c0a8:02c7::/48. 2457 2458Entries in the access map should be tagged according to their type. 2459Three tags are available: 2460 2461 Connect: connection information (${client_addr}, ${client_name}) 2462 From: envelope sender 2463 To: envelope recipient 2464 2465Notice: untagged entries are deprecated. 2466 2467If the required item is looked up in a map, it will be tried first 2468with the corresponding tag in front, then (as fallback to enable 2469backward compatibility) without any tag, unless the specific feature 2470requires a tag. For example, 2471 2472 From:spammer@some.dom REJECT 2473 To:friend.domain RELAY 2474 Connect:friend.domain OK 2475 Connect:from.domain RELAY 2476 From:good@another.dom OK 2477 From:another.dom REJECT 2478 2479This would deny mails from spammer@some.dom but you could still 2480send mail to that address even if FEATURE(`blacklist_recipients') 2481is enabled. Your system will allow relaying to friend.domain, but 2482not from it (unless enabled by other means). Connections from that 2483domain will be allowed even if it ends up in one of the DNS based 2484rejection lists. Relaying is enabled from from.domain but not to 2485it (since relaying is based on the connection information for 2486outgoing relaying, the tag Connect: must be used; for incoming 2487relaying, which is based on the recipient address, To: must be 2488used). The last two entries allow mails from good@another.dom but 2489reject mail from all other addresses with another.dom as domain 2490part. 2491 2492 2493The value part of the map can contain: 2494 2495 OK Accept mail even if other rules in the running 2496 ruleset would reject it, for example, if the domain 2497 name is unresolvable. "Accept" does not mean 2498 "relay", but at most acceptance for local 2499 recipients. That is, OK allows less than RELAY. 2500 RELAY Accept mail addressed to the indicated domain or 2501 received from the indicated domain for relaying 2502 through your SMTP server. RELAY also serves as 2503 an implicit OK for the other checks. 2504 REJECT Reject the sender or recipient with a general 2505 purpose message. 2506 DISCARD Discard the message completely using the 2507 $#discard mailer. If it is used in check_compat, 2508 it affects only the designated recipient, not 2509 the whole message as it does in all other cases. 2510 This should only be used if really necessary. 2511 SKIP This can only be used for host/domain names 2512 and IP addresses/nets. It will abort the current 2513 search for this entry without accepting or rejecting 2514 it but causing the default action. 2515 ### any text where ### is an RFC 821 compliant error code and 2516 "any text" is a message to return for the command. 2517 The entire string should be quoted to avoid 2518 surprises: 2519 2520 "### any text" 2521 2522 Otherwise sendmail formats the text as email 2523 addresses, e.g., it may remove spaces. 2524 This type is deprecated, use one of the two 2525 ERROR: entries below instead. 2526 ERROR:### any text 2527 as above, but useful to mark error messages as such. 2528 If quotes need to be used to avoid modifications 2529 (see above), they should be placed like this: 2530 2531 ERROR:"### any text" 2532 2533 ERROR:D.S.N:### any text 2534 where D.S.N is an RFC 1893 compliant error code 2535 and the rest as above. If quotes need to be used 2536 to avoid modifications, they should be placed 2537 like this: 2538 2539 ERROR:D.S.N:"### any text" 2540 2541 QUARANTINE:any text 2542 Quarantine the message using the given text as the 2543 quarantining reason. 2544 2545For example: 2546 2547 From:cyberspammer.com ERROR:"550 We don't accept mail from spammers" 2548 From:okay.cyberspammer.com OK 2549 Connect:sendmail.org RELAY 2550 To:sendmail.org RELAY 2551 Connect:128.32 RELAY 2552 Connect:128.32.2 SKIP 2553 Connect:IPv6:1:2:3:4:5:6:7 RELAY 2554 Connect:suspicious.example.com QUARANTINE:Mail from suspicious host 2555 Connect:[127.0.0.3] OK 2556 Connect:[IPv6:1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8] OK 2557 2558would accept mail from okay.cyberspammer.com, but would reject mail 2559from all other hosts at cyberspammer.com with the indicated message. 2560It would allow relaying mail from and to any hosts in the sendmail.org 2561domain, and allow relaying from the IPv6 1:2:3:4:5:6:7:* network 2562and from the 128.32.*.* network except for the 128.32.2.* network, 2563which shows how SKIP is useful to exempt subnets/subdomains. The 2564last two entries are for checks against ${client_name} if the IP 2565address doesn't resolve to a hostname (or is considered as "may be 2566forged"). That is, using square brackets means these are host 2567names, not network numbers. 2568 2569Warning: if you change the RFC 821 compliant error code from the default 2570value of 550, then you should probably also change the RFC 1893 compliant 2571error code to match it. For example, if you use 2572 2573 To:user@example.com ERROR:450 mailbox full 2574 2575the error returned would be "450 5.0.0 mailbox full" which is wrong. 2576Use "ERROR:4.2.2:450 mailbox full" instead. 2577 2578Note, UUCP users may need to add hostname.UUCP to the access database 2579or class {R}. 2580 2581If you also use: 2582 2583 FEATURE(`relay_hosts_only') 2584 2585then the above example will allow relaying for sendmail.org, but not 2586hosts within the sendmail.org domain. Note that this will also require 2587hosts listed in class {R} to be fully qualified host names. 2588 2589You can also use the access database to block sender addresses based on 2590the username portion of the address. For example: 2591 2592 From:FREE.STEALTH.MAILER@ ERROR:550 Spam not accepted 2593 2594Note that you must include the @ after the username to signify that 2595this database entry is for checking only the username portion of the 2596sender address. 2597 2598If you use: 2599 2600 FEATURE(`blacklist_recipients') 2601 2602then you can add entries to the map for local users, hosts in your 2603domains, or addresses in your domain which should not receive mail: 2604 2605 To:badlocaluser@ ERROR:550 Mailbox disabled for badlocaluser 2606 To:host.my.TLD ERROR:550 That host does not accept mail 2607 To:user@other.my.TLD ERROR:550 Mailbox disabled for this recipient 2608 2609This would prevent a recipient of badlocaluser in any of the local 2610domains (class {w}), any user at host.my.TLD, and the single address 2611user@other.my.TLD from receiving mail. Please note: a local username 2612must be now tagged with an @ (this is consistent with the check of 2613the sender address, and hence it is possible to distinguish between 2614hostnames and usernames). Enabling this feature will keep you from 2615sending mails to all addresses that have an error message or REJECT 2616as value part in the access map. Taking the example from above: 2617 2618 spammer@aol.com REJECT 2619 cyberspammer.com REJECT 2620 2621Mail can't be sent to spammer@aol.com or anyone at cyberspammer.com. 2622That's why tagged entries should be used. 2623 2624There are several DNS based blacklists which can be found by 2625querying a search engine. These are databases of spammers 2626maintained in DNS. To use such a database, specify 2627 2628 FEATURE(`dnsbl', `dnsbl.example.com') 2629 2630This will cause sendmail to reject mail from any site listed in the 2631DNS based blacklist. You must select an DNSB based blacklist domain 2632to check by specifying an argument to the FEATURE. The default 2633error message is 2634 2635 Rejected: IP-ADDRESS listed at SERVER 2636 2637where IP-ADDRESS and SERVER are replaced by the appropriate 2638information. A second argument can be used to specify a different 2639text. By default, temporary lookup failures are ignored and hence 2640cause the connection not to be rejected by the DNS based rejection 2641list. This behavior can be changed by specifying a third argument, 2642which must be either `t' or a full error message. For example: 2643 2644 FEATURE(`dnsbl', `dnsbl.example.com', `', 2645 `"451 Temporary lookup failure for " $&{client_addr} " in dnsbl.example.com"') 2646 2647If `t' is used, the error message is: 2648 2649 451 Temporary lookup failure of IP-ADDRESS at SERVER 2650 2651where IP-ADDRESS and SERVER are replaced by the appropriate 2652information. 2653 2654This FEATURE can be included several times to query different 2655DNS based rejection lists. 2656 2657Notice: to avoid checking your own local domains against those 2658blacklists, use the access_db feature and add: 2659 2660 Connect:10.1 OK 2661 Connect:127.0.0.1 RELAY 2662 2663to the access map, where 10.1 is your local network. You may 2664want to use "RELAY" instead of "OK" to allow also relaying 2665instead of just disabling the DNS lookups in the blacklists. 2666 2667 2668The features described above make use of the check_relay, check_mail, 2669and check_rcpt rulesets. Note that check_relay checks the SMTP 2670client hostname and IP address when the connection is made to your 2671server. It does not check if a mail message is being relayed to 2672another server. That check is done in check_rcpt. If you wish to 2673include your own checks, you can put your checks in the rulesets 2674Local_check_relay, Local_check_mail, and Local_check_rcpt. For 2675example if you wanted to block senders with all numeric usernames 2676(i.e. 2312343@bigisp.com), you would use Local_check_mail and the 2677regex map: 2678 2679 LOCAL_CONFIG 2680 Kallnumbers regex -a@MATCH ^[0-9]+$ 2681 2682 LOCAL_RULESETS 2683 SLocal_check_mail 2684 # check address against various regex checks 2685 R$* $: $>Parse0 $>3 $1 2686 R$+ < @ bigisp.com. > $* $: $(allnumbers $1 $) 2687 R@MATCH $#error $: 553 Header Error 2688 2689These rules are called with the original arguments of the corresponding 2690check_* ruleset. If the local ruleset returns $#OK, no further checking 2691is done by the features described above and the mail is accepted. If 2692the local ruleset resolves to a mailer (such as $#error or $#discard), 2693the appropriate action is taken. Other results starting with $# are 2694interpreted by sendmail and may lead to unspecified behavior. Note: do 2695NOT create a mailer with the name OK. Return values that do not start 2696with $# are ignored, i.e., normal processing continues. 2697 2698Delay all checks 2699---------------- 2700 2701By using FEATURE(`delay_checks') the rulesets check_mail and check_relay 2702will not be called when a client connects or issues a MAIL command, 2703respectively. Instead, those rulesets will be called by the check_rcpt 2704ruleset; they will be skipped if a sender has been authenticated using 2705a "trusted" mechanism, i.e., one that is defined via TRUST_AUTH_MECH(). 2706If check_mail returns an error then the RCPT TO command will be rejected 2707with that error. If it returns some other result starting with $# then 2708check_relay will be skipped. If the sender address (or a part of it) is 2709listed in the access map and it has a RHS of OK or RELAY, then check_relay 2710will be skipped. This has an interesting side effect: if your domain is 2711my.domain and you have 2712 2713 my.domain RELAY 2714 2715in the access map, then any e-mail with a sender address of 2716<user@my.domain> will not be rejected by check_relay even though 2717it would match the hostname or IP address. This allows spammers 2718to get around DNS based blacklist by faking the sender address. To 2719avoid this problem you have to use tagged entries: 2720 2721 To:my.domain RELAY 2722 Connect:my.domain RELAY 2723 2724if you need those entries at all (class {R} may take care of them). 2725 2726FEATURE(`delay_checks') can take an optional argument: 2727 2728 FEATURE(`delay_checks', `friend') 2729 enables spamfriend test 2730 FEATURE(`delay_checks', `hater') 2731 enables spamhater test 2732 2733If such an argument is given, the recipient will be looked up in the 2734access map (using the tag Spam:). If the argument is `friend', then 2735the default behavior is to apply the other rulesets and make a SPAM 2736friend the exception. The rulesets check_mail and check_relay will be 2737skipped only if the recipient address is found and has RHS FRIEND. If 2738the argument is `hater', then the default behavior is to skip the rulesets 2739check_mail and check_relay and make a SPAM hater the exception. The 2740other two rulesets will be applied only if the recipient address is 2741found and has RHS HATER. 2742 2743This allows for simple exceptions from the tests, e.g., by activating 2744the friend option and having 2745 2746 Spam:abuse@ FRIEND 2747 2748in the access map, mail to abuse@localdomain will get through (where 2749"localdomain" is any domain in class {w}). It is also possible to 2750specify a full address or an address with +detail: 2751 2752 Spam:abuse@my.domain FRIEND 2753 Spam:me+abuse@ FRIEND 2754 Spam:spam.domain FRIEND 2755 2756Note: The required tag has been changed in 8.12 from To: to Spam:. 2757This change is incompatible to previous versions. However, you can 2758(for now) simply add the new entries to the access map, the old 2759ones will be ignored. As soon as you removed the old entries from 2760the access map, specify a third parameter (`n') to this feature and 2761the backward compatibility rules will not be in the generated .cf 2762file. 2763 2764Header Checks 2765------------- 2766 2767You can also reject mail on the basis of the contents of headers. 2768This is done by adding a ruleset call to the 'H' header definition command 2769in sendmail.cf. For example, this can be used to check the validity of 2770a Message-ID: header: 2771 2772 LOCAL_CONFIG 2773 HMessage-Id: $>CheckMessageId 2774 2775 LOCAL_RULESETS 2776 SCheckMessageId 2777 R< $+ @ $+ > $@ OK 2778 R$* $#error $: 553 Header Error 2779 2780The alternative format: 2781 2782 HSubject: $>+CheckSubject 2783 2784that is, $>+ instead of $>, gives the full Subject: header including 2785comments to the ruleset (comments in parentheses () are stripped 2786by default). 2787 2788A default ruleset for headers which don't have a specific ruleset 2789defined for them can be given by: 2790 2791 H*: $>CheckHdr 2792 2793Notice: 27941. All rules act on tokens as explained in doc/op/op.{me,ps,txt}. 2795That may cause problems with simple header checks due to the 2796tokenization. It might be simpler to use a regex map and apply it 2797to $&{currHeader}. 27982. There are no default rulesets coming with this distribution of 2799sendmail. You can write your own, can search the WWW for examples, 2800or take a look at cf/cf/knecht.mc. 28013. When using a default ruleset for headers, the name of the header 2802currently being checked can be found in the $&{hdr_name} macro. 2803 2804After all of the headers are read, the check_eoh ruleset will be called for 2805any final header-related checks. The ruleset is called with the number of 2806headers and the size of all of the headers in bytes separated by $|. One 2807example usage is to reject messages which do not have a Message-Id: 2808header. However, the Message-Id: header is *NOT* a required header and is 2809not a guaranteed spam indicator. This ruleset is an example and should 2810probably not be used in production. 2811 2812 LOCAL_CONFIG 2813 Kstorage macro 2814 HMessage-Id: $>CheckMessageId 2815 2816 LOCAL_RULESETS 2817 SCheckMessageId 2818 # Record the presence of the header 2819 R$* $: $(storage {MessageIdCheck} $@ OK $) $1 2820 R< $+ @ $+ > $@ OK 2821 R$* $#error $: 553 Header Error 2822 2823 Scheck_eoh 2824 # Check the macro 2825 R$* $: < $&{MessageIdCheck} > 2826 # Clear the macro for the next message 2827 R$* $: $(storage {MessageIdCheck} $) $1 2828 # Has a Message-Id: header 2829 R< $+ > $@ OK 2830 # Allow missing Message-Id: from local mail 2831 R$* $: < $&{client_name} > 2832 R< > $@ OK 2833 R< $=w > $@ OK 2834 # Otherwise, reject the mail 2835 R$* $#error $: 553 Header Error 2836 2837 2838+--------------------+ 2839| CONNECTION CONTROL | 2840+--------------------+ 2841 2842The features ratecontrol and conncontrol allow to establish connection 2843limits per client IP address or net. These features can limit the 2844rate of connections (connections per time unit) or the number of 2845incoming SMTP connections, respectively. If enabled, appropriate 2846rulesets are called at the end of check_relay, i.e., after DNS 2847blacklists and generic access_db operations. The features require 2848FEATURE(`access_db') to be listed earlier in the mc file. 2849 2850Note: FEATURE(`delay_checks') delays those connection control checks 2851after a recipient address has been received, hence making these 2852connection control features less useful. To run the checks as early 2853as possible, specify the parameter `nodelay', e.g., 2854 2855 FEATURE(`ratecontrol', `nodelay') 2856 2857In that case, FEATURE(`delay_checks') has no effect on connection 2858control (and it must be specified earlier in the mc file). 2859 2860An optional second argument `terminate' specifies whether the 2861rulesets should return the error code 421 which will cause 2862sendmail to terminate the session with that error if it is 2863returned from check_relay, i.e., not delayed as explained in 2864the previous paragraph. Example: 2865 2866 FEATURE(`ratecontrol', `nodelay', `terminate') 2867 2868 2869+----------+ 2870| STARTTLS | 2871+----------+ 2872 2873In this text, cert will be used as an abbreviation for X.509 certificate, 2874DN (CN) is the distinguished (common) name of a cert, and CA is a 2875certification authority, which signs (issues) certs. 2876 2877For STARTTLS to be offered by sendmail you need to set at least 2878these variables (the file names and paths are just examples): 2879 2880 define(`confCACERT_PATH', `/etc/mail/certs/') 2881 define(`confCACERT', `/etc/mail/certs/CA.cert.pem') 2882 define(`confSERVER_CERT', `/etc/mail/certs/my.cert.pem') 2883 define(`confSERVER_KEY', `/etc/mail/certs/my.key.pem') 2884 2885On systems which do not have the compile flag HASURANDOM set (see 2886sendmail/README) you also must set confRAND_FILE. 2887 2888See doc/op/op.{me,ps,txt} for more information about these options, 2889especially the sections ``Certificates for STARTTLS'' and ``PRNG for 2890STARTTLS''. 2891 2892Macros related to STARTTLS are: 2893 2894${cert_issuer} holds the DN of the CA (the cert issuer). 2895${cert_subject} holds the DN of the cert (called the cert subject). 2896${cn_issuer} holds the CN of the CA (the cert issuer). 2897${cn_subject} holds the CN of the cert (called the cert subject). 2898${tls_version} the TLS/SSL version used for the connection, e.g., TLSv1, 2899 TLSv1/SSLv3, SSLv3, SSLv2. 2900${cipher} the cipher used for the connection, e.g., EDH-DSS-DES-CBC3-SHA, 2901 EDH-RSA-DES-CBC-SHA, DES-CBC-MD5, DES-CBC3-SHA. 2902${cipher_bits} the keylength (in bits) of the symmetric encryption algorithm 2903 used for the connection. 2904${verify} holds the result of the verification of the presented cert. 2905 Possible values are: 2906 OK verification succeeded. 2907 NO no cert presented. 2908 NOT no cert requested. 2909 FAIL cert presented but could not be verified, 2910 e.g., the cert of the signing CA is missing. 2911 NONE STARTTLS has not been performed. 2912 TEMP temporary error occurred. 2913 PROTOCOL protocol error occurred (SMTP level). 2914 SOFTWARE STARTTLS handshake failed. 2915${server_name} the name of the server of the current outgoing SMTP 2916 connection. 2917${server_addr} the address of the server of the current outgoing SMTP 2918 connection. 2919 2920Relaying 2921-------- 2922 2923SMTP STARTTLS can allow relaying for remote SMTP clients which have 2924successfully authenticated themselves. If the verification of the cert 2925failed (${verify} != OK), relaying is subject to the usual rules. 2926Otherwise the DN of the issuer is looked up in the access map using the 2927tag CERTISSUER. If the resulting value is RELAY, relaying is allowed. 2928If it is SUBJECT, the DN of the cert subject is looked up next in the 2929access map using the tag CERTSUBJECT. If the value is RELAY, relaying 2930is allowed. 2931 2932To make things a bit more flexible (or complicated), the values for 2933${cert_issuer} and ${cert_subject} can be optionally modified by regular 2934expressions defined in the m4 variables _CERT_REGEX_ISSUER_ and 2935_CERT_REGEX_SUBJECT_, respectively. To avoid problems with those macros in 2936rulesets and map lookups, they are modified as follows: each non-printable 2937character and the characters '<', '>', '(', ')', '"', '+', ' ' are replaced 2938by their HEX value with a leading '+'. For example: 2939 2940/C=US/ST=California/O=endmail.org/OU=private/CN=Darth Mail (Cert)/Email= 2941darth+cert@endmail.org 2942 2943is encoded as: 2944 2945/C=US/ST=California/O=endmail.org/OU=private/CN= 2946Darth+20Mail+20+28Cert+29/Email=darth+2Bcert@endmail.org 2947 2948(line breaks have been inserted for readability). 2949 2950The macros which are subject to this encoding are ${cert_subject}, 2951${cert_issuer}, ${cn_subject}, and ${cn_issuer}. 2952 2953Examples: 2954 2955To allow relaying for everyone who can present a cert signed by 2956 2957/C=US/ST=California/O=endmail.org/OU=private/CN= 2958Darth+20Mail+20+28Cert+29/Email=darth+2Bcert@endmail.org 2959 2960simply use: 2961 2962CertIssuer:/C=US/ST=California/O=endmail.org/OU=private/CN= 2963Darth+20Mail+20+28Cert+29/Email=darth+2Bcert@endmail.org RELAY 2964 2965To allow relaying only for a subset of machines that have a cert signed by 2966 2967/C=US/ST=California/O=endmail.org/OU=private/CN= 2968Darth+20Mail+20+28Cert+29/Email=darth+2Bcert@endmail.org 2969 2970use: 2971 2972CertIssuer:/C=US/ST=California/O=endmail.org/OU=private/CN= 2973Darth+20Mail+20+28Cert+29/Email=darth+2Bcert@endmail.org SUBJECT 2974CertSubject:/C=US/ST=California/O=endmail.org/OU=private/CN= 2975DeathStar/Email=deathstar@endmail.org RELAY 2976 2977Notes: 2978- line breaks have been inserted after "CN=" for readability, 2979 each tagged entry must be one (long) line in the access map. 2980- if OpenSSL 0.9.7 or newer is used then the "Email=" part of a DN 2981 is replaced by "emailAddress=". 2982 2983Of course it is also possible to write a simple ruleset that allows 2984relaying for everyone who can present a cert that can be verified, e.g., 2985 2986LOCAL_RULESETS 2987SLocal_check_rcpt 2988R$* $: $&{verify} 2989ROK $# OK 2990 2991Allowing Connections 2992-------------------- 2993 2994The rulesets tls_server, tls_client, and tls_rcpt are used to decide whether 2995an SMTP connection is accepted (or should continue). 2996 2997tls_server is called when sendmail acts as client after a STARTTLS command 2998(should) have been issued. The parameter is the value of ${verify}. 2999 3000tls_client is called when sendmail acts as server, after a STARTTLS command 3001has been issued, and from check_mail. The parameter is the value of 3002${verify} and STARTTLS or MAIL, respectively. 3003 3004Both rulesets behave the same. If no access map is in use, the connection 3005will be accepted unless ${verify} is SOFTWARE, in which case the connection 3006is always aborted. For tls_server/tls_client, ${client_name}/${server_name} 3007is looked up in the access map using the tag TLS_Srv/TLS_Clt, which is done 3008with the ruleset LookUpDomain. If no entry is found, ${client_addr} 3009(${server_addr}) is looked up in the access map (same tag, ruleset 3010LookUpAddr). If this doesn't result in an entry either, just the tag is 3011looked up in the access map (included the trailing colon). Notice: 3012requiring that e-mail is sent to a server only encrypted, e.g., via 3013 3014TLS_Srv:secure.domain ENCR:112 3015 3016doesn't necessarily mean that e-mail sent to that domain is encrypted. 3017If the domain has multiple MX servers, e.g., 3018 3019secure.domain. IN MX 10 mail.secure.domain. 3020secure.domain. IN MX 50 mail.other.domain. 3021 3022then mail to user@secure.domain may go unencrypted to mail.other.domain. 3023tls_rcpt can be used to address this problem. 3024 3025tls_rcpt is called before a RCPT TO: command is sent. The parameter is the 3026current recipient. This ruleset is only defined if FEATURE(`access_db') 3027is selected. A recipient address user@domain is looked up in the access 3028map in four formats: TLS_Rcpt:user@domain, TLS_Rcpt:user@, TLS_Rcpt:domain, 3029and TLS_Rcpt:; the first match is taken. 3030 3031The result of the lookups is then used to call the ruleset TLS_connection, 3032which checks the requirement specified by the RHS in the access map against 3033the actual parameters of the current TLS connection, esp. ${verify} and 3034${cipher_bits}. Legal RHSs in the access map are: 3035 3036VERIFY verification must have succeeded 3037VERIFY:bits verification must have succeeded and ${cipher_bits} must 3038 be greater than or equal bits. 3039ENCR:bits ${cipher_bits} must be greater than or equal bits. 3040 3041The RHS can optionally be prefixed by TEMP+ or PERM+ to select a temporary 3042or permanent error. The default is a temporary error code (403 4.7.0) 3043unless the macro TLS_PERM_ERR is set during generation of the .cf file. 3044 3045If a certain level of encryption is required, then it might also be 3046possible that this level is provided by the security layer from a SASL 3047algorithm, e.g., DIGEST-MD5. 3048 3049Furthermore, there can be a list of extensions added. Such a list 3050starts with '+' and the items are separated by '++'. Allowed 3051extensions are: 3052 3053CN:name name must match ${cn_subject} 3054CN ${server_name} must match ${cn_subject} 3055CS:name name must match ${cert_subject} 3056CI:name name must match ${cert_issuer} 3057 3058Example: e-mail sent to secure.example.com should only use an encrypted 3059connection. E-mail received from hosts within the laptop.example.com domain 3060should only be accepted if they have been authenticated. The host which 3061receives e-mail for darth@endmail.org must present a cert that uses the 3062CN smtp.endmail.org. 3063 3064TLS_Srv:secure.example.com ENCR:112 3065TLS_Clt:laptop.example.com PERM+VERIFY:112 3066TLS_Rcpt:darth@endmail.org ENCR:112+CN:smtp.endmail.org 3067 3068 3069Disabling STARTTLS And Setting SMTP Server Features 3070--------------------------------------------------- 3071 3072By default STARTTLS is used whenever possible. However, there are 3073some broken MTAs that don't properly implement STARTTLS. To be able 3074to send to (or receive from) those MTAs, the ruleset try_tls 3075(srv_features) can be used that work together with the access map. 3076Entries for the access map must be tagged with Try_TLS (Srv_Features) 3077and refer to the hostname or IP address of the connecting system. 3078A default case can be specified by using just the tag. For example, 3079the following entries in the access map: 3080 3081 Try_TLS:broken.server NO 3082 Srv_Features:my.domain v 3083 Srv_Features: V 3084 3085will turn off STARTTLS when sending to broken.server (or any host 3086in that domain), and request a client certificate during the TLS 3087handshake only for hosts in my.domain. The valid entries on the RHS 3088for Srv_Features are listed in the Sendmail Installation and 3089Operations Guide. 3090 3091 3092Received: Header 3093---------------- 3094 3095The Received: header reveals whether STARTTLS has been used. It contains an 3096extra line: 3097 3098(version=${tls_version} cipher=${cipher} bits=${cipher_bits} verify=${verify}) 3099 3100 3101+---------------------+ 3102| SMTP AUTHENTICATION | 3103+---------------------+ 3104 3105The macros ${auth_authen}, ${auth_author}, and ${auth_type} can be 3106used in anti-relay rulesets to allow relaying for those users that 3107authenticated themselves. A very simple example is: 3108 3109SLocal_check_rcpt 3110R$* $: $&{auth_type} 3111R$+ $# OK 3112 3113which checks whether a user has successfully authenticated using 3114any available mechanism. Depending on the setup of the Cyrus SASL 3115library, more sophisticated rulesets might be required, e.g., 3116 3117SLocal_check_rcpt 3118R$* $: $&{auth_type} $| $&{auth_authen} 3119RDIGEST-MD5 $| $+@$=w $# OK 3120 3121to allow relaying for users that authenticated using DIGEST-MD5 3122and have an identity in the local domains. 3123 3124The ruleset trust_auth is used to determine whether a given AUTH= 3125parameter (that is passed to this ruleset) should be trusted. This 3126ruleset may make use of the other ${auth_*} macros. Only if the 3127ruleset resolves to the error mailer, the AUTH= parameter is not 3128trusted. A user supplied ruleset Local_trust_auth can be written 3129to modify the default behavior, which only trust the AUTH= 3130parameter if it is identical to the authenticated user. 3131 3132Per default, relaying is allowed for any user who authenticated 3133via a "trusted" mechanism, i.e., one that is defined via 3134TRUST_AUTH_MECH(`list of mechanisms') 3135For example: 3136TRUST_AUTH_MECH(`KERBEROS_V4 DIGEST-MD5') 3137 3138If the selected mechanism provides a security layer the number of 3139bits used for the key of the symmetric cipher is stored in the 3140macro ${auth_ssf}. 3141 3142Providing SMTP AUTH Data when sendmail acts as Client 3143----------------------------------------------------- 3144 3145If sendmail acts as client, it needs some information how to 3146authenticate against another MTA. This information can be provided 3147by the ruleset authinfo or by the option DefaultAuthInfo. The 3148authinfo ruleset looks up {server_name} using the tag AuthInfo: in 3149the access map. If no entry is found, {server_addr} is looked up 3150in the same way and finally just the tag AuthInfo: to provide 3151default values. Note: searches for domain parts or IP nets are 3152only performed if the access map is used; if the authinfo feature 3153is used then only up to three lookups are performed (two exact 3154matches, one default). 3155 3156Note: If your daemon does client authentication when sending, and 3157if it uses either PLAIN or LOGIN authentication, then you *must* 3158prevent ordinary users from seeing verbose output. Do NOT install 3159sendmail set-user-ID. Use PrivacyOptions to turn off verbose output 3160("goaway" works for this). 3161 3162Notice: the default configuration file causes the option DefaultAuthInfo 3163to fail since the ruleset authinfo is in the .cf file. If you really 3164want to use DefaultAuthInfo (it is deprecated) then you have to 3165remove the ruleset. 3166 3167The RHS for an AuthInfo: entry in the access map should consists of a 3168list of tokens, each of which has the form: "TDstring" (including 3169the quotes). T is a tag which describes the item, D is a delimiter, 3170either ':' for simple text or '=' for a base64 encoded string. 3171Valid values for the tag are: 3172 3173 U user (authorization) id 3174 I authentication id 3175 P password 3176 R realm 3177 M list of mechanisms delimited by spaces 3178 3179Example entries are: 3180 3181AuthInfo:other.dom "U:user" "I:user" "P:secret" "R:other.dom" "M:DIGEST-MD5" 3182AuthInfo:host.more.dom "U:user" "P=c2VjcmV0" 3183 3184User id or authentication id must exist as well as the password. All 3185other entries have default values. If one of user or authentication 3186id is missing, the existing value is used for the missing item. 3187If "R:" is not specified, realm defaults to $j. The list of mechanisms 3188defaults to those specified by AuthMechanisms. 3189 3190Since this map contains sensitive information, either the access 3191map must be unreadable by everyone but root (or the trusted user) 3192or FEATURE(`authinfo') must be used which provides a separate map. 3193Notice: It is not checked whether the map is actually 3194group/world-unreadable, this is left to the user. 3195 3196+--------------------------------+ 3197| ADDING NEW MAILERS OR RULESETS | 3198+--------------------------------+ 3199 3200Sometimes you may need to add entirely new mailers or rulesets. They 3201should be introduced with the constructs MAILER_DEFINITIONS and 3202LOCAL_RULESETS respectively. For example: 3203 3204 MAILER_DEFINITIONS 3205 Mmymailer, ... 3206 ... 3207 3208 LOCAL_RULESETS 3209 Smyruleset 3210 ... 3211 3212Local additions for the rulesets srv_features, try_tls, tls_rcpt, 3213tls_client, and tls_server can be made using LOCAL_SRV_FEATURES, 3214LOCAL_TRY_TLS, LOCAL_TLS_RCPT, LOCAL_TLS_CLIENT, and LOCAL_TLS_SERVER, 3215respectively. For example, to add a local ruleset that decides 3216whether to try STARTTLS in a sendmail client, use: 3217 3218 LOCAL_TRY_TLS 3219 R... 3220 3221Note: you don't need to add a name for the ruleset, it is implicitly 3222defined by using the appropriate macro. 3223 3224 3225+-------------------------+ 3226| ADDING NEW MAIL FILTERS | 3227+-------------------------+ 3228 3229Sendmail supports mail filters to filter incoming SMTP messages according 3230to the "Sendmail Mail Filter API" documentation. These filters can be 3231configured in your mc file using the two commands: 3232 3233 MAIL_FILTER(`name', `equates') 3234 INPUT_MAIL_FILTER(`name', `equates') 3235 3236The first command, MAIL_FILTER(), simply defines a filter with the given 3237name and equates. For example: 3238 3239 MAIL_FILTER(`archive', `S=local:/var/run/archivesock, F=R') 3240 3241This creates the equivalent sendmail.cf entry: 3242 3243 Xarchive, S=local:/var/run/archivesock, F=R 3244 3245The INPUT_MAIL_FILTER() command performs the same actions as MAIL_FILTER 3246but also populates the m4 variable `confINPUT_MAIL_FILTERS' with the name 3247of the filter such that the filter will actually be called by sendmail. 3248 3249For example, the two commands: 3250 3251 INPUT_MAIL_FILTER(`archive', `S=local:/var/run/archivesock, F=R') 3252 INPUT_MAIL_FILTER(`spamcheck', `S=inet:2525@localhost, F=T') 3253 3254are equivalent to the three commands: 3255 3256 MAIL_FILTER(`archive', `S=local:/var/run/archivesock, F=R') 3257 MAIL_FILTER(`spamcheck', `S=inet:2525@localhost, F=T') 3258 define(`confINPUT_MAIL_FILTERS', `archive, spamcheck') 3259 3260In general, INPUT_MAIL_FILTER() should be used unless you need to define 3261more filters than you want to use for `confINPUT_MAIL_FILTERS'. 3262 3263Note that setting `confINPUT_MAIL_FILTERS' after any INPUT_MAIL_FILTER() 3264commands will clear the list created by the prior INPUT_MAIL_FILTER() 3265commands. 3266 3267 3268+-------------------------+ 3269| QUEUE GROUP DEFINITIONS | 3270+-------------------------+ 3271 3272In addition to the queue directory (which is the default queue group 3273called "mqueue"), sendmail can deal with multiple queue groups, which 3274are collections of queue directories with the same behaviour. Queue 3275groups can be defined using the command: 3276 3277 QUEUE_GROUP(`name', `equates') 3278 3279For details about queue groups, please see doc/op/op.{me,ps,txt}. 3280 3281+-------------------------------+ 3282| NON-SMTP BASED CONFIGURATIONS | 3283+-------------------------------+ 3284 3285These configuration files are designed primarily for use by 3286SMTP-based sites. They may not be well tuned for UUCP-only or 3287UUCP-primarily nodes (the latter is defined as a small local net 3288connected to the rest of the world via UUCP). However, there is 3289one hook to handle some special cases. 3290 3291You can define a ``smart host'' that understands a richer address syntax 3292using: 3293 3294 define(`SMART_HOST', `mailer:hostname') 3295 3296In this case, the ``mailer:'' defaults to "relay". Any messages that 3297can't be handled using the usual UUCP rules are passed to this host. 3298 3299If you are on a local SMTP-based net that connects to the outside 3300world via UUCP, you can use LOCAL_NET_CONFIG to add appropriate rules. 3301For example: 3302 3303 define(`SMART_HOST', `uucp-new:uunet') 3304 LOCAL_NET_CONFIG 3305 R$* < @ $* .$m. > $* $#smtp $@ $2.$m. $: $1 < @ $2.$m. > $3 3306 3307This will cause all names that end in your domain name ($m) to be sent 3308via SMTP; anything else will be sent via uucp-new (smart UUCP) to uunet. 3309If you have FEATURE(`nocanonify'), you may need to omit the dots after 3310the $m. If you are running a local DNS inside your domain which is 3311not otherwise connected to the outside world, you probably want to 3312use: 3313 3314 define(`SMART_HOST', `smtp:fire.wall.com') 3315 LOCAL_NET_CONFIG 3316 R$* < @ $* . > $* $#smtp $@ $2. $: $1 < @ $2. > $3 3317 3318That is, send directly only to things you found in your DNS lookup; 3319anything else goes through SMART_HOST. 3320 3321You may need to turn off the anti-spam rules in order to accept 3322UUCP mail with FEATURE(`promiscuous_relay') and 3323FEATURE(`accept_unresolvable_domains'). 3324 3325 3326+-----------+ 3327| WHO AM I? | 3328+-----------+ 3329 3330Normally, the $j macro is automatically defined to be your fully 3331qualified domain name (FQDN). Sendmail does this by getting your 3332host name using gethostname and then calling gethostbyname on the 3333result. For example, in some environments gethostname returns 3334only the root of the host name (such as "foo"); gethostbyname is 3335supposed to return the FQDN ("foo.bar.com"). In some (fairly rare) 3336cases, gethostbyname may fail to return the FQDN. In this case 3337you MUST define confDOMAIN_NAME to be your fully qualified domain 3338name. This is usually done using: 3339 3340 Dmbar.com 3341 define(`confDOMAIN_NAME', `$w.$m')dnl 3342 3343 3344+-----------------------------------+ 3345| ACCEPTING MAIL FOR MULTIPLE NAMES | 3346+-----------------------------------+ 3347 3348If your host is known by several different names, you need to augment 3349class {w}. This is a list of names by which your host is known, and 3350anything sent to an address using a host name in this list will be 3351treated as local mail. You can do this in two ways: either create the 3352file /etc/mail/local-host-names containing a list of your aliases (one per 3353line), and use ``FEATURE(`use_cw_file')'' in the .mc file, or add 3354``LOCAL_DOMAIN(`alias.host.name')''. Be sure you use the fully-qualified 3355name of the host, rather than a short name. 3356 3357If you want to have different address in different domains, take 3358a look at the virtusertable feature, which is also explained at 3359http://www.sendmail.org/virtual-hosting.html 3360 3361 3362+--------------------+ 3363| USING MAILERTABLES | 3364+--------------------+ 3365 3366To use FEATURE(`mailertable'), you will have to create an external 3367database containing the routing information for various domains. 3368For example, a mailertable file in text format might be: 3369 3370 .my.domain xnet:%1.my.domain 3371 uuhost1.my.domain uucp-new:uuhost1 3372 .bitnet smtp:relay.bit.net 3373 3374This should normally be stored in /etc/mail/mailertable. The actual 3375database version of the mailertable is built using: 3376 3377 makemap hash /etc/mail/mailertable < /etc/mail/mailertable 3378 3379The semantics are simple. Any LHS entry that does not begin with 3380a dot matches the full host name indicated. LHS entries beginning 3381with a dot match anything ending with that domain name (including 3382the leading dot) -- that is, they can be thought of as having a 3383leading ".+" regular expression pattern for a non-empty sequence of 3384characters. Matching is done in order of most-to-least qualified 3385-- for example, even though ".my.domain" is listed first in the 3386above example, an entry of "uuhost1.my.domain" will match the second 3387entry since it is more explicit. Note: e-mail to "user@my.domain" 3388does not match any entry in the above table. You need to have 3389something like: 3390 3391 my.domain esmtp:host.my.domain 3392 3393The RHS should always be a "mailer:host" pair. The mailer is the 3394configuration name of a mailer (that is, an M line in the 3395sendmail.cf file). The "host" will be the hostname passed to 3396that mailer. In domain-based matches (that is, those with leading 3397dots) the "%1" may be used to interpolate the wildcarded part of 3398the host name. For example, the first line above sends everything 3399addressed to "anything.my.domain" to that same host name, but using 3400the (presumably experimental) xnet mailer. 3401 3402In some cases you may want to temporarily turn off MX records, 3403particularly on gateways. For example, you may want to MX 3404everything in a domain to one machine that then forwards it 3405directly. To do this, you might use the DNS configuration: 3406 3407 *.domain. IN MX 0 relay.machine 3408 3409and on relay.machine use the mailertable: 3410 3411 .domain smtp:[gateway.domain] 3412 3413The [square brackets] turn off MX records for this host only. 3414If you didn't do this, the mailertable would use the MX record 3415again, which would give you an MX loop. Note that the use of 3416wildcard MX records is almost always a bad idea. Please avoid 3417using them if possible. 3418 3419 3420+--------------------------------+ 3421| USING USERDB TO MAP FULL NAMES | 3422+--------------------------------+ 3423 3424The user database was not originally intended for mapping full names 3425to login names (e.g., Eric.Allman => eric), but some people are using 3426it that way. (it is recommended that you set up aliases for this 3427purpose instead -- since you can specify multiple alias files, this 3428is fairly easy.) The intent was to locate the default maildrop at 3429a site, but allow you to override this by sending to a specific host. 3430 3431If you decide to set up the user database in this fashion, it is 3432imperative that you not use FEATURE(`stickyhost') -- otherwise, 3433e-mail sent to Full.Name@local.host.name will be rejected. 3434 3435To build the internal form of the user database, use: 3436 3437 makemap btree /etc/mail/userdb < /etc/mail/userdb.txt 3438 3439As a general rule, it is an extremely bad idea to using full names 3440as e-mail addresses, since they are not in any sense unique. For 3441example, the UNIX software-development community has at least two 3442well-known Peter Deutsches, and at one time Bell Labs had two 3443Stephen R. Bournes with offices along the same hallway. Which one 3444will be forced to suffer the indignity of being Stephen_R_Bourne_2? 3445The less famous of the two, or the one that was hired later? 3446 3447Finger should handle full names (and be fuzzy). Mail should use 3448handles, and not be fuzzy. 3449 3450 3451+--------------------------------+ 3452| MISCELLANEOUS SPECIAL FEATURES | 3453+--------------------------------+ 3454 3455Plussed users 3456 Sometimes it is convenient to merge configuration on a 3457 centralized mail machine, for example, to forward all 3458 root mail to a mail server. In this case it might be 3459 useful to be able to treat the root addresses as a class 3460 of addresses with subtle differences. You can do this 3461 using plussed users. For example, a client might include 3462 the alias: 3463 3464 root: root+client1@server 3465 3466 On the server, this will match an alias for "root+client1". 3467 If that is not found, the alias "root+*" will be tried, 3468 then "root". 3469 3470 3471+----------------+ 3472| SECURITY NOTES | 3473+----------------+ 3474 3475A lot of sendmail security comes down to you. Sendmail 8 is much 3476more careful about checking for security problems than previous 3477versions, but there are some things that you still need to watch 3478for. In particular: 3479 3480* Make sure the aliases file is not writable except by trusted 3481 system personnel. This includes both the text and database 3482 version. 3483 3484* Make sure that other files that sendmail reads, such as the 3485 mailertable, are only writable by trusted system personnel. 3486 3487* The queue directory should not be world writable PARTICULARLY 3488 if your system allows "file giveaways" (that is, if a non-root 3489 user can chown any file they own to any other user). 3490 3491* If your system allows file giveaways, DO NOT create a publically 3492 writable directory for forward files. This will allow anyone 3493 to steal anyone else's e-mail. Instead, create a script that 3494 copies the .forward file from users' home directories once a 3495 night (if you want the non-NFS-mounted forward directory). 3496 3497* If your system allows file giveaways, you'll find that 3498 sendmail is much less trusting of :include: files -- in 3499 particular, you'll have to have /SENDMAIL/ANY/SHELL/ in 3500 /etc/shells before they will be trusted (that is, before 3501 files and programs listed in them will be honored). 3502 3503In general, file giveaways are a mistake -- if you can turn them 3504off, do so. 3505 3506 3507+--------------------------------+ 3508| TWEAKING CONFIGURATION OPTIONS | 3509+--------------------------------+ 3510 3511There are a large number of configuration options that don't normally 3512need to be changed. However, if you feel you need to tweak them, 3513you can define the following M4 variables. Note that some of these 3514variables require formats that are defined in RFC 2821 or RFC 2822. 3515Before changing them you need to make sure you do not violate those 3516(and other relevant) RFCs. 3517 3518This list is shown in four columns: the name you define, the default 3519value for that definition, the option or macro that is affected 3520(either Ox for an option or Dx for a macro), and a brief description. 3521Greater detail of the semantics can be found in the Installation 3522and Operations Guide. 3523 3524Some options are likely to be deprecated in future versions -- that is, 3525the option is only included to provide back-compatibility. These are 3526marked with "*". 3527 3528Remember that these options are M4 variables, and hence may need to 3529be quoted. In particular, arguments with commas will usually have to 3530be ``double quoted, like this phrase'' to avoid having the comma 3531confuse things. This is common for alias file definitions and for 3532the read timeout. 3533 3534M4 Variable Name Configuration [Default] & Description 3535================ ============= ======================= 3536confMAILER_NAME $n macro [MAILER-DAEMON] The sender name used 3537 for internally generated outgoing 3538 messages. 3539confDOMAIN_NAME $j macro If defined, sets $j. This should 3540 only be done if your system cannot 3541 determine your local domain name, 3542 and then it should be set to 3543 $w.Foo.COM, where Foo.COM is your 3544 domain name. 3545confCF_VERSION $Z macro If defined, this is appended to the 3546 configuration version name. 3547confLDAP_CLUSTER ${sendmailMTACluster} macro 3548 If defined, this is the LDAP 3549 cluster to use for LDAP searches 3550 as described above in ``USING LDAP 3551 FOR ALIASES, MAPS, AND CLASSES''. 3552confFROM_HEADER From: [$?x$x <$g>$|$g$.] The format of an 3553 internally generated From: address. 3554confRECEIVED_HEADER Received: 3555 [$?sfrom $s $.$?_($?s$|from $.$_) 3556 $.$?{auth_type}(authenticated) 3557 $.by $j ($v/$Z)$?r with $r$. id $i$?u 3558 for $u; $|; 3559 $.$b] 3560 The format of the Received: header 3561 in messages passed through this host. 3562 It is unwise to try to change this. 3563confMESSAGEID_HEADER Message-Id: [<$t.$i@$j>] The format of an 3564 internally generated Message-Id: 3565 header. 3566confCW_FILE Fw class [/etc/mail/local-host-names] Name 3567 of file used to get the local 3568 additions to class {w} (local host 3569 names). 3570confCT_FILE Ft class [/etc/mail/trusted-users] Name of 3571 file used to get the local additions 3572 to class {t} (trusted users). 3573confCR_FILE FR class [/etc/mail/relay-domains] Name of 3574 file used to get the local additions 3575 to class {R} (hosts allowed to relay). 3576confTRUSTED_USERS Ct class [no default] Names of users to add to 3577 the list of trusted users. This list 3578 always includes root, uucp, and daemon. 3579 See also FEATURE(`use_ct_file'). 3580confTRUSTED_USER TrustedUser [no default] Trusted user for file 3581 ownership and starting the daemon. 3582 Not to be confused with 3583 confTRUSTED_USERS (see above). 3584confSMTP_MAILER - [esmtp] The mailer name used when 3585 SMTP connectivity is required. 3586 One of "smtp", "smtp8", 3587 "esmtp", or "dsmtp". 3588confUUCP_MAILER - [uucp-old] The mailer to be used by 3589 default for bang-format recipient 3590 addresses. See also discussion of 3591 class {U}, class {Y}, and class {Z} 3592 in the MAILER(`uucp') section. 3593confLOCAL_MAILER - [local] The mailer name used when 3594 local connectivity is required. 3595 Almost always "local". 3596confRELAY_MAILER - [relay] The default mailer name used 3597 for relaying any mail (e.g., to a 3598 BITNET_RELAY, a SMART_HOST, or 3599 whatever). This can reasonably be 3600 "uucp-new" if you are on a 3601 UUCP-connected site. 3602confSEVEN_BIT_INPUT SevenBitInput [False] Force input to seven bits? 3603confEIGHT_BIT_HANDLING EightBitMode [pass8] 8-bit data handling 3604confALIAS_WAIT AliasWait [10m] Time to wait for alias file 3605 rebuild until you get bored and 3606 decide that the apparently pending 3607 rebuild failed. 3608confMIN_FREE_BLOCKS MinFreeBlocks [100] Minimum number of free blocks on 3609 queue filesystem to accept SMTP mail. 3610 (Prior to 8.7 this was minfree/maxsize, 3611 where minfree was the number of free 3612 blocks and maxsize was the maximum 3613 message size. Use confMAX_MESSAGE_SIZE 3614 for the second value now.) 3615confMAX_MESSAGE_SIZE MaxMessageSize [infinite] The maximum size of messages 3616 that will be accepted (in bytes). 3617confBLANK_SUB BlankSub [.] Blank (space) substitution 3618 character. 3619confCON_EXPENSIVE HoldExpensive [False] Avoid connecting immediately 3620 to mailers marked expensive. 3621confCHECKPOINT_INTERVAL CheckpointInterval 3622 [10] Checkpoint queue files every N 3623 recipients. 3624confDELIVERY_MODE DeliveryMode [background] Default delivery mode. 3625confERROR_MODE ErrorMode [print] Error message mode. 3626confERROR_MESSAGE ErrorHeader [undefined] Error message header/file. 3627confSAVE_FROM_LINES SaveFromLine Save extra leading From_ lines. 3628confTEMP_FILE_MODE TempFileMode [0600] Temporary file mode. 3629confMATCH_GECOS MatchGECOS [False] Match GECOS field. 3630confMAX_HOP MaxHopCount [25] Maximum hop count. 3631confIGNORE_DOTS* IgnoreDots [False; always False in -bs or -bd 3632 mode] Ignore dot as terminator for 3633 incoming messages? 3634confBIND_OPTS ResolverOptions [undefined] Default options for DNS 3635 resolver. 3636confMIME_FORMAT_ERRORS* SendMimeErrors [True] Send error messages as MIME- 3637 encapsulated messages per RFC 1344. 3638confFORWARD_PATH ForwardPath [$z/.forward.$w:$z/.forward] 3639 The colon-separated list of places to 3640 search for .forward files. N.B.: see 3641 the Security Notes section. 3642confMCI_CACHE_SIZE ConnectionCacheSize 3643 [2] Size of open connection cache. 3644confMCI_CACHE_TIMEOUT ConnectionCacheTimeout 3645 [5m] Open connection cache timeout. 3646confHOST_STATUS_DIRECTORY HostStatusDirectory 3647 [undefined] If set, host status is kept 3648 on disk between sendmail runs in the 3649 named directory tree. This need not be 3650 a full pathname, in which case it is 3651 interpreted relative to the queue 3652 directory. 3653confSINGLE_THREAD_DELIVERY SingleThreadDelivery 3654 [False] If this option and the 3655 HostStatusDirectory option are both 3656 set, single thread deliveries to other 3657 hosts. That is, don't allow any two 3658 sendmails on this host to connect 3659 simultaneously to any other single 3660 host. This can slow down delivery in 3661 some cases, in particular since a 3662 cached but otherwise idle connection 3663 to a host will prevent other sendmails 3664 from connecting to the other host. 3665confUSE_ERRORS_TO* UseErrorsTo [False] Use the Errors-To: header to 3666 deliver error messages. This should 3667 not be necessary because of general 3668 acceptance of the envelope/header 3669 distinction. 3670confLOG_LEVEL LogLevel [9] Log level. 3671confME_TOO MeToo [True] Include sender in group 3672 expansions. This option is 3673 deprecated and will be removed from 3674 a future version. 3675confCHECK_ALIASES CheckAliases [False] Check RHS of aliases when 3676 running newaliases. Since this does 3677 DNS lookups on every address, it can 3678 slow down the alias rebuild process 3679 considerably on large alias files. 3680confOLD_STYLE_HEADERS* OldStyleHeaders [True] Assume that headers without 3681 special chars are old style. 3682confPRIVACY_FLAGS PrivacyOptions [authwarnings] Privacy flags. 3683confCOPY_ERRORS_TO PostmasterCopy [undefined] Address for additional 3684 copies of all error messages. 3685confQUEUE_FACTOR QueueFactor [600000] Slope of queue-only function. 3686confQUEUE_FILE_MODE QueueFileMode [undefined] Default permissions for 3687 queue files (octal). If not set, 3688 sendmail uses 0600 unless its real 3689 and effective uid are different in 3690 which case it uses 0644. 3691confDONT_PRUNE_ROUTES DontPruneRoutes [False] Don't prune down route-addr 3692 syntax addresses to the minimum 3693 possible. 3694confSAFE_QUEUE* SuperSafe [True] Commit all messages to disk 3695 before forking. 3696confTO_INITIAL Timeout.initial [5m] The timeout waiting for a response 3697 on the initial connect. 3698confTO_CONNECT Timeout.connect [0] The timeout waiting for an initial 3699 connect() to complete. This can only 3700 shorten connection timeouts; the kernel 3701 silently enforces an absolute maximum 3702 (which varies depending on the system). 3703confTO_ICONNECT Timeout.iconnect 3704 [undefined] Like Timeout.connect, but 3705 applies only to the very first attempt 3706 to connect to a host in a message. 3707 This allows a single very fast pass 3708 followed by more careful delivery 3709 attempts in the future. 3710confTO_ACONNECT Timeout.aconnect 3711 [0] The overall timeout waiting for 3712 all connection for a single delivery 3713 attempt to succeed. If 0, no overall 3714 limit is applied. 3715confTO_HELO Timeout.helo [5m] The timeout waiting for a response 3716 to a HELO or EHLO command. 3717confTO_MAIL Timeout.mail [10m] The timeout waiting for a 3718 response to the MAIL command. 3719confTO_RCPT Timeout.rcpt [1h] The timeout waiting for a response 3720 to the RCPT command. 3721confTO_DATAINIT Timeout.datainit 3722 [5m] The timeout waiting for a 354 3723 response from the DATA command. 3724confTO_DATABLOCK Timeout.datablock 3725 [1h] The timeout waiting for a block 3726 during DATA phase. 3727confTO_DATAFINAL Timeout.datafinal 3728 [1h] The timeout waiting for a response 3729 to the final "." that terminates a 3730 message. 3731confTO_RSET Timeout.rset [5m] The timeout waiting for a response 3732 to the RSET command. 3733confTO_QUIT Timeout.quit [2m] The timeout waiting for a response 3734 to the QUIT command. 3735confTO_MISC Timeout.misc [2m] The timeout waiting for a response 3736 to other SMTP commands. 3737confTO_COMMAND Timeout.command [1h] In server SMTP, the timeout 3738 waiting for a command to be issued. 3739confTO_IDENT Timeout.ident [5s] The timeout waiting for a 3740 response to an IDENT query. 3741confTO_FILEOPEN Timeout.fileopen 3742 [60s] The timeout waiting for a file 3743 (e.g., :include: file) to be opened. 3744confTO_LHLO Timeout.lhlo [2m] The timeout waiting for a response 3745 to an LMTP LHLO command. 3746confTO_AUTH Timeout.auth [10m] The timeout waiting for a 3747 response in an AUTH dialogue. 3748confTO_STARTTLS Timeout.starttls 3749 [1h] The timeout waiting for a 3750 response to an SMTP STARTTLS command. 3751confTO_CONTROL Timeout.control 3752 [2m] The timeout for a complete 3753 control socket transaction to complete. 3754confTO_QUEUERETURN Timeout.queuereturn 3755 [5d] The timeout before a message is 3756 returned as undeliverable. 3757confTO_QUEUERETURN_NORMAL 3758 Timeout.queuereturn.normal 3759 [undefined] As above, for normal 3760 priority messages. 3761confTO_QUEUERETURN_URGENT 3762 Timeout.queuereturn.urgent 3763 [undefined] As above, for urgent 3764 priority messages. 3765confTO_QUEUERETURN_NONURGENT 3766 Timeout.queuereturn.non-urgent 3767 [undefined] As above, for non-urgent 3768 (low) priority messages. 3769confTO_QUEUERETURN_DSN 3770 Timeout.queuereturn.dsn 3771 [undefined] As above, for delivery 3772 status notification messages. 3773confTO_QUEUEWARN Timeout.queuewarn 3774 [4h] The timeout before a warning 3775 message is sent to the sender telling 3776 them that the message has been 3777 deferred. 3778confTO_QUEUEWARN_NORMAL Timeout.queuewarn.normal 3779 [undefined] As above, for normal 3780 priority messages. 3781confTO_QUEUEWARN_URGENT Timeout.queuewarn.urgent 3782 [undefined] As above, for urgent 3783 priority messages. 3784confTO_QUEUEWARN_NONURGENT 3785 Timeout.queuewarn.non-urgent 3786 [undefined] As above, for non-urgent 3787 (low) priority messages. 3788confTO_QUEUEWARN_DSN 3789 Timeout.queuewarn.dsn 3790 [undefined] As above, for delivery 3791 status notification messages. 3792confTO_HOSTSTATUS Timeout.hoststatus 3793 [30m] How long information about host 3794 statuses will be maintained before it 3795 is considered stale and the host should 3796 be retried. This applies both within 3797 a single queue run and to persistent 3798 information (see below). 3799confTO_RESOLVER_RETRANS Timeout.resolver.retrans 3800 [varies] Sets the resolver's 3801 retransmission time interval (in 3802 seconds). Sets both 3803 Timeout.resolver.retrans.first and 3804 Timeout.resolver.retrans.normal. 3805confTO_RESOLVER_RETRANS_FIRST Timeout.resolver.retrans.first 3806 [varies] Sets the resolver's 3807 retransmission time interval (in 3808 seconds) for the first attempt to 3809 deliver a message. 3810confTO_RESOLVER_RETRANS_NORMAL Timeout.resolver.retrans.normal 3811 [varies] Sets the resolver's 3812 retransmission time interval (in 3813 seconds) for all resolver lookups 3814 except the first delivery attempt. 3815confTO_RESOLVER_RETRY Timeout.resolver.retry 3816 [varies] Sets the number of times 3817 to retransmit a resolver query. 3818 Sets both 3819 Timeout.resolver.retry.first and 3820 Timeout.resolver.retry.normal. 3821confTO_RESOLVER_RETRY_FIRST Timeout.resolver.retry.first 3822 [varies] Sets the number of times 3823 to retransmit a resolver query for 3824 the first attempt to deliver a 3825 message. 3826confTO_RESOLVER_RETRY_NORMAL Timeout.resolver.retry.normal 3827 [varies] Sets the number of times 3828 to retransmit a resolver query for 3829 all resolver lookups except the 3830 first delivery attempt. 3831confTIME_ZONE TimeZoneSpec [USE_SYSTEM] Time zone info -- can be 3832 USE_SYSTEM to use the system's idea, 3833 USE_TZ to use the user's TZ envariable, 3834 or something else to force that value. 3835confDEF_USER_ID DefaultUser [1:1] Default user id. 3836confUSERDB_SPEC UserDatabaseSpec 3837 [undefined] User database 3838 specification. 3839confFALLBACK_MX FallbackMXhost [undefined] Fallback MX host. 3840confFALLBACK_SMARTHOST FallbackSmartHost 3841 [undefined] Fallback smart host. 3842confTRY_NULL_MX_LIST TryNullMXList [False] If this host is the best MX 3843 for a host and other arrangements 3844 haven't been made, try connecting 3845 to the host directly; normally this 3846 would be a config error. 3847confQUEUE_LA QueueLA [varies] Load average at which 3848 queue-only function kicks in. 3849 Default values is (8 * numproc) 3850 where numproc is the number of 3851 processors online (if that can be 3852 determined). 3853confREFUSE_LA RefuseLA [varies] Load average at which 3854 incoming SMTP connections are 3855 refused. Default values is (12 * 3856 numproc) where numproc is the 3857 number of processors online (if 3858 that can be determined). 3859confREJECT_LOG_INTERVAL RejectLogInterval [3h] Log interval when 3860 refusing connections for this long. 3861confDELAY_LA DelayLA [0] Load average at which sendmail 3862 will sleep for one second on most 3863 SMTP commands and before accepting 3864 connections. 0 means no limit. 3865confMAX_ALIAS_RECURSION MaxAliasRecursion 3866 [10] Maximum depth of alias recursion. 3867confMAX_DAEMON_CHILDREN MaxDaemonChildren 3868 [undefined] The maximum number of 3869 children the daemon will permit. After 3870 this number, connections will be 3871 rejected. If not set or <= 0, there is 3872 no limit. 3873confMAX_HEADERS_LENGTH MaxHeadersLength 3874 [32768] Maximum length of the sum 3875 of all headers. 3876confMAX_MIME_HEADER_LENGTH MaxMimeHeaderLength 3877 [undefined] Maximum length of 3878 certain MIME header field values. 3879confCONNECTION_RATE_THROTTLE ConnectionRateThrottle 3880 [undefined] The maximum number of 3881 connections permitted per second per 3882 daemon. After this many connections 3883 are accepted, further connections 3884 will be delayed. If not set or <= 0, 3885 there is no limit. 3886confCONNECTION_RATE_WINDOW_SIZE ConnectionRateWindowSize 3887 [60s] Define the length of the 3888 interval for which the number of 3889 incoming connections is maintained. 3890confWORK_RECIPIENT_FACTOR 3891 RecipientFactor [30000] Cost of each recipient. 3892confSEPARATE_PROC ForkEachJob [False] Run all deliveries in a 3893 separate process. 3894confWORK_CLASS_FACTOR ClassFactor [1800] Priority multiplier for class. 3895confWORK_TIME_FACTOR RetryFactor [90000] Cost of each delivery attempt. 3896confQUEUE_SORT_ORDER QueueSortOrder [Priority] Queue sort algorithm: 3897 Priority, Host, Filename, Random, 3898 Modification, or Time. 3899confMIN_QUEUE_AGE MinQueueAge [0] The minimum amount of time a job 3900 must sit in the queue between queue 3901 runs. This allows you to set the 3902 queue run interval low for better 3903 responsiveness without trying all 3904 jobs in each run. 3905confDEF_CHAR_SET DefaultCharSet [unknown-8bit] When converting 3906 unlabeled 8 bit input to MIME, the 3907 character set to use by default. 3908confSERVICE_SWITCH_FILE ServiceSwitchFile 3909 [/etc/mail/service.switch] The file 3910 to use for the service switch on 3911 systems that do not have a 3912 system-defined switch. 3913confHOSTS_FILE HostsFile [/etc/hosts] The file to use when doing 3914 "file" type access of hosts names. 3915confDIAL_DELAY DialDelay [0s] If a connection fails, wait this 3916 long and try again. Zero means "don't 3917 retry". This is to allow "dial on 3918 demand" connections to have enough time 3919 to complete a connection. 3920confNO_RCPT_ACTION NoRecipientAction 3921 [none] What to do if there are no legal 3922 recipient fields (To:, Cc: or Bcc:) 3923 in the message. Legal values can 3924 be "none" to just leave the 3925 nonconforming message as is, "add-to" 3926 to add a To: header with all the 3927 known recipients (which may expose 3928 blind recipients), "add-apparently-to" 3929 to do the same but use Apparently-To: 3930 instead of To: (strongly discouraged 3931 in accordance with IETF standards), 3932 "add-bcc" to add an empty Bcc: 3933 header, or "add-to-undisclosed" to 3934 add the header 3935 ``To: undisclosed-recipients:;''. 3936confSAFE_FILE_ENV SafeFileEnvironment 3937 [undefined] If set, sendmail will do a 3938 chroot() into this directory before 3939 writing files. 3940confCOLON_OK_IN_ADDR ColonOkInAddr [True unless Configuration Level > 6] 3941 If set, colons are treated as a regular 3942 character in addresses. If not set, 3943 they are treated as the introducer to 3944 the RFC 822 "group" syntax. Colons are 3945 handled properly in route-addrs. This 3946 option defaults on for V5 and lower 3947 configuration files. 3948confMAX_QUEUE_RUN_SIZE MaxQueueRunSize [0] If set, limit the maximum size of 3949 any given queue run to this number of 3950 entries. Essentially, this will stop 3951 reading each queue directory after this 3952 number of entries are reached; it does 3953 _not_ pick the highest priority jobs, 3954 so this should be as large as your 3955 system can tolerate. If not set, there 3956 is no limit. 3957confMAX_QUEUE_CHILDREN MaxQueueChildren 3958 [undefined] Limits the maximum number 3959 of concurrent queue runners active. 3960 This is to keep system resources used 3961 within a reasonable limit. Relates to 3962 Queue Groups and ForkEachJob. 3963confMAX_RUNNERS_PER_QUEUE MaxRunnersPerQueue 3964 [1] Only active when MaxQueueChildren 3965 defined. Controls the maximum number 3966 of queue runners (aka queue children) 3967 active at the same time in a work 3968 group. See also MaxQueueChildren. 3969confDONT_EXPAND_CNAMES DontExpandCnames 3970 [False] If set, $[ ... $] lookups that 3971 do DNS based lookups do not expand 3972 CNAME records. This currently violates 3973 the published standards, but the IETF 3974 seems to be moving toward legalizing 3975 this. For example, if "FTP.Foo.ORG" 3976 is a CNAME for "Cruft.Foo.ORG", then 3977 with this option set a lookup of 3978 "FTP" will return "FTP.Foo.ORG"; if 3979 clear it returns "Cruft.FOO.ORG". N.B. 3980 you may not see any effect until your 3981 downstream neighbors stop doing CNAME 3982 lookups as well. 3983confFROM_LINE UnixFromLine [From $g $d] The From_ line used 3984 when sending to files or programs. 3985confSINGLE_LINE_FROM_HEADER SingleLineFromHeader 3986 [False] From: lines that have 3987 embedded newlines are unwrapped 3988 onto one line. 3989confALLOW_BOGUS_HELO AllowBogusHELO [False] Allow HELO SMTP command that 3990 does not include a host name. 3991confMUST_QUOTE_CHARS MustQuoteChars [.'] Characters to be quoted in a full 3992 name phrase (@,;:\()[] are automatic). 3993confOPERATORS OperatorChars [.:%@!^/[]+] Address operator 3994 characters. 3995confSMTP_LOGIN_MSG SmtpGreetingMessage 3996 [$j Sendmail $v/$Z; $b] 3997 The initial (spontaneous) SMTP 3998 greeting message. The word "ESMTP" 3999 will be inserted between the first and 4000 second words to convince other 4001 sendmails to try to speak ESMTP. 4002confDONT_INIT_GROUPS DontInitGroups [False] If set, the initgroups(3) 4003 routine will never be invoked. You 4004 might want to do this if you are 4005 running NIS and you have a large group 4006 map, since this call does a sequential 4007 scan of the map; in a large site this 4008 can cause your ypserv to run 4009 essentially full time. If you set 4010 this, agents run on behalf of users 4011 will only have their primary 4012 (/etc/passwd) group permissions. 4013confUNSAFE_GROUP_WRITES UnsafeGroupWrites 4014 [True] If set, group-writable 4015 :include: and .forward files are 4016 considered "unsafe", that is, programs 4017 and files cannot be directly referenced 4018 from such files. World-writable files 4019 are always considered unsafe. 4020 Notice: this option is deprecated and 4021 will be removed in future versions; 4022 Set GroupWritableForwardFileSafe 4023 and GroupWritableIncludeFileSafe in 4024 DontBlameSendmail if required. 4025confCONNECT_ONLY_TO ConnectOnlyTo [undefined] override connection 4026 address (for testing). 4027confCONTROL_SOCKET_NAME ControlSocketName 4028 [undefined] Control socket for daemon 4029 management. 4030confDOUBLE_BOUNCE_ADDRESS DoubleBounceAddress 4031 [postmaster] If an error occurs when 4032 sending an error message, send that 4033 "double bounce" error message to this 4034 address. If it expands to an empty 4035 string, double bounces are dropped. 4036confDEAD_LETTER_DROP DeadLetterDrop [undefined] Filename to save bounce 4037 messages which could not be returned 4038 to the user or sent to postmaster. 4039 If not set, the queue file will 4040 be renamed. 4041confRRT_IMPLIES_DSN RrtImpliesDsn [False] Return-Receipt-To: header 4042 implies DSN request. 4043confRUN_AS_USER RunAsUser [undefined] If set, become this user 4044 when reading and delivering mail. 4045 Causes all file reads (e.g., .forward 4046 and :include: files) to be done as 4047 this user. Also, all programs will 4048 be run as this user, and all output 4049 files will be written as this user. 4050confMAX_RCPTS_PER_MESSAGE MaxRecipientsPerMessage 4051 [infinite] If set, allow no more than 4052 the specified number of recipients in 4053 an SMTP envelope. Further recipients 4054 receive a 452 error code (i.e., they 4055 are deferred for the next delivery 4056 attempt). 4057confBAD_RCPT_THROTTLE BadRcptThrottle [infinite] If set and the specified 4058 number of recipients in a single SMTP 4059 transaction have been rejected, sleep 4060 for one second after each subsequent 4061 RCPT command in that transaction. 4062confDONT_PROBE_INTERFACES DontProbeInterfaces 4063 [False] If set, sendmail will _not_ 4064 insert the names and addresses of any 4065 local interfaces into class {w} 4066 (list of known "equivalent" addresses). 4067 If you set this, you must also include 4068 some support for these addresses (e.g., 4069 in a mailertable entry) -- otherwise, 4070 mail to addresses in this list will 4071 bounce with a configuration error. 4072 If set to "loopback" (without 4073 quotes), sendmail will skip 4074 loopback interfaces (e.g., "lo0"). 4075confPID_FILE PidFile [system dependent] Location of pid 4076 file. 4077confPROCESS_TITLE_PREFIX ProcessTitlePrefix 4078 [undefined] Prefix string for the 4079 process title shown on 'ps' listings. 4080confDONT_BLAME_SENDMAIL DontBlameSendmail 4081 [safe] Override sendmail's file 4082 safety checks. This will definitely 4083 compromise system security and should 4084 not be used unless absolutely 4085 necessary. 4086confREJECT_MSG - [550 Access denied] The message 4087 given if the access database contains 4088 REJECT in the value portion. 4089confRELAY_MSG - [550 Relaying denied] The message 4090 given if an unauthorized relaying 4091 attempt is rejected. 4092confDF_BUFFER_SIZE DataFileBufferSize 4093 [4096] The maximum size of a 4094 memory-buffered data (df) file 4095 before a disk-based file is used. 4096confXF_BUFFER_SIZE XScriptFileBufferSize 4097 [4096] The maximum size of a 4098 memory-buffered transcript (xf) 4099 file before a disk-based file is 4100 used. 4101confAUTH_MECHANISMS AuthMechanisms [GSSAPI KERBEROS_V4 DIGEST-MD5 4102 CRAM-MD5] List of authentication 4103 mechanisms for AUTH (separated by 4104 spaces). The advertised list of 4105 authentication mechanisms will be the 4106 intersection of this list and the list 4107 of available mechanisms as determined 4108 by the Cyrus SASL library. 4109confAUTH_REALM AuthRealm [undefined] The authentication realm 4110 that is passed to the Cyrus SASL 4111 library. If no realm is specified, 4112 $j is used. 4113confDEF_AUTH_INFO DefaultAuthInfo [undefined] Name of file that contains 4114 authentication information for 4115 outgoing connections. This file must 4116 contain the user id, the authorization 4117 id, the password (plain text), the 4118 realm to use, and the list of 4119 mechanisms to try, each on a separate 4120 line and must be readable by root (or 4121 the trusted user) only. If no realm 4122 is specified, $j is used. If no 4123 mechanisms are given in the file, 4124 AuthMechanisms is used. Notice: this 4125 option is deprecated and will be 4126 removed in future versions; it doesn't 4127 work for the MSP since it can't read 4128 the file. Use the authinfo ruleset 4129 instead. See also the section SMTP 4130 AUTHENTICATION. 4131confAUTH_OPTIONS AuthOptions [undefined] If this option is 'A' 4132 then the AUTH= parameter for the 4133 MAIL FROM command is only issued 4134 when authentication succeeded. 4135 See doc/op/op.me for more options 4136 and details. 4137confAUTH_MAX_BITS AuthMaxBits [INT_MAX] Limit the maximum encryption 4138 strength for the security layer in 4139 SMTP AUTH (SASL). Default is 4140 essentially unlimited. 4141confTLS_SRV_OPTIONS TLSSrvOptions If this option is 'V' no client 4142 verification is performed, i.e., 4143 the server doesn't ask for a 4144 certificate. 4145confLDAP_DEFAULT_SPEC LDAPDefaultSpec [undefined] Default map 4146 specification for LDAP maps. The 4147 value should only contain LDAP 4148 specific settings such as "-h host 4149 -p port -d bindDN", etc. The 4150 settings will be used for all LDAP 4151 maps unless they are specified in 4152 the individual map specification 4153 ('K' command). 4154confCACERT_PATH CACertPath [undefined] Path to directory 4155 with certs of CAs. 4156confCACERT CACertFile [undefined] File containing one CA 4157 cert. 4158confSERVER_CERT ServerCertFile [undefined] File containing the 4159 cert of the server, i.e., this cert 4160 is used when sendmail acts as 4161 server. 4162confSERVER_KEY ServerKeyFile [undefined] File containing the 4163 private key belonging to the server 4164 cert. 4165confCLIENT_CERT ClientCertFile [undefined] File containing the 4166 cert of the client, i.e., this cert 4167 is used when sendmail acts as 4168 client. 4169confCLIENT_KEY ClientKeyFile [undefined] File containing the 4170 private key belonging to the client 4171 cert. 4172confCRL CRLFile [undefined] File containing certificate 4173 revocation status, useful for X.509v3 4174 authentication. Note that CRL requires 4175 at least OpenSSL version 0.9.7. 4176confDH_PARAMETERS DHParameters [undefined] File containing the 4177 DH parameters. 4178confRAND_FILE RandFile [undefined] File containing random 4179 data (use prefix file:) or the 4180 name of the UNIX socket if EGD is 4181 used (use prefix egd:). STARTTLS 4182 requires this option if the compile 4183 flag HASURANDOM is not set (see 4184 sendmail/README). 4185confNICE_QUEUE_RUN NiceQueueRun [undefined] If set, the priority of 4186 queue runners is set the given value 4187 (nice(3)). 4188confDIRECT_SUBMISSION_MODIFIERS DirectSubmissionModifiers 4189 [undefined] Defines {daemon_flags} 4190 for direct submissions. 4191confUSE_MSP UseMSP [undefined] Use as mail submission 4192 program, see sendmail/SECURITY. 4193confDELIVER_BY_MIN DeliverByMin [0] Minimum time for Deliver By 4194 SMTP Service Extension (RFC 2852). 4195confREQUIRES_DIR_FSYNC RequiresDirfsync [true] RequiresDirfsync can 4196 be used to turn off the compile time 4197 flag REQUIRES_DIR_FSYNC at runtime. 4198 See sendmail/README for details. 4199confSHARED_MEMORY_KEY SharedMemoryKey [0] Key for shared memory. 4200confFAST_SPLIT FastSplit [1] If set to a value greater than 4201 zero, the initial MX lookups on 4202 addresses is suppressed when they 4203 are sorted which may result in 4204 faster envelope splitting. If the 4205 mail is submitted directly from the 4206 command line, then the value also 4207 limits the number of processes to 4208 deliver the envelopes. 4209confMAILBOX_DATABASE MailboxDatabase [pw] Type of lookup to find 4210 information about local mailboxes. 4211confDEQUOTE_OPTS - [empty] Additional options for the 4212 dequote map. 4213confINPUT_MAIL_FILTERS InputMailFilters 4214 A comma separated list of filters 4215 which determines which filters and 4216 the invocation sequence are 4217 contacted for incoming SMTP 4218 messages. If none are set, no 4219 filters will be contacted. 4220confMILTER_LOG_LEVEL Milter.LogLevel [9] Log level for input mail filter 4221 actions, defaults to LogLevel. 4222confMILTER_MACROS_CONNECT Milter.macros.connect 4223 [j, _, {daemon_name}, {if_name}, 4224 {if_addr}] Macros to transmit to 4225 milters when a session connection 4226 starts. 4227confMILTER_MACROS_HELO Milter.macros.helo 4228 [{tls_version}, {cipher}, 4229 {cipher_bits}, {cert_subject}, 4230 {cert_issuer}] Macros to transmit to 4231 milters after HELO/EHLO command. 4232confMILTER_MACROS_ENVFROM Milter.macros.envfrom 4233 [i, {auth_type}, {auth_authen}, 4234 {auth_ssf}, {auth_author}, 4235 {mail_mailer}, {mail_host}, 4236 {mail_addr}] Macros to transmit to 4237 milters after MAIL FROM command. 4238confMILTER_MACROS_ENVRCPT Milter.macros.envrcpt 4239 [{rcpt_mailer}, {rcpt_host}, 4240 {rcpt_addr}] Macros to transmit to 4241 milters after RCPT TO command. 4242confMILTER_MACROS_EOM Milter.macros.eom 4243 [{msg_id}] Macros to transmit to 4244 milters after DATA command. 4245 4246 4247See also the description of OSTYPE for some parameters that can be 4248tweaked (generally pathnames to mailers). 4249 4250ClientPortOptions and DaemonPortOptions are special cases since multiple 4251clients/daemons can be defined. This can be done via 4252 4253 CLIENT_OPTIONS(`field1=value1,field2=value2,...') 4254 DAEMON_OPTIONS(`field1=value1,field2=value2,...') 4255 4256Note that multiple CLIENT_OPTIONS() commands (and therefore multiple 4257ClientPortOptions settings) are allowed in order to give settings for each 4258protocol family (e.g., one for Family=inet and one for Family=inet6). A 4259restriction placed on one family only affects outgoing connections on that 4260particular family. 4261 4262If DAEMON_OPTIONS is not used, then the default is 4263 4264 DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Port=smtp, Name=MTA') 4265 DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Port=587, Name=MSA, M=E') 4266 4267If you use one DAEMON_OPTIONS macro, it will alter the parameters 4268of the first of these. The second will still be defaulted; it 4269represents a "Message Submission Agent" (MSA) as defined by RFC 42702476 (see below). To turn off the default definition for the MSA, 4271use FEATURE(`no_default_msa') (see also FEATURES). If you use 4272additional DAEMON_OPTIONS macros, they will add additional daemons. 4273 4274Example 1: To change the port for the SMTP listener, while 4275still using the MSA default, use 4276 DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Port=925, Name=MTA') 4277 4278Example 2: To change the port for the MSA daemon, while still 4279using the default SMTP port, use 4280 FEATURE(`no_default_msa') 4281 DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Name=MTA') 4282 DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Port=987, Name=MSA, M=E') 4283 4284Note that if the first of those DAEMON_OPTIONS lines were omitted, then 4285there would be no listener on the standard SMTP port. 4286 4287Example 3: To listen on both IPv4 and IPv6 interfaces, use 4288 4289 DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Name=MTA-v4, Family=inet') 4290 DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Name=MTA-v6, Family=inet6') 4291 4292A "Message Submission Agent" still uses all of the same rulesets for 4293processing the message (and therefore still allows message rejection via 4294the check_* rulesets). In accordance with the RFC, the MSA will ensure 4295that all domains in envelope addresses are fully qualified if the message 4296is relayed to another MTA. It will also enforce the normal address syntax 4297rules and log error messages. Additionally, by using the M=a modifier you 4298can require authentication before messages are accepted by the MSA. 4299Notice: Do NOT use the 'a' modifier on a public accessible MTA! Finally, 4300the M=E modifier shown above disables ETRN as required by RFC 2476. 4301 4302Mail filters can be defined using the INPUT_MAIL_FILTER() and MAIL_FILTER() 4303commands: 4304 4305 INPUT_MAIL_FILTER(`sample', `S=local:/var/run/f1.sock') 4306 MAIL_FILTER(`myfilter', `S=inet:3333@localhost') 4307 4308The INPUT_MAIL_FILTER() command causes the filter(s) to be called in the 4309same order they were specified by also setting confINPUT_MAIL_FILTERS. A 4310filter can be defined without adding it to the input filter list by using 4311MAIL_FILTER() instead of INPUT_MAIL_FILTER() in your .mc file. 4312Alternatively, you can reset the list of filters and their order by setting 4313confINPUT_MAIL_FILTERS option after all INPUT_MAIL_FILTER() commands in 4314your .mc file. 4315 4316 4317+----------------------------+ 4318| MESSAGE SUBMISSION PROGRAM | 4319+----------------------------+ 4320 4321The purpose of the message submission program (MSP) is explained 4322in sendmail/SECURITY. This section contains a list of caveats and 4323a few hints how for those who want to tweak the default configuration 4324for it (which is installed as submit.cf). 4325 4326Notice: do not add options/features to submit.mc unless you are 4327absolutely sure you need them. Options you may want to change 4328include: 4329 4330- confTRUSTED_USERS, FEATURE(`use_ct_file'), and confCT_FILE for 4331 avoiding X-Authentication warnings. 4332- confTIME_ZONE to change it from the default `USE_TZ'. 4333- confDELIVERY_MODE is set to interactive in msp.m4 instead 4334 of the default background mode. 4335- FEATURE(stickyhost) and LOCAL_RELAY to send unqualified addresses 4336 to the LOCAL_RELAY instead of the default relay. 4337- confRAND_FILE if you use STARTTLS and sendmail is not compiled with 4338 the flag HASURANDOM. 4339 4340The MSP performs hostname canonicalization by default. As also 4341explained in sendmail/SECURITY, mail may end up for various DNS 4342related reasons in the MSP queue. This problem can be minimized by 4343using 4344 4345 FEATURE(`nocanonify', `canonify_hosts') 4346 define(`confDIRECT_SUBMISSION_MODIFIERS', `C') 4347 4348See the discussion about nocanonify for possible side effects. 4349 4350Some things are not intended to work with the MSP. These include 4351features that influence the delivery process (e.g., mailertable, 4352aliases), or those that are only important for a SMTP server (e.g., 4353virtusertable, DaemonPortOptions, multiple queues). Moreover, 4354relaxing certain restrictions (RestrictQueueRun, permissions on 4355queue directory) or adding features (e.g., enabling prog/file mailer) 4356can cause security problems. 4357 4358Other things don't work well with the MSP and require tweaking or 4359workarounds. For example, to allow for client authentication it 4360is not just sufficient to provide a client certificate and the 4361corresponding key, but it is also necessary to make the key group 4362(smmsp) readable and tell sendmail not to complain about that, i.e., 4363 4364 define(`confDONT_BLAME_SENDMAIL', `GroupReadableKeyFile') 4365 4366If the MSP should actually use AUTH then the necessary data 4367should be placed in a map as explained in SMTP AUTHENTICATION: 4368 4369FEATURE(`authinfo', `DATABASE_MAP_TYPE /etc/mail/msp-authinfo') 4370 4371/etc/mail/msp-authinfo should contain an entry like: 4372 4373 AuthInfo:127.0.0.1 "U:smmsp" "P:secret" "M:DIGEST-MD5" 4374 4375The file and the map created by makemap should be owned by smmsp, 4376its group should be smmsp, and it should have mode 640. The database 4377used by the MTA for AUTH must have a corresponding entry. 4378Additionally the MTA must trust this authentication data so the AUTH= 4379part will be relayed on to the next hop. This can be achieved by 4380adding the following to your sendmail.mc file: 4381 4382 LOCAL_RULESETS 4383 SLocal_trust_auth 4384 R$* $: $&{auth_authen} 4385 Rsmmsp $# OK 4386 4387Note: the authentication data can leak to local users who invoke 4388the MSP with debug options or even with -v. For that reason either 4389an authentication mechanism that does not show the password in the 4390AUTH dialogue (e.g., DIGEST-MD5) or a different authentication 4391method like STARTTLS should be used. 4392 4393feature/msp.m4 defines almost all settings for the MSP. Most of 4394those should not be changed at all. Some of the features and options 4395can be overridden if really necessary. It is a bit tricky to do 4396this, because it depends on the actual way the option is defined 4397in feature/msp.m4. If it is directly defined (i.e., define()) then 4398the modified value must be defined after 4399 4400 FEATURE(`msp') 4401 4402If it is conditionally defined (i.e., ifdef()) then the desired 4403value must be defined before the FEATURE line in the .mc file. 4404To see how the options are defined read feature/msp.m4. 4405 4406 4407+--------------------------+ 4408| FORMAT OF FILES AND MAPS | 4409+--------------------------+ 4410 4411Files that define classes, i.e., F{classname}, consist of lines 4412each of which contains a single element of the class. For example, 4413/etc/mail/local-host-names may have the following content: 4414 4415my.domain 4416another.domain 4417 4418Maps must be created using makemap(8) , e.g., 4419 4420 makemap hash MAP < MAP 4421 4422In general, a text file from which a map is created contains lines 4423of the form 4424 4425key value 4426 4427where 'key' and 'value' are also called LHS and RHS, respectively. 4428By default, the delimiter between LHS and RHS is a non-empty sequence 4429of white space characters. 4430 4431 4432+------------------+ 4433| DIRECTORY LAYOUT | 4434+------------------+ 4435 4436Within this directory are several subdirectories, to wit: 4437 4438m4 General support routines. These are typically 4439 very important and should not be changed without 4440 very careful consideration. 4441 4442cf The configuration files themselves. They have 4443 ".mc" suffixes, and must be run through m4 to 4444 become complete. The resulting output should 4445 have a ".cf" suffix. 4446 4447ostype Definitions describing a particular operating 4448 system type. These should always be referenced 4449 using the OSTYPE macro in the .mc file. Examples 4450 include "bsd4.3", "bsd4.4", "sunos3.5", and 4451 "sunos4.1". 4452 4453domain Definitions describing a particular domain, referenced 4454 using the DOMAIN macro in the .mc file. These are 4455 site dependent; for example, "CS.Berkeley.EDU.m4" 4456 describes hosts in the CS.Berkeley.EDU subdomain. 4457 4458mailer Descriptions of mailers. These are referenced using 4459 the MAILER macro in the .mc file. 4460 4461sh Shell files used when building the .cf file from the 4462 .mc file in the cf subdirectory. 4463 4464feature These hold special orthogonal features that you might 4465 want to include. They should be referenced using 4466 the FEATURE macro. 4467 4468hack Local hacks. These can be referenced using the HACK 4469 macro. They shouldn't be of more than voyeuristic 4470 interest outside the .Berkeley.EDU domain, but who knows? 4471 4472siteconfig Site configuration -- e.g., tables of locally connected 4473 UUCP sites. 4474 4475 4476+------------------------+ 4477| ADMINISTRATIVE DETAILS | 4478+------------------------+ 4479 4480The following sections detail usage of certain internal parts of the 4481sendmail.cf file. Read them carefully if you are trying to modify 4482the current model. If you find the above descriptions adequate, these 4483should be {boring, confusing, tedious, ridiculous} (pick one or more). 4484 4485RULESETS (* means built in to sendmail) 4486 4487 0 * Parsing 4488 1 * Sender rewriting 4489 2 * Recipient rewriting 4490 3 * Canonicalization 4491 4 * Post cleanup 4492 5 * Local address rewrite (after aliasing) 4493 1x mailer rules (sender qualification) 4494 2x mailer rules (recipient qualification) 4495 3x mailer rules (sender header qualification) 4496 4x mailer rules (recipient header qualification) 4497 5x mailer subroutines (general) 4498 6x mailer subroutines (general) 4499 7x mailer subroutines (general) 4500 8x reserved 4501 90 Mailertable host stripping 4502 96 Bottom half of Ruleset 3 (ruleset 6 in old sendmail) 4503 97 Hook for recursive ruleset 0 call (ruleset 7 in old sendmail) 4504 98 Local part of ruleset 0 (ruleset 8 in old sendmail) 4505 4506 4507MAILERS 4508 4509 0 local, prog local and program mailers 4510 1 [e]smtp, relay SMTP channel 4511 2 uucp-* UNIX-to-UNIX Copy Program 4512 3 netnews Network News delivery 4513 4 fax Sam Leffler's HylaFAX software 4514 5 mail11 DECnet mailer 4515 4516 4517MACROS 4518 4519 A 4520 B Bitnet Relay 4521 C DECnet Relay 4522 D The local domain -- usually not needed 4523 E reserved for X.400 Relay 4524 F FAX Relay 4525 G 4526 H mail Hub (for mail clusters) 4527 I 4528 J 4529 K 4530 L Luser Relay 4531 M Masquerade (who you claim to be) 4532 N 4533 O 4534 P 4535 Q 4536 R Relay (for unqualified names) 4537 S Smart Host 4538 T 4539 U my UUCP name (if you have a UUCP connection) 4540 V UUCP Relay (class {V} hosts) 4541 W UUCP Relay (class {W} hosts) 4542 X UUCP Relay (class {X} hosts) 4543 Y UUCP Relay (all other hosts) 4544 Z Version number 4545 4546 4547CLASSES 4548 4549 A 4550 B domains that are candidates for bestmx lookup 4551 C 4552 D 4553 E addresses that should not seem to come from $M 4554 F hosts this system forward for 4555 G domains that should be looked up in genericstable 4556 H 4557 I 4558 J 4559 K 4560 L addresses that should not be forwarded to $R 4561 M domains that should be mapped to $M 4562 N host/domains that should not be mapped to $M 4563 O operators that indicate network operations (cannot be in local names) 4564 P top level pseudo-domains: BITNET, DECNET, FAX, UUCP, etc. 4565 Q 4566 R domains this system is willing to relay (pass anti-spam filters) 4567 S 4568 T 4569 U locally connected UUCP hosts 4570 V UUCP hosts connected to relay $V 4571 W UUCP hosts connected to relay $W 4572 X UUCP hosts connected to relay $X 4573 Y locally connected smart UUCP hosts 4574 Z locally connected domain-ized UUCP hosts 4575 . the class containing only a dot 4576 [ the class containing only a left bracket 4577 4578 4579M4 DIVERSIONS 4580 4581 1 Local host detection and resolution 4582 2 Local Ruleset 3 additions 4583 3 Local Ruleset 0 additions 4584 4 UUCP Ruleset 0 additions 4585 5 locally interpreted names (overrides $R) 4586 6 local configuration (at top of file) 4587 7 mailer definitions 4588 8 DNS based blacklists 4589 9 special local rulesets (1 and 2) 4590 4591$Revision: 8.706 $, Last updated $Date: 2006/04/18 22:31:06 $ 4592