Runs as a daemon in the background, waiting for incoming
SMTP connections.
Runs as a daemon in the foreground, waiting for incoming
SMTP connections.
Delivers mail in the usual way (default).
Prints a summary of the mail queues.
Prints the number of entries in the queues. This option
is only available with shared memory support.
Uses the SMTP protocol as described in RFC 2821. This
flag implies all the operations of the -ba flag that are compatible
with SMTP.
Runs in address test mode. This mode reads addresses and
shows the steps in parsing; it is used for debugging configuration
tables.
Verifies names only. Does not try to collect or deliver a
message. Verify mode is normally used for validating users or mailing
lists.
Uses alternate configuration file.
Sets the name of the "from" person (that is,
the sender of the mail).
Sets the full name of the sender.
When accepting messages by way of the command line,
indicates that they are for relay (gateway) submission. When this flag is set,
sendmail might complain about syntactically invalid messages, for
example, unqualified host names, rather than fixing them. sendmail does
not do any canonicalization in this mode.
Does not do aliasing.
Sets the sending protocol. The protocol field can
be in form protocol:host to set both the sending protocol
and the sending host. For example: -pUUCP:uunet sets the sending
protocol to UUCP and the sending host to uunet. Some
existing programs use -oM to set the r and s macros; this
is equivalent to using -p.
Quarantines a normal queue item with the given reason or
unquarantines a quarantined queue item if no reason is given. This should only
be used with some sort of item matching as described above.
Identifies the information you want returned if the
message bounces. ret can be HDRS for headers only or FULL
for headers plus body.
Reads message for recipients. To:,Cc:, and
Bcc: lines are scanned for people to send to. The Bcc: line is
deleted before transmission. Any addresses in the argument list is suppressed.
The NoRecipientAction Processing Option can be used to change the
behavior when no legal recipients are included in the message.
Goes into verbose mode. Alias expansions are announced,
and so forth.
There are a number of "random" options that can be set
from a configuration file. Options are represented by a single character or
by multiple character names. The syntax for the single character names of
is:
Oxvalue
This sets option x to be value. Depending on the
option, value may be a string, an integer, a boolean (with legal
values t, T, f, or F; the default is
TRUE), or a time interval.
The multiple character or long names use this syntax:
O Longname=argument
This sets the option Longname to be argument. The
long names are beneficial because they are easier to interpret than the
single character names.
Not all processing options have single character names associated
with them. In the list below, the multiple character name is presented first
followed by the single character syntax enclosed in parentheses.
AliasFile (Afile)
Specifies possible alias files.
AliasWait (a N)
If set, waits up to
N minutes for an
"@:@" entry to exist in the
aliases(5) database before
starting up. If it does not appear in
N minutes, issues a warning.
Defaults to 10 minutes.
AllowBogusHELO
Allows a HELO SMTP command that does not include a
host name. By default this option is disabled.
BadRcptThrottle=N
If set and more than the specified number of recipients
in a single SMTP envelope are rejected, sleeps for one second after
each rejected RCPT command.
BlankSub (Bc)
Sets the blank substitution character to c.
Unquoted spaces in addresses are replaced by this character. Defaults to SPACE
(that is, no change is made).
CACertFile
File containing one CA cert.
CACertPath
Path to directory with certs of CAs.
CheckAliases (n)
Validates the RHS of aliases when rebuilding the
aliases(5) database.
CheckpointInterval (CN)
Checkpoints the queue every N (default 10)
addresses sent. If your system crashes during delivery to a large list, this
prevents retransmission to any but the last N recipients.
ClassFactor (zfact)
The indicated factor fact is multiplied by the
message class (determined by the Precedence: field in the user header
and the P lines in the configuration file) and subtracted from the
priority. Thus, messages with a higher Priority: are favored. Defaults
to 1800.
ClientCertFile
File containing the cert of the client, that is, this
cert is used when sendmail acts as client.
ClientKeyFile
File containing the private key belonging to the client
cert.
ClientPortOptions
Sets client
SMTP options. The options are
key=value pairs. Known keys are:
Addr Address Mask
Address Mask defaults to INADDR_ANY. The
address mask can be a numeric address in dot notation or a network name.
Family
Address family (defaults to INET).
Listen
Size of listen queue (defaults to 10).
Port
Name/number of listening port (defaults to
smtp).
RcvBufSize
The size of the TCP/IP receive buffer.
SndBufSize
The size of the TCP/IP send buffer.
Modifier
Options (flags) for the daemon. Can be:
h
Uses name of interface for HELO command.
If h is set, the name corresponding to the outgoing
interface address (whether chosen by means of the Connection
parameter or the default) is used for the HELO/EHLO
command.
ColonOkInAddr
If set, colons are treated as a regular character in
addresses. If not set, they are treated as the introducer to the RFC 822
"group" syntax. This option is on for version 5 and lower
configuration files.
ConnectionCacheSize (kN)
The maximum number of open connections that are to be
cached at a time. The default is 1. This delays closing the current
connection until either this invocation of sendmail needs to connect to
another host or it terminates. Setting it to 0 defaults to the old
behavior, that is, connections are closed immediately.
ConnectionCacheTimeout (Ktimeout)
The maximum amount of time a cached connection is
permitted to idle without activity. If this time is exceeded, the connection
is immediately closed. This value should be small (on the order of ten
minutes). Before sendmail uses a cached connection, it always sends a
NOOP (no operation) command to check the connection. If the NOOP
command fails, it reopens the connection. This keeps your end from failing if
the other end times out. The point of this option is to be a good network
neighbor and avoid using up excessive resources on the other end. The default
is five minutes.
ConnectionRateThrottle
The maximum number of connections permitted per second.
After this many connections are accepted, further connections are delayed. If
not set or <= 0, there is no limit.
ConnectionRateWindowSize
Define the length of the interval for which the number of
incoming connections is maintained. The default is 60 seconds.
ControlSocketName
Name of the control socket for daemon management. A
running sendmail daemon can be controlled through this Unix domain
socket. Available commands are: help, restart, shutdown,
and status. The status command returns the current number of
daemon children, the free disk space (in blocks) of the queue directory, and
the load average of the machine expressed as an integer. If not set, no
control socket is available. For the sake of security, this Unix domain socket
must be in a directory which is accessible only by root;
/var/spool/mqueue/.smcontrol is recommended for the socket name.
CRLFile
File containing certificate revocation status, useful for
X.509v3 authentication.
DaemonPortOptions (Ooptions)
Sets server SMTP options. The options are
key=value pairs. Known keys are:
Name
User-definable name for the daemon (defaults to
"Daemon#"). Used for error messages and logging.
Addr
Address mask (defaults
INADDR_ANY).
The address mask may be a numeric address in dot notation or a
network name.
Family
Address family (defaults to INET).
InputMailFilters
List of input mail filters for the daemon.
Listen
Size of listen queue (defaults to 10).
Modifier
Options (flags) for the daemon; can be a sequence
(without any delimiters) of:
a
Requires authentication.
b
Binds to interface through which mail has been
received.
c
Performs hostname canonification (.cf).
f
Requires fully qualified hostname (.cf).
h
Uses name of interface for HELO command.
u
Allows unqualified addresses (.cf).
C
Does not perform hostname canonification.
E
Disallows ETRN (see RFC 2476).
Name
User-definable name for the daemon (defaults to
Daemon#). Used for error messages and logging.
Port
Name/number of listening port (defaults to
smtp).
ReceiveSize
The size of the TCP/IP receive buffer.
SendSize
The size of the TCP/IP send buffer.
children
Maximum number of children per daemon. See
MaxDaemonChildren.
DeliveryMode
Delivery mode per daemon. See DeliveryMode.
refuseLA
RefuseLA per daemon.
delayLA
DelayLA per daemon.
queueLA
QueueLA per daemon.
sendmail listens on a new socket for each occurrence of the
DaemonPortOptions option in a configuration file.
DataFileBufferSize
Sets the threshold, in bytes, before a memory-bases queue
data file becomes disk-based. The default is 4096 bytes.
DeadLetterDrop
Defines the location of the system-wide dead.letter file,
formerly hard-coded to /var/tmp/dead.letter. If this option is not set
(the default), sendmail does not attempt to save to a system-wide
dead.letter file in the event it cannot bounce the mail to the user or
postmaster. Instead, it renames the qf file as it has in the past when
the dead.letter file could not be opened.
DefaultCharSet
Sets the default character set to use when converting
unlabeled 8 bit input to MIME.
DefaultUser (ggid) or
(uuid)
Sets the default group ID for mailers to run in to
gid or set the default userid for mailers to uid. Defaults to
1. The value can also be given as a symbolic group or user name.
DelayLA=LA
When the system load average exceeds LA,
sendmail sleeps for one second on most SMTP commands and before
accepting connections.
DeliverByMin=time
Sets minimum time for Deliver By SMTP Service
Extension (RFC 2852). If 0, no time is listed, if less than
0, the extension is not offered, if greater than 0, it is listed
as minimum time for the EHLO keyword DELIVERBY.
DeliveryMode (dx)
Delivers in mode
x. Legal modes are:
i
Delivers interactively (synchronously).
b
Delivers in background (asynchronously).
d
Deferred mode. Database lookups are deferred until the
actual queue run.
q
Just queues the message (delivers during queue
run).
Defaults to b if no option is specified, i if it is
specified but given no argument (that is, Od is equivalent to
Odi).
DHParameters
File containing the DH parameters.
DialDelay
If a connection fails, waits this many seconds and tries
again. Zero means "do not retry".
DontBlameSendmail
If set, overrides the file safety checks. This
compromises system security and should not be used. See
http://www.sendmail.org/tips/DontBlameSendmail.html for more
information.
DontExpandCnames
If set, $[ ... $] lookups that do DNS-based lookups do
not expand CNAME records.
DontInitGroups
If set, the
initgroups(3C) routine is never
invoked. If you set this, agents run on behalf of users only have their
primary (
/etc/passwd) group permissions.
DontProbeInterfaces
If set, sendmail does not insert the names and
addresses of any local interfaces into the $=w class. If set, you must
also include support for these addresses, otherwise mail to addresses in this
list bounces with a configuration error.
DontPruneRoutes (R)
If set, does not prune route-addr syntax addresses to the
minimum possible.
DoubleBounceAddress
If an error occurs when sending an error message, sends
that "double bounce" error message to this address.
EightBitMode (8)
Uses 8-bit data handling. This option requires one of the
following keys. The key can selected by using just the first character, but
using the full word is better for clarity.
mimify
Does any necessary conversion of 8BITMIME to
7-bit.
pass
Passes unlabeled 8-bit input through as is.
strict
Rejects unlabeled 8-bit input.
ErrorHeader (Efile/message)
Appends error messages with the indicated message. If it
begins with a slash, it is assumed to be the pathname of a file containing a
message (this is the recommended setting). Otherwise, it is a literal message.
The error file might contain the name, email address, and/or phone number of a
local postmaster who could provide assistance to end users. If the option is
missing or NULL, or if it names a file which does not exist or which is
not readable, no message is printed.
ErrorMode (ex)
Disposes of errors using mode
x. The values for
x are:
e
Mails back errors and gives 0 exit status
always.
m
Mails back errors.
p
Prints error messages (default).
q
No messages, just gives exit status.
w
Writes back errors (mail if user not logged in).
FallbackMXhost (Vfallbackhost)
If specified, the fallbackhost acts like a very
low priority MX on every host. This is intended to be used by sites with poor
network connectivity.
FallBackSmartHost
If specified, the fallBackSmartHost is used in a
last-ditch effort for each host. This is intended to be used by sites with
"fake internal DNS". That is, a company whose DNS accurately
reflects the world inside that company's domain but not outside.
FastSplit
If set to a value greater than zero (the default is one),
it suppresses the MX lookups on addresses when they are initially sorted, that
is, for the first delivery attempt. This usually results in faster envelope
splitting unless the MX records are readily available in a local DNS cache. To
enforce initial sorting based on MX records set FastSplit to zero. If
the mail is submitted directly from the command line, then the value also
limits the number of processes to deliver the envelopes; if more envelopes are
created they are only queued up and must be taken care of by a queue run.
Since the default submission method is by way of SMTP (either from a MUA or by
way of the Message Submission Program [MSP]), the value of FastSplit is
seldom used to limit the number of processes to deliver the envelopes.
ForkEachJob (Y)
If set, delivers each job that is run from the queue in a
separate process. Use this option if you are short of memory, since the
default tends to consume considerable amounts of memory while the queue is
being processed.
ForwardPath (Jpath)
Sets the path for searching for users' .forward
files. The default is $z/.forward. Some sites that use the automounter
may prefer to change this to /var/forward/$u to search a file with the
same name as the user in a system directory. It can also be set to a sequence
of paths separated by colons; sendmail stops at the first file it can
successfully and safely open. For example, /var/forward/$u:$z/.forward
searches first in /var/forward/ username and then in
~username/.forward (but only if the first file does not
exist). Refer to the NOTES section for more information.
HeloName=name
Sets the name to be used for HELO/EHLO
(instead of $j).
HelpFile (Hfile)
Specifies the help file for SMTP.
HoldExpensive (c)
If an outgoing mailer is marked as being expensive, does
not connect immediately.
HostsFile
Sets the file to use when doing "file" type
access of host names.
HostStatusDirectory
If set, host status is kept on disk between
sendmail runs in the named directory tree. If a full path is not used,
then the path is interpreted relative to the queue directory.
IgnoreDots (i)
Ignores dots in incoming messages. This is always
disabled (that is, dots are always accepted) when reading SMTP
mail.
LogLevel (Ln)
Sets the default log level to n. Defaults to
9.
(Mxvalue)
Sets the macro x to value. This is intended
only for use from the command line.
MailboxDatabase
Type of lookup to find information about local mail
boxes, defaults to
pw which uses
getpwnam(3C). Other types can
be introduced by adding them to the source code, see
libsm/mbdb.c for
details.
MatchGECOS (G)
Tries to match recipient names using the GECOS field.
This allows for mail to be delivered using names defined in the GECOS field in
/etc/passwd as well as the login name.
MaxDaemonChildren
The maximum number of children the daemon permits. After
this number, connections are rejected. If not set or <=0, there is no
limit.
MaxHopCount (hN)
The maximum hop count. Messages that have been processed
more than N times are assumed to be in a loop and are rejected.
Defaults to 25.
MaxMessageSize
The maximum size of messages that are accepted (in
bytes).
MaxMimeHeaderLength=M[/N]
Sets the maximum length of certain MIME header field
values to M characters. For some of these headers which take
parameters, the maximum length of each parameter is set to N if
specified. If /N is not specified, one half of M is used.
By default, these values are 0, meaning no checks are done.
MaxNOOPCommands=N
Overrides the default of 20 for the number of useless
commands.
MaxQueueChildren=N
When set, this limits the number of concurrent queue
runner processes to N. This helps to control the amount of system
resources used when processing the queue. When there are multiple queue groups
defined and the total number of queue runners for these queue groups would
exceed MaxQueueChildren then the queue groups are not all run
concurrently. That is, some portion of the queue groups run concurrently such
that MaxQueueChildren is not be exceeded, while the remaining queue
groups are run later (in round robin order). See
MaxRunnersPerQueue.
MaxQueueRunSize
If set, limits the maximum size of any given queue run to
this number of entries. This stops reading the queue directory after this
number of entries is reached; job priority is not used. If not set, there is
no limit.
MaxRunnersPerQueue=N
This sets the default maximum number of queue runners for
queue groups. Up to N queue runners work in parallel on a queue group's
messages. This is useful where the processing of a message in the queue might
delay the processing of subsequent messages. Such a delay can be the result of
non-erroneous situations such as a low bandwidth connection. The can be
overridden on a per queue group basis by setting the Runners option.
The default is 1 when not set.
MeToo (M)
Sends to me too, even if I am in an alias
expansion.
MaxRecipientsPerMessage
If set, allows no more than the specified number of
recipients in an SMTP envelope. Further recipients receive a 452 error code
and are deferred for the next delivery attempt.
MinFreeBlocks (bN/M)
Insists on at least N blocks free on the file
system that holds the queue files before accepting email by way of SMTP. If
there is insufficient space, sendmail gives a 452 response to
the MAIL command. This invites the sender to try again later. The
optional M is a maximum message size advertised in the ESMTP
EHLO response. It is currently otherwise unused.
MinQueueAge
Specifies the amount of time a job must sit in the queue
between queue runs. This allows you to set the queue run interval low for
better responsiveness without trying all jobs in each run. The default value
is 0.
MustQuoteChars
Specifies the characters to be quoted in a full name
phrase. &,;:\()[] are quoted automatically.
NiceQueueRun
Specifies the priority of queue runners. See
nice(1).
NoRecipientAction
Sets action if there are no legal recipient files in the
message. The legal values are:
add-apparently-to
Adds an Apparently-to: header with all the known
recipients (which may expose blind recipients).
add-bcc
Adds an empty Bcc: header.
add-to
Adds a To: header with all the known recipients
(which may expose blind recipients).
add-to-undisclosed
Adds a To: undisclosed-recipients: header.
none
Does nothing, that is, leaves the message as it is.
OldStyleHeaders (o)
Assumes that the headers may be in old format, that is,
spaces delimit names. This actually turns on an adaptive algorithm: if any
recipient address contains a comma, parenthesis, or angle bracket, it is
assumed that commas already exist. If this flag is not on, only commas delimit
names. Headers are always output with commas between the names.
OperatorChars or $o
Defines the list of characters that can be used to
separate the components of an address into tokens.
PidFile
Specifies the filename of the pid file. The
default is /var/run/sendmail.pid. The filename is macro-expanded before
it is opened, and unlinked when sendmail exits.
PostmasterCopy (Ppostmaster)
If set, copies of error messages are sent to the named
postmaster. Only the header of the failed message is sent. Since most
errors are user problems, this is probably not a good idea on large sites, and
arguably contains all sorts of privacy violations, but it seems to be popular
with certain operating systems vendors.
PrivacyOptions (popt,opt,...)
Sets privacy options. Privacy is really a misnomer; many
of these options are just a way of insisting on stricter adherence to the SMTP
protocol.
The goaway pseudo-flag sets all flags except
noreceipts, restrictmailq, restrictqrun,
restrictexpand, noetrn, and nobodyreturn. If
mailq is restricted, only people in the same group as the queue
directory can print the queue. If queue runs are restricted, only root and
the owner of the queue directory can run the queue. The
restrict-expand pseudo-flag instructs sendmail to drop privileges
when the -bv option is given by users who are neither root nor the
TrustedUser so users cannot read private aliases, forwards, or
:include: files. It adds the NonRootSafeAddr to the
"DontBlame-Sendmail" option to prevent misleading unsafe address
warnings. It also overrides the -v (verbose) command line option to
prevent information leakage. Authentication Warnings add warnings about
various conditions that may indicate attempts to fool the mail system, such
as using an non-standard queue directory.
The options can be selected from:
authwarnings
Puts X-Authentication-Warning: headers in
messages.
goaway
Disallows essentially all SMTP status queries.
needexpnhelo
Insists on HELO or EHLO command before
EXPN.
needmailhelo
Insists on HELO or EHLO command before
MAIL.
needvrfyhelo
Insists on HELO or EHLO command before
VRFY.
noactualrecipient
Do not put an X-Actual-Recipient line in a DNS that
reveals the actual account to which an address is mapped.
noetrn
Disallows ETRN entirely.
noexpn
Disallows EXPN entirely.
noreceipts
Prevents return receipts.
nobodyreturn
Does not return the body of a message with DSNs.
novrfy
Disallows VRFY entirely.
public
Allows open access.
restrictexpand
Restricts -bv and -v command line
flags.
restrictmailq
Restricts mailq command.
restrictqrun
Restricts -q command line flag.
ProcessTitlePrefix string
Prefixes the process title shown on "/usr/ucb/ps
auxww" listings with string. The string is macro
processed.
QueueDirectory (Qdir)
Uses the named dir as the queue directory.
QueueFactor (qfactor)
Uses factor as the multiplier in the map function
to decide when to just queue up jobs rather than run them. This value is
divided by the difference between the current load average and the load
average limit (x flag) to determine the maximum message priority to be
sent. Defaults to 600000.
QueueFileMode=mode
Defaults permissions for queue files (octal). If not set,
sendmail uses 0600 unless its real and effective uid are
different in which case it uses 0644.
QueueLA (xLA)
When the system load average exceeds LA, just
queues messages (that is, does not try to send them). Defaults to eight times
the number of processors online when sendmail starts.
QueueSortOrder=algorithm
Sets the algorithm used for sorting the queue. Only the
first character of the value is used. Legal values are host (to order
by the name of the first host name of the first recipient), filename
(to order by the name of the queue file name), time (to order by the
submission/creation time), random (to order randomly),
modification (to order by the modification time of the qf file
(older entries first)), none (to not order), and priority (to
order by message priority). Host ordering makes better use of the connection
cache, but may tend to process low priority messages that go to a single host
over high priority messages that go to several hosts; it probably shouldn't be
used on slow network links. Filename and modification time ordering saves the
overhead of reading all of the queued items before starting the queue run.
Creation (submission) time ordering is almost always a bad idea, since it
allows large, bulk mail to go out before smaller, personal mail, but may have
applicability on some hosts with very fast connections. Random is useful if
several queue runners are started by hand which try to drain the same queue
since odds are they are working on different parts of the queue at the same
time. Priority ordering is the default.
QueueTimeout
(Trtime/wtime)
Sets the queue timeout to rtime. After this
interval, messages that have not been successfully sent are returned to the
sender. Defaults to five days (5d). The optional wtime is the
time after which a warning message is sent. If it is missing or 0, then
no warning messages are sent.
RandFile
File containing random data (use prefix
file:) or
the name of the UNIX socket if EGD is used (use prefix
egd:). Note that
Solaris supports
random(4D), so this does not need to be
specified.
RecipientFactor (yfact)
The indicated factor fact is added to the priority
(thus lowering the priority of the job) for each recipient, that is,
this value penalizes jobs with large numbers of recipients. Defaults to
30000.
RefuseLA (XLA)
When the system load average exceeds LA, refuses
incoming SMTP connections. Defaults to 12 times the number of
processors online when sendmail starts.
RejectLogInterval
Log interval when refusing connections for this long
(default: 3h).
ResolverOptions (I)
Tunes DNS lookups.
RetryFactor (Zfact)
The indicated factor fact is added to the priority
every time a job is processed. Thus, each time a job is processed, its
priority is decreased by the indicated value. In most environments this should
be positive, since hosts that are down are all too often down for a long time.
Defaults to 90000.
RrtImpliesDsn
If this option is set, a Return-Receipt-To: header
causes the request of a DSN, which is sent to the envelope sender as
required by RFC 1891, not to the address given in the header.
RunAsUser
If set, becomes this user when reading and delivering
mail. Intended for use of firewalls where users do not have accounts.
SafeFileEnvironment
If set, sendmail does a chroot into this
directory before writing files.
SaveFromLine (f)
Saves Unix-style From lines at the front of
headers. Normally they are assumed redundant and discarded.
SendMimeErrors (j)
If set, sends error messages in MIME format (see RFC 2045
and RFC 1344 for details). If disabled, sendmail does not return the
DSN keyword in response to an EHLO and does not do Delivery Status
Notification processing as described in RFC 1891.
ServerCertFile
File containing the cert of the server, that is, this
cert is used when sendmail acts as server.
ServerKeyFile
File containing the private key belonging to the server
cert.
ServiceSwitchFile
Defines the path to the service-switch file. Since the
service-switch file is defined in the Solaris operating environment this
option is ignored.
SevenBitInput (7)
Strips input to seven bits for compatibility with old
systems. This should not be necessary.
SharedMemoryKey
Specifies key to use for shared memory segment. If not
set (or 0), shared memory is not be used. If this option is set,
sendmail can share some data between different instances. For example,
the number of entries in a queue directory or the available space in a file
system. This allows for more efficient program execution, since only one
process needs to update the data instead of each individual process gathering
the data each time it is required.
SharedMemoryKeyFile=file
If SharedMemoryKeyFile is set to -1, the
automatically selected shared memory key will be stored in the specified
file.
SingleLineFromHeader
If set, From: lines that have embedded newlines
are unwrapped onto one line.
SingleThreadDelivery
If this option and the HostStatusDirectory option
are both set, uses single thread deliveries to other hosts.
SmtpGreetingMessage or $e
Specifies the initial SMTP greeting message.
SoftBounce
If set, issue temporary errors (4xy) instead of
permanent errors (5xy). This can be useful during testing of a new
configuration to avoid erroneous bouncing of mail.
StatusFile (Sfile)
Logs statistics in the named
file. By default,
this is
/etc/mail/sendmail.st. As root, you must
touch(1) this
file to enable
mailstats(1).
SuperSafe (s)
This option can be set to True, False,
Interactive, or PostMilter. If set to True,
sendmail is set to super-safe when running things, that is, always
instantiate the queue file, even if you are going to attempt immediate
delivery. sendmail always instantiates the queue file before returning
control to the client under any circumstances. This should really always be
set to True. The Interactive value has been introduced in
8.12 and can be used together with DeliveryMode=i. It skips some
synchronization calls which are effectively doubled in the code execution path
for this mode. If set to PostMilter, sendmail defers
synchronizing the queue file until any milters have signaled acceptance of the
message. PostMilter is useful only when sendmail is running as
an SMTP server; in all other situations it acts the same as True.
TempFileMode (Fmode)
Specifies the file mode for queue files.
Timeout (rtimeouts)
Timeout reads after time interval. The
timeouts
argument is a list of
keyword=value pairs. All but
command apply
to client
SMTP. For backward compatibility, a timeout with no
keyword= part is set all of the longer values. The recognized timeouts
and their default values, and their minimum values specified in RFC 1123
section 5.3.2 are:
aconnect
all connections for a single delivery attempt [0,
unspecified]
command
command read [1h, 5m]
connect
initial connect [0, unspecified]
control
complete control socket transaction [2m, none]
datablock
data block read [1h, 3m]
datafinal
reply to final . in data [1h, 10m]
datainit
reply to DATA command [5m, 2m]
fileopen
file open [60sec, none]
helo
reply to HELO or EHLO command [5m,
none]
hoststatus
host retry [30m, unspecified]
iconnect
first attempt to connect to a host [0, unspecified]
ident
IDENT protocol timeout [5s, none]
initial
wait for initial greeting message [5m, 5m]
lhlo
wait for reply to an LMTP LHLO command [2m,
unspecified]
mail
reply to MAIL command [10m, 5m]
misc
reply to NOOP and VERB commands [2m,
none]
queuereturn
undeliverable message returned [5d]
queuewarn
deferred warning [4h]
quit
reply to QUIT command [2m, none]
rcpt
reply to RCPT command [1h, 5m]
resolver.retrans
Resolver's retransmission time interval (in seconds)
[varies]. Sets both Timeout.resolver.retrans.first and
Timeout.resolver.retrans.normal.
resolver.retrans.first
Resolver's retransmission time interval (in seconds) for
the first attempt to deliver a message [varies].
resolver.retrans.normal
Resolver's retransmission time interval (in seconds) for
all look-ups except the first delivery attempt [varies].
resolver.retry
Number of times to retransmit a resolver query [varies].
Sets both Timeout.resolver.retry.first and
Timeout.resolver.retry.normal.
resolver.retry.first
Number of times to retransmit a resolver query for the
first attempt to deliver a message [varies].
resolver.retry.normal
Number of times to retransmit a resolver query for all
look-ups except the first delivery attempt [varies].
rset
reply to RSET command [5m, none]
starttls
response to an SMTP STARTTLS command [1h]
TimeZoneSpec (ttzinfo)
Sets the local time zone info to tzinfo, for
example, "PST8PDT". Actually, if this is not set, the TZ
environment variable is cleared (so the system default is used); if set but
null, the user's TZ variable is used, and if set and non-null, the
TZ variable is set to this value.
TLSSrvOptions
If this option is 'V', then no client verification
is performed,that is, the server does not ask for a certificate.
TrustedUser
The user parameter can be a user name (looked up in the
passwd map) or a numeric user id. Trusted user for file ownership and starting
the daemon. If set, generated alias databases and the control socket (if
configured) are automatically owned by this user.
TryNullMXList (w)
If you are the "best" (that is, lowest
preference) MX for a given host, you should normally detect this
situation and treat that condition specially, by forwarding the mail to a
UUCP feed, treating it as local, or whatever. However, in some cases
(such as Internet firewalls) you may want to try to connect directly to that
host as though it had no MX records at all. Setting this option causes
sendmail to try this. The downside is that errors in your configuration
are likely to be diagnosed as "host unknown" or "message timed
out" instead of something more meaningful. This option is
deprecated.
UnixFromLine or $l
The "From " line used when sending to files or
programs.
UnsafeGroupWrites
If set, group-writable :include: and .forward files are
considered "unsafe", that is, programs and files cannot be directly
referenced from such files.
UseErrorsTo (l)
If there is an Errors-To: header, sends error
messages to the addresses listed there. They normally go to the envelope
sender. Use of this option causes sendmail to violate RFC 1123.
This option is not recommended and deprecated.
UseMSP
Uses as mail submission program, that is, allows group
writable queue files if the group is the same as that of a set-group-id
sendmail binary.
UserDatabaseSpec (U)
Defines the name and location of the file containing User
Database information.
Verbose (v)
Runs in verbose mode. If this is set, sendmail
adjusts the HoldExpensive and DeliveryMode options so that all
mail is delivered completely in a single job so that you can see the entire
delivery process. The Verbose option should never be set in the
configuration file; it is intended for command line use only.
XscriptFileBufferSize
Sets the threshold, in bytes, before a memory-bases queue
transcript file becomes disk-based. The default is 4096 bytes.
If the first character of the user name is a vertical bar, the
rest of the user name is used as the name of a program to pipe the mail to.
It may be necessary to quote the name of the user to keep sendmail
from suppressing the blanks from between arguments.
If invoked as newaliases, sendmail rebuilds the
alias database, so long as the /etc/mail/aliases* files are owned by
root and root has exclusive write permission. If invoked as
mailq, sendmail prints the contents of the mail queue.