sendmail - send mail over the interne sendmail



  • System Administration Commands					  sendmail(1M)
    
    
    
    NAME
           sendmail	- send mail over the internet
    
    SYNOPSIS
           /usr/lib/sendmail [-Ac] [-Am] [-ba] [-bD] [-bd] [-bi] [-bl]
    	    [-bm] [-bp]	[-bP] [-bs] [-bt] [-bv]	[-B type] [-C file]
    	    [-D	logfile] [-d X]	[-F fullname] [-f name]	[-G]
    	    [-h	N] [-L tag] [-M	xvalue]	[-N notifications] [-n]
    	    [-Ooption =value] [-o xvalue] [-p protocol]
    	    [-Q	[reason]] [-q [time]] [-q Xstring] [-R ret]
    	    [-r	name] [-t] [-V envid] [-v] [-X logfile]
    	    [address]...
    
    
    DESCRIPTION
           The sendmail utility sends a message to one or more people, routing the
           message over whatever networks are necessary. sendmail  does  internet-
           work  forwarding	 as  necessary	to  deliver the	message	to the correct
           place.
    
    
           sendmail	is not intended	as a user interface  routine.  Other  programs
           provide user-friendly front ends. sendmail is used only to deliver pre-
           formatted messages.
    
    
           With no flags, sendmail reads its standard input	up to  an  EOF,	 or  a
           line  with  a single dot, and sends a copy of the letter	found there to
           all of the addresses listed. It determines the network to use based  on
           the syntax and contents of the addresses.
    
    
           Local  addresses	 are  looked  up in the	local aliases(4) file, or in a
           name service as defined	by  the	 nsswitch.conf(4)  file,  and  aliased
           appropriately.  In  addition,  if there is a .forward file in a recipi-
           ent's home directory, sendmail forwards a copy of each message  to  the
           list  of	 recipients that file contains.	Refer to the NOTES section for
           more information	about .forward files. Aliasing	can  be	 prevented  by
           preceding the address with a backslash.
    
    
           There  are  several conditions under which the expected behavior	is for
           the alias database to be	either built or	 rebuilt.  This	 cannot	 occur
           under  any  circumstances unless	root owns and has exclusive write per-
           mission to the /etc/mail/aliases* files.
    
    
           If a message is found to	be undeliverable, it is	returned to the	sender
           with  diagnostics that indicate the location and	nature of the failure;
           or, the message is placed in a dead.letter file in  the	sender's  home
           directory.
    
       Service Management
           The  sendmail  service  is  managed by the service management facility,
           smf(5), under the service identifiers:
    
    	 svc:/network/smtp:sendmail
    	 svc:/network/sendmail-client:default
    
    
    
    
    
           Administrative actions on these services, such as enabling,  disabling,
           or requesting restart, can be performed using svcadm(1M). The services'
           status can be queried using the svcs(1) command.
    
    
           These are separate services rather than instances of the	 same  service
           so  that	 other services	can properly express any dependencies. In par-
           ticular,	here are some guidelines about which  service/instance	should
           be depended on for which	purposes:
    
    	   o	  For  a  service that uses sendmail to	send mail, an optional
    		  dependency on	the service svc:/network/sendmail-client might
    		  be in	order.
    
    	   o	  For  a  service  that	 needs to receive mail in general, but
    		  does not  depend  on	sendmail  being	 the  particular  SMTP
    		  receiver,  a	dependency  on	the  service svc:/network/smtp
    		  might	be in order.
    
    	   o	  For a	service	that needs to interact with sendmail  in  par-
    		  ticular,  such  as  a	 Milter,  a dependency on the instance
    		  svc:/network/smtp:sendmail might be in order.
    
    
           For the last two, note the difference, as the latter  has  the  ":send-
           mail"  instance specification, whereas the former does not, thus	repre-
           senting the more	general	service.
    
       Enabling Access to Remote Clients
           On an unmodified	system,	 access	 to  sendmail  by  remote  clients  is
           enabled	and  disabled  through	the  service  management facility (see
           smf(5)).	In particular, remote access is	determined by the value	of the
           local_only SMF property:
    
    	 svc:/network/smtp:sendmail/config/local_only =	true
    
    
    
           A  setting  of  true,  as  above, disallows remote access; false	allows
           remote access. The default value	is true.
    
    
           The following example shows the sequence	of SMF commands	used to	enable
           sendmail	to allow access	to remote systems:
    
    	 # svccfg -s svc:/network/smtp:sendmail	setprop	config/local_only = false
    	 # svcadm refresh svc:/network/smtp:sendmail
    	 # svcadm restart svc:/network/smtp:sendmail
    
    
    
    
           See svcadm(1M) and svccfg(1M).
    
    
           Note, however, on a system where	any of the sendmail(4) files have been
           customized, setting this	property might not have	the  intended  effect.
           See sendmail(4) for details.
    
       Automated Rebuilding	of Configuration Files
           See  sendmail(4)	 for details on	which service properties can be	set to
           automate	(re)building  of  configuration	 files	when  the  service  is
           started.
    
       Restricting Host Access
           sendmail	 uses  TCP  Wrappers  to restrict access to hosts. It uses the
           service name of sendmail	for hosts_access(). For	 more  information  on
           TCP  Wrappers,  see  tcpd(1M)  and hosts_access(4) in the security/tcp-
           wrapper package.	tcpd(1M) and  hosts_access(4)  are  not	 part  of  the
           Solaris man pages.
    
       Startup Options
           The  /etc/default/sendmail  file	stores startup options for sendmail so
           that the	options	are not	removed	when a	host  is  upgraded.  See  also
           sendmail(4) for details on which	service	properties can be set to auto-
           mate (re)building of configuration files	when the service is started.
    
    
           You can	use  the  following  variables	in  the	 /etc/default/sendmail
           startup file:
    
           CLIENTOPTIONS=string
    
    	   Selects additional options to be used with the client daemon, which
    	   looks in the	client-only queue (/var/spool/clientmqueue)  and  acts
    	   as a	client queue runner. No	syntax checking	is done, so be careful
    	   when	making changes to this variable.
    
    
           CLIENTQUEUEINTERVAL=#
    
    	   Similar to the QUEUEINTERVAL	option,	CLIENTQUEUEINTERVAL  sets  the
    	   time	interval for mail queue	runs. However, the CLIENTQUEUEINTERVAL
    	   option controls the functions of the	client daemon, instead of  the
    	   functions  of  the  master  daemon. Typically, the master daemon is
    	   able	to deliver all messages	to the SMTP port. However, if the mes-
    	   sage	 load  is  too	high or	the master daemon is not running, then
    	   messages go into the	 client-only  queue,  /var/spool/clientmqueue.
    	   The client daemon, which checks in the client-only queue, then acts
    	   as a	client queue processor.
    
    
           ETRN_HOSTS=string
    
    	   Enables an SMTP client and server to	interact  immediately  without
    	   waiting for the queue run intervals,	which are periodic. The	server
    	   can immediately deliver the portion of its queue that goes  to  the
    	   specified  hosts.  For  more	information, refer to the etrn(1M) man
    	   page.
    
    
           MODE=-bd
    
    	   Selects the mode to start sendmail with.  Use  the  -bd  option  or
    	   leave it undefined.
    
    
           OPTIONS=string
    
    	   Selects  additional	options	 to be used with the master daemon. No
    	   syntax checking is done, so be careful when making changes to  this
    	   variable.
    
    
           QUEUEINTERVAL=#
    
    	   Sets	 the  interval for mail	queue runs on the master daemon. # can
    	   be a	positive integer that is followed by either s for  seconds,  m
    	   for minutes,	h for hours, d for days, or w for weeks. The syntax is
    	   checked before sendmail is started. If the interval is negative  or
    	   if  the entry does not end with an appropriate letter, the interval
    	   is ignored and sendmail starts with a queue interval	of 15 minutes.
    
    
           QUEUEOPTIONS=p
    
    	   Enables one persistent queue	runner that sleeps between  queue  run
    	   intervals,  instead of a new	queue runner for each queue run	inter-
    	   val.	You can	set this option	to p, which is the only	setting	avail-
    	   able. Otherwise, this option	is not set.
    
    
       Mail	Filter API
           sendmail	 supports a mail filter	API called "milter". For more informa-
           tion, see /usr/include/libmilter/README and http://www.milter.org
    
    OPTIONS
           The following options are supported:
    
           -Ac
    
    	   Uses	submit.cf even if the operation	mode does not indicate an ini-
    	   tial	mail submission.
    
    
           -Am
    
    	   Uses	 sendmail.cf  even  if the operation mode indicates an initial
    	   mail	submission.
    
    
           -ba
    
    	   Goes	into ARPANET mode. All input lines must	 end  with  a  RETURN-
    	   LINEFEED,  and all messages are generated with a RETURN-LINEFEED at
    	   the end. Also, the From: and	Sender:	fields are  examined  for  the
    	   name	of the sender.
    
    
           -bC
    
    	   Checks the configuration file.
    
    
           -bd
    
    	   Runs	 as a daemon in	the background,	waiting	for incoming SMTP con-
    	   nections.
    
    
           -bD
    
    	   Runs	as a daemon in the foreground, waiting for incoming SMTP  con-
    	   nections.
    
    
           -bi
    
    	   Initializes	the aliases(4) database. Root must own and have	exclu-
    	   sive	write permission to the	/etc/mail/aliases* files for  success-
    	   ful use of this option.
    
    
           -bl
    
    	   Runs	 as a daemon (like -bd)	but accepts only loopback SMTP connec-
    	   tions.
    
    
           -bm
    
    	   Delivers mail in the	usual way (default).
    
    
           -bp
    
    	   Prints a summary of the mail	queues.
    
    
           -bP
    
    	   Prints the number of	entries	in the queues.	This  option  is  only
    	   available with shared memory	support.
    
    
           -bs
    
    	   Uses	 the SMTP protocol as described	in RFC 2821. This flag implies
    	   all the operations of the -ba flag that are compatible with SMTP.
    
    
           -bt
    
    	   Runs	in address test	mode. This mode	reads addresses	and shows  the
    	   steps in parsing; it	is used	for debugging configuration tables.
    
    
           -bv
    
    	   Verifies  names only. Does not try to collect or deliver a message.
    	   Verify mode is normally used	for validating users or	mailing	lists.
    
    
           -B type
    
    	   Indicates body type (7BIT or	8BITMIME).
    
    
           -C file
    
    	   Uses	alternate configuration	file.
    
    
           -D logfile
    
    	   Send	debugging output to the	indicated log file instead of stdout.
    
    
           -d X
    
    	   Sets	debugging value	to X.
    
    
           -f name
    
    	   Sets	the name of the	"from" person (that  is,  the  sender  of  the
    	   mail).
    
    
           -F fullname
    
    	   Sets	the full name of the sender.
    
    
           -G
    
    	   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.
    
    
           -h N
    
    	   Sets	 the  hop  count to N. The hop count is	incremented every time
    	   the mail is processed.  When	 it  reaches  a	 limit,	 the  mail  is
    	   returned with an error message, the victim of an aliasing loop.
    
    
           -L tag
    
    	   Sets	the identifier used in syslog messages to the supplied tag.
    
    
           -Mxvalue
    
    	   Sets	macro x	to the specified value.
    
    
           -n
    
    	   Does	not do aliasing.
    
    
           -N notifications
    
    	   Tags	 all  addresses	 being sent as wanting the indicated notifica-
    	   tions, which	consists of the	word "NEVER" or	a comma-separated list
    	   of "SUCCESS", "FAILURE", and	"DELAY"	for successful delivery, fail-
    	   ure and a message that is stuck in a	queue somwhere.	The default is
    	   "FAILURE,DELAY".
    
    
           -oxvalue
    
    	   Sets	 option	 x  to	the  specified	value.	Processing Options are
    	   described below.
    
    
           -Ooption=value
    
    	   Sets	option to the specified	value (for long	from names).  Process-
    	   ing Options are described below.
    
    
           -p protocol
    
    	   Sets	the sending protocol. The protocol field can be	in form	proto-
    	   col: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.
    
    
           -q[time]
    
    	   Processes  saved  messages in the queue at given intervals. If time
    	   is omitted, processes the queue once. time is  given	 as  a	tagged
    	   number,  where  s  is seconds, m is minutes,	h is hours, d is days,
    	   and w is weeks. For example,	-q1h30m	or -q90m would	both  set  the
    	   timeout to one hour thirty minutes.
    
    	   By  default,	 sendmail  runs	 in the	background. This option	can be
    	   used	safely with -bd.
    
    
           -qp[time-]
    
    	   Similar to -q[time],	except that instead of periodically forking  a
    	   child  to  process  the  queue,  sendmail forks a single persistent
    	   child for each queue	that alternates	between	processing  the	 queue
    	   and	sleeping.  The sleep time (time) is specified as the argument;
    	   it defaults to 1 second. The	process	always sleeps at least 5  sec-
    	   onds	if the queue was empty in the previous queue run.
    
    
           -qf
    
    	   Processes  saved  messages  in the queue once and does not fork(2),
    	   but runs in the foreground.
    
    
           -qG name
    
    	   Processes jobs in queue group called	name only.
    
    
           -q[!]I substr
    
    	   Limits processed jobs to those containing substr as a substring  of
    	   the queue ID	or not when ! is specified.
    
    
           -q[!]Q substr
    
    	   Limits  processed  jobs to those quarantined	jobs containing	substr
    	   as a	substring of the quarantine reason or not when ! is specified.
    
    
           -q[!]R substr
    
    	   Limits processed jobs to those containing substr as a substring  of
    	   one of the recipients or not	when ! is specified.
    
    
           -q[!]S substr
    
    	   Limits  processed jobs to those containing substr as	a substring of
    	   the sender or not when ! is specified.
    
    
           -Q[reason]
    
    	   Quarantines a normal	queue item with	the given reason or  unquaran-
    	   tines  a  quarantined queue item if no reason is given. This	should
    	   only	be used	with some sort of item matching	as described above.
    
    
           -r name
    
    	   An alternate	and obsolete form of the -f flag.
    
    
           -R ret
    
    	   Identifies  the  information	 you  want  returned  if  the  message
    	   bounces.  ret can be	HDRS for headers only or FULL for headers plus
    	   body.
    
    
           -t
    
    	   Reads message for recipients. To:,Cc:, and Bcc: lines  are  scanned
    	   for	people	to  send to. The Bcc: line is deleted before transmis-
    	   sion. Any addresses in the argument list is suppressed.  The	 NoRe-
    	   cipientAction  Processing Option can	be used	to change the behavior
    	   when	no legal recipients are	included in the	message.
    
    
           -v
    
    	   Goes	into verbose mode. Alias  expansions  are  announced,  and  so
    	   forth.
    
    
           -V envid
    
    	   The	indicated envid	is passed with the envelope of the message and
    	   returned if the message bounces.
    
    
           -X logfile
    
    	   Logs	all traffic in and out of sendmail in  the  indicated  logfile
    	   for	debugging  mailer  problems.  This produces a lot of data very
    	   quickly and should be used sparingly.
    
    
       Processing Options
           There are a number of "random" options that can be set from a  configu-
           ration file. Options are	represented by a single	character or by	multi-
           ple 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	 bene-
           ficial  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(4)  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.
    
    
           CertFingerprintAlgorithm
    
    	   Specifies  the  fingerprint	algorithm (digest) to use for the pre-
    	   sented cert.	If the option is not set, md5 is used  and  the	 macro
    	   ${cert_md5} contains	the cert fingerprint. If the option is explic-
    	   itly	set, the specified algorithm (for example, sha1) is  used  and
    	   the macro ${cert_fp}	contains the cert fingerprint.
    
    
           CheckAliases (n)
    
    	   Validates  the  RHS of aliases when rebuilding the aliases(4) data-
    	   base.
    
    
           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.
    
    
           CipherList
    
    	   Specify cipher list for STARTTLS. See ciphers (1openssl) for	possi-
    	   ble values.
    
    
           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.
    
    
    
           ClientSSLOptions
    
    	   A space separated list of SSL related options for client side.  See
    	   SSL_CTX_set_options(3)  for	a list;	the available values depend on
    	   the OpenSSL version against which sendmail is compiled. By default,
    	   *	SSL_OP_ALL,   *	  SSL_OP_NO_SSLv2,   *	 SSL_OP_NO_TICKET,   *
    	   -SSL_OP_TLSEXT_PADDING are used (if those options are available).
    
    	   Options can be cleared by preceeding	them with a minus sign.	It  is
    	   also	possible to specify numerical values, for example, -0x0010.
    
    
           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 imme-
    	   diately 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 send-
    	   mail	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 con-
    	   trol	 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 Daemon-
    	   PortOptions 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.send-
    	   mail.org/tips/dontBlameSendmail 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	 "dou-
    	   ble 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 pro-
    	   vide	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 sup-
    	   presses 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	avail-
    	   able	 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/for-
    	   ward/$u:$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  con-
    	   nect	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 num-
    	   ber,	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.
    
    
           MaxQueueAge=age
    
    	   Does	 not  process any queued jobs that have	been in	the queue less
    	   than	the indicated time interval. This is intended to allow you  to
    	   get	responsiveness by processing the queue fairly frequently with-
    	   out thrashing your system by	trying jobs  too  often.  The  default
    	   units  are minutes. Note that this option is	ignored	for queue runs
    	   that	select a subset	of the queue, that is, -q[!][I|R|S|Q][string].
    
    
           MaxQueueChildren=N
    
    	   When	set, this limits the number of concurrent  queue  runner  pro-
    	   cesses  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 num-
    	   ber	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 com-
    	   mand. 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, restrict-
    	   mailq, 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 sys-
    	   tem,	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/bin/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	 aver-
    	   age	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 char-
    	   acter  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 prob-
    	   ably	shouldn't be used on slow network links. Filename and  modifi-
    	   cation  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(7D),	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 con-
    	   nections. 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.
    
    
           ServerSSLOptions
    
    	   A space separated list of SSL related options for server side.  See
    	   SSL_CTX_set_options(3)  for	a list;	the available values depend on
    	   the OpenSSL version against which sendmail is compiled. By default,
    	   * SSL_OP_ALL	and *-SSL_OP_TLSEXT_PADDING are	used (if those options
    	   are available).
    
    	   Options can be cleared by preceeding	them with a minus sign.	It  is
    	   also	possible to specify numerical values, for example, -0x0010.
    
    
           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  num-
    	   ber	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 circum-
    	   stances. 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. PostMil-
    	   ter 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	 Time-
    	       out.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	 Time-
    	       out.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 vari-
    	   able	is set to this value.
    
    
           TLSSrvOptions
    
    	   If this  option  is	'V',  then  no	client	verification  is  per-
    	   formed,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 con-
    	   dition 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  configu-
    	   ration  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.
    
    
           UseCompressedIPv6Addresses
    
    	   If  set, the	compressed format of IPv6 addresses, such as IPV6:::1,
    	   will	 be  used,  instead  of	 the  uncompressed  format,  such   as
    	   IPv6:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1.
    
    
           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 HoldEx-
    	   pensive and DeliveryMode options so that all	mail is	delivered com-
    	   pletely  in	a  single  job so that you can see the entire delivery
    	   process. The	Verbose	option should never be set in  the  configura-
    	   tion	file; it is intended for command line use only.
    
    
           XscriptFileBufferSize
    
    	   Sets	 the  threshold,  in  bytes, before a memory-bases queue tran-
    	   script 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	exclu-
           sive  write  permission.	 If invoked as mailq, sendmail prints the con-
           tents of	the mail queue.
    
    OPERANDS
           address
    
    	   address of an intended recipient of the message being sent.
    
    
    USAGE
           See largefile(5)	for the	description of the behavior of	sendmail  when
           encountering files greater than or equal	to 2 Gbyte ( 2^31 bytes).
    
    EXIT STATUS
           sendmail	 returns  an exit status describing what it did. The codes are
           defined in /usr/include/sysexits.h.
    
           EX_OK
    
    	   Successful completion on all	addresses.
    
    
           EX_NOUSER
    
    	   User	name not recognized.
    
    
           EX_UNAVAILABLE
    
    	   Catchall. Necessary resources were not available.
    
    
           EX_SYNTAX
    
    	   Syntax error	in address.
    
    
           EX_SOFTWARE
    
    	   Internal software error, including bad arguments.
    
    
           EX_OSERR
    
    	   Temporary operating system error, such as "cannot fork".
    
    
           EX_NOHOST
    
    	   Host	name not recognized.
    
    
           EX_TEMPFAIL
    
    	   Message could not be	sent immediately, but was queued.
    
    
    ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
           No environment variables	are used. However, sendmail's start-up script,
           invoked	by  svcadm(1M),	 reads /etc/default/sendmail. In this file, if
           the variable ETRN_HOSTS is set, the start-up script parses  this	 vari-
           able  and  invokes  etrn(1M) appropriately. ETRN_HOSTS should be	of the
           form:
    
    	 "s1:c1.1,c1.2	      s2:c2.1 s3:c3.1,c3.2,c3.3"
    
    
    
    
           That is,	white-space separated groups of	server:client where client can
           be  one	or  more  comma-separated names. The :client part is optional.
           server is the name of the server	to prod; a mail	queue run is requested
           for each	client name. This is comparable	to running:
    
    	 /usr/lib/sendmail -qR client
    
    
    
    
           on the host server.
    
    FILES
           dead.letter
    
    	   Unmailable text
    
    
           /etc/default/sendmail
    
    	   Contains default settings. You can override some of the settings by
    	   command line	options.
    
    
           /etc/mail/aliases
    
    	   Mail	aliases	file (ASCII)
    
    
           /etc/mail/aliases.db
    
    	   Database of mail aliases (binary)
    
    
           /etc/mail/aliases.dir
    
    	   Database of mail aliases (binary)
    
    
           /etc/mail/aliases.pag
    
    	   Database of mail aliases (binary)
    
    
           /etc/mail/sendmail.cf
    
    	   Defines environment for sendmail
    
    
           /etc/mail/submit.cf
    
    	   Defines environment for MSP
    
    
           /etc/mail/trusted-users
    
    	   Lists users that are	"trusted", that	is, able to set	their envelope
    	   from	 address  using	 -f without generating a warning message. Note
    	   that	this file is consulted by the default sendmail.cf, but not  by
    	   the	 default   submit.cf,	in   which   the   line	 referring  to
    	   /etc/mail/trusted-users  is	commented  out.	 See  sendmail(4)  for
    	   instructions	on making changes to submit.cf and sendmail.cf.
    
    
           /var/spool/clientmqueue/*
    
    	   Temporary files and queued mail
    
    
           /var/spool/mqueue/*
    
    	   Temporary files and queued mail
    
    
           ~/.forward
    
    	   List	of recipients for forwarding messages
    
    
           /usr/include/libmilter/README
    
    	   Describes the steps needed to compile and run a filter
    
    
    ATTRIBUTES
           See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
    
    
    
    
           +-----------------------------+------------------------------+
           |      ATTRIBUTE	TYPE	     |	     ATTRIBUTE VALUE	    |
           +-----------------------------+------------------------------+
           |Availability		     |service/network/smtp/sendmail |
           +-----------------------------+------------------------------+
    
    SEE ALSO
           svcs(1),	 biff(1B),  mail(1),  mailq(1),	mailx(1), nice(1), check-host-
           name(1M), check-permissions(1M),	etrn(1M), newaliases(1M),  svcadm(1M),
           svccfg(1M),		  fork(2),		  getpwnam(3C)getuser-
           shell(3C)resolver(3RESOLV)aliases(4), hosts(4), sendmail(4), shells(4),
           attributes(5), largefile(5), smf(5), random(7D)
    
    
           tcpd(1M), hosts_access(4) in the	security/tcp-wrapper package.
    
    
           RFC 2821	Simple Mail Transfer Protocol, John Klensin, April 2001.
    
    
           RFC 2822	Internet Message Format, Pete Resnick, April 2001.
    
    
           sendmail,  Third	 Edition,  Bryan Costales with Eric Allman, O'Reilly &
           Associates, Inc., 2003.
    
    
           http://www.sendmail.org
    
    
           http://www.milter.org
    
    NOTES
           The sendmail program requires a fully qualified host name  when	start-
           ing.  A	script	has  been  included to help verify if the host name is
           defined properly	(see check-hostname(1M)).
    
    
           The permissions and the ownership  of  several  directories  have  been
           changed	in  order  to  increase	 security.  In	particular,  access to
           /etc/mail and /var/spool/mqueue has been	restricted.
    
    
           Security	restrictions have been placed users using  .forward  files  to
           pipe  mail  to  a program or redirect mail to a file. The default shell
           (as  listed  in	/etc/passwd)  of  these	 users	must  be   listed   in
           /etc/shells.  This restriction does not affect mail that	is being redi-
           rected to another alias.
    
    
           Additional  restrictions	 have  been  put  in  place  on	 .forward  and
           :include:  files. These files and the directory structure that they are
           placed  in  cannot  be  group-  or  world-writable.  See	 check-permis-
           sions(1M).
    
    
           If  you	have  interfaces that map to domains that have MX records that
           point to	non-local destinations,	you might need	to  enable  the	 Dont-
           ProbeInterfaces option to enable	delivery to those destinations.	In its
           default startup behavior, sendmail probes each interface	 and  adds  an
           interface's  IP	addresses, as well as any domains that those addresses
           map to, to its list of domains that are considered local.  For  domains
           thus  added, being on the list of local domains is equivalent to	having
           a 0-preference MX record, with localhost	as the MX value.  If  this  is
           not the result you want,	enable DontProbeInterfaces.
    
    
    
    SunOS 5.11			  02 Jun 2015			  sendmail(1M)
    

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