Sendmail

A classic O'Reilly title since 1993, sendmail now covers Versions 8.10 through 8.14 of this email routing program, including dozens of new features, options, and macros. This edition also takes a more nuts-and-bolts approach than its predecessors. It includes both an administration handbook an...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Costales, Bryane (-)
Otros Autores: Costales, Bryan
Formato: Libro electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Beijing ; Sebastopol, California : O'Reilly 2007.
Edición:4th ed
Materias:
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull:https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009627064506719
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Table of Contents; Preface; Changes Since the Previous Edition; Why This Book Is Necessary; History; Thoughts from Eric Allman; Organization; Audience and Assumptions; Unix and sendmail Versions; Conventions Used in This Book; Using Code Examples; Additional Sources of Information; Other Books, Other Problems; How to Contact Us; Safari® Books Online; Acknowledgments; Some Basics; 1.1 Email Basics; 1.2 Requests for Comments (RFCs); 1.3 Email and sendmail; 1.3.1 Other MTAs; 1.3.2 Why sendmail Is So Complex; 1.4 Basic Parts of sendmail; 1.4.1 The Configuration File; 1.4.2 The Queue
  • 1.4.3 Aliases and Mailing Lists1.5 Basic Parts of a Mail Message; 1.5.1 Run sendmail by Hand; 1.5.2 The Header; 1.5.3 The Body; 1.5.4 The Envelope; 1.6 Basic Roles of sendmail; 1.6.1 Role in the Filesystem; 1.6.2 Role in the aliases File; 1.6.3 Role in Queue Management; 1.6.4 Role in Local Delivery; 1.6.5 Delivery to a Mailbox; 1.6.6 Delivery Through a Program; 1.6.7 Role in Network Transport; 1.6.8 Role in TCP/IP; 1.6.9 Role in UUCP; 1.6.10 Role in Other Protocols; 1.6.11 Role As a Daemon; 1.7 Basic Modes of sendmail; 1.7.1 How to Run sendmail; 1.7.1.1 Become a mode (-b)
  • 1.7.1.2 Daemon mode (-bd)1.7.2 Kill and Restart, Beginning with V8.7; 1.7.2.1 Kill and restart with V8.6; 1.7.2.2 Kill and restart, very old versions; 1.7.2.3 If you forget to kill the daemon; 1.7.3 Show Queue Mode (-bp); 1.7.4 Rebuild Aliases Mode (-bi); 1.7.5 Verify Mode (-bv); 1.7.6 Verbose Mode (-v); 1.7.7 Debugging Mode (-d); 1.8 The sendmail.cf File; 1.8.1 Configuration Commands; 1.8.2 The version Command; 1.8.3 Comments; 1.8.4 A Quick Tour; 1.8.4.1 Mail delivery agents; 1.8.4.2 Macros; 1.8.4.3 Rules; 1.8.4.4 Rule sets; 1.8.4.5 Class macros; 1.8.4.6 File class macros; 1.8.4.7 Options
  • 1.8.4.8 Headers1.8.4.9 Priority; 1.8.4.10 Trusted users; 1.8.4.11 Keyed databases; 1.8.4.12 Environment variables; 1.8.4.13 Queues defined; 1.8.4.14 External filter programs; Part I; Download, Build, and Install; 2.1 Vendor Versus Compiling; 2.2 Download the Source; 2.3 What's Where in the Source; 2.3.1 The Top-Level Build Script; 2.3.2 The contrib Directory; 2.3.3 The devtools Directory; 2.3.4 The doc Directory; 2.3.5 The include Directory; 2.3.6 The INSTALL File; 2.3.7 The KNOWNBUGS File; 2.3.8 The libmilter Directory; 2.3.9 The libsm Directory; 2.3.10 The libsmdb Directory
  • 2.3.11 The libsmutil Directory2.3.12 The LICENSE File; 2.3.13 The Makefile File; 2.3.14 The PGPKEYS File; 2.3.15 The README File; 2.3.16 The RELEASE_NOTES File; 2.3.17 The test Directory; 2.4 Build sendmail; 2.4.1 The Build Script; 2.4.2 Build with m4; 2.4.3 Run Build; 2.4.4 If You Change Your m4 Build File; 2.4.5 Use libresolv.a; 2.4.6 Badly Defined sys_errlist; 2.4.7 Error at or Near Variable; 2.4.8 Undefined Symbol strtoul; 2.4.9 warning: & before array; 2.4.10 Other Considerations; 2.5 Install sendmail; 2.5.1 Add smmsp to /etc/passwd; 2.5.2 Add smmsp to /etc/group; 2.5.3 Modify init Files
  • 2.5.4 The submit.cf File