Qmail
qmail has quietly become one of the most widely used applications on the Internet today. It's powerful enough to handle mail for systems with millions of users--Like Yahoo! Mail and Hotmail, while remaining compact and manageable enough for the smallest Unix- and Linux-based PC systems. Its co...
Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Sebastopol, California :
O'Reilly
2004.
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Edición: | First edition |
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009627410506719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- qmail; Part II: Advanced Qmail; Style Conventions; Examples and Patches; Comments and Questions; Acknowledgments; I. Introduction to Qmail; 1.1.2. Envelopes; 1.1.3. Messages; 1.1.4. Lines; 1.2. Mailstore; 1.2.2. Opaque Mailstore; 1.2.2.2. IMAP4; 1.3. The Structure of Internet Mail; 2. How Qmail Works; 2.1.2. The Principle of Least Privilege; 2.1.3. Program Wrapping; 2.1.4. No New Languages; 2.1.5. Configuration Files; 2.2. What Does a Mail Transfer Agent (MTA) Do?; 2.3. The Pieces of Qmail; 3. Installing Qmail; 3.1.2. Should I Upgrade?; 3.1.3. Other Software You Should Fetch
- 3.2. Creating the Users and Groups3.2.2. Adding by Hand; 3.2.3. Nofiles Group Really Has No Files; 3.3. Configuring and Making the Software; 3.3.2. conf-cc; 3.3.3. conf-groups; 3.3.4. conf-ld; 3.3.5. conf-patrn; 3.3.6. conf-qmail; 3.3.7. conf-spawn; 3.3.8. conf-split; 3.3.9. conf-users; 3.3.10. Build Using make; 3.3.11. If the Build Fails; 3.3.12. Building the Other Packages; 3.3.13. Installing Qmail; 3.3.14. Installing Other Programs; 3.4. Patching Qmail; 4. Getting Comfortable with Qmail; 4.1.2. Local Delivery; 4.1.3. Logging; 4.2. An Excursion into Daemon Management
- 4.3. Setting Up the Qmail Configuration Files4.4. Starting and Stopping Qmail; 4.4.2. Fire `er Up; 4.4.3. Stopping Qmail; 4.5. Incoming Mail; 4.5.2. Setting Up the Daemons; 4.5.3. Make Some Mail Aliases; 4.5.4. Relaying for Local Users; 4.6. Procmail and Qmail; 4.7. Creating Addresses and Mailboxes; 4.8. Reading Your Mail; 4.9. Configuring Qmail&s Control Files; 4.10. Using ~alias; 4.11. fastforward and /etc/aliases; 4.11.2. Using fastforward; 4.11.3. Alias File Format; 5. Moving from Sendmail to Qmail; 5.2. User Issues; 5.2.2. Qmail and .forward Files; 5.3. System Issues
- 5.3.2. Local Deliveries5.3.3. Hostnames and Masquerading; 5.3.4. Local and Virtual Domains; 5.3.5. Remote Domains, and Primary and Backup MXes; 5.3.6. Smarthosts; 5.3.7. Uucp and Other Specialized Deliveries; 5.3.8. Spam Filtering; 5.4. Converting Your Aliases File; 5.4.2. Mailing Lists; 5.4.3. Program Deliveries; 5.5. Trusted Users; 6. Handling Locally Generated Mail; 6.1.2. Other Queueing Programs; 6.1.3. Wrapping qmail-queue; 6.2. Cleaning Up Injected Mail; 6.2.1.2. Header rewriting; 6.2.1.3. Address rewriting; 6.2.2. Passing in Large Numbers of Addresses
- 6.3. Accepting Local Mail from Other Hosts6.4. Distinguishing Injected from Relayed Mail; 7. Accepting Mail from Other Hosts; 7.2. Accepting and Cleaning Up Local Mail Using the Regular SMTP Daemon; 7.2.2. Deciding On the Fly Which Daemon to Use; 7.3. Dealing with Roaming Users; 7.4. SMTP Authorization and TLS Security; 7.5. POP-before-SMTP; 7.5.2. Adding POP-Before-SMTP to the SMTP Server; 7.5.3. Using POP-before-SMTP with ofmipd; 7.5.4. Other POP-before-SMTP Daemons; 8. Delivering and Routing Local Mail; 8.1.2. Maildirs and Mail Clients; 8.2. Mail Sorting
- 8.2.2. Mail Sorting with Filter Programs