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TCP/IP Network Administration

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10. sendmail

Users have a love-hate relationship with email; they love to use it, and hate when it doesn't work. It's the system administrator's job to make sure it does work. That is the job we tackle in this chapter.

sendmail is not the only mail transport program. MMDF (Multichannel Memorandum Distribution Facility) predates sendmail and is still used today. There are also variations of basic sendmail, such as IDA sendmail, that are widely used. But plain sendmail is the most widely used mail transport program, and it's the one we cover.

This entire chapter is devoted to sendmail, and an entire book is easily devoted to the subject. [1] In part this is because of email's importance, but it is also because sendmail has a complex configuration.

[1] See sendmail , by Costales and Allman (O'Reilly & Associates), for a book-length treatment of sendmail.

The variety of programs and protocols used for email complicates configuration and support. SMTP sends email over TCP/IP networks. Another program sends mail between users on the same system. Still another sends mail between systems on UUCP networks. Each of these mail systems - SMTP, UUCP, and local mail - has its own delivery program and its own mail addressing scheme. All of this can cause confusion for mail users and for system administrators.

10.1 sendmail's Function

sendmail eliminates some of the confusion caused by multiple mail delivery programs. It does this by routing mail for the user to the proper delivery program based on the email address. It accepts mail from a user's mail program, interprets the mail address, rewrites the address into the proper form for the delivery program, and routes the mail to the correct delivery program. sendmail insulates the end user from these details. If the mail is properly addressed, sendmail will see that it is properly passed on for delivery. Likewise, for incoming mail, sendmail interprets the address and either delivers the mail to a user's mail program or forwards it to another system.

Figure 10.1 illustrates sendmail's special role in routing mail between the various mail programs found on UNIX systems.

Figure 10.1: Mail is routed through sendmail

Figure 10.1

In addition to routing mail between user programs and delivery programs, sendmail:

  • Receives and delivers SMTP (internet) mail

  • Provides system-wide mail aliases, which allow mailing lists

Configuring a system to perform all of these functions properly is a complex task. In this chapter we discuss each of these functions, look at how they are configured, and examine ways to simplify the task. First, we'll see how sendmail is run to receive SMTP mail. Then we'll see how mail aliases are used, and how sendmail is configured to route mail based on the mail's address.