Mercurial > masqmail
view docs/simple-relay-setup @ 209:10da50168dab
replaced the MD5 implementation with the one of Solar Designer
Until now, the sample code of RFC 1321 was used. It had an ugly license.
Now we use the implementation of Solar Designer, which is in the Public Domain.
http://openwall.info/wiki/people/solar/software/public-domain-source-code/md5
author | meillo@marmaro.de |
---|---|
date | Sun, 18 Jul 2010 21:58:15 +0200 |
parents | 3dff59a4e764 |
children | 9814e75de61c |
line wrap: on
line source
Simple Setup ============ You want -------- - submit mail on stdin by calling masqmail on the commandline - submit mail with SMTP from the local machine - let masqmail deliver mail locally to the system mailboxes /var/mail/* - let masqmail forward non-local mail through a smart host This is like the simple-local-setup plus the forwarding. Set up ------ Follow the description in INSTALL. A common configure call would be: ./configure --enable-auth --enable-ident Configuration ------------- You need a config file like this one: host_name = "foo.example.org" online_routes.default = /etc/masqmail/default.route (Substitute a real hostname, of course.) Addionally you need to create the route config file like: protocol = smtp # where to relay to; the address and port of the smart host mail_host = "mail.gmx.net:25" # use the wrapper to enable encryption #wrapper = "openssl s_client -quiet -connect mail.gmx.net:465 2>/dev/null" do_correct_helo = true # rewrite the From addresses to ones visible from the outside map_return_path_addresses = "meillo: schnalke4@gmx.de" map_h_from_addresses = "meillo: markus schnalke <schnalke4@gmx.de>" # it's good to use "login" only if the connection is encrypted auth_name = "login" #auth_name = "cram-md5" auth_login = "UID_OR_EMAIL_ADDRESS" auth_secret = "PASSWORD" Starting the daemon ------------------- Listening for SMTP connections on a port requires masqmail to run as daemon. You probably want to start masqmail as daemon each time the system comes up. How you have to do that is system dependent. /etc/rc.local is a good try to add the daemon call, because this file seems to be frequently available. /usr/local/sbin/masqmail -bd -q10m This starts masqmail in daemon mode and does a queue run every ten minutes. Check the setup --------------- Like in simple-local-setup plus ... Send a mail to a remote location: $ echo "some text" | mail foo@somewhereelse.example.org Check if it is queued: $ masqmail -bp Deliver it with: $ masqmail -qo default Check the queue contents again. You need to do such queue runs for online routes explicitely. For instance by cron. Automatic queue runs -------------------- You can also tell masqmail to send queued mails through a route each time the daemon does a queue run. Therefor you need to tell masqmail that it is online and can use the default route to deliver mail. Add this to masqmail.conf: online_detect = "pipe" online_pipe = "/bin/echo default" Now masqmail will send online mail automatically through the default route, each time it does a queue run (every ten minutes). In case of problems ------------------- Have a look at the log file: /var/log/masqmail/masqmail.log Set the debug level in masqmail.conf, restart the daemon, redo the test, and look at the debug file: /var/log/masqmail/debug.log If you use a wrapper, test it manually and interactively on the command line. Ask on the mailing list: <masqmail@marmaro.de> meillo