masqmail
changeset 3:8c55886cacd8
man pages will be maintained in troff now
author | meillo@marmaro.de |
---|---|
date | Fri, 26 Sep 2008 21:40:10 +0200 |
parents | 653aef34b225 |
children | 2c09cca4cab9 |
files | Makefile.am Makefile.in config.status.lineno configure configure.ac docs/Makefile.am docs/Makefile.in docs/README docs/man/Makefile.am docs/man/Makefile.in docs/man/masqmail.8 docs/man/masqmail.aliases.5 docs/man/masqmail.conf.5 docs/man/masqmail.get.5 docs/man/masqmail.route.5 docs/man/mservdetect.8 docs/masqmail.8 docs/masqmail.aliases.5 docs/masqmail.conf.5 docs/masqmail.get.5 docs/masqmail.route.5 docs/mservdetect.8 docs/xml/Makefile.am docs/xml/Makefile.in docs/xml/masqmail.8.xml docs/xml/masqmail.aliases.5.xml docs/xml/masqmail.conf.5.xml docs/xml/masqmail.get.5.xml docs/xml/masqmail.route.5.xml docs/xml/mservdetect.8.xml |
diffstat | 30 files changed, 959 insertions(+), 3648 deletions(-) [+] |
line diff
1.1 --- a/Makefile.am Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 1.2 +++ b/Makefile.am Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 1.3 @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ 1.4 EXTRA_DIST = \ 1.5 examples/example.get examples/example.route examples/masqmail.conf \ 1.6 -docs/README docs/man/m*.[0-9] \ 1.7 +docs/README docs/m*.[0-9] \ 1.8 suse/masqmail suse/masqmail.spec suse/masqmail.spec.in \ 1.9 redhat/masqmail redhat/masqmail.spec redhat/masqmail.spec.in \ 1.10 tpl/failmsg.tpl tpl/failmsg.tpl.de tpl/failmsg.tpl.fr tpl/failmsg.tpl.it \
2.1 --- a/Makefile.in Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 2.2 +++ b/Makefile.in Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 2.3 @@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ 2.4 with_user = @with_user@ 2.5 EXTRA_DIST = \ 2.6 examples/example.get examples/example.route examples/masqmail.conf \ 2.7 -docs/README docs/man/m*.[0-9] \ 2.8 +docs/README docs/m*.[0-9] \ 2.9 suse/masqmail suse/masqmail.spec suse/masqmail.spec.in \ 2.10 redhat/masqmail redhat/masqmail.spec redhat/masqmail.spec.in \ 2.11 tpl/failmsg.tpl tpl/failmsg.tpl.de tpl/failmsg.tpl.fr tpl/failmsg.tpl.it \ 2.12 @@ -337,7 +337,7 @@ 2.13 distdir: $(DISTFILES) 2.14 $(am__remove_distdir) 2.15 mkdir $(distdir) 2.16 - $(mkinstalldirs) $(distdir)/docs $(distdir)/docs/man $(distdir)/examples $(distdir)/redhat $(distdir)/suse $(distdir)/tpl 2.17 + $(mkinstalldirs) $(distdir)/docs $(distdir)/examples $(distdir)/redhat $(distdir)/suse $(distdir)/tpl 2.18 @srcdirstrip=`echo "$(srcdir)" | sed 's|.|.|g'`; \ 2.19 topsrcdirstrip=`echo "$(top_srcdir)" | sed 's|.|.|g'`; \ 2.20 list='$(DISTFILES)'; for file in $$list; do \
3.1 --- a/config.status.lineno Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 3.2 +++ b/config.status.lineno Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 3.3 @@ -301,7 +301,7 @@ 3.4 " 3.5 3.6 # Files that config.status was made for. 3.7 -config_files=" Makefile debian/Makefile docs/Makefile docs/man/Makefile docs/xml/Makefile tests/Makefile src/Makefile src/base64/Makefile src/md5/Makefile src/libident/Makefile suse/masqmail.spec redhat/masqmail.spec" 3.8 +config_files=" Makefile debian/Makefile tests/Makefile src/Makefile src/base64/Makefile src/md5/Makefile src/libident/Makefile suse/masqmail.spec redhat/masqmail.spec" 3.9 config_headers=" config.h" 3.10 config_commands=" depfiles" 3.11 3.12 @@ -438,9 +438,6 @@ 3.13 "depfiles") CONFIG_COMMANDS="$CONFIG_COMMANDS depfiles" ;; 3.14 "Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES Makefile" ;; 3.15 "debian/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES debian/Makefile" ;; 3.16 - "docs/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES docs/Makefile" ;; 3.17 - "docs/man/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES docs/man/Makefile" ;; 3.18 - "docs/xml/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES docs/xml/Makefile" ;; 3.19 "tests/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES tests/Makefile" ;; 3.20 "src/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES src/Makefile" ;; 3.21 "src/base64/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES src/base64/Makefile" ;;
4.1 --- a/configure Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 4.2 +++ b/configure Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 4.3 @@ -6494,7 +6494,7 @@ 4.4 fi 4.5 fi 4.6 4.7 -ac_config_files="$ac_config_files Makefile debian/Makefile docs/Makefile docs/man/Makefile docs/xml/Makefile tests/Makefile src/Makefile src/base64/Makefile src/md5/Makefile src/libident/Makefile suse/masqmail.spec redhat/masqmail.spec" 4.8 +ac_config_files="$ac_config_files Makefile debian/Makefile tests/Makefile src/Makefile src/base64/Makefile src/md5/Makefile src/libident/Makefile suse/masqmail.spec redhat/masqmail.spec" 4.9 4.10 cat >confcache <<\_ACEOF 4.11 # This file is a shell script that caches the results of configure 4.12 @@ -7076,9 +7076,6 @@ 4.13 "depfiles") CONFIG_COMMANDS="$CONFIG_COMMANDS depfiles" ;; 4.14 "Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES Makefile" ;; 4.15 "debian/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES debian/Makefile" ;; 4.16 - "docs/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES docs/Makefile" ;; 4.17 - "docs/man/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES docs/man/Makefile" ;; 4.18 - "docs/xml/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES docs/xml/Makefile" ;; 4.19 "tests/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES tests/Makefile" ;; 4.20 "src/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES src/Makefile" ;; 4.21 "src/base64/Makefile") CONFIG_FILES="$CONFIG_FILES src/base64/Makefile" ;;
5.1 --- a/configure.ac Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 5.2 +++ b/configure.ac Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 5.3 @@ -289,9 +289,6 @@ 5.4 5.5 AC_OUTPUT(Makefile \ 5.6 debian/Makefile \ 5.7 - docs/Makefile \ 5.8 - docs/man/Makefile \ 5.9 - docs/xml/Makefile \ 5.10 tests/Makefile \ 5.11 src/Makefile \ 5.12 src/base64/Makefile \
6.1 --- a/docs/Makefile.am Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 6.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 6.3 @@ -1,46 +0,0 @@ 6.4 -SUBDIRS=man xml 6.5 - 6.6 -man: man/masqmail.8 man/mservdetect.8 man/masqmail.conf.5 man/masqmail.route.5 man/masqmail.get.5 man/masqmail.aliases.5 6.7 - 6.8 -html: html/masqmail.8.html html/mservdetect.8.html html/masqmail.conf.5.html html/masqmail.route.5.html html/masqmail.get.5.html html/masqmail.aliases.5.html 6.9 - 6.10 -man/masqmail.8: xml/masqmail.8.xml 6.11 - xmltoman $< >$@ 6.12 - 6.13 -man/mservdetect.8: xml/mservdetect.8.xml 6.14 - xmltoman $< >$@ 6.15 - 6.16 -man/masqmail.conf.5: xml/masqmail.conf.5.xml 6.17 - xmltoman $< >$@ 6.18 - 6.19 -man/masqmail.route.5: xml/masqmail.route.5.xml 6.20 - xmltoman $< >$@ 6.21 - 6.22 -man/masqmail.get.5: xml/masqmail.get.5.xml 6.23 - xmltoman $< >$@ 6.24 - 6.25 -man/masqmail.aliases.5: xml/masqmail.aliases.5.xml 6.26 - xmltoman $< >$@ 6.27 - 6.28 - 6.29 -html/masqmail.8.html: xml/masqmail.8.xml 6.30 - xmlmantohtml $< >$@ 6.31 - 6.32 -html/mservdetect.8.html: xml/mservdetect.8.xml 6.33 - xmlmantohtml $< >$@ 6.34 - 6.35 -html/masqmail.conf.5.html: xml/masqmail.conf.5.xml 6.36 - xmlmantohtml $< >$@ 6.37 - 6.38 -html/masqmail.route.5.html: xml/masqmail.route.5.xml 6.39 - xmlmantohtml $< >$@ 6.40 - 6.41 -html/masqmail.get.5.html: xml/masqmail.get.5.xml 6.42 - xmlmantohtml $< >$@ 6.43 - 6.44 -html/masqmail.aliases.5.html: xml/masqmail.aliases.5.xml 6.45 - xmlmantohtml $< >$@ 6.46 - 6.47 -#clean: 6.48 -# rm -f man/*.[58] 6.49 -# rm -r html/*.html
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8.1 --- a/docs/README Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 8.2 +++ b/docs/README Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 8.3 @@ -1,11 +1,2 @@ 8.4 -Since version 0.1.1 the documentation within the masqmail package is 8.5 -in man pages. The source is in in xml, the xml sources can be 8.6 -converted to man pages or html pages with the perl scripts xml2man and 8.7 -xmlman2html. 8.8 - 8.9 -The xml sources are availabe in another package. 8.10 - 8.11 -The perl scripts will be available at http://masqmail.cx/xml2man/ 8.12 - 8.13 -If you want to conribute to the documentation, please use the xml 8.14 -sources, changes in html or man pages will be lost. 8.15 +Since masqmail-0.3, documentation is maintained in troff (man page) format. 8.16 +The old XML sources are no longer used.
9.1 --- a/docs/man/Makefile.am Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 9.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 9.3 @@ -1,1 +0,0 @@ 9.4 -man_MANS=masqmail.8 mservdetect.8 masqmail.conf.5 masqmail.route.5 masqmail.get.5 masqmail.aliases.5 9.5 \ No newline at end of file
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11.1 --- a/docs/man/masqmail.8 Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 11.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 11.3 @@ -1,213 +0,0 @@ 11.4 -.TH masqmail 8 User Manuals 11.5 -.SH NAME 11.6 -masqmail \- An offline Mail Transfer Agent 11.7 -.SH SYNOPSIS 11.8 -\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-C \fIfile\f1\fB] [-odq] [-bd] [-q\fIinterval\f1\fB] 11.9 - 11.10 -\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-odq] [-bs] 11.11 - 11.12 -\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-bp] 11.13 - 11.14 -\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-q] 11.15 - 11.16 -\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-qo [\fIname\f1\fB]] 11.17 - 11.18 -\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-odq] [-g [\fIname\f1\fB]] 11.19 - 11.20 -\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-odq] [-go [\fIname\f1\fB]] 11.21 - 11.22 -\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-t] [-oi] [-f \fIaddress\f1\fB] [--] \fIaddress...\f1\fB 11.23 - 11.24 -\fB/usr/sbin/mailq 11.25 - 11.26 -\fB 11.27 -.SH DESCRIPTION 11.28 - 11.29 -MasqMail is a mail server designed for hosts that do not have a permanent internet connection eg. a home network or a single host at home. It has special support for connections to different ISPs. It replaces sendmail or other MTAs such as qmail or exim. It can also act as a pop3 client. 11.30 - 11.31 -.SH OPTIONS 11.32 - 11.33 -Since masqmail is intended to replace sendmail, it uses the same command line options, but not all are implemented. There are also two additional options, which are unique to masqmail (-qo \fIconnection\f1 and -g) 11.34 -.TP 11.35 - 11.36 -\fB--\f1 11.37 - 11.38 -Not a 'real' option, it means that all following arguments are to be understood as arguments and not as options even if they begin with a leading dash '-'. Mutt is known to call sendmail with this option. 11.39 -.TP 11.40 - 11.41 -\fB-bd\f1 11.42 - 11.43 -Run as daemon, accepting connections, usually on port 25 if not configured differently. This is usually used in the startup script at system boot and together with the -q option (see below). 11.44 -.TP 11.45 - 11.46 -\fB-bi\f1 11.47 - 11.48 -Old sendmail rebuilds its alias database when invoked with this option. Masqmail ignores it. Masqmail reads directly from the file given with alias_file in the config file. 11.49 -.TP 11.50 - 11.51 -\fB-bp\f1 11.52 - 11.53 -Show the messages in the queue. Same as calling masqmail as 'mailq'. 11.54 -.TP 11.55 - 11.56 -\fB-bs\f1 11.57 - 11.58 -Accept SMTP commands from stdin. Some mailers (eg pine) use this option as an interface. It can also be used to call masqmail from inetd. 11.59 -.TP 11.60 - 11.61 -\fB-B \fIarg\f1\fB\f1 11.62 - 11.63 -\fIarg\f1 is usually 8BITMIME. Some mailers use this to indicate that the message contains characters > 127. Masqmail is 8-bit clean and ignores this, so you do not have to recompile elm, which is very painful ;-). Note though that this violates some conventions: masqmail does not convert 8 bit messages to any MIME format if it encounters a mail server which does not advertise its 8BITMIME capability, masqmail does not advertise this itself. This is the same practice as that of exim (but different to sendmail). 11.64 -.TP 11.65 - 11.66 -\fB-bV \f1 11.67 - 11.68 -Show version information. 11.69 -.TP 11.70 - 11.71 -\fB-C \f1\fIfilename\f1 11.72 - 11.73 -Use another configuration than \fI/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf\f1. Useful for debugging purposes. If not invoked by a privileged user, masqmail will drop all privileges. 11.74 -.TP 11.75 - 11.76 -\fB-d \fInumber\f1\fB\f1 11.77 - 11.78 -Set the debug level. This takes precedence before the value ofdebug_level in the configuration file. Read the warning in the description of the latter. 11.79 -.TP 11.80 - 11.81 -\fB-f [\fIaddress\f1\fB]\f1 11.82 - 11.83 -Set the return path address to \fIaddress\f1. Only root, the user mail and anyoune in group trusted is allowed to do that. 11.84 -.TP 11.85 - 11.86 -\fB-F [\fIstring\f1\fB]\f1 11.87 - 11.88 -Set the full sender name (in the From: header) to \fIstring\f1. 11.89 -.TP 11.90 - 11.91 -\fB-g [\fIname\f1\fB]\f1 11.92 - 11.93 -Get mail (using pop3 or apop), using the configurations given with get.\fIname\f1 in the main configuration. Without \fIname\f1, all get configurations will be used. See also \fBmasqmail.get (5)\f1 11.94 -.TP 11.95 - 11.96 -\fB-go [\fIinterval\f1\fB] [\fIname\f1\fB]\f1 11.97 - 11.98 -Can be followed by a connection name. Use this option in your script which starts as soon as a link to the internet has been set up (usually ip-up). When masqmail is called with this option, the specified get configuration(s) is(are) read and mail will be retrieved from servers on the internet. The \fIname\f1 is defined in the configuration (see \fBonline_gets.\fIname\f1\fB\f1). 11.99 - 11.100 -If called with an interval option (recognized by a digit as the first characater), masqmail starts as a daemon and tries to get mail in these intervals. It checks for the online status first. Example: masqmail -go 5m will retrieve mail all five minutes. 11.101 - 11.102 -If called without \fIname\f1 the online status is determined with the configured method (see \fBonline_detect\f1 in config.html). 11.103 -.TP 11.104 - 11.105 -\fB-i\f1 11.106 - 11.107 -Same as -oi, see below. 11.108 -.TP 11.109 - 11.110 -\fB-Mrm \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 11.111 - 11.112 -Remove given messages from the queue. Only allowed for privileged users. 11.113 -.TP 11.114 - 11.115 -\fB-oem\f1 11.116 - 11.117 -If the -oi ist not also given, always return with a non zero return code. Maybe someone tells me what this is good for... 11.118 -.TP 11.119 - 11.120 -\fB-odb\f1 11.121 - 11.122 -Deliver in background. Masqmail always does this, which makes this option pretty much useless. 11.123 -.TP 11.124 - 11.125 -\fB-odq\f1 11.126 - 11.127 -Do not attempt to deliver immediately. Any messages will be queued until the next queue running process picks them up and delivers them. You get the same effect by setting the do_queue option in /etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf. 11.128 -.TP 11.129 - 11.130 -\fB-oi\f1 11.131 - 11.132 -A dot as a single character in a line does not terminate the message. 11.133 -.TP 11.134 - 11.135 -\fB-q [\fIinterval\f1\fB]\f1 11.136 - 11.137 -If not given with an argument, run a queue process, ie. try to deliver all messages in the queue. Masqmail sends only to those addresses that are on the local net, not to those that are outside. Use -qo for those. 11.138 - 11.139 -If you have configured inetd to start masqmail, you can use this option in a cron job which starts in regular time intervals, to mimic the same effect as starting masqmail with -bd -q30m. 11.140 - 11.141 -An argument may be a time interval ie. a numerical value followed by one of the letters. s,m,h,d,w which are interpreted as seconds, minutes, hours, days or weeks respectively. Example: -q30m. Masqmail starts as a daemon and a queue runner process will be started automatically once in this time interval. This is usually used together with -bd (see above). 11.142 -.TP 11.143 - 11.144 -\fB-qo [\fIname\f1\fB]\f1 11.145 - 11.146 -Can be followed by a connection name. Use this option in your script which starts as soon as a link to the internet has been set up (usually ip-up). When masqmail is called with this option, the specified route configuration is read and the queued mail with destinations on the internet will be sent. The \fIname\f1 is defined in the configuration (see \fBonline_routes.\fIname\f1\fB\f1). 11.147 - 11.148 -If called without \fIname\f1 the online status is determined with the configured method (see \fBonline_detect\f1 in config.html) 11.149 -.TP 11.150 - 11.151 -\fB-t\f1 11.152 - 11.153 -Read recipients from headers. Delete 'Bcc:' headers. If any arguments are given, these are interpreted as recipient addresses and the message will not be sent to these. 11.154 -.TP 11.155 - 11.156 -\fB-v\f1 11.157 - 11.158 -Log also to stdout. Currently, some log messages are marked as 'write to stdout' and additionally, all messages with priority 'LOG_ALERT' and 'LOG_WARNING' will be written to stdout if this option is given. It is disabled in daemon mode. 11.159 -.SH ENVIRONMENT FOR PIPES AND MDAS 11.160 - 11.161 -For security reasons, before any pipe command from an alias expansion or an mda is called, the environment variables will be completely discarded and newly set up. These are: 11.162 - 11.163 -SENDER, RETURN_PATH - the return path. 11.164 - 11.165 -SENDER_DOMAIN - the domain part of the return path. 11.166 - 11.167 -SENDER_LOCAL - the local part of the return path. 11.168 - 11.169 -RECEIVED_HOST - the host the message was received from (unless local). 11.170 - 11.171 -LOCAL_PART, USER, LOGNAME - the local part of the (original) recipient. 11.172 - 11.173 -MESSAGE_ID - the unique message id. This is not necessarily identical with the Message ID as given in the Message ID: header. 11.174 - 11.175 -QUALIFY_DOMAIN - the domain which will be appended to unqualified addresses. 11.176 - 11.177 -.SH FILES 11.178 - 11.179 -\fI/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf\f1 is the main configuration for masqmail. Depending on the settings in this file, you will also have other configuration files in \fI/etc/masqmail/\f1. 11.180 - 11.181 -\fI/etc/aliases\f1 is the alias file, if not set differently in \fI/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf\f1. 11.182 - 11.183 -\fI/var/spool/masqmail/\f1 is the spool directory where masqmail stores its spooled messages and the uniq pop ids. 11.184 - 11.185 -\fI/var/spool/mail/\f1 is the directory where locally delivered mail will be put, if not configured differently in \fImasqmail.conf\f1. 11.186 - 11.187 -\fI/var/log/masqmail/\f1 is the directory where masqmail stores its log mesages. This can also be somewhere else if configured differently by your sysadmin or the package mantainer. 11.188 - 11.189 -.SH CONFORMING TO 11.190 - 11.191 -RFC 821, 822, 1869, 1870, 2197, 2554 (SMTP) 11.192 - 11.193 -RFC 1725, 1939 (POP3) 11.194 - 11.195 -RFC 1321 (MD5) 11.196 - 11.197 -RFC 2195 (CRAM-MD5) 11.198 - 11.199 -.SH AUTHOR 11.200 - 11.201 -masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 11.202 - 11.203 -You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 11.204 - 11.205 -.SH BUGS 11.206 - 11.207 -You should report them to the mailing list. 11.208 - 11.209 -.SH SEE ALSO 11.210 - 11.211 -\fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.route (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.get (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.aliases (5)\f1 11.212 - 11.213 -.SH COMMENTS 11.214 - 11.215 -This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 11.216 -
12.1 --- a/docs/man/masqmail.aliases.5 Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 12.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 12.3 @@ -1,41 +0,0 @@ 12.4 -.TH masqmail.aliases 5 User Manuals 12.5 -.SH NAME 12.6 -masqmail.aliases \- masqmail alias file format 12.7 -.SH DESCRIPTION 12.8 - 12.9 -This man page describes the format of the masqmail alias file. Its usual location is \fI/etc/aliases\f1. 12.10 - 12.11 -.SH FILE FORMAT 12.12 - 12.13 -The alias file consists of lines of the form: 12.14 -local_part: item1, item2, ... 12.15 -Items can be surrounded by quotes '"'. If within the quotes other quotes are needed for an address they can be escaped with a leading backslash '\'. 12.16 - 12.17 -A leading '\' indicates that this address shall not be further expanded. 12.18 - 12.19 -A leading pipe symbol '|' indicates that the item shall be treated as a pipe command. The content of the message will then be sent to the standard input of a command. The command will run under the user id and group id masqmail is running as. If quotes are needed, the pipe symbol must appear within the quotes. 12.20 - 12.21 -Loops will be detected, the offending address will be ignored. 12.22 - 12.23 -Aliases will be expanded at delivery time. This means that if there is a message still in the queue and you change any alias which matches one of the recipient addresses, the change will have effect next time a delivery is attemped. 12.24 - 12.25 -There is no need to restart masqmail or run any command when the alias file has been changed. 12.26 - 12.27 -.SH AUTHOR 12.28 - 12.29 -masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 12.30 - 12.31 -You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 12.32 - 12.33 -.SH BUGS 12.34 - 12.35 -You should report them to the mailing list. 12.36 - 12.37 -.SH SEE ALSO 12.38 - 12.39 -\fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail (8)\f1, 12.40 - 12.41 -.SH COMMENTS 12.42 - 12.43 -This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 12.44 -
13.1 --- a/docs/man/masqmail.conf.5 Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 13.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 13.3 @@ -1,345 +0,0 @@ 13.4 -.TH masqmail.conf 5 User Manuals 13.5 -.SH NAME 13.6 -masqmail.conf \- masqmail configuration file 13.7 -.SH DESCRIPTION 13.8 - 13.9 -This man page describes the syntax of the main configuration file of masqmail. Its usual location is \fI/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf\f1 13.10 - 13.11 -The configuration consists of lines of the form 13.12 - 13.13 -\fBval\f1 = \fIexpression\f1 13.14 - 13.15 -Where \fBval\f1 is a variable name and \fIexpression\f1 a string, which can be quoted with '"'. If the expression is on multiple lines or contains characters other than letters, digits or the characters '.', '-', '_', '/', it must be quoted. You can use quotes inside quotes by escaping them with a backslash. 13.16 - 13.17 -Each val has a type, which can be boolean, numeric, string or list. A boolean variable can be set with one of the values 'on', 'yes', and 'true' or 'off', 'no' and 'false'. List items are separated with ';'. For some values patterns (like '*','?') can be used. The spaces before and after the '=' are optional. 13.18 - 13.19 -Most lists (exceptions: \fBlocal_hosts\f1,\fBlocal_nets\f1, \fBlisten_addresses\f1, \fBonline_routes\f1 and \fBonline_gets\f1) accept files. These will be recognized by a leading slash '/'. The contents of these files will be included at the position of the file name, there can be items or other files before and after the file entry. The format of the files is different though, within these files each entry is on another line. (And not separated by semicolons). This makes it easy to include large lists which are common in different configuration files, so they do not have to appear in every configuration file. 13.20 - 13.21 -Blank lines and lines starting with '#' are ignored. 13.22 - 13.23 -.SH OPTIONS 13.24 -.TP 13.25 - 13.26 -\fBrun_as_user = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 13.27 - 13.28 -If this is set, masqmail runs with the user id of the user who invoked it and never changes it. This is for debugging purposes only. If the user is not root, masqmail will not be able to listen on a port < 1024 and will not be able to deliver local mail to others than the user. 13.29 -.TP 13.30 - 13.31 -\fBuse_syslog = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 13.32 - 13.33 -If this is set, masqmail uses syslogd for logging. It uses facility MAIL. You still have to set \fBlog_dir\f1 for debug files. 13.34 -.TP 13.35 - 13.36 -\fBdebug_level = \fIn\f1\fB\f1 13.37 - 13.38 -Set the debug level. Valid values are 0 to 6, increasing it further makes no difference. Be careful if you set this as high as 5 or higher, the logs may very soon fill your hard drive. 13.39 -.TP 13.40 - 13.41 -\fBmail_dir = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 13.42 - 13.43 -The directory where local mail is stored, usually \fI/var/spool/mail\f1 or \fI/var/mail\f1. 13.44 -.TP 13.45 - 13.46 -\fBspool_dir = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 13.47 - 13.48 -The directory where masqmail stores its spool files (and later also other stuff). It must have a subdirectory \fIinput\f1. Masqmail needs read and write permissions for this directory. I suggest to use \fI/var/spool/masqmail\f1. 13.49 -.TP 13.50 - 13.51 -\fBhost_name = \fIstring\f1\fB\f1 13.52 - 13.53 -This is used in different places: Masqmail identifies itself in the greeting banner on incoming connections and in the HELO/EHLO command for outgoing connections with this name, it is used in the Received: header and to qualify the sender of a locally originating message. 13.54 - 13.55 -If the string begins with a slash '/', it it assumed that it is a filename, and the first line of this file will be used. Usually this will be '/etc/mailname' to make masqmail conform to Debian policies. 13.56 - 13.57 -It is not used to find whether an address is local. Use \fBlocal_hosts\f1 for that. 13.58 -.TP 13.59 - 13.60 -\fBremote_port = \fIn\f1\fB\f1 13.61 - 13.62 -The remote port number to be used. This defaults to port 25. 13.63 - 13.64 -This option is deprecated. Use \fBhost_name\f1 in the route configuration instead. See \fBmasqmail.route (5)\f1. 13.65 -.TP 13.66 - 13.67 -\fBlocal_hosts = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.68 - 13.69 -A semicolon ';' separated list of hostnames which are considered local. Normally you set it to "localhost;foo;foo.bar.com" if your host has the fully qualified domain name 'foo.bar.com'. 13.70 -.TP 13.71 - 13.72 -\fBlocal_nets = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.73 - 13.74 -A semicolon ';' separated list of hostnames which are on the 'local' net. Delivery to these hosts is attempted immediately. You can use patterns with '*', eg. "*.bar.com". 13.75 -.TP 13.76 - 13.77 -\fBlocal_addresses = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.78 - 13.79 -A semicolon ';' separated list of fully qualified email-addresses which are considered local although their domain name part is not in the list of \fBlocal_hosts\f1. 13.80 - 13.81 -For example: There are two people working at your LAN: person1@yourdomain and person2@yourdomain. But there are other persons @yourdomain which are NOT local. So you can not put yourdomain to the list of local_hosts. If person1 now wants to write to person2@yourdomain and this mail should not leave the LAN then you can put 13.82 - 13.83 -local_addresses = "person1@yourdomain;person2@yourdomain" 13.84 - 13.85 -to your masqmail.conf. 13.86 -.TP 13.87 - 13.88 -\fBnot_local_addresses = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.89 - 13.90 -A semicolon ';' separated list of fully qualified email-addresses which are considered not local although their domain name part is in the list of \fBlocal_hosts\f1. 13.91 - 13.92 -This ist the opposite of the previous case. The majority of addresses of a specific domain are local. But some users are not. With this option you can easily exclude these users. 13.93 - 13.94 -Example: 13.95 - 13.96 -local_hosts = "localhost;myhost;mydomain.net" 13.97 - 13.98 -not_local_addresses = "eric@mydomain.net" 13.99 -.TP 13.100 - 13.101 -\fBlisten_addresses = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.102 - 13.103 -A semicolon ';' separated list of interfaces on which connections will be accepted. An interface ist defined by a hostname, optionally followed by a colon ':' and a number for the port. If this is left out, port 25 will be used. 13.104 - 13.105 -You can set this to "localhost:25;foo:25" if your hostname is 'foo'. 13.106 - 13.107 -Note that the names are resolved to IP addreses. If your host has different names which resolve to the same IP, use only one of them, otherwise you will get an error message. 13.108 -.TP 13.109 - 13.110 -\fBdo_save_envelope_to = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 13.111 - 13.112 -If this is set to true, a possibly existing Envelope-to: header in an incoming mail which is received via either pop3 or smtp will be saved as an X-Orig-Envelope-to: header. 13.113 - 13.114 -This is useful if you retrieve mail from a pop3 server with either masqmail or fetchmail, and the server supports Envelope-to: headers, and you want to make use of those with a mail filtering tool, eg. procmail. It cannot be preserved because masqmail sets such a header by itself. 13.115 - 13.116 -Default is false. 13.117 -.TP 13.118 - 13.119 -\fBdo_relay = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 13.120 - 13.121 -If this is set to false, mail with a return path that is not local and a destination that is also not local will not be accepted via smtp and a 550 reply will be given. Default is true. 13.122 - 13.123 -Note that this will not protect you from spammers using open relays, but from users unable to set their address in their mail clients. 13.124 -.TP 13.125 - 13.126 -\fBdo_queue = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 13.127 - 13.128 -If this is set, mail will not be delivered immediately when accepted. Same as calling masqmail with the \fB-odq\f1 option. 13.129 -.TP 13.130 - 13.131 -\fBonline_routes.\fIname\f1\fB = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.132 - 13.133 -Replace \fIname\f1 with a name to identify a connection. Set this to a filename (or a list of filenames) for the special route configuration for that connection. You will use that name to call masqmail with the\fB-qo\f1 option every time a connection to your ISP is set up. 13.134 - 13.135 -Example: Your ISP has the name FastNet. Then you write the following line in the main configuration: 13.136 - 13.137 -\fBonline_routes.FastNet\f1 = \fI"/etc/masqmail/fastnet.route"\f1 13.138 - 13.139 -\fI/etc/masqmail/fastnet.route\f1 is the route configuration file, see \fBmasqmail.route (5)\f1. As soon as a link to FastNet has been set up, you call masqmail \fB-qo\f1 \fIFastNet\f1. Masqmail will then read the specified file and send the mails. 13.140 -.TP 13.141 - 13.142 -\fBconnect_route.\fIname\f1\fB = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.143 - 13.144 -Old name for \fBonline_routes\f1. 13.145 -.TP 13.146 - 13.147 -\fBlocal_net_route = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 13.148 - 13.149 -This is similar to \fBonline_routes.\fIname\f1\fB\f1 but for the local net. Recipient addresses that are in local_nets will be routed using this route configuration. Main purpose is to define a mail server with mail_host in your local network. In simple environments this can be left unset. If unset, a default route configuration will be used. 13.150 -.TP 13.151 - 13.152 -\fBalias_file = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 13.153 - 13.154 -Set this to the location of your alias file. If unset, no aliasing will be done. 13.155 -.TP 13.156 - 13.157 -\fBalias_local_caseless = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 13.158 - 13.159 -If this is set, local parts in the alias file will be matched disregarding upper/lower case. 13.160 -.TP 13.161 - 13.162 -\fBpipe_fromline = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 13.163 - 13.164 -If this is set, a from line will be prepended to the output stream whenever a pipe command is called after an alias expansion. Default is false. 13.165 -.TP 13.166 - 13.167 -\fBpipe_fromhack = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 13.168 - 13.169 -If this is set, each line beginning with 'From ' is replaced with '>From ' whenever a pipe command is called after an alias expansion. You probably want this if you have set \fBpipe_fromline\f1 above. Default is false. 13.170 -.TP 13.171 - 13.172 -\fBmbox_default = \fIstring\f1\fB\f1 13.173 - 13.174 -The default local delivery method. Can be one of mbox, mda or maildir (the latter only if maildir support is enabled at compile time). Default is mbox. You can override this for each user by using the \fBmbox_users\f1, \fBmda_users\f1 or \fBmaildir_users\f1 options (see below). 13.175 -.TP 13.176 - 13.177 -\fBmbox_users = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.178 - 13.179 -A list of users which wish delivery to an mbox style mail folder. 13.180 -.TP 13.181 - 13.182 -\fBmda_users = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.183 - 13.184 -A list of users which wish local delivery to an mda. You have to set \fBmda\f1 (see below) as well. 13.185 -.TP 13.186 - 13.187 -\fBmaildir_users = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.188 - 13.189 -A list of users which wish delivery to a qmail style maildir. The path to maildir is ~/Maildir/. The maildir will be created if it does not exist. 13.190 -.TP 13.191 - 13.192 -\fBmda = \fIexpand string\f1\fB\f1 13.193 - 13.194 -If you want local delivery to be transferred to an mda (Mail Delivery Agent), set this to a command. The argument will be expanded on delivery time, you can use variables beginning with a '$' sign, optionally enclosed in curly braces. Variables you can use are: 13.195 - 13.196 -uid - the unique message id. This is not necessarily identical with the Message ID as given in the Message ID: header. 13.197 - 13.198 -received_host - the host the mail was received from 13.199 - 13.200 -ident - the ident, this is either the ident delivered by the ident protocol or the user id of the sender if the message was received locally. 13.201 - 13.202 -return_path_local - the local part of the return path (sender). 13.203 - 13.204 -return_path_domain - the domain part of the return path (sender). 13.205 - 13.206 -return_path - the complete return path (sender). 13.207 - 13.208 -rcpt_local - the local part of the recipient. 13.209 - 13.210 -rcpt_domain - the domain part of the recipient. 13.211 - 13.212 -rcpt - the complete recipient address. 13.213 - 13.214 -Example: 13.215 - 13.216 -mda="/usr/bin/procmail -Y -d ${rcpt_local}" 13.217 - 13.218 -For the mda, as for pipe commands, a few environment variables will be set as well. See \fBmasqmail (8)\f1. To use environment variables for the mda, the '$' sign has to be escaped with a backslash, otherwise they will be tried to be expanded with the internal variables. 13.219 -.TP 13.220 - 13.221 -\fBmda_fromline = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 13.222 - 13.223 -If this is set, a from line will be prepended to the output stream whenever a message is delivered to an mda. Default is false. 13.224 -.TP 13.225 - 13.226 -\fBmda_fromhack = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 13.227 - 13.228 -If this is set, each line beginning with 'From ' is replaced with '>From ' whenever a message is delivered to an mda. You probably want this if you have set \fBmda_fromline\f1 above. Default is false. 13.229 -.TP 13.230 - 13.231 -\fBonline_detect = \fIstring\f1\fB\f1 13.232 - 13.233 -Defines the method MasqMail uses to detect whether there is currently an online connection. It can have the values \fBfile\f1, \fBpipe\f1 or \fBmserver\f1. 13.234 - 13.235 -When it is set to \fBfile\f1, MasqMail first checks for the existence of \fBonline_file\f1 (see below) and if it exists, it reads it. The content of the file should be the name of the current connection as defined with \fBconnect_route.\fIname\f1\fB\f1 (without a trailing newline character). 13.236 - 13.237 -When it is set to \fBpipe\f1, MasqMail calls the executable given by the \fBonline_pipe\f1 option (see below) and reads the current online status from its standard output. 13.238 - 13.239 -When it is set to \fBmserver\f1, MasqMail connects to the masqdialer server using the value of \fBmserver_iface\f1 and asks it whether a connection exists and for the name, which should be the name of the current connection as defined with \fBconnect_route.\fIname\f1\fB\f1. 13.240 - 13.241 -No matter how MasqMail detects the online status, only messages that are accepted at online time will be delivered using the connection. The spool still has to be emptied with masqmail \fB-qo\f1\fIconnection\f1. 13.242 -.TP 13.243 - 13.244 -\fBonline_file = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 13.245 - 13.246 -This is the name of the file checked for when MasqMail determines whether it is online. The file should only exist when there is currently a connection. Create it in your ip-up script with eg. 13.247 - 13.248 -echo -n <name> > /tmp/connect_route 13.249 - 13.250 -chmod 0644 /tmp/connect_route 13.251 - 13.252 -Do not forget to delete it in your ip-down script. 13.253 -.TP 13.254 - 13.255 -\fBonline_pipe = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 13.256 - 13.257 -This is the name of the executable which will be called to determine the online status. This executable should just print the name oif the current connection to the standard output and return a zero status code. masqmail assumes it is offline if the script returns with a non zero status. Simple example: 13.258 - 13.259 -#!/bin/sh 13.260 - 13.261 - 13.262 - 13.263 -[ -e /tmp/connect_route ] || exit 1 13.264 - 13.265 -cat /tmp/connect_route 13.266 - 13.267 -exit 0 13.268 - 13.269 -Of course, instead of the example above you could as well use \fBfile\f1 as the online detection method, but you can do something more sophisticated. 13.270 -.TP 13.271 - 13.272 -\fBmserver_iface = \fIinterface\f1\fB\f1 13.273 - 13.274 -The interface the masqdialer server is listening to. Usually this will be "localhost:224" if mserver is running on the same host as masqmail. But using this option, you can also let masqmail run on another host by setting \fBmserver_iface\f1 to another hostname, eg. "foo:224". 13.275 -.TP 13.276 - 13.277 -\fBget.\fIname\f1\fB = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 13.278 - 13.279 -Replace \fIname\f1 with a name to identify a get configuration. Set this to a filename for the get configuration. These files will be used to retrieve mail when called with the -g option. 13.280 -.TP 13.281 - 13.282 -\fBonline_gets.\fIname\f1\fB = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.283 - 13.284 -Replace \fIname\f1 with a name to identify an online configuration. Set this to a filename (or a list of filenames) for the get configuration. These files will be used to retrieve mail when called with the -go option. 13.285 -.TP 13.286 - 13.287 -\fBident_trusted_nets = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 13.288 - 13.289 -\fIlist\f1 is a list of networks of the form a.b.c.d/e (eg. 192.168.1.0/24), from which the ident given by the ident protocol will be trusted, so a user can delete his mail from the queue if the ident is identical to his login name. 13.290 -.TP 13.291 - 13.292 -\fBerrmsg_file = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 13.293 - 13.294 -Set this to a template which will be used to generate delivery failure reports. Variable parts within the template begin with a dollar sign and are identical to those which can be used as arguments for the mda command, see \fBmda\f1 above. Additional information can be included with @failed_rcpts, @msg_headers and @msg_body, these must be at the beginning of a line and will be replaced with the list of the failed recipients, the message headers and the message body of the failed message. 13.295 - 13.296 -Default is /usr/share/masqmail/tpl/failmsg.tpl. 13.297 -.TP 13.298 - 13.299 -\fBwarnmsg_file = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 13.300 - 13.301 -Set this to a template which will be used to generate delivery warning reports. It uses the same mechanisms for variables as \fBerrmsg_file\f1, see above. 13.302 - 13.303 -Default is /usr/share/masqmail/tpl/warnmsg.tpl. 13.304 -.TP 13.305 - 13.306 -\fBwarn_intervals\f1 = \fIlist\f1 13.307 - 13.308 -Set this to a list of time intervals, at which delivery warnings (starting with the receiving time of the message) shall be generated. 13.309 - 13.310 -A warning will only be generated just after an attempt to deliver the mail and if that attempt failed temporarily. So a warning may be generated after a longer time, if there was no attempt before. 13.311 - 13.312 -Default is "1h;4h;8h;1d;2d;3d" 13.313 -.TP 13.314 - 13.315 -\fBmax_defer_time\f1 = \fItime\f1 13.316 - 13.317 -This is the maximum time, in which a temporarily failed mail will be kept in the spool. When this time is exceeded, it will be handled as a delivery failure, and the message will be bounced. 13.318 - 13.319 -The excedence of this time will only be noticed if the message was actually tried to be delivered. If, for example, the message can only be delivered when online, but you have not been online for that time, no bounce will be generated. 13.320 - 13.321 -Default is 4d (4 days) 13.322 -.TP 13.323 - 13.324 -\fBlog_user = \fIname\f1\fB\f1 13.325 - 13.326 -Replace \fIname\f1 with a valid local or remote mail address. 13.327 - 13.328 -If this option is not empty, then a copy of every mail, that passes trough the masqmail system will also be sent to the given mail address. 13.329 - 13.330 -For example you can feed your mails into a program like hypermail for archiving purpose by placing an appropriate pipe command in masqmail.alias 13.331 -.SH AUTHOR 13.332 - 13.333 -masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 13.334 - 13.335 -You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 13.336 - 13.337 -.SH BUGS 13.338 - 13.339 -You should report them to the mailing list. 13.340 - 13.341 -.SH SEE ALSO 13.342 - 13.343 -\fBmasqmail (8)\f1, \fBmasqmail.route (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.get (5)\f1 13.344 - 13.345 -.SH COMMENTS 13.346 - 13.347 -This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 13.348 -
14.1 --- a/docs/man/masqmail.get.5 Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 14.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 14.3 @@ -1,99 +0,0 @@ 14.4 -.TH masqmail.get 5 User Manuals 14.5 -.SH NAME 14.6 -masqmail.get \- masqmail get configuration file 14.7 -.SH DESCRIPTION 14.8 - 14.9 -This man page describes the options available for the masqmail get configuration. 14.10 - 14.11 -.SH OPTIONS 14.12 -.TP 14.13 - 14.14 -\fBprotocol\f1 = \fIstring\f1 14.15 - 14.16 -The protocol with which you retrieve your mail. Currently only 'pop3' and 'apop' are supported. There is no default. 14.17 -.TP 14.18 - 14.19 -\fBserver\f1 = \fIstring\f1 14.20 - 14.21 -The server you get your mail from. 14.22 -.TP 14.23 - 14.24 -\fBresolve_list\f1 = \fIlist\f1 14.25 - 14.26 -Specify the method how the domain of the server is resolved. Possible values are dns_mx, dns_a, byname. For 'dns_mx', the domain is assumed to be an MX pointer to a list of host names, these will be tried each in order (lowest preference value first, equal preference values in random order). For 'dns_a', the domain is assumed to be an A pointer. For 'byname', the library function \fBgethostbyname (3)\f1 will be used. 14.27 - 14.28 -The default is "dns_a;byname". It does not make much sense here to use 'dns_mx'. 14.29 -.TP 14.30 - 14.31 -\fBuser\f1 = \fIstring\f1 14.32 - 14.33 -Your login name. 14.34 -.TP 14.35 - 14.36 -\fBpass\f1 = \fIstring\f1 14.37 - 14.38 -Your password. 14.39 -.TP 14.40 - 14.41 -\fBaddress\f1 = \fIaddress\f1 14.42 - 14.43 -The address where the retrieved mail should be sent to. It can be any address, but you probably want to set this to a local address on your LAN. 14.44 -.TP 14.45 - 14.46 -\fBreturn_path\f1 = \fIaddress\f1 14.47 - 14.48 -If set, masqmail sets the return path to this address. Bounces generated during further delivery will be sent to this address. If unset, masqmail looks for the Return-Path: header in the mail, if this does not exist it uses the From: address and if this fails, postmaster will be used. 14.49 - 14.50 -It is in most cases not useful to set this to the same address as the 'address' option as this may generate multiple bounces. postmaster is recommended. 14.51 -.TP 14.52 - 14.53 -\fBdo_keep\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 14.54 - 14.55 -If you want to keep your mail on the server after you retrieved it, set this to true. It is recommended that you also set do_uidl, otherwise you will get the mail again each time you connect to the server. Masqmail does not check any headers before it retrieves mail, which may mark it as already fetched. Note that this behaviour is different to that of fetchmail. The default is false. 14.56 -.TP 14.57 - 14.58 -\fBdo_uidl\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 14.59 - 14.60 -If set, MasqMail keeps a list of unique IDs of mails already fetched, so that they will not be retrieved again. Default is false. 14.61 -.TP 14.62 - 14.63 -\fBdo_uidl_dele\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 14.64 - 14.65 -If set, and \fBdo_uidl\f1 is also set, MasqMail sends a delete (DELE) command to the server for each message uid in the uid listing at the beginning of the session. This prevents mail to be left on the server if masqmail gets interrupted during a session before it can send the QUIT command to the server. Default is false. 14.66 -.TP 14.67 - 14.68 -\fBmax_size\f1 = \fInumeric\f1 14.69 - 14.70 -If set to a value > 0, only messages smaller than this in bytes will be retrieved. The default is 0. 14.71 -.TP 14.72 - 14.73 -\fBmax_count\f1 = \fInumeric\f1 14.74 - 14.75 -If set to a value > 0, only \fBmax_count\f1 messages will be retrieved. The default is 0. 14.76 -.TP 14.77 - 14.78 -\fBwrapper\f1 = \fIcommand\f1 14.79 - 14.80 -If set, instead of opening a connection to a remote server, \fIcommand\f1 will be called and all traffic will be piped to its stdin and from its stdout. Purpose is to tunnel ip traffic, eg. for ssl. 14.81 - 14.82 -Example for ssl tunneling: 14.83 - 14.84 -wrapper="/usr/bin/openssl s_client -quiet -connect pop.gmx.net:995 2>/dev/null" 14.85 -.SH AUTHOR 14.86 - 14.87 -masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 14.88 - 14.89 -You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 14.90 - 14.91 -.SH BUGS 14.92 - 14.93 -You should report them to the mailing list. 14.94 - 14.95 -.SH SEE ALSO 14.96 - 14.97 -\fBmasqmail (8)\f1, \fBmasqmail.route (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1 14.98 - 14.99 -.SH COMMENTS 14.100 - 14.101 -This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 14.102 -
15.1 --- a/docs/man/masqmail.route.5 Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 15.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 15.3 @@ -1,212 +0,0 @@ 15.4 -.TH masqmail.route 5 User Manuals 15.5 -.SH NAME 15.6 -masqmail.route \- masqmail route configuration file 15.7 -.SH DESCRIPTION 15.8 - 15.9 -This man page describes the syntax of the route configuration files of \fBmasqmail (8)\f1. Their usual locations are in \fI/etc/masqmail/\f1. 15.10 - 15.11 -.SH OPTIONS 15.12 -.TP 15.13 - 15.14 -\fBprotocol\f1 = \fIstring\f1 15.15 - 15.16 -\fIstring\f1 can be one of 'smtp' or 'pipe', default is 'smtp'. If set to 'smtp', mail will be sent with the SMTP protocol to its destination. If set to 'pipe', you also have to set 'pipe' to a command, the message will then be piped to a program. See option 'pipe' below. 15.17 -.TP 15.18 - 15.19 -\fBmail_host\f1 = \fIstring\f1 15.20 - 15.21 -This is preferably the mail server of your ISP. All outgoing messages will be sent to this host which will distribute them to their destinations. If you do not set this mails will be sent directly. Because the mail server is probably 'near' to you, mail transfer will be much faster if you use it. 15.22 - 15.23 -You can optionally give a port number following the host name and a colon, eg mail_host="mail.foo.com:25". 15.24 -.TP 15.25 - 15.26 -\fBresolve_list\f1 = \fIlist\f1 15.27 - 15.28 -Specify the method how the domain of the server is resolved. Possible values are dns_mx, dns_a, byname. For 'dns_mx', the domain is assumed to be an MX pointer to a list of host names, these will be tried each in order (lowest preference value first, equal preference values in random order). For 'dns_a', the domain is assumed to be an A pointer. For 'byname', the library function \fBgethostbyname (3)\f1 will be used. 15.29 - 15.30 -The default is "dns_mx;dns_a;byname". 15.31 -.TP 15.32 - 15.33 -\fBconnect_error_fail\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 15.34 - 15.35 -If this is set, a connection error will cause a mail delivery to fail, ie. it will be bounced. If it is unset, it will just be defered. 15.36 - 15.37 -Default is false. The reason for this is that masqmail is designed for non permanent internet connections, where such errors may occur quite often, and a bounce would be annoying. 15.38 - 15.39 -For the default local_net route is is set to true. 15.40 -.TP 15.41 - 15.42 -\fBhelo_name\f1 = \fIstring\f1 15.43 - 15.44 -Set the name given with the HELO/EHLO command. If this is not set, \fBhost_name\f1 from \fImasqmail.conf\f1 will be used, if the \fBdo_correct_helo\f1 option (see below) is unset. 15.45 -.TP 15.46 - 15.47 -\fBdo_correct_helo\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 15.48 - 15.49 -If this is set, masqmail tries to look up your host name as it appears on the internet and sends this in the HELO/EHLO command. Some servers are so picky that they want this. Which is really crazy. It just does not make any sense to lie about ones own identity, because it can always be looked up by the server. Nobody should believe in the name given by HELO/EHLO anyway. If this is not set, \fBhost_name\f1 from \fImasqmail.conf\f1 or as given with the \fBhelo_name\f1 (see above) will be used. 15.50 -.TP 15.51 - 15.52 -\fBdo_pipelining\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 15.53 - 15.54 -If this is set to false, masqmail will not use ESMTP PIPELINING, even if the server announces that it is able to cope with it. Default is true. 15.55 - 15.56 -You do not want to set this to false unless the mail setup on the remote server side is really broken. Keywords: wingate. 15.57 -.TP 15.58 - 15.59 -\fBallowed_mail_locals\f1 = \fIlist\f1 15.60 - 15.61 -This is a semicolon ';' separated list of local parts which will be allowed to send mail through this connection. If unset and \fBnot_allowed_mail_locals\f1 is also unset, all users are allowed. 15.62 -.TP 15.63 - 15.64 -\fBnot_allowed_mail_locals\f1 = \fIlist\f1 15.65 - 15.66 -This is a semicolon ';' separated list of local parts which will be not allowed to send mail through this connection. Local parts in this list will not be allowed to use this route even if they are part of \fBallowed_mail_locals\f1 (see above). 15.67 -.TP 15.68 - 15.69 -\fBallowed_return_paths\f1 = \fIlist\f1 15.70 - 15.71 -This is a semicolon ';' separated list of addresses. Messages which have one one of these addresses as the return path will be used using this route (if not also in \fBnot_allowed_return_paths\f1 or an item in \fBnot_allowed_mail_locals\f1 matches). 15.72 - 15.73 -Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used. The special item "<>" matches the null sender address (eg. failure notices or delivery notifications). 15.74 -.TP 15.75 - 15.76 -\fBnot_allowed_return_paths\f1 = \fIlist\f1 15.77 - 15.78 -This is a semicolon ';' separated list of addresses. Messages which have one one of these addresses as the return path will not be used using this route (even if also in \fBallowed_return_paths\f1 or an item in \fBallowed_mail_locals\f1 matches). 15.79 - 15.80 -Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used. The special item "<>" matches the null sender address (eg. failure notices or delivery notifications). 15.81 -.TP 15.82 - 15.83 -\fBallowed_rcpt_domains\f1 = \fIlist\f1 15.84 - 15.85 -A list of recipient domains where mail will be sent to. This is for example useful if you use this route configuration when connected to another LAN via ppp. Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used. 15.86 -.TP 15.87 - 15.88 -\fBnot_allowed_rcpt_domains\f1 = \fIlist\f1 15.89 - 15.90 -A list of recipient domains where mail will not be sent to. This is for example useful if you send mail directly (\fBmail_host\f1 is not set) and you know of hosts that will not accept mail from you because they use a dialup list (eg. \fBhttp://maps.vix.com/dul/\f1. If any domain matches both \fBallowed_rcpt_domains\f1 and \fBnot_allowed_rcpt_domains\f1, mail will not be sent to this domain. Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used. 15.91 -.TP 15.92 - 15.93 -\fBset_h_from_domain\f1 = \fIstring\f1 15.94 - 15.95 -Replace the domain part in 'From:' headers with this value. This may be useful if you use a private, outside unknown address on your local LAN and want this to be replaced by the domain of the address of your email addrsss on the internet. Note that this is different to \fBset_return_path_domain\f1, see below. 15.96 -.TP 15.97 - 15.98 -\fBset_return_path_domain\f1 = \fIstring\f1 15.99 - 15.100 -Sets the domain part of the envelope from address. Some hosts check whether this is the same as the net the connection is coming from. If not, they reject the mail because they suspect spamming. It should be a valid address, because some mail servers also check that. You can also use this to set it to your usual address on the internet and put a local address only known on your LAN in the configuration of your mailer. Only the domain part will be changed, the local part remains unchanged. Use \fBmap_return_path_addresses\f1 for rewriting local parts. 15.101 -.TP 15.102 - 15.103 -\fBmap_h_from_addresses\f1 = \fIlist\f1 15.104 - 15.105 -This is similar to \fBset_h_from_domain\f1, but more flexible. Set this to a list which maps local parts to a full RFC 822 compliant email address, the local parts (the keys) are separated from the addresses (the values) by colons (':'). 15.106 - 15.107 -Example: 15.108 - 15.109 -map_h_from_addresses = "john: John Smith <jsmith@mail.academic.edu>; charlie: Charlie Miller <cmiller@mx.commercial.com>" 15.110 - 15.111 -You can use patterns, eg. * as keys. 15.112 -.TP 15.113 - 15.114 -\fBmap_h_reply_to_addresses\f1 = \fIlist\f1 15.115 - 15.116 -Same as \fBmap_h_from_addresses\f1, but for the 'Reply-To:' header. 15.117 -.TP 15.118 - 15.119 -\fBmap_h_mail_followup_to_addresses\f1 = \fIlist\f1 15.120 - 15.121 -Same as \fBmap_h_from_addresses\f1, but for the 'Mail-Followup-To:' header. Useful when replying to mailing lists. 15.122 -.TP 15.123 - 15.124 -\fBmap_return_path_addresses\f1 = \fIlist\f1 15.125 - 15.126 -This is similar to \fBset_return_path_domain\f1, but more flexible. Set this to a list which maps local parts to a full RFC 821 compliant email address, the local parts (the keys) are separated from the addresses (the values) by colons (':'). Note that this option takes RFC 821 addresses while \fBmap_h_from_addresses\f1 takes RFC 822 addresses. The most important difference is that RFC 821 addresses have no full name. 15.127 - 15.128 -Example: 15.129 - 15.130 -map_return_path_addresses = "john: <jsmith@mail.academic.edu>; charlie: <cmiller@mx.commercial.com>" 15.131 - 15.132 -You can use patterns, eg. * as keys. 15.133 -.TP 15.134 - 15.135 -\fBexpand_h_sender_address\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 15.136 - 15.137 -This sets the domain of the sender address as given by the Sender: header to the same address as in the envelope return path address (which can be set by either \fBset_return_path_domain\f1 or \fBmap_return_path_addresses\f1). This is for mail clients (eg. Microsoft Outlook) which use this address as the sender address. Though they should use the From: address, see RFC 821. If \fBfetchmail (1)\f1 encounters an unqualified Sender: address, it will be expanded to the domain of the pop server, which is almost never correct. Default is true. 15.138 -.TP 15.139 - 15.140 -\fBexpand_h_sender_domain\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 15.141 - 15.142 -Like \fBexpand_h_sender_address\f1, but sets the domain only. Deprecated, will be removed in a later version. 15.143 -.TP 15.144 - 15.145 -\fBlast_route\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 15.146 - 15.147 -If this is set, a mail which would have been delivered using this route, but has failed temporarily, will not be tried to be delivered using the next route. 15.148 - 15.149 -If you have set up a special route with filters using the lists 'allowed_rcpt_domains', 'allowed_return_paths', and 'allowed_mail_locals' or their complements (not_), and the mail passing these rules should be delivered using this route only, you should set this to 'true'. Otherwise the mail would be passed to the next route (if any), unless that route has rules which prevent that. 15.150 - 15.151 -Default is false. 15.152 -.TP 15.153 - 15.154 -\fBauth_name\f1 = \fIstring\f1 15.155 - 15.156 -Set the authentication type for ESMTP AUTH authentification. Currently only 'cram-md5' and 'login' are supported. 15.157 -.TP 15.158 - 15.159 -\fBauth_login\f1 = \fIstring\f1 15.160 - 15.161 -Your account name for ESMTP AUTH authentification. 15.162 -.TP 15.163 - 15.164 -\fBauth_secret\f1 = \fIstring\f1 15.165 - 15.166 -Your secret for ESMTP AUTH authentification. 15.167 -.TP 15.168 - 15.169 -\fBpop3_login\f1 = \fIfile\f1 15.170 - 15.171 -If your Mail server requires SMTP-after-POP, set this to a get configuration (see \fBmasqmail.get (5)\f1). If you login to the POP server before you send, this is not necessary. 15.172 -.TP 15.173 - 15.174 -\fBwrapper\f1 = \fIcommand\f1 15.175 - 15.176 -If set, instead of opening a connection to a remote server, \fIcommand\f1 will be called and all traffic will be piped to its stdin and from its stdout. Purpose is to tunnel ip traffic, eg. for ssl. 15.177 - 15.178 -Example for ssl tunneling: 15.179 - 15.180 -wrapper="/usr/bin/openssl s_client -quiet -connect pop.gmx.net:995 2>/dev/null" 15.181 -.TP 15.182 - 15.183 -\fBpipe\f1 = \fIcommand\f1 15.184 - 15.185 -If set, and protocol is set to 'pipe', \fIcommand\f1 will be called and the message will be piped to its stdin. Purpose is to use gateways to uucp, fax, sms or whatever else. 15.186 - 15.187 -You can use variables to give as arguments to the command, these are the same as for the mda in the main configuration, see \fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1. 15.188 -.TP 15.189 - 15.190 -\fBpipe_fromline = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 15.191 - 15.192 -If this is set, and protocol is set to 'pipe', a from line will be prepended to the output stream whenever a pipe command is called. Default is false. 15.193 -.TP 15.194 - 15.195 -\fBpipe_fromhack = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 15.196 - 15.197 -If this is set, and protocol is set to 'pipe', each line beginning with 'From ' is replaced with '>From ' whenever a pipe command is called. You probably want this if you have set \fBpipe_fromline\f1 above. Default is false. 15.198 -.SH AUTHOR 15.199 - 15.200 -masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 15.201 - 15.202 -You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 15.203 - 15.204 -.SH BUGS 15.205 - 15.206 -You should report them to the mailing list. 15.207 - 15.208 -.SH SEE ALSO 15.209 - 15.210 -\fBmasqmail (8)\f1, \fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.get (5)\f1 15.211 - 15.212 -.SH COMMENTS 15.213 - 15.214 -This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 15.215 -
16.1 --- a/docs/man/mservdetect.8 Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 16.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 16.3 @@ -1,42 +0,0 @@ 16.4 -.TH mservdetect 8 User Manuals 16.5 -.SH NAME 16.6 -mservdetect \- Helper for masqmail and masqdialer 16.7 -.SH SYNOPSIS 16.8 -\fB/usr/bin/masqmail \fIhost\f1\fB \fIport\f1\fB 16.9 - 16.10 -\fB 16.11 -.SH DESCRIPTION 16.12 - 16.13 -mservdetect is a small helper application for masqmail to detect its online status if the modem server masqdialer is used. It connects to the\fIhost\f1 at \fIport\f1 and prints the connection name to stdout. 16.14 - 16.15 -If you want to use it, set \fBonline_detect\f1=\fIpipe\f1 and \fBonline_pipe\f1=\fI"/usr/bin/mservdetect host port"\f1. 16.16 - 16.17 -.SH OPTIONS 16.18 -.TP 16.19 - 16.20 -\fBhost\f1 16.21 - 16.22 -The hostname where the masqdialer server is running. 16.23 -.TP 16.24 - 16.25 -\fBport\f1 16.26 - 16.27 -The port number where the masqdialer server is listening. 16.28 -.SH AUTHOR 16.29 - 16.30 -masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 16.31 - 16.32 -You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 16.33 - 16.34 -.SH BUGS 16.35 - 16.36 -You should report them to the mailing list. 16.37 - 16.38 -.SH SEE ALSO 16.39 - 16.40 -\fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1 16.41 - 16.42 -.SH COMMENTS 16.43 - 16.44 -This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 16.45 -
17.1 --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 17.2 +++ b/docs/masqmail.8 Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 17.3 @@ -0,0 +1,213 @@ 17.4 +.TH masqmail 8 User Manuals 17.5 +.SH NAME 17.6 +masqmail \- An offline Mail Transfer Agent 17.7 +.SH SYNOPSIS 17.8 +\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-C \fIfile\f1\fB] [-odq] [-bd] [-q\fIinterval\f1\fB] 17.9 + 17.10 +\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-odq] [-bs] 17.11 + 17.12 +\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-bp] 17.13 + 17.14 +\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-q] 17.15 + 17.16 +\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-qo [\fIname\f1\fB]] 17.17 + 17.18 +\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-odq] [-g [\fIname\f1\fB]] 17.19 + 17.20 +\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-odq] [-go [\fIname\f1\fB]] 17.21 + 17.22 +\fB/usr/sbin/masqmail [-t] [-oi] [-f \fIaddress\f1\fB] [--] \fIaddress...\f1\fB 17.23 + 17.24 +\fB/usr/sbin/mailq 17.25 + 17.26 +\fB 17.27 +.SH DESCRIPTION 17.28 + 17.29 +MasqMail is a mail server designed for hosts that do not have a permanent internet connection eg. a home network or a single host at home. It has special support for connections to different ISPs. It replaces sendmail or other MTAs such as qmail or exim. It can also act as a pop3 client. 17.30 + 17.31 +.SH OPTIONS 17.32 + 17.33 +Since masqmail is intended to replace sendmail, it uses the same command line options, but not all are implemented. There are also two additional options, which are unique to masqmail (-qo \fIconnection\f1 and -g) 17.34 +.TP 17.35 + 17.36 +\fB--\f1 17.37 + 17.38 +Not a 'real' option, it means that all following arguments are to be understood as arguments and not as options even if they begin with a leading dash '-'. Mutt is known to call sendmail with this option. 17.39 +.TP 17.40 + 17.41 +\fB-bd\f1 17.42 + 17.43 +Run as daemon, accepting connections, usually on port 25 if not configured differently. This is usually used in the startup script at system boot and together with the -q option (see below). 17.44 +.TP 17.45 + 17.46 +\fB-bi\f1 17.47 + 17.48 +Old sendmail rebuilds its alias database when invoked with this option. Masqmail ignores it. Masqmail reads directly from the file given with alias_file in the config file. 17.49 +.TP 17.50 + 17.51 +\fB-bp\f1 17.52 + 17.53 +Show the messages in the queue. Same as calling masqmail as 'mailq'. 17.54 +.TP 17.55 + 17.56 +\fB-bs\f1 17.57 + 17.58 +Accept SMTP commands from stdin. Some mailers (eg pine) use this option as an interface. It can also be used to call masqmail from inetd. 17.59 +.TP 17.60 + 17.61 +\fB-B \fIarg\f1\fB\f1 17.62 + 17.63 +\fIarg\f1 is usually 8BITMIME. Some mailers use this to indicate that the message contains characters > 127. Masqmail is 8-bit clean and ignores this, so you do not have to recompile elm, which is very painful ;-). Note though that this violates some conventions: masqmail does not convert 8 bit messages to any MIME format if it encounters a mail server which does not advertise its 8BITMIME capability, masqmail does not advertise this itself. This is the same practice as that of exim (but different to sendmail). 17.64 +.TP 17.65 + 17.66 +\fB-bV \f1 17.67 + 17.68 +Show version information. 17.69 +.TP 17.70 + 17.71 +\fB-C \f1\fIfilename\f1 17.72 + 17.73 +Use another configuration than \fI/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf\f1. Useful for debugging purposes. If not invoked by a privileged user, masqmail will drop all privileges. 17.74 +.TP 17.75 + 17.76 +\fB-d \fInumber\f1\fB\f1 17.77 + 17.78 +Set the debug level. This takes precedence before the value ofdebug_level in the configuration file. Read the warning in the description of the latter. 17.79 +.TP 17.80 + 17.81 +\fB-f [\fIaddress\f1\fB]\f1 17.82 + 17.83 +Set the return path address to \fIaddress\f1. Only root, the user mail and anyoune in group trusted is allowed to do that. 17.84 +.TP 17.85 + 17.86 +\fB-F [\fIstring\f1\fB]\f1 17.87 + 17.88 +Set the full sender name (in the From: header) to \fIstring\f1. 17.89 +.TP 17.90 + 17.91 +\fB-g [\fIname\f1\fB]\f1 17.92 + 17.93 +Get mail (using pop3 or apop), using the configurations given with get.\fIname\f1 in the main configuration. Without \fIname\f1, all get configurations will be used. See also \fBmasqmail.get (5)\f1 17.94 +.TP 17.95 + 17.96 +\fB-go [\fIinterval\f1\fB] [\fIname\f1\fB]\f1 17.97 + 17.98 +Can be followed by a connection name. Use this option in your script which starts as soon as a link to the internet has been set up (usually ip-up). When masqmail is called with this option, the specified get configuration(s) is(are) read and mail will be retrieved from servers on the internet. The \fIname\f1 is defined in the configuration (see \fBonline_gets.\fIname\f1\fB\f1). 17.99 + 17.100 +If called with an interval option (recognized by a digit as the first characater), masqmail starts as a daemon and tries to get mail in these intervals. It checks for the online status first. Example: masqmail -go 5m will retrieve mail all five minutes. 17.101 + 17.102 +If called without \fIname\f1 the online status is determined with the configured method (see \fBonline_detect\f1 in config.html). 17.103 +.TP 17.104 + 17.105 +\fB-i\f1 17.106 + 17.107 +Same as -oi, see below. 17.108 +.TP 17.109 + 17.110 +\fB-Mrm \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 17.111 + 17.112 +Remove given messages from the queue. Only allowed for privileged users. 17.113 +.TP 17.114 + 17.115 +\fB-oem\f1 17.116 + 17.117 +If the -oi ist not also given, always return with a non zero return code. Maybe someone tells me what this is good for... 17.118 +.TP 17.119 + 17.120 +\fB-odb\f1 17.121 + 17.122 +Deliver in background. Masqmail always does this, which makes this option pretty much useless. 17.123 +.TP 17.124 + 17.125 +\fB-odq\f1 17.126 + 17.127 +Do not attempt to deliver immediately. Any messages will be queued until the next queue running process picks them up and delivers them. You get the same effect by setting the do_queue option in /etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf. 17.128 +.TP 17.129 + 17.130 +\fB-oi\f1 17.131 + 17.132 +A dot as a single character in a line does not terminate the message. 17.133 +.TP 17.134 + 17.135 +\fB-q [\fIinterval\f1\fB]\f1 17.136 + 17.137 +If not given with an argument, run a queue process, ie. try to deliver all messages in the queue. Masqmail sends only to those addresses that are on the local net, not to those that are outside. Use -qo for those. 17.138 + 17.139 +If you have configured inetd to start masqmail, you can use this option in a cron job which starts in regular time intervals, to mimic the same effect as starting masqmail with -bd -q30m. 17.140 + 17.141 +An argument may be a time interval ie. a numerical value followed by one of the letters. s,m,h,d,w which are interpreted as seconds, minutes, hours, days or weeks respectively. Example: -q30m. Masqmail starts as a daemon and a queue runner process will be started automatically once in this time interval. This is usually used together with -bd (see above). 17.142 +.TP 17.143 + 17.144 +\fB-qo [\fIname\f1\fB]\f1 17.145 + 17.146 +Can be followed by a connection name. Use this option in your script which starts as soon as a link to the internet has been set up (usually ip-up). When masqmail is called with this option, the specified route configuration is read and the queued mail with destinations on the internet will be sent. The \fIname\f1 is defined in the configuration (see \fBonline_routes.\fIname\f1\fB\f1). 17.147 + 17.148 +If called without \fIname\f1 the online status is determined with the configured method (see \fBonline_detect\f1 in config.html) 17.149 +.TP 17.150 + 17.151 +\fB-t\f1 17.152 + 17.153 +Read recipients from headers. Delete 'Bcc:' headers. If any arguments are given, these are interpreted as recipient addresses and the message will not be sent to these. 17.154 +.TP 17.155 + 17.156 +\fB-v\f1 17.157 + 17.158 +Log also to stdout. Currently, some log messages are marked as 'write to stdout' and additionally, all messages with priority 'LOG_ALERT' and 'LOG_WARNING' will be written to stdout if this option is given. It is disabled in daemon mode. 17.159 +.SH ENVIRONMENT FOR PIPES AND MDAS 17.160 + 17.161 +For security reasons, before any pipe command from an alias expansion or an mda is called, the environment variables will be completely discarded and newly set up. These are: 17.162 + 17.163 +SENDER, RETURN_PATH - the return path. 17.164 + 17.165 +SENDER_DOMAIN - the domain part of the return path. 17.166 + 17.167 +SENDER_LOCAL - the local part of the return path. 17.168 + 17.169 +RECEIVED_HOST - the host the message was received from (unless local). 17.170 + 17.171 +LOCAL_PART, USER, LOGNAME - the local part of the (original) recipient. 17.172 + 17.173 +MESSAGE_ID - the unique message id. This is not necessarily identical with the Message ID as given in the Message ID: header. 17.174 + 17.175 +QUALIFY_DOMAIN - the domain which will be appended to unqualified addresses. 17.176 + 17.177 +.SH FILES 17.178 + 17.179 +\fI/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf\f1 is the main configuration for masqmail. Depending on the settings in this file, you will also have other configuration files in \fI/etc/masqmail/\f1. 17.180 + 17.181 +\fI/etc/aliases\f1 is the alias file, if not set differently in \fI/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf\f1. 17.182 + 17.183 +\fI/var/spool/masqmail/\f1 is the spool directory where masqmail stores its spooled messages and the uniq pop ids. 17.184 + 17.185 +\fI/var/spool/mail/\f1 is the directory where locally delivered mail will be put, if not configured differently in \fImasqmail.conf\f1. 17.186 + 17.187 +\fI/var/log/masqmail/\f1 is the directory where masqmail stores its log mesages. This can also be somewhere else if configured differently by your sysadmin or the package mantainer. 17.188 + 17.189 +.SH CONFORMING TO 17.190 + 17.191 +RFC 821, 822, 1869, 1870, 2197, 2554 (SMTP) 17.192 + 17.193 +RFC 1725, 1939 (POP3) 17.194 + 17.195 +RFC 1321 (MD5) 17.196 + 17.197 +RFC 2195 (CRAM-MD5) 17.198 + 17.199 +.SH AUTHOR 17.200 + 17.201 +masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 17.202 + 17.203 +You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 17.204 + 17.205 +.SH BUGS 17.206 + 17.207 +You should report them to the mailing list. 17.208 + 17.209 +.SH SEE ALSO 17.210 + 17.211 +\fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.route (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.get (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.aliases (5)\f1 17.212 + 17.213 +.SH COMMENTS 17.214 + 17.215 +This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 17.216 +
18.1 --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 18.2 +++ b/docs/masqmail.aliases.5 Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 18.3 @@ -0,0 +1,41 @@ 18.4 +.TH masqmail.aliases 5 User Manuals 18.5 +.SH NAME 18.6 +masqmail.aliases \- masqmail alias file format 18.7 +.SH DESCRIPTION 18.8 + 18.9 +This man page describes the format of the masqmail alias file. Its usual location is \fI/etc/aliases\f1. 18.10 + 18.11 +.SH FILE FORMAT 18.12 + 18.13 +The alias file consists of lines of the form: 18.14 +local_part: item1, item2, ... 18.15 +Items can be surrounded by quotes '"'. If within the quotes other quotes are needed for an address they can be escaped with a leading backslash '\'. 18.16 + 18.17 +A leading '\' indicates that this address shall not be further expanded. 18.18 + 18.19 +A leading pipe symbol '|' indicates that the item shall be treated as a pipe command. The content of the message will then be sent to the standard input of a command. The command will run under the user id and group id masqmail is running as. If quotes are needed, the pipe symbol must appear within the quotes. 18.20 + 18.21 +Loops will be detected, the offending address will be ignored. 18.22 + 18.23 +Aliases will be expanded at delivery time. This means that if there is a message still in the queue and you change any alias which matches one of the recipient addresses, the change will have effect next time a delivery is attemped. 18.24 + 18.25 +There is no need to restart masqmail or run any command when the alias file has been changed. 18.26 + 18.27 +.SH AUTHOR 18.28 + 18.29 +masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 18.30 + 18.31 +You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 18.32 + 18.33 +.SH BUGS 18.34 + 18.35 +You should report them to the mailing list. 18.36 + 18.37 +.SH SEE ALSO 18.38 + 18.39 +\fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail (8)\f1, 18.40 + 18.41 +.SH COMMENTS 18.42 + 18.43 +This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 18.44 +
19.1 --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 19.2 +++ b/docs/masqmail.conf.5 Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 19.3 @@ -0,0 +1,345 @@ 19.4 +.TH masqmail.conf 5 User Manuals 19.5 +.SH NAME 19.6 +masqmail.conf \- masqmail configuration file 19.7 +.SH DESCRIPTION 19.8 + 19.9 +This man page describes the syntax of the main configuration file of masqmail. Its usual location is \fI/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf\f1 19.10 + 19.11 +The configuration consists of lines of the form 19.12 + 19.13 +\fBval\f1 = \fIexpression\f1 19.14 + 19.15 +Where \fBval\f1 is a variable name and \fIexpression\f1 a string, which can be quoted with '"'. If the expression is on multiple lines or contains characters other than letters, digits or the characters '.', '-', '_', '/', it must be quoted. You can use quotes inside quotes by escaping them with a backslash. 19.16 + 19.17 +Each val has a type, which can be boolean, numeric, string or list. A boolean variable can be set with one of the values 'on', 'yes', and 'true' or 'off', 'no' and 'false'. List items are separated with ';'. For some values patterns (like '*','?') can be used. The spaces before and after the '=' are optional. 19.18 + 19.19 +Most lists (exceptions: \fBlocal_hosts\f1,\fBlocal_nets\f1, \fBlisten_addresses\f1, \fBonline_routes\f1 and \fBonline_gets\f1) accept files. These will be recognized by a leading slash '/'. The contents of these files will be included at the position of the file name, there can be items or other files before and after the file entry. The format of the files is different though, within these files each entry is on another line. (And not separated by semicolons). This makes it easy to include large lists which are common in different configuration files, so they do not have to appear in every configuration file. 19.20 + 19.21 +Blank lines and lines starting with '#' are ignored. 19.22 + 19.23 +.SH OPTIONS 19.24 +.TP 19.25 + 19.26 +\fBrun_as_user = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 19.27 + 19.28 +If this is set, masqmail runs with the user id of the user who invoked it and never changes it. This is for debugging purposes only. If the user is not root, masqmail will not be able to listen on a port < 1024 and will not be able to deliver local mail to others than the user. 19.29 +.TP 19.30 + 19.31 +\fBuse_syslog = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 19.32 + 19.33 +If this is set, masqmail uses syslogd for logging. It uses facility MAIL. You still have to set \fBlog_dir\f1 for debug files. 19.34 +.TP 19.35 + 19.36 +\fBdebug_level = \fIn\f1\fB\f1 19.37 + 19.38 +Set the debug level. Valid values are 0 to 6, increasing it further makes no difference. Be careful if you set this as high as 5 or higher, the logs may very soon fill your hard drive. 19.39 +.TP 19.40 + 19.41 +\fBmail_dir = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 19.42 + 19.43 +The directory where local mail is stored, usually \fI/var/spool/mail\f1 or \fI/var/mail\f1. 19.44 +.TP 19.45 + 19.46 +\fBspool_dir = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 19.47 + 19.48 +The directory where masqmail stores its spool files (and later also other stuff). It must have a subdirectory \fIinput\f1. Masqmail needs read and write permissions for this directory. I suggest to use \fI/var/spool/masqmail\f1. 19.49 +.TP 19.50 + 19.51 +\fBhost_name = \fIstring\f1\fB\f1 19.52 + 19.53 +This is used in different places: Masqmail identifies itself in the greeting banner on incoming connections and in the HELO/EHLO command for outgoing connections with this name, it is used in the Received: header and to qualify the sender of a locally originating message. 19.54 + 19.55 +If the string begins with a slash '/', it it assumed that it is a filename, and the first line of this file will be used. Usually this will be '/etc/mailname' to make masqmail conform to Debian policies. 19.56 + 19.57 +It is not used to find whether an address is local. Use \fBlocal_hosts\f1 for that. 19.58 +.TP 19.59 + 19.60 +\fBremote_port = \fIn\f1\fB\f1 19.61 + 19.62 +The remote port number to be used. This defaults to port 25. 19.63 + 19.64 +This option is deprecated. Use \fBhost_name\f1 in the route configuration instead. See \fBmasqmail.route (5)\f1. 19.65 +.TP 19.66 + 19.67 +\fBlocal_hosts = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.68 + 19.69 +A semicolon ';' separated list of hostnames which are considered local. Normally you set it to "localhost;foo;foo.bar.com" if your host has the fully qualified domain name 'foo.bar.com'. 19.70 +.TP 19.71 + 19.72 +\fBlocal_nets = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.73 + 19.74 +A semicolon ';' separated list of hostnames which are on the 'local' net. Delivery to these hosts is attempted immediately. You can use patterns with '*', eg. "*.bar.com". 19.75 +.TP 19.76 + 19.77 +\fBlocal_addresses = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.78 + 19.79 +A semicolon ';' separated list of fully qualified email-addresses which are considered local although their domain name part is not in the list of \fBlocal_hosts\f1. 19.80 + 19.81 +For example: There are two people working at your LAN: person1@yourdomain and person2@yourdomain. But there are other persons @yourdomain which are NOT local. So you can not put yourdomain to the list of local_hosts. If person1 now wants to write to person2@yourdomain and this mail should not leave the LAN then you can put 19.82 + 19.83 +local_addresses = "person1@yourdomain;person2@yourdomain" 19.84 + 19.85 +to your masqmail.conf. 19.86 +.TP 19.87 + 19.88 +\fBnot_local_addresses = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.89 + 19.90 +A semicolon ';' separated list of fully qualified email-addresses which are considered not local although their domain name part is in the list of \fBlocal_hosts\f1. 19.91 + 19.92 +This ist the opposite of the previous case. The majority of addresses of a specific domain are local. But some users are not. With this option you can easily exclude these users. 19.93 + 19.94 +Example: 19.95 + 19.96 +local_hosts = "localhost;myhost;mydomain.net" 19.97 + 19.98 +not_local_addresses = "eric@mydomain.net" 19.99 +.TP 19.100 + 19.101 +\fBlisten_addresses = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.102 + 19.103 +A semicolon ';' separated list of interfaces on which connections will be accepted. An interface ist defined by a hostname, optionally followed by a colon ':' and a number for the port. If this is left out, port 25 will be used. 19.104 + 19.105 +You can set this to "localhost:25;foo:25" if your hostname is 'foo'. 19.106 + 19.107 +Note that the names are resolved to IP addreses. If your host has different names which resolve to the same IP, use only one of them, otherwise you will get an error message. 19.108 +.TP 19.109 + 19.110 +\fBdo_save_envelope_to = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 19.111 + 19.112 +If this is set to true, a possibly existing Envelope-to: header in an incoming mail which is received via either pop3 or smtp will be saved as an X-Orig-Envelope-to: header. 19.113 + 19.114 +This is useful if you retrieve mail from a pop3 server with either masqmail or fetchmail, and the server supports Envelope-to: headers, and you want to make use of those with a mail filtering tool, eg. procmail. It cannot be preserved because masqmail sets such a header by itself. 19.115 + 19.116 +Default is false. 19.117 +.TP 19.118 + 19.119 +\fBdo_relay = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 19.120 + 19.121 +If this is set to false, mail with a return path that is not local and a destination that is also not local will not be accepted via smtp and a 550 reply will be given. Default is true. 19.122 + 19.123 +Note that this will not protect you from spammers using open relays, but from users unable to set their address in their mail clients. 19.124 +.TP 19.125 + 19.126 +\fBdo_queue = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 19.127 + 19.128 +If this is set, mail will not be delivered immediately when accepted. Same as calling masqmail with the \fB-odq\f1 option. 19.129 +.TP 19.130 + 19.131 +\fBonline_routes.\fIname\f1\fB = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.132 + 19.133 +Replace \fIname\f1 with a name to identify a connection. Set this to a filename (or a list of filenames) for the special route configuration for that connection. You will use that name to call masqmail with the\fB-qo\f1 option every time a connection to your ISP is set up. 19.134 + 19.135 +Example: Your ISP has the name FastNet. Then you write the following line in the main configuration: 19.136 + 19.137 +\fBonline_routes.FastNet\f1 = \fI"/etc/masqmail/fastnet.route"\f1 19.138 + 19.139 +\fI/etc/masqmail/fastnet.route\f1 is the route configuration file, see \fBmasqmail.route (5)\f1. As soon as a link to FastNet has been set up, you call masqmail \fB-qo\f1 \fIFastNet\f1. Masqmail will then read the specified file and send the mails. 19.140 +.TP 19.141 + 19.142 +\fBconnect_route.\fIname\f1\fB = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.143 + 19.144 +Old name for \fBonline_routes\f1. 19.145 +.TP 19.146 + 19.147 +\fBlocal_net_route = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 19.148 + 19.149 +This is similar to \fBonline_routes.\fIname\f1\fB\f1 but for the local net. Recipient addresses that are in local_nets will be routed using this route configuration. Main purpose is to define a mail server with mail_host in your local network. In simple environments this can be left unset. If unset, a default route configuration will be used. 19.150 +.TP 19.151 + 19.152 +\fBalias_file = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 19.153 + 19.154 +Set this to the location of your alias file. If unset, no aliasing will be done. 19.155 +.TP 19.156 + 19.157 +\fBalias_local_caseless = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 19.158 + 19.159 +If this is set, local parts in the alias file will be matched disregarding upper/lower case. 19.160 +.TP 19.161 + 19.162 +\fBpipe_fromline = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 19.163 + 19.164 +If this is set, a from line will be prepended to the output stream whenever a pipe command is called after an alias expansion. Default is false. 19.165 +.TP 19.166 + 19.167 +\fBpipe_fromhack = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 19.168 + 19.169 +If this is set, each line beginning with 'From ' is replaced with '>From ' whenever a pipe command is called after an alias expansion. You probably want this if you have set \fBpipe_fromline\f1 above. Default is false. 19.170 +.TP 19.171 + 19.172 +\fBmbox_default = \fIstring\f1\fB\f1 19.173 + 19.174 +The default local delivery method. Can be one of mbox, mda or maildir (the latter only if maildir support is enabled at compile time). Default is mbox. You can override this for each user by using the \fBmbox_users\f1, \fBmda_users\f1 or \fBmaildir_users\f1 options (see below). 19.175 +.TP 19.176 + 19.177 +\fBmbox_users = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.178 + 19.179 +A list of users which wish delivery to an mbox style mail folder. 19.180 +.TP 19.181 + 19.182 +\fBmda_users = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.183 + 19.184 +A list of users which wish local delivery to an mda. You have to set \fBmda\f1 (see below) as well. 19.185 +.TP 19.186 + 19.187 +\fBmaildir_users = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.188 + 19.189 +A list of users which wish delivery to a qmail style maildir. The path to maildir is ~/Maildir/. The maildir will be created if it does not exist. 19.190 +.TP 19.191 + 19.192 +\fBmda = \fIexpand string\f1\fB\f1 19.193 + 19.194 +If you want local delivery to be transferred to an mda (Mail Delivery Agent), set this to a command. The argument will be expanded on delivery time, you can use variables beginning with a '$' sign, optionally enclosed in curly braces. Variables you can use are: 19.195 + 19.196 +uid - the unique message id. This is not necessarily identical with the Message ID as given in the Message ID: header. 19.197 + 19.198 +received_host - the host the mail was received from 19.199 + 19.200 +ident - the ident, this is either the ident delivered by the ident protocol or the user id of the sender if the message was received locally. 19.201 + 19.202 +return_path_local - the local part of the return path (sender). 19.203 + 19.204 +return_path_domain - the domain part of the return path (sender). 19.205 + 19.206 +return_path - the complete return path (sender). 19.207 + 19.208 +rcpt_local - the local part of the recipient. 19.209 + 19.210 +rcpt_domain - the domain part of the recipient. 19.211 + 19.212 +rcpt - the complete recipient address. 19.213 + 19.214 +Example: 19.215 + 19.216 +mda="/usr/bin/procmail -Y -d ${rcpt_local}" 19.217 + 19.218 +For the mda, as for pipe commands, a few environment variables will be set as well. See \fBmasqmail (8)\f1. To use environment variables for the mda, the '$' sign has to be escaped with a backslash, otherwise they will be tried to be expanded with the internal variables. 19.219 +.TP 19.220 + 19.221 +\fBmda_fromline = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 19.222 + 19.223 +If this is set, a from line will be prepended to the output stream whenever a message is delivered to an mda. Default is false. 19.224 +.TP 19.225 + 19.226 +\fBmda_fromhack = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 19.227 + 19.228 +If this is set, each line beginning with 'From ' is replaced with '>From ' whenever a message is delivered to an mda. You probably want this if you have set \fBmda_fromline\f1 above. Default is false. 19.229 +.TP 19.230 + 19.231 +\fBonline_detect = \fIstring\f1\fB\f1 19.232 + 19.233 +Defines the method MasqMail uses to detect whether there is currently an online connection. It can have the values \fBfile\f1, \fBpipe\f1 or \fBmserver\f1. 19.234 + 19.235 +When it is set to \fBfile\f1, MasqMail first checks for the existence of \fBonline_file\f1 (see below) and if it exists, it reads it. The content of the file should be the name of the current connection as defined with \fBconnect_route.\fIname\f1\fB\f1 (without a trailing newline character). 19.236 + 19.237 +When it is set to \fBpipe\f1, MasqMail calls the executable given by the \fBonline_pipe\f1 option (see below) and reads the current online status from its standard output. 19.238 + 19.239 +When it is set to \fBmserver\f1, MasqMail connects to the masqdialer server using the value of \fBmserver_iface\f1 and asks it whether a connection exists and for the name, which should be the name of the current connection as defined with \fBconnect_route.\fIname\f1\fB\f1. 19.240 + 19.241 +No matter how MasqMail detects the online status, only messages that are accepted at online time will be delivered using the connection. The spool still has to be emptied with masqmail \fB-qo\f1\fIconnection\f1. 19.242 +.TP 19.243 + 19.244 +\fBonline_file = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 19.245 + 19.246 +This is the name of the file checked for when MasqMail determines whether it is online. The file should only exist when there is currently a connection. Create it in your ip-up script with eg. 19.247 + 19.248 +echo -n <name> > /tmp/connect_route 19.249 + 19.250 +chmod 0644 /tmp/connect_route 19.251 + 19.252 +Do not forget to delete it in your ip-down script. 19.253 +.TP 19.254 + 19.255 +\fBonline_pipe = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 19.256 + 19.257 +This is the name of the executable which will be called to determine the online status. This executable should just print the name oif the current connection to the standard output and return a zero status code. masqmail assumes it is offline if the script returns with a non zero status. Simple example: 19.258 + 19.259 +#!/bin/sh 19.260 + 19.261 + 19.262 + 19.263 +[ -e /tmp/connect_route ] || exit 1 19.264 + 19.265 +cat /tmp/connect_route 19.266 + 19.267 +exit 0 19.268 + 19.269 +Of course, instead of the example above you could as well use \fBfile\f1 as the online detection method, but you can do something more sophisticated. 19.270 +.TP 19.271 + 19.272 +\fBmserver_iface = \fIinterface\f1\fB\f1 19.273 + 19.274 +The interface the masqdialer server is listening to. Usually this will be "localhost:224" if mserver is running on the same host as masqmail. But using this option, you can also let masqmail run on another host by setting \fBmserver_iface\f1 to another hostname, eg. "foo:224". 19.275 +.TP 19.276 + 19.277 +\fBget.\fIname\f1\fB = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 19.278 + 19.279 +Replace \fIname\f1 with a name to identify a get configuration. Set this to a filename for the get configuration. These files will be used to retrieve mail when called with the -g option. 19.280 +.TP 19.281 + 19.282 +\fBonline_gets.\fIname\f1\fB = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.283 + 19.284 +Replace \fIname\f1 with a name to identify an online configuration. Set this to a filename (or a list of filenames) for the get configuration. These files will be used to retrieve mail when called with the -go option. 19.285 +.TP 19.286 + 19.287 +\fBident_trusted_nets = \fIlist\f1\fB\f1 19.288 + 19.289 +\fIlist\f1 is a list of networks of the form a.b.c.d/e (eg. 192.168.1.0/24), from which the ident given by the ident protocol will be trusted, so a user can delete his mail from the queue if the ident is identical to his login name. 19.290 +.TP 19.291 + 19.292 +\fBerrmsg_file = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 19.293 + 19.294 +Set this to a template which will be used to generate delivery failure reports. Variable parts within the template begin with a dollar sign and are identical to those which can be used as arguments for the mda command, see \fBmda\f1 above. Additional information can be included with @failed_rcpts, @msg_headers and @msg_body, these must be at the beginning of a line and will be replaced with the list of the failed recipients, the message headers and the message body of the failed message. 19.295 + 19.296 +Default is /usr/share/masqmail/tpl/failmsg.tpl. 19.297 +.TP 19.298 + 19.299 +\fBwarnmsg_file = \fIfile\f1\fB\f1 19.300 + 19.301 +Set this to a template which will be used to generate delivery warning reports. It uses the same mechanisms for variables as \fBerrmsg_file\f1, see above. 19.302 + 19.303 +Default is /usr/share/masqmail/tpl/warnmsg.tpl. 19.304 +.TP 19.305 + 19.306 +\fBwarn_intervals\f1 = \fIlist\f1 19.307 + 19.308 +Set this to a list of time intervals, at which delivery warnings (starting with the receiving time of the message) shall be generated. 19.309 + 19.310 +A warning will only be generated just after an attempt to deliver the mail and if that attempt failed temporarily. So a warning may be generated after a longer time, if there was no attempt before. 19.311 + 19.312 +Default is "1h;4h;8h;1d;2d;3d" 19.313 +.TP 19.314 + 19.315 +\fBmax_defer_time\f1 = \fItime\f1 19.316 + 19.317 +This is the maximum time, in which a temporarily failed mail will be kept in the spool. When this time is exceeded, it will be handled as a delivery failure, and the message will be bounced. 19.318 + 19.319 +The excedence of this time will only be noticed if the message was actually tried to be delivered. If, for example, the message can only be delivered when online, but you have not been online for that time, no bounce will be generated. 19.320 + 19.321 +Default is 4d (4 days) 19.322 +.TP 19.323 + 19.324 +\fBlog_user = \fIname\f1\fB\f1 19.325 + 19.326 +Replace \fIname\f1 with a valid local or remote mail address. 19.327 + 19.328 +If this option is not empty, then a copy of every mail, that passes trough the masqmail system will also be sent to the given mail address. 19.329 + 19.330 +For example you can feed your mails into a program like hypermail for archiving purpose by placing an appropriate pipe command in masqmail.alias 19.331 +.SH AUTHOR 19.332 + 19.333 +masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 19.334 + 19.335 +You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 19.336 + 19.337 +.SH BUGS 19.338 + 19.339 +You should report them to the mailing list. 19.340 + 19.341 +.SH SEE ALSO 19.342 + 19.343 +\fBmasqmail (8)\f1, \fBmasqmail.route (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.get (5)\f1 19.344 + 19.345 +.SH COMMENTS 19.346 + 19.347 +This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 19.348 +
20.1 --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 20.2 +++ b/docs/masqmail.get.5 Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 20.3 @@ -0,0 +1,99 @@ 20.4 +.TH masqmail.get 5 User Manuals 20.5 +.SH NAME 20.6 +masqmail.get \- masqmail get configuration file 20.7 +.SH DESCRIPTION 20.8 + 20.9 +This man page describes the options available for the masqmail get configuration. 20.10 + 20.11 +.SH OPTIONS 20.12 +.TP 20.13 + 20.14 +\fBprotocol\f1 = \fIstring\f1 20.15 + 20.16 +The protocol with which you retrieve your mail. Currently only 'pop3' and 'apop' are supported. There is no default. 20.17 +.TP 20.18 + 20.19 +\fBserver\f1 = \fIstring\f1 20.20 + 20.21 +The server you get your mail from. 20.22 +.TP 20.23 + 20.24 +\fBresolve_list\f1 = \fIlist\f1 20.25 + 20.26 +Specify the method how the domain of the server is resolved. Possible values are dns_mx, dns_a, byname. For 'dns_mx', the domain is assumed to be an MX pointer to a list of host names, these will be tried each in order (lowest preference value first, equal preference values in random order). For 'dns_a', the domain is assumed to be an A pointer. For 'byname', the library function \fBgethostbyname (3)\f1 will be used. 20.27 + 20.28 +The default is "dns_a;byname". It does not make much sense here to use 'dns_mx'. 20.29 +.TP 20.30 + 20.31 +\fBuser\f1 = \fIstring\f1 20.32 + 20.33 +Your login name. 20.34 +.TP 20.35 + 20.36 +\fBpass\f1 = \fIstring\f1 20.37 + 20.38 +Your password. 20.39 +.TP 20.40 + 20.41 +\fBaddress\f1 = \fIaddress\f1 20.42 + 20.43 +The address where the retrieved mail should be sent to. It can be any address, but you probably want to set this to a local address on your LAN. 20.44 +.TP 20.45 + 20.46 +\fBreturn_path\f1 = \fIaddress\f1 20.47 + 20.48 +If set, masqmail sets the return path to this address. Bounces generated during further delivery will be sent to this address. If unset, masqmail looks for the Return-Path: header in the mail, if this does not exist it uses the From: address and if this fails, postmaster will be used. 20.49 + 20.50 +It is in most cases not useful to set this to the same address as the 'address' option as this may generate multiple bounces. postmaster is recommended. 20.51 +.TP 20.52 + 20.53 +\fBdo_keep\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 20.54 + 20.55 +If you want to keep your mail on the server after you retrieved it, set this to true. It is recommended that you also set do_uidl, otherwise you will get the mail again each time you connect to the server. Masqmail does not check any headers before it retrieves mail, which may mark it as already fetched. Note that this behaviour is different to that of fetchmail. The default is false. 20.56 +.TP 20.57 + 20.58 +\fBdo_uidl\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 20.59 + 20.60 +If set, MasqMail keeps a list of unique IDs of mails already fetched, so that they will not be retrieved again. Default is false. 20.61 +.TP 20.62 + 20.63 +\fBdo_uidl_dele\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 20.64 + 20.65 +If set, and \fBdo_uidl\f1 is also set, MasqMail sends a delete (DELE) command to the server for each message uid in the uid listing at the beginning of the session. This prevents mail to be left on the server if masqmail gets interrupted during a session before it can send the QUIT command to the server. Default is false. 20.66 +.TP 20.67 + 20.68 +\fBmax_size\f1 = \fInumeric\f1 20.69 + 20.70 +If set to a value > 0, only messages smaller than this in bytes will be retrieved. The default is 0. 20.71 +.TP 20.72 + 20.73 +\fBmax_count\f1 = \fInumeric\f1 20.74 + 20.75 +If set to a value > 0, only \fBmax_count\f1 messages will be retrieved. The default is 0. 20.76 +.TP 20.77 + 20.78 +\fBwrapper\f1 = \fIcommand\f1 20.79 + 20.80 +If set, instead of opening a connection to a remote server, \fIcommand\f1 will be called and all traffic will be piped to its stdin and from its stdout. Purpose is to tunnel ip traffic, eg. for ssl. 20.81 + 20.82 +Example for ssl tunneling: 20.83 + 20.84 +wrapper="/usr/bin/openssl s_client -quiet -connect pop.gmx.net:995 2>/dev/null" 20.85 +.SH AUTHOR 20.86 + 20.87 +masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 20.88 + 20.89 +You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 20.90 + 20.91 +.SH BUGS 20.92 + 20.93 +You should report them to the mailing list. 20.94 + 20.95 +.SH SEE ALSO 20.96 + 20.97 +\fBmasqmail (8)\f1, \fBmasqmail.route (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1 20.98 + 20.99 +.SH COMMENTS 20.100 + 20.101 +This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 20.102 +
21.1 --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 21.2 +++ b/docs/masqmail.route.5 Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 21.3 @@ -0,0 +1,212 @@ 21.4 +.TH masqmail.route 5 User Manuals 21.5 +.SH NAME 21.6 +masqmail.route \- masqmail route configuration file 21.7 +.SH DESCRIPTION 21.8 + 21.9 +This man page describes the syntax of the route configuration files of \fBmasqmail (8)\f1. Their usual locations are in \fI/etc/masqmail/\f1. 21.10 + 21.11 +.SH OPTIONS 21.12 +.TP 21.13 + 21.14 +\fBprotocol\f1 = \fIstring\f1 21.15 + 21.16 +\fIstring\f1 can be one of 'smtp' or 'pipe', default is 'smtp'. If set to 'smtp', mail will be sent with the SMTP protocol to its destination. If set to 'pipe', you also have to set 'pipe' to a command, the message will then be piped to a program. See option 'pipe' below. 21.17 +.TP 21.18 + 21.19 +\fBmail_host\f1 = \fIstring\f1 21.20 + 21.21 +This is preferably the mail server of your ISP. All outgoing messages will be sent to this host which will distribute them to their destinations. If you do not set this mails will be sent directly. Because the mail server is probably 'near' to you, mail transfer will be much faster if you use it. 21.22 + 21.23 +You can optionally give a port number following the host name and a colon, eg mail_host="mail.foo.com:25". 21.24 +.TP 21.25 + 21.26 +\fBresolve_list\f1 = \fIlist\f1 21.27 + 21.28 +Specify the method how the domain of the server is resolved. Possible values are dns_mx, dns_a, byname. For 'dns_mx', the domain is assumed to be an MX pointer to a list of host names, these will be tried each in order (lowest preference value first, equal preference values in random order). For 'dns_a', the domain is assumed to be an A pointer. For 'byname', the library function \fBgethostbyname (3)\f1 will be used. 21.29 + 21.30 +The default is "dns_mx;dns_a;byname". 21.31 +.TP 21.32 + 21.33 +\fBconnect_error_fail\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 21.34 + 21.35 +If this is set, a connection error will cause a mail delivery to fail, ie. it will be bounced. If it is unset, it will just be defered. 21.36 + 21.37 +Default is false. The reason for this is that masqmail is designed for non permanent internet connections, where such errors may occur quite often, and a bounce would be annoying. 21.38 + 21.39 +For the default local_net route is is set to true. 21.40 +.TP 21.41 + 21.42 +\fBhelo_name\f1 = \fIstring\f1 21.43 + 21.44 +Set the name given with the HELO/EHLO command. If this is not set, \fBhost_name\f1 from \fImasqmail.conf\f1 will be used, if the \fBdo_correct_helo\f1 option (see below) is unset. 21.45 +.TP 21.46 + 21.47 +\fBdo_correct_helo\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 21.48 + 21.49 +If this is set, masqmail tries to look up your host name as it appears on the internet and sends this in the HELO/EHLO command. Some servers are so picky that they want this. Which is really crazy. It just does not make any sense to lie about ones own identity, because it can always be looked up by the server. Nobody should believe in the name given by HELO/EHLO anyway. If this is not set, \fBhost_name\f1 from \fImasqmail.conf\f1 or as given with the \fBhelo_name\f1 (see above) will be used. 21.50 +.TP 21.51 + 21.52 +\fBdo_pipelining\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 21.53 + 21.54 +If this is set to false, masqmail will not use ESMTP PIPELINING, even if the server announces that it is able to cope with it. Default is true. 21.55 + 21.56 +You do not want to set this to false unless the mail setup on the remote server side is really broken. Keywords: wingate. 21.57 +.TP 21.58 + 21.59 +\fBallowed_mail_locals\f1 = \fIlist\f1 21.60 + 21.61 +This is a semicolon ';' separated list of local parts which will be allowed to send mail through this connection. If unset and \fBnot_allowed_mail_locals\f1 is also unset, all users are allowed. 21.62 +.TP 21.63 + 21.64 +\fBnot_allowed_mail_locals\f1 = \fIlist\f1 21.65 + 21.66 +This is a semicolon ';' separated list of local parts which will be not allowed to send mail through this connection. Local parts in this list will not be allowed to use this route even if they are part of \fBallowed_mail_locals\f1 (see above). 21.67 +.TP 21.68 + 21.69 +\fBallowed_return_paths\f1 = \fIlist\f1 21.70 + 21.71 +This is a semicolon ';' separated list of addresses. Messages which have one one of these addresses as the return path will be used using this route (if not also in \fBnot_allowed_return_paths\f1 or an item in \fBnot_allowed_mail_locals\f1 matches). 21.72 + 21.73 +Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used. The special item "<>" matches the null sender address (eg. failure notices or delivery notifications). 21.74 +.TP 21.75 + 21.76 +\fBnot_allowed_return_paths\f1 = \fIlist\f1 21.77 + 21.78 +This is a semicolon ';' separated list of addresses. Messages which have one one of these addresses as the return path will not be used using this route (even if also in \fBallowed_return_paths\f1 or an item in \fBallowed_mail_locals\f1 matches). 21.79 + 21.80 +Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used. The special item "<>" matches the null sender address (eg. failure notices or delivery notifications). 21.81 +.TP 21.82 + 21.83 +\fBallowed_rcpt_domains\f1 = \fIlist\f1 21.84 + 21.85 +A list of recipient domains where mail will be sent to. This is for example useful if you use this route configuration when connected to another LAN via ppp. Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used. 21.86 +.TP 21.87 + 21.88 +\fBnot_allowed_rcpt_domains\f1 = \fIlist\f1 21.89 + 21.90 +A list of recipient domains where mail will not be sent to. This is for example useful if you send mail directly (\fBmail_host\f1 is not set) and you know of hosts that will not accept mail from you because they use a dialup list (eg. \fBhttp://maps.vix.com/dul/\f1. If any domain matches both \fBallowed_rcpt_domains\f1 and \fBnot_allowed_rcpt_domains\f1, mail will not be sent to this domain. Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used. 21.91 +.TP 21.92 + 21.93 +\fBset_h_from_domain\f1 = \fIstring\f1 21.94 + 21.95 +Replace the domain part in 'From:' headers with this value. This may be useful if you use a private, outside unknown address on your local LAN and want this to be replaced by the domain of the address of your email addrsss on the internet. Note that this is different to \fBset_return_path_domain\f1, see below. 21.96 +.TP 21.97 + 21.98 +\fBset_return_path_domain\f1 = \fIstring\f1 21.99 + 21.100 +Sets the domain part of the envelope from address. Some hosts check whether this is the same as the net the connection is coming from. If not, they reject the mail because they suspect spamming. It should be a valid address, because some mail servers also check that. You can also use this to set it to your usual address on the internet and put a local address only known on your LAN in the configuration of your mailer. Only the domain part will be changed, the local part remains unchanged. Use \fBmap_return_path_addresses\f1 for rewriting local parts. 21.101 +.TP 21.102 + 21.103 +\fBmap_h_from_addresses\f1 = \fIlist\f1 21.104 + 21.105 +This is similar to \fBset_h_from_domain\f1, but more flexible. Set this to a list which maps local parts to a full RFC 822 compliant email address, the local parts (the keys) are separated from the addresses (the values) by colons (':'). 21.106 + 21.107 +Example: 21.108 + 21.109 +map_h_from_addresses = "john: John Smith <jsmith@mail.academic.edu>; charlie: Charlie Miller <cmiller@mx.commercial.com>" 21.110 + 21.111 +You can use patterns, eg. * as keys. 21.112 +.TP 21.113 + 21.114 +\fBmap_h_reply_to_addresses\f1 = \fIlist\f1 21.115 + 21.116 +Same as \fBmap_h_from_addresses\f1, but for the 'Reply-To:' header. 21.117 +.TP 21.118 + 21.119 +\fBmap_h_mail_followup_to_addresses\f1 = \fIlist\f1 21.120 + 21.121 +Same as \fBmap_h_from_addresses\f1, but for the 'Mail-Followup-To:' header. Useful when replying to mailing lists. 21.122 +.TP 21.123 + 21.124 +\fBmap_return_path_addresses\f1 = \fIlist\f1 21.125 + 21.126 +This is similar to \fBset_return_path_domain\f1, but more flexible. Set this to a list which maps local parts to a full RFC 821 compliant email address, the local parts (the keys) are separated from the addresses (the values) by colons (':'). Note that this option takes RFC 821 addresses while \fBmap_h_from_addresses\f1 takes RFC 822 addresses. The most important difference is that RFC 821 addresses have no full name. 21.127 + 21.128 +Example: 21.129 + 21.130 +map_return_path_addresses = "john: <jsmith@mail.academic.edu>; charlie: <cmiller@mx.commercial.com>" 21.131 + 21.132 +You can use patterns, eg. * as keys. 21.133 +.TP 21.134 + 21.135 +\fBexpand_h_sender_address\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 21.136 + 21.137 +This sets the domain of the sender address as given by the Sender: header to the same address as in the envelope return path address (which can be set by either \fBset_return_path_domain\f1 or \fBmap_return_path_addresses\f1). This is for mail clients (eg. Microsoft Outlook) which use this address as the sender address. Though they should use the From: address, see RFC 821. If \fBfetchmail (1)\f1 encounters an unqualified Sender: address, it will be expanded to the domain of the pop server, which is almost never correct. Default is true. 21.138 +.TP 21.139 + 21.140 +\fBexpand_h_sender_domain\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 21.141 + 21.142 +Like \fBexpand_h_sender_address\f1, but sets the domain only. Deprecated, will be removed in a later version. 21.143 +.TP 21.144 + 21.145 +\fBlast_route\f1 = \fIboolean\f1 21.146 + 21.147 +If this is set, a mail which would have been delivered using this route, but has failed temporarily, will not be tried to be delivered using the next route. 21.148 + 21.149 +If you have set up a special route with filters using the lists 'allowed_rcpt_domains', 'allowed_return_paths', and 'allowed_mail_locals' or their complements (not_), and the mail passing these rules should be delivered using this route only, you should set this to 'true'. Otherwise the mail would be passed to the next route (if any), unless that route has rules which prevent that. 21.150 + 21.151 +Default is false. 21.152 +.TP 21.153 + 21.154 +\fBauth_name\f1 = \fIstring\f1 21.155 + 21.156 +Set the authentication type for ESMTP AUTH authentification. Currently only 'cram-md5' and 'login' are supported. 21.157 +.TP 21.158 + 21.159 +\fBauth_login\f1 = \fIstring\f1 21.160 + 21.161 +Your account name for ESMTP AUTH authentification. 21.162 +.TP 21.163 + 21.164 +\fBauth_secret\f1 = \fIstring\f1 21.165 + 21.166 +Your secret for ESMTP AUTH authentification. 21.167 +.TP 21.168 + 21.169 +\fBpop3_login\f1 = \fIfile\f1 21.170 + 21.171 +If your Mail server requires SMTP-after-POP, set this to a get configuration (see \fBmasqmail.get (5)\f1). If you login to the POP server before you send, this is not necessary. 21.172 +.TP 21.173 + 21.174 +\fBwrapper\f1 = \fIcommand\f1 21.175 + 21.176 +If set, instead of opening a connection to a remote server, \fIcommand\f1 will be called and all traffic will be piped to its stdin and from its stdout. Purpose is to tunnel ip traffic, eg. for ssl. 21.177 + 21.178 +Example for ssl tunneling: 21.179 + 21.180 +wrapper="/usr/bin/openssl s_client -quiet -connect pop.gmx.net:995 2>/dev/null" 21.181 +.TP 21.182 + 21.183 +\fBpipe\f1 = \fIcommand\f1 21.184 + 21.185 +If set, and protocol is set to 'pipe', \fIcommand\f1 will be called and the message will be piped to its stdin. Purpose is to use gateways to uucp, fax, sms or whatever else. 21.186 + 21.187 +You can use variables to give as arguments to the command, these are the same as for the mda in the main configuration, see \fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1. 21.188 +.TP 21.189 + 21.190 +\fBpipe_fromline = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 21.191 + 21.192 +If this is set, and protocol is set to 'pipe', a from line will be prepended to the output stream whenever a pipe command is called. Default is false. 21.193 +.TP 21.194 + 21.195 +\fBpipe_fromhack = \fIboolean\f1\fB\f1 21.196 + 21.197 +If this is set, and protocol is set to 'pipe', each line beginning with 'From ' is replaced with '>From ' whenever a pipe command is called. You probably want this if you have set \fBpipe_fromline\f1 above. Default is false. 21.198 +.SH AUTHOR 21.199 + 21.200 +masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 21.201 + 21.202 +You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 21.203 + 21.204 +.SH BUGS 21.205 + 21.206 +You should report them to the mailing list. 21.207 + 21.208 +.SH SEE ALSO 21.209 + 21.210 +\fBmasqmail (8)\f1, \fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1, \fBmasqmail.get (5)\f1 21.211 + 21.212 +.SH COMMENTS 21.213 + 21.214 +This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 21.215 +
22.1 --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 22.2 +++ b/docs/mservdetect.8 Fri Sep 26 21:40:10 2008 +0200 22.3 @@ -0,0 +1,42 @@ 22.4 +.TH mservdetect 8 User Manuals 22.5 +.SH NAME 22.6 +mservdetect \- Helper for masqmail and masqdialer 22.7 +.SH SYNOPSIS 22.8 +\fB/usr/bin/masqmail \fIhost\f1\fB \fIport\f1\fB 22.9 + 22.10 +\fB 22.11 +.SH DESCRIPTION 22.12 + 22.13 +mservdetect is a small helper application for masqmail to detect its online status if the modem server masqdialer is used. It connects to the\fIhost\f1 at \fIport\f1 and prints the connection name to stdout. 22.14 + 22.15 +If you want to use it, set \fBonline_detect\f1=\fIpipe\f1 and \fBonline_pipe\f1=\fI"/usr/bin/mservdetect host port"\f1. 22.16 + 22.17 +.SH OPTIONS 22.18 +.TP 22.19 + 22.20 +\fBhost\f1 22.21 + 22.22 +The hostname where the masqdialer server is running. 22.23 +.TP 22.24 + 22.25 +\fBport\f1 22.26 + 22.27 +The port number where the masqdialer server is listening. 22.28 +.SH AUTHOR 22.29 + 22.30 +masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth <oku@masqmail.cx> 22.31 + 22.32 +You will find the newest version of masqmail at \fBhttp://masqmail.cx/masqmail/\f1 or search for it in freshmeat (\fBhttp://www.freshmeat.net\f1). There is also a mailing list, you will find information about it at masqmails main site. 22.33 + 22.34 +.SH BUGS 22.35 + 22.36 +You should report them to the mailing list. 22.37 + 22.38 +.SH SEE ALSO 22.39 + 22.40 +\fBmasqmail.conf (5)\f1 22.41 + 22.42 +.SH COMMENTS 22.43 + 22.44 +This man page was written using \fBxml2man (1)\f1 by the same author. 22.45 +
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25.1 --- a/docs/xml/masqmail.8.xml Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 25.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 25.3 @@ -1,302 +0,0 @@ 25.4 -<?xml version="1.0" standalone='no'?> 25.5 -<!DOCTYPE spec SYSTEM "man.dtd"> 25.6 - 25.7 -<manpage name="masqmail" section="8" desc="An offline Mail Transfer Agent"> 25.8 - 25.9 -<synopsis> 25.10 -<cmd>/usr/sbin/masqmail [-C <arg>file</arg>] [-odq] [-bd] [-q<arg>interval</arg>]</cmd> 25.11 -<cmd>/usr/sbin/masqmail [-odq] [-bs]</cmd> 25.12 -<cmd>/usr/sbin/masqmail [-bp]</cmd> 25.13 -<cmd>/usr/sbin/masqmail [-q]</cmd> 25.14 -<cmd>/usr/sbin/masqmail [-qo [<arg>name</arg>]]</cmd> 25.15 -<cmd>/usr/sbin/masqmail [-odq] [-g [<arg>name</arg>]]</cmd> 25.16 -<cmd>/usr/sbin/masqmail [-odq] [-go [<arg>name</arg>]]</cmd> 25.17 -<cmd>/usr/sbin/masqmail [-t] [-oi] [-f <arg>address</arg>] [--] <arg>address...</arg></cmd> 25.18 -<cmd>/usr/sbin/mailq</cmd> 25.19 -</synopsis> 25.20 - 25.21 -<description> 25.22 -<p>MasqMail is a mail server designed for hosts that do 25.23 -not have a permanent internet connection eg. a home network or a 25.24 -single host at home. It has special support for connections to 25.25 -different ISPs. It replaces sendmail or other MTAs such as qmail or 25.26 -exim. It can also act as a pop3 client.</p> 25.27 -</description> 25.28 - 25.29 -<options> 25.30 -<p>Since masqmail is intended to replace sendmail, it uses the same 25.31 -command line options, but not all are implemented. There are also two 25.32 -additional options, which are unique to masqmail (-qo <arg>connection</arg> and -g) 25.33 -</p> 25.34 - 25.35 -<option> 25.36 -<p><opt>--</opt></p> 25.37 -<optdesc><p>Not a 'real' option, it means that all following arguments are to 25.38 -be understood as arguments and not as options even if they begin with a 25.39 -leading dash '-'. Mutt is known to call sendmail with this option.</p></optdesc> 25.40 -</option> 25.41 - 25.42 -<option> 25.43 -<p><opt>-bd</opt></p> 25.44 -<optdesc><p>Run as daemon, accepting connections, usually on port 25 if not 25.45 -configured differently. This is usually used in the startup script at system boot and 25.46 -together with the -q option (see below).</p></optdesc> 25.47 -</option> 25.48 - 25.49 -<option> 25.50 -<p><opt>-bi</opt></p> 25.51 -<optdesc><p>Old sendmail rebuilds its alias database when invoked with this 25.52 -option. Masqmail ignores it. Masqmail reads directly from the file 25.53 -given with <b>alias_file</b> in the config file.</p></optdesc> 25.54 -</option> 25.55 - 25.56 -<option> 25.57 -<p><opt>-bp</opt></p> 25.58 -<optdesc><p>Show the messages in the queue. Same as calling masqmail as 25.59 -'mailq'.</p></optdesc> 25.60 -</option> 25.61 - 25.62 -<option> 25.63 -<p><opt>-bs</opt></p> 25.64 -<optdesc><p>Accept SMTP commands from stdin. Some mailers (eg pine) use this 25.65 -option as an interface. It can also be used to call masqmail from 25.66 -inetd.</p></optdesc> 25.67 -</option> 25.68 - 25.69 -<option> 25.70 -<p><opt>-B <arg>arg</arg></opt></p> 25.71 -<optdesc><p><arg>arg</arg> is usually 8BITMIME. Some mailers use this 25.72 -to indicate that the message contains characters > 127. Masqmail is 25.73 -8-bit clean and ignores this, so you do not have to recompile elm, 25.74 -which is very painful ;-). Note though that this violates some 25.75 -conventions: masqmail <em>does not</em> convert 8 bit messages to any 25.76 -MIME format if it encounters a mail server which does not advertise 25.77 -its 8BITMIME capability, masqmail does not advertise this itself. This 25.78 -is the same practice as that of exim (but different to 25.79 -sendmail).</p></optdesc></option> 25.80 - 25.81 -<option> 25.82 -<p><opt>-bV </opt></p> 25.83 -<optdesc><p>Show version information.</p> 25.84 -</optdesc> 25.85 -</option> 25.86 - 25.87 -<option> 25.88 -<p><opt>-C </opt><arg>filename</arg></p> 25.89 -<optdesc><p>Use another configuration than <file>/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf</file>. Useful for 25.90 -debugging purposes. If not invoked by a privileged user, masqmail will drop all privileges. 25.91 -</p></optdesc> 25.92 -</option> 25.93 - 25.94 -<option> 25.95 -<p><opt>-d <arg>number</arg></opt></p> 25.96 -<optdesc> 25.97 -<p>Set the debug level. This takes precedence before the value of 25.98 -<b>debug_level</b> in the configuration file. Read the warning in the 25.99 -description of the latter. 25.100 -</p> 25.101 -</optdesc> 25.102 -</option> 25.103 - 25.104 -<option> 25.105 -<p><opt>-f [<arg>address</arg>]</opt></p> 25.106 -<optdesc> 25.107 -<p>Set the return path address to <arg>address</arg>. Only root, the 25.108 -user mail and anyoune in group trusted is allowed to do that.</p> 25.109 -</optdesc> 25.110 -</option> 25.111 - 25.112 -<option> 25.113 -<p><opt>-F [<arg>string</arg>]</opt></p> 25.114 -<optdesc> 25.115 -<p>Set the full sender name (in the From: header) 25.116 -to <arg>string</arg>.</p> 25.117 -</optdesc> 25.118 -</option> 25.119 - 25.120 -<option> 25.121 -<p><opt>-g [<arg>name</arg>]</opt></p> 25.122 -<optdesc> 25.123 -<p>Get mail (using pop3 or apop), using the configurations given 25.124 -with <b>get.<arg>name</arg></b> in the main configuration. Without <arg>name</arg>, 25.125 -all get configurations will be used. See also <manref 25.126 -name = "masqmail.get" section="5" href="masqmail.get.5.html"/></p> 25.127 -</optdesc> 25.128 -</option> 25.129 - 25.130 -<option> 25.131 -<p><opt>-go [<arg>interval</arg>] [<arg>name</arg>]</opt></p> 25.132 -<optdesc> 25.133 -<p>Can be followed by a connection name. Use this option in your 25.134 -script which starts as soon as a link to the internet has been set up 25.135 -(usually ip-up). When masqmail is called with this option, the 25.136 -specified get configuration(s) is(are) read and mail will be 25.137 -retrieved from servers on the internet. 25.138 -The <arg>name</arg> is defined 25.139 -in the configuration (see <opt>online_gets.<arg>name</arg></opt>). 25.140 -</p><p> 25.141 -If called with an interval option (recognized by a digit 25.142 -as the first characater), masqmail starts as a daemon and tries to 25.143 -get mail in these intervals. It checks for the online status first. 25.144 -Example: masqmail -go 5m will retrieve mail 25.145 -all five minutes. 25.146 -</p><p> 25.147 -If called without <arg>name</arg> the online status is determined with 25.148 -the configured method (see <opt>online_detect</opt> in <a 25.149 -href="config.html">config.html</a>). 25.150 -</p> 25.151 -</optdesc> 25.152 -</option> 25.153 - 25.154 -<option> 25.155 -<p><opt>-i</opt></p> 25.156 -<optdesc><p>Same as <b>-oi</b>, see below.</p></optdesc> 25.157 -</option> 25.158 - 25.159 -<option> 25.160 -<p><opt>-Mrm <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 25.161 -<optdesc><p>Remove given messages from the queue. Only allowed for privileged users.</p></optdesc> 25.162 -</option> 25.163 - 25.164 -<option> 25.165 -<p><opt>-oem</opt></p> 25.166 -<optdesc><p>If the <b>-oi</b> ist not also given, always return with a non zero 25.167 -return code. Maybe someone tells me what this is good for...</p></optdesc> 25.168 -</option> 25.169 - 25.170 -<option> 25.171 -<p><opt>-odb</opt></p> 25.172 -<optdesc><p>Deliver in background. Masqmail always does this, which 25.173 -makes this option pretty much useless.</p></optdesc> 25.174 -</option> 25.175 - 25.176 -<option> 25.177 -<p><opt>-odq</opt></p> 25.178 -<optdesc><p>Do not attempt to deliver immediately. Any messages will be queued 25.179 -until the next queue running process picks them up and delivers 25.180 -them. You get the same effect by setting the <i>do_queue</i> option in 25.181 -/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf.</p></optdesc> 25.182 -</option> 25.183 - 25.184 -<option> 25.185 -<p><opt>-oi</opt></p> 25.186 -<optdesc><p>A dot as a single character in a line does <em>not</em> terminate 25.187 -the message.</p></optdesc> 25.188 -</option> 25.189 - 25.190 -<option> 25.191 -<p><opt>-q [<arg>interval</arg>]</opt></p> 25.192 -<optdesc><p>If not given with an argument, run a queue process, ie. try to 25.193 -deliver all messages in the queue. Masqmail sends only to those 25.194 -addresses that are on the <em>local</em> net, not to those that are 25.195 -outside. Use -qo for those.</p> 25.196 -<p> 25.197 -If you have configured inetd to start masqmail, you can use this 25.198 -option in a cron job which starts in regular time intervals, to mimic 25.199 -the same effect as starting masqmail with -bd -q30m. 25.200 -</p><p> 25.201 -An argument may be a time interval ie. a numerical value followed 25.202 -by one of the letters. s,m,h,d,w which are interpreted as seconds, 25.203 -minutes, hours, days or weeks respectively. Example: -q30m. Masqmail 25.204 -starts as a daemon and a queue runner process will be started 25.205 -automatically once in this time interval. This is usually used 25.206 -together with -bd (see above). 25.207 -</p> 25.208 -</optdesc> 25.209 -</option> 25.210 - 25.211 -<option> 25.212 -<p><opt>-qo [<arg>name</arg>]</opt></p> 25.213 -<optdesc> 25.214 -<p>Can be followed by a connection name. Use this option in your 25.215 -script which starts as soon as a link to the internet has been set up 25.216 -(usually ip-up). When masqmail is called with this option, the 25.217 -specified route configuration is read and the queued mail with 25.218 -destinations on the internet will be sent. The <arg>name</arg> is defined 25.219 -in the configuration (see <opt>online_routes.<arg>name</arg></opt>). 25.220 -</p><p> 25.221 -If called without <arg>name</arg> the online status is determined with 25.222 -the configured method (see <opt>online_detect</opt> in <a 25.223 -href="config.html">config.html</a>) 25.224 -</p> 25.225 -</optdesc> 25.226 -</option> 25.227 - 25.228 -<option> 25.229 -<p><opt>-t</opt></p> 25.230 -<optdesc><p>Read recipients from headers. Delete 'Bcc:' headers. If any 25.231 -arguments are given, these are interpreted as recipient addresses and 25.232 -the message will <em>not</em> be sent to these.</p></optdesc> 25.233 -</option> 25.234 - 25.235 -<option> 25.236 -<p><opt>-v</opt></p> 25.237 -<optdesc><p>Log also to stdout. Currently, some log messages are 25.238 -marked as 'write to stdout' and additionally, all messages with 25.239 -priority 'LOG_ALERT' and 'LOG_WARNING' will be written to stdout 25.240 -if this option is given. It is disabled in daemon mode. 25.241 -</p></optdesc> 25.242 -</option> 25.243 - 25.244 -</options> 25.245 - 25.246 -<section name = "Environment for pipes and mdas"> 25.247 - 25.248 -<p>For security reasons, before any pipe command from an alias 25.249 -expansion or an mda is called, the environment variables will be 25.250 -completely discarded and newly set up. These are:</p> 25.251 -<p>SENDER, RETURN_PATH - the return path.</p> 25.252 -<p>SENDER_DOMAIN - the domain part of the return path.</p> 25.253 -<p>SENDER_LOCAL - the local part of the return path.</p> 25.254 -<p>RECEIVED_HOST - the host the message was received from (unless local).</p> 25.255 -<p>LOCAL_PART, USER, LOGNAME - the local part of the (original) recipient.</p> 25.256 -<p>MESSAGE_ID - the unique message id. This is not necessarily identical with the Message ID as given in the Message ID: header.</p> 25.257 -<p>QUALIFY_DOMAIN - the domain which will be appended to unqualified addresses.</p> 25.258 - 25.259 -</section> 25.260 - 25.261 -<section name = "Files"> 25.262 -<p><file>/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf</file> is the main configuration 25.263 -for masqmail. Depending on the settings in this file, you will also 25.264 -have other configuration files in <file>/etc/masqmail/</file>.</p> 25.265 -<p><file>/etc/aliases</file> is the alias file, if not set differently 25.266 -in <file>/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf</file>.</p> 25.267 -<p><file>/var/spool/masqmail/</file> is the spool directory where masqmail 25.268 -stores its spooled messages and the uniq pop ids.</p> 25.269 -<p><file>/var/spool/mail/</file> is the directory where locally delivered mail will be put, if not configured differently in <file>masqmail.conf</file>.</p> 25.270 -<p><file>/var/log/masqmail/</file> is the directory where masqmail stores 25.271 -its log mesages. This can also be somewhere else if configured 25.272 -differently by your sysadmin or the package mantainer.</p> 25.273 -</section> 25.274 - 25.275 -<section name="Conforming to"> 25.276 -<p><b>RFC 821, 822, 1869, 1870, 2197, 2554</b> (SMTP)</p> 25.277 -<p><b>RFC 1725, 1939</b> (POP3)</p> 25.278 -<p><b>RFC 1321</b> (MD5)</p> 25.279 -<p><b>RFC 2195</b> (CRAM-MD5)</p> 25.280 -</section> 25.281 - 25.282 -<section name = "Author"> 25.283 -<p>masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth 25.284 -<oku@masqmail.cx></p><p>You will find the newest version of 25.285 -masqmail at <url href="http://masqmail.cx/masqmail/"/> or search for it 25.286 -in freshmeat (<url href="http://www.freshmeat.net"/>). There is also a mailing list, 25.287 -you will find information about it at masqmails main site.</p> 25.288 -</section> 25.289 - 25.290 -<section name = "Bugs"> 25.291 -<p>You should report them to the mailing list.</p> 25.292 -</section> 25.293 - 25.294 -<section name = "See also"> 25.295 -<p> 25.296 -<manref name="masqmail.conf" section="5" href="masqmail.conf.5.html"/>, <manref name="masqmail.route" section="5" href="masqmail.route.5.html"/>, <manref name="masqmail.get" section="5" href="masqmail.get.5.html"/>, <manref name="masqmail.aliases" section="5" href="masqmail.aliases.5.html"/> 25.297 -</p> 25.298 -</section> 25.299 - 25.300 -<section name = "Comments"> 25.301 -<p>This man page was written using <manref name="xml2man" section="1" 25.302 -href="http://masqmail.cx/xml2man/"/> by the same author.</p> 25.303 -</section> 25.304 - 25.305 -</manpage>
26.1 --- a/docs/xml/masqmail.aliases.5.xml Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 26.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 26.3 @@ -1,63 +0,0 @@ 26.4 -<?xml version="1.0" standalone='no'?> 26.5 -<!DOCTYPE spec SYSTEM "man.dtd"> 26.6 - 26.7 -<manpage name="masqmail.aliases" section="5" desc="masqmail alias file format"> 26.8 - 26.9 -<description> 26.10 -<p>This man page describes the format of the masqmail alias file. Its usual location is <file>/etc/aliases</file>.</p> 26.11 -</description> 26.12 - 26.13 -<section name="File Format"> 26.14 -<p>The alias file consists of lines of the form:</p> 26.15 -<pre> 26.16 -local_part: item1, item2, ... 26.17 -</pre> 26.18 - 26.19 -<p>Items can be surrounded by quotes '"'. If within the quotes other 26.20 -quotes are needed for an address they can be escaped with a leading 26.21 -backslash '\'.</p> 26.22 - 26.23 -<p>A leading '\' indicates that this address shall not be further 26.24 -expanded.</p> 26.25 - 26.26 -<p>A leading pipe symbol '|' indicates that the item shall be treated 26.27 -as a pipe command. The content of the message will then be sent to the 26.28 -standard input of a command. The command will run under the user id 26.29 -and group id masqmail is running as. If quotes are needed, the pipe 26.30 -symbol must appear <i>within</i> the quotes.</p> 26.31 - 26.32 -<p>Loops will be detected, the offending address will be ignored.</p> 26.33 - 26.34 -<p>Aliases will be expanded at <i>delivery</i> time. This means that 26.35 -if there is a message still in the queue and you change any alias 26.36 -which matches one of the recipient addresses, the change will have 26.37 -effect next time a delivery is attemped.</p> 26.38 - 26.39 -<p>There is no need to restart masqmail or run any command when the 26.40 -alias file has been changed.</p> 26.41 -</section> 26.42 - 26.43 -<section name = "Author"> 26.44 -<p>masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth 26.45 -<oku@masqmail.cx></p><p>You will find the newest version of 26.46 -masqmail at <url href="http://masqmail.cx/masqmail/"/> or search for it 26.47 -in freshmeat (<url href="http://www.freshmeat.net"/>). There is also a mailing list, 26.48 -you will find information about it at masqmails main site.</p> 26.49 -</section> 26.50 - 26.51 -<section name = "Bugs"> 26.52 -<p>You should report them to the mailing list.</p> 26.53 -</section> 26.54 - 26.55 -<section name = "See also"> 26.56 -<p> 26.57 -<manref name="masqmail.conf" section="5" href="masqmail.conf.5.html"/>, <manref name="masqmail" section="8" href="masqmail.8.html"/>, 26.58 -</p> 26.59 -</section> 26.60 - 26.61 -<section name = "Comments"> 26.62 -<p>This man page was written using <manref name="xml2man" section="1" 26.63 - href="http://masqmail.cx/xml2man/"/> by the same author.</p> 26.64 -</section> 26.65 - 26.66 -</manpage>
27.1 --- a/docs/xml/masqmail.conf.5.xml Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 27.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 27.3 @@ -1,561 +0,0 @@ 27.4 -<?xml version="1.0" standalone='no'?> 27.5 -<!DOCTYPE spec SYSTEM "man.dtd"> 27.6 - 27.7 -<manpage name="masqmail.conf" section="5" desc="masqmail configuration file"> 27.8 - 27.9 -<description> 27.10 -<p>This man page describes the syntax of the main configuration file 27.11 -of masqmail. Its usual location is <file>/etc/masqmail/masqmail.conf</file></p> 27.12 - 27.13 -<p>The configuration consists of lines of the form</p> 27.14 - 27.15 -<p><opt>val</opt> = <arg>expression</arg></p> 27.16 - 27.17 -<p>Where <opt>val</opt> is a variable name and <arg>expression</arg> a string, 27.18 -which can be quoted with '"'. If the expression is on multiple lines 27.19 -or contains characters other than letters, digits or the characters 27.20 -'.', '-', '_', '/', it <em>must</em> be quoted. You can use quotes inside quotes 27.21 -by escaping them with a backslash.</p> 27.22 - 27.23 -<p>Each val has a <i>type</i>, which can be boolean, numeric, string 27.24 -or list. A boolean variable can be set with one of the values 'on', 27.25 -'yes', and 'true' or 'off', 'no' and 'false'. List items are separated 27.26 -with ';'. For some values patterns (like '*','?') can be used. The 27.27 -spaces before and after the '=' are optional.</p> 27.28 - 27.29 -<p>Most lists (exceptions: <opt>local_hosts</opt>, 27.30 -<opt>local_nets</opt>, <opt>listen_addresses</opt>, <opt>online_routes</opt> and <opt>online_gets</opt>) accept 27.31 -files. These will be recognized by a leading slash '/'. The contents 27.32 -of these files will be included at the position of the file name, 27.33 -there can be items or other files before and after the file entry. The 27.34 -format of the files is different though, within these files each entry 27.35 -is on another line. (And not separated by semicolons). This makes it 27.36 -easy to include large lists which are common in different 27.37 -configuration files, so they do not have to appear in every 27.38 -configuration file.</p> 27.39 - 27.40 -<p>Blank lines and lines starting with '#' are ignored.</p> 27.41 - 27.42 -</description> 27.43 - 27.44 -<options> 27.45 -<option> 27.46 -<p><opt>run_as_user = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 27.47 -<optdesc> 27.48 -<p>If this is set, masqmail runs with the user id of the user who 27.49 -invoked it and never changes it. This is for debugging purposes 27.50 -<em>only</em>. If the user is not root, masqmail will not be able to 27.51 -listen on a port < 1024 and will not be able to deliver local mail 27.52 -to others than the user.</p> 27.53 -</optdesc> 27.54 -</option> 27.55 - 27.56 -<option> 27.57 -<p><opt>use_syslog = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 27.58 -<optdesc> 27.59 -<p>If this is set, masqmail uses syslogd for logging. It uses facility 27.60 -MAIL. You still have to set <opt>log_dir</opt> for debug files.</p> 27.61 -</optdesc> 27.62 -</option> 27.63 - 27.64 -<option> 27.65 -<p><opt>debug_level = <arg>n</arg></opt></p> 27.66 -<optdesc> 27.67 -<p>Set the debug level. Valid values are 0 to 6, increasing it further 27.68 -makes no difference. Be careful if you set this as high as 5 or higher, 27.69 -the logs may very soon fill your hard drive.</p> 27.70 -</optdesc> 27.71 -</option> 27.72 - 27.73 -<option> 27.74 -<p><opt>mail_dir = <arg>file</arg></opt></p> 27.75 -<optdesc> 27.76 -<p>The directory where local mail is stored, 27.77 -usually <file>/var/spool/mail</file> or <file>/var/mail</file>.</p> 27.78 -</optdesc> 27.79 -</option> 27.80 - 27.81 -<option> 27.82 -<p><opt>spool_dir = <arg>file</arg></opt></p> 27.83 -<optdesc> 27.84 -<p>The directory where masqmail stores its spool files (and later also 27.85 -other stuff). It <em>must</em> have a subdirectory <file>input</file>. 27.86 -Masqmail needs read and write permissions for this 27.87 -directory. I suggest to use <file>/var/spool/masqmail</file>.</p> 27.88 -</optdesc> 27.89 -</option> 27.90 - 27.91 -<option> 27.92 -<p><opt>host_name = <arg>string</arg></opt></p> 27.93 -<optdesc> 27.94 -<p>This is used in different places: Masqmail identifies itself in the 27.95 -greeting banner on incoming connections and in the HELO/EHLO command 27.96 -for outgoing connections with this name, it is used in the Received: 27.97 -header and to qualify the sender of a locally originating message.</p> 27.98 - 27.99 -<p>If the string begins with a slash '/', it it assumed that it is a 27.100 -filename, and the first line of this file will be used. Usually this will 27.101 -be '/etc/mailname' to make masqmail conform to Debian policies.</p> 27.102 - 27.103 -<p>It is <em>not</em> used to find whether an address is local. 27.104 -Use <opt>local_hosts</opt> for that.</p> 27.105 -</optdesc> 27.106 -</option> 27.107 - 27.108 -<option> 27.109 -<p><opt>remote_port = <arg>n</arg></opt></p> 27.110 -<optdesc> 27.111 -<p>The remote port number to be used. This defaults to port 25.</p> 27.112 -<p>This option is deprecated. Use <opt>host_name</opt> in the route 27.113 -configuration instead. See <manref name="masqmail.route" section="5" 27.114 -href="masqmail.route.5.html"/>.</p> 27.115 -</optdesc> 27.116 -</option> 27.117 - 27.118 -<option> 27.119 -<p><opt>local_hosts = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.120 -<optdesc> 27.121 -<p>A semicolon ';' separated list of hostnames which are considered 27.122 -local. Normally you set it to "localhost;foo;foo.bar.com" if your host 27.123 -has the fully qualified domain name 'foo.bar.com'.</p> 27.124 -</optdesc> 27.125 -</option> 27.126 - 27.127 -<option> 27.128 -<p><opt>local_nets = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.129 -<optdesc> 27.130 -<p>A semicolon ';' separated list of hostnames which are on the 27.131 -'local' net. Delivery to these hosts is attempted immediately. You can 27.132 -use patterns with '*', eg. "*.bar.com".</p> 27.133 -</optdesc> 27.134 -</option> 27.135 - 27.136 -<option> 27.137 -<p><opt>local_addresses = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.138 -<optdesc> 27.139 -<p>A semicolon ';' separated list of fully qualified email-addresses 27.140 -which are considered local although their domain name part is not in 27.141 -the list of <opt>local_hosts</opt>. </p> 27.142 -<p>For example: There are two people working at your 27.143 -LAN: person1@yourdomain and person2@yourdomain. But there are 27.144 -other persons @yourdomain which are NOT local. So you can not put 27.145 -yourdomain to the list of local_hosts. If person1 now wants 27.146 -to write to person2@yourdomain and this mail should not leave the LAN 27.147 -then you can put</p> 27.148 -<p>local_addresses = "person1@yourdomain;person2@yourdomain"</p> 27.149 -<p>to your masqmail.conf.</p> 27.150 -</optdesc> 27.151 -</option> 27.152 - 27.153 -<option> 27.154 -<p><opt>not_local_addresses = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.155 -<optdesc> 27.156 -<p>A semicolon ';' separated list of fully qualified email-addresses 27.157 -which are considered not local although their domain name part is in 27.158 -the list of <opt>local_hosts</opt>. </p> 27.159 -<p>This ist the opposite of the previous case. The majority of addresses 27.160 -of a specific domain are local. But some users are not. With this 27.161 -option you can easily exclude these users.</p> 27.162 -<p>Example:</p> 27.163 -<p>local_hosts = "localhost;myhost;mydomain.net"</p> 27.164 -<p>not_local_addresses = "eric@mydomain.net"</p> 27.165 -</optdesc> 27.166 -</option> 27.167 - 27.168 -<option> 27.169 -<p><opt>listen_addresses = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.170 -<optdesc> 27.171 -<p>A semicolon ';' separated list of interfaces on which connections 27.172 -will be accepted. An interface ist defined by a hostname, optionally 27.173 -followed by a colon ':' and a number for the port. If this is left out, 27.174 -port 25 will be used.</p> 27.175 -<p>You can set this to "localhost:25;foo:25" if your hostname is 'foo'.</p> 27.176 -<p>Note that the names are resolved to IP addreses. If your host has 27.177 -different names which resolve to the same IP, use only one of them, 27.178 -otherwise you will get an error message. 27.179 -</p> 27.180 -</optdesc> 27.181 -</option> 27.182 - 27.183 -<option> 27.184 -<p><opt>do_save_envelope_to = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 27.185 -<optdesc> 27.186 -<p>If this is set to true, a possibly existing Envelope-to: header in an 27.187 -incoming mail which is received via either pop3 or smtp will be saved as 27.188 -an X-Orig-Envelope-to: header.</p> 27.189 -<p>This is useful if you retrieve mail from a pop3 server with either masqmail 27.190 -or fetchmail, and the server supports Envelope-to: headers, and you want to make use 27.191 -of those with a mail filtering tool, eg. procmail. It cannot be preserved because 27.192 -masqmail sets such a header by itself.</p> 27.193 -<p>Default is false.</p> 27.194 -</optdesc> 27.195 -</option> 27.196 - 27.197 -<option> 27.198 -<p><opt>do_relay = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 27.199 -<optdesc> 27.200 -<p>If this is set to false, mail with a return path that is not local and a 27.201 -destination that is also not local will not be accepted via smtp and a 550 27.202 -reply will be given. Default is true.</p> 27.203 -<p>Note that this will not protect you from spammers using open relays, but from 27.204 -users unable to set their address in their mail clients.</p> 27.205 -</optdesc> 27.206 -</option> 27.207 - 27.208 -<option> 27.209 -<p><opt>do_queue = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 27.210 -<optdesc> 27.211 -<p>If this is set, mail will not be delivered immediately when 27.212 -accepted. Same as calling masqmail with the <opt>-odq</opt> option.</p> 27.213 -</optdesc> 27.214 -</option> 27.215 - 27.216 -<option> 27.217 -<p><opt>online_routes.<arg>name</arg> = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.218 -<optdesc> 27.219 - 27.220 -<p>Replace <arg>name</arg> with a name to identify a connection. Set this 27.221 -to a filename (or a list of filenames) for the special route configuration for that 27.222 -connection. You will use that name to call masqmail with the 27.223 - <opt>-qo</opt> option every time a connection to your ISP is set 27.224 -up.</p> 27.225 - 27.226 -<p>Example: Your ISP has the name <i>FastNet</i>. Then you write the 27.227 -following line in the main configuration:</p> 27.228 - 27.229 -<p><opt>online_routes.FastNet</opt> = <arg>"/etc/masqmail/fastnet.route"</arg></p> 27.230 - 27.231 -<p><file>/etc/masqmail/fastnet.route</file> is the route configuration 27.232 -file, see <manref name="masqmail.route" section="5" href="masqmail.route.5.html"/>. As soon as a link to FastNet has been set up, you 27.233 -call masqmail <opt>-qo</opt> <arg>FastNet</arg>. Masqmail will then 27.234 -read the specified file and send the mails.</p> 27.235 - 27.236 -</optdesc> 27.237 -</option> 27.238 - 27.239 -<option> 27.240 -<p><opt>connect_route.<arg>name</arg> = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.241 -<optdesc> 27.242 -<p>Old name for <opt>online_routes</opt>.</p> 27.243 -</optdesc> 27.244 -</option> 27.245 - 27.246 - 27.247 -<option> 27.248 -<p><opt>local_net_route = <arg>file</arg></opt></p> 27.249 -<optdesc> 27.250 -<p>This is similar to <opt>online_routes.<arg>name</arg></opt> but for the 27.251 -local net. Recipient addresses that are in <b>local_nets</b> will be 27.252 -routed using this route configuration. Main purpose is to define a 27.253 -mail server with <b>mail_host</b> in your local network. In simple 27.254 -environments this can be left unset. If unset, a default route 27.255 -configuration will be used.</p> 27.256 -</optdesc> 27.257 -</option> 27.258 - 27.259 -<option> 27.260 -<p><opt>alias_file = <arg>file</arg></opt></p> 27.261 -<optdesc> 27.262 -<p>Set this to the location of your alias file. If unset, no aliasing 27.263 -will be done.</p> 27.264 -</optdesc> 27.265 -</option> 27.266 - 27.267 -<option> 27.268 -<p><opt>alias_local_caseless = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 27.269 -<optdesc> 27.270 -<p>If this is set, local parts in the alias file will be matched 27.271 -disregarding upper/lower case.</p> 27.272 -</optdesc> 27.273 -</option> 27.274 - 27.275 -<option> 27.276 -<p><opt>pipe_fromline = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 27.277 -<optdesc> 27.278 -<p>If this is set, a from line will be prepended to the output stream whenever 27.279 -a pipe command is called after an alias expansion. Default is false.</p> 27.280 -</optdesc> 27.281 -</option> 27.282 - 27.283 -<option> 27.284 -<p><opt>pipe_fromhack = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 27.285 -<optdesc> 27.286 -<p>If this is set, each line beginning with 'From ' is replaced with '>From ' whenever 27.287 -a pipe command is called after an alias expansion. You probably want this if you have 27.288 -set <opt>pipe_fromline</opt> above. Default is false.</p> 27.289 -</optdesc> 27.290 -</option> 27.291 - 27.292 -<option> 27.293 -<p><opt>mbox_default = <arg>string</arg></opt></p> 27.294 -<optdesc> 27.295 -<p>The default local delivery method. Can be one of mbox, mda or 27.296 -maildir (the latter only if maildir support is enabled at compile 27.297 -time). Default is mbox. You can override this for each user by using 27.298 -the <opt>mbox_users</opt>, <opt>mda_users</opt> or <opt>maildir_users</opt> options 27.299 -(see below). 27.300 -</p> 27.301 -</optdesc> 27.302 -</option> 27.303 - 27.304 -<option> 27.305 -<p><opt>mbox_users = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.306 -<optdesc> 27.307 -<p>A list of users which wish delivery to an mbox style mail folder.</p> 27.308 -</optdesc> 27.309 -</option> 27.310 - 27.311 -<option> 27.312 -<p><opt>mda_users = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.313 -<optdesc> 27.314 -<p>A list of users which wish local delivery to an mda. You have to 27.315 -set <opt>mda</opt> (see below) as well.</p> 27.316 -</optdesc> 27.317 -</option> 27.318 - 27.319 -<option> 27.320 -<p><opt>maildir_users = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.321 -<optdesc> 27.322 -<p>A list of users which wish delivery to a qmail style maildir. The 27.323 -path to maildir is ~/Maildir/. The maildir will be created if it 27.324 -does not exist.</p> 27.325 -</optdesc> 27.326 -</option> 27.327 - 27.328 -<option> 27.329 -<p><opt>mda = <arg>expand string</arg></opt></p> 27.330 -<optdesc> 27.331 -<p>If you want local delivery to be transferred to an mda (Mail 27.332 -Delivery Agent), set this to a command. The argument will be expanded 27.333 -on delivery time, you can use variables beginning with a '$' sign, 27.334 -optionally enclosed in curly braces. Variables you can use are:</p> 27.335 -<p>uid - the unique message id. This is not necessarily identical with 27.336 -the Message ID as given in the Message ID: header.</p> 27.337 -<p>received_host - the host the mail was received from</p> 27.338 -<p>ident - the ident, this is either the ident delivered by the ident 27.339 -protocol or the user id of the sender if the message was received locally.</p> 27.340 -<p>return_path_local - the local part of the return path (sender).</p> 27.341 -<p>return_path_domain - the domain part of the return path (sender).</p> 27.342 -<p>return_path - the complete return path (sender).</p> 27.343 -<p>rcpt_local - the local part of the recipient.</p> 27.344 -<p>rcpt_domain - the domain part of the recipient.</p> 27.345 -<p>rcpt - the complete recipient address.</p> 27.346 -<p>Example:</p><p>mda="/usr/bin/procmail -Y -d ${rcpt_local}"</p> 27.347 -<p>For the mda, as for pipe commands, a few environment variables will 27.348 -be set as well. See <manref name="masqmail" section="8" 27.349 -href="masqmail.8.html"/>. To use environment variables for the mda, 27.350 -the '$' sign has to be escaped with a backslash, otherwise they will 27.351 -be tried to be expanded with the internal variables.</p> 27.352 - 27.353 -</optdesc> 27.354 -</option> 27.355 - 27.356 -<option> 27.357 -<p><opt>mda_fromline = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 27.358 -<optdesc> 27.359 -<p>If this is set, a from line will be prepended to the output stream whenever 27.360 -a message is delivered to an mda. Default is false.</p> 27.361 -</optdesc> 27.362 -</option> 27.363 - 27.364 -<option> 27.365 -<p><opt>mda_fromhack = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 27.366 -<optdesc> 27.367 -<p>If this is set, each line beginning with 'From ' is replaced with '>From ' whenever 27.368 -a message is delivered to an mda. You probably want this if you have 27.369 -set <opt>mda_fromline</opt> above. Default is false.</p> 27.370 -</optdesc> 27.371 -</option> 27.372 - 27.373 -<option> 27.374 -<p><opt>online_detect = <arg>string</arg></opt></p> 27.375 -<optdesc> 27.376 -<p>Defines the method MasqMail uses to detect whether there is 27.377 -currently an online connection. It can have the 27.378 -values <opt>file</opt>, <opt>pipe</opt> or <opt>mserver</opt>.</p> 27.379 - 27.380 -<p>When it is set to <opt>file</opt>, MasqMail first checks for the 27.381 -existence of <opt>online_file</opt> (see below) and if it exists, it reads 27.382 -it. The content of the file should be the name of the current 27.383 -connection as defined with <opt>connect_route.<arg>name</arg></opt> (without 27.384 -a trailing newline character).</p> 27.385 - 27.386 -<p>When it is set to <opt>pipe</opt>, MasqMail calls the executable given by 27.387 -the <opt>online_pipe</opt> option (see below) and reads the current online 27.388 -status from its standard output.</p> 27.389 - 27.390 -<p>When it is set to <opt>mserver</opt>, MasqMail connects to the 27.391 -masqdialer server using the value of <opt>mserver_iface</opt> and asks it 27.392 -whether a connection exists and for the name, which should be the name 27.393 -of the current connection as defined with <opt>connect_route.<arg>name</arg></opt>.</p> 27.394 - 27.395 -<p>No matter how MasqMail detects the online status, only messages 27.396 -that are accepted at online time will be delivered using the 27.397 -connection. The spool still has to be emptied with masqmail <opt>-qo</opt> 27.398 -<arg>connection</arg>.</p> 27.399 -</optdesc> 27.400 -</option> 27.401 - 27.402 -<option> 27.403 -<p><opt>online_file = <arg>file</arg></opt></p> 27.404 -<optdesc> 27.405 -<p>This is the name of the file checked for when MasqMail determines 27.406 -whether it is online. The file should only exist when there is 27.407 -currently a connection. Create it in your ip-up script with eg.</p> 27.408 - 27.409 -<p>echo -n <name> > /tmp/connect_route</p> 27.410 -<p>chmod 0644 /tmp/connect_route</p> 27.411 - 27.412 -<p>Do not forget to delete it in your ip-down script.</p> 27.413 -</optdesc> 27.414 -</option> 27.415 - 27.416 -<option> 27.417 -<p><opt>online_pipe = <arg>file</arg></opt></p> 27.418 -<optdesc> 27.419 -<p>This is the name of the executable which will be called to determine 27.420 -the online status. This executable should just print the name oif the current 27.421 -connection to the standard output and return a zero status code. masqmail assumes 27.422 -it is offline if the script returns with a non zero status. Simple example:</p> 27.423 - 27.424 -<p>#!/bin/sh</p> 27.425 -<p></p> 27.426 -<p>[ -e /tmp/connect_route ] || exit 1</p> 27.427 -<p>cat /tmp/connect_route</p> 27.428 -<p>exit 0</p> 27.429 - 27.430 -<p>Of course, instead of the example above you could as well use <opt>file</opt> as 27.431 -the online detection method, but you can do something more sophisticated.</p> 27.432 -</optdesc> 27.433 -</option> 27.434 - 27.435 -<option> 27.436 -<p><opt>mserver_iface = <arg>interface</arg></opt></p> 27.437 -<optdesc> 27.438 -<p>The interface the masqdialer server is listening to. Usually this 27.439 -will be "localhost:224" if mserver is running on the same host as 27.440 -masqmail. But using this option, you can also let masqmail run on 27.441 -another host by setting <opt>mserver_iface</opt> to another hostname, 27.442 -eg. "foo:224".</p> 27.443 -</optdesc> 27.444 -</option> 27.445 - 27.446 -<option> 27.447 -<p><opt>get.<arg>name</arg> = <arg>file</arg></opt></p> 27.448 -<optdesc> 27.449 -<p>Replace <arg>name</arg> with a name to identify a get 27.450 -configuration. Set this to a filename for the get configuration. These 27.451 -files will be used to retrieve mail when called with the -g option.</p> 27.452 -</optdesc> 27.453 -</option> 27.454 - 27.455 -<option> 27.456 -<p><opt>online_gets.<arg>name</arg> = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.457 -<optdesc> 27.458 -<p>Replace <arg>name</arg> with a name to identify an online 27.459 -configuration. Set this to a filename (or a list of filenames) for the get configuration. These 27.460 -files will be used to retrieve mail when called with the -go option.</p> 27.461 -</optdesc> 27.462 -</option> 27.463 - 27.464 -<option> 27.465 -<p><opt>ident_trusted_nets = <arg>list</arg></opt></p> 27.466 -<optdesc> 27.467 -<p><arg>list</arg> is a list of networks of the form a.b.c.d/e 27.468 -(eg. 192.168.1.0/24), from which the ident given by the ident protocol 27.469 -will be trusted, so a user can delete his mail from the queue if the 27.470 -ident is identical to his login name.</p> 27.471 -</optdesc> 27.472 -</option> 27.473 - 27.474 -<option> 27.475 -<p><opt>errmsg_file = <arg>file</arg></opt></p> 27.476 -<optdesc> 27.477 -<p>Set this to a template which will be used to generate delivery failure 27.478 -reports. Variable parts within the template begin with a dollar sign and 27.479 -are identical to those which can be used as arguments for the mda command, 27.480 -see <opt>mda</opt> above. Additional information can be included with 27.481 -@failed_rcpts, @msg_headers and @msg_body, these <b>must</b> be at the 27.482 -beginning of a line and will be replaced with the list of the failed recipients, 27.483 -the message headers and the message body of the failed message.</p> 27.484 -<p>Default is /usr/share/masqmail/tpl/failmsg.tpl.</p> 27.485 -</optdesc> 27.486 -</option> 27.487 - 27.488 -<option> 27.489 -<p><opt>warnmsg_file = <arg>file</arg></opt></p> 27.490 -<optdesc> 27.491 -<p>Set this to a template which will be used to generate delivery warning 27.492 -reports. It uses the same mechanisms for variables as <opt>errmsg_file</opt>, 27.493 -see above. 27.494 -</p> 27.495 -<p>Default is /usr/share/masqmail/tpl/warnmsg.tpl.</p> 27.496 -</optdesc> 27.497 -</option> 27.498 - 27.499 -<option> 27.500 -<p><opt>warn_intervals</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 27.501 -<optdesc> 27.502 -<p>Set this to a list of time intervals, at which delivery warnings (starting 27.503 -with the receiving time of the message) shall be generated.</p> 27.504 -<p>A warning will only be generated just after an attempt to deliver the 27.505 -mail and if that attempt failed temporarily. So a warning may be generated after 27.506 -a longer time, if there was no attempt before.</p> 27.507 -<p>Default is "1h;4h;8h;1d;2d;3d"</p> 27.508 -</optdesc> 27.509 -</option> 27.510 - 27.511 -<option> 27.512 -<p><opt>max_defer_time</opt> = <arg>time</arg></p> 27.513 -<optdesc> 27.514 -<p>This is the maximum time, in which a temporarily failed mail will be kept 27.515 -in the spool. When this time is exceeded, it will be handled as a delivery failure, 27.516 -and the message will be bounced.</p> 27.517 -<p>The excedence of this time will only be noticed if the message was actually 27.518 -tried to be delivered. If, for example, the message can only be delivered when 27.519 -online, but you have not been online for that time, no bounce will be generated.</p> 27.520 -<p>Default is 4d (4 days)</p> 27.521 -</optdesc> 27.522 -</option> 27.523 - 27.524 -<option> 27.525 -<p><opt>log_user = <arg>name</arg></opt></p> 27.526 -<optdesc> 27.527 -<p>Replace <arg>name</arg> with a valid local or remote mail address.</p> 27.528 -<p>If this option is not empty, then a copy of every mail, 27.529 -that passes trough the masqmail system will also be sent to the 27.530 -given mail address.</p> 27.531 -<p>For example you can feed your mails into a program like <i>hypermail</i> for 27.532 -archiving purpose by placing an appropriate pipe command in masqmail.alias</p> 27.533 -</optdesc> 27.534 -</option> 27.535 - 27.536 -</options> 27.537 - 27.538 -<section name = "Author"> 27.539 -<p>masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth 27.540 -<oku@masqmail.cx></p><p>You will find the newest version of 27.541 -masqmail at <url href="http://masqmail.cx/masqmail/"/> or search for it 27.542 -in freshmeat (<url href="http://www.freshmeat.net"/>). There is also a mailing list, 27.543 -you will find information about it at masqmails main site.</p> 27.544 -</section> 27.545 - 27.546 -<section name = "Bugs"> 27.547 -<p>You should report them to the mailing list.</p> 27.548 -</section> 27.549 - 27.550 -<section name = "See also"> 27.551 -<p> 27.552 -<manref name="masqmail" section="8" href="masqmail.8.html"/>, <manref name="masqmail.route" section="5" href="masqmail.route.5.html"/>, <manref name="masqmail.get" section="5" href="masqmail.get.5.html"/> 27.553 -</p> 27.554 -</section> 27.555 - 27.556 - 27.557 -<section name = "Comments"> 27.558 -<p>This man page was written using <manref name="xml2man" section="1" 27.559 -href="http://masqmail.cx/xml2man/"/> by the same 27.560 -author.</p> 27.561 -</section> 27.562 - 27.563 -</manpage> 27.564 -
28.1 --- a/docs/xml/masqmail.get.5.xml Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 28.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 28.3 @@ -1,165 +0,0 @@ 28.4 -<?xml version="1.0" standalone='no'?> 28.5 -<!DOCTYPE spec SYSTEM "man.dtd"> 28.6 - 28.7 -<manpage name="masqmail.get" section="5" desc="masqmail get configuration file"> 28.8 - 28.9 -<description> <p>This man page describes the options available for the 28.10 -masqmail get configuration.</p> 28.11 - 28.12 -</description> 28.13 - 28.14 -<options> 28.15 - 28.16 -<option> 28.17 -<p><opt>protocol</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 28.18 -<optdesc> 28.19 -<p>The protocol with which you retrieve your mail. Currently only 28.20 -'pop3' and 'apop' are supported. There is no default.</p> 28.21 -</optdesc> 28.22 -</option> 28.23 - 28.24 -<option> 28.25 -<p><opt>server</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 28.26 -<optdesc> 28.27 -<p>The server you get your mail from.</p> 28.28 -</optdesc> 28.29 -</option> 28.30 - 28.31 -<option> 28.32 -<p><opt>resolve_list</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 28.33 -<optdesc> 28.34 -<p>Specify the method how the domain of the server is resolved. Possible values are 28.35 -dns_mx, dns_a, byname. For 'dns_mx', the domain is assumed to be an MX 28.36 -pointer to a list of host names, these will be tried each in order 28.37 -(lowest preference value first, equal preference values in random 28.38 -order). For 'dns_a', the domain is assumed to be an A pointer. For 28.39 -'byname', the library function <manref name="gethostbyname" section="3"/> will be used.</p> 28.40 -<p>The default is "dns_a;byname". It does not make much sense here to use 'dns_mx'.</p> 28.41 -</optdesc> 28.42 -</option> 28.43 - 28.44 -<option> 28.45 -<p><opt>user</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 28.46 -<optdesc> 28.47 -<p>Your login name.</p> 28.48 -</optdesc> 28.49 -</option> 28.50 - 28.51 -<option> 28.52 -<p><opt>pass</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 28.53 -<optdesc> 28.54 -<p>Your password.</p> 28.55 -</optdesc> 28.56 -</option> 28.57 - 28.58 -<option> 28.59 -<p><opt>address</opt> = <arg>address</arg></p> 28.60 -<optdesc> 28.61 -<p>The address where the retrieved mail should be sent to. It can be 28.62 -any address, but you probably want to set this to a local address on 28.63 -your LAN.</p> 28.64 -</optdesc> 28.65 -</option> 28.66 - 28.67 -<option> 28.68 -<p><opt>return_path</opt> = <arg>address</arg></p> 28.69 -<optdesc> 28.70 -<p>If set, masqmail sets the return path to this address. Bounces 28.71 -generated during further delivery will be sent to this address. If 28.72 -unset, masqmail looks for the Return-Path: header in the mail, if 28.73 -this does not exist it uses the From: address and if this fails, 28.74 -postmaster will be used. 28.75 -</p><p> 28.76 -It is in most cases not useful to set this to the same address as 28.77 -the 'address' option as this may generate multiple bounces. 28.78 -postmaster is recommended.</p> 28.79 -</optdesc> 28.80 -</option> 28.81 - 28.82 -<option> 28.83 -<p><opt>do_keep</opt> = <arg>boolean</arg></p> 28.84 -<optdesc> 28.85 -<p>If you want to keep your mail on the server after you retrieved it, 28.86 -set this to true. It is recommended that you also set <b>do_uidl</b>, 28.87 -otherwise you will get the mail again each time you connect to the 28.88 -server. Masqmail does not check any headers before it retrieves mail, 28.89 -which may mark it as already fetched. Note that this behaviour is 28.90 -different to that of fetchmail. The default is false.</p> 28.91 -</optdesc> 28.92 -</option> 28.93 - 28.94 -<option> 28.95 -<p><opt>do_uidl</opt> = <arg>boolean</arg></p> 28.96 -<optdesc> 28.97 -<p>If set, MasqMail keeps a list of unique IDs of mails already 28.98 -fetched, so that they will not be retrieved again. Default is false.</p> 28.99 -</optdesc> 28.100 -</option> 28.101 - 28.102 -<option> 28.103 -<p><opt>do_uidl_dele</opt> = <arg>boolean</arg></p> 28.104 -<optdesc> 28.105 -<p>If set, and <opt>do_uidl</opt> is also set, MasqMail sends a delete (DELE) 28.106 -command to the server for each message uid in the uid listing at the 28.107 -beginning of the session. This prevents mail to be left on the server if 28.108 -masqmail gets interrupted during a session before it can send the QUIT 28.109 -command to the server. Default is false. 28.110 -</p> 28.111 -</optdesc> 28.112 -</option> 28.113 - 28.114 -<option> 28.115 -<p><opt>max_size</opt> = <arg>numeric</arg></p> 28.116 -<optdesc> 28.117 -<p>If set to a value > 0, only messages smaller than this in bytes will be 28.118 -retrieved. The default is 0.</p> 28.119 -</optdesc> 28.120 -</option> 28.121 - 28.122 -<option> 28.123 -<p><opt>max_count</opt> = <arg>numeric</arg></p> 28.124 -<optdesc> 28.125 -<p>If set to a value > 0, only <opt>max_count</opt> messages will be retrieved. 28.126 -The default is 0.</p> 28.127 -</optdesc> 28.128 -</option> 28.129 - 28.130 -<option> 28.131 -<p><opt>wrapper</opt> = <arg>command</arg></p> 28.132 -<optdesc> 28.133 -<p>If set, instead of opening a connection to a remote server, <arg>command</arg> will 28.134 -be called and all traffic will be piped to its 28.135 -stdin and from its stdout. Purpose is to tunnel ip traffic, eg. for ssl.</p> 28.136 -<p>Example for ssl tunneling:</p> 28.137 -<p>wrapper="/usr/bin/openssl s_client -quiet -connect pop.gmx.net:995 2>/dev/null"</p> 28.138 -</optdesc> 28.139 -</option> 28.140 - 28.141 -</options> 28.142 - 28.143 -<section name = "Author"> 28.144 -<p>masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth 28.145 -<oku@masqmail.cx></p><p>You will find the newest version of 28.146 -masqmail at <url href="http://masqmail.cx/masqmail/"/> or search for it 28.147 -in freshmeat (<url href="http://www.freshmeat.net"/>). There is also a mailing list, 28.148 -you will find information about it at masqmails main site.</p> 28.149 -</section> 28.150 - 28.151 -<section name = "Bugs"> 28.152 -<p>You should report them to the mailing list.</p> 28.153 -</section> 28.154 - 28.155 -<section name = "See also"> 28.156 -<p> 28.157 -<manref name="masqmail" section="8" href="masqmail.8.html"/>, <manref name="masqmail.route" section="5" href="masqmail.route.5.html"/>, <manref name="masqmail.conf" section="5" href="masqmail.conf.5.html"/> 28.158 -</p> 28.159 -</section> 28.160 - 28.161 -<section name = "Comments"> 28.162 -<p>This man page was written using <manref name="xml2man" section="1" 28.163 -href="http://masqmail.cx/xml2man/"/> by the same 28.164 -author.</p> 28.165 -</section> 28.166 - 28.167 -</manpage> 28.168 -
29.1 --- a/docs/xml/masqmail.route.5.xml Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 29.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 29.3 @@ -1,376 +0,0 @@ 29.4 -<?xml version="1.0" standalone='no'?> 29.5 -<!DOCTYPE spec SYSTEM "man.dtd"> 29.6 - 29.7 -<manpage name="masqmail.route" section="5" desc="masqmail route configuration file"> 29.8 - 29.9 -<description> 29.10 -<p>This man page describes the syntax of the route configuration files 29.11 -of <manref name = "masqmail" section="8" href="masqmail.8.html"/>. Their usual locations are in <file>/etc/masqmail/</file>.</p> 29.12 -</description> 29.13 - 29.14 -<options> 29.15 - 29.16 -<option> 29.17 -<p><opt>protocol</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 29.18 -<optdesc> 29.19 -<p><arg>string</arg> can be one of 'smtp' or 'pipe', default is 29.20 -'smtp'. If set to 'smtp', mail will be sent with the SMTP protocol to 29.21 -its destination. If set to 'pipe', you also have to set 'pipe' 29.22 -to a command, the message will then be piped to a program. See option 'pipe' below.</p> 29.23 -</optdesc> 29.24 -</option> 29.25 - 29.26 -<option> 29.27 -<p><opt>mail_host</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 29.28 -<optdesc> 29.29 -<p>This is preferably the mail server of your ISP. All outgoing 29.30 -messages will be sent to this host which will distribute them to their 29.31 -destinations. If you do not set this mails will be sent 29.32 -directly. Because the mail server is probably 'near' to you, mail 29.33 -transfer will be much faster if you use it.</p> 29.34 -<p>You can optionally give a port number following the host name 29.35 -and a colon, eg mail_host="mail.foo.com:25".</p> 29.36 -</optdesc> 29.37 -</option> 29.38 - 29.39 -<option> 29.40 -<p><opt>resolve_list</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 29.41 -<optdesc> 29.42 -<p>Specify the method how the domain of the server is resolved. Possible values are 29.43 -dns_mx, dns_a, byname. For 'dns_mx', the domain is assumed to be an MX 29.44 -pointer to a list of host names, these will be tried each in order 29.45 -(lowest preference value first, equal preference values in random 29.46 -order). For 'dns_a', the domain is assumed to be an A pointer. For 29.47 -'byname', the library function <manref name="gethostbyname" section="3"/> will be used.</p> 29.48 -<p>The default is "dns_mx;dns_a;byname".</p> 29.49 -</optdesc> 29.50 -</option> 29.51 - 29.52 -<option> 29.53 -<p><opt>connect_error_fail</opt> = <arg>boolean</arg></p> 29.54 -<optdesc> 29.55 -<p>If this is set, a connection error will cause a mail delivery to 29.56 -fail, ie. it will be bounced. If it is unset, it will just be defered.</p> 29.57 -<p>Default is false. The reason for this is that masqmail is designed 29.58 -for non permanent internet connections, where such errors may occur 29.59 -quite often, and a bounce would be annoying.</p> 29.60 -<p>For the default local_net route is is set to true.</p> 29.61 -</optdesc> 29.62 -</option> 29.63 - 29.64 -<option> 29.65 -<p><opt>helo_name</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 29.66 -<optdesc> 29.67 -<p>Set the name given with the HELO/EHLO command. If this is not 29.68 -set, <opt>host_name</opt> from <file>masqmail.conf</file> will be used, if 29.69 -the <opt>do_correct_helo</opt> option (see below) is unset.</p> 29.70 -</optdesc> 29.71 -</option> 29.72 - 29.73 -<option> 29.74 -<p><opt>do_correct_helo</opt> = <arg>boolean</arg></p> 29.75 -<optdesc> 29.76 -<p>If this is set, masqmail tries to look up your host name as it 29.77 -appears on the internet and sends this in the HELO/EHLO command. Some 29.78 -servers are so picky that they want this. Which is really 29.79 -crazy. It just does not make any sense to lie about ones own identity, 29.80 -because it can always be looked up by the server. Nobody should 29.81 -believe in the name given by HELO/EHLO anyway. If this is not 29.82 -set, <opt>host_name</opt> from <file>masqmail.conf</file> or as given with 29.83 -the <opt>helo_name</opt> (see above) will be used.</p> 29.84 -</optdesc> 29.85 -</option> 29.86 - 29.87 -<option> 29.88 -<p><opt>do_pipelining</opt> = <arg>boolean</arg></p> 29.89 -<optdesc> 29.90 -<p>If this is set to false, masqmail will not use ESMTP PIPELINING, even 29.91 -if the server announces that it is able to cope with it. Default is true.</p> 29.92 -<p>You do not want to set this to false unless the mail setup on the 29.93 -remote server side is really broken. Keywords: wingate.</p> 29.94 -</optdesc> 29.95 -</option> 29.96 - 29.97 -<option> 29.98 -<p><opt>allowed_mail_locals</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 29.99 -<optdesc> 29.100 -<p>This is a semicolon ';' separated list of local parts which will be 29.101 -allowed to send mail through this connection. If unset 29.102 -and <opt>not_allowed_mail_locals</opt> is also unset, all users are 29.103 -allowed.</p> 29.104 -</optdesc> 29.105 -</option> 29.106 - 29.107 -<option> 29.108 -<p><opt>not_allowed_mail_locals</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 29.109 -<optdesc> 29.110 -<p>This is a semicolon ';' separated list of local parts which will be 29.111 -not allowed to send mail through this connection. Local 29.112 -parts in this list will not be allowed to use this route even if they 29.113 -are part of <opt>allowed_mail_locals</opt> (see above).</p> 29.114 -</optdesc> 29.115 -</option> 29.116 - 29.117 -<option> 29.118 -<p><opt>allowed_return_paths</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 29.119 -<optdesc> 29.120 -<p>This is a semicolon ';' separated list of addresses. Messages which 29.121 -have one one of these addresses as the return path will be used using 29.122 -this route (if not also in <opt>not_allowed_return_paths</opt> or an item 29.123 -in <opt>not_allowed_mail_locals</opt> matches).</p> 29.124 -<p>Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used. The special item "<>" matches 29.125 -the null sender address (eg. failure notices or delivery notifications).</p> 29.126 -</optdesc> 29.127 -</option> 29.128 - 29.129 -<option> 29.130 -<p><opt>not_allowed_return_paths</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 29.131 -<optdesc> 29.132 -<p>This is a semicolon ';' separated list of addresses. Messages which 29.133 -have one one of these addresses as the return path will <em>not</em> be used using 29.134 -this route (even if also in <opt>allowed_return_paths</opt> or an item 29.135 -in <opt>allowed_mail_locals</opt> matches).</p> 29.136 -<p>Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used. The special item "<>" matches 29.137 -the null sender address (eg. failure notices or delivery notifications).</p> 29.138 -</optdesc> 29.139 -</option> 29.140 - 29.141 -<option> 29.142 -<p><opt>allowed_rcpt_domains</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 29.143 -<optdesc> 29.144 -<p>A list of recipient domains where mail will be sent to. This is for 29.145 -example useful if you use this route configuration when connected to 29.146 -another LAN via ppp. Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used.</p> 29.147 -</optdesc> 29.148 -</option> 29.149 - 29.150 -<option> 29.151 -<p><opt>not_allowed_rcpt_domains</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 29.152 -<optdesc> 29.153 -<p>A list of recipient domains where mail will <em>not</em> be sent 29.154 -to. This is for example useful if you send mail directly (<opt>mail_host</opt> is 29.155 -not set) and you know of hosts that will not accept mail from you 29.156 -because they use a dialup list (eg. <url href="http://maps.vix.com/dul/"/>. If any domain 29.157 -matches both <opt>allowed_rcpt_domains</opt> and <opt>not_allowed_rcpt_domains</opt>, 29.158 -mail will not be sent to this domain. Patterns containing '?' and '*' can be used.</p> 29.159 -</optdesc> 29.160 -</option> 29.161 - 29.162 -<option> 29.163 -<p><opt>set_h_from_domain</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 29.164 -<optdesc> 29.165 -<p>Replace the domain part in 'From:' headers with this value. This 29.166 -may be useful if you use a private, outside unknown address on your 29.167 -local LAN and want this to be replaced by the domain of the address of 29.168 -your email addrsss on the internet. Note that this is different to <opt> 29.169 -set_return_path_domain</opt>, see below.</p> 29.170 -</optdesc> 29.171 -</option> 29.172 - 29.173 -<option> 29.174 -<p><opt>set_return_path_domain</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 29.175 -<optdesc> 29.176 -<p>Sets the domain part of the envelope from address. Some hosts check 29.177 -whether this is the same as the net the connection is coming from. If 29.178 -not, they reject the mail because they suspect spamming. It should be 29.179 -a valid address, because some mail servers also check 29.180 -that. You can also use this to set it to your usual address on the 29.181 -internet and put a local address only known on your LAN in the 29.182 -configuration of your mailer. Only the domain part will 29.183 -be changed, the local part remains unchanged. Use <opt> 29.184 -map_return_path_addresses</opt> for rewriting local parts.</p> 29.185 -</optdesc> 29.186 -</option> 29.187 - 29.188 -<option> 29.189 -<p><opt>map_h_from_addresses</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 29.190 -<optdesc> 29.191 -<p>This is similar to <opt>set_h_from_domain</opt>, but more flexible. Set 29.192 -this to a list which maps local parts to a full RFC 822 compliant 29.193 -email address, the local parts (the <em>keys</em>) are separated from 29.194 -the addresses (the <em>values</em>) by colons (':').</p> 29.195 - 29.196 -<p>Example:</p> 29.197 - 29.198 -<p>map_h_from_addresses = "john: John Smith <jsmith@mail.academic.edu>; 29.199 -charlie: Charlie Miller <cmiller@mx.commercial.com>"</p> 29.200 -<p>You can use patterns, eg. * as keys.</p> 29.201 -</optdesc> 29.202 -</option> 29.203 - 29.204 -<option> 29.205 -<p><opt>map_h_reply_to_addresses</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 29.206 -<optdesc> 29.207 -<p>Same as <opt>map_h_from_addresses</opt>, but for the 'Reply-To:' header.</p> 29.208 -</optdesc> 29.209 -</option> 29.210 - 29.211 -<option> 29.212 -<p><opt>map_h_mail_followup_to_addresses</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 29.213 -<optdesc> 29.214 -<p>Same as <opt>map_h_from_addresses</opt>, but for the 'Mail-Followup-To:' 29.215 -header. Useful when replying to mailing lists.</p> 29.216 -</optdesc> 29.217 -</option> 29.218 - 29.219 -<option> 29.220 -<p><opt>map_return_path_addresses</opt> = <arg>list</arg></p> 29.221 -<optdesc> 29.222 -<p>This is similar to <opt>set_return_path_domain</opt>, but more 29.223 -flexible. Set this to a list which maps local parts to a full RFC 821 29.224 -compliant email address, the local parts (the keys) are 29.225 -separated from the addresses (the values) by colons 29.226 -(':'). Note that this option takes RFC 821 addresses 29.227 -while <opt>map_h_from_addresses</opt> takes RFC 822 addresses. The 29.228 -most important difference is that RFC 821 addresses have no full 29.229 -name.</p> 29.230 - 29.231 -<p>Example:</p> 29.232 -<p> 29.233 -map_return_path_addresses = 29.234 -"john: <jsmith@mail.academic.edu>; 29.235 -charlie: <cmiller@mx.commercial.com>" 29.236 -</p> 29.237 -<p>You can use patterns, eg. * as keys.</p> 29.238 -</optdesc> 29.239 -</option> 29.240 - 29.241 -<option> 29.242 -<p><opt>expand_h_sender_address</opt> = <arg>boolean</arg></p> 29.243 -<optdesc> 29.244 -<p>This sets the domain of the sender address as given by the Sender: 29.245 -header to the same address as in the envelope return path address 29.246 -(which can be set by either <opt>set_return_path_domain</opt> or <opt>map_return_path_addresses</opt>). 29.247 -This is for mail clients (eg. Microsoft Outlook) which use this address as the sender 29.248 -address. Though they should use the From: address, see RFC 29.249 -821. If <manref name="fetchmail" section="1" href="http://www.fetchmail.org"/> encounters an unqualified Sender: 29.250 -address, it will be expanded to the domain of the pop server, which is 29.251 -almost never correct. Default is true.</p> 29.252 -</optdesc> 29.253 -</option> 29.254 - 29.255 -<option> 29.256 -<p><opt>expand_h_sender_domain</opt> = <arg>boolean</arg></p> 29.257 -<optdesc> 29.258 -<p>Like <opt>expand_h_sender_address</opt>, but sets the domain only. 29.259 -Deprecated, will be removed in a later version.</p> 29.260 -</optdesc> 29.261 -</option> 29.262 - 29.263 -<option> 29.264 -<p><opt>last_route</opt> = <arg>boolean</arg></p> 29.265 -<optdesc> 29.266 -<p>If this is set, a mail which would have been delivered using this 29.267 -route, but has failed temporarily, will not be tried to be delivered 29.268 -using the next route.</p> 29.269 -<p>If you have set up a special route with filters using the lists 29.270 -'allowed_rcpt_domains', 'allowed_return_paths', and 29.271 -'allowed_mail_locals' or their complements (not_), and the mail 29.272 -passing these rules should be delivered using this route only, you 29.273 -should set this to 'true'. Otherwise the mail would be passed to the 29.274 -next route (if any), unless that route has rules which prevent 29.275 -that.</p> 29.276 -<p>Default is false.</p> 29.277 -</optdesc> 29.278 -</option> 29.279 - 29.280 -<option> 29.281 -<p><opt>auth_name</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 29.282 -<optdesc> 29.283 -<p>Set the authentication type for ESMTP AUTH authentification. 29.284 -Currently only 'cram-md5' and 'login' are supported.</p> 29.285 -</optdesc> 29.286 -</option> 29.287 - 29.288 -<option> 29.289 -<p><opt>auth_login</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 29.290 -<optdesc> 29.291 -<p>Your account name for ESMTP AUTH authentification.</p> 29.292 -</optdesc> 29.293 -</option> 29.294 - 29.295 -<option> 29.296 -<p><opt>auth_secret</opt> = <arg>string</arg></p> 29.297 -<optdesc> 29.298 -<p>Your secret for ESMTP AUTH authentification.</p> 29.299 -</optdesc> 29.300 -</option> 29.301 - 29.302 -<option> 29.303 -<p><opt>pop3_login</opt> = <arg>file</arg></p> 29.304 -<optdesc> 29.305 -<p>If your Mail server requires SMTP-after-POP, set this to a 29.306 -get configuration (see <manref name="masqmail.get" section="5" href="masqmail.get.5.html"/>). 29.307 -If you login to the POP server 29.308 -before you send, this is not necessary.</p> 29.309 -</optdesc> 29.310 -</option> 29.311 - 29.312 -<option> 29.313 -<p><opt>wrapper</opt> = <arg>command</arg></p> 29.314 -<optdesc> 29.315 -<p>If set, instead of opening a connection to a remote server, <arg>command</arg> will 29.316 -be called and all traffic will be piped to its 29.317 -stdin and from its stdout. Purpose is to tunnel ip traffic, eg. for ssl.</p> 29.318 -<p>Example for ssl tunneling:</p> 29.319 -<p>wrapper="/usr/bin/openssl s_client -quiet -connect pop.gmx.net:995 2>/dev/null"</p> 29.320 -</optdesc> 29.321 -</option> 29.322 - 29.323 -<option> 29.324 -<p><opt>pipe</opt> = <arg>command</arg></p> 29.325 -<optdesc> 29.326 -<p>If set, and protocol is set to 'pipe', <arg>command</arg> will be 29.327 -called and the message will be piped to its stdin. Purpose is to use 29.328 -gateways to uucp, fax, sms or whatever else.</p> 29.329 -<p>You can use variables to give as arguments to the command, these 29.330 -are the same as for the mda in the main configuration, see <manref 29.331 -name="masqmail.conf" section="5" href="masqmail.conf.5.html"/>.</p> 29.332 -</optdesc> 29.333 -</option> 29.334 - 29.335 -<option> 29.336 -<p><opt>pipe_fromline = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 29.337 -<optdesc> 29.338 -<p>If this is set, and protocol is set to 'pipe', a from line will be prepended to the output stream whenever 29.339 -a pipe command is called. Default is false.</p> 29.340 -</optdesc> 29.341 -</option> 29.342 - 29.343 -<option> 29.344 -<p><opt>pipe_fromhack = <arg>boolean</arg></opt></p> 29.345 -<optdesc> 29.346 -<p>If this is set, and protocol is set to 'pipe', each line beginning with 'From ' 29.347 -is replaced with '>From ' whenever a pipe command is called. You probably want this if you have 29.348 -set <opt>pipe_fromline</opt> above. Default is false.</p> 29.349 -</optdesc> 29.350 -</option> 29.351 - 29.352 -</options> 29.353 - 29.354 -<section name = "Author"> 29.355 -<p>masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth 29.356 -<oku@masqmail.cx></p><p>You will find the newest version of 29.357 -masqmail at <url href="http://masqmail.cx/masqmail/"/> or search for it 29.358 -in freshmeat (<url href="http://www.freshmeat.net"/>). There is also a mailing list, 29.359 -you will find information about it at masqmails main site.</p> 29.360 -</section> 29.361 - 29.362 -<section name = "Bugs"> 29.363 -<p>You should report them to the mailing list.</p> 29.364 -</section> 29.365 - 29.366 -<section name = "See also"> 29.367 -<p> 29.368 -<manref name="masqmail" section="8" href="masqmail.8.html"/>, <manref name="masqmail.conf" section="5" href="masqmail.conf.5.html"/>, <manref name="masqmail.get" section="5" href="masqmail.get.5.html"/> 29.369 -</p> 29.370 -</section> 29.371 - 29.372 -<section name = "Comments"> 29.373 -<p>This man page was written using <manref name="xml2man" section="1" 29.374 -href="http://masqmail.cx/xml2man/"/> by the same 29.375 -author.</p> 29.376 -</section> 29.377 - 29.378 -</manpage> 29.379 -
30.1 --- a/docs/xml/mservdetect.8.xml Fri Sep 26 21:26:36 2008 +0200 30.2 +++ /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 30.3 @@ -1,60 +0,0 @@ 30.4 -<?xml version="1.0" standalone='no'?> 30.5 -<!DOCTYPE spec SYSTEM "man.dtd"> 30.6 - 30.7 -<manpage name="mservdetect" section="8" desc="Helper for masqmail and masqdialer"> 30.8 - 30.9 -<synopsis> 30.10 -<cmd>/usr/bin/masqmail <arg>host</arg> <arg>port</arg></cmd> 30.11 -</synopsis> 30.12 - 30.13 -<description> 30.14 -<p> 30.15 -mservdetect is a small helper application for masqmail to detect its online 30.16 -status if the modem server masqdialer is used. It connects to the 30.17 -<arg>host</arg> at <arg>port</arg> and prints the connection name to 30.18 -stdout.</p> 30.19 -<p>If you want to use it, set <opt>online_detect</opt>=<arg>pipe</arg> and <opt>online_pipe</opt>=<arg>"/usr/bin/mservdetect host port"</arg>.</p> 30.20 -</description> 30.21 - 30.22 -<options> 30.23 - 30.24 -<option> 30.25 -<p><opt>host</opt></p> 30.26 -<optdesc><p> 30.27 -The hostname where the masqdialer server is running. 30.28 -</p></optdesc> 30.29 -</option> 30.30 - 30.31 -<option> 30.32 -<p><opt>port</opt></p> 30.33 -<optdesc><p> 30.34 -The port number where the masqdialer server is listening. 30.35 -</p></optdesc> 30.36 -</option> 30.37 - 30.38 -</options> 30.39 - 30.40 -<section name = "Author"> 30.41 -<p>masqmail was written by Oliver Kurth 30.42 -<oku@masqmail.cx></p><p>You will find the newest version of 30.43 -masqmail at <url href="http://masqmail.cx/masqmail/"/> or search for it 30.44 -in freshmeat (<url href="http://www.freshmeat.net"/>). There is also a mailing list, 30.45 -you will find information about it at masqmails main site.</p> 30.46 -</section> 30.47 - 30.48 -<section name = "Bugs"> 30.49 -<p>You should report them to the mailing list.</p> 30.50 -</section> 30.51 - 30.52 -<section name = "See also"> 30.53 -<p> 30.54 -<manref name="masqmail.conf" section="5" href="masqmail.conf.5.html"/> 30.55 -</p> 30.56 -</section> 30.57 - 30.58 -<section name = "Comments"> 30.59 -<p>This man page was written using <manref name="xml2man" section="1" 30.60 -href="http://masqmail.cx/xml2man/"/> by the same author.</p> 30.61 -</section> 30.62 - 30.63 -</manpage>