メールシステムの管理

付録 A sendmail 構成ファイル

sendmail 構成ファイルの例

コーディングの例 A-1 には、デフォルトの main.cf ファイルを示します。このファイルで使用される構文とセマンティクスについては、sendmail 構成ファイルの構文」 を参照してください。


例 A-1 デフォルトの main.cf ファイル

############################################################ # #	
      Sendmail configuration file for "MAIN MACHINES"
#
#	       You should install this file as /etc/sendmail.cf 
#	       if your machine is the main (or only) mail-relaying 
#	       machine in your domain. Then edit the file to 
#	       customize it for your network configuration. 
# 
#	       @(#)main.mc 1.17 90/01/04 SMI  

###	       local info

# delete the following if you have no sendmailvars table 
Lmmaildomain 
# my official hostname 
# You have two choices here. If you want the gateway machine to identify 
# itself as the DOMAIN, use this line: 
Dj$m 
# If you want the gateway machine to appear to be INSIDE the domain, use: 
#Dj$w.$m 
#if you are using sendmail.mx (or have a fully-qualified hostname), use: 
#Dj$w  

# major relay mailer - typical choice is "ddn" if you are on the 
# Defense Data Network (e.g. Arpanet or Milnet) 
DMsmartuucp  

# major relay host: use the $M mailer to send mail to other domains
DR ddn-gateway
CR ddn-gateway  

# If you want to pre-load the "mailhosts" then use a line like 
# FS /usr/lib/mailhosts 
# and then change all the occurrences of $%y to be $=S instead. 
# Otherwise, the default is to use the hosts.byname map if NIS 
# is running (or else the /etc/hosts file if no NIS).  

# valid top-level domains (default passes ALL unknown domains up) 
CT arpa com edu gov mil net org 
CT us de fr jp kr nz il uk no au fi nl se ca ch my dk ar  

# options that you probably want on a mailhost:  

# checkpoint the queue after this many recipients 
OC10  

# refuse to send tiny messages to more than these recipients 
Ob10  

#################################################
# 
#	       General configuration information  

# local domain names 
# 
# These can now be determined from the domainname system call. 
# The first component of the NIS domain name is stripped off unless 
# it begins with a dot or a plus sign. 
# If your NIS domain is not inside the domain name 
you would like to have 
# appear in your mail headers, add a "Dm" line to define 
your domain name. 
# The Dm value is what is used in outgoing mail. The Cm values are 
# accepted in incoming mail. By default Cm is set from Dm, 
but you might 
# want to have more than one Cm line to recognize more than one domain 
# name on incoming mail during a transition. 
# Example: 
# DmCS.Podunk.EDU 
# Cm cs cs.Podunk.EDU
# 
# known hosts in this domain are obtained from gethostbyname() call  

# Version number of configuration file 
#ident	  "@(#)version.m4	   1.17	 90/07/14 SMI"	/* SunOS 4.1   */ 
# 
#	       Copyright Notice 
# 
#Notice of copyright on this source code product does not indicate
#publication 
# 
#		(c) 1986,1987,1988,1989 Sun Microsystems, Inc 
#	       Allrights reserved.   


DVSMI-SVR4   

###			Standard macros  

# name used for error messages 
DnMailer-Daemon 
# special user 
CDMailer-Daemon root daemon uucp 
# UNIX header format DlFrom $g  $d 
# delimiter (operator) characters 
Do.:%@!^=/[]
# format of a total name 
Dq$g$?x ($x)$. 
# SMTP login message 
De$j Sendmail $v/$V ready at $b  

###			Options  

# Remote mode - send through server if mailbox directory is mounted 
OR 
# location of alias file 
OA/etc/mail/aliases 
# default delivery mode (deliver in background) 
Odbackground 
# rebuild the alias file automagically 
OD 
# temporary file mode -- 0600 for secure mail, 0644 for permissive
OF0600 
# default GID 
Og1 
# location of help file 
OH/etc/mail/sendmail.hf 
# log level 
OL9 
# default messages to old style 
Oo 
# Cc my postmaster on error
replies I generate 
OPPostmaster 
# queue directory 
OQ/var/spool/mqueue 
# read timeout for SMTP protocols 
Or15m 
# status file -- none 
OS/etc/mail/sendmail.st
# queue up everything before starting transmission, for safety 
Os 
# return
queued mail after this long 
OT3d 
# default UID 
Ou1  

###			Message precedences
Pfirst-class=0 
Pspecial-delivery=100 
Pjunk=-100  

###			Trusted users 
T root
daemon uucp  

###			Format of headers 
H?P?Return-Path: <$g> 
HReceived: $?sfrom $s $.by $j ($v/$V)
 	       id $i; $b 
H?D?Resent-Date: $a 
H?D?Date: $a 
H?F?Resent-From:
$q H?F?From: $q 
H?x?Full-Name: $x 
HSubject: 
H?M?Resent-Message-Id: <$t.$i@$j>
H?M?Message-Id: <$t.$i@$j> 
HErrors-To:

########################### 
###  Rewriting Rules  ### 
###########################    



# Sender Field Pre-rewriting
S1 
# None needed.  

# Recipient Field Pre-rewriting 
S2 
# None needed.  

# Name Canonicalization   


# Internal format of names within the rewriting rules is:
# 	       anything<@host.domain.domain...>anything 
# We try to get everykind of name into this format, except for local 
# names, which have no hostpart. The reason for the "<>" stuff is 
# that the relevant host name couldbe on the front of the name (for 
# source routing), or on the back (normal form). 
We enclose the one that 
# we want to route on in the <>'s to makeit easy to find. 
# 
S3  

# handle "from:<>" special case 
R$*<>$*								$@@		 			turn into magic token  

# basic textual canonicalization 
R<$*<@$+>>	       	    		$@$1<@$2> 
R$*<$+>$*         	    		$2		 				basic RFC822 parsing  

# make sure <@a,@b,@c:user@d> syntax is easy to parse -- undone later 
R@$+,$+:$+	       				@$1:$2:$3       	change all "," to ":" 
R@$+:$+	       	       		$@$>6<@$1>:$2    	src route canonical 
R$+:$*;@$+	       	  			$@$1:$2;@$3 		list syntax 
R$+@$+	       	       		$:$1<@$2>			focus on domain 
R$+<$+@$+>	       				$1$2<@$3>			move gaze right 
R$+<@$+>								$@$>6$1<@$2>		already canonical
 
# convert old-style names to domain-based names 
# All old-style names parsefrom left to right, without precedence. 
R$-!$+								$@$>6$2<@$1.uucp> 	uucphost!user 
R$-.$+!$+							$@$>6$3<@$1.$2>		host.domain!user
R$+%$+								$@$>3$1@$2	   	 	user%host  

# Final Output Post-rewriting
S4 
R$+<@$+.uucp>						$2!$1	   	 			u@h.uucp => h!u 
R$+									$: $>9 $1	   	 	Clean up addr 
R$*<$+>$*							$1$2$3		  	 		defocus  

# Clean up an name for passing to a mailer 
# (but leave it focused) 
S9 
R$=w!@								$@$w!$n	       	       	       	       
R@										$@$n		   	 	handle <> error addr 
R$*<$*LOCAL>$*						$1<$2$m>$3	   	change local info	 
R<@$+>$*:$+:$+						<@$1>$2,$3:$4	   <route-addr> canonical  

#######################
#	Rewriting rules  

# special local conversions
 S6 
R$*<@$*$=m>$*	      	  	 	$1<@$2LOCAL>$4	    convert local domain  

# Localand Program Mailer specification  

Mlocal,	P=/usr/lib/mail.local, F=flsSDFMmnP, S=10, R=20, 
A=mail.local -d $u 
Mprog,	 P=/bin/sh, F=lsDFMeuP, S=10, R=20, A=sh -c $u  

S10 
# None needed. 
 
S20 
# None needed. 

#ident	"@(#)etherm.m4   1.15	  93/04/05 SMI"	 /* SunOS 4.1	 */ 
# 
#	       Copyright Notice 
# 
#Notice of copyright on this source code product does not indicate
#publication 
# 
#		(c) 1986,1987,1988,1989 Sun Microsystems, Inc 
#	       Allrights reserved.  

############################################################
##### #####	       	       Ethernet Mailer specification 
##### 
#####	Messages processed by this configuration are assumed to remain 
#####	in the same domain. This really has nothing particular to do 
#####	with Ethernet - the name is historical.  

Mether,	P=[TCP], F=msDFMuCX, S=11,R=21, A=TCP $h 
S11 
R$*<@$+>$*					$@$1<@$2>$3			already ok 
R$=D							$@$1<@$w>			tack on my hostname 
R$+							$@$1<@$k>			tack on my mbox hostname  

S21 
R$*<@$+>$*					$@$1<@$2>$3			already ok 
R$+							$@$1<@$k>			tack on my mbox hostname

########################################################## 
#	General code to convert back to old style UUCP names 
S5 
R$+<@LOCAL>					$@ $w!$1				name@LOCAL => sun!name 
R$+<@$-.LOCAL>				$@ $2!$1				u@h.LOCAL => h!u 
R$+<@$+.uucp>				$@ $2!$1				u@h.uucp => h!u 
R$+<@$*>						$@ $2!$1				u@h => h!u 
# Route-addrs do not work here. Punt til uucp-mail 
comes up with something. 
R<@$+>$*						$@ @$1$2				just defocus and punt
R$*<$*>$*					$@ $1$2$3			Defocus strange
stuff  

#	       UUCP Mailer specification  
Muucp,	  P=/usr/bin/uux, F=msDFMhuU, S=13, R=23, 	    
			A=uux - -r -a$f $h!rmail ($u)  

# Convert uucp sender (From) field 
S13 R$+						$:$>5$1				convert to old style 
R$=w!$+						$2						strip local name
R$+							$:$w!$1				stick on real host name  

# Convert uucp recipient (To,Cc) fields 
S23 
R$+							$:$>5$1				convert to old style 

#ident	 "@(#)ddnm.m4	  1.8	  93/06/30 SMI"	/* SunOS 4.1	 */ 
# 
#	       Copyright Notice 
# 
#Notice ofcopyright on this source code product does not indicate 
#publication 
# 
#	
(c) 1986,1987,1988,1989 Sun Microsystems, Inc 
#	       All rights reserved.


############################################################ 
# 
#	      	       DDN Mailer specification 
# 
#	       Send mail on the Defense Data Network 
#	       					(such as Arpanet or Milnet)  

Mddn,	P=[TCP], F=msDFMuCX, S=22, R=22, A=TCP $h, E=¥r¥n  

# map containing the inverse of mail.aliases
# Note that there is a special case mail.byaddr will cause reverse 
# lookups in both Nis+ and NIS. 
# If you want to use ONLY Nis+ for alias inversion 
comment out the next line 
# and uncomment the line after that 
DZmail.byaddr 
#DZREVERSE.mail_aliases.org_dir
 
S22 
R$*<@LOCAL>$*				$:$1 
R$-<@$->						$:$>3${Z$1@$2$}		invert aliases
R$*<@$+.$*>$*				$@$1<@$2.$3>$4			already ok 
R$+<@$+>$*					$@$1<@$2.$m>$3			tack on our full name

# "Smart" UUCP mailer: Uses UUCP transport but domain-style naming 
Msmartuucp,
P=/usr/bin/uux, F=CmsDFMhuU, S=22, R=22,
 	       A=uux - -r $h!rmail ($u)


############################################################ 
# 
#	      	       RULESET ZERO 
# 
#	This is the ruleset that determines which mailer a name goes to.  

# Ruleset 30 just calls rulesets 3 then 0. 
S30 
R$*							$: $>3 $1				First canonicalize
R$*							$@ $>0 $1				Then rerun ruleset 0  

S0 
# On entry, the address has been canonicalized and focused
by ruleset 3. 
# Handle special cases..... 
R@	       	       	       $#local $:$n	   
   	       	   handle <> form  

# resolve the local hostname to "LOCAL".
R$*<$*$=w.LOCAL>$*	$1<$2LOCAL>$4			thishost.LOCAL
R$*<$*$=w.uucp>$*		$1<$2LOCAL>$4			thishost.uucp
R$*<$*$=w>$*			$1<$2LOCAL>$4			thishost
 
# Mail addressed explicitly to the domain gateway (us) 
R$*<@LOCAL>				$@$>30$1					strip our name, retry 
R<@LOCAL>:$+			$@$>30$1					retry after route strip  

# For numeric spec, you can't pass spec on to receiver, 
since old rcvr's 
# are not smart enough to know that [x.y.z.a] is their own name. 
R<@[$+]>:$*				$:$>9 <@[$1]>:$2			Clean it up, then... 
R<@[$+]>:$*				$#ether $@[$1] $:$2		numeric internet spec 
R<@[$+]>,$*				$#ether $@[$1] $:$2		numeric internet spec 
R$*<@[$+]>				$#ether $@[$2] $:$1		numeric internet spec  

# deliver to known ethernet hosts explicitly specified in our domain 
R$*<@$%y.LOCAL>$*		$#ether $@$2 $:$1<@$2>$3		user@host.sun.com 
# deliver to hosts in our domain that have a MX record 
R$*<@$%x.LOCAL>$*		$#ether $@$2 $:$1<@$2>$3		user@host.sun.com  

# etherhost.uucp is treated as etherhost.$m for now. 
# This allows them to be addressed from uucp as 
foo!sun!etherhost!user.
R$*<@$%y.uucp>$*		$#ether $@$2 $:$1<@$2>$3		user@etherhost.uucp
 
# Explicitly specified names in our domain -- 
that we've never heard of 
R$*<@$*.LOCAL>$*    $#error $:Never heard of host $2 in domain $m  

# Clean up addresses for external use -- 
kills LOCAL, route-addr ,=>: 
R$*						$:$>9 $1						Then continue...  

# resolve UUCP-style names
R<@$-.uucp>:$+			$#uucp			$@$1 $:$2		@host.uucp:...
R$+<@$-.uucp>			$#uucp $@$2 $:$1					user@host.uucp
 
# Pass other valid names up the ladder to our forwarder #
R$*<@$*.$=T>$*			$#$M	$@$R $:$1<@$2.$3>$4		user@domain.known  

# Replace following with above to only forward "known"
 top-level domains 
R$*<@$*.$+>$*			$#$M	$@$R $:$1<@$2.$3>$4		user@any.domain  

# if you are on the DDN, then comment-out both of the lines above 
# and use the following instead: 
#R$*<@$*.$+>$*			$#ddn $@ $2.$3 $:$1<@$2.$3>$4user@any.domain

# All addresses in the rules ABOVE are absolute 
(fully qualified domains). 
# Addresses BELOW can be partially qualified.  

# deliver to known ethernet hosts 
R$*<@$%y>$*				$#ether $@$2 $:$1<@$2>$3		user@etherhost 
# deliver to known ethernet hosts that has MX record
R$*<@$%x>$*				$#ether $@$2 $:$1<@$2>$3		user@etherhost
 
# other non-local names have nowhere to go; return them to sender. 
R$*<@$+.$->$*			$#error $:Unknown domain $3 
R$*<@$+>$*				$#error $:Neverheard of $2 in domain $m 
R$*@$*				 	$#error $:I don't understand $1@$2  

# Local names with % are really not local! 
R$+%$+					$@$>30$1@$2						turn % => @, retry  

# everything else is a local name 
R$+						$#local $:$1					local names