[Chapter 10] 10.3 sendmail Aliases
Chapter 10sendmail 10.3 sendmail Aliases It is almost impossible to exaggerate the importance of mail aliases.
Without them, a sendmail system could not act as a central mail
server. Mail aliases provide for:Alternate names (nicknames) for individual usersForwarding of mail to other hostsMailing listssendmail mail aliases are defined in the aliases
file.
[2]
The basic format of entries in the aliases file is:[2] The location of the file is defined in the "Options" section of
the sendmail configuration file.alias: recipient[, recipient,...]alias is the name to which the mail is addressed, and
recipient is the name to which the mail is delivered.
recipient can be a username, the name of another alias, or
a full email address containing both a username and a hostname.
Including a hostname allows mail to be forwarded to a remote host.
Additionally, there can be multiple recipients for a single alias.
Mail addressed to that alias is delivered to all of the recipients,
thus creating a mailing list.Aliases that define nicknames for individual users can be used to
handle frequently misspelled names. You can also use
aliases to deliver mail addressed to
special names, such as postmaster or root, to the real
users that do those jobs. Aliases can also be used to implement
simplified mail addressing, especially when used in conjunction with MX
records.
[3]
This aliases file from almond shows all of these uses:[3] Chapter 8, Configuring DNS Name Service , discusses MX records.# special names
postmaster: clark
root: norman
# accept firstname.lastname@nuts.com
rebecca.hunt: becky@peanut
jessie.mccafferty: jessie@walnut
anthony.resnick: anthony@pecan
andy.wright: andy@filbert
# a mailing list
admin: kathy, david@peanut, sara@pecan, becky@peanut, craig,
anna@peanut, jane@peanut, christy@filbert
owner-admin: admin-request
admin-request: craigThe first two aliases are special names. Using these aliases, mail
addressed to postmaster is delivered to the local user
clark, and mail addressed to root is delivered to
norman.The second set of aliases is in the form of firstname and
lastname. The first alias in this group is rebecca.hunt. Mail
addressed to rebecca.hunt is forwarded from almond and delivered
to becky@peanut. Combine this alias with an MX record that names
almond as the mail server for nuts.com, and mail addressed
to rebecca.hunt@nuts.com is delivered to becky@peanut.nuts.com.
This type of addressing scheme allows each user to advertise a
consistent mailing address that does not change just because the user's
account moves to another host. Additionally, if a remote user knows
that this firstname.lastname addressing scheme is used at
nuts.com, he can address mail to Rebecca Hunt as
rebecca.hunt@nuts.com without knowing her real email address.The last two aliases are for a mailing list. The alias admin
defines the list itself. If mail is sent to admin, a copy of
the mail is sent to each of the recipients (kathy, david,
sara, becky, craig, anna, jane, and
christy). Note that the mailing list continues across multiple
lines. A line that starts with a blank or a tab is a continuation
line.The owner-admin alias is a special form used by sendmail.
The format of this special alias is owner-listname where
listname is the name of a mailing list. The person specified on
this alias line is responsible for the list identified by listname.
If sendmail has problems delivering mail to any of the recipients
in the admin list, an error message is sent to owner-admin.
The owner-admin alias points to admin-request as the person
responsible for maintaining the mailing list admin. Aliases in the
form of listname-request are commonly used for administrative
requests, such as subscribing to a list, for manually maintained
mailing lists. Notice that we point an alias to another alias, which is
perfectly legal. The admin-request alias resolves to craig.sendmail does not use the aliases file directly. The
aliases file must first be processed by the newaliases
command.
newaliases is equivalent to sendmail with the -bi
option, which causes sendmail to build the aliases database.
newaliases creates the database files that are used by
sendmail when it is searching for aliases. Invoke
newaliases after updating the aliases file to make sure
that sendmail is able to use the new aliases.
[4][4] If the D option is used (see Appendix E, A sendmail Reference), sendmail
automatically rebuilds the aliases database - even if newaliases
is not run.10.3.1 Personal mail forwarding In addition to the mail forwarding provided by aliases,
sendmail allows individual users to define their own forwarding.
The user defines her personal forwarding in the .forward file
in her home directory. sendmail checks for this file after using
the aliases file and before making final delivery to the user.
If the .forward file exists, sendmail delivers the mail
as directed by that file. For example, say that user kathy has a
.forward file in her home directory that contains
kathy@podunk.edu. The mail that sendmail would normally
deliver to the local user kathy is forwarded to kathy's
account at podunk.edu.Use the .forward file for temporary forwarding. Modifying
aliases and rebuilding the database takes more effort than
modifying a .forward file, particularly if the forwarding
change will be short-lived. Additionally, the .forward file
puts the user in charge of his own mail forwarding.Mail aliases and mail forwarding are handled by the aliases file
and the .forward file. Everything else about the
sendmail configuration is handled in the sendmail.cf
file.10.2 Running sendmail as a Daemon 10.4 The sendmail.cf File [ Library Home | DNS & BIND | TCP/IP | sendmail | sendmail Reference | Firewalls | Practical Security ]
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