summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/SENDMAIL
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorJohn Denker <jsd@av8n.com>2012-06-01 18:58:45 -0700
committerJohn Denker <jsd@av8n.com>2012-06-01 18:58:45 -0700
commitb732a73bc773789894466b0e5320b2f1fe42c7e9 (patch)
tree385358983f064a1f10a5080b33a3ba13010886db /SENDMAIL
parent634d365a03cb0581a062cd3cf4db9ae69f1cde26 (diff)
original, as downloaded from http://www.qmail.org/netqmail-1.06.tar.gz
Diffstat (limited to 'SENDMAIL')
-rw-r--r--SENDMAIL76
1 files changed, 76 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/SENDMAIL b/SENDMAIL
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9280c24
--- /dev/null
+++ b/SENDMAIL
@@ -0,0 +1,76 @@
+This document explains what you, as a user, will notice when the system
+switches from sendmail to qmail.
+
+This is a global document, part of the qmail package, not reflecting the
+decisions made by your system administrator. For details on
+
+ * which local delivery agent qmail is configured to use,
+ * whether qmail is configured to use dot-forward,
+ * whether ezmlm is installed,
+ * whether fastforward is installed, and
+ * all other local configuration features,
+
+see your local sendmail-qmail upgrade announcement (which your system
+administrator may have placed into /var/qmail/doc/ANNOUNCE).
+
+
+--- Mailbox location
+
+If your system administrator has configured qmail to use binmail for
+local deliveries, your mailbox will be in /var/spool/mail/you, just as
+it was under sendmail.
+
+If your system administrator has configured qmail to use qmail-local for
+local deliveries, your mailbox will be moved to ~you/Mailbox. There is a
+symbolic link from /var/spool/mail/you to ~you/Mailbox, so your mail
+reader will find the mailbox at its new location.
+
+
+--- Loop control
+
+qmail-local automatically adds a Delivered-To field at the top of every
+delivered message. It uses Delivered-To to prevent mail forwarding
+loops, including cross-host mailing-list loops.
+
+
+--- Outgoing messages
+
+qmail lets you use environment variables to control the appearance of
+your outgoing mail, supplementing the features offered by your MUA. For
+example, qmail-inject will set up Mail-Followup-To for you automatically
+if you tell it which mailing lists you are subscribed to. See
+qmail-inject(8) for a complete list of features.
+
+If you're at (say) sun.ee.movie.edu, qmail lets you type joe@mac for
+joe@mac.ee.movie.edu, and joe@mac+ for joe@mac.movie.edu without the ee.
+sendmail has a different interpretation of hostnames without dots.
+
+
+--- Forwarding and mailing lists
+
+qmail gives you the power to set up your own mailing lists without
+pestering your system administrator.
+
+Under qmail, you are in charge of all addresses of the form
+you-anything. The delivery of you-anything is controlled by
+~you/.qmail-anything, a file in your home directory.
+
+For example, if you want to set up a bug-of-the-month-club mailing list,
+you can put a list of addresses into ~you/.qmail-botmc. Any mail to
+you-botmc will be forwarded to all of those addresses. Mail directly to
+you is controlled by ~you/.qmail. You can even set up a catch-all,
+~you/.qmail-default, to handle unknown you- addresses.
+
+See dot-qmail(5) for the complete story. Beware that the syntax of
+.qmail is different from the syntax of sendmail's .forward file.
+
+If your system administrator has configured qmail to use the dot-forward
+compatibility tool, you can put forwarding addresses (and programs) into
+.forward the same way you did with sendmail.
+
+If your system administrator has installed ezmlm, you can use ezmlm-make
+to instantly set up a professional-quality mailing list, handling
+subscriptions and archives automatically.
+
+If your system administrator has installed fastforward, you can easily
+manage a large database of forwarding addresses.