EXTSMAIL.EXTERNALS(5) | File Formats Manual | EXTSMAIL.EXTERNALS(5) |
NAME¶
extsmail.externals
—
configure which external commands to robustly send e-mail
via
DESCRIPTION¶
extsmail.externals
is used to configure
extsmaild(1). It consists of one or more
group
declarations. Each group consists of zero or more
match /
reject
clauses followed by one or more
external
declarations. An external consists of one or more assignments of
key = value
pairs.
When sending messages extsmaild(1) first searches through the externals file, in order, for a group whose match / reject clauses match the message in question. If a group does not contain any such clauses it automatically matches all messages. Match / reject clauses currently match only against headers, and use standard POSiX extended regular expressions (see re_format(7) for more details). extsmaild(1) then tries each external in the group, in order, to send the message successfully.
The grammar for this file is as follows:
group ::= { matches* external+ } matches ::= match | reject match ::= MATCH HEADER string reject ::= REJECT HEADER string external ::= EXTERNAL ID { defn+ } defn ::= ID = STRING | ID = TIME TIME ::= [0-9]+[dhms]
Valid assignments within an external are:
- sendmail
- Defines the external shell command used to send e-mail.
- timeout
- If extsmaild(1) is executed in daemon mode, this value defines the length of time that extsmaild(1) will retry this external before giving up and trying the next external in the group. Times are specified as a number followed by d (days), h (hours), m (minutes), or s (seconds). If extsmaild(1) is executed in batch mode, the timeout value is ignored.
FILES¶
The extsmail configuration file is searched for, in order, in the following locations:
- ~/.extsmail/externals
- Per-user configuration.
- /etc/extsmail/externals
- System-wide configuration.
EXAMPLES¶
The simplest externals file sending e-mail via ssh(1) looks as follows:
group { external mymachine { sendmail = "/usr/bin/ssh -q -C -l user mymachine.net /usr/sbin/sendmail -t" } }
A more complex example using multiple groups, message matching, and multiple external commands looks as follows:
group { match header "^To:.*@foo.com" external foo { sendmail = "/usr/bin/ssh -q -C -l user shell.foo.com /usr/sbin/sendmail -t" } } group { external mymachine { sendmail = "/usr/bin/ssh -q -C -l user mymachine.net /usr/sbin/sendmail -t" } external bk { sendmail = "/usr/bin/ssh -q -C -l user bk.mymachine.net /usr/sbin/sendmail -t" } }
SEE ALSO¶
AUTHORS¶
Laurence Tratt ⟨http://tratt.net/laurie/⟩
November 2, 2008 | Debian |