--- sendmail.1m.old	Tue Dec  9 15:49:23 2008
+++ sendmail.1m.new	Tue Dec  9 15:50:29 2008
@@ -1,2183 +1,2183 @@
 System Administration Commands                       sendmail(1M)
 
 
 NAME
      sendmail - send mail over the internet
 
 SYNOPSIS
      /usr/lib/sendmail [-Ac] [-Am] [-ba] [-bD] [-bd] [-bi] [-bl]
 	 [-bm] [-bp] [-bP] [-bs] [-bt] [-bv] [-B type] [-C file] [-D
 	 logfile] [-d X] [-F fullname] [-f name] [-G] [-h N] [-L tag]
 	 [-M xvalue] [-N notifications] [-n] [-Ooption =value] [-o
 	 xvalue] [-p protocol] [-Q [reason]] [-q [time]] [-q Xstring]
 	 [-R ret] [-r name] [-t] [-V envid] [-v] [-X logfile]
 	 [address]...
 
 
 DESCRIPTION
      The sendmail utility sends a message to one or more people,
      routing the message over whatever networks are necessary.
      sendmail does internetwork forwarding as necessary to deliver the
      message to the correct place.
 
 
      sendmail is not intended as a user interface routine. Other
      programs provide user-friendly front ends. sendmail is used only
      to deliver pre-formatted messages.
 
 
      With no flags, sendmail reads its standard input up to an EOF, or
      a line with a single dot, and sends a copy of the letter found
      there to all of the addresses listed. It deter- mines the network
      to use based on the syntax and contents of the addresses.
 
 
      Local addresses are looked up in the local aliases(4) file, or in
      a name service as defined by the nsswitch.conf(4) file, and
      aliased appropriately. In addition, if there is a
      .forward file in a recipient's home directory, sendmail for-
      wards a copy of each message to the list of recipients that file
      contains. Refer to the NOTES section for more informa- tion about
      .forward files. Aliasing can be prevented by preceding the address
      with a backslash.
 
 
      There are several conditions under which the expected behavior is
      for the alias database to be either built or rebuilt. This cannot
      occur under any circumstances unless root owns and has exclusive
      write permission to the /etc/mail/aliases* files.
 
 
      If a message is found to be undeliverable, it is returned to the
      sender with diagnostics that indicate the location and
      nature of the failure; or, the message is placed in a dead.letter
      file in the sender's home directory.
 
 
      The sendmail service is managed by the service management
      facility, smf(5), under the service identifier:
 
        svc:/network/smtp:sendmail
 
 
 
 
      Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling,
      disabling, or requesting restart, can be performed using
      svcadm(1M). The service's status can be queried using the svcs(1)
      command.
 
   Enabling Access to Remote Clients
      On an unmodified system, access to sendmail by remote clients is
      enabled and disabled through the service manage- ment facility
      (see smf(5)).  In particular, remote access is determined by the
      value of the local_only SMF property:
 
        svc:/network/smtp:sendmail/config/local_only = true
 
 
 
      A setting of true, as above, disallows remote access; false allows
      remote access. The default value is true.
 
 
      The following example shows the sequence of SMF commands used to
      enable sendmail to allow access to remote systems:
 
        # svccfg -s svc:/network/smtp:sendmail setprop config/local_only
        = false # svcadm refresh svc:/network/smtp:sendmail # svcadm
        restart svc:/network/smtp:sendmail
 
 
 
 
      See svcadm(1M) and svccfg(1M).
 
 
      Note, however, on a system where any of the sendmail(4) files have
      been customized, setting this property might not have the intended
      effect. See sendmail(4) for details.
 
   Automated Rebuilding of Configuration Files
      See sendmail(4) for details on which service properties can be set
      to automate (re)building of configuration files when the service
      is started.
 
   Restricting Host Access
      sendmail uses TCP Wrappers to restrict access to hosts. It uses
      the service name of sendmail for hosts_access(). For more
      information on TCP Wrappers, see tcpd(1M) and hosts_access(4) in
      the SUNWtcpd package. tcpd(1M) and hosts_access(4) are not part of
      the Solaris man pages.
 
   Startup Options
      The /etc/default/sendmail file stores startup options for sendmail
      so that the options are not removed when a host is upgraded. See
      also sendmail(4) for details on which service properties can be
      set to automate (re)building of configura- tion files when the
      service is started.
 
 
      You can use the following variables in the /etc/default/sendmail
      startup file:
 
      CLIENTOPTIONS=string
 
 	 Selects additional options to be used  with  the  client
 	 daemon,   which   looks   in   the   client-only   queue
 	 (/var/spool/clientmqueue) and acts  as  a  client  queue
 	 runner.  No  syntax checking is done, so be careful when
 	 making changes to this variable.
 
 
      CLIENTQUEUEINTERVAL=#
 
 	 Similar to the QUEUEINTERVAL option, CLIENTQUEUEINTERVAL sets
 	 the time interval for mail queue runs. However, the
 	 CLIENTQUEUEINTERVAL option controls the functions of the
 	 client  daemon,  instead  of the functions of the master
 	 daemon. Typically, the master daemon is able to  deliver all
 	 messages  to the SMTP port. However, if the message load is
 	 too high or the master daemon  is  not  running, then
 	 messages   go   into   the   client-only   queue,
 	 /var/spool/clientmqueue.   The  client   daemon,   which
 	 checks  in  the client-only queue, then acts as a client queue
 	 processor.
 
 
      ETRN_HOSTS=string
 
 	 Enables an SMTP client and server  to  interact  immedi- ately
 	 without waiting for the queue run intervals, which are
 	 periodic. The server  can  immediately  deliver  the portion
 	 of  its queue that goes to the specified hosts.  For more
 	 information, refer to the etrn(1M) man page.
 
      MODE=-bd
 
 	 Selects the mode to start sendmail  with.  Use  the  -bd
 	 option or leave it undefined.
 
 
      OPTIONS=string
 
 	 Selects additional options to be used  with  the  master
 	 daemon.  No  syntax checking is done, so be careful when
 	 making changes to this variable.
 
 
      QUEUEINTERVAL=#
 
 	 Sets the interval for mail queue runs on the master dae- mon.
 	 #  can  be  a positive integer that is followed by either s
 	 for seconds, m for minutes, h for hours, d  for days, or w for
 	 weeks. The syntax is checked before send- mail is started. If
 	 the interval is negative or  if  the entry  does  not  end
 	 with  an  appropriate letter, the interval is ignored and
 	 sendmail  starts  with  a  queue interval of 15 minutes.
 
 
      QUEUEOPTIONS=p
 
 	 Enables one persistent queue runner that sleeps  between
 	 queue  run  intervals, instead of a new queue runner for each
 	 queue run interval. You can set this option  to  p, which  is
 	 the  only  setting available. Otherwise, this option is not
 	 set.
 
 
   Mail Filter API
      sendmail supports a mail filter  API  called  "milter".  For
      more   information,  see  /usr/include/libmilter/README  and
      http://www.milter.org
 
 OPTIONS
      The following options are supported:
 
      -Ac
 
 	 Uses submit.cf even if the operation mode does not indi- cate
 	 an initial mail submission.
 
 
      -Am
 
 	 Uses sendmail.cf even if the operation mode indicates an
 	 initial mail submission.
 
 
      -ba
 
 	 Goes into ARPANET mode. All input lines must end with  a
 	 RETURN-LINEFEED,  and  all messages are generated with a
 	 RETURN-LINEFEED at the end. Also, the From: and  Sender:
 	 fields are examined for the name of the sender.
 
 
      -bd
 
 	 Runs as a daemon in the background, waiting for incoming SMTP
 	 connections.
 
 
      -bD
 
 	 Runs as a daemon in the foreground, waiting for incoming SMTP
 	 connections.
 
 
      -bi
 
 	 Initializes the aliases(4) database. Root must  own  and
 	 have     exclusive     write     permission    to    the
 	 /etc/mail/aliases* files  for  successful  use  of  this
 	 option.
 
 
      -bl
 
 	 Runs as a daemon (like -bd) but  accepts  only  loopback SMTP
 	 connections.
 
 
      -bm
 
 	 Delivers mail in the usual way (default).
 
 
      -bp
 
 	 Prints a summary of the mail queues.
 
 
      -bP
 
 	 Prints the number of entries in the queues. This  option is
 	 only available with shared memory support.
 
 
      -bs
 
 	 Uses the SMTP protocol as described in  RFC  2821.  This flag
 	 implies all the operations of the -ba flag that are compatible
 	 with SMTP.
 
 
      -bt
 
 	 Runs in address test mode. This mode reads addresses and
 	 shows  the  steps  in  parsing; it is used for debugging
 	 configuration tables.
 
 
      -bv
 
 	 Verifies names only. Does not try to collect or  deliver a
 	 message.  Verify mode is normally used for validating users or
 	 mailing lists.
 
 
      -B type
 
 	 Indicates body type (7BIT or 8BITMIME).
 
 
      -C file
 
 	 Uses alternate configuration file.
 
 
      -D logfile
 
 	 Send debugging output to the indicated log file  instead of
 	 stdout.
 
 
      -d X
 
 	 Sets debugging value to X.
 
 
      -f name
 
 	 Sets the name of the "from" person (that is, the  sender of
 	 the mail).
 
 
      -F fullname
 
 	 Sets the full name of the sender.
 
 
      -G
 
 	 When accepting messages by  way  of  the  command  line,
 	 indicates  that they are for relay (gateway) submission.  When
 	 this flag is set,  sendmail  might  complain  about
 	 syntactically invalid messages, for example, unqualified host
 	 names, rather than fixing them. sendmail  does  not do any
 	 canonicalization in this mode.
 
 
      -h N
 
 	 Sets the hop count to N. The hop  count  is  incremented
 	 every  time  the  mail  is  processed. When it reaches a
 	 limit, the mail is returned with an error  message,  the
 	 victim of an aliasing loop.
 
 
      -L tag
 
 	 Sets the identifier used in syslog messages to the  sup- plied
 	 tag.
 
 
      -Mxvalue
 
 	 Sets macro x to the specified value.
 
 
      -n
 
 	 Does not do aliasing.
 
 
      -N notifications
 
 	 Tags all addresses being sent as wanting  the  indicated
 	 notifications,  which  consists of the word "NEVER" or a
 	 comma-separated  list  of  "SUCCESS",   "FAILURE",   and
 	 "DELAY"  for  successful delivery, failure and a message that
 	 is stuck  in  a  queue  somwhere.  The  default  is
 	 "FAILURE,DELAY".
 
 
      -oxvalue
 
 	 Sets option x to the specified value. Processing Options are
 	 described below.
 
 
      -Ooption=value
 
 	 Sets option  to  the  specified  value  (for  long  from
 	 names). Processing Options are described below.
 
 
      -p protocol
 
 	 Sets the sending protocol. The protocol field can be  in form
 	 protocol:host to set both the sending protocol and the sending
 	 host. For  example:  -pUUCP:uunet  sets  the sending  protocol
 	 to UUCP and the sending host to uunet.  Some existing programs
 	 use -oM to set the r and  s  mac- ros; this is equivalent to
 	 using -p.
 
 
      -q[time]
 
 	 Processes saved messages in the queue  at  given  inter- vals.
 	 If time is omitted, processes the queue once. time is given as
 	 a tagged number, where s is  seconds,  m  is minutes,  h  is
 	 hours,  d  is days, and w is weeks. For example, -q1h30m or
 	 -q90m would both set the timeout  to one hour thirty minutes.
 
 	 By default, sendmail runs in the background. This option can
 	 be used safely with -bd.
 
 
      -qp[time-]
 
 	 Similar to -q[time], except that instead of periodically
 	 forking  a  child to process the queue, sendmail forks a
 	 single persistent child for each queue  that  alternates
 	 between  processing  the  queue  and sleeping. The sleep time
 	 (time) is specified as the argument; it defaults to 1
 	 second.  The process always sleeps at least 5 seconds if the
 	 queue was empty in the previous queue run.
 
 
      -qf
 
 	 Processes saved messages in the queue once and does  not
 	 fork(2), but runs in the foreground.
 
 
      -qG name
 
 	 Processes jobs in queue group called name only.
 
 
      -q[!]I substr
 
 	 Limits processed jobs to those containing  substr  as  a
 	 substring of the queue ID or not when ! is specified.
 
 
      -q[!]Q substr
 
 	 Limits processed jobs to those quarantined jobs contain- ing
 	 substr  as  a substring of the quarantine reason or not when !
 	 is specified.
 
 
      -q[!]R substr
 
 	 Limits processed jobs to those containing  substr  as  a
 	 substring  of  one  of  the  recipients or not when ! is
 	 specified.
 
 
      -q[!]S substr
 
 	 Limits processed jobs to those containing  substr  as  a
 	 substring of the sender or not when ! is specified.
 
 
      -Q[reason]
 
 	 Quarantines a normal queue item with the given reason or
 	 unquarantines  a  quarantined queue item if no reason is
 	 given. This should only be used with some sort  of  item
 	 matching as described above.
 
 
      -r name
 
 	 An alternate and obsolete form of the -f flag.
 
 
      -R ret
 
 	 Identifies the information you want returned if the mes- sage
 	 bounces.  ret can be HDRS for headers only or FULL for headers
 	 plus body.
 
 
      -t
 
 	 Reads message for recipients. To:,Cc:,  and  Bcc:  lines are
 	 scanned  for  people  to  send to. The Bcc: line is deleted
 	 before transmission. Any addresses in the  argu- ment  list is
 	 suppressed. The NoRecipientAction Process- ing Option can be
 	 used to change the  behavior  when  no legal recipients are
 	 included in the message.
 
 
      -v
 
 	 Goes into verbose mode. Alias expansions are  announced, and
 	 so forth.
 
 
      -V envid
 
 	 The indicated envid is passed with the envelope  of  the
 	 message and returned if the message bounces.
 
 
      -X logfile
 
 	 Logs all traffic in and out of sendmail in the indicated
 	 logfile  for  debugging mailer problems. This produces a lot
 	 of data very quickly and should be used sparingly.
 
 
   Processing Options
      There are a number of "random" options that can be set  from a
      configuration  file.  Options are represented by a single
      character or by multiple character names. The syntax for the
      single character names of is:
 
        Oxvalue
 
 
 
 
      This sets option x to be value.  Depending  on  the  option,
      value  may  be  a  string, an integer, a boolean (with legal
      values t, T, f, or F; the default is TRUE), or a time inter- val.
 
 
      The multiple character or long names use this syntax:
 
        O Longname=argument
 
 
 
 
      This sets the option Longname to be argument. The long names are
      beneficial because they are easier to interpret than the single
      character names.
 
 
      Not all processing options have single character names asso-
      ciated  with them. In the list below, the multiple character name
      is presented first followed  by  the  single  character syntax
      enclosed in parentheses.
 
      AliasFile (Afile)
 
 	 Specifies possible alias files.
 
 
      AliasWait (a N)
 
 	 If set, waits up to N minutes  for  an  "@:@"  entry  to exist
 	 in the aliases(4) database before starting up.  If it does not
 	 appear  in  N  minutes,  issues  a  warning.  Defaults to 10
 	 minutes.
 
 
      AllowBogusHELO
 
 	 Allows a HELO SMTP command that does not include a  host name.
 	 By default this option is disabled.
 
 
      BadRcptThrottle=N
 
 	 If set and more than the specified number of  recipients in
 	 a  single SMTP envelope are rejected, sleeps for one second
 	 after each rejected RCPT command.
 
 
      BlankSub (Bc)
 
 	 Sets the blank substitution  character  to  c.  Unquoted
 	 spaces  in  addresses  are  replaced  by this character.
 	 Defaults to SPACE (that is, no change is made).
 
 
      CACertFile
 
 	 File containing one CA cert.
 
 
      CACertPath
 
 	 Path to directory with certs of CAs.
 
 
      CheckAliases (n)
 
 	 Validates  the  RHS  of  aliases  when  rebuilding   the
 	 aliases(4) database.
 
 
      CheckpointInterval (CN)
 
 	 Checkpoints the queue every  N  (default  10)  addresses
 	 sent.  If your system crashes during delivery to a large list,
 	 this prevents retransmission to any but the last N
 	 recipients.
 
 
      ClassFactor (zfact)
 
 	 The indicated factor fact is multiplied by  the  message
 	 class  (determined  by the Precedence: field in the user
 	 header and the P lines in the  configuration  file)  and
 	 subtracted  from  the  priority.  Thus,  messages with a
 	 higher Priority: are favored. Defaults to 1800.
 
 
      ClientCertFile
 
 	 File containing the cert of the client,  that  is,  this cert
 	 is used when sendmail acts as client.
 
 
      ClientKeyFile
 
 	 File containing the private key belonging to the  client
 	 cert.
 
 
      ClientPortOptions
 
 	 Sets client SMTP  options.  The  options  are  key=value
 	 pairs. Known keys are:
 
 	 Addr Address Mask
 
 	     Address Mask defaults  to  INADDR_ANY.  The  address mask
 	     can  be a numeric address in dot notation or a network
 	     name.
 
 
 	 Family
 
 	     Address family (defaults to INET).
 
 
 	 Listen
 
 	     Size of listen queue (defaults to 10).
 
 
 	 Port
 
 	     Name/number of listening port (defaults to smtp).
 
 
 	 RcvBufSize
 
 	     The size of the TCP/IP receive buffer.
 
 
 	 SndBufSize
 
 	     The size of the TCP/IP send buffer.
 
 
 	 Modifier
 
 	     Options (flags) for the daemon. Can be:
 
 	     h
 
 		 Uses name of interface for HELO command.
 
 	     If h is set, the name corresponding to the  outgoing
 	     interface  address  (whether  chosen by means of the
 	     Connection parameter or the default) is used for the
 	     HELO/EHLO command.
 
 
 
      ColonOkInAddr
 
 	 If set, colons are treated as  a  regular  character  in
 	 addresses.  If  not  set, they are treated as the intro- ducer
 	 to the RFC 822 "group" syntax. This option  is  on for version
 	 5 and lower configuration files.
 
 
      ConnectionCacheSize (kN)
 
 	 The maximum number of open connections that  are  to  be
 	 cached  at a time. The default is 1. This delays closing the
 	 current connection until either this  invocation  of sendmail
 	 needs  to  connect  to another host or it ter- minates.
 	 Setting it to 0 defaults to the  old  behavior, that is,
 	 connections are closed immediately.
 
 
      ConnectionCacheTimeout (Ktimeout)
 
 	 The maximum amount of time a cached connection  is  per-
 	 mitted  to  idle  without  activity.  If  this  time  is
 	 exceeded, the connection  is  immediately  closed.  This
 	 value  should  be  small  (on the order of ten minutes).
 	 Before sendmail uses  a  cached  connection,  it  always sends
 	 a NOOP (no operation) command to check the connec- tion.  If
 	 the  NOOP  command  fails,  it  reopens   the
 	 connection.  This  keeps  your  end  from failing if the other
 	 end times out. The point of this option is to be a good
 	 network  neighbor  and  avoid  using  up excessive resources
 	 on the other end. The default is five minutes.
 
 
      ConnectionRateThrottle
 
 	 The maximum number of connections permitted per  second.
 	 After  this  many connections are accepted, further con-
 	 nections are delayed. If not set or <= 0,  there  is  no
 	 limit.
 
 
      ConnectionRateWindowSize
 
 	 Define the length of the interval for which  the  number of
 	 incoming connections is maintained. The default is 60
 	 seconds.
 
 
      ControlSocketName
 
 	 Name of the control socket for daemon management. A run- ning
 	 sendmail daemon can be controlled through this Unix domain
 	 socket. Available commands  are:  help,  restart, shutdown,
 	 and  status.   The status command returns the current number
 	 of daemon children, the free  disk  space (in blocks) of the
 	 queue directory, and the load average of the machine expressed
 	 as an integer. If not  set,  no control  socket  is available.
 	 For the sake of security, this Unix domain socket must be in a
 	 directory which  is accessible only by root;
 	 /var/spool/mqueue/.smcontrol is recommended for the socket
 	 name.
 
 
      CRLFile
 
 	 File containing certificate  revocation  status,  useful for
 	 X.509v3 authentication.
 
 
      DaemonPortOptions (Ooptions)
 
 	 Sets server SMTP  options.  The  options  are  key=value
 	 pairs. Known keys are:
 
 	 Name
 
 	     User-definable name  for  the  daemon  (defaults  to
 	     "Daemon#"). Used for error messages and logging.
 
 
 	 Addr
 
 	     Address mask (defaults INADDR_ANY).
 
 	     The address mask may be a  numeric  address  in  dot
 	     notation or a network name.
 
 
 	 Family
 
 	     Address family (defaults to INET).
 
 
 	 InputMailFilters
 
 	     List of input mail filters for the daemon.
 
 
 	 Listen
 
 	     Size of listen queue (defaults to 10).
 
 
 	 Modifier
 
 	     Options (flags) for the daemon; can  be  a  sequence
 	     (without any delimiters) of:
 
 	     a
 
 		 Requires authentication.
 
 
 	     b
 
 		 Binds to interface through which mail  has  been
 		 received.
 
 
 	     c
 
 		 Performs hostname canonification (.cf).
 
 
 	     f
 
 		 Requires fully qualified hostname (.cf).
 
 
 	     h
 
 		 Uses name of interface for HELO command.
 
 	     u
 
 		 Allows unqualified addresses (.cf).
 
 
 	     C
 
 		 Does not perform hostname canonification.
 
 
 	     E
 
 		 Disallows ETRN (see RFC 2476).
 
 
 
 	 Name
 
 	     User-definable name for the daemon (defaults to Dae-
 	     mon#). Used for error messages and logging.
 
 
 	 Port
 
 	     Name/number of listening port (defaults to smtp).
 
 
 	 ReceiveSize
 
 	     The size of the TCP/IP receive buffer.
 
 
 	 SendSize
 
 	     The size of the TCP/IP send buffer.
 
 
 	 children
 
 	     Maximum number of children per daemon.  See  MaxDae-
 	     monChildren.
 
 
 	 DeliveryMode
 
 	     Delivery mode per daemon. See DeliveryMode.
 
 
 	 refuseLA
 
 	     RefuseLA per daemon.
 
 
 	 delayLA
 
 	     DelayLA per daemon.
 
 
 	 queueLA
 
 	     QueueLA per daemon.
 
 	 sendmail listens on a new socket for each occurrence  of the
 	 DaemonPortOptions option in a configuration file.
 
 
      DataFileBufferSize
 
 	 Sets the threshold,  in  bytes,  before  a  memory-bases
 	 queue  data file becomes disk-based. The default is 4096
 	 bytes.
 
 
      DeadLetterDrop
 
 	 Defines the  location  of  the  system-wide  dead.letter
 	 file,  formerly  hard-coded  to /var/tmp/dead.letter. If this
 	 option is not set (the default), sendmail does  not attempt to
 	 save to a system-wide dead.letter file in the event it cannot
 	 bounce the mail to the user or  postmas- ter.  Instead,  it
 	 renames the qf file as it has in the past when the dead.letter
 	 file could not be opened.
 
 
      DefaultCharSet
 
 	 Sets the default character set to  use  when  converting
 	 unlabeled 8 bit input to MIME.
 
 
      DefaultUser (ggid) or (uuid)
 
 	 Sets the default group ID for mailers to run in  to  gid or
 	 set  the default userid for mailers to uid. Defaults to 1. The
 	 value can also be given as a symbolic group or user name.
 
 
      DelayLA=LA
 
 	 When the system load average exceeds LA, sendmail sleeps for
 	 one second on most SMTP commands and before accept- ing
 	 connections.
 
 
      DeliverByMin=time
 
 	 Sets minimum time for Deliver By SMTP Service  Extension (RFC
 	 2852). If 0, no time is listed, if less than 0, the extension
 	 is not offered,  if  greater  than  0,  it  is listed as
 	 minimum time for the EHLO keyword DELIVERBY.
 
 
      DeliveryMode (dx)
 
 	 Delivers in mode x. Legal modes are:
 
 	 i
 
 	     Delivers interactively (synchronously).
 
 
 	 b
 
 	     Delivers in background (asynchronously).
 
 
 	 d
 
 	     Deferred mode. Database lookups are  deferred  until the
 	     actual queue run.
 
 
 	 q
 
 	     Just queues the message (delivers during queue run).
 
 	 Defaults to b if no option is  specified,  i  if  it  is
 	 specified   but  given  no  argument  (that  is,  Od  is
 	 equivalent to Odi).
 
 
      DHParameters
 
 	 File containing the DH parameters.
 
 
      DialDelay
 
 	 If a connection fails, waits this many seconds and tries
 	 again. Zero means "do not retry".
 
 
      DontBlameSendmail
 
 	 If set, overrides the file safety checks. This  compromises
 	 system  security  and  should  not  be  used.  See
 	 http://www.sendmail.org/tips/DontBlameSendmail.html  for more
 	 information.
 
 
      DontExpandCnames
 
 	 If set, $[ ... $] lookups that do DNS-based  lookups  do not
 	 expand CNAME records.
 
 
      DontInitGroups
 
 	 If set, the initgroups(3C) routine is never invoked.  If you
 	 set  this,  agents run on behalf of users only have their
 	 primary (/etc/passwd) group permissions.
 
 
      DontProbeInterfaces
 
 	 If set, sendmail does not insert the names and addresses of
 	 any local interfaces into the $=w class. If set, you must also
 	 include support for these addresses, otherwise mail to
 	 addresses in this list bounces with a configura- tion error.
 
 
      DontPruneRoutes (R)
 
 	 If set, does not prune route-addr  syntax  addresses  to the
 	 minimum possible.
 
 
      DoubleBounceAddress
 
 	 If an error occurs when sending an error message,  sends that
 	 "double bounce" error message to this address.
 
 
      EightBitMode (8)
 
 	 Uses 8-bit data handling. This option  requires  one  of the
 	 following  keys. The key can selected by using just the first
 	 character, but using the full word  is  better for clarity.
 
 	 mimify
 
 	     Does any necessary conversion of 8BITMIME to 7-bit.
 
 
 	 pass
 
 	     Passes unlabeled 8-bit input through as is.
 
 
 	 strict
 
 	     Rejects unlabeled 8-bit input.
 
 
 
      ErrorHeader (Efile/message)
 
 	 Appends error messages with the indicated message. If it
 	 begins with a slash, it is assumed to be the pathname of a
 	 file containing a message  (this  is  the  recommended
 	 setting).  Otherwise, it is a literal message. The error file
 	 might contain the name, email address, and/or phone number
 	 of  a  local postmaster who could provide assis- tance to end
 	 users. If the option is missing or NULL, or if  it names a
 	 file which does not exist or which is not readable, no message
 	 is printed.
 
 
      ErrorMode (ex)
 
 	 Disposes of errors using mode x. The values for x are:
 
 	 e
 
 	     Mails back errors and gives 0 exit status always.
 
 
 	 m
 
 	     Mails back errors.
 
 
 	 p
 
 	     Prints error messages (default).
 
 
 	 q
 
 	     No messages, just gives exit status.
 
 
 	 w
 
 	     Writes back errors (mail if user not logged in).
 
 
      FallbackMXhost (Vfallbackhost)
 
 	 If specified, the fallbackhost  acts  like  a  very  low
 	 priority  MX  on every host. This is intended to be used by
 	 sites with poor network connectivity.
 
 
      FallBackSmartHost
 
 	 If specified, the fallBackSmartHost is used in  a  last-
 	 ditch  effort for each host. This is intended to be used by
 	 sites with "fake internal DNS". That  is,  a  company whose
 	 DNS  accurately  reflects  the  world inside that company's
 	 domain but not outside.
 
 
      FastSplit
 
 	 If set to a value greater  than  zero  (the  default  is
 	 one),  it  suppresses  the  MX lookups on addresses when they
 	 are  initially  sorted,  that  is,  for  the  first delivery
 	 attempt.   This  usually  results  in  faster envelope
 	 splitting unless the  MX  records  are  readily available in a
 	 local DNS cache. To enforce initial sort- ing based on MX
 	 records set FastSplit to  zero.  If  the mail  is  submitted
 	 directly from the command line, then the value also limits the
 	 number of processes to deliver the  envelopes;  if  more
 	 envelopes are created they are only queued up and must be
 	 taken care of by a queue run.  Since  the  default  submission
 	 method is by way of SMTP (either from a MUA or by way of the
 	 Message  Submission Program [MSP]), the value of FastSplit is
 	 seldom used to limit the number of processes to deliver the
 	 envelopes.
 
 
      ForkEachJob (Y)
 
 	 If set, delivers each job that is run from the queue  in a
 	 separate process. Use this option if you are short of memory,
 	 since the default tends to consume  considerable amounts of
 	 memory while the queue is being processed.
 
 
      ForwardPath (Jpath)
 
 	 Sets the path for searching for users'  .forward  files.  The
 	 default  is  $z/.forward.  Some  sites that use the
 	 automounter may prefer to change this to /var/forward/$u to
 	 search  a  file  with the same name as the user in a system
 	 directory. It can also be set to  a  sequence  of paths
 	 separated  by colons; sendmail stops at the first file it can
 	 successfully and safely open.  For  example,
 	 /var/forward/$u:$z/.forward     searches     first    in
 	 /var/forward/ username and  then  in  ~username/.forward (but
 	 only  if  the first file does not exist). Refer to the NOTES
 	 section for more information.
 
 
      HeloName=name
 
 	 Sets the name to be used for HELO/EHLO (instead of $j).
 
 
      HelpFile (Hfile)
 
 	 Specifies the help file for SMTP.
 
 
      HoldExpensive (c)
 
 	 If an outgoing mailer is marked as being expensive, does not
 	 connect immediately.
 
 
      HostsFile
 
 	 Sets the file to use when doing "file"  type  access  of host
 	 names.
 
 
      HostStatusDirectory
 
 	 If set, host status is kept  on  disk  between  sendmail runs
 	 in the named directory tree. If a full path is not used, then
 	 the path is interpreted relative to the queue directory.
 
 
      IgnoreDots (i)
 
 	 Ignores dots in incoming messages. This is  always  dis-
 	 abled  (that  is, dots are always accepted) when reading SMTP
 	 mail.
 
 
      LogLevel (Ln)
 
 	 Sets the default log level to n. Defaults to 9.
 
 
      (Mxvalue)
 
 	 Sets the macro x to value. This is intended only for use from
 	 the command line.
 
 
      MailboxDatabase
 
 	 Type of lookup to  find  information  about  local  mail
 	 boxes,  defaults  to  pw  which uses getpwnam(3C). Other types
 	 can be introduced by adding  them  to  the  source code, see
 	 libsm/mbdb.c for details.
 
 
      MatchGECOS (G)
 
 	 Tries to match recipient names using  the  GECOS  field.  This
 	 allows for mail to be delivered using names defined in the
 	 GECOS field in /etc/passwd as well as  the  login name.
 
 
      MaxDaemonChildren
 
 	 The maximum number of children the daemon permits. After this
 	 number,  connections  are  rejected. If not set or <=0, there
 	 is no limit.
 
 
      MaxHopCount (hN)
 
 	 The maximum hop count. Messages that have been processed more
 	 than  N  times are assumed to be in a loop and are rejected.
 	 Defaults to 25.
 
 
      MaxMessageSize
 
 	 The maximum size  of  messages  that  are  accepted  (in
 	 bytes).
 
 
      MaxMimeHeaderLength=M[/N]
 
 	 Sets the maximum length of  certain  MIME  header  field
 	 values  to M characters. For some of these headers which take
 	 parameters, the maximum length of each parameter is set  to N
 	 if specified. If /N is not specified, one half of M is used.
 	 By default, these values are 0, meaning no checks are done.
 
 
      MaxNOOPCommands=N
 
 	 Overrides the default of 20 for the  number  of  useless
 	 commands.
 
 
      MaxQueueChildren=N
 
 	 When set, this limits the  number  of  concurrent  queue
 	 runner  processes to N. This helps to control the amount of
 	 system resources used when processing the queue. When there
 	 are  multiple  queue groups defined and the total number of
 	 queue runners for  these  queue  groups  would exceed
 	 MaxQueueChildren  then  the queue groups are not all run
 	 concurrently. That is, some portion of the queue groups  run
 	 concurrently  such that MaxQueueChildren is not be exceeded,
 	 while the remaining  queue  groups  are run  later  (in
 	 round  robin order). See MaxRunnersPer- Queue.
 
 
      MaxQueueRunSize
 
 	 If set, limits the maximum size of any given  queue  run to
 	 this number of entries. This stops reading the queue directory
 	 after this number of entries is  reached;  job priority is not
 	 used. If not set, there is no limit.
 
 
      MaxRunnersPerQueue=N
 
 	 This sets the default maximum number  of  queue  runners for
 	 queue groups. Up to N queue runners work in parallel on a
 	 queue group's messages. This is  useful  where  the
 	 processing  of  a  message  in the queue might delay the
 	 processing of subsequent messages.  Such a delay can  be the
 	 result  of  non-erroneous  situations such as a low bandwidth
 	 connection. The can be  overridden  on  a  per queue  group
 	 basis  by  setting the Runners option. The default is 1 when
 	 not set.
 
 
      MeToo (M)
 
 	 Sends to me too, even if I am in an alias expansion.
 
 
      MaxRecipientsPerMessage
 
 	 If set, allows no more  than  the  specified  number  of
 	 recipients  in  an  SMTP  envelope.  Further  recipients
 	 receive a 452 error code and are deferred for  the  next
 	 delivery attempt.
 
 
      MinFreeBlocks (bN/M)
 
 	 Insists on at least N blocks free  on  the  file  system
 	 that holds the queue files before accepting email by way of
 	 SMTP. If there is insufficient space, sendmail  gives a  452
 	 response  to the MAIL command.  This invites the sender to try
 	 again later. The optional M is  a  maximum message  size
 	 advertised in the ESMTP EHLO response. It is currently
 	 otherwise unused.
 
 
      MinQueueAge
 
 	 Specifies the amount of time a job must sit in the queue
 	 between queue runs. This allows you to set the queue run
 	 interval low for better  responsiveness  without  trying all
 	 jobs in each run. The default value is 0.
 
 
      MustQuoteChars
 
 	 Specifies the characters to be quoted  in  a  full  name
 	 phrase. &,;:\()[] are quoted automatically.
 
 
      NiceQueueRun
 
 	 Specifies the priority of queue runners. See nice(1).
 
 
      NoRecipientAction
 
 	 Sets action if there are no legal recipient files in the
 	 message. The legal values are:
 
 	 add-apparently-to
 
 	     Adds an Apparently-to: header  with  all  the  known
 	     recipients (which may expose blind recipients).
 
 
 	 add-bcc
 
 	     Adds an empty Bcc: header.
 
 
 	 add-to
 
 	     Adds a To: header  with  all  the  known  recipients
 	     (which may expose blind recipients).
 
 
 	 add-to-undisclosed
 
 	     Adds a To: undisclosed-recipients: header.
 
 
 	 none
 
 	     Does nothing, that is, leaves the message as it is.
 
 
 
      OldStyleHeaders (o)
 
 	 Assumes that the headers may be in old format, that  is,
 	 spaces delimit names. This actually turns on an adaptive
 	 algorithm: if any recipient address  contains  a  comma,
 	 parenthesis, or angle bracket, it is assumed that commas
 	 already exist. If this flag is not on, only commas  del- imit
 	 names.  Headers  are  always  output  with  commas between the
 	 names.
 
 
      OperatorChars or $o
 
 	 Defines the list of  characters  that  can  be  used  to
 	 separate the components of an address into tokens.
 
 
      PidFile
 
 	 Specifies the filename of the pid file. The  default  is
 	 /var/run/sendmail.pid.  The  filename  is macro-expanded
 	 before it is opened, and unlinked when sendmail exits.
 
 
      PostmasterCopy (Ppostmaster)
 
 	 If set, copies of error messages are sent to  the  named
 	 postmaster.  Only  the  header  of the failed message is sent.
 	 Since most errors are user problems, this is prob- ably  not
 	 a good idea on large sites, and arguably con- tains all sorts
 	 of privacy violations, but it  seems  to be popular with
 	 certain operating systems vendors.
 
 
      PrivacyOptions (popt,opt,...)
 
 	 Sets privacy options. Privacy is really a misnomer; many of
 	 these options are just a way of insisting on stricter
 	 adherence to the SMTP protocol.
 
 	 The goaway pseudo-flag sets all flags except noreceipts,
 	 restrictmailq, restrictqrun, restrictexpand, noetrn, and
 	 nobodyreturn. If mailq is restricted, only people in the same
 	 group  as the queue directory can print the queue.  If queue
 	 runs are restricted, only root and the owner of the  queue
 	 directory  can  run the queue. The restrict-
 	 expand pseudo-flag instructs sendmail to drop privileges when
 	 the  -bv  option is given by users who are neither root nor
 	 the TrustedUser so users  cannot  read  private aliases,
 	 forwards, or :include: files. It adds the Non- RootSafeAddr
 	 to  the  "DontBlame-Sendmail"  option   to prevent
 	 misleading  unsafe  address  warnings.  It also overrides
 	 the  -v  (verbose)  command  line  option  to prevent
 	 information leakage. Authentication Warnings add warnings
 	 about  various  conditions  that  may  indicate attempts  to
 	 fool the mail system, such as using an non- standard queue
 	 directory.
 
 	 The options can be selected from:
 
 	 authwarnings
 
 	     Puts X-Authentication-Warning: headers in messages.
 
 
 	 goaway
 
 	     Disallows essentially all SMTP status queries.
 
 
 	 needexpnhelo
 
 	     Insists on HELO or EHLO command before EXPN.
 
 
 	 needmailhelo
 
 	     Insists on HELO or EHLO command before MAIL.
 
 
 	 needvrfyhelo
 
 	     Insists on HELO or EHLO command before VRFY.
 
 
 	 noactualrecipient
 
 	     Do not put an X-Actual-Recipient line in a DNS  that
 	     reveals  the  actual  account to which an address is
 	     mapped.
 
 
 	 noetrn
 
 	     Disallows ETRN entirely.
 
 
 	 noexpn
 
 	     Disallows EXPN entirely.
 
 
 	 noreceipts
 
 	     Prevents return receipts.
 
 
 	 nobodyreturn
 
 	     Does not return the body of a message with DSNs.
 
 
 	 novrfy
 
 	     Disallows VRFY entirely.
 
 
 	 public
 
 	     Allows open access.
 
 
 	 restrictexpand
 
 	     Restricts -bv and -v command line flags.
 
 
 	 restrictmailq
 
 	     Restricts mailq command.
 
 
 	 restrictqrun
 
 	     Restricts -q command line flag.
 
 
 
      ProcessTitlePrefix string
 
 	 Prefixes the process title shown on "/usr/ucb/ps  auxww"
 	 listings with string. The string is macro processed.
 
 
      QueueDirectory (Qdir)
 
 	 Uses the named dir as the queue directory.
 
 
      QueueFactor (qfactor)
 
 	 Uses factor as the multiplier in  the  map  function  to
 	 decide  when to just queue up jobs rather than run them.  This
 	 value is divided  by  the  difference  between  the current
 	 load average and the load average limit (x flag) to determine
 	 the maximum message priority  to  be  sent.  Defaults to
 	 600000.
 
 
      QueueFileMode=mode
 
 	 Defaults permissions for queue  files  (octal).  If  not set,
 	 sendmail  uses  0600 unless its real and effective uid are
 	 different in which case it uses 0644.
 
 
      QueueLA (xLA)
 
 	 When the system load average  exceeds  LA,  just  queues
 	 messages  (that is, does not try to send them). Defaults to
 	 eight times the  number  of  processors  online  when sendmail
 	 starts.
 
 
      QueueSortOrder=algorithm
 
 	 Sets the algorithm used for sorting the queue. Only  the
 	 first  character  of the value is used. Legal values are host
 	 (to order by the name of the first host name of the first
 	 recipient), filename (to order by the name of the queue
 	 file   name),   time   (to    order    by    the
 	 submission/creation  time),  random (to order randomly),
 	 modification (to order by the modification time  of  the qf
 	 file (older entries first)), none (to not order), and priority
 	 (to order by message priority).  Host  ordering makes  better
 	 use of the connection cache, but may tend to process low
 	 priority messages that  go  to  a  single host  over  high
 	 priority  messages  that go to several hosts; it probably
 	 shouldn't be  used  on  slow  network links. Filename and
 	 modification time ordering saves the overhead of reading  all
 	 of  the  queued  items  before starting  the queue run.
 	 Creation (submission) time ord- ering is almost always  a
 	 bad  idea,  since  it  allows large,  bulk  mail  to  go  out
 	 before smaller, personal mail, but may have applicability on
 	 some hosts with very fast  connections.  Random  is  useful
 	 if several queue runners are started by hand which try to
 	 drain the  same queue since odds are they are working on
 	 different parts of the queue at the same time. Priority
 	 ordering is  the default.
 
 
      QueueTimeout (Trtime/wtime)
 
 	 Sets the queue timeout to rtime.  After  this  interval,
 	 messages  that  have  not  been  successfully  sent  are
 	 returned to the sender. Defaults to five days (5d).  The
 	 optional wtime is the time after which a warning message is
 	 sent. If it is missing or 0, then no warning messages are
 	 sent.
 
 
      RandFile
 
 	 File containing random data (use prefix  file:)  or  the name
 	 of  the  UNIX  socket  if  EGD is used (use prefix egd:). Note
 	 that Solaris supports  random(7D),  so  this does not need to
 	 be specified.
 
 
      RecipientFactor (yfact)
 
 	 The indicated factor fact is added to the priority (thus
 	 lowering  the  priority  of the job) for each recipient, that
 	 is, this value penalizes jobs with large numbers of
 	 recipients. Defaults to 30000.
 
 
      RefuseLA (XLA)
 
 	 When the system load average exceeds LA, refuses  incom- ing
 	 SMTP connections. Defaults to 12 times the number of
 	 processors online when sendmail starts.
 
 
      RejectLogInterval
 
 	 Log interval when refusing  connections  for  this  long
 	 (default: 3h).
 
 
      ResolverOptions (I)
 
 	 Tunes DNS lookups.
 
 
      RetryFactor (Zfact)
 
 	 The indicated factor fact is added to the priority every time
 	 a  job is processed. Thus, each time a job is pro- cessed,
 	 its  priority  is  decreased  by  the  indicated value.  In
 	 most  environments  this should be positive, since hosts that
 	 are down are all too often down  for  a long time. Defaults to
 	 90000.
 
 
      RrtImpliesDsn
 
 	 If this  option  is  set,  a  Return-Receipt-To:  header
 	 causes  the  request  of  a  DSN,  which  is sent to the
 	 envelope sender as required by  RFC  1891,  not  to  the
 	 address given in the header.
 
 
      RunAsUser
 
 	 If set, becomes this user when  reading  and  delivering
 	 mail.  Intended  for use of firewalls where users do not have
 	 accounts.
 
 
      SafeFileEnvironment
 
 	 If set, sendmail  does  a  chroot  into  this  directory
 	 before writing files.
 
 
      SaveFromLine (f)
 
 	 Saves Unix-style From lines at  the  front  of  headers.
 	 Normally they are assumed redundant and discarded.
 
 
      SendMimeErrors (j)
 
 	 If set, sends error messages in  MIME  format  (see  RFC 2045
 	 and  RFC  1344 for details). If disabled, sendmail does not
 	 return the DSN keyword in response to  an  EHLO and  does not
 	 do Delivery Status Notification processing as described in RFC
 	 1891.
 
 
      ServerCertFile
 
 	 File containing the cert of the server,  that  is,  this cert
 	 is used when sendmail acts as server.
 
 
      ServerKeyFile
 
 	 File containing the private key belonging to the  server
 	 cert.
 
 
      ServiceSwitchFile
 
 	 Defines the path to the service-switch file.  Since  the
 	 service-switch  file is defined in the Solaris operating
 	 environment this option is ignored.
 
 
      SevenBitInput (7)
 
 	 Strips input to seven bits for  compatibility  with  old
 	 systems. This should not be necessary.
 
 
      SharedMemoryKey
 
 	 Specifies key to use for shared memory segment.  If  not set
 	 (or 0), shared memory is not be used. If this option is set,
 	 sendmail can share some data  between  different instances.
 	 For example, the number of entries in a queue directory or the
 	 available space in a file system.  This allows  for more
 	 efficient program execution, since only one process needs to
 	 update the  data  instead  of  each individual  process
 	 gathering  the data each time it is required.
 
 
      SharedMemoryKeyFile=file
 
 	 If SharedMemoryKeyFile is set to -1,  the  automatically
 	 selected  shared memory key will be stored in the speci- fied
 	 file.
 
 
      SingleLineFromHeader
 
 	 If set, From: lines  that  have  embedded  newlines  are
 	 unwrapped onto one line.
 
 
      SingleThreadDelivery
 
 	 If this option and the  HostStatusDirectory  option  are both
 	 set, uses single thread deliveries to other hosts.
 
 
      SmtpGreetingMessage or $e
 
 	 Specifies the initial SMTP greeting message.
 
 
      SoftBounce
 
 	 If set, issue temporary errors  (4xy)  instead  of  per-
 	 manent  errors  (5xy). This can be useful during testing of a
 	 new configuration to avoid  erroneous  bouncing  of mail.
 
 
      StatusFile (Sfile)
 
 	 Logs statistics in the named file. By default,  this  is
 	 /etc/mail/sendmail.st.  As  root, you must touch(1) this file
 	 to enable mailstats(1).
 
 
      SuperSafe (s)
 
 	 This option can be set to True, False,  Interactive,  or
 	 PostMilter.  If  set  to True, sendmail is set to super- safe
 	 when running things, that  is,  always  instantiate the queue
 	 file, even if you are going to attempt immedi- ate delivery.
 	 sendmail  always  instantiates  the  queue file  before
 	 returning  control to the client under any circumstances. This
 	 should really always be set to True.  The  Interactive  value
 	 has been introduced in 8.12 and can be used together with
 	 DeliveryMode=i. It skips  some synchronization  calls  which
 	 are effectively doubled in the code execution path for this
 	 mode. If set  to  Post- Milter,  sendmail  defers
 	 synchronizing  the queue file until any milters have signaled
 	 acceptance of  the  mes- sage. PostMilter is useful only when
 	 sendmail is running as an SMTP server; in all other situations
 	 it  acts  the same as True.
 
 
      TempFileMode (Fmode)
 
 	 Specifies the file mode for queue files.
 
 
      Timeout (rtimeouts)
 
 	 Timeout reads after time interval. The timeouts argument is  a
 	 list of keyword=value pairs. All but command apply to client
 	 SMTP. For backward  compatibility,  a  timeout with  no
 	 keyword= part is set all of the longer values.  The recognized
 	 timeouts and their  default  values,  and their minimum values
 	 specified in RFC 1123 section 5.3.2 are:
 
 	 aconnect
 
 	     all connections for a single  delivery  attempt  [0,
 	     unspecified]
 
 
 	 command
 
 	     command read [1h, 5m]
 
 
 	 connect
 
 	     initial connect [0, unspecified]
 
 
 	 control
 
 	     complete control socket transaction [2m, none]
 
 
 	 datablock
 
 	     data block read [1h, 3m]
 
 
 	 datafinal
 
 	     reply to final . in data [1h, 10m]
 
 
 	 datainit
 
 	     reply to DATA command [5m, 2m]
 
 
 	 fileopen
 
 	     file open [60sec, none]
 
 
 	 helo
 
 	     reply to HELO or EHLO command [5m, none]
 
 
 	 hoststatus
 
 	     host retry [30m, unspecified]
 
 
 	 iconnect
 
 	     first attempt to connect to a host [0, unspecified]
 
 
 	 ident
 
 	     IDENT protocol timeout [5s, none]
 
 
 	 initial
 
 	     wait for initial greeting message [5m, 5m]
 
 
 	 lhlo
 
 	     wait for reply to an LMTP LHLO command [2m, unspeci- fied]
 
 
 	 mail
 
 	     reply to MAIL command [10m, 5m]
 
 
 	 misc
 
 	     reply to NOOP and VERB commands [2m, none]
 
 
 	 queuereturn
 
 	     undeliverable message returned [5d]
 
 
 	 queuewarn
 
 	     deferred warning [4h]
 
 
 	 quit
 
 	     reply to QUIT command [2m, none]
 
 
 	 rcpt
 
 	     reply to RCPT command [1h, 5m]
 
 
 	 resolver.retrans
 
 	     Resolver's retransmission time interval (in seconds)
 	     [varies].  Sets  both Timeout.resolver.retrans.first and
 	     Timeout.resolver.retrans.normal.
 
 
 	 resolver.retrans.first
 
 	     Resolver's retransmission time interval (in seconds) for
 	     the first attempt to deliver a message [varies].
 
 
 	 resolver.retrans.normal
 
 	     Resolver's retransmission time interval (in seconds) for
 	     all  look-ups except the first delivery attempt [varies].
 
 
 	 resolver.retry
 
 	     Number of  times  to  retransmit  a  resolver  query
 	     [varies]. Sets both Timeout.resolver.retry.first and
 	     Timeout.resolver.retry.normal.
 
 
 	 resolver.retry.first
 
 	     Number of times to retransmit a resolver  query  for the
 	     first attempt to deliver a message [varies].
 
 
 	 resolver.retry.normal
 
 	     Number of times to retransmit a resolver  query  for all
 	     look-ups  except  the  first  delivery  attempt [varies].
 
 
 	 rset
 
 	     reply to RSET command [5m, none]
 
 
 	 starttls
 
 	     response to an SMTP STARTTLS command [1h]
 
 
 
      TimeZoneSpec (ttzinfo)
 
 	 Sets the local time zone info to  tzinfo,  for  example,
 	 "PST8PDT". Actually, if this is not set, the TZ environ- ment
 	 variable is  cleared  (so  the  system  default  is used);  if
 	 set but null, the user's TZ variable is used, and if set and
 	 non-null, the TZ variable is set to  this value.
 
 
      TLSSrvOptions
 
 	 If this option is 'V', then no  client  verification  is
 	 performed,that  is,  the  server  does  not  ask  for  a
 	 certificate.
 
 
      TrustedUser
 
 	 The user parameter can be a user name (looked up in  the
 	 passwd  map) or a numeric user id. Trusted user for file
 	 ownership and starting the  daemon.  If  set,  generated
 	 alias  databases  and the control socket (if configured) are
 	 automatically owned by this user.
 
 
      TryNullMXList (w)
 
 	 If you are the "best" (that is,  lowest  preference)  MX for a
 	 given host, you should normally detect this situa- tion and
 	 treat that condition specially,  by  forwarding the  mail to a
 	 UUCP feed, treating it as local, or what- ever.  However,  in
 	 some  cases   (such   as   Internet firewalls)  you  may  want
 	 to try to connect directly to that host as though it had no MX
 	 records at all. Setting this option causes sendmail to try
 	 this. The downside is that errors in your configuration are
 	 likely to be diag- nosed  as  "host unknown" or "message timed
 	 out" instead of something more meaningful. This option is
 	 deprecated.
 
 
      UnixFromLine or $l
 
 	 The "From " line used when sending to files or programs.
 
 
      UnsafeGroupWrites
 
 	 If set, group-writable :include: and .forward files  are
 	 considered  "unsafe", that is, programs and files cannot be
 	 directly referenced from such files.
 
 
      UseErrorsTo (l)
 
 	 If there is an Errors-To: header, sends  error  messages to
 	 the  addresses listed there. They normally go to the envelope
 	 sender. Use of this option causes  sendmail  to violate  RFC
 	 1123.  This  option is not recommended and deprecated.
 
 
      UseMSP
 
 	 Uses as mail submission program, that is,  allows  group
 	 writable queue files if the group is the same as that of
 	 a set-group-id sendmail binary.
 
 
      UserDatabaseSpec (U)
 
 	 Defines the name and location  of  the  file  containing User
 	 Database information.
 
 
      Verbose (v)
 
 	 Runs in verbose mode. If this is set,  sendmail  adjusts the
 	 HoldExpensive  and DeliveryMode options so that all mail is
 	 delivered completely in a single job so that you can  see the
 	 entire delivery process. The Verbose option should never be
 	 set in the  configuration  file;  it  is intended for command
 	 line use only.
 
 
      XscriptFileBufferSize
 
 	 Sets the threshold,  in  bytes,  before  a  memory-bases queue
 	 transcript file becomes disk-based. The default is 4096
 	 bytes.
 
 
 
      If the first character of the user name is a  vertical  bar, the
      rest  of the user name is used as the name of a program to pipe
      the mail to. It may be necessary to quote  the  name of  the
      user  to  keep sendmail from suppressing the blanks from between
      arguments.
 
 
      If invoked as newaliases, sendmail rebuilds the alias  data-
      base,  so  long as the /etc/mail/aliases* files are owned by root
      and root has exclusive write permission. If invoked  as mailq,
      sendmail prints the contents of the mail queue.
 
 OPERANDS
      address
 
 	 address of an intended recipient of  the  message  being
 	 sent.
 
 
 USAGE
      See largefile(5) for the  description  of  the  behavior  of
      sendmail  when encountering files greater than or equal to 2 Gbyte
      ( 2^31 bytes).
 
 
 EXIT STATUS
      sendmail returns an exit status describing what it did.  The codes
      are defined in /usr/include/sysexits.h.
 
      EX_OK
 
 	 Successful completion on all addresses.
 
 
      EX_NOUSER
 
 	 User name not recognized.
 
 
      EX_UNAVAILABLE
 
 	 Catchall. Necessary resources were not available.
 
 
      EX_SYNTAX
 
 	 Syntax error in address.
 
 
      EX_SOFTWARE
 
 	 Internal software error, including bad arguments.
 
 
      EX_OSERR
 
 	 Temporary operating system error, such as "cannot fork".
 
 
      EX_NOHOST
 
 	 Host name not recognized.
 
 
      EX_TEMPFAIL
 
 	 Message could not be sent immediately, but was queued.
 
 
 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
      No  environment  variables  are  used.  However,  sendmail's
      start-up    script,    invoked    by    svcadm(1M),    reads
      /etc/default/sendmail.  In  this  file,  if   the   variable
      ETRN_HOSTS  is set, the start-up script parses this variable and
      invokes etrn(1M) appropriately. ETRN_HOSTS should be  of the
      form:
 
        "s1:c1.1,c1.2        s2:c2.1 s3:c3.1,c3.2,c3.3"
 
      That is, white-space separated groups of server:client where
      client can be one or more comma-separated names. The :client part
      is optional. server is the name of the server to  prod; a  mail
      queue run is requested for each client name. This is comparable to
      running:
 
        /usr/lib/sendmail -qR client
 
      on the host server.
 
 
 FILES
      dead.letter
 
 	 Unmailable text
 
 
      /etc/default/sendmail
 
 	 Contains default settings. You can override some of  the
 	 settings by command line options.
 
 
      /etc/mail/aliases
 
 	 Mail aliases file (ASCII)
 
 
      /etc/mail/aliases.db
 
 	 Database of mail aliases (binary)
 
 
      /etc/mail/aliases.dir
 
 	 Database of mail aliases (binary)
 
 
      /etc/mail/aliases.pag
 
 	 Database of mail aliases (binary)
 
 
      /etc/mail/sendmail.cf
 
 	 Defines environment for sendmail
 
 
      /etc/mail/submit.cf
 
 	 Defines environment for MSP
 
 
      /etc/mail/trusted-users
 
 	 Lists users that are "trusted", that  is,  able  to  set
 	 their  envelope from address using -f without generating a
 	 warning message. Note that this file is  consulted  by the
 	 default   sendmail.cf,  but  not  by  the  default
 	 submit.cf,   in   which   the    line    referring    to
 	 /etc/mail/trusted-users  is  commented  out.  See  send-
 	 mail(4) for instructions on making changes to  submit.cf and
 	 sendmail.cf.
 
 
      /var/spool/clientmqueue/*
 
 	 Temporary files and queued mail
 
 
      /var/spool/mqueue/*
 
 	 Temporary files and queued mail
 
 
      ~/.forward
 
 	 List of recipients for forwarding messages
 
 
      /usr/include/libmilter/README
 
 	 Describes the steps needed to compile and run a filter
 
 
 ATTRIBUTES
      See attributes(5) for descriptions of the  following  attri-
      butes:
 
     +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
     |       ATTRIBUTE TYPE        |       ATTRIBUTE VALUE       |
     +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
     | Availability                | SUNWsndmu                   |
     +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
 
 
 SEE ALSO
      svcs(1), biff(1B),  mail(1),  mailq(1),  mailx(1),  nice(1),
      check-hostname(1M),     check-permissions(1M),     etrn(1M),
-     newaliases(1M),     svcadm(1M),     svccfg(1M),     fork(2),
-     getpwnam(3C),      getusershell(3C),      resolver(3RESOLV),
+     mailwrapper(1M), newaliases(1M),   svcadm(1M),   svccfg(1M),
+     fork(2), getpwnam(3C), getusershell(3C),  resolver(3RESOLV),
      aliases(4), hosts(4), sendmail(4), shells(4), attributes(5),
      largefile(5), smf(5), random(7D)
 
 
      tcpd(1M), hosts_access(4) in the SUNWtcpd package.
 
 
      RFC 2821 Simple Mail Transfer Protocol, John Klensin,  April
      2001.
 
 
      RFC 2822 Internet Message Format, Pete Resnick, April 2001.
 
 
      sendmail, Third Edition, Bryan Costales  with  Eric  Allman,
      O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 2003.
 
 
      http://www.sendmail.org
 
 
      http://www.milter.org
 
 NOTES
      The sendmail program requires a fully  qualified  host  name when
      starting. A script has been included to help verify if the host
      name is defined properly (see check-hostname(1M)).
 
 
      The permissions and the  ownership  of  several  directories have
      been changed in order to increase security. In particu- lar,
      access to /etc/mail and /var/spool/mqueue has been res- tricted.
 
 
      Security restrictions have been placed users using  .forward
      files  to pipe mail to a program or redirect mail to a file.  The
      default shell (as listed in /etc/passwd) of these  users must  be
      listed  in  /etc/shells. This restriction does not affect mail
      that is being redirected to another alias.
 
 
      Additional restrictions have been put in place  on  .forward and
      :include: files. These files and the directory structure that they
      are placed in cannot be group- or  world-writable.  See
      check-permissions(1M).
 
 
      If you have interfaces that map  to  domains  that  have  MX
      records that point to non-local destinations, you might need to
      enable the DontProbeInterfaces option to enable  delivery to
      those  destinations.  In  its  default startup behavior, sendmail
      probes each interface and adds  an  interface's  IP addresses,
      as  well as any domains that those addresses map to, to its list
      of domains that are  considered  local.  For domains  thus
      added,  being on the list of local domains is equivalent  to
      having  a  0-preference  MX   record,   with localhost  as  the
      MX  value. If this is not the result you want, enable
      DontProbeInterfaces.
