On Tue, 2005-11-08 at 23:36, Jay Moore wrote: > > > Bottom Line: Having found this trove of knowledge, I *think* my best > > > course of action is to fix (right after I find it) the sendmail startup > > > to remove the "-bd" option, > > > > Fine. Just don't bother others with complaints when mail within your > > own system (e.g., mail from cron jobs, mail from logwatch, etc.) > > just sits in /var/spool/clientmqueue and is never delivered. > > !?! Are you saying that running sendmail without "-bd" will cause this? Probably - anything that submits mail to the localhost via smtp will fail, and if you also take out the -q, or eliminat that process deliveries won't happen either. > According to the "sendmail Cookbook", "-bd" should not be used except > for mail servers. Ref Chap. 10, "Securing sendmail". They don't understand the setup where sendmail only listens on the localhost address. > > FWIW, sendmail is a service started by 'init' in run levels 2-5. The > > files and links controlling that are in /etc/rc.d/init.d and > > /etc/rc.d/rc?.d . Unless you've changed the default setup, sendmail > > accept connections only from 127.0.0.1 . > > As I stated previously, I have *not* changed my default setup for > running sendmail. And pardon my bitching, but why the f**k do I have to > hack a shell script to change the startup behavior? IMHO, this is BFU. What? There is nothing easier than editing a text file. If you aren't able to do that, how do you manage to type all these messages? Almost every command you do on unix/linux systems is parsed by the shell before starting. Learning how the shell works can pay off every time you use it. > Here's what I find in /etc/rc.d/init.d/sendmail... how would you suggest > I change this? I'd suggest you leave it alone until you understand how to make it better. It works well enough as-is. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx