Thanks for the info but I need to know more about this stuff. its completely confusing for me. I will research and give it try. Thanks On 7/12/06, Garry T. Williams <gtwilliams@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Tuesday 11 July 2006 11:51, Deepak Shrestha wrote: > My fedora 5 installation is working fine except some annoying boot > time. During boot, when it reaches the part of starting sendmail it > takes about 2 minutes and another 1 minute for the sm_client. This is probably (as pointed out by Paul) a name resolution issue. The problem occurs when sendmail tries to determine its fully- qualified DNS name. If your system is on a DSL, cable, or dial-up connection, then this is futile. Even if the ISP provides the name, it won't be what you want on mail sent by your system. So you have to "fool" sendmail by telling a bit of a lie. First, you need to install sendmail-cf, if you do not already have it installed: $ sudo yum install sendmail-cf Next, you need to reconfigure sendmail. This involves editing the /etc/mail/sendmail.mc file and then regenerating its configuration file from that file and then restarting sendmail. We need to tell sendmail its fully-qualified DNS name, have it masquerade all mail from your system as if it were originating from your ISP's domain, tell it not to probe your system's network interfaces for their DNS names, and probably tell it to use your ISP's mail server as a smart relay instead of attempting to deliver mail directly. (This last bit is necessary because a lot of admins configure their mail systems to refuse mail from IP addresses that "live" on ISP DSL and dial-up networks. This prevents zombie mail relays, operated by spammers, from sending mail.) This procedure will vary a bit from system to system, but I'll show you my configuration so you can get the general idea. Google will help find a more thorough procedure. /etc/mail/senmail.mc -------------------- $ diff -u sendmail.mc.rpmnew sendmail.mc --- sendmail.mc.rpmnew 2006-02-17 12:05:53.000000000 -0500 +++ sendmail.mc 2006-07-12 06:39:40.000000000 -0400 @@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ dnl # Uncomment and edit the following line if your outgoing mail needs to dnl # be sent out through an external mail server: dnl # -dnl define(`SMART_HOST',`smtp.your.provider') +define(`SMART_HOST',`[mail.bellsouth.net]') dnl # define(`confDEF_USER_ID',``8:12'')dnl dnl define(`confAUTO_REBUILD')dnl @@ -153,11 +153,13 @@ dnl # The following example makes mail from this host and any additional dnl # specified domains appear to be sent from mydomain.com dnl # -dnl MASQUERADE_AS(`mydomain.com')dnl +MASQUERADE_AS(`bellsouth.net')dnl dnl # dnl # masquerade not just the headers, but the envelope as well dnl # -dnl FEATURE(masquerade_envelope)dnl +FEATURE(masquerade_envelope)dnl +FEATURE(`allmasquerade')dnl +FEATURE(`always_add_domain')dnl dnl # dnl # masquerade not just @mydomainalias.com, but @*.mydomainalias.com as well dnl # @@ -167,6 +169,8 @@ dnl MASQUERADE_DOMAIN(localhost.localdomain)dnl dnl MASQUERADE_DOMAIN(mydomainalias.com)dnl dnl MASQUERADE_DOMAIN(mydomain.lan)dnl +define(`confDONT_PROBE_INTERFACES', `True')dnl +define(`confDOMAIN_NAME', `tfr.bellsouth.net')dnl MAILER(smtp)dnl MAILER(procmail)dnl dnl MAILER(cyrusv2)dnl $ Since you lied to sendmail about your system's fully-qualified DNS name, you need to provide a local name service for that name. You do this by adding the name to your /etc/hosts file: $ grep tfr /etc/hosts 127.0.0.1 localhost tfr dspam tfr.bellsouth.net $ You also need to add your login ID to the /etc/mail/virtusertable file so that outbound mail from you will be rewritten as having come from your ISP mail account: $ cat virtusertable garry <my_isp_user_id>@bellsouth.net root <my_isp_user_id>@bellsouth.net $ (Substitute your ISP mail account user ID for the `<my_isp_user_id>' in the above.) Add any other local users (and their ISP mail account user IDs) you have on your system to this file so that they get their outbound mail rewritten as well. Now you need to regenerate your senmail.cf file from the updated senmail.mc file and create the virtusertable database file. This is easy because a make file will automatically do that for you: $ sudo make -C /etc/mail/Makefile Finally, tell sendmail to restart with its new configuration: $ sudo service sendmail restart -- Garry T. Williams --- +1 678 656-4579 -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list