1.\" 2.\" Copyright (c) 2008-2014, Simon Schubert <2@0x2c.org>. 3.\" Copyright (c) 2008 4.\" The DragonFly Project. All rights reserved. 5.\" 6.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 7.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 8.\" are met: 9.\" 10.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 11.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 12.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 13.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in 14.\" the documentation and/or other materials provided with the 15.\" distribution. 16.\" 3. Neither the name of The DragonFly Project nor the names of its 17.\" contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived 18.\" from this software without specific, prior written permission. 19.\" 20.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS 21.\" ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT 22.\" LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS 23.\" FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE 24.\" COPYRIGHT HOLDERS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, 25.\" INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, 26.\" BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; 27.\" LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED 28.\" AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, 29.\" OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT 30.\" OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 31.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 32.\" 33.Dd February 13, 2014 34.Dt DMA 8 35.Os 36.Sh NAME 37.Nm dma 38.Nd DragonFly Mail Agent 39.Sh SYNOPSIS 40.Nm 41.Op Fl DiOt 42.Op Fl A Ns Ar mode 43.Op Fl b Ns Ar mode 44.Op Fl f Ar sender 45.Op Fl L Ar tag 46.Op Fl o Ns Ar option 47.Op Fl r Ar sender 48.Op Fl q Ns Op Ar arg 49.Op Ar recipient ... 50.Sh DESCRIPTION 51.Nm 52is a small Mail Transport Agent (MTA), designed for home and office use. 53It accepts mails from locally installed Mail User Agents (MUA) and 54delivers the mails either locally or to a remote destination. 55Remote delivery includes several features like TLS/SSL support and SMTP 56authentication. 57.Pp 58.Nm 59is not intended as a replacement for real, big MTAs like 60.Xr sendmail 8 61or 62.Xr postfix 1 . 63Consequently, 64.Nm 65does not listen on port 25 for incoming connections. 66.Pp 67The options are as follows: 68.Bl -tag -width indent 69.It Fl A Ns Ar mode 70.Fl \&Ac 71acts as a compatibility option for sendmail. 72.It Fl b Ns Ar mode 73.Bl -tag -width indent 74.It Fl bp 75List all mails currently stored in the mail queue. 76.It Fl bq 77Queue the mail, but don't attempt to deliver it. 78See also the 79.Sq DEFER 80config file setting below. 81.El 82.Pp 83All other 84.Ar mode Ns 85s are ignored. 86.It Fl D 87Don't run in the background. 88Useful for debugging. 89.It Fl f Ar sender 90Set sender address (envelope-from) to 91.Ar sender . 92This overrides the value of the 93.Ev EMAIL 94environment variable, but is overridden by the 95.Sq MASQUERADE 96config file setting. 97.It Fl i 98Ignore dots alone on lines by themselves in incoming messages. 99This should be set if you are reading data from a file. 100.It Fl L Ar tag 101Set the identifier used in syslog messages to the supplied 102.Ar tag . 103This is a compatibility option for sendmail. 104.It Fl O 105This is a compatibility option for sendmail. 106.It Fl o Ns Ar option 107Specifying 108.Fl oi 109is synonymous to 110.Fl i . 111All other options are ignored. 112.It Fl q Ns Op Ar arg 113Process saved messages in the queue. 114The argument is optional and ignored. 115.It Fl r Ar sender 116Same as 117.Fl f . 118.It Fl t 119Obtain recipient addresses from the message header. 120.Nm 121will parse the 122.Li To: , 123.Li Cc: , 124and 125.Li Bcc: 126headers. 127The 128.Li Bcc: 129header will be removed independent of whether 130.Fl t 131is specified or not. 132.El 133.Sh CONFIGURATION 134.Nm 135can be configured with two config files: 136.Pp 137.Bl -bullet -compact 138.It 139auth.conf 140.It 141dma.conf 142.El 143.Pp 144These two files are stored per default in 145.Pa /etc/dma . 146.Sh FILE FORMAT 147Every file contains parameters of the form 148.Sq name value . 149Lines containing boolean values are set to 150.Sq NO 151if the line is commented and to 152.Sq YES 153if the line is uncommented. 154Empty lines or lines beginning with a 155.Sq # 156are ignored. 157Parameter names and their values are case sensitive. 158.Sh PARAMETERS 159.Ss auth.conf 160SMTP authentication can be configured in 161.Pa auth.conf . 162Each line has the format 163.Dq Li user|smarthost:password . 164.Pp 165.Nm 166uses the recipient MTA hostname and finds the first entry in the auth.conf 167file that matches the smarthost value or the hostname of the recipient 168address. 169It then uses the user and password to authenticate with the smarthost. 170.Pp 171Note, that the only authentication method supported is CRAM-MD5. 172The receiving MTA must be configured to accept CRAM-MD5 authentication. 173.Ss dma.conf 174Most of the behaviour of 175.Nm 176can be configured in 177.Pa dma.conf . 178.Bl -tag -width 4n 179.It Ic SMARTHOST Xo 180(string, default=empty) 181.Xc 182If you want to send outgoing mails via a smarthost, set this variable to 183your smarthosts address. 184.It Ic PORT Xo 185(numeric, default=25) 186.Xc 187Use this port to deliver remote emails. 188Only useful together with the 189.Sq SMARTHOST 190option, because 191.Nm 192will deliver all mails to this port, regardless of whether a smarthost is set 193or not. 194.It Ic ALIASES Xo 195(string, default=/etc/aliases) 196.Xc 197Path to the local aliases file. 198Just stick with the default. 199The aliases file is of the format 200.Dl nam: dest1 dest2 ... 201In this case, mails to 202.Li nam 203will instead be delivered to 204.Li dest1 205and 206.Li dest2 , 207which in turn could be entries in 208.Pa /etc/aliases . 209The special name 210.Ql * 211can be used to create a catch-all alias, which gets used if no other 212matching alias is found. 213Use the catch-all alias only if you don't want any local mail to be 214delivered. 215.It Ic SPOOLDIR Xo 216(string, default=/var/spool/dma) 217.Xc 218Path to 219.Nm Ap s 220spool directory. 221Just stick with the default. 222.It Ic AUTHPATH Xo 223(string, default=not set) 224.Xc 225Path to the 226.Sq auth.conf 227file. 228.It Ic SECURETRANSFER Xo 229(boolean, default=commented) 230.Xc 231Uncomment if you want TLS/SSL secured transfer. 232.It Ic STARTTLS Xo 233(boolean, default=commented) 234.Xc 235Uncomment if you want to use STARTTLS. 236Only useful together with 237.Sq SECURETRANSFER . 238.It Ic FINGERPRINT Xo 239Pin the server certificate by specifying its SHA256 fingerprint. 240Only makes sense if you use a smarthost. 241.It Ic OPPORTUNISTIC_TLS Xo 242(boolean, default=commented) 243.Xc 244Uncomment if you want to allow the STARTTLS negotiation to fail. 245Most useful when 246.Nm 247is used without a smarthost, delivering remote messages directly to 248the outside mail exchangers; in opportunistic TLS mode, the connection will 249be encrypted if the remote server supports STARTTLS, but an unencrypted 250delivery will still be made if the negotiation fails. 251Only useful together with 252.Sq SECURETRANSFER 253and 254.Sq STARTTLS . 255.It Ic CERTFILE Xo 256(string, default=empty) 257.Xc 258Path to your SSL certificate file. 259.It Ic SECURE Xo 260(boolean, default=commented) 261.Xc 262Uncomment this entry and change it to 263.Sq INSECURE 264to use plain text SMTP login over an insecure connection. 265You have to rename this variable manually to prevent that you send your 266password accidentally over an insecure connection. 267.It Ic DEFER Xo 268(boolean, default=commented) 269.Xc 270Uncomment if you want that 271.Nm 272defers your mail. 273You have to flush your mail queue manually with the 274.Fl q 275option. 276This option is handy if you are behind a dialup line. 277.It Ic FULLBOUNCE Xo 278(boolean, default=commented) 279.Xc 280Uncomment if you want the bounce message to include the complete original 281message, not just the headers. 282.It Ic MAILNAME Xo 283(string, default=empty) 284.Xc 285The internet hostname 286.Nm 287uses to identify the host. 288If not set or empty, the result of 289.Xr gethostname 3 290is used. 291If 292.Sq MAILNAME 293is an absolute path to a file, the first line of this file will be used 294as the hostname. 295.It Ic MASQUERADE Xo 296(string, default=empty) 297.Xc 298Masquerade the envelope-from addresses with this address/hostname. 299Use this setting if mails are not accepted by destination mail servers 300because your sender domain is invalid. 301This setting overrides the 302.Fl f 303flag and the 304.Ev EMAIL 305environment variable. 306.Pp 307If 308.Sq MASQUERADE 309does not contain a 310.Li @ 311sign, the string is interpreted as a host name. 312For example, setting 313.Sq MASQUERADE 314to 315.Ql john@ 316on host 317.Ql hamlet 318will send all mails as 319.Ql john@hamlet ; 320setting it to 321.Ql percolator 322will send all mails as 323.Ql Sm off Va username @percolator . 324.Sm on 325.It Ic NULLCLIENT Xo 326.Xc 327Bypass aliases and local delivery, and instead forward all mails to 328the defined 329.Sq SMARTHOST . 330.Sq NULLCLIENT 331requires 332.Sq SMARTHOST 333to be set. 334.El 335.Ss Environment variables 336The behavior of 337.Nm 338can be influenced by some environment variables. 339.Bl -tag -width 4n 340.It Ev EMAIL Xo 341.Xc 342Used to set the sender address (envelope-from). 343Use a plain address, in the form of 344.Li user@example.com . 345This value will be overridden when the 346.Sq MASQUERADE 347config file setting or the 348.Fl f 349flag is used. 350.El 351.Sh SEE ALSO 352.Xr mailwrapper 8 , 353.Xr sendmail 8 354.Rs 355.%A "J. B. Postel" 356.%T "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol" 357.%O RFC 821 358.Re 359.Rs 360.%A "J. Myers" 361.%T "SMTP Service Extension for Authentication" 362.%O RFC 2554 363.Re 364.Rs 365.%A "P. Hoffman" 366.%T "SMTP Service Extension for Secure SMTP over TLS" 367.%O RFC 2487 368.Re 369.Sh HISTORY 370The 371.Nm 372utility first appeared in 373.Dx 1.11 . 374.Sh AUTHORS 375.An -nosplit 376.Nm 377was written by 378.An Matthias Schmidt Aq Mt matthias@dragonflybsd.org 379and 380.An Simon Schubert Aq Mt 2@0x2c.org . 381