On 5/21/07, Jerry McAllister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, May 21, 2007 at 01:52:34PM -0400, Maxim Khitrov wrote:

> On 5/21/07, Per olof Ljungmark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Maxim Khitrov wrote:
> >> Hi everyone,
> >>
> >> I have what I hope is a rather simple question. I'm not very familiar
> >> with this area of system administration, so hopefully someone here can
> >> point me in the right direction. I just got myself a FreeBSD VPS to
> >> host a few of my websites. I need the processes on the server (PHP,
> >> for example) to be able to send e-mail via /usr/sbin/sendmail. The
> >> thing is that I don't actually want to run a mail server. My vps is
> >> severely limited on disk space, and any mail I get I'll forward to my
> >> gmail account anyway. I can obviously configure sendmail or postfix to
> >> do this for me, but this seems a bit excessive for what I'm trying to
> >> do. The mail load will be very light, and I'd prefer to conserve disk
> >> space. Is there a port, perhaps, that will simply forward all mail
> >> transmitted to /usr/sbin/sendmail to the destination SMTP server? The
> >> only other thing it has to be able to do is use the aliases file to
> >> determine the real e-mail of root, for example.
> >>
> >> Like I said, I'm not too familiar with setting up mail servers, so if
> >> this makes no sense to you please suggest an alternative. Just to
> >> recap, I don't need local mail storage and I don't need the server to
> >> accept mail from anything other than the local processes running on
> >> the server. Just need it to read the destination e-mail address (or
> >> get it via aliases), connect to the MX server for that domain, and
> >> transmit the message. If there isn't any simple daemon that will do
> >> this, can you recommend either how to configure sendmail or something
> >> like postfix to do this? The idea is to minimize resource usage (disk
> >> space, memory, cpu time).
> >
> >Sounds to me you just have to enter the proper aliases (in
> >/etc/mail/aliases), run "newaliases", and you're done, i.e. point
> >everything to your own e-mail address?
> >
>
> Well I need sendmail running for that correct? Right now I've got it
> disabled with sendmail_enable="NONE" in my rc.conf. I was hoping to
> use something a bit less resource intensive, and with a better
> security history. I am not really at all familiar with sendmail. I
> tried figuring out how to configure and tune it properly in the past,
> and realized that I have neither the time or patience for that task. I
> know that it will probably work the way it comes by default with
> FreeBSD, but I really don't like running daemons that I don't
> understand or don't know how to configure and monitor.
>
> If this is the most efficient solution to my problem, then I guess
> I'll head over to the handbook and try to figure sendmail out. If you
> have other suggestions, by all means, let me know. Otherwise, are
> there at least parts of sendmail that I can disable?

There is nothing wrong with using sendmail.
If you want to 'receive' email at the address and forward it to
some other address, then there is nothing you have to do to configure it.
Just leave it at its defaults.    Then put the aliases in as indicated.

If you want to be able to send out Email - say from processes, but
receive no email, not even to forward, then set it to 'no' in rc.conf.

////jerry

Fair enough, I'll give that a try. Just for my own info, when I set
sendmail_enable to NO and start it up I get sendmail_submit and
sendmail_clientmqueue starting. Am I correct in assuming that
clientmqueue is what accepts the messages from the processes on the
system (places them in /var/spool/mqueue), and submit is what actually
delivers them to other servers?

Thanks for your help guys!
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