c4739a80fb94549212e1c6a62acfd744c9ae7bab
[exim.git] / doc / doc-docbook / spec.xfpt
1 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2 . This is the primary source of the Exim Manual. It is an xfpt document that is
3 . converted into DocBook XML for subsequent conversion into printing and online
4 . formats. The markup used herein is "standard" xfpt markup, with some extras.
5 . The markup is summarized in a file called Markup.txt.
6 .
7 . WARNING: When you use the .new macro, make sure it appears *before* any
8 . adjacent index items; otherwise you get an empty "paragraph" which causes
9 . unwanted vertical space.
10 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
11
12 .include stdflags
13 .include stdmacs
14
15 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
16 . This outputs the standard DocBook boilerplate.
17 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
18
19 .docbook
20
21 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
22 . These lines are processing instructions for the Simple DocBook Processor that
23 . Philip Hazel has developed as a less cumbersome way of making PostScript and
24 . PDFs than using xmlto and fop. They will be ignored by all other XML
25 . processors.
26 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
27
28 .literal xml
29 <?sdop
30 foot_right_recto="&chaptertitle; (&chapternumber;)"
31 foot_right_verso="&chaptertitle; (&chapternumber;)"
32 toc_chapter_blanks="yes,yes"
33 table_warn_overflow="overprint"
34 ?>
35 .literal off
36
37 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
38 . This generate the outermost <book> element that wraps then entire document.
39 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
40
41 .book
42
43 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
44 . These definitions set some parameters and save some typing. Remember that
45 . the <bookinfo> element must also be updated for each new edition.
46 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
47
48 .set previousversion "4.75"
49 .set version "4.77"
50
51 .set ACL "access control lists (ACLs)"
52 .set I "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"
53
54
55 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
56 . Additional xfpt markup used by this document, over and above the default
57 . provided in the xfpt library.
58 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
59
60 . --- Override the &$ flag to automatically insert a $ with the variable name
61
62 .flag &$ $& "<varname>$" "</varname>"
63
64 . --- Short flags for daggers in option headings. They will always be inside
65 . --- an italic string, but we want the daggers to be roman.
66
67 .flag &!! "</emphasis>&dagger;<emphasis>"
68 .flag &!? "</emphasis>&Dagger;<emphasis>"
69
70 . --- A macro for an Exim option definition heading, generating a one-line
71 . --- table with four columns. For cases when the option name is given with
72 . --- a space, so that it can be split, a fifth argument is used for the
73 . --- index entry.
74
75 .macro option
76 .arg 5
77 .oindex "&%$5%&"
78 .endarg
79 .arg -5
80 .oindex "&%$1%&"
81 .endarg
82 .itable all 0 0 4 8* left 6* center 6* center 6* right
83 .row "&%$1%&" "Use: &'$2'&" "Type: &'$3'&" "Default: &'$4'&"
84 .endtable
85 .endmacro
86
87 . --- A macro for the common 2-column tables. The width of the first column
88 . --- is suitable for the many tables at the start of the main options chapter;
89 . --- the small number of other 2-column tables override it.
90
91 .macro table2 196pt 254pt
92 .itable none 0 0 2 $1 left $2 left
93 .endmacro
94
95 . --- A macro that generates .row, but puts &I; at the start of the first
96 . --- argument, thus indenting it. Assume a minimum of two arguments, and
97 . --- allow up to four arguments, which is as many as we'll ever need.
98
99 .macro irow
100 .arg 4
101 .row "&I;$1" "$2" "$3" "$4"
102 .endarg
103 .arg -4
104 .arg 3
105 .row "&I;$1" "$2" "$3"
106 .endarg
107 .arg -3
108 .row "&I;$1" "$2"
109 .endarg
110 .endarg
111 .endmacro
112
113 . --- Macros for option, variable, and concept index entries. For a "range"
114 . --- style of entry, use .scindex for the start and .ecindex for the end. The
115 . --- first argument of .scindex and the only argument of .ecindex must be the
116 . --- ID that ties them together.
117
118 .macro cindex
119 &<indexterm role="concept">&
120 &<primary>&$1&</primary>&
121 .arg 2
122 &<secondary>&$2&</secondary>&
123 .endarg
124 &</indexterm>&
125 .endmacro
126
127 .macro scindex
128 &<indexterm role="concept" id="$1" class="startofrange">&
129 &<primary>&$2&</primary>&
130 .arg 3
131 &<secondary>&$3&</secondary>&
132 .endarg
133 &</indexterm>&
134 .endmacro
135
136 .macro ecindex
137 &<indexterm role="concept" startref="$1" class="endofrange"/>&
138 .endmacro
139
140 .macro oindex
141 &<indexterm role="option">&
142 &<primary>&$1&</primary>&
143 .arg 2
144 &<secondary>&$2&</secondary>&
145 .endarg
146 &</indexterm>&
147 .endmacro
148
149 .macro vindex
150 &<indexterm role="variable">&
151 &<primary>&$1&</primary>&
152 .arg 2
153 &<secondary>&$2&</secondary>&
154 .endarg
155 &</indexterm>&
156 .endmacro
157
158 .macro index
159 .echo "** Don't use .index; use .cindex or .oindex or .vindex"
160 .endmacro
161 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
162
163
164 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
165 . The <bookinfo> element is removed from the XML before processing for Ascii
166 . output formats.
167 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
168
169 .literal xml
170 <bookinfo>
171 <title>Specification of the Exim Mail Transfer Agent</title>
172 <titleabbrev>The Exim MTA</titleabbrev>
173 <date>06 May 2011</date>
174 <author><firstname>Exim</firstname><surname>Maintainers</surname></author>
175 <authorinitials>EM</authorinitials>
176 <revhistory><revision>
177 <revnumber>4.77</revnumber>
178 <date>10 Oct 2011</date>
179 <authorinitials>EM</authorinitials>
180 </revision></revhistory>
181 <copyright><year>2011</year><holder>University of Cambridge</holder></copyright>
182 </bookinfo>
183 .literal off
184
185
186 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
187 . This chunk of literal XML implements index entries of the form "x, see y" and
188 . "x, see also y". However, the DocBook DTD doesn't allow <indexterm> entries
189 . at the top level, so we have to put the .chapter directive first.
190 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
191
192 .chapter "Introduction" "CHID1"
193 .literal xml
194
195 <indexterm role="variable">
196 <primary>$1, $2, etc.</primary>
197 <see><emphasis>numerical variables</emphasis></see>
198 </indexterm>
199 <indexterm role="concept">
200 <primary>address</primary>
201 <secondary>rewriting</secondary>
202 <see><emphasis>rewriting</emphasis></see>
203 </indexterm>
204 <indexterm role="concept">
205 <primary>Bounce Address Tag Validation</primary>
206 <see><emphasis>BATV</emphasis></see>
207 </indexterm>
208 <indexterm role="concept">
209 <primary>Client SMTP Authorization</primary>
210 <see><emphasis>CSA</emphasis></see>
211 </indexterm>
212 <indexterm role="concept">
213 <primary>CR character</primary>
214 <see><emphasis>carriage return</emphasis></see>
215 </indexterm>
216 <indexterm role="concept">
217 <primary>CRL</primary>
218 <see><emphasis>certificate revocation list</emphasis></see>
219 </indexterm>
220 <indexterm role="concept">
221 <primary>delivery</primary>
222 <secondary>failure report</secondary>
223 <see><emphasis>bounce message</emphasis></see>
224 </indexterm>
225 <indexterm role="concept">
226 <primary>dialup</primary>
227 <see><emphasis>intermittently connected hosts</emphasis></see>
228 </indexterm>
229 <indexterm role="concept">
230 <primary>exiscan</primary>
231 <see><emphasis>content scanning</emphasis></see>
232 </indexterm>
233 <indexterm role="concept">
234 <primary>failover</primary>
235 <see><emphasis>fallback</emphasis></see>
236 </indexterm>
237 <indexterm role="concept">
238 <primary>fallover</primary>
239 <see><emphasis>fallback</emphasis></see>
240 </indexterm>
241 <indexterm role="concept">
242 <primary>filter</primary>
243 <secondary>Sieve</secondary>
244 <see><emphasis>Sieve filter</emphasis></see>
245 </indexterm>
246 <indexterm role="concept">
247 <primary>ident</primary>
248 <see><emphasis>RFC 1413</emphasis></see>
249 </indexterm>
250 <indexterm role="concept">
251 <primary>LF character</primary>
252 <see><emphasis>linefeed</emphasis></see>
253 </indexterm>
254 <indexterm role="concept">
255 <primary>maximum</primary>
256 <seealso><emphasis>limit</emphasis></seealso>
257 </indexterm>
258 <indexterm role="concept">
259 <primary>monitor</primary>
260 <see><emphasis>Exim monitor</emphasis></see>
261 </indexterm>
262 <indexterm role="concept">
263 <primary>no_<emphasis>xxx</emphasis></primary>
264 <see>entry for xxx</see>
265 </indexterm>
266 <indexterm role="concept">
267 <primary>NUL</primary>
268 <see><emphasis>binary zero</emphasis></see>
269 </indexterm>
270 <indexterm role="concept">
271 <primary>passwd file</primary>
272 <see><emphasis>/etc/passwd</emphasis></see>
273 </indexterm>
274 <indexterm role="concept">
275 <primary>process id</primary>
276 <see><emphasis>pid</emphasis></see>
277 </indexterm>
278 <indexterm role="concept">
279 <primary>RBL</primary>
280 <see><emphasis>DNS list</emphasis></see>
281 </indexterm>
282 <indexterm role="concept">
283 <primary>redirection</primary>
284 <see><emphasis>address redirection</emphasis></see>
285 </indexterm>
286 <indexterm role="concept">
287 <primary>return path</primary>
288 <seealso><emphasis>envelope sender</emphasis></seealso>
289 </indexterm>
290 <indexterm role="concept">
291 <primary>scanning</primary>
292 <see><emphasis>content scanning</emphasis></see>
293 </indexterm>
294 <indexterm role="concept">
295 <primary>SSL</primary>
296 <see><emphasis>TLS</emphasis></see>
297 </indexterm>
298 <indexterm role="concept">
299 <primary>string</primary>
300 <secondary>expansion</secondary>
301 <see><emphasis>expansion</emphasis></see>
302 </indexterm>
303 <indexterm role="concept">
304 <primary>top bit</primary>
305 <see><emphasis>8-bit characters</emphasis></see>
306 </indexterm>
307 <indexterm role="concept">
308 <primary>variables</primary>
309 <see><emphasis>expansion, variables</emphasis></see>
310 </indexterm>
311 <indexterm role="concept">
312 <primary>zero, binary</primary>
313 <see><emphasis>binary zero</emphasis></see>
314 </indexterm>
315
316 .literal off
317
318
319 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
320 . This is the real start of the first chapter. See the comment above as to why
321 . we can't have the .chapter line here.
322 . chapter "Introduction"
323 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
324
325 Exim is a mail transfer agent (MTA) for hosts that are running Unix or
326 Unix-like operating systems. It was designed on the assumption that it would be
327 run on hosts that are permanently connected to the Internet. However, it can be
328 used on intermittently connected hosts with suitable configuration adjustments.
329
330 Configuration files currently exist for the following operating systems: AIX,
331 BSD/OS (aka BSDI), Darwin (Mac OS X), DGUX, Dragonfly, FreeBSD, GNU/Hurd,
332 GNU/Linux, HI-OSF (Hitachi), HI-UX, HP-UX, IRIX, MIPS RISCOS, NetBSD, OpenBSD,
333 OpenUNIX, QNX, SCO, SCO SVR4.2 (aka UNIX-SV), Solaris (aka SunOS5), SunOS4,
334 Tru64-Unix (formerly Digital UNIX, formerly DEC-OSF1), Ultrix, and Unixware.
335 Some of these operating systems are no longer current and cannot easily be
336 tested, so the configuration files may no longer work in practice.
337
338 There are also configuration files for compiling Exim in the Cygwin environment
339 that can be installed on systems running Windows. However, this document does
340 not contain any information about running Exim in the Cygwin environment.
341
342 The terms and conditions for the use and distribution of Exim are contained in
343 the file &_NOTICE_&. Exim is distributed under the terms of the GNU General
344 Public Licence, a copy of which may be found in the file &_LICENCE_&.
345
346 The use, supply or promotion of Exim for the purpose of sending bulk,
347 unsolicited electronic mail is incompatible with the basic aims of the program,
348 which revolve around the free provision of a service that enhances the quality
349 of personal communications. The author of Exim regards indiscriminate
350 mass-mailing as an antisocial, irresponsible abuse of the Internet.
351
352 Exim owes a great deal to Smail 3 and its author, Ron Karr. Without the
353 experience of running and working on the Smail 3 code, I could never have
354 contemplated starting to write a new MTA. Many of the ideas and user interfaces
355 were originally taken from Smail 3, though the actual code of Exim is entirely
356 new, and has developed far beyond the initial concept.
357
358 Many people, both in Cambridge and around the world, have contributed to the
359 development and the testing of Exim, and to porting it to various operating
360 systems. I am grateful to them all. The distribution now contains a file called
361 &_ACKNOWLEDGMENTS_&, in which I have started recording the names of
362 contributors.
363
364
365 .section "Exim documentation" "SECID1"
366 . Keep this example change bar when updating the documentation!
367
368 .new
369 .cindex "documentation"
370 This edition of the Exim specification applies to version &version; of Exim.
371 Substantive changes from the &previousversion; edition are marked in some
372 renditions of the document; this paragraph is so marked if the rendition is
373 capable of showing a change indicator.
374 .wen
375
376 This document is very much a reference manual; it is not a tutorial. The reader
377 is expected to have some familiarity with the SMTP mail transfer protocol and
378 with general Unix system administration. Although there are some discussions
379 and examples in places, the information is mostly organized in a way that makes
380 it easy to look up, rather than in a natural order for sequential reading.
381 Furthermore, the manual aims to cover every aspect of Exim in detail, including
382 a number of rarely-used, special-purpose features that are unlikely to be of
383 very wide interest.
384
385 .cindex "books about Exim"
386 An &"easier"& discussion of Exim which provides more in-depth explanatory,
387 introductory, and tutorial material can be found in a book entitled &'The Exim
388 SMTP Mail Server'& (second edition, 2007), published by UIT Cambridge
389 (&url(http://www.uit.co.uk/exim-book/)).
390
391 This book also contains a chapter that gives a general introduction to SMTP and
392 Internet mail. Inevitably, however, the book is unlikely to be fully up-to-date
393 with the latest release of Exim. (Note that the earlier book about Exim,
394 published by O'Reilly, covers Exim 3, and many things have changed in Exim 4.)
395
396 .cindex "Debian" "information sources"
397 If you are using a Debian distribution of Exim, you will find information about
398 Debian-specific features in the file
399 &_/usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian_&.
400 The command &(man update-exim.conf)& is another source of Debian-specific
401 information.
402
403 .cindex "&_doc/NewStuff_&"
404 .cindex "&_doc/ChangeLog_&"
405 .cindex "change log"
406 As the program develops, there may be features in newer versions that have not
407 yet made it into this document, which is updated only when the most significant
408 digit of the fractional part of the version number changes. Specifications of
409 new features that are not yet in this manual are placed in the file
410 &_doc/NewStuff_& in the Exim distribution.
411
412 Some features may be classified as &"experimental"&. These may change
413 incompatibly while they are developing, or even be withdrawn. For this reason,
414 they are not documented in this manual. Information about experimental features
415 can be found in the file &_doc/experimental.txt_&.
416
417 All changes to the program (whether new features, bug fixes, or other kinds of
418 change) are noted briefly in the file called &_doc/ChangeLog_&.
419
420 .cindex "&_doc/spec.txt_&"
421 This specification itself is available as an ASCII file in &_doc/spec.txt_& so
422 that it can easily be searched with a text editor. Other files in the &_doc_&
423 directory are:
424
425 .table2 100pt
426 .row &_OptionLists.txt_& "list of all options in alphabetical order"
427 .row &_dbm.discuss.txt_& "discussion about DBM libraries"
428 .row &_exim.8_& "a man page of Exim's command line options"
429 .row &_experimental.txt_& "documentation of experimental features"
430 .row &_filter.txt_& "specification of the filter language"
431 .row &_Exim3.upgrade_& "upgrade notes from release 2 to release 3"
432 .row &_Exim4.upgrade_& "upgrade notes from release 3 to release 4"
433 .endtable
434
435 The main specification and the specification of the filtering language are also
436 available in other formats (HTML, PostScript, PDF, and Texinfo). Section
437 &<<SECTavail>>& below tells you how to get hold of these.
438
439
440
441 .section "FTP and web sites" "SECID2"
442 .cindex "web site"
443 .cindex "FTP site"
444 The primary site for Exim source distributions is currently the University of
445 Cambridge's FTP site, whose contents are described in &'Where to find the Exim
446 distribution'& below. In addition, there is a web site and an FTP site at
447 &%exim.org%&. These are now also hosted at the University of Cambridge. The
448 &%exim.org%& site was previously hosted for a number of years by Energis
449 Squared, formerly Planet Online Ltd, whose support I gratefully acknowledge.
450
451 .cindex "wiki"
452 .cindex "FAQ"
453 As well as Exim distribution tar files, the Exim web site contains a number of
454 differently formatted versions of the documentation. A recent addition to the
455 online information is the Exim wiki (&url(http://wiki.exim.org)),
456 which contains what used to be a separate FAQ, as well as various other
457 examples, tips, and know-how that have been contributed by Exim users.
458
459 .cindex Bugzilla
460 An Exim Bugzilla exists at &url(http://bugs.exim.org). You can use
461 this to report bugs, and also to add items to the wish list. Please search
462 first to check that you are not duplicating a previous entry.
463
464
465
466 .section "Mailing lists" "SECID3"
467 .cindex "mailing lists" "for Exim users"
468 The following Exim mailing lists exist:
469
470 .table2 140pt
471 .row &'exim-announce@exim.org'& "Moderated, low volume announcements list"
472 .row &'exim-users@exim.org'& "General discussion list"
473 .row &'exim-dev@exim.org'& "Discussion of bugs, enhancements, etc."
474 .row &'exim-cvs@exim.org'& "Automated commit messages from the VCS"
475 .endtable
476
477 You can subscribe to these lists, change your existing subscriptions, and view
478 or search the archives via the mailing lists link on the Exim home page.
479 .cindex "Debian" "mailing list for"
480 If you are using a Debian distribution of Exim, you may wish to subscribe to
481 the Debian-specific mailing list &'pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org'&
482 via this web page:
483 .display
484 &url(http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users)
485 .endd
486 Please ask Debian-specific questions on this list and not on the general Exim
487 lists.
488
489 .section "Exim training" "SECID4"
490 .cindex "training courses"
491 Training courses in Cambridge (UK) used to be run annually by the author of
492 Exim, before he retired. At the time of writing, there are no plans to run
493 further Exim courses in Cambridge. However, if that changes, relevant
494 information will be posted at &url(http://www-tus.csx.cam.ac.uk/courses/exim/).
495
496 .section "Bug reports" "SECID5"
497 .cindex "bug reports"
498 .cindex "reporting bugs"
499 Reports of obvious bugs can be emailed to &'bugs@exim.org'& or reported
500 via the Bugzilla (&url(http://bugs.exim.org)). However, if you are unsure
501 whether some behaviour is a bug or not, the best thing to do is to post a
502 message to the &'exim-dev'& mailing list and have it discussed.
503
504
505
506 .section "Where to find the Exim distribution" "SECTavail"
507 .cindex "FTP site"
508 .cindex "distribution" "ftp site"
509 The master ftp site for the Exim distribution is
510 .display
511 &*ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/email/exim*&
512 .endd
513 This is mirrored by
514 .display
515 &*ftp://ftp.exim.org/pub/exim*&
516 .endd
517 The file references that follow are relative to the &_exim_& directories at
518 these sites. There are now quite a number of independent mirror sites around
519 the world. Those that I know about are listed in the file called &_Mirrors_&.
520
521 Within the &_exim_& directory there are subdirectories called &_exim3_& (for
522 previous Exim 3 distributions), &_exim4_& (for the latest Exim 4
523 distributions), and &_Testing_& for testing versions. In the &_exim4_&
524 subdirectory, the current release can always be found in files called
525 .display
526 &_exim-n.nn.tar.gz_&
527 &_exim-n.nn.tar.bz2_&
528 .endd
529 where &'n.nn'& is the highest such version number in the directory. The two
530 files contain identical data; the only difference is the type of compression.
531 The &_.bz2_& file is usually a lot smaller than the &_.gz_& file.
532
533 .cindex "distribution" "signing details"
534 .cindex "distribution" "public key"
535 .cindex "public key for signed distribution"
536 The distributions are currently signed with Nigel Metheringham's GPG key. The
537 corresponding public key is available from a number of keyservers, and there is
538 also a copy in the file &_nigel-pubkey.asc_&. The signatures for the tar bundles are
539 in:
540 .display
541 &_exim-n.nn.tar.gz.asc_&
542 &_exim-n.nn.tar.bz2.asc_&
543 .endd
544 For each released version, the log of changes is made separately available in a
545 separate file in the directory &_ChangeLogs_& so that it is possible to
546 find out what has changed without having to download the entire distribution.
547
548 .cindex "documentation" "available formats"
549 The main distribution contains ASCII versions of this specification and other
550 documentation; other formats of the documents are available in separate files
551 inside the &_exim4_& directory of the FTP site:
552 .display
553 &_exim-html-n.nn.tar.gz_&
554 &_exim-pdf-n.nn.tar.gz_&
555 &_exim-postscript-n.nn.tar.gz_&
556 &_exim-texinfo-n.nn.tar.gz_&
557 .endd
558 These tar files contain only the &_doc_& directory, not the complete
559 distribution, and are also available in &_.bz2_& as well as &_.gz_& forms.
560
561
562 .section "Limitations" "SECID6"
563 .ilist
564 .cindex "limitations of Exim"
565 .cindex "bang paths" "not handled by Exim"
566 Exim is designed for use as an Internet MTA, and therefore handles addresses in
567 RFC 2822 domain format only. It cannot handle UUCP &"bang paths"&, though
568 simple two-component bang paths can be converted by a straightforward rewriting
569 configuration. This restriction does not prevent Exim from being interfaced to
570 UUCP as a transport mechanism, provided that domain addresses are used.
571 .next
572 .cindex "domainless addresses"
573 .cindex "address" "without domain"
574 Exim insists that every address it handles has a domain attached. For incoming
575 local messages, domainless addresses are automatically qualified with a
576 configured domain value. Configuration options specify from which remote
577 systems unqualified addresses are acceptable. These are then qualified on
578 arrival.
579 .next
580 .cindex "transport" "external"
581 .cindex "external transports"
582 The only external transport mechanisms that are currently implemented are SMTP
583 and LMTP over a TCP/IP network (including support for IPv6). However, a pipe
584 transport is available, and there are facilities for writing messages to files
585 and pipes, optionally in &'batched SMTP'& format; these facilities can be used
586 to send messages to other transport mechanisms such as UUCP, provided they can
587 handle domain-style addresses. Batched SMTP input is also catered for.
588 .next
589 Exim is not designed for storing mail for dial-in hosts. When the volumes of
590 such mail are large, it is better to get the messages &"delivered"& into files
591 (that is, off Exim's queue) and subsequently passed on to the dial-in hosts by
592 other means.
593 .next
594 Although Exim does have basic facilities for scanning incoming messages, these
595 are not comprehensive enough to do full virus or spam scanning. Such operations
596 are best carried out using additional specialized software packages. If you
597 compile Exim with the content-scanning extension, straightforward interfaces to
598 a number of common scanners are provided.
599 .endlist
600
601
602 .section "Run time configuration" "SECID7"
603 Exim's run time configuration is held in a single text file that is divided
604 into a number of sections. The entries in this file consist of keywords and
605 values, in the style of Smail 3 configuration files. A default configuration
606 file which is suitable for simple online installations is provided in the
607 distribution, and is described in chapter &<<CHAPdefconfil>>& below.
608
609
610 .section "Calling interface" "SECID8"
611 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "command line interface"
612 Like many MTAs, Exim has adopted the Sendmail command line interface so that it
613 can be a straight replacement for &_/usr/lib/sendmail_& or
614 &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_& when sending mail, but you do not need to know anything
615 about Sendmail in order to run Exim. For actions other than sending messages,
616 Sendmail-compatible options also exist, but those that produce output (for
617 example, &%-bp%&, which lists the messages on the queue) do so in Exim's own
618 format. There are also some additional options that are compatible with Smail
619 3, and some further options that are new to Exim. Chapter &<<CHAPcommandline>>&
620 documents all Exim's command line options. This information is automatically
621 made into the man page that forms part of the Exim distribution.
622
623 Control of messages on the queue can be done via certain privileged command
624 line options. There is also an optional monitor program called &'eximon'&,
625 which displays current information in an X window, and which contains a menu
626 interface to Exim's command line administration options.
627
628
629
630 .section "Terminology" "SECID9"
631 .cindex "terminology definitions"
632 .cindex "body of message" "definition of"
633 The &'body'& of a message is the actual data that the sender wants to transmit.
634 It is the last part of a message, and is separated from the &'header'& (see
635 below) by a blank line.
636
637 .cindex "bounce message" "definition of"
638 When a message cannot be delivered, it is normally returned to the sender in a
639 delivery failure message or a &"non-delivery report"& (NDR). The term
640 &'bounce'& is commonly used for this action, and the error reports are often
641 called &'bounce messages'&. This is a convenient shorthand for &"delivery
642 failure error report"&. Such messages have an empty sender address in the
643 message's &'envelope'& (see below) to ensure that they cannot themselves give
644 rise to further bounce messages.
645
646 The term &'default'& appears frequently in this manual. It is used to qualify a
647 value which is used in the absence of any setting in the configuration. It may
648 also qualify an action which is taken unless a configuration setting specifies
649 otherwise.
650
651 The term &'defer'& is used when the delivery of a message to a specific
652 destination cannot immediately take place for some reason (a remote host may be
653 down, or a user's local mailbox may be full). Such deliveries are &'deferred'&
654 until a later time.
655
656 The word &'domain'& is sometimes used to mean all but the first component of a
657 host's name. It is &'not'& used in that sense here, where it normally refers to
658 the part of an email address following the @ sign.
659
660 .cindex "envelope, definition of"
661 .cindex "sender" "definition of"
662 A message in transit has an associated &'envelope'&, as well as a header and a
663 body. The envelope contains a sender address (to which bounce messages should
664 be delivered), and any number of recipient addresses. References to the
665 sender or the recipients of a message usually mean the addresses in the
666 envelope. An MTA uses these addresses for delivery, and for returning bounce
667 messages, not the addresses that appear in the header lines.
668
669 .cindex "message" "header, definition of"
670 .cindex "header section" "definition of"
671 The &'header'& of a message is the first part of a message's text, consisting
672 of a number of lines, each of which has a name such as &'From:'&, &'To:'&,
673 &'Subject:'&, etc. Long header lines can be split over several text lines by
674 indenting the continuations. The header is separated from the body by a blank
675 line.
676
677 .cindex "local part" "definition of"
678 .cindex "domain" "definition of"
679 The term &'local part'&, which is taken from RFC 2822, is used to refer to that
680 part of an email address that precedes the @ sign. The part that follows the
681 @ sign is called the &'domain'& or &'mail domain'&.
682
683 .cindex "local delivery" "definition of"
684 .cindex "remote delivery, definition of"
685 The terms &'local delivery'& and &'remote delivery'& are used to distinguish
686 delivery to a file or a pipe on the local host from delivery by SMTP over
687 TCP/IP to another host. As far as Exim is concerned, all hosts other than the
688 host it is running on are &'remote'&.
689
690 .cindex "return path" "definition of"
691 &'Return path'& is another name that is used for the sender address in a
692 message's envelope.
693
694 .cindex "queue" "definition of"
695 The term &'queue'& is used to refer to the set of messages awaiting delivery,
696 because this term is in widespread use in the context of MTAs. However, in
697 Exim's case the reality is more like a pool than a queue, because there is
698 normally no ordering of waiting messages.
699
700 .cindex "queue runner" "definition of"
701 The term &'queue runner'& is used to describe a process that scans the queue
702 and attempts to deliver those messages whose retry times have come. This term
703 is used by other MTAs, and also relates to the command &%runq%&, but in Exim
704 the waiting messages are normally processed in an unpredictable order.
705
706 .cindex "spool directory" "definition of"
707 The term &'spool directory'& is used for a directory in which Exim keeps the
708 messages on its queue &-- that is, those that it is in the process of
709 delivering. This should not be confused with the directory in which local
710 mailboxes are stored, which is called a &"spool directory"& by some people. In
711 the Exim documentation, &"spool"& is always used in the first sense.
712
713
714
715
716
717
718 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
719 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
720
721 .chapter "Incorporated code" "CHID2"
722 .cindex "incorporated code"
723 .cindex "regular expressions" "library"
724 .cindex "PCRE"
725 A number of pieces of external code are included in the Exim distribution.
726
727 .ilist
728 Regular expressions are supported in the main Exim program and in the
729 Exim monitor using the freely-distributable PCRE library, copyright
730 &copy; University of Cambridge. The source to PCRE is no longer shipped with
731 Exim, so you will need to use the version of PCRE shipped with your system,
732 or obtain and install the full version of the library from
733 &url(ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre).
734 .next
735 .cindex "cdb" "acknowledgment"
736 Support for the cdb (Constant DataBase) lookup method is provided by code
737 contributed by Nigel Metheringham of (at the time he contributed it) Planet
738 Online Ltd. The implementation is completely contained within the code of Exim.
739 It does not link against an external cdb library. The code contains the
740 following statements:
741
742 .blockquote
743 Copyright &copy; 1998 Nigel Metheringham, Planet Online Ltd
744
745 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
746 the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
747 Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later
748 version.
749 This code implements Dan Bernstein's Constant DataBase (cdb) spec. Information,
750 the spec and sample code for cdb can be obtained from
751 &url(http://www.pobox.com/~djb/cdb.html). This implementation borrows
752 some code from Dan Bernstein's implementation (which has no license
753 restrictions applied to it).
754 .endblockquote
755 .next
756 .cindex "SPA authentication"
757 .cindex "Samba project"
758 .cindex "Microsoft Secure Password Authentication"
759 Client support for Microsoft's &'Secure Password Authentication'& is provided
760 by code contributed by Marc Prud'hommeaux. Server support was contributed by
761 Tom Kistner. This includes code taken from the Samba project, which is released
762 under the Gnu GPL.
763 .next
764 .cindex "Cyrus"
765 .cindex "&'pwcheck'& daemon"
766 .cindex "&'pwauthd'& daemon"
767 Support for calling the Cyrus &'pwcheck'& and &'saslauthd'& daemons is provided
768 by code taken from the Cyrus-SASL library and adapted by Alexander S.
769 Sabourenkov. The permission notice appears below, in accordance with the
770 conditions expressed therein.
771
772 .blockquote
773 Copyright &copy; 2001 Carnegie Mellon University. All rights reserved.
774
775 Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
776 modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
777 are met:
778
779 .olist
780 Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
781 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
782 .next
783 Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
784 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
785 the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
786 distribution.
787 .next
788 The name &"Carnegie Mellon University"& must not be used to
789 endorse or promote products derived from this software without
790 prior written permission. For permission or any other legal
791 details, please contact
792 .display
793 Office of Technology Transfer
794 Carnegie Mellon University
795 5000 Forbes Avenue
796 Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890
797 (412) 268-4387, fax: (412) 268-7395
798 tech-transfer@andrew.cmu.edu
799 .endd
800 .next
801 Redistributions of any form whatsoever must retain the following
802 acknowledgment:
803
804 &"This product includes software developed by Computing Services
805 at Carnegie Mellon University (&url(http://www.cmu.edu/computing/)."&
806
807 CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO
808 THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY
809 AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY BE LIABLE
810 FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
811 WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN
812 AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING
813 OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
814 .endlist
815 .endblockquote
816
817 .next
818 .cindex "Exim monitor" "acknowledgment"
819 .cindex "X-windows"
820 .cindex "Athena"
821 The Exim Monitor program, which is an X-Window application, includes
822 modified versions of the Athena StripChart and TextPop widgets.
823 This code is copyright by DEC and MIT, and their permission notice appears
824 below, in accordance with the conditions expressed therein.
825
826 .blockquote
827 Copyright 1987, 1988 by Digital Equipment Corporation, Maynard, Massachusetts,
828 and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
829
830 All Rights Reserved
831
832 Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its
833 documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted,
834 provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that
835 both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in
836 supporting documentation, and that the names of Digital or MIT not be
837 used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the
838 software without specific, written prior permission.
839
840 DIGITAL DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING
841 ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL
842 DIGITAL BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR
843 ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS,
844 WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION,
845 ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS
846 SOFTWARE.
847 .endblockquote
848
849 .next
850 Many people have contributed code fragments, some large, some small, that were
851 not covered by any specific licence requirements. It is assumed that the
852 contributors are happy to see their code incorporated into Exim under the GPL.
853 .endlist
854
855
856
857
858
859 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
860 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
861
862 .chapter "How Exim receives and delivers mail" "CHID11" &&&
863 "Receiving and delivering mail"
864
865
866 .section "Overall philosophy" "SECID10"
867 .cindex "design philosophy"
868 Exim is designed to work efficiently on systems that are permanently connected
869 to the Internet and are handling a general mix of mail. In such circumstances,
870 most messages can be delivered immediately. Consequently, Exim does not
871 maintain independent queues of messages for specific domains or hosts, though
872 it does try to send several messages in a single SMTP connection after a host
873 has been down, and it also maintains per-host retry information.
874
875
876 .section "Policy control" "SECID11"
877 .cindex "policy control" "overview"
878 Policy controls are now an important feature of MTAs that are connected to the
879 Internet. Perhaps their most important job is to stop MTAs being abused as
880 &"open relays"& by misguided individuals who send out vast amounts of
881 unsolicited junk, and want to disguise its source. Exim provides flexible
882 facilities for specifying policy controls on incoming mail:
883
884 .ilist
885 .cindex "&ACL;" "introduction"
886 Exim 4 (unlike previous versions of Exim) implements policy controls on
887 incoming mail by means of &'Access Control Lists'& (ACLs). Each list is a
888 series of statements that may either grant or deny access. ACLs can be used at
889 several places in the SMTP dialogue while receiving a message from a remote
890 host. However, the most common places are after each RCPT command, and at the
891 very end of the message. The sysadmin can specify conditions for accepting or
892 rejecting individual recipients or the entire message, respectively, at these
893 two points (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&). Denial of access results in an SMTP
894 error code.
895 .next
896 An ACL is also available for locally generated, non-SMTP messages. In this
897 case, the only available actions are to accept or deny the entire message.
898 .next
899 When Exim is compiled with the content-scanning extension, facilities are
900 provided in the ACL mechanism for passing the message to external virus and/or
901 spam scanning software. The result of such a scan is passed back to the ACL,
902 which can then use it to decide what to do with the message.
903 .next
904 When a message has been received, either from a remote host or from the local
905 host, but before the final acknowledgment has been sent, a locally supplied C
906 function called &[local_scan()]& can be run to inspect the message and decide
907 whether to accept it or not (see chapter &<<CHAPlocalscan>>&). If the message
908 is accepted, the list of recipients can be modified by the function.
909 .next
910 Using the &[local_scan()]& mechanism is another way of calling external scanner
911 software. The &%SA-Exim%& add-on package works this way. It does not require
912 Exim to be compiled with the content-scanning extension.
913 .next
914 After a message has been accepted, a further checking mechanism is available in
915 the form of the &'system filter'& (see chapter &<<CHAPsystemfilter>>&). This
916 runs at the start of every delivery process.
917 .endlist
918
919
920
921 .section "User filters" "SECID12"
922 .cindex "filter" "introduction"
923 .cindex "Sieve filter"
924 In a conventional Exim configuration, users are able to run private filters by
925 setting up appropriate &_.forward_& files in their home directories. See
926 chapter &<<CHAPredirect>>& (about the &(redirect)& router) for the
927 configuration needed to support this, and the separate document entitled
928 &'Exim's interfaces to mail filtering'& for user details. Two different kinds
929 of filtering are available:
930
931 .ilist
932 Sieve filters are written in the standard filtering language that is defined
933 by RFC 3028.
934 .next
935 Exim filters are written in a syntax that is unique to Exim, but which is more
936 powerful than Sieve, which it pre-dates.
937 .endlist
938
939 User filters are run as part of the routing process, described below.
940
941
942
943 .section "Message identification" "SECTmessiden"
944 .cindex "message ids" "details of format"
945 .cindex "format" "of message id"
946 .cindex "id of message"
947 .cindex "base62"
948 .cindex "base36"
949 .cindex "Darwin"
950 .cindex "Cygwin"
951 Every message handled by Exim is given a &'message id'& which is sixteen
952 characters long. It is divided into three parts, separated by hyphens, for
953 example &`16VDhn-0001bo-D3`&. Each part is a sequence of letters and digits,
954 normally encoding numbers in base 62. However, in the Darwin operating
955 system (Mac OS X) and when Exim is compiled to run under Cygwin, base 36
956 (avoiding the use of lower case letters) is used instead, because the message
957 id is used to construct file names, and the names of files in those systems are
958 not always case-sensitive.
959
960 .cindex "pid (process id)" "re-use of"
961 The detail of the contents of the message id have changed as Exim has evolved.
962 Earlier versions relied on the operating system not re-using a process id (pid)
963 within one second. On modern operating systems, this assumption can no longer
964 be made, so the algorithm had to be changed. To retain backward compatibility,
965 the format of the message id was retained, which is why the following rules are
966 somewhat eccentric:
967
968 .ilist
969 The first six characters of the message id are the time at which the message
970 started to be received, to a granularity of one second. That is, this field
971 contains the number of seconds since the start of the epoch (the normal Unix
972 way of representing the date and time of day).
973 .next
974 After the first hyphen, the next six characters are the id of the process that
975 received the message.
976 .next
977 There are two different possibilities for the final two characters:
978 .olist
979 .oindex "&%localhost_number%&"
980 If &%localhost_number%& is not set, this value is the fractional part of the
981 time of reception, normally in units of 1/2000 of a second, but for systems
982 that must use base 36 instead of base 62 (because of case-insensitive file
983 systems), the units are 1/1000 of a second.
984 .next
985 If &%localhost_number%& is set, it is multiplied by 200 (100) and added to
986 the fractional part of the time, which in this case is in units of 1/200
987 (1/100) of a second.
988 .endlist
989 .endlist
990
991 After a message has been received, Exim waits for the clock to tick at the
992 appropriate resolution before proceeding, so that if another message is
993 received by the same process, or by another process with the same (re-used)
994 pid, it is guaranteed that the time will be different. In most cases, the clock
995 will already have ticked while the message was being received.
996
997
998 .section "Receiving mail" "SECID13"
999 .cindex "receiving mail"
1000 .cindex "message" "reception"
1001 The only way Exim can receive mail from another host is using SMTP over
1002 TCP/IP, in which case the sender and recipient addresses are transferred using
1003 SMTP commands. However, from a locally running process (such as a user's MUA),
1004 there are several possibilities:
1005
1006 .ilist
1007 If the process runs Exim with the &%-bm%& option, the message is read
1008 non-interactively (usually via a pipe), with the recipients taken from the
1009 command line, or from the body of the message if &%-t%& is also used.
1010 .next
1011 If the process runs Exim with the &%-bS%& option, the message is also read
1012 non-interactively, but in this case the recipients are listed at the start of
1013 the message in a series of SMTP RCPT commands, terminated by a DATA
1014 command. This is so-called &"batch SMTP"& format,
1015 but it isn't really SMTP. The SMTP commands are just another way of passing
1016 envelope addresses in a non-interactive submission.
1017 .next
1018 If the process runs Exim with the &%-bs%& option, the message is read
1019 interactively, using the SMTP protocol. A two-way pipe is normally used for
1020 passing data between the local process and the Exim process.
1021 This is &"real"& SMTP and is handled in the same way as SMTP over TCP/IP. For
1022 example, the ACLs for SMTP commands are used for this form of submission.
1023 .next
1024 A local process may also make a TCP/IP call to the host's loopback address
1025 (127.0.0.1) or any other of its IP addresses. When receiving messages, Exim
1026 does not treat the loopback address specially. It treats all such connections
1027 in the same way as connections from other hosts.
1028 .endlist
1029
1030
1031 .cindex "message sender, constructed by Exim"
1032 .cindex "sender" "constructed by Exim"
1033 In the three cases that do not involve TCP/IP, the sender address is
1034 constructed from the login name of the user that called Exim and a default
1035 qualification domain (which can be set by the &%qualify_domain%& configuration
1036 option). For local or batch SMTP, a sender address that is passed using the
1037 SMTP MAIL command is ignored. However, the system administrator may allow
1038 certain users (&"trusted users"&) to specify a different sender address
1039 unconditionally, or all users to specify certain forms of different sender
1040 address. The &%-f%& option or the SMTP MAIL command is used to specify these
1041 different addresses. See section &<<SECTtrustedadmin>>& for details of trusted
1042 users, and the &%untrusted_set_sender%& option for a way of allowing untrusted
1043 users to change sender addresses.
1044
1045 Messages received by either of the non-interactive mechanisms are subject to
1046 checking by the non-SMTP ACL, if one is defined. Messages received using SMTP
1047 (either over TCP/IP, or interacting with a local process) can be checked by a
1048 number of ACLs that operate at different times during the SMTP session. Either
1049 individual recipients, or the entire message, can be rejected if local policy
1050 requirements are not met. The &[local_scan()]& function (see chapter
1051 &<<CHAPlocalscan>>&) is run for all incoming messages.
1052
1053 Exim can be configured not to start a delivery process when a message is
1054 received; this can be unconditional, or depend on the number of incoming SMTP
1055 connections or the system load. In these situations, new messages wait on the
1056 queue until a queue runner process picks them up. However, in standard
1057 configurations under normal conditions, delivery is started as soon as a
1058 message is received.
1059
1060
1061
1062
1063
1064 .section "Handling an incoming message" "SECID14"
1065 .cindex "spool directory" "files that hold a message"
1066 .cindex "file" "how a message is held"
1067 When Exim accepts a message, it writes two files in its spool directory. The
1068 first contains the envelope information, the current status of the message, and
1069 the header lines, and the second contains the body of the message. The names of
1070 the two spool files consist of the message id, followed by &`-H`& for the
1071 file containing the envelope and header, and &`-D`& for the data file.
1072
1073 .cindex "spool directory" "&_input_& sub-directory"
1074 By default all these message files are held in a single directory called
1075 &_input_& inside the general Exim spool directory. Some operating systems do
1076 not perform very well if the number of files in a directory gets large; to
1077 improve performance in such cases, the &%split_spool_directory%& option can be
1078 used. This causes Exim to split up the input files into 62 sub-directories
1079 whose names are single letters or digits. When this is done, the queue is
1080 processed one sub-directory at a time instead of all at once, which can improve
1081 overall performance even when there are not enough files in each directory to
1082 affect file system performance.
1083
1084 The envelope information consists of the address of the message's sender and
1085 the addresses of the recipients. This information is entirely separate from
1086 any addresses contained in the header lines. The status of the message includes
1087 a list of recipients who have already received the message. The format of the
1088 first spool file is described in chapter &<<CHAPspool>>&.
1089
1090 .cindex "rewriting" "addresses"
1091 Address rewriting that is specified in the rewrite section of the configuration
1092 (see chapter &<<CHAPrewrite>>&) is done once and for all on incoming addresses,
1093 both in the header lines and the envelope, at the time the message is accepted.
1094 If during the course of delivery additional addresses are generated (for
1095 example, via aliasing), these new addresses are rewritten as soon as they are
1096 generated. At the time a message is actually delivered (transported) further
1097 rewriting can take place; because this is a transport option, it can be
1098 different for different forms of delivery. It is also possible to specify the
1099 addition or removal of certain header lines at the time the message is
1100 delivered (see chapters &<<CHAProutergeneric>>& and
1101 &<<CHAPtransportgeneric>>&).
1102
1103
1104
1105 .section "Life of a message" "SECID15"
1106 .cindex "message" "life of"
1107 .cindex "message" "frozen"
1108 A message remains in the spool directory until it is completely delivered to
1109 its recipients or to an error address, or until it is deleted by an
1110 administrator or by the user who originally created it. In cases when delivery
1111 cannot proceed &-- for example, when a message can neither be delivered to its
1112 recipients nor returned to its sender, the message is marked &"frozen"& on the
1113 spool, and no more deliveries are attempted.
1114
1115 .cindex "frozen messages" "thawing"
1116 .cindex "message" "thawing frozen"
1117 An administrator can &"thaw"& such messages when the problem has been
1118 corrected, and can also freeze individual messages by hand if necessary. In
1119 addition, an administrator can force a delivery error, causing a bounce message
1120 to be sent.
1121
1122 .oindex "&%timeout_frozen_after%&"
1123 .oindex "&%ignore_bounce_errors_after%&"
1124 There are options called &%ignore_bounce_errors_after%& and
1125 &%timeout_frozen_after%&, which discard frozen messages after a certain time.
1126 The first applies only to frozen bounces, the second to any frozen messages.
1127
1128 .cindex "message" "log file for"
1129 .cindex "log" "file for each message"
1130 While Exim is working on a message, it writes information about each delivery
1131 attempt to its main log file. This includes successful, unsuccessful, and
1132 delayed deliveries for each recipient (see chapter &<<CHAPlog>>&). The log
1133 lines are also written to a separate &'message log'& file for each message.
1134 These logs are solely for the benefit of the administrator, and are normally
1135 deleted along with the spool files when processing of a message is complete.
1136 The use of individual message logs can be disabled by setting
1137 &%no_message_logs%&; this might give an improvement in performance on very busy
1138 systems.
1139
1140 .cindex "journal file"
1141 .cindex "file" "journal"
1142 All the information Exim itself needs to set up a delivery is kept in the first
1143 spool file, along with the header lines. When a successful delivery occurs, the
1144 address is immediately written at the end of a journal file, whose name is the
1145 message id followed by &`-J`&. At the end of a delivery run, if there are some
1146 addresses left to be tried again later, the first spool file (the &`-H`& file)
1147 is updated to indicate which these are, and the journal file is then deleted.
1148 Updating the spool file is done by writing a new file and renaming it, to
1149 minimize the possibility of data loss.
1150
1151 Should the system or the program crash after a successful delivery but before
1152 the spool file has been updated, the journal is left lying around. The next
1153 time Exim attempts to deliver the message, it reads the journal file and
1154 updates the spool file before proceeding. This minimizes the chances of double
1155 deliveries caused by crashes.
1156
1157
1158
1159 .section "Processing an address for delivery" "SECTprocaddress"
1160 .cindex "drivers" "definition of"
1161 .cindex "router" "definition of"
1162 .cindex "transport" "definition of"
1163 The main delivery processing elements of Exim are called &'routers'& and
1164 &'transports'&, and collectively these are known as &'drivers'&. Code for a
1165 number of them is provided in the source distribution, and compile-time options
1166 specify which ones are included in the binary. Run time options specify which
1167 ones are actually used for delivering messages.
1168
1169 .cindex "drivers" "instance definition"
1170 Each driver that is specified in the run time configuration is an &'instance'&
1171 of that particular driver type. Multiple instances are allowed; for example,
1172 you can set up several different &(smtp)& transports, each with different
1173 option values that might specify different ports or different timeouts. Each
1174 instance has its own identifying name. In what follows we will normally use the
1175 instance name when discussing one particular instance (that is, one specific
1176 configuration of the driver), and the generic driver name when discussing
1177 the driver's features in general.
1178
1179 A &'router'& is a driver that operates on an address, either determining how
1180 its delivery should happen, by assigning it to a specific transport, or
1181 converting the address into one or more new addresses (for example, via an
1182 alias file). A router may also explicitly choose to fail an address, causing it
1183 to be bounced.
1184
1185 A &'transport'& is a driver that transmits a copy of the message from Exim's
1186 spool to some destination. There are two kinds of transport: for a &'local'&
1187 transport, the destination is a file or a pipe on the local host, whereas for a
1188 &'remote'& transport the destination is some other host. A message is passed
1189 to a specific transport as a result of successful routing. If a message has
1190 several recipients, it may be passed to a number of different transports.
1191
1192 .cindex "preconditions" "definition of"
1193 An address is processed by passing it to each configured router instance in
1194 turn, subject to certain preconditions, until a router accepts the address or
1195 specifies that it should be bounced. We will describe this process in more
1196 detail shortly. First, as a simple example, we consider how each recipient
1197 address in a message is processed in a small configuration of three routers.
1198
1199 To make this a more concrete example, it is described in terms of some actual
1200 routers, but remember, this is only an example. You can configure Exim's
1201 routers in many different ways, and there may be any number of routers in a
1202 configuration.
1203
1204 The first router that is specified in a configuration is often one that handles
1205 addresses in domains that are not recognized specially by the local host. These
1206 are typically addresses for arbitrary domains on the Internet. A precondition
1207 is set up which looks for the special domains known to the host (for example,
1208 its own domain name), and the router is run for addresses that do &'not'&
1209 match. Typically, this is a router that looks up domains in the DNS in order to
1210 find the hosts to which this address routes. If it succeeds, the address is
1211 assigned to a suitable SMTP transport; if it does not succeed, the router is
1212 configured to fail the address.
1213
1214 The second router is reached only when the domain is recognized as one that
1215 &"belongs"& to the local host. This router does redirection &-- also known as
1216 aliasing and forwarding. When it generates one or more new addresses from the
1217 original, each of them is routed independently from the start. Otherwise, the
1218 router may cause an address to fail, or it may simply decline to handle the
1219 address, in which case the address is passed to the next router.
1220
1221 The final router in many configurations is one that checks to see if the
1222 address belongs to a local mailbox. The precondition may involve a check to
1223 see if the local part is the name of a login account, or it may look up the
1224 local part in a file or a database. If its preconditions are not met, or if
1225 the router declines, we have reached the end of the routers. When this happens,
1226 the address is bounced.
1227
1228
1229
1230 .section "Processing an address for verification" "SECID16"
1231 .cindex "router" "for verification"
1232 .cindex "verifying address" "overview"
1233 As well as being used to decide how to deliver to an address, Exim's routers
1234 are also used for &'address verification'&. Verification can be requested as
1235 one of the checks to be performed in an ACL for incoming messages, on both
1236 sender and recipient addresses, and it can be tested using the &%-bv%& and
1237 &%-bvs%& command line options.
1238
1239 When an address is being verified, the routers are run in &"verify mode"&. This
1240 does not affect the way the routers work, but it is a state that can be
1241 detected. By this means, a router can be skipped or made to behave differently
1242 when verifying. A common example is a configuration in which the first router
1243 sends all messages to a message-scanning program, unless they have been
1244 previously scanned. Thus, the first router accepts all addresses without any
1245 checking, making it useless for verifying. Normally, the &%no_verify%& option
1246 would be set for such a router, causing it to be skipped in verify mode.
1247
1248
1249
1250
1251 .section "Running an individual router" "SECTrunindrou"
1252 .cindex "router" "running details"
1253 .cindex "preconditions" "checking"
1254 .cindex "router" "result of running"
1255 As explained in the example above, a number of preconditions are checked before
1256 running a router. If any are not met, the router is skipped, and the address is
1257 passed to the next router. When all the preconditions on a router &'are'& met,
1258 the router is run. What happens next depends on the outcome, which is one of
1259 the following:
1260
1261 .ilist
1262 &'accept'&: The router accepts the address, and either assigns it to a
1263 transport, or generates one or more &"child"& addresses. Processing the
1264 original address ceases,
1265 .oindex "&%unseen%&"
1266 unless the &%unseen%& option is set on the router. This option
1267 can be used to set up multiple deliveries with different routing (for example,
1268 for keeping archive copies of messages). When &%unseen%& is set, the address is
1269 passed to the next router. Normally, however, an &'accept'& return marks the
1270 end of routing.
1271
1272 Any child addresses generated by the router are processed independently,
1273 starting with the first router by default. It is possible to change this by
1274 setting the &%redirect_router%& option to specify which router to start at for
1275 child addresses. Unlike &%pass_router%& (see below) the router specified by
1276 &%redirect_router%& may be anywhere in the router configuration.
1277 .next
1278 &'pass'&: The router recognizes the address, but cannot handle it itself. It
1279 requests that the address be passed to another router. By default the address
1280 is passed to the next router, but this can be changed by setting the
1281 &%pass_router%& option. However, (unlike &%redirect_router%&) the named router
1282 must be below the current router (to avoid loops).
1283 .next
1284 &'decline'&: The router declines to accept the address because it does not
1285 recognize it at all. By default, the address is passed to the next router, but
1286 this can be prevented by setting the &%no_more%& option. When &%no_more%& is
1287 set, all the remaining routers are skipped. In effect, &%no_more%& converts
1288 &'decline'& into &'fail'&.
1289 .next
1290 &'fail'&: The router determines that the address should fail, and queues it for
1291 the generation of a bounce message. There is no further processing of the
1292 original address unless &%unseen%& is set on the router.
1293 .next
1294 &'defer'&: The router cannot handle the address at the present time. (A
1295 database may be offline, or a DNS lookup may have timed out.) No further
1296 processing of the address happens in this delivery attempt. It is tried again
1297 next time the message is considered for delivery.
1298 .next
1299 &'error'&: There is some error in the router (for example, a syntax error in
1300 its configuration). The action is as for defer.
1301 .endlist
1302
1303 If an address reaches the end of the routers without having been accepted by
1304 any of them, it is bounced as unrouteable. The default error message in this
1305 situation is &"unrouteable address"&, but you can set your own message by
1306 making use of the &%cannot_route_message%& option. This can be set for any
1307 router; the value from the last router that &"saw"& the address is used.
1308
1309 Sometimes while routing you want to fail a delivery when some conditions are
1310 met but others are not, instead of passing the address on for further routing.
1311 You can do this by having a second router that explicitly fails the delivery
1312 when the relevant conditions are met. The &(redirect)& router has a &"fail"&
1313 facility for this purpose.
1314
1315
1316 .section "Duplicate addresses" "SECID17"
1317 .cindex "case of local parts"
1318 .cindex "address duplicate, discarding"
1319 .cindex "duplicate addresses"
1320 Once routing is complete, Exim scans the addresses that are assigned to local
1321 and remote transports, and discards any duplicates that it finds. During this
1322 check, local parts are treated as case-sensitive. This happens only when
1323 actually delivering a message; when testing routers with &%-bt%&, all the
1324 routed addresses are shown.
1325
1326
1327
1328 .section "Router preconditions" "SECTrouprecon"
1329 .cindex "router" "preconditions, order of processing"
1330 .cindex "preconditions" "order of processing"
1331 The preconditions that are tested for each router are listed below, in the
1332 order in which they are tested. The individual configuration options are
1333 described in more detail in chapter &<<CHAProutergeneric>>&.
1334
1335 .ilist
1336 The &%local_part_prefix%& and &%local_part_suffix%& options can specify that
1337 the local parts handled by the router may or must have certain prefixes and/or
1338 suffixes. If a mandatory affix (prefix or suffix) is not present, the router is
1339 skipped. These conditions are tested first. When an affix is present, it is
1340 removed from the local part before further processing, including the evaluation
1341 of any other conditions.
1342 .next
1343 Routers can be designated for use only when not verifying an address, that is,
1344 only when routing it for delivery (or testing its delivery routing). If the
1345 &%verify%& option is set false, the router is skipped when Exim is verifying an
1346 address.
1347 Setting the &%verify%& option actually sets two options, &%verify_sender%& and
1348 &%verify_recipient%&, which independently control the use of the router for
1349 sender and recipient verification. You can set these options directly if
1350 you want a router to be used for only one type of verification.
1351 .next
1352 If the &%address_test%& option is set false, the router is skipped when Exim is
1353 run with the &%-bt%& option to test an address routing. This can be helpful
1354 when the first router sends all new messages to a scanner of some sort; it
1355 makes it possible to use &%-bt%& to test subsequent delivery routing without
1356 having to simulate the effect of the scanner.
1357 .next
1358 Routers can be designated for use only when verifying an address, as
1359 opposed to routing it for delivery. The &%verify_only%& option controls this.
1360 .next
1361 Individual routers can be explicitly skipped when running the routers to
1362 check an address given in the SMTP EXPN command (see the &%expn%& option).
1363 .next
1364 If the &%domains%& option is set, the domain of the address must be in the set
1365 of domains that it defines.
1366 .next
1367 .vindex "&$local_part_prefix$&"
1368 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
1369 .vindex "&$local_part_suffix$&"
1370 If the &%local_parts%& option is set, the local part of the address must be in
1371 the set of local parts that it defines. If &%local_part_prefix%& or
1372 &%local_part_suffix%& is in use, the prefix or suffix is removed from the local
1373 part before this check. If you want to do precondition tests on local parts
1374 that include affixes, you can do so by using a &%condition%& option (see below)
1375 that uses the variables &$local_part$&, &$local_part_prefix$&, and
1376 &$local_part_suffix$& as necessary.
1377 .next
1378 .vindex "&$local_user_uid$&"
1379 .vindex "&$local_user_gid$&"
1380 .vindex "&$home$&"
1381 If the &%check_local_user%& option is set, the local part must be the name of
1382 an account on the local host. If this check succeeds, the uid and gid of the
1383 local user are placed in &$local_user_uid$& and &$local_user_gid$& and the
1384 user's home directory is placed in &$home$&; these values can be used in the
1385 remaining preconditions.
1386 .next
1387 If the &%router_home_directory%& option is set, it is expanded at this point,
1388 because it overrides the value of &$home$&. If this expansion were left till
1389 later, the value of &$home$& as set by &%check_local_user%& would be used in
1390 subsequent tests. Having two different values of &$home$& in the same router
1391 could lead to confusion.
1392 .next
1393 If the &%senders%& option is set, the envelope sender address must be in the
1394 set of addresses that it defines.
1395 .next
1396 If the &%require_files%& option is set, the existence or non-existence of
1397 specified files is tested.
1398 .next
1399 .cindex "customizing" "precondition"
1400 If the &%condition%& option is set, it is evaluated and tested. This option
1401 uses an expanded string to allow you to set up your own custom preconditions.
1402 Expanded strings are described in chapter &<<CHAPexpand>>&.
1403 .endlist
1404
1405
1406 Note that &%require_files%& comes near the end of the list, so you cannot use
1407 it to check for the existence of a file in which to lookup up a domain, local
1408 part, or sender. However, as these options are all expanded, you can use the
1409 &%exists%& expansion condition to make such tests within each condition. The
1410 &%require_files%& option is intended for checking files that the router may be
1411 going to use internally, or which are needed by a specific transport (for
1412 example, &_.procmailrc_&).
1413
1414
1415
1416 .section "Delivery in detail" "SECID18"
1417 .cindex "delivery" "in detail"
1418 When a message is to be delivered, the sequence of events is as follows:
1419
1420 .ilist
1421 If a system-wide filter file is specified, the message is passed to it. The
1422 filter may add recipients to the message, replace the recipients, discard the
1423 message, cause a new message to be generated, or cause the message delivery to
1424 fail. The format of the system filter file is the same as for Exim user filter
1425 files, described in the separate document entitled &'Exim's interfaces to mail
1426 filtering'&.
1427 .cindex "Sieve filter" "not available for system filter"
1428 (&*Note*&: Sieve cannot be used for system filter files.)
1429
1430 Some additional features are available in system filters &-- see chapter
1431 &<<CHAPsystemfilter>>& for details. Note that a message is passed to the system
1432 filter only once per delivery attempt, however many recipients it has. However,
1433 if there are several delivery attempts because one or more addresses could not
1434 be immediately delivered, the system filter is run each time. The filter
1435 condition &%first_delivery%& can be used to detect the first run of the system
1436 filter.
1437 .next
1438 Each recipient address is offered to each configured router in turn, subject to
1439 its preconditions, until one is able to handle it. If no router can handle the
1440 address, that is, if they all decline, the address is failed. Because routers
1441 can be targeted at particular domains, several locally handled domains can be
1442 processed entirely independently of each other.
1443 .next
1444 .cindex "routing" "loops in"
1445 .cindex "loop" "while routing"
1446 A router that accepts an address may assign it to a local or a remote
1447 transport. However, the transport is not run at this time. Instead, the address
1448 is placed on a list for the particular transport, which will be run later.
1449 Alternatively, the router may generate one or more new addresses (typically
1450 from alias, forward, or filter files). New addresses are fed back into this
1451 process from the top, but in order to avoid loops, a router ignores any address
1452 which has an identically-named ancestor that was processed by itself.
1453 .next
1454 When all the routing has been done, addresses that have been successfully
1455 handled are passed to their assigned transports. When local transports are
1456 doing real local deliveries, they handle only one address at a time, but if a
1457 local transport is being used as a pseudo-remote transport (for example, to
1458 collect batched SMTP messages for transmission by some other means) multiple
1459 addresses can be handled. Remote transports can always handle more than one
1460 address at a time, but can be configured not to do so, or to restrict multiple
1461 addresses to the same domain.
1462 .next
1463 Each local delivery to a file or a pipe runs in a separate process under a
1464 non-privileged uid, and these deliveries are run one at a time. Remote
1465 deliveries also run in separate processes, normally under a uid that is private
1466 to Exim (&"the Exim user"&), but in this case, several remote deliveries can be
1467 run in parallel. The maximum number of simultaneous remote deliveries for any
1468 one message is set by the &%remote_max_parallel%& option.
1469 The order in which deliveries are done is not defined, except that all local
1470 deliveries happen before any remote deliveries.
1471 .next
1472 .cindex "queue runner"
1473 When it encounters a local delivery during a queue run, Exim checks its retry
1474 database to see if there has been a previous temporary delivery failure for the
1475 address before running the local transport. If there was a previous failure,
1476 Exim does not attempt a new delivery until the retry time for the address is
1477 reached. However, this happens only for delivery attempts that are part of a
1478 queue run. Local deliveries are always attempted when delivery immediately
1479 follows message reception, even if retry times are set for them. This makes for
1480 better behaviour if one particular message is causing problems (for example,
1481 causing quota overflow, or provoking an error in a filter file).
1482 .next
1483 .cindex "delivery" "retry in remote transports"
1484 Remote transports do their own retry handling, since an address may be
1485 deliverable to one of a number of hosts, each of which may have a different
1486 retry time. If there have been previous temporary failures and no host has
1487 reached its retry time, no delivery is attempted, whether in a queue run or
1488 not. See chapter &<<CHAPretry>>& for details of retry strategies.
1489 .next
1490 If there were any permanent errors, a bounce message is returned to an
1491 appropriate address (the sender in the common case), with details of the error
1492 for each failing address. Exim can be configured to send copies of bounce
1493 messages to other addresses.
1494 .next
1495 .cindex "delivery" "deferral"
1496 If one or more addresses suffered a temporary failure, the message is left on
1497 the queue, to be tried again later. Delivery of these addresses is said to be
1498 &'deferred'&.
1499 .next
1500 When all the recipient addresses have either been delivered or bounced,
1501 handling of the message is complete. The spool files and message log are
1502 deleted, though the message log can optionally be preserved if required.
1503 .endlist
1504
1505
1506
1507
1508 .section "Retry mechanism" "SECID19"
1509 .cindex "delivery" "retry mechanism"
1510 .cindex "retry" "description of mechanism"
1511 .cindex "queue runner"
1512 Exim's mechanism for retrying messages that fail to get delivered at the first
1513 attempt is the queue runner process. You must either run an Exim daemon that
1514 uses the &%-q%& option with a time interval to start queue runners at regular
1515 intervals, or use some other means (such as &'cron'&) to start them. If you do
1516 not arrange for queue runners to be run, messages that fail temporarily at the
1517 first attempt will remain on your queue for ever. A queue runner process works
1518 its way through the queue, one message at a time, trying each delivery that has
1519 passed its retry time.
1520 You can run several queue runners at once.
1521
1522 Exim uses a set of configured rules to determine when next to retry the failing
1523 address (see chapter &<<CHAPretry>>&). These rules also specify when Exim
1524 should give up trying to deliver to the address, at which point it generates a
1525 bounce message. If no retry rules are set for a particular host, address, and
1526 error combination, no retries are attempted, and temporary errors are treated
1527 as permanent.
1528
1529
1530
1531 .section "Temporary delivery failure" "SECID20"
1532 .cindex "delivery" "temporary failure"
1533 There are many reasons why a message may not be immediately deliverable to a
1534 particular address. Failure to connect to a remote machine (because it, or the
1535 connection to it, is down) is one of the most common. Temporary failures may be
1536 detected during routing as well as during the transport stage of delivery.
1537 Local deliveries may be delayed if NFS files are unavailable, or if a mailbox
1538 is on a file system where the user is over quota. Exim can be configured to
1539 impose its own quotas on local mailboxes; where system quotas are set they will
1540 also apply.
1541
1542 If a host is unreachable for a period of time, a number of messages may be
1543 waiting for it by the time it recovers, and sending them in a single SMTP
1544 connection is clearly beneficial. Whenever a delivery to a remote host is
1545 deferred,
1546 .cindex "hints database"
1547 Exim makes a note in its hints database, and whenever a successful
1548 SMTP delivery has happened, it looks to see if any other messages are waiting
1549 for the same host. If any are found, they are sent over the same SMTP
1550 connection, subject to a configuration limit as to the maximum number in any
1551 one connection.
1552
1553
1554
1555 .section "Permanent delivery failure" "SECID21"
1556 .cindex "delivery" "permanent failure"
1557 .cindex "bounce message" "when generated"
1558 When a message cannot be delivered to some or all of its intended recipients, a
1559 bounce message is generated. Temporary delivery failures turn into permanent
1560 errors when their timeout expires. All the addresses that fail in a given
1561 delivery attempt are listed in a single message. If the original message has
1562 many recipients, it is possible for some addresses to fail in one delivery
1563 attempt and others to fail subsequently, giving rise to more than one bounce
1564 message. The wording of bounce messages can be customized by the administrator.
1565 See chapter &<<CHAPemsgcust>>& for details.
1566
1567 .cindex "&'X-Failed-Recipients:'& header line"
1568 Bounce messages contain an &'X-Failed-Recipients:'& header line that lists the
1569 failed addresses, for the benefit of programs that try to analyse such messages
1570 automatically.
1571
1572 .cindex "bounce message" "recipient of"
1573 A bounce message is normally sent to the sender of the original message, as
1574 obtained from the message's envelope. For incoming SMTP messages, this is the
1575 address given in the MAIL command. However, when an address is expanded via a
1576 forward or alias file, an alternative address can be specified for delivery
1577 failures of the generated addresses. For a mailing list expansion (see section
1578 &<<SECTmailinglists>>&) it is common to direct bounce messages to the manager
1579 of the list.
1580
1581
1582
1583 .section "Failures to deliver bounce messages" "SECID22"
1584 .cindex "bounce message" "failure to deliver"
1585 If a bounce message (either locally generated or received from a remote host)
1586 itself suffers a permanent delivery failure, the message is left on the queue,
1587 but it is frozen, awaiting the attention of an administrator. There are options
1588 that can be used to make Exim discard such failed messages, or to keep them
1589 for only a short time (see &%timeout_frozen_after%& and
1590 &%ignore_bounce_errors_after%&).
1591
1592
1593
1594
1595
1596 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1597 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1598
1599 .chapter "Building and installing Exim" "CHID3"
1600 .scindex IIDbuex "building Exim"
1601
1602 .section "Unpacking" "SECID23"
1603 Exim is distributed as a gzipped or bzipped tar file which, when unpacked,
1604 creates a directory with the name of the current release (for example,
1605 &_exim-&version;_&) into which the following files are placed:
1606
1607 .table2 140pt
1608 .irow &_ACKNOWLEDGMENTS_& "contains some acknowledgments"
1609 .irow &_CHANGES_& "contains a reference to where changes are &&&
1610 documented"
1611 .irow &_LICENCE_& "the GNU General Public Licence"
1612 .irow &_Makefile_& "top-level make file"
1613 .irow &_NOTICE_& "conditions for the use of Exim"
1614 .irow &_README_& "list of files, directories and simple build &&&
1615 instructions"
1616 .endtable
1617
1618 Other files whose names begin with &_README_& may also be present. The
1619 following subdirectories are created:
1620
1621 .table2 140pt
1622 .irow &_Local_& "an empty directory for local configuration files"
1623 .irow &_OS_& "OS-specific files"
1624 .irow &_doc_& "documentation files"
1625 .irow &_exim_monitor_& "source files for the Exim monitor"
1626 .irow &_scripts_& "scripts used in the build process"
1627 .irow &_src_& "remaining source files"
1628 .irow &_util_& "independent utilities"
1629 .endtable
1630
1631 The main utility programs are contained in the &_src_& directory, and are built
1632 with the Exim binary. The &_util_& directory contains a few optional scripts
1633 that may be useful to some sites.
1634
1635
1636 .section "Multiple machine architectures and operating systems" "SECID24"
1637 .cindex "building Exim" "multiple OS/architectures"
1638 The building process for Exim is arranged to make it easy to build binaries for
1639 a number of different architectures and operating systems from the same set of
1640 source files. Compilation does not take place in the &_src_& directory.
1641 Instead, a &'build directory'& is created for each architecture and operating
1642 system.
1643 .cindex "symbolic link" "to build directory"
1644 Symbolic links to the sources are installed in this directory, which is where
1645 the actual building takes place. In most cases, Exim can discover the machine
1646 architecture and operating system for itself, but the defaults can be
1647 overridden if necessary.
1648
1649
1650 .section "PCRE library" "SECTpcre"
1651 .cindex "PCRE library"
1652 Exim no longer has an embedded PCRE library as the vast majority of
1653 modern systems include PCRE as a system library, although you may need
1654 to install the PCRE or PCRE development package for your operating
1655 system. If your system has a normal PCRE installation the Exim build
1656 process will need no further configuration. If the library or the
1657 headers are in an unusual location you will need to set the PCRE_LIBS
1658 and INCLUDE directives appropriately. If your operating system has no
1659 PCRE support then you will need to obtain and build the current PCRE
1660 from &url(ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre/).
1661
1662 .section "DBM libraries" "SECTdb"
1663 .cindex "DBM libraries" "discussion of"
1664 .cindex "hints database" "DBM files used for"
1665 Even if you do not use any DBM files in your configuration, Exim still needs a
1666 DBM library in order to operate, because it uses indexed files for its hints
1667 databases. Unfortunately, there are a number of DBM libraries in existence, and
1668 different operating systems often have different ones installed.
1669
1670 .cindex "Solaris" "DBM library for"
1671 .cindex "IRIX, DBM library for"
1672 .cindex "BSD, DBM library for"
1673 .cindex "Linux, DBM library for"
1674 If you are using Solaris, IRIX, one of the modern BSD systems, or a modern
1675 Linux distribution, the DBM configuration should happen automatically, and you
1676 may be able to ignore this section. Otherwise, you may have to learn more than
1677 you would like about DBM libraries from what follows.
1678
1679 .cindex "&'ndbm'& DBM library"
1680 Licensed versions of Unix normally contain a library of DBM functions operating
1681 via the &'ndbm'& interface, and this is what Exim expects by default. Free
1682 versions of Unix seem to vary in what they contain as standard. In particular,
1683 some early versions of Linux have no default DBM library, and different
1684 distributors have chosen to bundle different libraries with their packaged
1685 versions. However, the more recent releases seem to have standardized on the
1686 Berkeley DB library.
1687
1688 Different DBM libraries have different conventions for naming the files they
1689 use. When a program opens a file called &_dbmfile_&, there are several
1690 possibilities:
1691
1692 .olist
1693 A traditional &'ndbm'& implementation, such as that supplied as part of
1694 Solaris, operates on two files called &_dbmfile.dir_& and &_dbmfile.pag_&.
1695 .next
1696 .cindex "&'gdbm'& DBM library"
1697 The GNU library, &'gdbm'&, operates on a single file. If used via its &'ndbm'&
1698 compatibility interface it makes two different hard links to it with names
1699 &_dbmfile.dir_& and &_dbmfile.pag_&, but if used via its native interface, the
1700 file name is used unmodified.
1701 .next
1702 .cindex "Berkeley DB library"
1703 The Berkeley DB package, if called via its &'ndbm'& compatibility interface,
1704 operates on a single file called &_dbmfile.db_&, but otherwise looks to the
1705 programmer exactly the same as the traditional &'ndbm'& implementation.
1706 .next
1707 If the Berkeley package is used in its native mode, it operates on a single
1708 file called &_dbmfile_&; the programmer's interface is somewhat different to
1709 the traditional &'ndbm'& interface.
1710 .next
1711 To complicate things further, there are several very different versions of the
1712 Berkeley DB package. Version 1.85 was stable for a very long time, releases
1713 2.&'x'& and 3.&'x'& were current for a while, but the latest versions are now
1714 numbered 4.&'x'&. Maintenance of some of the earlier releases has ceased. All
1715 versions of Berkeley DB can be obtained from
1716 &url(http://www.sleepycat.com/).
1717 .next
1718 .cindex "&'tdb'& DBM library"
1719 Yet another DBM library, called &'tdb'&, is available from
1720 &url(http://download.sourceforge.net/tdb). It has its own interface, and also
1721 operates on a single file.
1722 .endlist
1723
1724 .cindex "USE_DB"
1725 .cindex "DBM libraries" "configuration for building"
1726 Exim and its utilities can be compiled to use any of these interfaces. In order
1727 to use any version of the Berkeley DB package in native mode, you must set
1728 USE_DB in an appropriate configuration file (typically
1729 &_Local/Makefile_&). For example:
1730 .code
1731 USE_DB=yes
1732 .endd
1733 Similarly, for gdbm you set USE_GDBM, and for tdb you set USE_TDB. An
1734 error is diagnosed if you set more than one of these.
1735
1736 At the lowest level, the build-time configuration sets none of these options,
1737 thereby assuming an interface of type (1). However, some operating system
1738 configuration files (for example, those for the BSD operating systems and
1739 Linux) assume type (4) by setting USE_DB as their default, and the
1740 configuration files for Cygwin set USE_GDBM. Anything you set in
1741 &_Local/Makefile_&, however, overrides these system defaults.
1742
1743 As well as setting USE_DB, USE_GDBM, or USE_TDB, it may also be
1744 necessary to set DBMLIB, to cause inclusion of the appropriate library, as
1745 in one of these lines:
1746 .code
1747 DBMLIB = -ldb
1748 DBMLIB = -ltdb
1749 .endd
1750 Settings like that will work if the DBM library is installed in the standard
1751 place. Sometimes it is not, and the library's header file may also not be in
1752 the default path. You may need to set INCLUDE to specify where the header
1753 file is, and to specify the path to the library more fully in DBMLIB, as in
1754 this example:
1755 .code
1756 INCLUDE=-I/usr/local/include/db-4.1
1757 DBMLIB=/usr/local/lib/db-4.1/libdb.a
1758 .endd
1759 There is further detailed discussion about the various DBM libraries in the
1760 file &_doc/dbm.discuss.txt_& in the Exim distribution.
1761
1762
1763
1764 .section "Pre-building configuration" "SECID25"
1765 .cindex "building Exim" "pre-building configuration"
1766 .cindex "configuration for building Exim"
1767 .cindex "&_Local/Makefile_&"
1768 .cindex "&_src/EDITME_&"
1769 Before building Exim, a local configuration file that specifies options
1770 independent of any operating system has to be created with the name
1771 &_Local/Makefile_&. A template for this file is supplied as the file
1772 &_src/EDITME_&, and it contains full descriptions of all the option settings
1773 therein. These descriptions are therefore not repeated here. If you are
1774 building Exim for the first time, the simplest thing to do is to copy
1775 &_src/EDITME_& to &_Local/Makefile_&, then read it and edit it appropriately.
1776
1777 There are three settings that you must supply, because Exim will not build
1778 without them. They are the location of the run time configuration file
1779 (CONFIGURE_FILE), the directory in which Exim binaries will be installed
1780 (BIN_DIRECTORY), and the identity of the Exim user (EXIM_USER and
1781 maybe EXIM_GROUP as well). The value of CONFIGURE_FILE can in fact be
1782 a colon-separated list of file names; Exim uses the first of them that exists.
1783
1784 There are a few other parameters that can be specified either at build time or
1785 at run time, to enable the same binary to be used on a number of different
1786 machines. However, if the locations of Exim's spool directory and log file
1787 directory (if not within the spool directory) are fixed, it is recommended that
1788 you specify them in &_Local/Makefile_& instead of at run time, so that errors
1789 detected early in Exim's execution (such as a malformed configuration file) can
1790 be logged.
1791
1792 .cindex "content scanning" "specifying at build time"
1793 Exim's interfaces for calling virus and spam scanning software directly from
1794 access control lists are not compiled by default. If you want to include these
1795 facilities, you need to set
1796 .code
1797 WITH_CONTENT_SCAN=yes
1798 .endd
1799 in your &_Local/Makefile_&. For details of the facilities themselves, see
1800 chapter &<<CHAPexiscan>>&.
1801
1802
1803 .cindex "&_Local/eximon.conf_&"
1804 .cindex "&_exim_monitor/EDITME_&"
1805 If you are going to build the Exim monitor, a similar configuration process is
1806 required. The file &_exim_monitor/EDITME_& must be edited appropriately for
1807 your installation and saved under the name &_Local/eximon.conf_&. If you are
1808 happy with the default settings described in &_exim_monitor/EDITME_&,
1809 &_Local/eximon.conf_& can be empty, but it must exist.
1810
1811 This is all the configuration that is needed in straightforward cases for known
1812 operating systems. However, the building process is set up so that it is easy
1813 to override options that are set by default or by operating-system-specific
1814 configuration files, for example to change the name of the C compiler, which
1815 defaults to &%gcc%&. See section &<<SECToverride>>& below for details of how to
1816 do this.
1817
1818
1819
1820 .section "Support for iconv()" "SECID26"
1821 .cindex "&[iconv()]& support"
1822 .cindex "RFC 2047"
1823 The contents of header lines in messages may be encoded according to the rules
1824 described RFC 2047. This makes it possible to transmit characters that are not
1825 in the ASCII character set, and to label them as being in a particular
1826 character set. When Exim is inspecting header lines by means of the &%$h_%&
1827 mechanism, it decodes them, and translates them into a specified character set
1828 (default ISO-8859-1). The translation is possible only if the operating system
1829 supports the &[iconv()]& function.
1830
1831 However, some of the operating systems that supply &[iconv()]& do not support
1832 very many conversions. The GNU &%libiconv%& library (available from
1833 &url(http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv/)) can be installed on such
1834 systems to remedy this deficiency, as well as on systems that do not supply
1835 &[iconv()]& at all. After installing &%libiconv%&, you should add
1836 .code
1837 HAVE_ICONV=yes
1838 .endd
1839 to your &_Local/Makefile_& and rebuild Exim.
1840
1841
1842
1843 .section "Including TLS/SSL encryption support" "SECTinctlsssl"
1844 .cindex "TLS" "including support for TLS"
1845 .cindex "encryption" "including support for"
1846 .cindex "SUPPORT_TLS"
1847 .cindex "OpenSSL" "building Exim with"
1848 .cindex "GnuTLS" "building Exim with"
1849 Exim can be built to support encrypted SMTP connections, using the STARTTLS
1850 command as per RFC 2487. It can also support legacy clients that expect to
1851 start a TLS session immediately on connection to a non-standard port (see the
1852 &%tls_on_connect_ports%& runtime option and the &%-tls-on-connect%& command
1853 line option).
1854
1855 If you want to build Exim with TLS support, you must first install either the
1856 OpenSSL or GnuTLS library. There is no cryptographic code in Exim itself for
1857 implementing SSL.
1858
1859 If OpenSSL is installed, you should set
1860 .code
1861 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1862 TLS_LIBS=-lssl -lcrypto
1863 .endd
1864 in &_Local/Makefile_&. You may also need to specify the locations of the
1865 OpenSSL library and include files. For example:
1866 .code
1867 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1868 TLS_LIBS=-L/usr/local/openssl/lib -lssl -lcrypto
1869 TLS_INCLUDE=-I/usr/local/openssl/include/
1870 .endd
1871 .new
1872 .cindex "pkg-config" "OpenSSL"
1873 If you have &'pkg-config'& available, then instead you can just use:
1874 .code
1875 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1876 USE_OPENSSL_PC=openssl
1877 .endd
1878 .wen
1879 .cindex "USE_GNUTLS"
1880 If GnuTLS is installed, you should set
1881 .code
1882 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1883 USE_GNUTLS=yes
1884 TLS_LIBS=-lgnutls -ltasn1 -lgcrypt
1885 .endd
1886 in &_Local/Makefile_&, and again you may need to specify the locations of the
1887 library and include files. For example:
1888 .code
1889 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1890 USE_GNUTLS=yes
1891 TLS_LIBS=-L/usr/gnu/lib -lgnutls -ltasn1 -lgcrypt
1892 TLS_INCLUDE=-I/usr/gnu/include
1893 .endd
1894 .new
1895 .cindex "pkg-config" "GnuTLS"
1896 If you have &'pkg-config'& available, then instead you can just use:
1897 .code
1898 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1899 USE_GNUTLS=yes
1900 USE_GNUTLS_PC=gnutls
1901 .endd
1902 .wen
1903
1904 You do not need to set TLS_INCLUDE if the relevant directory is already
1905 specified in INCLUDE. Details of how to configure Exim to make use of TLS are
1906 given in chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>&.
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911 .section "Use of tcpwrappers" "SECID27"
1912
1913 .cindex "tcpwrappers, building Exim to support"
1914 .cindex "USE_TCP_WRAPPERS"
1915 .cindex "TCP_WRAPPERS_DAEMON_NAME"
1916 .cindex "tcp_wrappers_daemon_name"
1917 Exim can be linked with the &'tcpwrappers'& library in order to check incoming
1918 SMTP calls using the &'tcpwrappers'& control files. This may be a convenient
1919 alternative to Exim's own checking facilities for installations that are
1920 already making use of &'tcpwrappers'& for other purposes. To do this, you
1921 should set USE_TCP_WRAPPERS in &_Local/Makefile_&, arrange for the file
1922 &_tcpd.h_& to be available at compile time, and also ensure that the library
1923 &_libwrap.a_& is available at link time, typically by including &%-lwrap%& in
1924 EXTRALIBS_EXIM. For example, if &'tcpwrappers'& is installed in &_/usr/local_&,
1925 you might have
1926 .code
1927 USE_TCP_WRAPPERS=yes
1928 CFLAGS=-O -I/usr/local/include
1929 EXTRALIBS_EXIM=-L/usr/local/lib -lwrap
1930 .endd
1931 in &_Local/Makefile_&. The daemon name to use in the &'tcpwrappers'& control
1932 files is &"exim"&. For example, the line
1933 .code
1934 exim : LOCAL 192.168.1. .friendly.domain.example
1935 .endd
1936 in your &_/etc/hosts.allow_& file allows connections from the local host, from
1937 the subnet 192.168.1.0/24, and from all hosts in &'friendly.domain.example'&.
1938 All other connections are denied. The daemon name used by &'tcpwrappers'&
1939 can be changed at build time by setting TCP_WRAPPERS_DAEMON_NAME in
1940 in &_Local/Makefile_&, or by setting tcp_wrappers_daemon_name in the
1941 configure file. Consult the &'tcpwrappers'& documentation for
1942 further details.
1943
1944
1945 .section "Including support for IPv6" "SECID28"
1946 .cindex "IPv6" "including support for"
1947 Exim contains code for use on systems that have IPv6 support. Setting
1948 &`HAVE_IPV6=YES`& in &_Local/Makefile_& causes the IPv6 code to be included;
1949 it may also be necessary to set IPV6_INCLUDE and IPV6_LIBS on systems
1950 where the IPv6 support is not fully integrated into the normal include and
1951 library files.
1952
1953 Two different types of DNS record for handling IPv6 addresses have been
1954 defined. AAAA records (analogous to A records for IPv4) are in use, and are
1955 currently seen as the mainstream. Another record type called A6 was proposed
1956 as better than AAAA because it had more flexibility. However, it was felt to be
1957 over-complex, and its status was reduced to &"experimental"&. It is not known
1958 if anyone is actually using A6 records. Exim has support for A6 records, but
1959 this is included only if you set &`SUPPORT_A6=YES`& in &_Local/Makefile_&. The
1960 support has not been tested for some time.
1961
1962
1963
1964 .section "Dynamically loaded lookup module support" "SECTdynamicmodules"
1965 .cindex "lookup modules"
1966 .cindex "dynamic modules"
1967 .cindex ".so building"
1968 On some platforms, Exim supports not compiling all lookup types directly into
1969 the main binary, instead putting some into external modules which can be loaded
1970 on demand.
1971 This permits packagers to build Exim with support for lookups with extensive
1972 library dependencies without requiring all users to install all of those
1973 dependencies.
1974 Most, but not all, lookup types can be built this way.
1975
1976 Set &`LOOKUP_MODULE_DIR`& to the directory into which the modules will be
1977 installed; Exim will only load modules from that directory, as a security
1978 measure. You will need to set &`CFLAGS_DYNAMIC`& if not already defined
1979 for your OS; see &_OS/Makefile-Linux_& for an example.
1980 Some other requirements for adjusting &`EXTRALIBS`& may also be necessary,
1981 see &_src/EDITME_& for details.
1982
1983 Then, for each module to be loaded dynamically, define the relevant
1984 &`LOOKUP_`&<&'lookup_type'&> flags to have the value "2" instead of "yes".
1985 For example, this will build in lsearch but load sqlite and mysql support
1986 on demand:
1987 .code
1988 LOOKUP_LSEARCH=yes
1989 LOOKUP_SQLITE=2
1990 LOOKUP_MYSQL=2
1991 .endd
1992
1993
1994 .section "The building process" "SECID29"
1995 .cindex "build directory"
1996 Once &_Local/Makefile_& (and &_Local/eximon.conf_&, if required) have been
1997 created, run &'make'& at the top level. It determines the architecture and
1998 operating system types, and creates a build directory if one does not exist.
1999 For example, on a Sun system running Solaris 8, the directory
2000 &_build-SunOS5-5.8-sparc_& is created.
2001 .cindex "symbolic link" "to source files"
2002 Symbolic links to relevant source files are installed in the build directory.
2003
2004 &*Warning*&: The &%-j%& (parallel) flag must not be used with &'make'&; the
2005 building process fails if it is set.
2006
2007 If this is the first time &'make'& has been run, it calls a script that builds
2008 a make file inside the build directory, using the configuration files from the
2009 &_Local_& directory. The new make file is then passed to another instance of
2010 &'make'&. This does the real work, building a number of utility scripts, and
2011 then compiling and linking the binaries for the Exim monitor (if configured), a
2012 number of utility programs, and finally Exim itself. The command &`make
2013 makefile`& can be used to force a rebuild of the make file in the build
2014 directory, should this ever be necessary.
2015
2016 If you have problems building Exim, check for any comments there may be in the
2017 &_README_& file concerning your operating system, and also take a look at the
2018 FAQ, where some common problems are covered.
2019
2020
2021
2022 .section 'Output from &"make"&' "SECID283"
2023 The output produced by the &'make'& process for compile lines is often very
2024 unreadable, because these lines can be very long. For this reason, the normal
2025 output is suppressed by default, and instead output similar to that which
2026 appears when compiling the 2.6 Linux kernel is generated: just a short line for
2027 each module that is being compiled or linked. However, it is still possible to
2028 get the full output, by calling &'make'& like this:
2029 .code
2030 FULLECHO='' make -e
2031 .endd
2032 The value of FULLECHO defaults to &"@"&, the flag character that suppresses
2033 command reflection in &'make'&. When you ask for the full output, it is
2034 given in addition to the short output.
2035
2036
2037
2038 .section "Overriding build-time options for Exim" "SECToverride"
2039 .cindex "build-time options, overriding"
2040 The main make file that is created at the beginning of the building process
2041 consists of the concatenation of a number of files which set configuration
2042 values, followed by a fixed set of &'make'& instructions. If a value is set
2043 more than once, the last setting overrides any previous ones. This provides a
2044 convenient way of overriding defaults. The files that are concatenated are, in
2045 order:
2046 .display
2047 &_OS/Makefile-Default_&
2048 &_OS/Makefile-_&<&'ostype'&>
2049 &_Local/Makefile_&
2050 &_Local/Makefile-_&<&'ostype'&>
2051 &_Local/Makefile-_&<&'archtype'&>
2052 &_Local/Makefile-_&<&'ostype'&>-<&'archtype'&>
2053 &_OS/Makefile-Base_&
2054 .endd
2055 .cindex "&_Local/Makefile_&"
2056 .cindex "building Exim" "operating system type"
2057 .cindex "building Exim" "architecture type"
2058 where <&'ostype'&> is the operating system type and <&'archtype'&> is the
2059 architecture type. &_Local/Makefile_& is required to exist, and the building
2060 process fails if it is absent. The other three &_Local_& files are optional,
2061 and are often not needed.
2062
2063 The values used for <&'ostype'&> and <&'archtype'&> are obtained from scripts
2064 called &_scripts/os-type_& and &_scripts/arch-type_& respectively. If either of
2065 the environment variables EXIM_OSTYPE or EXIM_ARCHTYPE is set, their
2066 values are used, thereby providing a means of forcing particular settings.
2067 Otherwise, the scripts try to get values from the &%uname%& command. If this
2068 fails, the shell variables OSTYPE and ARCHTYPE are inspected. A number
2069 of &'ad hoc'& transformations are then applied, to produce the standard names
2070 that Exim expects. You can run these scripts directly from the shell in order
2071 to find out what values are being used on your system.
2072
2073
2074 &_OS/Makefile-Default_& contains comments about the variables that are set
2075 therein. Some (but not all) are mentioned below. If there is something that
2076 needs changing, review the contents of this file and the contents of the make
2077 file for your operating system (&_OS/Makefile-<ostype>_&) to see what the
2078 default values are.
2079
2080
2081 .cindex "building Exim" "overriding default settings"
2082 If you need to change any of the values that are set in &_OS/Makefile-Default_&
2083 or in &_OS/Makefile-<ostype>_&, or to add any new definitions, you do not
2084 need to change the original files. Instead, you should make the changes by
2085 putting the new values in an appropriate &_Local_& file. For example,
2086 .cindex "Tru64-Unix build-time settings"
2087 when building Exim in many releases of the Tru64-Unix (formerly Digital UNIX,
2088 formerly DEC-OSF1) operating system, it is necessary to specify that the C
2089 compiler is called &'cc'& rather than &'gcc'&. Also, the compiler must be
2090 called with the option &%-std1%&, to make it recognize some of the features of
2091 Standard C that Exim uses. (Most other compilers recognize Standard C by
2092 default.) To do this, you should create a file called &_Local/Makefile-OSF1_&
2093 containing the lines
2094 .code
2095 CC=cc
2096 CFLAGS=-std1
2097 .endd
2098 If you are compiling for just one operating system, it may be easier to put
2099 these lines directly into &_Local/Makefile_&.
2100
2101 Keeping all your local configuration settings separate from the distributed
2102 files makes it easy to transfer them to new versions of Exim simply by copying
2103 the contents of the &_Local_& directory.
2104
2105
2106 .cindex "NIS lookup type" "including support for"
2107 .cindex "NIS+ lookup type" "including support for"
2108 .cindex "LDAP" "including support for"
2109 .cindex "lookup" "inclusion in binary"
2110 Exim contains support for doing LDAP, NIS, NIS+, and other kinds of file
2111 lookup, but not all systems have these components installed, so the default is
2112 not to include the relevant code in the binary. All the different kinds of file
2113 and database lookup that Exim supports are implemented as separate code modules
2114 which are included only if the relevant compile-time options are set. In the
2115 case of LDAP, NIS, and NIS+, the settings for &_Local/Makefile_& are:
2116 .code
2117 LOOKUP_LDAP=yes
2118 LOOKUP_NIS=yes
2119 LOOKUP_NISPLUS=yes
2120 .endd
2121 and similar settings apply to the other lookup types. They are all listed in
2122 &_src/EDITME_&. In many cases the relevant include files and interface
2123 libraries need to be installed before compiling Exim.
2124 .cindex "cdb" "including support for"
2125 However, there are some optional lookup types (such as cdb) for which
2126 the code is entirely contained within Exim, and no external include
2127 files or libraries are required. When a lookup type is not included in the
2128 binary, attempts to configure Exim to use it cause run time configuration
2129 errors.
2130
2131 .new
2132 .cindex "pkg-config" "lookups"
2133 .cindex "pkg-config" "authenticators"
2134 Many systems now use a tool called &'pkg-config'& to encapsulate information
2135 about how to compile against a library; Exim has some initial support for
2136 being able to use pkg-config for lookups and authenticators. For any given
2137 makefile variable which starts &`LOOKUP_`& or &`AUTH_`&, you can add a new
2138 variable with the &`_PC`& suffix in the name and assign as the value the
2139 name of the package to be queried. The results of querying via the
2140 &'pkg-config'& command will be added to the appropriate Makefile variables
2141 with &`+=`& directives, so your version of &'make'& will need to support that
2142 syntax. For instance:
2143 .code
2144 LOOKUP_SQLITE=yes
2145 LOOKUP_SQLITE_PC=sqlite3
2146 AUTH_GSASL=yes
2147 AUTH_GSASL_PC=libgsasl
2148 AUTH_HEIMDAL_GSSAPI=yes
2149 AUTH_HEIMDAL_GSSAPI_PC=heimdal-gssapi
2150 .endd
2151 .wen
2152
2153 .cindex "Perl" "including support for"
2154 Exim can be linked with an embedded Perl interpreter, allowing Perl
2155 subroutines to be called during string expansion. To enable this facility,
2156 .code
2157 EXIM_PERL=perl.o
2158 .endd
2159 must be defined in &_Local/Makefile_&. Details of this facility are given in
2160 chapter &<<CHAPperl>>&.
2161
2162 .cindex "X11 libraries, location of"
2163 The location of the X11 libraries is something that varies a lot between
2164 operating systems, and there may be different versions of X11 to cope
2165 with. Exim itself makes no use of X11, but if you are compiling the Exim
2166 monitor, the X11 libraries must be available.
2167 The following three variables are set in &_OS/Makefile-Default_&:
2168 .code
2169 X11=/usr/X11R6
2170 XINCLUDE=-I$(X11)/include
2171 XLFLAGS=-L$(X11)/lib
2172 .endd
2173 These are overridden in some of the operating-system configuration files. For
2174 example, in &_OS/Makefile-SunOS5_& there is
2175 .code
2176 X11=/usr/openwin
2177 XINCLUDE=-I$(X11)/include
2178 XLFLAGS=-L$(X11)/lib -R$(X11)/lib
2179 .endd
2180 If you need to override the default setting for your operating system, place a
2181 definition of all three of these variables into your
2182 &_Local/Makefile-<ostype>_& file.
2183
2184 .cindex "EXTRALIBS"
2185 If you need to add any extra libraries to the link steps, these can be put in a
2186 variable called EXTRALIBS, which appears in all the link commands, but by
2187 default is not defined. In contrast, EXTRALIBS_EXIM is used only on the
2188 command for linking the main Exim binary, and not for any associated utilities.
2189
2190 .cindex "DBM libraries" "configuration for building"
2191 There is also DBMLIB, which appears in the link commands for binaries that
2192 use DBM functions (see also section &<<SECTdb>>&). Finally, there is
2193 EXTRALIBS_EXIMON, which appears only in the link step for the Exim monitor
2194 binary, and which can be used, for example, to include additional X11
2195 libraries.
2196
2197 .cindex "configuration file" "editing"
2198 The make file copes with rebuilding Exim correctly if any of the configuration
2199 files are edited. However, if an optional configuration file is deleted, it is
2200 necessary to touch the associated non-optional file (that is,
2201 &_Local/Makefile_& or &_Local/eximon.conf_&) before rebuilding.
2202
2203
2204 .section "OS-specific header files" "SECID30"
2205 .cindex "&_os.h_&"
2206 .cindex "building Exim" "OS-specific C header files"
2207 The &_OS_& directory contains a number of files with names of the form
2208 &_os.h-<ostype>_&. These are system-specific C header files that should not
2209 normally need to be changed. There is a list of macro settings that are
2210 recognized in the file &_OS/os.configuring_&, which should be consulted if you
2211 are porting Exim to a new operating system.
2212
2213
2214
2215 .section "Overriding build-time options for the monitor" "SECID31"
2216 .cindex "building Eximon"
2217 A similar process is used for overriding things when building the Exim monitor,
2218 where the files that are involved are
2219 .display
2220 &_OS/eximon.conf-Default_&
2221 &_OS/eximon.conf-_&<&'ostype'&>
2222 &_Local/eximon.conf_&
2223 &_Local/eximon.conf-_&<&'ostype'&>
2224 &_Local/eximon.conf-_&<&'archtype'&>
2225 &_Local/eximon.conf-_&<&'ostype'&>-<&'archtype'&>
2226 .endd
2227 .cindex "&_Local/eximon.conf_&"
2228 As with Exim itself, the final three files need not exist, and in this case the
2229 &_OS/eximon.conf-<ostype>_& file is also optional. The default values in
2230 &_OS/eximon.conf-Default_& can be overridden dynamically by setting environment
2231 variables of the same name, preceded by EXIMON_. For example, setting
2232 EXIMON_LOG_DEPTH in the environment overrides the value of
2233 LOG_DEPTH at run time.
2234 .ecindex IIDbuex
2235
2236
2237 .section "Installing Exim binaries and scripts" "SECID32"
2238 .cindex "installing Exim"
2239 .cindex "BIN_DIRECTORY"
2240 The command &`make install`& runs the &(exim_install)& script with no
2241 arguments. The script copies binaries and utility scripts into the directory
2242 whose name is specified by the BIN_DIRECTORY setting in &_Local/Makefile_&.
2243 .cindex "setuid" "installing Exim with"
2244 The install script copies files only if they are newer than the files they are
2245 going to replace. The Exim binary is required to be owned by root and have the
2246 &'setuid'& bit set, for normal configurations. Therefore, you must run &`make
2247 install`& as root so that it can set up the Exim binary in this way. However, in
2248 some special situations (for example, if a host is doing no local deliveries)
2249 it may be possible to run Exim without making the binary setuid root (see
2250 chapter &<<CHAPsecurity>>& for details).
2251
2252 .cindex "CONFIGURE_FILE"
2253 Exim's run time configuration file is named by the CONFIGURE_FILE setting
2254 in &_Local/Makefile_&. If this names a single file, and the file does not
2255 exist, the default configuration file &_src/configure.default_& is copied there
2256 by the installation script. If a run time configuration file already exists, it
2257 is left alone. If CONFIGURE_FILE is a colon-separated list, naming several
2258 alternative files, no default is installed.
2259
2260 .cindex "system aliases file"
2261 .cindex "&_/etc/aliases_&"
2262 One change is made to the default configuration file when it is installed: the
2263 default configuration contains a router that references a system aliases file.
2264 The path to this file is set to the value specified by
2265 SYSTEM_ALIASES_FILE in &_Local/Makefile_& (&_/etc/aliases_& by default).
2266 If the system aliases file does not exist, the installation script creates it,
2267 and outputs a comment to the user.
2268
2269 The created file contains no aliases, but it does contain comments about the
2270 aliases a site should normally have. Mail aliases have traditionally been
2271 kept in &_/etc/aliases_&. However, some operating systems are now using
2272 &_/etc/mail/aliases_&. You should check if yours is one of these, and change
2273 Exim's configuration if necessary.
2274
2275 The default configuration uses the local host's name as the only local domain,
2276 and is set up to do local deliveries into the shared directory &_/var/mail_&,
2277 running as the local user. System aliases and &_.forward_& files in users' home
2278 directories are supported, but no NIS or NIS+ support is configured. Domains
2279 other than the name of the local host are routed using the DNS, with delivery
2280 over SMTP.
2281
2282 It is possible to install Exim for special purposes (such as building a binary
2283 distribution) in a private part of the file system. You can do this by a
2284 command such as
2285 .code
2286 make DESTDIR=/some/directory/ install
2287 .endd
2288 This has the effect of pre-pending the specified directory to all the file
2289 paths, except the name of the system aliases file that appears in the default
2290 configuration. (If a default alias file is created, its name &'is'& modified.)
2291 For backwards compatibility, ROOT is used if DESTDIR is not set,
2292 but this usage is deprecated.
2293
2294 .cindex "installing Exim" "what is not installed"
2295 Running &'make install'& does not copy the Exim 4 conversion script
2296 &'convert4r4'&. You will probably run this only once if you are
2297 upgrading from Exim 3. None of the documentation files in the &_doc_&
2298 directory are copied, except for the info files when you have set
2299 INFO_DIRECTORY, as described in section &<<SECTinsinfdoc>>& below.
2300
2301 For the utility programs, old versions are renamed by adding the suffix &_.O_&
2302 to their names. The Exim binary itself, however, is handled differently. It is
2303 installed under a name that includes the version number and the compile number,
2304 for example &_exim-&version;-1_&. The script then arranges for a symbolic link
2305 called &_exim_& to point to the binary. If you are updating a previous version
2306 of Exim, the script takes care to ensure that the name &_exim_& is never absent
2307 from the directory (as seen by other processes).
2308
2309 .cindex "installing Exim" "testing the script"
2310 If you want to see what the &'make install'& will do before running it for
2311 real, you can pass the &%-n%& option to the installation script by this
2312 command:
2313 .code
2314 make INSTALL_ARG=-n install
2315 .endd
2316 The contents of the variable INSTALL_ARG are passed to the installation
2317 script. You do not need to be root to run this test. Alternatively, you can run
2318 the installation script directly, but this must be from within the build
2319 directory. For example, from the top-level Exim directory you could use this
2320 command:
2321 .code
2322 (cd build-SunOS5-5.5.1-sparc; ../scripts/exim_install -n)
2323 .endd
2324 .cindex "installing Exim" "install script options"
2325 There are two other options that can be supplied to the installation script.
2326
2327 .ilist
2328 &%-no_chown%& bypasses the call to change the owner of the installed binary
2329 to root, and the call to make it a setuid binary.
2330 .next
2331 &%-no_symlink%& bypasses the setting up of the symbolic link &_exim_& to the
2332 installed binary.
2333 .endlist
2334
2335 INSTALL_ARG can be used to pass these options to the script. For example:
2336 .code
2337 make INSTALL_ARG=-no_symlink install
2338 .endd
2339 The installation script can also be given arguments specifying which files are
2340 to be copied. For example, to install just the Exim binary, and nothing else,
2341 without creating the symbolic link, you could use:
2342 .code
2343 make INSTALL_ARG='-no_symlink exim' install
2344 .endd
2345
2346
2347
2348 .section "Installing info documentation" "SECTinsinfdoc"
2349 .cindex "installing Exim" "&'info'& documentation"
2350 Not all systems use the GNU &'info'& system for documentation, and for this
2351 reason, the Texinfo source of Exim's documentation is not included in the main
2352 distribution. Instead it is available separately from the ftp site (see section
2353 &<<SECTavail>>&).
2354
2355 If you have defined INFO_DIRECTORY in &_Local/Makefile_& and the Texinfo
2356 source of the documentation is found in the source tree, running &`make
2357 install`& automatically builds the info files and installs them.
2358
2359
2360
2361 .section "Setting up the spool directory" "SECID33"
2362 .cindex "spool directory" "creating"
2363 When it starts up, Exim tries to create its spool directory if it does not
2364 exist. The Exim uid and gid are used for the owner and group of the spool
2365 directory. Sub-directories are automatically created in the spool directory as
2366 necessary.
2367
2368
2369
2370
2371 .section "Testing" "SECID34"
2372 .cindex "testing" "installation"
2373 Having installed Exim, you can check that the run time configuration file is
2374 syntactically valid by running the following command, which assumes that the
2375 Exim binary directory is within your PATH environment variable:
2376 .code
2377 exim -bV
2378 .endd
2379 If there are any errors in the configuration file, Exim outputs error messages.
2380 Otherwise it outputs the version number and build date,
2381 the DBM library that is being used, and information about which drivers and
2382 other optional code modules are included in the binary.
2383 Some simple routing tests can be done by using the address testing option. For
2384 example,
2385 .display
2386 &`exim -bt`& <&'local username'&>
2387 .endd
2388 should verify that it recognizes a local mailbox, and
2389 .display
2390 &`exim -bt`& <&'remote address'&>
2391 .endd
2392 a remote one. Then try getting it to deliver mail, both locally and remotely.
2393 This can be done by passing messages directly to Exim, without going through a
2394 user agent. For example:
2395 .code
2396 exim -v postmaster@your.domain.example
2397 From: user@your.domain.example
2398 To: postmaster@your.domain.example
2399 Subject: Testing Exim
2400
2401 This is a test message.
2402 ^D
2403 .endd
2404 The &%-v%& option causes Exim to output some verification of what it is doing.
2405 In this case you should see copies of three log lines, one for the message's
2406 arrival, one for its delivery, and one containing &"Completed"&.
2407
2408 .cindex "delivery" "problems with"
2409 If you encounter problems, look at Exim's log files (&'mainlog'& and
2410 &'paniclog'&) to see if there is any relevant information there. Another source
2411 of information is running Exim with debugging turned on, by specifying the
2412 &%-d%& option. If a message is stuck on Exim's spool, you can force a delivery
2413 with debugging turned on by a command of the form
2414 .display
2415 &`exim -d -M`& <&'exim-message-id'&>
2416 .endd
2417 You must be root or an &"admin user"& in order to do this. The &%-d%& option
2418 produces rather a lot of output, but you can cut this down to specific areas.
2419 For example, if you use &%-d-all+route%& only the debugging information
2420 relevant to routing is included. (See the &%-d%& option in chapter
2421 &<<CHAPcommandline>>& for more details.)
2422
2423 .cindex '&"sticky"& bit'
2424 .cindex "lock files"
2425 One specific problem that has shown up on some sites is the inability to do
2426 local deliveries into a shared mailbox directory, because it does not have the
2427 &"sticky bit"& set on it. By default, Exim tries to create a lock file before
2428 writing to a mailbox file, and if it cannot create the lock file, the delivery
2429 is deferred. You can get round this either by setting the &"sticky bit"& on the
2430 directory, or by setting a specific group for local deliveries and allowing
2431 that group to create files in the directory (see the comments above the
2432 &(local_delivery)& transport in the default configuration file). Another
2433 approach is to configure Exim not to use lock files, but just to rely on
2434 &[fcntl()]& locking instead. However, you should do this only if all user
2435 agents also use &[fcntl()]& locking. For further discussion of locking issues,
2436 see chapter &<<CHAPappendfile>>&.
2437
2438 One thing that cannot be tested on a system that is already running an MTA is
2439 the receipt of incoming SMTP mail on the standard SMTP port. However, the
2440 &%-oX%& option can be used to run an Exim daemon that listens on some other
2441 port, or &'inetd'& can be used to do this. The &%-bh%& option and the
2442 &'exim_checkaccess'& utility can be used to check out policy controls on
2443 incoming SMTP mail.
2444
2445 Testing a new version on a system that is already running Exim can most easily
2446 be done by building a binary with a different CONFIGURE_FILE setting. From
2447 within the run time configuration, all other file and directory names
2448 that Exim uses can be altered, in order to keep it entirely clear of the
2449 production version.
2450
2451
2452 .section "Replacing another MTA with Exim" "SECID35"
2453 .cindex "replacing another MTA"
2454 Building and installing Exim for the first time does not of itself put it in
2455 general use. The name by which the system's MTA is called by mail user agents
2456 is either &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_&, or &_/usr/lib/sendmail_& (depending on the
2457 operating system), and it is necessary to make this name point to the &'exim'&
2458 binary in order to get the user agents to pass messages to Exim. This is
2459 normally done by renaming any existing file and making &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_&
2460 or &_/usr/lib/sendmail_&
2461 .cindex "symbolic link" "to &'exim'& binary"
2462 a symbolic link to the &'exim'& binary. It is a good idea to remove any setuid
2463 privilege and executable status from the old MTA. It is then necessary to stop
2464 and restart the mailer daemon, if one is running.
2465
2466 .cindex "FreeBSD, MTA indirection"
2467 .cindex "&_/etc/mail/mailer.conf_&"
2468 Some operating systems have introduced alternative ways of switching MTAs. For
2469 example, if you are running FreeBSD, you need to edit the file
2470 &_/etc/mail/mailer.conf_& instead of setting up a symbolic link as just
2471 described. A typical example of the contents of this file for running Exim is
2472 as follows:
2473 .code
2474 sendmail /usr/exim/bin/exim
2475 send-mail /usr/exim/bin/exim
2476 mailq /usr/exim/bin/exim -bp
2477 newaliases /usr/bin/true
2478 .endd
2479 Once you have set up the symbolic link, or edited &_/etc/mail/mailer.conf_&,
2480 your Exim installation is &"live"&. Check it by sending a message from your
2481 favourite user agent.
2482
2483 You should consider what to tell your users about the change of MTA. Exim may
2484 have different capabilities to what was previously running, and there are
2485 various operational differences such as the text of messages produced by
2486 command line options and in bounce messages. If you allow your users to make
2487 use of Exim's filtering capabilities, you should make the document entitled
2488 &'Exim's interface to mail filtering'& available to them.
2489
2490
2491
2492 .section "Upgrading Exim" "SECID36"
2493 .cindex "upgrading Exim"
2494 If you are already running Exim on your host, building and installing a new
2495 version automatically makes it available to MUAs, or any other programs that
2496 call the MTA directly. However, if you are running an Exim daemon, you do need
2497 to send it a HUP signal, to make it re-execute itself, and thereby pick up the
2498 new binary. You do not need to stop processing mail in order to install a new
2499 version of Exim. The install script does not modify an existing runtime
2500 configuration file.
2501
2502
2503
2504
2505 .section "Stopping the Exim daemon on Solaris" "SECID37"
2506 .cindex "Solaris" "stopping Exim on"
2507 The standard command for stopping the mailer daemon on Solaris is
2508 .code
2509 /etc/init.d/sendmail stop
2510 .endd
2511 If &_/usr/lib/sendmail_& has been turned into a symbolic link, this script
2512 fails to stop Exim because it uses the command &'ps -e'& and greps the output
2513 for the text &"sendmail"&; this is not present because the actual program name
2514 (that is, &"exim"&) is given by the &'ps'& command with these options. A
2515 solution is to replace the line that finds the process id with something like
2516 .code
2517 pid=`cat /var/spool/exim/exim-daemon.pid`
2518 .endd
2519 to obtain the daemon's pid directly from the file that Exim saves it in.
2520
2521 Note, however, that stopping the daemon does not &"stop Exim"&. Messages can
2522 still be received from local processes, and if automatic delivery is configured
2523 (the normal case), deliveries will still occur.
2524
2525
2526
2527
2528 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2529 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2530
2531 .chapter "The Exim command line" "CHAPcommandline"
2532 .scindex IIDclo1 "command line" "options"
2533 .scindex IIDclo2 "options" "command line"
2534 Exim's command line takes the standard Unix form of a sequence of options,
2535 each starting with a hyphen character, followed by a number of arguments. The
2536 options are compatible with the main options of Sendmail, and there are also
2537 some additional options, some of which are compatible with Smail 3. Certain
2538 combinations of options do not make sense, and provoke an error if used.
2539 The form of the arguments depends on which options are set.
2540
2541
2542 .section "Setting options by program name" "SECID38"
2543 .cindex "&'mailq'&"
2544 If Exim is called under the name &'mailq'&, it behaves as if the option &%-bp%&
2545 were present before any other options.
2546 The &%-bp%& option requests a listing of the contents of the mail queue on the
2547 standard output.
2548 This feature is for compatibility with some systems that contain a command of
2549 that name in one of the standard libraries, symbolically linked to
2550 &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_& or &_/usr/lib/sendmail_&.
2551
2552 .cindex "&'rsmtp'&"
2553 If Exim is called under the name &'rsmtp'& it behaves as if the option &%-bS%&
2554 were present before any other options, for compatibility with Smail. The
2555 &%-bS%& option is used for reading in a number of messages in batched SMTP
2556 format.
2557
2558 .cindex "&'rmail'&"
2559 If Exim is called under the name &'rmail'& it behaves as if the &%-i%& and
2560 &%-oee%& options were present before any other options, for compatibility with
2561 Smail. The name &'rmail'& is used as an interface by some UUCP systems.
2562
2563 .cindex "&'runq'&"
2564 .cindex "queue runner"
2565 If Exim is called under the name &'runq'& it behaves as if the option &%-q%&
2566 were present before any other options, for compatibility with Smail. The &%-q%&
2567 option causes a single queue runner process to be started.
2568
2569 .cindex "&'newaliases'&"
2570 .cindex "alias file" "building"
2571 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "calling Exim as &'newaliases'&"
2572 If Exim is called under the name &'newaliases'& it behaves as if the option
2573 &%-bi%& were present before any other options, for compatibility with Sendmail.
2574 This option is used for rebuilding Sendmail's alias file. Exim does not have
2575 the concept of a single alias file, but can be configured to run a given
2576 command if called with the &%-bi%& option.
2577
2578
2579 .section "Trusted and admin users" "SECTtrustedadmin"
2580 Some Exim options are available only to &'trusted users'& and others are
2581 available only to &'admin users'&. In the description below, the phrases &"Exim
2582 user"& and &"Exim group"& mean the user and group defined by EXIM_USER and
2583 EXIM_GROUP in &_Local/Makefile_& or set by the &%exim_user%& and
2584 &%exim_group%& options. These do not necessarily have to use the name &"exim"&.
2585
2586 .ilist
2587 .cindex "trusted users" "definition of"
2588 .cindex "user" "trusted definition of"
2589 The trusted users are root, the Exim user, any user listed in the
2590 &%trusted_users%& configuration option, and any user whose current group or any
2591 supplementary group is one of those listed in the &%trusted_groups%&
2592 configuration option. Note that the Exim group is not automatically trusted.
2593
2594 .cindex '&"From"& line'
2595 .cindex "envelope sender"
2596 Trusted users are always permitted to use the &%-f%& option or a leading
2597 &"From&~"& line to specify the envelope sender of a message that is passed to
2598 Exim through the local interface (see the &%-bm%& and &%-f%& options below).
2599 See the &%untrusted_set_sender%& option for a way of permitting non-trusted
2600 users to set envelope senders.
2601
2602 .cindex "&'From:'& header line"
2603 .cindex "&'Sender:'& header line"
2604 For a trusted user, there is never any check on the contents of the &'From:'&
2605 header line, and a &'Sender:'& line is never added. Furthermore, any existing
2606 &'Sender:'& line in incoming local (non-TCP/IP) messages is not removed.
2607
2608 Trusted users may also specify a host name, host address, interface address,
2609 protocol name, ident value, and authentication data when submitting a message
2610 locally. Thus, they are able to insert messages into Exim's queue locally that
2611 have the characteristics of messages received from a remote host. Untrusted
2612 users may in some circumstances use &%-f%&, but can never set the other values
2613 that are available to trusted users.
2614 .next
2615 .cindex "user" "admin definition of"
2616 .cindex "admin user" "definition of"
2617 The admin users are root, the Exim user, and any user that is a member of the
2618 Exim group or of any group listed in the &%admin_groups%& configuration option.
2619 The current group does not have to be one of these groups.
2620
2621 Admin users are permitted to list the queue, and to carry out certain
2622 operations on messages, for example, to force delivery failures. It is also
2623 necessary to be an admin user in order to see the full information provided by
2624 the Exim monitor, and full debugging output.
2625
2626 By default, the use of the &%-M%&, &%-q%&, &%-R%&, and &%-S%& options to cause
2627 Exim to attempt delivery of messages on its queue is restricted to admin users.
2628 However, this restriction can be relaxed by setting the &%prod_requires_admin%&
2629 option false (that is, specifying &%no_prod_requires_admin%&).
2630
2631 Similarly, the use of the &%-bp%& option to list all the messages in the queue
2632 is restricted to admin users unless &%queue_list_requires_admin%& is set
2633 false.
2634 .endlist
2635
2636
2637 &*Warning*&: If you configure your system so that admin users are able to
2638 edit Exim's configuration file, you are giving those users an easy way of
2639 getting root. There is further discussion of this issue at the start of chapter
2640 &<<CHAPconf>>&.
2641
2642
2643
2644
2645 .section "Command line options" "SECID39"
2646 Exim's command line options are described in alphabetical order below. If none
2647 of the options that specifies a specific action (such as starting the daemon or
2648 a queue runner, or testing an address, or receiving a message in a specific
2649 format, or listing the queue) are present, and there is at least one argument
2650 on the command line, &%-bm%& (accept a local message on the standard input,
2651 with the arguments specifying the recipients) is assumed. Otherwise, Exim
2652 outputs a brief message about itself and exits.
2653
2654 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2655 . Insert a stylized XML comment here, to identify the start of the command line
2656 . options. This is for the benefit of the Perl script that automatically
2657 . creates a man page for the options.
2658 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2659
2660 .literal xml
2661 <!-- === Start of command line options === -->
2662 .literal off
2663
2664
2665 .vlist
2666 .vitem &%--%&
2667 .oindex "--"
2668 .cindex "options" "command line; terminating"
2669 This is a pseudo-option whose only purpose is to terminate the options and
2670 therefore to cause subsequent command line items to be treated as arguments
2671 rather than options, even if they begin with hyphens.
2672
2673 .vitem &%--help%&
2674 .oindex "&%--help%&"
2675 This option causes Exim to output a few sentences stating what it is.
2676 The same output is generated if the Exim binary is called with no options and
2677 no arguments.
2678
2679 .vitem &%--version%&
2680 .oindex "&%--version%&"
2681 This option is an alias for &%-bV%& and causes version information to be
2682 displayed.
2683
2684 .vitem &%-B%&<&'type'&>
2685 .oindex "&%-B%&"
2686 .cindex "8-bit characters"
2687 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "8-bit characters"
2688 This is a Sendmail option for selecting 7 or 8 bit processing. Exim is 8-bit
2689 clean; it ignores this option.
2690
2691 .vitem &%-bd%&
2692 .oindex "&%-bd%&"
2693 .cindex "daemon"
2694 .cindex "SMTP" "listener"
2695 .cindex "queue runner"
2696 This option runs Exim as a daemon, awaiting incoming SMTP connections. Usually
2697 the &%-bd%& option is combined with the &%-q%&<&'time'&> option, to specify
2698 that the daemon should also initiate periodic queue runs.
2699
2700 The &%-bd%& option can be used only by an admin user. If either of the &%-d%&
2701 (debugging) or &%-v%& (verifying) options are set, the daemon does not
2702 disconnect from the controlling terminal. When running this way, it can be
2703 stopped by pressing ctrl-C.
2704
2705 By default, Exim listens for incoming connections to the standard SMTP port on
2706 all the host's running interfaces. However, it is possible to listen on other
2707 ports, on multiple ports, and only on specific interfaces. Chapter
2708 &<<CHAPinterfaces>>& contains a description of the options that control this.
2709
2710 When a listening daemon
2711 .cindex "daemon" "process id (pid)"
2712 .cindex "pid (process id)" "of daemon"
2713 is started without the use of &%-oX%& (that is, without overriding the normal
2714 configuration), it writes its process id to a file called &_exim-daemon.pid_&
2715 in Exim's spool directory. This location can be overridden by setting
2716 PID_FILE_PATH in &_Local/Makefile_&. The file is written while Exim is still
2717 running as root.
2718
2719 When &%-oX%& is used on the command line to start a listening daemon, the
2720 process id is not written to the normal pid file path. However, &%-oP%& can be
2721 used to specify a path on the command line if a pid file is required.
2722
2723 The SIGHUP signal
2724 .cindex "SIGHUP"
2725 .cindex "daemon" "restarting"
2726 can be used to cause the daemon to re-execute itself. This should be done
2727 whenever Exim's configuration file, or any file that is incorporated into it by
2728 means of the &%.include%& facility, is changed, and also whenever a new version
2729 of Exim is installed. It is not necessary to do this when other files that are
2730 referenced from the configuration (for example, alias files) are changed,
2731 because these are reread each time they are used.
2732
2733 .vitem &%-bdf%&
2734 .oindex "&%-bdf%&"
2735 This option has the same effect as &%-bd%& except that it never disconnects
2736 from the controlling terminal, even when no debugging is specified.
2737
2738 .vitem &%-be%&
2739 .oindex "&%-be%&"
2740 .cindex "testing" "string expansion"
2741 .cindex "expansion" "testing"
2742 Run Exim in expansion testing mode. Exim discards its root privilege, to
2743 prevent ordinary users from using this mode to read otherwise inaccessible
2744 files. If no arguments are given, Exim runs interactively, prompting for lines
2745 of data. Otherwise, it processes each argument in turn.
2746
2747 If Exim was built with USE_READLINE=yes in &_Local/Makefile_&, it tries
2748 to load the &%libreadline%& library dynamically whenever the &%-be%& option is
2749 used without command line arguments. If successful, it uses the &[readline()]&
2750 function, which provides extensive line-editing facilities, for reading the
2751 test data. A line history is supported.
2752
2753 Long expansion expressions can be split over several lines by using backslash
2754 continuations. As in Exim's run time configuration, white space at the start of
2755 continuation lines is ignored. Each argument or data line is passed through the
2756 string expansion mechanism, and the result is output. Variable values from the
2757 configuration file (for example, &$qualify_domain$&) are available, but no
2758 message-specific values (such as &$sender_domain$&) are set, because no message
2759 is being processed (but see &%-bem%& and &%-Mset%&).
2760
2761 &*Note*&: If you use this mechanism to test lookups, and you change the data
2762 files or databases you are using, you must exit and restart Exim before trying
2763 the same lookup again. Otherwise, because each Exim process caches the results
2764 of lookups, you will just get the same result as before.
2765
2766 .vitem &%-bem%&&~<&'filename'&>
2767 .oindex "&%-bem%&"
2768 .cindex "testing" "string expansion"
2769 .cindex "expansion" "testing"
2770 This option operates like &%-be%& except that it must be followed by the name
2771 of a file. For example:
2772 .code
2773 exim -bem /tmp/testmessage
2774 .endd
2775 The file is read as a message (as if receiving a locally-submitted non-SMTP
2776 message) before any of the test expansions are done. Thus, message-specific
2777 variables such as &$message_size$& and &$header_from:$& are available. However,
2778 no &'Received:'& header is added to the message. If the &%-t%& option is set,
2779 recipients are read from the headers in the normal way, and are shown in the
2780 &$recipients$& variable. Note that recipients cannot be given on the command
2781 line, because further arguments are taken as strings to expand (just like
2782 &%-be%&).
2783
2784 .vitem &%-bF%&&~<&'filename'&>
2785 .oindex "&%-bF%&"
2786 .cindex "system filter" "testing"
2787 .cindex "testing" "system filter"
2788 This option is the same as &%-bf%& except that it assumes that the filter being
2789 tested is a system filter. The additional commands that are available only in
2790 system filters are recognized.
2791
2792 .vitem &%-bf%&&~<&'filename'&>
2793 .oindex "&%-bf%&"
2794 .cindex "filter" "testing"
2795 .cindex "testing" "filter file"
2796 .cindex "forward file" "testing"
2797 .cindex "testing" "forward file"
2798 .cindex "Sieve filter" "testing"
2799 This option runs Exim in user filter testing mode; the file is the filter file
2800 to be tested, and a test message must be supplied on the standard input. If
2801 there are no message-dependent tests in the filter, an empty file can be
2802 supplied.
2803
2804 If you want to test a system filter file, use &%-bF%& instead of &%-bf%&. You
2805 can use both &%-bF%& and &%-bf%& on the same command, in order to test a system
2806 filter and a user filter in the same run. For example:
2807 .code
2808 exim -bF /system/filter -bf /user/filter </test/message
2809 .endd
2810 This is helpful when the system filter adds header lines or sets filter
2811 variables that are used by the user filter.
2812
2813 If the test filter file does not begin with one of the special lines
2814 .code
2815 # Exim filter
2816 # Sieve filter
2817 .endd
2818 it is taken to be a normal &_.forward_& file, and is tested for validity under
2819 that interpretation. See sections &<<SECTitenonfilred>>& to
2820 &<<SECTspecitredli>>& for a description of the possible contents of non-filter
2821 redirection lists.
2822
2823 The result of an Exim command that uses &%-bf%&, provided no errors are
2824 detected, is a list of the actions that Exim would try to take if presented
2825 with the message for real. More details of filter testing are given in the
2826 separate document entitled &'Exim's interfaces to mail filtering'&.
2827
2828 When testing a filter file,
2829 .cindex "&""From""& line"
2830 .cindex "envelope sender"
2831 .oindex "&%-f%&" "for filter testing"
2832 the envelope sender can be set by the &%-f%& option,
2833 or by a &"From&~"& line at the start of the test message. Various parameters
2834 that would normally be taken from the envelope recipient address of the message
2835 can be set by means of additional command line options (see the next four
2836 options).
2837
2838 .vitem &%-bfd%&&~<&'domain'&>
2839 .oindex "&%-bfd%&"
2840 .vindex "&$qualify_domain$&"
2841 This sets the domain of the recipient address when a filter file is being
2842 tested by means of the &%-bf%& option. The default is the value of
2843 &$qualify_domain$&.
2844
2845 .vitem &%-bfl%&&~<&'local&~part'&>
2846 .oindex "&%-bfl%&"
2847 This sets the local part of the recipient address when a filter file is being
2848 tested by means of the &%-bf%& option. The default is the username of the
2849 process that calls Exim. A local part should be specified with any prefix or
2850 suffix stripped, because that is how it appears to the filter when a message is
2851 actually being delivered.
2852
2853 .vitem &%-bfp%&&~<&'prefix'&>
2854 .oindex "&%-bfp%&"
2855 This sets the prefix of the local part of the recipient address when a filter
2856 file is being tested by means of the &%-bf%& option. The default is an empty
2857 prefix.
2858
2859 .vitem &%-bfs%&&~<&'suffix'&>
2860 .oindex "&%-bfs%&"
2861 This sets the suffix of the local part of the recipient address when a filter
2862 file is being tested by means of the &%-bf%& option. The default is an empty
2863 suffix.
2864
2865 .vitem &%-bh%&&~<&'IP&~address'&>
2866 .oindex "&%-bh%&"
2867 .cindex "testing" "incoming SMTP"
2868 .cindex "SMTP" "testing incoming"
2869 .cindex "testing" "relay control"
2870 .cindex "relaying" "testing configuration"
2871 .cindex "policy control" "testing"
2872 .cindex "debugging" "&%-bh%& option"
2873 This option runs a fake SMTP session as if from the given IP address, using the
2874 standard input and output. The IP address may include a port number at the end,
2875 after a full stop. For example:
2876 .code
2877 exim -bh 10.9.8.7.1234
2878 exim -bh fe80::a00:20ff:fe86:a061.5678
2879 .endd
2880 When an IPv6 address is given, it is converted into canonical form. In the case
2881 of the second example above, the value of &$sender_host_address$& after
2882 conversion to the canonical form is
2883 &`fe80:0000:0000:0a00:20ff:fe86:a061.5678`&.
2884
2885 Comments as to what is going on are written to the standard error file. These
2886 include lines beginning with &"LOG"& for anything that would have been logged.
2887 This facility is provided for testing configuration options for incoming
2888 messages, to make sure they implement the required policy. For example, you can
2889 test your relay controls using &%-bh%&.
2890
2891 &*Warning 1*&:
2892 .cindex "RFC 1413"
2893 You can test features of the configuration that rely on ident (RFC 1413)
2894 information by using the &%-oMt%& option. However, Exim cannot actually perform
2895 an ident callout when testing using &%-bh%& because there is no incoming SMTP
2896 connection.
2897
2898 &*Warning 2*&: Address verification callouts (see section &<<SECTcallver>>&)
2899 are also skipped when testing using &%-bh%&. If you want these callouts to
2900 occur, use &%-bhc%& instead.
2901
2902 Messages supplied during the testing session are discarded, and nothing is
2903 written to any of the real log files. There may be pauses when DNS (and other)
2904 lookups are taking place, and of course these may time out. The &%-oMi%& option
2905 can be used to specify a specific IP interface and port if this is important,
2906 and &%-oMaa%& and &%-oMai%& can be used to set parameters as if the SMTP
2907 session were authenticated.
2908
2909 The &'exim_checkaccess'& utility is a &"packaged"& version of &%-bh%& whose
2910 output just states whether a given recipient address from a given host is
2911 acceptable or not. See section &<<SECTcheckaccess>>&.
2912
2913 Features such as authentication and encryption, where the client input is not
2914 plain text, cannot easily be tested with &%-bh%&. Instead, you should use a
2915 specialized SMTP test program such as
2916 &url(http://jetmore.org/john/code/#swaks,swaks).
2917
2918 .vitem &%-bhc%&&~<&'IP&~address'&>
2919 .oindex "&%-bhc%&"
2920 This option operates in the same way as &%-bh%&, except that address
2921 verification callouts are performed if required. This includes consulting and
2922 updating the callout cache database.
2923
2924 .vitem &%-bi%&
2925 .oindex "&%-bi%&"
2926 .cindex "alias file" "building"
2927 .cindex "building alias file"
2928 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-bi%& option"
2929 Sendmail interprets the &%-bi%& option as a request to rebuild its alias file.
2930 Exim does not have the concept of a single alias file, and so it cannot mimic
2931 this behaviour. However, calls to &_/usr/lib/sendmail_& with the &%-bi%& option
2932 tend to appear in various scripts such as NIS make files, so the option must be
2933 recognized.
2934
2935 If &%-bi%& is encountered, the command specified by the &%bi_command%&
2936 configuration option is run, under the uid and gid of the caller of Exim. If
2937 the &%-oA%& option is used, its value is passed to the command as an argument.
2938 The command set by &%bi_command%& may not contain arguments. The command can
2939 use the &'exim_dbmbuild'& utility, or some other means, to rebuild alias files
2940 if this is required. If the &%bi_command%& option is not set, calling Exim with
2941 &%-bi%& is a no-op.
2942
2943 .vitem &%-bm%&
2944 .oindex "&%-bm%&"
2945 .cindex "local message reception"
2946 This option runs an Exim receiving process that accepts an incoming,
2947 locally-generated message on the current input. The recipients are given as the
2948 command arguments (except when &%-t%& is also present &-- see below). Each
2949 argument can be a comma-separated list of RFC 2822 addresses. This is the
2950 default option for selecting the overall action of an Exim call; it is assumed
2951 if no other conflicting option is present.
2952
2953 If any addresses in the message are unqualified (have no domain), they are
2954 qualified by the values of the &%qualify_domain%& or &%qualify_recipient%&
2955 options, as appropriate. The &%-bnq%& option (see below) provides a way of
2956 suppressing this for special cases.
2957
2958 Policy checks on the contents of local messages can be enforced by means of
2959 the non-SMTP ACL. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for details.
2960
2961 .cindex "return code" "for &%-bm%&"
2962 The return code is zero if the message is successfully accepted. Otherwise, the
2963 action is controlled by the &%-oe%&&'x'& option setting &-- see below.
2964
2965 The format
2966 .cindex "message" "format"
2967 .cindex "format" "message"
2968 .cindex "&""From""& line"
2969 .cindex "UUCP" "&""From""& line"
2970 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&""From""& line"
2971 of the message must be as defined in RFC 2822, except that, for
2972 compatibility with Sendmail and Smail, a line in one of the forms
2973 .code
2974 From sender Fri Jan 5 12:55 GMT 1997
2975 From sender Fri, 5 Jan 97 12:55:01
2976 .endd
2977 (with the weekday optional, and possibly with additional text after the date)
2978 is permitted to appear at the start of the message. There appears to be no
2979 authoritative specification of the format of this line. Exim recognizes it by
2980 matching against the regular expression defined by the &%uucp_from_pattern%&
2981 option, which can be changed if necessary.
2982
2983 .oindex "&%-f%&" "overriding &""From""& line"
2984 The specified sender is treated as if it were given as the argument to the
2985 &%-f%& option, but if a &%-f%& option is also present, its argument is used in
2986 preference to the address taken from the message. The caller of Exim must be a
2987 trusted user for the sender of a message to be set in this way.
2988
2989 .vitem &%-bnq%&
2990 .oindex "&%-bnq%&"
2991 .cindex "address qualification, suppressing"
2992 By default, Exim automatically qualifies unqualified addresses (those
2993 without domains) that appear in messages that are submitted locally (that
2994 is, not over TCP/IP). This qualification applies both to addresses in
2995 envelopes, and addresses in header lines. Sender addresses are qualified using
2996 &%qualify_domain%&, and recipient addresses using &%qualify_recipient%& (which
2997 defaults to the value of &%qualify_domain%&).
2998
2999 Sometimes, qualification is not wanted. For example, if &%-bS%& (batch SMTP) is
3000 being used to re-submit messages that originally came from remote hosts after
3001 content scanning, you probably do not want to qualify unqualified addresses in
3002 header lines. (Such lines will be present only if you have not enabled a header
3003 syntax check in the appropriate ACL.)
3004
3005 The &%-bnq%& option suppresses all qualification of unqualified addresses in
3006 messages that originate on the local host. When this is used, unqualified
3007 addresses in the envelope provoke errors (causing message rejection) and
3008 unqualified addresses in header lines are left alone.
3009
3010
3011 .vitem &%-bP%&
3012 .oindex "&%-bP%&"
3013 .cindex "configuration options" "extracting"
3014 .cindex "options" "configuration &-- extracting"
3015 If this option is given with no arguments, it causes the values of all Exim's
3016 main configuration options to be written to the standard output. The values
3017 of one or more specific options can be requested by giving their names as
3018 arguments, for example:
3019 .code
3020 exim -bP qualify_domain hold_domains
3021 .endd
3022 .cindex "hiding configuration option values"
3023 .cindex "configuration options" "hiding value of"
3024 .cindex "options" "hiding value of"
3025 However, any option setting that is preceded by the word &"hide"& in the
3026 configuration file is not shown in full, except to an admin user. For other
3027 users, the output is as in this example:
3028 .code
3029 mysql_servers = <value not displayable>
3030 .endd
3031 If &%configure_file%& is given as an argument, the name of the run time
3032 configuration file is output.
3033 If a list of configuration files was supplied, the value that is output here
3034 is the name of the file that was actually used.
3035
3036 .cindex "daemon" "process id (pid)"
3037 .cindex "pid (process id)" "of daemon"
3038 If &%log_file_path%& or &%pid_file_path%& are given, the names of the
3039 directories where log files and daemon pid files are written are output,
3040 respectively. If these values are unset, log files are written in a
3041 sub-directory of the spool directory called &%log%&, and the pid file is
3042 written directly into the spool directory.
3043
3044 If &%-bP%& is followed by a name preceded by &`+`&, for example,
3045 .code
3046 exim -bP +local_domains
3047 .endd
3048 it searches for a matching named list of any type (domain, host, address, or
3049 local part) and outputs what it finds.
3050
3051 .cindex "options" "router &-- extracting"
3052 .cindex "options" "transport &-- extracting"
3053 .cindex "options" "authenticator &-- extracting"
3054 If one of the words &%router%&, &%transport%&, or &%authenticator%& is given,
3055 followed by the name of an appropriate driver instance, the option settings for
3056 that driver are output. For example:
3057 .code
3058 exim -bP transport local_delivery
3059 .endd
3060 The generic driver options are output first, followed by the driver's private
3061 options. A list of the names of drivers of a particular type can be obtained by
3062 using one of the words &%router_list%&, &%transport_list%&, or
3063 &%authenticator_list%&, and a complete list of all drivers with their option
3064 settings can be obtained by using &%routers%&, &%transports%&, or
3065 &%authenticators%&.
3066
3067 .cindex "options" "macro &-- extracting"
3068 If invoked by an admin user, then &%macro%&, &%macro_list%& and &%macros%&
3069 are available, similarly to the drivers. Because macros are sometimes used
3070 for storing passwords, this option is restricted.
3071 The output format is one item per line.
3072
3073 .vitem &%-bp%&
3074 .oindex "&%-bp%&"
3075 .cindex "queue" "listing messages on"
3076 .cindex "listing" "messages on the queue"
3077 This option requests a listing of the contents of the mail queue on the
3078 standard output. If the &%-bp%& option is followed by a list of message ids,
3079 just those messages are listed. By default, this option can be used only by an
3080 admin user. However, the &%queue_list_requires_admin%& option can be set false
3081 to allow any user to see the queue.
3082
3083 Each message on the queue is displayed as in the following example:
3084 .code
3085 25m 2.9K 0t5C6f-0000c8-00 <alice@wonderland.fict.example>
3086 red.king@looking-glass.fict.example
3087 <other addresses>
3088 .endd
3089 .cindex "message" "size in queue listing"
3090 .cindex "size" "of message"
3091 The first line contains the length of time the message has been on the queue
3092 (in this case 25 minutes), the size of the message (2.9K), the unique local
3093 identifier for the message, and the message sender, as contained in the
3094 envelope. For bounce messages, the sender address is empty, and appears as
3095 &"<>"&. If the message was submitted locally by an untrusted user who overrode
3096 the default sender address, the user's login name is shown in parentheses
3097 before the sender address.
3098
3099 .cindex "frozen messages" "in queue listing"
3100 If the message is frozen (attempts to deliver it are suspended) then the text
3101 &"*** frozen ***"& is displayed at the end of this line.
3102
3103 The recipients of the message (taken from the envelope, not the headers) are
3104 displayed on subsequent lines. Those addresses to which the message has already
3105 been delivered are marked with the letter D. If an original address gets
3106 expanded into several addresses via an alias or forward file, the original is
3107 displayed with a D only when deliveries for all of its child addresses are
3108 complete.
3109
3110
3111 .vitem &%-bpa%&
3112 .oindex "&%-bpa%&"
3113 This option operates like &%-bp%&, but in addition it shows delivered addresses
3114 that were generated from the original top level address(es) in each message by
3115 alias or forwarding operations. These addresses are flagged with &"+D"& instead
3116 of just &"D"&.
3117
3118
3119 .vitem &%-bpc%&
3120 .oindex "&%-bpc%&"
3121 .cindex "queue" "count of messages on"
3122 This option counts the number of messages on the queue, and writes the total
3123 to the standard output. It is restricted to admin users, unless
3124 &%queue_list_requires_admin%& is set false.
3125
3126
3127 .vitem &%-bpr%&
3128 .oindex "&%-bpr%&"
3129 This option operates like &%-bp%&, but the output is not sorted into
3130 chronological order of message arrival. This can speed it up when there are
3131 lots of messages on the queue, and is particularly useful if the output is
3132 going to be post-processed in a way that doesn't need the sorting.
3133
3134 .vitem &%-bpra%&
3135 .oindex "&%-bpra%&"
3136 This option is a combination of &%-bpr%& and &%-bpa%&.
3137
3138 .vitem &%-bpru%&
3139 .oindex "&%-bpru%&"
3140 This option is a combination of &%-bpr%& and &%-bpu%&.
3141
3142
3143 .vitem &%-bpu%&
3144 .oindex "&%-bpu%&"
3145 This option operates like &%-bp%& but shows only undelivered top-level
3146 addresses for each message displayed. Addresses generated by aliasing or
3147 forwarding are not shown, unless the message was deferred after processing by a
3148 router with the &%one_time%& option set.
3149
3150
3151 .vitem &%-brt%&
3152 .oindex "&%-brt%&"
3153 .cindex "testing" "retry configuration"
3154 .cindex "retry" "configuration testing"
3155 This option is for testing retry rules, and it must be followed by up to three
3156 arguments. It causes Exim to look for a retry rule that matches the values
3157 and to write it to the standard output. For example:
3158 .code
3159 exim -brt bach.comp.mus.example
3160 Retry rule: *.comp.mus.example F,2h,15m; F,4d,30m;
3161 .endd
3162 See chapter &<<CHAPretry>>& for a description of Exim's retry rules. The first
3163 argument, which is required, can be a complete address in the form
3164 &'local_part@domain'&, or it can be just a domain name. If the second argument
3165 contains a dot, it is interpreted as an optional second domain name; if no
3166 retry rule is found for the first argument, the second is tried. This ties in
3167 with Exim's behaviour when looking for retry rules for remote hosts &-- if no
3168 rule is found that matches the host, one that matches the mail domain is
3169 sought. Finally, an argument that is the name of a specific delivery error, as
3170 used in setting up retry rules, can be given. For example:
3171 .code
3172 exim -brt haydn.comp.mus.example quota_3d
3173 Retry rule: *@haydn.comp.mus.example quota_3d F,1h,15m
3174 .endd
3175
3176 .vitem &%-brw%&
3177 .oindex "&%-brw%&"
3178 .cindex "testing" "rewriting"
3179 .cindex "rewriting" "testing"
3180 This option is for testing address rewriting rules, and it must be followed by
3181 a single argument, consisting of either a local part without a domain, or a
3182 complete address with a fully qualified domain. Exim outputs how this address
3183 would be rewritten for each possible place it might appear. See chapter
3184 &<<CHAPrewrite>>& for further details.
3185
3186 .vitem &%-bS%&
3187 .oindex "&%-bS%&"
3188 .cindex "SMTP" "batched incoming"
3189 .cindex "batched SMTP input"
3190 This option is used for batched SMTP input, which is an alternative interface
3191 for non-interactive local message submission. A number of messages can be
3192 submitted in a single run. However, despite its name, this is not really SMTP
3193 input. Exim reads each message's envelope from SMTP commands on the standard
3194 input, but generates no responses. If the caller is trusted, or
3195 &%untrusted_set_sender%& is set, the senders in the SMTP MAIL commands are
3196 believed; otherwise the sender is always the caller of Exim.
3197
3198 The message itself is read from the standard input, in SMTP format (leading
3199 dots doubled), terminated by a line containing just a single dot. An error is
3200 provoked if the terminating dot is missing. A further message may then follow.
3201
3202 As for other local message submissions, the contents of incoming batch SMTP
3203 messages can be checked using the non-SMTP ACL (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&).
3204 Unqualified addresses are automatically qualified using &%qualify_domain%& and
3205 &%qualify_recipient%&, as appropriate, unless the &%-bnq%& option is used.
3206
3207 Some other SMTP commands are recognized in the input. HELO and EHLO act
3208 as RSET; VRFY, EXPN, ETRN, and HELP act as NOOP;
3209 QUIT quits, ignoring the rest of the standard input.
3210
3211 .cindex "return code" "for &%-bS%&"
3212 If any error is encountered, reports are written to the standard output and
3213 error streams, and Exim gives up immediately. The return code is 0 if no error
3214 was detected; it is 1 if one or more messages were accepted before the error
3215 was detected; otherwise it is 2.
3216
3217 More details of input using batched SMTP are given in section
3218 &<<SECTincomingbatchedSMTP>>&.
3219
3220 .vitem &%-bs%&
3221 .oindex "&%-bs%&"
3222 .cindex "SMTP" "local input"
3223 .cindex "local SMTP input"
3224 This option causes Exim to accept one or more messages by reading SMTP commands
3225 on the standard input, and producing SMTP replies on the standard output. SMTP
3226 policy controls, as defined in ACLs (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&) are applied.
3227 Some user agents use this interface as a way of passing locally-generated
3228 messages to the MTA.
3229
3230 In
3231 .cindex "sender" "source of"
3232 this usage, if the caller of Exim is trusted, or &%untrusted_set_sender%& is
3233 set, the senders of messages are taken from the SMTP MAIL commands.
3234 Otherwise the content of these commands is ignored and the sender is set up as
3235 the calling user. Unqualified addresses are automatically qualified using
3236 &%qualify_domain%& and &%qualify_recipient%&, as appropriate, unless the
3237 &%-bnq%& option is used.
3238
3239 .cindex "inetd"
3240 The
3241 &%-bs%& option is also used to run Exim from &'inetd'&, as an alternative to
3242 using a listening daemon. Exim can distinguish the two cases by checking
3243 whether the standard input is a TCP/IP socket. When Exim is called from
3244 &'inetd'&, the source of the mail is assumed to be remote, and the comments
3245 above concerning senders and qualification do not apply. In this situation,
3246 Exim behaves in exactly the same way as it does when receiving a message via
3247 the listening daemon.
3248
3249 .vitem &%-bmalware%&&~<&'filename'&>
3250 .oindex "&%-bmalware%&"
3251 .cindex "testing", "malware"
3252 .cindex "malware scan test"
3253 This debugging option causes Exim to scan the given file,
3254 using the malware scanning framework. The option of &%av_scanner%& influences
3255 this option, so if &%av_scanner%&'s value is dependent upon an expansion then
3256 the expansion should have defaults which apply to this invocation. ACLs are
3257 not invoked, so if &%av_scanner%& references an ACL variable then that variable
3258 will never be populated and &%-bmalware%& will fail.
3259
3260 Exim will have changed working directory before resolving the filename, so
3261 using fully qualified pathnames is advisable. Exim will be running as the Exim
3262 user when it tries to open the file, rather than as the invoking user.
3263 This option requires admin privileges.
3264
3265 The &%-bmalware%& option will not be extended to be more generally useful,
3266 there are better tools for file-scanning. This option exists to help
3267 administrators verify their Exim and AV scanner configuration.
3268
3269 .vitem &%-bt%&
3270 .oindex "&%-bt%&"
3271 .cindex "testing" "addresses"
3272 .cindex "address" "testing"
3273 This option runs Exim in address testing mode, in which each argument is taken
3274 as a recipient address to be tested for deliverability. The results are
3275 written to the standard output. If a test fails, and the caller is not an admin
3276 user, no details of the failure are output, because these might contain
3277 sensitive information such as usernames and passwords for database lookups.
3278
3279 If no arguments are given, Exim runs in an interactive manner, prompting with a
3280 right angle bracket for addresses to be tested.
3281
3282 Unlike the &%-be%& test option, you cannot arrange for Exim to use the
3283 &[readline()]& function, because it is running as &'root'& and there are
3284 security issues.
3285
3286 Each address is handled as if it were the recipient address of a message
3287 (compare the &%-bv%& option). It is passed to the routers and the result is
3288 written to the standard output. However, any router that has
3289 &%no_address_test%& set is bypassed. This can make &%-bt%& easier to use for
3290 genuine routing tests if your first router passes everything to a scanner
3291 program.
3292
3293 .cindex "return code" "for &%-bt%&"
3294 The return code is 2 if any address failed outright; it is 1 if no address
3295 failed outright but at least one could not be resolved for some reason. Return
3296 code 0 is given only when all addresses succeed.
3297
3298 .cindex "duplicate addresses"
3299 &*Note*&: When actually delivering a message, Exim removes duplicate recipient
3300 addresses after routing is complete, so that only one delivery takes place.
3301 This does not happen when testing with &%-bt%&; the full results of routing are
3302 always shown.
3303
3304 &*Warning*&: &%-bt%& can only do relatively simple testing. If any of the
3305 routers in the configuration makes any tests on the sender address of a
3306 message,
3307 .oindex "&%-f%&" "for address testing"
3308 you can use the &%-f%& option to set an appropriate sender when running
3309 &%-bt%& tests. Without it, the sender is assumed to be the calling user at the
3310 default qualifying domain. However, if you have set up (for example) routers
3311 whose behaviour depends on the contents of an incoming message, you cannot test
3312 those conditions using &%-bt%&. The &%-N%& option provides a possible way of
3313 doing such tests.
3314
3315 .vitem &%-bV%&
3316 .oindex "&%-bV%&"
3317 .cindex "version number of Exim"
3318 This option causes Exim to write the current version number, compilation
3319 number, and compilation date of the &'exim'& binary to the standard output.
3320 It also lists the DBM library that is being used, the optional modules (such as
3321 specific lookup types), the drivers that are included in the binary, and the
3322 name of the run time configuration file that is in use.
3323
3324 As part of its operation, &%-bV%& causes Exim to read and syntax check its
3325 configuration file. However, this is a static check only. It cannot check
3326 values that are to be expanded. For example, although a misspelt ACL verb is
3327 detected, an error in the verb's arguments is not. You cannot rely on &%-bV%&
3328 alone to discover (for example) all the typos in the configuration; some
3329 realistic testing is needed. The &%-bh%& and &%-N%& options provide more
3330 dynamic testing facilities.
3331
3332 .vitem &%-bv%&
3333 .oindex "&%-bv%&"
3334 .cindex "verifying address" "using &%-bv%&"
3335 .cindex "address" "verification"
3336 This option runs Exim in address verification mode, in which each argument is
3337 taken as a recipient address to be verified by the routers. (This does
3338 not involve any verification callouts). During normal operation, verification
3339 happens mostly as a consequence processing a &%verify%& condition in an ACL
3340 (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&). If you want to test an entire ACL, possibly
3341 including callouts, see the &%-bh%& and &%-bhc%& options.
3342
3343 If verification fails, and the caller is not an admin user, no details of the
3344 failure are output, because these might contain sensitive information such as
3345 usernames and passwords for database lookups.
3346
3347 If no arguments are given, Exim runs in an interactive manner, prompting with a
3348 right angle bracket for addresses to be verified.
3349
3350 Unlike the &%-be%& test option, you cannot arrange for Exim to use the
3351 &[readline()]& function, because it is running as &'exim'& and there are
3352 security issues.
3353
3354 Verification differs from address testing (the &%-bt%& option) in that routers
3355 that have &%no_verify%& set are skipped, and if the address is accepted by a
3356 router that has &%fail_verify%& set, verification fails. The address is
3357 verified as a recipient if &%-bv%& is used; to test verification for a sender
3358 address, &%-bvs%& should be used.
3359
3360 If the &%-v%& option is not set, the output consists of a single line for each
3361 address, stating whether it was verified or not, and giving a reason in the
3362 latter case. Without &%-v%&, generating more than one address by redirection
3363 causes verification to end successfully, without considering the generated
3364 addresses. However, if just one address is generated, processing continues,
3365 and the generated address must verify successfully for the overall verification
3366 to succeed.
3367
3368 When &%-v%& is set, more details are given of how the address has been handled,
3369 and in the case of address redirection, all the generated addresses are also
3370 considered. Verification may succeed for some and fail for others.
3371
3372 The
3373 .cindex "return code" "for &%-bv%&"
3374 return code is 2 if any address failed outright; it is 1 if no address
3375 failed outright but at least one could not be resolved for some reason. Return
3376 code 0 is given only when all addresses succeed.
3377
3378 If any of the routers in the configuration makes any tests on the sender
3379 address of a message, you should use the &%-f%& option to set an appropriate
3380 sender when running &%-bv%& tests. Without it, the sender is assumed to be the
3381 calling user at the default qualifying domain.
3382
3383 .vitem &%-bvs%&
3384 .oindex "&%-bvs%&"
3385 This option acts like &%-bv%&, but verifies the address as a sender rather
3386 than a recipient address. This affects any rewriting and qualification that
3387 might happen.
3388
3389 .vitem &%-C%&&~<&'filelist'&>
3390 .oindex "&%-C%&"
3391 .cindex "configuration file" "alternate"
3392 .cindex "CONFIGURE_FILE"
3393 .cindex "alternate configuration file"
3394 This option causes Exim to find the run time configuration file from the given
3395 list instead of from the list specified by the CONFIGURE_FILE
3396 compile-time setting. Usually, the list will consist of just a single file
3397 name, but it can be a colon-separated list of names. In this case, the first
3398 file that exists is used. Failure to open an existing file stops Exim from
3399 proceeding any further along the list, and an error is generated.
3400
3401 When this option is used by a caller other than root, and the list is different
3402 from the compiled-in list, Exim gives up its root privilege immediately, and
3403 runs with the real and effective uid and gid set to those of the caller.
3404 However, if a TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST file is defined in &_Local/Makefile_&, that
3405 file contains a list of full pathnames, one per line, for configuration files
3406 which are trusted. Root privilege is retained for any configuration file so
3407 listed, as long as the caller is the Exim user (or the user specified in the
3408 CONFIGURE_OWNER option, if any), and as long as the configuration file is
3409 not writeable by inappropriate users or groups.
3410
3411 Leaving TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST unset precludes the possibility of testing a
3412 configuration using &%-C%& right through message reception and delivery,
3413 even if the caller is root. The reception works, but by that time, Exim is
3414 running as the Exim user, so when it re-executes to regain privilege for the
3415 delivery, the use of &%-C%& causes privilege to be lost. However, root can
3416 test reception and delivery using two separate commands (one to put a message
3417 on the queue, using &%-odq%&, and another to do the delivery, using &%-M%&).
3418
3419 If ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX is defined &_in Local/Makefile_&, it specifies a
3420 prefix string with which any file named in a &%-C%& command line option
3421 must start. In addition, the file name must not contain the sequence &`/../`&.
3422 However, if the value of the &%-C%& option is identical to the value of
3423 CONFIGURE_FILE in &_Local/Makefile_&, Exim ignores &%-C%& and proceeds as
3424 usual. There is no default setting for ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX; when it is
3425 unset, any file name can be used with &%-C%&.
3426
3427 ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX can be used to confine alternative configuration files
3428 to a directory to which only root has access. This prevents someone who has
3429 broken into the Exim account from running a privileged Exim with an arbitrary
3430 configuration file.
3431
3432 The &%-C%& facility is useful for ensuring that configuration files are
3433 syntactically correct, but cannot be used for test deliveries, unless the
3434 caller is privileged, or unless it is an exotic configuration that does not
3435 require privilege. No check is made on the owner or group of the files
3436 specified by this option.
3437
3438
3439 .vitem &%-D%&<&'macro'&>=<&'value'&>
3440 .oindex "&%-D%&"
3441 .cindex "macro" "setting on command line"
3442 This option can be used to override macro definitions in the configuration file
3443 (see section &<<SECTmacrodefs>>&). However, like &%-C%&, if it is used by an
3444 unprivileged caller, it causes Exim to give up its root privilege.
3445 If DISABLE_D_OPTION is defined in &_Local/Makefile_&, the use of &%-D%& is
3446 completely disabled, and its use causes an immediate error exit.
3447
3448 If WHITELIST_D_MACROS is defined in &_Local/Makefile_& then it should be a
3449 colon-separated list of macros which are considered safe and, if &%-D%& only
3450 supplies macros from this list, and the values are acceptable, then Exim will
3451 not give up root privilege if the caller is root, the Exim run-time user, or
3452 the CONFIGURE_OWNER, if set. This is a transition mechanism and is expected
3453 to be removed in the future. Acceptable values for the macros satisfy the
3454 regexp: &`^[A-Za-z0-9_/.-]*$`&
3455
3456 The entire option (including equals sign if present) must all be within one
3457 command line item. &%-D%& can be used to set the value of a macro to the empty
3458 string, in which case the equals sign is optional. These two commands are
3459 synonymous:
3460 .code
3461 exim -DABC ...
3462 exim -DABC= ...
3463 .endd
3464 To include spaces in a macro definition item, quotes must be used. If you use
3465 quotes, spaces are permitted around the macro name and the equals sign. For
3466 example:
3467 .code
3468 exim '-D ABC = something' ...
3469 .endd
3470 &%-D%& may be repeated up to 10 times on a command line.
3471
3472
3473 .vitem &%-d%&<&'debug&~options'&>
3474 .oindex "&%-d%&"
3475 .cindex "debugging" "list of selectors"
3476 .cindex "debugging" "&%-d%& option"
3477 This option causes debugging information to be written to the standard
3478 error stream. It is restricted to admin users because debugging output may show
3479 database queries that contain password information. Also, the details of users'
3480 filter files should be protected. If a non-admin user uses &%-d%&, Exim
3481 writes an error message to the standard error stream and exits with a non-zero
3482 return code.
3483
3484 When &%-d%& is used, &%-v%& is assumed. If &%-d%& is given on its own, a lot of
3485 standard debugging data is output. This can be reduced, or increased to include
3486 some more rarely needed information, by directly following &%-d%& with a string
3487 made up of names preceded by plus or minus characters. These add or remove sets
3488 of debugging data, respectively. For example, &%-d+filter%& adds filter
3489 debugging, whereas &%-d-all+filter%& selects only filter debugging. Note that
3490 no spaces are allowed in the debug setting. The available debugging categories
3491 are:
3492 .display
3493 &`acl `& ACL interpretation
3494 &`auth `& authenticators
3495 &`deliver `& general delivery logic
3496 &`dns `& DNS lookups (see also resolver)
3497 &`dnsbl `& DNS black list (aka RBL) code
3498 &`exec `& arguments for &[execv()]& calls
3499 &`expand `& detailed debugging for string expansions
3500 &`filter `& filter handling
3501 &`hints_lookup `& hints data lookups
3502 &`host_lookup `& all types of name-to-IP address handling
3503 &`ident `& ident lookup
3504 &`interface `& lists of local interfaces
3505 &`lists `& matching things in lists
3506 &`load `& system load checks
3507 &`local_scan `& can be used by &[local_scan()]& (see chapter &&&
3508 &<<CHAPlocalscan>>&)
3509 &`lookup `& general lookup code and all lookups
3510 &`memory `& memory handling
3511 &`pid `& add pid to debug output lines
3512 &`process_info `& setting info for the process log
3513 &`queue_run `& queue runs
3514 &`receive `& general message reception logic
3515 &`resolver `& turn on the DNS resolver's debugging output
3516 &`retry `& retry handling
3517 &`rewrite `& address rewriting
3518 &`route `& address routing
3519 &`timestamp `& add timestamp to debug output lines
3520 &`tls `& TLS logic
3521 &`transport `& transports
3522 &`uid `& changes of uid/gid and looking up uid/gid
3523 &`verify `& address verification logic
3524 &`all `& almost all of the above (see below), and also &%-v%&
3525 .endd
3526 The &`all`& option excludes &`memory`& when used as &`+all`&, but includes it
3527 for &`-all`&. The reason for this is that &`+all`& is something that people
3528 tend to use when generating debug output for Exim maintainers. If &`+memory`&
3529 is included, an awful lot of output that is very rarely of interest is
3530 generated, so it now has to be explicitly requested. However, &`-all`& does
3531 turn everything off.
3532
3533 .cindex "resolver, debugging output"
3534 .cindex "DNS resolver, debugging output"
3535 The &`resolver`& option produces output only if the DNS resolver was compiled
3536 with DEBUG enabled. This is not the case in some operating systems. Also,
3537 unfortunately, debugging output from the DNS resolver is written to stdout
3538 rather than stderr.
3539
3540 The default (&%-d%& with no argument) omits &`expand`&, &`filter`&,
3541 &`interface`&, &`load`&, &`memory`&, &`pid`&, &`resolver`&, and &`timestamp`&.
3542 However, the &`pid`& selector is forced when debugging is turned on for a
3543 daemon, which then passes it on to any re-executed Exims. Exim also
3544 automatically adds the pid to debug lines when several remote deliveries are
3545 run in parallel.
3546
3547 The &`timestamp`& selector causes the current time to be inserted at the start
3548 of all debug output lines. This can be useful when trying to track down delays
3549 in processing.
3550
3551 If the &%debug_print%& option is set in any driver, it produces output whenever
3552 any debugging is selected, or if &%-v%& is used.
3553
3554 .vitem &%-dd%&<&'debug&~options'&>
3555 .oindex "&%-dd%&"
3556 This option behaves exactly like &%-d%& except when used on a command that
3557 starts a daemon process. In that case, debugging is turned off for the
3558 subprocesses that the daemon creates. Thus, it is useful for monitoring the
3559 behaviour of the daemon without creating as much output as full debugging does.
3560
3561 .vitem &%-dropcr%&
3562 .oindex "&%-dropcr%&"
3563 This is an obsolete option that is now a no-op. It used to affect the way Exim
3564 handled CR and LF characters in incoming messages. What happens now is
3565 described in section &<<SECTlineendings>>&.
3566
3567 .vitem &%-E%&
3568 .oindex "&%-E%&"
3569 .cindex "bounce message" "generating"
3570 This option specifies that an incoming message is a locally-generated delivery
3571 failure report. It is used internally by Exim when handling delivery failures
3572 and is not intended for external use. Its only effect is to stop Exim
3573 generating certain messages to the postmaster, as otherwise message cascades
3574 could occur in some situations. As part of the same option, a message id may
3575 follow the characters &%-E%&. If it does, the log entry for the receipt of the
3576 new message contains the id, following &"R="&, as a cross-reference.
3577
3578 .vitem &%-e%&&'x'&
3579 .oindex "&%-e%&&'x'&"
3580 There are a number of Sendmail options starting with &%-oe%& which seem to be
3581 called by various programs without the leading &%o%& in the option. For
3582 example, the &%vacation%& program uses &%-eq%&. Exim treats all options of the
3583 form &%-e%&&'x'& as synonymous with the corresponding &%-oe%&&'x'& options.
3584
3585 .vitem &%-F%&&~<&'string'&>
3586 .oindex "&%-F%&"
3587 .cindex "sender" "name"
3588 .cindex "name" "of sender"
3589 This option sets the sender's full name for use when a locally-generated
3590 message is being accepted. In the absence of this option, the user's &'gecos'&
3591 entry from the password data is used. As users are generally permitted to alter
3592 their &'gecos'& entries, no security considerations are involved. White space
3593 between &%-F%& and the <&'string'&> is optional.
3594
3595 .vitem &%-f%&&~<&'address'&>
3596 .oindex "&%-f%&"
3597 .cindex "sender" "address"
3598 .cindex "address" "sender"
3599 .cindex "trusted users"
3600 .cindex "envelope sender"
3601 .cindex "user" "trusted"
3602 This option sets the address of the envelope sender of a locally-generated
3603 message (also known as the return path). The option can normally be used only
3604 by a trusted user, but &%untrusted_set_sender%& can be set to allow untrusted
3605 users to use it.
3606
3607 Processes running as root or the Exim user are always trusted. Other
3608 trusted users are defined by the &%trusted_users%& or &%trusted_groups%&
3609 options. In the absence of &%-f%&, or if the caller is not trusted, the sender
3610 of a local message is set to the caller's login name at the default qualify
3611 domain.
3612
3613 There is one exception to the restriction on the use of &%-f%&: an empty sender
3614 can be specified by any user, trusted or not, to create a message that can
3615 never provoke a bounce. An empty sender can be specified either as an empty
3616 string, or as a pair of angle brackets with nothing between them, as in these
3617 examples of shell commands:
3618 .code
3619 exim -f '<>' user@domain
3620 exim -f "" user@domain
3621 .endd
3622 In addition, the use of &%-f%& is not restricted when testing a filter file
3623 with &%-bf%& or when testing or verifying addresses using the &%-bt%& or
3624 &%-bv%& options.
3625
3626 Allowing untrusted users to change the sender address does not of itself make
3627 it possible to send anonymous mail. Exim still checks that the &'From:'& header
3628 refers to the local user, and if it does not, it adds a &'Sender:'& header,
3629 though this can be overridden by setting &%no_local_from_check%&.
3630
3631 White
3632 .cindex "&""From""& line"
3633 space between &%-f%& and the <&'address'&> is optional (that is, they can be
3634 given as two arguments or one combined argument). The sender of a
3635 locally-generated message can also be set (when permitted) by an initial
3636 &"From&~"& line in the message &-- see the description of &%-bm%& above &-- but
3637 if &%-f%& is also present, it overrides &"From&~"&.
3638
3639 .vitem &%-G%&
3640 .oindex "&%-G%&"
3641 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-G%& option ignored"
3642 This is a Sendmail option which is ignored by Exim.
3643
3644 .vitem &%-h%&&~<&'number'&>
3645 .oindex "&%-h%&"
3646 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-h%& option ignored"
3647 This option is accepted for compatibility with Sendmail, but has no effect. (In
3648 Sendmail it overrides the &"hop count"& obtained by counting &'Received:'&
3649 headers.)
3650
3651 .vitem &%-i%&
3652 .oindex "&%-i%&"
3653 .cindex "Solaris" "&'mail'& command"
3654 .cindex "dot" "in incoming non-SMTP message"
3655 This option, which has the same effect as &%-oi%&, specifies that a dot on a
3656 line by itself should not terminate an incoming, non-SMTP message. I can find
3657 no documentation for this option in Solaris 2.4 Sendmail, but the &'mailx'&
3658 command in Solaris 2.4 uses it. See also &%-ti%&.
3659
3660 .vitem &%-M%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3661 .oindex "&%-M%&"
3662 .cindex "forcing delivery"
3663 .cindex "delivery" "forcing attempt"
3664 .cindex "frozen messages" "forcing delivery"
3665 This option requests Exim to run a delivery attempt on each message in turn. If
3666 any of the messages are frozen, they are automatically thawed before the
3667 delivery attempt. The settings of &%queue_domains%&, &%queue_smtp_domains%&,
3668 and &%hold_domains%& are ignored.
3669
3670 Retry
3671 .cindex "hints database" "overriding retry hints"
3672 hints for any of the addresses are overridden &-- Exim tries to deliver even if
3673 the normal retry time has not yet been reached. This option requires the caller
3674 to be an admin user. However, there is an option called &%prod_requires_admin%&
3675 which can be set false to relax this restriction (and also the same requirement
3676 for the &%-q%&, &%-R%&, and &%-S%& options).
3677
3678 The deliveries happen synchronously, that is, the original Exim process does
3679 not terminate until all the delivery attempts have finished. No output is
3680 produced unless there is a serious error. If you want to see what is happening,
3681 use the &%-v%& option as well, or inspect Exim's main log.
3682
3683 .vitem &%-Mar%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'address'&>&~<&'address'&>&~...
3684 .oindex "&%-Mar%&"
3685 .cindex "message" "adding recipients"
3686 .cindex "recipient" "adding"
3687 This option requests Exim to add the addresses to the list of recipients of the
3688 message (&"ar"& for &"add recipients"&). The first argument must be a message
3689 id, and the remaining ones must be email addresses. However, if the message is
3690 active (in the middle of a delivery attempt), it is not altered. This option
3691 can be used only by an admin user.
3692
3693 .vitem "&%-MC%&&~<&'transport'&>&~<&'hostname'&>&~<&'sequence&~number'&>&&&
3694 &~<&'message&~id'&>"
3695 .oindex "&%-MC%&"
3696 .cindex "SMTP" "passed connection"
3697 .cindex "SMTP" "multiple deliveries"
3698 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
3699 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3700 by Exim to invoke another instance of itself to deliver a waiting message using
3701 an existing SMTP connection, which is passed as the standard input. Details are
3702 given in chapter &<<CHAPSMTP>>&. This must be the final option, and the caller
3703 must be root or the Exim user in order to use it.
3704
3705 .vitem &%-MCA%&
3706 .oindex "&%-MCA%&"
3707 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3708 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option. It signifies that the
3709 connection to the remote host has been authenticated.
3710
3711 .vitem &%-MCP%&
3712 .oindex "&%-MCP%&"
3713 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3714 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option. It signifies that the server to
3715 which Exim is connected supports pipelining.
3716
3717 .vitem &%-MCQ%&&~<&'process&~id'&>&~<&'pipe&~fd'&>
3718 .oindex "&%-MCQ%&"
3719 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3720 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option when the original delivery was
3721 started by a queue runner. It passes on the process id of the queue runner,
3722 together with the file descriptor number of an open pipe. Closure of the pipe
3723 signals the final completion of the sequence of processes that are passing
3724 messages through the same SMTP connection.
3725
3726 .vitem &%-MCS%&
3727 .oindex "&%-MCS%&"
3728 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3729 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option, and passes on the fact that the
3730 SMTP SIZE option should be used on messages delivered down the existing
3731 connection.
3732
3733 .vitem &%-MCT%&
3734 .oindex "&%-MCT%&"
3735 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3736 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option, and passes on the fact that the
3737 host to which Exim is connected supports TLS encryption.
3738
3739 .vitem &%-Mc%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3740 .oindex "&%-Mc%&"
3741 .cindex "hints database" "not overridden by &%-Mc%&"
3742 .cindex "delivery" "manually started &-- not forced"
3743 This option requests Exim to run a delivery attempt on each message in turn,
3744 but unlike the &%-M%& option, it does check for retry hints, and respects any
3745 that are found. This option is not very useful to external callers. It is
3746 provided mainly for internal use by Exim when it needs to re-invoke itself in
3747 order to regain root privilege for a delivery (see chapter &<<CHAPsecurity>>&).
3748 However, &%-Mc%& can be useful when testing, in order to run a delivery that
3749 respects retry times and other options such as &%hold_domains%& that are
3750 overridden when &%-M%& is used. Such a delivery does not count as a queue run.
3751 If you want to run a specific delivery as if in a queue run, you should use
3752 &%-q%& with a message id argument. A distinction between queue run deliveries
3753 and other deliveries is made in one or two places.
3754
3755 .vitem &%-Mes%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'address'&>
3756 .oindex "&%-Mes%&"
3757 .cindex "message" "changing sender"
3758 .cindex "sender" "changing"
3759 This option requests Exim to change the sender address in the message to the
3760 given address, which must be a fully qualified address or &"<>"& (&"es"& for
3761 &"edit sender"&). There must be exactly two arguments. The first argument must
3762 be a message id, and the second one an email address. However, if the message
3763 is active (in the middle of a delivery attempt), its status is not altered.
3764 This option can be used only by an admin user.
3765
3766 .vitem &%-Mf%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3767 .oindex "&%-Mf%&"
3768 .cindex "freezing messages"
3769 .cindex "message" "manually freezing"
3770 This option requests Exim to mark each listed message as &"frozen"&. This
3771 prevents any delivery attempts taking place until the message is &"thawed"&,
3772 either manually or as a result of the &%auto_thaw%& configuration option.
3773 However, if any of the messages are active (in the middle of a delivery
3774 attempt), their status is not altered. This option can be used only by an admin
3775 user.
3776
3777 .vitem &%-Mg%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3778 .oindex "&%-Mg%&"
3779 .cindex "giving up on messages"
3780 .cindex "message" "abandoning delivery attempts"
3781 .cindex "delivery" "abandoning further attempts"
3782 This option requests Exim to give up trying to deliver the listed messages,
3783 including any that are frozen. However, if any of the messages are active,
3784 their status is not altered. For non-bounce messages, a delivery error message
3785 is sent to the sender, containing the text &"cancelled by administrator"&.
3786 Bounce messages are just discarded. This option can be used only by an admin
3787 user.
3788
3789 .vitem &%-Mmad%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3790 .oindex "&%-Mmad%&"
3791 .cindex "delivery" "cancelling all"
3792 This option requests Exim to mark all the recipient addresses in the messages
3793 as already delivered (&"mad"& for &"mark all delivered"&). However, if any
3794 message is active (in the middle of a delivery attempt), its status is not
3795 altered. This option can be used only by an admin user.
3796
3797 .vitem &%-Mmd%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'address'&>&~<&'address'&>&~...
3798 .oindex "&%-Mmd%&"
3799 .cindex "delivery" "cancelling by address"
3800 .cindex "recipient" "removing"
3801 .cindex "removing recipients"
3802 This option requests Exim to mark the given addresses as already delivered
3803 (&"md"& for &"mark delivered"&). The first argument must be a message id, and
3804 the remaining ones must be email addresses. These are matched to recipient
3805 addresses in the message in a case-sensitive manner. If the message is active
3806 (in the middle of a delivery attempt), its status is not altered. This option
3807 can be used only by an admin user.
3808
3809 .vitem &%-Mrm%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3810 .oindex "&%-Mrm%&"
3811 .cindex "removing messages"
3812 .cindex "abandoning mail"
3813 .cindex "message" "manually discarding"
3814 This option requests Exim to remove the given messages from the queue. No
3815 bounce messages are sent; each message is simply forgotten. However, if any of
3816 the messages are active, their status is not altered. This option can be used
3817 only by an admin user or by the user who originally caused the message to be
3818 placed on the queue.
3819
3820 .vitem &%-Mset%&&~<&'message&~id'&>
3821 .oindex "&%-Mset%&
3822 .cindex "testing" "string expansion"
3823 .cindex "expansion" "testing"
3824 This option is useful only in conjunction with &%-be%& (that is, when testing
3825 string expansions). Exim loads the given message from its spool before doing
3826 the test expansions, thus setting message-specific variables such as
3827 &$message_size$& and the header variables. The &$recipients$& variable is made
3828 available. This feature is provided to make it easier to test expansions that
3829 make use of these variables. However, this option can be used only by an admin
3830 user. See also &%-bem%&.
3831
3832 .vitem &%-Mt%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3833 .oindex "&%-Mt%&"
3834 .cindex "thawing messages"
3835 .cindex "unfreezing messages"
3836 .cindex "frozen messages" "thawing"
3837 .cindex "message" "thawing frozen"
3838 This option requests Exim to &"thaw"& any of the listed messages that are
3839 &"frozen"&, so that delivery attempts can resume. However, if any of the
3840 messages are active, their status is not altered. This option can be used only
3841 by an admin user.
3842
3843 .vitem &%-Mvb%&&~<&'message&~id'&>
3844 .oindex "&%-Mvb%&"
3845 .cindex "listing" "message body"
3846 .cindex "message" "listing body of"
3847 This option causes the contents of the message body (-D) spool file to be
3848 written to the standard output. This option can be used only by an admin user.
3849
3850 .vitem &%-Mvc%&&~<&'message&~id'&>
3851 .oindex "&%-Mvc%&"
3852 .cindex "message" "listing in RFC 2822 format"
3853 .cindex "listing" "message in RFC 2822 format"
3854 This option causes a copy of the complete message (header lines plus body) to
3855 be written to the standard output in RFC 2822 format. This option can be used
3856 only by an admin user.
3857
3858 .vitem &%-Mvh%&&~<&'message&~id'&>
3859 .oindex "&%-Mvh%&"
3860 .cindex "listing" "message headers"
3861 .cindex "header lines" "listing"
3862 .cindex "message" "listing header lines"
3863 This option causes the contents of the message headers (-H) spool file to be
3864 written to the standard output. This option can be used only by an admin user.
3865
3866 .vitem &%-Mvl%&&~<&'message&~id'&>
3867 .oindex "&%-Mvl%&"
3868 .cindex "listing" "message log"
3869 .cindex "message" "listing message log"
3870 This option causes the contents of the message log spool file to be written to
3871 the standard output. This option can be used only by an admin user.
3872
3873 .vitem &%-m%&
3874 .oindex "&%-m%&"
3875 This is apparently a synonym for &%-om%& that is accepted by Sendmail, so Exim
3876 treats it that way too.
3877
3878 .vitem &%-N%&
3879 .oindex "&%-N%&"
3880 .cindex "debugging" "&%-N%& option"
3881 .cindex "debugging" "suppressing delivery"
3882 This is a debugging option that inhibits delivery of a message at the transport
3883 level. It implies &%-v%&. Exim goes through many of the motions of delivery &--
3884 it just doesn't actually transport the message, but instead behaves as if it
3885 had successfully done so. However, it does not make any updates to the retry
3886 database, and the log entries for deliveries are flagged with &"*>"& rather
3887 than &"=>"&.
3888
3889 Because &%-N%& discards any message to which it applies, only root or the Exim
3890 user are allowed to use it with &%-bd%&, &%-q%&, &%-R%& or &%-M%&. In other
3891 words, an ordinary user can use it only when supplying an incoming message to
3892 which it will apply. Although transportation never fails when &%-N%& is set, an
3893 address may be deferred because of a configuration problem on a transport, or a
3894 routing problem. Once &%-N%& has been used for a delivery attempt, it sticks to
3895 the message, and applies to any subsequent delivery attempts that may happen
3896 for that message.
3897
3898 .vitem &%-n%&
3899 .oindex "&%-n%&"
3900 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-n%& option ignored"
3901 This option is interpreted by Sendmail to mean &"no aliasing"&. It is ignored
3902 by Exim.
3903
3904 .vitem &%-O%&&~<&'data'&>
3905 .oindex "&%-O%&"
3906 This option is interpreted by Sendmail to mean &`set option`&. It is ignored by
3907 Exim.
3908
3909 .vitem &%-oA%&&~<&'file&~name'&>
3910 .oindex "&%-oA%&"
3911 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-oA%& option"
3912 This option is used by Sendmail in conjunction with &%-bi%& to specify an
3913 alternative alias file name. Exim handles &%-bi%& differently; see the
3914 description above.
3915
3916 .vitem &%-oB%&&~<&'n'&>
3917 .oindex "&%-oB%&"
3918 .cindex "SMTP" "passed connection"
3919 .cindex "SMTP" "multiple deliveries"
3920 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
3921 This is a debugging option which limits the maximum number of messages that can
3922 be delivered down one SMTP connection, overriding the value set in any &(smtp)&
3923 transport. If <&'n'&> is omitted, the limit is set to 1.
3924
3925 .vitem &%-odb%&
3926 .oindex "&%-odb%&"
3927 .cindex "background delivery"
3928 .cindex "delivery" "in the background"
3929 This option applies to all modes in which Exim accepts incoming messages,
3930 including the listening daemon. It requests &"background"& delivery of such
3931 messages, which means that the accepting process automatically starts a
3932 delivery process for each message received, but does not wait for the delivery
3933 processes to finish.
3934
3935 When all the messages have been received, the reception process exits,
3936 leaving the delivery processes to finish in their own time. The standard output
3937 and error streams are closed at the start of each delivery process.
3938 This is the default action if none of the &%-od%& options are present.
3939
3940 If one of the queueing options in the configuration file
3941 (&%queue_only%& or &%queue_only_file%&, for example) is in effect, &%-odb%&
3942 overrides it if &%queue_only_override%& is set true, which is the default
3943 setting. If &%queue_only_override%& is set false, &%-odb%& has no effect.
3944
3945 .vitem &%-odf%&
3946 .oindex "&%-odf%&"
3947 .cindex "foreground delivery"
3948 .cindex "delivery" "in the foreground"
3949 This option requests &"foreground"& (synchronous) delivery when Exim has
3950 accepted a locally-generated message. (For the daemon it is exactly the same as
3951 &%-odb%&.) A delivery process is automatically started to deliver the message,
3952 and Exim waits for it to complete before proceeding.
3953
3954 The original Exim reception process does not finish until the delivery
3955 process for the final message has ended. The standard error stream is left open
3956 during deliveries.
3957
3958 However, like &%-odb%&, this option has no effect if &%queue_only_override%& is
3959 false and one of the queueing options in the configuration file is in effect.
3960
3961 If there is a temporary delivery error during foreground delivery, the
3962 message is left on the queue for later delivery, and the original reception
3963 process exits. See chapter &<<CHAPnonqueueing>>& for a way of setting up a
3964 restricted configuration that never queues messages.
3965
3966
3967 .vitem &%-odi%&
3968 .oindex "&%-odi%&"
3969 This option is synonymous with &%-odf%&. It is provided for compatibility with
3970 Sendmail.
3971
3972 .vitem &%-odq%&
3973 .oindex "&%-odq%&"
3974 .cindex "non-immediate delivery"
3975 .cindex "delivery" "suppressing immediate"
3976 .cindex "queueing incoming messages"
3977 This option applies to all modes in which Exim accepts incoming messages,
3978 including the listening daemon. It specifies that the accepting process should
3979 not automatically start a delivery process for each message received. Messages
3980 are placed on the queue, and remain there until a subsequent queue runner
3981 process encounters them. There are several configuration options (such as
3982 &%queue_only%&) that can be used to queue incoming messages under certain
3983 conditions. This option overrides all of them and also &%-odqs%&. It always
3984 forces queueing.
3985
3986 .vitem &%-odqs%&
3987 .oindex "&%-odqs%&"
3988 .cindex "SMTP" "delaying delivery"
3989 This option is a hybrid between &%-odb%&/&%-odi%& and &%-odq%&.
3990 However, like &%-odb%& and &%-odi%&, this option has no effect if
3991 &%queue_only_override%& is false and one of the queueing options in the
3992 configuration file is in effect.
3993
3994 When &%-odqs%& does operate, a delivery process is started for each incoming
3995 message, in the background by default, but in the foreground if &%-odi%& is
3996 also present. The recipient addresses are routed, and local deliveries are done
3997 in the normal way. However, if any SMTP deliveries are required, they are not
3998 done at this time, so the message remains on the queue until a subsequent queue
3999 runner process encounters it. Because routing was done, Exim knows which
4000 messages are waiting for which hosts, and so a number of messages for the same
4001 host can be sent in a single SMTP connection. The &%queue_smtp_domains%&
4002 configuration option has the same effect for specific domains. See also the
4003 &%-qq%& option.
4004
4005 .vitem &%-oee%&
4006 .oindex "&%-oee%&"
4007 .cindex "error" "reporting"
4008 If an error is detected while a non-SMTP message is being received (for
4009 example, a malformed address), the error is reported to the sender in a mail
4010 message.
4011
4012 .cindex "return code" "for &%-oee%&"
4013 Provided
4014 this error message is successfully sent, the Exim receiving process
4015 exits with a return code of zero. If not, the return code is 2 if the problem
4016 is that the original message has no recipients, or 1 any other error. This is
4017 the default &%-oe%&&'x'& option if Exim is called as &'rmail'&.
4018
4019 .vitem &%-oem%&
4020 .oindex "&%-oem%&"
4021 .cindex "error" "reporting"
4022 .cindex "return code" "for &%-oem%&"
4023 This is the same as &%-oee%&, except that Exim always exits with a non-zero
4024 return code, whether or not the error message was successfully sent.
4025 This is the default &%-oe%&&'x'& option, unless Exim is called as &'rmail'&.
4026
4027 .vitem &%-oep%&
4028 .oindex "&%-oep%&"
4029 .cindex "error" "reporting"
4030 If an error is detected while a non-SMTP message is being received, the
4031 error is reported by writing a message to the standard error file (stderr).
4032 .cindex "return code" "for &%-oep%&"
4033 The return code is 1 for all errors.
4034
4035 .vitem &%-oeq%&
4036 .oindex "&%-oeq%&"
4037 .cindex "error" "reporting"
4038 This option is supported for compatibility with Sendmail, but has the same
4039 effect as &%-oep%&.
4040
4041 .vitem &%-oew%&
4042 .oindex "&%-oew%&"
4043 .cindex "error" "reporting"
4044 This option is supported for compatibility with Sendmail, but has the same
4045 effect as &%-oem%&.
4046
4047 .vitem &%-oi%&
4048 .oindex "&%-oi%&"
4049 .cindex "dot" "in incoming non-SMTP message"
4050 This option, which has the same effect as &%-i%&, specifies that a dot on a
4051 line by itself should not terminate an incoming, non-SMTP message. Otherwise, a
4052 single dot does terminate, though Exim does no special processing for other
4053 lines that start with a dot. This option is set by default if Exim is called as
4054 &'rmail'&. See also &%-ti%&.
4055
4056 .vitem &%-oitrue%&
4057 .oindex "&%-oitrue%&"
4058 This option is treated as synonymous with &%-oi%&.
4059
4060 .vitem &%-oMa%&&~<&'host&~address'&>
4061 .oindex "&%-oMa%&"
4062 .cindex "sender" "host address, specifying for local message"
4063 A number of options starting with &%-oM%& can be used to set values associated
4064 with remote hosts on locally-submitted messages (that is, messages not received
4065 over TCP/IP). These options can be used by any caller in conjunction with the
4066 &%-bh%&, &%-be%&, &%-bf%&, &%-bF%&, &%-bt%&, or &%-bv%& testing options. In
4067 other circumstances, they are ignored unless the caller is trusted.
4068
4069 The &%-oMa%& option sets the sender host address. This may include a port
4070 number at the end, after a full stop (period). For example:
4071 .code
4072 exim -bs -oMa 10.9.8.7.1234
4073 .endd
4074 An alternative syntax is to enclose the IP address in square brackets,
4075 followed by a colon and the port number:
4076 .code
4077 exim -bs -oMa [10.9.8.7]:1234
4078 .endd
4079 The IP address is placed in the &$sender_host_address$& variable, and the
4080 port, if present, in &$sender_host_port$&. If both &%-oMa%& and &%-bh%&
4081 are present on the command line, the sender host IP address is taken from
4082 whichever one is last.
4083
4084 .vitem &%-oMaa%&&~<&'name'&>
4085 .oindex "&%-oMaa%&"
4086 .cindex "authentication" "name, specifying for local message"
4087 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMaa%&
4088 option sets the value of &$sender_host_authenticated$& (the authenticator
4089 name). See chapter &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>& for a discussion of SMTP authentication.
4090 This option can be used with &%-bh%& and &%-bs%& to set up an
4091 authenticated SMTP session without actually using the SMTP AUTH command.
4092
4093 .vitem &%-oMai%&&~<&'string'&>
4094 .oindex "&%-oMai%&"
4095 .cindex "authentication" "id, specifying for local message"
4096 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMai%&
4097 option sets the value of &$authenticated_id$& (the id that was authenticated).
4098 This overrides the default value (the caller's login id, except with &%-bh%&,
4099 where there is no default) for messages from local sources. See chapter
4100 &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>& for a discussion of authenticated ids.
4101
4102 .vitem &%-oMas%&&~<&'address'&>
4103 .oindex "&%-oMas%&"
4104 .cindex "authentication" "sender, specifying for local message"
4105 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMas%&
4106 option sets the authenticated sender value in &$authenticated_sender$&. It
4107 overrides the sender address that is created from the caller's login id for
4108 messages from local sources, except when &%-bh%& is used, when there is no
4109 default. For both &%-bh%& and &%-bs%&, an authenticated sender that is
4110 specified on a MAIL command overrides this value. See chapter
4111 &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>& for a discussion of authenticated senders.
4112
4113 .vitem &%-oMi%&&~<&'interface&~address'&>
4114 .oindex "&%-oMi%&"
4115 .cindex "interface" "address, specifying for local message"
4116 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMi%&
4117 option sets the IP interface address value. A port number may be included,
4118 using the same syntax as for &%-oMa%&. The interface address is placed in
4119 &$received_ip_address$& and the port number, if present, in &$received_port$&.
4120
4121 .vitem &%-oMr%&&~<&'protocol&~name'&>
4122 .oindex "&%-oMr%&"
4123 .cindex "protocol, specifying for local message"
4124 .vindex "&$received_protocol$&"
4125 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMr%&
4126 option sets the received protocol value that is stored in
4127 &$received_protocol$&. However, it does not apply (and is ignored) when &%-bh%&
4128 or &%-bs%& is used. For &%-bh%&, the protocol is forced to one of the standard
4129 SMTP protocol names (see the description of &$received_protocol$& in section
4130 &<<SECTexpvar>>&). For &%-bs%&, the protocol is always &"local-"& followed by
4131 one of those same names. For &%-bS%& (batched SMTP) however, the protocol can
4132 be set by &%-oMr%&.
4133
4134 .vitem &%-oMs%&&~<&'host&~name'&>
4135 .oindex "&%-oMs%&"
4136 .cindex "sender" "host name, specifying for local message"
4137 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMs%&
4138 option sets the sender host name in &$sender_host_name$&. When this option is
4139 present, Exim does not attempt to look up a host name from an IP address; it
4140 uses the name it is given.
4141
4142 .vitem &%-oMt%&&~<&'ident&~string'&>
4143 .oindex "&%-oMt%&"
4144 .cindex "sender" "ident string, specifying for local message"
4145 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMt%&
4146 option sets the sender ident value in &$sender_ident$&. The default setting for
4147 local callers is the login id of the calling process, except when &%-bh%& is
4148 used, when there is no default.
4149
4150 .vitem &%-om%&
4151 .oindex "&%-om%&"
4152 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-om%& option ignored"
4153 In Sendmail, this option means &"me too"&, indicating that the sender of a
4154 message should receive a copy of the message if the sender appears in an alias
4155 expansion. Exim always does this, so the option does nothing.
4156
4157 .vitem &%-oo%&
4158 .oindex "&%-oo%&"
4159 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-oo%& option ignored"
4160 This option is ignored. In Sendmail it specifies &"old style headers"&,
4161 whatever that means.
4162
4163 .vitem &%-oP%&&~<&'path'&>
4164 .oindex "&%-oP%&"
4165 .cindex "pid (process id)" "of daemon"
4166 .cindex "daemon" "process id (pid)"
4167 This option is useful only in conjunction with &%-bd%& or &%-q%& with a time
4168 value. The option specifies the file to which the process id of the daemon is
4169 written. When &%-oX%& is used with &%-bd%&, or when &%-q%& with a time is used
4170 without &%-bd%&, this is the only way of causing Exim to write a pid file,
4171 because in those cases, the normal pid file is not used.
4172
4173 .vitem &%-or%&&~<&'time'&>
4174 .oindex "&%-or%&"
4175 .cindex "timeout" "for non-SMTP input"
4176 This option sets a timeout value for incoming non-SMTP messages. If it is not
4177 set, Exim will wait forever for the standard input. The value can also be set
4178 by the &%receive_timeout%& option. The format used for specifying times is
4179 described in section &<<SECTtimeformat>>&.
4180
4181 .vitem &%-os%&&~<&'time'&>
4182 .oindex "&%-os%&"
4183 .cindex "timeout" "for SMTP input"
4184 .cindex "SMTP" "input timeout"
4185 This option sets a timeout value for incoming SMTP messages. The timeout
4186 applies to each SMTP command and block of data. The value can also be set by
4187 the &%smtp_receive_timeout%& option; it defaults to 5 minutes. The format used
4188 for specifying times is described in section &<<SECTtimeformat>>&.
4189
4190 .vitem &%-ov%&
4191 .oindex "&%-ov%&"
4192 This option has exactly the same effect as &%-v%&.
4193
4194 .vitem &%-oX%&&~<&'number&~or&~string'&>
4195 .oindex "&%-oX%&"
4196 .cindex "TCP/IP" "setting listening ports"
4197 .cindex "TCP/IP" "setting listening interfaces"
4198 .cindex "port" "receiving TCP/IP"
4199 This option is relevant only when the &%-bd%& (start listening daemon) option
4200 is also given. It controls which ports and interfaces the daemon uses. Details
4201 of the syntax, and how it interacts with configuration file options, are given
4202 in chapter &<<CHAPinterfaces>>&. When &%-oX%& is used to start a daemon, no pid
4203 file is written unless &%-oP%& is also present to specify a pid file name.
4204
4205 .vitem &%-pd%&
4206 .oindex "&%-pd%&"
4207 .cindex "Perl" "starting the interpreter"
4208 This option applies when an embedded Perl interpreter is linked with Exim (see
4209 chapter &<<CHAPperl>>&). It overrides the setting of the &%perl_at_start%&
4210 option, forcing the starting of the interpreter to be delayed until it is
4211 needed.
4212
4213 .vitem &%-ps%&
4214 .oindex "&%-ps%&"
4215 .cindex "Perl" "starting the interpreter"
4216 This option applies when an embedded Perl interpreter is linked with Exim (see
4217 chapter &<<CHAPperl>>&). It overrides the setting of the &%perl_at_start%&
4218 option, forcing the starting of the interpreter to occur as soon as Exim is
4219 started.
4220
4221 .vitem &%-p%&<&'rval'&>:<&'sval'&>
4222 .oindex "&%-p%&"
4223 For compatibility with Sendmail, this option is equivalent to
4224 .display
4225 &`-oMr`& <&'rval'&> &`-oMs`& <&'sval'&>
4226 .endd
4227 It sets the incoming protocol and host name (for trusted callers). The
4228 host name and its colon can be omitted when only the protocol is to be set.
4229 Note the Exim already has two private options, &%-pd%& and &%-ps%&, that refer
4230 to embedded Perl. It is therefore impossible to set a protocol value of &`p`&
4231 or &`s`& using this option (but that does not seem a real limitation).
4232
4233 .vitem &%-q%&
4234 .oindex "&%-q%&"
4235 .cindex "queue runner" "starting manually"
4236 This option is normally restricted to admin users. However, there is a
4237 configuration option called &%prod_requires_admin%& which can be set false to
4238 relax this restriction (and also the same requirement for the &%-M%&, &%-R%&,
4239 and &%-S%& options).
4240
4241 .cindex "queue runner" "description of operation"
4242 The &%-q%& option starts one queue runner process. This scans the queue of
4243 waiting messages, and runs a delivery process for each one in turn. It waits
4244 for each delivery process to finish before starting the next one. A delivery
4245 process may not actually do any deliveries if the retry times for the addresses
4246 have not been reached. Use &%-qf%& (see below) if you want to override this.
4247
4248 If
4249 .cindex "SMTP" "passed connection"
4250 .cindex "SMTP" "multiple deliveries"
4251 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
4252 the delivery process spawns other processes to deliver other messages down
4253 passed SMTP connections, the queue runner waits for these to finish before
4254 proceeding.
4255
4256 When all the queued messages have been considered, the original queue runner
4257 process terminates. In other words, a single pass is made over the waiting
4258 mail, one message at a time. Use &%-q%& with a time (see below) if you want
4259 this to be repeated periodically.
4260
4261 Exim processes the waiting messages in an unpredictable order. It isn't very
4262 random, but it is likely to be different each time, which is all that matters.
4263 If one particular message screws up a remote MTA, other messages to the same
4264 MTA have a chance of getting through if they get tried first.
4265
4266 It is possible to cause the messages to be processed in lexical message id
4267 order, which is essentially the order in which they arrived, by setting the
4268 &%queue_run_in_order%& option, but this is not recommended for normal use.
4269
4270 .vitem &%-q%&<&'qflags'&>
4271 The &%-q%& option may be followed by one or more flag letters that change its
4272 behaviour. They are all optional, but if more than one is present, they must
4273 appear in the correct order. Each flag is described in a separate item below.
4274
4275 .vitem &%-qq...%&
4276 .oindex "&%-qq%&"
4277 .cindex "queue" "double scanning"
4278 .cindex "queue" "routing"
4279 .cindex "routing" "whole queue before delivery"
4280 An option starting with &%-qq%& requests a two-stage queue run. In the first
4281 stage, the queue is scanned as if the &%queue_smtp_domains%& option matched
4282 every domain. Addresses are routed, local deliveries happen, but no remote
4283 transports are run.
4284
4285 .cindex "hints database" "remembering routing"
4286 The hints database that remembers which messages are waiting for specific hosts
4287 is updated, as if delivery to those hosts had been deferred. After this is
4288 complete, a second, normal queue scan happens, with routing and delivery taking
4289 place as normal. Messages that are routed to the same host should mostly be
4290 delivered down a single SMTP
4291 .cindex "SMTP" "passed connection"
4292 .cindex "SMTP" "multiple deliveries"
4293 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
4294 connection because of the hints that were set up during the first queue scan.
4295 This option may be useful for hosts that are connected to the Internet
4296 intermittently.
4297
4298 .vitem &%-q[q]i...%&
4299 .oindex "&%-qi%&"
4300 .cindex "queue" "initial delivery"
4301 If the &'i'& flag is present, the queue runner runs delivery processes only for
4302 those messages that haven't previously been tried. (&'i'& stands for &"initial
4303 delivery"&.) This can be helpful if you are putting messages on the queue using
4304 &%-odq%& and want a queue runner just to process the new messages.
4305
4306 .vitem &%-q[q][i]f...%&
4307 .oindex "&%-qf%&"
4308 .cindex "queue" "forcing delivery"
4309 .cindex "delivery" "forcing in queue run"
4310 If one &'f'& flag is present, a delivery attempt is forced for each non-frozen
4311 message, whereas without &'f'& only those non-frozen addresses that have passed
4312 their retry times are tried.
4313
4314 .vitem &%-q[q][i]ff...%&
4315 .oindex "&%-qff%&"
4316 .cindex "frozen messages" "forcing delivery"
4317 If &'ff'& is present, a delivery attempt is forced for every message, whether
4318 frozen or not.
4319
4320 .vitem &%-q[q][i][f[f]]l%&
4321 .oindex "&%-ql%&"
4322 .cindex "queue" "local deliveries only"
4323 The &'l'& (the letter &"ell"&) flag specifies that only local deliveries are to
4324 be done. If a message requires any remote deliveries, it remains on the queue
4325 for later delivery.
4326
4327 .vitem &%-q%&<&'qflags'&>&~<&'start&~id'&>&~<&'end&~id'&>
4328 .cindex "queue" "delivering specific messages"
4329 When scanning the queue, Exim can be made to skip over messages whose ids are
4330 lexically less than a given value by following the &%-q%& option with a
4331 starting message id. For example:
4332 .code
4333 exim -q 0t5C6f-0000c8-00
4334 .endd
4335 Messages that arrived earlier than &`0t5C6f-0000c8-00`& are not inspected. If a
4336 second message id is given, messages whose ids are lexically greater than it
4337 are also skipped. If the same id is given twice, for example,
4338 .code
4339 exim -q 0t5C6f-0000c8-00 0t5C6f-0000c8-00
4340 .endd
4341 just one delivery process is started, for that message. This differs from
4342 &%-M%& in that retry data is respected, and it also differs from &%-Mc%& in
4343 that it counts as a delivery from a queue run. Note that the selection
4344 mechanism does not affect the order in which the messages are scanned. There
4345 are also other ways of selecting specific sets of messages for delivery in a
4346 queue run &-- see &%-R%& and &%-S%&.
4347
4348 .vitem &%-q%&<&'qflags'&><&'time'&>
4349 .cindex "queue runner" "starting periodically"
4350 .cindex "periodic queue running"
4351 When a time value is present, the &%-q%& option causes Exim to run as a daemon,
4352 starting a queue runner process at intervals specified by the given time value
4353 (whose format is described in section &<<SECTtimeformat>>&). This form of the
4354 &%-q%& option is commonly combined with the &%-bd%& option, in which case a
4355 single daemon process handles both functions. A common way of starting up a
4356 combined daemon at system boot time is to use a command such as
4357 .code
4358 /usr/exim/bin/exim -bd -q30m
4359 .endd
4360 Such a daemon listens for incoming SMTP calls, and also starts a queue runner
4361 process every 30 minutes.
4362
4363 When a daemon is started by &%-q%& with a time value, but without &%-bd%&, no
4364 pid file is written unless one is explicitly requested by the &%-oP%& option.
4365
4366 .vitem &%-qR%&<&'rsflags'&>&~<&'string'&>
4367 .oindex "&%-qR%&"
4368 This option is synonymous with &%-R%&. It is provided for Sendmail
4369 compatibility.
4370
4371 .vitem &%-qS%&<&'rsflags'&>&~<&'string'&>
4372 .oindex "&%-qS%&"
4373 This option is synonymous with &%-S%&.
4374
4375 .vitem &%-R%&<&'rsflags'&>&~<&'string'&>
4376 .oindex "&%-R%&"
4377 .cindex "queue runner" "for specific recipients"
4378 .cindex "delivery" "to given domain"
4379 .cindex "domain" "delivery to"
4380 The <&'rsflags'&> may be empty, in which case the white space before the string
4381 is optional, unless the string is &'f'&, &'ff'&, &'r'&, &'rf'&, or &'rff'&,
4382 which are the possible values for <&'rsflags'&>. White space is required if
4383 <&'rsflags'&> is not empty.
4384
4385 This option is similar to &%-q%& with no time value, that is, it causes Exim to
4386 perform a single queue run, except that, when scanning the messages on the
4387 queue, Exim processes only those that have at least one undelivered recipient
4388 address containing the given string, which is checked in a case-independent
4389 way. If the <&'rsflags'&> start with &'r'&, <&'string'&> is interpreted as a
4390 regular expression; otherwise it is a literal string.
4391
4392 If you want to do periodic queue runs for messages with specific recipients,
4393 you can combine &%-R%& with &%-q%& and a time value. For example:
4394 .code
4395 exim -q25m -R @special.domain.example
4396 .endd
4397 This example does a queue run for messages with recipients in the given domain
4398 every 25 minutes. Any additional flags that are specified with &%-q%& are
4399 applied to each queue run.
4400
4401 Once a message is selected for delivery by this mechanism, all its addresses
4402 are processed. For the first selected message, Exim overrides any retry
4403 information and forces a delivery attempt for each undelivered address. This
4404 means that if delivery of any address in the first message is successful, any
4405 existing retry information is deleted, and so delivery attempts for that
4406 address in subsequently selected messages (which are processed without forcing)
4407 will run. However, if delivery of any address does not succeed, the retry
4408 information is updated, and in subsequently selected messages, the failing
4409 address will be skipped.
4410
4411 .cindex "frozen messages" "forcing delivery"
4412 If the <&'rsflags'&> contain &'f'& or &'ff'&, the delivery forcing applies to
4413 all selected messages, not just the first; frozen messages are included when
4414 &'ff'& is present.
4415
4416 The &%-R%& option makes it straightforward to initiate delivery of all messages
4417 to a given domain after a host has been down for some time. When the SMTP
4418 command ETRN is accepted by its ACL (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&), its default
4419 effect is to run Exim with the &%-R%& option, but it can be configured to run
4420 an arbitrary command instead.
4421
4422 .vitem &%-r%&
4423 .oindex "&%-r%&"
4424 This is a documented (for Sendmail) obsolete alternative name for &%-f%&.
4425
4426 .vitem &%-S%&<&'rsflags'&>&~<&'string'&>
4427 .oindex "&%-S%&"
4428 .cindex "delivery" "from given sender"
4429 .cindex "queue runner" "for specific senders"
4430 This option acts like &%-R%& except that it checks the string against each
4431 message's sender instead of against the recipients. If &%-R%& is also set, both
4432 conditions must be met for a message to be selected. If either of the options
4433 has &'f'& or &'ff'& in its flags, the associated action is taken.
4434
4435 .vitem &%-Tqt%&&~<&'times'&>
4436 .oindex "&%-Tqt%&"
4437 This an option that is exclusively for use by the Exim testing suite. It is not
4438 recognized when Exim is run normally. It allows for the setting up of explicit
4439 &"queue times"& so that various warning/retry features can be tested.
4440
4441 .vitem &%-t%&
4442 .oindex "&%-t%&"
4443 .cindex "recipient" "extracting from header lines"
4444 .cindex "&'Bcc:'& header line"
4445 .cindex "&'Cc:'& header line"
4446 .cindex "&'To:'& header line"
4447 When Exim is receiving a locally-generated, non-SMTP message on its standard
4448 input, the &%-t%& option causes the recipients of the message to be obtained
4449 from the &'To:'&, &'Cc:'&, and &'Bcc:'& header lines in the message instead of
4450 from the command arguments. The addresses are extracted before any rewriting
4451 takes place and the &'Bcc:'& header line, if present, is then removed.
4452
4453 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-t%& option"
4454 If the command has any arguments, they specify addresses to which the message
4455 is &'not'& to be delivered. That is, the argument addresses are removed from
4456 the recipients list obtained from the headers. This is compatible with Smail 3
4457 and in accordance with the documented behaviour of several versions of
4458 Sendmail, as described in man pages on a number of operating systems (e.g.
4459 Solaris 8, IRIX 6.5, HP-UX 11). However, some versions of Sendmail &'add'&
4460 argument addresses to those obtained from the headers, and the O'Reilly
4461 Sendmail book documents it that way. Exim can be made to add argument addresses
4462 instead of subtracting them by setting the option
4463 &%extract_addresses_remove_arguments%& false.
4464
4465 .cindex "&%Resent-%& header lines" "with &%-t%&"
4466 If there are any &%Resent-%& header lines in the message, Exim extracts
4467 recipients from all &'Resent-To:'&, &'Resent-Cc:'&, and &'Resent-Bcc:'& header
4468 lines instead of from &'To:'&, &'Cc:'&, and &'Bcc:'&. This is for compatibility
4469 with Sendmail and other MTAs. (Prior to release 4.20, Exim gave an error if
4470 &%-t%& was used in conjunction with &%Resent-%& header lines.)
4471
4472 RFC 2822 talks about different sets of &%Resent-%& header lines (for when a
4473 message is resent several times). The RFC also specifies that they should be
4474 added at the front of the message, and separated by &'Received:'& lines. It is
4475 not at all clear how &%-t%& should operate in the present of multiple sets,
4476 nor indeed exactly what constitutes a &"set"&.
4477 In practice, it seems that MUAs do not follow the RFC. The &%Resent-%& lines
4478 are often added at the end of the header, and if a message is resent more than
4479 once, it is common for the original set of &%Resent-%& headers to be renamed as
4480 &%X-Resent-%& when a new set is added. This removes any possible ambiguity.
4481
4482 .vitem &%-ti%&
4483 .oindex "&%-ti%&"
4484 This option is exactly equivalent to &%-t%& &%-i%&. It is provided for
4485 compatibility with Sendmail.
4486
4487 .vitem &%-tls-on-connect%&
4488 .oindex "&%-tls-on-connect%&"
4489 .cindex "TLS" "use without STARTTLS"
4490 .cindex "TLS" "automatic start"
4491 This option is available when Exim is compiled with TLS support. It forces all
4492 incoming SMTP connections to behave as if the incoming port is listed in the
4493 &%tls_on_connect_ports%& option. See section &<<SECTsupobssmt>>& and chapter
4494 &<<CHAPTLS>>& for further details.
4495
4496
4497 .vitem &%-U%&
4498 .oindex "&%-U%&"
4499 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-U%& option ignored"
4500 Sendmail uses this option for &"initial message submission"&, and its
4501 documentation states that in future releases, it may complain about
4502 syntactically invalid messages rather than fixing them when this flag is not
4503 set. Exim ignores this option.
4504
4505 .vitem &%-v%&
4506 .oindex "&%-v%&"
4507 This option causes Exim to write information to the standard error stream,
4508 describing what it is doing. In particular, it shows the log lines for
4509 receiving and delivering a message, and if an SMTP connection is made, the SMTP
4510 dialogue is shown. Some of the log lines shown may not actually be written to
4511 the log if the setting of &%log_selector%& discards them. Any relevant
4512 selectors are shown with each log line. If none are shown, the logging is
4513 unconditional.
4514
4515 .vitem &%-x%&
4516 .oindex "&%-x%&"
4517 AIX uses &%-x%& for a private purpose (&"mail from a local mail program has
4518 National Language Support extended characters in the body of the mail item"&).
4519 It sets &%-x%& when calling the MTA from its &%mail%& command. Exim ignores
4520 this option.
4521 .endlist
4522
4523 .ecindex IIDclo1
4524 .ecindex IIDclo2
4525
4526
4527 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
4528 . Insert a stylized DocBook comment here, to identify the end of the command
4529 . line options. This is for the benefit of the Perl script that automatically
4530 . creates a man page for the options.
4531 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
4532
4533 .literal xml
4534 <!-- === End of command line options === -->
4535 .literal off
4536
4537
4538
4539
4540
4541 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
4542 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
4543
4544
4545 .chapter "The Exim run time configuration file" "CHAPconf" &&&
4546 "The runtime configuration file"
4547
4548 .cindex "run time configuration"
4549 .cindex "configuration file" "general description"
4550 .cindex "CONFIGURE_FILE"
4551 .cindex "configuration file" "errors in"
4552 .cindex "error" "in configuration file"
4553 .cindex "return code" "for bad configuration"
4554 Exim uses a single run time configuration file that is read whenever an Exim
4555 binary is executed. Note that in normal operation, this happens frequently,
4556 because Exim is designed to operate in a distributed manner, without central
4557 control.
4558
4559 If a syntax error is detected while reading the configuration file, Exim
4560 writes a message on the standard error, and exits with a non-zero return code.
4561 The message is also written to the panic log. &*Note*&: Only simple syntax
4562 errors can be detected at this time. The values of any expanded options are
4563 not checked until the expansion happens, even when the expansion does not
4564 actually alter the string.
4565
4566 The name of the configuration file is compiled into the binary for security
4567 reasons, and is specified by the CONFIGURE_FILE compilation option. In
4568 most configurations, this specifies a single file. However, it is permitted to
4569 give a colon-separated list of file names, in which case Exim uses the first
4570 existing file in the list.
4571
4572 .cindex "EXIM_USER"
4573 .cindex "EXIM_GROUP"
4574 .cindex "CONFIGURE_OWNER"
4575 .cindex "CONFIGURE_GROUP"
4576 .cindex "configuration file" "ownership"
4577 .cindex "ownership" "configuration file"
4578 The run time configuration file must be owned by root or by the user that is
4579 specified at compile time by the CONFIGURE_OWNER option (if set). The
4580 configuration file must not be world-writeable, or group-writeable unless its
4581 group is the root group or the one specified at compile time by the
4582 CONFIGURE_GROUP option.
4583
4584 &*Warning*&: In a conventional configuration, where the Exim binary is setuid
4585 to root, anybody who is able to edit the run time configuration file has an
4586 easy way to run commands as root. If you specify a user or group in the
4587 CONFIGURE_OWNER or CONFIGURE_GROUP options, then that user and/or any users
4588 who are members of that group will trivially be able to obtain root privileges.
4589
4590 Up to Exim version 4.72, the run time configuration file was also permitted to
4591 be writeable by the Exim user and/or group. That has been changed in Exim 4.73
4592 since it offered a simple privilege escalation for any attacker who managed to
4593 compromise the Exim user account.
4594
4595 A default configuration file, which will work correctly in simple situations,
4596 is provided in the file &_src/configure.default_&. If CONFIGURE_FILE
4597 defines just one file name, the installation process copies the default
4598 configuration to a new file of that name if it did not previously exist. If
4599 CONFIGURE_FILE is a list, no default is automatically installed. Chapter
4600 &<<CHAPdefconfil>>& is a &"walk-through"& discussion of the default
4601 configuration.
4602
4603
4604
4605 .section "Using a different configuration file" "SECID40"
4606 .cindex "configuration file" "alternate"
4607 A one-off alternate configuration can be specified by the &%-C%& command line
4608 option, which may specify a single file or a list of files. However, when
4609 &%-C%& is used, Exim gives up its root privilege, unless called by root (or
4610 unless the argument for &%-C%& is identical to the built-in value from
4611 CONFIGURE_FILE), or is listed in the TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST file and the caller
4612 is the Exim user or the user specified in the CONFIGURE_OWNER setting. &%-C%&
4613 is useful mainly for checking the syntax of configuration files before
4614 installing them. No owner or group checks are done on a configuration file
4615 specified by &%-C%&, if root privilege has been dropped.
4616
4617 Even the Exim user is not trusted to specify an arbitrary configuration file
4618 with the &%-C%& option to be used with root privileges, unless that file is
4619 listed in the TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST file. This locks out the possibility of
4620 testing a configuration using &%-C%& right through message reception and
4621 delivery, even if the caller is root. The reception works, but by that time,
4622 Exim is running as the Exim user, so when it re-execs to regain privilege for
4623 the delivery, the use of &%-C%& causes privilege to be lost. However, root
4624 can test reception and delivery using two separate commands (one to put a
4625 message on the queue, using &%-odq%&, and another to do the delivery, using
4626 &%-M%&).
4627
4628 If ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX is defined &_in Local/Makefile_&, it specifies a
4629 prefix string with which any file named in a &%-C%& command line option must
4630 start. In addition, the file name must not contain the sequence &"&`/../`&"&.
4631 There is no default setting for ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX; when it is unset, any file
4632 name can be used with &%-C%&.
4633
4634 One-off changes to a configuration can be specified by the &%-D%& command line
4635 option, which defines and overrides values for macros used inside the
4636 configuration file. However, like &%-C%&, the use of this option by a
4637 non-privileged user causes Exim to discard its root privilege.
4638 If DISABLE_D_OPTION is defined in &_Local/Makefile_&, the use of &%-D%& is
4639 completely disabled, and its use causes an immediate error exit.
4640
4641 The WHITELIST_D_MACROS option in &_Local/Makefile_& permits the binary builder
4642 to declare certain macro names trusted, such that root privilege will not
4643 necessarily be discarded.
4644 WHITELIST_D_MACROS defines a colon-separated list of macros which are
4645 considered safe and, if &%-D%& only supplies macros from this list, and the
4646 values are acceptable, then Exim will not give up root privilege if the caller
4647 is root, the Exim run-time user, or the CONFIGURE_OWNER, if set. This is a
4648 transition mechanism and is expected to be removed in the future. Acceptable
4649 values for the macros satisfy the regexp: &`^[A-Za-z0-9_/.-]*$`&
4650
4651 Some sites may wish to use the same Exim binary on different machines that
4652 share a file system, but to use different configuration files on each machine.
4653 If CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_NODE is defined in &_Local/Makefile_&, Exim first
4654 looks for a file whose name is the configuration file name followed by a dot
4655 and the machine's node name, as obtained from the &[uname()]& function. If this
4656 file does not exist, the standard name is tried. This processing occurs for
4657 each file name in the list given by CONFIGURE_FILE or &%-C%&.
4658
4659 In some esoteric situations different versions of Exim may be run under
4660 different effective uids and the CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_EUID is defined to
4661 help with this. See the comments in &_src/EDITME_& for details.
4662
4663
4664
4665 .section "Configuration file format" "SECTconffilfor"
4666 .cindex "configuration file" "format of"
4667 .cindex "format" "configuration file"
4668 Exim's configuration file is divided into a number of different parts. General
4669 option settings must always appear at the start of the file. The other parts
4670 are all optional, and may appear in any order. Each part other than the first
4671 is introduced by the word &"begin"& followed by the name of the part. The
4672 optional parts are:
4673
4674 .ilist
4675 &'ACL'&: Access control lists for controlling incoming SMTP mail (see chapter
4676 &<<CHAPACL>>&).
4677 .next
4678 .cindex "AUTH" "configuration"
4679 &'authenticators'&: Configuration settings for the authenticator drivers. These
4680 are concerned with the SMTP AUTH command (see chapter &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>&).
4681 .next
4682 &'routers'&: Configuration settings for the router drivers. Routers process
4683 addresses and determine how the message is to be delivered (see chapters
4684 &<<CHAProutergeneric>>&&--&<<CHAPredirect>>&).
4685 .next
4686 &'transports'&: Configuration settings for the transport drivers. Transports
4687 define mechanisms for copying messages to destinations (see chapters
4688 &<<CHAPtransportgeneric>>&&--&<<CHAPsmtptrans>>&).
4689 .next
4690 &'retry'&: Retry rules, for use when a message cannot be delivered immediately.
4691 If there is no retry section, or if it is empty (that is, no retry rules are
4692 defined), Exim will not retry deliveries. In this situation, temporary errors
4693 are treated the same as permanent errors. Retry rules are discussed in chapter
4694 &<<CHAPretry>>&.
4695 .next
4696 &'rewrite'&: Global address rewriting rules, for use when a message arrives and
4697 when new addresses are generated during delivery. Rewriting is discussed in
4698 chapter &<<CHAPrewrite>>&.
4699 .next
4700 &'local_scan'&: Private options for the &[local_scan()]& function. If you
4701 want to use this feature, you must set
4702 .code
4703 LOCAL_SCAN_HAS_OPTIONS=yes
4704 .endd
4705 in &_Local/Makefile_& before building Exim. Details of the &[local_scan()]&
4706 facility are given in chapter &<<CHAPlocalscan>>&.
4707 .endlist
4708
4709 .cindex "configuration file" "leading white space in"
4710 .cindex "configuration file" "trailing white space in"
4711 .cindex "white space" "in configuration file"
4712 Leading and trailing white space in configuration lines is always ignored.
4713
4714 Blank lines in the file, and lines starting with a # character (ignoring
4715 leading white space) are treated as comments and are ignored. &*Note*&: A
4716 # character other than at the beginning of a line is not treated specially,
4717 and does not introduce a comment.
4718
4719 Any non-comment line can be continued by ending it with a backslash. Note that
4720 the general rule for white space means that trailing white space after the
4721 backslash and leading white space at the start of continuation
4722 lines is ignored. Comment lines beginning with # (but not empty lines) may
4723 appear in the middle of a sequence of continuation lines.
4724
4725 A convenient way to create a configuration file is to start from the
4726 default, which is supplied in &_src/configure.default_&, and add, delete, or
4727 change settings as required.
4728
4729 The ACLs, retry rules, and rewriting rules have their own syntax which is
4730 described in chapters &<<CHAPACL>>&, &<<CHAPretry>>&, and &<<CHAPrewrite>>&,
4731 respectively. The other parts of the configuration file have some syntactic
4732 items in common, and these are described below, from section &<<SECTcos>>&
4733 onwards. Before that, the inclusion, macro, and conditional facilities are
4734 described.
4735
4736
4737
4738 .section "File inclusions in the configuration file" "SECID41"
4739 .cindex "inclusions in configuration file"
4740 .cindex "configuration file" "including other files"
4741 .cindex "&`.include`& in configuration file"
4742 .cindex "&`.include_if_exists`& in configuration file"
4743 You can include other files inside Exim's run time configuration file by
4744 using this syntax:
4745 .display
4746 &`.include`& <&'file name'&>
4747 &`.include_if_exists`& <&'file name'&>
4748 .endd
4749 on a line by itself. Double quotes round the file name are optional. If you use
4750 the first form, a configuration error occurs if the file does not exist; the
4751 second form does nothing for non-existent files. In all cases, an absolute file
4752 name is required.
4753
4754 Includes may be nested to any depth, but remember that Exim reads its
4755 configuration file often, so it is a good idea to keep them to a minimum.
4756 If you change the contents of an included file, you must HUP the daemon,
4757 because an included file is read only when the configuration itself is read.
4758
4759 The processing of inclusions happens early, at a physical line level, so, like
4760 comment lines, an inclusion can be used in the middle of an option setting,
4761 for example:
4762 .code
4763 hosts_lookup = a.b.c \
4764 .include /some/file
4765 .endd
4766 Include processing happens after macro processing (see below). Its effect is to
4767 process the lines of the included file as if they occurred inline where the
4768 inclusion appears.
4769
4770
4771
4772 .section "Macros in the configuration file" "SECTmacrodefs"
4773 .cindex "macro" "description of"
4774 .cindex "configuration file" "macros"
4775 If a line in the main part of the configuration (that is, before the first
4776 &"begin"& line) begins with an upper case letter, it is taken as a macro
4777 definition, and must be of the form
4778 .display
4779 <&'name'&> = <&'rest of line'&>
4780 .endd
4781 The name must consist of letters, digits, and underscores, and need not all be
4782 in upper case, though that is recommended. The rest of the line, including any
4783 continuations, is the replacement text, and has leading and trailing white
4784 space removed. Quotes are not removed. The replacement text can never end with
4785 a backslash character, but this doesn't seem to be a serious limitation.
4786
4787 Macros may also be defined between router, transport, authenticator, or ACL
4788 definitions. They may not, however, be defined within an individual driver or
4789 ACL, or in the &%local_scan%&, retry, or rewrite sections of the configuration.
4790
4791 .section "Macro substitution" "SECID42"
4792 Once a macro is defined, all subsequent lines in the file (and any included
4793 files) are scanned for the macro name; if there are several macros, the line is
4794 scanned for each in turn, in the order in which the macros are defined. The
4795 replacement text is not re-scanned for the current macro, though it is scanned
4796 for subsequently defined macros. For this reason, a macro name may not contain
4797 the name of a previously defined macro as a substring. You could, for example,
4798 define
4799 .display
4800 &`ABCD_XYZ = `&<&'something'&>
4801 &`ABCD = `&<&'something else'&>
4802 .endd
4803 but putting th