FreeBSD manual
download PDF document: dma.8.pdf
DMA(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual DMA(8)
NAME
dma - DragonFly Mail Agent
SYNOPSIS
dma [-DiOt] [-Amode] [-bmode] [-f sender] [-L tag] [-ooption] [-r sender]
[-q[arg]] [recipient ...]
DESCRIPTION
dma is a small Mail Transport Agent (MTA), designed for home and office
use. It accepts mails from locally installed Mail User Agents (MUA) and
delivers the mails either locally or to a remote destination. Remote
delivery includes several features like TLS/SSL support and SMTP
authentication.
dma is not intended as a replacement for real, big MTAs like sendmail(8)
or postfix(1). Consequently, dma does not listen on port 25 for incoming
connections.
The options are as follows:
-Amode -Ac acts as a compatibility option for sendmail.
-bmode
-bp List all mails currently stored in the mail queue.
-bq Queue the mail, but do not attempt to deliver it. See
also the `DEFER' config file setting below.
All other modes are ignored.
-D Do not run in the background. Useful for debugging.
-f sender
Set sender address (envelope-from) to sender. This overrides the
value of the EMAIL environment variable, but is overridden by the
`MASQUERADE' config file setting.
-i Ignore dots alone on lines by themselves in incoming messages.
This should be set if you are reading data from a file.
-L tag Set the identifier used in syslog messages to the supplied tag.
This is a compatibility option for sendmail.
-O This is a compatibility option for sendmail.
-ooption
Specifying -oi is synonymous to -i. All other options are
ignored.
-q[arg]
Process saved messages in the queue. The argument is optional
and ignored.
-r sender
Same as -f.
o auth.conf
o dma.conf
These two files are stored per default in /etc/dma.
FILE FORMAT
Every file contains parameters of the form `name value'. Lines
containing boolean values are set to `NO' if the line is commented and to
`YES' if the line is uncommented. Empty lines or lines beginning with a
`#' are ignored. Parameter names and their values are case sensitive.
PARAMETERS
auth.conf
SMTP authentication can be configured in auth.conf. Each line has the
format "user|smarthost:password".
dma.conf
Most of the behaviour of dma can be configured in dma.conf.
SMARTHOST (string, default=empty)
If you want to send outgoing mails via a smarthost, set this
variable to your smarthosts address.
PORT (numeric, default=25)
Use this port to deliver remote emails. Only useful together with
the `SMARTHOST' option, because dma will deliver all mails to this
port, regardless of whether a smarthost is set or not.
ALIASES (string, default=/etc/aliases)
Path to the local aliases file. Just stick with the default. The
aliases file is of the format
nam: dest1 dest2 ...
In this case, mails to nam will instead be delivered to dest1 and
dest2, which in turn could be entries in /etc/aliases. The special
name `*' can be used to create a catch-all alias, which gets used
if no other matching alias is found. Use the catch-all alias only
if you do not want any local mail to be delivered.
SPOOLDIR (string, default=/var/spool/dma)
Path to dma's spool directory. Just stick with the default.
AUTHPATH (string, default=not set)
Path to the `auth.conf' file.
SECURETRANSFER (boolean, default=commented)
Uncomment if you want TLS/SSL secured transfer.
STARTTLS (boolean, default=commented)
Uncomment if you want to use STARTTLS. Only useful together with
`SECURETRANSFER'.
FINGERPRINT (string, default=empty)
Pin the server certificate by specifying its SHA256 fingerprint.
Only makes sense if you use a smarthost.
OPPORTUNISTIC_TLS (boolean, default=commented)
Uncomment if you want to allow the STARTTLS negotiation to fail.
Most useful when dma is used without a smarthost, delivering remote
messages directly to the outside mail exchangers; in opportunistic
SECURE (boolean, default=commented)
Uncomment this entry and change it to `INSECURE' to use plain text
SMTP login over an insecure connection. You have to rename this
variable manually to prevent that you send your password
accidentally over an insecure connection.
DEFER (boolean, default=commented)
Uncomment if you want that dma defers your mail. You have to flush
your mail queue manually with the -q option. This option is handy
if you are behind a dialup line.
FULLBOUNCE (boolean, default=commented)
Uncomment if you want the bounce message to include the complete
original message, not just the headers.
MAILNAME (string, default=empty)
The internet hostname dma uses to identify the host. If not set or
empty, the result of gethostname(3) is used. If `MAILNAME' is an
absolute path to a file, the first line of this file will be used
as the hostname.
MASQUERADE (string, default=empty)
Masquerade the envelope-from addresses with this address/hostname.
Use this setting if mails are not accepted by destination mail
servers because your sender domain is invalid. This setting
overrides the -f flag and the EMAIL environment variable.
If `MASQUERADE' does not contain a @ sign, the string is
interpreted as a host name. For example, setting `MASQUERADE' to
`john@' on host `hamlet' will send all mails as `john@hamlet';
setting it to `percolator' will send all mails as
`username@percolator'.
NULLCLIENT (boolean, default=commented)
Bypass aliases and local delivery, and instead forward all mails to
the defined `SMARTHOST'. `NULLCLIENT' requires `SMARTHOST' to be
set.
Environment variables
The behavior of dma can be influenced by some environment variables.
EMAIL
Used to set the sender address (envelope-from). Use a plain
address, in the form of user@example.com. This value will be
overridden when the `MASQUERADE' config file setting or the -f flag
is used.
SEE ALSO
mailaddr(7), mailwrapper(8), sendmail(8)
J. B. Postel, Simple Mail Transfer Protocol, RFC 821.
J. Myers, SMTP Service Extension for Authentication, RFC 2554.
P. Hoffman, SMTP Service Extension for Secure SMTP over TLS, RFC 2487.
HISTORY
The dma utility first appeared in DragonFly 1.11.