At times it is desirable to run sendmail so that it does not perform aliasing. When aliasing is disabled, sendmail uses the recipient address as is. No addresses are ever looked up in the aliases file, even if they are local.
The
-n
command-line switch tells
sendmail
not to perform aliasing of recipient addresses. This switch is rarely used but can be handy in a couple of situations.
In tracking down delivery problems, it can be difficult to determine where the problem lies. If you suspect a bad alias, you can force aliasing to be skipped and see whether that causes the problem to go away:
%/usr/lib/sendmail -n user < /dev/null
This tells
sendmail
to send an empty mail message (one containing mandatory headers only) to the recipient named
user
. The
-n
prevents
sendmail
from looking up
user
either in the
aliases
database or in
~/.forward
. If
user
resolves to the
local
delivery agent, the message will be delivered, and you should therefore suspect an aliasing problem.
Other switches, such as
-v
(verbose) and
-d
(debugging), can be combined with
-n
to view the delivery process in more detail.
The
-n
command-line switch can also be used to suppress aliasing when delivering to a list of recipients that has already been aliased. For example, consider the following script, which attempts to restrict delivery to users who have mail delivered locally and to skip users who have mail forwarded offsite:
#!/bin/sh EX_OK=0 # From <sysexits.h> EX_NOUSER=67 # From <sysexits.h> EX_SOFTWARE=70 # From <sysexits.h> if [ ${#} -ne 2 ]; then echo Usage: $0 list-name exit $EX_USAGE fi trap "exit 70" 1 2 13 15 LIST= "`/usr/lib/sendmail -bv $1 \ | grep "mailer local" 2>&1`" \ | sed 's/\\.\\.\\..*$//' if [ -z "$LIST" ] echo "$1 expanded to an empty list" exit $EX_NOUSER fi if /usr/lib/sendmail -n $LIST >/dev/null 2>&1 then exit $EX_OK fi exit $EX_SOFTWARE
The
sendmail
program is called twice inside this script. First, it is given the
-bv
switch, which causes it to expand the list of recipients in
$1
. That expansion includes aliasing (and
~/.forward
aliasing) for each name in the list. The output produced looks like this:
user1... deliverable: mailer local, user user1 user2@otherhost... deliverable: mailer smtp, host otherhost, user user2@otherhost
The
grep
(1) program selects only those lines that contain the expression
"mailer local"
, thus indicating a local user. The
sed
(1) program then discards from the ... to the end of each selected line. The result, a list of local recipients only, is saved in the shell variable
LIST
.
The
sendmail
program is called with the
-n
switch, which prevents it from re-aliasing the list of names in
$LIST
(they have already been aliased once).
Note that this script should not be used as is because it checks only for the delivery agent named
local
, rather than for any delivery agent that can perform final delivery.