Re: [Exim] remote_smtp send problem unless comment out never…

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Autor: Tsuyoshi Niwa
Data:  
Para: Kirill Miazine
CC: exim-users
Assunto: Re: [Exim] remote_smtp send problem unless comment out never_users=root
Dear Kirill,

The command you gave me returned both exim_user and exim_group is set
to 'root'. I understand this is the problem. What I don't understand
is why it didn't take 'EXIM_USER=exim' in Local/Makefile when it's
compiled. Maybe, I am not understanding how to compile it fully? The
source directory is /usr/local/bin/exim-4.10. I moved to the directory
and ran 'make' followed by 'make install' as root. Is this correct at
all?

The below is the result of the command you gave me and the
Local/Makefile.

[root@server root]# /usr/exim/bin/exim -bP exim_user exim_group
exim_user = root
exim_group = root
[root@server root]# cat /usr/local/bin/exim-4.10/Local/Makefile
##################################################
#          The Exim mail transport agent         #
##################################################


# This is the template for Exim's main build-time configuration file. It
# contains settings that are independent of any operating system. These
are
# things that are mostly sysadmin choices. The items below are divided
into
# those you must specify, those you probably want to specify, those you
might
# often want to specify, and those that you almost never need to
mention.

# Edit this file and save the result to a file called Local/Makefile
within the
# Exim distribution directory before running the "make" command.

# Things that depend on the operating system have default settings in
# OS/Makefile-Default, but these are overridden for some OS by files
called
# called OS/Makefile-<osname>. You can further override these by
creating files
# called Local/Makefile-<osname>, where "<osname>" stands for the name
of your
# operating system - look at the names in the OS directory to see which
names
# are recognized.

# However, if you are building Exim for a single OS only, you don't
need to
# worry about setting up Local/Makefile-<osname>. Any build-time
configuration
# settings you require can in fact be placed in the one file called
# Local/Makefile. It is only if you are building for several OS from
the same
# source files that you need to worry about splitting off your own
OS-dependent
# settings into separate files. (There's more explanation about how
this all
# works in the toplevel README file, under "Modifying the building
process", as
# well as in the Exim specification.)

# One OS-specific thing that may need to be changed is the command for
running
# the C compiler; the overall default is gcc, but some OS Makefiles
specify cc.
# You can override anything that is set by putting CC=whatever in your
# Local/Makefile.

# NOTE: You should never need to edit any of the distributed Makefiles;
all
# overriding can be done in your Local/Makefile(s). This will make it
easier
# for you when the next release comes along.

# The location of the X11 libraries is something else that is quite
variable
# even between different versions of the same operating system (and
indeed
# there are different versions of X11 as well, of course). The four
settings
# concerned here are X11, XINCLUDE, XLFLAGS (linking flags) and
X11_LD_LIB
# (dynamic run-time library). You need not worry about X11 unless you
want to
# compile the Exim monitor utility. Exim itself does not use X11.

# Another area of variability between systems is the type and location
of the
# DBM library package. Exim has support for ndbm, gdbm, tdb, and
Berkeley DB.
# By default the code assumes ndbm; this often works with gdbm or DB,
provided
# they are correctly installed, via their compatibility interfaces.
However,
# Exim can also be configured to use the native calls for Berkeley DB
(obsolete
# versions 1.85 and 2.x, or the current 3.x version) and also for gdbm.

# For some operating systems, a default DBM library (other than ndbm) is
# selected by a setting in the OS-specific Makefile. Most modern OS now
have
# a DBM library installed as standard, and in many cases this will be
selected
# for you by the OS-specific configuration. If Exim compiles without any
# problems, you probably do not have to worry about the DBM library. If
you
# do want or need to change it, you should first read the discussion in
the
# file doc/dbm.discuss.txt, which also contains instructions for
testing Exim's
# interface to the DBM library.

# In Local/Makefiles blank lines and lines starting with # are ignored.
It is
# also permitted to use the # character to add a comment to a setting,
for
# example
#
# EXIM_GID=42 # the "mail" group
#
# However, with some versions of "make" this works only if there is no
white
# space between the end of the setting and the #, so perhaps it is best
# avoided. A consequence of this facility is that it is not possible to
have
# the # character present in any setting, but I can't think of any
cases where
# this would be wanted.
########################################################################
#######



########################################################################
#######
#                    THESE ARE THINGS YOU MUST SPECIFY
       #
########################################################################
#######


# Exim will not build unless you specify BIN_DIRECTORY, CONFIGURE_FILE,
and
# EXIM_USER. You also need EXIM_GROUP if EXIM_USER specifies a uid by
number.

# If you don't specify SPOOL_DIRECTORY, Exim won't fail to build.
However, it
# really is a very good idea to specify it here rather than at run
time. This
# is particularly true if you let the logs go to their default location
in the
# spool directory, because it means that the location of the logs is
known
# before Exim has read the run time configuration file.

#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# BIN_DIRECTORY defines where the exim binary will be installed by "make
# install". The path is also used internally by Exim when it needs to
re-invoke
# itself, either to send an error message, or to recover root
privilege. Exim's
# utility binaries and scripts are also installed in this directory.
There is
# no "standard" place for the binary directory. Some people like to
keep all
# the Exim files under one directory such as /usr/exim; others just let
the
# Exim binaries go into an existing directory such as /usr/sbin or
# /usr/local/sbin. The installation script will try to create this
directory,
# and any superior directories, if they do not exist.

BIN_DIRECTORY=/usr/exim/bin


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# CONFIGURE_FILE defines where Exim's run time configuration file is to
be
# found. The location of all other run time files and directories can be
# changed in the run time configuration file. There is a lot of variety
in the
# choice of location in different OS, and in the preferences of
different
# sysadmins. Some common locations are in /etc or /etc/mail or
/usr/local/etc
# or /usr/local/etc/mail. Another possibility is to keep all the Exim
files
# under a single directory such as /usr/exim. Whatever you choose, the
# installation script will try to make the directory and any superior
# directories if they don't exist. It will also install a default run
time
# configuration if this file does not exist.

CONFIGURE_FILE=/usr/exim/configure


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The Exim binary must normally be setuid root, so that it starts
executing as
# root, but (depending on the options with which it is called) it does
not
# always need to retain the root privilege. These settings define the
user and
# group that is used for Exim processes when they no longer need to be
root. In
# particular, this applies when receiving messages and when doing remote
# deliveries. (Local deliveries run as various non-root users,
typically as the
# owner of a local mailbox.) Specifying these values as root is very
strongly
# discouraged. These values are compiled into the binary.

EXIM_USER=exim

# If the setting of EXIM_USER is numeric (e.g. EXIM_USER=42), there must
# also be a setting of EXIM_GROUP. If, on the other hand, you use a name
# for EXIM_USER (e.g. EXIM_USER=exim), you don't need to set EXIM_GROUP
unless
# you want to use a group other than the default group for the given
user.

# EXIM_GROUP=

# Many sites define a user called "exim", with an appropriate default
group,
# and use
#
# EXIM_USER=exim
#
# while leaving EXIM_GROUP unspecified (commented out).


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# SPOOL_DIRECTORY defines the directory where all the data for messages
in
# transit is kept. It is strongly recommended that you define it here,
though
# it is possible to leave this till the run time configuration.

# Exim creates the spool directory if it does not exist. The owner and
group
# will be those defined by EXIM_USER and EXIM_GROUP, and this also
applies to
# all the files and directories that are created in the spool directory.

# Almost all installations choose this:

SPOOL_DIRECTORY=/var/spool/exim



########################################################################
#######
#           THESE ARE THINGS YOU PROBABLY WANT TO SPECIFY
       #
########################################################################
#######


# You need to specify some routers and transports if you want the Exim
that you
# are building to be capable of delivering mail. You almost certainly
need at
# least one type of lookup. You should consider whether you want to
build
# the Exim monitor or not.


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# These settings determine which individual router drivers are included
in the
# Exim binary. There are no defaults in the code; those routers that
are wanted
# must be defined here by setting the appropriate variables to the
value "yes".
# Including a router in the binary does not cause it to be used
automatically.
# It has also to be configured in the run time configuration file. By
# commenting out those you know you don't want to use, you can make the
binary
# a bit smaller. If you are unsure, leave all of these included for now.

ROUTER_ACCEPT=yes
ROUTER_DNSLOOKUP=yes
ROUTER_IPLITERAL=yes
ROUTER_MANUALROUTE=yes
ROUTER_QUERYPROGRAM=yes
ROUTER_REDIRECT=yes

# This one is very special-purpose, so is not included by default.

# ROUTER_IPLOOKUP=yes


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# These settings determine which individual transport drivers are
included in
# the Exim binary. There are no defaults; those transports that are
wanted must
# be defined here by setting the appropriate variables to the value
"yes".
# Including a transport in the binary does not cause it to be used
# automatically. It has also to be configured in the run time
configuration
# file. By commenting out those you know you don't want to use, you can
make
# the binary a bit smaller. If you are unsure, leave all of these
included for
# now.

TRANSPORT_APPENDFILE=yes
TRANSPORT_AUTOREPLY=yes
TRANSPORT_PIPE=yes
TRANSPORT_SMTP=yes

# This one is special-purpose, and commonly not required, so it is not
# included by default.

# TRANSPORT_LMTP=yes


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The appendfile transport can write messages to local mailboxes in a
number
# of formats. The code for three specialist formats, maildir,
mailstore, and
# MBX, is included only when requested. If you do not know what this is
about,
# leave these settings commented out.

# SUPPORT_MAILDIR=yes
# SUPPORT_MAILSTORE=yes
# SUPPORT_MBX=yes


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# These settings determine which file and database lookup methods are
included
# in the binary. See the manual chapter entitled "File and database
lookups"
# for discussion. DBM and lsearch (linear search) are included by
default. If
# you are unsure about the others, leave them commented out for now.
# LOOKUP_DNSDB does *not* refer to general mail routing using the DNS.
It is
# for the specialist case of using the DNS as a general database
facility (not
# common).

LOOKUP_DBM=yes
LOOKUP_LSEARCH=yes

# LOOKUP_CDB=yes
# LOOKUP_DNSDB=yes
# LOOKUP_DSEARCH=yes
# LOOKUP_LDAP=yes
# LOOKUP_MYSQL=yes
# LOOKUP_NIS=yes
# LOOKUP_NISPLUS=yes
# LOOKUP_ORACLE=yes
# LOOKUP_PGSQL=yes
# LOOKUP_WHOSON=yes


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# If you have set LDAP=yes, you should set LDAP_LIB_TYPE to indicate
which LDAP
# library you have. Unfortunately, though most of their functions are
the
# same, there are minor differences. Currently Exim knows about four
LDAP
# libraries: the one from the University of Michigan (also known as
OpenLDAP 1),
# OpenLDAP 2, the Netscape SDK library, and the library that comes with
Solaris
# 7 onwards. Uncomment whichever of these you are using.

# LDAP_LIB_TYPE=OPENLDAP1
# LDAP_LIB_TYPE=OPENLDAP2
# LDAP_LIB_TYPE=NETSCAPE
# LDAP_LIB_TYPE=SOLARIS

# If you don't set any of these, Exim assumes the original University of
# Michigan (OpenLDAP 1) library.


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Additional libraries and include directories may be required for some
# lookup styles (e.g. LDAP, MYSQL or PGSQL). LOOKUP_LIBS is included
only on
# the command for linking Exim itself, not on any auxiliary programs.
You
# don't need to set LOOKUP_INCLUDE if the relevant directories are
already
# specified in INCLUDE.

# LOOKUP_INCLUDE=-I /usr/local/ldap/include -I /usr/local/mysql/include
-I /usr/local/pgsql/include
# LOOKUP_LIBS=-L/usr/local/lib -lldap -llber -lmysqlclient -lpq


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Compiling the Exim monitor: If you want to compile the Exim monitor, a
# program that requires an X11 display, then EXIM_MONITOR should be set
to the
# value "eximon.bin". Comment out this setting to disable compilation
of the
# monitor. The locations of various X11 directories for libraries and
include
# files are defaulted in the OS/Makefile-Default file, but can be
overridden in
# local OS-specific make files.

#EXIM_MONITOR=eximon.bin
#commented out by Tsuyoshi Niwa


########################################################################
#######
#                 THESE ARE THINGS YOU MIGHT WANT TO SPECIFY
       #
########################################################################
#######


# The items in this section are those that are commonly changed
according to
# the sysadmin's preferences, but whose defaults are often acceptable.


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Exim has support for the AUTH (authentication) extension of the SMTP
# protocol, as defined by RFC 2554. If you don't know what SMTP
authentication
# is, you probably won't want to include this code, so you should leave
these
# settings commented out. If you do want to make use of SMTP
authentication,
# you must uncomment at least one of the following, so that appropriate
code is
# included in the Exim binary. You will then need to set up the run time
# configuration to make use of the mechanism(s) selected.

# AUTH_CRAM_MD5=yes
# AUTH_PLAINTEXT=yes
# AUTH_SPA=yes


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Exim can be built to support the SMTP STARTTLS command, which
implements
# Transport Layer Security using SSL (Secure Sockets Layer). To do
this, you
# must install the OpenSSL library package. Exim contains no
cryptographic
# code of its own. Uncomment the following lines if you want to build
Exim
# with TLS support. If you don't know what this is all about, leave
these
# settings commented out.

# Tsuyoshi uncommented the following two lines to enable TLS/SSL
encryption support
SUPPORT_TLS=yes
TLS_LIBS=-lssl -lcrypto

# If you are running Exim as a server, note that just building it with
TLS
# support is not all you need to do. You also need to set up a suitable
# certificate, and tell Exim about it by means of the tls_certificate
# and tls_privatekey run time options. You also need to set
tls_advertise_hosts
# to specify the hosts to which Exim advertises TLS support. On the
other hand,
# if you are running Exim only as a client, building it with TLS support
# is all you need to do.

# Additional libraries and include files are required for OpenSSL. The
TLS_LIBS
# setting above assumes that the libraries are installed with all your
other
# libraries. If they are in a special directory, you may need something
like

# TLS_LIBS=-L/usr/local/openssl/lib -lssl -lcrypto

# TLS_LIBS is included only on the command for linking Exim itself, not
on any
# auxiliary programs. If the include files are not in a standard place,
you can
# set TLS_INCLUDE to specify where they are:

# TLS_INCLUDE=-I/usr/local/openssl/include/

# You don't need to set TLS_INCLUDE if the relevant directories are
already
# specified in INCLUDE.


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The default distribution of Exim contains only the plain text form of
the
# documentation. Other forms are available separately. If you want to
install
# the documentation in "info" format, first fetch the Texinfo
documentation
# sources from the ftp directory and unpack them, which should create
files
# with the extension "texinfo" in the doc directory. You may find that
the
# version number of the texinfo files is different to your Exim version
number,
# because the main documentation isn't updated as often as the code. For
# example, if you have Exim version 4.03, the source tarball upacks
into a
# directory called exim-4.03, but the texinfo tarball unpacks into
exim-4.00.
# In this case, move the contents of exim-4.00/doc into exim-4.03/doc
after you
# have unpacked them. Then set INFO_DIRECTORY to the location of your
info
# directory. This varies from system to system, but is often
/usr/share/info.
# Once you have done this, "make install" will build the info files and
# install them in the directory you have defined.

# INFO_DIRECTORY=/usr/share/info


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Exim log directory and files: Exim creates several log files inside a
# single log directory. You can define the directory and the form of the
# log file name here. If you do not set anything, Exim creates a
directory
# called "log" inside its spool directory (see SPOOL_DIRECTORY above)
and uses
# the filenames "mainlog", "paniclog", and "rejectlog". If you want to
change
# this, you can set LOG_FILE_PATH to a path name containing one
occurrence of
# %s. This will be replaced by one of the strings "main", "panic", or
"reject"
# to form the final file names. Some installations may want something
like this:

# LOG_FILE_PATH=/var/log/exim_%slog

# which results in files with names /var/log/exim_mainlog, etc. The
directory
# in which the log files are placed must exist; Exim does not try to
create
# it for itself. It is also your responsibility to ensure that Exim is
capable
# of writing files using this path name. The Exim user (see EXIM_USER
above)
# must be able to create and update files in the directory you have
specified.

# You can also configure Exim to use syslog, instead of or as well as
log
# files, by settings such as these

# LOG_FILE_PATH=syslog
# LOG_FILE_PATH=syslog:/var/log/exim_%slog

# The first of these uses only syslog; the second uses syslog and also
writes
# to log files. Do not include white space in such a setting as it
messes up
# the building process.


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Cycling log files: this variable specifies the maximum number of old
# log files that are kept by the exicyclog log-cycling script. You
don't have
# to use exicyclog. If your operating system has other ways of cycling
log
# files, you can use them instead. The exicyclog script isn't run by
default;
# you have to set up a cron job for it if you want it.

EXICYCLOG_MAX=10


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The compress command is used by the exicyclog script to compress old
log
# files. Both the name of the command and the suffix that it adds to
files
# need to be defined here. See also the EXICYCLOG_MAX configuration.

COMPRESS_COMMAND=/usr/bin/gzip
COMPRESS_SUFFIX=gz


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# If the exigrep utility is fed compressed log files, it tries to
uncompress
# them using this command.

ZCAT_COMMAND=/usr/bin/zcat


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Compiling in support for embedded Perl: If you want to be able to
# use Perl code in Exim's string manipulation language and you have Perl
# (version 5.004 or later) installed, set EXIM_PERL to perl.o. Using
embedded
# Perl costs quite a lot of resources. Only do this if you really need
it.

# EXIM_PERL=perl.o


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Exim has support for PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules), a
facility
# which is available in the latest releases of Solaris and in some
GNU/Linux
# distributions (see http://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/pam/). The
Exim
# support, which is intended for use in conjunction with the SMTP AUTH
# facilities, is included only when requested by the following setting:

# SUPPORT_PAM=yes

# You probably need to add -lpam to EXTRALIBS, and in some releases of
# GNU/Linux -ldl is also needed.


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Support for authentication via Radius is also available. The Exim
support,
# which is intended for use in conjunction with the SMTP AUTH
facilities,
# is included only when requested by setting the following parameter to
the
# location of your Radius configuration file:

# RADIUS_CONFIG_FILE=/etc/radiusclient/radiusclient.conf


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Support for authentication via the Cyrus SASL pwcheck daemon is
available.
# The Exim support, which is intented for use in conjunction with the
SMTP AUTH
# facilities, is included only when requested by setting the following
# parameter to the location of the pwcheck daemon's socket directory.
#
# There is no need to install all of SASL on your system. You just need
to run
# ./configure --with-pwcheck, cd to the pwcheck directory with sources,
make
# and make install. You must create the socket directory (default
/var/pwcheck)
# and chown it to exim's user and group. Once you have installed
pwcheck, you
# should arrange for it to be started by root at boot time.

# CYRUS_PWCHECK_SOCKET=/var/pwcheck/pwcheck


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# TCP wrappers: If you want to use tcpwrappers from within Exim,
uncomment
# this setting. See the manual section entitled "Use of tcpwrappers" in
the
# chapter on building and installing Exim.

# USE_TCP_WRAPPERS=yes

# You may well also have to specify a local "include" file and an
additional
# library for TCP wrappers, so you probably need something like this:

# USE_TCP_WRAPPERS=yes
# CFLAGS=-O -I/usr/local/include
# EXTRALIBS_EXIM=-L/usr/local/lib -lwrap

# but of course there may need to be other things in CFLAGS and
EXTRALIBS_EXIM
# as well.


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The default action of the exim_install script is to install the Exim
binary
# with a unique name such as exim-4.00-1, and then set up a symbolic
link
# called "exim" to reference it, moving the symbolic link from any
previous
# version. If you define NO_SYMLINK (the value doesn't matter), the
symbolic
# link is not created or moved. You will then have to "turn Exim on" by
setting
# up the link manually.

# NO_SYMLINK=yes



########################################################################
#######
#              THINGS YOU ALMOST NEVER NEED TO MENTION
       #
########################################################################
#######


# The settings in this section are available for use in special
circumstances.
# In the vast majority of installations you need not change anything
below.


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The following commands live in different places in some OS. Either the
# ultimate default settings, or the OS-specific files should already
point to
# the right place, but they can be overridden here if necessary. These
settings
# are used when building various scripts to ensure that the correct
paths are
# used when the scripts are run. They are not used in the Makefile
itself. Perl
# is not necessary for running Exim unless you set EXIM_PERL (see
above) to get
# it embedded, but there are some utilities that are Perl scripts. If
you
# haven't got Perl, Exim will still build and run; you just won't be
able to
# use those utilities.

# CHOWN_COMMAND=/usr/bin/chown
# CHGRP_COMMAND=/usr/bin/chgrp
# MV_COMMAND=/bin/mv
# RM_COMMAND=/bin/rm
# PERL_COMMAND=/usr/bin/perl


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The following macro can be used to change the command for building a
library
# of functions. By default the "ar" command is used, with options "cq".
# Only in rare circumstances should you need to change this.

# AR=ar cq


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The following macros can be used to change the default modes that are
used
# by the appendfile transport. In most installations the defaults are
just
# fine, and in any case, you can change particular instances of the
transport
# at run time if you want.

# APPENDFILE_MODE=0600
# APPENDFILE_DIRECTORY_MODE=0700
# APPENDFILE_LOCKFILE_MODE=0600


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# In some installations there may be multiple machines sharing file
systems,
# where a different configuration file is required for Exim on the
different
# machines. If CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_NODE is defined, then Exim will first
look
# for a configuration file whose name is that defined by CONFIGURE_FILE,
# with the node name obtained by uname() tacked on the end, separated
by a
# period (for example, /usr/exim/configure.host.in.some.domain). If
this file
# does not exist, then the bare configuration file name is tried.

# CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_NODE=yes


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# In some esoteric configurations two different versions of Exim are
run,
# with different setuid values, and different configuration files are
required
# to handle the different cases. If CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_EUID is defined,
then
# Exim will first look for a configuration file whose name is that
defined
# by CONFIGURE_FILE, with the effective uid tacked on the end,
separated by
# a period (for eximple, /usr/exim/configure.0). If this file does not
exist,
# then the bare configuration file name is tried. In the case when both
# CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_EUID and CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_NODE are set, four
files
# are tried: <name>.<euid>.<node>, <name>.<node>, <name>.<euid>, and
<name>.

# CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_EUID=yes


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The size of the delivery buffer: This specifies the size (in bytes) of
# the buffer which is used when copying a message from the spool to a
# destination. The default value built into the source is 8192 and
there is
# rarely any need to change this.

# DELIVER_BUFFER_SIZE=8192


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The mode of the database directory: Exim creates a directory called
"db"
# in its spool directory, to hold its databases of hints. This variable
# determines the mode of the created directory. The default value in the
# source is 0750.

# EXIMDB_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Database file mode: The mode of files created in the "db" directory
defaults
# to 0640 in the source, and can be changed here.

# EXIMDB_MODE=0640


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Database lock file mode: The mode of zero-length files created in the
"db"
# directory to use for locking purposes defaults to 0640 in the source,
and
# can be changed here.

# EXIMDB_LOCKFILE_MODE=0640


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# This parameter sets the maximum length of the header portion of a
message
# that Exim is prepared to process. The default setting is one
megabyte. The
# limit exists in order to catch rogue mailers that might connect to
your SMTP
# port, start off a header line, and then just pump junk at it for
ever. The
# message_size_limit option would also catch this, but it may not be
set.

# HEADER_MAXSIZE="(1024*1024)"


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The mode of the input directory: The input directory is where
messages are
# kept while awaiting delivery. Exim creates it if necessary, using a
mode
# which can be defined here (default 0750).

# INPUT_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The mode of Exim's log directory, when it is created by Exim inside
the spool
# directory, defaults to 0750 but can be changed here.

# LOG_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The log files themselves are created as required, with a mode that
defaults
# to 0640, but which can be changed here.

# LOG_MODE=0640


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The TESTDB lookup is for performing tests on the handling of lookup
results,
# and is not useful for general running. It should be included only when
# debugging the code of Exim.

# LOOKUP_TESTDB=yes


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# /bin/sh is used by default as the shell in which to run commands that
are
# defined in the makefiles. This can be changed if necessary, by
uncommenting
# this line and specifying another shell, but note that a
Bourne-compatible
# shell is expected.

# MAKE_SHELL=/bin/sh


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The maximum number of named lists of each type (address, domain,
host, and
# local part) can be increased by changing this value. It should be set
to
# a multiple of 16.

# MAX_NAMED_LIST=16


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Network interfaces: Unless you set the local_interfaces option in the
runtime
# configuration file to restrict Exim to certain interfaces only, it
will run
# code to find all the interfaces there are on your host. Unfortunately,
# the call to the OS that does this requires a buffer large enough to
hold
# data for all the interfaces - it was designed in the days when a host
rarely
# had more than three or four interfaces. Nowadays hosts can have very
many
# virtual interfaces running on the same hardware. If you have more
than 250
# virtual interfaces, you will need to uncomment this setting and
increase the
# value.

# MAXINTERFACES=250


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Per-message logs: While a message is in the process of being
delivered,
# comments on its progress are written to a message log, for the
benefit of
# human administrators. These logs are held in a directory called
"msglog"
# in the spool directory. Its mode defaults to 0750, but can be changed
here.
# The message log directory is also used for storing files that are
used by
# transports for returning data to a message's sender (see the
"return_output"
# option for transports).

# MSGLOG_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# There are three options which are used when compiling the Perl
interface and
# when linking with Perl. The default values for these are placed
automatically
# at the head of the Makefile by the script which builds it. However,
if you
# want to override them, you can do so here.

# PERL_CC=
# PERL_CCOPTS=
# PERL_LIBS=


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Identifying the daemon: When an Exim daemon starts up, it writes its
pid
# (process id) to a file so that it can easily be identified. The path
of the
# file can be specified here. Some installations may want something
like this:

# PID_FILE_PATH=/var/lock/exim.pid

# If PID_FILE_PATH is not defined, Exim writes a file in its spool
directory
# using the name "exim-daemon.pid".

# If you start up a daemon without the -bd option (for example, with
just
# the -q15m option), a pid file is not written. Also, if you override
the
# configuration file with the -oX option, no pid file is written. In
other
# words, the pid file is written only for a "standard" daemon.


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# If Exim creates the spool directory, it is given this mode,
defaulting in the
# source to 0750.

# SPOOL_DIRECTORY_MODE=0750


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# The mode of files on the input spool which hold the contents of
messages can
# be changed here. The default is 0640 so that information from the
spool is
# available to anyone who is a member of the Exim group.

# SPOOL_MODE=0640


#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
# Moving frozen messages: If the following is uncommented, Exim is
compiled
# with support for automatically moving frozen messages out of the main
spool
# directory, a facility that is found useful by some large
installations. A
# run time option is required to cause the moving actually to occur.
Such
# messages become "invisible" to the normal management tools.

# SUPPORT_MOVE_FROZEN_MESSAGES=yes

# End of EDITME for Exim 4.
[root@server root]#


Thanks for you help.
Tsuyoshi Niwa
http://www.sopranomaster.com/



On 2003.7.10, at 02:13 AM, Kirill Miazine wrote:

> What does following command produce?
>
>     $ exim -bP exim_user exim_group

>
> Tsuyoshi Niwa wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I was using Exim-4.10 on Red Hat Linux 7.2 (kernel-2.4.7) just fine
>> until I recompiled it.
>> After recompiling, sending non-local email address is denied and the
>> mainlog says
>> "2003-07-09 22:15:18 19aQxe-0000xZ-00 == blah@??? R=dnslookup
>> T=remote_smtp defer (-29): User 0 set for remote_smtp transport is on
>> the never_users list"
>>
>> This can be easily worked around by commenting out "never_users =
>> root", but I know that's a terrible solution.
>>
>> So, I went back to the source directory, checked Local/Makefile and
>> see
>> "EXIM_USER=exim"
>> I thought this should be fine, so I tried compiling again by doing as
>> follows.
>> #/etc/rc.d/init.d/sendmail stop
>> #cd /source-dir-of-exim/
>> #make
>> #make install
>> #/etc/rc.d/init.d/sendmail start
>>
>> The service starts, but still, remote_smtp fails.
>
> Some debugging info would be fine indeed.
>
>     $ exim -d -M <message_id>

>
>> I read on articles and posting about 'never_users' and tried to change
>> the owner of the following files to a user 'exim'.
>> /usr/exim/configure
>
> Let the configuration file be owned by root, there is no reason for
> changing the owner to the exim user.
>
>> /var/spool/exim/*
>>
>> This didn't work either. Can you guys give me what I am missing?
>> Thanks
>> in advance.
>
> What did not work? What did you expect to happen when changing the
> owner
> of the above mentioned files?
>
> --
> Kirill Miazine
> mailto:km@krot.org
> http://km.krot.org/
>
>