Date: Sun, 27 Aug 2006 10:08:44 -0700 From: Gregory Shapiro <gshapiro@freebsd.org> To: Dirk Engling <erdgeist@erdgeist.org> Cc: hackers@freebsd.org Subject: Re: jails, cron and sendmail Message-ID: <20060827170844.GB1032@gir.gshapiro.net> In-Reply-To: <44F1B7B7.9090701@erdgeist.org> References: <44F0E38F.5030809@erdgeist.org> <17648.59470.572563.377998@bhuda.mired.org> <20060827052733.F16322@erdgeist.org> <17649.9146.307818.780974@bhuda.mired.org> <44F1B7B7.9090701@erdgeist.org>
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> But it prevents a vanilla system to try to connect to localhost:25 once > a day. Only those periodic scripts send mails per default. If you still want mail to work, but don't want to listen on a network port: cd /etc/mail/ make vi `hostname`.submit.mc Change the 127.0.0.1 in the line "FEATURE(`msp', `[127.0.0.1]')dnl" to an IP address that has a listening SMTP server and will accept mail from your jail. You can also use a hostname, for example, FEATURE(`msp', `smtp.example.com') make install Then make sure you leave the default for sendmail_outbound_enable ("YES") and turn off the others. You'll have a system where mail works just fine and nothing listens on any TCP port.
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