NAME
aliases
—
aliases file for smtpd
DESCRIPTION
This manual page describes the format of the
aliases
file, as used by
smtpd(8). An
alias, in its simplest form, is used to assign an arbitrary name to an email
address or a group of email addresses. This provides a convenient way to
send mail. For example an alias could refer to all users of a group: email
to that alias would be sent to all members of the group. Much more complex
aliases can be defined however: an alias can refer to other aliases, be used
to send mail to a file instead of another person, or to execute various
commands.
Within the file, ‘#
’ is a
comment delimiter; anything placed after it is discarded. The file consists
of key/value mappings of the form:
key is always folded to lowercase before alias lookups to ensure that there can be no ambiguity. The key is expanded to the corresponding values, which consist of one or more of the following:
- user
- A user on the host machine. The user must have a valid entry in the passwd(5) database file.
- /path/to/file
- Append messages to file, specified by its absolute pathname.
- |command
- Pipe the message to command on its standard input. The command is run under the privileges of the daemon's unprivileged account.
- :include:/path/to/file
- Include any definitions in file as alias entries. The format of the file is identical to this one.
- user-part@domain-part
- An email address in RFC 5322 format. If an address extension is appended to the user-part, it is first compared for an exact match. It is then stripped so that an address such as [email protected] will only use the part that precedes ‘+’ as a key.
- error:code message
- A status code and message to return. The code must be 3 digits, starting 4XX (TempFail) or 5XX (PermFail). The message must be present and can be freely chosen.
FILES
- /etc/mail/aliases
- Default
aliases
file.
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The aliases
file format appeared in
4.0BSD.