Book Image

Linux Email

Book Image

Linux Email

Overview of this book

Many businesses want to run their email servers on Linux for greater control and flexibility of corporate communications, but getting started can be complicated. The attractiveness of a free-to-use and robust email service running on Linux can be undermined by the apparent technical challenges involved. Some of the complexity arises from the fact that an email server consists of several components that must be installed and configured separately, then integrated together. This book gives you just what you need to know to set up and maintain an email server. Unlike other approaches that deal with one component at a time, this book delivers a step-by-step approach across all the server components, leaving you with a complete working email server for your small business network. Starting with a discussion on why you should even consider hosting your own email server, the book covers setting up the mail server. We then move on to look at providing web access, so that users can access their email out of the office. After this we look at the features you'll want to add to improve email productivity: virus protection, spam detection, and automatic email processing. Finally we look at an essential maintenance task: backups. Written by professional Linux administrators, the book is aimed at technically confident users and new and part-time system administrators. The emphasis is on simple, practical and reliable guidance. Based entirely on free, Open Source software, this book will show you how to set up and manage your email server easily.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Linux E-mail
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
Preface

Delivering and non-delivering recipes


So far we have covered only those recipes that either do a final delivery of the mail to a program or a file, or forward a message to another mail user. There is another option available, and to quote from the Procmail documentation:

There are two kinds of recipes—delivering and non-delivering recipes. If a delivering recipe is found to match, Procmail considers the mail (you guessed it) delivered and will cease processing the .procmailrc file after having successfully executed the action line of the recipe. If a non-delivering recipe is found to match, processing of the .procmailrc file will continue after the action line of this recipe has been executed.

Non-delivering example

We introduced an example in the previous chapter that was intended to make backups of mail items, in case a recipe that is being tested deletes all mails. This is a very useful non-delivering recipe example and may be found in the Procmail manual page procmailex.

If you are fairly...