Name
F=r
Synopsis
If sendmail is run
with a -f
command-line argument, and if the
F=r
delivery agent flag is specified, the
A=
for this delivery agent has the two additional
arguments, -r
and $g
, inserted
between its argv[0]
and
argv[1]
.
Consider a case in which sendmail is run as:
/usr/lib/sendmail -f jim bill
If bill
is a local user and the delivery agent for
local
is defined as:
Mlocal, P=/bin/mail, F=r
lsDFMmnP, S=10, R=20, A=mail -d $u
↑note
the r
in F=
r
lsDFmnP
will
cause the A=
of:
A=mail -d $u
to be rewritten as:
A=mail -r $g
-d $u
The $g
is jim
from the original
command line (but rewritten to be a return address relative to the
recipient). The original -f
argument
jim
is first rewritten by the
canonify
rule set 3, the rule set 1, and the
final
rule set 4. The result of those rewrites is
placed into $f
($f). The
$f
sendmail macro is
rewritten by the canonify
rule set 3, the rule set
1, the S=
rule set, and the
final
rule set 4, and the result is placed into
$g
($g).
Note that the F=f
and the F=r
delivery agent flags are very similar and easily confused.
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