Majordomo Frequently Asked Questions „îïîëíèòåëüíûå ñîâåòû ïî Majordomo ‚ redhat 5.2 ñìåíèëàñü âåðñèß ïåðëà, è ìàññà îøèáîê â ðåãóëßðíûõ âûðàæåíèßõ, êîòîðûìè íàáèò majordom, ïîëåçëè íàðóæó. Žñíîâíîå, ÷òî òàì íàäî ïðàâèòü - ïðèìåíåíèß êëþ÷à "g" - global - íà $ èëè ^. íàïðèìåð s/\n$//g; ‚ñå ïîäîáíûå äûðêè íàäî âû÷èñòèòü âî âñåõ ïåðëîâûõ ôàéëàõ majordomo ‹èñò ðàññûëêè, â êîòîðûé ìîæåò ïèñàòü òîëüêî admin subscribe_policy = auto+confirm unsubscribe_policy = auto strip = yes reply_to = $SENDER sender = null index_access = closed get_access = list info_access = open maxlength = 400000 moderate = yes Žòêðûòûé maillist subscribe_policy = auto+confirm unsubscribe_policy = auto strip = yes reply_to = $SENDER index_access = closed get_access = list info_access = open maxlength = 400000 moderate = no Subject: Majordomo Frequently Asked Questions Date: 5 Nov 1997 10:03:03 -0500 Expires: 9 Dec 1997 15:03:01 GMT Version: $Id: majordomo-faq.html,v 1.145 1997/10/24 14:09:28 barr Exp barr $ Archive-Name: mail/list-admin/majordomo-faq Posting-Frequency: monthly Note: This FAQ has been recently updated to be exclusively for Majordomo 1.94 and up. Table of Contents: 1. What is Majordomo and how can I get it? + 1.1 - What is Majordomo? + 1.2 - Where do I get Majordomo? + 1.3 - How do I install it? + 1.4 - How do I upgrade from an earlier release? + 1.5 - Where do I report bugs or get help with Majordomo? + 1.6 - Which is better, Majordomo or LISTSERV? + 1.6 - How can I access Majordomo via the Web? 2. Problems setting up Majordomo + 2.1 - What are the proper permissions and ownership of all Majordomo files and directories? + 2.2 - I get a MAJORDOMO ABORT with "chown(...): Not owner" + 2.3 - I get "sh: wrapper: cannot execute" or "wrapper: permission denied" + 2.4 - I get "Unknown mailer error" when majordomo runs + 2.5 - I get an error "insecure usage" from the wrapper + 2.6 - I get "majordomo: No such file or directory" from the wrapper + 2.7 - I get an error "Can't locate majordomo.pl" + 2.8 - I told my majordomo.cf where to archive the list, why isn't it working? + 2.9 - config-test can't seem to find ctime.pl or resend can't find getopts.pl + 2.10 - A list is visible via lists, but can't subscribe or 'get' files 3. Setting up mailing lists and aliases + 3.1 - How do I direct bounces to the right address? + 3.2 - Semi-automated handling of bounced mail + 3.3 - What's this Owner-List and List-Owner stuff? Why both? + 3.4 - How should I configure resend for Reply-To headers? + 3.5 - How can I hide lists so they can't be viewed by 'lists'? + 3.6 - How can I restrict a list such that only subscribers can send mail to the list? + 3.7 - Can I have the list owner or approval person be changeable without intervention from the Majordomo owner? + 3.8 - What are all these different passwords? + 3.9 - How do I tell majordomo to handle "get"-ing of binary files? + 3.10 - How do I set up a moderated list? + 3.11 - How do I set up a digested version of a list? + 3.12 - How do I setup virtual majordomo domains? 4. Miscellaneous mailer and other problems + 4.1 - Address with blanks are being treated separately + 4.2 - Why aren't my digests going out? + 4.3 - Why do I get duplicate mail sent to the list? + 4.4 - How do I gate my list to and/or from a newsgroup? + 4.5 - How can I improve Majordomo's performance? + 4.6 - How can I handle X.400 addresses? + 4.7 - Why is the Subject of my messages missing? This FAQ is Copyright 1996 by David Barr and The Ohio State University. This document may be reproduced, so long as it is kept in its entirety and in its original format. Credits: This FAQ originally written by Vincent D. Skahan. Many thanks to the members of the majordomo-workers and majordomo-users mailing lists for many of the questions and answers found in this FAQ. Thanks to fen@comedia.com (Fen Labalme) for getting an HTML version started. You can get an HTML version of this FAQ on the World Wide Web at http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/~barr/majordomo-faq.html. You can request a copy by email by sending a message to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu, with the following text in the body: send usenet/comp.mail.list-admin.software/Majordomo_Frequently_Asked_Questions If you have any questions or submissions regarding this FAQ, send them to barr@cis.ohio-state.edu (David Barr). _________________________________________________________________ Section 1: What is Majordomo and how can I get it? 1.1 - What is Majordomo? Majordomo is a program which automates the management of Internet mailing lists. Commands are sent to Majordomo via electronic mail to handle all aspects of list maintainance. Once a list is set up, virtually all operations can be performed remotely, requiring no intervention upon the postmaster of the list site. See the main Majordomo web page at: http://www.greatcircle.com/majordomo/ Majordomo controls a list of addresses for some mail transport system (like sendmail or smail) to handle. Majordomo itself performs no mail delivery (though it has scripts to format and archive messages). majordomo - n: a person who speaks, makes arrangements, or takes charge for another. From latin "major domus" - "master of the house". Majordomo is written in Perl. It will work with Perl 4.036 or Perl 5.002 or greater. It will not work with Perl 5.001!!!. It is recommended that you use the latest release of Perl that you can get, which can be found at http://www.perl.com/perl/. You must upgrade to version 1.94.3 in order for it to work with Perl 5.004, due to changes in regular expressions. While Majordomo is still compatible with Perl 4.036, future versions will likely be Perl 5 only. Many people have been having problems with DEC OSF/1 AXP systems with Majordomo. Apparently Perl on the Alphas is not as stable as compared to other platforms, and Majordomo tickles bugs in that port of Perl. If you are having problems, please make sure you are running the very latest version of Perl (version 5.002 is known to work). There have also been reported problems with the native compiler for AIX 3.2.5. Perl compiled with that compiler will crash when running Majordomo (even though it passes all the regression tests), however if you compile Perl with gcc it will work. Majordomo was developed under UNIX based systems, but will probably work on others. If you can get Perl to compile and run cleanly on your system, and can send Internet mail by piping or calling an external program (and that external program reads its list of recipients from a plain text file), you can probably get Majordomo to work on a wide variety of UNIX-based and non-UNIX based systems. Here's a short list of some of the features of Majordomo. * supports various types of lists, including moderated ones. * List options can be set easily through a configuration file, editable remotely. * Supports archival and remote retrieval of messages. * Supports digests. * Written in Perl, - easily customizable and expandable. * Modular in design. * Includes support for FTPMAIL. * Supports confirmation of subscriptions (to protect against forged subscription requests). * List filters 1.2 - Where do I get Majordomo? Via the Web at: http://www.greatcircle.com/majordomo/ Via anonymous FTP at: ftp://ftp.greatcircle.com/pub/majordomo/ ftp://ftp.sgi.com/other/majordomo/ ftp://ftp.sgi.com/other/majordomo/ The current version is 1.94.4. It includes a security fix found in 1.94.3 and prior. If you don't have Perl, you can get it from: http://www.perl.com/perl/ Use that link for more information about Perl, too. The FTPMAIL package can be found in ftp://src.doc.ic.ac.uk/packages/ftpmail or any comp.sources.misc archive (volume 37). 1.3 - How do I install it? Majordomo comes with a rather extensive INSTALL file. Read this file completely. There's also a README file which also covers some common problems. This FAQ is meant to be a supplement to Majordomo's documentation, not a replacement for it. If you have any questions that this FAQ doesn't cover, chances are that it is covered in the documentation in the Majordomo distribution. For anyone who is going to run a list, you must read Doc/list-owner-info before trying to do anything. If you don't have access to the system where your list is being run, the Majordomo maintainer who set up your list should have sent it to you. Bug him if he didn't. If you have permission problems unpacking the distribution, try using the 'o' flag to tar to ignore user/group information. 1.4 - How do I upgrade from an earlier release? Be sure to browse the "Changelog" file to get an idea what has changed. There currently is no canned set of instructions for upgrading from an earlier release. The most straightforward method is to simply install the current release in a different directory, (with the same list/archive/digest directories) and change the mail aliases for each list to use the new Majordomo scripts as soon as you feel comfortable with the new setup. Be careful in upgrading to 1.94 that you update your $mailer and $bounce_mailer variables in your majordomo.cf! There are also some other new variables too. You may want to update the list .config files so they contain any new variables found in the new release. You just need to do a 'writeconfig' for each list, and majordomo will update the .config file using the existing values in the old .config file. Any new variables will be set to defaults for a new list. 1.5 - Where do I report bugs or get help with Majordomo? Please DO NOT ask the FAQ maintainer for help on Majordomo. I will probably accidently delete your message. Let me say that about 90% of the answers I give are from the documentation or this FAQ. Most of the rest are answered by reading the source. It's really not that hard to figure out. If you need help, there is a mailing list majordomo-users@greatcircle.com, which is frequented by lots of users of Majordomo. Report actual bugs to majordomo-workers@greatcircle.com. It's a good idea to search an browse the list archives below for the last couple months since many of the same questions are asked (and answered) over and over again. There are searchable list archives (thanks to Jason Tibbitts) at http://www.hpc.uh.edu/majordomo-users/ and http://www.hpc.uh.edu/majordomo-workers/. Be sure always to include which version of Majordomo you are using. You should also include what operating system you are using, what version of Perl, and what mailer (sendmail, smail, qmail, etc) and version you are using, especially if you can't get Majordomo to work at all. But first, you must have thoroughly read the ALL documentation in the Majordomo distribution and this FAQ. If you got this FAQ from the Majordomo distribution, or anywhere except from the WWW site at the top of this document don't expect it to be up-to-date. It's probably not. There is an FTP site for unofficial patches. See ftp://sol.ccsf.cc.ca.us/majordomo-patches/ . What's in it? Messages that are saved from the majordomo-users and -workers mailing lists. There are INDEX files in each part with one-line summaries of each patch, and a README file in the top directory with overall information. If you have patches that you think should be in the archive, you can FTP or email them in. The top-level README file tells how to do it. Please contribute -- to save other people the headaches you had. NOTE: The patches are NOT "official" patches approved by Chan Wilson or anyone else. Use your own judgement before (and after) you apply them. Nick Perry also has various patches for 1.94.3 at ftp://ftp.amulation.com/pub/majordomo_patches/. They are patches which add various functions to majordomo. Do NOT ask questions about Majordomo on the list-managers@greatcircle.com list. That list is for general discussions about running mailing lists, not for help on specific packages. The same goes for the Usenet group comp.mail.list-admin.policy. There is a good guide for people running majordomo lists at http://docuspace.uchicago.edu/g_maj-adm.html. 1.6 - Which is better, Majordomo or LISTSERV? For a good comparison of various mailing list managers (MLM's) there's a good FAQ by Norm Aleks. It is posted monthly to news.answers and comp.mail.list-admin.software. It's also mirrored at the following URL. ftp://ftp.uu.net/usenet/news.answers/mail/list-admin/software-faq You can also request a copy via email, by sending the text "get mlm-software faq" in the body of a mail message to LISTSERV@listserv.net. Contact naleks@library.ummed.edu (Norm Aleks) for more information. 1.7 - How can I access Majordomo via the Web? There are various Web interfaces to Majordomo available. * LWGate - http://www.netspace.org/users/dwb/lwgate.html * Regan's - http://www.peak.org/peak_info/mlists/Majordomo.html * MajorCool - http://ncrinfo.ncr.com/pub/contrib/unix/MajorCool/ * MailServ - http://iquest.com/~fitz/www/mailserv/ * Pandora - http://www.ed.umuc.edu/products/pandora.html * Maitre-d - http://www.outer.net/wps/content2.htm#ch12 * Gutierrez' - http://gaia.gutierrez.com/majordomo/ * Marcos' - http://www.inf.utfsm.cl/~marcos/majordomo/www.html Section 2: Problems setting up Majordomo 2.1 - What are the proper permissions and ownership of all Majordomo files and directories? By far the biggest problem in setting up Majordomo is getting all the permissions and ownerships right. In part this is due to the security model that Majordomo uses, and it's also due to the fact that it's hard to automate this process. Once you install majordomo, run "./wrapper config-test" as some other user (like you) and read the results. Do NOT run "./wrapper config-test" as 'root' or your 'majordom' user. That will defeat the test of the wrapper operation. The config-test script will check your installation for correct permissions (as well as other tests) and report any problems. It's not quite perfect, but it catches 95% of all problems. Majordomo works by using a small C "wrapper" which works by allowing Majordomo to always run as the "majordom" user and group that you create. (note that the wrapper may disappear in a future release, since its function could safely be replaced by features found in Perl 5) You can use a different name than "majordom" for your user and group, but that is what is assumed for the explanations found in this document. The 1.94.3 INSTALL file suggests using 'daemon' as your majordomo group. This is the group that 'sendmail' runs as, and allows you to have $homedir permissions set to 750. This has the disadvantage in environments where there may be one or more administrators of the Majordomo system or where you don't want to always have to 'su' the the majordomo user to do administration. (you don't really want to put other normal users in the 'daemon' group for security reasons) If you create a separate 'majordom' group and add yourself and other majordomo administrators to it, then you'll need to make sure the $homedir and wrapper have world execute permission, and you may have to add 'majordom' to the 'trusted' list of users in your sendmail.cf. (otherwise sendmail 8.x will probably give "X-Authentication-Warning:"'s) Because Majordomo does not run with any "special" (root) priviliges, and because of the fact that Majordomo does a lot of .lock-style locking (with shlock.pl), permissions on all files and directories are critical to the correct operation of Majordomo. The wrapper The wrapper is compiled in one of two ways, by uncommenting the correct section in the Makefile for your type of system. If you are unsure if your system is POSIX or not, I would suggest you assume that your system is not. (The default is POSIX) If things don't work right (for example you get symptoms of permission problems or you get an error from the wrapper saying to recompile using POSIX flags), then try POSIX. Some systems which are non-POSIX: SunOS 4.x, Ultrix, most BSD 4.2 and 4.3-based systems. POSIX systems include: Solaris 2.x, IRIX 5.x, BSDI (and other 4.4 BSD-based systems), Linux. Make sure W_PATH is right in the Makefile. On IRIX 5.x, you need to add /usr/bsd to the W_PATH to get the hostname (needed by Perl) command. (IRIX doesn't have a /usr/ucb). If you are on a non-POSIX system, the wrapper must be both suid and sgid (mode 6755) to "majordom". It must not be setuid root! OR On a POSIX system the wrapper must be setuid root, and double-check that W_USER and W_GROUP are the uid and gid of the "majordom" user and group. Don't ever set W_USER to be 0! Then compile the wrapper and install it. Do not install the wrapper on an NFS filesystem mounted with the "nosuid" option set. This will prevent the wrapper from working. Majordomo files All files that majordomo creates will be mode 660, user "majordom", group "majordom" if it is running correctly (see $config_umask in the majordomo.cf). The "Log" file that Majordomo writes logging information to must have this same permission and ownership. Make sure any files you create by hand (.config, subscription lists) have this same permission and ownership. (they can also be mode 664 if you don't need the contents to be private to others) The permissions/ownership of the Majordomo programs and related files themselves aren't as critical, but the must all be readable to the "majordom" user/group. All Majordomo programs (majordomo, resend, etc.) must have the execute bit set. All Majordomo programs must have the correct path to Perl in the #! line in the beginning of the script. The 'make install' process should do this all automatically for you. Majordomo directories All directories under Majordomo's control ($homedir, $listdir, $digest_work_dir, $filedir, as defined in your majordomo.cf) must be at least mode 750 (or 755). They should be user and group owned by "majordom". If want to allow a local user to be able to directly modify files or for example copy files into a list's archive directory, you may make the directory or file owned by that user. However directories and files must be then group-"majordom" writeable (770 or 775). 2.2 - I get a MAJORDOMO ABORT with "chown(...): Not owner" Most likely your wrapper is not installed correctly. Re-check the Makefile and see if the wrapper was compiled with the right UID and GID. See the README and the above section on how to set the permissions correctly. You should have seen an error if you ran "./wrapper config-test". If not, it's a bug in config-test and should be fixed. 2.3 - I get "sh: wrapper: cannot execute" or "wrapper: permission denied" This is a bug in the 1.94 Makefile. You'll see this in new installs of Majordomo, if you don't use a majordomo group of 'daemon'. The majordomo $homedir needs to have permission of at least 751 (or 755), not 750. Otherwise, sendmail won't have permission to execute the wrapper. You'll need to do a 'chmod 755 $homedir' after you install majordomo. Make sure 'wrapper' also has world execute permission. Some people also have put the user 'daemon' in the 'majordom' group. This works too. 2.4 - I get "Unknown mailer error" when majordomo runs If something is wrong with your setup, the wrapper will often exit with various return codes depending on what the problem is. In order to really understand what is going on, look at the session transcript further down in the bounce message to see the error which is returned from the wrapper or from Majordomo. You should usually see some sort of error message. If you just get a return code, check the Majordomo README for futher explanation on sendmail return codes. If you get "Unknown mailer error XX" where XX is less than 255, look for the error in /usr/include/errno.h . Otherwise, see the README. See section 1.1> above for what versions of Perl won't work with Majordomo. [reported by Russell Street] You may also get problems when messages to majordomo are queued (for example if you change sendmail's behavior to always queue messages rather than perform immediate delivery). The problem was that if sendmail queues a message it smashes the case in command lines and addresses when the queue gets processed. This is in spite of the lines shown by mailq. This is sendmail 5.x on Solaris 2.3, but it might apply to other versions of sendmail. 2.5 - I get an error "insecure usage" from the wrapper The argument to "wrapper" should be simply be the command, not the full path to the command. "wrapper" has where to look compiled in to it (the "W_HOME" setting in the Makefile) and for security reasons will not let you specify another directory. Your alias should say for example: |"/path/to/majordomo/wrapper majordomo" 2.6 - I get "majordomo: No such file or directory" from the wrapper Make sure that the #! statement at the beginning of all the Majordomo Perl executables contain the correct path to the perl program (the default is /usr/local/bin/perl). Note many UNIXes have a 32 character limit on that path -- make sure it doesn't exceed this limit. Make sure also that majordomo and all the related scripts are in the W_HOME directory as defined in the Makefile when you compiled the wrapper. 2.7 - I get an error "Can't locate majordomo.pl" [from Brent Chapman] Majordomo adds "$homedir" from the majordomo.cf file to the @INC array before it goes looking for "majordomo.pl". Since it's not finding it, I'd guess you have one of two problems: 1) $homedir is set improperly (or not set at all; there is no default) in your majordomo.cf file. 2) majordomo.pl is not in $homedir, or is not readable. [from John P. Rouillard] 3) Note that the new majordomo.cf file checks to see if the environment variable $HOME is set first, and uses that for $homedir. Since the wrapper always sets HOME to the correct directory, you get a nice default, unless you are running a previously built wrapper, in which case you may get the wrong directory. [from Andreas Fenner] 4) I had the same problem when I installed majordomo (1.62). My Problem was a missing ";" in the majordomo.cf file - just in the line before setting homedir .... My hint for you: Check your perl-files carefully. 2.8 - I told my majordomo.cf where to archive the list, why isn't it working? [From John Rouillard] The archive variables in majordomo.cf aren't used to archive anything. You have to use a separate archive program, or a sendmail alias to do the archiving. The info is used to generate a directory where the archive files are being placed by some other mechanism. You are telling majordomo to look in the directory: /usr/local/mail/majordomo/archive/listname for files that it should allow to be gotten using the get command. Majordomo comes with three different archive programs that run under wrapper, that do various types of archiving. Look in the contrib directory. 2.9 - config-test can't seem to find ctime.pl or resend can't find getopts.pl ctime.pl and getopts.pl are included in the standard Perl distribution. If it can't find it, it means Perl was not installed correctly. Re-install Perl. (you may want to take the opportunity to upgrade Perl, too) 2.10 - A list is visible via lists, but can't subscribe or 'get' files [From Brent Chapman] I'll bet your list name has capital letters in it... Majordomo smashes all list names to all-lower-case before attempting to use the list name as part of a filename. So, while it's OK to advertise (for instance) "Majordomo-Users" and have the headers say "Majordomo-Users", the file names and archive directory names themselves all need to be in lower case. If you want to use mixed case, simply configure the list using the lower-case names everywhere, except put the mixed-case version in the "-l" and "-h" flags to resend. _________________________________________________________________ Section 3: Setting up mailing lists and aliases 3.1 - How do I direct bounces to the right address? You should use 'resend' to filter all messages. Make sure the "sender" variable in the list config file points to "owner-listname" and that you have defined the "owner-listname" alias to point to the owner of the list. What this does is force outgoing mail to have the out-of-band envelope FROM be "owner-listname", and thus all bounces will be redirected to that address. (Users often see this mirrored in the message body as the "From " or "Return-Path:" header). 'resend' also inserts a "Sender:" line with the same address to help people identify where it came from, but that header is not used for the bounce address. If you are using sendmail v8.x, you don't have to use 'resend' to do the same thing. You simply have to define an alias like this: owner-sample: joe, Note the trailing comma is necessary to prevent sendmail from resolving the alias first before putting it in the header. Without the comma, it will put "joe" in the envelope from instead of "owner-sample". Either address will work, of course, but the generic address is preferred should the owner ever change. However if you choose not to use 'resend', you will have to do without much of majordomo's other features like moderating, administrivia checks, and others. 3.2 - Semi-automated handling of bounced mail This is not true automation of bounced mail. What this does is the next best thing. You unsubscribe the user from the list, but add the user to a special 'bounces' list (there's a perl script in the distribution called bounceyou run to make this easier) The majordomo maintainer then runs (out of cron) the 'bounce-remind' script periodically, which sends mail to all the people on the bounces list, saying essentially "you were removed from list 'foo' because mail to you bounced. To subscribe yourself back to the list, send the following commands ...". There's no facility yet for trimming the bounces list, but it's easy to write one because the date the person was added to the bounces list is included (so you could write a perl script which removes anyone on the list for more than one week, assuming you run bounce-remind more than once a week). There's no facility for automatically detecting what addresses are failing. You have to determine that based on the bounce messages you receive from other sites. [From John Rouillard] Just create a mailing list called "bounces". I usually set mine up as an auto list just to make life easier. All that "bounce" script does is create an email message to majordomo that says: approve [passwd] unsubscribe [listname] [address] approve [passwd] subscribe bounces [address] The [address] and [listname], are given on the command line to bounce. The address of the majordomo, and the passwords are retrieved from the .majordomo file in your home directory. A sample .majordomo file might look like (shamelessly stolen from the comments at the top of the bounce script): this-list passwd1 Majordomo@This.COM other-list passwd2 Majordomo@Other.COM bounces passwd3 Majordomo@This.COM bounces passwd4 Majordomo@Other.COM A command of "bounce this-list user@fubar.com" will mail the following message to Majordomo@This.COM: approve passwd1 unsubscribe this-list user@fubar.com approve passwd3 subscribe bounces user@fubar.com (930401 this-list) while a command of "bounce other-list user@fubar.com" will mail the following message to Majordomo@Other.COM: approve passwd2 unsubscribe other-list user@fubar.com approve passwd4 subscribe bounces user@fubar.com (930401 this-list) Note that the date and the list the user was bounced from are included as a comment in the address used for the "subscribe bounces" command. 3.3 - What's this Owner-List and List-Owner stuff? Why both? [From David Barr] The "standard" is spelled out in RFC 1211 - "Problems with the Maintenance of Large Mailing Lists". It's here where the "owner-listname" and "listname-request" concepts got their start. (well it was before this, but this is where it was first spelled out) Personally, I don't use "listname-owner" anywhere. You don't really have to put both, since the "owner" alias is usually only for bounces, which you add automatically anyway with resend's "-f" flag, or having Sendmail v8.x's "owner-listname" alias. (while I'm on the subject) The "-approval" is a Majordomo-ism, and is only necessary if you want bounces and approval notices to go to different mailboxes. (though you'll have to edit some code in majordomo and request-answer if you want to get rid of the -approval alias, since it's currently hardwired in) So, to answer your question, I'd say "no". You don't have to have both. You should just have "owner-list". 3.4 - How should I configure resend for Reply-To headers? Whether you should have a "Reply-To:" or not depends on the charter of your list and the nature of its users. If the list is a discussion list and you generally want replies to go back to the list, you can include one. Some people don't like being told what to do, and prefer to be able to choose whether to send a private reply or a reply to the list just by using the right function on their mail agent. Take note that if you do use a "Reply-To:", then some mail agents make it much harder for a person on the list to send a private reply. The most important reason why Reply-To: to the list is bad is that it can cause mail loops if any of the members of your list are running fairly-common but broken software which doesn't know what an envelope address is. (Many Microsoft products, as well as many other PC-based non-SMTP/Internet mail systems which work through an SMTP gateway.) You should read the following FAQ on why you shouldn't set the Reply-To: field. http://www.unicom.com/FAQ/reply-to-harmful.html If you are using resend, use the 'reply_to' configuration variable in the list .config file. 3.5 - How can I hide lists so they can't be viewed by 'lists'? That is what advertise and noadvertise are for. These two variables take regular expressions that are matched against the from address of the sender. A list display follows the rules: 1. If the from address is on the list, it is shown. 2. If the from address matches a regexp in noadvertise (e.g. /.*/) the list is not shown. 3. If the advertise list is empty, the list is shown unless 2 applies. 4. If the advertise list is non-empty, the from address must match an address in advertise. Otherwise the list is not shown. Rule 2 applies, so you could allow all hosts in umb.edu except hosts in cs.umb.edu. 3.6 - How can I restrict a list such that only subscribers can send mail to the list? See the restrict_post variable in the config file. Just set it to the filename that holds the list of subscribers. Unfortunately this means you probably will need help from the Majordomo maintainer in setting it if you don't have access to the host machine. This is due to be improved in a future release of Majordomo. However, there is a problem with either of these methods. Majordomo works by filtering the messages coming in through the "listname" alias, doing its dirty work, then passing the resulting message out to another alias you define like "listname-outgoing". If you trust people to not send mail directly to the "listname-outgoing" alias, then you'll be fine. If however you're not trusting, there are several steps to make sure people don't bypass the restrictions of the list. There are several methods. First you need to change your "listname-outgoing" alias such that it is not obvious. Next, you need to make it such that people can't find out what your -outgoing alias is. You can use the "@filename" directive in resend to move the command-line options of resend into a file readable only by the majordomo user/group. This will make it such that you can't find out the -outgoing address by connecting to your mailer and doing an EXPN or VRFY. The "@filename" directive seems to have fallen into undocumentation for some reason. This should be fixed in future releases. Another more direct approach is to simply disable EXPN or VRFY altogether. See the documentation for your mailer on how to do this. However this doesn't prevent local reading if the aliases file. Sendmail 8.x will unfortunately log your -outgoing alias in the "Received:" lines. To get around this you need to specify more than one address for the list name argument to resend. (for example "mylist:|"/usr/local/lib/majordomo/wrapper resend -h foo.org -l mylist mylist,nobody"" where nobody is an alias for /dev/null) For Sendmail 8.x you must not define an alias 'owner-mylist-seekrit' to be something like 'owner-mylist,' (with the commma). Otherwise sendmail will set the envelope address of outgoing mail to contain your secret outgoing alias. Finally it should be noted that it is impossible with any method to prevent people from forging mail as someone on the list, and sending to the list that way. 3.7 - Can I have the list owner or approval person be changeable without intervention from the Majordomo owner? Sure! Just make owner-listname and/or listname-approval be another majordomo list. (probably hidden, for simplicity's sake) 3.8 - What are all these different passwords? Think of three separate passwords: 1. A master password that can be used by both resend and majordomo contained in [listname].passwd. To be used by the master list manager when using writeconfig commands etc. This allows someone who handles a number of mailing lists all using the same password. 2. A password for the manager of this one list. The admin_passwd can be used by subsidiary majordomo list maintainers. 3. A password for those concerned with the list content (approve_passwd) This way the administration and moderation functions can be split. The original reason for maintaining [listname].passwd was to allow a new config file to be put in if the config file was trashed and the admin_password was obliterated, and may still be useful to allow a single password to be used for admin functions by the majordomo admin or some other "superadmin". Note that the admin passwd in the config file is not a file name, but the password itself. This is the only way that the list-maintainer could change the password since they wouldn't have access to the file. 3.9 - How do I tell majordomo to handle "get"-ing of binary files? Majordomo is not designed to be a general-purpose file-by-mail system. If you want to do anything more than trivial "get"-ing of text files (archives, etc) than you should get and install ftpmail. Majordomo has hooks to allow transparent access to files via ftpmail (see majordomo.cf). See the beginning of this FAQ for where to get ftpmail. 3.10 - How do I set up a moderated list? First, you need to tell Majordomo that the list is moderated. In the configuration file for the list, you set "moderated = yes". Do not try to use the now-deprecated "-A" option to resend. In fact you shouldn't be using ANY options to resend except "-h" and "-l", since all the others are handled in the config file. Any mail which is not "approved", gets bounced with "Approval required". If the moderator wishes to approve the message for the list, then you need to tag the message as "approved" and send it to the list. The "approve" script which comes with Majordomo does this for you. If you don't have access to "approve" (e.g. you're not on a UNIX system with Perl), you have to do it by hand. The easiest way is to forward the original message to the list, add the line "Approved: approval-password" to the very first line of the body, and then the entire contents of the original message. (meaning there should not be a blank line before and after the "Approved:" line.) 3.11 - How do I set up a digested version of a list? [ Modified from explanation given by jmb@kryten.atinc.com (Jonathan M. Bresler)] * Create aliases for the mailing list and the digest. See section 2.2 of the README for an example. * create an alias for the majordom(o) user, so that his cron generated mail comes to me, rather than just piling up in /usr/local/mail/majordom. * create the list's and the digest's files, (widget, widget-digest, widget.config, widget-digest.config, etc.). Edit the widget-digest.config file and make sure all the digest options are set to your tastes. * create the digest directory and archive directory. See FAQ section 2 on how to set permissions on all majordomo files and directories. You must have archives if you have digests so the digester can make the digest. You can purge the archive after the digest is generated. * Add yourself to both the mailing list and its digest so you can monitor what happens...at least for a while (not a bad idea to create a dummy user, and subscribe him to both the mailing list and its digest. This preserves a record of messages for debugging. Don't forget to remove this account and unsubscribe it after debugging.) * Optionally you may use cron to send a mkdigest to push out a digest at set intervals regardless of the number of queued messages. See the question Why aren't my digests going out?". 3.12 - How do I setup virtual majordomo domains? [From Alan Millar, et. al.] Set up a majordomo.cf file for each virtual domain, defining $whereami as appropriate. Use your mailer's virtual domain stuff to get to it, making an alias for it if necessary. Alias entry: majordomo-domain2: |/your/wrapper majordomo -C /your/domain2.cf Virtual domain stuff: majordomo@domain2 = majordomo-domain2 majordomo-owner@domain2 = whoever I use the sendmail virtual domain examples right off the Sendmail FAQ. Works for me. You'll need to modify request-answer slightly if you want the virtual host to be used there in replies. Look for: From: $list-request in the source and change it to: From: $list-request\@$whereami Don't forget to use the -C option to request-answer for your virutal aliases. _________________________________________________________________ Section 4: Miscellaneous mailer problems 4.1 - Address with blanks are being treated separately If a subscriber to the list is John Doe < jdoe@node.com> it gets treated these as the three addresses: John Doe < jdoe@node.com> [From Alan Millar] Majordomo does not treat these as three addresses. Apparently your mailer does. Remember that all Majordomo does is add and remove addresses from a list. Majordomo does not interpret the contents of the list for message distribution; the system mailer (such as sendmail) does. I'm using SMail3 instead of sendmail, and it has an alternative (read "stupid") view of how mixed angle-bracketed and non-angle-bracketed addresses should be interpreted. I found that putting a comma at the end of each line was effective to fix the problem, and I got to keep my comments. So I patched Majordomo to add the comma at the end of each address it writes to the list file. You can also change to "strip = yes" in the config file so that none of the addresses are angle-bracketed. 4.2 - Why aren't my digests going out? [from John Rouillard] echo mkdigest [digest-name] [digest-password] | mail majordomo@... This will force a digest to be created. Or you can set the max size in the digest list config file down low, and force automatic generation. 4.3 - Why do I get duplicate mail sent to the list? If you're running MMDF, read on: [From Gunther Anderson] Well, I can tell you what happened to me recently. We use MMDF here, which certainly colors the picture a little. What was happening here was that MMDF was verifying the validity of the whole mailing list before returning from the Submit call. The thing calling the Submit would time out and close, but the Submit itself would still be running somewhere. The calling routine would believe that the message had failed in its delivery, but the Submit would eventually succeed. The calling process would try again some time later. This, of course, is bad. The larger the list got, the more addresses there were to verify (verificatio