.\" -*-nroff-*- .\" .\" Copyright (C) 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, .\" 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020 .\" Martin Lambers .\" Copyright (C) 2011 .\" Scott Shumate .\" .\" Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document .\" under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or .\" any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no .\" Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. .TH MSMTP 1 2020-06 .SH NAME msmtp \- An SMTP client .SH SYNOPSIS .IP "Sendmail mode (default):" .B msmtp [option...] [\-\-] recipient... .br .B msmtp [option...] \-t [\-\-] [recipient...] .IP "Configuration mode:" .B msmtp \-\-configure .IP "Server information mode:" .B msmtp [option...] \-\-serverinfo .IP "Remote Message Queue Starting mode:" .B msmtp [option...] \-\-rmqs=\fIhost\fP|\fI@domain\fP|\fI#queue\fP .SH DESCRIPTION In the default sendmail mode, msmtp reads a mail from standard input and sends it to an SMTP server for delivery. .br In server information mode, msmtp prints information about an SMTP server. .br In Remote Message Queue Starting mode, msmtp sends a Remote Message Queue Starting request for a host, domain, or queue to an SMTP server. .SH EXIT STATUS The standard sendmail exit status codes are used, as defined in sysexits.h. .SH OPTIONS Options override configuration file settings. .br They are compatible with sendmail where appropriate. .IP "\fBGeneral options\fP" .RS .IP "\-\-version" Print version information, including information about the libraries used. .IP "\-\-help" Print help. .IP "\-P, \-\-pretend" Print the configuration settings that would be used, but do not take further action. An asterisk (`*') will be printed instead of your password. .IP "\-v, \-d, \-\-debug" Print lots of debugging information, including the whole conversation with the SMTP server. Be careful with this option: the (potentially dangerous) output will not be sanitized, and your password may get printed in an easily decodable format! .RE .IP "\fBChanging the mode of operation\fP" .RS .IP "\-\-configure=\fImailaddress\fP" Generate a configuration for the given mail address and print it. This can be modified or copied unchanged to the configuration file. Note that this only works for mail domains that publish appropriate SRV records; see RFC 8314. .IP "\-S, \-\-serverinfo" Print information about the SMTP server and exit. This includes information about supported features (mail size limit, authentication, TLS, DSN, ...) and about the TLS certificate (if TLS is active). .IP "\-\-rmqs=(\fIhost\fP|\fI@domain\fP|\fI#queue\fP)" Send a Remote Message Queue Starting request for the given host, domain, or queue to the SMTP server and exit. .RE .IP "\fBConfiguration options\fP" .RS .IP "\-C, \-\-file=\fIfilename\fP" Use the given file instead of ~/.msmtprc or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/msmtp/config as the user configuration file. .IP "\-a, \-\-account=\fIaccount_name\fP" Use the given account instead of the account named "default". The settings of this account may be changed with command line options. This option cannot be used together with the \fB\-\-host\fP option. .IP "\-\-host=\fIhostname\fP" Use this SMTP server with settings from the command line; do not use any configuration file data. This option cannot be used together with the \fB\-\-account\fP option. .IP "\-\-port=\fInumber\fP" Set the port number to connect to. See the \fBport\fP command. .IP "\-\-source\-ip=[\fIIP\fP]" Set or unset an IP address to bind the socket to. See the \fBsource_ip\fP command. .IP "\-\-proxy\-host=[\fIIP\fP|\fIhostname\fP]" Set or unset a SOCKS proxy to use. See the \fBproxy_host\fP command. .IP "\-\-proxy\-port=[\fInumber\fP]" Set or unset a port number for the proxy host. See the \fBproxy_port\fP command. .IP "\-\-socket=[\fIsocketname\fP]" Set or unset a local unix domain socket name to connect to. See the \fBsocket\fP command. .IP "\-\-timeout=(\fIoff\fP|\fIseconds\fP)" Set or unset a network timeout, in seconds. See the \fBtimeout\fP command. .IP "\-\-protocol=(\fIsmtp\fP|\fIlmtp\fP) Set the protocol. See the \fBprotocol\fP command. .IP "\-\-domain=[\fIstring\fP]" Set the argument of the SMTP EHLO (or LMTP LHLO) command. See the \fBdomain\fP command. .IP "\-\-auth[=(\fIon\fP|\fIoff\fP|\fImethod\fP)]" Enable or disable authentication and optionally choose the method. See the \fBauth\fP command. .IP "\-\-user=\fI[username]\fP" Set or unset the user name for authentication. See the \fBuser\fP command. .IP "\-\-passwordeval=[\fIeval\fP]" Evaluate password for authentication. See the \fBpasswordeval\fP command. .IP "\-\-tls[=(\fIon\fP|\fIoff\fP)]" Enable or disable TLS/SSL. See the \fBtls\fP command. .IP "\-\-tls\-starttls[=(\fIon\fP|\fIoff\fP)]" Enable or disable STARTTLS for TLS. See the \fBtls_starttls\fP command. .IP "\-\-tls\-trust\-file=[\fIfile\fP]" Set or unset a trust file for TLS. See the \fBtls_trust_file\fP command. .IP "\-\-tls\-crl\-file=[\fIfile\fP]" Set or unset a certificate revocation list (CRL) file for TLS. See the \fBtls_crl_file\fP command. .IP "\-\-tls\-fingerprint=[\fIfingerprint\fP]" Set or unset the fingerprint of a trusted TLS certificate. See the \fBtls_fingerprint\fP command. .IP "\-\-tls\-key\-file=[\fIfile\fP]" Set or unset a key file for TLS. See the \fBtls_key_file\fP command. .IP "\-\-tls\-cert\-file=[\fIfile\fP]" Set or unset a cert file for TLS. See the \fBtls_cert_file\fP command. .IP "\-\-tls\-certcheck[=(\fIon\fP|\fIoff\fP)]" Enable or disable server certificate checks for TLS. See the \fBtls_certcheck\fP command. .IP "\-\-tls\-min\-dh\-prime\-bits=[\fIbits\fP]" Set or unset minimum bit size of the Diffie-Hellman (DH) prime. See the \fBtls_min_dh_prime_bits\fP command. .IP "\-\-tls\-priorities=[\fIpriorities\fP]" Set or unset TLS priorities. See the \fBtls_priorities\fP command. .IP "\-\-tls\-host\-override=[\fIhost\fP]" Set or unset override for TLS host verification. See the \fBtls_host_override\fP command. .RE .IP "\fBOptions specific to sendmail mode\fP" .RS .IP "\-f, \-\-from=\fIaddress\fP" Set the envelope-from address. .br If no account was chosen yet (with \fB\-\-account\fP or \fB\-\-host\fP), this option will choose the first account that has the given envelope-from address (set with the \fBfrom\fP command). If no such account is found, "default" is used. .br See the \fBfrom\fP command for substitution patterns supported in \fIaddress\fP. .IP "\-N, \-\-dsn\-notify=(\fIoff\fP|\fIcond\fP)" Set or unset DSN notification conditions. See the \fBdsn_notify\fP command. .IP "\-R, \-\-dsn\-return=(\fIoff\fP|\fIret\fP)" Set or unset the DSN notification amount. See the \fBdsn_return\fP command. Note that \fIhdrs\fP is accepted as an alias for \fIheaders\fP to be compatible with sendmail. .IP "\-\-set\-from\-header[=(\fIauto\fP|\fIon\fP|\fIoff\fP)]" Set From header handling. See the \fBset_from_header\fP command. .IP "\-\-set\-date\-header[=(\fIauto\fP|\fIoff\fP)]" Set Date header handling. See the \fBset_date_header\fP command. .IP "\-\-remove\-bcc\-headers[=(\fIon\fP|\fIoff\fP)]" Enable or disable the removal of Bcc headers. See the \fBremove_bcc_headers\fP command. .IP "\-\-undisclosed\-recipients[=(\fIon\fP|\fIoff\fP)]" Enable or disable the replacement of To/Cc/Bcc with "To: undisclosed-recipients:;". See the \fBundisclosed_recipients\fP command. .IP "\-X, \-\-logfile=[\fIfile\fP]" Set or unset the log file. See the \fBlogfile\fP command. .IP "\-\-logfile\-time\-format=[\fIfmt\fP]" Set or unset the log file time format. See the \fBlogfile_time_format\fP command. .IP "\-\-syslog[=(\fIon\fP|\fIoff\fP|\fIfacility\fP)]" Enable or disable syslog logging. See the \fBsyslog\fP command. .IP "\-t, \-\-read\-recipients" Read recipient addresses from the To, Cc, and Bcc headers of the mail in addition to the recipients given on the command line. If any Resent- headers are present, then the addresses from any Resent-To, Resent-Cc, and Resent-Bcc headers in the first block of Resent- headers are used instead. .IP "\-\-read\-envelope\-from" Read the envelope from address from the From header of the mail. .IP "\-\-aliases=[\fIfile\fP]" Set or unset an aliases file. See the \fBaliases\fP command. .IP "\-F\fIname\fP" Msmtp adds a From header to mails that lack it, using the envelope from address. This option allows one to set a full name to be used in that header. .IP "\-\-auto\-from[=(\fIon\fP|\fIoff\fP)]" Obsolete. See the \fBauto_from\fP command. .IP "\-\-maildomain=[\fIdomain\fP]" Obsolete. See the \fBmaildomain\fP command. .IP "\-\-" This marks the end of options. All following arguments will be treated as recipient addresses, even if they start with a `\-'. .RE .PP The following options are accepted but ignored for sendmail compatibility: .br \-B\fItype\fP, \-bm, \-G, \-h\fIN\fP, \-i, \-L \fItag\fP, \-m, \-n, \-O \fIoption=value\fP, \-o\fIx\fP \fIvalue\fP .SH USAGE A suggestion for a suitable configuration file can be generated using the \-\-configure option. Normally, a system wide configuration file and/or a user configuration file contain information about which SMTP server to use and how to use it, but all settings can also be configured on the command line. .br The information about SMTP servers is organized in accounts. Each account describes one SMTP server: host name, authentication settings, TLS settings, and so on. Each configuration file can define multiple accounts. .PP The user can choose which account to use in one of three ways: .IP "\-\-account=\fIid\fP" Use the given account. Command line settings override configuration file settings. .IP "\-\-host=\fIhostname\fP Use only the settings from the command line; do not use any configuration file data. .IP "\-\-from=\fIaddress\fP or \-\-read\-envelope\-from" Choose the first account from the system or user configuration file that has a matching envelope-from address as specified by a \fBfrom\fP command. This works only when neither \fB\-\-account\fP nor \fB\-\-host\fP is used. .PP If none of the above options is used (or if no account has a matching \fBfrom\fP command), then the account "default" is used. .PP Msmtp transmits mails unaltered to the SMTP server, with the following exceptions: .br - The Bcc header(s) will be removed. This behavior can be changed with the \fBremove_bcc_headers\fP command and \fB\-\-remove\-bcc\-headers\fP option. .br - A From header will be added if the mail does not have one. This can be changed with the \fBset_from_header\fP command and \fB\-\-set\-from\-header\fP option. The header will use the envelope from address and optionally a full name set with the \fB\-F\fP option. .br - A Date header will be added if the mail does not have one. This can be changed with the \fBset_date_header\fP command and \fB\-\-set\-date\-header\fP option. .br - When \fBundisclosed_recipients\fP is set, the original To, Cc, and Bcc headers are removed and replaced with "To: undisclosed-recipients:;". .PP Skip to the EXAMPLES section for a quick start. .SH CONFIGURATION FILES If it exists and is readable, a system wide configuration file SYSCONFDIR/msmtprc will be loaded, where SYSCONFDIR depends on your platform. Use \fB\-\-version\fP to find out which directory is used. .br If it exists and is readable, a user configuration file will be loaded (~/.msmtprc will be tried first followed by $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/msmtp/config by default, but see \fB\-\-version\fP). Accounts defined in the user configuration file override accounts from the system configuration file. .br Configuration data from either file can be changed by command line options. .PP A configuration file is a simple text file. Empty lines and comment lines (whose first non-blank character is `#') are ignored. .br Every other line must contain a command and may contain an argument to that command. .br The argument may be enclosed in double quotes ("), for example if its first or last character is a blank. .br If a file name starts with the tilde (~), this tilde will be replaced by $HOME. If a command accepts the argument \fIon\fP, it also accepts an empty argument and treats that as if it was \fIon\fP. .br Commands are organized in accounts. Each account starts with the \fBaccount\fP command and defines the settings for one SMTP account. .PP Skip to the EXAMPLES section for a quick start. .PP Commands are as follows: .IP "defaults" Set defaults. The following configuration commands will set default values for all following account definitions in the current configuration file. .IP "account \fIname\fP [:\fIaccount\fP[,...]]" Start a new account definition with the given name. The current default values are filled in. .br If a colon and a list of previously defined accounts is given after the account name, the new account, with the filled in default values, will inherit all settings from the accounts in the list. .IP "host \fIhostname\fP" The SMTP server to send the mail to. The argument may be a host name or a network address. Every account definition must contain this command. .IP "port \fInumber\fP" The port that the SMTP server listens on. The default is 25 ("smtp"), unless TLS without STARTTLS is used, in which case it is 465 ("smtps"). .IP "source_ip [\fIIP\fP]" Set a source IP address to bind the outgoing connection to. Useful only in special cases on multi-home systems. An empty argument disables this. .IP "proxy_host [\fIIP|hostname\fP]" Use a SOCKS proxy. All network traffic will go through this proxy host, including DNS queries, except for a DNS query that might be necessary to resolve the proxy host name itself (this can be avoided by using an IP address as proxy host name). An empty \fIhostname\fP argument disables proxy usage. The supported SOCKS protocol version is 5. If you want to use this with Tor, see also "Using msmtp with Tor" below. .IP "proxy_port [\fInumber\fP]" Set the port number for the proxy host. An empty \fInumber\fP argument resets this to the default port. .IP "socket \fIsocketname\fP" Set the file name of a unix domain socket to connect to. This overrides both \fBhost\fP/\fBport\fP and \fBproxy_host\fP/\fBproxy_port\fP. .IP "timeout (\fIoff\fP|\fIseconds\fP)" Set or unset a network timeout, in seconds. The argument \fIoff\fP means that no timeout will be set, which means that the operating system default will be used. .IP "protocol (\fIsmtp\fP|\fIlmtp\fP)" Set the protocol to use. Currently only SMTP and LMTP are supported. SMTP is the default. See the \fBport\fP command above for default ports. .IP "domain \fIargument\fP" Use this command to set the argument of the SMTP EHLO (or LMTP LHLO) command. The default is \fIlocalhost\fP, which is stupid but usually works. Try to change the default if mails get rejected due to anti-SPAM measures. Possible choices are the domain part of your mail address (provider.example for joe@provider.example) or the fully qualified domain name of your host (if available). .IP "auth [(\fIon\fP|\fIoff\fP|\fImethod\fP)]" Enable or disable authentication and optionally choose a method to use. The argument \fIon\fP chooses a method automatically. .br Usually a user name and a password are used for authentication. The user name is specified in the configuration file with the \fBuser\fP command. There are five different methods to specify the password: .br 1. Add the password to the system key ring. Currently supported key rings are the Gnome key ring and the Mac OS X Keychain. For the Gnome key ring, use the command secret\-tool (part of Gnome's libsecret) to store passwords: secret\-tool store \-\-label=msmtp host mail.freemail.example service smtp user joe.smith. On Mac OS X, use the following command: security add\-internet\-password \-s mail.freemail.example \-r smtp \-a joe.smith \-w. In both examples, replace mail.freemail.example with the SMTP server name, and joe.smith with your user name. .br 2. Store the password in an encrypted files, and use \fBpasswordeval\fP to specify a command to decrypt that file, e.g. using GnuPG. See EXAMPLES. .br 3. Store the password in the configuration file using the \fBpassword\fP command. (Usually it is not considered a good idea to store passwords in cleartext files. If you do it anyway, you must make sure that the file can only be read by yourself.) .br 4. Store the password in ~/.netrc. This method is probably obsolete. .br 5. Type the password into the terminal when it is required. .br It is recommended to use method 1 or 2. .br Multiple authentication methods exist. Most servers support only some of them. Historically, sophisticated methods were developed to protect passwords from being sent unencrypted to the server, but nowadays everybody needs TLS anyway, so the simple methods suffice since the whole session is protected. A suitable authentication method is chosen automatically, and when TLS is disabled for some reason, only methods that avoid sending cleartext passwords are considered. .br The following user / password methods are supported: \fIplain\fP (a simple cleartext method, with base64 encoding, supported by almost all servers), \fIscram\-sha\-1\fP (a method that avoids cleartext passwords), \fIcram\-md5\fP (an obsolete method that avoids cleartext passwords, but is not considered secure anymore), \fIdigest\-md5\fP (an overcomplicated obsolete method that avoids cleartext passwords, but is not considered secure anymore), \fIlogin\fP (a non-standard cleartext method similar to but worse than the plain method), \fIntlm\fP (an obscure non-standard method that is now considered broken; it sometimes requires a special domain parameter passed via \fBntlmdomain\fP). .br There are currently three authentication methods that are not based on user / password information and have to be chosen manually: \fIoauthbearer\fP (an OAuth2 token from the mail provider is used as the password. See the documentation of your mail provider for details on how to get this token. The \fBpasswordeval\fP command can be used to pass the regularly changing tokens into msmtp from a script or an environment variable), \fIexternal\fP (the authentication happens outside of the protocol, typically by sending a TLS client certificate, and the method merely confirms that this authentication succeeded), and \fIgssapi\fP (the Kerberos framework takes care of secure authentication, only a user name is required). .br It depends on the underlying authentication library and its version whether a particular method is supported or not. Use \fB\-\-version\fP to find out which methods are supported. .IP "user \fIlogin\fP" Set the user name for authentication. An empty argument unsets the user name. .IP "password \fIsecret\fP" Set the password for authentication. An empty argument unsets the password. Consider using the \fBpasswordeval\fP command or a key ring instead of this command, to avoid storing cleartext passwords in the configuration file. .IP "passwordeval [\fIeval\fP]" Set the password for authentication to the output (stdout) of the command \fIeval\fP. This can be used e.g. to decrypt password files on the fly or to query key rings, and thus to avoid storing cleartext passwords. .br Note that the \fIeval\fP command must not mess with standard input (stdin) because that is where msmtp reads the mail from. If in doubt, append \fI1"\ ":set from=you@example.com" .br .B macro generic\ "2"\ ":set from=you@your\-employer.example" .br .B macro generic\ "3"\ ":set from=you@some\-other\-provider.example" .PP .B Using msmtp with mail .PP Define a default account, and put the following in your ~/.mailrc: .br .B set sendmail="/path/to/msmtp" .PP .B Using msmtp with Tor .PP Use the following settings: .br .B proxy_host 127.0.0.1 .br .B proxy_port 9050 .br .B tls on .br Use an IP address as proxy host name, so that msmtp does not leak a DNS query when resolving it. .br TLS is required to prevent exit hosts from reading your SMTP session. .br Do not set \fBdomain\fP to something that you do not want to reveal (do not set it at all if possible). .PP .B Aliases file .PP # Example aliases file # Send root to Joe and Jane .br root: joe_smith@example.com, jane_chang@example.com # Send cron to Mark .br cron: mark_jones@example.com # Send everything else to admin .br default: admin@domain.example .SH FILES .IP "SYSCONFDIR/msmtprc" System configuration file. Use .B \-\-version to find out what SYSCONFDIR is on your platform. .IP "~/.msmtprc or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/msmtp/config" User configuration file. .IP "~/.netrc and SYSCONFDIR/netrc" The netrc file contains login information. Before prompting for a password, msmtp will search it in ~/.netrc and SYSCONFDIR/netrc. .SH ENVIRONMENT .IP "USER, LOGNAME" These variables override the user's login name when constructing an envelope-from address. LOGNAME is only used if USER is unset. .IP "TMPDIR" Directory to create temporary files in. If this is unset, a system specific default directory is used. .br A temporary file is only created when the .BR \-t/\-\-read\-recipients or .BR \-\-read\-envelope\-from option is used. The file is then used to buffer the headers of the mail (but not the body, so the file won't get very large). .IP "EMAIL, SMTPSERVER" These environment variables are used only if neither \fB\-\-host\fP nor \fB\-\-account\fP is used and there is no default account defined in the configuration files. In this case, the host name is taken from SMTPSERVER, and the envelope from address is taken from EMAIL, unless overridden by \fB\-\-from\fP or \fB\-\-read\-envelope\-from\fP. Currently SMTPSERVER must contain a plain host name (no URL), and EMAIL must contain a plain address (no names or additional information). .SH AUTHORS msmtp was written by Martin Lambers . .br Other authors are listed in the AUTHORS file in the source distribution. .SH SEE ALSO .BR sendmail (8), .BR netrc (5) or .BR ftp (1)