Pekka Helenius 43919c11a0 | 5 years ago | |
---|---|---|
.. | ||
README.md | 5 years ago | |
revaliases | 5 years ago | |
ssmtp.conf | 5 years ago | |
wanchecker.sh | 5 years ago |
Once you have installed sSMTP on your Linux system, make sure the following applies. Run these configuration commands as root or with sudo
.
1) Create symbolic link from /usr/bin/ssmtp
to /usr/bin/sendmail
exists:
ln -s /usr/bin/ssmtp /usr/bin/sendmail
Test:
> stat -c "%A %a %U:%G %N" /usr/bin/sendmail
lrwxrwxrwx 777 root:root /usr/bin/sendmail -> ssmtp
NOTE: User & group mail
are defined on Arch Linux by default, preinstalled with filesystem
package. If they do not exist, then do the following.
2) Make sure user & group mail
exists, and directory /var/spool/mail
exists with proper permissions:
mkdir -p /var/spool/mail
chmod 1777 /var/spool/mail
groupadd -g 12 mail
useradd -r -d /var/spool/mail -s /sbin/nologin -u 12 -g 12 mail
Test:
-----
> sudo stat -c "%A %a %U:%G %n" /var/spool/mail
drwxrwxrwt 1777 root:root /var/spool/mail
-----
> grep mail /etc/passwd
mail:x:12:12::/var/spool/mail:/sbin/nologin
-----
> grep mail /etc/group
mail:x:12:
Once you have sSMTP installed on your Linux system, configure ssmtp.conf and revaliases in /etc/ssmtp/
folder.
Configure your message defined in wanchecker.sh file.
wanchecker.sh
variables:
Variable | Value | Type |
---|---|---|
EMAIL_SENDER | Sender's address | String |
EMAIL_RECIPIENTS | Email recipients. Multiple allowed | Bash array |
SUBJECT_EMAIL | Email title | String |
MESSAGE_EMAIL | Email message contents | String |
MESSAGE_STDOUT | Internal Linux system message about sent email message | String |
WANIP_DIR | Log file directory path. User mail must have write access to this folder. |
String |
WANIP_LOG | Log file name | String |
NOTE: At minimum, you should configure proper email addresses in variables EMAIL_SENDER
and EMAIL_RECIPIENTS
. EMAIL_SENDER
takes same value as defined in /etc/ssmtp/ssmtp.conf
(sample) and /etc/ssmtp/revaliases
(sample) files.
Permissions for /etc/ssmtp
folder should be:
> stat -c "%A %a %U:%G %n" /etc/ssmtp
drwxr-x--- 750 root:mail /etc/ssmtp
Contents of /etc/ssmtp/
folder should contain the following files & permissions:
> stat -c "%A %a %U:%G %n" /etc/ssmtp/*
-rw-r----- 640 root:mail /etc/ssmtp/revaliases
-rw-r----- 640 root:mail /etc/ssmtp/ssmtp.conf
-rwxr-x--- 750 root:mail /etc/ssmtp/wanchecker.sh
NOTE: As /etc/ssmtp/ssmtp.conf
contains a clear-text email password, the file must be protected from any eavesdropping with correct permission policy! The file must not be readable to any other than mail
user, and mail
user must not be available for normal usage. Still, any sudo
group member can access the file, so make sure sudo
group does not contain hostile or unwanted members, and configure your /etc/sudoers
file properly.