NAME
msmtp - An SMTP client
SYNOPSIS
Sendmail mode (default):
msmtp [option...] [--]
recipient...
msmtp [option...] -t [--] [recipient...]
Configuration mode:
msmtp --configure <mailaddress>
Server information mode:
msmtp [option...] --serverinfo
Remote Message Queue Starting mode:
msmtp [option...] --rmqs=host|@domain|#queue
DESCRIPTION
In the default
sendmail mode, msmtp reads a mail from standard input and
sends it to an SMTP server for delivery.
In server information mode, msmtp prints information about
an SMTP server.
In Remote Message Queue Starting mode, msmtp sends a Remote
Message Queue Starting request for a host, domain, or queue
to an SMTP server.
EXIT STATUS
The standard sendmail exit status codes are used, as defined in sysexits.h.
OPTIONS
Options
override configuration file settings.
They are compatible with sendmail where appropriate.
General options
--version
Print version information, including information about the libraries used.
--help |
Print help. |
-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.
-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!
Changing the mode of operation
--configure=mailaddress
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.
-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).
--rmqs=(host|@domain|#queue)
Send a Remote Message Queue Starting request for the given host, domain, or queue to the SMTP server and exit.
Configuration options
-C, --file=filename
Use the given file instead of ~/.msmtprc or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/msmtp/config as the user configuration file.
-a, --account=account_name
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 --host option.
--host=hostname
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 --account option.
--port=number
Set the port number to connect to. See the port command.
--source-ip=[IP]
Set or unset an IP address to bind the socket to. See the source_ip command.
--proxy-host=[IP|hostname]
Set or unset a SOCKS proxy to use. See the proxy_host command.
--proxy-port=[number]
Set or unset a port number for the proxy host. See the proxy_port command.
--socket=[socketname]
Set or unset a local unix domain socket name to connect to. See the socket command.
--timeout=(off|seconds)
Set or unset a network timeout, in seconds. See the timeout command.
--protocol=(smtp|lmtp)
Set the protocol. See the protocol command.
--domain=[string]
Set the argument of the SMTP EHLO (or LMTP LHLO) command. See the domain command.
--auth[=(on|off|method)]
Enable or disable authentication and optionally choose the method. See the auth command.
--user=[username]
Set or unset the user name for authentication. See the user command.
--passwordeval=[cmd]
Evaluate password for authentication. See the passwordeval command.
--tls[=(on|off)]
Enable or disable TLS/SSL. See the tls command.
--tls-starttls[=(on|off)]
Enable or disable STARTTLS for TLS. See the tls_starttls command.
--tls-trust-file=[file]
Set or unset a trust file for TLS. See the tls_trust_file command.
--tls-crl-file=[file]
Deprecated. Set or unset a certificate revocation list (CRL) file for TLS. See the tls_crl_file command.
--tls-fingerprint=[fingerprint]
Set or unset the fingerprint of a trusted TLS certificate. See the tls_fingerprint command.
--tls-key-file=[file]
Set or unset a key file for TLS. See the tls_key_file command.
--tls-cert-file=[file]
Set or unset a cert file for TLS. See the tls_cert_file command.
--tls-certcheck[=(on|off)]
Enable or disable server certificate checks for TLS. See the tls_certcheck command.
--tls-priorities=[priorities]
Set or unset TLS priorities. See the tls_priorities command.
--tls-host-override=[host]
Set or unset override for TLS host verification. See the tls_host_override command.
--tls-min-dh-prime-bits=[bits]
Deprecated, use --tls-priorities instead. Set or unset minimum bit size of the Diffie-Hellman (DH) prime. See the tls_min_dh_prime_bits command.
Options specific to sendmail mode
-f, --from=address
Set the envelope-from address.
If no account was chosen yet (with --account or
--host), this option will choose the first account
that has the given envelope-from address (set with the
from command). If no such account is found,
"default" is used.
See the from and allow_from_override
commands.
-N, --dsn-notify=(off|cond)
Set or unset DSN notification conditions. See the dsn_notify command.
-R, --dsn-return=(off|ret)
Set or unset the DSN notification amount. See the dsn_return command. Note that hdrs is accepted as an alias for headers to be compatible with sendmail.
--set-from-header[=(auto|on|off)]
Set From header handling. See the set_from_header command.
--set-date-header[=(auto|off)]
Set Date header handling. See the set_date_header command.
--set-msgid-header[=(auto|off)]
Set Message-ID header handling. See the set_msgid_header command.
--remove-bcc-headers[=(on|off)]
Enable or disable the removal of Bcc headers. See the remove_bcc_headers command.
--undisclosed-recipients[=(on|off)]
Enable or disable the replacement of To/Cc/Bcc with "To: undisclosed-recipients:;". See the undisclosed_recipients command.
-X, --logfile=[file]
Set or unset the log file. See the logfile command.
--logfile-time-format=[fmt]
Set or unset the log file time format. See the logfile_time_format command.
--syslog[=(on|off|facility)]
Enable or disable syslog logging. See the syslog command.
-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.
--read-envelope-from
Read the envelope from address from the From header of the mail.
--aliases=[file]
Set or unset an aliases file. See the aliases command.
-Fname |
Set a full name to be used in a From header if msmtp adds one. See the from_full_name command. |
--auto-from[=(on|off)]
Obsolete. See the auto_from command.
--maildomain=[domain]
Obsolete. See the maildomain command.
-- |
This marks the end of options. All following arguments will be treated as recipient addresses, even if they start with a ’-’. |
The following
options are accepted but ignored for sendmail compatibility:
-Btype, -bm, -G, -hN, -i, -L tag, -m,
-n, -O option=value, -ox value
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.
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.
The user can
choose which account to use in one of three ways:
--account=id
Use the given account. Command line settings override configuration file settings.
--host=hostname
Use only the settings from the command line; do not use any configuration file data.
--from=address 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 from command.
This works only when neither --account nor
--host is used.
Subadresses are supported. For example, the envelope from
address user+detail [AT] example.com will match the
account for user [AT] example.com.
Furthermore, the envelope-from address of the account may be
a wildcard pattern. See the from command.
If none of the above options is used (or if no account has a matching from command), then the account "default" is used.
Msmtp transmits
mails unaltered to the SMTP server, with the following
exceptions:
- The Bcc header(s) will be removed. This behavior can be
changed with the remove_bcc_headers command and
--remove-bcc-headers option.
- A From header will be added if the mail does not have one.
This can be changed with the set_from_header command
and --set-from-header option. The header will use the
envelope from address and optionally a full name set with
the -F option or from_full_name command.
- A Date header will be added if the mail does not have one.
This can be changed with the set_date_header command
and --set-date-header option.
- A Message-ID header will be added if the mail does not
have one. This can be changed with the set_msg_header
command and --set-msgid-header option.
- When undisclosed_recipients is set, the original
To, Cc, and Bcc headers are removed and replaced with
"To: undisclosed-recipients:;".
Skip to the EXAMPLES section for a quick start.
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 --version to find out which
directory is used.
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
--version). Accounts defined in the user
configuration file override accounts from the system
configuration file.
Configuration data from either file can be changed by
command line options.
A configuration
file is a simple text file. Empty lines and comment lines
(whose first non-blank character is ’#’) are
ignored.
Every other line must contain a command and may contain an
argument to that command.
The argument may be enclosed in double quotes ("), for
example if its first or last character is a blank.
If a file name starts with the tilde (~), this tilde will be
replaced by $HOME. If a command accepts the argument
on, it also accepts an empty argument and treats that
as if it was on.
Commands are organized in accounts. Each account starts with
the account command and defines the settings for one
SMTP account.
Skip to the EXAMPLES section for a quick start.
Commands are as
follows:
defaults
Set defaults. The following configuration commands will set default values for all following account definitions in the current configuration file.
account name [:account[,...]]
Start a new account definition
with the given name. The current default values are filled
in.
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.
eval cmd
Replace the current
configuration file line with the first line of the output
(stdout) of the command cmd. This can be used to
decrypt settings or to create them via scripts. For example,
eval echo host localhost replaces the current line
with host localhost.
Note that every eval line will be evaluated when the
configuration file is read.
The cmd command must not mess with standard input; if
in doubt, append < /dev/null.
Note that for passwords you can also use the
passwordeval command instead of eval password
cmd. This has the advantage that the command is only
evaluated if needed.
host hostname
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.
port number
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").
source_ip [IP]
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.
proxy_host [IP|hostname]
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 hostname 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.
proxy_port [number]
Set the port number for the proxy host. An empty number argument resets this to the default port.
socket socketname
Set the file name of a unix domain socket to connect to. This overrides both host/port and proxy_host/proxy_port.
timeout (off|seconds)
Set or unset a network timeout, in seconds. The argument off means that no timeout will be set, which means that the operating system default will be used.
protocol (smtp|lmtp)
Set the protocol to use. Currently only SMTP and LMTP are supported. SMTP is the default. See the port command above for default ports.
domain argument
Use this command to set the
argument of the SMTP EHLO (or LMTP LHLO) command. The
default is localhost, 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 [AT] provider.example) or the fully qualified domain name of
your host (if available).
The following substitution patterns are supported:
%H will be replaced by $HOSTNAME, or if that fails by the
host name of the system.
%C will be replaced by the canonical name of %H.
%M will be replaced by the contents of /etc/mailname
(potentially a different directory is used depending on the
build configuration; see the output of msmtp --version and
look for the location of the system configuration file).
auth [(on|off|method)]
Enable or disable
authentication and optionally choose a method to use. The
argument on chooses a method automatically.
Usually a user name and a password are used for
authentication. The user name is specified in the
configuration file with the user command. There are
five different methods to specify the password:
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.
2. Store the password in an encrypted files, and use
passwordeval to specify a command to decrypt that
file, e.g. using GnuPG. See EXAMPLES.
3. Store the password in the configuration file using the
password 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.)
4. Store the password in ~/.netrc. This method is probably
obsolete.
5. Type the password into the terminal when it is required.
It is recommended to use method 1 or 2.
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.
The following user / password methods are supported:
plain (a simple cleartext method, with base64
encoding, supported by almost all servers),
scram-sha-1 (a method that avoids cleartext
passwords), scram-sha-256 (same but with stronger
hash), cram-md5 (an obsolete method that avoids
cleartext passwords, but is not considered secure anymore),
digest-md5 (an overcomplicated obsolete method that
avoids cleartext passwords, but is not considered secure
anymore), login (a non-standard cleartext method
similar to but worse than the plain method), ntlm (an
obscure non-standard method that is now considered broken;
it sometimes requires a special domain parameter passed via
ntlmdomain).
There are currently three authentication methods that are
not based on user / password information and have to be
chosen manually: oauthbearer or its predecessor
xoauth2 (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
passwordeval command can be used to pass the
regularly changing tokens into msmtp from a script or an
environment variable), external (the authentication
happens outside of the protocol, typically by sending a TLS
client certificate, and the method merely confirms that this
authentication succeeded), and gssapi (the Kerberos
framework takes care of secure authentication, only a user
name is required).
It depends on the underlying authentication library and its
version whether a particular method is supported or not. Use
--version to find out which methods are
supported.
user login
Set the user name for authentication. An empty argument unsets the user name.
password secret
Set the password for authentication. An empty argument unsets the password. Consider using the passwordeval command or a key ring instead of this command, to avoid storing cleartext passwords in the configuration file.
passwordeval [cmd]
Set the password for
authentication to the output (stdout) of the command
cmd. 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.
The cmd command must not mess with standard input; if
in doubt, append < /dev/null.
ntlmdomain [domain]
Set a domain for the ntlm authentication method. This is obsolete.
tls [(on|off)]
Enable or disable TLS (also
known as SSL) for secured connections.
Transport Layer Security (TLS) "... provides
communications privacy over the Internet. The protocol
allows client/server applications to communicate in a way
that is designed to prevent eavesdropping, tampering, or
message forgery" (quote from RFC2246).
A server can use TLS in one of two modes: via a STARTTLS
command (the session starts with the normal protocol
initialization, and TLS is then started using the
protocol’s STARTTLS command), or immediately (TLS is
initialized before the normal protocol initialization; this
requires a separate port). The first mode is the default,
but you can switch to the second mode by disabling
tls_starttls.
When TLS is started, the server sends a certificate to
identify itself. To verify the server identity, a client
program is expected to check that the certificate is
formally correct and that it was issued by a Certificate
Authority (CA) that the user trusts. (There can also be
certificate chains with intermediate CAs.)
The list of trusted CAs is specified using the
tls_trust_file command. The default value ist
"system" and chooses the system-wide default, but
you can also choose the trusted CAs yourself.
A fundamental problem with this is that you need to trust
CAs. Like any other organization, a CA can be incompetent,
malicious, subverted by bad people, or forced by government
agencies to compromise end users without telling them. All
of these things happened and continue to happen worldwide.
The idea to have central organizations that have to be
trusted for your communication to be secure is fundamentally
broken.
Instead of putting trust in a CA, you can choose to trust
only a single certificate for the server you want to connect
to. For that purpose, specify the certificate fingerprint
with tls_fingerprint. This makes sure that no
man-in-the-middle can fake the identity of the server by
presenting you a fraudulent certificate issued by some CA
that happens to be in your trust list. However, you have to
update the fingerprint whenever the server certificate
changes, and you have to make sure that the change is
legitimate each time, e.g. when the old certificate expired.
This is inconvenient, but it’s the price to pay.
Information about a server certificate can be obtained with
--serverinfo --tls --tls-certcheck=off. This includes
the issuer CA of the certificate (so you can trust that CA
via tls_trust_file), and the fingerprint of the
certificate (so you can trust that particular certificate
via tls_fingerprint).
TLS also allows the server to verify the identity of the
client. For this purpose, the client has to present a
certificate issued by a CA that the server trusts. To
present that certificate, the client also needs the matching
key file. You can set the certificate and key files using
tls_cert_file and tls_key_file. This mechanism
can also be used to authenticate users, so that traditional
user / password authentication is not necessary anymore. See
the external mechanism in auth.
You can also use client certificates stored on some external
authentication device by specifying GnuTLS device URIs in
tls_cert_file and tls_key_file. You can find
the correct URIs using p11tool --list-privkeys
--login (p11tool is bundled with GnuTLS). If your device
requires a PIN to access the data, you can specify that
using one of the password mechanisms (e.g.
passwordeval, password).
tls_starttls [(on|off)]
Choose the TLS variant: start TLS from within the session (on, default), or tunnel the session through TLS (off).
tls_trust_file file
Activate server certificate verification using a list of trusted Certification Authorities (CAs). The default is the special value "system", which selects the system default. An empty argument disables trust in CAs. If you select a file, it must be in PEM format, and you should also use tls_crl_file.
tls_crl_file [file]
Deprecated. This sets a certificate revocation list (CRL) file for TLS, to check for revoked certificates (an empty argument, which is the default, disables this). Nowadays automatic OCSP checks replace CRL file checks.
tls_fingerprint [fingerprint]
Set the fingerprint of a single certificate to accept for TLS. This certificate will be trusted regardless of its contents (this overrides tls_trust_file). The fingerprint should be of type SHA256, but can for backwards compatibility also be of type SHA1 or MD5 (please avoid this). The format should be 01:23:45:67:.... Use --serverinfo --tls --tls-certcheck=off --tls-fingerprint= to get the server certificate fingerprint.
tls_key_file file
Send a client certificate to the server (use this together with tls_cert_file}). The file must contain the private key of a certificate in PEM format. An empty argument disables this feature.
tls_cert_file file
Send a client certificate to the server (use this together with tls_key_file). The file must contain a certificate in PEM format. An empty argument disables this feature.
tls_certcheck [(on|off)]
Enable or disable checks of the server certificate. They are enabled by default. Disabling them will override tls_trust_file and tls_fingerprint. WARNING: When the checks are disabled, TLS sessions will not be secure!
tls_priorities [priorities]
Set priorities for TLS session
parameters. The default is set by the TLS library and can be
selected by using an empty argument to this command. The
interpretation of the priorities string depends on
the TLS library. Use --version to find out which TLS
library you use.
For GnuTLS, see the section on Priority Strings in the
manual.
For libtls, the priorites string is a space-separated
list of parameter strings prefixed with either PROTOCOLS=,
CIPHERS=, or ECDHECURVES=. These parameter strings will be
passed to the functions tls_config_parse_protocols,
tls_config_set_ciphers, and
tls_config_set_ecdhecurves. Unrecognized parts of the
priorities string will be ignored. Example:
"PROTOCOLS=TLSv1.3 CIPHERS=ECDHE-RSA-AES128-SHA256
ECDHECURVES=P-384".
tls_host_override [host]
By default, TLS host verification uses the host name given by the host command. This command allows one to use a different host name for verification. This is only useful in special cases.
tls_min_dh_prime_bits [bits]
Deprecated, use tls_priorities instead. Set or unset the minimum number of Diffie-Hellman (DH) prime bits accepted for TLS sessions. The default is set by the TLS library and can be selected by using an empty argument to this command. Only lower the default (for example to 512 bits) if there is no other way to make TLS work with the remote server.
from envelope_from
Set the envelope-from address.
The following substitution patterns are supported:
%U will be replaced by $USER, or if that fails by $LOGNAME,
or if that fails by the login name of the user running
msmtp.
%H will be replaced by $HOSTNAME, or if that fails by the
host name of the system.
%C will be replaced by the canonical name of %H.
%M will be replaced by the contents of /etc/mailname
(potentially a different directory is used depending on the
build configuration; see the output of msmtp --version and
look for the location of the system configuration file).
Note that the obsolete auto_from command replaces
this envelope-from address.
To enforce the use of this envelope-from address and ignore
the -f / --from option, see the allow_from_override
command.
Furthermore, the envelope-from address may be a wildcard
pattern as used for file name matching in the shell. This is
the case if it contains one of the characters ?, * or [.
This allows a variety of envelope-from addresses given with
the --from option to match a single account.
from_full_name name
Set a full name to be used in a From header if msmtp adds one. See the set_from_header command.
allow_from_override (on|off)
By default, the --from option overrides the from command. Set to off to disable this.
dsn_notify (off|condition)
This command sets the condition(s) under which the mail system should send DSN (Delivery Status Notification) messages. The argument off disables explicit DSN requests, which means the mail system decides when to send DSN messages. This is the default. The condition must be never, to never request notification, or a comma separated list (no spaces!) of one or more of the following: failure, to request notification on transmission failure, delay, to be notified of message delays, success, to be notified of successful transmission. The SMTP server must support the DSN extension.
dsn_return (off|amount)
This command controls how much of a mail should be returned in DSN (Delivery Status Notification) messages. The argument off disables explicit DSN requests, which means the mail system decides how much of a mail it returns in DSN messages. This is the default. The amount must be headers, to just return the message headers, or full, to return the full mail. The SMTP server must support the DSN extension.
set_from_header [(auto|on|off)]
When to set a From header:
auto adds a From header if the mail does not have one
(this is the default), on always sets a From header
and overrides any existing one, and off never sets a
From header.
If the mail server rejects the mail because its From header
does not match the envelope-from address (a common anti-spam
measure), then you might want to set this option to
on.
The From header is created based on the envelope-from
address. Disable allow_from_override to prevent
programs from setting their own envelope-from address.
For compatibility with older versions,
add_missing_from_header [(on|off)] is
still supported and corresponds to the auto and
off settings.
set_date_header [(auto|off)]
When to set a Date header:
auto adds a Date header if the mail does not have one
(this is the default), and off never sets a Date
header.
For compatibility with older versions,
add_missing_date_header [(on|off)] is
still supported and corresponds to the auto and
off settings.
set_msgid_header [(auto|off)]
When to set a Message-ID header: auto adds a Message-ID header if the mail does not have one (this is the default), and off never sets a Message-ID header.
remove_bcc_headers [(on|off)]
This command controls whether to remove Bcc headers. The default is to remove them.
undisclosed_recipients [(on|off)]
When set, the original To, Cc, and Bcc headers of the mail are removed and a single new header line "To: undisclosed-recipients:;" is added. The default setting is off.
logfile [file]
An empty argument disables
logging (this is the default).
When logging is enabled by choosing a log file, msmtp will
append one line to the log file for each mail it tries to
send via the account that this log file was chosen for.
The line will include the following information: date and
time in the format specified by logfile_time_format,
host name of the SMTP server, whether TLS was used, whether
authentication was used, authentication user name (only if
authentication is used), envelope-from address, recipient
addresses, size of the mail as transferred to the server
(only if the delivery succeeded), SMTP status code and SMTP
error message (only in case of failure and only if
available), error message (only in case of failure and only
if available), exit code (from sysexits.h; EX_OK indicates
success).
If the filename is a dash (-), msmtp prints the log line to
the standard output.
logfile_time_format [fmt]
Set or unset the log file time format. This will be used as the format string for the strftime() function. An empty argument chooses the default ("%b %d %H:%M:%S").
syslog [(on|off|facility)]
Enable or disable syslog
logging. The facility can be one of LOG_USER, LOG_MAIL,
LOG_LOCAL0, ..., LOG_LOCAL7. The default is LOG_USER.
Each time msmtp tries to send a mail via the account that
contains this syslog command, it will log one entry to the
syslog service with the chosen facility.
The line will include the following information: host name
of the SMTP server, whether TLS was used, whether
authentication was used, envelope-from address, recipient
addresses, size of the mail as transferred to the server
(only if the delivery succeeded), SMTP status code and SMTP
error message (only in case of failure and only if
available), error message (only in case of failure and only
if available), exit code (from sysexits.h; EX_OK indicates
success).
aliases [file]
Replace local recipients with
addresses in the aliases file. The aliases file is a
cleartext file containing mappings between a local address
and a list of replacement addresses. The mappings are of the
form:
local: someone [AT] example.com, person [AT] domain.example
Multiple replacement addresses are separated with commas.
Comments start with ’#’ and continue to the end
of the line.
The local address default has special significance
and is matched if the local address is not found in the
aliases file. If no default alias is found, then the
local address is left as is.
Note that alias expansion only affects the mail envelope.
The To and Cc headers are not modified.
An empty argument to the aliases command disables the
replacement of local addresses. This is the default.
auto_from [(on|off)]
Obsolete; you can achieve the
same and more using the substitution patterns of the
from command.
Enable or disable automatic envelope-from addresses. The
default is off. When enabled, an envelope-from address of
the form user@domain will be generated. The local part will
be set to USER or, if that fails, to LOGNAME
or, if that fails, to the login name of the current user.
The domain part can be set with the maildomain
command. If the maildomain is empty, the envelope-from
address will only consist of the user name and not have a
domain part. When auto_from is disabled, the envelope-from
address must be set explicitly.
maildomain [domain]
Obsolete; you can achieve the
same and more using the substitution patterns of the
from command.
Set a domain part for the generation of an envelope-from
address. This is only used when auto_from is on. The
domain may be empty.
EXAMPLES
Configuration file
# Example for a
user configuration file ~/.msmtprc
#
# This file focusses on TLS and authentication. Features not
used here include
# logging, timeouts, SOCKS proxies, TLS parameters, Delivery
Status Notification
# (DSN) settings, and more.
# Set default
values for all following accounts.
defaults
# Use the mail
submission port 587 instead of the SMTP port 25.
port 587
# Always use
TLS.
tls on
# Set a list of
trusted CAs for TLS. The default is to use system settings,
but
# you can select your own file.
#tls_trust_file /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
# A freemail
service
account freemail
# Host name of
the SMTP server
host smtp.freemail.example
# As an
alternative to tls_trust_file, you can use tls_fingerprint
# to pin a single certificate. You have to update the
fingerprint when the
# server certificate changes, but an attacker cannot trick
you into accepting
# a fraudulent certificate. Get the fingerprint with
# $ msmtp --serverinfo --tls --tls-certcheck=off
--host=smtp.freemail.example
#tls_fingerprint
00:11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99:AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF:00:11
:22:33
# Envelope-from
address
from joe_smith [AT] freemail.example
#
Authentication. The password is given using one of five
methods, see below.
auth on
user joe.smith
# Password
method 1: Add the password to the system keyring, and let
msmtp get
# it automatically. To set the keyring password using
Gnome’s libsecret:
# $ secret-tool store --label=msmtp \
# host smtp.freemail.example \
# service smtp \
# user joe.smith
# Password
method 2: Store the password in an encrypted file, and tell
msmtp
# which command to use to decrypt it. This is usually used
with GnuPG, as in
# this example. Usually gpg-agent will ask once for the
decryption password.
passwordeval gpg2 --no-tty -q -d ~/.msmtp-password.gpg
# Password
method 3: Store the password directly in this file. Usually
it is not
# a good idea to store passwords in cleartext files. If you
do it anyway, at
# least make sure that this file can only be read by
yourself.
#password secret123
# Password
method 4: Store the password in ~/.netrc. This method is
probably not
# relevant anymore.
# Password
method 5: Do not specify a password. Msmtp will then prompt
you for
# it. This means you need to be able to type into a terminal
when msmtp runs.
# A second mail
address at the same freemail service
account freemail2 : freemail
from joey [AT] freemail.example
# The SMTP
server of your ISP
account isp
host mail.isp.example
from smithjoe [AT] isp.example
auth on
user 12345
# Set a default
account
account default : freemail
Using msmtp with Mutt
Create a
configuration file for msmtp and add the following lines to
your Mutt configuration file:
set sendmail="/path/to/msmtp"
set use_from=yes
set realname="Your Name"
set from=you [AT] example.com
set envelope_from=yes
The envelope_from=yes option lets Mutt use the -f
option of msmtp. Therefore msmtp chooses the first account
that matches the from address you [AT] example.com.
Alternatively, you can use the -a option:
set sendmail="/path/to/msmtp -a my-account"
Or set everything from the command line (but note that you
cannot set a password this way):
set sendmail="/path/to/msmtp --host=mailhub -f
me [AT] example.com --tls
--tls-trust-file=trust.crt"
If you have
multiple mail accounts in your msmtp configuration file and
let Mutt use the -f option to choose the right one,
you can easily switch accounts in Mutt with the following
Mutt configuration lines:
macro generic "<esc>1" ":set
from=you [AT] example.com"
macro generic "<esc>2" ":set
from=you [AT] your-employer.example"
macro generic "<esc>3" ":set
from=you [AT] some-other-provider.example"
Using msmtp with mail
Define a
default account, and put the following in your ~/.mailrc:
set sendmail="/path/to/msmtp"
Using msmtp with Tor
Use the
following settings:
proxy_host 127.0.0.1
proxy_port 9050
tls on
Use an IP address as proxy host name, so that msmtp does not
leak a DNS query when resolving it.
TLS is required to prevent exit hosts from reading your SMTP
session.
Do not set domain to something that you do not want
to reveal (do not set it at all if possible).
Aliases file
# Example aliases file
# Send root to
Joe and Jane
root: joe_smith [AT] example.com, jane_chang [AT] example.com
# Send cron to
Mark
cron: mark_jones [AT] example.com
# Send
everything else to admin
default: admin [AT] domain.example
FILES
SYSCONFDIR/msmtprc
System configuration file. Use --version to find out what SYSCONFDIR is on your platform.
~/.msmtprc or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/msmtp/config
User configuration file.
~/.netrc and SYSCONFDIR/netrc
The netrc file contains login information. Before prompting for a password, msmtp will search it in ~/.netrc and SYSCONFDIR/netrc.
ENVIRONMENT
USER, LOGNAME
These variables override the user’s login name when constructing an envelope-from address. LOGNAME is only used if USER is unset.
TMPDIR |
Directory to create temporary files in. If this is unset, a system specific default directory is used. |
A temporary file is only created when the -t/--read-recipients or --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).
EMAIL, SMTPSERVER
These environment variables are used only if neither --host nor --account 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 --from or --read-envelope-from. Currently SMTPSERVER must contain a plain host name (no URL), and EMAIL must contain a plain address (no names or additional information).
AUTHORS
msmtp was
written by Martin Lambers <marlam [AT] marlam.de>.
Other authors are listed in the AUTHORS file in the source
distribution.