Beginning with V8.2 sendmail, the -X
command-line
switch can be used to record all input and output, SMTP traffic,
and other significant transactions.
The form of the -X
(transaction) command-line switch looks like this:
-Xfile
Space between the -X
and the file
is optional. The
file
may be specified as either as a full or a relative pathname.
For security the -X
command-line switch always causes
sendmail to give up its root privilege unless it was
run by root.
If the transaction file
cannot be opened for writing, the
following error is printed and no logging is done:
cannot openfile
Otherwise, the file is opened in append mode, and each line that is written to it looks like this:
pid what detail
The pid
is the process identification number of the sendmail
that added the line. The what
is one of these three symbols:
<<<
This is input. It is either text that is read on the standard input or parts of an SMTP dialog that were read on a socket connection.
>>>
This is output. It is either something that sendmail printed to its standard output, or something that it sent over an SMTP connection.
===
This is an event. The only two events that are currently logged are CONNECT for connection to a host and EXEC for execution of a delivery agent.
To illustrate, consider sending a mail message to yourself and to a friend at another site:
%/usr/lib/sendmail -X /tmp/xfile -oQ/tmp yourself,friend@remote.host
To: yourself,friend@remote.host Subject: test This is a test. .
These few lines of input produce a long /tmp/xfile. The first few lines of that file are illustrative:
29559 <<< To: yourself,friend@remote.host 29559 <<< Subject: test 29559 <<< 29559 <<< This is a test. 29559 <<< . 29561 === CONNECT remote.host 29561 <<< 220 remote.host ESMTP Sendmail 8.7.5; Sun, 12 May 1996 08:06:47 -0600 (MDT) 29561 >>> EHLO your.host 29561 <<< 250-remote.host Hello you@your.host [206.54.76.122], pleased to meet you 29561 <<< 250-8BITMIME 29561 <<< 250-SIZE 29561 <<< 250-DSN 29561 <<< 250-VERB 29561 <<< 250-ONEX 29561 <<< 250 HELP 29561 >>> MAIL From:<your@your.host> SIZE=65 29561 <<< 250 <your@your.host>... Sender ok 29561 >>> RCPT To:<friend@remot.host> 29561 <<< 250 Recipient ok 29561 >>> DATA 29561 <<< 354 Enter mail, end with "." on a line by itself 29561 >>> The first line of data here, 29561 >>> the second line of data here, 29561 >>> and so on.
Notice that the process ID changes. After sendmail collects the message, it fork(2)s and exec(2)s to handle the actual delivery.
Because these transaction files include message bodies, they should
be guarded. Never use the -X
switch with the daemon unless
you are prepared for a huge file and the possibility of disclosing
message contents to nonprivileged users.