Mailx: Difference between revisions
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First, you will need to make sure <tt>mailx</tt> has access to a valid Google certificate in an NSS certificate database. Firefox usually has it in its profile directory, but it is a good idea to initialize a private certificate database for <tt>mailx</tt>. This page explains how to do that [[NSS#Create_a_New_Certificate_Database_and_Import_Google.27s_Certificate|Create a New NSS Certificate Database and Import Google's Certificate]]: | First, you will need to make sure <tt>mailx</tt> has access to a valid Google certificate in an NSS certificate database. Firefox usually has it in its profile directory, but it is a good idea to initialize a private certificate database for <tt>mailx</tt>. This page explains how to do that [[NSS#Create_a_New_Certificate_Database_and_Import_Google.27s_Certificate|Create a New NSS Certificate Database and Import Google's Certificate]]: | ||
Assuming you provision <tt>root</tt> GMail SMTP access, move the <tt>certs</tt> directory created at the previous step under <tt>~root</tt> as follows: | |||
<pre> | |||
mv .../certs ~root/.certs | |||
</pre> | |||
Configure <tt>/etc/mail.rc<tt> as follows: | |||
<pre> | |||
... | |||
</pre> | |||
<font color=red>TODO: try a per-user mail.rc that is read restricted because it contains sensitive credentials.</font> | |||
Revision as of 00:57, 1 February 2016
Internal
Installation
yum install mailx
Configuration
Configuring mailx to Use a Google SMTP Server
First, you will need to make sure mailx has access to a valid Google certificate in an NSS certificate database. Firefox usually has it in its profile directory, but it is a good idea to initialize a private certificate database for mailx. This page explains how to do that Create a New NSS Certificate Database and Import Google's Certificate:
Assuming you provision root GMail SMTP access, move the certs directory created at the previous step under ~root as follows:
mv .../certs ~root/.certs
Configure /etc/mail.rc as follows:
...
TODO: try a per-user mail.rc that is read restricted because it contains sensitive credentials.
Deplete:
- http://www.systutorials.com/1411/sending-email-from-mailx-command-in-linux-using-gmails-smtp/
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/16799407/mailx-and-gmail-nss-config-dir
- http://serverfault.com/questions/498588/smtp-gmail-com-from-bash-gives-error-in-certificate-peers-certificate-issuer
- http://www.systutorials.com/1411/sending-email-from-mailx-command-in-linux-using-gmails-smtp/
Last:
SSL/TLS handshake failed: Unknown error -5938.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/16799407/mailx-and-gmail-nss-config-dir
continue to https://kb.novaordis.com/index.php/mail#Configuration
Clarify mail on now510: be able to send mail and test how does cron reacts to it (success or failure). Document -> [1], understand the nss business.
Document NSS • http://serverfault.com/questions/498588/smtp-gmail-com-from-bash-gives-error-in-certificate-peers-certificate-issuer
Try to use the /etc/pki/nssdb
IMPORTANT! My google password is in /etc/mail.rc
Tried:
echo "test" | mailx -v -A gmail -s "command line e-mail" ovidiu@feodorov.com