Did I mention in the previous post that sendmail does not like group
writable directories? Check /, /usr, /usr/local,
/usr/local/majordomo-1.94.5, and /usr/local/majordomo-1.94.5/lists for a
group write bit and chmod it to off.
Check your /var/log/maillog for the message that went to la la land to
see where sendmail thinks it went. Make sure the message is not still
in your sendmail queue. Make sure your aliases are not sending bounces
into /dev/null, or you will never be able to troubleshoot the problem.
You might have to check the postmaster mail to find it, depending on
what you discover from the maillog file.
Check your /usr/local/majordomo-1.94.5/Log to see if majordomo ever saw
the message.
It could also be, that since you were the sender of the message,
sendmail may have decided you did not need a copy. I think this is a
"me too" setting in the sendmail.cf.
I could probably write a book on troubleshooting majordomo, but by the
time I would ever get it finished, everyone would be using MJ2. <G>
Dan Liston
Liza Deatrick Peak wrote:
>
> Dan - thanks for the response. I made the permission changes you noted
> below. Yes, indeed the permissions were set wrong. I have regenerated the
> original message for broadcast and sent it. However, I am in the list for
> the group and did not receive it. The message is indeed in the out box and
> no error messages were returned. What has happened to the message?
>
> >Date: Sat, 24 Jun 2000 14:05:23 -0500
> >From: Dan Liston <dliston@netscape.com>
> >Organization: iPlanet E-Commerce Solutions, A Sun Netscape Alliance
> >X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.72 [en] (X11; U; Linux 2.2.14-5.0 i686)
> >X-Accept-Language: en
> >To: Liza Deatrick Peak <liza@bannister.com>
> >Cc: majordomo-users <majordomo-users@GreatCircle.COM>
> >Subject: RedHat in address
> >Sender: majordomo-users-owner@GreatCircle.COM
> >
> >The hostname has "nothing" to do with how you have your mailer or
> >list manager configured. This information comes from DNS, /etc/hosts,
> >/etc/HOSTNAME, NIS, DHCP, and possibly even from your network or eth0
> >config files.
> >
> >Looking at your error message below, you still need to add majordomo
> >to your list of "Trusted Users" in your sendmail.cf file too. While
> >you are in the sendmail.cf, you can also use DMbannister.com to do
> >domain masquerading.
> >
> >In your aliases file for majordomo, a -h argument on your resend line,
> >or the resend_host = bannister.com setting in acuia-membership.config
> >should also remove the "RedHat." from all but the "received:" lines of
> >your messages.
> >
> >Dan Liston
> >
> >Liza Deatrick Peak wrote:
> > >
> > > hello - I recently installed RedHat 6.2 and using sendmail. During the
> > > testing phase of this server we named the box RedHat - now I don't know
> > > where it is picking up "RedHat" from. I have checked aliases, sendmail,
> > > majordomo config files - no "RedHat". When you type in hostname it come
> > > back correct "bannister.com" - I am assuming this is why the below error
> > > message comes back and aborts the send or an I totally off base here? Help!
> > >
> > > >Date: Fri, 23 Jun 2000 17:07:29 -0400
> > > >From: owner-acuia-members@RedHat.bannister.com
> > > >X-Authentication-Warning: RedHat.bannister.com: mail set sender to
> > > owner-acuia-members using -f
> > > >To: owner-acuia-members@RedHat.bannister.com
> > > >Subject: MAJORDOMO ABORT (mj_resend)
> > > >Reply-To: owner-acuia-members@RedHat.bannister.com
> > > >
> > > >--
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >MAJORDOMO ABORT (mj_resend)!!
> > > >
> > > >shlock: '/usr/local/majordomo-1.94.5/lists' is not writable by UID 8
> > GID 12
References:
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