Mail messages that have not yet been delivered are stored in the
sendmail program's queue
directory. The location of that directory is defined by the
QueueDirectory option. That location can be a
relative pathname (for testing) or an absolute pathname. If the
specified location does not exist, sendmail
prints something such as the following:
cannot chdir(/var/spool/mqueue): No such file or directory
If the location exists but is not a directory,
sendmail prints something such as the following:
cannot chdir(/var/spool/mqueue): Not a directory
In both cases, sendmail also logs an error
message via syslog(8) if the logging level of
the LogLevel option (LogLevel)
permits. In both cases, sendmail aborts
immediately.
The forms of the QueueDirectory option are as
follows:
O QueueDirectory=path configuration file (V8.7 and later)
-OQueueDirectory=path command line (V8.7 and later)
define(`QUEUE_DIR',`path') mc configuration (V8.7 and later)
OQpath configuration file (deprecated)
-oQpath command line (deprecated)
The path argument is of type
string. If it is missing, the value for
path defaults to
mqueue. Relative names for the queue are always
relative to the directory in which sendmail was
invoked. If the entire QueueDirectory option is
missing, the value for path defaults to a
null string, and sendmail complains with:
QueueDirectory (Q) option must be set
The default in configuring with the mc technique
varies depending on your operating system.
The QueueDirectory option is not safe. If
specified from the command line, it can cause
sendmail to relinquish its special privileges.