The
use of the
# to place comments into a .mc
file for eventual transfer to your configuration file might not work
as expected. The # is not special to the
m4 processor, so m4
continues to process a line even though that line is intended to be a
comment. So, instead of:
# Here we define $m as our domain
(which would see define as an
m4 keyword), use single quotes to insulate all
such comments from m4 interpretation:
# `Here we define $m as our domain'
Never blindly overwrite your sendmail.cf file
with a new one. Always compare the new version to the old first:
% diff /etc/mail/sendmail.cf oursite.cf
19c19
< ##### built by you@oursite.com on Sat Jan 1 11:26:39 PDT 2000
---
> ##### built by you@oursite.com on Fri Dec 13 04:14:25 PDT
2002
Here, the only change was the date the files were built, but if you
had expected some other change, this would tell you the change had
failed.
Never edit your sendmail.cf file directly. If
you do, you will never be able to generate a duplicate or update from
your mc file. This is an especially serious
problem when upgrading from one release of
sendmail to a newer release. Should you make
this mistake, reread the appropriate sections in this book and the
documentation supplied with the sendmail source.
Don't assume UUCP support and UUCP relaying are
turned off by default. Always use the nouucp
feature (FEATURE(nouucp)) to disable UUCP unless you
actually support UUCP:
FEATURE(`nouucp') recommended through V8.9
FEATURE(`nouucp',`reject') recommended with V8.10 and above