The
EX_CONFIG exit value (the value 78) means that a fatal configuration
problem was found, but this does not necessarily mean that the
problem was found while reading the configuration file. Failure of a
delivery agent to function correctly can lead to this kind of
failure:
During delivery, when a rule set 0 selection of a delivery agent
fails to specify a host with the $@ part (Section 19.5), the following error is logged and the
fork(2)'d child exits with
EX_CONFIG:
null hostname for mailer
During delivery, when $u appears in the argument
list for an SMTP delivery agent (See this section),
sendmail logs the following error and the
fork(2)'d child exits with
EX_CONFIG:
non-clever IPC
During delivery, when an attempt is made to use an SMTP delivery
agent with a version of sendmail that was
compiled without SMTP support (SMTP),
sendmail logs the following error and the
fork(2)'d child exits with
EX_CONFIG:
deliver: need SMTP compiled to use clever mailer
Some apparent DNS errors are really configuration problems. In the
following error, hostB is an MX record that
points back to your host. The problem is that your host
doesn't know that it should be accepting mail for
hostB. The solution is to add
hostB to your local $=w class
($=w):
MX list for hostB points back to ourhost
When sendmail processes MX records, it skips any
records of absurd length and logs the following message:
Host name ourhost too long
You should never set up DNS so that an MX record points to a CNAME
record. If you ever do, the result can be serious. The first CNAME
can point to a second, the second to a third, and so on. If this list
is longer than the number defined by MAXCNAMEDEPTH in
domain.c, the result is the following error:
DNS failure: CNAME loop for bad hostname here
Errors in rule sets are sometimes found only during actual rewriting,
and they too yield errors:
illegal ruleset number bad number here
rewrite: excessive recursion (max max), ruleset bad number here
rewrite: ruleset num:replacement$digitout of bounds
Unknown ruleset bad name here
The solutions to rule set problems should be obvious. See Chapter 19 for guidance.
Note that the EX_CONFIG and EX_SOFTWARE (discussed later) cause the
local postmaster to get a copy of the message on
the presumption that local errors can only be fixed locally.