Thomas H. George wrote:
After finally understanding the exim4 authentication setup - as root I
am able to send email to my other mail box - I tried to send mail as
tom and from mutt. No go.
First, there were messages that exim4 could not write to the files
/var/log/exim4/mainlog and paniclog - permission denied.
I added tom to the Debian-exim group and the mail group. This had no
effect. I then changed the file permissions from 640 to 666. That
resolved the mainlog and paniclog problem.
Next there was a message the exim4 could not write to the directory
/var/spool/exim4/msglog - permission denied. Again I changed the
directory permissions to 666.
Now there was no protest but the messages were not received by my
other mail box. Investigating I found that there were entries in
mainlog stating the messages were frozen and messages in the msglog
directory with 640 permissions and tom:tom ownership. Earlier frozen
messages (from attempts to send mail as root while the authentication
setup was incorrect) are owned by Debian-exim:Debian-exim.
I don't understand this at all. It seems to me that the standard
installation should such that normal users can send and receive mail
and root is prevented from doing so. What I have encountered is the
other way around and I have yet find all the changes - or the best
practice changes - which allow a normal user to send mail.
Tom
Unresolved.
I have tried re-running dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config - No change.
I have tried dpkg --purge exim4 followed by apt-get install exim4 - No
change.
Tom
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