Anope.org > General Chat

[Guide] Anope and ssmtp

(1/2) > >>

Stefan:
Hi,

I have for some days trying to figure out how to setup Anope with email support and I finally made it work with "ssmtp"

So the first thing you need to do is install :

--- Code: ---sudo apt-get update
--- End code ---


--- Code: ---sudo apt-get install ssmtp
--- End code ---

then edit the following file:

--- Code: ---sudo nano /etc/ssmtp/ssmtp.conf
--- End code ---

You then need to make some changes to the file:


--- Code: ---#
# Config file for sSMTP sendmail
#
# The person who gets all mail for userids < 1000
# Make this empty to disable rewriting.
#root=postmaster
root=
#Debug - remove the # if you need to debug (the file you need to look into is : /var/syslog)
#Debug=Yes

# The place where the mail goes. The actual machine name is required no
# MX records are consulted. Commonly mailhosts are named mail.domain.com
mailhub=mail.yourprovider.com:587

AuthUser=YOURMAILADRESS
AuthPass=YOURPASSWORD
UseTLS=YES
UseSTARTTLS=YES

# Where will the mail seem to come from?
#rewriteDomain=

# The full hostname
hostname=YOURHOSTNAME

# Are users allowed to set their own From: address?
# YES - Allow the user to specify their own From: address
# NO - Use the system generated From: address
FromLineOverride=YES

--- End code ---

And lastly make this change:

--- Code: ---sendmailpath = "/usr/sbin/ssmtp -t"
--- End code ---

Thats how I made it work :)

Jens Voss:
Thank you. :-)

Moebius:

--- Quote from: Stefan on March 28, 2023, 03:09:15 PM ---Hi,

I have for some days trying to figure how to setup Anope with email support and I finally made it work with "ssmtp"

So the first thing you need to do is install :

--- Code: ---sudo apt-get update
--- End code ---


--- Code: ---sudo apt-get install ssmtp
--- End code ---

then edit the following file:

--- Code: ---sudo nano /etc/ssmtp/ssmtp.conf
--- End code ---

You then need to make some changes to the file:


--- Code: ---#
# Config file for sSMTP sendmail
#
# The person who gets all mail for userids < 1000
# Make this empty to disable rewriting.
#root=postmaster
root=
#Debug - remove the # if you need to debug (the file you need to look into is : /var/syslog)
#Debug=Yes

# The place where the mail goes. The actual machine name is required no
# MX records are consulted. Commonly mailhosts are named mail.domain.com
mailhub=mail.yourprovider.com:587

AuthUser=YOURMAILADRESS
AuthPass=YOURPASSWORD
UseTLS=YES
UseSTARTTLS=YES

# Where will the mail seem to come from?
#rewriteDomain=

# The full hostname
hostname=YOURHOSTNAME

# Are users allowed to set their own From: address?
# YES - Allow the user to specify their own From: address
# NO - Use the system generated From: address
FromLineOverride=YES

--- End code ---

And lastly make this change:

--- Code: ---sendmailpath = "/usr/sbin/ssmtp -t"
--- End code ---

Thats how I made it work :)

--- End quote ---

May I ask how exactly you went about the app password/less secure authentication? It seems that most email services these days use a 2-step verification and won't allow third-party apps to log into your account unless using a dedicated app password, which is something ssmtp isn't good at or so it seems. I've tried sending an email using a previously generated app password but I keep getting an error saying password is missing or just bad. In the case of gmail.com it looks like this:


--- Code: ---ssmtp: Authorization failed (535 5.7.8  https://support.google.com/mail/?p=BadCredentials z6-20020a05600c220600b003ed246c1d28sm2044983wml.44 - gsmtp)
--- End code ---

So, I figure either I'm doing something wrong or you could be using a different email service altogether, which doesn't require the above authentication method.

Moebius:
Ok, nevermind. I did something and it works now. I've NO idea how I fixed it, though. I even tried to reverse the few random and hopeless changes I made to the ssmtp.conf file and it still just works. Oh well.

Now I have another question. Is there a way to fake the sender's name and address? I know it can be done with sendmail and mailx but I'm not sure they are good options here. The question is, can you pull it off with ssmtp? The farthest I've gone is change the sender's name but I can't seem to change the actual email address. Here's what I mean:


--- Code: ---ssmtp -v -fservices@retroit.org -Fservices@retroit.org someone@somemail.com < msg.txt
--- End code ---

This only changes the name but not the address in angle brackets, it's pretty much stuck there. So, only the -F parameter works. Same happens when I use "From:" in the actual message.

Stefan:

--- Quote from: Moebius on April 06, 2023, 06:04:06 PM ---May I ask how exactly you went about the app password/less secure authentication? It seems that most email services these days use a 2-step verification and won't allow third-party apps to log into your account unless using a dedicated app password, which is something ssmtp isn't good at or so it seems. I've tried sending an email using a previously generated app password but I keep getting an error saying password is missing or just bad. In the case of gmail.com it looks like this:


--- Code: ---ssmtp: Authorization failed (535 5.7.8  https://support.google.com/mail/?p=BadCredentials z6-20020a05600c220600b003ed246c1d28sm2044983wml.44 - gsmtp)
--- End code ---

So, I figure either I'm doing something wrong or you could be using a different email service altogether, which doesn't require the above authentication method.

--- End quote ---

Hi,

I can't speak about gmail. As I don't use that I use https://privateemail.com/ And it works fine.

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

Go to full version