Current Path : /compat/linux/proc/68247/cwd/usr/local/majordomo/doc/ |
FreeBSD hs32.drive.ne.jp 9.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 9.1-RELEASE #1: Wed Jan 14 12:18:08 JST 2015 root@hs32.drive.ne.jp:/sys/amd64/compile/hs32 amd64 |
Current File : //compat/linux/proc/68247/cwd/usr/local/majordomo/doc/INSTALL |
_ _ ____ _ ____ ____ ___ ____ _ _ ____ |\/| |__| | | | |__/ | \ | | |\/| | | | | | | _| |__| | \ |__/ |__| | | |__| Release 1.94.5 INSTALL -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -> Current users of Majordomo whom are upgrading will want to <-- -> read the NEWS and Changelog for details on what has changed <-- -> between versions of Majordomo. <-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ** SECURITY ALERT ** The default installation of Majordomo, including the checks that config-test does, WILL NOT RESULT IN A SECURE INSTALLATION. In particular, the majordomo home directory and the "wrapper" program are, by default, accessible to any user. These open privileges can be (mis)used to change list membership, list configuration details, forge email, perhaps even create and/or delete lists, and anything else that the majordomo user has permissions to do. If Majordomo is *NOT* installed on a secured system with controlled access (and if you are paranoid, even if it is), you will need to take additional steps to prevent access to the majordomo directories. Usually, changing the privileges of the majordomo home directory to be 0750 fixes these problems, but creates the additional burden of needing to configure the MTA (sendmail, qmail, exim) properly so that it can read and execute "wrapper". Such configuration is beyond the scope of this install document, and is left to the FAQ (Doc/FAQ, Doc/majordomo-faq.html) and the support group majordomo-users@greatcircle.com to answer. ** SECURITY ALERT ** UPGRADING: ---------- If you're upgrading from a release before 1.94.4, you'll need to either do a clean install or patch your 1.94.X to 1.94.4 using the patches found at ftp://ftp.greatcircle.com/pub/majordomo. Then... Folks upgrading from 1.94.4 to 1.94.5 have three options: 1) A clean install. See below. 2) Patch your _distribution_ of 1.94.4 to 1.94.5: % cd distribution/majordomo-1.94.4 % patch < ...../patches/majordomo-1.94.5/1.94.4-to-1.94.5-patch If there are no *.rej files, do a 'make install'. Otherwise, examine each .rej file and merge the changes in by hand. 3) Patch your _installation_ of 1.94.4 to 1.94.5: % cd /usr/majordomo (ie, where you've installed majordomo) % patch < ....../majordomo-1.94.5/patches/1.94.4-to-1.94.5-installed-patch If there are no *.rej files, you're done! Otherwise, examine each .rej file and merge the changes in by hand. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Steps to do a clean installation of Majordomo: 1) Pick a group and user ID for Majordomo to run under. Usually this is "majordomo.daemon". If you're this group, you can do all the majordomo management functions (creating new lists, etc.) without having to "su" to Majordomo. You can create and use a group other id than "daemon" if you want, but if you do, that UID needs to be a "trusted" user as far as Sendmail is concerned (i.e., the user name needs to appear on a "T" line in your sendmail.cf file). 2) Choose a directory for Majordomo to install into. This must _NOT_ be the same directory you untarred the Majordomo files into or a symbolic link to it. 3) Edit the Makefile, defining where Perl and the C compiler are, the Majordomo home directory (chosen in step 2), the location of the manual pages, the user and group that Majordomo will run under, and the permissions for the various files and directories. If running on a non-POSIX system, comment out the POSIX SECTION in the Makefile. Under POSIX, wrapper must be setuid "root", even if the programs will be running as something other than "root" (i.e., "daemon"), or it won't work. The symptom of this is that Perl starts complaining about security violations and "unsafe usages". 4) Edit majordomo.cf. If this is a new install, copy sample.cf to majordomo.cf first. This .cf file is "require"ed into majordomo, so it needs to be valid Perl. Here are the important variables to set: $whereami What machine am I on? $whoami Who do users send requests to me as? $whoami_owner Who is the owner of the above, for problems? $homedir Where can I find my extra .pl files? $listdir Where are the mailing lists? $log Where do I write my log? $sendmail_command Where the sendmail program resides. $mailer What program and args do I use to send mail to the lists? $bounce_mailer What program and args do I use to send administrative messages? If this is an upgrade, examine sample.cf for new configuration variables to place in your existing majordomo.cf. Alternately, running config-test after the installation is complete will show all the variables that are missing. 5) Do a 'make wrapper' to verify that the wrapper program compiles cleanly. 6) Do a 'make install' to install the Majordomo programs. This must be done either as root or as the Majordomo user in order to properly set the ownership of the various files and directories. 7) Do a 'make install-wrapper' as root to install the wrapper. This must be done as root because wrapper must be installed setuid and on POSIX systems must be owned by root. The wrapper takes care to severely restrict the programs which may be run by it and further restricts the environment those programs run with. 8) Add the majordomo-related aliases to your Sendmail alias file. This can either be /etc/aliases, or if you are using a more recent version of Sendmail (8.6 or above) a cleaner approach is to add an alias file specifically for Majordomo aliases by adding another "OA" line to /etc/sendmail.cf: OA/path/to/majordomo/majordomo.aliases If you use the M4 configuration system of recent sendmails, you can add the following line to your .mc file to achieve the same effect: define(`ALIAS_FILE',`/etc/aliases,/path/to/majordomo/majordomo.aliases') Whichever method chosen, add the following aliases for Majordomo itself: majordomo: "|/path/to/majordomo/wrapper majordomo" owner-majordomo: you, majordomo-owner: you Note the program name (majordomo) after wrapper must not be a full path name. Also look at 'majordomo.aliases' for additional examples. 9) Chdir to the Majordomo home and (as a regular, unprivileged user, not the Majordomo user or root) run the configuration test script: % cd /path/to/majordomo % ./wrapper config-test This should check for the proper configuration of Majordomo. Fix any errors, and run again. When the process is complete and there are no errors, config-test will offer to register your installation of Majordomo by sending information on your operating system, your Perl version, and the address of the Majordomo owner to the Majordomo maintainers. A copy of the message will also be sent to the Majordomo owner at your site. Note that if you have a setup which uses more than one configuration file, you can have config-test check them by calling it with the name of an alternate configuration file, like so: % ./wrapper config-test alternate.cf 10) Test the configuration again by creating an empty file 'test' in $listdir, and issue a 'lists' command to Majordomo: % touch /path/to/majordomo/lists/test % echo 'lists' | mail majordomo If everything is working correctly, you should get a message back from Majordomo, and not Mailer-Daemon. 11) Browse the Frequently Asked Questions (Doc/FAQ), it can answer many questions that you might have. That's it! To create new lists, read the NEWLIST file.