Here's how to remove sendmail from your system. 1. Find sendmail in your boot scripts. It's usually in either /etc/rc or /etc/init.d/sendmail. It looks like sendmail -bd -q15m -q15m means that it should run the queue every 15 minutes; you may see a different number. Comment out this line. 2. Kill the sendmail daemon. You should first kill -STOP the daemon; if any children are running, you should kill -CONT, wait, kill -STOP again, and repeat ad nauseam. If there aren't any children, kill -TERM and then kill -CONT. 3. Check whether you have any messages in the sendmail queue, /var/spool/mqueue. If you do, you will have to try flushing them with sendmail.bak -q. If necessary, wait a while and run sendmail.bak -q again. Repeat until the queue is empty. This may take several days. 4. Remove the setuid bit on the sendmail binary, to prevent local users from gaining extra privileges through sendmail's security holes. The binary may be at several different locations: # chmod 0 /usr/lib/sendmail # chmod 0 /usr/sbin/sendmail # chmod 0 /usr/lib/sendmail.mx 5. Move the sendmail binary out of the way: # mv /usr/lib/sendmail /usr/lib/sendmail.bak # mv /usr/sbin/sendmail /usr/sbin/sendmail.bak