UNIX has traditionally delivered mail into a central spool directory, /var/spool/mail. (The original name was /usr/spool/mail; some systems now use /var/mail.) There are two basic problems with /var/spool/mail: * It's slow. On systems with thousands of users, /var/spool/mail has thousands of entries. A few UNIX systems support fast operations on large directories, but most don't. * It's insecure. Writing code that works safely in a world-writable directory is not easy. See, for example, CERT advisory 95:02. These may not be problems at your site, so you may want to leave your mailboxes in /var/spool/mail. This file explains several ways that you can configure qmail to use existing /var/spool/mail delivery tools. Please note that I do not vouch for the security or reliability of any of those tools. 1. What to configure The qmail system is started from /var/qmail/rc with qmail-start ./Mailbox splogger qmail The first argument to qmail-start, ./Mailbox, is the default delivery instruction. You can change it to run a program such as binmail or procmail. (See dot-qmail.0 for the format of delivery instructions.) 2. Using procmail You may already have installed procmail for mail filtering. procmail delivers to /var/spool/mail by default. To set up qmail to use procmail, simply copy /var/qmail/boot/proc to /var/qmail/rc. Note that procmail must be in your system's boot PATH; if it isn't, you will have edit /var/qmail/rc to include the full path. 3. Using sendmail's delivery agent sendmail uses binmail to deliver to /var/spool/mail. binmail is shipped with the operating system as /bin/mail or /usr/libexec/mail.local. There is some variation in binmail syntax among systems. The most common interfaces are shown in /var/qmail/boot/binm1, /var/qmail/boot/binm2, and /var/qmail/boot/binm3.