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MSMTP(1)							      MSMTP(1)

NAME
       msmtp - An SMTP client

SYNOPSIS
       Sendmail mode (default):
	      msmtp [option...] [--] recipient...
	      msmtp [option...] -t [--] [recipient...]

       Server information mode:
	      msmtp [option...] --serverinfo

       Remote Message Queue Starting mode:
	      msmtp [option...] --rmqs=host|@domain|#queue

DESCRIPTION
       In  the	default	 sendmail mode, msmtp reads a mail from standard input
       and sends it to an SMTP server for delivery.
       In server information mode, msmtp  prints  information  about  an  SMTP
       server.
       In  Remote  Message  Queue  Starting mode, msmtp sends a Remote Message
       Queue Starting request for a host, domain, or queue to an SMTP server.

EXIT STATUS
       The standard sendmail exit status codes are used, as defined in	sysex‐
       its.h.

OPTIONS
       Options override configuration file settings.
       They are compatible with sendmail where appropriate.

       General options

	      --version
		     Print  version  information.  This	 includes  information
		     about the library used for TLS/SSL support (if any),  the
		     library used for authentication, the authentication mech‐
		     anisms supported by this library, and the	default	 loca‐
		     tions of the system and user configuration files.

	      --help Print help.

	      -P, --pretend
		     Print  the configuration settings that would be used, but
		     do not take further action.  An asterisk  (`*')  will  be
		     printed instead of your password.

	      -v, -d, --debug
		     Print  lots of debugging information, including the whole
		     conversation with the SMTP server. Be careful  with  this
		     option:  the  (potentially	 dangerous) output will not be
		     sanitized, and your password may get printed in an easily
		     decodable format!

       Changing the mode of operation

	      -S, --serverinfo
		     Print  information	 about	the SMTP server and exit. This
		     includes information about supported features (mail  size
		     limit,  authentication,  TLS, DSN, ...) and about the TLS
		     certificate (if TLS is active).

	      --rmqs=(host|@domain|#queue)
		     Send a Remote Message  Queue  Starting  request  for  the
		     given host, domain, or queue to the SMTP server and exit.

       Configuration options

	      -C, --file=filename
		     Use the given file instead of ~/.msmtprc as the user con‐
		     figuration file.

	      -a, --account=account_name
		     Use the  given  account  instead  of  the	account	 named
		     "default".	 The  settings	of this account may be changed
		     with command line options. This  option  cannot  be  used
		     together with the --host option.

	      --host=hostname
		     Use this SMTP server with settings from the command line;
		     do not use any configuration file data. This option  can‐
		     not be used together with the --account option.

	      --port=number
		     Set  the  port number to connect to. See the port command
		     below.

	      --timeout=(off|seconds)
		     Set a network timeout. See the timeout command below. For
		     compatibility  with  older versions, --connect-timeout is
		     accepted as an alias for this option.

	      --protocol=(smtp|lmtp)
		     Set the protocol to use. See the protocol command below.

	      --auth[=(on|off|method)]
		     Enable or	disable	 authentication.  You  can  optionally
		     choose the method. See the auth command below.

	      --user=[username]
		     Set  or  unset  the user name for authentication. See the
		     user command below.

	      --passwordeval=[eval]
		     Set your password for SMTP authentication to  the	output
		     (stdout) of the execution of eval.

	      --tls[=(on|off)]
		     Enable or disable TLS/SSL encryption. See the tls command
		     below.

	      --tls-starttls[=(on|off)]
		     Enable or disable STARTTLS for TLS	 encryption.  See  the
		     tls_starttls command below.

	      --tls-trust-file=[file]
		     Set  or  unset  a	trust file for TLS encryption. See the
		     tls_trust_file command below.

	      --tls-crl-file=[file]
		     Set or unset a certificate revocation list (CRL) file for
		     TLS. See the tls_crl_file command below.

	      --tls-fingerprint=[fingerprint]
		     Set  ot  unset  the fingerprint of a trusted TLS certifi‐
		     cate. See the tls_fingerprint command below.

	      --tls-key-file=[file]
		     Set or unset a key	 file  for  TLS	 encryption.  See  the
		     tls_key_file command below.

	      --tls-cert-file=[file]
		     Set  or  unset  a	cert  file for TLS encryption. See the
		     tls_cert_file command below.

	      --tls-certcheck[=(on|off)]
		     Enable or	disable	 server	 certificate  checks  for  TLS
		     encryption. See the tls_certcheck command below.

	      --tls-force-sslv3[=(on|off)]
		     Force TLS/SSL version SSLv3. See the tls_force_sslv3 com‐
		     mand below.

	      --tls-min-dh-prime-bits=[bits]
		     Set or unset minimum bit size of the Diffie-Hellman  (DH)
		     prime. See the tls_min_dh_prime_bits command below.

	      --tls-priorities=[priorities]
		     Set  or unset TLS priorities. See the tls_priorities com‐
		     mand below.

	      --domain=[string]
		     Set the argument of the SMTP EHLO (or LMTP LHLO) command.
		     See the domain command below.

       Options specific to sendmail mode

	      --auto-from[=(on|off)]
		     Enable  or disable automatic envelope-from addresses. The
		     default is off.  See the auto_from command below.

	      -f, --from=address
		     Set the envelope-from  address.  It  is  only  used  when
		     auto_from is off.
		     If	 no account was chosen yet (with --account or --host),
		     this option will choose the first account	that  has  the
		     given  envelope-from address (set with the from command).
		     If no such account is found, "default" is used.

	      --maildomain=[domain]
		     Set  the  domain	part   for   generated	 envelope-from
		     addresses.	 It is only used when auto_from is on. See the
		     maildomain command below.

	      -N, --dsn-notify=(off|cond)
		     Set  or  unset  DSN  notification	conditions.  See   the
		     dsn_notify command below.

	      -R, --dsn-return=(off|ret)
		     Set  or  unset  the  DSN  notification  amount.  See  the
		     dsn_return command below.	Note that hdrs is accepted  as
		     an alias for headers to be compatible with sendmail.

	      --keepbcc[=(on|off)]
		     Enable or disable the preservation of the Bcc header. See
		     the keepbcc command below.

	      -X, --logfile=[file]
		     Set or unset the log file. See the logfile command below.

	      --syslog[=(on|off|facility)]
		     Enable or disable syslog logging. See the syslog  command
		     below.

	      -t, --read-recipients
		     Read recipient addresses from the To, Cc, and Bcc headers
		     of the mail in addition to the recipients	given  on  the
		     command  line.   If any Resent- headers are present, then
		     the addresses from any Resent-To, Resent-Cc, and  Resent-
		     Bcc  headers  in  the  first block of Resent- headers are
		     used instead.

	      --read-envelope-from
		     Read the envelope from address from the  From  header  of
		     the mail.

	      --aliases=[file]
		     Set  or  unset  an	 aliases file. See the aliases command
		     below.

	      --     This marks the end of options.  All  following  arguments
		     will  be  treated	as  recipient  addresses, even if they
		     start with a `-'.

       The following options are accepted but ignored for sendmail compatibil‐
       ity:
       -Btype,	-bm, -Fname, -G, -hN, -i, -L tag, -m, -n, -O option=value, -ox
       value

USAGE
       Normally, a system wide configuration file and/or a user	 configuration
       file contain information about which SMTP server to use (and how to use
       it), but almost all settings can also  be  configured  on  the  command
       line.

       Information  about  SMTP servers is organized in accounts. Each account
       describes one SMTP server: host name, authentication settings, TLS set‐
       tings,  and  so	on.   Each  configuration  file	 can  define  multiple
       accounts.

       In sendmail mode, an envelope-from address is necessary to  send	 mail.
       This  is	 the mail address that will be presented to the SMTP server as
       the originator of the mail.  Envelope-from addresses can	 be  generated
       automatically  (when  auto_from	is enabled) or set explicitly with the
       from command or --from option. When auto_from is enabled, an  envelope-
       from address of the form user@domain will be generated.	The local part
       will be set to USER or, if that fails, to LOGNAME or, if that fails, to
       the  login  name	 of the current user.  The domain part can be set with
       the maildomain command.	If the maildomain is empty, the	 envelope-from
       address will only consist of the user name and not have a domain part.

       The user can choose which account to use in one of three ways:

       --account=id
	      Use the given account. Command line settings override configura‐
	      tion file settings.

       --host=hostname
	      Use only the settings from the command line; do not use any con‐
	      figuration file data.

       --from=address or --read-envelope-from
	      Choose  the  first account from the system or user configuration
	      file that has a matching envelope-from address as specified by a
	      from  command. This works only when neither --account nor --host
	      is used.

       If none of the above options is used (or if no account has  a  matching
       from command), then the account "default" is used.

       Skip to the EXAMPLES section for a quick start.

CONFIGURATION FILES
       If  it  exists  and  is	readable,  a  system  wide  configuration file
       SYSCONFDIR/msmtprc will be loaded, where	 SYSCONFDIR  depends  on  your
       platform.  Use --version to find out which directory is used.
       If  it exists and is readable, a user configuration file will be loaded
       (~/.msmtprc by default). Accounts defined  in  the  user	 configuration
       file  override  accounts	 from the system configuration file.  The user
       configuration file must have no more permissions than user  read/write.
       Configuration  data  from  either  file	can be changed by command line
       options.

       A configuration file is a simple text file.  Empty  lines  and  comment
       lines (whose first non-blank character is `#') are ignored.
       Every  other line must contain a command and may contain an argument to
       that command.
       The argument may be enclosed in double quotes ("), for example  if  its
       first or last character is a blank.
       If  the first character of a filename is the tilde (~), this tilde will
       be replaced by HOME.  If a command accepts the  argument	 on,  it  also
       accepts an empty argument and treats that as if it was on.
       Commands	 form  groups.	Each group begins with the account command and
       defines the settings for one SMTP server.

       Skip to the EXAMPLES section for a quick start.

       Commands are as follows:

       defaults
	      Set defaults. The	 following  configuration  commands  will  set
	      default values for all following account definitions in the cur‐
	      rent configuration file.

       account name [:account[,...]]
	      Start a new account definition with the given name. The  current
	      default values are filled in.
	      If  a  colon  and a list of previously defined accounts is given
	      after the account name, the new  account,	 with  the  filled  in
	      default  values,	will inherit all settings from the accounts in
	      the list.

       host hostname
	      The SMTP server to send the mail to.  The argument may be a host
	      name  or	a network address.  Every account definition must con‐
	      tain this command.

       port number
	      The port that the SMTP server listens on.	 The default port will
	      be  acquired  from your operating system's service database: for
	      SMTP, the service is "smtp" (default port 25), unless TLS	 with‐
	      out  STARTTLS  is	 used,	in which case it is "ssmtp" (465). For
	      LMTP, it is "lmtp".

       timeout (off|seconds)
	      Set or unset a network timeout, in  seconds.  The	 argument  off
	      means  that no timeout will be set, which means that the operat‐
	      ing system default will be used.
	      For  compatibility  with	older  versions,  connect_timeout   is
	      accepted as an alias for this command.

       protocol (smtp|lmtp)
	      Set  the	protocol to use. Currently only SMTP and LMTP are sup‐
	      ported. SMTP is the default. See	the  port  command  above  for
	      default ports.

       auto_from [(on|off)]
	      Enable or disable automatic envelope-from addresses. The default
	      is off.  When enabled, an	 envelope-from	address	 of  the  form
	      user@domain  will	 be  generated.	 The local part will be set to
	      USER or, if that fails, to LOGNAME or, if	 that  fails,  to  the
	      login name of the current user.  The domain part can be set with
	      the maildomain command.  If the maildomain is empty,  the	 enve‐
	      lope-from	 address  will	only  consist of the user name and not
	      have a domain part. When auto_from is  disabled,	the  envelope-
	      from address must be set explicitly.

       from envelope_from
	      Set  the	envelope-from  address. This address will only be used
	      when auto_from is off.

       maildomain [domain]
	      Set a  domain  part  for	the  generation	 of  an	 envelope-from
	      address.	This is only used when auto_from is on. The domain may
	      be empty.

       auth [(on|off|method)]
	      This command enables or disables SMTP authentication. You should
	      not need to set the method yourself; with the argument on, msmtp
	      will choose the best one available for you (see below).
	      You probably need to set a username  (with  user)	 and  password
	      (with password).	If no password is set but one is needed during
	      authentication, msmtp will try to find it in ~/.netrc.  If  that
	      fails, it will try to find it in SYSCONFDIR/netrc (use --version
	      to find out what SYSCONFDIR is on your platform). If that fails,
	      it  will try to get it from a system specific keyring (if avail‐
	      able). If that fails but a controlling  terminal	is  available,
	      msmtp will prompt you for it.
	      Currently	 supported  keyrings are the Gnome Keyring and the Mac
	      OS X Keychain.  The script msmtp-gnome-tool.py can  be  used  to
	      manage  Gnome  Keyring  passwords	 for msmtp. To manage Mac OS X
	      Keychain passwords, use the Keychain Access GUI application. The
	      account  name  is	 same as the msmtp user argument. The keychain
	      item name is  smtp://<hostname>  where  <hostname>  matches  the
	      msmtp host argument.
	      Available	  authentication   methods   are  plain,  scram-sha-1,
	      cram-md5, gssapi, external, digest-md5, login, and  ntlm.	  Note
	      that one or more of these methods may be unavailable due to lack
	      of support in the underlying  authentication  library.  Use  the
	      --version option to find out which methods are supported.
	      The  plain  and  login  methods send your authentication data in
	      cleartext over the net, and the ntlm method may be vulnerable to
	      attacks.	 These	methods should therefore only be used together
	      with the tls command.
	      If you don't choose the method yourself, msmtp chooses the  best
	      secure  method  that the SMTP server supports. Secure means that
	      your authentication data will not be sent in cleartext (or in an
	      easily decryptable form) over the net. For TLS encrypted connec‐
	      tions, every authentication method is secure in this sense.   If
	      TLS  is  not  active, only gssapi, scram-sha-1, and cram-md5 are
	      secure in this sense.
	      The external is special: the actual authentication happens  out‐
	      side  of	the  SMTP  protocol, typically by sending a TLS client
	      certificate (see the tls_cert_file command). The external method
	      merely confirms that this authentication succeeded for the given
	      user (or, if no user name is given, confirms that authentication
	      succeeded).  This	 authentication method is not chosen automati‐
	      cally; you have to request it manually.

       user [username]
	      Set your user name for SMTP authentication.  An  empty  argument
	      unsets  the user name. Authentication must be activated with the
	      auth command.

       password [secret]
	      Set your password for SMTP  authentication.  An  empty  argument
	      unsets  the  password. Authentication must be activated with the
	      auth command.  If no password is set but one  is	needed	during
	      authentication,  msmtp will try to find it. First, if passworde‐
	      val is set, it will evaluate that command.  If  passwordeval  is
	      not  set,	 msmtp	will try to find the password in ~/.netrc.  If
	      that fails, it will try to  find	it  in	SYSCONFDIR/netrc  (use
	      --version	 to  find out what SYSCONFDIR is on your platform). If
	      that fails, it will try to get it from a	system	specific  key‐
	      chain  (if  available). If that fails but a controlling terminal
	      is available, msmtp will prompt you for it.

       passwordeval [eval]
	      Set your password for SMTP authentication to the output (stdout)
	      of the execution of eval.

       ntlmdomain [domain]
	      Set  a domain for the ntlm authentication method. The default is
	      to use no domain (equivalent to an  empty	 argument),  but  some
	      servers seem to require one, even if it is an arbitrary string.

       tls [(on|off)]
	      This  command  enables  or  disables  TLS	 (also	known  as SSL)
	      encrypted connections to the SMTP server. Not every server  sup‐
	      ports TLS.
	      With  TLS/SSL,  the connection with the SMTP server will be pro‐
	      tected against eavesdroppers and man-in-the-middle  attacks.  To
	      use  TLS/SSL,  it	 is  required to either use the tls_trust_file
	      command (highly recommended) or to disable tls_certcheck.

       tls_starttls [(on|off)]
	      By default, TLS encryption is activated using the STARTTLS  SMTP
	      command.	 By  disabling	this,  TLS  encryption	is immediately
	      started  instead	(this  is  known  as  SMTP  tunneled   through
	      TLS/SSL). The default port is set to 465 for this mode of opera‐
	      tion.
	      For  compatibility  with	older  versions,   tls_nostarttls   is
	      accepted as an alias for tls_starttls off.

       tls_trust_file [file]
	      This command activates strict server certificate verification.
	      The  filename  must  be  the absolute path name of a file in PEM
	      format containing one or more certificates of trusted Certifica‐
	      tion Authorities (CAs).
	      On  Debian  based	 systems,  you can install the ca-certificates
	      package and use the file /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt.

       tls_crl_file [file]
	      This command sets or unsets a certificate revocation list	 (CRL)
	      file  for TLS, to be used during strict server certificate veri‐
	      fication as enabled by the tls_trust_file command.  This	allows
	      the verification procedure to detect revoked certificates.

       tls_fingerprint [fingerprint]
	      This  command sets or unsets the fingerprint of a particular TLS
	      certificate.  This certificate will then be trusted,  regardless
	      of  its  contents. This can be used to trust broken certificates
	      (e.g. with a  non-matching  hostname)  or	 in  situations	 where
	      tls_trust_file cannot be used for some reason.
	      You  can give either an SHA1 (recommended) or an MD5 fingerprint
	      in the format 01:23:45:67:...
	      You can use --serverinfo --tls --tls-certcheck=off  to  get  the
	      peer certificate's fingerprints.

       tls_key_file [file]
	      This  command  (together with the tls_cert_file command) enables
	      msmtp to send  a	client	certificate  to	 the  SMTP  server  if
	      requested.   The file must contain the private key of a certifi‐
	      cate in PEM format.  An empty argument disables this feature.

       tls_cert_file [file]
	      This command (together with the  tls_key_file  command)  enables
	      msmtp  to	 send  a  client  certificate  to  the	SMTP server if
	      requested.  The file must contain a certificate in  PEM  format.
	      An empty argument disables this feature.

       tls_certcheck [(on|off)]
	      This  command enables or disables checks for the server certifi‐
	      cate.
	      WARNING: When the checks are disabled, TLS/SSL sessions will  be
	      vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks!
	      For   compatibility  with	 older	versions,  tls_nocertcheck  is
	      accepted as an alias for tls_certcheck off.

       tls_force_sslv3 [(on|off)]
	      Force TLS/SSL version SSLv3. This might be  needed  to  use  SSL
	      with  some  old  and  broken servers. Do not use this unless you
	      have to.

       tls_min_dh_prime_bits [bits]
	      Set or unset the minimum number  of  Diffie-Hellman  (DH)	 prime
	      bits  that  msmtp	 will accept for TLS sessions.	The default is
	      set by the TLS library and can be selected  by  using  an	 empty
	      argument	to  this command.  Only lower the default (for example
	      to 512 bits) if there is no other way to make TLS work with  the
	      remote server.

       tls_priorities [priorities]
	      Set  the priorities for TLS sessions.  The default is set by the
	      TLS library and can be selected by using an  empty  argument  to
	      this  command.   Currently  this	command only works with suffi‐
	      ciently recent GnuTLS releases. See the GnuTLS documentation  of
	      the  gnutls_priority_init function for a description of the pri‐
	      orities string.

       dsn_notify (off|condition)
	      This command sets the condition(s) under which the  mail	system
	      should  send  DSN	 (Delivery  Status Notification) messages. The
	      argument off disables explicit DSN  requests,  which  means  the
	      mail  system  decides  when  to  send  DSN messages. This is the
	      default.	The condition must be never, to never request  notifi‐
	      cation, or a comma separated list (no spaces!) of one or more of
	      the following: failure, to request notification on  transmission
	      failure, delay, to be notified of message delays, success, to be
	      notified of successful transmission. The SMTP server  must  sup‐
	      port the DSN extension.

       dsn_return (off|amount)
	      This  command  controls how much of a mail should be returned in
	      DSN (Delivery Status Notification) messages.  The	 argument  off
	      disables	explicit  DSN  requests,  which	 means the mail system
	      decides how much of a mail it returns in DSN messages.  This  is
	      the  default.   The  amount  must be headers, to just return the
	      message headers, or full, to return the  full  mail.   The  SMTP
	      server must support the DSN extension.

       domain argument
	      Use  this	 command to set the argument of the SMTP EHLO (or LMTP
	      LHLO) command.  The default is localhost, which  is  stupid  but
	      usually  works.  Try to change the default if mails get rejected
	      due to anti-SPAM measures. Possible choices are the domain  part
	      of your mail address (provider.example for joe@provider.example)
	      or the fully qualified domain name of your host (if available).

       keepbcc [(on|off)]
	      This command controls whether to remove or keep the  Bcc	header
	      when sending a mail. The default is to remove it.

       logfile [file]
	      An empty argument disables logging (this is the default).
	      When  logging  is	 enabled  by  choosing	a log file, msmtp will
	      append one line to the log file for each mail it tries  to  send
	      via the account that this log file was chosen for.
	      The  line will include the following information: date and time,
	      host name of the SMTP server,  whether  TLS  was	used,  whether
	      authentication  was  used,  authentication  user	name  (only if
	      authentication  is  used),  envelope-from	  address,   recipient
	      addresses,  size	of the mail as transferred to the server (only
	      if the delivery succeeded), SMTP status code and SMTP error mes‐
	      sage (only in case of failure and only if available), error mes‐
	      sage (only in case of failure and only if available), exit  code
	      (from sysexits.h; EX_OK indicates success).
	      If  the filename is a dash (-), msmtp prints the log line to the
	      standard output.

       syslog [(on|off|facility)]
	      Enable or disable syslog logging. The facility  can  be  one  of
	      LOG_USER,	 LOG_MAIL, LOG_LOCAL0, ..., LOG_LOCAL7. The default is
	      LOG_USER.
	      Each time msmtp tries to send a mail via the account  that  con‐
	      tains  this  syslog command, it will log one entry to the syslog
	      service with the chosen facility.
	      The line will include the following information:	host  name  of
	      the  SMTP	 server,  whether TLS was used, whether authentication
	      was used, envelope-from address, recipient  addresses,  size  of
	      the mail as transferred to the server (only if the delivery suc‐
	      ceeded), SMTP status code and SMTP error message (only  in  case
	      of  failure  and only if available), error message (only in case
	      of failure and only if available), exit code  (from  sysexits.h;
	      EX_OK indicates success).

       aliases [file]
	      Replace  local  recipients  with	addresses in the aliases file.
	      The aliases file	is  a  plain  text  file  containing  mappings
	      between a local address and a list of domain addresses.  A local
	      address is defined as one without an `@' character and a	domain
	      address  is  one with an `@' character.  The mappings are of the
	      form:
		  local: someone@example.com, person@domain.example
	      Multiple domain addresses are separated with  commas.   Comments
	      start with `#' and continue to the end of the line.
	      The  local  address  default  has	 special  significance	and is
	      matched if the local address is not found in the	aliases	 file.
	      If  no default alias is found, then the local address is left as
	      is.
	      An empty argument to the aliases command disables	 the  replace‐
	      ment of local addresses.	This is the default.

EXAMPLES
       Configuration file

       # Set default values for all following accounts.
       defaults
       tls on
       tls_trust_file /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
       logfile ~/.msmtp.log

       # A freemail service
       account freemail
       host smtp.freemail.example
       from joe_smith@freemail.example
       auth on
       user joe.smith
       password secret

       # A second mail address at the same freemail service
       account freemail2 : freemail
       from joey@freemail.example

       # The SMTP server of the provider.
       account provider
       host mail.provider.example
       from smithjoe@provider.example
       auth on
       user 123456789
       passwordeval gpg -d ~/.msmtp.password.gpg

       # Set a default account
       account default : provider

       Using msmtp with Mutt

       Create  a  configuration	 file for msmtp and add the following lines to
       your Mutt configuration file:
       set sendmail="/path/to/msmtp"
       set use_from=yes
       set realname="Your Name"
       set from=you@example.com
       set envelope_from=yes
       The envelope_from=yes option lets Mutt use  the	-f  option  of	msmtp.
       Therefore msmtp chooses the first account that matches the from address
       you@example.com.
       Alternatively, you can use the -a option:
       set sendmail="/path/to/msmtp -a my-account"
       Or set everything from the command line (but note that you cannot set a
       password this way):
       set  sendmail="/path/to/msmtp  --host=mailhub  -f  me@example.com --tls
       --tls-trust-file=trust.crt"

       If you have multiple mail accounts in your msmtp configuration file and
       let  Mutt  use  the  -f	option to choose the right one, you can easily
       switch accounts in Mutt with the following Mutt configuration lines:
       macro generic "<esc>1" ":set from=you@example.com"
       macro generic "<esc>2" ":set from=you@your-employer.example"
       macro generic "<esc>3" ":set from=you@some-other-provider.example"

       Using msmtp with mail

       Define a default account, and put the following in your ~/.mailrc:
       set sendmail="/path/to/msmtp"

       Aliases file

       # Example aliases file

       # Send root to Joe and Jane
       root: joe_smith@example.com, jane_chang@example.com

       # Send cron to Mark
       cron: mark_jones@example.com

       # Send everything else to admin
       default: admin@domain.example

FILES
       SYSCONFDIR/msmtprc
	      System configuration  file.  Use	--version  to  find  out  what
	      SYSCONFDIR is on your platform.

       ~/.msmtprc
	      User configuration file.

       ~/.netrc and SYSCONFDIR/netrc
	      The  netrc file contains login information. If a password is not
	      found in	the  configuration  file,  msmtp  will	search	it  in
	      ~/.netrc	and SYSCONFDIR/netrc before prompting the user for it.
	      The syntax of netrc files is described in netrc(5) or ftp(1).

ENVIRONMENT
       USER, LOGNAME
	      These variables override the user's login name when constructing
	      an envelope-from address. LOGNAME is only used if USER is unset.

       TMPDIR Directory to create temporary files in. If this is unset, a sys‐
	      tem specific default directory is used.
	      A temporary file is only created when  the  -t/--read-recipients
	      or --read-envelope-from option is used. The file is then used to
	      buffer the headers of the mail (but not the body,	 so  the  file
	      won't get very large).

       EMAIL, SMTPSERVER
	      These  environment variables are used only if neither --host nor
	      --account is used and there is no default account defined in the
	      configuration  files.  In this case, the host name is taken from
	      SMTPSERVER, and the envelope from address is taken  from	EMAIL,
	      unless  overridden  by --from or --read-envelope-from. Currently
	      SMTPSERVER must contain a plain host name (no  URL),  and	 EMAIL
	      must  contain  a	plain address (no names or additional informa‐
	      tion).

AUTHORS
       msmtp was written by Martin Lambers <marlam@marlam.de>.
       Other authors are listed in the AUTHORS file in	the  source  distribu‐
       tion.

SEE ALSO
       mutt(1), mail(1), sendmail(8), netrc(5) or ftp(1)

				    2012-05			      MSMTP(1)
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