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CentOS 7 Linux Server Cookbook, Second Edition

You're reading from   CentOS 7 Linux Server Cookbook, Second Edition Get your CentOS server up and running with this collection of more than 80 recipes created for CentOS 7 - essential for Linux fans!

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785887284
Length 326 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Jonathan Hobson Jonathan Hobson
Author Profile Icon Jonathan Hobson
Jonathan Hobson
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing CentOS FREE CHAPTER 2. Configuring the System 3. Managing the System 4. Managing Packages with YUM 5. Administering the Filesystem 6. Providing Security 7. Building a Network 8. Working with FTP 9. Working with Domains 10. Working with Databases 11. Providing Mail Services 12. Providing Web Services 13. Operating System-Level Virtualization 14. Working with SELinux 15. Monitoring IT Infrastructure Index

Working with Postfix

In a previous recipe, we learned how to install and configure Postfix as our domain-wide e-mail server. When it comes to working with e-mails, there are lots of different tools and programs available for Linux and we already showed you how to send e-mails through the sendmail program as well as the swaks utility. Here in this recipe, we will show you how to work with one of the most commonly used mail utilities in Unix and Linux, called mailx, which has some useful features missing in the sendmail package for sending mails or reading your mailbox.

How to do it...

We will begin this recipe by installing the mailx package on our server running our domain-wide Postfix service, as it is not available on CentOS 7 by default.

  1. Begin by logging in as root and typing the following command:
    yum install mailx
    
  2. The easiest way is to use mailx with its standard input mode, as follows:
    echo "this is the mail body." | mail -s "subject" john@centos7.home
    
  3. You can also...
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