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Many site administrators (and the persons they work for) are interested in the
volume of mail passing to, from, and through the local site. There are a
number of ways to quantify mail traffic.
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Sendmail comes with a utility called mailstats that reads a
file called /usr/local/lib/mail/sendmail.st and reports
the number of messages and number of bytes transferred by each
of the mailers used in the sendmail.cf file. This
file must be created by the local administrator manually for
sendmail logging to occur. The running totals are cleared by
removing and recreating the sendmail.st file. One way
is to do the following:
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Probably the best way to do quality reporting regarding who uses mail
and how much volume passes to, from, and through the local system is
to turn on mail debugging with syslogd(8). Generally, this
means running the /etc/syslogd daemon from your system startup
file (which you should be doing anyway), and adding a line to
/etc/syslog.conf(5) that looks something like the following:
If you use mail.debug and get any medium to high mail
volume, the syslog output can get quite large. Output files from
syslogd generally need to be rotated or purged on a routine
basis from crond(8).
There are a number of commonly available utilities that can summarize
the output of mail logging from syslogd. One of the more well known
utilities is syslog-stat.pl, a perl script that is
distributed with the sendmail+IDA sources.
Andrew Anderson
Thu Mar 7 23:22:06 EST 1996