dwww Home | Manual pages | Find package

mailaddr(7)            Miscellaneous Information Manual            mailaddr(7)

NAME
       mailaddr - mail addressing description

DESCRIPTION
       This  manual page gives a brief introduction to SMTP mail addresses, as
       used on the Internet.  These addresses are in the general format

           user@domain

       where a domain is a  hierarchical  dot-separated  list  of  subdomains.
       These examples are valid forms of the same address:

           john.doe@monet.example.com
           John Doe <john.doe@monet.example.com>
           john.doe@monet.example.com (John Doe)

       The  domain  part ("monet.example.com") is a mail-accepting domain.  It
       can be a host and in the past it usually was, but it  doesn't  have  to
       be.  The domain part is not case sensitive.

       The local part ("john.doe") is often a username, but its meaning is de-
       fined by the local software.  Sometimes it is case sensitive,  although
       that  is  unusual.  If you see a local-part that looks like garbage, it
       is usually because of a gateway between an internal e-mail  system  and
       the net, here are some examples:

           "surname/admd=telemail/c=us/o=hp/prmd=hp"@some.where
           USER%SOMETHING@some.where
           machine!machine!name@some.where
           I2461572@some.where

       (These  are,  respectively, an X.400 gateway, a gateway to an arbitrary
       internal mail system that lacks proper internet support, an UUCP  gate-
       way, and the last one is just boring username policy.)

       The  real-name  part ("John Doe") can either be placed before <>, or in
       () at the end.  (Strictly speaking the two aren't  the  same,  but  the
       difference  is beyond the scope of this page.)  The name may have to be
       quoted using "", for example, if it contains ".":

           "John Q. Doe" <john.doe@monet.example.com>

   Abbreviation
       Some mail systems let users abbreviate the domain name.  For  instance,
       users at example.com may get away with "john.doe@monet" to send mail to
       John Doe.  This behavior is deprecated.  Sometimes it  works,  but  you
       should not depend on it.

   Route-addrs
       In the past, sometimes one had to route a message through several hosts
       to get it to its final destination.  Addresses which show these  relays
       are termed "route-addrs".  These use the syntax:

           <@hosta,@hostb:user@hostc>

       This  specifies that the message should be sent to hosta, from there to
       hostb, and finally to hostc.  Many hosts disregard route-addrs and send
       directly to hostc.

       Route-addrs are very unusual now.  They occur sometimes in old mail ar-
       chives.  It is generally possible to ignore all  but  the  "user@hostc"
       part of the address to determine the actual address.

   Postmaster
       Every  site  is required to have a user or user alias designated "post-
       master" to which problems with the mail system may be  addressed.   The
       "postmaster" address is not case sensitive.

FILES
       /etc/aliases
       ~/.forward

SEE ALSO
       mail(1), aliases(5), forward(5), sendmail(8)

       IETF RFC 5322 ⟨http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5322.txt⟩

4.2 Berkeley Distribution         2023-02-05                       mailaddr(7)

Generated by dwww version 1.15 on Sun Jun 23 21:10:24 CEST 2024.