eslack dot org> in private email.
Changes:
Version 1.0.0:
- New feature: tilde expansion for filenames in the configuration file
Version 0.7.2:
- This version adds native support for Windows 9x/ME/NT/2000/XP/2003
(with MinGW) and DOS (with DJGPP and the Watt32 library).
Version 0.7.1:
- New command: 'domain'
- New options: --pretend and --debug
Version 0.7.0:
- Support for DSN (Delivery Status Notifications) was added via
the new commands 'dsn_notify' and 'dsn_return'.
- The 'tls_nocertcheck' command was added. It disables all server
certificate checks. Use it if you get certificate check errors but
still want to use the SMTP server with TLS/SSL.
- The 'nostarttls' command is now called 'tls_nostarttls'.
Please update your configuration file.
Version 0.6.5:
- License clarification:
msmtp is released under the GPL with the additional exemption that
compiling, linking, and/or using OpenSSL is allowed.
- If you want to use GnuTLS instead of OpenSSL, you will now need
GnuTLS >= 1.0.0 and libgcrypt >= 1.1.90!
- msmtp now works on systems that lack IPv6 support
- msmtp now accepts arbitrary long lines in mails
Version 0.6.4:
- fixed configuration file code
Version 0.6.3:
- portability fix for Mac OS X (Randolph Fritz)
- fixed --disable-gsasl configure option
- man page improvements
Version 0.6.2:
- use GNU Autotools (Christophe Nowicki)
- fixed wildcard support in server certificate's Common Name field
Version 0.6.1:
- improved certificate check/verification with OpenSSL
- code cleanups
Version 0.6.0:
- Added sanity checks of server certificate when using TLS
- Strict server certificate verification with tls_trust_file command
- Possibility to send client certificate if requested (tls_key_file and
tls_cert_file commands)
- Optional support for GnuTLS instead of OpenSSL
- Optional support for GSASL (adds DIGEST-MD5 and NTLM authentication methods)
- Arguments in the configuration file may now contain blanks
- Removed the possibility to choose the TLS version with the tls command
- Proper recognition of server capabilities (EHLO response)
Bryan Carter Vyhmeister in PR 22840.
and probably other MUAs (mail user agents). msmtp forwards mails
to an SMTP server (for example at a free mail provider) which does
the delivery.
Features include:
* SMTP AUTH methods PLAIN, LOGIN and CRAM-MD5
* TLS encrypted connections
* IPv6 support
* robustness
* detailed error messages (including the full answer of the
SMTP server) if something goes wrong
* sendmail compatible exit codes (which most MUAs understand).
Simply tell your MUA to call msmtp instead of /usr/sbin/sendmail.