#!/bin/sh cat <<'EOF' <!doctype html public "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> <html> <head> <title>Postfix Small/Home Office Hints and Tips</title> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> </head> <body> <h1><img src="postfix-logo.jpg" width="203" height="98" ALT="">Postfix Small/Home Office Hints and Tips</h1> <hr> <h2>Overview</h2> <p> This document combines hints and tips for "small office/home office" applications into one document so that they are easier to find. The text describes the mail sending side only. If your machine does not receive mail directly (i.e. it does not have its own Internet domain name and its own fixed IP address), then you will need a solution such as "fetchmail", which is outside the scope of the Postfix documentation. </p> <ul> <li> <p> Selected topics from the STANDARD_CONFIGURATION_README document: </p> <ul> <li><a href="#stand_alone">Postfix on a stand-alone Internet host</a> <li><a href="#fantasy">Postfix on hosts without a real Internet hostname</a> </ul> <p> Selected topics from the SASL_README document: </p> <ul> <li><a href="#client_sasl_enable">Enabling SASL authentication in the Postfix SMTP client</a></li> <li><a href="#client_sasl_sender">Configuring Sender-Dependent SASL authentication </a></li> </ul> </ul> <p> See the SASL_README and STANDARD_CONFIGURATION_README documents for further information on these topics. </p> EOF sed -n '/^<h2><a name="stand_alone">/,${ /^<h2><a name="null_client">/q p }' STANDARD_CONFIGURATION_README.html sed -n '/^<h2><a name="fantasy">/,${ /^<\/body>/q p }' STANDARD_CONFIGURATION_README.html sed -n '/^<h3><a name="client_sasl_enable"/,${ /^<h3><a name="client_sasl_policy"/q s/h3>/h2>/g p }' SASL_README.html cat <<'EOF' </body> </html> EOF |