Setting up an RT queue and a Mailman list to work together
Revision as of 12:59, 27 June 2013 by Ryan52 (talk | contribs) (→On wasp (mailman server): use RT queue specific in mailman whitelist)
How to set up a queue and email list for FOOBAR:
On wasp (mailman server)
- Set up the mailman list FOOBAR@lists.freegeek.org
- Goto "http://lists.freegeek.org/admin/FOOBAR/privacy/sender" and add the following to the "List of non-member addresses whose postings should be automatically accepted." field:
- FOOBAR@todo.freegeek.org
- FOOBAR-comment@todo.freegeek.org
- Privacy->Sender page should be set to allow implicit addresses
On george (mail server) as root
- Add an alias to to the LDAP database like this:
./ldap-addalias.sh FOOBAR FOOBAR@todo.freegeek.org
On art (RT server) as root
- Add email aliases to /etc/aliases/ like this:
FOOBAR: "|/usr/bin/rt-mailgate --queue FOOBAR --action correspond --url http://localhost/rt/" FOOBAR-comment: "|/usr/bin/rt-mailgate --queue FOOBAR --action comment --url http://localhost/rt/"
- Run this command:
newaliases
In RT as an administrator
- Create a user:
- Username = FOOBAR-user
- Email address = FOOBAR@lists.freegeek.org
- Real name = Fake FOOBAR user
- Allow the user to be granted rights
- Set up a queue called FOOBAR and:
- Give the appropriate group (probably fgcore) the regular RT Permissions
- Add FOOBAR-user as an admin-cc watcher to the FOOBAR queue
- Give FOOBAR-user the right to create and reply to tickets
Test it
- Send a message to FOOBAR@freegeek.org
- Wait a while and check the FOOBAR RT queue
- Check the mailman archives for FOOBAR