How to make crontab email me with output?

In the end I used sSMTP. It's far, far simpler than either Postfix or sendmail and does the job beautifully.

For future reference, here's how to use sSMTP with Yahoo Mail (don't worry, it's far less complex than it looks):

  • Use Synaptic to download ssmtp. Alternatively you could run sudo apt-get install ssmtp.

  • Open the config file at /etc/ssmtp/ssmtp.conf.

  • Make the config look like this:

    root=[[email protected]]
    mailhub=smtp.mail.yahoo.com:587
    FromLineOverride=YES
    UseSTARTTLS=YES
    AuthUser=[[email protected]]
    AuthPass=[yourRealYahooPassword]
    TLS_CA_File=~/cert.pem
    
  • Create the cert.pem file with OpenSSL. I used the command openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout key.pem -out cert.pem -days 9999 -nodes (more info at How to create a self-signed certificate with OpenSSL). You can stick the file anywhere, but I just chucked it in ~/. Wherever you put it, make sure you point the TLS_CA_File= line in ssmtp.conf to the correct location.

  • Open the file /etc/ssmtp/revaliases and add the line:

    [yourPCUsername]:[[email protected]]:smtp.mail.yahoo.com:587
    

    If you're running as root, I would think you need to add another line replacing your name with 'root'.

  • That's it, you're good to go! To test, the easiest way (IMO) is to create a file with the following in it:

    To: [[email protected]]
    From: "whateverYaWant" <[[email protected]]>
    Subject: Some Notifying Email
    MIME-Version: 1.0
    Content-Type: text/plain
    
    Body of your email goes here! Hello world!
    
  • Save and close the file, then to check you don't have the real sendmail installed, run sendmail -V - it should say 'sSMTP'.

  • Finally, run cat fileWithEmailInIt.txt | sendmail -i -t, then wait a few seconds (10-30) and check your email!

Obviously, replace [[email protected]] with your email (without the brackets) and [yourRealYahooPassword] with your Yahoo Mail password (again, without the brackets).

Additional note 1: If you have trouble with Gmail, try option 1 of this answer.
(Thanks to Ben Creasy!)

Additional note 2: If mail is sending from the command line but not through crontab, try changing FromLineOverride to NO in /etc/ssmtp/ssmtp.conf. You can also get more detailed logging by adding Debug=YES to ssmtp.conf - the extra logging goes to /var/log/mail.log.
(Thanks Jakub Kukul!)


Install Postfix. It is more complicated than most other packages but it's still not complicated.

sudo apt-get install postfix

Select "Internet Site" and then accept all the defaults. Then we just need to stop outside connections, turning this into a "null client". Run: sudoedit /etc/postfix/main.cf and find the inet_interfaces setting (near the end) and change it to loopback-only, like so:

inet_interfaces = loopback-only

And finally restart Postfix with sudo /etc/init.d/postfix restart (reloading won't do).

You now have a Postfix install that won't relay email for outside machines, it'll just accept connections on 127.0.0.1 (and ::1 for IPv6).


On a separate note, your cron lines are probably not working because you're using non-relative paths and paths with Bash substitutions in. sh doesn't understand ~ and it might not have a proper PATH set. So replace them with (I'm just guessing at the actual paths):

1 0 * * *   /home/clonkex/Desktop/toskymesh.sh
59 6 * * *  /home/clonkex/Desktop/tooptus.sh
0 3 * * *   /usr/bin/snapraid sync

And if your scripts require to be run from a specific directory, make sure they cd into the right directory. Don't assume that cron will be in the right place as it likely won't.


I had very good luck with exim4.

sudo apt-get install alpine exim4 mailutils eximon4 spf-tools-perl swaks

(alpine is just the mail client I like using)

After that, I ran

sudo dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config

and followed through the prompts. This page: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Exim4 was very helpful as well. It took me about 10 minutes to get it running.


From sSMTP manpage: "It does not do aliasing, which must be done either in the user agent or on the mailhub. Nor does it honor .forwards, which have to be done on the recieving host. It especially does not deliver to pipelines."

So, if you want to receive all msgs sent to root on your extenal email, it's a bad idea to use sSMTP, because it does not support aliases.

Instead, you could user postfix. It's still very simple. Here's how to use it with gmail as your smtp for sending messages:

sudo apt-get install postfix mailutils

General type of mail configuration: Satellite system

System mail name: The preferred fully-qualified name of the mail server, e.g., mail.example.com

SMTP relay host (blank for none): [smtp.gmail.com]:587

Add to /etc/postfix/main.cf:

smtp_use_tls = yes
smtp_sasl_auth_enable = yes
smtp_sasl_password_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/sasl/sasl_passwd
smtp_sasl_security_options = noanonymous
smtp_sasl_tls_security_options = noanonymous

Create /etc/postfix/sasl/sasl_passwd

[smtp.gmail.com]:587 [email protected]:password

Then:

sudo postmap /etc/postfix/sasl/sasl_passwd
sudo chown -R root:postfix /etc/postfix/sasl
sudo chmod 750 /etc/postfix/sasl
sudo chmod 640 /etc/postfix/sasl/sasl_passwd*

Edit /etc/aliases and add:

root: [email protected]

Lastly, run:

sudo newaliases
sudo systemctl stop postfix.service
sudo systemctl start postfix.service

Now, you can test if redirecting is working:

echo "Test to root." | mail -s "Test message to root" root

Hope it helps.


In case you don't want email notifications, but want to log cron jobs' output somewhere to be able to inspect it if need be:

# apt install postfix

Select "Local only" when asked for a mail server configuration type.

To confirm that cron will be able to send mail:

# apt install mailutils
# echo test body | mail -s 'test subject' root
# cat /var/mail/root

Alternatively add a cron job:

* * * * * date

Wait for it to run (journalctl -ef or watch date), then cat /var/mail/root.