Commit | Line | Data |
---|---|---|
059ec3d9 PH |
1 | /************************************************* |
2 | * Exim - an Internet mail transport agent * | |
3 | *************************************************/ | |
4 | ||
3386088d | 5 | /* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2015 */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
6 | /* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */ |
7 | ||
8 | /* Code for receiving a message and setting up spool files. */ | |
9 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
10 | #include "exim.h" |
11 | ||
6a8f9482 TK |
12 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_DCC |
13 | extern int dcc_ok; | |
14 | #endif | |
15 | ||
4840604e | 16 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_DMARC |
c007c974 | 17 | # include "dmarc.h" |
4840604e TL |
18 | #endif /* EXPERIMENTAL_DMARC */ |
19 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
20 | /************************************************* |
21 | * Local static variables * | |
22 | *************************************************/ | |
23 | ||
24 | static FILE *data_file = NULL; | |
25 | static int data_fd = -1; | |
26 | static uschar spool_name[256]; | |
27 | ||
28 | ||
29 | ||
30 | /************************************************* | |
31 | * Non-SMTP character reading functions * | |
32 | *************************************************/ | |
33 | ||
34 | /* These are the default functions that are set up in the variables such as | |
35 | receive_getc initially. They just call the standard functions, passing stdin as | |
36 | the file. (When SMTP input is occurring, different functions are used by | |
37 | changing the pointer variables.) */ | |
38 | ||
39 | int | |
40 | stdin_getc(void) | |
41 | { | |
42 | return getc(stdin); | |
43 | } | |
44 | ||
45 | int | |
46 | stdin_ungetc(int c) | |
47 | { | |
48 | return ungetc(c, stdin); | |
49 | } | |
50 | ||
51 | int | |
52 | stdin_feof(void) | |
53 | { | |
54 | return feof(stdin); | |
55 | } | |
56 | ||
57 | int | |
58 | stdin_ferror(void) | |
59 | { | |
60 | return ferror(stdin); | |
61 | } | |
62 | ||
63 | ||
64 | ||
65 | ||
66 | /************************************************* | |
67 | * Check that a set sender is allowed * | |
68 | *************************************************/ | |
69 | ||
70 | /* This function is called when a local caller sets an explicit sender address. | |
71 | It checks whether this is permitted, which it is for trusted callers. | |
72 | Otherwise, it must match the pattern(s) in untrusted_set_sender. | |
73 | ||
74 | Arguments: the proposed sender address | |
75 | Returns: TRUE for a trusted caller | |
76 | TRUE if the address has been set, untrusted_set_sender has been | |
77 | set, and the address matches something in the list | |
78 | FALSE otherwise | |
79 | */ | |
80 | ||
81 | BOOL | |
82 | receive_check_set_sender(uschar *newsender) | |
83 | { | |
84 | uschar *qnewsender; | |
85 | if (trusted_caller) return TRUE; | |
86 | if (newsender == NULL || untrusted_set_sender == NULL) return FALSE; | |
87 | qnewsender = (Ustrchr(newsender, '@') != NULL)? | |
88 | newsender : string_sprintf("%s@%s", newsender, qualify_domain_sender); | |
89 | return | |
55414b25 | 90 | match_address_list(qnewsender, TRUE, TRUE, CUSS &untrusted_set_sender, NULL, -1, |
059ec3d9 PH |
91 | 0, NULL) == OK; |
92 | } | |
93 | ||
94 | ||
95 | ||
96 | ||
97 | /************************************************* | |
5cb8cbc6 | 98 | * Read space info for a partition * |
059ec3d9 PH |
99 | *************************************************/ |
100 | ||
8e669ac1 PH |
101 | /* This function is called by receive_check_fs() below, and also by string |
102 | expansion for variables such as $spool_space. The field names for the statvfs | |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
103 | structure are macros, because not all OS have F_FAVAIL and it seems tidier to |
104 | have macros for F_BAVAIL and F_FILES as well. Some kinds of file system do not | |
105 | have inodes, and they return -1 for the number available. | |
059ec3d9 | 106 | |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
107 | Later: It turns out that some file systems that do not have the concept of |
108 | inodes return 0 rather than -1. Such systems should also return 0 for the total | |
8e669ac1 | 109 | number of inodes, so we require that to be greater than zero before returning |
5cb8cbc6 | 110 | an inode count. |
059ec3d9 | 111 | |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
112 | Arguments: |
113 | isspool TRUE for spool partition, FALSE for log partition | |
114 | inodeptr address of int to receive inode count; -1 if there isn't one | |
8e669ac1 | 115 | |
5cb8cbc6 | 116 | Returns: available on-root space, in kilobytes |
8e669ac1 PH |
117 | -1 for log partition if there isn't one |
118 | ||
119 | All values are -1 if the STATFS functions are not available. | |
059ec3d9 PH |
120 | */ |
121 | ||
8e669ac1 | 122 | int |
5cb8cbc6 | 123 | receive_statvfs(BOOL isspool, int *inodeptr) |
059ec3d9 PH |
124 | { |
125 | #ifdef HAVE_STATFS | |
059ec3d9 | 126 | struct STATVFS statbuf; |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
127 | uschar *path; |
128 | uschar *name; | |
129 | uschar buffer[1024]; | |
059ec3d9 | 130 | |
5cb8cbc6 | 131 | /* The spool directory must always exist. */ |
059ec3d9 | 132 | |
5cb8cbc6 | 133 | if (isspool) |
059ec3d9 | 134 | { |
8e669ac1 PH |
135 | path = spool_directory; |
136 | name = US"spool"; | |
137 | } | |
138 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
139 | /* Need to cut down the log file path to the directory, and to ignore any |
140 | appearance of "syslog" in it. */ | |
141 | ||
5cb8cbc6 | 142 | else |
059ec3d9 | 143 | { |
059ec3d9 | 144 | int sep = ':'; /* Not variable - outside scripts use */ |
55414b25 | 145 | const uschar *p = log_file_path; |
8e669ac1 | 146 | name = US"log"; |
059ec3d9 PH |
147 | |
148 | /* An empty log_file_path means "use the default". This is the same as an | |
149 | empty item in a list. */ | |
150 | ||
151 | if (*p == 0) p = US":"; | |
55414b25 JH |
152 | while ((path = string_nextinlist(&p, &sep, buffer, sizeof(buffer)))) |
153 | if (Ustrcmp(path, "syslog") != 0) | |
154 | break; | |
059ec3d9 | 155 | |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
156 | if (path == NULL) /* No log files */ |
157 | { | |
8e669ac1 PH |
158 | *inodeptr = -1; |
159 | return -1; | |
160 | } | |
059ec3d9 | 161 | |
8e669ac1 PH |
162 | /* An empty string means use the default, which is in the spool directory. |
163 | But don't just use the spool directory, as it is possible that the log | |
5cb8cbc6 | 164 | subdirectory has been symbolically linked elsewhere. */ |
059ec3d9 | 165 | |
8e669ac1 | 166 | if (path[0] == 0) |
059ec3d9 | 167 | { |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
168 | sprintf(CS buffer, CS"%s/log", CS spool_directory); |
169 | path = buffer; | |
8e669ac1 PH |
170 | } |
171 | else | |
059ec3d9 | 172 | { |
8e669ac1 | 173 | uschar *cp; |
5cb8cbc6 | 174 | if ((cp = Ustrrchr(path, '/')) != NULL) *cp = 0; |
8e669ac1 | 175 | } |
5cb8cbc6 | 176 | } |
8e669ac1 | 177 | |
8f128379 | 178 | /* We now have the path; do the business */ |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
179 | |
180 | memset(&statbuf, 0, sizeof(statbuf)); | |
181 | ||
182 | if (STATVFS(CS path, &statbuf) != 0) | |
183 | { | |
184 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "cannot accept message: failed to stat " | |
185 | "%s directory %s: %s", name, spool_directory, strerror(errno)); | |
186 | smtp_closedown(US"spool or log directory problem"); | |
187 | exim_exit(EXIT_FAILURE); | |
188 | } | |
8e669ac1 | 189 | |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
190 | *inodeptr = (statbuf.F_FILES > 0)? statbuf.F_FAVAIL : -1; |
191 | ||
192 | /* Disks are getting huge. Take care with computing the size in kilobytes. */ | |
8e669ac1 | 193 | |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
194 | return (int)(((double)statbuf.F_BAVAIL * (double)statbuf.F_FRSIZE)/1024.0); |
195 | ||
196 | /* Unable to find partition sizes in this environment. */ | |
197 | ||
198 | #else | |
199 | *inodeptr = -1; | |
200 | return -1; | |
201 | #endif | |
202 | } | |
203 | ||
059ec3d9 | 204 | |
059ec3d9 | 205 | |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
206 | |
207 | /************************************************* | |
208 | * Check space on spool and log partitions * | |
209 | *************************************************/ | |
210 | ||
211 | /* This function is called before accepting a message; if any thresholds are | |
212 | set, it checks them. If a message_size is supplied, it checks that there is | |
213 | enough space for that size plus the threshold - i.e. that the message won't | |
214 | reduce the space to the threshold. Not all OS have statvfs(); for those that | |
215 | don't, this function always returns TRUE. For some OS the old function and | |
216 | struct name statfs is used; that is handled by a macro, defined in exim.h. | |
217 | ||
218 | Arguments: | |
219 | msg_size the (estimated) size of an incoming message | |
220 | ||
221 | Returns: FALSE if there isn't enough space, or if the information cannot | |
222 | be obtained | |
223 | TRUE if no check was done or there is enough space | |
224 | */ | |
225 | ||
226 | BOOL | |
227 | receive_check_fs(int msg_size) | |
228 | { | |
229 | int space, inodes; | |
230 | ||
231 | if (check_spool_space > 0 || msg_size > 0 || check_spool_inodes > 0) | |
232 | { | |
8e669ac1 PH |
233 | space = receive_statvfs(TRUE, &inodes); |
234 | ||
059ec3d9 | 235 | DEBUG(D_receive) |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
236 | debug_printf("spool directory space = %dK inodes = %d " |
237 | "check_space = %dK inodes = %d msg_size = %d\n", | |
238 | space, inodes, check_spool_space, check_spool_inodes, msg_size); | |
8e669ac1 PH |
239 | |
240 | if ((space >= 0 && space < check_spool_space) || | |
5cb8cbc6 | 241 | (inodes >= 0 && inodes < check_spool_inodes)) |
8e669ac1 | 242 | { |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
243 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "spool directory space check failed: space=%d " |
244 | "inodes=%d", space, inodes); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
245 | return FALSE; |
246 | } | |
247 | } | |
248 | ||
5cb8cbc6 PH |
249 | if (check_log_space > 0 || check_log_inodes > 0) |
250 | { | |
8e669ac1 PH |
251 | space = receive_statvfs(FALSE, &inodes); |
252 | ||
5cb8cbc6 PH |
253 | DEBUG(D_receive) |
254 | debug_printf("log directory space = %dK inodes = %d " | |
255 | "check_space = %dK inodes = %d\n", | |
256 | space, inodes, check_log_space, check_log_inodes); | |
8e669ac1 PH |
257 | |
258 | if ((space >= 0 && space < check_log_space) || | |
5cb8cbc6 | 259 | (inodes >= 0 && inodes < check_log_inodes)) |
8e669ac1 | 260 | { |
5cb8cbc6 PH |
261 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "log directory space check failed: space=%d " |
262 | "inodes=%d", space, inodes); | |
263 | return FALSE; | |
264 | } | |
8e669ac1 PH |
265 | } |
266 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
267 | return TRUE; |
268 | } | |
269 | ||
270 | ||
271 | ||
272 | /************************************************* | |
273 | * Bomb out while reading a message * | |
274 | *************************************************/ | |
275 | ||
276 | /* The common case of wanting to bomb out is if a SIGTERM or SIGINT is | |
277 | received, or if there is a timeout. A rarer case might be if the log files are | |
278 | screwed up and Exim can't open them to record a message's arrival. Handling | |
279 | that case is done by setting a flag to cause the log functions to call this | |
280 | function if there is an ultimate disaster. That is why it is globally | |
281 | accessible. | |
282 | ||
8f128379 PH |
283 | Arguments: |
284 | reason text reason to pass to the not-quit ACL | |
285 | msg default SMTP response to give if in an SMTP session | |
059ec3d9 PH |
286 | Returns: it doesn't |
287 | */ | |
288 | ||
289 | void | |
8f128379 | 290 | receive_bomb_out(uschar *reason, uschar *msg) |
059ec3d9 | 291 | { |
ead37e6c PP |
292 | static BOOL already_bombing_out; |
293 | /* The smtp_notquit_exit() below can call ACLs which can trigger recursive | |
294 | timeouts, if someone has something slow in their quit ACL. Since the only | |
295 | things we should be doing are to close down cleanly ASAP, on the second | |
296 | pass we also close down stuff that might be opened again, before bypassing | |
297 | the ACL call and exiting. */ | |
298 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
299 | /* If spool_name is set, it contains the name of the data file that is being |
300 | written. Unlink it before closing so that it cannot be picked up by a delivery | |
301 | process. Ensure that any header file is also removed. */ | |
302 | ||
ead37e6c | 303 | if (spool_name[0] != '\0') |
059ec3d9 PH |
304 | { |
305 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
306 | spool_name[Ustrlen(spool_name) - 1] = 'H'; | |
307 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
ead37e6c | 308 | spool_name[0] = '\0'; |
059ec3d9 PH |
309 | } |
310 | ||
311 | /* Now close the file if it is open, either as a fd or a stream. */ | |
312 | ||
ead37e6c PP |
313 | if (data_file != NULL) |
314 | { | |
315 | (void)fclose(data_file); | |
316 | data_file = NULL; | |
317 | } else if (data_fd >= 0) { | |
318 | (void)close(data_fd); | |
319 | data_fd = -1; | |
320 | } | |
059ec3d9 | 321 | |
8f128379 PH |
322 | /* Attempt to close down an SMTP connection tidily. For non-batched SMTP, call |
323 | smtp_notquit_exit(), which runs the NOTQUIT ACL, if present, and handles the | |
324 | SMTP response. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 325 | |
ead37e6c | 326 | if (!already_bombing_out) |
059ec3d9 | 327 | { |
ead37e6c PP |
328 | already_bombing_out = TRUE; |
329 | if (smtp_input) | |
330 | { | |
331 | if (smtp_batched_input) | |
332 | moan_smtp_batch(NULL, "421 %s - message abandoned", msg); /* No return */ | |
333 | smtp_notquit_exit(reason, US"421", US"%s %s - closing connection.", | |
334 | smtp_active_hostname, msg); | |
335 | } | |
059ec3d9 PH |
336 | } |
337 | ||
338 | /* Exit from the program (non-BSMTP cases) */ | |
339 | ||
340 | exim_exit(EXIT_FAILURE); | |
341 | } | |
342 | ||
343 | ||
344 | /************************************************* | |
345 | * Data read timeout * | |
346 | *************************************************/ | |
347 | ||
348 | /* Handler function for timeouts that occur while reading the data that | |
349 | comprises a message. | |
350 | ||
351 | Argument: the signal number | |
352 | Returns: nothing | |
353 | */ | |
354 | ||
355 | static void | |
356 | data_timeout_handler(int sig) | |
357 | { | |
358 | uschar *msg = NULL; | |
359 | ||
360 | sig = sig; /* Keep picky compilers happy */ | |
361 | ||
362 | if (smtp_input) | |
363 | { | |
364 | msg = US"SMTP incoming data timeout"; | |
365 | log_write(L_lost_incoming_connection, | |
366 | LOG_MAIN, "SMTP data timeout (message abandoned) on connection " | |
fed77020 PH |
367 | "from %s F=<%s>", |
368 | (sender_fullhost != NULL)? sender_fullhost : US"local process", | |
369 | sender_address); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
370 | } |
371 | else | |
372 | { | |
373 | fprintf(stderr, "exim: timed out while reading - message abandoned\n"); | |
374 | log_write(L_lost_incoming_connection, | |
375 | LOG_MAIN, "timed out while reading local message"); | |
376 | } | |
377 | ||
8f128379 | 378 | receive_bomb_out(US"data-timeout", msg); /* Does not return */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
379 | } |
380 | ||
381 | ||
382 | ||
383 | /************************************************* | |
384 | * local_scan() timeout * | |
385 | *************************************************/ | |
386 | ||
387 | /* Handler function for timeouts that occur while running a local_scan() | |
388 | function. | |
389 | ||
390 | Argument: the signal number | |
391 | Returns: nothing | |
392 | */ | |
393 | ||
394 | static void | |
395 | local_scan_timeout_handler(int sig) | |
396 | { | |
397 | sig = sig; /* Keep picky compilers happy */ | |
398 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "local_scan() function timed out - " | |
399 | "message temporarily rejected (size %d)", message_size); | |
8f128379 PH |
400 | /* Does not return */ |
401 | receive_bomb_out(US"local-scan-timeout", US"local verification problem"); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
402 | } |
403 | ||
404 | ||
405 | ||
406 | /************************************************* | |
407 | * local_scan() crashed * | |
408 | *************************************************/ | |
409 | ||
410 | /* Handler function for signals that occur while running a local_scan() | |
411 | function. | |
412 | ||
413 | Argument: the signal number | |
414 | Returns: nothing | |
415 | */ | |
416 | ||
417 | static void | |
418 | local_scan_crash_handler(int sig) | |
419 | { | |
420 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "local_scan() function crashed with " | |
421 | "signal %d - message temporarily rejected (size %d)", sig, message_size); | |
8f128379 PH |
422 | /* Does not return */ |
423 | receive_bomb_out(US"local-scan-error", US"local verification problem"); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
424 | } |
425 | ||
426 | ||
427 | /************************************************* | |
428 | * SIGTERM or SIGINT received * | |
429 | *************************************************/ | |
430 | ||
431 | /* Handler for SIGTERM or SIGINT signals that occur while reading the | |
432 | data that comprises a message. | |
433 | ||
434 | Argument: the signal number | |
435 | Returns: nothing | |
436 | */ | |
437 | ||
438 | static void | |
439 | data_sigterm_sigint_handler(int sig) | |
440 | { | |
441 | uschar *msg = NULL; | |
442 | ||
443 | if (smtp_input) | |
444 | { | |
445 | msg = US"Service not available - SIGTERM or SIGINT received"; | |
446 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s closed after %s", smtp_get_connection_info(), | |
447 | (sig == SIGTERM)? "SIGTERM" : "SIGINT"); | |
448 | } | |
449 | else | |
450 | { | |
f05da2e8 | 451 | if (filter_test == FTEST_NONE) |
059ec3d9 PH |
452 | { |
453 | fprintf(stderr, "\nexim: %s received - message abandoned\n", | |
454 | (sig == SIGTERM)? "SIGTERM" : "SIGINT"); | |
455 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s received while reading local message", | |
456 | (sig == SIGTERM)? "SIGTERM" : "SIGINT"); | |
457 | } | |
458 | } | |
459 | ||
8f128379 | 460 | receive_bomb_out(US"signal-exit", msg); /* Does not return */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
461 | } |
462 | ||
463 | ||
464 | ||
465 | /************************************************* | |
466 | * Add new recipient to list * | |
467 | *************************************************/ | |
468 | ||
469 | /* This function builds a list of recipient addresses in argc/argv | |
470 | format. | |
471 | ||
472 | Arguments: | |
473 | recipient the next address to add to recipients_list | |
474 | pno parent number for fixed aliases; -1 otherwise | |
475 | ||
476 | Returns: nothing | |
477 | */ | |
478 | ||
479 | void | |
480 | receive_add_recipient(uschar *recipient, int pno) | |
481 | { | |
482 | if (recipients_count >= recipients_list_max) | |
483 | { | |
484 | recipient_item *oldlist = recipients_list; | |
485 | int oldmax = recipients_list_max; | |
486 | recipients_list_max = recipients_list_max? 2*recipients_list_max : 50; | |
487 | recipients_list = store_get(recipients_list_max * sizeof(recipient_item)); | |
488 | if (oldlist != NULL) | |
489 | memcpy(recipients_list, oldlist, oldmax * sizeof(recipient_item)); | |
490 | } | |
491 | ||
492 | recipients_list[recipients_count].address = recipient; | |
493 | recipients_list[recipients_count].pno = pno; | |
8523533c TK |
494 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_BRIGHTMAIL |
495 | recipients_list[recipients_count].bmi_optin = bmi_current_optin; | |
496 | /* reset optin string pointer for next recipient */ | |
497 | bmi_current_optin = NULL; | |
498 | #endif | |
6c1c3d1d WB |
499 | recipients_list[recipients_count].orcpt = NULL; |
500 | recipients_list[recipients_count].dsn_flags = 0; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
501 | recipients_list[recipients_count++].errors_to = NULL; |
502 | } | |
503 | ||
504 | ||
505 | ||
506 | ||
fd98a5c6 JH |
507 | /************************************************* |
508 | * Send user response message * | |
509 | *************************************************/ | |
61147df4 | 510 | |
fd98a5c6 JH |
511 | /* This function is passed a default response code and a user message. It calls |
512 | smtp_message_code() to check and possibly modify the response code, and then | |
513 | calls smtp_respond() to transmit the response. I put this into a function | |
514 | just to avoid a lot of repetition. | |
61147df4 PP |
515 | |
516 | Arguments: | |
fd98a5c6 JH |
517 | code the response code |
518 | user_msg the user message | |
519 | ||
520 | Returns: nothing | |
61147df4 PP |
521 | */ |
522 | ||
8ccd00b1 | 523 | #ifndef DISABLE_PRDR |
61147df4 | 524 | static void |
fd98a5c6 | 525 | smtp_user_msg(uschar *code, uschar *user_msg) |
61147df4 | 526 | { |
fd98a5c6 JH |
527 | int len = 3; |
528 | smtp_message_code(&code, &len, &user_msg, NULL); | |
529 | smtp_respond(code, len, TRUE, user_msg); | |
61147df4 PP |
530 | } |
531 | #endif | |
532 | ||
533 | ||
534 | ||
535 | ||
fd98a5c6 | 536 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
537 | /************************************************* |
538 | * Remove a recipient from the list * | |
539 | *************************************************/ | |
540 | ||
541 | /* This function is provided for local_scan() to use. | |
542 | ||
543 | Argument: | |
544 | recipient address to remove | |
545 | ||
546 | Returns: TRUE if it did remove something; FALSE otherwise | |
547 | */ | |
548 | ||
549 | BOOL | |
550 | receive_remove_recipient(uschar *recipient) | |
551 | { | |
552 | int count; | |
553 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("receive_remove_recipient(\"%s\") called\n", | |
554 | recipient); | |
555 | for (count = 0; count < recipients_count; count++) | |
556 | { | |
557 | if (Ustrcmp(recipients_list[count].address, recipient) == 0) | |
558 | { | |
559 | if ((--recipients_count - count) > 0) | |
560 | memmove(recipients_list + count, recipients_list + count + 1, | |
54cdb463 | 561 | (recipients_count - count)*sizeof(recipient_item)); |
059ec3d9 PH |
562 | return TRUE; |
563 | } | |
564 | } | |
565 | return FALSE; | |
566 | } | |
567 | ||
568 | ||
569 | ||
570 | ||
571 | ||
572 | /************************************************* | |
573 | * Read data portion of a non-SMTP message * | |
574 | *************************************************/ | |
575 | ||
576 | /* This function is called to read the remainder of a message (following the | |
577 | header) when the input is not from SMTP - we are receiving a local message on | |
578 | a standard input stream. The message is always terminated by EOF, and is also | |
579 | terminated by a dot on a line by itself if the flag dot_ends is TRUE. Split the | |
580 | two cases for maximum efficiency. | |
581 | ||
582 | Ensure that the body ends with a newline. This will naturally be the case when | |
583 | the termination is "\n.\n" but may not be otherwise. The RFC defines messages | |
584 | as "sequences of lines" - this of course strictly applies only to SMTP, but | |
585 | deliveries into BSD-type mailbox files also require it. Exim used to have a | |
586 | flag for doing this at delivery time, but as it was always set for all | |
587 | transports, I decided to simplify things by putting the check here instead. | |
588 | ||
589 | There is at least one MUA (dtmail) that sends CRLF via this interface, and | |
590 | other programs are known to do this as well. Exim used to have a option for | |
591 | dealing with this: in July 2003, after much discussion, the code has been | |
592 | changed to default to treat any of LF, CRLF, and bare CR as line terminators. | |
593 | ||
594 | However, for the case when a dot on a line by itself terminates a message, the | |
595 | only recognized terminating sequences before and after the dot are LF and CRLF. | |
596 | Otherwise, having read EOL . CR, you don't know whether to read another | |
597 | character or not. | |
598 | ||
599 | Internally, in messages stored in Exim's spool files, LF is used as the line | |
600 | terminator. Under the new regime, bare CRs will no longer appear in these | |
601 | files. | |
602 | ||
603 | Arguments: | |
604 | fout a FILE to which to write the message | |
605 | ||
606 | Returns: One of the END_xxx values indicating why it stopped reading | |
607 | */ | |
608 | ||
609 | static int | |
610 | read_message_data(FILE *fout) | |
611 | { | |
612 | int ch_state; | |
613 | register int ch; | |
d677b2f2 | 614 | register int linelength = 0; |
059ec3d9 PH |
615 | |
616 | /* Handle the case when only EOF terminates the message */ | |
617 | ||
618 | if (!dot_ends) | |
619 | { | |
620 | register int last_ch = '\n'; | |
621 | ||
80a47a2c | 622 | for (; (ch = (receive_getc)()) != EOF; last_ch = ch) |
059ec3d9 PH |
623 | { |
624 | if (ch == 0) body_zerocount++; | |
625 | if (last_ch == '\r' && ch != '\n') | |
626 | { | |
d677b2f2 PH |
627 | if (linelength > max_received_linelength) |
628 | max_received_linelength = linelength; | |
629 | linelength = 0; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
630 | if (fputc('\n', fout) == EOF) return END_WERROR; |
631 | message_size++; | |
632 | body_linecount++; | |
633 | } | |
634 | if (ch == '\r') continue; | |
635 | ||
636 | if (fputc(ch, fout) == EOF) return END_WERROR; | |
d677b2f2 PH |
637 | if (ch == '\n') |
638 | { | |
639 | if (linelength > max_received_linelength) | |
640 | max_received_linelength = linelength; | |
641 | linelength = 0; | |
642 | body_linecount++; | |
643 | } | |
644 | else linelength++; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
645 | if (++message_size > thismessage_size_limit) return END_SIZE; |
646 | } | |
647 | ||
648 | if (last_ch != '\n') | |
649 | { | |
d677b2f2 PH |
650 | if (linelength > max_received_linelength) |
651 | max_received_linelength = linelength; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
652 | if (fputc('\n', fout) == EOF) return END_WERROR; |
653 | message_size++; | |
654 | body_linecount++; | |
655 | } | |
656 | ||
657 | return END_EOF; | |
658 | } | |
659 | ||
660 | /* Handle the case when a dot on a line on its own, or EOF, terminates. */ | |
661 | ||
662 | ch_state = 1; | |
663 | ||
80a47a2c | 664 | while ((ch = (receive_getc)()) != EOF) |
059ec3d9 PH |
665 | { |
666 | if (ch == 0) body_zerocount++; | |
667 | switch (ch_state) | |
668 | { | |
669 | case 0: /* Normal state (previous char written) */ | |
670 | if (ch == '\n') | |
d677b2f2 PH |
671 | { |
672 | body_linecount++; | |
673 | if (linelength > max_received_linelength) | |
674 | max_received_linelength = linelength; | |
675 | linelength = -1; | |
676 | ch_state = 1; | |
677 | } | |
059ec3d9 PH |
678 | else if (ch == '\r') |
679 | { ch_state = 2; continue; } | |
680 | break; | |
681 | ||
682 | case 1: /* After written "\n" */ | |
683 | if (ch == '.') { ch_state = 3; continue; } | |
6eb02f88 | 684 | if (ch == '\r') { ch_state = 2; continue; } |
d677b2f2 | 685 | if (ch != '\n') ch_state = 0; else linelength = -1; |
059ec3d9 PH |
686 | break; |
687 | ||
688 | case 2: | |
689 | body_linecount++; /* After unwritten "\r" */ | |
d677b2f2 PH |
690 | if (linelength > max_received_linelength) |
691 | max_received_linelength = linelength; | |
059ec3d9 | 692 | if (ch == '\n') |
d677b2f2 PH |
693 | { |
694 | ch_state = 1; | |
695 | linelength = -1; | |
696 | } | |
059ec3d9 PH |
697 | else |
698 | { | |
699 | if (message_size++, fputc('\n', fout) == EOF) return END_WERROR; | |
700 | if (ch == '\r') continue; | |
701 | ch_state = 0; | |
d677b2f2 | 702 | linelength = 0; |
059ec3d9 PH |
703 | } |
704 | break; | |
705 | ||
706 | case 3: /* After "\n." (\n written, dot not) */ | |
707 | if (ch == '\n') return END_DOT; | |
708 | if (ch == '\r') { ch_state = 4; continue; } | |
709 | message_size++; | |
d677b2f2 | 710 | linelength++; |
059ec3d9 PH |
711 | if (fputc('.', fout) == EOF) return END_WERROR; |
712 | ch_state = 0; | |
713 | break; | |
714 | ||
715 | case 4: /* After "\n.\r" (\n written, rest not) */ | |
716 | if (ch == '\n') return END_DOT; | |
717 | message_size += 2; | |
718 | body_linecount++; | |
719 | if (fputs(".\n", fout) == EOF) return END_WERROR; | |
720 | if (ch == '\r') { ch_state = 2; continue; } | |
721 | ch_state = 0; | |
722 | break; | |
723 | } | |
724 | ||
d677b2f2 | 725 | linelength++; |
059ec3d9 PH |
726 | if (fputc(ch, fout) == EOF) return END_WERROR; |
727 | if (++message_size > thismessage_size_limit) return END_SIZE; | |
728 | } | |
729 | ||
730 | /* Get here if EOF read. Unless we have just written "\n", we need to ensure | |
731 | the message ends with a newline, and we must also write any characters that | |
732 | were saved up while testing for an ending dot. */ | |
733 | ||
734 | if (ch_state != 1) | |
735 | { | |
736 | static uschar *ends[] = { US"\n", NULL, US"\n", US".\n", US".\n" }; | |
737 | if (fputs(CS ends[ch_state], fout) == EOF) return END_WERROR; | |
738 | message_size += Ustrlen(ends[ch_state]); | |
739 | body_linecount++; | |
740 | } | |
741 | ||
742 | return END_EOF; | |
743 | } | |
744 | ||
745 | ||
746 | ||
747 | ||
748 | /************************************************* | |
749 | * Read data portion of an SMTP message * | |
750 | *************************************************/ | |
751 | ||
752 | /* This function is called to read the remainder of an SMTP message (after the | |
753 | headers), or to skip over it when an error has occurred. In this case, the | |
754 | output file is passed as NULL. | |
755 | ||
756 | If any line begins with a dot, that character is skipped. The input should only | |
757 | be successfully terminated by CR LF . CR LF unless it is local (non-network) | |
758 | SMTP, in which case the CRs are optional, but... | |
759 | ||
760 | FUDGE: It seems that sites on the net send out messages with just LF | |
761 | terminators, despite the warnings in the RFCs, and other MTAs handle this. So | |
762 | we make the CRs optional in all cases. | |
763 | ||
764 | July 2003: Bare CRs cause trouble. We now treat them as line terminators as | |
765 | well, so that there are no CRs in spooled messages. However, the message | |
766 | terminating dot is not recognized between two bare CRs. | |
767 | ||
768 | Arguments: | |
769 | fout a FILE to which to write the message; NULL if skipping | |
770 | ||
771 | Returns: One of the END_xxx values indicating why it stopped reading | |
772 | */ | |
773 | ||
774 | static int | |
775 | read_message_data_smtp(FILE *fout) | |
776 | { | |
777 | int ch_state = 0; | |
e4bdf652 | 778 | int ch; |
1f5497b2 | 779 | register int linelength = 0; |
059ec3d9 | 780 | |
80a47a2c | 781 | while ((ch = (receive_getc)()) != EOF) |
059ec3d9 PH |
782 | { |
783 | if (ch == 0) body_zerocount++; | |
784 | switch (ch_state) | |
785 | { | |
786 | case 0: /* After LF or CRLF */ | |
787 | if (ch == '.') | |
788 | { | |
789 | ch_state = 3; | |
790 | continue; /* Don't ever write . after LF */ | |
791 | } | |
792 | ch_state = 1; | |
793 | ||
794 | /* Else fall through to handle as normal uschar. */ | |
795 | ||
796 | case 1: /* Normal state */ | |
797 | if (ch == '\n') | |
798 | { | |
799 | ch_state = 0; | |
800 | body_linecount++; | |
1f5497b2 PH |
801 | if (linelength > max_received_linelength) |
802 | max_received_linelength = linelength; | |
803 | linelength = -1; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
804 | } |
805 | else if (ch == '\r') | |
806 | { | |
807 | ch_state = 2; | |
808 | continue; | |
809 | } | |
810 | break; | |
811 | ||
812 | case 2: /* After (unwritten) CR */ | |
813 | body_linecount++; | |
1f5497b2 PH |
814 | if (linelength > max_received_linelength) |
815 | max_received_linelength = linelength; | |
816 | linelength = -1; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
817 | if (ch == '\n') |
818 | { | |
819 | ch_state = 0; | |
820 | } | |
821 | else | |
822 | { | |
823 | message_size++; | |
824 | if (fout != NULL && fputc('\n', fout) == EOF) return END_WERROR; | |
e4bdf652 | 825 | (void) cutthrough_put_nl(); |
059ec3d9 PH |
826 | if (ch != '\r') ch_state = 1; else continue; |
827 | } | |
828 | break; | |
829 | ||
830 | case 3: /* After [CR] LF . */ | |
831 | if (ch == '\n') | |
832 | return END_DOT; | |
833 | if (ch == '\r') | |
834 | { | |
835 | ch_state = 4; | |
836 | continue; | |
837 | } | |
838 | ch_state = 1; /* The dot itself is removed */ | |
839 | break; | |
840 | ||
841 | case 4: /* After [CR] LF . CR */ | |
842 | if (ch == '\n') return END_DOT; | |
843 | message_size++; | |
844 | body_linecount++; | |
845 | if (fout != NULL && fputc('\n', fout) == EOF) return END_WERROR; | |
e4bdf652 | 846 | (void) cutthrough_put_nl(); |
059ec3d9 PH |
847 | if (ch == '\r') |
848 | { | |
849 | ch_state = 2; | |
850 | continue; | |
851 | } | |
852 | ch_state = 1; | |
853 | break; | |
854 | } | |
855 | ||
856 | /* Add the character to the spool file, unless skipping; then loop for the | |
857 | next. */ | |
858 | ||
859 | message_size++; | |
1f5497b2 | 860 | linelength++; |
059ec3d9 PH |
861 | if (fout != NULL) |
862 | { | |
863 | if (fputc(ch, fout) == EOF) return END_WERROR; | |
864 | if (message_size > thismessage_size_limit) return END_SIZE; | |
865 | } | |
e4bdf652 JH |
866 | if(ch == '\n') |
867 | (void) cutthrough_put_nl(); | |
868 | else | |
869 | { | |
870 | uschar c= ch; | |
871 | (void) cutthrough_puts(&c, 1); | |
872 | } | |
059ec3d9 PH |
873 | } |
874 | ||
875 | /* Fall through here if EOF encountered. This indicates some kind of error, | |
876 | since a correct message is terminated by [CR] LF . [CR] LF. */ | |
877 | ||
878 | return END_EOF; | |
879 | } | |
880 | ||
881 | ||
882 | ||
883 | ||
884 | /************************************************* | |
885 | * Swallow SMTP message * | |
886 | *************************************************/ | |
887 | ||
888 | /* This function is called when there has been some kind of error while reading | |
889 | an SMTP message, and the remaining data may need to be swallowed. It is global | |
890 | because it is called from smtp_closedown() to shut down an incoming call | |
891 | tidily. | |
892 | ||
893 | Argument: a FILE from which to read the message | |
894 | Returns: nothing | |
895 | */ | |
896 | ||
897 | void | |
898 | receive_swallow_smtp(void) | |
899 | { | |
900 | if (message_ended >= END_NOTENDED) | |
901 | message_ended = read_message_data_smtp(NULL); | |
902 | } | |
903 | ||
904 | ||
905 | ||
906 | /************************************************* | |
907 | * Handle lost SMTP connection * | |
908 | *************************************************/ | |
909 | ||
910 | /* This function logs connection loss incidents and generates an appropriate | |
911 | SMTP response. | |
912 | ||
913 | Argument: additional data for the message | |
914 | Returns: the SMTP response | |
915 | */ | |
916 | ||
917 | static uschar * | |
918 | handle_lost_connection(uschar *s) | |
919 | { | |
920 | log_write(L_lost_incoming_connection | L_smtp_connection, LOG_MAIN, | |
921 | "%s lost while reading message data%s", smtp_get_connection_info(), s); | |
922 | return US"421 Lost incoming connection"; | |
923 | } | |
924 | ||
925 | ||
926 | ||
927 | ||
928 | /************************************************* | |
929 | * Handle a non-smtp reception error * | |
930 | *************************************************/ | |
931 | ||
932 | /* This function is called for various errors during the reception of non-SMTP | |
933 | messages. It either sends a message to the sender of the problem message, or it | |
934 | writes to the standard error stream. | |
935 | ||
936 | Arguments: | |
937 | errcode code for moan_to_sender(), identifying the error | |
938 | text1 first message text, passed to moan_to_sender() | |
939 | text2 second message text, used only for stderrr | |
940 | error_rc code to pass to exim_exit if no problem | |
941 | f FILE containing body of message (may be stdin) | |
942 | hptr pointer to instore headers or NULL | |
943 | ||
944 | Returns: calls exim_exit(), which does not return | |
945 | */ | |
946 | ||
947 | static void | |
948 | give_local_error(int errcode, uschar *text1, uschar *text2, int error_rc, | |
949 | FILE *f, header_line *hptr) | |
950 | { | |
951 | if (error_handling == ERRORS_SENDER) | |
952 | { | |
953 | error_block eblock; | |
954 | eblock.next = NULL; | |
955 | eblock.text1 = text1; | |
956 | if (!moan_to_sender(errcode, &eblock, hptr, f, FALSE)) | |
957 | error_rc = EXIT_FAILURE; | |
958 | } | |
959 | else fprintf(stderr, "exim: %s%s\n", text2, text1); /* Sic */ | |
f1e894f3 | 960 | (void)fclose(f); |
059ec3d9 PH |
961 | exim_exit(error_rc); |
962 | } | |
963 | ||
964 | ||
965 | ||
966 | /************************************************* | |
967 | * Add header lines set up by ACL * | |
968 | *************************************************/ | |
969 | ||
850635b6 PH |
970 | /* This function is called to add the header lines that were set up by |
971 | statements in an ACL to the list of headers in memory. It is done in two stages | |
972 | like this, because when the ACL for RCPT is running, the other headers have not | |
973 | yet been received. This function is called twice; once just before running the | |
974 | DATA ACL, and once after. This is so that header lines added by MAIL or RCPT | |
975 | are visible to the DATA ACL. | |
059ec3d9 PH |
976 | |
977 | Originally these header lines were added at the end. Now there is support for | |
978 | three different places: top, bottom, and after the Received: header(s). There | |
979 | will always be at least one Received: header, even if it is marked deleted, and | |
980 | even if something else has been put in front of it. | |
981 | ||
982 | Arguments: | |
983 | acl_name text to identify which ACL | |
984 | ||
985 | Returns: nothing | |
986 | */ | |
987 | ||
988 | static void | |
578d43dc | 989 | add_acl_headers(int where, uschar *acl_name) |
059ec3d9 PH |
990 | { |
991 | header_line *h, *next; | |
992 | header_line *last_received = NULL; | |
e7568d51 | 993 | |
578d43dc JH |
994 | switch(where) |
995 | { | |
996 | case ACL_WHERE_DKIM: | |
997 | case ACL_WHERE_MIME: | |
af4a1bca | 998 | case ACL_WHERE_DATA: |
5032d1cf | 999 | if (cutthrough.fd >= 0 && (acl_removed_headers || acl_added_headers)) |
578d43dc JH |
1000 | { |
1001 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Header modification in data ACLs" | |
af4a1bca | 1002 | " will not take effect on cutthrough deliveries"); |
578d43dc JH |
1003 | return; |
1004 | } | |
1005 | } | |
1006 | ||
e7568d51 TL |
1007 | if (acl_removed_headers != NULL) |
1008 | { | |
1009 | DEBUG(D_receive|D_acl) debug_printf(">>Headers removed by %s ACL:\n", acl_name); | |
1010 | ||
4a142059 | 1011 | for (h = header_list; h != NULL; h = h->next) if (h->type != htype_old) |
e7568d51 | 1012 | { |
55414b25 | 1013 | const uschar * list = acl_removed_headers; |
e7568d51 TL |
1014 | int sep = ':'; /* This is specified as a colon-separated list */ |
1015 | uschar *s; | |
1016 | uschar buffer[128]; | |
4a142059 JH |
1017 | |
1018 | while ((s = string_nextinlist(&list, &sep, buffer, sizeof(buffer)))) | |
1019 | if (header_testname(h, s, Ustrlen(s), FALSE)) | |
e7568d51 TL |
1020 | { |
1021 | h->type = htype_old; | |
1022 | DEBUG(D_receive|D_acl) debug_printf(" %s", h->text); | |
1023 | } | |
e7568d51 TL |
1024 | } |
1025 | acl_removed_headers = NULL; | |
1026 | DEBUG(D_receive|D_acl) debug_printf(">>\n"); | |
1027 | } | |
059ec3d9 | 1028 | |
71fafd95 | 1029 | if (acl_added_headers == NULL) return; |
059ec3d9 PH |
1030 | DEBUG(D_receive|D_acl) debug_printf(">>Headers added by %s ACL:\n", acl_name); |
1031 | ||
71fafd95 | 1032 | for (h = acl_added_headers; h != NULL; h = next) |
059ec3d9 PH |
1033 | { |
1034 | next = h->next; | |
1035 | ||
1036 | switch(h->type) | |
1037 | { | |
1038 | case htype_add_top: | |
1039 | h->next = header_list; | |
1040 | header_list = h; | |
1041 | DEBUG(D_receive|D_acl) debug_printf(" (at top)"); | |
1042 | break; | |
1043 | ||
1044 | case htype_add_rec: | |
1045 | if (last_received == NULL) | |
1046 | { | |
1047 | last_received = header_list; | |
1048 | while (!header_testname(last_received, US"Received", 8, FALSE)) | |
1049 | last_received = last_received->next; | |
1050 | while (last_received->next != NULL && | |
1051 | header_testname(last_received->next, US"Received", 8, FALSE)) | |
1052 | last_received = last_received->next; | |
1053 | } | |
1054 | h->next = last_received->next; | |
1055 | last_received->next = h; | |
1056 | DEBUG(D_receive|D_acl) debug_printf(" (after Received:)"); | |
1057 | break; | |
1058 | ||
8523533c TK |
1059 | case htype_add_rfc: |
1060 | /* add header before any header which is NOT Received: or Resent- */ | |
1061 | last_received = header_list; | |
1062 | while ( (last_received->next != NULL) && | |
1063 | ( (header_testname(last_received->next, US"Received", 8, FALSE)) || | |
1064 | (header_testname_incomplete(last_received->next, US"Resent-", 7, FALSE)) ) ) | |
1065 | last_received = last_received->next; | |
1066 | /* last_received now points to the last Received: or Resent-* header | |
1067 | in an uninterrupted chain of those header types (seen from the beginning | |
1068 | of all headers. Our current header must follow it. */ | |
1069 | h->next = last_received->next; | |
1070 | last_received->next = h; | |
8e669ac1 | 1071 | DEBUG(D_receive|D_acl) debug_printf(" (before any non-Received: or Resent-*: header)"); |
8523533c TK |
1072 | break; |
1073 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
1074 | default: |
1075 | h->next = NULL; | |
1076 | header_last->next = h; | |
1077 | break; | |
1078 | } | |
1079 | ||
1080 | if (h->next == NULL) header_last = h; | |
1081 | ||
1082 | /* Check for one of the known header types (From:, To:, etc.) though in | |
1083 | practice most added headers are going to be "other". Lower case | |
1084 | identification letters are never stored with the header; they are used | |
1085 | for existence tests when messages are received. So discard any lower case | |
1086 | flag values. */ | |
1087 | ||
1088 | h->type = header_checkname(h, FALSE); | |
1089 | if (h->type >= 'a') h->type = htype_other; | |
1090 | ||
1091 | DEBUG(D_receive|D_acl) debug_printf(" %s", header_last->text); | |
1092 | } | |
1093 | ||
71fafd95 | 1094 | acl_added_headers = NULL; |
059ec3d9 PH |
1095 | DEBUG(D_receive|D_acl) debug_printf(">>\n"); |
1096 | } | |
1097 | ||
1098 | ||
1099 | ||
1100 | /************************************************* | |
1101 | * Add host information for log line * | |
1102 | *************************************************/ | |
1103 | ||
1104 | /* Called for acceptance and rejecting log lines. This adds information about | |
1105 | the calling host to a string that is being built dynamically. | |
1106 | ||
1107 | Arguments: | |
1108 | s the dynamic string | |
1109 | sizeptr points to the size variable | |
1110 | ptrptr points to the pointer variable | |
1111 | ||
1112 | Returns: the extended string | |
1113 | */ | |
1114 | ||
1115 | static uschar * | |
1116 | add_host_info_for_log(uschar *s, int *sizeptr, int *ptrptr) | |
1117 | { | |
1118 | if (sender_fullhost != NULL) | |
1119 | { | |
1120 | s = string_append(s, sizeptr, ptrptr, 2, US" H=", sender_fullhost); | |
1121 | if ((log_extra_selector & LX_incoming_interface) != 0 && | |
1122 | interface_address != NULL) | |
1123 | { | |
1124 | uschar *ss = string_sprintf(" I=[%s]:%d", interface_address, | |
1125 | interface_port); | |
1126 | s = string_cat(s, sizeptr, ptrptr, ss, Ustrlen(ss)); | |
1127 | } | |
1128 | } | |
1129 | if (sender_ident != NULL) | |
1130 | s = string_append(s, sizeptr, ptrptr, 2, US" U=", sender_ident); | |
1131 | if (received_protocol != NULL) | |
1132 | s = string_append(s, sizeptr, ptrptr, 2, US" P=", received_protocol); | |
1133 | return s; | |
1134 | } | |
1135 | ||
1136 | ||
1137 | ||
63955bf2 | 1138 | #ifdef WITH_CONTENT_SCAN |
059ec3d9 | 1139 | |
54cdb463 PH |
1140 | /************************************************* |
1141 | * Run the MIME ACL on a message * | |
1142 | *************************************************/ | |
1143 | ||
1144 | /* This code is in a subroutine so that it can be used for both SMTP | |
1145 | and non-SMTP messages. It is called with a non-NULL ACL pointer. | |
1146 | ||
1147 | Arguments: | |
1148 | acl The ACL to run (acl_smtp_mime or acl_not_smtp_mime) | |
1149 | smtp_yield_ptr Set FALSE to kill messages after dropped connection | |
1150 | smtp_reply_ptr Where SMTP reply is being built | |
1151 | blackholed_by_ptr Where "blackholed by" message is being built | |
1152 | ||
1153 | Returns: TRUE to carry on; FALSE to abandon the message | |
1154 | */ | |
1155 | ||
1156 | static BOOL | |
1157 | run_mime_acl(uschar *acl, BOOL *smtp_yield_ptr, uschar **smtp_reply_ptr, | |
1158 | uschar **blackholed_by_ptr) | |
1159 | { | |
1160 | FILE *mbox_file; | |
1161 | uschar rfc822_file_path[2048]; | |
1162 | unsigned long mbox_size; | |
1163 | header_line *my_headerlist; | |
1164 | uschar *user_msg, *log_msg; | |
1165 | int mime_part_count_buffer = -1; | |
7156b1ef | 1166 | int rc = OK; |
54cdb463 PH |
1167 | |
1168 | memset(CS rfc822_file_path,0,2048); | |
1169 | ||
1170 | /* check if it is a MIME message */ | |
1171 | my_headerlist = header_list; | |
4e88a19f PH |
1172 | while (my_headerlist != NULL) |
1173 | { | |
54cdb463 | 1174 | /* skip deleted headers */ |
4e88a19f PH |
1175 | if (my_headerlist->type == '*') |
1176 | { | |
54cdb463 PH |
1177 | my_headerlist = my_headerlist->next; |
1178 | continue; | |
4e88a19f PH |
1179 | } |
1180 | if (strncmpic(my_headerlist->text, US"Content-Type:", 13) == 0) | |
1181 | { | |
54cdb463 PH |
1182 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("Found Content-Type: header - executing acl_smtp_mime.\n"); |
1183 | goto DO_MIME_ACL; | |
4e88a19f | 1184 | } |
54cdb463 | 1185 | my_headerlist = my_headerlist->next; |
4e88a19f | 1186 | } |
54cdb463 PH |
1187 | |
1188 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("No Content-Type: header - presumably not a MIME message.\n"); | |
1189 | return TRUE; | |
1190 | ||
1191 | DO_MIME_ACL: | |
1192 | /* make sure the eml mbox file is spooled up */ | |
8544e77a | 1193 | mbox_file = spool_mbox(&mbox_size, NULL); |
54cdb463 PH |
1194 | if (mbox_file == NULL) { |
1195 | /* error while spooling */ | |
1196 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, | |
1197 | "acl_smtp_mime: error while creating mbox spool file, message temporarily rejected."); | |
1198 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
1199 | unspool_mbox(); | |
6f0c431a PP |
1200 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_DCC |
1201 | dcc_ok = 0; | |
1202 | #endif | |
a5bd321b | 1203 | smtp_respond(US"451", 3, TRUE, US"temporary local problem"); |
54cdb463 PH |
1204 | message_id[0] = 0; /* Indicate no message accepted */ |
1205 | *smtp_reply_ptr = US""; /* Indicate reply already sent */ | |
1206 | return FALSE; /* Indicate skip to end of receive function */ | |
1207 | }; | |
1208 | ||
1209 | mime_is_rfc822 = 0; | |
1210 | ||
1211 | MIME_ACL_CHECK: | |
1212 | mime_part_count = -1; | |
1213 | rc = mime_acl_check(acl, mbox_file, NULL, &user_msg, &log_msg); | |
f1e894f3 | 1214 | (void)fclose(mbox_file); |
54cdb463 | 1215 | |
4e88a19f PH |
1216 | if (Ustrlen(rfc822_file_path) > 0) |
1217 | { | |
54cdb463 PH |
1218 | mime_part_count = mime_part_count_buffer; |
1219 | ||
4e88a19f PH |
1220 | if (unlink(CS rfc822_file_path) == -1) |
1221 | { | |
54cdb463 PH |
1222 | log_write(0, LOG_PANIC, |
1223 | "acl_smtp_mime: can't unlink RFC822 spool file, skipping."); | |
1224 | goto END_MIME_ACL; | |
4e88a19f PH |
1225 | } |
1226 | } | |
54cdb463 PH |
1227 | |
1228 | /* check if we must check any message/rfc822 attachments */ | |
4e88a19f PH |
1229 | if (rc == OK) |
1230 | { | |
54cdb463 | 1231 | uschar temp_path[1024]; |
e8bc7fca JH |
1232 | struct dirent * entry; |
1233 | DIR * tempdir; | |
54cdb463 | 1234 | |
e8bc7fca JH |
1235 | (void) string_format(temp_path, sizeof(temp_path), "%s/scan/%s", |
1236 | spool_directory, message_id); | |
54cdb463 | 1237 | |
4e88a19f | 1238 | tempdir = opendir(CS temp_path); |
e8bc7fca | 1239 | for (;;) |
4e88a19f | 1240 | { |
e8bc7fca JH |
1241 | if (!(entry = readdir(tempdir))) |
1242 | break; | |
1243 | if (strncmpic(US entry->d_name, US"__rfc822_", 9) == 0) | |
4e88a19f | 1244 | { |
e8bc7fca JH |
1245 | (void) string_format(rfc822_file_path, sizeof(rfc822_file_path), |
1246 | "%s/scan/%s/%s", spool_directory, message_id, entry->d_name); | |
1247 | debug_printf("RFC822 attachment detected: running MIME ACL for '%s'\n", | |
1248 | rfc822_file_path); | |
4e88a19f PH |
1249 | break; |
1250 | } | |
e8bc7fca | 1251 | } |
4e88a19f | 1252 | closedir(tempdir); |
54cdb463 | 1253 | |
e8bc7fca | 1254 | if (entry) |
4e88a19f | 1255 | { |
e8bc7fca | 1256 | if ((mbox_file = Ufopen(rfc822_file_path, "rb"))) |
4e88a19f | 1257 | { |
e8bc7fca JH |
1258 | /* set RFC822 expansion variable */ |
1259 | mime_is_rfc822 = 1; | |
1260 | mime_part_count_buffer = mime_part_count; | |
1261 | goto MIME_ACL_CHECK; | |
4e88a19f | 1262 | } |
e8bc7fca JH |
1263 | log_write(0, LOG_PANIC, |
1264 | "acl_smtp_mime: can't open RFC822 spool file, skipping."); | |
1265 | unlink(CS rfc822_file_path); | |
4e88a19f PH |
1266 | } |
1267 | } | |
54cdb463 PH |
1268 | |
1269 | END_MIME_ACL: | |
578d43dc | 1270 | add_acl_headers(ACL_WHERE_MIME, US"MIME"); |
54cdb463 PH |
1271 | if (rc == DISCARD) |
1272 | { | |
1273 | recipients_count = 0; | |
1274 | *blackholed_by_ptr = US"MIME ACL"; | |
1275 | } | |
1276 | else if (rc != OK) | |
1277 | { | |
1278 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
1279 | unspool_mbox(); | |
6f0c431a PP |
1280 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_DCC |
1281 | dcc_ok = 0; | |
1282 | #endif | |
f4c1088b | 1283 | if (smtp_input && smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_MIME, rc, user_msg, log_msg) != 0) { |
54cdb463 | 1284 | *smtp_yield_ptr = FALSE; /* No more messsages after dropped connection */ |
f4c1088b PP |
1285 | *smtp_reply_ptr = US""; /* Indicate reply already sent */ |
1286 | } | |
54cdb463 PH |
1287 | message_id[0] = 0; /* Indicate no message accepted */ |
1288 | return FALSE; /* Cause skip to end of receive function */ | |
4e88a19f | 1289 | } |
54cdb463 PH |
1290 | |
1291 | return TRUE; | |
1292 | } | |
1293 | ||
63955bf2 | 1294 | #endif /* WITH_CONTENT_SCAN */ |
54cdb463 PH |
1295 | |
1296 | ||
e4bdf652 JH |
1297 | |
1298 | void | |
1299 | received_header_gen(void) | |
1300 | { | |
1301 | uschar *received; | |
1302 | uschar *timestamp; | |
1303 | header_line *received_header= header_list; | |
1304 | ||
1305 | timestamp = expand_string(US"${tod_full}"); | |
1306 | if (recipients_count == 1) received_for = recipients_list[0].address; | |
1307 | received = expand_string(received_header_text); | |
1308 | received_for = NULL; | |
1309 | ||
1310 | if (received == NULL) | |
1311 | { | |
1312 | if(spool_name[0] != 0) | |
1313 | Uunlink(spool_name); /* Lose the data file */ | |
1314 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Expansion of \"%s\" " | |
1315 | "(received_header_text) failed: %s", string_printing(received_header_text), | |
1316 | expand_string_message); | |
1317 | } | |
1318 | ||
1319 | /* The first element on the header chain is reserved for the Received header, | |
1320 | so all we have to do is fill in the text pointer, and set the type. However, if | |
1321 | the result of the expansion is an empty string, we leave the header marked as | |
1322 | "old" so as to refrain from adding a Received header. */ | |
1323 | ||
1324 | if (received[0] == 0) | |
1325 | { | |
1326 | received_header->text = string_sprintf("Received: ; %s\n", timestamp); | |
1327 | received_header->type = htype_old; | |
1328 | } | |
1329 | else | |
1330 | { | |
1331 | received_header->text = string_sprintf("%s; %s\n", received, timestamp); | |
1332 | received_header->type = htype_received; | |
1333 | } | |
1334 | ||
1335 | received_header->slen = Ustrlen(received_header->text); | |
1336 | ||
1337 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf(">>Generated Received: header line\n%c %s", | |
1338 | received_header->type, received_header->text); | |
1339 | } | |
1340 | ||
1341 | ||
1342 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
1343 | /************************************************* |
1344 | * Receive message * | |
1345 | *************************************************/ | |
1346 | ||
1347 | /* Receive a message on the given input, and put it into a pair of spool files. | |
1348 | Either a non-null list of recipients, or the extract flag will be true, or | |
1349 | both. The flag sender_local is true for locally generated messages. The flag | |
1350 | submission_mode is true if an ACL has obeyed "control = submission". The flag | |
8800895a | 1351 | suppress_local_fixups is true if an ACL has obeyed "control = |
f4ee74ac PP |
1352 | suppress_local_fixups" or -G was passed on the command-line. |
1353 | The flag smtp_input is true if the message is to be | |
8800895a PH |
1354 | handled using SMTP conventions about termination and lines starting with dots. |
1355 | For non-SMTP messages, dot_ends is true for dot-terminated messages. | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1356 | |
1357 | If a message was successfully read, message_id[0] will be non-zero. | |
1358 | ||
1359 | The general actions of this function are: | |
1360 | ||
1361 | . Read the headers of the message (if any) into a chain of store | |
1362 | blocks. | |
1363 | ||
1364 | . If there is a "sender:" header and the message is locally originated, | |
69358f02 PH |
1365 | throw it away, unless the caller is trusted, or unless |
1366 | active_local_sender_retain is set - which can only happen if | |
1367 | active_local_from_check is false. | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1368 | |
1369 | . If recipients are to be extracted from the message, build the | |
1370 | recipients list from the headers, removing any that were on the | |
1371 | original recipients list (unless extract_addresses_remove_arguments is | |
1372 | false), and at the same time, remove any bcc header that may be present. | |
1373 | ||
1374 | . Get the spool file for the data, sort out its unique name, open | |
1375 | and lock it (but don't give it the name yet). | |
1376 | ||
1377 | . Generate a "Message-Id" header if the message doesn't have one, for | |
1378 | locally-originated messages. | |
1379 | ||
1380 | . Generate a "Received" header. | |
1381 | ||
1382 | . Ensure the recipients list is fully qualified and rewritten if necessary. | |
1383 | ||
1384 | . If there are any rewriting rules, apply them to the sender address | |
1385 | and also to the headers. | |
1386 | ||
1387 | . If there is no from: header, generate one, for locally-generated messages | |
1388 | and messages in "submission mode" only. | |
1389 | ||
1390 | . If the sender is local, check that from: is correct, and if not, generate | |
1391 | a Sender: header, unless message comes from a trusted caller, or this | |
69358f02 | 1392 | feature is disabled by active_local_from_check being false. |
059ec3d9 PH |
1393 | |
1394 | . If there is no "date" header, generate one, for locally-originated | |
1395 | or submission mode messages only. | |
1396 | ||
1397 | . Copy the rest of the input, or up to a terminating "." if in SMTP or | |
1398 | dot_ends mode, to the data file. Leave it open, to hold the lock. | |
1399 | ||
1400 | . Write the envelope and the headers to a new file. | |
1401 | ||
1402 | . Set the name for the header file; close it. | |
1403 | ||
1404 | . Set the name for the data file; close it. | |
1405 | ||
1406 | Because this function can potentially be called many times in a single | |
1407 | SMTP connection, all store should be got by store_get(), so that it will be | |
1408 | automatically retrieved after the message is accepted. | |
1409 | ||
1410 | FUDGE: It seems that sites on the net send out messages with just LF | |
1411 | terminators, despite the warnings in the RFCs, and other MTAs handle this. So | |
1412 | we make the CRs optional in all cases. | |
1413 | ||
1414 | July 2003: Bare CRs in messages, especially in header lines, cause trouble. A | |
1415 | new regime is now in place in which bare CRs in header lines are turned into LF | |
1416 | followed by a space, so as not to terminate the header line. | |
1417 | ||
1418 | February 2004: A bare LF in a header line in a message whose first line was | |
1419 | terminated by CRLF is treated in the same way as a bare CR. | |
1420 | ||
1421 | Arguments: | |
1422 | extract_recip TRUE if recipients are to be extracted from the message's | |
1423 | headers | |
1424 | ||
1425 | Returns: TRUE there are more messages to be read (SMTP input) | |
1426 | FALSE there are no more messages to be read (non-SMTP input | |
1427 | or SMTP connection collapsed, or other failure) | |
1428 | ||
1429 | When reading a message for filter testing, the returned value indicates | |
1430 | whether the headers (which is all that is read) were terminated by '.' or | |
1431 | not. */ | |
1432 | ||
1433 | BOOL | |
1434 | receive_msg(BOOL extract_recip) | |
1435 | { | |
7156b1ef NM |
1436 | int i; |
1437 | int rc = FAIL; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1438 | int msg_size = 0; |
1439 | int process_info_len = Ustrlen(process_info); | |
1440 | int error_rc = (error_handling == ERRORS_SENDER)? | |
1441 | errors_sender_rc : EXIT_FAILURE; | |
1442 | int header_size = 256; | |
1443 | int start, end, domain, size, sptr; | |
1444 | int id_resolution; | |
1445 | int had_zero = 0; | |
d677b2f2 | 1446 | int prevlines_length = 0; |
059ec3d9 PH |
1447 | |
1448 | register int ptr = 0; | |
1449 | ||
1450 | BOOL contains_resent_headers = FALSE; | |
1451 | BOOL extracted_ignored = FALSE; | |
1452 | BOOL first_line_ended_crlf = TRUE_UNSET; | |
1453 | BOOL smtp_yield = TRUE; | |
1454 | BOOL yield = FALSE; | |
1455 | ||
1456 | BOOL resents_exist = FALSE; | |
1457 | uschar *resent_prefix = US""; | |
1458 | uschar *blackholed_by = NULL; | |
04f7d5b9 | 1459 | uschar *blackhole_log_msg = US""; |
c5430c20 | 1460 | enum {NOT_TRIED, TMP_REJ, PERM_REJ, ACCEPTED} cutthrough_done = NOT_TRIED; |
059ec3d9 PH |
1461 | |
1462 | flock_t lock_data; | |
1463 | error_block *bad_addresses = NULL; | |
1464 | ||
1465 | uschar *frozen_by = NULL; | |
1466 | uschar *queued_by = NULL; | |
1467 | ||
1468 | uschar *errmsg, *s; | |
1469 | struct stat statbuf; | |
1470 | ||
4e88a19f | 1471 | /* Final message to give to SMTP caller, and messages from ACLs */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1472 | |
1473 | uschar *smtp_reply = NULL; | |
4e88a19f | 1474 | uschar *user_msg, *log_msg; |
059ec3d9 PH |
1475 | |
1476 | /* Working header pointers */ | |
1477 | ||
1478 | header_line *h, *next; | |
1479 | ||
2cbb4081 | 1480 | /* Flags for noting the existence of certain headers (only one left) */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1481 | |
1482 | BOOL date_header_exists = FALSE; | |
1483 | ||
1484 | /* Pointers to receive the addresses of headers whose contents we need. */ | |
1485 | ||
1486 | header_line *from_header = NULL; | |
1487 | header_line *subject_header = NULL; | |
1488 | header_line *msgid_header = NULL; | |
1489 | header_line *received_header; | |
1490 | ||
4840604e TL |
1491 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_DMARC |
1492 | int dmarc_up = 0; | |
1493 | #endif /* EXPERIMENTAL_DMARC */ | |
1494 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
1495 | /* Variables for use when building the Received: header. */ |
1496 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
1497 | uschar *timestamp; |
1498 | int tslen; | |
1499 | ||
1500 | /* Release any open files that might have been cached while preparing to | |
1501 | accept the message - e.g. by verifying addresses - because reading a message | |
1502 | might take a fair bit of real time. */ | |
1503 | ||
1504 | search_tidyup(); | |
1505 | ||
e4bdf652 JH |
1506 | /* Extracting the recipient list from an input file is incompatible with |
1507 | cutthrough delivery with the no-spool option. It shouldn't be possible | |
817d9f57 | 1508 | to set up the combination, but just in case kill any ongoing connection. */ |
e4bdf652 | 1509 | if (extract_recip || !smtp_input) |
2e5b33cd | 1510 | cancel_cutthrough_connection("not smtp input"); |
e4bdf652 | 1511 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1512 | /* Initialize the chain of headers by setting up a place-holder for Received: |
1513 | header. Temporarily mark it as "old", i.e. not to be used. We keep header_last | |
1514 | pointing to the end of the chain to make adding headers simple. */ | |
1515 | ||
1516 | received_header = header_list = header_last = store_get(sizeof(header_line)); | |
1517 | header_list->next = NULL; | |
1518 | header_list->type = htype_old; | |
1519 | header_list->text = NULL; | |
1520 | header_list->slen = 0; | |
1521 | ||
1522 | /* Control block for the next header to be read. */ | |
1523 | ||
1524 | next = store_get(sizeof(header_line)); | |
1525 | next->text = store_get(header_size); | |
1526 | ||
1527 | /* Initialize message id to be null (indicating no message read), and the | |
1528 | header names list to be the normal list. Indicate there is no data file open | |
1529 | yet, initialize the size and warning count, and deal with no size limit. */ | |
1530 | ||
1531 | message_id[0] = 0; | |
1532 | data_file = NULL; | |
1533 | data_fd = -1; | |
1534 | spool_name[0] = 0; | |
1535 | message_size = 0; | |
1536 | warning_count = 0; | |
d677b2f2 | 1537 | received_count = 1; /* For the one we will add */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1538 | |
1539 | if (thismessage_size_limit <= 0) thismessage_size_limit = INT_MAX; | |
1540 | ||
2e0c1448 | 1541 | /* While reading the message, the following counts are computed. */ |
059ec3d9 | 1542 | |
d677b2f2 PH |
1543 | message_linecount = body_linecount = body_zerocount = |
1544 | max_received_linelength = 0; | |
059ec3d9 | 1545 | |
80a47a2c TK |
1546 | #ifndef DISABLE_DKIM |
1547 | /* Call into DKIM to set up the context. */ | |
1548 | if (smtp_input && !smtp_batched_input && !dkim_disable_verify) dkim_exim_verify_init(); | |
fb2274d4 TK |
1549 | #endif |
1550 | ||
4840604e TL |
1551 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_DMARC |
1552 | /* initialize libopendmarc */ | |
1553 | dmarc_up = dmarc_init(); | |
1554 | #endif | |
1555 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
1556 | /* Remember the time of reception. Exim uses time+pid for uniqueness of message |
1557 | ids, and fractions of a second are required. See the comments that precede the | |
1558 | message id creation below. */ | |
1559 | ||
1560 | (void)gettimeofday(&message_id_tv, NULL); | |
1561 | ||
1562 | /* For other uses of the received time we can operate with granularity of one | |
1563 | second, and for that we use the global variable received_time. This is for | |
1564 | things like ultimate message timeouts. */ | |
1565 | ||
1566 | received_time = message_id_tv.tv_sec; | |
1567 | ||
1568 | /* If SMTP input, set the special handler for timeouts. The alarm() calls | |
1569 | happen in the smtp_getc() function when it refills its buffer. */ | |
1570 | ||
1571 | if (smtp_input) os_non_restarting_signal(SIGALRM, data_timeout_handler); | |
1572 | ||
1573 | /* If not SMTP input, timeout happens only if configured, and we just set a | |
1574 | single timeout for the whole message. */ | |
1575 | ||
1576 | else if (receive_timeout > 0) | |
1577 | { | |
1578 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGALRM, data_timeout_handler); | |
1579 | alarm(receive_timeout); | |
1580 | } | |
1581 | ||
1582 | /* SIGTERM and SIGINT are caught always. */ | |
1583 | ||
1584 | signal(SIGTERM, data_sigterm_sigint_handler); | |
1585 | signal(SIGINT, data_sigterm_sigint_handler); | |
1586 | ||
1587 | /* Header lines in messages are not supposed to be very long, though when | |
1588 | unfolded, to: and cc: headers can take up a lot of store. We must also cope | |
1589 | with the possibility of junk being thrown at us. Start by getting 256 bytes for | |
1590 | storing the header, and extend this as necessary using string_cat(). | |
1591 | ||
1592 | To cope with total lunacies, impose an upper limit on the length of the header | |
1593 | section of the message, as otherwise the store will fill up. We must also cope | |
1594 | with the possibility of binary zeros in the data. Hence we cannot use fgets(). | |
1595 | Folded header lines are joined into one string, leaving the '\n' characters | |
1596 | inside them, so that writing them out reproduces the input. | |
1597 | ||
1598 | Loop for each character of each header; the next structure for chaining the | |
1599 | header is set up already, with ptr the offset of the next character in | |
1600 | next->text. */ | |
1601 | ||
1602 | for (;;) | |
1603 | { | |
80a47a2c | 1604 | int ch = (receive_getc)(); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1605 | |
1606 | /* If we hit EOF on a SMTP connection, it's an error, since incoming | |
1607 | SMTP must have a correct "." terminator. */ | |
1608 | ||
1609 | if (ch == EOF && smtp_input /* && !smtp_batched_input */) | |
1610 | { | |
1611 | smtp_reply = handle_lost_connection(US" (header)"); | |
1612 | smtp_yield = FALSE; | |
1613 | goto TIDYUP; /* Skip to end of function */ | |
1614 | } | |
1615 | ||
1616 | /* See if we are at the current header's size limit - there must be at least | |
1617 | four bytes left. This allows for the new character plus a zero, plus two for | |
1618 | extra insertions when we are playing games with dots and carriage returns. If | |
1619 | we are at the limit, extend the text buffer. This could have been done | |
1620 | automatically using string_cat() but because this is a tightish loop storing | |
1621 | only one character at a time, we choose to do it inline. Normally | |
1622 | store_extend() will be able to extend the block; only at the end of a big | |
1623 | store block will a copy be needed. To handle the case of very long headers | |
1624 | (and sometimes lunatic messages can have ones that are 100s of K long) we | |
1625 | call store_release() for strings that have been copied - if the string is at | |
1626 | the start of a block (and therefore the only thing in it, because we aren't | |
1627 | doing any other gets), the block gets freed. We can only do this because we | |
1628 | know there are no other calls to store_get() going on. */ | |
1629 | ||
1630 | if (ptr >= header_size - 4) | |
1631 | { | |
1632 | int oldsize = header_size; | |
1633 | /* header_size += 256; */ | |
1634 | header_size *= 2; | |
1635 | if (!store_extend(next->text, oldsize, header_size)) | |
1636 | { | |
1637 | uschar *newtext = store_get(header_size); | |
1638 | memcpy(newtext, next->text, ptr); | |
1639 | store_release(next->text); | |
1640 | next->text = newtext; | |
1641 | } | |
1642 | } | |
1643 | ||
1644 | /* Cope with receiving a binary zero. There is dispute about whether | |
1645 | these should be allowed in RFC 822 messages. The middle view is that they | |
1646 | should not be allowed in headers, at least. Exim takes this attitude at | |
1647 | the moment. We can't just stomp on them here, because we don't know that | |
1648 | this line is a header yet. Set a flag to cause scanning later. */ | |
1649 | ||
1650 | if (ch == 0) had_zero++; | |
1651 | ||
1652 | /* Test for termination. Lines in remote SMTP are terminated by CRLF, while | |
1653 | those from data files use just LF. Treat LF in local SMTP input as a | |
1654 | terminator too. Treat EOF as a line terminator always. */ | |
1655 | ||
1656 | if (ch == EOF) goto EOL; | |
1657 | ||
1658 | /* FUDGE: There are sites out there that don't send CRs before their LFs, and | |
1659 | other MTAs accept this. We are therefore forced into this "liberalisation" | |
1660 | too, so we accept LF as a line terminator whatever the source of the message. | |
1661 | However, if the first line of the message ended with a CRLF, we treat a bare | |
1662 | LF specially by inserting a white space after it to ensure that the header | |
1663 | line is not terminated. */ | |
1664 | ||
1665 | if (ch == '\n') | |
1666 | { | |
1667 | if (first_line_ended_crlf == TRUE_UNSET) first_line_ended_crlf = FALSE; | |
80a47a2c | 1668 | else if (first_line_ended_crlf) receive_ungetc(' '); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1669 | goto EOL; |
1670 | } | |
1671 | ||
1672 | /* This is not the end of the line. If this is SMTP input and this is | |
1673 | the first character in the line and it is a "." character, ignore it. | |
1674 | This implements the dot-doubling rule, though header lines starting with | |
1675 | dots aren't exactly common. They are legal in RFC 822, though. If the | |
1676 | following is CRLF or LF, this is the line that that terminates the | |
1677 | entire message. We set message_ended to indicate this has happened (to | |
1678 | prevent further reading), and break out of the loop, having freed the | |
1679 | empty header, and set next = NULL to indicate no data line. */ | |
1680 | ||
1681 | if (ptr == 0 && ch == '.' && (smtp_input || dot_ends)) | |
1682 | { | |
80a47a2c | 1683 | ch = (receive_getc)(); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1684 | if (ch == '\r') |
1685 | { | |
80a47a2c | 1686 | ch = (receive_getc)(); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1687 | if (ch != '\n') |
1688 | { | |
80a47a2c | 1689 | receive_ungetc(ch); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1690 | ch = '\r'; /* Revert to CR */ |
1691 | } | |
1692 | } | |
1693 | if (ch == '\n') | |
1694 | { | |
1695 | message_ended = END_DOT; | |
1696 | store_reset(next); | |
1697 | next = NULL; | |
1698 | break; /* End character-reading loop */ | |
1699 | } | |
1700 | ||
1701 | /* For non-SMTP input, the dot at the start of the line was really a data | |
1702 | character. What is now in ch is the following character. We guaranteed | |
1703 | enough space for this above. */ | |
1704 | ||
1705 | if (!smtp_input) | |
1706 | { | |
1707 | next->text[ptr++] = '.'; | |
1708 | message_size++; | |
1709 | } | |
1710 | } | |
1711 | ||
1712 | /* If CR is immediately followed by LF, end the line, ignoring the CR, and | |
1713 | remember this case if this is the first line ending. */ | |
1714 | ||
1715 | if (ch == '\r') | |
1716 | { | |
80a47a2c | 1717 | ch = (receive_getc)(); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1718 | if (ch == '\n') |
1719 | { | |
1720 | if (first_line_ended_crlf == TRUE_UNSET) first_line_ended_crlf = TRUE; | |
1721 | goto EOL; | |
1722 | } | |
1723 | ||
1724 | /* Otherwise, put back the character after CR, and turn the bare CR | |
1725 | into LF SP. */ | |
1726 | ||
80a47a2c | 1727 | ch = (receive_ungetc)(ch); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1728 | next->text[ptr++] = '\n'; |
1729 | message_size++; | |
1730 | ch = ' '; | |
1731 | } | |
1732 | ||
1733 | /* We have a data character for the header line. */ | |
1734 | ||
1735 | next->text[ptr++] = ch; /* Add to buffer */ | |
1736 | message_size++; /* Total message size so far */ | |
1737 | ||
1738 | /* Handle failure due to a humungously long header section. The >= allows | |
1739 | for the terminating \n. Add what we have so far onto the headers list so | |
1740 | that it gets reflected in any error message, and back up the just-read | |
1741 | character. */ | |
1742 | ||
1743 | if (message_size >= header_maxsize) | |
1744 | { | |
1745 | next->text[ptr] = 0; | |
1746 | next->slen = ptr; | |
1747 | next->type = htype_other; | |
1748 | next->next = NULL; | |
1749 | header_last->next = next; | |
1750 | header_last = next; | |
1751 | ||
1752 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "ridiculously long message header received from " | |
1753 | "%s (more than %d characters): message abandoned", | |
1754 | sender_host_unknown? sender_ident : sender_fullhost, header_maxsize); | |
1755 | ||
1756 | if (smtp_input) | |
1757 | { | |
1758 | smtp_reply = US"552 Message header is ridiculously long"; | |
1759 | receive_swallow_smtp(); | |
1760 | goto TIDYUP; /* Skip to end of function */ | |
1761 | } | |
1762 | ||
1763 | else | |
1764 | { | |
1765 | give_local_error(ERRMESS_VLONGHEADER, | |
1766 | string_sprintf("message header longer than %d characters received: " | |
1767 | "message not accepted", header_maxsize), US"", error_rc, stdin, | |
1768 | header_list->next); | |
1769 | /* Does not return */ | |
1770 | } | |
1771 | } | |
1772 | ||
1773 | continue; /* With next input character */ | |
1774 | ||
1775 | /* End of header line reached */ | |
1776 | ||
1777 | EOL: | |
2e0c1448 PH |
1778 | |
1779 | /* Keep track of lines for BSMTP errors and overall message_linecount. */ | |
1780 | ||
1781 | receive_linecount++; | |
1782 | message_linecount++; | |
059ec3d9 | 1783 | |
d677b2f2 PH |
1784 | /* Keep track of maximum line length */ |
1785 | ||
1786 | if (ptr - prevlines_length > max_received_linelength) | |
1787 | max_received_linelength = ptr - prevlines_length; | |
1788 | prevlines_length = ptr + 1; | |
1789 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
1790 | /* Now put in the terminating newline. There is always space for |
1791 | at least two more characters. */ | |
1792 | ||
1793 | next->text[ptr++] = '\n'; | |
1794 | message_size++; | |
1795 | ||
1796 | /* A blank line signals the end of the headers; release the unwanted | |
1797 | space and set next to NULL to indicate this. */ | |
1798 | ||
1799 | if (ptr == 1) | |
1800 | { | |
1801 | store_reset(next); | |
1802 | next = NULL; | |
1803 | break; | |
1804 | } | |
1805 | ||
1806 | /* There is data in the line; see if the next input character is a | |
1807 | whitespace character. If it is, we have a continuation of this header line. | |
1808 | There is always space for at least one character at this point. */ | |
1809 | ||
1810 | if (ch != EOF) | |
1811 | { | |
80a47a2c | 1812 | int nextch = (receive_getc)(); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1813 | if (nextch == ' ' || nextch == '\t') |
1814 | { | |
1815 | next->text[ptr++] = nextch; | |
1816 | message_size++; | |
1817 | continue; /* Iterate the loop */ | |
1818 | } | |
80a47a2c | 1819 | else if (nextch != EOF) (receive_ungetc)(nextch); /* For next time */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1820 | else ch = EOF; /* Cause main loop to exit at end */ |
1821 | } | |
1822 | ||
1823 | /* We have got to the real line end. Terminate the string and release store | |
1824 | beyond it. If it turns out to be a real header, internal binary zeros will | |
1825 | be squashed later. */ | |
1826 | ||
1827 | next->text[ptr] = 0; | |
1828 | next->slen = ptr; | |
1829 | store_reset(next->text + ptr + 1); | |
1830 | ||
1831 | /* Check the running total size against the overall message size limit. We | |
1832 | don't expect to fail here, but if the overall limit is set less than MESSAGE_ | |
1833 | MAXSIZE and a big header is sent, we want to catch it. Just stop reading | |
1834 | headers - the code to read the body will then also hit the buffer. */ | |
1835 | ||
1836 | if (message_size > thismessage_size_limit) break; | |
1837 | ||
1838 | /* A line that is not syntactically correct for a header also marks | |
1839 | the end of the headers. In this case, we leave next containing the | |
1840 | first data line. This might actually be several lines because of the | |
1841 | continuation logic applied above, but that doesn't matter. | |
1842 | ||
1843 | It turns out that smail, and presumably sendmail, accept leading lines | |
1844 | of the form | |
1845 | ||
1846 | From ph10 Fri Jan 5 12:35 GMT 1996 | |
1847 | ||
1848 | in messages. The "mail" command on Solaris 2 sends such lines. I cannot | |
1849 | find any documentation of this, but for compatibility it had better be | |
1850 | accepted. Exim restricts it to the case of non-smtp messages, and | |
1851 | treats it as an alternative to the -f command line option. Thus it is | |
1852 | ignored except for trusted users or filter testing. Otherwise it is taken | |
1853 | as the sender address, unless -f was used (sendmail compatibility). | |
1854 | ||
1855 | It further turns out that some UUCPs generate the From_line in a different | |
1856 | format, e.g. | |
1857 | ||
1858 | From ph10 Fri, 7 Jan 97 14:00:00 GMT | |
1859 | ||
1860 | The regex for matching these things is now capable of recognizing both | |
1861 | formats (including 2- and 4-digit years in the latter). In fact, the regex | |
1862 | is now configurable, as is the expansion string to fish out the sender. | |
1863 | ||
1864 | Even further on it has been discovered that some broken clients send | |
1865 | these lines in SMTP messages. There is now an option to ignore them from | |
1866 | specified hosts or networks. Sigh. */ | |
1867 | ||
1868 | if (header_last == header_list && | |
1869 | (!smtp_input | |
1870 | || | |
1871 | (sender_host_address != NULL && | |
1872 | verify_check_host(&ignore_fromline_hosts) == OK) | |
1873 | || | |
1874 | (sender_host_address == NULL && ignore_fromline_local) | |
1875 | ) && | |
1876 | regex_match_and_setup(regex_From, next->text, 0, -1)) | |
1877 | { | |
1878 | if (!sender_address_forced) | |
1879 | { | |
1880 | uschar *uucp_sender = expand_string(uucp_from_sender); | |
1881 | if (uucp_sender == NULL) | |
1882 | { | |
1883 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, | |
1884 | "expansion of \"%s\" failed after matching " | |
1885 | "\"From \" line: %s", uucp_from_sender, expand_string_message); | |
1886 | } | |
1887 | else | |
1888 | { | |
1889 | int start, end, domain; | |
1890 | uschar *errmess; | |
1891 | uschar *newsender = parse_extract_address(uucp_sender, &errmess, | |
1892 | &start, &end, &domain, TRUE); | |
1893 | if (newsender != NULL) | |
1894 | { | |
1895 | if (domain == 0 && newsender[0] != 0) | |
1896 | newsender = rewrite_address_qualify(newsender, FALSE); | |
1897 | ||
f05da2e8 | 1898 | if (filter_test != FTEST_NONE || receive_check_set_sender(newsender)) |
059ec3d9 PH |
1899 | { |
1900 | sender_address = newsender; | |
1901 | ||
f05da2e8 | 1902 | if (trusted_caller || filter_test != FTEST_NONE) |
059ec3d9 PH |
1903 | { |
1904 | authenticated_sender = NULL; | |
1905 | originator_name = US""; | |
1906 | sender_local = FALSE; | |
1907 | } | |
1908 | ||
f05da2e8 | 1909 | if (filter_test != FTEST_NONE) |
059ec3d9 PH |
1910 | printf("Sender taken from \"From \" line\n"); |
1911 | } | |
1912 | } | |
1913 | } | |
1914 | } | |
1915 | } | |
1916 | ||
1917 | /* Not a leading "From " line. Check to see if it is a valid header line. | |
1918 | Header names may contain any non-control characters except space and colon, | |
1919 | amazingly. */ | |
1920 | ||
1921 | else | |
1922 | { | |
1923 | uschar *p = next->text; | |
1924 | ||
1925 | /* If not a valid header line, break from the header reading loop, leaving | |
1926 | next != NULL, indicating that it holds the first line of the body. */ | |
1927 | ||
1928 | if (isspace(*p)) break; | |
1929 | while (mac_isgraph(*p) && *p != ':') p++; | |
1930 | while (isspace(*p)) p++; | |
1931 | if (*p != ':') | |
1932 | { | |
1933 | body_zerocount = had_zero; | |
1934 | break; | |
1935 | } | |
1936 | ||
1937 | /* We have a valid header line. If there were any binary zeroes in | |
1938 | the line, stomp on them here. */ | |
1939 | ||
1940 | if (had_zero > 0) | |
1941 | for (p = next->text; p < next->text + ptr; p++) if (*p == 0) *p = '?'; | |
1942 | ||
1943 | /* It is perfectly legal to have an empty continuation line | |
1944 | at the end of a header, but it is confusing to humans | |
1945 | looking at such messages, since it looks like a blank line. | |
1946 | Reduce confusion by removing redundant white space at the | |
1947 | end. We know that there is at least one printing character | |
1948 | (the ':' tested for above) so there is no danger of running | |
1949 | off the end. */ | |
1950 | ||
1951 | p = next->text + ptr - 2; | |
1952 | for (;;) | |
1953 | { | |
1954 | while (*p == ' ' || *p == '\t') p--; | |
1955 | if (*p != '\n') break; | |
1956 | ptr = (p--) - next->text + 1; | |
1957 | message_size -= next->slen - ptr; | |
1958 | next->text[ptr] = 0; | |
1959 | next->slen = ptr; | |
1960 | } | |
1961 | ||
1962 | /* Add the header to the chain */ | |
1963 | ||
1964 | next->type = htype_other; | |
1965 | next->next = NULL; | |
1966 | header_last->next = next; | |
1967 | header_last = next; | |
1968 | ||
1969 | /* Check the limit for individual line lengths. This comes after adding to | |
1970 | the chain so that the failing line is reflected if a bounce is generated | |
1971 | (for a local message). */ | |
1972 | ||
1973 | if (header_line_maxsize > 0 && next->slen > header_line_maxsize) | |
1974 | { | |
1975 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "overlong message header line received from " | |
1976 | "%s (more than %d characters): message abandoned", | |
1977 | sender_host_unknown? sender_ident : sender_fullhost, | |
1978 | header_line_maxsize); | |
1979 | ||
1980 | if (smtp_input) | |
1981 | { | |
1982 | smtp_reply = US"552 A message header line is too long"; | |
1983 | receive_swallow_smtp(); | |
1984 | goto TIDYUP; /* Skip to end of function */ | |
1985 | } | |
1986 | ||
1987 | else | |
1988 | { | |
1989 | give_local_error(ERRMESS_VLONGHDRLINE, | |
1990 | string_sprintf("message header line longer than %d characters " | |
1991 | "received: message not accepted", header_line_maxsize), US"", | |
1992 | error_rc, stdin, header_list->next); | |
1993 | /* Does not return */ | |
1994 | } | |
1995 | } | |
1996 | ||
1997 | /* Note if any resent- fields exist. */ | |
1998 | ||
1999 | if (!resents_exist && strncmpic(next->text, US"resent-", 7) == 0) | |
2000 | { | |
2001 | resents_exist = TRUE; | |
2002 | resent_prefix = US"Resent-"; | |
2003 | } | |
2004 | } | |
2005 | ||
2006 | /* The line has been handled. If we have hit EOF, break out of the loop, | |
2007 | indicating no pending data line. */ | |
2008 | ||
2009 | if (ch == EOF) { next = NULL; break; } | |
2010 | ||
2011 | /* Set up for the next header */ | |
2012 | ||
2013 | header_size = 256; | |
2014 | next = store_get(sizeof(header_line)); | |
2015 | next->text = store_get(header_size); | |
2016 | ptr = 0; | |
2017 | had_zero = 0; | |
d677b2f2 | 2018 | prevlines_length = 0; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2019 | } /* Continue, starting to read the next header */ |
2020 | ||
2021 | /* At this point, we have read all the headers into a data structure in main | |
2022 | store. The first header is still the dummy placeholder for the Received: header | |
2023 | we are going to generate a bit later on. If next != NULL, it contains the first | |
2024 | data line - which terminated the headers before reaching a blank line (not the | |
2025 | normal case). */ | |
2026 | ||
2027 | DEBUG(D_receive) | |
2028 | { | |
2029 | debug_printf(">>Headers received:\n"); | |
2030 | for (h = header_list->next; h != NULL; h = h->next) | |
2031 | debug_printf("%s", h->text); | |
2032 | debug_printf("\n"); | |
2033 | } | |
2034 | ||
2035 | /* End of file on any SMTP connection is an error. If an incoming SMTP call | |
2036 | is dropped immediately after valid headers, the next thing we will see is EOF. | |
2037 | We must test for this specially, as further down the reading of the data is | |
2038 | skipped if already at EOF. */ | |
2039 | ||
2040 | if (smtp_input && (receive_feof)()) | |
2041 | { | |
2042 | smtp_reply = handle_lost_connection(US" (after header)"); | |
2043 | smtp_yield = FALSE; | |
2044 | goto TIDYUP; /* Skip to end of function */ | |
2045 | } | |
2046 | ||
2047 | /* If this is a filter test run and no headers were read, output a warning | |
2048 | in case there is a mistake in the test message. */ | |
2049 | ||
f05da2e8 | 2050 | if (filter_test != FTEST_NONE && header_list->next == NULL) |
059ec3d9 PH |
2051 | printf("Warning: no message headers read\n"); |
2052 | ||
2053 | ||
2054 | /* Scan the headers to identify them. Some are merely marked for later | |
2055 | processing; some are dealt with here. */ | |
2056 | ||
2057 | for (h = header_list->next; h != NULL; h = h->next) | |
2058 | { | |
2059 | BOOL is_resent = strncmpic(h->text, US"resent-", 7) == 0; | |
2060 | if (is_resent) contains_resent_headers = TRUE; | |
2061 | ||
2062 | switch (header_checkname(h, is_resent)) | |
2063 | { | |
059ec3d9 | 2064 | case htype_bcc: |
2cbb4081 | 2065 | h->type = htype_bcc; /* Both Bcc: and Resent-Bcc: */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
2066 | break; |
2067 | ||
059ec3d9 | 2068 | case htype_cc: |
2cbb4081 | 2069 | h->type = htype_cc; /* Both Cc: and Resent-Cc: */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
2070 | break; |
2071 | ||
2072 | /* Record whether a Date: or Resent-Date: header exists, as appropriate. */ | |
2073 | ||
2074 | case htype_date: | |
4c69d561 | 2075 | if (!resents_exist || is_resent) date_header_exists = TRUE; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2076 | break; |
2077 | ||
2078 | /* Same comments as about Return-Path: below. */ | |
2079 | ||
2080 | case htype_delivery_date: | |
2081 | if (delivery_date_remove) h->type = htype_old; | |
2082 | break; | |
2083 | ||
2084 | /* Same comments as about Return-Path: below. */ | |
2085 | ||
2086 | case htype_envelope_to: | |
2087 | if (envelope_to_remove) h->type = htype_old; | |
2088 | break; | |
2089 | ||
2090 | /* Mark all "From:" headers so they get rewritten. Save the one that is to | |
2091 | be used for Sender: checking. For Sendmail compatibility, if the "From:" | |
2092 | header consists of just the login id of the user who called Exim, rewrite | |
2093 | it with the gecos field first. Apply this rule to Resent-From: if there | |
2094 | are resent- fields. */ | |
2095 | ||
2096 | case htype_from: | |
2097 | h->type = htype_from; | |
2098 | if (!resents_exist || is_resent) | |
2099 | { | |
2100 | from_header = h; | |
2101 | if (!smtp_input) | |
2102 | { | |
5de8faa3 | 2103 | int len; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2104 | uschar *s = Ustrchr(h->text, ':') + 1; |
2105 | while (isspace(*s)) s++; | |
5de8faa3 | 2106 | len = h->slen - (s - h->text) - 1; |
e0fccd1d TF |
2107 | if (Ustrlen(originator_login) == len && |
2108 | strncmpic(s, originator_login, len) == 0) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2109 | { |
2110 | uschar *name = is_resent? US"Resent-From" : US"From"; | |
2111 | header_add(htype_from, "%s: %s <%s@%s>\n", name, originator_name, | |
2112 | originator_login, qualify_domain_sender); | |
2113 | from_header = header_last; | |
2114 | h->type = htype_old; | |
2115 | DEBUG(D_receive|D_rewrite) | |
2116 | debug_printf("rewrote \"%s:\" header using gecos\n", name); | |
2117 | } | |
2118 | } | |
2119 | } | |
2120 | break; | |
2121 | ||
2122 | /* Identify the Message-id: header for generating "in-reply-to" in the | |
2123 | autoreply transport. For incoming logging, save any resent- value. In both | |
2124 | cases, take just the first of any multiples. */ | |
2125 | ||
2126 | case htype_id: | |
2127 | if (msgid_header == NULL && (!resents_exist || is_resent)) | |
2128 | { | |
2129 | msgid_header = h; | |
2130 | h->type = htype_id; | |
2131 | } | |
2132 | break; | |
2133 | ||
2134 | /* Flag all Received: headers */ | |
2135 | ||
2136 | case htype_received: | |
2137 | h->type = htype_received; | |
2138 | received_count++; | |
2139 | break; | |
2140 | ||
2141 | /* "Reply-to:" is just noted (there is no resent-reply-to field) */ | |
2142 | ||
2143 | case htype_reply_to: | |
2144 | h->type = htype_reply_to; | |
2145 | break; | |
2146 | ||
2147 | /* The Return-path: header is supposed to be added to messages when | |
2148 | they leave the SMTP system. We shouldn't receive messages that already | |
2149 | contain Return-path. However, since Exim generates Return-path: on | |
2150 | local delivery, resent messages may well contain it. We therefore | |
2151 | provide an option (which defaults on) to remove any Return-path: headers | |
2152 | on input. Removal actually means flagging as "old", which prevents the | |
2153 | header being transmitted with the message. */ | |
2154 | ||
2155 | case htype_return_path: | |
2156 | if (return_path_remove) h->type = htype_old; | |
2157 | ||
2158 | /* If we are testing a mail filter file, use the value of the | |
2159 | Return-Path: header to set up the return_path variable, which is not | |
2160 | otherwise set. However, remove any <> that surround the address | |
2161 | because the variable doesn't have these. */ | |
2162 | ||
f05da2e8 | 2163 | if (filter_test != FTEST_NONE) |
059ec3d9 PH |
2164 | { |
2165 | uschar *start = h->text + 12; | |
2166 | uschar *end = start + Ustrlen(start); | |
2167 | while (isspace(*start)) start++; | |
2168 | while (end > start && isspace(end[-1])) end--; | |
2169 | if (*start == '<' && end[-1] == '>') | |
2170 | { | |
2171 | start++; | |
2172 | end--; | |
2173 | } | |
2174 | return_path = string_copyn(start, end - start); | |
2175 | printf("Return-path taken from \"Return-path:\" header line\n"); | |
2176 | } | |
2177 | break; | |
2178 | ||
2179 | /* If there is a "Sender:" header and the message is locally originated, | |
8800895a PH |
2180 | and from an untrusted caller and suppress_local_fixups is not set, or if we |
2181 | are in submission mode for a remote message, mark it "old" so that it will | |
2182 | not be transmitted with the message, unless active_local_sender_retain is | |
2183 | set. (This can only be true if active_local_from_check is false.) If there | |
2184 | are any resent- headers in the message, apply this rule to Resent-Sender: | |
2185 | instead of Sender:. Messages with multiple resent- header sets cannot be | |
2186 | tidily handled. (For this reason, at least one MUA - Pine - turns old | |
2187 | resent- headers into X-resent- headers when resending, leaving just one | |
2188 | set.) */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2189 | |
2190 | case htype_sender: | |
69358f02 | 2191 | h->type = ((!active_local_sender_retain && |
8800895a PH |
2192 | ( |
2193 | (sender_local && !trusted_caller && !suppress_local_fixups) | |
2194 | || submission_mode | |
2195 | ) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2196 | ) && |
2197 | (!resents_exist||is_resent))? | |
2198 | htype_old : htype_sender; | |
2199 | break; | |
2200 | ||
2201 | /* Remember the Subject: header for logging. There is no Resent-Subject */ | |
2202 | ||
2203 | case htype_subject: | |
2204 | subject_header = h; | |
2205 | break; | |
2206 | ||
2207 | /* "To:" gets flagged, and the existence of a recipient header is noted, | |
2208 | whether it's resent- or not. */ | |
2209 | ||
2210 | case htype_to: | |
2211 | h->type = htype_to; | |
2212 | /**** | |
2213 | to_or_cc_header_exists = TRUE; | |
2214 | ****/ | |
2215 | break; | |
2216 | } | |
2217 | } | |
2218 | ||
2219 | /* Extract recipients from the headers if that is required (the -t option). | |
2220 | Note that this is documented as being done *before* any address rewriting takes | |
2221 | place. There are two possibilities: | |
2222 | ||
2223 | (1) According to sendmail documentation for Solaris, IRIX, and HP-UX, any | |
2224 | recipients already listed are to be REMOVED from the message. Smail 3 works | |
2225 | like this. We need to build a non-recipients tree for that list, because in | |
2226 | subsequent processing this data is held in a tree and that's what the | |
2227 | spool_write_header() function expects. Make sure that non-recipient addresses | |
2228 | are fully qualified and rewritten if necessary. | |
2229 | ||
2230 | (2) According to other sendmail documentation, -t ADDS extracted recipients to | |
2231 | those in the command line arguments (and it is rumoured some other MTAs do | |
2232 | this). Therefore, there is an option to make Exim behave this way. | |
2233 | ||
2234 | *** Notes on "Resent-" header lines *** | |
2235 | ||
2236 | The presence of resent-headers in the message makes -t horribly ambiguous. | |
2237 | Experiments with sendmail showed that it uses recipients for all resent- | |
2238 | headers, totally ignoring the concept of "sets of resent- headers" as described | |
2239 | in RFC 2822 section 3.6.6. Sendmail also amalgamates them into a single set | |
2240 | with all the addresses in one instance of each header. | |
2241 | ||
2242 | This seems to me not to be at all sensible. Before release 4.20, Exim 4 gave an | |
2243 | error for -t if there were resent- headers in the message. However, after a | |
2244 | discussion on the mailing list, I've learned that there are MUAs that use | |
2245 | resent- headers with -t, and also that the stuff about sets of resent- headers | |
2246 | and their ordering in RFC 2822 is generally ignored. An MUA that submits a | |
2247 | message with -t and resent- header lines makes sure that only *its* resent- | |
2248 | headers are present; previous ones are often renamed as X-resent- for example. | |
2249 | ||
2250 | Consequently, Exim has been changed so that, if any resent- header lines are | |
2251 | present, the recipients are taken from all of the appropriate resent- lines, | |
2252 | and not from the ordinary To:, Cc:, etc. */ | |
2253 | ||
2254 | if (extract_recip) | |
2255 | { | |
2256 | int rcount = 0; | |
2257 | error_block **bnext = &bad_addresses; | |
2258 | ||
2259 | if (extract_addresses_remove_arguments) | |
2260 | { | |
2261 | while (recipients_count-- > 0) | |
2262 | { | |
2263 | uschar *s = rewrite_address(recipients_list[recipients_count].address, | |
2264 | TRUE, TRUE, global_rewrite_rules, rewrite_existflags); | |
2265 | tree_add_nonrecipient(s); | |
2266 | } | |
2267 | recipients_list = NULL; | |
2268 | recipients_count = recipients_list_max = 0; | |
2269 | } | |
2270 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2271 | /* Now scan the headers */ |
2272 | ||
2273 | for (h = header_list->next; h != NULL; h = h->next) | |
2274 | { | |
2275 | if ((h->type == htype_to || h->type == htype_cc || h->type == htype_bcc) && | |
2276 | (!contains_resent_headers || strncmpic(h->text, US"resent-", 7) == 0)) | |
2277 | { | |
2278 | uschar *s = Ustrchr(h->text, ':') + 1; | |
2279 | while (isspace(*s)) s++; | |
2280 | ||
1eccaa59 PH |
2281 | parse_allow_group = TRUE; /* Allow address group syntax */ |
2282 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2283 | while (*s != 0) |
2284 | { | |
2285 | uschar *ss = parse_find_address_end(s, FALSE); | |
2286 | uschar *recipient, *errmess, *p, *pp; | |
2287 | int start, end, domain; | |
2288 | ||
2289 | /* Check on maximum */ | |
2290 | ||
2291 | if (recipients_max > 0 && ++rcount > recipients_max) | |
2292 | { | |
2293 | give_local_error(ERRMESS_TOOMANYRECIP, US"too many recipients", | |
2294 | US"message rejected: ", error_rc, stdin, NULL); | |
2295 | /* Does not return */ | |
2296 | } | |
2297 | ||
2298 | /* Make a copy of the address, and remove any internal newlines. These | |
2299 | may be present as a result of continuations of the header line. The | |
2300 | white space that follows the newline must not be removed - it is part | |
2301 | of the header. */ | |
2302 | ||
2303 | pp = recipient = store_get(ss - s + 1); | |
2304 | for (p = s; p < ss; p++) if (*p != '\n') *pp++ = *p; | |
2305 | *pp = 0; | |
250b6871 JH |
2306 | |
2307 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_INTERNATIONAL | |
2308 | { | |
2309 | BOOL b = allow_utf8_domains; | |
2310 | allow_utf8_domains = TRUE; | |
2311 | #endif | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2312 | recipient = parse_extract_address(recipient, &errmess, &start, &end, |
2313 | &domain, FALSE); | |
2314 | ||
250b6871 JH |
2315 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_INTERNATIONAL |
2316 | if (string_is_utf8(recipient)) | |
2317 | message_smtputf8 = TRUE; | |
2318 | else | |
2319 | allow_utf8_domains = b; | |
2320 | } | |
2321 | #endif | |
2322 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2323 | /* Keep a list of all the bad addresses so we can send a single |
2324 | error message at the end. However, an empty address is not an error; | |
2325 | just ignore it. This can come from an empty group list like | |
2326 | ||
2327 | To: Recipients of list:; | |
2328 | ||
2329 | If there are no recipients at all, an error will occur later. */ | |
2330 | ||
2331 | if (recipient == NULL && Ustrcmp(errmess, "empty address") != 0) | |
2332 | { | |
2333 | int len = Ustrlen(s); | |
2334 | error_block *b = store_get(sizeof(error_block)); | |
2335 | while (len > 0 && isspace(s[len-1])) len--; | |
2336 | b->next = NULL; | |
2337 | b->text1 = string_printing(string_copyn(s, len)); | |
2338 | b->text2 = errmess; | |
2339 | *bnext = b; | |
2340 | bnext = &(b->next); | |
2341 | } | |
2342 | ||
2343 | /* If the recipient is already in the nonrecipients tree, it must | |
2344 | have appeared on the command line with the option extract_addresses_ | |
2345 | remove_arguments set. Do not add it to the recipients, and keep a note | |
2346 | that this has happened, in order to give a better error if there are | |
2347 | no recipients left. */ | |
2348 | ||
2349 | else if (recipient != NULL) | |
2350 | { | |
2351 | if (tree_search(tree_nonrecipients, recipient) == NULL) | |
2352 | receive_add_recipient(recipient, -1); | |
2353 | else | |
2354 | extracted_ignored = TRUE; | |
2355 | } | |
2356 | ||
2357 | /* Move on past this address */ | |
2358 | ||
2359 | s = ss + (*ss? 1:0); | |
2360 | while (isspace(*s)) s++; | |
1eccaa59 PH |
2361 | } /* Next address */ |
2362 | ||
2363 | parse_allow_group = FALSE; /* Reset group syntax flags */ | |
2364 | parse_found_group = FALSE; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2365 | |
2366 | /* If this was the bcc: header, mark it "old", which means it | |
2367 | will be kept on the spool, but not transmitted as part of the | |
2368 | message. */ | |
2369 | ||
2cbb4081 | 2370 | if (h->type == htype_bcc) h->type = htype_old; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2371 | } /* For appropriate header line */ |
2372 | } /* For each header line */ | |
2373 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2374 | } |
2375 | ||
2376 | /* Now build the unique message id. This has changed several times over the | |
2377 | lifetime of Exim. This description was rewritten for Exim 4.14 (February 2003). | |
2378 | Retaining all the history in the comment has become too unwieldy - read | |
2379 | previous release sources if you want it. | |
2380 | ||
2381 | The message ID has 3 parts: tttttt-pppppp-ss. Each part is a number in base 62. | |
2382 | The first part is the current time, in seconds. The second part is the current | |
2383 | pid. Both are large enough to hold 32-bit numbers in base 62. The third part | |
2384 | can hold a number in the range 0-3843. It used to be a computed sequence | |
2385 | number, but is now the fractional component of the current time in units of | |
2386 | 1/2000 of a second (i.e. a value in the range 0-1999). After a message has been | |
2387 | received, Exim ensures that the timer has ticked at the appropriate level | |
2388 | before proceeding, to avoid duplication if the pid happened to be re-used | |
2389 | within the same time period. It seems likely that most messages will take at | |
2390 | least half a millisecond to be received, so no delay will normally be | |
2391 | necessary. At least for some time... | |
2392 | ||
2393 | There is a modification when localhost_number is set. Formerly this was allowed | |
2394 | to be as large as 255. Now it is restricted to the range 0-16, and the final | |
2395 | component of the message id becomes (localhost_number * 200) + fractional time | |
2396 | in units of 1/200 of a second (i.e. a value in the range 0-3399). | |
2397 | ||
2398 | Some not-really-Unix operating systems use case-insensitive file names (Darwin, | |
2399 | Cygwin). For these, we have to use base 36 instead of base 62. Luckily, this | |
2400 | still allows the tttttt field to hold a large enough number to last for some | |
2401 | more decades, and the final two-digit field can hold numbers up to 1295, which | |
2402 | is enough for milliseconds (instead of 1/2000 of a second). | |
2403 | ||
2404 | However, the pppppp field cannot hold a 32-bit pid, but it can hold a 31-bit | |
2405 | pid, so it is probably safe because pids have to be positive. The | |
2406 | localhost_number is restricted to 0-10 for these hosts, and when it is set, the | |
2407 | final field becomes (localhost_number * 100) + fractional time in centiseconds. | |
2408 | ||
2409 | Note that string_base62() returns its data in a static storage block, so it | |
2410 | must be copied before calling string_base62() again. It always returns exactly | |
2411 | 6 characters. | |
2412 | ||
2413 | There doesn't seem to be anything in the RFC which requires a message id to | |
2414 | start with a letter, but Smail was changed to ensure this. The external form of | |
2415 | the message id (as supplied by string expansion) therefore starts with an | |
2416 | additional leading 'E'. The spool file names do not include this leading | |
2417 | letter and it is not used internally. | |
2418 | ||
2419 | NOTE: If ever the format of message ids is changed, the regular expression for | |
2420 | checking that a string is in this format must be updated in a corresponding | |
2421 | way. It appears in the initializing code in exim.c. The macro MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH | |
2422 | must also be changed to reflect the correct string length. Then, of course, | |
2423 | other programs that rely on the message id format will need updating too. */ | |
2424 | ||
2425 | Ustrncpy(message_id, string_base62((long int)(message_id_tv.tv_sec)), 6); | |
2426 | message_id[6] = '-'; | |
2427 | Ustrncpy(message_id + 7, string_base62((long int)getpid()), 6); | |
2428 | ||
2429 | /* Deal with the case where the host number is set. The value of the number was | |
2430 | checked when it was read, to ensure it isn't too big. The timing granularity is | |
2431 | left in id_resolution so that an appropriate wait can be done after receiving | |
2432 | the message, if necessary (we hope it won't be). */ | |
2433 | ||
2434 | if (host_number_string != NULL) | |
2435 | { | |
2436 | id_resolution = (BASE_62 == 62)? 5000 : 10000; | |
2437 | sprintf(CS(message_id + MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH - 3), "-%2s", | |
2438 | string_base62((long int)( | |
2439 | host_number * (1000000/id_resolution) + | |
2440 | message_id_tv.tv_usec/id_resolution)) + 4); | |
2441 | } | |
2442 | ||
2443 | /* Host number not set: final field is just the fractional time at an | |
2444 | appropriate resolution. */ | |
2445 | ||
2446 | else | |
2447 | { | |
2448 | id_resolution = (BASE_62 == 62)? 500 : 1000; | |
2449 | sprintf(CS(message_id + MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH - 3), "-%2s", | |
2450 | string_base62((long int)(message_id_tv.tv_usec/id_resolution)) + 4); | |
2451 | } | |
2452 | ||
2453 | /* Add the current message id onto the current process info string if | |
2454 | it will fit. */ | |
2455 | ||
2456 | (void)string_format(process_info + process_info_len, | |
2457 | PROCESS_INFO_SIZE - process_info_len, " id=%s", message_id); | |
2458 | ||
2459 | /* If we are using multiple input directories, set up the one for this message | |
2460 | to be the least significant base-62 digit of the time of arrival. Otherwise | |
2461 | ensure that it is an empty string. */ | |
2462 | ||
2463 | message_subdir[0] = split_spool_directory? message_id[5] : 0; | |
2464 | ||
2465 | /* Now that we have the message-id, if there is no message-id: header, generate | |
8800895a PH |
2466 | one, but only for local (without suppress_local_fixups) or submission mode |
2467 | messages. This can be user-configured if required, but we had better flatten | |
2468 | any illegal characters therein. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 2469 | |
8800895a PH |
2470 | if (msgid_header == NULL && |
2471 | ((sender_host_address == NULL && !suppress_local_fixups) | |
2472 | || submission_mode)) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2473 | { |
2474 | uschar *p; | |
2475 | uschar *id_text = US""; | |
2476 | uschar *id_domain = primary_hostname; | |
2477 | ||
2478 | /* Permit only letters, digits, dots, and hyphens in the domain */ | |
2479 | ||
2480 | if (message_id_domain != NULL) | |
2481 | { | |
2482 | uschar *new_id_domain = expand_string(message_id_domain); | |
2483 | if (new_id_domain == NULL) | |
2484 | { | |
2485 | if (!expand_string_forcedfail) | |
2486 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, | |
2487 | "expansion of \"%s\" (message_id_header_domain) " | |
2488 | "failed: %s", message_id_domain, expand_string_message); | |
2489 | } | |
2490 | else if (*new_id_domain != 0) | |
2491 | { | |
2492 | id_domain = new_id_domain; | |
2493 | for (p = id_domain; *p != 0; p++) | |
2494 | if (!isalnum(*p) && *p != '.') *p = '-'; /* No need to test '-' ! */ | |
2495 | } | |
2496 | } | |
2497 | ||
2498 | /* Permit all characters except controls and RFC 2822 specials in the | |
2499 | additional text part. */ | |
2500 | ||
2501 | if (message_id_text != NULL) | |
2502 | { | |
2503 | uschar *new_id_text = expand_string(message_id_text); | |
2504 | if (new_id_text == NULL) | |
2505 | { | |
2506 | if (!expand_string_forcedfail) | |
2507 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, | |
2508 | "expansion of \"%s\" (message_id_header_text) " | |
2509 | "failed: %s", message_id_text, expand_string_message); | |
2510 | } | |
2511 | else if (*new_id_text != 0) | |
2512 | { | |
2513 | id_text = new_id_text; | |
2514 | for (p = id_text; *p != 0; p++) | |
2515 | if (mac_iscntrl_or_special(*p)) *p = '-'; | |
2516 | } | |
2517 | } | |
2518 | ||
e7e680d6 PP |
2519 | /* Add the header line |
2520 | * Resent-* headers are prepended, per RFC 5322 3.6.6. Non-Resent-* are | |
2521 | * appended, to preserve classical expectations of header ordering. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 2522 | |
e7e680d6 | 2523 | header_add_at_position(!resents_exist, NULL, FALSE, htype_id, |
5eb690a1 NM |
2524 | "%sMessage-Id: <%s%s%s@%s>\n", resent_prefix, message_id_external, |
2525 | (*id_text == 0)? "" : ".", id_text, id_domain); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2526 | } |
2527 | ||
2528 | /* If we are to log recipients, keep a copy of the raw ones before any possible | |
2529 | rewriting. Must copy the count, because later ACLs and the local_scan() | |
2530 | function may mess with the real recipients. */ | |
2531 | ||
2532 | if ((log_extra_selector & LX_received_recipients) != 0) | |
2533 | { | |
2534 | raw_recipients = store_get(recipients_count * sizeof(uschar *)); | |
2535 | for (i = 0; i < recipients_count; i++) | |
2536 | raw_recipients[i] = string_copy(recipients_list[i].address); | |
2537 | raw_recipients_count = recipients_count; | |
2538 | } | |
2539 | ||
2540 | /* Ensure the recipients list is fully qualified and rewritten. Unqualified | |
2541 | recipients will get here only if the conditions were right (allow_unqualified_ | |
2542 | recipient is TRUE). */ | |
2543 | ||
2544 | for (i = 0; i < recipients_count; i++) | |
2545 | recipients_list[i].address = | |
2546 | rewrite_address(recipients_list[i].address, TRUE, TRUE, | |
2547 | global_rewrite_rules, rewrite_existflags); | |
2548 | ||
8800895a PH |
2549 | /* If there is no From: header, generate one for local (without |
2550 | suppress_local_fixups) or submission_mode messages. If there is no sender | |
2551 | address, but the sender is local or this is a local delivery error, use the | |
2552 | originator login. This shouldn't happen for genuine bounces, but might happen | |
2553 | for autoreplies. The addition of From: must be done *before* checking for the | |
2554 | possible addition of a Sender: header, because untrusted_set_sender allows an | |
2555 | untrusted user to set anything in the envelope (which might then get info | |
2556 | From:) but we still want to ensure a valid Sender: if it is required. */ | |
2557 | ||
2558 | if (from_header == NULL && | |
2559 | ((sender_host_address == NULL && !suppress_local_fixups) | |
2560 | || submission_mode)) | |
059ec3d9 | 2561 | { |
2fe1a124 PH |
2562 | uschar *oname = US""; |
2563 | ||
2564 | /* Use the originator_name if this is a locally submitted message and the | |
2565 | caller is not trusted. For trusted callers, use it only if -F was used to | |
2566 | force its value or if we have a non-SMTP message for which -f was not used | |
2567 | to set the sender. */ | |
2568 | ||
2569 | if (sender_host_address == NULL) | |
2570 | { | |
2571 | if (!trusted_caller || sender_name_forced || | |
2572 | (!smtp_input && !sender_address_forced)) | |
2573 | oname = originator_name; | |
2574 | } | |
2575 | ||
2576 | /* For non-locally submitted messages, the only time we use the originator | |
2577 | name is when it was forced by the /name= option on control=submission. */ | |
2578 | ||
2579 | else | |
2580 | { | |
2581 | if (submission_name != NULL) oname = submission_name; | |
2582 | } | |
2583 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2584 | /* Envelope sender is empty */ |
2585 | ||
2586 | if (sender_address[0] == 0) | |
2587 | { | |
87ba3f5f PH |
2588 | uschar *fromstart, *fromend; |
2589 | ||
2590 | fromstart = string_sprintf("%sFrom: %s%s", resent_prefix, | |
2fe1a124 PH |
2591 | oname, (oname[0] == 0)? "" : " <"); |
2592 | fromend = (oname[0] == 0)? US"" : US">"; | |
87ba3f5f | 2593 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2594 | if (sender_local || local_error_message) |
2595 | { | |
87ba3f5f PH |
2596 | header_add(htype_from, "%s%s@%s%s\n", fromstart, |
2597 | local_part_quote(originator_login), qualify_domain_sender, | |
2598 | fromend); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2599 | } |
2600 | else if (submission_mode && authenticated_id != NULL) | |
2601 | { | |
2602 | if (submission_domain == NULL) | |
2603 | { | |
87ba3f5f PH |
2604 | header_add(htype_from, "%s%s@%s%s\n", fromstart, |
2605 | local_part_quote(authenticated_id), qualify_domain_sender, | |
2606 | fromend); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2607 | } |
2608 | else if (submission_domain[0] == 0) /* empty => whole address set */ | |
2609 | { | |
87ba3f5f PH |
2610 | header_add(htype_from, "%s%s%s\n", fromstart, authenticated_id, |
2611 | fromend); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2612 | } |
2613 | else | |
2614 | { | |
87ba3f5f PH |
2615 | header_add(htype_from, "%s%s@%s%s\n", fromstart, |
2616 | local_part_quote(authenticated_id), submission_domain, | |
2617 | fromend); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2618 | } |
2619 | from_header = header_last; /* To get it checked for Sender: */ | |
2620 | } | |
2621 | } | |
2622 | ||
2623 | /* There is a non-null envelope sender. Build the header using the original | |
2624 | sender address, before any rewriting that might have been done while | |
2625 | verifying it. */ | |
2626 | ||
2627 | else | |
2628 | { | |
87ba3f5f | 2629 | header_add(htype_from, "%sFrom: %s%s%s%s\n", resent_prefix, |
2fe1a124 PH |
2630 | oname, |
2631 | (oname[0] == 0)? "" : " <", | |
87ba3f5f PH |
2632 | (sender_address_unrewritten == NULL)? |
2633 | sender_address : sender_address_unrewritten, | |
2fe1a124 | 2634 | (oname[0] == 0)? "" : ">"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2635 | |
2636 | from_header = header_last; /* To get it checked for Sender: */ | |
2637 | } | |
2638 | } | |
2639 | ||
2640 | ||
8800895a PH |
2641 | /* If the sender is local (without suppress_local_fixups), or if we are in |
2642 | submission mode and there is an authenticated_id, check that an existing From: | |
2643 | is correct, and if not, generate a Sender: header, unless disabled. Any | |
2644 | previously-existing Sender: header was removed above. Note that sender_local, | |
2645 | as well as being TRUE if the caller of exim is not trusted, is also true if a | |
2646 | trusted caller did not supply a -f argument for non-smtp input. To allow | |
2647 | trusted callers to forge From: without supplying -f, we have to test explicitly | |
2648 | here. If the From: header contains more than one address, then the call to | |
2649 | parse_extract_address fails, and a Sender: header is inserted, as required. */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2650 | |
2651 | if (from_header != NULL && | |
69358f02 | 2652 | (active_local_from_check && |
8800895a | 2653 | ((sender_local && !trusted_caller && !suppress_local_fixups) || |
69358f02 | 2654 | (submission_mode && authenticated_id != NULL)) |
059ec3d9 PH |
2655 | )) |
2656 | { | |
2657 | BOOL make_sender = TRUE; | |
2658 | int start, end, domain; | |
2659 | uschar *errmess; | |
2660 | uschar *from_address = | |
2661 | parse_extract_address(Ustrchr(from_header->text, ':') + 1, &errmess, | |
2662 | &start, &end, &domain, FALSE); | |
2663 | uschar *generated_sender_address; | |
2664 | ||
2665 | if (submission_mode) | |
2666 | { | |
2667 | if (submission_domain == NULL) | |
2668 | { | |
2669 | generated_sender_address = string_sprintf("%s@%s", | |
2670 | local_part_quote(authenticated_id), qualify_domain_sender); | |
2671 | } | |
2672 | else if (submission_domain[0] == 0) /* empty => full address */ | |
2673 | { | |
2674 | generated_sender_address = string_sprintf("%s", | |
2675 | authenticated_id); | |
2676 | } | |
2677 | else | |
2678 | { | |
2679 | generated_sender_address = string_sprintf("%s@%s", | |
2680 | local_part_quote(authenticated_id), submission_domain); | |
2681 | } | |
2682 | } | |
2683 | else | |
2684 | generated_sender_address = string_sprintf("%s@%s", | |
2685 | local_part_quote(originator_login), qualify_domain_sender); | |
2686 | ||
2687 | /* Remove permitted prefixes and suffixes from the local part of the From: | |
2688 | address before doing the comparison with the generated sender. */ | |
2689 | ||
2690 | if (from_address != NULL) | |
2691 | { | |
2692 | int slen; | |
2693 | uschar *at = (domain == 0)? NULL : from_address + domain - 1; | |
2694 | ||
2695 | if (at != NULL) *at = 0; | |
2696 | from_address += route_check_prefix(from_address, local_from_prefix); | |
2697 | slen = route_check_suffix(from_address, local_from_suffix); | |
2698 | if (slen > 0) | |
2699 | { | |
2700 | memmove(from_address+slen, from_address, Ustrlen(from_address)-slen); | |
2701 | from_address += slen; | |
2702 | } | |
2703 | if (at != NULL) *at = '@'; | |
2704 | ||
2705 | if (strcmpic(generated_sender_address, from_address) == 0 || | |
2706 | (domain == 0 && strcmpic(from_address, originator_login) == 0)) | |
2707 | make_sender = FALSE; | |
2708 | } | |
2709 | ||
2710 | /* We have to cause the Sender header to be rewritten if there are | |
2711 | appropriate rewriting rules. */ | |
2712 | ||
2713 | if (make_sender) | |
2714 | { | |
2fe1a124 | 2715 | if (submission_mode && submission_name == NULL) |
059ec3d9 PH |
2716 | header_add(htype_sender, "%sSender: %s\n", resent_prefix, |
2717 | generated_sender_address); | |
2718 | else | |
2719 | header_add(htype_sender, "%sSender: %s <%s>\n", | |
2fe1a124 PH |
2720 | resent_prefix, |
2721 | submission_mode? submission_name : originator_name, | |
2722 | generated_sender_address); | |
059ec3d9 | 2723 | } |
87ba3f5f PH |
2724 | |
2725 | /* Ensure that a non-null envelope sender address corresponds to the | |
2726 | submission mode sender address. */ | |
2727 | ||
2728 | if (submission_mode && sender_address[0] != 0) | |
2729 | { | |
2730 | if (sender_address_unrewritten == NULL) | |
2731 | sender_address_unrewritten = sender_address; | |
2732 | sender_address = generated_sender_address; | |
089793a4 TF |
2733 | if (Ustrcmp(sender_address_unrewritten, generated_sender_address) != 0) |
2734 | log_write(L_address_rewrite, LOG_MAIN, | |
2735 | "\"%s\" from env-from rewritten as \"%s\" by submission mode", | |
2736 | sender_address_unrewritten, generated_sender_address); | |
87ba3f5f | 2737 | } |
059ec3d9 PH |
2738 | } |
2739 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2740 | /* If there are any rewriting rules, apply them to the sender address, unless |
2741 | it has already been rewritten as part of verification for SMTP input. */ | |
2742 | ||
2743 | if (global_rewrite_rules != NULL && sender_address_unrewritten == NULL && | |
2744 | sender_address[0] != 0) | |
2745 | { | |
2746 | sender_address = rewrite_address(sender_address, FALSE, TRUE, | |
2747 | global_rewrite_rules, rewrite_existflags); | |
2748 | DEBUG(D_receive|D_rewrite) | |
2749 | debug_printf("rewritten sender = %s\n", sender_address); | |
2750 | } | |
2751 | ||
2752 | ||
2753 | /* The headers must be run through rewrite_header(), because it ensures that | |
2754 | addresses are fully qualified, as well as applying any rewriting rules that may | |
2755 | exist. | |
2756 | ||
2757 | Qualification of header addresses in a message from a remote host happens only | |
2758 | if the host is in sender_unqualified_hosts or recipient_unqualified hosts, as | |
2759 | appropriate. For local messages, qualification always happens, unless -bnq is | |
2760 | used to explicitly suppress it. No rewriting is done for an unqualified address | |
2761 | that is left untouched. | |
2762 | ||
2763 | We start at the second header, skipping our own Received:. This rewriting is | |
2764 | documented as happening *after* recipient addresses are taken from the headers | |
2765 | by the -t command line option. An added Sender: gets rewritten here. */ | |
2766 | ||
2767 | for (h = header_list->next; h != NULL; h = h->next) | |
2768 | { | |
2769 | header_line *newh = rewrite_header(h, NULL, NULL, global_rewrite_rules, | |
2770 | rewrite_existflags, TRUE); | |
2771 | if (newh != NULL) h = newh; | |
2772 | } | |
2773 | ||
2774 | ||
2775 | /* An RFC 822 (sic) message is not legal unless it has at least one of "to", | |
2cbb4081 | 2776 | "cc", or "bcc". Note that although the minimal examples in RFC 822 show just |
059ec3d9 PH |
2777 | "to" or "bcc", the full syntax spec allows "cc" as well. If any resent- header |
2778 | exists, this applies to the set of resent- headers rather than the normal set. | |
2779 | ||
2cbb4081 PH |
2780 | The requirement for a recipient header has been removed in RFC 2822. At this |
2781 | point in the code, earlier versions of Exim added a To: header for locally | |
2782 | submitted messages, and an empty Bcc: header for others. In the light of the | |
2783 | changes in RFC 2822, this was dropped in November 2003. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 2784 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2785 | |
2786 | /* If there is no date header, generate one if the message originates locally | |
8800895a PH |
2787 | (i.e. not over TCP/IP) and suppress_local_fixups is not set, or if the |
2788 | submission mode flag is set. Messages without Date: are not valid, but it seems | |
e7e680d6 PP |
2789 | to be more confusing if Exim adds one to all remotely-originated messages. |
2790 | As per Message-Id, we prepend if resending, else append. | |
2791 | */ | |
059ec3d9 | 2792 | |
8800895a PH |
2793 | if (!date_header_exists && |
2794 | ((sender_host_address == NULL && !suppress_local_fixups) | |
2795 | || submission_mode)) | |
e7e680d6 PP |
2796 | header_add_at_position(!resents_exist, NULL, FALSE, htype_other, |
2797 | "%sDate: %s\n", resent_prefix, tod_stamp(tod_full)); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2798 | |
2799 | search_tidyup(); /* Free any cached resources */ | |
2800 | ||
2801 | /* Show the complete set of headers if debugging. Note that the first one (the | |
2802 | new Received:) has not yet been set. */ | |
2803 | ||
2804 | DEBUG(D_receive) | |
2805 | { | |
2806 | debug_printf(">>Headers after rewriting and local additions:\n"); | |
2807 | for (h = header_list->next; h != NULL; h = h->next) | |
2808 | debug_printf("%c %s", h->type, h->text); | |
2809 | debug_printf("\n"); | |
2810 | } | |
2811 | ||
2812 | /* The headers are now complete in store. If we are running in filter | |
2813 | testing mode, that is all this function does. Return TRUE if the message | |
2814 | ended with a dot. */ | |
2815 | ||
f05da2e8 | 2816 | if (filter_test != FTEST_NONE) |
059ec3d9 PH |
2817 | { |
2818 | process_info[process_info_len] = 0; | |
2819 | return message_ended == END_DOT; | |
2820 | } | |
2821 | ||
817d9f57 | 2822 | /* Cutthrough delivery: |
5032d1cf JH |
2823 | We have to create the Received header now rather than at the end of reception, |
2824 | so the timestamp behaviour is a change to the normal case. | |
2825 | XXX Ensure this gets documented XXX. | |
2826 | Having created it, send the headers to the destination. */ | |
2827 | if (cutthrough.fd >= 0) | |
e4bdf652 | 2828 | { |
817d9f57 JH |
2829 | if (received_count > received_headers_max) |
2830 | { | |
2e5b33cd | 2831 | cancel_cutthrough_connection("too many headers"); |
817d9f57 JH |
2832 | if (smtp_input) receive_swallow_smtp(); /* Swallow incoming SMTP */ |
2833 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "rejected from <%s>%s%s%s%s: " | |
2834 | "Too many \"Received\" headers", | |
2835 | sender_address, | |
2836 | (sender_fullhost == NULL)? "" : " H=", | |
2837 | (sender_fullhost == NULL)? US"" : sender_fullhost, | |
2838 | (sender_ident == NULL)? "" : " U=", | |
2839 | (sender_ident == NULL)? US"" : sender_ident); | |
2840 | message_id[0] = 0; /* Indicate no message accepted */ | |
2841 | smtp_reply = US"550 Too many \"Received\" headers - suspected mail loop"; | |
2842 | goto TIDYUP; /* Skip to end of function */ | |
2843 | } | |
e4bdf652 | 2844 | received_header_gen(); |
578d43dc | 2845 | add_acl_headers(ACL_WHERE_RCPT, US"MAIL or RCPT"); |
e4bdf652 JH |
2846 | (void) cutthrough_headers_send(); |
2847 | } | |
61147df4 | 2848 | |
e4bdf652 | 2849 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2850 | /* Open a new spool file for the data portion of the message. We need |
2851 | to access it both via a file descriptor and a stream. Try to make the | |
2852 | directory if it isn't there. Note re use of sprintf: spool_directory | |
2853 | is checked on input to be < 200 characters long. */ | |
2854 | ||
2855 | sprintf(CS spool_name, "%s/input/%s/%s-D", spool_directory, message_subdir, | |
2856 | message_id); | |
2857 | data_fd = Uopen(spool_name, O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_EXCL, SPOOL_MODE); | |
2858 | if (data_fd < 0) | |
2859 | { | |
2860 | if (errno == ENOENT) | |
2861 | { | |
2862 | uschar temp[16]; | |
2863 | sprintf(CS temp, "input/%s", message_subdir); | |
2864 | if (message_subdir[0] == 0) temp[5] = 0; | |
2865 | (void)directory_make(spool_directory, temp, INPUT_DIRECTORY_MODE, TRUE); | |
2866 | data_fd = Uopen(spool_name, O_RDWR|O_CREAT|O_EXCL, SPOOL_MODE); | |
2867 | } | |
2868 | if (data_fd < 0) | |
2869 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Failed to create spool file %s: %s", | |
2870 | spool_name, strerror(errno)); | |
2871 | } | |
2872 | ||
2873 | /* Make sure the file's group is the Exim gid, and double-check the mode | |
2874 | because the group setting doesn't always get set automatically. */ | |
2875 | ||
1ac6b2e7 JH |
2876 | if (fchown(data_fd, exim_uid, exim_gid)) |
2877 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, | |
2878 | "Failed setting ownership on spool file %s: %s", | |
2879 | spool_name, strerror(errno)); | |
ff790e47 | 2880 | (void)fchmod(data_fd, SPOOL_MODE); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2881 | |
2882 | /* We now have data file open. Build a stream for it and lock it. We lock only | |
2883 | the first line of the file (containing the message ID) because otherwise there | |
2884 | are problems when Exim is run under Cygwin (I'm told). See comments in | |
2885 | spool_in.c, where the same locking is done. */ | |
2886 | ||
2887 | data_file = fdopen(data_fd, "w+"); | |
2888 | lock_data.l_type = F_WRLCK; | |
2889 | lock_data.l_whence = SEEK_SET; | |
2890 | lock_data.l_start = 0; | |
2891 | lock_data.l_len = SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET; | |
2892 | ||
2893 | if (fcntl(data_fd, F_SETLK, &lock_data) < 0) | |
2894 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Cannot lock %s (%d): %s", spool_name, | |
2895 | errno, strerror(errno)); | |
2896 | ||
2897 | /* We have an open, locked data file. Write the message id to it to make it | |
2898 | self-identifying. Then read the remainder of the input of this message and | |
2899 | write it to the data file. If the variable next != NULL, it contains the first | |
2900 | data line (which was read as a header but then turned out not to have the right | |
2901 | format); write it (remembering that it might contain binary zeros). The result | |
2902 | of fwrite() isn't inspected; instead we call ferror() below. */ | |
2903 | ||
2904 | fprintf(data_file, "%s-D\n", message_id); | |
2905 | if (next != NULL) | |
2906 | { | |
2907 | uschar *s = next->text; | |
2908 | int len = next->slen; | |
1ac6b2e7 | 2909 | len = fwrite(s, 1, len, data_file); len = len; /* compiler quietening */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
2910 | body_linecount++; /* Assumes only 1 line */ |
2911 | } | |
2912 | ||
2913 | /* Note that we might already be at end of file, or the logical end of file | |
2914 | (indicated by '.'), or might have encountered an error while writing the | |
2915 | message id or "next" line. */ | |
2916 | ||
2917 | if (!ferror(data_file) && !(receive_feof)() && message_ended != END_DOT) | |
2918 | { | |
2919 | if (smtp_input) | |
2920 | { | |
2921 | message_ended = read_message_data_smtp(data_file); | |
2922 | receive_linecount++; /* The terminating "." line */ | |
2923 | } | |
2924 | else message_ended = read_message_data(data_file); | |
2925 | ||
2926 | receive_linecount += body_linecount; /* For BSMTP errors mainly */ | |
2e0c1448 | 2927 | message_linecount += body_linecount; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2928 | |
2929 | /* Handle premature termination of SMTP */ | |
2930 | ||
2931 | if (smtp_input && message_ended == END_EOF) | |
2932 | { | |
2933 | Uunlink(spool_name); /* Lose data file when closed */ | |
2e5b33cd | 2934 | cancel_cutthrough_connection("sender closed connection"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2935 | message_id[0] = 0; /* Indicate no message accepted */ |
2936 | smtp_reply = handle_lost_connection(US""); | |
2937 | smtp_yield = FALSE; | |
2938 | goto TIDYUP; /* Skip to end of function */ | |
2939 | } | |
2940 | ||
2941 | /* Handle message that is too big. Don't use host_or_ident() in the log | |
2942 | message; we want to see the ident value even for non-remote messages. */ | |
2943 | ||
2944 | if (message_ended == END_SIZE) | |
2945 | { | |
2946 | Uunlink(spool_name); /* Lose the data file when closed */ | |
2e5b33cd | 2947 | cancel_cutthrough_connection("mail too big"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2948 | if (smtp_input) receive_swallow_smtp(); /* Swallow incoming SMTP */ |
2949 | ||
2950 | log_write(L_size_reject, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "rejected from <%s>%s%s%s%s: " | |
2951 | "message too big: read=%d max=%d", | |
2952 | sender_address, | |
2953 | (sender_fullhost == NULL)? "" : " H=", | |
2954 | (sender_fullhost == NULL)? US"" : sender_fullhost, | |
2955 | (sender_ident == NULL)? "" : " U=", | |
2956 | (sender_ident == NULL)? US"" : sender_ident, | |
2957 | message_size, | |
2958 | thismessage_size_limit); | |
2959 | ||
2960 | if (smtp_input) | |
2961 | { | |
2962 | smtp_reply = US"552 Message size exceeds maximum permitted"; | |
2963 | message_id[0] = 0; /* Indicate no message accepted */ | |
2964 | goto TIDYUP; /* Skip to end of function */ | |
2965 | } | |
2966 | else | |
2967 | { | |
2968 | fseek(data_file, (long int)SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET, SEEK_SET); | |
2969 | give_local_error(ERRMESS_TOOBIG, | |
2970 | string_sprintf("message too big (max=%d)", thismessage_size_limit), | |
2971 | US"message rejected: ", error_rc, data_file, header_list); | |
2972 | /* Does not return */ | |
2973 | } | |
2974 | } | |
2975 | } | |
2976 | ||
2977 | /* Restore the standard SIGALRM handler for any subsequent processing. (For | |
2978 | example, there may be some expansion in an ACL that uses a timer.) */ | |
2979 | ||
2980 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGALRM, sigalrm_handler); | |
2981 | ||
2982 | /* The message body has now been read into the data file. Call fflush() to | |
2983 | empty the buffers in C, and then call fsync() to get the data written out onto | |
2984 | the disk, as fflush() doesn't do this (or at least, it isn't documented as | |
2985 | having to do this). If there was an I/O error on either input or output, | |
2986 | attempt to send an error message, and unlink the spool file. For non-SMTP input | |
2987 | we can then give up. Note that for SMTP input we must swallow the remainder of | |
2988 | the input in cases of output errors, since the far end doesn't expect to see | |
2989 | anything until the terminating dot line is sent. */ | |
2990 | ||
2991 | if (fflush(data_file) == EOF || ferror(data_file) || | |
54fc8428 | 2992 | EXIMfsync(fileno(data_file)) < 0 || (receive_ferror)()) |
059ec3d9 PH |
2993 | { |
2994 | uschar *msg_errno = US strerror(errno); | |
2995 | BOOL input_error = (receive_ferror)() != 0; | |
2996 | uschar *msg = string_sprintf("%s error (%s) while receiving message from %s", | |
2997 | input_error? "Input read" : "Spool write", | |
2998 | msg_errno, | |
2999 | (sender_fullhost != NULL)? sender_fullhost : sender_ident); | |
3000 | ||
3001 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Message abandoned: %s", msg); | |
3002 | Uunlink(spool_name); /* Lose the data file */ | |
2e5b33cd | 3003 | cancel_cutthrough_connection("error writing spoolfile"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3004 | |
3005 | if (smtp_input) | |
3006 | { | |
3007 | if (input_error) | |
3008 | smtp_reply = US"451 Error while reading input data"; | |
3009 | else | |
3010 | { | |
3011 | smtp_reply = US"451 Error while writing spool file"; | |
3012 | receive_swallow_smtp(); | |
3013 | } | |
3014 | message_id[0] = 0; /* Indicate no message accepted */ | |
3015 | goto TIDYUP; /* Skip to end of function */ | |
3016 | } | |
3017 | ||
3018 | else | |
3019 | { | |
3020 | fseek(data_file, (long int)SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET, SEEK_SET); | |
3021 | give_local_error(ERRMESS_IOERR, msg, US"", error_rc, data_file, | |
3022 | header_list); | |
3023 | /* Does not return */ | |
3024 | } | |
3025 | } | |
3026 | ||
3027 | ||
3028 | /* No I/O errors were encountered while writing the data file. */ | |
3029 | ||
3030 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("Data file written for message %s\n", message_id); | |
3031 | ||
3032 | ||
3033 | /* If there were any bad addresses extracted by -t, or there were no recipients | |
3034 | left after -t, send a message to the sender of this message, or write it to | |
3035 | stderr if the error handling option is set that way. Note that there may | |
3036 | legitimately be no recipients for an SMTP message if they have all been removed | |
3037 | by "discard". | |
3038 | ||
3039 | We need to rewind the data file in order to read it. In the case of no | |
3040 | recipients or stderr error writing, throw the data file away afterwards, and | |
3041 | exit. (This can't be SMTP, which always ensures there's at least one | |
3042 | syntactically good recipient address.) */ | |
3043 | ||
3044 | if (extract_recip && (bad_addresses != NULL || recipients_count == 0)) | |
3045 | { | |
3046 | DEBUG(D_receive) | |
3047 | { | |
3048 | if (recipients_count == 0) debug_printf("*** No recipients\n"); | |
3049 | if (bad_addresses != NULL) | |
3050 | { | |
3051 | error_block *eblock = bad_addresses; | |
3052 | debug_printf("*** Bad address(es)\n"); | |
3053 | while (eblock != NULL) | |
3054 | { | |
3055 | debug_printf(" %s: %s\n", eblock->text1, eblock->text2); | |
3056 | eblock = eblock->next; | |
3057 | } | |
3058 | } | |
3059 | } | |
3060 | ||
3061 | fseek(data_file, (long int)SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET, SEEK_SET); | |
3062 | ||
3063 | /* If configured to send errors to the sender, but this fails, force | |
3064 | a failure error code. We use a special one for no recipients so that it | |
3065 | can be detected by the autoreply transport. Otherwise error_rc is set to | |
3066 | errors_sender_rc, which is EXIT_FAILURE unless -oee was given, in which case | |
3067 | it is EXIT_SUCCESS. */ | |
3068 | ||
3069 | if (error_handling == ERRORS_SENDER) | |
3070 | { | |
3071 | if (!moan_to_sender( | |
3072 | (bad_addresses == NULL)? | |
3073 | (extracted_ignored? ERRMESS_IGADDRESS : ERRMESS_NOADDRESS) : | |
3074 | (recipients_list == NULL)? ERRMESS_BADNOADDRESS : ERRMESS_BADADDRESS, | |
3075 | bad_addresses, header_list, data_file, FALSE)) | |
3076 | error_rc = (bad_addresses == NULL)? EXIT_NORECIPIENTS : EXIT_FAILURE; | |
3077 | } | |
3078 | else | |
3079 | { | |
3080 | if (bad_addresses == NULL) | |
3081 | { | |
3082 | if (extracted_ignored) | |
3083 | fprintf(stderr, "exim: all -t recipients overridden by command line\n"); | |
3084 | else | |
3085 | fprintf(stderr, "exim: no recipients in message\n"); | |
3086 | } | |
3087 | else | |
3088 | { | |
3089 | fprintf(stderr, "exim: invalid address%s", | |
3090 | (bad_addresses->next == NULL)? ":" : "es:\n"); | |
3091 | while (bad_addresses != NULL) | |
3092 | { | |
3093 | fprintf(stderr, " %s: %s\n", bad_addresses->text1, | |
3094 | bad_addresses->text2); | |
3095 | bad_addresses = bad_addresses->next; | |
3096 | } | |
3097 | } | |
3098 | } | |
3099 | ||
3100 | if (recipients_count == 0 || error_handling == ERRORS_STDERR) | |
3101 | { | |
3102 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
f1e894f3 | 3103 | (void)fclose(data_file); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3104 | exim_exit(error_rc); |
3105 | } | |
3106 | } | |
3107 | ||
3108 | /* Data file successfully written. Generate text for the Received: header by | |
3109 | expanding the configured string, and adding a timestamp. By leaving this | |
3110 | operation till now, we ensure that the timestamp is the time that message | |
3111 | reception was completed. However, this is deliberately done before calling the | |
3112 | data ACL and local_scan(). | |
3113 | ||
3114 | This Received: header may therefore be inspected by the data ACL and by code in | |
3115 | the local_scan() function. When they have run, we update the timestamp to be | |
3116 | the final time of reception. | |
3117 | ||
3118 | If there is just one recipient, set up its value in the $received_for variable | |
3119 | for use when we generate the Received: header. | |
3120 | ||
3121 | Note: the checking for too many Received: headers is handled by the delivery | |
3122 | code. */ | |
e4bdf652 | 3123 | /*XXX eventually add excess Received: check for cutthrough case back when classifying them */ |
059ec3d9 | 3124 | |
e4bdf652 | 3125 | if (received_header->text == NULL) /* Non-cutthrough case */ |
059ec3d9 | 3126 | { |
e4bdf652 | 3127 | received_header_gen(); |
059ec3d9 | 3128 | |
e4bdf652 | 3129 | /* Set the value of message_body_size for the DATA ACL and for local_scan() */ |
059ec3d9 | 3130 | |
e4bdf652 JH |
3131 | message_body_size = (fstat(data_fd, &statbuf) == 0)? |
3132 | statbuf.st_size - SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET : -1; | |
059ec3d9 | 3133 | |
e4bdf652 JH |
3134 | /* If an ACL from any RCPT commands set up any warning headers to add, do so |
3135 | now, before running the DATA ACL. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 3136 | |
578d43dc | 3137 | add_acl_headers(ACL_WHERE_RCPT, US"MAIL or RCPT"); |
e4bdf652 | 3138 | } |
817d9f57 | 3139 | else |
e4bdf652 JH |
3140 | message_body_size = (fstat(data_fd, &statbuf) == 0)? |
3141 | statbuf.st_size - SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET : -1; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3142 | |
3143 | /* If an ACL is specified for checking things at this stage of reception of a | |
3144 | message, run it, unless all the recipients were removed by "discard" in earlier | |
3145 | ACLs. That is the only case in which recipients_count can be zero at this | |
3146 | stage. Set deliver_datafile to point to the data file so that $message_body and | |
3147 | $message_body_end can be extracted if needed. Allow $recipients in expansions. | |
3148 | */ | |
3149 | ||
3150 | deliver_datafile = data_fd; | |
4e88a19f | 3151 | user_msg = NULL; |
059ec3d9 | 3152 | |
0e20aff9 MH |
3153 | enable_dollar_recipients = TRUE; |
3154 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
3155 | if (recipients_count == 0) |
3156 | { | |
3157 | blackholed_by = recipients_discarded? US"MAIL ACL" : US"RCPT ACL"; | |
3158 | } | |
3159 | else | |
3160 | { | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3161 | /* Handle interactive SMTP messages */ |
3162 | ||
3163 | if (smtp_input && !smtp_batched_input) | |
3164 | { | |
8523533c | 3165 | |
80a47a2c TK |
3166 | #ifndef DISABLE_DKIM |
3167 | if (!dkim_disable_verify) | |
3168 | { | |
3169 | /* Finish verification, this will log individual signature results to | |
3170 | the mainlog */ | |
3171 | dkim_exim_verify_finish(); | |
3172 | ||
3173 | /* Check if we must run the DKIM ACL */ | |
3174 | if ((acl_smtp_dkim != NULL) && | |
3175 | (dkim_verify_signers != NULL) && | |
3176 | (dkim_verify_signers[0] != '\0')) | |
3177 | { | |
3178 | uschar *dkim_verify_signers_expanded = | |
3179 | expand_string(dkim_verify_signers); | |
3180 | if (dkim_verify_signers_expanded == NULL) | |
3181 | { | |
3182 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, | |
3183 | "expansion of dkim_verify_signers option failed: %s", | |
3184 | expand_string_message); | |
3185 | } | |
3186 | else | |
3187 | { | |
3188 | int sep = 0; | |
55414b25 | 3189 | const uschar *ptr = dkim_verify_signers_expanded; |
80a47a2c | 3190 | uschar *item = NULL; |
9e5d6b55 TK |
3191 | uschar *seen_items = NULL; |
3192 | int seen_items_size = 0; | |
3193 | int seen_items_offset = 0; | |
80a47a2c | 3194 | uschar itembuf[256]; |
9122af94 TK |
3195 | /* Default to OK when no items are present */ |
3196 | rc = OK; | |
80a47a2c TK |
3197 | while ((item = string_nextinlist(&ptr, &sep, |
3198 | itembuf, | |
5032d1cf | 3199 | sizeof(itembuf)))) |
80a47a2c | 3200 | { |
6119d1ea TK |
3201 | /* Prevent running ACL for an empty item */ |
3202 | if (!item || (item[0] == '\0')) continue; | |
5032d1cf JH |
3203 | |
3204 | /* Only run ACL once for each domain or identity, | |
3205 | no matter how often it appears in the expanded list. */ | |
3206 | if (seen_items) | |
6119d1ea | 3207 | { |
ae9094bf TK |
3208 | uschar *seen_item = NULL; |
3209 | uschar seen_item_buf[256]; | |
55414b25 | 3210 | const uschar *seen_items_list = seen_items; |
5032d1cf | 3211 | BOOL seen_this_item = FALSE; |
61147df4 | 3212 | |
ae9094bf TK |
3213 | while ((seen_item = string_nextinlist(&seen_items_list, &sep, |
3214 | seen_item_buf, | |
5032d1cf JH |
3215 | sizeof(seen_item_buf)))) |
3216 | if (Ustrcmp(seen_item,item) == 0) | |
3217 | { | |
3218 | seen_this_item = TRUE; | |
3219 | break; | |
3220 | } | |
3221 | ||
3222 | if (seen_this_item) | |
6119d1ea TK |
3223 | { |
3224 | DEBUG(D_receive) | |
5032d1cf JH |
3225 | debug_printf("acl_smtp_dkim: skipping signer %s, " |
3226 | "already seen\n", item); | |
6119d1ea TK |
3227 | continue; |
3228 | } | |
61147df4 | 3229 | |
5032d1cf JH |
3230 | seen_items = string_append(seen_items, &seen_items_size, |
3231 | &seen_items_offset, 1, ":"); | |
6119d1ea TK |
3232 | } |
3233 | ||
5032d1cf JH |
3234 | seen_items = string_append(seen_items, &seen_items_size, |
3235 | &seen_items_offset, 1, item); | |
4a73449b | 3236 | seen_items[seen_items_offset] = '\0'; |
6119d1ea TK |
3237 | |
3238 | DEBUG(D_receive) | |
5032d1cf JH |
3239 | debug_printf("calling acl_smtp_dkim for dkim_cur_signer=%s\n", |
3240 | item); | |
6119d1ea | 3241 | |
80a47a2c | 3242 | dkim_exim_acl_setup(item); |
5032d1cf JH |
3243 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_DKIM, NULL, acl_smtp_dkim, |
3244 | &user_msg, &log_msg); | |
6119d1ea TK |
3245 | |
3246 | if (rc != OK) | |
5032d1cf JH |
3247 | { |
3248 | DEBUG(D_receive) | |
3249 | debug_printf("acl_smtp_dkim: acl_check returned %d on %s, " | |
3250 | "skipping remaining items\n", rc, item); | |
3251 | cancel_cutthrough_connection("dkim acl not ok"); | |
3252 | break; | |
3253 | } | |
80a47a2c | 3254 | } |
578d43dc | 3255 | add_acl_headers(ACL_WHERE_DKIM, US"DKIM"); |
80a47a2c TK |
3256 | if (rc == DISCARD) |
3257 | { | |
3258 | recipients_count = 0; | |
3259 | blackholed_by = US"DKIM ACL"; | |
3260 | if (log_msg != NULL) | |
3261 | blackhole_log_msg = string_sprintf(": %s", log_msg); | |
3262 | } | |
3263 | else if (rc != OK) | |
3264 | { | |
3265 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
3266 | if (smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_DKIM, rc, user_msg, log_msg) != 0) | |
3267 | smtp_yield = FALSE; /* No more messsages after dropped connection */ | |
3268 | smtp_reply = US""; /* Indicate reply already sent */ | |
3269 | message_id[0] = 0; /* Indicate no message accepted */ | |
3270 | goto TIDYUP; /* Skip to end of function */ | |
3271 | } | |
3272 | } | |
3273 | } | |
3274 | } | |
4a8ce2d8 | 3275 | #endif /* DISABLE_DKIM */ |
fb2274d4 | 3276 | |
8523533c | 3277 | #ifdef WITH_CONTENT_SCAN |
80a47a2c TK |
3278 | if (recipients_count > 0 && |
3279 | acl_smtp_mime != NULL && | |
54cdb463 PH |
3280 | !run_mime_acl(acl_smtp_mime, &smtp_yield, &smtp_reply, &blackholed_by)) |
3281 | goto TIDYUP; | |
8523533c TK |
3282 | #endif /* WITH_CONTENT_SCAN */ |
3283 | ||
4840604e TL |
3284 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_DMARC |
3285 | dmarc_up = dmarc_store_data(from_header); | |
3286 | #endif /* EXPERIMENTAL_DMARC */ | |
3287 | ||
8ccd00b1 JH |
3288 | #ifndef DISABLE_PRDR |
3289 | if (prdr_requested && recipients_count > 1 && acl_smtp_data_prdr) | |
fd98a5c6 JH |
3290 | { |
3291 | unsigned int c; | |
3292 | int all_pass = OK; | |
3293 | int all_fail = FAIL; | |
3294 | ||
3295 | smtp_printf("353 PRDR content analysis beginning\r\n"); | |
3296 | /* Loop through recipients, responses must be in same order received */ | |
3297 | for (c = 0; recipients_count > c; c++) | |
3298 | { | |
3299 | uschar * addr= recipients_list[c].address; | |
3300 | uschar * msg= US"PRDR R=<%s> %s"; | |
3301 | uschar * code; | |
3302 | DEBUG(D_receive) | |
3303 | debug_printf("PRDR processing recipient %s (%d of %d)\n", | |
3304 | addr, c+1, recipients_count); | |
3305 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_PRDR, addr, | |
3306 | acl_smtp_data_prdr, &user_msg, &log_msg); | |
3307 | ||
3308 | /* If any recipient rejected content, indicate it in final message */ | |
3309 | all_pass |= rc; | |
3310 | /* If all recipients rejected, indicate in final message */ | |
3311 | all_fail &= rc; | |
3312 | ||
3313 | switch (rc) | |
3314 | { | |
3315 | case OK: case DISCARD: code = US"250"; break; | |
3316 | case DEFER: code = US"450"; break; | |
3317 | default: code = US"550"; break; | |
3318 | } | |
3319 | if (user_msg != NULL) | |
3320 | smtp_user_msg(code, user_msg); | |
3321 | else | |
3322 | { | |
3323 | switch (rc) | |
3324 | { | |
3325 | case OK: case DISCARD: | |
3326 | msg = string_sprintf(CS msg, addr, "acceptance"); break; | |
3327 | case DEFER: | |
3328 | msg = string_sprintf(CS msg, addr, "temporary refusal"); break; | |
3329 | default: | |
3330 | msg = string_sprintf(CS msg, addr, "refusal"); break; | |
3331 | } | |
3332 | smtp_user_msg(code, msg); | |
3333 | } | |
3334 | if (log_msg) log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "PRDR %s %s", addr, log_msg); | |
3335 | else if (user_msg) log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "PRDR %s %s", addr, user_msg); | |
112b6a93 | 3336 | else log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s", CS msg); |
fd98a5c6 JH |
3337 | |
3338 | if (rc != OK) { receive_remove_recipient(addr); c--; } | |
3339 | } | |
3340 | /* Set up final message, used if data acl gives OK */ | |
3341 | smtp_reply = string_sprintf("%s id=%s message %s", | |
3342 | all_fail == FAIL ? US"550" : US"250", | |
3343 | message_id, | |
3344 | all_fail == FAIL | |
3345 | ? US"rejected for all recipients" | |
3346 | : all_pass == OK | |
3347 | ? US"accepted" | |
3348 | : US"accepted for some recipients"); | |
3349 | if (recipients_count == 0) | |
3350 | { | |
3351 | message_id[0] = 0; /* Indicate no message accepted */ | |
3352 | goto TIDYUP; | |
3353 | } | |
3354 | } | |
3355 | else | |
3356 | prdr_requested = FALSE; | |
8ccd00b1 | 3357 | #endif /* !DISABLE_PRDR */ |
fd98a5c6 | 3358 | |
54cdb463 PH |
3359 | /* Check the recipients count again, as the MIME ACL might have changed |
3360 | them. */ | |
8523533c | 3361 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3362 | if (acl_smtp_data != NULL && recipients_count > 0) |
3363 | { | |
059ec3d9 | 3364 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_DATA, NULL, acl_smtp_data, &user_msg, &log_msg); |
578d43dc | 3365 | add_acl_headers(ACL_WHERE_DATA, US"DATA"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3366 | if (rc == DISCARD) |
3367 | { | |
3368 | recipients_count = 0; | |
3369 | blackholed_by = US"DATA ACL"; | |
8e669ac1 PH |
3370 | if (log_msg != NULL) |
3371 | blackhole_log_msg = string_sprintf(": %s", log_msg); | |
2e5b33cd | 3372 | cancel_cutthrough_connection("data acl discard"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3373 | } |
3374 | else if (rc != OK) | |
3375 | { | |
3376 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
2e5b33cd | 3377 | cancel_cutthrough_connection("data acl not ok"); |
8523533c TK |
3378 | #ifdef WITH_CONTENT_SCAN |
3379 | unspool_mbox(); | |
6f0c431a PP |
3380 | #endif |
3381 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_DCC | |
3382 | dcc_ok = 0; | |
8523533c | 3383 | #endif |
059ec3d9 PH |
3384 | if (smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_DATA, rc, user_msg, log_msg) != 0) |
3385 | smtp_yield = FALSE; /* No more messsages after dropped connection */ | |
3386 | smtp_reply = US""; /* Indicate reply already sent */ | |
3387 | message_id[0] = 0; /* Indicate no message accepted */ | |
3388 | goto TIDYUP; /* Skip to end of function */ | |
3389 | } | |
3390 | } | |
3391 | } | |
3392 | ||
3393 | /* Handle non-SMTP and batch SMTP (i.e. non-interactive) messages. Note that | |
3394 | we cannot take different actions for permanent and temporary rejections. */ | |
3395 | ||
54cdb463 | 3396 | else |
059ec3d9 | 3397 | { |
54cdb463 PH |
3398 | |
3399 | #ifdef WITH_CONTENT_SCAN | |
3400 | if (acl_not_smtp_mime != NULL && | |
3401 | !run_mime_acl(acl_not_smtp_mime, &smtp_yield, &smtp_reply, | |
3402 | &blackholed_by)) | |
3403 | goto TIDYUP; | |
3404 | #endif /* WITH_CONTENT_SCAN */ | |
3405 | ||
3406 | if (acl_not_smtp != NULL) | |
059ec3d9 | 3407 | { |
54cdb463 PH |
3408 | uschar *user_msg, *log_msg; |
3409 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_NOTSMTP, NULL, acl_not_smtp, &user_msg, &log_msg); | |
3410 | if (rc == DISCARD) | |
059ec3d9 | 3411 | { |
54cdb463 PH |
3412 | recipients_count = 0; |
3413 | blackholed_by = US"non-SMTP ACL"; | |
3414 | if (log_msg != NULL) | |
3415 | blackhole_log_msg = string_sprintf(": %s", log_msg); | |
059ec3d9 | 3416 | } |
54cdb463 | 3417 | else if (rc != OK) |
059ec3d9 | 3418 | { |
54cdb463 PH |
3419 | Uunlink(spool_name); |
3420 | #ifdef WITH_CONTENT_SCAN | |
3421 | unspool_mbox(); | |
6f0c431a PP |
3422 | #endif |
3423 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_DCC | |
3424 | dcc_ok = 0; | |
54cdb463 | 3425 | #endif |
6ea85e9a PH |
3426 | /* The ACL can specify where rejections are to be logged, possibly |
3427 | nowhere. The default is main and reject logs. */ | |
3428 | ||
3429 | if (log_reject_target != 0) | |
3430 | log_write(0, log_reject_target, "F=<%s> rejected by non-SMTP ACL: %s", | |
3431 | sender_address, log_msg); | |
3432 | ||
54cdb463 PH |
3433 | if (user_msg == NULL) user_msg = US"local configuration problem"; |
3434 | if (smtp_batched_input) | |
3435 | { | |
3436 | moan_smtp_batch(NULL, "%d %s", 550, user_msg); | |
3437 | /* Does not return */ | |
3438 | } | |
3439 | else | |
3440 | { | |
3441 | fseek(data_file, (long int)SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET, SEEK_SET); | |
3442 | give_local_error(ERRMESS_LOCAL_ACL, user_msg, | |
3443 | US"message rejected by non-SMTP ACL: ", error_rc, data_file, | |
3444 | header_list); | |
3445 | /* Does not return */ | |
3446 | } | |
059ec3d9 | 3447 | } |
578d43dc | 3448 | add_acl_headers(ACL_WHERE_NOTSMTP, US"non-SMTP"); |
059ec3d9 | 3449 | } |
059ec3d9 PH |
3450 | } |
3451 | ||
54cdb463 PH |
3452 | /* The applicable ACLs have been run */ |
3453 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
3454 | if (deliver_freeze) frozen_by = US"ACL"; /* for later logging */ |
3455 | if (queue_only_policy) queued_by = US"ACL"; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3456 | } |
3457 | ||
8523533c TK |
3458 | #ifdef WITH_CONTENT_SCAN |
3459 | unspool_mbox(); | |
3460 | #endif | |
3461 | ||
6a8f9482 TK |
3462 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_DCC |
3463 | dcc_ok = 0; | |
3464 | #endif | |
3465 | ||
3466 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
3467 | /* The final check on the message is to run the scan_local() function. The |
3468 | version supplied with Exim always accepts, but this is a hook for sysadmins to | |
3469 | supply their own checking code. The local_scan() function is run even when all | |
3470 | the recipients have been discarded. */ | |
3471 | ||
3472 | lseek(data_fd, (long int)SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET, SEEK_SET); | |
3473 | ||
3474 | /* Arrange to catch crashes in local_scan(), so that the -D file gets | |
3475 | deleted, and the incident gets logged. */ | |
3476 | ||
3477 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGSEGV, local_scan_crash_handler); | |
3478 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGFPE, local_scan_crash_handler); | |
3479 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGILL, local_scan_crash_handler); | |
3480 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGBUS, local_scan_crash_handler); | |
3481 | ||
3482 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("calling local_scan(); timeout=%d\n", | |
3483 | local_scan_timeout); | |
3484 | local_scan_data = NULL; | |
3485 | ||
3486 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGALRM, local_scan_timeout_handler); | |
3487 | if (local_scan_timeout > 0) alarm(local_scan_timeout); | |
3488 | rc = local_scan(data_fd, &local_scan_data); | |
3489 | alarm(0); | |
3490 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGALRM, sigalrm_handler); | |
3491 | ||
0e20aff9 MH |
3492 | enable_dollar_recipients = FALSE; |
3493 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
3494 | store_pool = POOL_MAIN; /* In case changed */ |
3495 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("local_scan() returned %d %s\n", rc, | |
3496 | local_scan_data); | |
3497 | ||
3498 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGSEGV, SIG_DFL); | |
3499 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGFPE, SIG_DFL); | |
3500 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGILL, SIG_DFL); | |
3501 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGBUS, SIG_DFL); | |
3502 | ||
3503 | /* The length check is paranoia against some runaway code, and also because | |
3504 | (for a success return) lines in the spool file are read into big_buffer. */ | |
3505 | ||
3506 | if (local_scan_data != NULL) | |
3507 | { | |
3508 | int len = Ustrlen(local_scan_data); | |
3509 | if (len > LOCAL_SCAN_MAX_RETURN) len = LOCAL_SCAN_MAX_RETURN; | |
3510 | local_scan_data = string_copyn(local_scan_data, len); | |
3511 | } | |
3512 | ||
3513 | if (rc == LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT_FREEZE) | |
3514 | { | |
58eb016e | 3515 | if (!deliver_freeze) /* ACL might have already frozen */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
3516 | { |
3517 | deliver_freeze = TRUE; | |
3518 | deliver_frozen_at = time(NULL); | |
3519 | frozen_by = US"local_scan()"; | |
3520 | } | |
3521 | rc = LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT; | |
3522 | } | |
3523 | else if (rc == LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT_QUEUE) | |
3524 | { | |
3525 | if (!queue_only_policy) /* ACL might have already queued */ | |
3526 | { | |
3527 | queue_only_policy = TRUE; | |
3528 | queued_by = US"local_scan()"; | |
3529 | } | |
3530 | rc = LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT; | |
3531 | } | |
3532 | ||
3533 | /* Message accepted: remove newlines in local_scan_data because otherwise | |
3534 | the spool file gets corrupted. Ensure that all recipients are qualified. */ | |
3535 | ||
3536 | if (rc == LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT) | |
3537 | { | |
3538 | if (local_scan_data != NULL) | |
3539 | { | |
3540 | uschar *s; | |
3541 | for (s = local_scan_data; *s != 0; s++) if (*s == '\n') *s = ' '; | |
3542 | } | |
3543 | for (i = 0; i < recipients_count; i++) | |
3544 | { | |
3545 | recipient_item *r = recipients_list + i; | |
3546 | r->address = rewrite_address_qualify(r->address, TRUE); | |
3547 | if (r->errors_to != NULL) | |
3548 | r->errors_to = rewrite_address_qualify(r->errors_to, TRUE); | |
3549 | } | |
3550 | if (recipients_count == 0 && blackholed_by == NULL) | |
3551 | blackholed_by = US"local_scan"; | |
3552 | } | |
3553 | ||
3554 | /* Message rejected: newlines permitted in local_scan_data to generate | |
3555 | multiline SMTP responses. */ | |
3556 | ||
3557 | else | |
3558 | { | |
3559 | uschar *istemp = US""; | |
3560 | uschar *s = NULL; | |
a5bd321b | 3561 | uschar *smtp_code; |
059ec3d9 PH |
3562 | int size = 0; |
3563 | int sptr = 0; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3564 | |
3565 | errmsg = local_scan_data; | |
3566 | ||
3567 | Uunlink(spool_name); /* Cancel this message */ | |
3568 | switch(rc) | |
3569 | { | |
3570 | default: | |
3571 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "invalid return %d from local_scan(). Temporary " | |
3572 | "rejection given", rc); | |
3573 | goto TEMPREJECT; | |
3574 | ||
3575 | case LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT_NOLOGHDR: | |
3576 | log_extra_selector &= ~LX_rejected_header; | |
3577 | /* Fall through */ | |
3578 | ||
3579 | case LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT: | |
a5bd321b | 3580 | smtp_code = US"550"; |
059ec3d9 PH |
3581 | if (errmsg == NULL) errmsg = US"Administrative prohibition"; |
3582 | break; | |
3583 | ||
3584 | case LOCAL_SCAN_TEMPREJECT_NOLOGHDR: | |
3585 | log_extra_selector &= ~LX_rejected_header; | |
3586 | /* Fall through */ | |
3587 | ||
3588 | case LOCAL_SCAN_TEMPREJECT: | |
3589 | TEMPREJECT: | |
a5bd321b | 3590 | smtp_code = US"451"; |
059ec3d9 PH |
3591 | if (errmsg == NULL) errmsg = US"Temporary local problem"; |
3592 | istemp = US"temporarily "; | |
3593 | break; | |
3594 | } | |
3595 | ||
3596 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US"F=", | |
3597 | (sender_address[0] == 0)? US"<>" : sender_address); | |
3598 | s = add_host_info_for_log(s, &size, &sptr); | |
3599 | s[sptr] = 0; | |
3600 | ||
3601 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "%s %srejected by local_scan(): %.256s", | |
3602 | s, istemp, string_printing(errmsg)); | |
3603 | ||
3604 | if (smtp_input) | |
3605 | { | |
3606 | if (!smtp_batched_input) | |
3607 | { | |
a5bd321b | 3608 | smtp_respond(smtp_code, 3, TRUE, errmsg); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3609 | message_id[0] = 0; /* Indicate no message accepted */ |
3610 | smtp_reply = US""; /* Indicate reply already sent */ | |
3611 | goto TIDYUP; /* Skip to end of function */ | |
3612 | } | |
3613 | else | |
3614 | { | |
a5bd321b | 3615 | moan_smtp_batch(NULL, "%s %s", smtp_code, errmsg); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3616 | /* Does not return */ |
3617 | } | |
3618 | } | |
3619 | else | |
3620 | { | |
3621 | fseek(data_file, (long int)SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET, SEEK_SET); | |
3622 | give_local_error(ERRMESS_LOCAL_SCAN, errmsg, | |
3623 | US"message rejected by local scan code: ", error_rc, data_file, | |
3624 | header_list); | |
3625 | /* Does not return */ | |
3626 | } | |
3627 | } | |
3628 | ||
3629 | /* Reset signal handlers to ignore signals that previously would have caused | |
3630 | the message to be abandoned. */ | |
3631 | ||
3632 | signal(SIGTERM, SIG_IGN); | |
3633 | signal(SIGINT, SIG_IGN); | |
3634 | ||
e4bdf652 | 3635 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3636 | /* Ensure the first time flag is set in the newly-received message. */ |
3637 | ||
3638 | deliver_firsttime = TRUE; | |
3639 | ||
8523533c TK |
3640 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_BRIGHTMAIL |
3641 | if (bmi_run == 1) { | |
3642 | /* rewind data file */ | |
3643 | lseek(data_fd, (long int)SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET, SEEK_SET); | |
3644 | bmi_verdicts = bmi_process_message(header_list, data_fd); | |
3645 | }; | |
3646 | #endif | |
3647 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
3648 | /* Update the timstamp in our Received: header to account for any time taken by |
3649 | an ACL or by local_scan(). The new time is the time that all reception | |
3650 | processing is complete. */ | |
3651 | ||
3652 | timestamp = expand_string(US"${tod_full}"); | |
3653 | tslen = Ustrlen(timestamp); | |
3654 | ||
3655 | memcpy(received_header->text + received_header->slen - tslen - 1, | |
3656 | timestamp, tslen); | |
3657 | ||
3658 | /* In MUA wrapper mode, ignore queueing actions set by ACL or local_scan() */ | |
3659 | ||
3660 | if (mua_wrapper) | |
3661 | { | |
3662 | deliver_freeze = FALSE; | |
3663 | queue_only_policy = FALSE; | |
3664 | } | |
3665 | ||
3666 | /* Keep the data file open until we have written the header file, in order to | |
3667 | hold onto the lock. In a -bh run, or if the message is to be blackholed, we | |
3668 | don't write the header file, and we unlink the data file. If writing the header | |
3669 | file fails, we have failed to accept this message. */ | |
3670 | ||
3671 | if (host_checking || blackholed_by != NULL) | |
3672 | { | |
3673 | header_line *h; | |
3674 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
3675 | msg_size = 0; /* Compute size for log line */ | |
3676 | for (h = header_list; h != NULL; h = h->next) | |
3677 | if (h->type != '*') msg_size += h->slen; | |
3678 | } | |
3679 | ||
3680 | /* Write the -H file */ | |
3681 | ||
3682 | else | |
3683 | { | |
3684 | if ((msg_size = spool_write_header(message_id, SW_RECEIVING, &errmsg)) < 0) | |
3685 | { | |
3686 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Message abandoned: %s", errmsg); | |
3687 | Uunlink(spool_name); /* Lose the data file */ | |
3688 | ||
3689 | if (smtp_input) | |
3690 | { | |
3691 | smtp_reply = US"451 Error in writing spool file"; | |
3692 | message_id[0] = 0; /* Indicate no message accepted */ | |
3693 | goto TIDYUP; | |
3694 | } | |
3695 | else | |
3696 | { | |
3697 | fseek(data_file, (long int)SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET, SEEK_SET); | |
3698 | give_local_error(ERRMESS_IOERR, errmsg, US"", error_rc, data_file, | |
3699 | header_list); | |
3700 | /* Does not return */ | |
3701 | } | |
3702 | } | |
3703 | } | |
3704 | ||
3705 | ||
3706 | /* The message has now been successfully received. */ | |
3707 | ||
3708 | receive_messagecount++; | |
3709 | ||
3710 | /* In SMTP sessions we may receive several in one connection. After each one, | |
3711 | we wait for the clock to tick at the level of message-id granularity. This is | |
3712 | so that the combination of time+pid is unique, even on systems where the pid | |
3713 | can be re-used within our time interval. We can't shorten the interval without | |
3714 | re-designing the message-id. See comments above where the message id is | |
3715 | created. This is Something For The Future. */ | |
3716 | ||
3717 | message_id_tv.tv_usec = (message_id_tv.tv_usec/id_resolution) * id_resolution; | |
3718 | exim_wait_tick(&message_id_tv, id_resolution); | |
3719 | ||
3720 | /* Add data size to written header size. We do not count the initial file name | |
3721 | that is in the file, but we do add one extra for the notional blank line that | |
3722 | precedes the data. This total differs from message_size in that it include the | |
3723 | added Received: header and any other headers that got created locally. */ | |
3724 | ||
3725 | fflush(data_file); | |
3726 | fstat(data_fd, &statbuf); | |
3727 | ||
3728 | msg_size += statbuf.st_size - SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET + 1; | |
3729 | ||
3730 | /* Generate a "message received" log entry. We do this by building up a dynamic | |
3731 | string as required. Since we commonly want to add two items at a time, use a | |
3732 | macro to simplify the coding. We log the arrival of a new message while the | |
3733 | file is still locked, just in case the machine is *really* fast, and delivers | |
3734 | it first! Include any message id that is in the message - since the syntax of a | |
3735 | message id is actually an addr-spec, we can use the parse routine to canonicize | |
3736 | it. */ | |
3737 | ||
3738 | size = 256; | |
3739 | sptr = 0; | |
3740 | s = store_get(size); | |
3741 | ||
3742 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US"<= ", | |
3743 | (sender_address[0] == 0)? US"<>" : sender_address); | |
3744 | if (message_reference != NULL) | |
3745 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US" R=", message_reference); | |
3746 | ||
3747 | s = add_host_info_for_log(s, &size, &sptr); | |
3748 | ||
3749 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
8ccd00b1 | 3750 | if (log_extra_selector & LX_tls_cipher && tls_in.cipher) |
817d9f57 | 3751 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US" X=", tls_in.cipher); |
8ccd00b1 | 3752 | if (log_extra_selector & LX_tls_certificate_verified && tls_in.cipher) |
059ec3d9 | 3753 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US" CV=", |
817d9f57 | 3754 | tls_in.certificate_verified? "yes":"no"); |
8ccd00b1 | 3755 | if (log_extra_selector & LX_tls_peerdn && tls_in.peerdn) |
48ed62d9 | 3756 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 3, US" DN=\"", |
817d9f57 | 3757 | string_printing(tls_in.peerdn), US"\""); |
8ccd00b1 | 3758 | if (log_extra_selector & LX_tls_sni && tls_in.sni) |
3f0945ff | 3759 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 3, US" SNI=\"", |
817d9f57 | 3760 | string_printing(tls_in.sni), US"\""); |
3f0945ff | 3761 | #endif |
059ec3d9 | 3762 | |
8ccd00b1 | 3763 | if (sender_host_authenticated) |
059ec3d9 PH |
3764 | { |
3765 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US" A=", sender_host_authenticated); | |
3766 | if (authenticated_id != NULL) | |
c8e2fc1e | 3767 | { |
059ec3d9 | 3768 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US":", authenticated_id); |
c8e2fc1e JH |
3769 | if (log_extra_selector & LX_smtp_mailauth && authenticated_sender != NULL) |
3770 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US":", authenticated_sender); | |
3771 | } | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3772 | } |
3773 | ||
8ccd00b1 | 3774 | #ifndef DISABLE_PRDR |
fd98a5c6 JH |
3775 | if (prdr_requested) |
3776 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 1, US" PRDR"); | |
3777 | #endif | |
8ccd00b1 | 3778 | |
a3c86431 | 3779 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_PROXY |
8ccd00b1 | 3780 | if (proxy_session && log_extra_selector & LX_proxy) |
a3bddaa8 | 3781 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US" PRX=", proxy_host_address); |
a3c86431 | 3782 | #endif |
fd98a5c6 | 3783 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3784 | sprintf(CS big_buffer, "%d", msg_size); |
3785 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US" S=", big_buffer); | |
3786 | ||
3c0a92dc JH |
3787 | /* log 8BITMIME mode announced in MAIL_FROM |
3788 | 0 ... no BODY= used | |
3789 | 7 ... 7BIT | |
3790 | 8 ... 8BITMIME */ | |
c8e2fc1e JH |
3791 | if (log_extra_selector & LX_8bitmime) |
3792 | { | |
3c0a92dc JH |
3793 | sprintf(CS big_buffer, "%d", body_8bitmime); |
3794 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US" M8S=", big_buffer); | |
c8e2fc1e | 3795 | } |
3c0a92dc | 3796 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3797 | /* If an addr-spec in a message-id contains a quoted string, it can contain |
3798 | any characters except " \ and CR and so in particular it can contain NL! | |
3799 | Therefore, make sure we use a printing-characters only version for the log. | |
3800 | Also, allow for domain literals in the message id. */ | |
3801 | ||
3802 | if (msgid_header != NULL) | |
3803 | { | |
3804 | uschar *old_id; | |
3805 | BOOL save_allow_domain_literals = allow_domain_literals; | |
3806 | allow_domain_literals = TRUE; | |
3807 | old_id = parse_extract_address(Ustrchr(msgid_header->text, ':') + 1, | |
3808 | &errmsg, &start, &end, &domain, FALSE); | |
3809 | allow_domain_literals = save_allow_domain_literals; | |
3810 | if (old_id != NULL) | |
3811 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US" id=", string_printing(old_id)); | |
3812 | } | |
3813 | ||
3814 | /* If subject logging is turned on, create suitable printing-character | |
3815 | text. By expanding $h_subject: we make use of the MIME decoding. */ | |
3816 | ||
3817 | if ((log_extra_selector & LX_subject) != 0 && subject_header != NULL) | |
3818 | { | |
3819 | int i; | |
3820 | uschar *p = big_buffer; | |
3821 | uschar *ss = expand_string(US"$h_subject:"); | |
3822 | ||
3823 | /* Backslash-quote any double quotes or backslashes so as to make a | |
3824 | a C-like string, and turn any non-printers into escape sequences. */ | |
3825 | ||
3826 | *p++ = '\"'; | |
3827 | if (*ss != 0) for (i = 0; i < 100 && ss[i] != 0; i++) | |
3828 | { | |
3829 | if (ss[i] == '\"' || ss[i] == '\\') *p++ = '\\'; | |
3830 | *p++ = ss[i]; | |
3831 | } | |
3832 | *p++ = '\"'; | |
3833 | *p = 0; | |
3834 | s = string_append(s, &size, &sptr, 2, US" T=", string_printing(big_buffer)); | |
3835 | } | |
3836 | ||
3837 | /* Terminate the string: string_cat() and string_append() leave room, but do | |
3838 | not put the zero in. */ | |
3839 | ||
3840 | s[sptr] = 0; | |
3841 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
3842 | /* Create a message log file if message logs are being used and this message is |
3843 | not blackholed. Write the reception stuff to it. We used to leave message log | |
e4bdf652 | 3844 | creation until the first delivery, but this has proved confusing for some |
059ec3d9 PH |
3845 | people. */ |
3846 | ||
3847 | if (message_logs && blackholed_by == NULL) | |
3848 | { | |
3849 | int fd; | |
3850 | ||
3851 | sprintf(CS spool_name, "%s/msglog/%s/%s", spool_directory, message_subdir, | |
3852 | message_id); | |
3853 | fd = Uopen(spool_name, O_WRONLY|O_APPEND|O_CREAT, SPOOL_MODE); | |
3854 | ||
3855 | if (fd < 0 && errno == ENOENT) | |
3856 | { | |
3857 | uschar temp[16]; | |
3858 | sprintf(CS temp, "msglog/%s", message_subdir); | |
3859 | if (message_subdir[0] == 0) temp[6] = 0; | |
3860 | (void)directory_make(spool_directory, temp, MSGLOG_DIRECTORY_MODE, TRUE); | |
3861 | fd = Uopen(spool_name, O_WRONLY|O_APPEND|O_CREAT, SPOOL_MODE); | |
3862 | } | |
3863 | ||
3864 | if (fd < 0) | |
3865 | { | |
3866 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Couldn't open message log %s: %s", | |
3867 | spool_name, strerror(errno)); | |
3868 | } | |
3869 | ||
3870 | else | |
3871 | { | |
3872 | FILE *message_log = fdopen(fd, "a"); | |
3873 | if (message_log == NULL) | |
3874 | { | |
3875 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Couldn't fdopen message log %s: %s", | |
3876 | spool_name, strerror(errno)); | |
f1e894f3 | 3877 | (void)close(fd); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3878 | } |
3879 | else | |
3880 | { | |
3881 | uschar *now = tod_stamp(tod_log); | |
3882 | fprintf(message_log, "%s Received from %s\n", now, s+3); | |
3883 | if (deliver_freeze) fprintf(message_log, "%s frozen by %s\n", now, | |
3884 | frozen_by); | |
3885 | if (queue_only_policy) fprintf(message_log, | |
3886 | "%s no immediate delivery: queued by %s\n", now, queued_by); | |
f1e894f3 | 3887 | (void)fclose(message_log); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3888 | } |
3889 | } | |
3890 | } | |
3891 | ||
58eb016e PH |
3892 | /* Everything has now been done for a successful message except logging its |
3893 | arrival, and outputting an SMTP response. While writing to the log, set a flag | |
3894 | to cause a call to receive_bomb_out() if the log cannot be opened. */ | |
3895 | ||
3896 | receive_call_bombout = TRUE; | |
3897 | ||
563b63fa PH |
3898 | /* Before sending an SMTP response in a TCP/IP session, we check to see if the |
3899 | connection has gone away. This can only be done if there is no unconsumed input | |
3900 | waiting in the local input buffer. We can test for this by calling | |
3901 | receive_smtp_buffered(). RFC 2920 (pipelining) explicitly allows for additional | |
3902 | input to be sent following the final dot, so the presence of following input is | |
3903 | not an error. | |
58eb016e | 3904 | |
563b63fa PH |
3905 | If the connection is still present, but there is no unread input for the |
3906 | socket, the result of a select() call will be zero. If, however, the connection | |
3907 | has gone away, or if there is pending input, the result of select() will be | |
3908 | non-zero. The two cases can be distinguished by trying to read the next input | |
3909 | character. If we succeed, we can unread it so that it remains in the local | |
3910 | buffer for handling later. If not, the connection has been lost. | |
58eb016e | 3911 | |
563b63fa PH |
3912 | Of course, since TCP/IP is asynchronous, there is always a chance that the |
3913 | connection will vanish between the time of this test and the sending of the | |
3914 | response, but the chance of this happening should be small. */ | |
3915 | ||
3916 | if (smtp_input && sender_host_address != NULL && !sender_host_notsocket && | |
3917 | !receive_smtp_buffered()) | |
58eb016e PH |
3918 | { |
3919 | struct timeval tv; | |
3920 | fd_set select_check; | |
3921 | FD_ZERO(&select_check); | |
3922 | FD_SET(fileno(smtp_in), &select_check); | |
3923 | tv.tv_sec = 0; | |
3924 | tv.tv_usec = 0; | |
3925 | ||
563b63fa | 3926 | if (select(fileno(smtp_in) + 1, &select_check, NULL, NULL, &tv) != 0) |
58eb016e | 3927 | { |
80a47a2c TK |
3928 | int c = (receive_getc)(); |
3929 | if (c != EOF) (receive_ungetc)(c); else | |
58eb016e | 3930 | { |
563b63fa PH |
3931 | uschar *msg = US"SMTP connection lost after final dot"; |
3932 | smtp_reply = US""; /* No attempt to send a response */ | |
3933 | smtp_yield = FALSE; /* Nothing more on this connection */ | |
58eb016e | 3934 | |
563b63fa | 3935 | /* Re-use the log line workspace */ |
58eb016e | 3936 | |
563b63fa PH |
3937 | sptr = 0; |
3938 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &sptr, msg, Ustrlen(msg)); | |
3939 | s = add_host_info_for_log(s, &size, &sptr); | |
3940 | s[sptr] = 0; | |
3941 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s", s); | |
58eb016e | 3942 | |
563b63fa | 3943 | /* Delete the files for this aborted message. */ |
58eb016e | 3944 | |
563b63fa PH |
3945 | sprintf(CS spool_name, "%s/input/%s/%s-D", spool_directory, |
3946 | message_subdir, message_id); | |
3947 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
58eb016e | 3948 | |
563b63fa PH |
3949 | sprintf(CS spool_name, "%s/input/%s/%s-H", spool_directory, |
3950 | message_subdir, message_id); | |
3951 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
58eb016e | 3952 | |
563b63fa PH |
3953 | sprintf(CS spool_name, "%s/msglog/%s/%s", spool_directory, |
3954 | message_subdir, message_id); | |
3955 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
58eb016e | 3956 | |
563b63fa PH |
3957 | goto TIDYUP; |
3958 | } | |
58eb016e PH |
3959 | } |
3960 | } | |
3961 | ||
3962 | /* The connection has not gone away; we really are going to take responsibility | |
3963 | for this message. */ | |
3964 | ||
817d9f57 | 3965 | /* Cutthrough - had sender last-dot; assume we've sent (or bufferred) all |
e4bdf652 JH |
3966 | data onward by now. |
3967 | ||
817d9f57 | 3968 | Send dot onward. If accepted, wipe the spooled files, log as delivered and accept |
e4bdf652 | 3969 | the sender's dot (below). |
817d9f57 JH |
3970 | If rejected: copy response to sender, wipe the spooled files, log approriately. |
3971 | If temp-reject: accept to sender, keep the spooled files. | |
e4bdf652 JH |
3972 | |
3973 | Having the normal spool files lets us do data-filtering, and store/forward on temp-reject. | |
817d9f57 JH |
3974 | |
3975 | XXX We do not handle queue-only, freezing, or blackholes. | |
e4bdf652 | 3976 | */ |
5032d1cf | 3977 | if(cutthrough.fd >= 0) |
e4bdf652 JH |
3978 | { |
3979 | uschar * msg= cutthrough_finaldot(); /* Ask the target system to accept the messsage */ | |
817d9f57 | 3980 | /* Logging was done in finaldot() */ |
e4bdf652 | 3981 | switch(msg[0]) |
817d9f57 JH |
3982 | { |
3983 | case '2': /* Accept. Do the same to the source; dump any spoolfiles. */ | |
b784ce7f | 3984 | cutthrough_done = ACCEPTED; |
817d9f57 | 3985 | break; /* message_id needed for SMTP accept below */ |
61147df4 | 3986 | |
817d9f57 JH |
3987 | default: /* Unknown response, or error. Treat as temp-reject. */ |
3988 | case '4': /* Temp-reject. Keep spoolfiles and accept. */ | |
b784ce7f | 3989 | cutthrough_done = TMP_REJ; /* Avoid the usual immediate delivery attempt */ |
817d9f57 | 3990 | break; /* message_id needed for SMTP accept below */ |
61147df4 | 3991 | |
817d9f57 JH |
3992 | case '5': /* Perm-reject. Do the same to the source. Dump any spoolfiles */ |
3993 | smtp_reply= msg; /* Pass on the exact error */ | |
b784ce7f | 3994 | cutthrough_done = PERM_REJ; |
817d9f57 JH |
3995 | break; |
3996 | } | |
e4bdf652 | 3997 | } |
58eb016e | 3998 | |
8ccd00b1 JH |
3999 | #ifndef DISABLE_PRDR |
4000 | if(!smtp_reply || prdr_requested) | |
4001 | #else | |
4002 | if(!smtp_reply) | |
fd98a5c6 | 4003 | #endif |
e4bdf652 JH |
4004 | { |
4005 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN | | |
4006 | (((log_extra_selector & LX_received_recipients) != 0)? LOG_RECIPIENTS : 0) | | |
4007 | (((log_extra_selector & LX_received_sender) != 0)? LOG_SENDER : 0), | |
4008 | "%s", s); | |
4009 | ||
4010 | /* Log any control actions taken by an ACL or local_scan(). */ | |
58eb016e | 4011 | |
e4bdf652 JH |
4012 | if (deliver_freeze) log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "frozen by %s", frozen_by); |
4013 | if (queue_only_policy) log_write(L_delay_delivery, LOG_MAIN, | |
4014 | "no immediate delivery: queued by %s", queued_by); | |
4015 | } | |
4016 | receive_call_bombout = FALSE; | |
58eb016e | 4017 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
4018 | store_reset(s); /* The store for the main log message can be reused */ |
4019 | ||
4020 | /* If the message is frozen, and freeze_tell is set, do the telling. */ | |
4021 | ||
4022 | if (deliver_freeze && freeze_tell != NULL && freeze_tell[0] != 0) | |
4023 | { | |
4024 | moan_tell_someone(freeze_tell, NULL, US"Message frozen on arrival", | |
4025 | "Message %s was frozen on arrival by %s.\nThe sender is <%s>.\n", | |
4026 | message_id, frozen_by, sender_address); | |
4027 | } | |
4028 | ||
4029 | ||
4030 | /* Either a message has been successfully received and written to the two spool | |
4031 | files, or an error in writing the spool has occurred for an SMTP message, or | |
58eb016e PH |
4032 | an SMTP message has been rejected for policy reasons. (For a non-SMTP message |
4033 | we will have already given up because there's no point in carrying on!) In | |
4034 | either event, we must now close (and thereby unlock) the data file. In the | |
059ec3d9 PH |
4035 | successful case, this leaves the message on the spool, ready for delivery. In |
4036 | the error case, the spool file will be deleted. Then tidy up store, interact | |
4037 | with an SMTP call if necessary, and return. | |
4038 | ||
4039 | A fflush() was done earlier in the expectation that any write errors on the | |
4040 | data file will be flushed(!) out thereby. Nevertheless, it is theoretically | |
4041 | possible for fclose() to fail - but what to do? What has happened to the lock | |
4042 | if this happens? */ | |
4043 | ||
e4bdf652 | 4044 | |
059ec3d9 | 4045 | TIDYUP: |
f1e894f3 PH |
4046 | process_info[process_info_len] = 0; /* Remove message id */ |
4047 | if (data_file != NULL) (void)fclose(data_file); /* Frees the lock */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
4048 | |
4049 | /* Now reset signal handlers to their defaults */ | |
4050 | ||
4051 | signal(SIGTERM, SIG_DFL); | |
4052 | signal(SIGINT, SIG_DFL); | |
4053 | ||
4054 | /* Tell an SMTP caller the state of play, and arrange to return the SMTP return | |
4055 | value, which defaults TRUE - meaning there may be more incoming messages from | |
4056 | this connection. For non-SMTP callers (where there is only ever one message), | |
4057 | the default is FALSE. */ | |
4058 | ||
4059 | if (smtp_input) | |
4060 | { | |
4061 | yield = smtp_yield; | |
4062 | ||
4063 | /* Handle interactive SMTP callers. After several kinds of error, smtp_reply | |
58eb016e PH |
4064 | is set to the response that should be sent. When it is NULL, we generate |
4065 | default responses. After an ACL error or local_scan() error, the response has | |
4066 | already been sent, and smtp_reply is an empty string to indicate this. */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
4067 | |
4068 | if (!smtp_batched_input) | |
4069 | { | |
4070 | if (smtp_reply == NULL) | |
4071 | { | |
29aba418 | 4072 | if (fake_response != OK) |
a5bd321b PH |
4073 | smtp_respond((fake_response == DEFER)? US"450" : US"550", 3, TRUE, |
4074 | fake_response_text); | |
4e88a19f PH |
4075 | |
4076 | /* An OK response is required; use "message" text if present. */ | |
4077 | ||
4078 | else if (user_msg != NULL) | |
4079 | { | |
4080 | uschar *code = US"250"; | |
4081 | int len = 3; | |
4082 | smtp_message_code(&code, &len, &user_msg, NULL); | |
4083 | smtp_respond(code, len, TRUE, user_msg); | |
4084 | } | |
4085 | ||
4086 | /* Default OK response */ | |
4087 | ||
8e669ac1 PH |
4088 | else |
4089 | smtp_printf("250 OK id=%s\r\n", message_id); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
4090 | if (host_checking) |
4091 | fprintf(stdout, | |
4092 | "\n**** SMTP testing: that is not a real message id!\n\n"); | |
4093 | } | |
4e88a19f | 4094 | |
58eb016e | 4095 | /* smtp_reply is set non-empty */ |
4e88a19f | 4096 | |
8523533c TK |
4097 | else if (smtp_reply[0] != 0) |
4098 | { | |
29aba418 | 4099 | if (fake_response != OK && (smtp_reply[0] == '2')) |
a5bd321b PH |
4100 | smtp_respond((fake_response == DEFER)? US"450" : US"550", 3, TRUE, |
4101 | fake_response_text); | |
8e669ac1 | 4102 | else |
6951ac6c PH |
4103 | smtp_printf("%.1024s\r\n", smtp_reply); |
4104 | } | |
e4bdf652 | 4105 | |
817d9f57 JH |
4106 | switch (cutthrough_done) |
4107 | { | |
b784ce7f JH |
4108 | case ACCEPTED: log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Completed");/* Delivery was done */ |
4109 | case PERM_REJ: { /* Delete spool files */ | |
817d9f57 JH |
4110 | sprintf(CS spool_name, "%s/input/%s/%s-D", spool_directory, |
4111 | message_subdir, message_id); | |
4112 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
4113 | sprintf(CS spool_name, "%s/input/%s/%s-H", spool_directory, | |
4114 | message_subdir, message_id); | |
4115 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
4116 | sprintf(CS spool_name, "%s/msglog/%s/%s", spool_directory, | |
4117 | message_subdir, message_id); | |
4118 | Uunlink(spool_name); | |
4119 | } | |
b784ce7f | 4120 | case TMP_REJ: message_id[0] = 0; /* Prevent a delivery from starting */ |
817d9f57 | 4121 | default:break; |
e4bdf652 | 4122 | } |
5032d1cf | 4123 | cutthrough.delivery = FALSE; |
059ec3d9 PH |
4124 | } |
4125 | ||
4126 | /* For batched SMTP, generate an error message on failure, and do | |
4127 | nothing on success. The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return - | |
4128 | it exits from the program with a non-zero return code. */ | |
4129 | ||
4130 | else if (smtp_reply != NULL) moan_smtp_batch(NULL, "%s", smtp_reply); | |
4131 | } | |
4132 | ||
4133 | ||
4134 | /* If blackholing, we can immediately log this message's sad fate. The data | |
4135 | file has already been unlinked, and the header file was never written to disk. | |
4136 | We must now indicate that nothing was received, to prevent a delivery from | |
4137 | starting. */ | |
4138 | ||
4139 | if (blackholed_by != NULL) | |
4140 | { | |
55414b25 JH |
4141 | const uschar *detail = local_scan_data |
4142 | ? string_printing(local_scan_data) | |
4143 | : string_sprintf("(%s discarded recipients)", blackholed_by); | |
04f7d5b9 | 4144 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "=> blackhole %s%s", detail, blackhole_log_msg); |
059ec3d9 PH |
4145 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Completed"); |
4146 | message_id[0] = 0; | |
4147 | } | |
4148 | ||
4149 | /* Reset headers so that logging of rejects for a subsequent message doesn't | |
4150 | include them. It is also important to set header_last = NULL before exiting | |
4151 | from this function, as this prevents certain rewrites that might happen during | |
4152 | subsequent verifying (of another incoming message) from trying to add headers | |
4153 | when they shouldn't. */ | |
4154 | ||
4155 | header_list = header_last = NULL; | |
4156 | ||
4157 | return yield; /* TRUE if more messages (SMTP only) */ | |
4158 | } | |
4159 | ||
4160 | /* End of receive.c */ |