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5dc43717 | 1 | /* $Cambridge: exim/src/src/smtp_in.c,v 1.67 2010/06/12 15:21:26 jetmore Exp $ */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
2 | |
3 | /************************************************* | |
4 | * Exim - an Internet mail transport agent * | |
5 | *************************************************/ | |
6 | ||
0a49a7a4 | 7 | /* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2009 */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
8 | /* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */ |
9 | ||
10 | /* Functions for handling an incoming SMTP call. */ | |
11 | ||
12 | ||
13 | #include "exim.h" | |
14 | ||
15 | ||
16 | /* Initialize for TCP wrappers if so configured. It appears that the macro | |
17 | HAVE_IPV6 is used in some versions of the tcpd.h header, so we unset it before | |
18 | including that header, and restore its value afterwards. */ | |
19 | ||
20 | #ifdef USE_TCP_WRAPPERS | |
21 | ||
22 | #if HAVE_IPV6 | |
23 | #define EXIM_HAVE_IPV6 | |
24 | #endif | |
25 | #undef HAVE_IPV6 | |
26 | #include <tcpd.h> | |
27 | #undef HAVE_IPV6 | |
28 | #ifdef EXIM_HAVE_IPV6 | |
29 | #define HAVE_IPV6 TRUE | |
30 | #endif | |
31 | ||
32 | int allow_severity = LOG_INFO; | |
33 | int deny_severity = LOG_NOTICE; | |
5dc43717 | 34 | uschar *tcp_wrappers_name; |
059ec3d9 PH |
35 | #endif |
36 | ||
37 | ||
8d67ada3 PH |
38 | /* Size of buffer for reading SMTP commands. We used to use 512, as defined |
39 | by RFC 821. However, RFC 1869 specifies that this must be increased for SMTP | |
40 | commands that accept arguments, and this in particular applies to AUTH, where | |
41 | the data can be quite long. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 42 | |
3ee512ff | 43 | #define smtp_cmd_buffer_size 2048 |
059ec3d9 PH |
44 | |
45 | /* Size of buffer for reading SMTP incoming packets */ | |
46 | ||
47 | #define in_buffer_size 8192 | |
48 | ||
49 | /* Structure for SMTP command list */ | |
50 | ||
51 | typedef struct { | |
52 | char *name; | |
53 | int len; | |
54 | short int cmd; | |
55 | short int has_arg; | |
56 | short int is_mail_cmd; | |
57 | } smtp_cmd_list; | |
58 | ||
59 | /* Codes for identifying commands. We order them so that those that come first | |
60 | are those for which synchronization is always required. Checking this can help | |
61 | block some spam. */ | |
62 | ||
63 | enum { | |
64 | /* These commands are required to be synchronized, i.e. to be the last in a | |
65 | block of commands when pipelining. */ | |
66 | ||
67 | HELO_CMD, EHLO_CMD, DATA_CMD, /* These are listed in the pipelining */ | |
68 | VRFY_CMD, EXPN_CMD, NOOP_CMD, /* RFC as requiring synchronization */ | |
69 | ETRN_CMD, /* This by analogy with TURN from the RFC */ | |
70 | STARTTLS_CMD, /* Required by the STARTTLS RFC */ | |
71 | ||
72 | /* This is a dummy to identify the non-sync commands when pipelining */ | |
73 | ||
74 | NON_SYNC_CMD_PIPELINING, | |
75 | ||
76 | /* These commands need not be synchronized when pipelining */ | |
77 | ||
78 | MAIL_CMD, RCPT_CMD, RSET_CMD, | |
79 | ||
80 | /* This is a dummy to identify the non-sync commands when not pipelining */ | |
81 | ||
82 | NON_SYNC_CMD_NON_PIPELINING, | |
83 | ||
84 | /* I have been unable to find a statement about the use of pipelining | |
85 | with AUTH, so to be on the safe side it is here, though I kind of feel | |
86 | it should be up there with the synchronized commands. */ | |
87 | ||
88 | AUTH_CMD, | |
89 | ||
90 | /* I'm not sure about these, but I don't think they matter. */ | |
91 | ||
92 | QUIT_CMD, HELP_CMD, | |
93 | ||
94 | /* These are specials that don't correspond to actual commands */ | |
95 | ||
96 | EOF_CMD, OTHER_CMD, BADARG_CMD, BADCHAR_CMD, BADSYN_CMD, | |
97 | TOO_MANY_NONMAIL_CMD }; | |
98 | ||
99 | ||
b4ed4da0 PH |
100 | /* This is a convenience macro for adding the identity of an SMTP command |
101 | to the circular buffer that holds a list of the last n received. */ | |
102 | ||
103 | #define HAD(n) \ | |
104 | smtp_connection_had[smtp_ch_index++] = n; \ | |
105 | if (smtp_ch_index >= SMTP_HBUFF_SIZE) smtp_ch_index = 0 | |
106 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
107 | |
108 | /************************************************* | |
109 | * Local static variables * | |
110 | *************************************************/ | |
111 | ||
112 | static auth_instance *authenticated_by; | |
113 | static BOOL auth_advertised; | |
114 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
115 | static BOOL tls_advertised; | |
116 | #endif | |
117 | static BOOL esmtp; | |
118 | static BOOL helo_required = FALSE; | |
119 | static BOOL helo_verify = FALSE; | |
120 | static BOOL helo_seen; | |
121 | static BOOL helo_accept_junk; | |
122 | static BOOL count_nonmail; | |
123 | static BOOL pipelining_advertised; | |
2679d413 PH |
124 | static BOOL rcpt_smtp_response_same; |
125 | static BOOL rcpt_in_progress; | |
059ec3d9 | 126 | static int nonmail_command_count; |
8f128379 | 127 | static BOOL smtp_exit_function_called = 0; |
059ec3d9 PH |
128 | static int synprot_error_count; |
129 | static int unknown_command_count; | |
130 | static int sync_cmd_limit; | |
131 | static int smtp_write_error = 0; | |
132 | ||
2679d413 | 133 | static uschar *rcpt_smtp_response; |
ca86f471 PH |
134 | static uschar *smtp_data_buffer; |
135 | static uschar *smtp_cmd_data; | |
136 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
137 | /* We need to know the position of RSET, HELO, EHLO, AUTH, and STARTTLS. Their |
138 | final fields of all except AUTH are forced TRUE at the start of a new message | |
139 | setup, to allow one of each between messages that is not counted as a nonmail | |
140 | command. (In fact, only one of HELO/EHLO is not counted.) Also, we have to | |
141 | allow a new EHLO after starting up TLS. | |
142 | ||
143 | AUTH is "falsely" labelled as a mail command initially, so that it doesn't get | |
144 | counted. However, the flag is changed when AUTH is received, so that multiple | |
145 | failing AUTHs will eventually hit the limit. After a successful AUTH, another | |
146 | AUTH is already forbidden. After a TLS session is started, AUTH's flag is again | |
147 | forced TRUE, to allow for the re-authentication that can happen at that point. | |
148 | ||
149 | QUIT is also "falsely" labelled as a mail command so that it doesn't up the | |
150 | count of non-mail commands and possibly provoke an error. */ | |
151 | ||
152 | static smtp_cmd_list cmd_list[] = { | |
153 | { "rset", sizeof("rset")-1, RSET_CMD, FALSE, FALSE }, /* First */ | |
154 | { "helo", sizeof("helo")-1, HELO_CMD, TRUE, FALSE }, | |
155 | { "ehlo", sizeof("ehlo")-1, EHLO_CMD, TRUE, FALSE }, | |
156 | { "auth", sizeof("auth")-1, AUTH_CMD, TRUE, TRUE }, | |
157 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
158 | { "starttls", sizeof("starttls")-1, STARTTLS_CMD, FALSE, FALSE }, | |
159 | #endif | |
160 | ||
161 | /* If you change anything above here, also fix the definitions below. */ | |
162 | ||
163 | { "mail from:", sizeof("mail from:")-1, MAIL_CMD, TRUE, TRUE }, | |
164 | { "rcpt to:", sizeof("rcpt to:")-1, RCPT_CMD, TRUE, TRUE }, | |
165 | { "data", sizeof("data")-1, DATA_CMD, FALSE, TRUE }, | |
166 | { "quit", sizeof("quit")-1, QUIT_CMD, FALSE, TRUE }, | |
167 | { "noop", sizeof("noop")-1, NOOP_CMD, TRUE, FALSE }, | |
168 | { "etrn", sizeof("etrn")-1, ETRN_CMD, TRUE, FALSE }, | |
169 | { "vrfy", sizeof("vrfy")-1, VRFY_CMD, TRUE, FALSE }, | |
170 | { "expn", sizeof("expn")-1, EXPN_CMD, TRUE, FALSE }, | |
171 | { "help", sizeof("help")-1, HELP_CMD, TRUE, FALSE } | |
172 | }; | |
173 | ||
174 | static smtp_cmd_list *cmd_list_end = | |
175 | cmd_list + sizeof(cmd_list)/sizeof(smtp_cmd_list); | |
176 | ||
177 | #define CMD_LIST_RSET 0 | |
178 | #define CMD_LIST_HELO 1 | |
179 | #define CMD_LIST_EHLO 2 | |
180 | #define CMD_LIST_AUTH 3 | |
181 | #define CMD_LIST_STARTTLS 4 | |
182 | ||
b4ed4da0 PH |
183 | /* This list of names is used for performing the smtp_no_mail logging action. |
184 | It must be kept in step with the SCH_xxx enumerations. */ | |
185 | ||
186 | static uschar *smtp_names[] = | |
187 | { | |
188 | US"NONE", US"AUTH", US"DATA", US"EHLO", US"ETRN", US"EXPN", US"HELO", | |
189 | US"HELP", US"MAIL", US"NOOP", US"QUIT", US"RCPT", US"RSET", US"STARTTLS", | |
190 | US"VRFY" }; | |
191 | ||
059ec3d9 | 192 | static uschar *protocols[] = { |
981756db PH |
193 | US"local-smtp", /* HELO */ |
194 | US"local-smtps", /* The rare case EHLO->STARTTLS->HELO */ | |
195 | US"local-esmtp", /* EHLO */ | |
196 | US"local-esmtps", /* EHLO->STARTTLS->EHLO */ | |
197 | US"local-esmtpa", /* EHLO->AUTH */ | |
198 | US"local-esmtpsa" /* EHLO->STARTTLS->EHLO->AUTH */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
199 | }; |
200 | ||
201 | #define pnormal 0 | |
981756db PH |
202 | #define pextend 2 |
203 | #define pcrpted 1 /* added to pextend or pnormal */ | |
204 | #define pauthed 2 /* added to pextend */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
205 | #define pnlocal 6 /* offset to remove "local" */ |
206 | ||
207 | /* When reading SMTP from a remote host, we have to use our own versions of the | |
208 | C input-reading functions, in order to be able to flush the SMTP output only | |
209 | when about to read more data from the socket. This is the only way to get | |
210 | optimal performance when the client is using pipelining. Flushing for every | |
211 | command causes a separate packet and reply packet each time; saving all the | |
212 | responses up (when pipelining) combines them into one packet and one response. | |
213 | ||
214 | For simplicity, these functions are used for *all* SMTP input, not only when | |
215 | receiving over a socket. However, after setting up a secure socket (SSL), input | |
216 | is read via the OpenSSL library, and another set of functions is used instead | |
217 | (see tls.c). | |
218 | ||
219 | These functions are set in the receive_getc etc. variables and called with the | |
220 | same interface as the C functions. However, since there can only ever be | |
221 | one incoming SMTP call, we just use a single buffer and flags. There is no need | |
222 | to implement a complicated private FILE-like structure.*/ | |
223 | ||
224 | static uschar *smtp_inbuffer; | |
225 | static uschar *smtp_inptr; | |
226 | static uschar *smtp_inend; | |
227 | static int smtp_had_eof; | |
228 | static int smtp_had_error; | |
229 | ||
230 | ||
231 | /************************************************* | |
232 | * SMTP version of getc() * | |
233 | *************************************************/ | |
234 | ||
235 | /* This gets the next byte from the SMTP input buffer. If the buffer is empty, | |
236 | it flushes the output, and refills the buffer, with a timeout. The signal | |
237 | handler is set appropriately by the calling function. This function is not used | |
238 | after a connection has negotated itself into an TLS/SSL state. | |
239 | ||
240 | Arguments: none | |
241 | Returns: the next character or EOF | |
242 | */ | |
243 | ||
244 | int | |
245 | smtp_getc(void) | |
246 | { | |
247 | if (smtp_inptr >= smtp_inend) | |
248 | { | |
249 | int rc, save_errno; | |
250 | fflush(smtp_out); | |
251 | if (smtp_receive_timeout > 0) alarm(smtp_receive_timeout); | |
252 | rc = read(fileno(smtp_in), smtp_inbuffer, in_buffer_size); | |
253 | save_errno = errno; | |
254 | alarm(0); | |
255 | if (rc <= 0) | |
256 | { | |
257 | /* Must put the error text in fixed store, because this might be during | |
258 | header reading, where it releases unused store above the header. */ | |
259 | if (rc < 0) | |
260 | { | |
261 | smtp_had_error = save_errno; | |
262 | smtp_read_error = string_copy_malloc( | |
263 | string_sprintf(" (error: %s)", strerror(save_errno))); | |
264 | } | |
265 | else smtp_had_eof = 1; | |
266 | return EOF; | |
267 | } | |
80a47a2c TK |
268 | #ifndef DISABLE_DKIM |
269 | dkim_exim_verify_feed(smtp_inbuffer, rc); | |
270 | #endif | |
059ec3d9 PH |
271 | smtp_inend = smtp_inbuffer + rc; |
272 | smtp_inptr = smtp_inbuffer; | |
273 | } | |
274 | return *smtp_inptr++; | |
275 | } | |
276 | ||
277 | ||
278 | ||
279 | /************************************************* | |
280 | * SMTP version of ungetc() * | |
281 | *************************************************/ | |
282 | ||
283 | /* Puts a character back in the input buffer. Only ever | |
284 | called once. | |
285 | ||
286 | Arguments: | |
287 | ch the character | |
288 | ||
289 | Returns: the character | |
290 | */ | |
291 | ||
292 | int | |
293 | smtp_ungetc(int ch) | |
294 | { | |
295 | *(--smtp_inptr) = ch; | |
296 | return ch; | |
297 | } | |
298 | ||
299 | ||
300 | ||
301 | ||
302 | /************************************************* | |
303 | * SMTP version of feof() * | |
304 | *************************************************/ | |
305 | ||
306 | /* Tests for a previous EOF | |
307 | ||
308 | Arguments: none | |
309 | Returns: non-zero if the eof flag is set | |
310 | */ | |
311 | ||
312 | int | |
313 | smtp_feof(void) | |
314 | { | |
315 | return smtp_had_eof; | |
316 | } | |
317 | ||
318 | ||
319 | ||
320 | ||
321 | /************************************************* | |
322 | * SMTP version of ferror() * | |
323 | *************************************************/ | |
324 | ||
325 | /* Tests for a previous read error, and returns with errno | |
326 | restored to what it was when the error was detected. | |
327 | ||
328 | Arguments: none | |
329 | Returns: non-zero if the error flag is set | |
330 | */ | |
331 | ||
332 | int | |
333 | smtp_ferror(void) | |
334 | { | |
335 | errno = smtp_had_error; | |
336 | return smtp_had_error; | |
337 | } | |
338 | ||
339 | ||
340 | ||
58eb016e PH |
341 | /************************************************* |
342 | * Test for characters in the SMTP buffer * | |
343 | *************************************************/ | |
344 | ||
345 | /* Used at the end of a message | |
346 | ||
347 | Arguments: none | |
348 | Returns: TRUE/FALSE | |
349 | */ | |
350 | ||
351 | BOOL | |
352 | smtp_buffered(void) | |
353 | { | |
354 | return smtp_inptr < smtp_inend; | |
355 | } | |
356 | ||
357 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
358 | |
359 | /************************************************* | |
360 | * Write formatted string to SMTP channel * | |
361 | *************************************************/ | |
362 | ||
363 | /* This is a separate function so that we don't have to repeat everything for | |
364 | TLS support or debugging. It is global so that the daemon and the | |
365 | authentication functions can use it. It does not return any error indication, | |
366 | because major problems such as dropped connections won't show up till an output | |
367 | flush for non-TLS connections. The smtp_fflush() function is available for | |
368 | checking that: for convenience, TLS output errors are remembered here so that | |
369 | they are also picked up later by smtp_fflush(). | |
370 | ||
371 | Arguments: | |
372 | format format string | |
373 | ... optional arguments | |
374 | ||
375 | Returns: nothing | |
376 | */ | |
377 | ||
378 | void | |
379 | smtp_printf(char *format, ...) | |
380 | { | |
381 | va_list ap; | |
382 | ||
ce552449 NM |
383 | va_start(ap, format); |
384 | smtp_vprintf(format, ap); | |
385 | va_end(ap); | |
386 | } | |
387 | ||
388 | /* This is split off so that verify.c:respond_printf() can, in effect, call | |
389 | smtp_printf(), bearing in mind that in C a vararg function can't directly | |
390 | call another vararg function, only a function which accepts a va_list. | |
391 | ||
392 | Note also that repeated calls to va_start()/va_end() pairs is claimed to be | |
393 | non-portable; meanwhile, va_copy() is also non-portable in that it's C99, so | |
394 | we end up needing OS support to define it for us. */ | |
395 | ||
396 | void | |
397 | smtp_vprintf(char *format, va_list ap) | |
398 | { | |
399 | va_list ap_d; | |
400 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
401 | DEBUG(D_receive) |
402 | { | |
898d150f | 403 | uschar *cr, *end; |
ce552449 NM |
404 | va_copy(ap_d, ap); |
405 | (void) string_vformat(big_buffer, big_buffer_size, format, ap_d); | |
898d150f PH |
406 | end = big_buffer + Ustrlen(big_buffer); |
407 | while ((cr = Ustrchr(big_buffer, '\r')) != NULL) /* lose CRs */ | |
408 | memmove(cr, cr + 1, (end--) - cr); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
409 | debug_printf("SMTP>> %s", big_buffer); |
410 | } | |
411 | ||
2679d413 PH |
412 | if (!string_vformat(big_buffer, big_buffer_size, format, ap)) |
413 | { | |
414 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "string too large in smtp_printf()"); | |
415 | smtp_closedown(US"Unexpected error"); | |
416 | exim_exit(EXIT_FAILURE); | |
417 | } | |
2679d413 PH |
418 | |
419 | /* If this is the first output for a (non-batch) RCPT command, see if all RCPTs | |
420 | have had the same. Note: this code is also present in smtp_respond(). It would | |
421 | be tidier to have it only in one place, but when it was added, it was easier to | |
422 | do it that way, so as not to have to mess with the code for the RCPT command, | |
423 | which sometimes uses smtp_printf() and sometimes smtp_respond(). */ | |
424 | ||
425 | if (rcpt_in_progress) | |
426 | { | |
427 | if (rcpt_smtp_response == NULL) | |
428 | rcpt_smtp_response = string_copy(big_buffer); | |
429 | else if (rcpt_smtp_response_same && | |
430 | Ustrcmp(rcpt_smtp_response, big_buffer) != 0) | |
431 | rcpt_smtp_response_same = FALSE; | |
432 | rcpt_in_progress = FALSE; | |
433 | } | |
059ec3d9 | 434 | |
2679d413 | 435 | /* Now write the string */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
436 | |
437 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
438 | if (tls_active >= 0) | |
439 | { | |
059ec3d9 PH |
440 | if (tls_write(big_buffer, Ustrlen(big_buffer)) < 0) smtp_write_error = -1; |
441 | } | |
442 | else | |
443 | #endif | |
444 | ||
2679d413 | 445 | if (fprintf(smtp_out, "%s", big_buffer) < 0) smtp_write_error = -1; |
059ec3d9 PH |
446 | } |
447 | ||
448 | ||
449 | ||
450 | /************************************************* | |
451 | * Flush SMTP out and check for error * | |
452 | *************************************************/ | |
453 | ||
454 | /* This function isn't currently used within Exim (it detects errors when it | |
455 | tries to read the next SMTP input), but is available for use in local_scan(). | |
456 | For non-TLS connections, it flushes the output and checks for errors. For | |
457 | TLS-connections, it checks for a previously-detected TLS write error. | |
458 | ||
459 | Arguments: none | |
460 | Returns: 0 for no error; -1 after an error | |
461 | */ | |
462 | ||
463 | int | |
464 | smtp_fflush(void) | |
465 | { | |
466 | if (tls_active < 0 && fflush(smtp_out) != 0) smtp_write_error = -1; | |
467 | return smtp_write_error; | |
468 | } | |
469 | ||
470 | ||
471 | ||
472 | /************************************************* | |
473 | * SMTP command read timeout * | |
474 | *************************************************/ | |
475 | ||
476 | /* Signal handler for timing out incoming SMTP commands. This attempts to | |
477 | finish off tidily. | |
478 | ||
479 | Argument: signal number (SIGALRM) | |
480 | Returns: nothing | |
481 | */ | |
482 | ||
483 | static void | |
484 | command_timeout_handler(int sig) | |
485 | { | |
486 | sig = sig; /* Keep picky compilers happy */ | |
487 | log_write(L_lost_incoming_connection, | |
488 | LOG_MAIN, "SMTP command timeout on%s connection from %s", | |
489 | (tls_active >= 0)? " TLS" : "", | |
490 | host_and_ident(FALSE)); | |
491 | if (smtp_batched_input) | |
492 | moan_smtp_batch(NULL, "421 SMTP command timeout"); /* Does not return */ | |
8f128379 PH |
493 | smtp_notquit_exit(US"command-timeout", US"421", |
494 | US"%s: SMTP command timeout - closing connection", smtp_active_hostname); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
495 | exim_exit(EXIT_FAILURE); |
496 | } | |
497 | ||
498 | ||
499 | ||
500 | /************************************************* | |
501 | * SIGTERM received * | |
502 | *************************************************/ | |
503 | ||
504 | /* Signal handler for handling SIGTERM. Again, try to finish tidily. | |
505 | ||
506 | Argument: signal number (SIGTERM) | |
507 | Returns: nothing | |
508 | */ | |
509 | ||
510 | static void | |
511 | command_sigterm_handler(int sig) | |
512 | { | |
513 | sig = sig; /* Keep picky compilers happy */ | |
514 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s closed after SIGTERM", smtp_get_connection_info()); | |
515 | if (smtp_batched_input) | |
516 | moan_smtp_batch(NULL, "421 SIGTERM received"); /* Does not return */ | |
8f128379 PH |
517 | smtp_notquit_exit(US"signal-exit", US"421", |
518 | US"%s: Service not available - closing connection", smtp_active_hostname); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
519 | exim_exit(EXIT_FAILURE); |
520 | } | |
521 | ||
522 | ||
523 | ||
a14e5636 | 524 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
525 | /************************************************* |
526 | * Read one command line * | |
527 | *************************************************/ | |
528 | ||
529 | /* Strictly, SMTP commands coming over the net are supposed to end with CRLF. | |
530 | There are sites that don't do this, and in any case internal SMTP probably | |
531 | should check only for LF. Consequently, we check here for LF only. The line | |
532 | ends up with [CR]LF removed from its end. If we get an overlong line, treat as | |
3ee512ff PH |
533 | an unknown command. The command is read into the global smtp_cmd_buffer so that |
534 | it is available via $smtp_command. | |
059ec3d9 PH |
535 | |
536 | The character reading routine sets up a timeout for each block actually read | |
537 | from the input (which may contain more than one command). We set up a special | |
538 | signal handler that closes down the session on a timeout. Control does not | |
539 | return when it runs. | |
540 | ||
541 | Arguments: | |
542 | check_sync if TRUE, check synchronization rules if global option is TRUE | |
543 | ||
544 | Returns: a code identifying the command (enumerated above) | |
545 | */ | |
546 | ||
547 | static int | |
548 | smtp_read_command(BOOL check_sync) | |
549 | { | |
550 | int c; | |
551 | int ptr = 0; | |
552 | smtp_cmd_list *p; | |
553 | BOOL hadnull = FALSE; | |
554 | ||
555 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGALRM, command_timeout_handler); | |
556 | ||
557 | while ((c = (receive_getc)()) != '\n' && c != EOF) | |
558 | { | |
3ee512ff | 559 | if (ptr >= smtp_cmd_buffer_size) |
059ec3d9 PH |
560 | { |
561 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGALRM, sigalrm_handler); | |
562 | return OTHER_CMD; | |
563 | } | |
564 | if (c == 0) | |
565 | { | |
566 | hadnull = TRUE; | |
567 | c = '?'; | |
568 | } | |
3ee512ff | 569 | smtp_cmd_buffer[ptr++] = c; |
059ec3d9 PH |
570 | } |
571 | ||
572 | receive_linecount++; /* For BSMTP errors */ | |
573 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGALRM, sigalrm_handler); | |
574 | ||
575 | /* If hit end of file, return pseudo EOF command. Whether we have a | |
576 | part-line already read doesn't matter, since this is an error state. */ | |
577 | ||
578 | if (c == EOF) return EOF_CMD; | |
579 | ||
580 | /* Remove any CR and white space at the end of the line, and terminate the | |
581 | string. */ | |
582 | ||
3ee512ff PH |
583 | while (ptr > 0 && isspace(smtp_cmd_buffer[ptr-1])) ptr--; |
584 | smtp_cmd_buffer[ptr] = 0; | |
059ec3d9 | 585 | |
3ee512ff | 586 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("SMTP<< %s\n", smtp_cmd_buffer); |
059ec3d9 PH |
587 | |
588 | /* NULLs are not allowed in SMTP commands */ | |
589 | ||
590 | if (hadnull) return BADCHAR_CMD; | |
591 | ||
592 | /* Scan command list and return identity, having set the data pointer | |
593 | to the start of the actual data characters. Check for SMTP synchronization | |
594 | if required. */ | |
595 | ||
596 | for (p = cmd_list; p < cmd_list_end; p++) | |
597 | { | |
084efe8d PH |
598 | if (strncmpic(smtp_cmd_buffer, US p->name, p->len) == 0 && |
599 | (smtp_cmd_buffer[p->len-1] == ':' || /* "mail from:" or "rcpt to:" */ | |
600 | smtp_cmd_buffer[p->len] == 0 || | |
601 | smtp_cmd_buffer[p->len] == ' ')) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
602 | { |
603 | if (smtp_inptr < smtp_inend && /* Outstanding input */ | |
604 | p->cmd < sync_cmd_limit && /* Command should sync */ | |
605 | check_sync && /* Local flag set */ | |
606 | smtp_enforce_sync && /* Global flag set */ | |
607 | sender_host_address != NULL && /* Not local input */ | |
608 | !sender_host_notsocket) /* Really is a socket */ | |
609 | return BADSYN_CMD; | |
610 | ||
ca86f471 PH |
611 | /* The variables $smtp_command and $smtp_command_argument point into the |
612 | unmodified input buffer. A copy of the latter is taken for actual | |
613 | processing, so that it can be chopped up into separate parts if necessary, | |
614 | for example, when processing a MAIL command options such as SIZE that can | |
615 | follow the sender address. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 616 | |
3ee512ff | 617 | smtp_cmd_argument = smtp_cmd_buffer + p->len; |
ca86f471 PH |
618 | while (isspace(*smtp_cmd_argument)) smtp_cmd_argument++; |
619 | Ustrcpy(smtp_data_buffer, smtp_cmd_argument); | |
620 | smtp_cmd_data = smtp_data_buffer; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
621 | |
622 | /* Count non-mail commands from those hosts that are controlled in this | |
623 | way. The default is all hosts. We don't waste effort checking the list | |
624 | until we get a non-mail command, but then cache the result to save checking | |
625 | again. If there's a DEFER while checking the host, assume it's in the list. | |
626 | ||
627 | Note that one instance of RSET, EHLO/HELO, and STARTTLS is allowed at the | |
628 | start of each incoming message by fiddling with the value in the table. */ | |
629 | ||
630 | if (!p->is_mail_cmd) | |
631 | { | |
632 | if (count_nonmail == TRUE_UNSET) count_nonmail = | |
633 | verify_check_host(&smtp_accept_max_nonmail_hosts) != FAIL; | |
634 | if (count_nonmail && ++nonmail_command_count > smtp_accept_max_nonmail) | |
635 | return TOO_MANY_NONMAIL_CMD; | |
636 | } | |
637 | ||
ca86f471 PH |
638 | /* If there is data for a command that does not expect it, generate the |
639 | error here. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 640 | |
ca86f471 | 641 | return (p->has_arg || *smtp_cmd_data == 0)? p->cmd : BADARG_CMD; |
059ec3d9 PH |
642 | } |
643 | } | |
644 | ||
645 | /* Enforce synchronization for unknown commands */ | |
646 | ||
647 | if (smtp_inptr < smtp_inend && /* Outstanding input */ | |
648 | check_sync && /* Local flag set */ | |
649 | smtp_enforce_sync && /* Global flag set */ | |
650 | sender_host_address != NULL && /* Not local input */ | |
651 | !sender_host_notsocket) /* Really is a socket */ | |
652 | return BADSYN_CMD; | |
653 | ||
654 | return OTHER_CMD; | |
655 | } | |
656 | ||
657 | ||
658 | ||
a14e5636 PH |
659 | /************************************************* |
660 | * Recheck synchronization * | |
661 | *************************************************/ | |
662 | ||
663 | /* Synchronization checks can never be perfect because a packet may be on its | |
664 | way but not arrived when the check is done. Such checks can in any case only be | |
665 | done when TLS is not in use. Normally, the checks happen when commands are | |
666 | read: Exim ensures that there is no more input in the input buffer. In normal | |
667 | cases, the response to the command will be fast, and there is no further check. | |
668 | ||
669 | However, for some commands an ACL is run, and that can include delays. In those | |
670 | cases, it is useful to do another check on the input just before sending the | |
671 | response. This also applies at the start of a connection. This function does | |
672 | that check by means of the select() function, as long as the facility is not | |
673 | disabled or inappropriate. A failure of select() is ignored. | |
674 | ||
675 | When there is unwanted input, we read it so that it appears in the log of the | |
676 | error. | |
677 | ||
678 | Arguments: none | |
679 | Returns: TRUE if all is well; FALSE if there is input pending | |
680 | */ | |
681 | ||
682 | static BOOL | |
683 | check_sync(void) | |
684 | { | |
685 | int fd, rc; | |
686 | fd_set fds; | |
687 | struct timeval tzero; | |
688 | ||
689 | if (!smtp_enforce_sync || sender_host_address == NULL || | |
690 | sender_host_notsocket || tls_active >= 0) | |
691 | return TRUE; | |
692 | ||
693 | fd = fileno(smtp_in); | |
694 | FD_ZERO(&fds); | |
695 | FD_SET(fd, &fds); | |
696 | tzero.tv_sec = 0; | |
697 | tzero.tv_usec = 0; | |
698 | rc = select(fd + 1, (SELECT_ARG2_TYPE *)&fds, NULL, NULL, &tzero); | |
699 | ||
700 | if (rc <= 0) return TRUE; /* Not ready to read */ | |
701 | rc = smtp_getc(); | |
702 | if (rc < 0) return TRUE; /* End of file or error */ | |
703 | ||
704 | smtp_ungetc(rc); | |
705 | rc = smtp_inend - smtp_inptr; | |
706 | if (rc > 150) rc = 150; | |
707 | smtp_inptr[rc] = 0; | |
708 | return FALSE; | |
709 | } | |
710 | ||
711 | ||
712 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
713 | /************************************************* |
714 | * Forced closedown of call * | |
715 | *************************************************/ | |
716 | ||
717 | /* This function is called from log.c when Exim is dying because of a serious | |
718 | disaster, and also from some other places. If an incoming non-batched SMTP | |
719 | channel is open, it swallows the rest of the incoming message if in the DATA | |
720 | phase, sends the reply string, and gives an error to all subsequent commands | |
721 | except QUIT. The existence of an SMTP call is detected by the non-NULLness of | |
722 | smtp_in. | |
723 | ||
8f128379 PH |
724 | Arguments: |
725 | message SMTP reply string to send, excluding the code | |
726 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
727 | Returns: nothing |
728 | */ | |
729 | ||
730 | void | |
731 | smtp_closedown(uschar *message) | |
732 | { | |
733 | if (smtp_in == NULL || smtp_batched_input) return; | |
734 | receive_swallow_smtp(); | |
735 | smtp_printf("421 %s\r\n", message); | |
736 | ||
737 | for (;;) | |
738 | { | |
739 | switch(smtp_read_command(FALSE)) | |
740 | { | |
741 | case EOF_CMD: | |
742 | return; | |
743 | ||
744 | case QUIT_CMD: | |
745 | smtp_printf("221 %s closing connection\r\n", smtp_active_hostname); | |
746 | mac_smtp_fflush(); | |
747 | return; | |
748 | ||
749 | case RSET_CMD: | |
750 | smtp_printf("250 Reset OK\r\n"); | |
751 | break; | |
752 | ||
753 | default: | |
754 | smtp_printf("421 %s\r\n", message); | |
755 | break; | |
756 | } | |
757 | } | |
758 | } | |
759 | ||
760 | ||
761 | ||
762 | ||
763 | /************************************************* | |
764 | * Set up connection info for logging * | |
765 | *************************************************/ | |
766 | ||
767 | /* This function is called when logging information about an SMTP connection. | |
768 | It sets up appropriate source information, depending on the type of connection. | |
dac79d3e PH |
769 | If sender_fullhost is NULL, we are at a very early stage of the connection; |
770 | just use the IP address. | |
059ec3d9 PH |
771 | |
772 | Argument: none | |
773 | Returns: a string describing the connection | |
774 | */ | |
775 | ||
776 | uschar * | |
777 | smtp_get_connection_info(void) | |
778 | { | |
dac79d3e PH |
779 | uschar *hostname = (sender_fullhost == NULL)? |
780 | sender_host_address : sender_fullhost; | |
781 | ||
059ec3d9 | 782 | if (host_checking) |
dac79d3e | 783 | return string_sprintf("SMTP connection from %s", hostname); |
059ec3d9 PH |
784 | |
785 | if (sender_host_unknown || sender_host_notsocket) | |
786 | return string_sprintf("SMTP connection from %s", sender_ident); | |
787 | ||
788 | if (is_inetd) | |
dac79d3e | 789 | return string_sprintf("SMTP connection from %s (via inetd)", hostname); |
059ec3d9 PH |
790 | |
791 | if ((log_extra_selector & LX_incoming_interface) != 0 && | |
792 | interface_address != NULL) | |
dac79d3e | 793 | return string_sprintf("SMTP connection from %s I=[%s]:%d", hostname, |
059ec3d9 PH |
794 | interface_address, interface_port); |
795 | ||
dac79d3e | 796 | return string_sprintf("SMTP connection from %s", hostname); |
059ec3d9 PH |
797 | } |
798 | ||
799 | ||
800 | ||
b4ed4da0 PH |
801 | /************************************************* |
802 | * Log lack of MAIL if so configured * | |
803 | *************************************************/ | |
804 | ||
805 | /* This function is called when an SMTP session ends. If the log selector | |
806 | smtp_no_mail is set, write a log line giving some details of what has happened | |
807 | in the SMTP session. | |
808 | ||
809 | Arguments: none | |
810 | Returns: nothing | |
811 | */ | |
812 | ||
813 | void | |
814 | smtp_log_no_mail(void) | |
815 | { | |
816 | int size, ptr, i; | |
817 | uschar *s, *sep; | |
818 | ||
819 | if (smtp_mailcmd_count > 0 || (log_extra_selector & LX_smtp_no_mail) == 0) | |
820 | return; | |
821 | ||
822 | s = NULL; | |
823 | size = ptr = 0; | |
824 | ||
825 | if (sender_host_authenticated != NULL) | |
826 | { | |
827 | s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" A=", sender_host_authenticated); | |
828 | if (authenticated_id != NULL) | |
829 | s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US":", authenticated_id); | |
830 | } | |
831 | ||
832 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
833 | if ((log_extra_selector & LX_tls_cipher) != 0 && tls_cipher != NULL) | |
834 | s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" X=", tls_cipher); | |
835 | if ((log_extra_selector & LX_tls_certificate_verified) != 0 && | |
836 | tls_cipher != NULL) | |
837 | s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" CV=", | |
838 | tls_certificate_verified? "yes":"no"); | |
839 | if ((log_extra_selector & LX_tls_peerdn) != 0 && tls_peerdn != NULL) | |
48ed62d9 PH |
840 | s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 3, US" DN=\"", |
841 | string_printing(tls_peerdn), US"\""); | |
b4ed4da0 PH |
842 | #endif |
843 | ||
844 | sep = (smtp_connection_had[SMTP_HBUFF_SIZE-1] != SCH_NONE)? | |
845 | US" C=..." : US" C="; | |
846 | for (i = smtp_ch_index; i < SMTP_HBUFF_SIZE; i++) | |
847 | { | |
848 | if (smtp_connection_had[i] != SCH_NONE) | |
849 | { | |
850 | s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, sep, | |
851 | smtp_names[smtp_connection_had[i]]); | |
852 | sep = US","; | |
853 | } | |
854 | } | |
855 | ||
856 | for (i = 0; i < smtp_ch_index; i++) | |
857 | { | |
858 | s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, sep, smtp_names[smtp_connection_had[i]]); | |
859 | sep = US","; | |
860 | } | |
861 | ||
862 | if (s != NULL) s[ptr] = 0; else s = US""; | |
863 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "no MAIL in SMTP connection from %s D=%s%s", | |
864 | host_and_ident(FALSE), | |
865 | readconf_printtime(time(NULL) - smtp_connection_start), s); | |
866 | } | |
867 | ||
868 | ||
869 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
870 | /************************************************* |
871 | * Check HELO line and set sender_helo_name * | |
872 | *************************************************/ | |
873 | ||
874 | /* Check the format of a HELO line. The data for HELO/EHLO is supposed to be | |
875 | the domain name of the sending host, or an ip literal in square brackets. The | |
876 | arrgument is placed in sender_helo_name, which is in malloc store, because it | |
877 | must persist over multiple incoming messages. If helo_accept_junk is set, this | |
878 | host is permitted to send any old junk (needed for some broken hosts). | |
879 | Otherwise, helo_allow_chars can be used for rogue characters in general | |
880 | (typically people want to let in underscores). | |
881 | ||
882 | Argument: | |
883 | s the data portion of the line (already past any white space) | |
884 | ||
885 | Returns: TRUE or FALSE | |
886 | */ | |
887 | ||
888 | static BOOL | |
889 | check_helo(uschar *s) | |
890 | { | |
891 | uschar *start = s; | |
892 | uschar *end = s + Ustrlen(s); | |
893 | BOOL yield = helo_accept_junk; | |
894 | ||
895 | /* Discard any previous helo name */ | |
896 | ||
897 | if (sender_helo_name != NULL) | |
898 | { | |
899 | store_free(sender_helo_name); | |
900 | sender_helo_name = NULL; | |
901 | } | |
902 | ||
903 | /* Skip tests if junk is permitted. */ | |
904 | ||
905 | if (!yield) | |
906 | { | |
907 | /* Allow the new standard form for IPv6 address literals, namely, | |
908 | [IPv6:....], and because someone is bound to use it, allow an equivalent | |
909 | IPv4 form. Allow plain addresses as well. */ | |
910 | ||
911 | if (*s == '[') | |
912 | { | |
913 | if (end[-1] == ']') | |
914 | { | |
915 | end[-1] = 0; | |
916 | if (strncmpic(s, US"[IPv6:", 6) == 0) | |
917 | yield = (string_is_ip_address(s+6, NULL) == 6); | |
918 | else if (strncmpic(s, US"[IPv4:", 6) == 0) | |
919 | yield = (string_is_ip_address(s+6, NULL) == 4); | |
920 | else | |
921 | yield = (string_is_ip_address(s+1, NULL) != 0); | |
922 | end[-1] = ']'; | |
923 | } | |
924 | } | |
925 | ||
926 | /* Non-literals must be alpha, dot, hyphen, plus any non-valid chars | |
927 | that have been configured (usually underscore - sigh). */ | |
928 | ||
929 | else if (*s != 0) | |
930 | { | |
931 | yield = TRUE; | |
932 | while (*s != 0) | |
933 | { | |
934 | if (!isalnum(*s) && *s != '.' && *s != '-' && | |
935 | Ustrchr(helo_allow_chars, *s) == NULL) | |
936 | { | |
937 | yield = FALSE; | |
938 | break; | |
939 | } | |
940 | s++; | |
941 | } | |
942 | } | |
943 | } | |
944 | ||
945 | /* Save argument if OK */ | |
946 | ||
947 | if (yield) sender_helo_name = string_copy_malloc(start); | |
948 | return yield; | |
949 | } | |
950 | ||
951 | ||
952 | ||
953 | ||
954 | ||
955 | /************************************************* | |
956 | * Extract SMTP command option * | |
957 | *************************************************/ | |
958 | ||
ca86f471 | 959 | /* This function picks the next option setting off the end of smtp_cmd_data. It |
059ec3d9 PH |
960 | is called for MAIL FROM and RCPT TO commands, to pick off the optional ESMTP |
961 | things that can appear there. | |
962 | ||
963 | Arguments: | |
964 | name point this at the name | |
965 | value point this at the data string | |
966 | ||
967 | Returns: TRUE if found an option | |
968 | */ | |
969 | ||
970 | static BOOL | |
971 | extract_option(uschar **name, uschar **value) | |
972 | { | |
973 | uschar *n; | |
ca86f471 | 974 | uschar *v = smtp_cmd_data + Ustrlen(smtp_cmd_data) - 1; |
059ec3d9 PH |
975 | while (isspace(*v)) v--; |
976 | v[1] = 0; | |
977 | ||
ca86f471 | 978 | while (v > smtp_cmd_data && *v != '=' && !isspace(*v)) v--; |
059ec3d9 PH |
979 | if (*v != '=') return FALSE; |
980 | ||
981 | n = v; | |
982 | while(isalpha(n[-1])) n--; | |
983 | ||
984 | if (n[-1] != ' ') return FALSE; | |
985 | ||
986 | n[-1] = 0; | |
987 | *name = n; | |
988 | *v++ = 0; | |
989 | *value = v; | |
990 | return TRUE; | |
991 | } | |
992 | ||
993 | ||
994 | ||
995 | ||
996 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
997 | /************************************************* |
998 | * Reset for new message * | |
999 | *************************************************/ | |
1000 | ||
1001 | /* This function is called whenever the SMTP session is reset from | |
1002 | within either of the setup functions. | |
1003 | ||
1004 | Argument: the stacking pool storage reset point | |
1005 | Returns: nothing | |
1006 | */ | |
1007 | ||
1008 | static void | |
1009 | smtp_reset(void *reset_point) | |
1010 | { | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1011 | store_reset(reset_point); |
1012 | recipients_list = NULL; | |
1013 | rcpt_count = rcpt_defer_count = rcpt_fail_count = | |
1014 | raw_recipients_count = recipients_count = recipients_list_max = 0; | |
2e0c1448 | 1015 | message_linecount = 0; |
059ec3d9 | 1016 | message_size = -1; |
71fafd95 | 1017 | acl_added_headers = NULL; |
059ec3d9 | 1018 | queue_only_policy = FALSE; |
2679d413 PH |
1019 | rcpt_smtp_response = NULL; |
1020 | rcpt_smtp_response_same = TRUE; | |
1021 | rcpt_in_progress = FALSE; | |
69358f02 | 1022 | deliver_freeze = FALSE; /* Can be set by ACL */ |
6a3f1455 | 1023 | freeze_tell = freeze_tell_config; /* Can be set by ACL */ |
29aba418 | 1024 | fake_response = OK; /* Can be set by ACL */ |
6951ac6c | 1025 | #ifdef WITH_CONTENT_SCAN |
8523533c TK |
1026 | no_mbox_unspool = FALSE; /* Can be set by ACL */ |
1027 | #endif | |
69358f02 | 1028 | submission_mode = FALSE; /* Can be set by ACL */ |
8800895a | 1029 | suppress_local_fixups = FALSE; /* Can be set by ACL */ |
69358f02 PH |
1030 | active_local_from_check = local_from_check; /* Can be set by ACL */ |
1031 | active_local_sender_retain = local_sender_retain; /* Can be set by ACL */ | |
059ec3d9 | 1032 | sender_address = NULL; |
2fe1a124 | 1033 | submission_name = NULL; /* Can be set by ACL */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1034 | raw_sender = NULL; /* After SMTP rewrite, before qualifying */ |
1035 | sender_address_unrewritten = NULL; /* Set only after verify rewrite */ | |
1036 | sender_verified_list = NULL; /* No senders verified */ | |
1037 | memset(sender_address_cache, 0, sizeof(sender_address_cache)); | |
1038 | memset(sender_domain_cache, 0, sizeof(sender_domain_cache)); | |
1039 | authenticated_sender = NULL; | |
8523533c TK |
1040 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_BRIGHTMAIL |
1041 | bmi_run = 0; | |
1042 | bmi_verdicts = NULL; | |
1043 | #endif | |
80a47a2c | 1044 | #ifndef DISABLE_DKIM |
9e5d6b55 | 1045 | dkim_signers = NULL; |
80a47a2c TK |
1046 | dkim_disable_verify = FALSE; |
1047 | dkim_collect_input = FALSE; | |
f7572e5a | 1048 | #endif |
8523533c TK |
1049 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_SPF |
1050 | spf_header_comment = NULL; | |
1051 | spf_received = NULL; | |
8e669ac1 | 1052 | spf_result = NULL; |
8523533c TK |
1053 | spf_smtp_comment = NULL; |
1054 | #endif | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1055 | body_linecount = body_zerocount = 0; |
1056 | ||
870f6ba8 TF |
1057 | sender_rate = sender_rate_limit = sender_rate_period = NULL; |
1058 | ratelimiters_mail = NULL; /* Updated by ratelimit ACL condition */ | |
1059 | /* Note that ratelimiters_conn persists across resets. */ | |
1060 | ||
38a0a95f | 1061 | /* Reset message ACL variables */ |
47ca6d6c | 1062 | |
38a0a95f | 1063 | acl_var_m = NULL; |
059ec3d9 PH |
1064 | |
1065 | /* The message body variables use malloc store. They may be set if this is | |
1066 | not the first message in an SMTP session and the previous message caused them | |
1067 | to be referenced in an ACL. */ | |
1068 | ||
1069 | if (message_body != NULL) | |
1070 | { | |
1071 | store_free(message_body); | |
1072 | message_body = NULL; | |
1073 | } | |
1074 | ||
1075 | if (message_body_end != NULL) | |
1076 | { | |
1077 | store_free(message_body_end); | |
1078 | message_body_end = NULL; | |
1079 | } | |
1080 | ||
1081 | /* Warning log messages are also saved in malloc store. They are saved to avoid | |
1082 | repetition in the same message, but it seems right to repeat them for different | |
4e88a19f | 1083 | messages. */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1084 | |
1085 | while (acl_warn_logged != NULL) | |
1086 | { | |
1087 | string_item *this = acl_warn_logged; | |
1088 | acl_warn_logged = acl_warn_logged->next; | |
1089 | store_free(this); | |
1090 | } | |
1091 | } | |
1092 | ||
1093 | ||
1094 | ||
1095 | ||
1096 | ||
1097 | /************************************************* | |
1098 | * Initialize for incoming batched SMTP message * | |
1099 | *************************************************/ | |
1100 | ||
1101 | /* This function is called from smtp_setup_msg() in the case when | |
1102 | smtp_batched_input is true. This happens when -bS is used to pass a whole batch | |
1103 | of messages in one file with SMTP commands between them. All errors must be | |
1104 | reported by sending a message, and only MAIL FROM, RCPT TO, and DATA are | |
1105 | relevant. After an error on a sender, or an invalid recipient, the remainder | |
1106 | of the message is skipped. The value of received_protocol is already set. | |
1107 | ||
1108 | Argument: none | |
1109 | Returns: > 0 message successfully started (reached DATA) | |
1110 | = 0 QUIT read or end of file reached | |
1111 | < 0 should not occur | |
1112 | */ | |
1113 | ||
1114 | static int | |
1115 | smtp_setup_batch_msg(void) | |
1116 | { | |
1117 | int done = 0; | |
1118 | void *reset_point = store_get(0); | |
1119 | ||
1120 | /* Save the line count at the start of each transaction - single commands | |
1121 | like HELO and RSET count as whole transactions. */ | |
1122 | ||
1123 | bsmtp_transaction_linecount = receive_linecount; | |
1124 | ||
1125 | if ((receive_feof)()) return 0; /* Treat EOF as QUIT */ | |
1126 | ||
1127 | smtp_reset(reset_point); /* Reset for start of message */ | |
1128 | ||
1129 | /* Deal with SMTP commands. This loop is exited by setting done to a POSITIVE | |
1130 | value. The values are 2 larger than the required yield of the function. */ | |
1131 | ||
1132 | while (done <= 0) | |
1133 | { | |
1134 | uschar *errmess; | |
1135 | uschar *recipient = NULL; | |
1136 | int start, end, sender_domain, recipient_domain; | |
1137 | ||
1138 | switch(smtp_read_command(FALSE)) | |
1139 | { | |
1140 | /* The HELO/EHLO commands set sender_address_helo if they have | |
1141 | valid data; otherwise they are ignored, except that they do | |
1142 | a reset of the state. */ | |
1143 | ||
1144 | case HELO_CMD: | |
1145 | case EHLO_CMD: | |
1146 | ||
ca86f471 | 1147 | check_helo(smtp_cmd_data); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1148 | /* Fall through */ |
1149 | ||
1150 | case RSET_CMD: | |
1151 | smtp_reset(reset_point); | |
1152 | bsmtp_transaction_linecount = receive_linecount; | |
1153 | break; | |
1154 | ||
1155 | ||
1156 | /* The MAIL FROM command requires an address as an operand. All we | |
1157 | do here is to parse it for syntactic correctness. The form "<>" is | |
1158 | a special case which converts into an empty string. The start/end | |
1159 | pointers in the original are not used further for this address, as | |
1160 | it is the canonical extracted address which is all that is kept. */ | |
1161 | ||
1162 | case MAIL_CMD: | |
1163 | if (sender_address != NULL) | |
1164 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ | |
3ee512ff | 1165 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "503 Sender already given"); |
059ec3d9 | 1166 | |
ca86f471 | 1167 | if (smtp_cmd_data[0] == 0) |
059ec3d9 | 1168 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ |
3ee512ff | 1169 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "501 MAIL FROM must have an address operand"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1170 | |
1171 | /* Reset to start of message */ | |
1172 | ||
1173 | smtp_reset(reset_point); | |
1174 | ||
1175 | /* Apply SMTP rewrite */ | |
1176 | ||
1177 | raw_sender = ((rewrite_existflags & rewrite_smtp) != 0)? | |
ca86f471 PH |
1178 | rewrite_one(smtp_cmd_data, rewrite_smtp|rewrite_smtp_sender, NULL, FALSE, |
1179 | US"", global_rewrite_rules) : smtp_cmd_data; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1180 | |
1181 | /* Extract the address; the TRUE flag allows <> as valid */ | |
1182 | ||
1183 | raw_sender = | |
1184 | parse_extract_address(raw_sender, &errmess, &start, &end, &sender_domain, | |
1185 | TRUE); | |
1186 | ||
1187 | if (raw_sender == NULL) | |
1188 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ | |
3ee512ff | 1189 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "501 %s", errmess); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1190 | |
1191 | sender_address = string_copy(raw_sender); | |
1192 | ||
1193 | /* Qualify unqualified sender addresses if permitted to do so. */ | |
1194 | ||
1195 | if (sender_domain == 0 && sender_address[0] != 0 && sender_address[0] != '@') | |
1196 | { | |
1197 | if (allow_unqualified_sender) | |
1198 | { | |
1199 | sender_address = rewrite_address_qualify(sender_address, FALSE); | |
1200 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("unqualified address %s accepted " | |
1201 | "and rewritten\n", raw_sender); | |
1202 | } | |
1203 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ | |
3ee512ff | 1204 | else moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "501 sender address must contain " |
059ec3d9 PH |
1205 | "a domain"); |
1206 | } | |
1207 | break; | |
1208 | ||
1209 | ||
1210 | /* The RCPT TO command requires an address as an operand. All we do | |
1211 | here is to parse it for syntactic correctness. There may be any number | |
1212 | of RCPT TO commands, specifying multiple senders. We build them all into | |
1213 | a data structure that is in argc/argv format. The start/end values | |
1214 | given by parse_extract_address are not used, as we keep only the | |
1215 | extracted address. */ | |
1216 | ||
1217 | case RCPT_CMD: | |
1218 | if (sender_address == NULL) | |
1219 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ | |
3ee512ff | 1220 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "503 No sender yet given"); |
059ec3d9 | 1221 | |
ca86f471 | 1222 | if (smtp_cmd_data[0] == 0) |
059ec3d9 | 1223 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ |
3ee512ff | 1224 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "501 RCPT TO must have an address operand"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1225 | |
1226 | /* Check maximum number allowed */ | |
1227 | ||
1228 | if (recipients_max > 0 && recipients_count + 1 > recipients_max) | |
1229 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ | |
3ee512ff | 1230 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "%s too many recipients", |
059ec3d9 PH |
1231 | recipients_max_reject? "552": "452"); |
1232 | ||
1233 | /* Apply SMTP rewrite, then extract address. Don't allow "<>" as a | |
1234 | recipient address */ | |
1235 | ||
1236 | recipient = ((rewrite_existflags & rewrite_smtp) != 0)? | |
ca86f471 PH |
1237 | rewrite_one(smtp_cmd_data, rewrite_smtp, NULL, FALSE, US"", |
1238 | global_rewrite_rules) : smtp_cmd_data; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1239 | |
1240 | /* rfc821_domains = TRUE; << no longer needed */ | |
1241 | recipient = parse_extract_address(recipient, &errmess, &start, &end, | |
1242 | &recipient_domain, FALSE); | |
1243 | /* rfc821_domains = FALSE; << no longer needed */ | |
1244 | ||
1245 | if (recipient == NULL) | |
1246 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ | |
3ee512ff | 1247 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "501 %s", errmess); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1248 | |
1249 | /* If the recipient address is unqualified, qualify it if permitted. Then | |
1250 | add it to the list of recipients. */ | |
1251 | ||
1252 | if (recipient_domain == 0) | |
1253 | { | |
1254 | if (allow_unqualified_recipient) | |
1255 | { | |
1256 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("unqualified address %s accepted\n", | |
1257 | recipient); | |
1258 | recipient = rewrite_address_qualify(recipient, TRUE); | |
1259 | } | |
1260 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ | |
3ee512ff | 1261 | else moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "501 recipient address must contain " |
059ec3d9 PH |
1262 | "a domain"); |
1263 | } | |
1264 | receive_add_recipient(recipient, -1); | |
1265 | break; | |
1266 | ||
1267 | ||
1268 | /* The DATA command is legal only if it follows successful MAIL FROM | |
1269 | and RCPT TO commands. This function is complete when a valid DATA | |
1270 | command is encountered. */ | |
1271 | ||
1272 | case DATA_CMD: | |
1273 | if (sender_address == NULL || recipients_count <= 0) | |
1274 | { | |
1275 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ | |
1276 | if (sender_address == NULL) | |
3ee512ff | 1277 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, |
059ec3d9 PH |
1278 | "503 MAIL FROM:<sender> command must precede DATA"); |
1279 | else | |
3ee512ff | 1280 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, |
059ec3d9 PH |
1281 | "503 RCPT TO:<recipient> must precede DATA"); |
1282 | } | |
1283 | else | |
1284 | { | |
1285 | done = 3; /* DATA successfully achieved */ | |
1286 | message_ended = END_NOTENDED; /* Indicate in middle of message */ | |
1287 | } | |
1288 | break; | |
1289 | ||
1290 | ||
1291 | /* The VRFY, EXPN, HELP, ETRN, and NOOP commands are ignored. */ | |
1292 | ||
1293 | case VRFY_CMD: | |
1294 | case EXPN_CMD: | |
1295 | case HELP_CMD: | |
1296 | case NOOP_CMD: | |
1297 | case ETRN_CMD: | |
1298 | bsmtp_transaction_linecount = receive_linecount; | |
1299 | break; | |
1300 | ||
1301 | ||
1302 | case EOF_CMD: | |
1303 | case QUIT_CMD: | |
1304 | done = 2; | |
1305 | break; | |
1306 | ||
1307 | ||
1308 | case BADARG_CMD: | |
1309 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ | |
3ee512ff | 1310 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "501 Unexpected argument data"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1311 | break; |
1312 | ||
1313 | ||
1314 | case BADCHAR_CMD: | |
1315 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ | |
3ee512ff | 1316 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "501 Unexpected NULL in SMTP command"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1317 | break; |
1318 | ||
1319 | ||
1320 | default: | |
1321 | /* The function moan_smtp_batch() does not return. */ | |
3ee512ff | 1322 | moan_smtp_batch(smtp_cmd_buffer, "500 Command unrecognized"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1323 | break; |
1324 | } | |
1325 | } | |
1326 | ||
1327 | return done - 2; /* Convert yield values */ | |
1328 | } | |
1329 | ||
1330 | ||
1331 | ||
1332 | ||
1333 | /************************************************* | |
1334 | * Start an SMTP session * | |
1335 | *************************************************/ | |
1336 | ||
1337 | /* This function is called at the start of an SMTP session. Thereafter, | |
1338 | smtp_setup_msg() is called to initiate each separate message. This | |
1339 | function does host-specific testing, and outputs the banner line. | |
1340 | ||
1341 | Arguments: none | |
1342 | Returns: FALSE if the session can not continue; something has | |
1343 | gone wrong, or the connection to the host is blocked | |
1344 | */ | |
1345 | ||
1346 | BOOL | |
1347 | smtp_start_session(void) | |
1348 | { | |
1349 | int size = 256; | |
4e88a19f PH |
1350 | int ptr, esclen; |
1351 | uschar *user_msg, *log_msg; | |
1352 | uschar *code, *esc; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1353 | uschar *p, *s, *ss; |
1354 | ||
b4ed4da0 PH |
1355 | smtp_connection_start = time(NULL); |
1356 | for (smtp_ch_index = 0; smtp_ch_index < SMTP_HBUFF_SIZE; smtp_ch_index++) | |
1357 | smtp_connection_had[smtp_ch_index] = SCH_NONE; | |
1358 | smtp_ch_index = 0; | |
1359 | ||
00f00ca5 PH |
1360 | /* Default values for certain variables */ |
1361 | ||
059ec3d9 | 1362 | helo_seen = esmtp = helo_accept_junk = FALSE; |
b4ed4da0 | 1363 | smtp_mailcmd_count = 0; |
059ec3d9 PH |
1364 | count_nonmail = TRUE_UNSET; |
1365 | synprot_error_count = unknown_command_count = nonmail_command_count = 0; | |
1366 | smtp_delay_mail = smtp_rlm_base; | |
1367 | auth_advertised = FALSE; | |
1368 | pipelining_advertised = FALSE; | |
cf8b11a5 | 1369 | pipelining_enable = TRUE; |
059ec3d9 | 1370 | sync_cmd_limit = NON_SYNC_CMD_NON_PIPELINING; |
8f128379 | 1371 | smtp_exit_function_called = FALSE; /* For avoiding loop in not-quit exit */ |
059ec3d9 PH |
1372 | |
1373 | memset(sender_host_cache, 0, sizeof(sender_host_cache)); | |
1374 | ||
33d73e3b PH |
1375 | /* If receiving by -bs from a trusted user, or testing with -bh, we allow |
1376 | authentication settings from -oMaa to remain in force. */ | |
1377 | ||
1378 | if (!host_checking && !sender_host_notsocket) sender_host_authenticated = NULL; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1379 | authenticated_by = NULL; |
1380 | ||
1381 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
1382 | tls_cipher = tls_peerdn = NULL; | |
1383 | tls_advertised = FALSE; | |
1384 | #endif | |
1385 | ||
1386 | /* Reset ACL connection variables */ | |
1387 | ||
38a0a95f | 1388 | acl_var_c = NULL; |
059ec3d9 | 1389 | |
ca86f471 | 1390 | /* Allow for trailing 0 in the command and data buffers. */ |
3ee512ff | 1391 | |
ca86f471 | 1392 | smtp_cmd_buffer = (uschar *)malloc(2*smtp_cmd_buffer_size + 2); |
3ee512ff | 1393 | if (smtp_cmd_buffer == NULL) |
059ec3d9 PH |
1394 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, |
1395 | "malloc() failed for SMTP command buffer"); | |
ca86f471 | 1396 | smtp_data_buffer = smtp_cmd_buffer + smtp_cmd_buffer_size + 1; |
059ec3d9 PH |
1397 | |
1398 | /* For batched input, the protocol setting can be overridden from the | |
1399 | command line by a trusted caller. */ | |
1400 | ||
1401 | if (smtp_batched_input) | |
1402 | { | |
1403 | if (received_protocol == NULL) received_protocol = US"local-bsmtp"; | |
1404 | } | |
1405 | ||
1406 | /* For non-batched SMTP input, the protocol setting is forced here. It will be | |
1407 | reset later if any of EHLO/AUTH/STARTTLS are received. */ | |
1408 | ||
1409 | else | |
1410 | received_protocol = | |
1411 | protocols[pnormal] + ((sender_host_address != NULL)? pnlocal : 0); | |
1412 | ||
1413 | /* Set up the buffer for inputting using direct read() calls, and arrange to | |
1414 | call the local functions instead of the standard C ones. */ | |
1415 | ||
1416 | smtp_inbuffer = (uschar *)malloc(in_buffer_size); | |
1417 | if (smtp_inbuffer == NULL) | |
1418 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "malloc() failed for SMTP input buffer"); | |
1419 | receive_getc = smtp_getc; | |
1420 | receive_ungetc = smtp_ungetc; | |
1421 | receive_feof = smtp_feof; | |
1422 | receive_ferror = smtp_ferror; | |
58eb016e | 1423 | receive_smtp_buffered = smtp_buffered; |
059ec3d9 PH |
1424 | smtp_inptr = smtp_inend = smtp_inbuffer; |
1425 | smtp_had_eof = smtp_had_error = 0; | |
1426 | ||
1427 | /* Set up the message size limit; this may be host-specific */ | |
1428 | ||
d45b1de8 PH |
1429 | thismessage_size_limit = expand_string_integer(message_size_limit, TRUE); |
1430 | if (expand_string_message != NULL) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1431 | { |
1432 | if (thismessage_size_limit == -1) | |
1433 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "unable to expand message_size_limit: " | |
1434 | "%s", expand_string_message); | |
1435 | else | |
1436 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "invalid message_size_limit: " | |
1437 | "%s", expand_string_message); | |
1438 | smtp_closedown(US"Temporary local problem - please try later"); | |
1439 | return FALSE; | |
1440 | } | |
1441 | ||
1442 | /* When a message is input locally via the -bs or -bS options, sender_host_ | |
1443 | unknown is set unless -oMa was used to force an IP address, in which case it | |
1444 | is checked like a real remote connection. When -bs is used from inetd, this | |
1445 | flag is not set, causing the sending host to be checked. The code that deals | |
1446 | with IP source routing (if configured) is never required for -bs or -bS and | |
1447 | the flag sender_host_notsocket is used to suppress it. | |
1448 | ||
1449 | If smtp_accept_max and smtp_accept_reserve are set, keep some connections in | |
1450 | reserve for certain hosts and/or networks. */ | |
1451 | ||
1452 | if (!sender_host_unknown) | |
1453 | { | |
1454 | int rc; | |
1455 | BOOL reserved_host = FALSE; | |
1456 | ||
1457 | /* Look up IP options (source routing info) on the socket if this is not an | |
1458 | -oMa "host", and if any are found, log them and drop the connection. | |
1459 | ||
1460 | Linux (and others now, see below) is different to everyone else, so there | |
1461 | has to be some conditional compilation here. Versions of Linux before 2.1.15 | |
1462 | used a structure whose name was "options". Somebody finally realized that | |
1463 | this name was silly, and it got changed to "ip_options". I use the | |
1464 | newer name here, but there is a fudge in the script that sets up os.h | |
1465 | to define a macro in older Linux systems. | |
1466 | ||
1467 | Sigh. Linux is a fast-moving target. Another generation of Linux uses | |
1468 | glibc 2, which has chosen ip_opts for the structure name. This is now | |
1469 | really a glibc thing rather than a Linux thing, so the condition name | |
1470 | has been changed to reflect this. It is relevant also to GNU/Hurd. | |
1471 | ||
1472 | Mac OS 10.x (Darwin) is like the later glibc versions, but without the | |
1473 | setting of the __GLIBC__ macro, so we can't detect it automatically. There's | |
1474 | a special macro defined in the os.h file. | |
1475 | ||
1476 | Some DGUX versions on older hardware appear not to support IP options at | |
1477 | all, so there is now a general macro which can be set to cut out this | |
1478 | support altogether. | |
1479 | ||
1480 | How to do this properly in IPv6 is not yet known. */ | |
1481 | ||
1482 | #if !HAVE_IPV6 && !defined(NO_IP_OPTIONS) | |
1483 | ||
1484 | #ifdef GLIBC_IP_OPTIONS | |
1485 | #if (!defined __GLIBC__) || (__GLIBC__ < 2) | |
1486 | #define OPTSTYLE 1 | |
1487 | #else | |
1488 | #define OPTSTYLE 2 | |
1489 | #endif | |
1490 | #elif defined DARWIN_IP_OPTIONS | |
1491 | #define OPTSTYLE 2 | |
1492 | #else | |
1493 | #define OPTSTYLE 3 | |
1494 | #endif | |
1495 | ||
1496 | if (!host_checking && !sender_host_notsocket) | |
1497 | { | |
1498 | #if OPTSTYLE == 1 | |
36a3b041 | 1499 | EXIM_SOCKLEN_T optlen = sizeof(struct ip_options) + MAX_IPOPTLEN; |
059ec3d9 PH |
1500 | struct ip_options *ipopt = store_get(optlen); |
1501 | #elif OPTSTYLE == 2 | |
1502 | struct ip_opts ipoptblock; | |
1503 | struct ip_opts *ipopt = &ipoptblock; | |
36a3b041 | 1504 | EXIM_SOCKLEN_T optlen = sizeof(ipoptblock); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1505 | #else |
1506 | struct ipoption ipoptblock; | |
1507 | struct ipoption *ipopt = &ipoptblock; | |
36a3b041 | 1508 | EXIM_SOCKLEN_T optlen = sizeof(ipoptblock); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1509 | #endif |
1510 | ||
1511 | /* Occasional genuine failures of getsockopt() have been seen - for | |
1512 | example, "reset by peer". Therefore, just log and give up on this | |
1513 | call, unless the error is ENOPROTOOPT. This error is given by systems | |
1514 | that have the interfaces but not the mechanism - e.g. GNU/Hurd at the time | |
1515 | of writing. So for that error, carry on - we just can't do an IP options | |
1516 | check. */ | |
1517 | ||
1518 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("checking for IP options\n"); | |
1519 | ||
1520 | if (getsockopt(fileno(smtp_out), IPPROTO_IP, IP_OPTIONS, (uschar *)(ipopt), | |
1521 | &optlen) < 0) | |
1522 | { | |
1523 | if (errno != ENOPROTOOPT) | |
1524 | { | |
1525 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "getsockopt() failed from %s: %s", | |
1526 | host_and_ident(FALSE), strerror(errno)); | |
1527 | smtp_printf("451 SMTP service not available\r\n"); | |
1528 | return FALSE; | |
1529 | } | |
1530 | } | |
1531 | ||
1532 | /* Deal with any IP options that are set. On the systems I have looked at, | |
1533 | the value of MAX_IPOPTLEN has been 40, meaning that there should never be | |
1534 | more logging data than will fit in big_buffer. Nevertheless, after somebody | |
1535 | questioned this code, I've added in some paranoid checking. */ | |
1536 | ||
1537 | else if (optlen > 0) | |
1538 | { | |
1539 | uschar *p = big_buffer; | |
1540 | uschar *pend = big_buffer + big_buffer_size; | |
1541 | uschar *opt, *adptr; | |
1542 | int optcount; | |
1543 | struct in_addr addr; | |
1544 | ||
1545 | #if OPTSTYLE == 1 | |
1546 | uschar *optstart = (uschar *)(ipopt->__data); | |
1547 | #elif OPTSTYLE == 2 | |
1548 | uschar *optstart = (uschar *)(ipopt->ip_opts); | |
1549 | #else | |
1550 | uschar *optstart = (uschar *)(ipopt->ipopt_list); | |
1551 | #endif | |
1552 | ||
1553 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("IP options exist\n"); | |
1554 | ||
1555 | Ustrcpy(p, "IP options on incoming call:"); | |
1556 | p += Ustrlen(p); | |
1557 | ||
1558 | for (opt = optstart; opt != NULL && | |
1559 | opt < (uschar *)(ipopt) + optlen;) | |
1560 | { | |
1561 | switch (*opt) | |
1562 | { | |
1563 | case IPOPT_EOL: | |
1564 | opt = NULL; | |
1565 | break; | |
1566 | ||
1567 | case IPOPT_NOP: | |
1568 | opt++; | |
1569 | break; | |
1570 | ||
1571 | case IPOPT_SSRR: | |
1572 | case IPOPT_LSRR: | |
1573 | if (!string_format(p, pend-p, " %s [@%s", | |
1574 | (*opt == IPOPT_SSRR)? "SSRR" : "LSRR", | |
1575 | #if OPTSTYLE == 1 | |
1576 | inet_ntoa(*((struct in_addr *)(&(ipopt->faddr)))))) | |
1577 | #elif OPTSTYLE == 2 | |
1578 | inet_ntoa(ipopt->ip_dst))) | |
1579 | #else | |
1580 | inet_ntoa(ipopt->ipopt_dst))) | |
1581 | #endif | |
1582 | { | |
1583 | opt = NULL; | |
1584 | break; | |
1585 | } | |
1586 | ||
1587 | p += Ustrlen(p); | |
1588 | optcount = (opt[1] - 3) / sizeof(struct in_addr); | |
1589 | adptr = opt + 3; | |
1590 | while (optcount-- > 0) | |
1591 | { | |
1592 | memcpy(&addr, adptr, sizeof(addr)); | |
1593 | if (!string_format(p, pend - p - 1, "%s%s", | |
1594 | (optcount == 0)? ":" : "@", inet_ntoa(addr))) | |
1595 | { | |
1596 | opt = NULL; | |
1597 | break; | |
1598 | } | |
1599 | p += Ustrlen(p); | |
1600 | adptr += sizeof(struct in_addr); | |
1601 | } | |
1602 | *p++ = ']'; | |
1603 | opt += opt[1]; | |
1604 | break; | |
1605 | ||
1606 | default: | |
1607 | { | |
1608 | int i; | |
1609 | if (pend - p < 4 + 3*opt[1]) { opt = NULL; break; } | |
1610 | Ustrcat(p, "[ "); | |
1611 | p += 2; | |
1612 | for (i = 0; i < opt[1]; i++) | |
1613 | { | |
1614 | sprintf(CS p, "%2.2x ", opt[i]); | |
1615 | p += 3; | |
1616 | } | |
1617 | *p++ = ']'; | |
1618 | } | |
1619 | opt += opt[1]; | |
1620 | break; | |
1621 | } | |
1622 | } | |
1623 | ||
1624 | *p = 0; | |
1625 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s", big_buffer); | |
1626 | ||
1627 | /* Refuse any call with IP options. This is what tcpwrappers 7.5 does. */ | |
1628 | ||
1629 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, | |
1630 | "connection from %s refused (IP options)", host_and_ident(FALSE)); | |
1631 | ||
1632 | smtp_printf("554 SMTP service not available\r\n"); | |
1633 | return FALSE; | |
1634 | } | |
1635 | ||
1636 | /* Length of options = 0 => there are no options */ | |
1637 | ||
1638 | else DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("no IP options found\n"); | |
1639 | } | |
1640 | #endif /* HAVE_IPV6 && !defined(NO_IP_OPTIONS) */ | |
1641 | ||
1642 | /* Set keep-alive in socket options. The option is on by default. This | |
1643 | setting is an attempt to get rid of some hanging connections that stick in | |
1644 | read() when the remote end (usually a dialup) goes away. */ | |
1645 | ||
1646 | if (smtp_accept_keepalive && !sender_host_notsocket) | |
1647 | ip_keepalive(fileno(smtp_out), sender_host_address, FALSE); | |
1648 | ||
1649 | /* If the current host matches host_lookup, set the name by doing a | |
1650 | reverse lookup. On failure, sender_host_name will be NULL and | |
1651 | host_lookup_failed will be TRUE. This may or may not be serious - optional | |
1652 | checks later. */ | |
1653 | ||
1654 | if (verify_check_host(&host_lookup) == OK) | |
1655 | { | |
1656 | (void)host_name_lookup(); | |
1657 | host_build_sender_fullhost(); | |
1658 | } | |
1659 | ||
1660 | /* Delay this until we have the full name, if it is looked up. */ | |
1661 | ||
1662 | set_process_info("handling incoming connection from %s", | |
1663 | host_and_ident(FALSE)); | |
1664 | ||
1665 | /* Start up TLS if tls_on_connect is set. This is for supporting the legacy | |
1666 | smtps port for use with older style SSL MTAs. */ | |
1667 | ||
1668 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
83da1223 PH |
1669 | if (tls_on_connect && |
1670 | tls_server_start(tls_require_ciphers, | |
1671 | gnutls_require_mac, gnutls_require_kx, gnutls_require_proto) != OK) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1672 | return FALSE; |
1673 | #endif | |
1674 | ||
1675 | /* Test for explicit connection rejection */ | |
1676 | ||
1677 | if (verify_check_host(&host_reject_connection) == OK) | |
1678 | { | |
1679 | log_write(L_connection_reject, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "refused connection " | |
1680 | "from %s (host_reject_connection)", host_and_ident(FALSE)); | |
1681 | smtp_printf("554 SMTP service not available\r\n"); | |
1682 | return FALSE; | |
1683 | } | |
1684 | ||
afb3eaaf PH |
1685 | /* Test with TCP Wrappers if so configured. There is a problem in that |
1686 | hosts_ctl() returns 0 (deny) under a number of system failure circumstances, | |
1687 | such as disks dying. In these cases, it is desirable to reject with a 4xx | |
1688 | error instead of a 5xx error. There isn't a "right" way to detect such | |
1689 | problems. The following kludge is used: errno is zeroed before calling | |
1690 | hosts_ctl(). If the result is "reject", a 5xx error is given only if the | |
1691 | value of errno is 0 or ENOENT (which happens if /etc/hosts.{allow,deny} does | |
1692 | not exist). */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1693 | |
1694 | #ifdef USE_TCP_WRAPPERS | |
afb3eaaf | 1695 | errno = 0; |
5dc43717 JJ |
1696 | tcp_wrappers_name = expand_string(tcp_wrappers_daemon_name); |
1697 | if (tcp_wrappers_name == NULL) | |
1698 | { | |
1699 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Expansion of \"%s\" " | |
1700 | "(tcp_wrappers_name) failed: %s", string_printing(tcp_wrappers_name), | |
1701 | expand_string_message); | |
1702 | } | |
1703 | if (!hosts_ctl(tcp_wrappers_name, | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1704 | (sender_host_name == NULL)? STRING_UNKNOWN : CS sender_host_name, |
1705 | (sender_host_address == NULL)? STRING_UNKNOWN : CS sender_host_address, | |
1706 | (sender_ident == NULL)? STRING_UNKNOWN : CS sender_ident)) | |
1707 | { | |
afb3eaaf PH |
1708 | if (errno == 0 || errno == ENOENT) |
1709 | { | |
1710 | HDEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("tcp wrappers rejection\n"); | |
1711 | log_write(L_connection_reject, | |
1712 | LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "refused connection from %s " | |
1713 | "(tcp wrappers)", host_and_ident(FALSE)); | |
1714 | smtp_printf("554 SMTP service not available\r\n"); | |
1715 | } | |
1716 | else | |
1717 | { | |
1718 | int save_errno = errno; | |
1719 | HDEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("tcp wrappers rejected with unexpected " | |
1720 | "errno value %d\n", save_errno); | |
1721 | log_write(L_connection_reject, | |
1722 | LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "temporarily refused connection from %s " | |
1723 | "(tcp wrappers errno=%d)", host_and_ident(FALSE), save_errno); | |
1724 | smtp_printf("451 Temporary local problem - please try later\r\n"); | |
1725 | } | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1726 | return FALSE; |
1727 | } | |
1728 | #endif | |
1729 | ||
b01dd148 PH |
1730 | /* Check for reserved slots. The value of smtp_accept_count has already been |
1731 | incremented to include this process. */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1732 | |
1733 | if (smtp_accept_max > 0 && | |
b01dd148 | 1734 | smtp_accept_count > smtp_accept_max - smtp_accept_reserve) |
059ec3d9 PH |
1735 | { |
1736 | if ((rc = verify_check_host(&smtp_reserve_hosts)) != OK) | |
1737 | { | |
1738 | log_write(L_connection_reject, | |
1739 | LOG_MAIN, "temporarily refused connection from %s: not in " | |
1740 | "reserve list: connected=%d max=%d reserve=%d%s", | |
b01dd148 | 1741 | host_and_ident(FALSE), smtp_accept_count - 1, smtp_accept_max, |
059ec3d9 PH |
1742 | smtp_accept_reserve, (rc == DEFER)? " (lookup deferred)" : ""); |
1743 | smtp_printf("421 %s: Too many concurrent SMTP connections; " | |
1744 | "please try again later\r\n", smtp_active_hostname); | |
1745 | return FALSE; | |
1746 | } | |
1747 | reserved_host = TRUE; | |
1748 | } | |
1749 | ||
1750 | /* If a load level above which only messages from reserved hosts are | |
1751 | accepted is set, check the load. For incoming calls via the daemon, the | |
1752 | check is done in the superior process if there are no reserved hosts, to | |
1753 | save a fork. In all cases, the load average will already be available | |
1754 | in a global variable at this point. */ | |
1755 | ||
1756 | if (smtp_load_reserve >= 0 && | |
1757 | load_average > smtp_load_reserve && | |
1758 | !reserved_host && | |
1759 | verify_check_host(&smtp_reserve_hosts) != OK) | |
1760 | { | |
1761 | log_write(L_connection_reject, | |
1762 | LOG_MAIN, "temporarily refused connection from %s: not in " | |
1763 | "reserve list and load average = %.2f", host_and_ident(FALSE), | |
1764 | (double)load_average/1000.0); | |
1765 | smtp_printf("421 %s: Too much load; please try again later\r\n", | |
1766 | smtp_active_hostname); | |
1767 | return FALSE; | |
1768 | } | |
1769 | ||
1770 | /* Determine whether unqualified senders or recipients are permitted | |
1771 | for this host. Unfortunately, we have to do this every time, in order to | |
1772 | set the flags so that they can be inspected when considering qualifying | |
1773 | addresses in the headers. For a site that permits no qualification, this | |
1774 | won't take long, however. */ | |
1775 | ||
1776 | allow_unqualified_sender = | |
1777 | verify_check_host(&sender_unqualified_hosts) == OK; | |
1778 | ||
1779 | allow_unqualified_recipient = | |
1780 | verify_check_host(&recipient_unqualified_hosts) == OK; | |
1781 | ||
1782 | /* Determine whether HELO/EHLO is required for this host. The requirement | |
1783 | can be hard or soft. */ | |
1784 | ||
1785 | helo_required = verify_check_host(&helo_verify_hosts) == OK; | |
1786 | if (!helo_required) | |
1787 | helo_verify = verify_check_host(&helo_try_verify_hosts) == OK; | |
1788 | ||
1789 | /* Determine whether this hosts is permitted to send syntactic junk | |
1790 | after a HELO or EHLO command. */ | |
1791 | ||
1792 | helo_accept_junk = verify_check_host(&helo_accept_junk_hosts) == OK; | |
1793 | } | |
1794 | ||
1795 | /* For batch SMTP input we are now done. */ | |
1796 | ||
1797 | if (smtp_batched_input) return TRUE; | |
1798 | ||
1799 | /* Run the ACL if it exists */ | |
1800 | ||
4e88a19f | 1801 | user_msg = NULL; |
059ec3d9 PH |
1802 | if (acl_smtp_connect != NULL) |
1803 | { | |
1804 | int rc; | |
64ffc24f | 1805 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_CONNECT, NULL, acl_smtp_connect, &user_msg, |
059ec3d9 PH |
1806 | &log_msg); |
1807 | if (rc != OK) | |
1808 | { | |
1809 | (void)smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_CONNECT, rc, user_msg, log_msg); | |
1810 | return FALSE; | |
1811 | } | |
1812 | } | |
1813 | ||
1814 | /* Output the initial message for a two-way SMTP connection. It may contain | |
1815 | newlines, which then cause a multi-line response to be given. */ | |
1816 | ||
4e88a19f PH |
1817 | code = US"220"; /* Default status code */ |
1818 | esc = US""; /* Default extended status code */ | |
1819 | esclen = 0; /* Length of esc */ | |
1820 | ||
1821 | if (user_msg == NULL) | |
1822 | { | |
1823 | s = expand_string(smtp_banner); | |
1824 | if (s == NULL) | |
1825 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Expansion of \"%s\" (smtp_banner) " | |
1826 | "failed: %s", smtp_banner, expand_string_message); | |
1827 | } | |
1828 | else | |
1829 | { | |
1830 | int codelen = 3; | |
1831 | s = user_msg; | |
1832 | smtp_message_code(&code, &codelen, &s, NULL); | |
d6a96edc | 1833 | if (codelen > 4) |
4e88a19f PH |
1834 | { |
1835 | esc = code + 4; | |
1836 | esclen = codelen - 4; | |
1837 | } | |
1838 | } | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1839 | |
1840 | /* Remove any terminating newlines; might as well remove trailing space too */ | |
1841 | ||
1842 | p = s + Ustrlen(s); | |
1843 | while (p > s && isspace(p[-1])) p--; | |
1844 | *p = 0; | |
1845 | ||
1846 | /* It seems that CC:Mail is braindead, and assumes that the greeting message | |
1847 | is all contained in a single IP packet. The original code wrote out the | |
1848 | greeting using several calls to fprint/fputc, and on busy servers this could | |
1849 | cause it to be split over more than one packet - which caused CC:Mail to fall | |
1850 | over when it got the second part of the greeting after sending its first | |
1851 | command. Sigh. To try to avoid this, build the complete greeting message | |
1852 | first, and output it in one fell swoop. This gives a better chance of it | |
1853 | ending up as a single packet. */ | |
1854 | ||
1855 | ss = store_get(size); | |
1856 | ptr = 0; | |
1857 | ||
1858 | p = s; | |
1859 | do /* At least once, in case we have an empty string */ | |
1860 | { | |
1861 | int len; | |
1862 | uschar *linebreak = Ustrchr(p, '\n'); | |
4e88a19f | 1863 | ss = string_cat(ss, &size, &ptr, code, 3); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1864 | if (linebreak == NULL) |
1865 | { | |
1866 | len = Ustrlen(p); | |
4e88a19f | 1867 | ss = string_cat(ss, &size, &ptr, US" ", 1); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1868 | } |
1869 | else | |
1870 | { | |
1871 | len = linebreak - p; | |
4e88a19f | 1872 | ss = string_cat(ss, &size, &ptr, US"-", 1); |
059ec3d9 | 1873 | } |
4e88a19f | 1874 | ss = string_cat(ss, &size, &ptr, esc, esclen); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1875 | ss = string_cat(ss, &size, &ptr, p, len); |
1876 | ss = string_cat(ss, &size, &ptr, US"\r\n", 2); | |
1877 | p += len; | |
1878 | if (linebreak != NULL) p++; | |
1879 | } | |
1880 | while (*p != 0); | |
1881 | ||
1882 | ss[ptr] = 0; /* string_cat leaves room for this */ | |
1883 | ||
1884 | /* Before we write the banner, check that there is no input pending, unless | |
1885 | this synchronisation check is disabled. */ | |
1886 | ||
a14e5636 | 1887 | if (!check_sync()) |
059ec3d9 | 1888 | { |
a14e5636 PH |
1889 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "SMTP protocol " |
1890 | "synchronization error (input sent without waiting for greeting): " | |
1891 | "rejected connection from %s input=\"%s\"", host_and_ident(TRUE), | |
1892 | string_printing(smtp_inptr)); | |
1893 | smtp_printf("554 SMTP synchronization error\r\n"); | |
1894 | return FALSE; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
1895 | } |
1896 | ||
1897 | /* Now output the banner */ | |
1898 | ||
1899 | smtp_printf("%s", ss); | |
1900 | return TRUE; | |
1901 | } | |
1902 | ||
1903 | ||
1904 | ||
1905 | ||
1906 | ||
1907 | /************************************************* | |
1908 | * Handle SMTP syntax and protocol errors * | |
1909 | *************************************************/ | |
1910 | ||
1911 | /* Write to the log for SMTP syntax errors in incoming commands, if configured | |
1912 | to do so. Then transmit the error response. The return value depends on the | |
1913 | number of syntax and protocol errors in this SMTP session. | |
1914 | ||
1915 | Arguments: | |
1916 | type error type, given as a log flag bit | |
1917 | code response code; <= 0 means don't send a response | |
1918 | data data to reflect in the response (can be NULL) | |
1919 | errmess the error message | |
1920 | ||
1921 | Returns: -1 limit of syntax/protocol errors NOT exceeded | |
1922 | +1 limit of syntax/protocol errors IS exceeded | |
1923 | ||
1924 | These values fit in with the values of the "done" variable in the main | |
1925 | processing loop in smtp_setup_msg(). */ | |
1926 | ||
1927 | static int | |
1928 | synprot_error(int type, int code, uschar *data, uschar *errmess) | |
1929 | { | |
1930 | int yield = -1; | |
1931 | ||
1932 | log_write(type, LOG_MAIN, "SMTP %s error in \"%s\" %s %s", | |
1933 | (type == L_smtp_syntax_error)? "syntax" : "protocol", | |
3ee512ff | 1934 | string_printing(smtp_cmd_buffer), host_and_ident(TRUE), errmess); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1935 | |
1936 | if (++synprot_error_count > smtp_max_synprot_errors) | |
1937 | { | |
1938 | yield = 1; | |
1939 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "SMTP call from %s dropped: too many " | |
1940 | "syntax or protocol errors (last command was \"%s\")", | |
3ee512ff | 1941 | host_and_ident(FALSE), smtp_cmd_buffer); |
059ec3d9 PH |
1942 | } |
1943 | ||
1944 | if (code > 0) | |
1945 | { | |
1946 | smtp_printf("%d%c%s%s%s\r\n", code, (yield == 1)? '-' : ' ', | |
1947 | (data == NULL)? US"" : data, (data == NULL)? US"" : US": ", errmess); | |
1948 | if (yield == 1) | |
1949 | smtp_printf("%d Too many syntax or protocol errors\r\n", code); | |
1950 | } | |
1951 | ||
1952 | return yield; | |
1953 | } | |
1954 | ||
1955 | ||
1956 | ||
1957 | ||
1958 | /************************************************* | |
1959 | * Log incomplete transactions * | |
1960 | *************************************************/ | |
1961 | ||
1962 | /* This function is called after a transaction has been aborted by RSET, QUIT, | |
1963 | connection drops or other errors. It logs the envelope information received | |
1964 | so far in order to preserve address verification attempts. | |
1965 | ||
1966 | Argument: string to indicate what aborted the transaction | |
1967 | Returns: nothing | |
1968 | */ | |
1969 | ||
1970 | static void | |
1971 | incomplete_transaction_log(uschar *what) | |
1972 | { | |
1973 | if (sender_address == NULL || /* No transaction in progress */ | |
1974 | (log_write_selector & L_smtp_incomplete_transaction) == 0 /* Not logging */ | |
1975 | ) return; | |
1976 | ||
1977 | /* Build list of recipients for logging */ | |
1978 | ||
1979 | if (recipients_count > 0) | |
1980 | { | |
1981 | int i; | |
1982 | raw_recipients = store_get(recipients_count * sizeof(uschar *)); | |
1983 | for (i = 0; i < recipients_count; i++) | |
1984 | raw_recipients[i] = recipients_list[i].address; | |
1985 | raw_recipients_count = recipients_count; | |
1986 | } | |
1987 | ||
1988 | log_write(L_smtp_incomplete_transaction, LOG_MAIN|LOG_SENDER|LOG_RECIPIENTS, | |
1989 | "%s incomplete transaction (%s)", host_and_ident(TRUE), what); | |
1990 | } | |
1991 | ||
1992 | ||
1993 | ||
1994 | ||
1995 | /************************************************* | |
1996 | * Send SMTP response, possibly multiline * | |
1997 | *************************************************/ | |
1998 | ||
1999 | /* There are, it seems, broken clients out there that cannot handle multiline | |
2000 | responses. If no_multiline_responses is TRUE (it can be set from an ACL), we | |
2001 | output nothing for non-final calls, and only the first line for anything else. | |
2002 | ||
2003 | Arguments: | |
a5bd321b | 2004 | code SMTP code, may involve extended status codes |
d6a96edc | 2005 | codelen length of smtp code; if > 4 there's an ESC |
059ec3d9 PH |
2006 | final FALSE if the last line isn't the final line |
2007 | msg message text, possibly containing newlines | |
2008 | ||
2009 | Returns: nothing | |
2010 | */ | |
2011 | ||
2012 | void | |
a5bd321b | 2013 | smtp_respond(uschar* code, int codelen, BOOL final, uschar *msg) |
059ec3d9 | 2014 | { |
a5bd321b PH |
2015 | int esclen = 0; |
2016 | uschar *esc = US""; | |
2017 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2018 | if (!final && no_multiline_responses) return; |
2019 | ||
d6a96edc | 2020 | if (codelen > 4) |
a5bd321b PH |
2021 | { |
2022 | esc = code + 4; | |
2023 | esclen = codelen - 4; | |
2024 | } | |
2025 | ||
2679d413 PH |
2026 | /* If this is the first output for a (non-batch) RCPT command, see if all RCPTs |
2027 | have had the same. Note: this code is also present in smtp_printf(). It would | |
2028 | be tidier to have it only in one place, but when it was added, it was easier to | |
2029 | do it that way, so as not to have to mess with the code for the RCPT command, | |
2030 | which sometimes uses smtp_printf() and sometimes smtp_respond(). */ | |
2031 | ||
2032 | if (rcpt_in_progress) | |
2033 | { | |
2034 | if (rcpt_smtp_response == NULL) | |
2035 | rcpt_smtp_response = string_copy(msg); | |
2036 | else if (rcpt_smtp_response_same && | |
2037 | Ustrcmp(rcpt_smtp_response, msg) != 0) | |
2038 | rcpt_smtp_response_same = FALSE; | |
2039 | rcpt_in_progress = FALSE; | |
2040 | } | |
2041 | ||
2042 | /* Not output the message, splitting it up into multiple lines if necessary. */ | |
2043 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2044 | for (;;) |
2045 | { | |
2046 | uschar *nl = Ustrchr(msg, '\n'); | |
2047 | if (nl == NULL) | |
2048 | { | |
a5bd321b | 2049 | smtp_printf("%.3s%c%.*s%s\r\n", code, final? ' ':'-', esclen, esc, msg); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2050 | return; |
2051 | } | |
2052 | else if (nl[1] == 0 || no_multiline_responses) | |
2053 | { | |
a5bd321b PH |
2054 | smtp_printf("%.3s%c%.*s%.*s\r\n", code, final? ' ':'-', esclen, esc, |
2055 | (int)(nl - msg), msg); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2056 | return; |
2057 | } | |
2058 | else | |
2059 | { | |
a5bd321b | 2060 | smtp_printf("%.3s-%.*s%.*s\r\n", code, esclen, esc, (int)(nl - msg), msg); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2061 | msg = nl + 1; |
2062 | while (isspace(*msg)) msg++; | |
2063 | } | |
2064 | } | |
2065 | } | |
2066 | ||
2067 | ||
2068 | ||
2069 | ||
4e88a19f PH |
2070 | /************************************************* |
2071 | * Parse user SMTP message * | |
2072 | *************************************************/ | |
2073 | ||
2074 | /* This function allows for user messages overriding the response code details | |
2075 | by providing a suitable response code string at the start of the message | |
2076 | user_msg. Check the message for starting with a response code and optionally an | |
2077 | extended status code. If found, check that the first digit is valid, and if so, | |
2078 | change the code pointer and length to use the replacement. An invalid code | |
2079 | causes a panic log; in this case, if the log messages is the same as the user | |
2080 | message, we must also adjust the value of the log message to show the code that | |
2081 | is actually going to be used (the original one). | |
2082 | ||
2083 | This function is global because it is called from receive.c as well as within | |
2084 | this module. | |
2085 | ||
d6a96edc PH |
2086 | Note that the code length returned includes the terminating whitespace |
2087 | character, which is always included in the regex match. | |
2088 | ||
4e88a19f PH |
2089 | Arguments: |
2090 | code SMTP code, may involve extended status codes | |
d6a96edc | 2091 | codelen length of smtp code; if > 4 there's an ESC |
4e88a19f PH |
2092 | msg message text |
2093 | log_msg optional log message, to be adjusted with the new SMTP code | |
2094 | ||
2095 | Returns: nothing | |
2096 | */ | |
2097 | ||
2098 | void | |
2099 | smtp_message_code(uschar **code, int *codelen, uschar **msg, uschar **log_msg) | |
2100 | { | |
2101 | int n; | |
2102 | int ovector[3]; | |
2103 | ||
2104 | if (msg == NULL || *msg == NULL) return; | |
2105 | ||
2106 | n = pcre_exec(regex_smtp_code, NULL, CS *msg, Ustrlen(*msg), 0, | |
2107 | PCRE_EOPT, ovector, sizeof(ovector)/sizeof(int)); | |
2108 | if (n < 0) return; | |
2109 | ||
2110 | if ((*msg)[0] != (*code)[0]) | |
2111 | { | |
2112 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "configured error code starts with " | |
2113 | "incorrect digit (expected %c) in \"%s\"", (*code)[0], *msg); | |
2114 | if (log_msg != NULL && *log_msg == *msg) | |
2115 | *log_msg = string_sprintf("%s %s", *code, *log_msg + ovector[1]); | |
2116 | } | |
2117 | else | |
2118 | { | |
2119 | *code = *msg; | |
2120 | *codelen = ovector[1]; /* Includes final space */ | |
2121 | } | |
2122 | *msg += ovector[1]; /* Chop the code off the message */ | |
2123 | return; | |
2124 | } | |
2125 | ||
2126 | ||
2127 | ||
2128 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2129 | /************************************************* |
2130 | * Handle an ACL failure * | |
2131 | *************************************************/ | |
2132 | ||
2133 | /* This function is called when acl_check() fails. As well as calls from within | |
2134 | this module, it is called from receive.c for an ACL after DATA. It sorts out | |
2135 | logging the incident, and sets up the error response. A message containing | |
2136 | newlines is turned into a multiline SMTP response, but for logging, only the | |
2137 | first line is used. | |
2138 | ||
a5bd321b PH |
2139 | There's a table of default permanent failure response codes to use in |
2140 | globals.c, along with the table of names. VFRY is special. Despite RFC1123 it | |
2141 | defaults disabled in Exim. However, discussion in connection with RFC 821bis | |
2142 | (aka RFC 2821) has concluded that the response should be 252 in the disabled | |
2143 | state, because there are broken clients that try VRFY before RCPT. A 5xx | |
2144 | response should be given only when the address is positively known to be | |
2145 | undeliverable. Sigh. Also, for ETRN, 458 is given on refusal, and for AUTH, | |
2146 | 503. | |
2147 | ||
2148 | From Exim 4.63, it is possible to override the response code details by | |
2149 | providing a suitable response code string at the start of the message provided | |
2150 | in user_msg. The code's first digit is checked for validity. | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2151 | |
2152 | Arguments: | |
2153 | where where the ACL was called from | |
2154 | rc the failure code | |
2155 | user_msg a message that can be included in an SMTP response | |
2156 | log_msg a message for logging | |
2157 | ||
2158 | Returns: 0 in most cases | |
2159 | 2 if the failure code was FAIL_DROP, in which case the | |
2160 | SMTP connection should be dropped (this value fits with the | |
2161 | "done" variable in smtp_setup_msg() below) | |
2162 | */ | |
2163 | ||
2164 | int | |
2165 | smtp_handle_acl_fail(int where, int rc, uschar *user_msg, uschar *log_msg) | |
2166 | { | |
059ec3d9 | 2167 | BOOL drop = rc == FAIL_DROP; |
a5bd321b | 2168 | int codelen = 3; |
a5bd321b | 2169 | uschar *smtp_code; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2170 | uschar *lognl; |
2171 | uschar *sender_info = US""; | |
64ffc24f | 2172 | uschar *what = |
8523533c | 2173 | #ifdef WITH_CONTENT_SCAN |
64ffc24f | 2174 | (where == ACL_WHERE_MIME)? US"during MIME ACL checks" : |
8e669ac1 | 2175 | #endif |
64ffc24f PH |
2176 | (where == ACL_WHERE_PREDATA)? US"DATA" : |
2177 | (where == ACL_WHERE_DATA)? US"after DATA" : | |
ca86f471 | 2178 | (smtp_cmd_data == NULL)? |
64ffc24f | 2179 | string_sprintf("%s in \"connect\" ACL", acl_wherenames[where]) : |
ca86f471 | 2180 | string_sprintf("%s %s", acl_wherenames[where], smtp_cmd_data); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2181 | |
2182 | if (drop) rc = FAIL; | |
2183 | ||
4e88a19f | 2184 | /* Set the default SMTP code, and allow a user message to change it. */ |
a5bd321b PH |
2185 | |
2186 | smtp_code = (rc != FAIL)? US"451" : acl_wherecodes[where]; | |
4e88a19f | 2187 | smtp_message_code(&smtp_code, &codelen, &user_msg, &log_msg); |
a5bd321b | 2188 | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2189 | /* We used to have sender_address here; however, there was a bug that was not |
2190 | updating sender_address after a rewrite during a verify. When this bug was | |
2191 | fixed, sender_address at this point became the rewritten address. I'm not sure | |
2192 | this is what should be logged, so I've changed to logging the unrewritten | |
2193 | address to retain backward compatibility. */ | |
2194 | ||
8523533c | 2195 | #ifndef WITH_CONTENT_SCAN |
059ec3d9 | 2196 | if (where == ACL_WHERE_RCPT || where == ACL_WHERE_DATA) |
8523533c TK |
2197 | #else |
2198 | if (where == ACL_WHERE_RCPT || where == ACL_WHERE_DATA || where == ACL_WHERE_MIME) | |
2199 | #endif | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2200 | { |
2201 | sender_info = string_sprintf("F=<%s> ", (sender_address_unrewritten != NULL)? | |
2202 | sender_address_unrewritten : sender_address); | |
2203 | } | |
2204 | ||
2205 | /* If there's been a sender verification failure with a specific message, and | |
2206 | we have not sent a response about it yet, do so now, as a preliminary line for | |
278c6e6c PH |
2207 | failures, but not defers. However, always log it for defer, and log it for fail |
2208 | unless the sender_verify_fail log selector has been turned off. */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2209 | |
2210 | if (sender_verified_failed != NULL && | |
2211 | !testflag(sender_verified_failed, af_sverify_told)) | |
2212 | { | |
2679d413 PH |
2213 | BOOL save_rcpt_in_progress = rcpt_in_progress; |
2214 | rcpt_in_progress = FALSE; /* So as not to treat these as the error */ | |
2215 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2216 | setflag(sender_verified_failed, af_sverify_told); |
2217 | ||
278c6e6c PH |
2218 | if (rc != FAIL || (log_extra_selector & LX_sender_verify_fail) != 0) |
2219 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "%s sender verify %s for <%s>%s", | |
2220 | host_and_ident(TRUE), | |
2221 | ((sender_verified_failed->special_action & 255) == DEFER)? "defer":"fail", | |
2222 | sender_verified_failed->address, | |
2223 | (sender_verified_failed->message == NULL)? US"" : | |
2224 | string_sprintf(": %s", sender_verified_failed->message)); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2225 | |
2226 | if (rc == FAIL && sender_verified_failed->user_message != NULL) | |
a5bd321b | 2227 | smtp_respond(smtp_code, codelen, FALSE, string_sprintf( |
059ec3d9 PH |
2228 | testflag(sender_verified_failed, af_verify_pmfail)? |
2229 | "Postmaster verification failed while checking <%s>\n%s\n" | |
2230 | "Several RFCs state that you are required to have a postmaster\n" | |
2231 | "mailbox for each mail domain. This host does not accept mail\n" | |
2232 | "from domains whose servers reject the postmaster address." | |
2233 | : | |
2234 | testflag(sender_verified_failed, af_verify_nsfail)? | |
2235 | "Callback setup failed while verifying <%s>\n%s\n" | |
2236 | "The initial connection, or a HELO or MAIL FROM:<> command was\n" | |
2237 | "rejected. Refusing MAIL FROM:<> does not help fight spam, disregards\n" | |
2238 | "RFC requirements, and stops you from receiving standard bounce\n" | |
2239 | "messages. This host does not accept mail from domains whose servers\n" | |
2240 | "refuse bounces." | |
2241 | : | |
2242 | "Verification failed for <%s>\n%s", | |
2243 | sender_verified_failed->address, | |
2244 | sender_verified_failed->user_message)); | |
2679d413 PH |
2245 | |
2246 | rcpt_in_progress = save_rcpt_in_progress; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2247 | } |
2248 | ||
2249 | /* Sort out text for logging */ | |
2250 | ||
2251 | log_msg = (log_msg == NULL)? US"" : string_sprintf(": %s", log_msg); | |
2252 | lognl = Ustrchr(log_msg, '\n'); | |
2253 | if (lognl != NULL) *lognl = 0; | |
2254 | ||
2255 | /* Send permanent failure response to the command, but the code used isn't | |
2256 | always a 5xx one - see comments at the start of this function. If the original | |
2257 | rc was FAIL_DROP we drop the connection and yield 2. */ | |
2258 | ||
a5bd321b | 2259 | if (rc == FAIL) smtp_respond(smtp_code, codelen, TRUE, (user_msg == NULL)? |
059ec3d9 PH |
2260 | US"Administrative prohibition" : user_msg); |
2261 | ||
2262 | /* Send temporary failure response to the command. Don't give any details, | |
2263 | unless acl_temp_details is set. This is TRUE for a callout defer, a "defer" | |
2264 | verb, and for a header verify when smtp_return_error_details is set. | |
2265 | ||
2266 | This conditional logic is all somewhat of a mess because of the odd | |
2267 | interactions between temp_details and return_error_details. One day it should | |
2268 | be re-implemented in a tidier fashion. */ | |
2269 | ||
2270 | else | |
2271 | { | |
2272 | if (acl_temp_details && user_msg != NULL) | |
2273 | { | |
2274 | if (smtp_return_error_details && | |
2275 | sender_verified_failed != NULL && | |
2276 | sender_verified_failed->message != NULL) | |
2277 | { | |
a5bd321b | 2278 | smtp_respond(smtp_code, codelen, FALSE, sender_verified_failed->message); |
059ec3d9 | 2279 | } |
a5bd321b | 2280 | smtp_respond(smtp_code, codelen, TRUE, user_msg); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2281 | } |
2282 | else | |
a5bd321b PH |
2283 | smtp_respond(smtp_code, codelen, TRUE, |
2284 | US"Temporary local problem - please try later"); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2285 | } |
2286 | ||
6ea85e9a PH |
2287 | /* Log the incident to the logs that are specified by log_reject_target |
2288 | (default main, reject). This can be empty to suppress logging of rejections. If | |
2289 | the connection is not forcibly to be dropped, return 0. Otherwise, log why it | |
2290 | is closing if required and return 2. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 2291 | |
6ea85e9a PH |
2292 | if (log_reject_target != 0) |
2293 | log_write(0, log_reject_target, "%s %s%srejected %s%s", | |
2294 | host_and_ident(TRUE), | |
2295 | sender_info, (rc == FAIL)? US"" : US"temporarily ", what, log_msg); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2296 | |
2297 | if (!drop) return 0; | |
2298 | ||
2299 | log_write(L_smtp_connection, LOG_MAIN, "%s closed by DROP in ACL", | |
2300 | smtp_get_connection_info()); | |
8f128379 PH |
2301 | |
2302 | /* Run the not-quit ACL, but without any custom messages. This should not be a | |
2303 | problem, because we get here only if some other ACL has issued "drop", and | |
2304 | in that case, *its* custom messages will have been used above. */ | |
2305 | ||
2306 | smtp_notquit_exit(US"acl-drop", NULL, NULL); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2307 | return 2; |
2308 | } | |
2309 | ||
2310 | ||
2311 | ||
2312 | ||
8f128379 PH |
2313 | /************************************************* |
2314 | * Handle SMTP exit when QUIT is not given * | |
2315 | *************************************************/ | |
2316 | ||
2317 | /* This function provides a logging/statistics hook for when an SMTP connection | |
2318 | is dropped on the floor or the other end goes away. It's a global function | |
2319 | because it's called from receive.c as well as this module. As well as running | |
2320 | the NOTQUIT ACL, if there is one, this function also outputs a final SMTP | |
2321 | response, either with a custom message from the ACL, or using a default. There | |
2322 | is one case, however, when no message is output - after "drop". In that case, | |
2323 | the ACL that obeyed "drop" has already supplied the custom message, and NULL is | |
2324 | passed to this function. | |
2325 | ||
2326 | In case things go wrong while processing this function, causing an error that | |
2327 | may re-enter this funtion, there is a recursion check. | |
2328 | ||
2329 | Arguments: | |
2330 | reason What $smtp_notquit_reason will be set to in the ACL; | |
2331 | if NULL, the ACL is not run | |
2332 | code The error code to return as part of the response | |
2333 | defaultrespond The default message if there's no user_msg | |
2334 | ||
2335 | Returns: Nothing | |
2336 | */ | |
2337 | ||
2338 | void | |
2339 | smtp_notquit_exit(uschar *reason, uschar *code, uschar *defaultrespond, ...) | |
2340 | { | |
2341 | int rc; | |
2342 | uschar *user_msg = NULL; | |
2343 | uschar *log_msg = NULL; | |
2344 | ||
2345 | /* Check for recursive acll */ | |
2346 | ||
2347 | if (smtp_exit_function_called) | |
2348 | { | |
2349 | log_write(0, LOG_PANIC, "smtp_notquit_exit() called more than once (%s)", | |
2350 | reason); | |
2351 | return; | |
2352 | } | |
2353 | smtp_exit_function_called = TRUE; | |
2354 | ||
2355 | /* Call the not-QUIT ACL, if there is one, unless no reason is given. */ | |
2356 | ||
2357 | if (acl_smtp_notquit != NULL && reason != NULL) | |
2358 | { | |
2359 | smtp_notquit_reason = reason; | |
2360 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_NOTQUIT, NULL, acl_smtp_notquit, &user_msg, | |
2361 | &log_msg); | |
2362 | if (rc == ERROR) | |
2363 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "ACL for not-QUIT returned ERROR: %s", | |
2364 | log_msg); | |
2365 | } | |
2366 | ||
2367 | /* Write an SMTP response if we are expected to give one. As the default | |
2368 | responses are all internal, they should always fit in the buffer, but code a | |
2369 | warning, just in case. Note that string_vformat() still leaves a complete | |
2370 | string, even if it is incomplete. */ | |
2371 | ||
2372 | if (code != NULL && defaultrespond != NULL) | |
2373 | { | |
2374 | if (user_msg == NULL) | |
2375 | { | |
2376 | uschar buffer[128]; | |
2377 | va_list ap; | |
2378 | va_start(ap, defaultrespond); | |
2379 | if (!string_vformat(buffer, sizeof(buffer), CS defaultrespond, ap)) | |
2380 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "string too large in smtp_notquit_exit()"); | |
2381 | smtp_printf("%s %s\r\n", code, buffer); | |
2382 | va_end(ap); | |
2383 | } | |
2384 | else | |
2385 | smtp_respond(code, 3, TRUE, user_msg); | |
2386 | mac_smtp_fflush(); | |
2387 | } | |
2388 | } | |
2389 | ||
2390 | ||
2391 | ||
2392 | ||
d7b47fd0 PH |
2393 | /************************************************* |
2394 | * Verify HELO argument * | |
2395 | *************************************************/ | |
2396 | ||
2397 | /* This function is called if helo_verify_hosts or helo_try_verify_hosts is | |
2398 | matched. It is also called from ACL processing if verify = helo is used and | |
2399 | verification was not previously tried (i.e. helo_try_verify_hosts was not | |
2400 | matched). The result of its processing is to set helo_verified and | |
2401 | helo_verify_failed. These variables should both be FALSE for this function to | |
2402 | be called. | |
2403 | ||
2404 | Note that EHLO/HELO is legitimately allowed to quote an address literal. Allow | |
2405 | for IPv6 ::ffff: literals. | |
2406 | ||
2407 | Argument: none | |
2408 | Returns: TRUE if testing was completed; | |
2409 | FALSE on a temporary failure | |
2410 | */ | |
2411 | ||
2412 | BOOL | |
2413 | smtp_verify_helo(void) | |
2414 | { | |
2415 | BOOL yield = TRUE; | |
2416 | ||
2417 | HDEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("verifying EHLO/HELO argument \"%s\"\n", | |
2418 | sender_helo_name); | |
2419 | ||
2420 | if (sender_helo_name == NULL) | |
2421 | { | |
2422 | HDEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("no EHLO/HELO command was issued\n"); | |
2423 | } | |
2424 | ||
d1d5595c PH |
2425 | /* Deal with the case of -bs without an IP address */ |
2426 | ||
2427 | else if (sender_host_address == NULL) | |
2428 | { | |
2429 | HDEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("no client IP address: assume success\n"); | |
2430 | helo_verified = TRUE; | |
2431 | } | |
2432 | ||
2433 | /* Deal with the more common case when there is a sending IP address */ | |
2434 | ||
d7b47fd0 PH |
2435 | else if (sender_helo_name[0] == '[') |
2436 | { | |
2437 | helo_verified = Ustrncmp(sender_helo_name+1, sender_host_address, | |
2438 | Ustrlen(sender_host_address)) == 0; | |
2439 | ||
2440 | #if HAVE_IPV6 | |
2441 | if (!helo_verified) | |
2442 | { | |
2443 | if (strncmpic(sender_host_address, US"::ffff:", 7) == 0) | |
2444 | helo_verified = Ustrncmp(sender_helo_name + 1, | |
2445 | sender_host_address + 7, Ustrlen(sender_host_address) - 7) == 0; | |
2446 | } | |
2447 | #endif | |
2448 | ||
2449 | HDEBUG(D_receive) | |
2450 | { if (helo_verified) debug_printf("matched host address\n"); } | |
2451 | } | |
2452 | ||
2453 | /* Do a reverse lookup if one hasn't already given a positive or negative | |
2454 | response. If that fails, or the name doesn't match, try checking with a forward | |
2455 | lookup. */ | |
2456 | ||
2457 | else | |
2458 | { | |
2459 | if (sender_host_name == NULL && !host_lookup_failed) | |
2460 | yield = host_name_lookup() != DEFER; | |
2461 | ||
2462 | /* If a host name is known, check it and all its aliases. */ | |
2463 | ||
2464 | if (sender_host_name != NULL) | |
2465 | { | |
2466 | helo_verified = strcmpic(sender_host_name, sender_helo_name) == 0; | |
2467 | ||
2468 | if (helo_verified) | |
2469 | { | |
2470 | HDEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("matched host name\n"); | |
2471 | } | |
2472 | else | |
2473 | { | |
2474 | uschar **aliases = sender_host_aliases; | |
2475 | while (*aliases != NULL) | |
2476 | { | |
2477 | helo_verified = strcmpic(*aliases++, sender_helo_name) == 0; | |
2478 | if (helo_verified) break; | |
2479 | } | |
2480 | HDEBUG(D_receive) | |
2481 | { | |
2482 | if (helo_verified) | |
2483 | debug_printf("matched alias %s\n", *(--aliases)); | |
2484 | } | |
2485 | } | |
2486 | } | |
2487 | ||
2488 | /* Final attempt: try a forward lookup of the helo name */ | |
2489 | ||
2490 | if (!helo_verified) | |
2491 | { | |
2492 | int rc; | |
2493 | host_item h; | |
2494 | h.name = sender_helo_name; | |
2495 | h.address = NULL; | |
2496 | h.mx = MX_NONE; | |
2497 | h.next = NULL; | |
2498 | HDEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("getting IP address for %s\n", | |
2499 | sender_helo_name); | |
322050c2 | 2500 | rc = host_find_byname(&h, NULL, 0, NULL, TRUE); |
d7b47fd0 PH |
2501 | if (rc == HOST_FOUND || rc == HOST_FOUND_LOCAL) |
2502 | { | |
2503 | host_item *hh = &h; | |
2504 | while (hh != NULL) | |
2505 | { | |
2506 | if (Ustrcmp(hh->address, sender_host_address) == 0) | |
2507 | { | |
2508 | helo_verified = TRUE; | |
2509 | HDEBUG(D_receive) | |
2510 | debug_printf("IP address for %s matches calling address\n", | |
2511 | sender_helo_name); | |
2512 | break; | |
2513 | } | |
2514 | hh = hh->next; | |
2515 | } | |
2516 | } | |
2517 | } | |
2518 | } | |
2519 | ||
d1d5595c | 2520 | if (!helo_verified) helo_verify_failed = TRUE; /* We've tried ... */ |
d7b47fd0 PH |
2521 | return yield; |
2522 | } | |
2523 | ||
2524 | ||
2525 | ||
2526 | ||
4e88a19f PH |
2527 | /************************************************* |
2528 | * Send user response message * | |
2529 | *************************************************/ | |
2530 | ||
2531 | /* This function is passed a default response code and a user message. It calls | |
2532 | smtp_message_code() to check and possibly modify the response code, and then | |
2533 | calls smtp_respond() to transmit the response. I put this into a function | |
2534 | just to avoid a lot of repetition. | |
2535 | ||
2536 | Arguments: | |
2537 | code the response code | |
2538 | user_msg the user message | |
2539 | ||
2540 | Returns: nothing | |
2541 | */ | |
2542 | ||
2543 | static void | |
2544 | smtp_user_msg(uschar *code, uschar *user_msg) | |
2545 | { | |
2546 | int len = 3; | |
2547 | smtp_message_code(&code, &len, &user_msg, NULL); | |
2548 | smtp_respond(code, len, TRUE, user_msg); | |
2549 | } | |
2550 | ||
2551 | ||
2552 | ||
2553 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2554 | /************************************************* |
2555 | * Initialize for SMTP incoming message * | |
2556 | *************************************************/ | |
2557 | ||
2558 | /* This function conducts the initial dialogue at the start of an incoming SMTP | |
2559 | message, and builds a list of recipients. However, if the incoming message | |
2560 | is part of a batch (-bS option) a separate function is called since it would | |
2561 | be messy having tests splattered about all over this function. This function | |
2562 | therefore handles the case where interaction is occurring. The input and output | |
2563 | files are set up in smtp_in and smtp_out. | |
2564 | ||
2565 | The global recipients_list is set to point to a vector of recipient_item | |
2566 | blocks, whose number is given by recipients_count. This is extended by the | |
2567 | receive_add_recipient() function. The global variable sender_address is set to | |
2568 | the sender's address. The yield is +1 if a message has been successfully | |
2569 | started, 0 if a QUIT command was encountered or the connection was refused from | |
2570 | the particular host, or -1 if the connection was lost. | |
2571 | ||
2572 | Argument: none | |
2573 | ||
2574 | Returns: > 0 message successfully started (reached DATA) | |
2575 | = 0 QUIT read or end of file reached or call refused | |
2576 | < 0 lost connection | |
2577 | */ | |
2578 | ||
2579 | int | |
2580 | smtp_setup_msg(void) | |
2581 | { | |
2582 | int done = 0; | |
2583 | BOOL toomany = FALSE; | |
2584 | BOOL discarded = FALSE; | |
2585 | BOOL last_was_rej_mail = FALSE; | |
2586 | BOOL last_was_rcpt = FALSE; | |
2587 | void *reset_point = store_get(0); | |
2588 | ||
2589 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("smtp_setup_msg entered\n"); | |
2590 | ||
2591 | /* Reset for start of new message. We allow one RSET not to be counted as a | |
2592 | nonmail command, for those MTAs that insist on sending it between every | |
2593 | message. Ditto for EHLO/HELO and for STARTTLS, to allow for going in and out of | |
2594 | TLS between messages (an Exim client may do this if it has messages queued up | |
2595 | for the host). Note: we do NOT reset AUTH at this point. */ | |
2596 | ||
2597 | smtp_reset(reset_point); | |
2598 | message_ended = END_NOTSTARTED; | |
2599 | ||
2600 | cmd_list[CMD_LIST_RSET].is_mail_cmd = TRUE; | |
2601 | cmd_list[CMD_LIST_HELO].is_mail_cmd = TRUE; | |
2602 | cmd_list[CMD_LIST_EHLO].is_mail_cmd = TRUE; | |
2603 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
2604 | cmd_list[CMD_LIST_STARTTLS].is_mail_cmd = TRUE; | |
2605 | #endif | |
2606 | ||
2607 | /* Set the local signal handler for SIGTERM - it tries to end off tidily */ | |
2608 | ||
2609 | os_non_restarting_signal(SIGTERM, command_sigterm_handler); | |
2610 | ||
2611 | /* Batched SMTP is handled in a different function. */ | |
2612 | ||
2613 | if (smtp_batched_input) return smtp_setup_batch_msg(); | |
2614 | ||
2615 | /* Deal with SMTP commands. This loop is exited by setting done to a POSITIVE | |
2616 | value. The values are 2 larger than the required yield of the function. */ | |
2617 | ||
2618 | while (done <= 0) | |
2619 | { | |
2620 | uschar **argv; | |
2621 | uschar *etrn_command; | |
2622 | uschar *etrn_serialize_key; | |
2623 | uschar *errmess; | |
4e88a19f PH |
2624 | uschar *log_msg, *smtp_code; |
2625 | uschar *user_msg = NULL; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2626 | uschar *recipient = NULL; |
2627 | uschar *hello = NULL; | |
2628 | uschar *set_id = NULL; | |
2629 | uschar *s, *ss; | |
2630 | BOOL was_rej_mail = FALSE; | |
2631 | BOOL was_rcpt = FALSE; | |
2632 | void (*oldsignal)(int); | |
2633 | pid_t pid; | |
2634 | int start, end, sender_domain, recipient_domain; | |
2635 | int ptr, size, rc; | |
f78eb7c6 | 2636 | int c, i; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2637 | auth_instance *au; |
2638 | ||
2639 | switch(smtp_read_command(TRUE)) | |
2640 | { | |
2641 | /* The AUTH command is not permitted to occur inside a transaction, and may | |
c46782ef PH |
2642 | occur successfully only once per connection. Actually, that isn't quite |
2643 | true. When TLS is started, all previous information about a connection must | |
2644 | be discarded, so a new AUTH is permitted at that time. | |
2645 | ||
2646 | AUTH may only be used when it has been advertised. However, it seems that | |
2647 | there are clients that send AUTH when it hasn't been advertised, some of | |
2648 | them even doing this after HELO. And there are MTAs that accept this. Sigh. | |
2649 | So there's a get-out that allows this to happen. | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2650 | |
2651 | AUTH is initially labelled as a "nonmail command" so that one occurrence | |
2652 | doesn't get counted. We change the label here so that multiple failing | |
2653 | AUTHS will eventually hit the nonmail threshold. */ | |
2654 | ||
2655 | case AUTH_CMD: | |
b4ed4da0 | 2656 | HAD(SCH_AUTH); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2657 | authentication_failed = TRUE; |
2658 | cmd_list[CMD_LIST_AUTH].is_mail_cmd = FALSE; | |
2659 | ||
c46782ef | 2660 | if (!auth_advertised && !allow_auth_unadvertised) |
059ec3d9 PH |
2661 | { |
2662 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_protocol_error, 503, NULL, | |
2663 | US"AUTH command used when not advertised"); | |
2664 | break; | |
2665 | } | |
2666 | if (sender_host_authenticated != NULL) | |
2667 | { | |
2668 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_protocol_error, 503, NULL, | |
2669 | US"already authenticated"); | |
2670 | break; | |
2671 | } | |
2672 | if (sender_address != NULL) | |
2673 | { | |
2674 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_protocol_error, 503, NULL, | |
2675 | US"not permitted in mail transaction"); | |
2676 | break; | |
2677 | } | |
2678 | ||
2679 | /* Check the ACL */ | |
2680 | ||
2681 | if (acl_smtp_auth != NULL) | |
2682 | { | |
64ffc24f | 2683 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_AUTH, NULL, acl_smtp_auth, &user_msg, &log_msg); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2684 | if (rc != OK) |
2685 | { | |
2686 | done = smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_AUTH, rc, user_msg, log_msg); | |
2687 | break; | |
2688 | } | |
2689 | } | |
2690 | ||
2691 | /* Find the name of the requested authentication mechanism. */ | |
2692 | ||
ca86f471 PH |
2693 | s = smtp_cmd_data; |
2694 | while ((c = *smtp_cmd_data) != 0 && !isspace(c)) | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2695 | { |
2696 | if (!isalnum(c) && c != '-' && c != '_') | |
2697 | { | |
2698 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_syntax_error, 501, NULL, | |
2699 | US"invalid character in authentication mechanism name"); | |
2700 | goto COMMAND_LOOP; | |
2701 | } | |
ca86f471 | 2702 | smtp_cmd_data++; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2703 | } |
2704 | ||
2705 | /* If not at the end of the line, we must be at white space. Terminate the | |
2706 | name and move the pointer on to any data that may be present. */ | |
2707 | ||
ca86f471 | 2708 | if (*smtp_cmd_data != 0) |
059ec3d9 | 2709 | { |
ca86f471 PH |
2710 | *smtp_cmd_data++ = 0; |
2711 | while (isspace(*smtp_cmd_data)) smtp_cmd_data++; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2712 | } |
2713 | ||
2714 | /* Search for an authentication mechanism which is configured for use | |
c46782ef PH |
2715 | as a server and which has been advertised (unless, sigh, allow_auth_ |
2716 | unadvertised is set). */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2717 | |
2718 | for (au = auths; au != NULL; au = au->next) | |
2719 | { | |
2720 | if (strcmpic(s, au->public_name) == 0 && au->server && | |
c46782ef | 2721 | (au->advertised || allow_auth_unadvertised)) break; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2722 | } |
2723 | ||
2724 | if (au == NULL) | |
2725 | { | |
2726 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_protocol_error, 504, NULL, | |
2727 | string_sprintf("%s authentication mechanism not supported", s)); | |
2728 | break; | |
2729 | } | |
2730 | ||
f78eb7c6 PH |
2731 | /* Run the checking code, passing the remainder of the command line as |
2732 | data. Initials the $auth<n> variables as empty. Initialize $0 empty and set | |
2733 | it as the only set numerical variable. The authenticator may set $auth<n> | |
2734 | and also set other numeric variables. The $auth<n> variables are preferred | |
2735 | nowadays; the numerical variables remain for backwards compatibility. | |
059ec3d9 | 2736 | |
f78eb7c6 PH |
2737 | Afterwards, have a go at expanding the set_id string, even if |
2738 | authentication failed - for bad passwords it can be useful to log the | |
2739 | userid. On success, require set_id to expand and exist, and put it in | |
2740 | authenticated_id. Save this in permanent store, as the working store gets | |
2741 | reset at HELO, RSET, etc. */ | |
2742 | ||
2743 | for (i = 0; i < AUTH_VARS; i++) auth_vars[i] = NULL; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2744 | expand_nmax = 0; |
2745 | expand_nlength[0] = 0; /* $0 contains nothing */ | |
2746 | ||
ca86f471 | 2747 | c = (au->info->servercode)(au, smtp_cmd_data); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2748 | if (au->set_id != NULL) set_id = expand_string(au->set_id); |
2749 | expand_nmax = -1; /* Reset numeric variables */ | |
f78eb7c6 | 2750 | for (i = 0; i < AUTH_VARS; i++) auth_vars[i] = NULL; /* Reset $auth<n> */ |
059ec3d9 | 2751 | |
0612b098 PH |
2752 | /* The value of authenticated_id is stored in the spool file and printed in |
2753 | log lines. It must not contain binary zeros or newline characters. In | |
2754 | normal use, it never will, but when playing around or testing, this error | |
2755 | can (did) happen. To guard against this, ensure that the id contains only | |
2756 | printing characters. */ | |
2757 | ||
2758 | if (set_id != NULL) set_id = string_printing(set_id); | |
2759 | ||
059ec3d9 PH |
2760 | /* For the non-OK cases, set up additional logging data if set_id |
2761 | is not empty. */ | |
2762 | ||
2763 | if (c != OK) | |
2764 | { | |
2765 | if (set_id != NULL && *set_id != 0) | |
2766 | set_id = string_sprintf(" (set_id=%s)", set_id); | |
2767 | else set_id = US""; | |
2768 | } | |
2769 | ||
2770 | /* Switch on the result */ | |
2771 | ||
2772 | switch(c) | |
2773 | { | |
2774 | case OK: | |
2775 | if (au->set_id == NULL || set_id != NULL) /* Complete success */ | |
2776 | { | |
2777 | if (set_id != NULL) authenticated_id = string_copy_malloc(set_id); | |
2778 | sender_host_authenticated = au->name; | |
2779 | authentication_failed = FALSE; | |
2780 | received_protocol = | |
2781 | protocols[pextend + pauthed + ((tls_active >= 0)? pcrpted:0)] + | |
2782 | ((sender_host_address != NULL)? pnlocal : 0); | |
2783 | s = ss = US"235 Authentication succeeded"; | |
2784 | authenticated_by = au; | |
2785 | break; | |
2786 | } | |
2787 | ||
2788 | /* Authentication succeeded, but we failed to expand the set_id string. | |
2789 | Treat this as a temporary error. */ | |
2790 | ||
2791 | auth_defer_msg = expand_string_message; | |
2792 | /* Fall through */ | |
2793 | ||
2794 | case DEFER: | |
2795 | s = string_sprintf("435 Unable to authenticate at present%s", | |
2796 | auth_defer_user_msg); | |
2797 | ss = string_sprintf("435 Unable to authenticate at present%s: %s", | |
2798 | set_id, auth_defer_msg); | |
2799 | break; | |
2800 | ||
2801 | case BAD64: | |
2802 | s = ss = US"501 Invalid base64 data"; | |
2803 | break; | |
2804 | ||
2805 | case CANCELLED: | |
2806 | s = ss = US"501 Authentication cancelled"; | |
2807 | break; | |
2808 | ||
2809 | case UNEXPECTED: | |
2810 | s = ss = US"553 Initial data not expected"; | |
2811 | break; | |
2812 | ||
2813 | case FAIL: | |
2814 | s = US"535 Incorrect authentication data"; | |
2815 | ss = string_sprintf("535 Incorrect authentication data%s", set_id); | |
2816 | break; | |
2817 | ||
2818 | default: | |
2819 | s = US"435 Internal error"; | |
2820 | ss = string_sprintf("435 Internal error%s: return %d from authentication " | |
2821 | "check", set_id, c); | |
2822 | break; | |
2823 | } | |
2824 | ||
2825 | smtp_printf("%s\r\n", s); | |
2826 | if (c != OK) | |
2827 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "%s authenticator failed for %s: %s", | |
2828 | au->name, host_and_ident(FALSE), ss); | |
2829 | ||
2830 | break; /* AUTH_CMD */ | |
2831 | ||
2832 | /* The HELO/EHLO commands are permitted to appear in the middle of a | |
2833 | session as well as at the beginning. They have the effect of a reset in | |
2834 | addition to their other functions. Their absence at the start cannot be | |
2835 | taken to be an error. | |
2836 | ||
2837 | RFC 2821 says: | |
2838 | ||
2839 | If the EHLO command is not acceptable to the SMTP server, 501, 500, | |
2840 | or 502 failure replies MUST be returned as appropriate. The SMTP | |
2841 | server MUST stay in the same state after transmitting these replies | |
2842 | that it was in before the EHLO was received. | |
2843 | ||
2844 | Therefore, we do not do the reset until after checking the command for | |
2845 | acceptability. This change was made for Exim release 4.11. Previously | |
2846 | it did the reset first. */ | |
2847 | ||
2848 | case HELO_CMD: | |
b4ed4da0 | 2849 | HAD(SCH_HELO); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2850 | hello = US"HELO"; |
2851 | esmtp = FALSE; | |
2852 | goto HELO_EHLO; | |
2853 | ||
2854 | case EHLO_CMD: | |
b4ed4da0 | 2855 | HAD(SCH_EHLO); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2856 | hello = US"EHLO"; |
2857 | esmtp = TRUE; | |
2858 | ||
2859 | HELO_EHLO: /* Common code for HELO and EHLO */ | |
2860 | cmd_list[CMD_LIST_HELO].is_mail_cmd = FALSE; | |
2861 | cmd_list[CMD_LIST_EHLO].is_mail_cmd = FALSE; | |
2862 | ||
2863 | /* Reject the HELO if its argument was invalid or non-existent. A | |
2864 | successful check causes the argument to be saved in malloc store. */ | |
2865 | ||
ca86f471 | 2866 | if (!check_helo(smtp_cmd_data)) |
059ec3d9 PH |
2867 | { |
2868 | smtp_printf("501 Syntactically invalid %s argument(s)\r\n", hello); | |
2869 | ||
2870 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "rejected %s from %s: syntactically " | |
2871 | "invalid argument(s): %s", hello, host_and_ident(FALSE), | |
3ee512ff PH |
2872 | (*smtp_cmd_argument == 0)? US"(no argument given)" : |
2873 | string_printing(smtp_cmd_argument)); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2874 | |
2875 | if (++synprot_error_count > smtp_max_synprot_errors) | |
2876 | { | |
2877 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "SMTP call from %s dropped: too many " | |
2878 | "syntax or protocol errors (last command was \"%s\")", | |
3ee512ff | 2879 | host_and_ident(FALSE), smtp_cmd_buffer); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2880 | done = 1; |
2881 | } | |
2882 | ||
2883 | break; | |
2884 | } | |
2885 | ||
2886 | /* If sender_host_unknown is true, we have got here via the -bs interface, | |
2887 | not called from inetd. Otherwise, we are running an IP connection and the | |
2888 | host address will be set. If the helo name is the primary name of this | |
2889 | host and we haven't done a reverse lookup, force one now. If helo_required | |
2890 | is set, ensure that the HELO name matches the actual host. If helo_verify | |
2891 | is set, do the same check, but softly. */ | |
2892 | ||
2893 | if (!sender_host_unknown) | |
2894 | { | |
2895 | BOOL old_helo_verified = helo_verified; | |
ca86f471 | 2896 | uschar *p = smtp_cmd_data; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2897 | |
2898 | while (*p != 0 && !isspace(*p)) { *p = tolower(*p); p++; } | |
2899 | *p = 0; | |
2900 | ||
2901 | /* Force a reverse lookup if HELO quoted something in helo_lookup_domains | |
2902 | because otherwise the log can be confusing. */ | |
2903 | ||
2904 | if (sender_host_name == NULL && | |
2905 | (deliver_domain = sender_helo_name, /* set $domain */ | |
2906 | match_isinlist(sender_helo_name, &helo_lookup_domains, 0, | |
2907 | &domainlist_anchor, NULL, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL)) == OK) | |
2908 | (void)host_name_lookup(); | |
2909 | ||
2910 | /* Rebuild the fullhost info to include the HELO name (and the real name | |
2911 | if it was looked up.) */ | |
2912 | ||
2913 | host_build_sender_fullhost(); /* Rebuild */ | |
2914 | set_process_info("handling%s incoming connection from %s", | |
2915 | (tls_active >= 0)? " TLS" : "", host_and_ident(FALSE)); | |
2916 | ||
2917 | /* Verify if configured. This doesn't give much security, but it does | |
d7b47fd0 PH |
2918 | make some people happy to be able to do it. If helo_required is set, |
2919 | (host matches helo_verify_hosts) failure forces rejection. If helo_verify | |
2920 | is set (host matches helo_try_verify_hosts), it does not. This is perhaps | |
2921 | now obsolescent, since the verification can now be requested selectively | |
2922 | at ACL time. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 2923 | |
d7b47fd0 | 2924 | helo_verified = helo_verify_failed = FALSE; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2925 | if (helo_required || helo_verify) |
2926 | { | |
d7b47fd0 | 2927 | BOOL tempfail = !smtp_verify_helo(); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2928 | if (!helo_verified) |
2929 | { | |
2930 | if (helo_required) | |
2931 | { | |
2932 | smtp_printf("%d %s argument does not match calling host\r\n", | |
2933 | tempfail? 451 : 550, hello); | |
2934 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "%srejected \"%s %s\" from %s", | |
2935 | tempfail? "temporarily " : "", | |
2936 | hello, sender_helo_name, host_and_ident(FALSE)); | |
2937 | helo_verified = old_helo_verified; | |
2938 | break; /* End of HELO/EHLO processing */ | |
2939 | } | |
2940 | HDEBUG(D_all) debug_printf("%s verification failed but host is in " | |
2941 | "helo_try_verify_hosts\n", hello); | |
2942 | } | |
2943 | } | |
2944 | } | |
2945 | ||
8523533c TK |
2946 | #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_SPF |
2947 | /* set up SPF context */ | |
2948 | spf_init(sender_helo_name, sender_host_address); | |
2949 | #endif | |
2950 | ||
a14e5636 PH |
2951 | /* Apply an ACL check if one is defined; afterwards, recheck |
2952 | synchronization in case the client started sending in a delay. */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2953 | |
2954 | if (acl_smtp_helo != NULL) | |
2955 | { | |
64ffc24f | 2956 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_HELO, NULL, acl_smtp_helo, &user_msg, &log_msg); |
059ec3d9 PH |
2957 | if (rc != OK) |
2958 | { | |
2959 | done = smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_HELO, rc, user_msg, log_msg); | |
2960 | sender_helo_name = NULL; | |
2961 | host_build_sender_fullhost(); /* Rebuild */ | |
2962 | break; | |
2963 | } | |
a14e5636 | 2964 | else if (!check_sync()) goto SYNC_FAILURE; |
059ec3d9 PH |
2965 | } |
2966 | ||
4e88a19f PH |
2967 | /* Generate an OK reply. The default string includes the ident if present, |
2968 | and also the IP address if present. Reflecting back the ident is intended | |
2969 | as a deterrent to mail forgers. For maximum efficiency, and also because | |
2970 | some broken systems expect each response to be in a single packet, arrange | |
2971 | that the entire reply is sent in one write(). */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
2972 | |
2973 | auth_advertised = FALSE; | |
2974 | pipelining_advertised = FALSE; | |
2975 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
2976 | tls_advertised = FALSE; | |
2977 | #endif | |
2978 | ||
d6a96edc | 2979 | smtp_code = US"250 "; /* Default response code plus space*/ |
4e88a19f PH |
2980 | if (user_msg == NULL) |
2981 | { | |
2982 | s = string_sprintf("%.3s %s Hello %s%s%s", | |
2983 | smtp_code, | |
2984 | smtp_active_hostname, | |
2985 | (sender_ident == NULL)? US"" : sender_ident, | |
2986 | (sender_ident == NULL)? US"" : US" at ", | |
2987 | (sender_host_name == NULL)? sender_helo_name : sender_host_name); | |
2988 | ||
2989 | ptr = Ustrlen(s); | |
2990 | size = ptr + 1; | |
059ec3d9 | 2991 | |
4e88a19f PH |
2992 | if (sender_host_address != NULL) |
2993 | { | |
2994 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US" [", 2); | |
2995 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, sender_host_address, | |
2996 | Ustrlen(sender_host_address)); | |
2997 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US"]", 1); | |
2998 | } | |
2999 | } | |
3000 | ||
d6a96edc PH |
3001 | /* A user-supplied EHLO greeting may not contain more than one line. Note |
3002 | that the code returned by smtp_message_code() includes the terminating | |
3003 | whitespace character. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 3004 | |
4e88a19f | 3005 | else |
059ec3d9 | 3006 | { |
4e88a19f | 3007 | char *ss; |
d6a96edc | 3008 | int codelen = 4; |
4e88a19f | 3009 | smtp_message_code(&smtp_code, &codelen, &user_msg, NULL); |
d6a96edc | 3010 | s = string_sprintf("%.*s%s", codelen, smtp_code, user_msg); |
4e88a19f PH |
3011 | if ((ss = strpbrk(CS s, "\r\n")) != NULL) |
3012 | { | |
3013 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "EHLO/HELO response must not contain " | |
3014 | "newlines: message truncated: %s", string_printing(s)); | |
3015 | *ss = 0; | |
3016 | } | |
3017 | ptr = Ustrlen(s); | |
3018 | size = ptr + 1; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3019 | } |
3020 | ||
3021 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US"\r\n", 2); | |
3022 | ||
3023 | /* If we received EHLO, we must create a multiline response which includes | |
3024 | the functions supported. */ | |
3025 | ||
3026 | if (esmtp) | |
3027 | { | |
3028 | s[3] = '-'; | |
3029 | ||
3030 | /* I'm not entirely happy with this, as an MTA is supposed to check | |
3031 | that it has enough room to accept a message of maximum size before | |
3032 | it sends this. However, there seems little point in not sending it. | |
3033 | The actual size check happens later at MAIL FROM time. By postponing it | |
3034 | till then, VRFY and EXPN can be used after EHLO when space is short. */ | |
3035 | ||
3036 | if (thismessage_size_limit > 0) | |
3037 | { | |
4e88a19f PH |
3038 | sprintf(CS big_buffer, "%.3s-SIZE %d\r\n", smtp_code, |
3039 | thismessage_size_limit); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3040 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, big_buffer, Ustrlen(big_buffer)); |
3041 | } | |
3042 | else | |
3043 | { | |
4e88a19f PH |
3044 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, smtp_code, 3); |
3045 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US"-SIZE\r\n", 7); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3046 | } |
3047 | ||
3048 | /* Exim does not do protocol conversion or data conversion. It is 8-bit | |
3049 | clean; if it has an 8-bit character in its hand, it just sends it. It | |
3050 | cannot therefore specify 8BITMIME and remain consistent with the RFCs. | |
3051 | However, some users want this option simply in order to stop MUAs | |
3052 | mangling messages that contain top-bit-set characters. It is therefore | |
3053 | provided as an option. */ | |
3054 | ||
3055 | if (accept_8bitmime) | |
4e88a19f PH |
3056 | { |
3057 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, smtp_code, 3); | |
3058 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US"-8BITMIME\r\n", 11); | |
3059 | } | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3060 | |
3061 | /* Advertise ETRN if there's an ACL checking whether a host is | |
3062 | permitted to issue it; a check is made when any host actually tries. */ | |
3063 | ||
3064 | if (acl_smtp_etrn != NULL) | |
3065 | { | |
4e88a19f PH |
3066 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, smtp_code, 3); |
3067 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US"-ETRN\r\n", 7); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3068 | } |
3069 | ||
3070 | /* Advertise EXPN if there's an ACL checking whether a host is | |
3071 | permitted to issue it; a check is made when any host actually tries. */ | |
3072 | ||
3073 | if (acl_smtp_expn != NULL) | |
3074 | { | |
4e88a19f PH |
3075 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, smtp_code, 3); |
3076 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US"-EXPN\r\n", 7); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3077 | } |
3078 | ||
3079 | /* Exim is quite happy with pipelining, so let the other end know that | |
3080 | it is safe to use it, unless advertising is disabled. */ | |
3081 | ||
cf8b11a5 PH |
3082 | if (pipelining_enable && |
3083 | verify_check_host(&pipelining_advertise_hosts) == OK) | |
059ec3d9 | 3084 | { |
4e88a19f PH |
3085 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, smtp_code, 3); |
3086 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US"-PIPELINING\r\n", 13); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3087 | sync_cmd_limit = NON_SYNC_CMD_PIPELINING; |
3088 | pipelining_advertised = TRUE; | |
3089 | } | |
3090 | ||
3091 | /* If any server authentication mechanisms are configured, advertise | |
3092 | them if the current host is in auth_advertise_hosts. The problem with | |
3093 | advertising always is that some clients then require users to | |
3094 | authenticate (and aren't configurable otherwise) even though it may not | |
3095 | be necessary (e.g. if the host is in host_accept_relay). | |
3096 | ||
3097 | RFC 2222 states that SASL mechanism names contain only upper case | |
3098 | letters, so output the names in upper case, though we actually recognize | |
3099 | them in either case in the AUTH command. */ | |
3100 | ||
3101 | if (auths != NULL) | |
3102 | { | |
3103 | if (verify_check_host(&auth_advertise_hosts) == OK) | |
3104 | { | |
3105 | auth_instance *au; | |
3106 | BOOL first = TRUE; | |
3107 | for (au = auths; au != NULL; au = au->next) | |
3108 | { | |
3109 | if (au->server && (au->advertise_condition == NULL || | |
3110 | expand_check_condition(au->advertise_condition, au->name, | |
3111 | US"authenticator"))) | |
3112 | { | |
3113 | int saveptr; | |
3114 | if (first) | |
3115 | { | |
4e88a19f PH |
3116 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, smtp_code, 3); |
3117 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US"-AUTH", 5); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3118 | first = FALSE; |
3119 | auth_advertised = TRUE; | |
3120 | } | |
3121 | saveptr = ptr; | |
3122 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US" ", 1); | |
3123 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, au->public_name, | |
3124 | Ustrlen(au->public_name)); | |
3125 | while (++saveptr < ptr) s[saveptr] = toupper(s[saveptr]); | |
3126 | au->advertised = TRUE; | |
3127 | } | |
3128 | else au->advertised = FALSE; | |
3129 | } | |
3130 | if (!first) s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US"\r\n", 2); | |
3131 | } | |
3132 | } | |
3133 | ||
3134 | /* Advertise TLS (Transport Level Security) aka SSL (Secure Socket Layer) | |
3135 | if it has been included in the binary, and the host matches | |
3136 | tls_advertise_hosts. We must *not* advertise if we are already in a | |
3137 | secure connection. */ | |
3138 | ||
3139 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
3140 | if (tls_active < 0 && | |
3141 | verify_check_host(&tls_advertise_hosts) != FAIL) | |
3142 | { | |
4e88a19f PH |
3143 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, smtp_code, 3); |
3144 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US"-STARTTLS\r\n", 11); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3145 | tls_advertised = TRUE; |
3146 | } | |
3147 | #endif | |
3148 | ||
3149 | /* Finish off the multiline reply with one that is always available. */ | |
3150 | ||
4e88a19f PH |
3151 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, smtp_code, 3); |
3152 | s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US" HELP\r\n", 7); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3153 | } |
3154 | ||
3155 | /* Terminate the string (for debug), write it, and note that HELO/EHLO | |
3156 | has been seen. */ | |
3157 | ||
3158 | s[ptr] = 0; | |
3159 | ||
3160 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
3161 | if (tls_active >= 0) (void)tls_write(s, ptr); else | |
3162 | #endif | |
3163 | ||
f1e894f3 | 3164 | (void)fwrite(s, 1, ptr, smtp_out); |
898d150f PH |
3165 | DEBUG(D_receive) |
3166 | { | |
3167 | uschar *cr; | |
3168 | while ((cr = Ustrchr(s, '\r')) != NULL) /* lose CRs */ | |
3169 | memmove(cr, cr + 1, (ptr--) - (cr - s)); | |
3170 | debug_printf("SMTP>> %s", s); | |
3171 | } | |
059ec3d9 | 3172 | helo_seen = TRUE; |
4e88a19f PH |
3173 | |
3174 | /* Reset the protocol and the state, abandoning any previous message. */ | |
3175 | ||
3176 | received_protocol = (esmtp? | |
3177 | protocols[pextend + | |
3178 | ((sender_host_authenticated != NULL)? pauthed : 0) + | |
3179 | ((tls_active >= 0)? pcrpted : 0)] | |
3180 | : | |
3181 | protocols[pnormal + ((tls_active >= 0)? pcrpted : 0)]) | |
3182 | + | |
3183 | ((sender_host_address != NULL)? pnlocal : 0); | |
3184 | ||
3185 | smtp_reset(reset_point); | |
3186 | toomany = FALSE; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3187 | break; /* HELO/EHLO */ |
3188 | ||
3189 | ||
3190 | /* The MAIL command requires an address as an operand. All we do | |
3191 | here is to parse it for syntactic correctness. The form "<>" is | |
3192 | a special case which converts into an empty string. The start/end | |
3193 | pointers in the original are not used further for this address, as | |
3194 | it is the canonical extracted address which is all that is kept. */ | |
3195 | ||
3196 | case MAIL_CMD: | |
b4ed4da0 | 3197 | HAD(SCH_MAIL); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3198 | smtp_mailcmd_count++; /* Count for limit and ratelimit */ |
3199 | was_rej_mail = TRUE; /* Reset if accepted */ | |
3200 | ||
3201 | if (helo_required && !helo_seen) | |
3202 | { | |
3203 | smtp_printf("503 HELO or EHLO required\r\n"); | |
3204 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "rejected MAIL from %s: no " | |
3205 | "HELO/EHLO given", host_and_ident(FALSE)); | |
3206 | break; | |
3207 | } | |
3208 | ||
3209 | if (sender_address != NULL) | |
3210 | { | |
3211 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_protocol_error, 503, NULL, | |
3212 | US"sender already given"); | |
3213 | break; | |
3214 | } | |
3215 | ||
ca86f471 | 3216 | if (smtp_cmd_data[0] == 0) |
059ec3d9 PH |
3217 | { |
3218 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_protocol_error, 501, NULL, | |
3219 | US"MAIL must have an address operand"); | |
3220 | break; | |
3221 | } | |
3222 | ||
3223 | /* Check to see if the limit for messages per connection would be | |
3224 | exceeded by accepting further messages. */ | |
3225 | ||
3226 | if (smtp_accept_max_per_connection > 0 && | |
3227 | smtp_mailcmd_count > smtp_accept_max_per_connection) | |
3228 | { | |
3229 | smtp_printf("421 too many messages in this connection\r\n"); | |
3230 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "rejected MAIL command %s: too many " | |
3231 | "messages in one connection", host_and_ident(TRUE)); | |
3232 | break; | |
3233 | } | |
3234 | ||
3235 | /* Reset for start of message - even if this is going to fail, we | |
3236 | obviously need to throw away any previous data. */ | |
3237 | ||
3238 | smtp_reset(reset_point); | |
3239 | toomany = FALSE; | |
3240 | sender_data = recipient_data = NULL; | |
3241 | ||
3242 | /* Loop, checking for ESMTP additions to the MAIL FROM command. */ | |
3243 | ||
3244 | if (esmtp) for(;;) | |
3245 | { | |
3246 | uschar *name, *value, *end; | |
3247 | unsigned long int size; | |
3248 | ||
3249 | if (!extract_option(&name, &value)) break; | |
3250 | ||
3251 | /* Handle SIZE= by reading the value. We don't do the check till later, | |
3252 | in order to be able to log the sender address on failure. */ | |
3253 | ||
3254 | if (strcmpic(name, US"SIZE") == 0 && | |
a4dc33a8 | 3255 | ((size = Ustrtoul(value, &end, 10)), *end == 0)) |
059ec3d9 PH |
3256 | { |
3257 | if ((size == ULONG_MAX && errno == ERANGE) || size > INT_MAX) | |
3258 | size = INT_MAX; | |
3259 | message_size = (int)size; | |
3260 | } | |
3261 | ||
3262 | /* If this session was initiated with EHLO and accept_8bitmime is set, | |
3263 | Exim will have indicated that it supports the BODY=8BITMIME option. In | |
3264 | fact, it does not support this according to the RFCs, in that it does not | |
3265 | take any special action for forwarding messages containing 8-bit | |
3266 | characters. That is why accept_8bitmime is not the default setting, but | |
3267 | some sites want the action that is provided. We recognize both "8BITMIME" | |
3268 | and "7BIT" as body types, but take no action. */ | |
3269 | ||
3270 | else if (accept_8bitmime && strcmpic(name, US"BODY") == 0 && | |
3271 | (strcmpic(value, US"8BITMIME") == 0 || | |
3272 | strcmpic(value, US"7BIT") == 0)) {} | |
3273 | ||
3274 | /* Handle the AUTH extension. If the value given is not "<>" and either | |
3275 | the ACL says "yes" or there is no ACL but the sending host is | |
3276 | authenticated, we set it up as the authenticated sender. However, if the | |
3277 | authenticator set a condition to be tested, we ignore AUTH on MAIL unless | |
3278 | the condition is met. The value of AUTH is an xtext, which means that +, | |
3279 | = and cntrl chars are coded in hex; however "<>" is unaffected by this | |
3280 | coding. */ | |
3281 | ||
3282 | else if (strcmpic(name, US"AUTH") == 0) | |
3283 | { | |
3284 | if (Ustrcmp(value, "<>") != 0) | |
3285 | { | |
3286 | int rc; | |
3287 | uschar *ignore_msg; | |
3288 | ||
3289 | if (auth_xtextdecode(value, &authenticated_sender) < 0) | |
3290 | { | |
3291 | /* Put back terminator overrides for error message */ | |
3292 | name[-1] = ' '; | |
3293 | value[-1] = '='; | |
3294 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_syntax_error, 501, NULL, | |
3295 | US"invalid data for AUTH"); | |
3296 | goto COMMAND_LOOP; | |
3297 | } | |
3298 | ||
3299 | if (acl_smtp_mailauth == NULL) | |
3300 | { | |
3301 | ignore_msg = US"client not authenticated"; | |
3302 | rc = (sender_host_authenticated != NULL)? OK : FAIL; | |
3303 | } | |
3304 | else | |
3305 | { | |
3306 | ignore_msg = US"rejected by ACL"; | |
3307 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_MAILAUTH, NULL, acl_smtp_mailauth, | |
3308 | &user_msg, &log_msg); | |
3309 | } | |
3310 | ||
3311 | switch (rc) | |
3312 | { | |
3313 | case OK: | |
3314 | if (authenticated_by == NULL || | |
3315 | authenticated_by->mail_auth_condition == NULL || | |
3316 | expand_check_condition(authenticated_by->mail_auth_condition, | |
3317 | authenticated_by->name, US"authenticator")) | |
3318 | break; /* Accept the AUTH */ | |
3319 | ||
3320 | ignore_msg = US"server_mail_auth_condition failed"; | |
3321 | if (authenticated_id != NULL) | |
3322 | ignore_msg = string_sprintf("%s: authenticated ID=\"%s\"", | |
3323 | ignore_msg, authenticated_id); | |
3324 | ||
3325 | /* Fall through */ | |
3326 | ||
3327 | case FAIL: | |
3328 | authenticated_sender = NULL; | |
3329 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "ignoring AUTH=%s from %s (%s)", | |
3330 | value, host_and_ident(TRUE), ignore_msg); | |
3331 | break; | |
3332 | ||
3333 | /* Should only get DEFER or ERROR here. Put back terminator | |
3334 | overrides for error message */ | |
3335 | ||
3336 | default: | |
3337 | name[-1] = ' '; | |
3338 | value[-1] = '='; | |
3339 | (void)smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_MAILAUTH, rc, user_msg, | |
3340 | log_msg); | |
3341 | goto COMMAND_LOOP; | |
3342 | } | |
3343 | } | |
3344 | } | |
3345 | ||
3346 | /* Unknown option. Stick back the terminator characters and break | |
3347 | the loop. An error for a malformed address will occur. */ | |
3348 | ||
3349 | else | |
3350 | { | |
3351 | name[-1] = ' '; | |
3352 | value[-1] = '='; | |
3353 | break; | |
3354 | } | |
3355 | } | |
3356 | ||
3357 | /* If we have passed the threshold for rate limiting, apply the current | |
3358 | delay, and update it for next time, provided this is a limited host. */ | |
3359 | ||
3360 | if (smtp_mailcmd_count > smtp_rlm_threshold && | |
3361 | verify_check_host(&smtp_ratelimit_hosts) == OK) | |
3362 | { | |
3363 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("rate limit MAIL: delay %.3g sec\n", | |
3364 | smtp_delay_mail/1000.0); | |
3365 | millisleep((int)smtp_delay_mail); | |
3366 | smtp_delay_mail *= smtp_rlm_factor; | |
3367 | if (smtp_delay_mail > (double)smtp_rlm_limit) | |
3368 | smtp_delay_mail = (double)smtp_rlm_limit; | |
3369 | } | |
3370 | ||
3371 | /* Now extract the address, first applying any SMTP-time rewriting. The | |
3372 | TRUE flag allows "<>" as a sender address. */ | |
3373 | ||
3374 | raw_sender = ((rewrite_existflags & rewrite_smtp) != 0)? | |
ca86f471 PH |
3375 | rewrite_one(smtp_cmd_data, rewrite_smtp, NULL, FALSE, US"", |
3376 | global_rewrite_rules) : smtp_cmd_data; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3377 | |
3378 | /* rfc821_domains = TRUE; << no longer needed */ | |
3379 | raw_sender = | |
3380 | parse_extract_address(raw_sender, &errmess, &start, &end, &sender_domain, | |
3381 | TRUE); | |
3382 | /* rfc821_domains = FALSE; << no longer needed */ | |
3383 | ||
3384 | if (raw_sender == NULL) | |
3385 | { | |
ca86f471 | 3386 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_syntax_error, 501, smtp_cmd_data, errmess); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3387 | break; |
3388 | } | |
3389 | ||
3390 | sender_address = raw_sender; | |
3391 | ||
3392 | /* If there is a configured size limit for mail, check that this message | |
3393 | doesn't exceed it. The check is postponed to this point so that the sender | |
3394 | can be logged. */ | |
3395 | ||
3396 | if (thismessage_size_limit > 0 && message_size > thismessage_size_limit) | |
3397 | { | |
3398 | smtp_printf("552 Message size exceeds maximum permitted\r\n"); | |
3399 | log_write(L_size_reject, | |
3400 | LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "rejected MAIL FROM:<%s> %s: " | |
3401 | "message too big: size%s=%d max=%d", | |
3402 | sender_address, | |
3403 | host_and_ident(TRUE), | |
3404 | (message_size == INT_MAX)? ">" : "", | |
3405 | message_size, | |
3406 | thismessage_size_limit); | |
3407 | sender_address = NULL; | |
3408 | break; | |
3409 | } | |
3410 | ||
3411 | /* Check there is enough space on the disk unless configured not to. | |
3412 | When smtp_check_spool_space is set, the check is for thismessage_size_limit | |
3413 | plus the current message - i.e. we accept the message only if it won't | |
3414 | reduce the space below the threshold. Add 5000 to the size to allow for | |
3415 | overheads such as the Received: line and storing of recipients, etc. | |
3416 | By putting the check here, even when SIZE is not given, it allow VRFY | |
3417 | and EXPN etc. to be used when space is short. */ | |
3418 | ||
3419 | if (!receive_check_fs( | |
3420 | (smtp_check_spool_space && message_size >= 0)? | |
3421 | message_size + 5000 : 0)) | |
3422 | { | |
3423 | smtp_printf("452 Space shortage, please try later\r\n"); | |
3424 | sender_address = NULL; | |
3425 | break; | |
3426 | } | |
3427 | ||
3428 | /* If sender_address is unqualified, reject it, unless this is a locally | |
3429 | generated message, or the sending host or net is permitted to send | |
3430 | unqualified addresses - typically local machines behaving as MUAs - | |
3431 | in which case just qualify the address. The flag is set above at the start | |
3432 | of the SMTP connection. */ | |
3433 | ||
3434 | if (sender_domain == 0 && sender_address[0] != 0) | |
3435 | { | |
3436 | if (allow_unqualified_sender) | |
3437 | { | |
3438 | sender_domain = Ustrlen(sender_address) + 1; | |
3439 | sender_address = rewrite_address_qualify(sender_address, FALSE); | |
3440 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("unqualified address %s accepted\n", | |
3441 | raw_sender); | |
3442 | } | |
3443 | else | |
3444 | { | |
3445 | smtp_printf("501 %s: sender address must contain a domain\r\n", | |
ca86f471 | 3446 | smtp_cmd_data); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3447 | log_write(L_smtp_syntax_error, |
3448 | LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, | |
3449 | "unqualified sender rejected: <%s> %s%s", | |
3450 | raw_sender, | |
3451 | host_and_ident(TRUE), | |
3452 | host_lookup_msg); | |
3453 | sender_address = NULL; | |
3454 | break; | |
3455 | } | |
3456 | } | |
3457 | ||
a14e5636 PH |
3458 | /* Apply an ACL check if one is defined, before responding. Afterwards, |
3459 | when pipelining is not advertised, do another sync check in case the ACL | |
3460 | delayed and the client started sending in the meantime. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 3461 | |
a14e5636 PH |
3462 | if (acl_smtp_mail == NULL) rc = OK; else |
3463 | { | |
3464 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_MAIL, NULL, acl_smtp_mail, &user_msg, &log_msg); | |
3465 | if (rc == OK && !pipelining_advertised && !check_sync()) | |
3466 | goto SYNC_FAILURE; | |
3467 | } | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3468 | |
3469 | if (rc == OK || rc == DISCARD) | |
3470 | { | |
4e88a19f PH |
3471 | if (user_msg == NULL) smtp_printf("250 OK\r\n"); |
3472 | else smtp_user_msg(US"250", user_msg); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3473 | smtp_delay_rcpt = smtp_rlr_base; |
3474 | recipients_discarded = (rc == DISCARD); | |
3475 | was_rej_mail = FALSE; | |
3476 | } | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3477 | else |
3478 | { | |
3479 | done = smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_MAIL, rc, user_msg, log_msg); | |
3480 | sender_address = NULL; | |
3481 | } | |
3482 | break; | |
3483 | ||
3484 | ||
2679d413 PH |
3485 | /* The RCPT command requires an address as an operand. There may be any |
3486 | number of RCPT commands, specifying multiple recipients. We build them all | |
3487 | into a data structure. The start/end values given by parse_extract_address | |
3488 | are not used, as we keep only the extracted address. */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3489 | |
3490 | case RCPT_CMD: | |
b4ed4da0 | 3491 | HAD(SCH_RCPT); |
059ec3d9 | 3492 | rcpt_count++; |
2679d413 | 3493 | was_rcpt = rcpt_in_progress = TRUE; |
059ec3d9 PH |
3494 | |
3495 | /* There must be a sender address; if the sender was rejected and | |
3496 | pipelining was advertised, we assume the client was pipelining, and do not | |
3497 | count this as a protocol error. Reset was_rej_mail so that further RCPTs | |
3498 | get the same treatment. */ | |
3499 | ||
3500 | if (sender_address == NULL) | |
3501 | { | |
3502 | if (pipelining_advertised && last_was_rej_mail) | |
3503 | { | |
3504 | smtp_printf("503 sender not yet given\r\n"); | |
3505 | was_rej_mail = TRUE; | |
3506 | } | |
3507 | else | |
3508 | { | |
3509 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_protocol_error, 503, NULL, | |
3510 | US"sender not yet given"); | |
3511 | was_rcpt = FALSE; /* Not a valid RCPT */ | |
3512 | } | |
3513 | rcpt_fail_count++; | |
3514 | break; | |
3515 | } | |
3516 | ||
3517 | /* Check for an operand */ | |
3518 | ||
ca86f471 | 3519 | if (smtp_cmd_data[0] == 0) |
059ec3d9 PH |
3520 | { |
3521 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_syntax_error, 501, NULL, | |
3522 | US"RCPT must have an address operand"); | |
3523 | rcpt_fail_count++; | |
3524 | break; | |
3525 | } | |
3526 | ||
3527 | /* Apply SMTP rewriting then extract the working address. Don't allow "<>" | |
3528 | as a recipient address */ | |
3529 | ||
3530 | recipient = ((rewrite_existflags & rewrite_smtp) != 0)? | |
ca86f471 PH |
3531 | rewrite_one(smtp_cmd_data, rewrite_smtp, NULL, FALSE, US"", |
3532 | global_rewrite_rules) : smtp_cmd_data; | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3533 | |
3534 | /* rfc821_domains = TRUE; << no longer needed */ | |
3535 | recipient = parse_extract_address(recipient, &errmess, &start, &end, | |
3536 | &recipient_domain, FALSE); | |
3537 | /* rfc821_domains = FALSE; << no longer needed */ | |
3538 | ||
3539 | if (recipient == NULL) | |
3540 | { | |
ca86f471 | 3541 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_syntax_error, 501, smtp_cmd_data, errmess); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3542 | rcpt_fail_count++; |
3543 | break; | |
3544 | } | |
3545 | ||
3546 | /* If the recipient address is unqualified, reject it, unless this is a | |
3547 | locally generated message. However, unqualified addresses are permitted | |
3548 | from a configured list of hosts and nets - typically when behaving as | |
3549 | MUAs rather than MTAs. Sad that SMTP is used for both types of traffic, | |
3550 | really. The flag is set at the start of the SMTP connection. | |
3551 | ||
3552 | RFC 1123 talks about supporting "the reserved mailbox postmaster"; I always | |
3553 | assumed this meant "reserved local part", but the revision of RFC 821 and | |
3554 | friends now makes it absolutely clear that it means *mailbox*. Consequently | |
3555 | we must always qualify this address, regardless. */ | |
3556 | ||
3557 | if (recipient_domain == 0) | |
3558 | { | |
3559 | if (allow_unqualified_recipient || | |
3560 | strcmpic(recipient, US"postmaster") == 0) | |
3561 | { | |
3562 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("unqualified address %s accepted\n", | |
3563 | recipient); | |
3564 | recipient_domain = Ustrlen(recipient) + 1; | |
3565 | recipient = rewrite_address_qualify(recipient, TRUE); | |
3566 | } | |
3567 | else | |
3568 | { | |
3569 | rcpt_fail_count++; | |
3570 | smtp_printf("501 %s: recipient address must contain a domain\r\n", | |
ca86f471 | 3571 | smtp_cmd_data); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3572 | log_write(L_smtp_syntax_error, |
3573 | LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "unqualified recipient rejected: " | |
3574 | "<%s> %s%s", recipient, host_and_ident(TRUE), | |
3575 | host_lookup_msg); | |
3576 | break; | |
3577 | } | |
3578 | } | |
3579 | ||
3580 | /* Check maximum allowed */ | |
3581 | ||
3582 | if (rcpt_count > recipients_max && recipients_max > 0) | |
3583 | { | |
3584 | if (recipients_max_reject) | |
3585 | { | |
3586 | rcpt_fail_count++; | |
3587 | smtp_printf("552 too many recipients\r\n"); | |
3588 | if (!toomany) | |
3589 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "too many recipients: message " | |
3590 | "rejected: sender=<%s> %s", sender_address, host_and_ident(TRUE)); | |
3591 | } | |
3592 | else | |
3593 | { | |
3594 | rcpt_defer_count++; | |
3595 | smtp_printf("452 too many recipients\r\n"); | |
3596 | if (!toomany) | |
3597 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "too many recipients: excess " | |
3598 | "temporarily rejected: sender=<%s> %s", sender_address, | |
3599 | host_and_ident(TRUE)); | |
3600 | } | |
3601 | ||
3602 | toomany = TRUE; | |
3603 | break; | |
3604 | } | |
3605 | ||
3606 | /* If we have passed the threshold for rate limiting, apply the current | |
3607 | delay, and update it for next time, provided this is a limited host. */ | |
3608 | ||
3609 | if (rcpt_count > smtp_rlr_threshold && | |
3610 | verify_check_host(&smtp_ratelimit_hosts) == OK) | |
3611 | { | |
3612 | DEBUG(D_receive) debug_printf("rate limit RCPT: delay %.3g sec\n", | |
3613 | smtp_delay_rcpt/1000.0); | |
3614 | millisleep((int)smtp_delay_rcpt); | |
3615 | smtp_delay_rcpt *= smtp_rlr_factor; | |
3616 | if (smtp_delay_rcpt > (double)smtp_rlr_limit) | |
3617 | smtp_delay_rcpt = (double)smtp_rlr_limit; | |
3618 | } | |
3619 | ||
3620 | /* If the MAIL ACL discarded all the recipients, we bypass ACL checking | |
a14e5636 PH |
3621 | for them. Otherwise, check the access control list for this recipient. As |
3622 | there may be a delay in this, re-check for a synchronization error | |
3623 | afterwards, unless pipelining was advertised. */ | |
059ec3d9 | 3624 | |
a14e5636 PH |
3625 | if (recipients_discarded) rc = DISCARD; else |
3626 | { | |
3627 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_RCPT, recipient, acl_smtp_rcpt, &user_msg, | |
3628 | &log_msg); | |
3629 | if (rc == OK && !pipelining_advertised && !check_sync()) | |
3630 | goto SYNC_FAILURE; | |
3631 | } | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3632 | |
3633 | /* The ACL was happy */ | |
3634 | ||
3635 | if (rc == OK) | |
3636 | { | |
4e88a19f PH |
3637 | if (user_msg == NULL) smtp_printf("250 Accepted\r\n"); |
3638 | else smtp_user_msg(US"250", user_msg); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3639 | receive_add_recipient(recipient, -1); |
3640 | } | |
3641 | ||
3642 | /* The recipient was discarded */ | |
3643 | ||
3644 | else if (rc == DISCARD) | |
3645 | { | |
4e88a19f PH |
3646 | if (user_msg == NULL) smtp_printf("250 Accepted\r\n"); |
3647 | else smtp_user_msg(US"250", user_msg); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3648 | rcpt_fail_count++; |
3649 | discarded = TRUE; | |
3650 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_REJECT, "%s F=<%s> rejected RCPT %s: " | |
3651 | "discarded by %s ACL%s%s", host_and_ident(TRUE), | |
3652 | (sender_address_unrewritten != NULL)? | |
3653 | sender_address_unrewritten : sender_address, | |
3ee512ff | 3654 | smtp_cmd_argument, recipients_discarded? "MAIL" : "RCPT", |
059ec3d9 PH |
3655 | (log_msg == NULL)? US"" : US": ", |
3656 | (log_msg == NULL)? US"" : log_msg); | |
3657 | } | |
3658 | ||
3659 | /* Either the ACL failed the address, or it was deferred. */ | |
3660 | ||
3661 | else | |
3662 | { | |
3663 | if (rc == FAIL) rcpt_fail_count++; else rcpt_defer_count++; | |
3664 | done = smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_RCPT, rc, user_msg, log_msg); | |
3665 | } | |
3666 | break; | |
3667 | ||
3668 | ||
3669 | /* The DATA command is legal only if it follows successful MAIL FROM | |
3670 | and RCPT TO commands. However, if pipelining is advertised, a bad DATA is | |
3671 | not counted as a protocol error if it follows RCPT (which must have been | |
3672 | rejected if there are no recipients.) This function is complete when a | |
3673 | valid DATA command is encountered. | |
3674 | ||
3675 | Note concerning the code used: RFC 2821 says this: | |
3676 | ||
3677 | - If there was no MAIL, or no RCPT, command, or all such commands | |
3678 | were rejected, the server MAY return a "command out of sequence" | |
3679 | (503) or "no valid recipients" (554) reply in response to the | |
3680 | DATA command. | |
3681 | ||
3682 | The example in the pipelining RFC 2920 uses 554, but I use 503 here | |
2679d413 PH |
3683 | because it is the same whether pipelining is in use or not. |
3684 | ||
3685 | If all the RCPT commands that precede DATA provoked the same error message | |
3686 | (often indicating some kind of system error), it is helpful to include it | |
3687 | with the DATA rejection (an idea suggested by Tony Finch). */ | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3688 | |
3689 | case DATA_CMD: | |
b4ed4da0 | 3690 | HAD(SCH_DATA); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3691 | if (!discarded && recipients_count <= 0) |
3692 | { | |
2679d413 PH |
3693 | if (rcpt_smtp_response_same && rcpt_smtp_response != NULL) |
3694 | { | |
3695 | uschar *code = US"503"; | |
3696 | int len = Ustrlen(rcpt_smtp_response); | |
3697 | smtp_respond(code, 3, FALSE, US"All RCPT commands were rejected with " | |
3698 | "this error:"); | |
3699 | /* Responses from smtp_printf() will have \r\n on the end */ | |
3700 | if (len > 2 && rcpt_smtp_response[len-2] == '\r') | |
3701 | rcpt_smtp_response[len-2] = 0; | |
3702 | smtp_respond(code, 3, FALSE, rcpt_smtp_response); | |
3703 | } | |
059ec3d9 | 3704 | if (pipelining_advertised && last_was_rcpt) |
2679d413 | 3705 | smtp_printf("503 Valid RCPT command must precede DATA\r\n"); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3706 | else |
3707 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_protocol_error, 503, NULL, | |
3708 | US"valid RCPT command must precede DATA"); | |
3709 | break; | |
3710 | } | |
3711 | ||
3712 | if (toomany && recipients_max_reject) | |
3713 | { | |
3714 | sender_address = NULL; /* This will allow a new MAIL without RSET */ | |
3715 | sender_address_unrewritten = NULL; | |
3716 | smtp_printf("554 Too many recipients\r\n"); | |
3717 | break; | |
3718 | } | |
8e669ac1 | 3719 | |
a14e5636 PH |
3720 | /* If there is an ACL, re-check the synchronization afterwards, since the |
3721 | ACL may have delayed. */ | |
3722 | ||
5be20824 | 3723 | if (acl_smtp_predata == NULL) rc = OK; else |
8e669ac1 | 3724 | { |
5be20824 | 3725 | enable_dollar_recipients = TRUE; |
8e669ac1 | 3726 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_PREDATA, NULL, acl_smtp_predata, &user_msg, |
5be20824 PH |
3727 | &log_msg); |
3728 | enable_dollar_recipients = FALSE; | |
a14e5636 | 3729 | if (rc == OK && !check_sync()) goto SYNC_FAILURE; |
5be20824 | 3730 | } |
059ec3d9 PH |
3731 | |
3732 | if (rc == OK) | |
3733 | { | |
4e88a19f PH |
3734 | if (user_msg == NULL) |
3735 | smtp_printf("354 Enter message, ending with \".\" on a line by itself\r\n"); | |
3736 | else smtp_user_msg(US"354", user_msg); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3737 | done = 3; |
3738 | message_ended = END_NOTENDED; /* Indicate in middle of data */ | |
3739 | } | |
3740 | ||
3741 | /* Either the ACL failed the address, or it was deferred. */ | |
3742 | ||
3743 | else | |
3744 | done = smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_PREDATA, rc, user_msg, log_msg); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3745 | break; |
3746 | ||
3747 | ||
3748 | case VRFY_CMD: | |
b4ed4da0 | 3749 | HAD(SCH_VRFY); |
64ffc24f | 3750 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_VRFY, NULL, acl_smtp_vrfy, &user_msg, &log_msg); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3751 | if (rc != OK) |
3752 | done = smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_VRFY, rc, user_msg, log_msg); | |
3753 | else | |
3754 | { | |
3755 | uschar *address; | |
3756 | uschar *s = NULL; | |
3757 | ||
3758 | /* rfc821_domains = TRUE; << no longer needed */ | |
ca86f471 | 3759 | address = parse_extract_address(smtp_cmd_data, &errmess, &start, &end, |
059ec3d9 PH |
3760 | &recipient_domain, FALSE); |
3761 | /* rfc821_domains = FALSE; << no longer needed */ | |
3762 | ||
3763 | if (address == NULL) | |
3764 | s = string_sprintf("501 %s", errmess); | |
3765 | else | |
3766 | { | |
3767 | address_item *addr = deliver_make_addr(address, FALSE); | |
3768 | switch(verify_address(addr, NULL, vopt_is_recipient | vopt_qualify, -1, | |
4deaf07d | 3769 | -1, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL)) |
059ec3d9 PH |
3770 | { |
3771 | case OK: | |
3772 | s = string_sprintf("250 <%s> is deliverable", address); | |
3773 | break; | |
3774 | ||
3775 | case DEFER: | |
81e509d7 PH |
3776 | s = (addr->user_message != NULL)? |
3777 | string_sprintf("451 <%s> %s", address, addr->user_message) : | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3778 | string_sprintf("451 Cannot resolve <%s> at this time", address); |
3779 | break; | |
3780 | ||
3781 | case FAIL: | |
81e509d7 PH |
3782 | s = (addr->user_message != NULL)? |
3783 | string_sprintf("550 <%s> %s", address, addr->user_message) : | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3784 | string_sprintf("550 <%s> is not deliverable", address); |
3785 | log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "VRFY failed for %s %s", | |
3ee512ff | 3786 | smtp_cmd_argument, host_and_ident(TRUE)); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3787 | break; |
3788 | } | |
3789 | } | |
3790 | ||
3791 | smtp_printf("%s\r\n", s); | |
3792 | } | |
3793 | break; | |
3794 | ||
3795 | ||
3796 | case EXPN_CMD: | |
b4ed4da0 | 3797 | HAD(SCH_EXPN); |
64ffc24f | 3798 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_EXPN, NULL, acl_smtp_expn, &user_msg, &log_msg); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3799 | if (rc != OK) |
3800 | done = smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_EXPN, rc, user_msg, log_msg); | |
3801 | else | |
3802 | { | |
3803 | BOOL save_log_testing_mode = log_testing_mode; | |
3804 | address_test_mode = log_testing_mode = TRUE; | |
ca86f471 | 3805 | (void) verify_address(deliver_make_addr(smtp_cmd_data, FALSE), |
64ffc24f PH |
3806 | smtp_out, vopt_is_recipient | vopt_qualify | vopt_expn, -1, -1, -1, |
3807 | NULL, NULL, NULL); | |
059ec3d9 PH |
3808 | address_test_mode = FALSE; |
3809 | log_testing_mode = save_log_testing_mode; /* true for -bh */ | |
3810 | } | |
3811 | break; | |
3812 | ||
3813 | ||
3814 | #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS | |
3815 | ||
3816 | case STARTTLS_CMD: | |
b4ed4da0 | 3817 | HAD(SCH_STARTTLS); |
059ec3d9 PH |
3818 | if (!tls_advertised) |
3819 | { | |
3820 | done = synprot_error(L_smtp_protocol_error, 503, NULL, | |
3821 | US"STARTTLS command used when not advertised"); | |
3822 | break; | |
3823 | } | |
3824 | ||
3825 | /* Apply an ACL check if one is defined */ | |
3826 | ||
3827 | if (acl_smtp_starttls != NULL) | |
3828 | { | |
3829 | rc = acl_check(ACL_WHERE_STARTTLS, NULL, acl_smtp_starttls, &user_msg, | |
3830 | &log_msg); | |
3831 | if (rc != OK) | |
3832 | { | |
3833 | done = smtp_handle_acl_fail(ACL_WHERE_STARTTLS, rc, user_msg, log_msg); | |
3834 | break; | |
3835 | } | |
3836 | } | |
3837 | ||
3838 | /* RFC 2487 is not clear on when this command may be sent, though it | |
3839 | does state that all information previously obtained from the client | |
3840 | must be discarded if a TLS session is started. It seems reasonble to | |
3841 | do an implied RSET when STARTTLS is received. */ | |
3842 | ||