DocĂ– Fix typo about spf lookup (experimental)
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1From time to time, experimental features may be added to Exim.
2While a feature is experimental, there will be a build-time
3option whose name starts "EXPERIMENTAL_" that must be set in
4order to include the feature. This file contains information
5about experimental features, all of which are unstable and
6liable to incompatible change.
7
8
9Brightmail AntiSpam (BMI) support
10--------------------------------------------------------------
11
12Brightmail AntiSpam is a commercial package. Please see
13http://www.brightmail.com for more information on
14the product. For the sake of clarity, we'll refer to it as
15"BMI" from now on.
16
17
180) BMI concept and implementation overview
19
20In contrast to how spam-scanning with SpamAssassin is
21implemented in exiscan-acl, BMI is more suited for per
22-recipient scanning of messages. However, each messages is
23scanned only once, but multiple "verdicts" for multiple
24recipients can be returned from the BMI server. The exiscan
25implementation passes the message to the BMI server just
26before accepting it. It then adds the retrieved verdicts to
27the messages header file in the spool. These verdicts can then
28be queried in routers, where operation is per-recipient
29instead of per-message. To use BMI, you need to take the
30following steps:
31
32 1) Compile Exim with BMI support
33 2) Set up main BMI options (top section of Exim config file)
34 3) Set up ACL control statement (ACL section of the config
35 file)
36 4) Set up your routers to use BMI verdicts (routers section
37 of the config file).
38 5) (Optional) Set up per-recipient opt-in information.
39
40These four steps are explained in more details below.
41
421) Adding support for BMI at compile time
43
44 To compile with BMI support, you need to link Exim against
45 the Brightmail client SDK, consisting of a library
46 (libbmiclient_single.so) and a header file (bmi_api.h).
47 You'll also need to explicitly set a flag in the Makefile to
48 include BMI support in the Exim binary. Both can be achieved
49 with these lines in Local/Makefile:
50
51 EXPERIMENTAL_BRIGHTMAIL=yes
52 CFLAGS=-I/path/to/the/dir/with/the/includefile
53 EXTRALIBS_EXIM=-L/path/to/the/dir/with/the/library -lbmiclient_single
54
55 If you use other CFLAGS or EXTRALIBS_EXIM settings then
56 merge the content of these lines with them.
57
58 Note for BMI6.x users: You'll also have to add -lxml2_single
59 to the EXTRALIBS_EXIM line. Users of 5.5x do not need to do
60 this.
61
62 You should also include the location of
63 libbmiclient_single.so in your dynamic linker configuration
64 file (usually /etc/ld.so.conf) and run "ldconfig"
65 afterwards, or else the produced Exim binary will not be
66 able to find the library file.
67
68
692) Setting up BMI support in the Exim main configuration
70
71 To enable BMI support in the main Exim configuration, you
72 should set the path to the main BMI configuration file with
73 the "bmi_config_file" option, like this:
74
75 bmi_config_file = /opt/brightmail/etc/brightmail.cfg
76
77 This must go into section 1 of Exim's configuration file (You
78 can put it right on top). If you omit this option, it
79 defaults to /opt/brightmail/etc/brightmail.cfg.
80
81 Note for BMI6.x users: This file is in XML format in V6.xx
82 and its name is /opt/brightmail/etc/bmiconfig.xml. So BMI
83 6.x users MUST set the bmi_config_file option.
84
85
863) Set up ACL control statement
87
88 To optimize performance, it makes sense only to process
89 messages coming from remote, untrusted sources with the BMI
90 server. To set up a messages for processing by the BMI
91 server, you MUST set the "bmi_run" control statement in any
92 ACL for an incoming message. You will typically do this in
93 an "accept" block in the "acl_check_rcpt" ACL. You should
94 use the "accept" block(s) that accept messages from remote
95 servers for your own domain(s). Here is an example that uses
96 the "accept" blocks from Exim's default configuration file:
97
98
99 accept domains = +local_domains
100 endpass
101 verify = recipient
102 control = bmi_run
103
104 accept domains = +relay_to_domains
105 endpass
106 verify = recipient
107 control = bmi_run
108
109 If bmi_run is not set in any ACL during reception of the
110 message, it will NOT be passed to the BMI server.
111
112
1134) Setting up routers to use BMI verdicts
114
115 When a message has been run through the BMI server, one or
116 more "verdicts" are present. Different recipients can have
117 different verdicts. Each recipient is treated individually
118 during routing, so you can query the verdicts by recipient
119 at that stage. From Exim's view, a verdict can have the
120 following outcomes:
121
122 o deliver the message normally
123 o deliver the message to an alternate location
124 o do not deliver the message
125
126 To query the verdict for a recipient, the implementation
127 offers the following tools:
128
129
130 - Boolean router preconditions. These can be used in any
131 router. For a simple implementation of BMI, these may be
132 all that you need. The following preconditions are
133 available:
134
135 o bmi_deliver_default
136
137 This precondition is TRUE if the verdict for the
138 recipient is to deliver the message normally. If the
139 message has not been processed by the BMI server, this
140 variable defaults to TRUE.
141
142 o bmi_deliver_alternate
143
144 This precondition is TRUE if the verdict for the
145 recipient is to deliver the message to an alternate
146 location. You can get the location string from the
147 $bmi_alt_location expansion variable if you need it. See
148 further below. If the message has not been processed by
149 the BMI server, this variable defaults to FALSE.
150
151 o bmi_dont_deliver
152
153 This precondition is TRUE if the verdict for the
154 recipient is NOT to deliver the message to the
155 recipient. You will typically use this precondition in a
156 top-level blackhole router, like this:
157
158 # don't deliver messages handled by the BMI server
159 bmi_blackhole:
160 driver = redirect
161 bmi_dont_deliver
162 data = :blackhole:
163
164 This router should be on top of all others, so messages
165 that should not be delivered do not reach other routers
166 at all. If the message has not been processed by
167 the BMI server, this variable defaults to FALSE.
168
169
170 - A list router precondition to query if rules "fired" on
171 the message for the recipient. Its name is "bmi_rule". You
172 use it by passing it a colon-separated list of rule
173 numbers. You can use this condition to route messages that
174 matched specific rules. Here is an example:
175
176 # special router for BMI rule #5, #8 and #11
177 bmi_rule_redirect:
178 driver = redirect
179 bmi_rule = 5:8:11
180 data = postmaster@mydomain.com
181
182
183 - Expansion variables. Several expansion variables are set
184 during routing. You can use them in custom router
185 conditions, for example. The following variables are
186 available:
187
188 o $bmi_base64_verdict
189
190 This variable will contain the BASE64 encoded verdict
191 for the recipient being routed. You can use it to add a
192 header to messages for tracking purposes, for example:
193
194 localuser:
195 driver = accept
196 check_local_user
197 headers_add = X-Brightmail-Verdict: $bmi_base64_verdict
198 transport = local_delivery
199
200 If there is no verdict available for the recipient being
201 routed, this variable contains the empty string.
202
203 o $bmi_base64_tracker_verdict
204
205 This variable will contain a BASE64 encoded subset of
206 the verdict information concerning the "rules" that
207 fired on the message. You can add this string to a
208 header, commonly named "X-Brightmail-Tracker". Example:
209
210 localuser:
211 driver = accept
212 check_local_user
213 headers_add = X-Brightmail-Tracker: $bmi_base64_tracker_verdict
214 transport = local_delivery
215
216 If there is no verdict available for the recipient being
217 routed, this variable contains the empty string.
218
219 o $bmi_alt_location
220
221 If the verdict is to redirect the message to an
222 alternate location, this variable will contain the
223 alternate location string returned by the BMI server. In
224 its default configuration, this is a header-like string
225 that can be added to the message with "headers_add". If
226 there is no verdict available for the recipient being
227 routed, or if the message is to be delivered normally,
228 this variable contains the empty string.
229
230 o $bmi_deliver
231
232 This is an additional integer variable that can be used
233 to query if the message should be delivered at all. You
234 should use router preconditions instead if possible.
235
236 $bmi_deliver is '0': the message should NOT be delivered.
237 $bmi_deliver is '1': the message should be delivered.
238
239
240 IMPORTANT NOTE: Verdict inheritance.
241 The message is passed to the BMI server during message
242 reception, using the target addresses from the RCPT TO:
243 commands in the SMTP transaction. If recipients get expanded
244 or re-written (for example by aliasing), the new address(es)
245 inherit the verdict from the original address. This means
246 that verdicts also apply to all "child" addresses generated
247 from top-level addresses that were sent to the BMI server.
248
249
2505) Using per-recipient opt-in information (Optional)
251
252 The BMI server features multiple scanning "profiles" for
253 individual recipients. These are usually stored in a LDAP
254 server and are queried by the BMI server itself. However,
255 you can also pass opt-in data for each recipient from the
256 MTA to the BMI server. This is particularly useful if you
257 already look up recipient data in Exim anyway (which can
258 also be stored in a SQL database or other source). This
259 implementation enables you to pass opt-in data to the BMI
260 server in the RCPT ACL. This works by setting the
261 'bmi_optin' modifier in a block of that ACL. If should be
262 set to a list of comma-separated strings that identify the
263 features which the BMI server should use for that particular
264 recipient. Ideally, you would use the 'bmi_optin' modifier
265 in the same ACL block where you set the 'bmi_run' control
266 flag. Here is an example that will pull opt-in data for each
267 recipient from a flat file called
268 '/etc/exim/bmi_optin_data'.
269
270 The file format:
271
272 user1@mydomain.com: <OPTIN STRING1>:<OPTIN STRING2>
273 user2@thatdomain.com: <OPTIN STRING3>
274
275
276 The example:
277
278 accept domains = +relay_to_domains
279 endpass
280 verify = recipient
281 bmi_optin = ${lookup{$local_part@$domain}lsearch{/etc/exim/bmi_optin_data}}
282 control = bmi_run
283
284 Of course, you can also use any other lookup method that
285 Exim supports, including LDAP, Postgres, MySQL, Oracle etc.,
286 as long as the result is a list of colon-separated opt-in
287 strings.
288
289 For a list of available opt-in strings, please contact your
290 Brightmail representative.
291
292
293
294
295Sender Policy Framework (SPF) support
296--------------------------------------------------------------
297
298To learn more about SPF, visit http://www.openspf.org. This
299document does not explain the SPF fundamentals, you should
300read and understand the implications of deploying SPF on your
301system before doing so.
302
303SPF support is added via the libspf2 library. Visit
304
305 http://www.libspf2.org/
306
307to obtain a copy, then compile and install it. By default,
308this will put headers in /usr/local/include and the static
309library in /usr/local/lib.
310
311To compile Exim with SPF support, set these additional flags in
312Local/Makefile:
313
314EXPERIMENTAL_SPF=yes
315CFLAGS=-DSPF -I/usr/local/include
316EXTRALIBS_EXIM=-L/usr/local/lib -lspf2
317
318This assumes that the libspf2 files are installed in
319their default locations.
320
321You can now run SPF checks in incoming SMTP by using the "spf"
322ACL condition in either the MAIL, RCPT or DATA ACLs. When
323using it in the RCPT ACL, you can make the checks dependent on
324the RCPT address (or domain), so you can check SPF records
325only for certain target domains. This gives you the
326possibility to opt-out certain customers that do not want
327their mail to be subject to SPF checking.
328
329The spf condition takes a list of strings on its right-hand
330side. These strings describe the outcome of the SPF check for
331which the spf condition should succeed. Valid strings are:
332
333 o pass The SPF check passed, the sending host
334 is positively verified by SPF.
335 o fail The SPF check failed, the sending host
336 is NOT allowed to send mail for the domain
337 in the envelope-from address.
338 o softfail The SPF check failed, but the queried
339 domain can't absolutely confirm that this
340 is a forgery.
341 o none The queried domain does not publish SPF
342 records.
343 o neutral The SPF check returned a "neutral" state.
344 This means the queried domain has published
345 a SPF record, but wants to allow outside
346 servers to send mail under its domain as well.
347 This should be treated like "none".
348 o permerror This indicates a syntax error in the SPF
349 record of the queried domain. You may deny
350 messages when this occurs. (Changed in 4.83)
351 o temperror This indicates a temporary error during all
352 processing, including Exim's SPF processing.
353 You may defer messages when this occurs.
354 (Changed in 4.83)
355 o err_temp Same as permerror, deprecated in 4.83, will be
356 removed in a future release.
357 o err_perm Same as temperror, deprecated in 4.83, will be
358 removed in a future release.
359
360You can prefix each string with an exclamation mark to invert
361its meaning, for example "!fail" will match all results but
362"fail". The string list is evaluated left-to-right, in a
363short-circuit fashion. When a string matches the outcome of
364the SPF check, the condition succeeds. If none of the listed
365strings matches the outcome of the SPF check, the condition
366fails.
367
368Here is an example to fail forgery attempts from domains that
369publish SPF records:
370
371/* -----------------
372deny message = $sender_host_address is not allowed to send mail from ${if def:sender_address_domain {$sender_address_domain}{$sender_helo_name}}. \
373 Please see http://www.openspf.org/Why?scope=${if def:sender_address_domain {mfrom}{helo}};identity=${if def:sender_address_domain {$sender_address}{$sender_helo_name}};ip=$sender_host_address
374 spf = fail
375--------------------- */
376
377You can also give special treatment to specific domains:
378
379/* -----------------
380deny message = AOL sender, but not from AOL-approved relay.
381 sender_domains = aol.com
382 spf = fail:neutral
383--------------------- */
384
385Explanation: AOL publishes SPF records, but is liberal and
386still allows non-approved relays to send mail from aol.com.
387This will result in a "neutral" state, while mail from genuine
388AOL servers will result in "pass". The example above takes
389this into account and treats "neutral" like "fail", but only
390for aol.com. Please note that this violates the SPF draft.
391
392When the spf condition has run, it sets up several expansion
393variables.
394
395 $spf_header_comment
396 This contains a human-readable string describing the outcome
397 of the SPF check. You can add it to a custom header or use
398 it for logging purposes.
399
400 $spf_received
401 This contains a complete Received-SPF: header that can be
402 added to the message. Please note that according to the SPF
403 draft, this header must be added at the top of the header
404 list. Please see section 10 on how you can do this.
405
406 Note: in case of "Best-guess" (see below), the convention is
407 to put this string in a header called X-SPF-Guess: instead.
408
409 $spf_result
410 This contains the outcome of the SPF check in string form,
411 one of pass, fail, softfail, none, neutral, permerror or
412 temperror.
413
414 $spf_smtp_comment
415 This contains a string that can be used in a SMTP response
416 to the calling party. Useful for "fail".
417
418In addition to SPF, you can also perform checks for so-called
419"Best-guess". Strictly speaking, "Best-guess" is not standard
420SPF, but it is supported by the same framework that enables SPF
421capability. Refer to http://www.openspf.org/FAQ/Best_guess_record
422for a description of what it means.
423
424To access this feature, simply use the spf_guess condition in place
425of the spf one. For example:
426
427/* -----------------
428deny message = $sender_host_address doesn't look trustworthy to me
429 spf_guess = fail
430--------------------- */
431
432In case you decide to reject messages based on this check, you
433should note that although it uses the same framework, "Best-guess"
434is NOT SPF, and therefore you should not mention SPF at all in your
435reject message.
436
437When the spf_guess condition has run, it sets up the same expansion
438variables as when spf condition is run, described above.
439
440Additionally, since Best-guess is not standardized, you may redefine
441what "Best-guess" means to you by redefining spf_guess variable in
442global config. For example, the following:
443
444/* -----------------
445spf_guess = v=spf1 a/16 mx/16 ptr ?all
446--------------------- */
447
448would relax host matching rules to a broader network range.
449
450
451A lookup expansion is also available. It takes an email
452address as the key and an IP address as the database:
453
454 ${lookup {username@domain} spf {ip.ip.ip.ip}}
455
456The lookup will return the same result strings as they can appear in
457$spf_result (pass,fail,softfail,neutral,none,err_perm,err_temp).
458Currently, only IPv4 addresses are supported.
459
460
461
462SRS (Sender Rewriting Scheme) Support
463--------------------------------------------------------------
464
465Exiscan currently includes SRS support via Miles Wilton's
466libsrs_alt library. The current version of the supported
467library is 0.5, there are reports of 1.0 working.
468
469In order to use SRS, you must get a copy of libsrs_alt from
470
471https://opsec.eu/src/srs/
472
473(not the original source, which has disappeared.)
474
475Unpack the tarball, then refer to MTAs/README.EXIM
476to proceed. You need to set
477
478EXPERIMENTAL_SRS=yes
479
480in your Local/Makefile.
481
482
483
484DCC Support
485--------------------------------------------------------------
486Distributed Checksum Clearinghouse; http://www.rhyolite.com/dcc/
487
488*) Building exim
489
490In order to build exim with DCC support add
491
492EXPERIMENTAL_DCC=yes
493
494to your Makefile. (Re-)build/install exim. exim -d should show
495EXPERIMENTAL_DCC under "Support for".
496
497
498*) Configuration
499
500In the main section of exim.cf add at least
501 dccifd_address = /usr/local/dcc/var/dccifd
502or
503 dccifd_address = <ip> <port>
504
505In the DATA ACL you can use the new condition
506 dcc = *
507
508After that "$dcc_header" contains the X-DCC-Header.
509
510Return values are:
511 fail for overall "R", "G" from dccifd
512 defer for overall "T" from dccifd
513 accept for overall "A", "S" from dccifd
514
515dcc = */defer_ok works as for spamd.
516
517The "$dcc_result" variable contains the overall result from DCC
518answer. There will an X-DCC: header added to the mail.
519
520Usually you'll use
521 defer !dcc = *
522to greylist with DCC.
523
524If you set, in the main section,
525 dcc_direct_add_header = true
526then the dcc header will be added "in deep" and if the spool
527file was already written it gets removed. This forces Exim to
528write it again if needed. This helps to get the DCC Header
529through to eg. SpamAssassin.
530
531If you want to pass even more headers in the middle of the
532DATA stage you can set
533 $acl_m_dcc_add_header
534to tell the DCC routines to add more information; eg, you might set
535this to some results from ClamAV. Be careful. Header syntax is
536not checked and is added "as is".
537
538In case you've troubles with sites sending the same queue items from several
539hosts and fail to get through greylisting you can use
540$acl_m_dcc_override_client_ip
541
542Setting $acl_m_dcc_override_client_ip to an IP address overrides the default
543of $sender_host_address. eg. use the following ACL in DATA stage:
544
545 warn set acl_m_dcc_override_client_ip = \
546 ${lookup{$sender_helo_name}nwildlsearch{/etc/mail/multipleip_sites}{$value}{}}
547 condition = ${if def:acl_m_dcc_override_client_ip}
548 log_message = dbg: acl_m_dcc_override_client_ip set to \
549 $acl_m_dcc_override_client_ip
550
551Then set something like
552# cat /etc/mail/multipleip_sites
553mout-xforward.gmx.net 82.165.159.12
554mout.gmx.net 212.227.15.16
555
556Use a reasonable IP. eg. one the sending cluster actually uses.
557
558DMARC Support
559--------------------------------------------------------------
560
561DMARC combines feedback from SPF, DKIM, and header From: in order
562to attempt to provide better indicators of the authenticity of an
563email. This document does not explain the fundamentals, you
564should read and understand how it works by visiting the website at
565http://www.dmarc.org/.
566
567DMARC support is added via the libopendmarc library. Visit:
568
569 http://sourceforge.net/projects/opendmarc/
570
571to obtain a copy, or find it in your favorite rpm package
572repository. If building from source, this description assumes
573that headers will be in /usr/local/include, and that the libraries
574are in /usr/local/lib.
575
5761. To compile Exim with DMARC support, you must first enable SPF.
577Please read the above section on enabling the EXPERIMENTAL_SPF
578feature. You must also have DKIM support, so you cannot set the
579DISABLE_DKIM feature. Once both of those conditions have been met
580you can enable DMARC in Local/Makefile:
581
582EXPERIMENTAL_DMARC=yes
583LDFLAGS += -lopendmarc
584# CFLAGS += -I/usr/local/include
585# LDFLAGS += -L/usr/local/lib
586
587The first line sets the feature to include the correct code, and
588the second line says to link the libopendmarc libraries into the
589exim binary. The commented out lines should be uncommented if you
590built opendmarc from source and installed in the default location.
591Adjust the paths if you installed them elsewhere, but you do not
592need to uncomment them if an rpm (or you) installed them in the
593package controlled locations (/usr/include and /usr/lib).
594
595
5962. Use the following global settings to configure DMARC:
597
598Required:
599dmarc_tld_file Defines the location of a text file of valid
600 top level domains the opendmarc library uses
601 during domain parsing. Maintained by Mozilla,
602 the most current version can be downloaded
603 from a link at http://publicsuffix.org/list/.
604
605Optional:
606dmarc_history_file Defines the location of a file to log results
607 of dmarc verification on inbound emails. The
608 contents are importable by the opendmarc tools
609 which will manage the data, send out DMARC
610 reports, and expire the data. Make sure the
611 directory of this file is writable by the user
612 exim runs as.
613
614dmarc_forensic_sender The email address to use when sending a
615 forensic report detailing alignment failures
616 if a sender domain's dmarc record specifies it
617 and you have configured Exim to send them.
618 Default: do-not-reply@$default_hostname
619
620
6213. By default, the DMARC processing will run for any remote,
622non-authenticated user. It makes sense to only verify DMARC
623status of messages coming from remote, untrusted sources. You can
624use standard conditions such as hosts, senders, etc, to decide that
625DMARC verification should *not* be performed for them and disable
626DMARC with a control setting:
627
628 control = dmarc_disable_verify
629
630A DMARC record can also specify a "forensic address", which gives
631exim an email address to submit reports about failed alignment.
632Exim does not do this by default because in certain conditions it
633results in unintended information leakage (what lists a user might
634be subscribed to, etc). You must configure exim to submit forensic
635reports to the owner of the domain. If the DMARC record contains a
636forensic address and you specify the control statement below, then
637exim will send these forensic emails. It's also advised that you
638configure a dmarc_forensic_sender because the default sender address
639construction might be inadequate.
640
641 control = dmarc_enable_forensic
642
643(AGAIN: You can choose not to send these forensic reports by simply
644not putting the dmarc_enable_forensic control line at any point in
645your exim config. If you don't tell it to send them, it will not
646send them.)
647
648There are no options to either control. Both must appear before
649the DATA acl.
650
651
6524. You can now run DMARC checks in incoming SMTP by using the
653"dmarc_status" ACL condition in the DATA ACL. You are required to
654call the spf condition first in the ACLs, then the "dmarc_status"
655condition. Putting this condition in the ACLs is required in order
656for a DMARC check to actually occur. All of the variables are set
657up before the DATA ACL, but there is no actual DMARC check that
658occurs until a "dmarc_status" condition is encountered in the ACLs.
659
660The dmarc_status condition takes a list of strings on its
661right-hand side. These strings describe recommended action based
662on the DMARC check. To understand what the policy recommendations
663mean, refer to the DMARC website above. Valid strings are:
664
665 o accept The DMARC check passed and the library recommends
666 accepting the email.
667 o reject The DMARC check failed and the library recommends
668 rejecting the email.
669 o quarantine The DMARC check failed and the library recommends
670 keeping it for further inspection.
671 o none The DMARC check passed and the library recommends
672 no specific action, neutral.
673 o norecord No policy section in the DMARC record for this
674 sender domain.
675 o nofrom Unable to determine the domain of the sender.
676 o temperror Library error or dns error.
677 o off The DMARC check was disabled for this email.
678
679You can prefix each string with an exclamation mark to invert its
680meaning, for example "!accept" will match all results but
681"accept". The string list is evaluated left-to-right in a
682short-circuit fashion. When a string matches the outcome of the
683DMARC check, the condition succeeds. If none of the listed
684strings matches the outcome of the DMARC check, the condition
685fails.
686
687Of course, you can also use any other lookup method that Exim
688supports, including LDAP, Postgres, MySQL, etc, as long as the
689result is a list of colon-separated strings.
690
691Several expansion variables are set before the DATA ACL is
692processed, and you can use them in this ACL. The following
693expansion variables are available:
694
695 o $dmarc_status
696 This is a one word status indicating what the DMARC library
697 thinks of the email. It is a combination of the results of
698 DMARC record lookup and the SPF/DKIM/DMARC processing results
699 (if a DMARC record was found). The actual policy declared
700 in the DMARC record is in a separate expansion variable.
701
702 o $dmarc_status_text
703 This is a slightly longer, human readable status.
704
705 o $dmarc_used_domain
706 This is the domain which DMARC used to look up the DMARC
707 policy record.
708
709 o $dmarc_domain_policy
710 This is the policy declared in the DMARC record. Valid values
711 are "none", "reject" and "quarantine". It is blank when there
712 is any error, including no DMARC record.
713
714 o $dmarc_ar_header
715 This is the entire Authentication-Results header which you can
716 add using an add_header modifier.
717
718
7195. How to enable DMARC advanced operation:
720By default, Exim's DMARC configuration is intended to be
721non-intrusive and conservative. To facilitate this, Exim will not
722create any type of logging files without explicit configuration by
723you, the admin. Nor will Exim send out any emails/reports about
724DMARC issues without explicit configuration by you, the admin (other
725than typical bounce messages that may come about due to ACL
726processing or failure delivery issues).
727
728In order to log statistics suitable to be imported by the opendmarc
729tools, you need to:
730a. Configure the global setting dmarc_history_file.
731b. Configure cron jobs to call the appropriate opendmarc history
732 import scripts and truncating the dmarc_history_file.
733
734In order to send forensic reports, you need to:
735a. Configure the global setting dmarc_forensic_sender.
736b. Configure, somewhere before the DATA ACL, the control option to
737 enable sending DMARC forensic reports.
738
739
7406. Example usage:
741(RCPT ACL)
742 warn domains = +local_domains
743 hosts = +local_hosts
744 control = dmarc_disable_verify
745
746 warn !domains = +screwed_up_dmarc_records
747 control = dmarc_enable_forensic
748
749 warn condition = (lookup if destined to mailing list)
750 set acl_m_mailing_list = 1
751
752(DATA ACL)
753 warn dmarc_status = accept : none : off
754 !authenticated = *
755 log_message = DMARC DEBUG: $dmarc_status $dmarc_used_domain
756 add_header = $dmarc_ar_header
757
758 warn dmarc_status = !accept
759 !authenticated = *
760 log_message = DMARC DEBUG: '$dmarc_status' for $dmarc_used_domain
761
762 warn dmarc_status = quarantine
763 !authenticated = *
764 set $acl_m_quarantine = 1
765 # Do something in a transport with this flag variable
766
767 deny condition = ${if eq{$dmarc_domain_policy}{reject}}
768 condition = ${if eq{$acl_m_mailing_list}{1}}
769 message = Messages from $dmarc_used_domain break mailing lists
770
771 deny dmarc_status = reject
772 !authenticated = *
773 message = Message from $dmarc_used_domain failed sender's DMARC policy, REJECT
774
775
776
777DANE
778------------------------------------------------------------
779DNS-based Authentication of Named Entities, as applied
780to SMTP over TLS, provides assurance to a client that
781it is actually talking to the server it wants to rather
782than some attacker operating a Man In The Middle (MITM)
783operation. The latter can terminate the TLS connection
784you make, and make another one to the server (so both
785you and the server still think you have an encrypted
786connection) and, if one of the "well known" set of
787Certificate Authorities has been suborned - something
788which *has* been seen already (2014), a verifiable
789certificate (if you're using normal root CAs, eg. the
790Mozilla set, as your trust anchors).
791
792What DANE does is replace the CAs with the DNS as the
793trust anchor. The assurance is limited to a) the possibility
794that the DNS has been suborned, b) mistakes made by the
795admins of the target server. The attack surface presented
796by (a) is thought to be smaller than that of the set
797of root CAs.
798
799It also allows the server to declare (implicitly) that
800connections to it should use TLS. An MITM could simply
801fail to pass on a server's STARTTLS.
802
803DANE scales better than having to maintain (and
804side-channel communicate) copies of server certificates
805for every possible target server. It also scales
806(slightly) better than having to maintain on an SMTP
807client a copy of the standard CAs bundle. It also
808means not having to pay a CA for certificates.
809
810DANE requires a server operator to do three things:
8111) run DNSSEC. This provides assurance to clients
812that DNS lookups they do for the server have not
813been tampered with. The domain MX record applying
814to this server, its A record, its TLSA record and
815any associated CNAME records must all be covered by
816DNSSEC.
8172) add TLSA DNS records. These say what the server
818certificate for a TLS connection should be.
8193) offer a server certificate, or certificate chain,
820in TLS connections which is traceable to the one
821defined by (one of?) the TSLA records
822
823There are no changes to Exim specific to server-side
824operation of DANE.
825
826The TLSA record for the server may have "certificate
827usage" of DANE-TA(2) or DANE-EE(3). The latter specifies
828the End Entity directly, i.e. the certificate involved
829is that of the server (and should be the sole one transmitted
830during the TLS handshake); this is appropriate for a
831single system, using a self-signed certificate.
832 DANE-TA usage is effectively declaring a specific CA
833to be used; this might be a private CA or a public,
834well-known one. A private CA at simplest is just
835a self-signed certificate which is used to sign
836cerver certificates, but running one securely does
837require careful arrangement. If a private CA is used
838then either all clients must be primed with it, or
839(probably simpler) the server TLS handshake must transmit
840the entire certificate chain from CA to server-certificate.
841If a public CA is used then all clients must be primed with it
842(losing one advantage of DANE) - but the attack surface is
843reduced from all public CAs to that single CA.
844DANE-TA is commonly used for several services and/or
845servers, each having a TLSA query-domain CNAME record,
846all of which point to a single TLSA record.
847
848The TLSA record should have a Selector field of SPKI(1)
849and a Matching Type field of SHA2-512(2).
850
851At the time of writing, https://www.huque.com/bin/gen_tlsa
852is useful for quickly generating TLSA records; and commands like
853
854 openssl x509 -in -pubkey -noout <certificate.pem \
855 | openssl rsa -outform der -pubin 2>/dev/null \
856 | openssl sha512 \
857 | awk '{print $2}'
858
859are workable for 4th-field hashes.
860
861For use with the DANE-TA model, server certificates
862must have a correct name (SubjectName or SubjectAltName).
863
864The use of OCSP-stapling should be considered, allowing
865for fast revocation of certificates (which would otherwise
866be limited by the DNS TTL on the TLSA records). However,
867this is likely to only be usable with DANE-TA. NOTE: the
868default of requesting OCSP for all hosts is modified iff
869DANE is in use, to:
870
871 hosts_request_ocsp = ${if or { {= {0}{$tls_out_tlsa_usage}} \
872 {= {4}{$tls_out_tlsa_usage}} } \
873 {*}{}}
874
875The (new) variable $tls_out_tlsa_usage is a bitfield with
876numbered bits set for TLSA record usage codes.
877The zero above means DANE was not in use,
878the four means that only DANE-TA usage TLSA records were
879found. If the definition of hosts_request_ocsp includes the
880string "tls_out_tlsa_usage", they are re-expanded in time to
881control the OCSP request.
882
883This modification of hosts_request_ocsp is only done if
884it has the default value of "*". Admins who change it, and
885those who use hosts_require_ocsp, should consider the interaction
886with DANE in their OCSP settings.
887
888
889For client-side DANE there are two new smtp transport options,
890hosts_try_dane and hosts_require_dane.
891[ should they be domain-based rather than host-based? ]
892
893Hosts_require_dane will result in failure if the target host
894is not DNSSEC-secured.
895
896DANE will only be usable if the target host has DNSSEC-secured
897MX, A and TLSA records.
898
899A TLSA lookup will be done if either of the above options match
900and the host-lookup succeeded using dnssec.
901If a TLSA lookup is done and succeeds, a DANE-verified TLS connection
902will be required for the host. If it does not, the host will not
903be used; there is no fallback to non-DANE or non-TLS.
904
905If DANE is requested and useable (see above) the following transport
906options are ignored:
907 hosts_require_tls
908 tls_verify_hosts
909 tls_try_verify_hosts
910 tls_verify_certificates
911 tls_crl
912 tls_verify_cert_hostnames
913
914If DANE is not usable, whether requested or not, and CA-anchored
915verification evaluation is wanted, the above variables should be set
916appropriately.
917
918Currently dnssec_request_domains must be active (need to think about that)
919and dnssec_require_domains is ignored.
920
921If verification was successful using DANE then the "CV" item
922in the delivery log line will show as "CV=dane".
923
924There is a new variable $tls_out_dane which will have "yes" if
925verification succeeded using DANE and "no" otherwise (only useful
926in combination with EXPERIMENTAL_EVENT), and a new variable
927$tls_out_tlsa_usage (detailed above).
928
929
930
931DSN extra information
932---------------------
933If compiled with EXPERIMENTAL_DSN_INFO extra information will be added
934to DSN fail messages ("bounces"), when available. The intent is to aid
935tracing of specific failing messages, when presented with a "bounce"
936complaint and needing to search logs.
937
938
939The remote MTA IP address, with port number if nonstandard.
940Example:
941 Remote-MTA: X-ip; [127.0.0.1]:587
942Rationale:
943 Several addresses may correspond to the (already available)
944 dns name for the remote MTA.
945
946The remote MTA connect-time greeting.
947Example:
948 X-Remote-MTA-smtp-greeting: X-str; 220 the.local.host.name ESMTP Exim x.yz Tue, 2 Mar 1999 09:44:33 +0000
949Rationale:
950 This string sometimes presents the remote MTA's idea of its
951 own name, and sometimes identifies the MTA software.
952
953The remote MTA response to HELO or EHLO.
954Example:
955 X-Remote-MTA-helo-response: X-str; 250-the.local.host.name Hello localhost [127.0.0.1]
956Limitations:
957 Only the first line of a multiline response is recorded.
958Rationale:
959 This string sometimes presents the remote MTA's view of
960 the peer IP connecting to it.
961
962The reporting MTA detailed diagnostic.
963Example:
964 X-Exim-Diagnostic: X-str; SMTP error from remote mail server after RCPT TO:<d3@myhost.test.ex>: 550 hard error
965Rationale:
966 This string sometimes give extra information over the
967 existing (already available) Diagnostic-Code field.
968
969
970Note that non-RFC-documented field names and data types are used.
971
972
973LMDB Lookup support
974-------------------
975LMDB is an ultra-fast, ultra-compact, crash-proof key-value embedded data store.
976It is modeled loosely on the BerkeleyDB API. You should read about the feature
977set as well as operation modes at https://symas.com/products/lightning-memory-mapped-database/
978
979LMDB single key lookup support is provided by linking to the LMDB C library.
980The current implementation does not support writing to the LMDB database.
981
982Visit https://github.com/LMDB/lmdb to download the library or find it in your
983operating systems package repository.
984
985If building from source, this description assumes that headers will be in
986/usr/local/include, and that the libraries are in /usr/local/lib.
987
9881. In order to build exim with LMDB lookup support add or uncomment
989
990EXPERIMENTAL_LMDB=yes
991
992to your Local/Makefile. (Re-)build/install exim. exim -d should show
993Experimental_LMDB in the line "Support for:".
994
995EXPERIMENTAL_LMDB=yes
996LDFLAGS += -llmdb
997# CFLAGS += -I/usr/local/include
998# LDFLAGS += -L/usr/local/lib
999
1000The first line sets the feature to include the correct code, and
1001the second line says to link the LMDB libraries into the
1002exim binary. The commented out lines should be uncommented if you
1003built LMDB from source and installed in the default location.
1004Adjust the paths if you installed them elsewhere, but you do not
1005need to uncomment them if an rpm (or you) installed them in the
1006package controlled locations (/usr/include and /usr/lib).
1007
10082. Create your LMDB files, you can use the mdb_load utility which is
1009part of the LMDB distribution our your favourite language bindings.
1010
10113. Add the single key lookups to your exim.conf file, example lookups
1012are below.
1013
1014${lookup{$sender_address_domain}lmdb{/var/lib/baruwa/data/db/relaydomains.mdb}{$value}}
1015${lookup{$sender_address_domain}lmdb{/var/lib/baruwa/data/db/relaydomains.mdb}{$value}fail}
1016${lookup{$sender_address_domain}lmdb{/var/lib/baruwa/data/db/relaydomains.mdb}}
1017
1018
1019Queuefile transport
1020-------------------
1021Queuefile is a pseudo transport which does not perform final delivery.
1022It simply copies the exim spool files out of the spool directory into
1023an external directory retaining the exim spool format.
1024
1025The spool files can then be processed by external processes and then
1026requeued into exim spool directories for final delivery.
1027
1028The motivation/inspiration for the transport is to allow external
1029processes to access email queued by exim and have access to all the
1030information which would not be available if the messages were delivered
1031to the process in the standard email formats.
1032
1033The mailscanner package is one of the processes that can take advantage
1034of this transport to filter email.
1035
1036The transport can be used in the same way as the other existing transports,
1037i.e by configuring a router to route mail to a transport configured with
1038the queuefile driver.
1039
1040The transport only takes one option:
1041
1042* directory - This is used to specify the directory messages should be
1043copied to
1044
1045The generic transport options (body_only, current_directory, disable_logging,
1046debug_print, delivery_date_add, envelope_to_add, event_action, group,
1047headers_add, headers_only, headers_remove, headers_rewrite, home_directory,
1048initgroups, max_parallel, message_size_limit, rcpt_include_affixes,
1049retry_use_local_part, return_path, return_path_add, shadow_condition,
1050shadow_transport, transport_filter, transport_filter_timeout, user) are
1051ignored.
1052
1053Sample configuration:
1054
1055(Router)
1056
1057scan:
1058 driver = accept
1059 transport = scan
1060
1061(Transport)
1062
1063scan:
1064 driver = queuefile
1065 directory = /var/spool/baruwa-scanner/input
1066
1067
1068In order to build exim with Queuefile transport support add or uncomment
1069
1070EXPERIMENTAL_QUEUEFILE=yes
1071
1072to your Local/Makefile. (Re-)build/install exim. exim -d should show
1073Experimental_QUEUEFILE in the line "Support for:".
1074
1075
1076--------------------------------------------------------------
1077End of file
1078--------------------------------------------------------------