First pass update for 4.60 documentation.
[exim.git] / doc / doc-docbook / filter.ascd
1 ///
2 $Cambridge: exim/doc/doc-docbook/filter.ascd,v 1.2 2005/11/10 12:30:13 ph10 Exp $
3
4 This file contains the Asciidoc source for the document that describes Exim's
5 filtering facilities from a user's point of view. See the file AdMarkup.txt for
6 an explanation of the markup that is used. It is more or less standard
7 Asciidoc, but with a few changes and additions.
8 ///
9
10
11 ///
12 This preliminary stuff creates a <bookinfo> entry in the XML. This is removed
13 when creating the PostScript/PDF output, because we do not want a full-blown
14 title page created for those versions. The stylesheet fudges up a title line to
15 replace the text "Table of contents". However, for the other forms of output,
16 the <bookinfo> element is retained and used.
17 ///
18
19 Exim's interfaces to mail filtering
20 ===================================
21 :author: Philip Hazel
22 :copyright: University of Cambridge
23 :cpyear: 2005
24 :date: 06 October 2005
25 :doctitleabbrev: Exim filtering
26 :revision: 4.60
27
28
29 //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
30 ***WARNING*** Do not put anything, not even a titleabbrev setting, before
31 the first chapter (luckily it does not need one) because if you do, AsciiDoc
32 creates an empty <preface> element, which we do not want.
33 //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
34
35
36 Forwarding and filtering in Exim
37 --------------------------------
38
39 This document describes the user interfaces to Exim's in-built mail filtering
40 facilities, and is copyright (C) University of Cambridge 2005. It corresponds
41 to Exim version 4.60.
42
43
44
45 Introduction
46 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
47 Most Unix mail transfer agents (programs that deliver mail) permit individual
48 users to specify automatic forwarding of their mail, usually by placing a list
49 of forwarding addresses in a file called '.forward' in their home directories.
50 Exim extends this facility by allowing the forwarding instructions to be a set
51 of rules rather than just a list of addresses, in effect providing ``'.forward'
52 with conditions''. Operating the set of rules is called 'filtering', and the
53 file that contains them is called a 'filter file'.
54
55 Exim supports two different kinds of filter file. An 'Exim filter' contains
56 instructions in a format that is unique to Exim. A 'Sieve filter' contains
57 instructions in the Sieve format that is defined by RFC 3028. As this is a
58 standard format, Sieve filter files may already be familiar to some users.
59 Sieve files should also be portable between different environments. However,
60 the Exim filtering facility contains more features (such as variable
61 expansion), and better integration with the host environment (such as the use
62 of external processes and pipes).
63
64 The choice of which kind of filter to use can be left to the end-user, provided
65 that the system administrator has configured Exim appropriately for both kinds
66 of filter. However, if interoperability is important, Sieve is the only
67 choice.
68
69 The ability to use filtering or traditional forwarding has to be enabled by the
70 system administrator, and some of the individual facilities can be separately
71 enabled or disabled. A local document should be provided to describe exactly
72 what has been enabled. In the absence of this, consult your system
73 administrator.
74
75 This document describes how to use a filter file and the format of its
76 contents. It is intended for use by end-users. Both Sieve filters and Exim
77 filters are covered. However, for Sieve filters, only issues that relate to the
78 Exim implementation are discussed, since Sieve itself is described elsewhere.
79
80 The contents of traditional '.forward' files are not described here. They
81 normally contain just a list of addresses, file names, or pipe commands,
82 separated by commas or newlines, but other types of item are also available.
83 The full details can be found in the chapter on the ^redirect^ router in the
84 Exim specification, which also describes how the system administrator can set
85 up and control the use of filtering.
86
87
88
89 Filter operation
90 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
91 It is important to realize that, in Exim, no deliveries are actually made while
92 a filter or traditional '.forward' file is being processed. Running a filter
93 or processing a traditional '.forward' file sets up future delivery
94 operations, but does not carry them out.
95
96 The result of filter or '.forward' file processing is a list of destinations
97 to which a message should be delivered. The deliveries themselves take place
98 later, along with all other deliveries for the message. This means that it is
99 not possible to test for successful deliveries while filtering. It also means
100 that any duplicate addresses that are generated are dropped, because Exim never
101 delivers the same message to the same address more than once.
102
103
104
105
106 [[SECTtesting]]
107 Testing a new filter file
108 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
109 Filter files, especially the more complicated ones, should always be tested, as
110 it is easy to make mistakes. Exim provides a facility for preliminary testing
111 of a filter file before installing it. This tests the syntax of the file and
112 its basic operation, and can also be used with traditional '.forward' files.
113
114 Because a filter can do tests on the content of messages, a test message is
115 required. Suppose you have a new filter file called 'myfilter' and a test
116 message called 'test-message'. Assuming that Exim is installed with the
117 conventional path name '/usr/sbin/sendmail' (some operating systems use
118 '/usr/lib/sendmail'), the following command can be used:
119
120 /usr/sbin/sendmail -bf myfilter <test-message
121
122 The %-bf% option tells Exim that the following item on the command line is the
123 name of a filter file that is to be tested. There is also a %-bF% option,
124 which is similar, but which is used for testing system filter files, as opposed
125 to user filter files, and which is therefore of use only to the system
126 administrator.
127
128 The test message is supplied on the standard input. If there are no
129 message-dependent tests in the filter, an empty file ('/dev/null') can be
130 used. A supplied message must start with header lines or the ``From'' message
131 separator line which is found in many multi-message folder files. Note that
132 blank lines at the start terminate the header lines. A warning is given if no
133 header lines are read.
134
135 The result of running this command, provided no errors are detected in the
136 filter file, is a list of the actions that Exim would try to take if presented
137 with the message for real.
138 For example, for an Exim filter, the output
139
140 Deliver message to: gulliver@lilliput.fict.example
141 Save message to: /home/lemuel/mail/archive
142
143 means that one copy of the message would be sent to
144 'gulliver@lilliput.fict.example', and another would be added to the file
145 _/home/lemuel/mail/archive_, if all went well.
146
147 The actions themselves are not attempted while testing a filter file in this
148 way; there is no check, for example, that any forwarding addresses are valid.
149 For an Exim filter,
150 if you want to know why a particular action is being taken, add the %-v%
151 option to the command. This causes Exim to output the results of any
152 conditional tests and to indent its output according to the depth of nesting of
153 ^if^ commands. Further additional output from a filter test can be generated
154 by the ^testprint^ command, which is described below.
155
156 When Exim is outputting a list of the actions it would take, if any text
157 strings are included in the output, non-printing characters therein are
158 converted to escape sequences. In particular, if any text string contains a
159 newline character, this is shown as ``\n'' in the testing output.
160
161 When testing a filter in this way, Exim makes up an ``envelope'' for the message.
162 The recipient is by default the user running the command, and so is the sender,
163 but the command can be run with the %-f% option to supply a different sender.
164 For example,
165
166 ....
167 /usr/sbin/sendmail -bf myfilter \
168 -f islington@never.where <test-message
169 ....
170
171 Alternatively, if the %-f% option is not used, but the first line of the
172 supplied message is a ``From'' separator from a message folder file (not the same
173 thing as a 'From:' header line), the sender is taken from there. If %-f% is
174 present, the contents of any ``From'' line are ignored.
175
176 The ``return path'' is the same as the envelope sender, unless the message
177 contains a 'Return-path:' header, in which case it is taken from there. You
178 need not worry about any of this unless you want to test out features of a
179 filter file that rely on the sender address or the return path.
180
181 It is possible to change the envelope recipient by specifying further options.
182 The %-bfd% option changes the domain of the recipient address, while the
183 %-bfl% option changes the ``local part'', that is, the part before the @ sign.
184 An adviser could make use of these to test someone else's filter file.
185
186 The %-bfp% and %-bfs% options specify the prefix or suffix for the local part.
187 These are relevant only when support for multiple personal mailboxes is
188 implemented; see the description in section <<SECTmbox>> below.
189
190
191 Installing a filter file
192 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
193 A filter file is normally installed under the name '.forward' in your home
194 directory -- it is distinguished from a conventional '.forward' file by its
195 first line (described below). However, the file name is configurable, and some
196 system administrators may choose to use some different name or location for
197 filter files.
198
199
200 Testing an installed filter file
201 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
202 Testing a filter file before installation cannot find every potential problem;
203 for example, it does not actually run commands to which messages are piped.
204 Some ``live'' tests should therefore also be done once a filter is installed.
205
206 If at all possible, test your filter file by sending messages from some other
207 account. If you send a message to yourself from the filtered account, and
208 delivery fails, the error message will be sent back to the same account, which
209 may cause another delivery failure. It won't cause an infinite sequence of such
210 messages, because delivery failure messages do not themselves generate further
211 messages. However, it does mean that the failure won't be returned to you, and
212 also that the postmaster will have to investigate the stuck message.
213
214 If you have to test an Exim filter from the same account, a sensible precaution
215 is to include the line
216
217 if error_message then finish endif
218
219 as the first filter command, at least while testing. This causes filtering to
220 be abandoned for a delivery failure message, and since no destinations are
221 generated, the message goes on to be delivered to the original address. Unless
222 there is a good reason for not doing so, it is recommended that the above test
223 be left in all Exim filter files.
224 (This does not apply to Sieve files.)
225
226
227
228 Details of filtering commands
229 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
230 The filtering commands for Sieve and Exim filters are completely different in
231 syntax and semantics. The Sieve mechanism is defined in RFC 3028; in the next
232 chapter we describe how it is integrated into Exim. The subsequent chapter
233 covers Exim filtering commands in detail.
234
235
236
237 [[CHAPsievefilter]]
238 Sieve filter files
239 ------------------
240 The code for Sieve filtering in Exim was contributed by Michael Haardt, and
241 most of the content of this chapter is taken from the notes he provided. Since
242 Sieve is an extensible language, it is important to understand ``Sieve'' in
243 this context as ``the specific implementation of Sieve for Exim''.
244
245 This chapter does not contain a description of Sieve, since that can be found
246 in RFC 3028, which should be read in conjunction with these notes.
247
248 The Exim Sieve implementation offers the core as defined by RFC 3028,
249 comparison tests, the *copy*, *envelope*, *fileinto*, and *vacation*
250 extensions, but not the *reject* extension. Exim does not support message
251 delivery notifications (MDNs), so adding it just to the Sieve filter (as
252 required for *reject*) makes little sense.
253
254 In order for Sieve to work properly in Exim, the system administrator needs to
255 make some adjustments to the Exim configuration. These are described in the
256 chapter on the ^redirect^ router in the full Exim specification.
257
258
259 Recognition of Sieve filters
260 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
261 A filter file is interpreted as a Sieve filter if its first line is
262
263 # Sieve filter
264
265 This is what distinguishes it from a conventional '.forward' file or an Exim
266 filter file.
267
268
269
270 Saving to specified folders
271 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
272 If the system administrator has set things up as suggested in the Exim
273 specification, and you use *keep* or *fileinto* to save a mail into a
274 folder, absolute files are stored where specified, relative files are stored
275 relative to $home$, and *inbox* goes to the standard mailbox location.
276
277
278
279 Strings containing header names
280 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
281 RFC 3028 does not specify what happens if a string denoting a header field does
282 not contain a valid header name, for example, it contains a colon. This
283 implementation generates an error instead of ignoring the header field in order
284 to ease script debugging, which fits in with the common picture of Sieve.
285
286
287
288 Exists test with empty list of headers
289 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
290 The *exists* test succeeds only if all the specified headers exist. RFC 3028
291 does not explicitly specify what happens on an empty list of headers. This
292 implementation evaluates that condition as true, interpreting the RFC in a
293 strict sense.
294
295
296
297 Header test with invalid MIME encoding in header
298 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
299 Some MUAs process invalid base64 encoded data, generating junk.
300 Others ignore junk after seeing an equal sign in base64 encoded data.
301 RFC 2047 does not specify how to react in this case, other than stating
302 that a client must not forbid to process a message for that reason.
303 RFC 2045 specifies that invalid data should be ignored (apparently
304 looking at end of line characters). It also specifies that invalid data
305 may lead to rejecting messages containing them (and there it appears to
306 talk about true encoding violations), which is a clear contradiction to
307 ignoring them.
308
309 RFC 3028 does not specify how to process incorrect MIME words.
310 This implementation treats them literally, as it does if the word is
311 correct but its character set cannot be converted to UTF-8.
312
313
314
315 Address test for multiple addresses per header
316 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
317 A header may contain multiple addresses. RFC 3028 does not explicitly
318 specify how to deal with them, but since the address test checks if
319 anything matches anything else, matching one address suffices to
320 satisfy the condition. That makes it impossible to test if a header
321 contains a certain set of addresses and no more, but it is more logical
322 than letting the test fail if the header contains an additional address
323 besides the one the test checks for.
324
325
326
327 Semantics of keep
328 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
329 The *keep* command is equivalent to
330
331 fileinto "inbox";
332
333 It saves the message and resets the implicit keep flag. It does not set the
334 implicit keep flag; there is no command to set it once it has been reset.
335
336
337
338 Semantics of fileinto
339 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
340 RFC 3028 does not specify whether %fileinto% should try to create a mail folder
341 if it does not exist. This implementation allows the sysadmin to configure that
342 aspect using the ^appendfile^ transport options %create_directory%,
343 %create_file%, and %file_must_exist%. See the ^appendfile^ transport in
344 the Exim specification for details.
345
346
347
348 Semantics of redirect
349 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
350 Sieve scripts are supposed to be interoperable between servers, so this
351 implementation does not allow mail to be redirected to unqualified addresses,
352 because the domain would depend on the system being used. On systems with
353 virtual mail domains, the default domain is probably not what the user expects
354 it to be.
355
356
357
358 String arguments
359 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
360 There has been confusion if the string arguments to *require* are to be matched
361 case-sensitively or not. This implementation matches them with the match type
362 ^:is^ (default, see section 2.7.1 of the RFC) and the comparator
363 ^i;ascii-casemap^ (default, see section 2.7.3 of the RFC). The RFC defines the
364 command defaults clearly, so any different implementations violate RFC 3028.
365 The same is valid for comparator names, also specified as strings.
366
367
368
369 Number units
370 ~~~~~~~~~~~~
371 There is a mistake in RFC 3028: the suffix G denotes gibi-, not tebibyte.
372 The mistake is obvious, because RFC 3028 specifies G to denote 2^30
373 (which is gibi, not tebi), and that is what this implementation uses as
374 the scaling factor for the suffix G.
375
376
377
378 RFC compliance
379 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
380 Exim requires the first line of a Sieve filter to be
381
382 # Sieve filter
383
384 Of course the RFC does not specify that line. Do not expect examples to work
385 without adding it, though.
386
387 RFC 3028 requires the use of CRLF to terminate a line.
388 The rationale was that CRLF is universally used in network protocols
389 to mark the end of the line. This implementation does not embed Sieve
390 in a network protocol, but uses Sieve scripts as part of the Exim MTA.
391 Since all parts of Exim use LF as the newline character, this implementation
392 does, too, by default, though the system administrator may choose (at Exim
393 compile time) to use CRLF instead.
394
395 Exim violates RFC 2822, section 3.6.8, by accepting 8-bit header names, so
396 this implementation repeats this violation to stay consistent with Exim.
397 This is in preparation for UTF-8 data.
398
399 Sieve scripts cannot contain NUL characters in strings, but mail
400 headers could contain MIME encoded NUL characters, which could never
401 be matched by Sieve scripts using exact comparisons. For that reason,
402 this implementation extends the Sieve quoted string syntax with \0
403 to describe a NUL character, violating \0 being the same as 0 in
404 RFC 3028. Even without using \0, the following tests are all true in
405 this implementation. Implementations that use C-style strings will only
406 evaluate the first test as true.
407
408 Subject: =?iso-8859-1?q?abc=00def
409
410 header :contains "Subject" ["abc"]
411 header :contains "Subject" ["def"]
412 header :matches "Subject" ["abc?def"]
413
414 Note that by considering Sieve to be an MUA, RFC 2047 can be interpreted
415 in a way that NUL characters truncating strings is allowed for Sieve
416 implementations, although not recommended. It is further allowed to use
417 encoded NUL characters in headers, but that's not recommended either.
418 The above example shows why.
419
420 RFC 3028 states that if an implementation fails to convert a character
421 set to UTF-8, two strings cannot be equal if one contains octets greater
422 than 127. Assuming that all unknown character sets are one-byte character
423 sets with the lower 128 octets being US-ASCII is not sound, so this
424 implementation violates RFC 3028 and treats such MIME words literally.
425 That way at least something could be matched.
426
427 The folder specified by *fileinto* must not contain the character
428 sequence ``##`..`##'' to avoid security problems. RFC 3028 does not specify the
429 syntax of folders apart from *keep* being equivalent to
430
431 fileinto "INBOX";
432
433 This implementation uses _inbox_ instead.
434
435 Sieve script errors currently cause messages to be silently filed into
436 _inbox_. RFC 3028 requires that the user is notified of that condition.
437 This may be implemented in the future by adding a header line to mails that
438 are filed into _inbox_ due to an error in the filter.
439
440
441
442 [[CHAPeximfilter]]
443 Exim filter files
444 -----------------
445 This chapter contains a full description of the contents of Exim filter files.
446
447
448 Format of Exim filter files
449 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
450 Apart from leading white space, the first text in an Exim filter file must be
451
452 # Exim filter
453
454 This is what distinguishes it from a conventional '.forward' file or a Sieve
455 filter file. If the file does not have this initial line (or the equivalent for
456 a Sieve filter), it is treated as a conventional '.forward' file, both when
457 delivering mail and when using the %-bf% testing mechanism. The white space in
458 the line is optional, and any capitalization may be used. Further text on the
459 same line is treated as a comment. For example, you could have
460
461 # Exim filter <<== do not edit or remove this line!
462
463 The remainder of the file is a sequence of filtering commands, which consist of
464 keywords and data values. For example, in the command
465
466 deliver gulliver@lilliput.fict.example
467
468 the keyword is `deliver` and the data value is
469 `gulliver@lilliput.fict.example`. White space or line breaks separate the
470 components of a command, except in the case of conditions for the ^if^ command,
471 where round brackets (parentheses) also act as separators. Complete commands
472 are separated from each other by white space or line breaks; there are no
473 special terminators. Thus, several commands may appear on one line, or one
474 command may be spread over a number of lines.
475
476 If the character # follows a separator anywhere in a command, everything from
477 # up to the next newline is ignored. This provides a way of including comments
478 in a filter file.
479
480
481 Data values in filter commands
482 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
483 There are two ways in which a data value can be input:
484
485 - If the text contains no white space then it can be typed verbatim. However, if
486 it is part of a condition, it must also be free of round brackets
487 (parentheses), as these are used for grouping in conditions.
488
489 - Otherwise, it must be enclosed in double quotation marks. In this case, the
490 character \ (backslash) is treated as an ``escape character'' within the string,
491 causing the following character or characters to be treated specially:
492 +
493 &&&&
494 `\n` is replaced by a newline
495 `\r` is replaced by a carriage return
496 `\t` is replaced by a tab
497 &&&&
498
499 Backslash followed by up to three octal digits is replaced by the character
500 specified by those digits, and \x followed by up to two hexadecimal digits is
501 treated similarly. Backslash followed by any other character is replaced
502 by the second character, so that in particular, \\" becomes " and \\ becomes
503 \. A data item enclosed in double quotes can be continued onto the next line
504 by ending the first line with a backslash. Any leading white space at the start
505 of the continuation line is ignored.
506
507 In addition to the escape character processing that occurs when strings are
508 enclosed in quotes, most data values are also subject to 'string expansion'
509 (as described in the next section), in which case the characters `\$` and `\`
510 are also significant. This means that if a single backslash is actually
511 required in such a string, and the string is also quoted, \\\\ has to be
512 entered.
513
514 The maximum permitted length of a data string, before expansion, is 1024
515 characters.
516
517
518 [[SECTfilterstringexpansion]]
519 String expansion
520 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
521 Most data values are expanded before use. Expansion consists of replacing
522 substrings beginning with `\$` with other text. The full expansion facilities
523 available in Exim are extensive. If you want to know everything that Exim can
524 do with strings, you should consult the chapter on string expansion in the Exim
525 documentation.
526
527 In filter files, by far the most common use of string expansion is the
528 substitution of the contents of a variable. For example, the substring
529
530 $reply_address
531
532 is replaced by the address to which replies to the message should be sent. If
533 such a variable name is followed by a letter or digit or underscore, it must be
534 enclosed in curly brackets (braces), for example,
535
536 ${reply_address}
537
538 If a `\$` character is actually required in an expanded string, it must be
539 escaped with a backslash, and because backslash is also an escape character in
540 quoted input strings, it must be doubled in that case. The following two
541 examples illustrate two different ways of testing for a `\$` character in a
542 message:
543
544 if $message_body contains \$ then ...
545 if $message_body contains "\\$" then ...
546
547 You can prevent part of a string from being expanded by enclosing it between
548 two occurrences of `\N`. For example,
549
550 if $message_body contains \N$$$$\N then ...
551
552 tests for a run of four dollar characters.
553
554
555 Some useful general variables
556 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
557 A complete list of the available variables is given in the Exim documentation.
558 This shortened list contains the ones that are most likely to be useful in
559 personal filter files:
560
561 $body_linecount$: The number of lines in the body of the message.
562
563 $body_zerocount$: The number of binary zero characters in the body of the
564 message.
565
566
567 $home$: In conventional configurations, this variable normally contains the
568 user's home directory. The system administrator can, however, change this.
569
570 $local_part$: The part of the email address that precedes the @ sign --
571 normally the user's login name. If support for multiple personal mailboxes is
572 enabled (see section <<SECTmbox>> below) and a prefix or suffix for the local
573 part was recognized, it is removed from the string in this variable.
574
575 $local_part_prefix$: If support for multiple personal mailboxes is enabled
576 (see section <<SECTmbox>> below), and a local part prefix was recognized,
577 this variable contains the prefix. Otherwise it contains an empty string.
578
579 $local_part_suffix$: If support for multiple personal mailboxes is enabled
580 (see section <<SECTmbox>> below), and a local part suffix was recognized,
581 this variable contains the suffix. Otherwise it contains an empty string.
582
583 $message_body$: The initial portion of the body of the message. By default,
584 up to 500 characters are read into this variable, but the system administrator
585 can configure this to some other value. Newlines in the body are converted into
586 single spaces.
587
588 $message_body_end$: The final portion of the body of the message, formatted
589 and limited in the same way as $message_body$.
590
591 $message_body_size$: The size of the body of the message, in bytes.
592
593 $message_headers$: The header lines of the message, concatenated into a
594 single string, with newline characters between them.
595
596 $message_id$: The message's local identification string, which is unique for
597 each message handled by a single host.
598
599 $message_size$: The size of the entire message, in bytes.
600
601 $original_local_part$: When an address that arrived with the message is
602 being processed, this contains the same value as the variable $local_part$.
603 However, if an address generated by an alias, forward, or filter file is being
604 processed, this variable contains the local part of the original address.
605
606 $reply_address$: The contents of the 'Reply-to:' header, if the message
607 has one; otherwise the contents of the 'From:' header. It is the address to
608 which normal replies to the message should be sent.
609
610 $return_path$: The return path -- that is, the sender field that will be
611 transmitted as part of the message's envelope if the message is sent to another
612 host. This is the address to which delivery errors are sent. In many cases,
613 this variable has the same value as $sender_address$, but if, for example,
614 an incoming message to a mailing list has been expanded, $return_path$ may
615 have been changed to contain the address of the list maintainer.
616
617 $sender_address$: The sender address that was received in the envelope of
618 the message. This is not necessarily the same as the contents of the 'From:'
619 or 'Sender:' header lines. For delivery error messages (``bounce messages'')
620 there is no sender address, and this variable is empty.
621
622 $tod_full$: A full version of the time and date, for example: Wed, 18 Oct
623 1995 09:51:40 +0100. The timezone is always given as a numerical offset from
624 GMT.
625
626 $tod_log$: The time and date in the format used for writing Exim's log files,
627 without the timezone, for example: 1995-10-12 15:32:29.
628
629 $tod_zone$: The local timezone offset, for example: +0100.
630
631
632
633 [[SECTheadervariables]]
634 Header variables
635 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
636 There is a special set of expansion variables containing the header lines of
637 the message being processed. These variables have names beginning with
638 $header_$ followed by the name of the header line, terminated by a colon.
639 For example,
640
641 $header_from:
642 $header_subject:
643
644 The whole item, including the terminating colon, is replaced by the contents of
645 the message header line. If there is more than one header line with the same
646 name, their contents are concatenated. For header lines whose data consists of
647 a list of addresses (for example, 'From:' and 'To:'), a comma and newline is
648 inserted between each set of data. For all other header lines, just a newline
649 is used.
650
651 Leading and trailing white space is removed from header line data, and if there
652 are any MIME ``words'' that are encoded as defined by RFC 2047 (because they
653 contain non-ASCII characters), they are decoded and translated, if possible, to
654 a local character set. Translation is attempted only on operating systems that
655 have the ^^iconv()^^ function. This makes the header line look the same as it
656 would when displayed by an MUA. The default character set is ISO-8859-1, but
657 this can be changed by means of the ^headers^ command (see below).
658
659 If you want to see the actual characters that make up a header line, you can
660 specify $rheader_$ instead of $header_$. This inserts the ``raw''
661 header line, unmodified.
662
663 There is also an intermediate form, requested by $bheader_$, which removes
664 leading and trailing space and decodes MIME ``words'', but does not do any
665 character translation. If an attempt to decode what looks superficially like a
666 MIME ``word'' fails, the raw string is returned. If decoding produces a binary
667 zero character, it is replaced by a question mark.
668
669 The capitalization of the name following $header_$ is not significant.
670 Because any printing character except colon may appear in the name of a
671 message's header (this is a requirement of RFC 2822, the document that
672 describes the format of a mail message) curly brackets must 'not' be used in
673 this case, as they will be taken as part of the header name. Two shortcuts are
674 allowed in naming header variables:
675
676 - The initiating $header_$, $rheader_$, or $bheader_$ can be
677 abbreviated to $h_$, $rh_$, or $bh_$, respectively.
678
679 - The terminating colon can be omitted if the next character is white space. The
680 white space character is retained in the expanded string. However, this is not
681 recommended, because it makes it easy to forget the colon when it really is
682 needed.
683
684 If the message does not contain a header of the given name, an empty string is
685 substituted. Thus it is important to spell the names of headers correctly. Do
686 not use $header_Reply_to$ when you really mean $header_Reply-to$.
687
688
689 User variables
690 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
691 There are ten user variables with names $n0$ -- $n9$ that can be
692 incremented by the ^add^ command (see section <<SECTadd>>). These can be used
693 for ``scoring'' messages in various ways. If Exim is configured to run a
694 ``system filter'' on every message, the values left in these variables are
695 copied into the variables $sn0$ -- $sn9$ at the end of the system filter, thus
696 making them available to users' filter files. How these values are used is
697 entirely up to the individual installation.
698
699
700 Current directory
701 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
702 The contents of your filter file should not make any assumptions about the
703 current directory. It is best to use absolute paths for file names; you
704 can normally make use of the $home$ variable to refer to your home directory.
705 The ^save^ command automatically inserts $home$ at the start of non-absolute
706 paths.
707
708
709
710
711 [[SECTsigdel]]
712 Significant deliveries
713 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
714 When in the course of delivery a message is processed by a filter file, what
715 happens next, that is, after the filter file has been processed, depends on
716 whether or not the filter sets up any 'significant deliveries'. If at least
717 one significant delivery is set up, the filter is considered to have handled
718 the entire delivery arrangements for the current address, and no further
719 processing of the address takes place. If, however, no significant deliveries
720 are set up, Exim continues processing the current address as if there were no
721 filter file, and typically sets up a delivery of a copy of the message into a
722 local mailbox. In particular, this happens in the special case of a filter file
723 containing only comments.
724
725 The delivery commands ^deliver^, ^save^, and ^pipe^ are by default
726 significant. However, if such a command is preceded by the word ^unseen^, its
727 delivery is not considered to be significant. In contrast, other commands such
728 as ^mail^ and ^vacation^ do not set up significant deliveries unless
729 preceded by the word ^seen^.
730
731 The following example commands set up significant deliveries:
732
733 deliver jack@beanstalk.example
734 pipe $home/bin/mymailscript
735 seen mail subject "message discarded"
736 seen finish
737
738 The following example commands do not set up significant deliveries:
739
740 unseen deliver jack@beanstalk.example
741 unseen pipe $home/bin/mymailscript
742 mail subject "message discarded"
743 finish
744
745
746
747
748 Filter commands
749 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
750 The filter commands that are described in subsequent sections are listed
751 below, with the section in which they are described in brackets:
752
753 [frame="none"]
754 `-------------`-----------------------------------------------
755 ^add^ ~~increment a user variable (section <<SECTadd>>)
756 ^deliver^ ~~deliver to an email address (section <<SECTdeliver>>)
757 ^fail^ ~~force delivery failure (sysadmin use) (section <<SECTfail>>)
758 ^finish^ ~~end processing (section <<SECTfinish>>)
759 ^freeze^ ~~freeze message (sysadmin use) (section <<SECTfreeze>>)
760 ^headers^ ~~set the header character set (section <<SECTheaders>>)
761 ^if^ ~~test condition(s) (section <<SECTif>>)
762 ^logfile^ ~~define log file (section <<SECTlog>>)
763 ^logwrite^ ~~write to log file (section <<SECTlog>>)
764 ^mail^ ~~send a reply message (section <<SECTmail>>)
765 ^pipe^ ~~pipe to a command (section <<SECTpipe>>)
766 ^save^ ~~save to a file (section <<SECTsave>>)
767 ^testprint^ ~~print while testing (section <<SECTtestprint>>)
768 ^vacation^ ~~tailored form of ^mail^ (section <<SECTmail>>)
769 --------------------------------------------------------------
770
771 The ^headers^ command has additional parameters that can be used only in a
772 system filter. The ^fail^ and ^freeze^ commands are available only when
773 Exim's filtering facilities are being used as a system filter, and are
774 therefore usable only by the system administrator and not by ordinary users.
775 They are mentioned only briefly in this document; for more information, see the
776 main Exim specification.
777
778
779
780 [[SECTadd]]
781 The add command
782 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
783 &&&
784 ` add `<'number'>` to `<'user variable'>
785 `e.g. add 2 to n3`
786 &&&
787
788 There are 10 user variables of this type, with names $n0$ -- $n9$. Their
789 values can be obtained by the normal expansion syntax (for example $n3$) in
790 other commands. At the start of filtering, these variables all contain zero.
791 Both arguments of the ^add^ command are expanded before use, making it
792 possible to add variables to each other. Subtraction can be obtained by adding
793 negative numbers.
794
795
796
797 [[SECTdeliver]]
798 The deliver command
799 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
800
801 &&&
802 ` deliver` <'mail address'>
803 `e.g. deliver "Dr Livingstone <David@somewhere.africa.example>"`
804 &&&
805
806 This command provides a forwarding operation. The delivery that it sets up is
807 significant unless the command is preceded by ^unseen^ (see section
808 <<SECTsigdel>>). The message is sent on to the given address, exactly as
809 happens if the address had appeared in a traditional '.forward' file. If you
810 want to deliver the message to a number of different addresses, you can use
811 more than one ^deliver^ command (each one may have only one address). However,
812 duplicate addresses are discarded.
813
814 To deliver a copy of the message to your normal mailbox, your login name can be
815 given as the address. Once an address has been processed by the filtering
816 mechanism, an identical generated address will not be so processed again, so
817 doing this does not cause a loop.
818
819 However, if you have a mail alias, you should 'not' refer to it here. For
820 example, if the mail address 'L.Gulliver' is aliased to 'lg303' then all
821 references in Gulliver's '.forward' file should be to 'lg303'. A reference
822 to the alias will not work for messages that are addressed to that alias,
823 since, like '.forward' file processing, aliasing is performed only once on an
824 address, in order to avoid looping.
825
826 Following the new address, an optional second address, preceded by
827 ^errors_to^ may appear. This changes the address to which delivery errors on
828 the forwarded message will be sent. Instead of going to the message's original
829 sender, they go to this new address. For ordinary users, the only value that is
830 permitted for this address is the user whose filter file is being processed.
831 For example, the user 'lg303' whose mailbox is in the domain
832 'lilliput.example' could have a filter file that contains
833
834 deliver jon@elsewhere.example errors_to lg303@lilliput.example
835
836 Clearly, using this feature makes sense only in situations where not all
837 messages are being forwarded. In particular, bounce messages must not be
838 forwarded in this way, as this is likely to create a mail loop if something
839 goes wrong.
840
841
842
843 [[SECTsave]]
844 The save command
845 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
846 &&&
847 ` save `<'file name'>
848 `e.g. save $home/mail/bookfolder`
849 &&&
850
851 This command specifies that a copy of the message is to be appended to the
852 given file (that is, the file is to be used as a mail folder). The delivery
853 that ^save^ sets up is significant unless the command is preceded by
854 ^unseen^ (see section <<SECTsigdel>>).
855
856 More than one ^save^ command may be obeyed; each one causes a copy of the
857 message to be written to its argument file, provided they are different
858 (duplicate ^save^ commands are ignored).
859
860 If the file name does not start with a / character, the contents of the
861 $home$ variable are prepended, unless it is empty. In conventional
862 configurations, this variable is normally set in a user filter to the user's
863 home directory, but the system administrator may set it to some other path. In
864 some configurations, $home$ may be unset, in which case a non-absolute path
865 name may be generated. Such configurations convert this to an absolute path
866 when the delivery takes place. In a system filter, $home$ is never set.
867
868 The user must of course have permission to write to the file, and the writing
869 of the file takes place in a process that is running as the user, under the
870 user's primary group. Any secondary groups to which the user may belong are not
871 normally taken into account, though the system administrator can configure Exim
872 to set them up. In addition, the ability to use this command at all is
873 controlled by the system administrator -- it may be forbidden on some systems.
874
875 An optional mode value may be given after the file name. The value for the mode
876 is interpreted as an octal number, even if it does not begin with a zero. For
877 example:
878
879 save /some/folder 640
880
881 This makes it possible for users to override the system-wide mode setting for
882 file deliveries, which is normally 600. If an existing file does not have the
883 correct mode, it is changed.
884
885 An alternative form of delivery may be enabled on your system, in which each
886 message is delivered into a new file in a given directory. If this is the case,
887 this functionality can be requested by giving the directory name terminated by
888 a slash after the ^save^ command, for example
889
890 save separated/messages/
891
892 There are several different formats for such deliveries; check with your system
893 administrator or local documentation to find out which (if any) are available
894 on your system. If this functionality is not enabled, the use of a path name
895 ending in a slash causes an error.
896
897
898
899 [[SECTpipe]]
900 The pipe command
901 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
902 &&&
903 ` pipe `<'command'>
904 `e.g. pipe "$home/bin/countmail $sender_address"`
905 &&&
906
907 This command specifies that the message is to be delivered to the specified
908 command using a pipe. The delivery that it sets up is significant unless the
909 command is preceded by ^unseen^ (see section <<SECTsigdel>>). Remember,
910 however, that no deliveries are done while the filter is being processed. All
911 deliveries happen later on. Therefore, the result of running the pipe is not
912 available to the filter.
913
914 When the deliveries are done, a separate process is run, and a copy of the
915 message is passed on its standard input. The process runs as the user, under
916 the user's primary group. Any secondary groups to which the user may belong are
917 not normally taken into account, though the system administrator can configure
918 Exim to set them up. More than one ^pipe^ command may appear; each one causes
919 a copy of the message to be written to its argument pipe, provided they are
920 different (duplicate ^pipe^ commands are ignored).
921
922 When the time comes to transport the message,
923 the command supplied to ^pipe^ is split up by Exim into a command name and a
924 number of arguments. These are delimited by white space except for arguments
925 enclosed in double quotes, in which case backslash is interpreted as an escape,
926 or in single quotes, in which case no escaping is recognized. Note that as the
927 whole command is normally supplied in double quotes, a second level of quoting
928 is required for internal double quotes. For example:
929
930 pipe "$home/myscript \"size is $message_size\""
931
932 String expansion is performed on the separate components after the line has
933 been split up, and the command is then run directly by Exim; it is not run
934 under a shell. Therefore, substitution cannot change the number of arguments,
935 nor can quotes, backslashes or other shell metacharacters in variables cause
936 confusion.
937
938 Documentation for some programs that are normally run via this kind of pipe
939 often suggest that the command should start with
940
941 IFS=" "
942
943 This is a shell command, and should 'not' be present in Exim filter files,
944 since it does not normally run the command under a shell.
945
946 However, there is an option that the administrator can set to cause a shell to
947 be used. In this case, the entire command is expanded as a single string and
948 passed to the shell for interpretation. It is recommended that this be avoided
949 if at all possible, since it can lead to problems when inserted variables
950 contain shell metacharacters.
951
952 The default PATH set up for the command is determined by the system
953 administrator, usually containing at least _/usr/bin_ so that common commands
954 are available without having to specify an absolute file name. However, it is
955 possible for the system administrator to restrict the pipe facility so that the
956 command name must not contain any / characters, and must be found in one of the
957 directories in the configured PATH. It is also possible for the system
958 administrator to lock out the use of the ^pipe^ command altogether.
959
960 When the command is run, a number of environment variables are set up. The
961 complete list for pipe deliveries may be found in the Exim reference manual.
962 Those that may be useful for pipe deliveries from user filter files are:
963
964 &&&
965 `DOMAIN ` the domain of the address
966 `HOME ` your home directory
967 `LOCAL_PART ` see below
968 `LOCAL_PART_PREFIX ` see below
969 `LOCAL_PART_SUFFIX ` see below
970 `LOGNAME ` your login name
971 `MESSAGE_ID ` the unique id of the message
972 `PATH ` the command search path
973 `RECIPIENT ` the complete recipient address
974 `SENDER ` the sender of the message
975 `SHELL ` `/bin/sh`
976 `USER ` see below
977 &&&
978
979 LOCAL_PART, LOGNAME, and USER are all set to the same value,
980 namely, your login id. LOCAL_PART_PREFIX and LOCAL_PART_SUFFIX may
981 be set if Exim is configured to recognize prefixes or suffixes in the local
982 parts of addresses. For example, a message addressed to
983 'pat-suf2@domain.example' may cause the filter for user 'pat' to be run. If
984 this sets up a pipe delivery, LOCAL_PART_SUFFIX is `-suf2` when the
985 pipe command runs. The system administrator has to configure Exim specially for
986 this feature to be available.
987
988 If you run a command that is a shell script, be very careful in your use of
989 data from the incoming message in the commands in your script. RFC 2822 is very
990 generous in the characters that are permitted to appear in mail addresses, and
991 in particular, an address may begin with a vertical bar or a slash. For this
992 reason you should always use quotes round any arguments that involve data from
993 the message, like this:
994
995 /some/command '$SENDER'
996
997 so that inserted shell meta-characters do not cause unwanted effects.
998
999 Remember that, as was explained earlier, the pipe command is not run at the
1000 time the filter file is interpreted. The filter just defines what deliveries
1001 are required for one particular addressee of a message. The deliveries
1002 themselves happen later, once Exim has decided everything that needs to be done
1003 for the message.
1004
1005 A consequence of this is that you cannot inspect the return code from the pipe
1006 command from within the filter. Nevertheless, the code returned by the command
1007 is important, because Exim uses it to decide whether the delivery has succeeded
1008 or failed.
1009
1010 The command should return a zero completion code if all has gone well. Most
1011 non-zero codes are treated by Exim as indicating a failure of the pipe. This is
1012 treated as a delivery failure, causing the message to be returned to its
1013 sender. However, there are some completion codes that are treated as temporary
1014 errors. The message remains on Exim's spool disk, and the delivery is tried
1015 again later, though it will ultimately time out if the delivery failures go on
1016 too long. The completion codes to which this applies can be specified by the
1017 system administrator; the default values are 73 and 75.
1018
1019 The pipe command should not normally write anything to its standard output or
1020 standard error file descriptors. If it does, whatever is written is normally
1021 returned to the sender of the message as a delivery error, though this action
1022 can be varied by the system administrator.
1023
1024
1025
1026 [[SECTmail]]
1027 Mail commands
1028 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1029 There are two commands that cause the creation of a new mail message, neither
1030 of which count as a significant delivery unless the command is preceded by the
1031 word ^seen^ (see section <<SECTsigdel>>). This is a powerful facility, but it
1032 should be used with care, because of the danger of creating infinite sequences
1033 of messages. The system administrator can forbid the use of these commands
1034 altogether.
1035
1036 To help prevent runaway message sequences, these commands have no effect when
1037 the incoming message is a bounce (delivery error) message, and messages sent by
1038 this means are treated as if they were reporting delivery errors. Thus, they
1039 should never themselves cause a bounce message to be returned. The basic
1040 mail-sending command is
1041
1042 &&&
1043 `mail [to `<'address-list'>`]`
1044 ` [cc `<'address-list'>`]`
1045 ` [bcc `<'address-list'>`]`
1046 ` [from `<'address'>`]`
1047 ` [reply_to `<'address'>`]`
1048 ` [subject `<'text'>`]`
1049 ` [extra_headers `<'text'>`]`
1050 ` [text `<'text'>`]`
1051 ` [[expand] file `<'filename'>`]`
1052 ` [return message]`
1053 ` [log `<'log file name'>`]`
1054 ` [once `<'note file name'>`]`
1055 ` [once_repeat `<'time interval'>`]`
1056
1057 `e.g. mail text "Your message about $h_subject: has been received"`
1058 &&&
1059
1060 Each <'address-list'> can contain a number of addresses, separated by commas,
1061 in the format of a 'To:' or 'Cc:' header line. In fact, the text you supply
1062 here is copied exactly into the appropriate header line. It may contain
1063 additional information as well as email addresses. For example:
1064
1065 ....
1066 mail to "Julius Caesar <jc@rome.example>, \
1067 <ma@rome.example> (Mark A.)"
1068 ....
1069
1070 Similarly, the texts supplied for ^from^ and ^reply_to^ are copied into
1071 their respective header lines.
1072
1073 As a convenience for use in one common case, there is also a command called
1074 ^vacation^. It behaves in the same way as ^mail^, except that the defaults for
1075 the %subject%, %file%, %log%, %once%, and %once_repeat% options are
1076
1077 subject "On vacation"
1078 expand file .vacation.msg
1079 log .vacation.log
1080 once .vacation
1081 once_repeat 7d
1082
1083 respectively. These are the same file names and repeat period used by the
1084 traditional Unix ^vacation^ command. The defaults can be overridden by
1085 explicit settings, but if a file name is given its contents are expanded only
1086 if explicitly requested.
1087
1088 *Warning*: The ^vacation^ command should always be used conditionally,
1089 subject to at least the ^personal^ condition (see section <<SECTpersonal>>
1090 below) so as not to send automatic replies to non-personal messages from
1091 mailing lists or elsewhere. Sending an automatic response to a mailing list or
1092 a mailing list manager is an Internet Sin.
1093
1094 For both commands, the key/value argument pairs can appear in any order. At
1095 least one of ^text^ or ^file^ must appear (except with ^vacation^, where
1096 there is a default for ^file^); if both are present, the text string appears
1097 first in the message. If ^expand^ precedes ^file^, each line of the file is
1098 subject to string expansion before it is included in the message.
1099
1100 Several lines of text can be supplied to ^text^ by including the escape
1101 sequence ``\n'' in the string wherever a newline is required. If the command is
1102 output during filter file testing, newlines in the text are shown as ``\n''.
1103
1104 Note that the keyword for creating a 'Reply-To:' header is ^reply_to^,
1105 because Exim keywords may contain underscores, but not hyphens. If the ^from^
1106 keyword is present and the given address does not match the user who owns the
1107 forward file, Exim normally adds a 'Sender:' header to the message,
1108 though it can be configured not to do this.
1109
1110 The %extra_headers% keyword allows you to add custom header lines to the
1111 message. The text supplied must be one or more syntactically valid RFC 2822
1112 header lines. You can use ``\n'' within quoted text to specify newlines between
1113 headers, and also to define continued header lines. For example:
1114
1115 extra_headers "h1: first\nh2: second\n continued\nh3: third"
1116
1117 No newline should appear at the end of the final header line.
1118
1119 If no ^to^ argument appears, the message is sent to the address in the
1120 $reply_address$ variable (see section <<SECTfilterstringexpansion>> above).
1121 An 'In-Reply-To:' header is automatically included in the created message,
1122 giving a reference to the message identification of the incoming message.
1123
1124 If ^return message^ is specified, the incoming message that caused the filter
1125 file to be run is added to the end of the message, subject to a maximum size
1126 limitation.
1127
1128 If a log file is specified, a line is added to it for each message sent.
1129
1130 If a ^once^ file is specified, it is used to hold a database for remembering
1131 who has received a message, and no more than one message is ever sent to any
1132 particular address, unless ^once_repeat^ is set. This specifies a time
1133 interval after which another copy of the message is sent. The interval is
1134 specified as a sequence of numbers, each followed by the initial letter of one
1135 of ``seconds'', ``minutes'', ``hours'', ``days'', or ``weeks''. For example,
1136
1137 once_repeat 5d4h
1138
1139 causes a new message to be sent if 5 days and 4 hours have elapsed since the
1140 last one was sent. There must be no white space in a time interval.
1141
1142 Commonly, the file name specified for ^once^ is used as the base name for
1143 direct-access (DBM) file operations. There are a number of different DBM
1144 libraries in existence. Some operating systems provide one as a default, but
1145 even in this case a different one may have been used when building Exim. With
1146 some DBM libraries, specifying ^once^ results in two files being created,
1147 with the suffixes _.dir_ and _.pag_ being added to the given name. With
1148 some others a single file with the suffix _.db_ is used, or the name is used
1149 unchanged.
1150
1151 Using a DBM file for implementing the ^once^ feature means that the file
1152 grows as large as necessary. This is not usually a problem, but some system
1153 administrators want to put a limit on it. The facility can be configured not to
1154 use a DBM file, but instead, to use a regular file with a maximum size. The
1155 data in such a file is searched sequentially, and if the file fills up, the
1156 oldest entry is deleted to make way for a new one. This means that some
1157 correspondents may receive a second copy of the message after an unpredictable
1158 interval. Consult your local information to see if your system is configured
1159 this way.
1160
1161 More than one ^mail^ or ^vacation^ command may be obeyed in a single filter
1162 run; they are all honoured, even when they are to the same recipient.
1163
1164
1165
1166 [[SECTlog]]
1167 Logging commands
1168 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1169 A log can be kept of actions taken by a filter file. This facility is normally
1170 available in conventional configurations, but there are some situations where
1171 it might not be. Also, the system administrator may choose to disable it. Check
1172 your local information if in doubt.
1173
1174 Logging takes place while the filter file is being interpreted. It does not
1175 queue up for later like the delivery commands. The reason for this is so that a
1176 log file need be opened only once for several write operations. There are two
1177 commands, neither of which constitutes a significant delivery. The first
1178 defines a file to which logging output is subsequently written:
1179
1180 &&&
1181 ` logfile `<'file name'>
1182 `e.g. logfile $home/filter.log`
1183 &&&
1184
1185 The file name must be fully qualified. You can use $home$, as in this
1186 example, to refer to your home directory. The file name may optionally be
1187 followed by a mode for the file, which is used if the file has to be created.
1188 For example,
1189
1190 logfile $home/filter.log 0644
1191
1192 The number is interpreted as octal, even if it does not begin with a zero.
1193 The default for the mode is 600. It is suggested that the ^logfile^ command
1194 normally appear as the first command in a filter file. Once ^logfile^ has
1195 been obeyed, the ^logwrite^ command can be used to write to the log file:
1196
1197 &&&
1198 ` logwrite "`<'some text string'>`"`
1199 `e.g. logwrite "$tod_log $message_id processed"`
1200 &&&
1201
1202 It is possible to have more than one ^logfile^ command, to specify writing to
1203 different log files in different circumstances. Writing takes place at the end
1204 of the file, and a newline character is added to the end of each string if
1205 there isn't one already there. Newlines can be put in the middle of the string
1206 by using the ``\n'' escape sequence. Lines from simultaneous deliveries may get
1207 interleaved in the file, as there is no interlocking, so you should plan your
1208 logging with this in mind. However, data should not get lost.
1209
1210
1211
1212 [[SECTfinish]]
1213 The finish command
1214 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1215 The command ^finish^, which has no arguments, causes Exim to stop
1216 interpreting the filter file. This is not a significant action unless preceded
1217 by ^seen^. A filter file containing only ^seen finish^ is a black hole.
1218
1219
1220 [[SECTtestprint]]
1221 The testprint command
1222 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1223 It is sometimes helpful to be able to print out the values of variables when
1224 testing filter files. The command
1225
1226 &&&
1227 ` testprint `<'text'>
1228 `e.g. testprint "home=$home reply_address=$reply_address"`
1229 &&&
1230
1231 does nothing when mail is being delivered. However, when the filtering code is
1232 being tested by means of the %-bf% option (see section <<SECTtesting>> above),
1233 the value of the string is written to the standard output.
1234
1235
1236 [[SECTfail]]
1237 The fail command
1238 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1239 When Exim's filtering facilities are being used as a system filter, the
1240 ^fail^ command is available, to force delivery failure. Because this command
1241 is normally usable only by the system administrator, and not enabled for use by
1242 ordinary users, it is described in more detail in the main Exim specification
1243 rather than in this document.
1244
1245
1246 [[SECTfreeze]]
1247 The freeze command
1248 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1249 When Exim's filtering facilities are being used as a system filter, the
1250 ^freeze^ command is available, to freeze a message on the queue. Because this
1251 command is normally usable only by the system administrator, and not enabled
1252 for use by ordinary users, it is described in more detail in the main Exim
1253 specification rather than in this document.
1254
1255
1256
1257 [[SECTheaders]]
1258 The headers command
1259 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1260 The ^headers^ command can be used to change the target character set that is
1261 used when translating the contents of encoded header lines for insertion by the
1262 $header_$ mechanism (see section <<SECTheadervariables>> above). The default
1263 can be set in the Exim configuration; if not specified, ISO-8859-1 is used. The
1264 only currently supported format for the ^headers^ command in user filters is as
1265 in this example:
1266
1267 headers charset "UTF-8"
1268
1269 That is, ^headers^ is followed by the word ^charset^ and then the name of a
1270 character set. This particular example would be useful if you wanted to compare
1271 the contents of a header to a UTF-8 string.
1272
1273 In system filter files, the ^headers^ command can be used to add or remove
1274 header lines from the message. These features are described in the main Exim
1275 specification.
1276
1277
1278
1279 [[SECTif]]
1280 Obeying commands conditionally
1281 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1282 Most of the power of filtering comes from the ability to test conditions and
1283 obey different commands depending on the outcome. The ^if^ command is used to
1284 specify conditional execution, and its general form is
1285
1286 &&&
1287 `if `<'condition'>
1288 `then `<'commands'>
1289 `elif `<'condition'>
1290 `then `<'commands'>
1291 `else `<'commands'>
1292 `endif`
1293 &&&
1294
1295 There may be any number of ^elif^ and ^then^ sections (including none) and
1296 the ^else^ section is also optional. Any number of commands, including nested
1297 ^if^ commands, may appear in any of the <'commands'> sections.
1298
1299 Conditions can be combined by using the words ^and^ and ^or^, and round
1300 brackets (parentheses) can be used to specify how several conditions are to
1301 combine. Without brackets, ^and^ is more binding than ^or^.
1302 For example,
1303
1304 if
1305 $h_subject: contains "Make money" or
1306 $h_precedence: is "junk" or
1307 ($h_sender: matches ^\\d{8}@ and not personal) or
1308 $message_body contains "this is not spam"
1309 then
1310 seen finish
1311 endif
1312
1313 A condition can be preceded by ^not^ to negate it, and there are also some
1314 negative forms of condition that are more English-like.
1315
1316
1317
1318 String testing conditions
1319 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1320 There are a number of conditions that operate on text strings, using the words
1321 ``begins'', ``ends'', ``is'', ``contains'' and ``matches''. If you want to apply the same
1322 test to more than one header line, you can easily concatenate them into a
1323 single string for testing, as in this example:
1324
1325 if "$h_to:, $h_cc:" contains me@domain.example then ...
1326
1327 If a string-testing condition name is written in lower case, the testing
1328 of letters is done without regard to case; if it is written in upper case
1329 (for example, ``CONTAINS''), the case of letters is taken into account.
1330
1331 &&&
1332 ` `<'text1'>` begins `<'text2'>
1333 ` `<'text1'>` does not begin `<'text2'>
1334 `e.g. $header_from: begins "Friend@"`
1335 &&&
1336
1337 A ``begins'' test checks for the presence of the second string at the start of
1338 the first, both strings having been expanded.
1339
1340 &&&
1341 ` `<'text1'>` ends `<'text2'>
1342 ` `<'text1'>` does not end `<'text2'>
1343 `e.g. $header_from: ends "public.com.example"`
1344 &&&
1345
1346 An ``ends'' test checks for the presence of the second string at the end of
1347 the first, both strings having been expanded.
1348
1349 &&&
1350 ` `<'text1'>` is `<'text2'>
1351 ` `<'text1'>` is not `<'text2'>
1352 `e.g. $local_part_suffix is "-foo"`
1353 &&&
1354
1355 An ``is'' test does an exact match between the strings, having first expanded
1356 both strings.
1357
1358 &&&
1359 ` `<'text1'>` contains `<'text2'>
1360 ` `<'text1'>` does not contain `<'text2'>
1361 `e.g. $header_subject: contains "evolution"`
1362 &&&
1363
1364 A ``contains'' test does a partial string match, having expanded both strings.
1365
1366 &&&
1367 ` `<'text1'>` matches `<'text2'>
1368 ` `<'text1'>` does not match `<'text2'>
1369 `e.g. $sender_address matches "(bill|john)@"`
1370 &&&
1371
1372 For a ``matches'' test, after expansion of both strings, the second one is
1373 interpreted as a regular expression. Exim uses the PCRE regular expression
1374 library, which provides regular expressions that are compatible with Perl.
1375
1376 The match succeeds if the regular expression matches any part of the first
1377 string. If you want a regular expression to match only at the start or end of
1378 the subject string, you must encode that requirement explicitly, using the `^`
1379 or `$` metacharacters. The above example, which is not so constrained, matches
1380 all these addresses:
1381
1382 bill@test.example
1383 john@some.example
1384 spoonbill@example.com
1385 littlejohn@example.com
1386
1387 To match only the first two, you could use this:
1388
1389 if $sender_address matches "^(bill|john)@" then ...
1390
1391 Care must be taken if you need a backslash in a regular expression, because
1392 backslashes are interpreted as escape characters both by the string expansion
1393 code and by Exim's normal processing of strings in quotes. For example, if you
1394 want to test the sender address for a domain ending in '.com' the regular
1395 expression is
1396
1397 \.com$
1398
1399 The backslash and dollar sign in that expression have to be escaped when used
1400 in a filter command, as otherwise they would be interpreted by the expansion
1401 code. Thus, what you actually write is
1402
1403 if $sender_address matches \\.com\$
1404
1405 An alternative way of handling this is to make use of the `\N` expansion
1406 flag for suppressing expansion:
1407
1408 if $sender_address matches \N\.com$\N
1409
1410 Everything between the two occurrences of `\N` is copied without change by
1411 the string expander (and in fact you do not need the final one, because it is
1412 at the end of the string). If the regular expression is given in quotes
1413 (mandatory only if it contains white space) you have to write either
1414
1415 if $sender_address matches "\\\\.com\\$"
1416
1417 or
1418
1419 if $sender_address matches "\\N\\.com$\\N"
1420
1421
1422 If the regular expression contains bracketed sub-expressions, numeric
1423 variable substitutions such as $1$ can be used in the subsequent actions
1424 after a successful match. If the match fails, the values of the numeric
1425 variables remain unchanged. Previous values are not restored after ^endif^.
1426 In other words, only one set of values is ever available. If the condition
1427 contains several sub-conditions connected by ^and^ or ^or^, it is the
1428 strings extracted from the last successful match that are available in
1429 subsequent actions. Numeric variables from any one sub-condition are also
1430 available for use in subsequent sub-conditions, because string expansion of a
1431 condition occurs just before it is tested.
1432
1433
1434 Numeric testing conditions
1435 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1436 The following conditions are available for performing numerical tests:
1437
1438 &&&
1439 ` `<'number1'>` is above `<'number2'>
1440 ` `<'number1'>` is not above `<'number2'>
1441 ` `<'number1'>` is below `<'number2'>
1442 ` `<'number1'>` is not below `<'number2'>
1443 `e.g. $message_size is not above 10k`
1444 &&&
1445
1446 The <'number'> arguments must expand to strings of digits, optionally followed
1447 by one of the letters K or M (upper case or lower case) which cause
1448 multiplication by 1024 and 1024x1024 respectively.
1449
1450
1451 Testing for significant deliveries
1452 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1453 You can use the ^delivered^ condition to test whether or not any previously
1454 obeyed filter commands have set up a significant delivery. For example:
1455
1456 if not delivered then save mail/anomalous endif
1457
1458 ``Delivered'' is perhaps a poor choice of name for this condition, because the
1459 message has not actually been delivered; rather, a delivery has been set up for
1460 later processing.
1461
1462
1463 Testing for error messages
1464 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1465 The condition ^error_message^ is true if the incoming message is a bounce
1466 (mail delivery error) message. Putting the command
1467
1468 if error_message then finish endif
1469
1470 at the head of your filter file is a useful insurance against things going
1471 wrong in such a way that you cannot receive delivery error reports. *Note*:
1472 ^error_message^ is a condition, not an expansion variable, and therefore is
1473 not preceded by `$`.
1474
1475
1476 Testing a list of addresses
1477 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1478 There is a facility for looping through a list of addresses and applying a
1479 condition to each of them. It takes the form
1480
1481 &&&
1482 `foranyaddress `<'string'>` (`<'condition'>`)`
1483 &&&
1484
1485 where <'string'> is interpreted as a list of RFC 2822 addresses, as in a
1486 typical header line, and <'condition'> is any valid filter condition or
1487 combination of conditions. The ``group'' syntax that is defined for certain
1488 header lines that contain addresses is supported.
1489
1490 The parentheses surrounding the condition are mandatory, to delimit it from
1491 possible further sub-conditions of the enclosing ^if^ command. Within the
1492 condition, the expansion variable $thisaddress$ is set to the non-comment
1493 portion of each of the addresses in the string in turn. For example, if the
1494 string is
1495
1496 B.Simpson <bart@sfld.example>, lisa@sfld.example (his sister)
1497
1498 then $thisaddress$ would take on the values `bart@sfld.example` and
1499 `lisa@sfld.example` in turn.
1500
1501 If there are no valid addresses in the list, the whole condition is false. If
1502 the internal condition is true for any one address, the overall condition is
1503 true and the loop ends. If the internal condition is false for all addresses in
1504 the list, the overall condition is false. This example tests for the presence
1505 of an eight-digit local part in any address in a 'To:' header:
1506
1507 if foranyaddress $h_to: ( $thisaddress matches ^\\d{8}@ ) then ...
1508
1509 When the overall condition is true, the value of $thisaddress$ in the
1510 commands that follow ^then^ is the last value it took on inside the loop. At
1511 the end of the ^if^ command, the value of $thisaddress$ is reset to what it
1512 was before. It is best to avoid the use of multiple occurrences of
1513 ^foranyaddress^, nested or otherwise, in a single ^if^ command, if the
1514 value of $thisaddress$ is to be used afterwards, because it isn't always
1515 clear what the value will be. Nested ^if^ commands should be used instead.
1516
1517 Header lines can be joined together if a check is to be applied to more than
1518 one of them. For example:
1519
1520 if foranyaddress $h_to:,$h_cc: ....
1521
1522 scans through the addresses in both the 'To:' and the 'Cc:' headers.
1523
1524
1525 [[SECTpersonal]]
1526 Testing for personal mail
1527 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1528 A common requirement is to distinguish between incoming personal mail and mail
1529 from a mailing list, or from a robot or other automatic process (for example, a
1530 bounce message). In particular, this test is normally required for ``vacation
1531 messages''.
1532
1533 The ^personal^ condition checks that the message is not a bounce message and
1534 that the current user's email address appears in the 'To:' header. It also
1535 checks that the sender is not the current user or one of a number of common
1536 daemons, and that there are no header lines starting 'List-' in the message.
1537 Finally, it checks the content of the 'Precedence:' header line, if there is
1538 one.
1539
1540 You should always use the ^personal^ condition when generating automatic
1541 responses. This example shows the use of ^personal^ in a filter file that is
1542 sending out vacation messages:
1543
1544 if personal then
1545 mail to $reply_address
1546 subject "I am on holiday"
1547 file $home/vacation/message
1548 once $home/vacation/once
1549 once_repeat 10d
1550 endif
1551
1552 It is tempting, when writing commands like the above, to quote the original
1553 subject in the reply. For example:
1554
1555 subject "Re: $h_subject:"
1556
1557 There is a danger in doing this, however. It may allow a third party to
1558 subscribe you to an opt-in mailing list, provided that the list accepts bounce
1559 messages as subscription confirmations. (Messages sent from filters are always
1560 sent as bounce messages.) Well-managed lists require a non-bounce message to
1561 confirm a subscription, so the danger is relatively small.
1562
1563 If prefixes or suffixes are in use for local parts -- something which depends
1564 on the configuration of Exim (see section <<SECTmbox>> below) -- the tests for
1565 the current user are done with the full address (including the prefix and
1566 suffix, if any) as well as with the prefix and suffix removed. If the system is
1567 configured to rewrite local parts of mail addresses, for example, to rewrite
1568 `dag46` as `Dirk.Gently`, the rewritten form of the address is also used in
1569 the tests.
1570
1571
1572
1573 Alias addresses for the personal condition
1574 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1575 It is quite common for people who have mail accounts on a number of different
1576 systems to forward all their mail to one system, and in this case a check for
1577 personal mail should test all their various mail addresses. To allow for this,
1578 the ^personal^ condition keyword can be followed by
1579
1580 &&&
1581 `alias `<'address'>
1582 &&&
1583
1584 any number of times, for example
1585
1586 if personal alias smith@else.where.example
1587 alias jones@other.place.example
1588 then ...
1589
1590 The alias addresses are treated as alternatives to the current user's email
1591 address when testing the contents of header lines.
1592
1593
1594 Details of the personal condition
1595 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1596 The basic ^personal^ test is roughly equivalent to the following:
1597
1598 not error_message and
1599 $message_headers does not contain "\nList-Id:" and
1600 $message_headers does not contain "\nList-Help:" and
1601 $message_headers does not contain "\nList-Subscribe:" and
1602 $message_headers does not contain "\nList-Unsubscribe:" and
1603 $message_headers does not contain "\nList-Post:" and
1604 $message_headers does not contain "\nList-Owner:" and
1605 $message_headers does not contain "\nList-Archive:" and
1606 (
1607 "${if def h_auto-submitted:{present}{absent}}" is "absent" or
1608 $header_auto-submitted: is "no"
1609 ) and
1610 $header_precedence: does not contain "bulk" and
1611 $header_precedence: does not contain "list" and
1612 $header_precedence: does not contain "junk" and
1613 foranyaddress $header_to:
1614 ( $thisaddress contains "$local_part$domain" ) and
1615 not foranyaddress $header_from:
1616 (
1617 $thisaddress contains "$local_partdomain" or
1618 $thisaddress contains "server" or
1619 $thisaddress contains "daemon" or
1620 $thisaddress contains "root" or
1621 $thisaddress contains "listserv" or
1622 $thisaddress contains "majordomo" or
1623 $thisaddress contains "-request" or
1624 $thisaddress matches "^owner-[^]+"
1625 )
1626
1627 The variable $local_part$ contains the local part of the mail address of
1628 the user whose filter file is being run -- it is normally your login id. The
1629 $domain$ variable contains the mail domain. As explained above, if aliases
1630 or rewriting are defined, or if prefixes or suffixes are in use, the tests for
1631 the current user are also done with alternative addresses.
1632
1633
1634
1635
1636 Testing delivery status
1637 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1638 There are two conditions that are intended mainly for use in system filter
1639 files, but which are available in users' filter files as well. The condition
1640 ^first_delivery^ is true if this is the first process that is attempting to
1641 deliver the message, and false otherwise. This indicator is not reset until the
1642 first delivery process successfully terminates; if there is a crash or a power
1643 failure (for example), the next delivery attempt is also a ``first delivery''.
1644
1645 In a user filter file ^first_delivery^ will be false if there was previously an
1646 error in the filter, or if a delivery for the user failed owing to, for
1647 example, a quota error, or if forwarding to a remote address was deferred for
1648 some reason.
1649
1650 The condition ^manually_thawed^ is true if the message was ``frozen'' for some
1651 reason, and was subsequently released by the system administrator. It is
1652 unlikely to be of use in users' filter files.
1653
1654
1655 [[SECTmbox]]
1656 Multiple personal mailboxes
1657 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1658 The system administrator can configure Exim so that users can set up variants
1659 on their email addresses and handle them separately. Consult your system
1660 administrator or local documentation to see if this facility is enabled on your
1661 system, and if so, what the details are.
1662
1663 The facility involves the use of a prefix or a suffix on an email address. For
1664 example, all mail addressed to 'lg303-'<'something'> would be the property of
1665 user 'lg303', who could determine how it was to be handled, depending on the
1666 value of <'something'>.
1667
1668 There are two possible ways in which this can be set up. The first possibility
1669 is the use of multiple '.forward' files. In this case, mail to 'lg303-foo',
1670 for example, is handled by looking for a file called _.forward-foo_ in
1671 'lg303'{ap}s home directory. If such a file does not exist, delivery fails and the
1672 message is returned to its sender.
1673
1674 The alternative approach is to pass all messages through a single _.forward_
1675 file, which must be a filter file so that it can distinguish between the
1676 different cases by referencing the variables $local_part_prefix$ or
1677 $local_part_suffix$, as in the final example in section <<SECTex>> below.
1678
1679 It is possible to configure Exim to support both schemes at once. In this case,
1680 a specific _.forward-foo_ file is first sought; if it is not found, the basic
1681 _.forward_ file is used.
1682
1683 The ^personal^ test (see section <<SECTpersonal>>) includes prefixes and
1684 suffixes in its checking.
1685
1686
1687
1688 Ignoring delivery errors
1689 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1690 As was explained above, filtering just sets up addresses for delivery -- no
1691 deliveries are actually done while a filter file is active. If any of the
1692 generated addresses subsequently suffers a delivery failure, an error message
1693 is generated in the normal way. However, if a filter command that sets up a
1694 delivery is preceded by the word ^noerror^, errors for that delivery,
1695 'and any deliveries consequent on it' (that is, from alias, forwarding, or
1696 filter files it invokes) are ignored.
1697
1698
1699
1700 [[SECTex]]
1701 Examples of Exim filter commands
1702 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1703 Simple forwarding:
1704
1705 # Exim filter
1706 deliver baggins@rivendell.middle-earth.example
1707
1708 Vacation handling using traditional means, assuming that the _.vacation.msg_
1709 and other files have been set up in your home directory:
1710
1711 # Exim filter
1712 unseen pipe "/usr/ucb/vacation \"$local_part\""
1713
1714 Vacation handling inside Exim, having first created a file called
1715 _.vacation.msg_ in your home directory:
1716
1717 # Exim filter
1718 if personal then vacation endif
1719
1720 File some messages by subject:
1721
1722 # Exim filter
1723 if $header_subject: contains "empire" or
1724 $header_subject: contains "foundation"
1725 then
1726 save $home/mail/f+e
1727 endif
1728
1729 Save all non-urgent messages by weekday:
1730
1731 # Exim filter
1732 if $header_subject: does not contain "urgent" and
1733 $tod_full matches "^(...),"
1734 then
1735 save $home/mail/$1
1736 endif
1737
1738 Throw away all mail from one site, except from postmaster:
1739
1740 # Exim filter
1741 if $reply_address contains "@spam.site.example" and
1742 $reply_address does not contain "postmaster@"
1743 then
1744 seen finish
1745 endif
1746
1747 Handle multiple personal mailboxes:
1748
1749 # Exim filter
1750 if $local_part_suffix is "-foo"
1751 then
1752 save $home/mail/foo
1753 elif $local_part_suffix is "-bar"
1754 then
1755 save $home/mail/bar
1756 endif
1757
1758