tidying
[exim.git] / doc / doc-docbook / spec.xfpt
1 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2 . This is the primary source of the Exim Manual. It is an xfpt document that is
3 . converted into DocBook XML for subsequent conversion into printing and online
4 . formats. The markup used herein is "standard" xfpt markup, with some extras.
5 . The markup is summarized in a file called Markup.txt.
6 .
7 . WARNING: When you use the .new macro, make sure it appears *before* any
8 . adjacent index items; otherwise you get an empty "paragraph" which causes
9 . unwanted vertical space.
10 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
11
12 .include stdflags
13 .include stdmacs
14
15 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
16 . This outputs the standard DocBook boilerplate.
17 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
18
19 .docbook
20
21 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
22 . These lines are processing instructions for the Simple DocBook Processor that
23 . Philip Hazel has developed as a less cumbersome way of making PostScript and
24 . PDFs than using xmlto and fop. They will be ignored by all other XML
25 . processors.
26 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
27
28 .literal xml
29 <?sdop
30 foot_right_recto="&chaptertitle; (&chapternumber;)"
31 foot_right_verso="&chaptertitle; (&chapternumber;)"
32 toc_chapter_blanks="yes,yes"
33 table_warn_overflow="overprint"
34 ?>
35 .literal off
36
37 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
38 . This generate the outermost <book> element that wraps then entire document.
39 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
40
41 .book
42
43 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
44 . These definitions set some parameters and save some typing.
45 . Update the Copyright year (only) when changing content.
46 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
47
48 .set previousversion "4.91"
49 .include ./local_params
50
51 .set ACL "access control lists (ACLs)"
52 .set I "&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"
53
54 .macro copyyear
55 2018
56 .endmacro
57
58 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
59 . Additional xfpt markup used by this document, over and above the default
60 . provided in the xfpt library.
61 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
62
63 . --- Override the &$ flag to automatically insert a $ with the variable name
64
65 .flag &$ $& "<varname>$" "</varname>"
66
67 . --- Short flags for daggers in option headings. They will always be inside
68 . --- an italic string, but we want the daggers to be roman.
69
70 .flag &!! "</emphasis>&dagger;<emphasis>"
71 .flag &!? "</emphasis>&Dagger;<emphasis>"
72
73 . --- A macro for an Exim option definition heading, generating a one-line
74 . --- table with four columns. For cases when the option name is given with
75 . --- a space, so that it can be split, a fifth argument is used for the
76 . --- index entry.
77
78 .macro option
79 .arg 5
80 .oindex "&%$5%&"
81 .endarg
82 .arg -5
83 .oindex "&%$1%&"
84 .endarg
85 .itable all 0 0 4 8* left 6* center 6* center 6* right
86 .row "&%$1%&" "Use: &'$2'&" "Type: &'$3'&" "Default: &'$4'&"
87 .endtable
88 .endmacro
89
90 . --- A macro for the common 2-column tables. The width of the first column
91 . --- is suitable for the many tables at the start of the main options chapter;
92 . --- the small number of other 2-column tables override it.
93
94 .macro table2 196pt 254pt
95 .itable none 0 0 2 $1 left $2 left
96 .endmacro
97
98 . --- A macro that generates .row, but puts &I; at the start of the first
99 . --- argument, thus indenting it. Assume a minimum of two arguments, and
100 . --- allow up to four arguments, which is as many as we'll ever need.
101
102 .macro irow
103 .arg 4
104 .row "&I;$1" "$2" "$3" "$4"
105 .endarg
106 .arg -4
107 .arg 3
108 .row "&I;$1" "$2" "$3"
109 .endarg
110 .arg -3
111 .row "&I;$1" "$2"
112 .endarg
113 .endarg
114 .endmacro
115
116 . --- Macros for option, variable, and concept index entries. For a "range"
117 . --- style of entry, use .scindex for the start and .ecindex for the end. The
118 . --- first argument of .scindex and the only argument of .ecindex must be the
119 . --- ID that ties them together.
120
121 .macro cindex
122 &<indexterm role="concept">&
123 &<primary>&$1&</primary>&
124 .arg 2
125 &<secondary>&$2&</secondary>&
126 .endarg
127 &</indexterm>&
128 .endmacro
129
130 .macro scindex
131 &<indexterm role="concept" id="$1" class="startofrange">&
132 &<primary>&$2&</primary>&
133 .arg 3
134 &<secondary>&$3&</secondary>&
135 .endarg
136 &</indexterm>&
137 .endmacro
138
139 .macro ecindex
140 &<indexterm role="concept" startref="$1" class="endofrange"/>&
141 .endmacro
142
143 .macro oindex
144 &<indexterm role="option">&
145 &<primary>&$1&</primary>&
146 .arg 2
147 &<secondary>&$2&</secondary>&
148 .endarg
149 &</indexterm>&
150 .endmacro
151
152 .macro vindex
153 &<indexterm role="variable">&
154 &<primary>&$1&</primary>&
155 .arg 2
156 &<secondary>&$2&</secondary>&
157 .endarg
158 &</indexterm>&
159 .endmacro
160
161 .macro index
162 .echo "** Don't use .index; use .cindex or .oindex or .vindex"
163 .endmacro
164 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
165
166
167 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
168 . The <bookinfo> element is removed from the XML before processing for Ascii
169 . output formats.
170 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
171
172 .literal xml
173 <bookinfo>
174 <title>Specification of the Exim Mail Transfer Agent</title>
175 <titleabbrev>The Exim MTA</titleabbrev>
176 <date>
177 .fulldate
178 </date>
179 <author><firstname>Exim</firstname><surname>Maintainers</surname></author>
180 <authorinitials>EM</authorinitials>
181 <revhistory><revision>
182 .versiondatexml
183 <authorinitials>EM</authorinitials>
184 </revision></revhistory>
185 <copyright><year>
186 .copyyear
187 </year><holder>University of Cambridge</holder></copyright>
188 </bookinfo>
189 .literal off
190
191
192 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
193 . This chunk of literal XML implements index entries of the form "x, see y" and
194 . "x, see also y". However, the DocBook DTD doesn't allow <indexterm> entries
195 . at the top level, so we have to put the .chapter directive first.
196 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
197
198 .chapter "Introduction" "CHID1"
199 .literal xml
200
201 <indexterm role="variable">
202 <primary>$1, $2, etc.</primary>
203 <see><emphasis>numerical variables</emphasis></see>
204 </indexterm>
205 <indexterm role="concept">
206 <primary>address</primary>
207 <secondary>rewriting</secondary>
208 <see><emphasis>rewriting</emphasis></see>
209 </indexterm>
210 <indexterm role="concept">
211 <primary>Bounce Address Tag Validation</primary>
212 <see><emphasis>BATV</emphasis></see>
213 </indexterm>
214 <indexterm role="concept">
215 <primary>Client SMTP Authorization</primary>
216 <see><emphasis>CSA</emphasis></see>
217 </indexterm>
218 <indexterm role="concept">
219 <primary>CR character</primary>
220 <see><emphasis>carriage return</emphasis></see>
221 </indexterm>
222 <indexterm role="concept">
223 <primary>CRL</primary>
224 <see><emphasis>certificate revocation list</emphasis></see>
225 </indexterm>
226 <indexterm role="concept">
227 <primary>delivery</primary>
228 <secondary>failure report</secondary>
229 <see><emphasis>bounce message</emphasis></see>
230 </indexterm>
231 <indexterm role="concept">
232 <primary>dialup</primary>
233 <see><emphasis>intermittently connected hosts</emphasis></see>
234 </indexterm>
235 <indexterm role="concept">
236 <primary>exiscan</primary>
237 <see><emphasis>content scanning</emphasis></see>
238 </indexterm>
239 <indexterm role="concept">
240 <primary>failover</primary>
241 <see><emphasis>fallback</emphasis></see>
242 </indexterm>
243 <indexterm role="concept">
244 <primary>fallover</primary>
245 <see><emphasis>fallback</emphasis></see>
246 </indexterm>
247 <indexterm role="concept">
248 <primary>filter</primary>
249 <secondary>Sieve</secondary>
250 <see><emphasis>Sieve filter</emphasis></see>
251 </indexterm>
252 <indexterm role="concept">
253 <primary>ident</primary>
254 <see><emphasis>RFC 1413</emphasis></see>
255 </indexterm>
256 <indexterm role="concept">
257 <primary>LF character</primary>
258 <see><emphasis>linefeed</emphasis></see>
259 </indexterm>
260 <indexterm role="concept">
261 <primary>maximum</primary>
262 <seealso><emphasis>limit</emphasis></seealso>
263 </indexterm>
264 <indexterm role="concept">
265 <primary>monitor</primary>
266 <see><emphasis>Exim monitor</emphasis></see>
267 </indexterm>
268 <indexterm role="concept">
269 <primary>no_<emphasis>xxx</emphasis></primary>
270 <see>entry for xxx</see>
271 </indexterm>
272 <indexterm role="concept">
273 <primary>NUL</primary>
274 <see><emphasis>binary zero</emphasis></see>
275 </indexterm>
276 <indexterm role="concept">
277 <primary>passwd file</primary>
278 <see><emphasis>/etc/passwd</emphasis></see>
279 </indexterm>
280 <indexterm role="concept">
281 <primary>process id</primary>
282 <see><emphasis>pid</emphasis></see>
283 </indexterm>
284 <indexterm role="concept">
285 <primary>RBL</primary>
286 <see><emphasis>DNS list</emphasis></see>
287 </indexterm>
288 <indexterm role="concept">
289 <primary>redirection</primary>
290 <see><emphasis>address redirection</emphasis></see>
291 </indexterm>
292 <indexterm role="concept">
293 <primary>return path</primary>
294 <seealso><emphasis>envelope sender</emphasis></seealso>
295 </indexterm>
296 <indexterm role="concept">
297 <primary>scanning</primary>
298 <see><emphasis>content scanning</emphasis></see>
299 </indexterm>
300 <indexterm role="concept">
301 <primary>SSL</primary>
302 <see><emphasis>TLS</emphasis></see>
303 </indexterm>
304 <indexterm role="concept">
305 <primary>string</primary>
306 <secondary>expansion</secondary>
307 <see><emphasis>expansion</emphasis></see>
308 </indexterm>
309 <indexterm role="concept">
310 <primary>top bit</primary>
311 <see><emphasis>8-bit characters</emphasis></see>
312 </indexterm>
313 <indexterm role="concept">
314 <primary>variables</primary>
315 <see><emphasis>expansion, variables</emphasis></see>
316 </indexterm>
317 <indexterm role="concept">
318 <primary>zero, binary</primary>
319 <see><emphasis>binary zero</emphasis></see>
320 </indexterm>
321
322 .literal off
323
324
325 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
326 . This is the real start of the first chapter. See the comment above as to why
327 . we can't have the .chapter line here.
328 . chapter "Introduction"
329 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
330
331 Exim is a mail transfer agent (MTA) for hosts that are running Unix or
332 Unix-like operating systems. It was designed on the assumption that it would be
333 run on hosts that are permanently connected to the Internet. However, it can be
334 used on intermittently connected hosts with suitable configuration adjustments.
335
336 Configuration files currently exist for the following operating systems: AIX,
337 BSD/OS (aka BSDI), Darwin (Mac OS X), DGUX, Dragonfly, FreeBSD, GNU/Hurd,
338 GNU/Linux, HI-OSF (Hitachi), HI-UX, HP-UX, IRIX, MIPS RISCOS, NetBSD, OpenBSD,
339 OpenUNIX, QNX, SCO, SCO SVR4.2 (aka UNIX-SV), Solaris (aka SunOS5), SunOS4,
340 Tru64-Unix (formerly Digital UNIX, formerly DEC-OSF1), Ultrix, and Unixware.
341 Some of these operating systems are no longer current and cannot easily be
342 tested, so the configuration files may no longer work in practice.
343
344 There are also configuration files for compiling Exim in the Cygwin environment
345 that can be installed on systems running Windows. However, this document does
346 not contain any information about running Exim in the Cygwin environment.
347
348 The terms and conditions for the use and distribution of Exim are contained in
349 the file &_NOTICE_&. Exim is distributed under the terms of the GNU General
350 Public Licence, a copy of which may be found in the file &_LICENCE_&.
351
352 The use, supply or promotion of Exim for the purpose of sending bulk,
353 unsolicited electronic mail is incompatible with the basic aims of the program,
354 which revolve around the free provision of a service that enhances the quality
355 of personal communications. The author of Exim regards indiscriminate
356 mass-mailing as an antisocial, irresponsible abuse of the Internet.
357
358 Exim owes a great deal to Smail 3 and its author, Ron Karr. Without the
359 experience of running and working on the Smail 3 code, I could never have
360 contemplated starting to write a new MTA. Many of the ideas and user interfaces
361 were originally taken from Smail 3, though the actual code of Exim is entirely
362 new, and has developed far beyond the initial concept.
363
364 Many people, both in Cambridge and around the world, have contributed to the
365 development and the testing of Exim, and to porting it to various operating
366 systems. I am grateful to them all. The distribution now contains a file called
367 &_ACKNOWLEDGMENTS_&, in which I have started recording the names of
368 contributors.
369
370
371 .section "Exim documentation" "SECID1"
372 . Keep this example change bar when updating the documentation!
373
374 .new
375 .cindex "documentation"
376 This edition of the Exim specification applies to version &version() of Exim.
377 Substantive changes from the &previousversion; edition are marked in some
378 renditions of the document; this paragraph is so marked if the rendition is
379 capable of showing a change indicator.
380 .wen
381
382 This document is very much a reference manual; it is not a tutorial. The reader
383 is expected to have some familiarity with the SMTP mail transfer protocol and
384 with general Unix system administration. Although there are some discussions
385 and examples in places, the information is mostly organized in a way that makes
386 it easy to look up, rather than in a natural order for sequential reading.
387 Furthermore, the manual aims to cover every aspect of Exim in detail, including
388 a number of rarely-used, special-purpose features that are unlikely to be of
389 very wide interest.
390
391 .cindex "books about Exim"
392 An &"easier"& discussion of Exim which provides more in-depth explanatory,
393 introductory, and tutorial material can be found in a book entitled &'The Exim
394 SMTP Mail Server'& (second edition, 2007), published by UIT Cambridge
395 (&url(http://www.uit.co.uk/exim-book/)).
396
397 This book also contains a chapter that gives a general introduction to SMTP and
398 Internet mail. Inevitably, however, the book is unlikely to be fully up-to-date
399 with the latest release of Exim. (Note that the earlier book about Exim,
400 published by O'Reilly, covers Exim 3, and many things have changed in Exim 4.)
401
402 .cindex "Debian" "information sources"
403 If you are using a Debian distribution of Exim, you will find information about
404 Debian-specific features in the file
405 &_/usr/share/doc/exim4-base/README.Debian_&.
406 The command &(man update-exim.conf)& is another source of Debian-specific
407 information.
408
409 .cindex "&_doc/NewStuff_&"
410 .cindex "&_doc/ChangeLog_&"
411 .cindex "change log"
412 As the program develops, there may be features in newer versions that have not
413 yet made it into this document, which is updated only when the most significant
414 digit of the fractional part of the version number changes. Specifications of
415 new features that are not yet in this manual are placed in the file
416 &_doc/NewStuff_& in the Exim distribution.
417
418 Some features may be classified as &"experimental"&. These may change
419 incompatibly while they are developing, or even be withdrawn. For this reason,
420 they are not documented in this manual. Information about experimental features
421 can be found in the file &_doc/experimental.txt_&.
422
423 All changes to the program (whether new features, bug fixes, or other kinds of
424 change) are noted briefly in the file called &_doc/ChangeLog_&.
425
426 .cindex "&_doc/spec.txt_&"
427 This specification itself is available as an ASCII file in &_doc/spec.txt_& so
428 that it can easily be searched with a text editor. Other files in the &_doc_&
429 directory are:
430
431 .table2 100pt
432 .row &_OptionLists.txt_& "list of all options in alphabetical order"
433 .row &_dbm.discuss.txt_& "discussion about DBM libraries"
434 .row &_exim.8_& "a man page of Exim's command line options"
435 .row &_experimental.txt_& "documentation of experimental features"
436 .row &_filter.txt_& "specification of the filter language"
437 .row &_Exim3.upgrade_& "upgrade notes from release 2 to release 3"
438 .row &_Exim4.upgrade_& "upgrade notes from release 3 to release 4"
439 .row &_openssl.txt_& "installing a current OpenSSL release"
440 .endtable
441
442 The main specification and the specification of the filtering language are also
443 available in other formats (HTML, PostScript, PDF, and Texinfo). Section
444 &<<SECTavail>>& below tells you how to get hold of these.
445
446
447
448 .section "FTP and web sites" "SECID2"
449 .cindex "web site"
450 .cindex "FTP site"
451 The primary site for Exim source distributions is the &%exim.org%& FTP site,
452 available over HTTPS, HTTP and FTP. These services, and the &%exim.org%&
453 website, are hosted at the University of Cambridge.
454
455 .cindex "wiki"
456 .cindex "FAQ"
457 As well as Exim distribution tar files, the Exim web site contains a number of
458 differently formatted versions of the documentation. A recent addition to the
459 online information is the Exim wiki (&url(http://wiki.exim.org)),
460 which contains what used to be a separate FAQ, as well as various other
461 examples, tips, and know-how that have been contributed by Exim users.
462 The wiki site should always redirect to the correct place, which is currently
463 provided by GitHub, and is open to editing by anyone with a GitHub account.
464
465 .cindex Bugzilla
466 An Exim Bugzilla exists at &url(https://bugs.exim.org). You can use
467 this to report bugs, and also to add items to the wish list. Please search
468 first to check that you are not duplicating a previous entry.
469 Please do not ask for configuration help in the bug-tracker.
470
471
472 .section "Mailing lists" "SECID3"
473 .cindex "mailing lists" "for Exim users"
474 The following Exim mailing lists exist:
475
476 .table2 140pt
477 .row &'exim-announce@exim.org'& "Moderated, low volume announcements list"
478 .row &'exim-users@exim.org'& "General discussion list"
479 .row &'exim-dev@exim.org'& "Discussion of bugs, enhancements, etc."
480 .row &'exim-cvs@exim.org'& "Automated commit messages from the VCS"
481 .endtable
482
483 You can subscribe to these lists, change your existing subscriptions, and view
484 or search the archives via the mailing lists link on the Exim home page.
485 .cindex "Debian" "mailing list for"
486 If you are using a Debian distribution of Exim, you may wish to subscribe to
487 the Debian-specific mailing list &'pkg-exim4-users@lists.alioth.debian.org'&
488 via this web page:
489 .display
490 &url(http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/pkg-exim4-users)
491 .endd
492 Please ask Debian-specific questions on this list and not on the general Exim
493 lists.
494
495 .section "Bug reports" "SECID5"
496 .cindex "bug reports"
497 .cindex "reporting bugs"
498 Reports of obvious bugs can be emailed to &'bugs@exim.org'& or reported
499 via the Bugzilla (&url(https://bugs.exim.org)). However, if you are unsure
500 whether some behaviour is a bug or not, the best thing to do is to post a
501 message to the &'exim-dev'& mailing list and have it discussed.
502
503
504
505 .section "Where to find the Exim distribution" "SECTavail"
506 .cindex "FTP site"
507 .cindex "HTTPS download site"
508 .cindex "distribution" "ftp site"
509 .cindex "distribution" "https site"
510 The master distribution site for the Exim distribution is
511 .display
512 &*https://downloads.exim.org/*&
513 .endd
514 The service is available over HTTPS, HTTP and FTP.
515 We encourage people to migrate to HTTPS.
516
517 The content served at &'https://downloads.exim.org/'& is identical to the
518 content served at &'https://ftp.exim.org/pub/exim'& and
519 &'ftp://ftp.exim.org/pub/exim'&.
520
521 If accessing via a hostname containing &'ftp'&, then the file references that
522 follow are relative to the &_exim_& directories at these sites.
523 If accessing via the hostname &'downloads'& then the subdirectories described
524 here are top-level directories.
525
526 There are now quite a number of independent mirror sites around
527 the world. Those that I know about are listed in the file called &_Mirrors_&.
528
529 Within the top exim directory there are subdirectories called &_exim3_& (for
530 previous Exim 3 distributions), &_exim4_& (for the latest Exim 4
531 distributions), and &_Testing_& for testing versions. In the &_exim4_&
532 subdirectory, the current release can always be found in files called
533 .display
534 &_exim-n.nn.tar.xz_&
535 &_exim-n.nn.tar.gz_&
536 &_exim-n.nn.tar.bz2_&
537 .endd
538 where &'n.nn'& is the highest such version number in the directory. The three
539 files contain identical data; the only difference is the type of compression.
540 The &_.xz_& file is usually the smallest, while the &_.gz_& file is the
541 most portable to old systems.
542
543 .cindex "distribution" "signing details"
544 .cindex "distribution" "public key"
545 .cindex "public key for signed distribution"
546 The distributions will be PGP signed by an individual key of the Release
547 Coordinator. This key will have a uid containing an email address in the
548 &'exim.org'& domain and will have signatures from other people, including
549 other Exim maintainers. We expect that the key will be in the "strong set" of
550 PGP keys. There should be a trust path to that key from Nigel Metheringham's
551 PGP key, a version of which can be found in the release directory in the file
552 &_nigel-pubkey.asc_&. All keys used will be available in public keyserver pools,
553 such as &'pool.sks-keyservers.net'&.
554
555 At time of last update, releases were being made by Jeremy Harris and signed
556 with key &'0xBCE58C8CE41F32DF'&. Other recent keys used for signing are those
557 of Heiko Schlittermann, &'0x26101B62F69376CE'&,
558 and of Phil Pennock, &'0x4D1E900E14C1CC04'&.
559
560 The signatures for the tar bundles are in:
561 .display
562 &_exim-n.nn.tar.xz.asc_&
563 &_exim-n.nn.tar.gz.asc_&
564 &_exim-n.nn.tar.bz2.asc_&
565 .endd
566 For each released version, the log of changes is made separately available in a
567 separate file in the directory &_ChangeLogs_& so that it is possible to
568 find out what has changed without having to download the entire distribution.
569
570 .cindex "documentation" "available formats"
571 The main distribution contains ASCII versions of this specification and other
572 documentation; other formats of the documents are available in separate files
573 inside the &_exim4_& directory of the FTP site:
574 .display
575 &_exim-html-n.nn.tar.gz_&
576 &_exim-pdf-n.nn.tar.gz_&
577 &_exim-postscript-n.nn.tar.gz_&
578 &_exim-texinfo-n.nn.tar.gz_&
579 .endd
580 These tar files contain only the &_doc_& directory, not the complete
581 distribution, and are also available in &_.bz2_& and &_.xz_& forms.
582
583
584 .section "Limitations" "SECID6"
585 .ilist
586 .cindex "limitations of Exim"
587 .cindex "bang paths" "not handled by Exim"
588 Exim is designed for use as an Internet MTA, and therefore handles addresses in
589 RFC 2822 domain format only. It cannot handle UUCP &"bang paths"&, though
590 simple two-component bang paths can be converted by a straightforward rewriting
591 configuration. This restriction does not prevent Exim from being interfaced to
592 UUCP as a transport mechanism, provided that domain addresses are used.
593 .next
594 .cindex "domainless addresses"
595 .cindex "address" "without domain"
596 Exim insists that every address it handles has a domain attached. For incoming
597 local messages, domainless addresses are automatically qualified with a
598 configured domain value. Configuration options specify from which remote
599 systems unqualified addresses are acceptable. These are then qualified on
600 arrival.
601 .next
602 .cindex "transport" "external"
603 .cindex "external transports"
604 The only external transport mechanisms that are currently implemented are SMTP
605 and LMTP over a TCP/IP network (including support for IPv6). However, a pipe
606 transport is available, and there are facilities for writing messages to files
607 and pipes, optionally in &'batched SMTP'& format; these facilities can be used
608 to send messages to other transport mechanisms such as UUCP, provided they can
609 handle domain-style addresses. Batched SMTP input is also catered for.
610 .next
611 Exim is not designed for storing mail for dial-in hosts. When the volumes of
612 such mail are large, it is better to get the messages &"delivered"& into files
613 (that is, off Exim's queue) and subsequently passed on to the dial-in hosts by
614 other means.
615 .next
616 Although Exim does have basic facilities for scanning incoming messages, these
617 are not comprehensive enough to do full virus or spam scanning. Such operations
618 are best carried out using additional specialized software packages. If you
619 compile Exim with the content-scanning extension, straightforward interfaces to
620 a number of common scanners are provided.
621 .endlist
622
623
624 .section "Run time configuration" "SECID7"
625 Exim's run time configuration is held in a single text file that is divided
626 into a number of sections. The entries in this file consist of keywords and
627 values, in the style of Smail 3 configuration files. A default configuration
628 file which is suitable for simple online installations is provided in the
629 distribution, and is described in chapter &<<CHAPdefconfil>>& below.
630
631
632 .section "Calling interface" "SECID8"
633 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "command line interface"
634 Like many MTAs, Exim has adopted the Sendmail command line interface so that it
635 can be a straight replacement for &_/usr/lib/sendmail_& or
636 &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_& when sending mail, but you do not need to know anything
637 about Sendmail in order to run Exim. For actions other than sending messages,
638 Sendmail-compatible options also exist, but those that produce output (for
639 example, &%-bp%&, which lists the messages on the queue) do so in Exim's own
640 format. There are also some additional options that are compatible with Smail
641 3, and some further options that are new to Exim. Chapter &<<CHAPcommandline>>&
642 documents all Exim's command line options. This information is automatically
643 made into the man page that forms part of the Exim distribution.
644
645 Control of messages on the queue can be done via certain privileged command
646 line options. There is also an optional monitor program called &'eximon'&,
647 which displays current information in an X window, and which contains a menu
648 interface to Exim's command line administration options.
649
650
651
652 .section "Terminology" "SECID9"
653 .cindex "terminology definitions"
654 .cindex "body of message" "definition of"
655 The &'body'& of a message is the actual data that the sender wants to transmit.
656 It is the last part of a message, and is separated from the &'header'& (see
657 below) by a blank line.
658
659 .cindex "bounce message" "definition of"
660 When a message cannot be delivered, it is normally returned to the sender in a
661 delivery failure message or a &"non-delivery report"& (NDR). The term
662 &'bounce'& is commonly used for this action, and the error reports are often
663 called &'bounce messages'&. This is a convenient shorthand for &"delivery
664 failure error report"&. Such messages have an empty sender address in the
665 message's &'envelope'& (see below) to ensure that they cannot themselves give
666 rise to further bounce messages.
667
668 The term &'default'& appears frequently in this manual. It is used to qualify a
669 value which is used in the absence of any setting in the configuration. It may
670 also qualify an action which is taken unless a configuration setting specifies
671 otherwise.
672
673 The term &'defer'& is used when the delivery of a message to a specific
674 destination cannot immediately take place for some reason (a remote host may be
675 down, or a user's local mailbox may be full). Such deliveries are &'deferred'&
676 until a later time.
677
678 The word &'domain'& is sometimes used to mean all but the first component of a
679 host's name. It is &'not'& used in that sense here, where it normally refers to
680 the part of an email address following the @ sign.
681
682 .cindex "envelope, definition of"
683 .cindex "sender" "definition of"
684 A message in transit has an associated &'envelope'&, as well as a header and a
685 body. The envelope contains a sender address (to which bounce messages should
686 be delivered), and any number of recipient addresses. References to the
687 sender or the recipients of a message usually mean the addresses in the
688 envelope. An MTA uses these addresses for delivery, and for returning bounce
689 messages, not the addresses that appear in the header lines.
690
691 .cindex "message" "header, definition of"
692 .cindex "header section" "definition of"
693 The &'header'& of a message is the first part of a message's text, consisting
694 of a number of lines, each of which has a name such as &'From:'&, &'To:'&,
695 &'Subject:'&, etc. Long header lines can be split over several text lines by
696 indenting the continuations. The header is separated from the body by a blank
697 line.
698
699 .cindex "local part" "definition of"
700 .cindex "domain" "definition of"
701 The term &'local part'&, which is taken from RFC 2822, is used to refer to that
702 part of an email address that precedes the @ sign. The part that follows the
703 @ sign is called the &'domain'& or &'mail domain'&.
704
705 .cindex "local delivery" "definition of"
706 .cindex "remote delivery, definition of"
707 The terms &'local delivery'& and &'remote delivery'& are used to distinguish
708 delivery to a file or a pipe on the local host from delivery by SMTP over
709 TCP/IP to another host. As far as Exim is concerned, all hosts other than the
710 host it is running on are &'remote'&.
711
712 .cindex "return path" "definition of"
713 &'Return path'& is another name that is used for the sender address in a
714 message's envelope.
715
716 .cindex "queue" "definition of"
717 The term &'queue'& is used to refer to the set of messages awaiting delivery,
718 because this term is in widespread use in the context of MTAs. However, in
719 Exim's case the reality is more like a pool than a queue, because there is
720 normally no ordering of waiting messages.
721
722 .cindex "queue runner" "definition of"
723 The term &'queue runner'& is used to describe a process that scans the queue
724 and attempts to deliver those messages whose retry times have come. This term
725 is used by other MTAs, and also relates to the command &%runq%&, but in Exim
726 the waiting messages are normally processed in an unpredictable order.
727
728 .cindex "spool directory" "definition of"
729 The term &'spool directory'& is used for a directory in which Exim keeps the
730 messages on its queue &-- that is, those that it is in the process of
731 delivering. This should not be confused with the directory in which local
732 mailboxes are stored, which is called a &"spool directory"& by some people. In
733 the Exim documentation, &"spool"& is always used in the first sense.
734
735
736
737
738
739
740 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
741 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
742
743 .chapter "Incorporated code" "CHID2"
744 .cindex "incorporated code"
745 .cindex "regular expressions" "library"
746 .cindex "PCRE"
747 .cindex "OpenDMARC"
748 A number of pieces of external code are included in the Exim distribution.
749
750 .ilist
751 Regular expressions are supported in the main Exim program and in the
752 Exim monitor using the freely-distributable PCRE library, copyright
753 &copy; University of Cambridge. The source to PCRE is no longer shipped with
754 Exim, so you will need to use the version of PCRE shipped with your system,
755 or obtain and install the full version of the library from
756 &url(ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre).
757 .next
758 .cindex "cdb" "acknowledgment"
759 Support for the cdb (Constant DataBase) lookup method is provided by code
760 contributed by Nigel Metheringham of (at the time he contributed it) Planet
761 Online Ltd. The implementation is completely contained within the code of Exim.
762 It does not link against an external cdb library. The code contains the
763 following statements:
764
765 .blockquote
766 Copyright &copy; 1998 Nigel Metheringham, Planet Online Ltd
767
768 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
769 the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
770 Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later
771 version.
772 This code implements Dan Bernstein's Constant DataBase (cdb) spec. Information,
773 the spec and sample code for cdb can be obtained from
774 &url(http://www.pobox.com/~djb/cdb.html). This implementation borrows
775 some code from Dan Bernstein's implementation (which has no license
776 restrictions applied to it).
777 .endblockquote
778 .next
779 .cindex "SPA authentication"
780 .cindex "Samba project"
781 .cindex "Microsoft Secure Password Authentication"
782 Client support for Microsoft's &'Secure Password Authentication'& is provided
783 by code contributed by Marc Prud'hommeaux. Server support was contributed by
784 Tom Kistner. This includes code taken from the Samba project, which is released
785 under the Gnu GPL.
786 .next
787 .cindex "Cyrus"
788 .cindex "&'pwcheck'& daemon"
789 .cindex "&'pwauthd'& daemon"
790 Support for calling the Cyrus &'pwcheck'& and &'saslauthd'& daemons is provided
791 by code taken from the Cyrus-SASL library and adapted by Alexander S.
792 Sabourenkov. The permission notice appears below, in accordance with the
793 conditions expressed therein.
794
795 .blockquote
796 Copyright &copy; 2001 Carnegie Mellon University. All rights reserved.
797
798 Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
799 modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
800 are met:
801
802 .olist
803 Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
804 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
805 .next
806 Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
807 notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
808 the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
809 distribution.
810 .next
811 The name &"Carnegie Mellon University"& must not be used to
812 endorse or promote products derived from this software without
813 prior written permission. For permission or any other legal
814 details, please contact
815 .display
816 Office of Technology Transfer
817 Carnegie Mellon University
818 5000 Forbes Avenue
819 Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890
820 (412) 268-4387, fax: (412) 268-7395
821 tech-transfer@andrew.cmu.edu
822 .endd
823 .next
824 Redistributions of any form whatsoever must retain the following
825 acknowledgment:
826
827 &"This product includes software developed by Computing Services
828 at Carnegie Mellon University (&url(http://www.cmu.edu/computing/)."&
829
830 CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO
831 THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY
832 AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY BE LIABLE
833 FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
834 WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN
835 AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING
836 OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
837 .endlist
838 .endblockquote
839
840 .next
841 .cindex "Exim monitor" "acknowledgment"
842 .cindex "X-windows"
843 .cindex "Athena"
844 The Exim Monitor program, which is an X-Window application, includes
845 modified versions of the Athena StripChart and TextPop widgets.
846 This code is copyright by DEC and MIT, and their permission notice appears
847 below, in accordance with the conditions expressed therein.
848
849 .blockquote
850 Copyright 1987, 1988 by Digital Equipment Corporation, Maynard, Massachusetts,
851 and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
852
853 All Rights Reserved
854
855 Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its
856 documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted,
857 provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that
858 both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in
859 supporting documentation, and that the names of Digital or MIT not be
860 used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the
861 software without specific, written prior permission.
862
863 DIGITAL DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING
864 ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL
865 DIGITAL BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR
866 ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS,
867 WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION,
868 ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS
869 SOFTWARE.
870 .endblockquote
871
872 .next
873 .cindex "opendmarc" "acknowledgment"
874 The DMARC implementation uses the OpenDMARC library which is Copyrighted by
875 The Trusted Domain Project. Portions of Exim source which use OpenDMARC
876 derived code are indicated in the respective source files. The full OpenDMARC
877 license is provided in the LICENSE.opendmarc file contained in the distributed
878 source code.
879
880 .next
881 Many people have contributed code fragments, some large, some small, that were
882 not covered by any specific licence requirements. It is assumed that the
883 contributors are happy to see their code incorporated into Exim under the GPL.
884 .endlist
885
886
887
888
889
890 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
891 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
892
893 .chapter "How Exim receives and delivers mail" "CHID11" &&&
894 "Receiving and delivering mail"
895
896
897 .section "Overall philosophy" "SECID10"
898 .cindex "design philosophy"
899 Exim is designed to work efficiently on systems that are permanently connected
900 to the Internet and are handling a general mix of mail. In such circumstances,
901 most messages can be delivered immediately. Consequently, Exim does not
902 maintain independent queues of messages for specific domains or hosts, though
903 it does try to send several messages in a single SMTP connection after a host
904 has been down, and it also maintains per-host retry information.
905
906
907 .section "Policy control" "SECID11"
908 .cindex "policy control" "overview"
909 Policy controls are now an important feature of MTAs that are connected to the
910 Internet. Perhaps their most important job is to stop MTAs being abused as
911 &"open relays"& by misguided individuals who send out vast amounts of
912 unsolicited junk, and want to disguise its source. Exim provides flexible
913 facilities for specifying policy controls on incoming mail:
914
915 .ilist
916 .cindex "&ACL;" "introduction"
917 Exim 4 (unlike previous versions of Exim) implements policy controls on
918 incoming mail by means of &'Access Control Lists'& (ACLs). Each list is a
919 series of statements that may either grant or deny access. ACLs can be used at
920 several places in the SMTP dialogue while receiving a message from a remote
921 host. However, the most common places are after each RCPT command, and at the
922 very end of the message. The sysadmin can specify conditions for accepting or
923 rejecting individual recipients or the entire message, respectively, at these
924 two points (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&). Denial of access results in an SMTP
925 error code.
926 .next
927 An ACL is also available for locally generated, non-SMTP messages. In this
928 case, the only available actions are to accept or deny the entire message.
929 .next
930 When Exim is compiled with the content-scanning extension, facilities are
931 provided in the ACL mechanism for passing the message to external virus and/or
932 spam scanning software. The result of such a scan is passed back to the ACL,
933 which can then use it to decide what to do with the message.
934 .next
935 When a message has been received, either from a remote host or from the local
936 host, but before the final acknowledgment has been sent, a locally supplied C
937 function called &[local_scan()]& can be run to inspect the message and decide
938 whether to accept it or not (see chapter &<<CHAPlocalscan>>&). If the message
939 is accepted, the list of recipients can be modified by the function.
940 .next
941 Using the &[local_scan()]& mechanism is another way of calling external scanner
942 software. The &%SA-Exim%& add-on package works this way. It does not require
943 Exim to be compiled with the content-scanning extension.
944 .next
945 After a message has been accepted, a further checking mechanism is available in
946 the form of the &'system filter'& (see chapter &<<CHAPsystemfilter>>&). This
947 runs at the start of every delivery process.
948 .endlist
949
950
951
952 .section "User filters" "SECID12"
953 .cindex "filter" "introduction"
954 .cindex "Sieve filter"
955 In a conventional Exim configuration, users are able to run private filters by
956 setting up appropriate &_.forward_& files in their home directories. See
957 chapter &<<CHAPredirect>>& (about the &(redirect)& router) for the
958 configuration needed to support this, and the separate document entitled
959 &'Exim's interfaces to mail filtering'& for user details. Two different kinds
960 of filtering are available:
961
962 .ilist
963 Sieve filters are written in the standard filtering language that is defined
964 by RFC 3028.
965 .next
966 Exim filters are written in a syntax that is unique to Exim, but which is more
967 powerful than Sieve, which it pre-dates.
968 .endlist
969
970 User filters are run as part of the routing process, described below.
971
972
973
974 .section "Message identification" "SECTmessiden"
975 .cindex "message ids" "details of format"
976 .cindex "format" "of message id"
977 .cindex "id of message"
978 .cindex "base62"
979 .cindex "base36"
980 .cindex "Darwin"
981 .cindex "Cygwin"
982 Every message handled by Exim is given a &'message id'& which is sixteen
983 characters long. It is divided into three parts, separated by hyphens, for
984 example &`16VDhn-0001bo-D3`&. Each part is a sequence of letters and digits,
985 normally encoding numbers in base 62. However, in the Darwin operating
986 system (Mac OS X) and when Exim is compiled to run under Cygwin, base 36
987 (avoiding the use of lower case letters) is used instead, because the message
988 id is used to construct file names, and the names of files in those systems are
989 not always case-sensitive.
990
991 .cindex "pid (process id)" "re-use of"
992 The detail of the contents of the message id have changed as Exim has evolved.
993 Earlier versions relied on the operating system not re-using a process id (pid)
994 within one second. On modern operating systems, this assumption can no longer
995 be made, so the algorithm had to be changed. To retain backward compatibility,
996 the format of the message id was retained, which is why the following rules are
997 somewhat eccentric:
998
999 .ilist
1000 The first six characters of the message id are the time at which the message
1001 started to be received, to a granularity of one second. That is, this field
1002 contains the number of seconds since the start of the epoch (the normal Unix
1003 way of representing the date and time of day).
1004 .next
1005 After the first hyphen, the next six characters are the id of the process that
1006 received the message.
1007 .next
1008 There are two different possibilities for the final two characters:
1009 .olist
1010 .oindex "&%localhost_number%&"
1011 If &%localhost_number%& is not set, this value is the fractional part of the
1012 time of reception, normally in units of 1/2000 of a second, but for systems
1013 that must use base 36 instead of base 62 (because of case-insensitive file
1014 systems), the units are 1/1000 of a second.
1015 .next
1016 If &%localhost_number%& is set, it is multiplied by 200 (100) and added to
1017 the fractional part of the time, which in this case is in units of 1/200
1018 (1/100) of a second.
1019 .endlist
1020 .endlist
1021
1022 After a message has been received, Exim waits for the clock to tick at the
1023 appropriate resolution before proceeding, so that if another message is
1024 received by the same process, or by another process with the same (re-used)
1025 pid, it is guaranteed that the time will be different. In most cases, the clock
1026 will already have ticked while the message was being received.
1027
1028
1029 .section "Receiving mail" "SECID13"
1030 .cindex "receiving mail"
1031 .cindex "message" "reception"
1032 The only way Exim can receive mail from another host is using SMTP over
1033 TCP/IP, in which case the sender and recipient addresses are transferred using
1034 SMTP commands. However, from a locally running process (such as a user's MUA),
1035 there are several possibilities:
1036
1037 .ilist
1038 If the process runs Exim with the &%-bm%& option, the message is read
1039 non-interactively (usually via a pipe), with the recipients taken from the
1040 command line, or from the body of the message if &%-t%& is also used.
1041 .next
1042 If the process runs Exim with the &%-bS%& option, the message is also read
1043 non-interactively, but in this case the recipients are listed at the start of
1044 the message in a series of SMTP RCPT commands, terminated by a DATA
1045 command. This is so-called &"batch SMTP"& format,
1046 but it isn't really SMTP. The SMTP commands are just another way of passing
1047 envelope addresses in a non-interactive submission.
1048 .next
1049 If the process runs Exim with the &%-bs%& option, the message is read
1050 interactively, using the SMTP protocol. A two-way pipe is normally used for
1051 passing data between the local process and the Exim process.
1052 This is &"real"& SMTP and is handled in the same way as SMTP over TCP/IP. For
1053 example, the ACLs for SMTP commands are used for this form of submission.
1054 .next
1055 A local process may also make a TCP/IP call to the host's loopback address
1056 (127.0.0.1) or any other of its IP addresses. When receiving messages, Exim
1057 does not treat the loopback address specially. It treats all such connections
1058 in the same way as connections from other hosts.
1059 .endlist
1060
1061
1062 .cindex "message sender, constructed by Exim"
1063 .cindex "sender" "constructed by Exim"
1064 In the three cases that do not involve TCP/IP, the sender address is
1065 constructed from the login name of the user that called Exim and a default
1066 qualification domain (which can be set by the &%qualify_domain%& configuration
1067 option). For local or batch SMTP, a sender address that is passed using the
1068 SMTP MAIL command is ignored. However, the system administrator may allow
1069 certain users (&"trusted users"&) to specify a different sender address
1070 unconditionally, or all users to specify certain forms of different sender
1071 address. The &%-f%& option or the SMTP MAIL command is used to specify these
1072 different addresses. See section &<<SECTtrustedadmin>>& for details of trusted
1073 users, and the &%untrusted_set_sender%& option for a way of allowing untrusted
1074 users to change sender addresses.
1075
1076 Messages received by either of the non-interactive mechanisms are subject to
1077 checking by the non-SMTP ACL, if one is defined. Messages received using SMTP
1078 (either over TCP/IP, or interacting with a local process) can be checked by a
1079 number of ACLs that operate at different times during the SMTP session. Either
1080 individual recipients, or the entire message, can be rejected if local policy
1081 requirements are not met. The &[local_scan()]& function (see chapter
1082 &<<CHAPlocalscan>>&) is run for all incoming messages.
1083
1084 Exim can be configured not to start a delivery process when a message is
1085 received; this can be unconditional, or depend on the number of incoming SMTP
1086 connections or the system load. In these situations, new messages wait on the
1087 queue until a queue runner process picks them up. However, in standard
1088 configurations under normal conditions, delivery is started as soon as a
1089 message is received.
1090
1091
1092
1093
1094
1095 .section "Handling an incoming message" "SECID14"
1096 .cindex "spool directory" "files that hold a message"
1097 .cindex "file" "how a message is held"
1098 When Exim accepts a message, it writes two files in its spool directory. The
1099 first contains the envelope information, the current status of the message, and
1100 the header lines, and the second contains the body of the message. The names of
1101 the two spool files consist of the message id, followed by &`-H`& for the
1102 file containing the envelope and header, and &`-D`& for the data file.
1103
1104 .cindex "spool directory" "&_input_& sub-directory"
1105 By default all these message files are held in a single directory called
1106 &_input_& inside the general Exim spool directory. Some operating systems do
1107 not perform very well if the number of files in a directory gets large; to
1108 improve performance in such cases, the &%split_spool_directory%& option can be
1109 used. This causes Exim to split up the input files into 62 sub-directories
1110 whose names are single letters or digits. When this is done, the queue is
1111 processed one sub-directory at a time instead of all at once, which can improve
1112 overall performance even when there are not enough files in each directory to
1113 affect file system performance.
1114
1115 The envelope information consists of the address of the message's sender and
1116 the addresses of the recipients. This information is entirely separate from
1117 any addresses contained in the header lines. The status of the message includes
1118 a list of recipients who have already received the message. The format of the
1119 first spool file is described in chapter &<<CHAPspool>>&.
1120
1121 .cindex "rewriting" "addresses"
1122 Address rewriting that is specified in the rewrite section of the configuration
1123 (see chapter &<<CHAPrewrite>>&) is done once and for all on incoming addresses,
1124 both in the header lines and the envelope, at the time the message is accepted.
1125 If during the course of delivery additional addresses are generated (for
1126 example, via aliasing), these new addresses are rewritten as soon as they are
1127 generated. At the time a message is actually delivered (transported) further
1128 rewriting can take place; because this is a transport option, it can be
1129 different for different forms of delivery. It is also possible to specify the
1130 addition or removal of certain header lines at the time the message is
1131 delivered (see chapters &<<CHAProutergeneric>>& and
1132 &<<CHAPtransportgeneric>>&).
1133
1134
1135
1136 .section "Life of a message" "SECID15"
1137 .cindex "message" "life of"
1138 .cindex "message" "frozen"
1139 A message remains in the spool directory until it is completely delivered to
1140 its recipients or to an error address, or until it is deleted by an
1141 administrator or by the user who originally created it. In cases when delivery
1142 cannot proceed &-- for example, when a message can neither be delivered to its
1143 recipients nor returned to its sender, the message is marked &"frozen"& on the
1144 spool, and no more deliveries are attempted.
1145
1146 .cindex "frozen messages" "thawing"
1147 .cindex "message" "thawing frozen"
1148 An administrator can &"thaw"& such messages when the problem has been
1149 corrected, and can also freeze individual messages by hand if necessary. In
1150 addition, an administrator can force a delivery error, causing a bounce message
1151 to be sent.
1152
1153 .oindex "&%timeout_frozen_after%&"
1154 .oindex "&%ignore_bounce_errors_after%&"
1155 There are options called &%ignore_bounce_errors_after%& and
1156 &%timeout_frozen_after%&, which discard frozen messages after a certain time.
1157 The first applies only to frozen bounces, the second to any frozen messages.
1158
1159 .cindex "message" "log file for"
1160 .cindex "log" "file for each message"
1161 While Exim is working on a message, it writes information about each delivery
1162 attempt to its main log file. This includes successful, unsuccessful, and
1163 delayed deliveries for each recipient (see chapter &<<CHAPlog>>&). The log
1164 lines are also written to a separate &'message log'& file for each message.
1165 These logs are solely for the benefit of the administrator, and are normally
1166 deleted along with the spool files when processing of a message is complete.
1167 The use of individual message logs can be disabled by setting
1168 &%no_message_logs%&; this might give an improvement in performance on very busy
1169 systems.
1170
1171 .cindex "journal file"
1172 .cindex "file" "journal"
1173 All the information Exim itself needs to set up a delivery is kept in the first
1174 spool file, along with the header lines. When a successful delivery occurs, the
1175 address is immediately written at the end of a journal file, whose name is the
1176 message id followed by &`-J`&. At the end of a delivery run, if there are some
1177 addresses left to be tried again later, the first spool file (the &`-H`& file)
1178 is updated to indicate which these are, and the journal file is then deleted.
1179 Updating the spool file is done by writing a new file and renaming it, to
1180 minimize the possibility of data loss.
1181
1182 Should the system or the program crash after a successful delivery but before
1183 the spool file has been updated, the journal is left lying around. The next
1184 time Exim attempts to deliver the message, it reads the journal file and
1185 updates the spool file before proceeding. This minimizes the chances of double
1186 deliveries caused by crashes.
1187
1188
1189
1190 .section "Processing an address for delivery" "SECTprocaddress"
1191 .cindex "drivers" "definition of"
1192 .cindex "router" "definition of"
1193 .cindex "transport" "definition of"
1194 The main delivery processing elements of Exim are called &'routers'& and
1195 &'transports'&, and collectively these are known as &'drivers'&. Code for a
1196 number of them is provided in the source distribution, and compile-time options
1197 specify which ones are included in the binary. Run time options specify which
1198 ones are actually used for delivering messages.
1199
1200 .cindex "drivers" "instance definition"
1201 Each driver that is specified in the run time configuration is an &'instance'&
1202 of that particular driver type. Multiple instances are allowed; for example,
1203 you can set up several different &(smtp)& transports, each with different
1204 option values that might specify different ports or different timeouts. Each
1205 instance has its own identifying name. In what follows we will normally use the
1206 instance name when discussing one particular instance (that is, one specific
1207 configuration of the driver), and the generic driver name when discussing
1208 the driver's features in general.
1209
1210 A &'router'& is a driver that operates on an address, either determining how
1211 its delivery should happen, by assigning it to a specific transport, or
1212 converting the address into one or more new addresses (for example, via an
1213 alias file). A router may also explicitly choose to fail an address, causing it
1214 to be bounced.
1215
1216 A &'transport'& is a driver that transmits a copy of the message from Exim's
1217 spool to some destination. There are two kinds of transport: for a &'local'&
1218 transport, the destination is a file or a pipe on the local host, whereas for a
1219 &'remote'& transport the destination is some other host. A message is passed
1220 to a specific transport as a result of successful routing. If a message has
1221 several recipients, it may be passed to a number of different transports.
1222
1223 .cindex "preconditions" "definition of"
1224 An address is processed by passing it to each configured router instance in
1225 turn, subject to certain preconditions, until a router accepts the address or
1226 specifies that it should be bounced. We will describe this process in more
1227 detail shortly. First, as a simple example, we consider how each recipient
1228 address in a message is processed in a small configuration of three routers.
1229
1230 To make this a more concrete example, it is described in terms of some actual
1231 routers, but remember, this is only an example. You can configure Exim's
1232 routers in many different ways, and there may be any number of routers in a
1233 configuration.
1234
1235 The first router that is specified in a configuration is often one that handles
1236 addresses in domains that are not recognized specially by the local host. These
1237 are typically addresses for arbitrary domains on the Internet. A precondition
1238 is set up which looks for the special domains known to the host (for example,
1239 its own domain name), and the router is run for addresses that do &'not'&
1240 match. Typically, this is a router that looks up domains in the DNS in order to
1241 find the hosts to which this address routes. If it succeeds, the address is
1242 assigned to a suitable SMTP transport; if it does not succeed, the router is
1243 configured to fail the address.
1244
1245 The second router is reached only when the domain is recognized as one that
1246 &"belongs"& to the local host. This router does redirection &-- also known as
1247 aliasing and forwarding. When it generates one or more new addresses from the
1248 original, each of them is routed independently from the start. Otherwise, the
1249 router may cause an address to fail, or it may simply decline to handle the
1250 address, in which case the address is passed to the next router.
1251
1252 The final router in many configurations is one that checks to see if the
1253 address belongs to a local mailbox. The precondition may involve a check to
1254 see if the local part is the name of a login account, or it may look up the
1255 local part in a file or a database. If its preconditions are not met, or if
1256 the router declines, we have reached the end of the routers. When this happens,
1257 the address is bounced.
1258
1259
1260
1261 .section "Processing an address for verification" "SECID16"
1262 .cindex "router" "for verification"
1263 .cindex "verifying address" "overview"
1264 As well as being used to decide how to deliver to an address, Exim's routers
1265 are also used for &'address verification'&. Verification can be requested as
1266 one of the checks to be performed in an ACL for incoming messages, on both
1267 sender and recipient addresses, and it can be tested using the &%-bv%& and
1268 &%-bvs%& command line options.
1269
1270 When an address is being verified, the routers are run in &"verify mode"&. This
1271 does not affect the way the routers work, but it is a state that can be
1272 detected. By this means, a router can be skipped or made to behave differently
1273 when verifying. A common example is a configuration in which the first router
1274 sends all messages to a message-scanning program, unless they have been
1275 previously scanned. Thus, the first router accepts all addresses without any
1276 checking, making it useless for verifying. Normally, the &%no_verify%& option
1277 would be set for such a router, causing it to be skipped in verify mode.
1278
1279
1280
1281
1282 .section "Running an individual router" "SECTrunindrou"
1283 .cindex "router" "running details"
1284 .cindex "preconditions" "checking"
1285 .cindex "router" "result of running"
1286 As explained in the example above, a number of preconditions are checked before
1287 running a router. If any are not met, the router is skipped, and the address is
1288 passed to the next router. When all the preconditions on a router &'are'& met,
1289 the router is run. What happens next depends on the outcome, which is one of
1290 the following:
1291
1292 .ilist
1293 &'accept'&: The router accepts the address, and either assigns it to a
1294 transport, or generates one or more &"child"& addresses. Processing the
1295 original address ceases,
1296 .oindex "&%unseen%&"
1297 unless the &%unseen%& option is set on the router. This option
1298 can be used to set up multiple deliveries with different routing (for example,
1299 for keeping archive copies of messages). When &%unseen%& is set, the address is
1300 passed to the next router. Normally, however, an &'accept'& return marks the
1301 end of routing.
1302
1303 Any child addresses generated by the router are processed independently,
1304 starting with the first router by default. It is possible to change this by
1305 setting the &%redirect_router%& option to specify which router to start at for
1306 child addresses. Unlike &%pass_router%& (see below) the router specified by
1307 &%redirect_router%& may be anywhere in the router configuration.
1308 .next
1309 &'pass'&: The router recognizes the address, but cannot handle it itself. It
1310 requests that the address be passed to another router. By default the address
1311 is passed to the next router, but this can be changed by setting the
1312 &%pass_router%& option. However, (unlike &%redirect_router%&) the named router
1313 must be below the current router (to avoid loops).
1314 .next
1315 &'decline'&: The router declines to accept the address because it does not
1316 recognize it at all. By default, the address is passed to the next router, but
1317 this can be prevented by setting the &%no_more%& option. When &%no_more%& is
1318 set, all the remaining routers are skipped. In effect, &%no_more%& converts
1319 &'decline'& into &'fail'&.
1320 .next
1321 &'fail'&: The router determines that the address should fail, and queues it for
1322 the generation of a bounce message. There is no further processing of the
1323 original address unless &%unseen%& is set on the router.
1324 .next
1325 &'defer'&: The router cannot handle the address at the present time. (A
1326 database may be offline, or a DNS lookup may have timed out.) No further
1327 processing of the address happens in this delivery attempt. It is tried again
1328 next time the message is considered for delivery.
1329 .next
1330 &'error'&: There is some error in the router (for example, a syntax error in
1331 its configuration). The action is as for defer.
1332 .endlist
1333
1334 If an address reaches the end of the routers without having been accepted by
1335 any of them, it is bounced as unrouteable. The default error message in this
1336 situation is &"unrouteable address"&, but you can set your own message by
1337 making use of the &%cannot_route_message%& option. This can be set for any
1338 router; the value from the last router that &"saw"& the address is used.
1339
1340 Sometimes while routing you want to fail a delivery when some conditions are
1341 met but others are not, instead of passing the address on for further routing.
1342 You can do this by having a second router that explicitly fails the delivery
1343 when the relevant conditions are met. The &(redirect)& router has a &"fail"&
1344 facility for this purpose.
1345
1346
1347 .section "Duplicate addresses" "SECID17"
1348 .cindex "case of local parts"
1349 .cindex "address duplicate, discarding"
1350 .cindex "duplicate addresses"
1351 Once routing is complete, Exim scans the addresses that are assigned to local
1352 and remote transports, and discards any duplicates that it finds. During this
1353 check, local parts are treated as case-sensitive. This happens only when
1354 actually delivering a message; when testing routers with &%-bt%&, all the
1355 routed addresses are shown.
1356
1357
1358
1359 .section "Router preconditions" "SECTrouprecon"
1360 .cindex "router" "preconditions, order of processing"
1361 .cindex "preconditions" "order of processing"
1362 The preconditions that are tested for each router are listed below, in the
1363 order in which they are tested. The individual configuration options are
1364 described in more detail in chapter &<<CHAProutergeneric>>&.
1365
1366 .ilist
1367 The &%local_part_prefix%& and &%local_part_suffix%& options can specify that
1368 the local parts handled by the router may or must have certain prefixes and/or
1369 suffixes. If a mandatory affix (prefix or suffix) is not present, the router is
1370 skipped. These conditions are tested first. When an affix is present, it is
1371 removed from the local part before further processing, including the evaluation
1372 of any other conditions.
1373 .next
1374 Routers can be designated for use only when not verifying an address, that is,
1375 only when routing it for delivery (or testing its delivery routing). If the
1376 &%verify%& option is set false, the router is skipped when Exim is verifying an
1377 address.
1378 Setting the &%verify%& option actually sets two options, &%verify_sender%& and
1379 &%verify_recipient%&, which independently control the use of the router for
1380 sender and recipient verification. You can set these options directly if
1381 you want a router to be used for only one type of verification.
1382 Note that cutthrough delivery is classed as a recipient verification for this purpose.
1383 .next
1384 If the &%address_test%& option is set false, the router is skipped when Exim is
1385 run with the &%-bt%& option to test an address routing. This can be helpful
1386 when the first router sends all new messages to a scanner of some sort; it
1387 makes it possible to use &%-bt%& to test subsequent delivery routing without
1388 having to simulate the effect of the scanner.
1389 .next
1390 Routers can be designated for use only when verifying an address, as
1391 opposed to routing it for delivery. The &%verify_only%& option controls this.
1392 Again, cutthrough delivery counts as a verification.
1393 .next
1394 Individual routers can be explicitly skipped when running the routers to
1395 check an address given in the SMTP EXPN command (see the &%expn%& option).
1396 .next
1397 If the &%domains%& option is set, the domain of the address must be in the set
1398 of domains that it defines.
1399 .next
1400 .vindex "&$local_part_prefix$&"
1401 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
1402 .vindex "&$local_part_suffix$&"
1403 If the &%local_parts%& option is set, the local part of the address must be in
1404 the set of local parts that it defines. If &%local_part_prefix%& or
1405 &%local_part_suffix%& is in use, the prefix or suffix is removed from the local
1406 part before this check. If you want to do precondition tests on local parts
1407 that include affixes, you can do so by using a &%condition%& option (see below)
1408 that uses the variables &$local_part$&, &$local_part_prefix$&, and
1409 &$local_part_suffix$& as necessary.
1410 .next
1411 .vindex "&$local_user_uid$&"
1412 .vindex "&$local_user_gid$&"
1413 .vindex "&$home$&"
1414 If the &%check_local_user%& option is set, the local part must be the name of
1415 an account on the local host. If this check succeeds, the uid and gid of the
1416 local user are placed in &$local_user_uid$& and &$local_user_gid$& and the
1417 user's home directory is placed in &$home$&; these values can be used in the
1418 remaining preconditions.
1419 .next
1420 If the &%router_home_directory%& option is set, it is expanded at this point,
1421 because it overrides the value of &$home$&. If this expansion were left till
1422 later, the value of &$home$& as set by &%check_local_user%& would be used in
1423 subsequent tests. Having two different values of &$home$& in the same router
1424 could lead to confusion.
1425 .next
1426 If the &%senders%& option is set, the envelope sender address must be in the
1427 set of addresses that it defines.
1428 .next
1429 If the &%require_files%& option is set, the existence or non-existence of
1430 specified files is tested.
1431 .next
1432 .cindex "customizing" "precondition"
1433 If the &%condition%& option is set, it is evaluated and tested. This option
1434 uses an expanded string to allow you to set up your own custom preconditions.
1435 Expanded strings are described in chapter &<<CHAPexpand>>&.
1436 .endlist
1437
1438
1439 Note that &%require_files%& comes near the end of the list, so you cannot use
1440 it to check for the existence of a file in which to lookup up a domain, local
1441 part, or sender. However, as these options are all expanded, you can use the
1442 &%exists%& expansion condition to make such tests within each condition. The
1443 &%require_files%& option is intended for checking files that the router may be
1444 going to use internally, or which are needed by a specific transport (for
1445 example, &_.procmailrc_&).
1446
1447
1448
1449 .section "Delivery in detail" "SECID18"
1450 .cindex "delivery" "in detail"
1451 When a message is to be delivered, the sequence of events is as follows:
1452
1453 .ilist
1454 If a system-wide filter file is specified, the message is passed to it. The
1455 filter may add recipients to the message, replace the recipients, discard the
1456 message, cause a new message to be generated, or cause the message delivery to
1457 fail. The format of the system filter file is the same as for Exim user filter
1458 files, described in the separate document entitled &'Exim's interfaces to mail
1459 filtering'&.
1460 .cindex "Sieve filter" "not available for system filter"
1461 (&*Note*&: Sieve cannot be used for system filter files.)
1462
1463 Some additional features are available in system filters &-- see chapter
1464 &<<CHAPsystemfilter>>& for details. Note that a message is passed to the system
1465 filter only once per delivery attempt, however many recipients it has. However,
1466 if there are several delivery attempts because one or more addresses could not
1467 be immediately delivered, the system filter is run each time. The filter
1468 condition &%first_delivery%& can be used to detect the first run of the system
1469 filter.
1470 .next
1471 Each recipient address is offered to each configured router in turn, subject to
1472 its preconditions, until one is able to handle it. If no router can handle the
1473 address, that is, if they all decline, the address is failed. Because routers
1474 can be targeted at particular domains, several locally handled domains can be
1475 processed entirely independently of each other.
1476 .next
1477 .cindex "routing" "loops in"
1478 .cindex "loop" "while routing"
1479 A router that accepts an address may assign it to a local or a remote
1480 transport. However, the transport is not run at this time. Instead, the address
1481 is placed on a list for the particular transport, which will be run later.
1482 Alternatively, the router may generate one or more new addresses (typically
1483 from alias, forward, or filter files). New addresses are fed back into this
1484 process from the top, but in order to avoid loops, a router ignores any address
1485 which has an identically-named ancestor that was processed by itself.
1486 .next
1487 When all the routing has been done, addresses that have been successfully
1488 handled are passed to their assigned transports. When local transports are
1489 doing real local deliveries, they handle only one address at a time, but if a
1490 local transport is being used as a pseudo-remote transport (for example, to
1491 collect batched SMTP messages for transmission by some other means) multiple
1492 addresses can be handled. Remote transports can always handle more than one
1493 address at a time, but can be configured not to do so, or to restrict multiple
1494 addresses to the same domain.
1495 .next
1496 Each local delivery to a file or a pipe runs in a separate process under a
1497 non-privileged uid, and these deliveries are run one at a time. Remote
1498 deliveries also run in separate processes, normally under a uid that is private
1499 to Exim (&"the Exim user"&), but in this case, several remote deliveries can be
1500 run in parallel. The maximum number of simultaneous remote deliveries for any
1501 one message is set by the &%remote_max_parallel%& option.
1502 The order in which deliveries are done is not defined, except that all local
1503 deliveries happen before any remote deliveries.
1504 .next
1505 .cindex "queue runner"
1506 When it encounters a local delivery during a queue run, Exim checks its retry
1507 database to see if there has been a previous temporary delivery failure for the
1508 address before running the local transport. If there was a previous failure,
1509 Exim does not attempt a new delivery until the retry time for the address is
1510 reached. However, this happens only for delivery attempts that are part of a
1511 queue run. Local deliveries are always attempted when delivery immediately
1512 follows message reception, even if retry times are set for them. This makes for
1513 better behaviour if one particular message is causing problems (for example,
1514 causing quota overflow, or provoking an error in a filter file).
1515 .next
1516 .cindex "delivery" "retry in remote transports"
1517 Remote transports do their own retry handling, since an address may be
1518 deliverable to one of a number of hosts, each of which may have a different
1519 retry time. If there have been previous temporary failures and no host has
1520 reached its retry time, no delivery is attempted, whether in a queue run or
1521 not. See chapter &<<CHAPretry>>& for details of retry strategies.
1522 .next
1523 If there were any permanent errors, a bounce message is returned to an
1524 appropriate address (the sender in the common case), with details of the error
1525 for each failing address. Exim can be configured to send copies of bounce
1526 messages to other addresses.
1527 .next
1528 .cindex "delivery" "deferral"
1529 If one or more addresses suffered a temporary failure, the message is left on
1530 the queue, to be tried again later. Delivery of these addresses is said to be
1531 &'deferred'&.
1532 .next
1533 When all the recipient addresses have either been delivered or bounced,
1534 handling of the message is complete. The spool files and message log are
1535 deleted, though the message log can optionally be preserved if required.
1536 .endlist
1537
1538
1539
1540
1541 .section "Retry mechanism" "SECID19"
1542 .cindex "delivery" "retry mechanism"
1543 .cindex "retry" "description of mechanism"
1544 .cindex "queue runner"
1545 Exim's mechanism for retrying messages that fail to get delivered at the first
1546 attempt is the queue runner process. You must either run an Exim daemon that
1547 uses the &%-q%& option with a time interval to start queue runners at regular
1548 intervals, or use some other means (such as &'cron'&) to start them. If you do
1549 not arrange for queue runners to be run, messages that fail temporarily at the
1550 first attempt will remain on your queue for ever. A queue runner process works
1551 its way through the queue, one message at a time, trying each delivery that has
1552 passed its retry time.
1553 You can run several queue runners at once.
1554
1555 Exim uses a set of configured rules to determine when next to retry the failing
1556 address (see chapter &<<CHAPretry>>&). These rules also specify when Exim
1557 should give up trying to deliver to the address, at which point it generates a
1558 bounce message. If no retry rules are set for a particular host, address, and
1559 error combination, no retries are attempted, and temporary errors are treated
1560 as permanent.
1561
1562
1563
1564 .section "Temporary delivery failure" "SECID20"
1565 .cindex "delivery" "temporary failure"
1566 There are many reasons why a message may not be immediately deliverable to a
1567 particular address. Failure to connect to a remote machine (because it, or the
1568 connection to it, is down) is one of the most common. Temporary failures may be
1569 detected during routing as well as during the transport stage of delivery.
1570 Local deliveries may be delayed if NFS files are unavailable, or if a mailbox
1571 is on a file system where the user is over quota. Exim can be configured to
1572 impose its own quotas on local mailboxes; where system quotas are set they will
1573 also apply.
1574
1575 If a host is unreachable for a period of time, a number of messages may be
1576 waiting for it by the time it recovers, and sending them in a single SMTP
1577 connection is clearly beneficial. Whenever a delivery to a remote host is
1578 deferred,
1579 .cindex "hints database" "deferred deliveries"
1580 Exim makes a note in its hints database, and whenever a successful
1581 SMTP delivery has happened, it looks to see if any other messages are waiting
1582 for the same host. If any are found, they are sent over the same SMTP
1583 connection, subject to a configuration limit as to the maximum number in any
1584 one connection.
1585
1586
1587
1588 .section "Permanent delivery failure" "SECID21"
1589 .cindex "delivery" "permanent failure"
1590 .cindex "bounce message" "when generated"
1591 When a message cannot be delivered to some or all of its intended recipients, a
1592 bounce message is generated. Temporary delivery failures turn into permanent
1593 errors when their timeout expires. All the addresses that fail in a given
1594 delivery attempt are listed in a single message. If the original message has
1595 many recipients, it is possible for some addresses to fail in one delivery
1596 attempt and others to fail subsequently, giving rise to more than one bounce
1597 message. The wording of bounce messages can be customized by the administrator.
1598 See chapter &<<CHAPemsgcust>>& for details.
1599
1600 .cindex "&'X-Failed-Recipients:'& header line"
1601 Bounce messages contain an &'X-Failed-Recipients:'& header line that lists the
1602 failed addresses, for the benefit of programs that try to analyse such messages
1603 automatically.
1604
1605 .cindex "bounce message" "recipient of"
1606 A bounce message is normally sent to the sender of the original message, as
1607 obtained from the message's envelope. For incoming SMTP messages, this is the
1608 address given in the MAIL command. However, when an address is expanded via a
1609 forward or alias file, an alternative address can be specified for delivery
1610 failures of the generated addresses. For a mailing list expansion (see section
1611 &<<SECTmailinglists>>&) it is common to direct bounce messages to the manager
1612 of the list.
1613
1614
1615
1616 .section "Failures to deliver bounce messages" "SECID22"
1617 .cindex "bounce message" "failure to deliver"
1618 If a bounce message (either locally generated or received from a remote host)
1619 itself suffers a permanent delivery failure, the message is left on the queue,
1620 but it is frozen, awaiting the attention of an administrator. There are options
1621 that can be used to make Exim discard such failed messages, or to keep them
1622 for only a short time (see &%timeout_frozen_after%& and
1623 &%ignore_bounce_errors_after%&).
1624
1625
1626
1627
1628
1629 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1630 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1631
1632 .chapter "Building and installing Exim" "CHID3"
1633 .scindex IIDbuex "building Exim"
1634
1635 .section "Unpacking" "SECID23"
1636 Exim is distributed as a gzipped or bzipped tar file which, when unpacked,
1637 creates a directory with the name of the current release (for example,
1638 &_exim-&version()_&) into which the following files are placed:
1639
1640 .table2 140pt
1641 .irow &_ACKNOWLEDGMENTS_& "contains some acknowledgments"
1642 .irow &_CHANGES_& "contains a reference to where changes are &&&
1643 documented"
1644 .irow &_LICENCE_& "the GNU General Public Licence"
1645 .irow &_Makefile_& "top-level make file"
1646 .irow &_NOTICE_& "conditions for the use of Exim"
1647 .irow &_README_& "list of files, directories and simple build &&&
1648 instructions"
1649 .endtable
1650
1651 Other files whose names begin with &_README_& may also be present. The
1652 following subdirectories are created:
1653
1654 .table2 140pt
1655 .irow &_Local_& "an empty directory for local configuration files"
1656 .irow &_OS_& "OS-specific files"
1657 .irow &_doc_& "documentation files"
1658 .irow &_exim_monitor_& "source files for the Exim monitor"
1659 .irow &_scripts_& "scripts used in the build process"
1660 .irow &_src_& "remaining source files"
1661 .irow &_util_& "independent utilities"
1662 .endtable
1663
1664 The main utility programs are contained in the &_src_& directory, and are built
1665 with the Exim binary. The &_util_& directory contains a few optional scripts
1666 that may be useful to some sites.
1667
1668
1669 .section "Multiple machine architectures and operating systems" "SECID24"
1670 .cindex "building Exim" "multiple OS/architectures"
1671 The building process for Exim is arranged to make it easy to build binaries for
1672 a number of different architectures and operating systems from the same set of
1673 source files. Compilation does not take place in the &_src_& directory.
1674 Instead, a &'build directory'& is created for each architecture and operating
1675 system.
1676 .cindex "symbolic link" "to build directory"
1677 Symbolic links to the sources are installed in this directory, which is where
1678 the actual building takes place. In most cases, Exim can discover the machine
1679 architecture and operating system for itself, but the defaults can be
1680 overridden if necessary.
1681 .cindex compiler requirements
1682 .cindex compiler version
1683 A C99-capable compiler will be required for the build.
1684
1685
1686 .section "PCRE library" "SECTpcre"
1687 .cindex "PCRE library"
1688 Exim no longer has an embedded PCRE library as the vast majority of
1689 modern systems include PCRE as a system library, although you may need
1690 to install the PCRE or PCRE development package for your operating
1691 system. If your system has a normal PCRE installation the Exim build
1692 process will need no further configuration. If the library or the
1693 headers are in an unusual location you will need to either set the PCRE_LIBS
1694 and INCLUDE directives appropriately,
1695 or set PCRE_CONFIG=yes to use the installed &(pcre-config)& command.
1696 If your operating system has no
1697 PCRE support then you will need to obtain and build the current PCRE
1698 from &url(ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre/).
1699 More information on PCRE is available at &url(http://www.pcre.org/).
1700
1701 .section "DBM libraries" "SECTdb"
1702 .cindex "DBM libraries" "discussion of"
1703 .cindex "hints database" "DBM files used for"
1704 Even if you do not use any DBM files in your configuration, Exim still needs a
1705 DBM library in order to operate, because it uses indexed files for its hints
1706 databases. Unfortunately, there are a number of DBM libraries in existence, and
1707 different operating systems often have different ones installed.
1708
1709 .cindex "Solaris" "DBM library for"
1710 .cindex "IRIX, DBM library for"
1711 .cindex "BSD, DBM library for"
1712 .cindex "Linux, DBM library for"
1713 If you are using Solaris, IRIX, one of the modern BSD systems, or a modern
1714 Linux distribution, the DBM configuration should happen automatically, and you
1715 may be able to ignore this section. Otherwise, you may have to learn more than
1716 you would like about DBM libraries from what follows.
1717
1718 .cindex "&'ndbm'& DBM library"
1719 Licensed versions of Unix normally contain a library of DBM functions operating
1720 via the &'ndbm'& interface, and this is what Exim expects by default. Free
1721 versions of Unix seem to vary in what they contain as standard. In particular,
1722 some early versions of Linux have no default DBM library, and different
1723 distributors have chosen to bundle different libraries with their packaged
1724 versions. However, the more recent releases seem to have standardized on the
1725 Berkeley DB library.
1726
1727 Different DBM libraries have different conventions for naming the files they
1728 use. When a program opens a file called &_dbmfile_&, there are several
1729 possibilities:
1730
1731 .olist
1732 A traditional &'ndbm'& implementation, such as that supplied as part of
1733 Solaris, operates on two files called &_dbmfile.dir_& and &_dbmfile.pag_&.
1734 .next
1735 .cindex "&'gdbm'& DBM library"
1736 The GNU library, &'gdbm'&, operates on a single file. If used via its &'ndbm'&
1737 compatibility interface it makes two different hard links to it with names
1738 &_dbmfile.dir_& and &_dbmfile.pag_&, but if used via its native interface, the
1739 file name is used unmodified.
1740 .next
1741 .cindex "Berkeley DB library"
1742 The Berkeley DB package, if called via its &'ndbm'& compatibility interface,
1743 operates on a single file called &_dbmfile.db_&, but otherwise looks to the
1744 programmer exactly the same as the traditional &'ndbm'& implementation.
1745 .next
1746 If the Berkeley package is used in its native mode, it operates on a single
1747 file called &_dbmfile_&; the programmer's interface is somewhat different to
1748 the traditional &'ndbm'& interface.
1749 .next
1750 To complicate things further, there are several very different versions of the
1751 Berkeley DB package. Version 1.85 was stable for a very long time, releases
1752 2.&'x'& and 3.&'x'& were current for a while, but the latest versions are now
1753 numbered 4.&'x'&. Maintenance of some of the earlier releases has ceased. All
1754 versions of Berkeley DB can be obtained from
1755 &url(http://www.sleepycat.com/).
1756 .next
1757 .cindex "&'tdb'& DBM library"
1758 Yet another DBM library, called &'tdb'&, is available from
1759 &url(http://download.sourceforge.net/tdb). It has its own interface, and also
1760 operates on a single file.
1761 .endlist
1762
1763 .cindex "USE_DB"
1764 .cindex "DBM libraries" "configuration for building"
1765 Exim and its utilities can be compiled to use any of these interfaces. In order
1766 to use any version of the Berkeley DB package in native mode, you must set
1767 USE_DB in an appropriate configuration file (typically
1768 &_Local/Makefile_&). For example:
1769 .code
1770 USE_DB=yes
1771 .endd
1772 Similarly, for gdbm you set USE_GDBM, and for tdb you set USE_TDB. An
1773 error is diagnosed if you set more than one of these.
1774
1775 At the lowest level, the build-time configuration sets none of these options,
1776 thereby assuming an interface of type (1). However, some operating system
1777 configuration files (for example, those for the BSD operating systems and
1778 Linux) assume type (4) by setting USE_DB as their default, and the
1779 configuration files for Cygwin set USE_GDBM. Anything you set in
1780 &_Local/Makefile_&, however, overrides these system defaults.
1781
1782 As well as setting USE_DB, USE_GDBM, or USE_TDB, it may also be
1783 necessary to set DBMLIB, to cause inclusion of the appropriate library, as
1784 in one of these lines:
1785 .code
1786 DBMLIB = -ldb
1787 DBMLIB = -ltdb
1788 .endd
1789 Settings like that will work if the DBM library is installed in the standard
1790 place. Sometimes it is not, and the library's header file may also not be in
1791 the default path. You may need to set INCLUDE to specify where the header
1792 file is, and to specify the path to the library more fully in DBMLIB, as in
1793 this example:
1794 .code
1795 INCLUDE=-I/usr/local/include/db-4.1
1796 DBMLIB=/usr/local/lib/db-4.1/libdb.a
1797 .endd
1798 There is further detailed discussion about the various DBM libraries in the
1799 file &_doc/dbm.discuss.txt_& in the Exim distribution.
1800
1801
1802
1803 .section "Pre-building configuration" "SECID25"
1804 .cindex "building Exim" "pre-building configuration"
1805 .cindex "configuration for building Exim"
1806 .cindex "&_Local/Makefile_&"
1807 .cindex "&_src/EDITME_&"
1808 Before building Exim, a local configuration file that specifies options
1809 independent of any operating system has to be created with the name
1810 &_Local/Makefile_&. A template for this file is supplied as the file
1811 &_src/EDITME_&, and it contains full descriptions of all the option settings
1812 therein. These descriptions are therefore not repeated here. If you are
1813 building Exim for the first time, the simplest thing to do is to copy
1814 &_src/EDITME_& to &_Local/Makefile_&, then read it and edit it appropriately.
1815
1816 There are three settings that you must supply, because Exim will not build
1817 without them. They are the location of the run time configuration file
1818 (CONFIGURE_FILE), the directory in which Exim binaries will be installed
1819 (BIN_DIRECTORY), and the identity of the Exim user (EXIM_USER and
1820 maybe EXIM_GROUP as well). The value of CONFIGURE_FILE can in fact be
1821 a colon-separated list of file names; Exim uses the first of them that exists.
1822
1823 There are a few other parameters that can be specified either at build time or
1824 at run time, to enable the same binary to be used on a number of different
1825 machines. However, if the locations of Exim's spool directory and log file
1826 directory (if not within the spool directory) are fixed, it is recommended that
1827 you specify them in &_Local/Makefile_& instead of at run time, so that errors
1828 detected early in Exim's execution (such as a malformed configuration file) can
1829 be logged.
1830
1831 .cindex "content scanning" "specifying at build time"
1832 Exim's interfaces for calling virus and spam scanning software directly from
1833 access control lists are not compiled by default. If you want to include these
1834 facilities, you need to set
1835 .code
1836 WITH_CONTENT_SCAN=yes
1837 .endd
1838 in your &_Local/Makefile_&. For details of the facilities themselves, see
1839 chapter &<<CHAPexiscan>>&.
1840
1841
1842 .cindex "&_Local/eximon.conf_&"
1843 .cindex "&_exim_monitor/EDITME_&"
1844 If you are going to build the Exim monitor, a similar configuration process is
1845 required. The file &_exim_monitor/EDITME_& must be edited appropriately for
1846 your installation and saved under the name &_Local/eximon.conf_&. If you are
1847 happy with the default settings described in &_exim_monitor/EDITME_&,
1848 &_Local/eximon.conf_& can be empty, but it must exist.
1849
1850 This is all the configuration that is needed in straightforward cases for known
1851 operating systems. However, the building process is set up so that it is easy
1852 to override options that are set by default or by operating-system-specific
1853 configuration files, for example to change the name of the C compiler, which
1854 defaults to &%gcc%&. See section &<<SECToverride>>& below for details of how to
1855 do this.
1856
1857
1858
1859 .section "Support for iconv()" "SECID26"
1860 .cindex "&[iconv()]& support"
1861 .cindex "RFC 2047"
1862 The contents of header lines in messages may be encoded according to the rules
1863 described RFC 2047. This makes it possible to transmit characters that are not
1864 in the ASCII character set, and to label them as being in a particular
1865 character set. When Exim is inspecting header lines by means of the &%$h_%&
1866 mechanism, it decodes them, and translates them into a specified character set
1867 (default is set at build time). The translation is possible only if the operating system
1868 supports the &[iconv()]& function.
1869
1870 However, some of the operating systems that supply &[iconv()]& do not support
1871 very many conversions. The GNU &%libiconv%& library (available from
1872 &url(http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv/)) can be installed on such
1873 systems to remedy this deficiency, as well as on systems that do not supply
1874 &[iconv()]& at all. After installing &%libiconv%&, you should add
1875 .code
1876 HAVE_ICONV=yes
1877 .endd
1878 to your &_Local/Makefile_& and rebuild Exim.
1879
1880
1881
1882 .section "Including TLS/SSL encryption support" "SECTinctlsssl"
1883 .cindex "TLS" "including support for TLS"
1884 .cindex "encryption" "including support for"
1885 .cindex "SUPPORT_TLS"
1886 .cindex "OpenSSL" "building Exim with"
1887 .cindex "GnuTLS" "building Exim with"
1888 Exim can be built to support encrypted SMTP connections, using the STARTTLS
1889 command as per RFC 2487. It can also support legacy clients that expect to
1890 start a TLS session immediately on connection to a non-standard port (see the
1891 &%tls_on_connect_ports%& runtime option and the &%-tls-on-connect%& command
1892 line option).
1893
1894 If you want to build Exim with TLS support, you must first install either the
1895 OpenSSL or GnuTLS library. There is no cryptographic code in Exim itself for
1896 implementing SSL.
1897
1898 If OpenSSL is installed, you should set
1899 .code
1900 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1901 TLS_LIBS=-lssl -lcrypto
1902 .endd
1903 in &_Local/Makefile_&. You may also need to specify the locations of the
1904 OpenSSL library and include files. For example:
1905 .code
1906 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1907 TLS_LIBS=-L/usr/local/openssl/lib -lssl -lcrypto
1908 TLS_INCLUDE=-I/usr/local/openssl/include/
1909 .endd
1910 .cindex "pkg-config" "OpenSSL"
1911 If you have &'pkg-config'& available, then instead you can just use:
1912 .code
1913 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1914 USE_OPENSSL_PC=openssl
1915 .endd
1916 .cindex "USE_GNUTLS"
1917 If GnuTLS is installed, you should set
1918 .code
1919 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1920 USE_GNUTLS=yes
1921 TLS_LIBS=-lgnutls -ltasn1 -lgcrypt
1922 .endd
1923 in &_Local/Makefile_&, and again you may need to specify the locations of the
1924 library and include files. For example:
1925 .code
1926 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1927 USE_GNUTLS=yes
1928 TLS_LIBS=-L/usr/gnu/lib -lgnutls -ltasn1 -lgcrypt
1929 TLS_INCLUDE=-I/usr/gnu/include
1930 .endd
1931 .cindex "pkg-config" "GnuTLS"
1932 If you have &'pkg-config'& available, then instead you can just use:
1933 .code
1934 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
1935 USE_GNUTLS=yes
1936 USE_GNUTLS_PC=gnutls
1937 .endd
1938
1939 You do not need to set TLS_INCLUDE if the relevant directory is already
1940 specified in INCLUDE. Details of how to configure Exim to make use of TLS are
1941 given in chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>&.
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946 .section "Use of tcpwrappers" "SECID27"
1947
1948 .cindex "tcpwrappers, building Exim to support"
1949 .cindex "USE_TCP_WRAPPERS"
1950 .cindex "TCP_WRAPPERS_DAEMON_NAME"
1951 .cindex "tcp_wrappers_daemon_name"
1952 Exim can be linked with the &'tcpwrappers'& library in order to check incoming
1953 SMTP calls using the &'tcpwrappers'& control files. This may be a convenient
1954 alternative to Exim's own checking facilities for installations that are
1955 already making use of &'tcpwrappers'& for other purposes. To do this, you
1956 should set USE_TCP_WRAPPERS in &_Local/Makefile_&, arrange for the file
1957 &_tcpd.h_& to be available at compile time, and also ensure that the library
1958 &_libwrap.a_& is available at link time, typically by including &%-lwrap%& in
1959 EXTRALIBS_EXIM. For example, if &'tcpwrappers'& is installed in &_/usr/local_&,
1960 you might have
1961 .code
1962 USE_TCP_WRAPPERS=yes
1963 CFLAGS=-O -I/usr/local/include
1964 EXTRALIBS_EXIM=-L/usr/local/lib -lwrap
1965 .endd
1966 in &_Local/Makefile_&. The daemon name to use in the &'tcpwrappers'& control
1967 files is &"exim"&. For example, the line
1968 .code
1969 exim : LOCAL 192.168.1. .friendly.domain.example
1970 .endd
1971 in your &_/etc/hosts.allow_& file allows connections from the local host, from
1972 the subnet 192.168.1.0/24, and from all hosts in &'friendly.domain.example'&.
1973 All other connections are denied. The daemon name used by &'tcpwrappers'&
1974 can be changed at build time by setting TCP_WRAPPERS_DAEMON_NAME in
1975 &_Local/Makefile_&, or by setting tcp_wrappers_daemon_name in the
1976 configure file. Consult the &'tcpwrappers'& documentation for
1977 further details.
1978
1979
1980 .section "Including support for IPv6" "SECID28"
1981 .cindex "IPv6" "including support for"
1982 Exim contains code for use on systems that have IPv6 support. Setting
1983 &`HAVE_IPV6=YES`& in &_Local/Makefile_& causes the IPv6 code to be included;
1984 it may also be necessary to set IPV6_INCLUDE and IPV6_LIBS on systems
1985 where the IPv6 support is not fully integrated into the normal include and
1986 library files.
1987
1988 Two different types of DNS record for handling IPv6 addresses have been
1989 defined. AAAA records (analogous to A records for IPv4) are in use, and are
1990 currently seen as the mainstream. Another record type called A6 was proposed
1991 as better than AAAA because it had more flexibility. However, it was felt to be
1992 over-complex, and its status was reduced to &"experimental"&.
1993 Exim used to
1994 have a compile option for including A6 record support but this has now been
1995 withdrawn.
1996
1997
1998
1999 .section "Dynamically loaded lookup module support" "SECTdynamicmodules"
2000 .cindex "lookup modules"
2001 .cindex "dynamic modules"
2002 .cindex ".so building"
2003 On some platforms, Exim supports not compiling all lookup types directly into
2004 the main binary, instead putting some into external modules which can be loaded
2005 on demand.
2006 This permits packagers to build Exim with support for lookups with extensive
2007 library dependencies without requiring all users to install all of those
2008 dependencies.
2009 Most, but not all, lookup types can be built this way.
2010
2011 Set &`LOOKUP_MODULE_DIR`& to the directory into which the modules will be
2012 installed; Exim will only load modules from that directory, as a security
2013 measure. You will need to set &`CFLAGS_DYNAMIC`& if not already defined
2014 for your OS; see &_OS/Makefile-Linux_& for an example.
2015 Some other requirements for adjusting &`EXTRALIBS`& may also be necessary,
2016 see &_src/EDITME_& for details.
2017
2018 Then, for each module to be loaded dynamically, define the relevant
2019 &`LOOKUP_`&<&'lookup_type'&> flags to have the value "2" instead of "yes".
2020 For example, this will build in lsearch but load sqlite and mysql support
2021 on demand:
2022 .code
2023 LOOKUP_LSEARCH=yes
2024 LOOKUP_SQLITE=2
2025 LOOKUP_MYSQL=2
2026 .endd
2027
2028
2029 .section "The building process" "SECID29"
2030 .cindex "build directory"
2031 Once &_Local/Makefile_& (and &_Local/eximon.conf_&, if required) have been
2032 created, run &'make'& at the top level. It determines the architecture and
2033 operating system types, and creates a build directory if one does not exist.
2034 For example, on a Sun system running Solaris 8, the directory
2035 &_build-SunOS5-5.8-sparc_& is created.
2036 .cindex "symbolic link" "to source files"
2037 Symbolic links to relevant source files are installed in the build directory.
2038
2039 If this is the first time &'make'& has been run, it calls a script that builds
2040 a make file inside the build directory, using the configuration files from the
2041 &_Local_& directory. The new make file is then passed to another instance of
2042 &'make'&. This does the real work, building a number of utility scripts, and
2043 then compiling and linking the binaries for the Exim monitor (if configured), a
2044 number of utility programs, and finally Exim itself. The command &`make
2045 makefile`& can be used to force a rebuild of the make file in the build
2046 directory, should this ever be necessary.
2047
2048 If you have problems building Exim, check for any comments there may be in the
2049 &_README_& file concerning your operating system, and also take a look at the
2050 FAQ, where some common problems are covered.
2051
2052
2053
2054 .section 'Output from &"make"&' "SECID283"
2055 The output produced by the &'make'& process for compile lines is often very
2056 unreadable, because these lines can be very long. For this reason, the normal
2057 output is suppressed by default, and instead output similar to that which
2058 appears when compiling the 2.6 Linux kernel is generated: just a short line for
2059 each module that is being compiled or linked. However, it is still possible to
2060 get the full output, by calling &'make'& like this:
2061 .code
2062 FULLECHO='' make -e
2063 .endd
2064 The value of FULLECHO defaults to &"@"&, the flag character that suppresses
2065 command reflection in &'make'&. When you ask for the full output, it is
2066 given in addition to the short output.
2067
2068
2069
2070 .section "Overriding build-time options for Exim" "SECToverride"
2071 .cindex "build-time options, overriding"
2072 The main make file that is created at the beginning of the building process
2073 consists of the concatenation of a number of files which set configuration
2074 values, followed by a fixed set of &'make'& instructions. If a value is set
2075 more than once, the last setting overrides any previous ones. This provides a
2076 convenient way of overriding defaults. The files that are concatenated are, in
2077 order:
2078 .display
2079 &_OS/Makefile-Default_&
2080 &_OS/Makefile-_&<&'ostype'&>
2081 &_Local/Makefile_&
2082 &_Local/Makefile-_&<&'ostype'&>
2083 &_Local/Makefile-_&<&'archtype'&>
2084 &_Local/Makefile-_&<&'ostype'&>-<&'archtype'&>
2085 &_OS/Makefile-Base_&
2086 .endd
2087 .cindex "&_Local/Makefile_&"
2088 .cindex "building Exim" "operating system type"
2089 .cindex "building Exim" "architecture type"
2090 where <&'ostype'&> is the operating system type and <&'archtype'&> is the
2091 architecture type. &_Local/Makefile_& is required to exist, and the building
2092 process fails if it is absent. The other three &_Local_& files are optional,
2093 and are often not needed.
2094
2095 The values used for <&'ostype'&> and <&'archtype'&> are obtained from scripts
2096 called &_scripts/os-type_& and &_scripts/arch-type_& respectively. If either of
2097 the environment variables EXIM_OSTYPE or EXIM_ARCHTYPE is set, their
2098 values are used, thereby providing a means of forcing particular settings.
2099 Otherwise, the scripts try to get values from the &%uname%& command. If this
2100 fails, the shell variables OSTYPE and ARCHTYPE are inspected. A number
2101 of &'ad hoc'& transformations are then applied, to produce the standard names
2102 that Exim expects. You can run these scripts directly from the shell in order
2103 to find out what values are being used on your system.
2104
2105
2106 &_OS/Makefile-Default_& contains comments about the variables that are set
2107 therein. Some (but not all) are mentioned below. If there is something that
2108 needs changing, review the contents of this file and the contents of the make
2109 file for your operating system (&_OS/Makefile-<ostype>_&) to see what the
2110 default values are.
2111
2112
2113 .cindex "building Exim" "overriding default settings"
2114 If you need to change any of the values that are set in &_OS/Makefile-Default_&
2115 or in &_OS/Makefile-<ostype>_&, or to add any new definitions, you do not
2116 need to change the original files. Instead, you should make the changes by
2117 putting the new values in an appropriate &_Local_& file. For example,
2118 .cindex "Tru64-Unix build-time settings"
2119 when building Exim in many releases of the Tru64-Unix (formerly Digital UNIX,
2120 formerly DEC-OSF1) operating system, it is necessary to specify that the C
2121 compiler is called &'cc'& rather than &'gcc'&. Also, the compiler must be
2122 called with the option &%-std1%&, to make it recognize some of the features of
2123 Standard C that Exim uses. (Most other compilers recognize Standard C by
2124 default.) To do this, you should create a file called &_Local/Makefile-OSF1_&
2125 containing the lines
2126 .code
2127 CC=cc
2128 CFLAGS=-std1
2129 .endd
2130 If you are compiling for just one operating system, it may be easier to put
2131 these lines directly into &_Local/Makefile_&.
2132
2133 Keeping all your local configuration settings separate from the distributed
2134 files makes it easy to transfer them to new versions of Exim simply by copying
2135 the contents of the &_Local_& directory.
2136
2137
2138 .cindex "NIS lookup type" "including support for"
2139 .cindex "NIS+ lookup type" "including support for"
2140 .cindex "LDAP" "including support for"
2141 .cindex "lookup" "inclusion in binary"
2142 Exim contains support for doing LDAP, NIS, NIS+, and other kinds of file
2143 lookup, but not all systems have these components installed, so the default is
2144 not to include the relevant code in the binary. All the different kinds of file
2145 and database lookup that Exim supports are implemented as separate code modules
2146 which are included only if the relevant compile-time options are set. In the
2147 case of LDAP, NIS, and NIS+, the settings for &_Local/Makefile_& are:
2148 .code
2149 LOOKUP_LDAP=yes
2150 LOOKUP_NIS=yes
2151 LOOKUP_NISPLUS=yes
2152 .endd
2153 and similar settings apply to the other lookup types. They are all listed in
2154 &_src/EDITME_&. In many cases the relevant include files and interface
2155 libraries need to be installed before compiling Exim.
2156 .cindex "cdb" "including support for"
2157 However, there are some optional lookup types (such as cdb) for which
2158 the code is entirely contained within Exim, and no external include
2159 files or libraries are required. When a lookup type is not included in the
2160 binary, attempts to configure Exim to use it cause run time configuration
2161 errors.
2162
2163 .cindex "pkg-config" "lookups"
2164 .cindex "pkg-config" "authenticators"
2165 Many systems now use a tool called &'pkg-config'& to encapsulate information
2166 about how to compile against a library; Exim has some initial support for
2167 being able to use pkg-config for lookups and authenticators. For any given
2168 makefile variable which starts &`LOOKUP_`& or &`AUTH_`&, you can add a new
2169 variable with the &`_PC`& suffix in the name and assign as the value the
2170 name of the package to be queried. The results of querying via the
2171 &'pkg-config'& command will be added to the appropriate Makefile variables
2172 with &`+=`& directives, so your version of &'make'& will need to support that
2173 syntax. For instance:
2174 .code
2175 LOOKUP_SQLITE=yes
2176 LOOKUP_SQLITE_PC=sqlite3
2177 AUTH_GSASL=yes
2178 AUTH_GSASL_PC=libgsasl
2179 AUTH_HEIMDAL_GSSAPI=yes
2180 AUTH_HEIMDAL_GSSAPI_PC=heimdal-gssapi
2181 .endd
2182
2183 .cindex "Perl" "including support for"
2184 Exim can be linked with an embedded Perl interpreter, allowing Perl
2185 subroutines to be called during string expansion. To enable this facility,
2186 .code
2187 EXIM_PERL=perl.o
2188 .endd
2189 must be defined in &_Local/Makefile_&. Details of this facility are given in
2190 chapter &<<CHAPperl>>&.
2191
2192 .cindex "X11 libraries, location of"
2193 The location of the X11 libraries is something that varies a lot between
2194 operating systems, and there may be different versions of X11 to cope
2195 with. Exim itself makes no use of X11, but if you are compiling the Exim
2196 monitor, the X11 libraries must be available.
2197 The following three variables are set in &_OS/Makefile-Default_&:
2198 .code
2199 X11=/usr/X11R6
2200 XINCLUDE=-I$(X11)/include
2201 XLFLAGS=-L$(X11)/lib
2202 .endd
2203 These are overridden in some of the operating-system configuration files. For
2204 example, in &_OS/Makefile-SunOS5_& there is
2205 .code
2206 X11=/usr/openwin
2207 XINCLUDE=-I$(X11)/include
2208 XLFLAGS=-L$(X11)/lib -R$(X11)/lib
2209 .endd
2210 If you need to override the default setting for your operating system, place a
2211 definition of all three of these variables into your
2212 &_Local/Makefile-<ostype>_& file.
2213
2214 .cindex "EXTRALIBS"
2215 If you need to add any extra libraries to the link steps, these can be put in a
2216 variable called EXTRALIBS, which appears in all the link commands, but by
2217 default is not defined. In contrast, EXTRALIBS_EXIM is used only on the
2218 command for linking the main Exim binary, and not for any associated utilities.
2219
2220 .cindex "DBM libraries" "configuration for building"
2221 There is also DBMLIB, which appears in the link commands for binaries that
2222 use DBM functions (see also section &<<SECTdb>>&). Finally, there is
2223 EXTRALIBS_EXIMON, which appears only in the link step for the Exim monitor
2224 binary, and which can be used, for example, to include additional X11
2225 libraries.
2226
2227 .cindex "configuration file" "editing"
2228 The make file copes with rebuilding Exim correctly if any of the configuration
2229 files are edited. However, if an optional configuration file is deleted, it is
2230 necessary to touch the associated non-optional file (that is,
2231 &_Local/Makefile_& or &_Local/eximon.conf_&) before rebuilding.
2232
2233
2234 .section "OS-specific header files" "SECID30"
2235 .cindex "&_os.h_&"
2236 .cindex "building Exim" "OS-specific C header files"
2237 The &_OS_& directory contains a number of files with names of the form
2238 &_os.h-<ostype>_&. These are system-specific C header files that should not
2239 normally need to be changed. There is a list of macro settings that are
2240 recognized in the file &_OS/os.configuring_&, which should be consulted if you
2241 are porting Exim to a new operating system.
2242
2243
2244
2245 .section "Overriding build-time options for the monitor" "SECID31"
2246 .cindex "building Eximon"
2247 A similar process is used for overriding things when building the Exim monitor,
2248 where the files that are involved are
2249 .display
2250 &_OS/eximon.conf-Default_&
2251 &_OS/eximon.conf-_&<&'ostype'&>
2252 &_Local/eximon.conf_&
2253 &_Local/eximon.conf-_&<&'ostype'&>
2254 &_Local/eximon.conf-_&<&'archtype'&>
2255 &_Local/eximon.conf-_&<&'ostype'&>-<&'archtype'&>
2256 .endd
2257 .cindex "&_Local/eximon.conf_&"
2258 As with Exim itself, the final three files need not exist, and in this case the
2259 &_OS/eximon.conf-<ostype>_& file is also optional. The default values in
2260 &_OS/eximon.conf-Default_& can be overridden dynamically by setting environment
2261 variables of the same name, preceded by EXIMON_. For example, setting
2262 EXIMON_LOG_DEPTH in the environment overrides the value of
2263 LOG_DEPTH at run time.
2264 .ecindex IIDbuex
2265
2266
2267 .section "Installing Exim binaries and scripts" "SECID32"
2268 .cindex "installing Exim"
2269 .cindex "BIN_DIRECTORY"
2270 The command &`make install`& runs the &(exim_install)& script with no
2271 arguments. The script copies binaries and utility scripts into the directory
2272 whose name is specified by the BIN_DIRECTORY setting in &_Local/Makefile_&.
2273 .cindex "setuid" "installing Exim with"
2274 The install script copies files only if they are newer than the files they are
2275 going to replace. The Exim binary is required to be owned by root and have the
2276 &'setuid'& bit set, for normal configurations. Therefore, you must run &`make
2277 install`& as root so that it can set up the Exim binary in this way. However, in
2278 some special situations (for example, if a host is doing no local deliveries)
2279 it may be possible to run Exim without making the binary setuid root (see
2280 chapter &<<CHAPsecurity>>& for details).
2281
2282 .cindex "CONFIGURE_FILE"
2283 Exim's run time configuration file is named by the CONFIGURE_FILE setting
2284 in &_Local/Makefile_&. If this names a single file, and the file does not
2285 exist, the default configuration file &_src/configure.default_& is copied there
2286 by the installation script. If a run time configuration file already exists, it
2287 is left alone. If CONFIGURE_FILE is a colon-separated list, naming several
2288 alternative files, no default is installed.
2289
2290 .cindex "system aliases file"
2291 .cindex "&_/etc/aliases_&"
2292 One change is made to the default configuration file when it is installed: the
2293 default configuration contains a router that references a system aliases file.
2294 The path to this file is set to the value specified by
2295 SYSTEM_ALIASES_FILE in &_Local/Makefile_& (&_/etc/aliases_& by default).
2296 If the system aliases file does not exist, the installation script creates it,
2297 and outputs a comment to the user.
2298
2299 The created file contains no aliases, but it does contain comments about the
2300 aliases a site should normally have. Mail aliases have traditionally been
2301 kept in &_/etc/aliases_&. However, some operating systems are now using
2302 &_/etc/mail/aliases_&. You should check if yours is one of these, and change
2303 Exim's configuration if necessary.
2304
2305 The default configuration uses the local host's name as the only local domain,
2306 and is set up to do local deliveries into the shared directory &_/var/mail_&,
2307 running as the local user. System aliases and &_.forward_& files in users' home
2308 directories are supported, but no NIS or NIS+ support is configured. Domains
2309 other than the name of the local host are routed using the DNS, with delivery
2310 over SMTP.
2311
2312 It is possible to install Exim for special purposes (such as building a binary
2313 distribution) in a private part of the file system. You can do this by a
2314 command such as
2315 .code
2316 make DESTDIR=/some/directory/ install
2317 .endd
2318 This has the effect of pre-pending the specified directory to all the file
2319 paths, except the name of the system aliases file that appears in the default
2320 configuration. (If a default alias file is created, its name &'is'& modified.)
2321 For backwards compatibility, ROOT is used if DESTDIR is not set,
2322 but this usage is deprecated.
2323
2324 .cindex "installing Exim" "what is not installed"
2325 Running &'make install'& does not copy the Exim 4 conversion script
2326 &'convert4r4'&. You will probably run this only once if you are
2327 upgrading from Exim 3. None of the documentation files in the &_doc_&
2328 directory are copied, except for the info files when you have set
2329 INFO_DIRECTORY, as described in section &<<SECTinsinfdoc>>& below.
2330
2331 For the utility programs, old versions are renamed by adding the suffix &_.O_&
2332 to their names. The Exim binary itself, however, is handled differently. It is
2333 installed under a name that includes the version number and the compile number,
2334 for example &_exim-&version()-1_&. The script then arranges for a symbolic link
2335 called &_exim_& to point to the binary. If you are updating a previous version
2336 of Exim, the script takes care to ensure that the name &_exim_& is never absent
2337 from the directory (as seen by other processes).
2338
2339 .cindex "installing Exim" "testing the script"
2340 If you want to see what the &'make install'& will do before running it for
2341 real, you can pass the &%-n%& option to the installation script by this
2342 command:
2343 .code
2344 make INSTALL_ARG=-n install
2345 .endd
2346 The contents of the variable INSTALL_ARG are passed to the installation
2347 script. You do not need to be root to run this test. Alternatively, you can run
2348 the installation script directly, but this must be from within the build
2349 directory. For example, from the top-level Exim directory you could use this
2350 command:
2351 .code
2352 (cd build-SunOS5-5.5.1-sparc; ../scripts/exim_install -n)
2353 .endd
2354 .cindex "installing Exim" "install script options"
2355 There are two other options that can be supplied to the installation script.
2356
2357 .ilist
2358 &%-no_chown%& bypasses the call to change the owner of the installed binary
2359 to root, and the call to make it a setuid binary.
2360 .next
2361 &%-no_symlink%& bypasses the setting up of the symbolic link &_exim_& to the
2362 installed binary.
2363 .endlist
2364
2365 INSTALL_ARG can be used to pass these options to the script. For example:
2366 .code
2367 make INSTALL_ARG=-no_symlink install
2368 .endd
2369 The installation script can also be given arguments specifying which files are
2370 to be copied. For example, to install just the Exim binary, and nothing else,
2371 without creating the symbolic link, you could use:
2372 .code
2373 make INSTALL_ARG='-no_symlink exim' install
2374 .endd
2375
2376
2377
2378 .section "Installing info documentation" "SECTinsinfdoc"
2379 .cindex "installing Exim" "&'info'& documentation"
2380 Not all systems use the GNU &'info'& system for documentation, and for this
2381 reason, the Texinfo source of Exim's documentation is not included in the main
2382 distribution. Instead it is available separately from the ftp site (see section
2383 &<<SECTavail>>&).
2384
2385 If you have defined INFO_DIRECTORY in &_Local/Makefile_& and the Texinfo
2386 source of the documentation is found in the source tree, running &`make
2387 install`& automatically builds the info files and installs them.
2388
2389
2390
2391 .section "Setting up the spool directory" "SECID33"
2392 .cindex "spool directory" "creating"
2393 When it starts up, Exim tries to create its spool directory if it does not
2394 exist. The Exim uid and gid are used for the owner and group of the spool
2395 directory. Sub-directories are automatically created in the spool directory as
2396 necessary.
2397
2398
2399
2400
2401 .section "Testing" "SECID34"
2402 .cindex "testing" "installation"
2403 Having installed Exim, you can check that the run time configuration file is
2404 syntactically valid by running the following command, which assumes that the
2405 Exim binary directory is within your PATH environment variable:
2406 .code
2407 exim -bV
2408 .endd
2409 If there are any errors in the configuration file, Exim outputs error messages.
2410 Otherwise it outputs the version number and build date,
2411 the DBM library that is being used, and information about which drivers and
2412 other optional code modules are included in the binary.
2413 Some simple routing tests can be done by using the address testing option. For
2414 example,
2415 .display
2416 &`exim -bt`& <&'local username'&>
2417 .endd
2418 should verify that it recognizes a local mailbox, and
2419 .display
2420 &`exim -bt`& <&'remote address'&>
2421 .endd
2422 a remote one. Then try getting it to deliver mail, both locally and remotely.
2423 This can be done by passing messages directly to Exim, without going through a
2424 user agent. For example:
2425 .code
2426 exim -v postmaster@your.domain.example
2427 From: user@your.domain.example
2428 To: postmaster@your.domain.example
2429 Subject: Testing Exim
2430
2431 This is a test message.
2432 ^D
2433 .endd
2434 The &%-v%& option causes Exim to output some verification of what it is doing.
2435 In this case you should see copies of three log lines, one for the message's
2436 arrival, one for its delivery, and one containing &"Completed"&.
2437
2438 .cindex "delivery" "problems with"
2439 If you encounter problems, look at Exim's log files (&'mainlog'& and
2440 &'paniclog'&) to see if there is any relevant information there. Another source
2441 of information is running Exim with debugging turned on, by specifying the
2442 &%-d%& option. If a message is stuck on Exim's spool, you can force a delivery
2443 with debugging turned on by a command of the form
2444 .display
2445 &`exim -d -M`& <&'exim-message-id'&>
2446 .endd
2447 You must be root or an &"admin user"& in order to do this. The &%-d%& option
2448 produces rather a lot of output, but you can cut this down to specific areas.
2449 For example, if you use &%-d-all+route%& only the debugging information
2450 relevant to routing is included. (See the &%-d%& option in chapter
2451 &<<CHAPcommandline>>& for more details.)
2452
2453 .cindex '&"sticky"& bit'
2454 .cindex "lock files"
2455 One specific problem that has shown up on some sites is the inability to do
2456 local deliveries into a shared mailbox directory, because it does not have the
2457 &"sticky bit"& set on it. By default, Exim tries to create a lock file before
2458 writing to a mailbox file, and if it cannot create the lock file, the delivery
2459 is deferred. You can get round this either by setting the &"sticky bit"& on the
2460 directory, or by setting a specific group for local deliveries and allowing
2461 that group to create files in the directory (see the comments above the
2462 &(local_delivery)& transport in the default configuration file). Another
2463 approach is to configure Exim not to use lock files, but just to rely on
2464 &[fcntl()]& locking instead. However, you should do this only if all user
2465 agents also use &[fcntl()]& locking. For further discussion of locking issues,
2466 see chapter &<<CHAPappendfile>>&.
2467
2468 One thing that cannot be tested on a system that is already running an MTA is
2469 the receipt of incoming SMTP mail on the standard SMTP port. However, the
2470 &%-oX%& option can be used to run an Exim daemon that listens on some other
2471 port, or &'inetd'& can be used to do this. The &%-bh%& option and the
2472 &'exim_checkaccess'& utility can be used to check out policy controls on
2473 incoming SMTP mail.
2474
2475 Testing a new version on a system that is already running Exim can most easily
2476 be done by building a binary with a different CONFIGURE_FILE setting. From
2477 within the run time configuration, all other file and directory names
2478 that Exim uses can be altered, in order to keep it entirely clear of the
2479 production version.
2480
2481
2482 .section "Replacing another MTA with Exim" "SECID35"
2483 .cindex "replacing another MTA"
2484 Building and installing Exim for the first time does not of itself put it in
2485 general use. The name by which the system's MTA is called by mail user agents
2486 is either &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_&, or &_/usr/lib/sendmail_& (depending on the
2487 operating system), and it is necessary to make this name point to the &'exim'&
2488 binary in order to get the user agents to pass messages to Exim. This is
2489 normally done by renaming any existing file and making &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_&
2490 or &_/usr/lib/sendmail_&
2491 .cindex "symbolic link" "to &'exim'& binary"
2492 a symbolic link to the &'exim'& binary. It is a good idea to remove any setuid
2493 privilege and executable status from the old MTA. It is then necessary to stop
2494 and restart the mailer daemon, if one is running.
2495
2496 .cindex "FreeBSD, MTA indirection"
2497 .cindex "&_/etc/mail/mailer.conf_&"
2498 Some operating systems have introduced alternative ways of switching MTAs. For
2499 example, if you are running FreeBSD, you need to edit the file
2500 &_/etc/mail/mailer.conf_& instead of setting up a symbolic link as just
2501 described. A typical example of the contents of this file for running Exim is
2502 as follows:
2503 .code
2504 sendmail /usr/exim/bin/exim
2505 send-mail /usr/exim/bin/exim
2506 mailq /usr/exim/bin/exim -bp
2507 newaliases /usr/bin/true
2508 .endd
2509 Once you have set up the symbolic link, or edited &_/etc/mail/mailer.conf_&,
2510 your Exim installation is &"live"&. Check it by sending a message from your
2511 favourite user agent.
2512
2513 You should consider what to tell your users about the change of MTA. Exim may
2514 have different capabilities to what was previously running, and there are
2515 various operational differences such as the text of messages produced by
2516 command line options and in bounce messages. If you allow your users to make
2517 use of Exim's filtering capabilities, you should make the document entitled
2518 &'Exim's interface to mail filtering'& available to them.
2519
2520
2521
2522 .section "Upgrading Exim" "SECID36"
2523 .cindex "upgrading Exim"
2524 If you are already running Exim on your host, building and installing a new
2525 version automatically makes it available to MUAs, or any other programs that
2526 call the MTA directly. However, if you are running an Exim daemon, you do need
2527 to send it a HUP signal, to make it re-execute itself, and thereby pick up the
2528 new binary. You do not need to stop processing mail in order to install a new
2529 version of Exim. The install script does not modify an existing runtime
2530 configuration file.
2531
2532
2533
2534
2535 .section "Stopping the Exim daemon on Solaris" "SECID37"
2536 .cindex "Solaris" "stopping Exim on"
2537 The standard command for stopping the mailer daemon on Solaris is
2538 .code
2539 /etc/init.d/sendmail stop
2540 .endd
2541 If &_/usr/lib/sendmail_& has been turned into a symbolic link, this script
2542 fails to stop Exim because it uses the command &'ps -e'& and greps the output
2543 for the text &"sendmail"&; this is not present because the actual program name
2544 (that is, &"exim"&) is given by the &'ps'& command with these options. A
2545 solution is to replace the line that finds the process id with something like
2546 .code
2547 pid=`cat /var/spool/exim/exim-daemon.pid`
2548 .endd
2549 to obtain the daemon's pid directly from the file that Exim saves it in.
2550
2551 Note, however, that stopping the daemon does not &"stop Exim"&. Messages can
2552 still be received from local processes, and if automatic delivery is configured
2553 (the normal case), deliveries will still occur.
2554
2555
2556
2557
2558 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2559 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2560
2561 .chapter "The Exim command line" "CHAPcommandline"
2562 .scindex IIDclo1 "command line" "options"
2563 .scindex IIDclo2 "options" "command line"
2564 Exim's command line takes the standard Unix form of a sequence of options,
2565 each starting with a hyphen character, followed by a number of arguments. The
2566 options are compatible with the main options of Sendmail, and there are also
2567 some additional options, some of which are compatible with Smail 3. Certain
2568 combinations of options do not make sense, and provoke an error if used.
2569 The form of the arguments depends on which options are set.
2570
2571
2572 .section "Setting options by program name" "SECID38"
2573 .cindex "&'mailq'&"
2574 If Exim is called under the name &'mailq'&, it behaves as if the option &%-bp%&
2575 were present before any other options.
2576 The &%-bp%& option requests a listing of the contents of the mail queue on the
2577 standard output.
2578 This feature is for compatibility with some systems that contain a command of
2579 that name in one of the standard libraries, symbolically linked to
2580 &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_& or &_/usr/lib/sendmail_&.
2581
2582 .cindex "&'rsmtp'&"
2583 If Exim is called under the name &'rsmtp'& it behaves as if the option &%-bS%&
2584 were present before any other options, for compatibility with Smail. The
2585 &%-bS%& option is used for reading in a number of messages in batched SMTP
2586 format.
2587
2588 .cindex "&'rmail'&"
2589 If Exim is called under the name &'rmail'& it behaves as if the &%-i%& and
2590 &%-oee%& options were present before any other options, for compatibility with
2591 Smail. The name &'rmail'& is used as an interface by some UUCP systems.
2592
2593 .cindex "&'runq'&"
2594 .cindex "queue runner"
2595 If Exim is called under the name &'runq'& it behaves as if the option &%-q%&
2596 were present before any other options, for compatibility with Smail. The &%-q%&
2597 option causes a single queue runner process to be started.
2598
2599 .cindex "&'newaliases'&"
2600 .cindex "alias file" "building"
2601 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "calling Exim as &'newaliases'&"
2602 If Exim is called under the name &'newaliases'& it behaves as if the option
2603 &%-bi%& were present before any other options, for compatibility with Sendmail.
2604 This option is used for rebuilding Sendmail's alias file. Exim does not have
2605 the concept of a single alias file, but can be configured to run a given
2606 command if called with the &%-bi%& option.
2607
2608
2609 .section "Trusted and admin users" "SECTtrustedadmin"
2610 Some Exim options are available only to &'trusted users'& and others are
2611 available only to &'admin users'&. In the description below, the phrases &"Exim
2612 user"& and &"Exim group"& mean the user and group defined by EXIM_USER and
2613 EXIM_GROUP in &_Local/Makefile_& or set by the &%exim_user%& and
2614 &%exim_group%& options. These do not necessarily have to use the name &"exim"&.
2615
2616 .ilist
2617 .cindex "trusted users" "definition of"
2618 .cindex "user" "trusted definition of"
2619 The trusted users are root, the Exim user, any user listed in the
2620 &%trusted_users%& configuration option, and any user whose current group or any
2621 supplementary group is one of those listed in the &%trusted_groups%&
2622 configuration option. Note that the Exim group is not automatically trusted.
2623
2624 .cindex '&"From"& line'
2625 .cindex "envelope sender"
2626 Trusted users are always permitted to use the &%-f%& option or a leading
2627 &"From&~"& line to specify the envelope sender of a message that is passed to
2628 Exim through the local interface (see the &%-bm%& and &%-f%& options below).
2629 See the &%untrusted_set_sender%& option for a way of permitting non-trusted
2630 users to set envelope senders.
2631
2632 .cindex "&'From:'& header line"
2633 .cindex "&'Sender:'& header line"
2634 .cindex "header lines" "From:"
2635 .cindex "header lines" "Sender:"
2636 For a trusted user, there is never any check on the contents of the &'From:'&
2637 header line, and a &'Sender:'& line is never added. Furthermore, any existing
2638 &'Sender:'& line in incoming local (non-TCP/IP) messages is not removed.
2639
2640 Trusted users may also specify a host name, host address, interface address,
2641 protocol name, ident value, and authentication data when submitting a message
2642 locally. Thus, they are able to insert messages into Exim's queue locally that
2643 have the characteristics of messages received from a remote host. Untrusted
2644 users may in some circumstances use &%-f%&, but can never set the other values
2645 that are available to trusted users.
2646 .next
2647 .cindex "user" "admin definition of"
2648 .cindex "admin user" "definition of"
2649 The admin users are root, the Exim user, and any user that is a member of the
2650 Exim group or of any group listed in the &%admin_groups%& configuration option.
2651 The current group does not have to be one of these groups.
2652
2653 Admin users are permitted to list the queue, and to carry out certain
2654 operations on messages, for example, to force delivery failures. It is also
2655 necessary to be an admin user in order to see the full information provided by
2656 the Exim monitor, and full debugging output.
2657
2658 By default, the use of the &%-M%&, &%-q%&, &%-R%&, and &%-S%& options to cause
2659 Exim to attempt delivery of messages on its queue is restricted to admin users.
2660 However, this restriction can be relaxed by setting the &%prod_requires_admin%&
2661 option false (that is, specifying &%no_prod_requires_admin%&).
2662
2663 Similarly, the use of the &%-bp%& option to list all the messages in the queue
2664 is restricted to admin users unless &%queue_list_requires_admin%& is set
2665 false.
2666 .endlist
2667
2668
2669 &*Warning*&: If you configure your system so that admin users are able to
2670 edit Exim's configuration file, you are giving those users an easy way of
2671 getting root. There is further discussion of this issue at the start of chapter
2672 &<<CHAPconf>>&.
2673
2674
2675
2676
2677 .section "Command line options" "SECID39"
2678 Exim's command line options are described in alphabetical order below. If none
2679 of the options that specifies a specific action (such as starting the daemon or
2680 a queue runner, or testing an address, or receiving a message in a specific
2681 format, or listing the queue) are present, and there is at least one argument
2682 on the command line, &%-bm%& (accept a local message on the standard input,
2683 with the arguments specifying the recipients) is assumed. Otherwise, Exim
2684 outputs a brief message about itself and exits.
2685
2686 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2687 . Insert a stylized XML comment here, to identify the start of the command line
2688 . options. This is for the benefit of the Perl script that automatically
2689 . creates a man page for the options.
2690 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2691
2692 .literal xml
2693 <!-- === Start of command line options === -->
2694 .literal off
2695
2696
2697 .vlist
2698 .vitem &%--%&
2699 .oindex "--"
2700 .cindex "options" "command line; terminating"
2701 This is a pseudo-option whose only purpose is to terminate the options and
2702 therefore to cause subsequent command line items to be treated as arguments
2703 rather than options, even if they begin with hyphens.
2704
2705 .vitem &%--help%&
2706 .oindex "&%--help%&"
2707 This option causes Exim to output a few sentences stating what it is.
2708 The same output is generated if the Exim binary is called with no options and
2709 no arguments.
2710
2711 .vitem &%--version%&
2712 .oindex "&%--version%&"
2713 This option is an alias for &%-bV%& and causes version information to be
2714 displayed.
2715
2716 .vitem &%-Ac%& &&&
2717 &%-Am%&
2718 .oindex "&%-Ac%&"
2719 .oindex "&%-Am%&"
2720 These options are used by Sendmail for selecting configuration files and are
2721 ignored by Exim.
2722
2723 .vitem &%-B%&<&'type'&>
2724 .oindex "&%-B%&"
2725 .cindex "8-bit characters"
2726 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "8-bit characters"
2727 This is a Sendmail option for selecting 7 or 8 bit processing. Exim is 8-bit
2728 clean; it ignores this option.
2729
2730 .vitem &%-bd%&
2731 .oindex "&%-bd%&"
2732 .cindex "daemon"
2733 .cindex "SMTP" "listener"
2734 .cindex "queue runner"
2735 This option runs Exim as a daemon, awaiting incoming SMTP connections. Usually
2736 the &%-bd%& option is combined with the &%-q%&<&'time'&> option, to specify
2737 that the daemon should also initiate periodic queue runs.
2738
2739 The &%-bd%& option can be used only by an admin user. If either of the &%-d%&
2740 (debugging) or &%-v%& (verifying) options are set, the daemon does not
2741 disconnect from the controlling terminal. When running this way, it can be
2742 stopped by pressing ctrl-C.
2743
2744 By default, Exim listens for incoming connections to the standard SMTP port on
2745 all the host's running interfaces. However, it is possible to listen on other
2746 ports, on multiple ports, and only on specific interfaces. Chapter
2747 &<<CHAPinterfaces>>& contains a description of the options that control this.
2748
2749 When a listening daemon
2750 .cindex "daemon" "process id (pid)"
2751 .cindex "pid (process id)" "of daemon"
2752 is started without the use of &%-oX%& (that is, without overriding the normal
2753 configuration), it writes its process id to a file called &_exim-daemon.pid_&
2754 in Exim's spool directory. This location can be overridden by setting
2755 PID_FILE_PATH in &_Local/Makefile_&. The file is written while Exim is still
2756 running as root.
2757
2758 When &%-oX%& is used on the command line to start a listening daemon, the
2759 process id is not written to the normal pid file path. However, &%-oP%& can be
2760 used to specify a path on the command line if a pid file is required.
2761
2762 The SIGHUP signal
2763 .cindex "SIGHUP"
2764 .cindex "daemon" "restarting"
2765 can be used to cause the daemon to re-execute itself. This should be done
2766 whenever Exim's configuration file, or any file that is incorporated into it by
2767 means of the &%.include%& facility, is changed, and also whenever a new version
2768 of Exim is installed. It is not necessary to do this when other files that are
2769 referenced from the configuration (for example, alias files) are changed,
2770 because these are reread each time they are used.
2771
2772 .vitem &%-bdf%&
2773 .oindex "&%-bdf%&"
2774 This option has the same effect as &%-bd%& except that it never disconnects
2775 from the controlling terminal, even when no debugging is specified.
2776
2777 .vitem &%-be%&
2778 .oindex "&%-be%&"
2779 .cindex "testing" "string expansion"
2780 .cindex "expansion" "testing"
2781 Run Exim in expansion testing mode. Exim discards its root privilege, to
2782 prevent ordinary users from using this mode to read otherwise inaccessible
2783 files. If no arguments are given, Exim runs interactively, prompting for lines
2784 of data. Otherwise, it processes each argument in turn.
2785
2786 If Exim was built with USE_READLINE=yes in &_Local/Makefile_&, it tries
2787 to load the &%libreadline%& library dynamically whenever the &%-be%& option is
2788 used without command line arguments. If successful, it uses the &[readline()]&
2789 function, which provides extensive line-editing facilities, for reading the
2790 test data. A line history is supported.
2791
2792 Long expansion expressions can be split over several lines by using backslash
2793 continuations. As in Exim's run time configuration, white space at the start of
2794 continuation lines is ignored. Each argument or data line is passed through the
2795 string expansion mechanism, and the result is output. Variable values from the
2796 configuration file (for example, &$qualify_domain$&) are available, but no
2797 message-specific values (such as &$message_exim_id$&) are set, because no message
2798 is being processed (but see &%-bem%& and &%-Mset%&).
2799
2800 &*Note*&: If you use this mechanism to test lookups, and you change the data
2801 files or databases you are using, you must exit and restart Exim before trying
2802 the same lookup again. Otherwise, because each Exim process caches the results
2803 of lookups, you will just get the same result as before.
2804
2805 Macro processing is done on lines before string-expansion: new macros can be
2806 defined and macros will be expanded.
2807 Because macros in the config file are often used for secrets, those are only
2808 available to admin users.
2809
2810 .vitem &%-bem%&&~<&'filename'&>
2811 .oindex "&%-bem%&"
2812 .cindex "testing" "string expansion"
2813 .cindex "expansion" "testing"
2814 This option operates like &%-be%& except that it must be followed by the name
2815 of a file. For example:
2816 .code
2817 exim -bem /tmp/testmessage
2818 .endd
2819 The file is read as a message (as if receiving a locally-submitted non-SMTP
2820 message) before any of the test expansions are done. Thus, message-specific
2821 variables such as &$message_size$& and &$header_from:$& are available. However,
2822 no &'Received:'& header is added to the message. If the &%-t%& option is set,
2823 recipients are read from the headers in the normal way, and are shown in the
2824 &$recipients$& variable. Note that recipients cannot be given on the command
2825 line, because further arguments are taken as strings to expand (just like
2826 &%-be%&).
2827
2828 .vitem &%-bF%&&~<&'filename'&>
2829 .oindex "&%-bF%&"
2830 .cindex "system filter" "testing"
2831 .cindex "testing" "system filter"
2832 This option is the same as &%-bf%& except that it assumes that the filter being
2833 tested is a system filter. The additional commands that are available only in
2834 system filters are recognized.
2835
2836 .vitem &%-bf%&&~<&'filename'&>
2837 .oindex "&%-bf%&"
2838 .cindex "filter" "testing"
2839 .cindex "testing" "filter file"
2840 .cindex "forward file" "testing"
2841 .cindex "testing" "forward file"
2842 .cindex "Sieve filter" "testing"
2843 This option runs Exim in user filter testing mode; the file is the filter file
2844 to be tested, and a test message must be supplied on the standard input. If
2845 there are no message-dependent tests in the filter, an empty file can be
2846 supplied.
2847
2848 If you want to test a system filter file, use &%-bF%& instead of &%-bf%&. You
2849 can use both &%-bF%& and &%-bf%& on the same command, in order to test a system
2850 filter and a user filter in the same run. For example:
2851 .code
2852 exim -bF /system/filter -bf /user/filter </test/message
2853 .endd
2854 This is helpful when the system filter adds header lines or sets filter
2855 variables that are used by the user filter.
2856
2857 If the test filter file does not begin with one of the special lines
2858 .code
2859 # Exim filter
2860 # Sieve filter
2861 .endd
2862 it is taken to be a normal &_.forward_& file, and is tested for validity under
2863 that interpretation. See sections &<<SECTitenonfilred>>& to
2864 &<<SECTspecitredli>>& for a description of the possible contents of non-filter
2865 redirection lists.
2866
2867 The result of an Exim command that uses &%-bf%&, provided no errors are
2868 detected, is a list of the actions that Exim would try to take if presented
2869 with the message for real. More details of filter testing are given in the
2870 separate document entitled &'Exim's interfaces to mail filtering'&.
2871
2872 When testing a filter file,
2873 .cindex "&""From""& line"
2874 .cindex "envelope sender"
2875 .oindex "&%-f%&" "for filter testing"
2876 the envelope sender can be set by the &%-f%& option,
2877 or by a &"From&~"& line at the start of the test message. Various parameters
2878 that would normally be taken from the envelope recipient address of the message
2879 can be set by means of additional command line options (see the next four
2880 options).
2881
2882 .vitem &%-bfd%&&~<&'domain'&>
2883 .oindex "&%-bfd%&"
2884 .vindex "&$qualify_domain$&"
2885 This sets the domain of the recipient address when a filter file is being
2886 tested by means of the &%-bf%& option. The default is the value of
2887 &$qualify_domain$&.
2888
2889 .vitem &%-bfl%&&~<&'local&~part'&>
2890 .oindex "&%-bfl%&"
2891 This sets the local part of the recipient address when a filter file is being
2892 tested by means of the &%-bf%& option. The default is the username of the
2893 process that calls Exim. A local part should be specified with any prefix or
2894 suffix stripped, because that is how it appears to the filter when a message is
2895 actually being delivered.
2896
2897 .vitem &%-bfp%&&~<&'prefix'&>
2898 .oindex "&%-bfp%&"
2899 This sets the prefix of the local part of the recipient address when a filter
2900 file is being tested by means of the &%-bf%& option. The default is an empty
2901 prefix.
2902
2903 .vitem &%-bfs%&&~<&'suffix'&>
2904 .oindex "&%-bfs%&"
2905 This sets the suffix of the local part of the recipient address when a filter
2906 file is being tested by means of the &%-bf%& option. The default is an empty
2907 suffix.
2908
2909 .vitem &%-bh%&&~<&'IP&~address'&>
2910 .oindex "&%-bh%&"
2911 .cindex "testing" "incoming SMTP"
2912 .cindex "SMTP" "testing incoming"
2913 .cindex "testing" "relay control"
2914 .cindex "relaying" "testing configuration"
2915 .cindex "policy control" "testing"
2916 .cindex "debugging" "&%-bh%& option"
2917 This option runs a fake SMTP session as if from the given IP address, using the
2918 standard input and output. The IP address may include a port number at the end,
2919 after a full stop. For example:
2920 .code
2921 exim -bh 10.9.8.7.1234
2922 exim -bh fe80::a00:20ff:fe86:a061.5678
2923 .endd
2924 When an IPv6 address is given, it is converted into canonical form. In the case
2925 of the second example above, the value of &$sender_host_address$& after
2926 conversion to the canonical form is
2927 &`fe80:0000:0000:0a00:20ff:fe86:a061.5678`&.
2928
2929 Comments as to what is going on are written to the standard error file. These
2930 include lines beginning with &"LOG"& for anything that would have been logged.
2931 This facility is provided for testing configuration options for incoming
2932 messages, to make sure they implement the required policy. For example, you can
2933 test your relay controls using &%-bh%&.
2934
2935 &*Warning 1*&:
2936 .cindex "RFC 1413"
2937 You can test features of the configuration that rely on ident (RFC 1413)
2938 information by using the &%-oMt%& option. However, Exim cannot actually perform
2939 an ident callout when testing using &%-bh%& because there is no incoming SMTP
2940 connection.
2941
2942 &*Warning 2*&: Address verification callouts (see section &<<SECTcallver>>&)
2943 are also skipped when testing using &%-bh%&. If you want these callouts to
2944 occur, use &%-bhc%& instead.
2945
2946 Messages supplied during the testing session are discarded, and nothing is
2947 written to any of the real log files. There may be pauses when DNS (and other)
2948 lookups are taking place, and of course these may time out. The &%-oMi%& option
2949 can be used to specify a specific IP interface and port if this is important,
2950 and &%-oMaa%& and &%-oMai%& can be used to set parameters as if the SMTP
2951 session were authenticated.
2952
2953 The &'exim_checkaccess'& utility is a &"packaged"& version of &%-bh%& whose
2954 output just states whether a given recipient address from a given host is
2955 acceptable or not. See section &<<SECTcheckaccess>>&.
2956
2957 Features such as authentication and encryption, where the client input is not
2958 plain text, cannot easily be tested with &%-bh%&. Instead, you should use a
2959 specialized SMTP test program such as
2960 &url(http://jetmore.org/john/code/#swaks,swaks).
2961
2962 .vitem &%-bhc%&&~<&'IP&~address'&>
2963 .oindex "&%-bhc%&"
2964 This option operates in the same way as &%-bh%&, except that address
2965 verification callouts are performed if required. This includes consulting and
2966 updating the callout cache database.
2967
2968 .vitem &%-bi%&
2969 .oindex "&%-bi%&"
2970 .cindex "alias file" "building"
2971 .cindex "building alias file"
2972 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-bi%& option"
2973 Sendmail interprets the &%-bi%& option as a request to rebuild its alias file.
2974 Exim does not have the concept of a single alias file, and so it cannot mimic
2975 this behaviour. However, calls to &_/usr/lib/sendmail_& with the &%-bi%& option
2976 tend to appear in various scripts such as NIS make files, so the option must be
2977 recognized.
2978
2979 If &%-bi%& is encountered, the command specified by the &%bi_command%&
2980 configuration option is run, under the uid and gid of the caller of Exim. If
2981 the &%-oA%& option is used, its value is passed to the command as an argument.
2982 The command set by &%bi_command%& may not contain arguments. The command can
2983 use the &'exim_dbmbuild'& utility, or some other means, to rebuild alias files
2984 if this is required. If the &%bi_command%& option is not set, calling Exim with
2985 &%-bi%& is a no-op.
2986
2987 . // Keep :help first, then the rest in alphabetical order
2988 .vitem &%-bI:help%&
2989 .oindex "&%-bI:help%&"
2990 .cindex "querying exim information"
2991 We shall provide various options starting &`-bI:`& for querying Exim for
2992 information. The output of many of these will be intended for machine
2993 consumption. This one is not. The &%-bI:help%& option asks Exim for a
2994 synopsis of supported options beginning &`-bI:`&. Use of any of these
2995 options shall cause Exim to exit after producing the requested output.
2996
2997 .vitem &%-bI:dscp%&
2998 .oindex "&%-bI:dscp%&"
2999 .cindex "DSCP" "values"
3000 This option causes Exim to emit an alphabetically sorted list of all
3001 recognised DSCP names.
3002
3003 .vitem &%-bI:sieve%&
3004 .oindex "&%-bI:sieve%&"
3005 .cindex "Sieve filter" "capabilities"
3006 This option causes Exim to emit an alphabetically sorted list of all supported
3007 Sieve protocol extensions on stdout, one per line. This is anticipated to be
3008 useful for ManageSieve (RFC 5804) implementations, in providing that protocol's
3009 &`SIEVE`& capability response line. As the precise list may depend upon
3010 compile-time build options, which this option will adapt to, this is the only
3011 way to guarantee a correct response.
3012
3013 .vitem &%-bm%&
3014 .oindex "&%-bm%&"
3015 .cindex "local message reception"
3016 This option runs an Exim receiving process that accepts an incoming,
3017 locally-generated message on the standard input. The recipients are given as the
3018 command arguments (except when &%-t%& is also present &-- see below). Each
3019 argument can be a comma-separated list of RFC 2822 addresses. This is the
3020 default option for selecting the overall action of an Exim call; it is assumed
3021 if no other conflicting option is present.
3022
3023 If any addresses in the message are unqualified (have no domain), they are
3024 qualified by the values of the &%qualify_domain%& or &%qualify_recipient%&
3025 options, as appropriate. The &%-bnq%& option (see below) provides a way of
3026 suppressing this for special cases.
3027
3028 Policy checks on the contents of local messages can be enforced by means of
3029 the non-SMTP ACL. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for details.
3030
3031 .cindex "return code" "for &%-bm%&"
3032 The return code is zero if the message is successfully accepted. Otherwise, the
3033 action is controlled by the &%-oe%&&'x'& option setting &-- see below.
3034
3035 The format
3036 .cindex "message" "format"
3037 .cindex "format" "message"
3038 .cindex "&""From""& line"
3039 .cindex "UUCP" "&""From""& line"
3040 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&""From""& line"
3041 of the message must be as defined in RFC 2822, except that, for
3042 compatibility with Sendmail and Smail, a line in one of the forms
3043 .code
3044 From sender Fri Jan 5 12:55 GMT 1997
3045 From sender Fri, 5 Jan 97 12:55:01
3046 .endd
3047 (with the weekday optional, and possibly with additional text after the date)
3048 is permitted to appear at the start of the message. There appears to be no
3049 authoritative specification of the format of this line. Exim recognizes it by
3050 matching against the regular expression defined by the &%uucp_from_pattern%&
3051 option, which can be changed if necessary.
3052
3053 .oindex "&%-f%&" "overriding &""From""& line"
3054 The specified sender is treated as if it were given as the argument to the
3055 &%-f%& option, but if a &%-f%& option is also present, its argument is used in
3056 preference to the address taken from the message. The caller of Exim must be a
3057 trusted user for the sender of a message to be set in this way.
3058
3059 .vitem &%-bmalware%&&~<&'filename'&>
3060 .oindex "&%-bmalware%&"
3061 .cindex "testing", "malware"
3062 .cindex "malware scan test"
3063 This debugging option causes Exim to scan the given file or directory
3064 (depending on the used scanner interface),
3065 using the malware scanning framework. The option of &%av_scanner%& influences
3066 this option, so if &%av_scanner%&'s value is dependent upon an expansion then
3067 the expansion should have defaults which apply to this invocation. ACLs are
3068 not invoked, so if &%av_scanner%& references an ACL variable then that variable
3069 will never be populated and &%-bmalware%& will fail.
3070
3071 Exim will have changed working directory before resolving the filename, so
3072 using fully qualified pathnames is advisable. Exim will be running as the Exim
3073 user when it tries to open the file, rather than as the invoking user.
3074 This option requires admin privileges.
3075
3076 The &%-bmalware%& option will not be extended to be more generally useful,
3077 there are better tools for file-scanning. This option exists to help
3078 administrators verify their Exim and AV scanner configuration.
3079
3080 .vitem &%-bnq%&
3081 .oindex "&%-bnq%&"
3082 .cindex "address qualification, suppressing"
3083 By default, Exim automatically qualifies unqualified addresses (those
3084 without domains) that appear in messages that are submitted locally (that
3085 is, not over TCP/IP). This qualification applies both to addresses in
3086 envelopes, and addresses in header lines. Sender addresses are qualified using
3087 &%qualify_domain%&, and recipient addresses using &%qualify_recipient%& (which
3088 defaults to the value of &%qualify_domain%&).
3089
3090 Sometimes, qualification is not wanted. For example, if &%-bS%& (batch SMTP) is
3091 being used to re-submit messages that originally came from remote hosts after
3092 content scanning, you probably do not want to qualify unqualified addresses in
3093 header lines. (Such lines will be present only if you have not enabled a header
3094 syntax check in the appropriate ACL.)
3095
3096 The &%-bnq%& option suppresses all qualification of unqualified addresses in
3097 messages that originate on the local host. When this is used, unqualified
3098 addresses in the envelope provoke errors (causing message rejection) and
3099 unqualified addresses in header lines are left alone.
3100
3101
3102 .vitem &%-bP%&
3103 .oindex "&%-bP%&"
3104 .cindex "configuration options" "extracting"
3105 .cindex "options" "configuration &-- extracting"
3106 If this option is given with no arguments, it causes the values of all Exim's
3107 main configuration options to be written to the standard output. The values
3108 of one or more specific options can be requested by giving their names as
3109 arguments, for example:
3110 .code
3111 exim -bP qualify_domain hold_domains
3112 .endd
3113 .cindex "hiding configuration option values"
3114 .cindex "configuration options" "hiding value of"
3115 .cindex "options" "hiding value of"
3116 However, any option setting that is preceded by the word &"hide"& in the
3117 configuration file is not shown in full, except to an admin user. For other
3118 users, the output is as in this example:
3119 .code
3120 mysql_servers = <value not displayable>
3121 .endd
3122 If &%config%& is given as an argument, the config is
3123 output, as it was parsed, any include file resolved, any comment removed.
3124
3125 If &%config_file%& is given as an argument, the name of the run time
3126 configuration file is output. (&%configure_file%& works too, for
3127 backward compatibility.)
3128 If a list of configuration files was supplied, the value that is output here
3129 is the name of the file that was actually used.
3130
3131 .cindex "options" "hiding name of"
3132 If the &%-n%& flag is given, then for most modes of &%-bP%& operation the
3133 name will not be output.
3134
3135 .cindex "daemon" "process id (pid)"
3136 .cindex "pid (process id)" "of daemon"
3137 If &%log_file_path%& or &%pid_file_path%& are given, the names of the
3138 directories where log files and daemon pid files are written are output,
3139 respectively. If these values are unset, log files are written in a
3140 sub-directory of the spool directory called &%log%&, and the pid file is
3141 written directly into the spool directory.
3142
3143 If &%-bP%& is followed by a name preceded by &`+`&, for example,
3144 .code
3145 exim -bP +local_domains
3146 .endd
3147 it searches for a matching named list of any type (domain, host, address, or
3148 local part) and outputs what it finds.
3149
3150 .cindex "options" "router &-- extracting"
3151 .cindex "options" "transport &-- extracting"
3152 .cindex "options" "authenticator &-- extracting"
3153 If one of the words &%router%&, &%transport%&, or &%authenticator%& is given,
3154 followed by the name of an appropriate driver instance, the option settings for
3155 that driver are output. For example:
3156 .code
3157 exim -bP transport local_delivery
3158 .endd
3159 The generic driver options are output first, followed by the driver's private
3160 options. A list of the names of drivers of a particular type can be obtained by
3161 using one of the words &%router_list%&, &%transport_list%&, or
3162 &%authenticator_list%&, and a complete list of all drivers with their option
3163 settings can be obtained by using &%routers%&, &%transports%&, or
3164 &%authenticators%&.
3165
3166 .cindex "environment"
3167 If &%environment%& is given as an argument, the set of environment
3168 variables is output, line by line. Using the &%-n%& flag suppresses the value of the
3169 variables.
3170
3171 .cindex "options" "macro &-- extracting"
3172 If invoked by an admin user, then &%macro%&, &%macro_list%& and &%macros%&
3173 are available, similarly to the drivers. Because macros are sometimes used
3174 for storing passwords, this option is restricted.
3175 The output format is one item per line.
3176 For the "-bP macro <name>" form, if no such macro is found
3177 the exit status will be nonzero.
3178
3179 .vitem &%-bp%&
3180 .oindex "&%-bp%&"
3181 .cindex "queue" "listing messages on"
3182 .cindex "listing" "messages on the queue"
3183 This option requests a listing of the contents of the mail queue on the
3184 standard output. If the &%-bp%& option is followed by a list of message ids,
3185 just those messages are listed. By default, this option can be used only by an
3186 admin user. However, the &%queue_list_requires_admin%& option can be set false
3187 to allow any user to see the queue.
3188
3189 Each message on the queue is displayed as in the following example:
3190 .code
3191 25m 2.9K 0t5C6f-0000c8-00 <alice@wonderland.fict.example>
3192 red.king@looking-glass.fict.example
3193 <other addresses>
3194 .endd
3195 .cindex "message" "size in queue listing"
3196 .cindex "size" "of message"
3197 The first line contains the length of time the message has been on the queue
3198 (in this case 25 minutes), the size of the message (2.9K), the unique local
3199 identifier for the message, and the message sender, as contained in the
3200 envelope. For bounce messages, the sender address is empty, and appears as
3201 &"<>"&. If the message was submitted locally by an untrusted user who overrode
3202 the default sender address, the user's login name is shown in parentheses
3203 before the sender address.
3204
3205 .cindex "frozen messages" "in queue listing"
3206 If the message is frozen (attempts to deliver it are suspended) then the text
3207 &"*** frozen ***"& is displayed at the end of this line.
3208
3209 The recipients of the message (taken from the envelope, not the headers) are
3210 displayed on subsequent lines. Those addresses to which the message has already
3211 been delivered are marked with the letter D. If an original address gets
3212 expanded into several addresses via an alias or forward file, the original is
3213 displayed with a D only when deliveries for all of its child addresses are
3214 complete.
3215
3216
3217 .vitem &%-bpa%&
3218 .oindex "&%-bpa%&"
3219 This option operates like &%-bp%&, but in addition it shows delivered addresses
3220 that were generated from the original top level address(es) in each message by
3221 alias or forwarding operations. These addresses are flagged with &"+D"& instead
3222 of just &"D"&.
3223
3224
3225 .vitem &%-bpc%&
3226 .oindex "&%-bpc%&"
3227 .cindex "queue" "count of messages on"
3228 This option counts the number of messages on the queue, and writes the total
3229 to the standard output. It is restricted to admin users, unless
3230 &%queue_list_requires_admin%& is set false.
3231
3232
3233 .vitem &%-bpr%&
3234 .oindex "&%-bpr%&"
3235 This option operates like &%-bp%&, but the output is not sorted into
3236 chronological order of message arrival. This can speed it up when there are
3237 lots of messages on the queue, and is particularly useful if the output is
3238 going to be post-processed in a way that doesn't need the sorting.
3239
3240 .vitem &%-bpra%&
3241 .oindex "&%-bpra%&"
3242 This option is a combination of &%-bpr%& and &%-bpa%&.
3243
3244 .vitem &%-bpru%&
3245 .oindex "&%-bpru%&"
3246 This option is a combination of &%-bpr%& and &%-bpu%&.
3247
3248
3249 .vitem &%-bpu%&
3250 .oindex "&%-bpu%&"
3251 This option operates like &%-bp%& but shows only undelivered top-level
3252 addresses for each message displayed. Addresses generated by aliasing or
3253 forwarding are not shown, unless the message was deferred after processing by a
3254 router with the &%one_time%& option set.
3255
3256
3257 .vitem &%-brt%&
3258 .oindex "&%-brt%&"
3259 .cindex "testing" "retry configuration"
3260 .cindex "retry" "configuration testing"
3261 This option is for testing retry rules, and it must be followed by up to three
3262 arguments. It causes Exim to look for a retry rule that matches the values
3263 and to write it to the standard output. For example:
3264 .code
3265 exim -brt bach.comp.mus.example
3266 Retry rule: *.comp.mus.example F,2h,15m; F,4d,30m;
3267 .endd
3268 See chapter &<<CHAPretry>>& for a description of Exim's retry rules. The first
3269 argument, which is required, can be a complete address in the form
3270 &'local_part@domain'&, or it can be just a domain name. If the second argument
3271 contains a dot, it is interpreted as an optional second domain name; if no
3272 retry rule is found for the first argument, the second is tried. This ties in
3273 with Exim's behaviour when looking for retry rules for remote hosts &-- if no
3274 rule is found that matches the host, one that matches the mail domain is
3275 sought. Finally, an argument that is the name of a specific delivery error, as
3276 used in setting up retry rules, can be given. For example:
3277 .code
3278 exim -brt haydn.comp.mus.example quota_3d
3279 Retry rule: *@haydn.comp.mus.example quota_3d F,1h,15m
3280 .endd
3281
3282 .vitem &%-brw%&
3283 .oindex "&%-brw%&"
3284 .cindex "testing" "rewriting"
3285 .cindex "rewriting" "testing"
3286 This option is for testing address rewriting rules, and it must be followed by
3287 a single argument, consisting of either a local part without a domain, or a
3288 complete address with a fully qualified domain. Exim outputs how this address
3289 would be rewritten for each possible place it might appear. See chapter
3290 &<<CHAPrewrite>>& for further details.
3291
3292 .vitem &%-bS%&
3293 .oindex "&%-bS%&"
3294 .cindex "SMTP" "batched incoming"
3295 .cindex "batched SMTP input"
3296 This option is used for batched SMTP input, which is an alternative interface
3297 for non-interactive local message submission. A number of messages can be
3298 submitted in a single run. However, despite its name, this is not really SMTP
3299 input. Exim reads each message's envelope from SMTP commands on the standard
3300 input, but generates no responses. If the caller is trusted, or
3301 &%untrusted_set_sender%& is set, the senders in the SMTP MAIL commands are
3302 believed; otherwise the sender is always the caller of Exim.
3303
3304 The message itself is read from the standard input, in SMTP format (leading
3305 dots doubled), terminated by a line containing just a single dot. An error is
3306 provoked if the terminating dot is missing. A further message may then follow.
3307
3308 As for other local message submissions, the contents of incoming batch SMTP
3309 messages can be checked using the non-SMTP ACL (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&).
3310 Unqualified addresses are automatically qualified using &%qualify_domain%& and
3311 &%qualify_recipient%&, as appropriate, unless the &%-bnq%& option is used.
3312
3313 Some other SMTP commands are recognized in the input. HELO and EHLO act
3314 as RSET; VRFY, EXPN, ETRN, and HELP act as NOOP;
3315 QUIT quits, ignoring the rest of the standard input.
3316
3317 .cindex "return code" "for &%-bS%&"
3318 If any error is encountered, reports are written to the standard output and
3319 error streams, and Exim gives up immediately. The return code is 0 if no error
3320 was detected; it is 1 if one or more messages were accepted before the error
3321 was detected; otherwise it is 2.
3322
3323 More details of input using batched SMTP are given in section
3324 &<<SECTincomingbatchedSMTP>>&.
3325
3326 .vitem &%-bs%&
3327 .oindex "&%-bs%&"
3328 .cindex "SMTP" "local input"
3329 .cindex "local SMTP input"
3330 This option causes Exim to accept one or more messages by reading SMTP commands
3331 on the standard input, and producing SMTP replies on the standard output. SMTP
3332 policy controls, as defined in ACLs (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&) are applied.
3333 Some user agents use this interface as a way of passing locally-generated
3334 messages to the MTA.
3335
3336 In
3337 .cindex "sender" "source of"
3338 this usage, if the caller of Exim is trusted, or &%untrusted_set_sender%& is
3339 set, the senders of messages are taken from the SMTP MAIL commands.
3340 Otherwise the content of these commands is ignored and the sender is set up as
3341 the calling user. Unqualified addresses are automatically qualified using
3342 &%qualify_domain%& and &%qualify_recipient%&, as appropriate, unless the
3343 &%-bnq%& option is used.
3344
3345 .cindex "inetd"
3346 The
3347 &%-bs%& option is also used to run Exim from &'inetd'&, as an alternative to
3348 using a listening daemon. Exim can distinguish the two cases by checking
3349 whether the standard input is a TCP/IP socket. When Exim is called from
3350 &'inetd'&, the source of the mail is assumed to be remote, and the comments
3351 above concerning senders and qualification do not apply. In this situation,
3352 Exim behaves in exactly the same way as it does when receiving a message via
3353 the listening daemon.
3354
3355 .vitem &%-bt%&
3356 .oindex "&%-bt%&"
3357 .cindex "testing" "addresses"
3358 .cindex "address" "testing"
3359 This option runs Exim in address testing mode, in which each argument is taken
3360 as a recipient address to be tested for deliverability. The results are
3361 written to the standard output. If a test fails, and the caller is not an admin
3362 user, no details of the failure are output, because these might contain
3363 sensitive information such as usernames and passwords for database lookups.
3364
3365 If no arguments are given, Exim runs in an interactive manner, prompting with a
3366 right angle bracket for addresses to be tested.
3367
3368 Unlike the &%-be%& test option, you cannot arrange for Exim to use the
3369 &[readline()]& function, because it is running as &'root'& and there are
3370 security issues.
3371
3372 Each address is handled as if it were the recipient address of a message
3373 (compare the &%-bv%& option). It is passed to the routers and the result is
3374 written to the standard output. However, any router that has
3375 &%no_address_test%& set is bypassed. This can make &%-bt%& easier to use for
3376 genuine routing tests if your first router passes everything to a scanner
3377 program.
3378
3379 .cindex "return code" "for &%-bt%&"
3380 The return code is 2 if any address failed outright; it is 1 if no address
3381 failed outright but at least one could not be resolved for some reason. Return
3382 code 0 is given only when all addresses succeed.
3383
3384 .cindex "duplicate addresses"
3385 &*Note*&: When actually delivering a message, Exim removes duplicate recipient
3386 addresses after routing is complete, so that only one delivery takes place.
3387 This does not happen when testing with &%-bt%&; the full results of routing are
3388 always shown.
3389
3390 &*Warning*&: &%-bt%& can only do relatively simple testing. If any of the
3391 routers in the configuration makes any tests on the sender address of a
3392 message,
3393 .oindex "&%-f%&" "for address testing"
3394 you can use the &%-f%& option to set an appropriate sender when running
3395 &%-bt%& tests. Without it, the sender is assumed to be the calling user at the
3396 default qualifying domain. However, if you have set up (for example) routers
3397 whose behaviour depends on the contents of an incoming message, you cannot test
3398 those conditions using &%-bt%&. The &%-N%& option provides a possible way of
3399 doing such tests.
3400
3401 .vitem &%-bV%&
3402 .oindex "&%-bV%&"
3403 .cindex "version number of Exim"
3404 This option causes Exim to write the current version number, compilation
3405 number, and compilation date of the &'exim'& binary to the standard output.
3406 It also lists the DBM library that is being used, the optional modules (such as
3407 specific lookup types), the drivers that are included in the binary, and the
3408 name of the run time configuration file that is in use.
3409
3410 As part of its operation, &%-bV%& causes Exim to read and syntax check its
3411 configuration file. However, this is a static check only. It cannot check
3412 values that are to be expanded. For example, although a misspelt ACL verb is
3413 detected, an error in the verb's arguments is not. You cannot rely on &%-bV%&
3414 alone to discover (for example) all the typos in the configuration; some
3415 realistic testing is needed. The &%-bh%& and &%-N%& options provide more
3416 dynamic testing facilities.
3417
3418 .vitem &%-bv%&
3419 .oindex "&%-bv%&"
3420 .cindex "verifying address" "using &%-bv%&"
3421 .cindex "address" "verification"
3422 This option runs Exim in address verification mode, in which each argument is
3423 taken as a recipient address to be verified by the routers. (This does
3424 not involve any verification callouts). During normal operation, verification
3425 happens mostly as a consequence processing a &%verify%& condition in an ACL
3426 (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&). If you want to test an entire ACL, possibly
3427 including callouts, see the &%-bh%& and &%-bhc%& options.
3428
3429 If verification fails, and the caller is not an admin user, no details of the
3430 failure are output, because these might contain sensitive information such as
3431 usernames and passwords for database lookups.
3432
3433 If no arguments are given, Exim runs in an interactive manner, prompting with a
3434 right angle bracket for addresses to be verified.
3435
3436 Unlike the &%-be%& test option, you cannot arrange for Exim to use the
3437 &[readline()]& function, because it is running as &'exim'& and there are
3438 security issues.
3439
3440 Verification differs from address testing (the &%-bt%& option) in that routers
3441 that have &%no_verify%& set are skipped, and if the address is accepted by a
3442 router that has &%fail_verify%& set, verification fails. The address is
3443 verified as a recipient if &%-bv%& is used; to test verification for a sender
3444 address, &%-bvs%& should be used.
3445
3446 If the &%-v%& option is not set, the output consists of a single line for each
3447 address, stating whether it was verified or not, and giving a reason in the
3448 latter case. Without &%-v%&, generating more than one address by redirection
3449 causes verification to end successfully, without considering the generated
3450 addresses. However, if just one address is generated, processing continues,
3451 and the generated address must verify successfully for the overall verification
3452 to succeed.
3453
3454 When &%-v%& is set, more details are given of how the address has been handled,
3455 and in the case of address redirection, all the generated addresses are also
3456 considered. Verification may succeed for some and fail for others.
3457
3458 The
3459 .cindex "return code" "for &%-bv%&"
3460 return code is 2 if any address failed outright; it is 1 if no address
3461 failed outright but at least one could not be resolved for some reason. Return
3462 code 0 is given only when all addresses succeed.
3463
3464 If any of the routers in the configuration makes any tests on the sender
3465 address of a message, you should use the &%-f%& option to set an appropriate
3466 sender when running &%-bv%& tests. Without it, the sender is assumed to be the
3467 calling user at the default qualifying domain.
3468
3469 .vitem &%-bvs%&
3470 .oindex "&%-bvs%&"
3471 This option acts like &%-bv%&, but verifies the address as a sender rather
3472 than a recipient address. This affects any rewriting and qualification that
3473 might happen.
3474
3475 .vitem &%-bw%&
3476 .oindex "&%-bw%&"
3477 .cindex "daemon"
3478 .cindex "inetd"
3479 .cindex "inetd" "wait mode"
3480 This option runs Exim as a daemon, awaiting incoming SMTP connections,
3481 similarly to the &%-bd%& option. All port specifications on the command-line
3482 and in the configuration file are ignored. Queue-running may not be specified.
3483
3484 In this mode, Exim expects to be passed a socket as fd 0 (stdin) which is
3485 listening for connections. This permits the system to start up and have
3486 inetd (or equivalent) listen on the SMTP ports, starting an Exim daemon for
3487 each port only when the first connection is received.
3488
3489 If the option is given as &%-bw%&<&'time'&> then the time is a timeout, after
3490 which the daemon will exit, which should cause inetd to listen once more.
3491
3492 .vitem &%-C%&&~<&'filelist'&>
3493 .oindex "&%-C%&"
3494 .cindex "configuration file" "alternate"
3495 .cindex "CONFIGURE_FILE"
3496 .cindex "alternate configuration file"
3497 This option causes Exim to find the run time configuration file from the given
3498 list instead of from the list specified by the CONFIGURE_FILE
3499 compile-time setting. Usually, the list will consist of just a single file
3500 name, but it can be a colon-separated list of names. In this case, the first
3501 file that exists is used. Failure to open an existing file stops Exim from
3502 proceeding any further along the list, and an error is generated.
3503
3504 When this option is used by a caller other than root, and the list is different
3505 from the compiled-in list, Exim gives up its root privilege immediately, and
3506 runs with the real and effective uid and gid set to those of the caller.
3507 However, if a TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST file is defined in &_Local/Makefile_&, that
3508 file contains a list of full pathnames, one per line, for configuration files
3509 which are trusted. Root privilege is retained for any configuration file so
3510 listed, as long as the caller is the Exim user (or the user specified in the
3511 CONFIGURE_OWNER option, if any), and as long as the configuration file is
3512 not writeable by inappropriate users or groups.
3513
3514 Leaving TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST unset precludes the possibility of testing a
3515 configuration using &%-C%& right through message reception and delivery,
3516 even if the caller is root. The reception works, but by that time, Exim is
3517 running as the Exim user, so when it re-executes to regain privilege for the
3518 delivery, the use of &%-C%& causes privilege to be lost. However, root can
3519 test reception and delivery using two separate commands (one to put a message
3520 on the queue, using &%-odq%&, and another to do the delivery, using &%-M%&).
3521
3522 If ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX is defined &_in Local/Makefile_&, it specifies a
3523 prefix string with which any file named in a &%-C%& command line option
3524 must start. In addition, the file name must not contain the sequence &`/../`&.
3525 However, if the value of the &%-C%& option is identical to the value of
3526 CONFIGURE_FILE in &_Local/Makefile_&, Exim ignores &%-C%& and proceeds as
3527 usual. There is no default setting for ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX; when it is
3528 unset, any file name can be used with &%-C%&.
3529
3530 ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX can be used to confine alternative configuration files
3531 to a directory to which only root has access. This prevents someone who has
3532 broken into the Exim account from running a privileged Exim with an arbitrary
3533 configuration file.
3534
3535 The &%-C%& facility is useful for ensuring that configuration files are
3536 syntactically correct, but cannot be used for test deliveries, unless the
3537 caller is privileged, or unless it is an exotic configuration that does not
3538 require privilege. No check is made on the owner or group of the files
3539 specified by this option.
3540
3541
3542 .vitem &%-D%&<&'macro'&>=<&'value'&>
3543 .oindex "&%-D%&"
3544 .cindex "macro" "setting on command line"
3545 This option can be used to override macro definitions in the configuration file
3546 (see section &<<SECTmacrodefs>>&). However, like &%-C%&, if it is used by an
3547 unprivileged caller, it causes Exim to give up its root privilege.
3548 If DISABLE_D_OPTION is defined in &_Local/Makefile_&, the use of &%-D%& is
3549 completely disabled, and its use causes an immediate error exit.
3550
3551 If WHITELIST_D_MACROS is defined in &_Local/Makefile_& then it should be a
3552 colon-separated list of macros which are considered safe and, if &%-D%& only
3553 supplies macros from this list, and the values are acceptable, then Exim will
3554 not give up root privilege if the caller is root, the Exim run-time user, or
3555 the CONFIGURE_OWNER, if set. This is a transition mechanism and is expected
3556 to be removed in the future. Acceptable values for the macros satisfy the
3557 regexp: &`^[A-Za-z0-9_/.-]*$`&
3558
3559 The entire option (including equals sign if present) must all be within one
3560 command line item. &%-D%& can be used to set the value of a macro to the empty
3561 string, in which case the equals sign is optional. These two commands are
3562 synonymous:
3563 .code
3564 exim -DABC ...
3565 exim -DABC= ...
3566 .endd
3567 To include spaces in a macro definition item, quotes must be used. If you use
3568 quotes, spaces are permitted around the macro name and the equals sign. For
3569 example:
3570 .code
3571 exim '-D ABC = something' ...
3572 .endd
3573 &%-D%& may be repeated up to 10 times on a command line.
3574 Only macro names up to 22 letters long can be set.
3575
3576
3577 .vitem &%-d%&<&'debug&~options'&>
3578 .oindex "&%-d%&"
3579 .cindex "debugging" "list of selectors"
3580 .cindex "debugging" "&%-d%& option"
3581 This option causes debugging information to be written to the standard
3582 error stream. It is restricted to admin users because debugging output may show
3583 database queries that contain password information. Also, the details of users'
3584 filter files should be protected. If a non-admin user uses &%-d%&, Exim
3585 writes an error message to the standard error stream and exits with a non-zero
3586 return code.
3587
3588 When &%-d%& is used, &%-v%& is assumed. If &%-d%& is given on its own, a lot of
3589 standard debugging data is output. This can be reduced, or increased to include
3590 some more rarely needed information, by directly following &%-d%& with a string
3591 made up of names preceded by plus or minus characters. These add or remove sets
3592 of debugging data, respectively. For example, &%-d+filter%& adds filter
3593 debugging, whereas &%-d-all+filter%& selects only filter debugging. Note that
3594 no spaces are allowed in the debug setting. The available debugging categories
3595 are:
3596 .display
3597 &`acl `& ACL interpretation
3598 &`auth `& authenticators
3599 &`deliver `& general delivery logic
3600 &`dns `& DNS lookups (see also resolver)
3601 &`dnsbl `& DNS black list (aka RBL) code
3602 &`exec `& arguments for &[execv()]& calls
3603 &`expand `& detailed debugging for string expansions
3604 &`filter `& filter handling
3605 &`hints_lookup `& hints data lookups
3606 &`host_lookup `& all types of name-to-IP address handling
3607 &`ident `& ident lookup
3608 &`interface `& lists of local interfaces
3609 &`lists `& matching things in lists
3610 &`load `& system load checks
3611 &`local_scan `& can be used by &[local_scan()]& (see chapter &&&
3612 &<<CHAPlocalscan>>&)
3613 &`lookup `& general lookup code and all lookups
3614 &`memory `& memory handling
3615 &`pid `& add pid to debug output lines
3616 &`process_info `& setting info for the process log
3617 &`queue_run `& queue runs
3618 &`receive `& general message reception logic
3619 &`resolver `& turn on the DNS resolver's debugging output
3620 &`retry `& retry handling
3621 &`rewrite `& address rewriting
3622 &`route `& address routing
3623 &`timestamp `& add timestamp to debug output lines
3624 &`tls `& TLS logic
3625 &`transport `& transports
3626 &`uid `& changes of uid/gid and looking up uid/gid
3627 &`verify `& address verification logic
3628 &`all `& almost all of the above (see below), and also &%-v%&
3629 .endd
3630 The &`all`& option excludes &`memory`& when used as &`+all`&, but includes it
3631 for &`-all`&. The reason for this is that &`+all`& is something that people
3632 tend to use when generating debug output for Exim maintainers. If &`+memory`&
3633 is included, an awful lot of output that is very rarely of interest is
3634 generated, so it now has to be explicitly requested. However, &`-all`& does
3635 turn everything off.
3636
3637 .cindex "resolver, debugging output"
3638 .cindex "DNS resolver, debugging output"
3639 The &`resolver`& option produces output only if the DNS resolver was compiled
3640 with DEBUG enabled. This is not the case in some operating systems. Also,
3641 unfortunately, debugging output from the DNS resolver is written to stdout
3642 rather than stderr.
3643
3644 The default (&%-d%& with no argument) omits &`expand`&, &`filter`&,
3645 &`interface`&, &`load`&, &`memory`&, &`pid`&, &`resolver`&, and &`timestamp`&.
3646 However, the &`pid`& selector is forced when debugging is turned on for a
3647 daemon, which then passes it on to any re-executed Exims. Exim also
3648 automatically adds the pid to debug lines when several remote deliveries are
3649 run in parallel.
3650
3651 The &`timestamp`& selector causes the current time to be inserted at the start
3652 of all debug output lines. This can be useful when trying to track down delays
3653 in processing.
3654
3655 If the &%debug_print%& option is set in any driver, it produces output whenever
3656 any debugging is selected, or if &%-v%& is used.
3657
3658 .vitem &%-dd%&<&'debug&~options'&>
3659 .oindex "&%-dd%&"
3660 This option behaves exactly like &%-d%& except when used on a command that
3661 starts a daemon process. In that case, debugging is turned off for the
3662 subprocesses that the daemon creates. Thus, it is useful for monitoring the
3663 behaviour of the daemon without creating as much output as full debugging does.
3664
3665 .vitem &%-dropcr%&
3666 .oindex "&%-dropcr%&"
3667 This is an obsolete option that is now a no-op. It used to affect the way Exim
3668 handled CR and LF characters in incoming messages. What happens now is
3669 described in section &<<SECTlineendings>>&.
3670
3671 .vitem &%-E%&
3672 .oindex "&%-E%&"
3673 .cindex "bounce message" "generating"
3674 This option specifies that an incoming message is a locally-generated delivery
3675 failure report. It is used internally by Exim when handling delivery failures
3676 and is not intended for external use. Its only effect is to stop Exim
3677 generating certain messages to the postmaster, as otherwise message cascades
3678 could occur in some situations. As part of the same option, a message id may
3679 follow the characters &%-E%&. If it does, the log entry for the receipt of the
3680 new message contains the id, following &"R="&, as a cross-reference.
3681
3682 .vitem &%-e%&&'x'&
3683 .oindex "&%-e%&&'x'&"
3684 There are a number of Sendmail options starting with &%-oe%& which seem to be
3685 called by various programs without the leading &%o%& in the option. For
3686 example, the &%vacation%& program uses &%-eq%&. Exim treats all options of the
3687 form &%-e%&&'x'& as synonymous with the corresponding &%-oe%&&'x'& options.
3688
3689 .vitem &%-F%&&~<&'string'&>
3690 .oindex "&%-F%&"
3691 .cindex "sender" "name"
3692 .cindex "name" "of sender"
3693 This option sets the sender's full name for use when a locally-generated
3694 message is being accepted. In the absence of this option, the user's &'gecos'&
3695 entry from the password data is used. As users are generally permitted to alter
3696 their &'gecos'& entries, no security considerations are involved. White space
3697 between &%-F%& and the <&'string'&> is optional.
3698
3699 .vitem &%-f%&&~<&'address'&>
3700 .oindex "&%-f%&"
3701 .cindex "sender" "address"
3702 .cindex "address" "sender"
3703 .cindex "trusted users"
3704 .cindex "envelope sender"
3705 .cindex "user" "trusted"
3706 This option sets the address of the envelope sender of a locally-generated
3707 message (also known as the return path). The option can normally be used only
3708 by a trusted user, but &%untrusted_set_sender%& can be set to allow untrusted
3709 users to use it.
3710
3711 Processes running as root or the Exim user are always trusted. Other
3712 trusted users are defined by the &%trusted_users%& or &%trusted_groups%&
3713 options. In the absence of &%-f%&, or if the caller is not trusted, the sender
3714 of a local message is set to the caller's login name at the default qualify
3715 domain.
3716
3717 There is one exception to the restriction on the use of &%-f%&: an empty sender
3718 can be specified by any user, trusted or not, to create a message that can
3719 never provoke a bounce. An empty sender can be specified either as an empty
3720 string, or as a pair of angle brackets with nothing between them, as in these
3721 examples of shell commands:
3722 .code
3723 exim -f '<>' user@domain
3724 exim -f "" user@domain
3725 .endd
3726 In addition, the use of &%-f%& is not restricted when testing a filter file
3727 with &%-bf%& or when testing or verifying addresses using the &%-bt%& or
3728 &%-bv%& options.
3729
3730 Allowing untrusted users to change the sender address does not of itself make
3731 it possible to send anonymous mail. Exim still checks that the &'From:'& header
3732 refers to the local user, and if it does not, it adds a &'Sender:'& header,
3733 though this can be overridden by setting &%no_local_from_check%&.
3734
3735 White
3736 .cindex "&""From""& line"
3737 space between &%-f%& and the <&'address'&> is optional (that is, they can be
3738 given as two arguments or one combined argument). The sender of a
3739 locally-generated message can also be set (when permitted) by an initial
3740 &"From&~"& line in the message &-- see the description of &%-bm%& above &-- but
3741 if &%-f%& is also present, it overrides &"From&~"&.
3742
3743 .vitem &%-G%&
3744 .oindex "&%-G%&"
3745 .cindex "submission fixups, suppressing (command-line)"
3746 This option is equivalent to an ACL applying:
3747 .code
3748 control = suppress_local_fixups
3749 .endd
3750 for every message received. Note that Sendmail will complain about such
3751 bad formatting, where Exim silently just does not fix it up. This may change
3752 in future.
3753
3754 As this affects audit information, the caller must be a trusted user to use
3755 this option.
3756
3757 .vitem &%-h%&&~<&'number'&>
3758 .oindex "&%-h%&"
3759 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-h%& option ignored"
3760 This option is accepted for compatibility with Sendmail, but has no effect. (In
3761 Sendmail it overrides the &"hop count"& obtained by counting &'Received:'&
3762 headers.)
3763
3764 .vitem &%-i%&
3765 .oindex "&%-i%&"
3766 .cindex "Solaris" "&'mail'& command"
3767 .cindex "dot" "in incoming non-SMTP message"
3768 This option, which has the same effect as &%-oi%&, specifies that a dot on a
3769 line by itself should not terminate an incoming, non-SMTP message. I can find
3770 no documentation for this option in Solaris 2.4 Sendmail, but the &'mailx'&
3771 command in Solaris 2.4 uses it. See also &%-ti%&.
3772
3773 .vitem &%-L%&&~<&'tag'&>
3774 .oindex "&%-L%&"
3775 .cindex "syslog" "process name; set with flag"
3776 This option is equivalent to setting &%syslog_processname%& in the config
3777 file and setting &%log_file_path%& to &`syslog`&.
3778 Its use is restricted to administrators. The configuration file has to be
3779 read and parsed, to determine access rights, before this is set and takes
3780 effect, so early configuration file errors will not honour this flag.
3781
3782 The tag should not be longer than 32 characters.
3783
3784 .vitem &%-M%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3785 .oindex "&%-M%&"
3786 .cindex "forcing delivery"
3787 .cindex "delivery" "forcing attempt"
3788 .cindex "frozen messages" "forcing delivery"
3789 This option requests Exim to run a delivery attempt on each message in turn. If
3790 any of the messages are frozen, they are automatically thawed before the
3791 delivery attempt. The settings of &%queue_domains%&, &%queue_smtp_domains%&,
3792 and &%hold_domains%& are ignored.
3793
3794 Retry
3795 .cindex "hints database" "overriding retry hints"
3796 hints for any of the addresses are overridden &-- Exim tries to deliver even if
3797 the normal retry time has not yet been reached. This option requires the caller
3798 to be an admin user. However, there is an option called &%prod_requires_admin%&
3799 which can be set false to relax this restriction (and also the same requirement
3800 for the &%-q%&, &%-R%&, and &%-S%& options).
3801
3802 The deliveries happen synchronously, that is, the original Exim process does
3803 not terminate until all the delivery attempts have finished. No output is
3804 produced unless there is a serious error. If you want to see what is happening,
3805 use the &%-v%& option as well, or inspect Exim's main log.
3806
3807 .vitem &%-Mar%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'address'&>&~<&'address'&>&~...
3808 .oindex "&%-Mar%&"
3809 .cindex "message" "adding recipients"
3810 .cindex "recipient" "adding"
3811 This option requests Exim to add the addresses to the list of recipients of the
3812 message (&"ar"& for &"add recipients"&). The first argument must be a message
3813 id, and the remaining ones must be email addresses. However, if the message is
3814 active (in the middle of a delivery attempt), it is not altered. This option
3815 can be used only by an admin user.
3816
3817 .vitem "&%-MC%&&~<&'transport'&>&~<&'hostname'&>&~<&'sequence&~number'&>&&&
3818 &~<&'message&~id'&>"
3819 .oindex "&%-MC%&"
3820 .cindex "SMTP" "passed connection"
3821 .cindex "SMTP" "multiple deliveries"
3822 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
3823 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3824 by Exim to invoke another instance of itself to deliver a waiting message using
3825 an existing SMTP connection, which is passed as the standard input. Details are
3826 given in chapter &<<CHAPSMTP>>&. This must be the final option, and the caller
3827 must be root or the Exim user in order to use it.
3828
3829 .vitem &%-MCA%&
3830 .oindex "&%-MCA%&"
3831 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3832 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option. It signifies that the
3833 connection to the remote host has been authenticated.
3834
3835 .vitem &%-MCD%&
3836 .oindex "&%-MCD%&"
3837 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3838 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option. It signifies that the
3839 remote host supports the ESMTP &_DSN_& extension.
3840
3841 .vitem &%-MCG%&&~<&'queue&~name'&>
3842 .oindex "&%-MCG%&"
3843 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3844 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option. It signifies that an
3845 alternate queue is used, named by the following argument.
3846
3847 .vitem &%-MCK%&
3848 .oindex "&%-MCK%&"
3849 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3850 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option. It signifies that a
3851 remote host supports the ESMTP &_CHUNKING_& extension.
3852
3853 .vitem &%-MCP%&
3854 .oindex "&%-MCP%&"
3855 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3856 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option. It signifies that the server to
3857 which Exim is connected supports pipelining.
3858
3859 .vitem &%-MCQ%&&~<&'process&~id'&>&~<&'pipe&~fd'&>
3860 .oindex "&%-MCQ%&"
3861 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3862 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option when the original delivery was
3863 started by a queue runner. It passes on the process id of the queue runner,
3864 together with the file descriptor number of an open pipe. Closure of the pipe
3865 signals the final completion of the sequence of processes that are passing
3866 messages through the same SMTP connection.
3867
3868 .vitem &%-MCS%&
3869 .oindex "&%-MCS%&"
3870 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3871 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option, and passes on the fact that the
3872 SMTP SIZE option should be used on messages delivered down the existing
3873 connection.
3874
3875 .vitem &%-MCT%&
3876 .oindex "&%-MCT%&"
3877 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3878 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option, and passes on the fact that the
3879 host to which Exim is connected supports TLS encryption.
3880
3881 .vitem &%-MCt%&&~<&'IP&~address'&>&~<&'port'&>&~<&'cipher'&>
3882 .oindex "&%-MCt%&"
3883 This option is not intended for use by external callers. It is used internally
3884 by Exim in conjunction with the &%-MC%& option, and passes on the fact that the
3885 connection is being proxied by a parent process for handling TLS encryption.
3886 The arguments give the local address and port being proxied, and the TLS cipher.
3887
3888 .vitem &%-Mc%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3889 .oindex "&%-Mc%&"
3890 .cindex "hints database" "not overridden by &%-Mc%&"
3891 .cindex "delivery" "manually started &-- not forced"
3892 This option requests Exim to run a delivery attempt on each message in turn,
3893 but unlike the &%-M%& option, it does check for retry hints, and respects any
3894 that are found. This option is not very useful to external callers. It is
3895 provided mainly for internal use by Exim when it needs to re-invoke itself in
3896 order to regain root privilege for a delivery (see chapter &<<CHAPsecurity>>&).
3897 However, &%-Mc%& can be useful when testing, in order to run a delivery that
3898 respects retry times and other options such as &%hold_domains%& that are
3899 overridden when &%-M%& is used. Such a delivery does not count as a queue run.
3900 If you want to run a specific delivery as if in a queue run, you should use
3901 &%-q%& with a message id argument. A distinction between queue run deliveries
3902 and other deliveries is made in one or two places.
3903
3904 .vitem &%-Mes%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'address'&>
3905 .oindex "&%-Mes%&"
3906 .cindex "message" "changing sender"
3907 .cindex "sender" "changing"
3908 This option requests Exim to change the sender address in the message to the
3909 given address, which must be a fully qualified address or &"<>"& (&"es"& for
3910 &"edit sender"&). There must be exactly two arguments. The first argument must
3911 be a message id, and the second one an email address. However, if the message
3912 is active (in the middle of a delivery attempt), its status is not altered.
3913 This option can be used only by an admin user.
3914
3915 .vitem &%-Mf%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3916 .oindex "&%-Mf%&"
3917 .cindex "freezing messages"
3918 .cindex "message" "manually freezing"
3919 This option requests Exim to mark each listed message as &"frozen"&. This
3920 prevents any delivery attempts taking place until the message is &"thawed"&,
3921 either manually or as a result of the &%auto_thaw%& configuration option.
3922 However, if any of the messages are active (in the middle of a delivery
3923 attempt), their status is not altered. This option can be used only by an admin
3924 user.
3925
3926 .vitem &%-Mg%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3927 .oindex "&%-Mg%&"
3928 .cindex "giving up on messages"
3929 .cindex "message" "abandoning delivery attempts"
3930 .cindex "delivery" "abandoning further attempts"
3931 This option requests Exim to give up trying to deliver the listed messages,
3932 including any that are frozen. However, if any of the messages are active,
3933 their status is not altered. For non-bounce messages, a delivery error message
3934 is sent to the sender, containing the text &"cancelled by administrator"&.
3935 Bounce messages are just discarded. This option can be used only by an admin
3936 user.
3937
3938 .vitem &%-Mmad%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3939 .oindex "&%-Mmad%&"
3940 .cindex "delivery" "cancelling all"
3941 This option requests Exim to mark all the recipient addresses in the messages
3942 as already delivered (&"mad"& for &"mark all delivered"&). However, if any
3943 message is active (in the middle of a delivery attempt), its status is not
3944 altered. This option can be used only by an admin user.
3945
3946 .vitem &%-Mmd%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'address'&>&~<&'address'&>&~...
3947 .oindex "&%-Mmd%&"
3948 .cindex "delivery" "cancelling by address"
3949 .cindex "recipient" "removing"
3950 .cindex "removing recipients"
3951 This option requests Exim to mark the given addresses as already delivered
3952 (&"md"& for &"mark delivered"&). The first argument must be a message id, and
3953 the remaining ones must be email addresses. These are matched to recipient
3954 addresses in the message in a case-sensitive manner. If the message is active
3955 (in the middle of a delivery attempt), its status is not altered. This option
3956 can be used only by an admin user.
3957
3958 .vitem &%-Mrm%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3959 .oindex "&%-Mrm%&"
3960 .cindex "removing messages"
3961 .cindex "abandoning mail"
3962 .cindex "message" "manually discarding"
3963 This option requests Exim to remove the given messages from the queue. No
3964 bounce messages are sent; each message is simply forgotten. However, if any of
3965 the messages are active, their status is not altered. This option can be used
3966 only by an admin user or by the user who originally caused the message to be
3967 placed on the queue.
3968
3969 .vitem &%-Mset%&&~<&'message&~id'&>
3970 .oindex "&%-Mset%&
3971 .cindex "testing" "string expansion"
3972 .cindex "expansion" "testing"
3973 This option is useful only in conjunction with &%-be%& (that is, when testing
3974 string expansions). Exim loads the given message from its spool before doing
3975 the test expansions, thus setting message-specific variables such as
3976 &$message_size$& and the header variables. The &$recipients$& variable is made
3977 available. This feature is provided to make it easier to test expansions that
3978 make use of these variables. However, this option can be used only by an admin
3979 user. See also &%-bem%&.
3980
3981 .vitem &%-Mt%&&~<&'message&~id'&>&~<&'message&~id'&>&~...
3982 .oindex "&%-Mt%&"
3983 .cindex "thawing messages"
3984 .cindex "unfreezing messages"
3985 .cindex "frozen messages" "thawing"
3986 .cindex "message" "thawing frozen"
3987 This option requests Exim to &"thaw"& any of the listed messages that are
3988 &"frozen"&, so that delivery attempts can resume. However, if any of the
3989 messages are active, their status is not altered. This option can be used only
3990 by an admin user.
3991
3992 .vitem &%-Mvb%&&~<&'message&~id'&>
3993 .oindex "&%-Mvb%&"
3994 .cindex "listing" "message body"
3995 .cindex "message" "listing body of"
3996 This option causes the contents of the message body (-D) spool file to be
3997 written to the standard output. This option can be used only by an admin user.
3998
3999 .vitem &%-Mvc%&&~<&'message&~id'&>
4000 .oindex "&%-Mvc%&"
4001 .cindex "message" "listing in RFC 2822 format"
4002 .cindex "listing" "message in RFC 2822 format"
4003 This option causes a copy of the complete message (header lines plus body) to
4004 be written to the standard output in RFC 2822 format. This option can be used
4005 only by an admin user.
4006
4007 .vitem &%-Mvh%&&~<&'message&~id'&>
4008 .oindex "&%-Mvh%&"
4009 .cindex "listing" "message headers"
4010 .cindex "header lines" "listing"
4011 .cindex "message" "listing header lines"
4012 This option causes the contents of the message headers (-H) spool file to be
4013 written to the standard output. This option can be used only by an admin user.
4014
4015 .vitem &%-Mvl%&&~<&'message&~id'&>
4016 .oindex "&%-Mvl%&"
4017 .cindex "listing" "message log"
4018 .cindex "message" "listing message log"
4019 This option causes the contents of the message log spool file to be written to
4020 the standard output. This option can be used only by an admin user.
4021
4022 .vitem &%-m%&
4023 .oindex "&%-m%&"
4024 This is apparently a synonym for &%-om%& that is accepted by Sendmail, so Exim
4025 treats it that way too.
4026
4027 .vitem &%-N%&
4028 .oindex "&%-N%&"
4029 .cindex "debugging" "&%-N%& option"
4030 .cindex "debugging" "suppressing delivery"
4031 This is a debugging option that inhibits delivery of a message at the transport
4032 level. It implies &%-v%&. Exim goes through many of the motions of delivery &--
4033 it just doesn't actually transport the message, but instead behaves as if it
4034 had successfully done so. However, it does not make any updates to the retry
4035 database, and the log entries for deliveries are flagged with &"*>"& rather
4036 than &"=>"&.
4037
4038 Because &%-N%& discards any message to which it applies, only root or the Exim
4039 user are allowed to use it with &%-bd%&, &%-q%&, &%-R%& or &%-M%&. In other
4040 words, an ordinary user can use it only when supplying an incoming message to
4041 which it will apply. Although transportation never fails when &%-N%& is set, an
4042 address may be deferred because of a configuration problem on a transport, or a
4043 routing problem. Once &%-N%& has been used for a delivery attempt, it sticks to
4044 the message, and applies to any subsequent delivery attempts that may happen
4045 for that message.
4046
4047 .vitem &%-n%&
4048 .oindex "&%-n%&"
4049 This option is interpreted by Sendmail to mean &"no aliasing"&.
4050 For normal modes of operation, it is ignored by Exim.
4051 When combined with &%-bP%& it makes the output more terse (suppresses
4052 option names, environment values and config pretty printing).
4053
4054 .vitem &%-O%&&~<&'data'&>
4055 .oindex "&%-O%&"
4056 This option is interpreted by Sendmail to mean &`set option`&. It is ignored by
4057 Exim.
4058
4059 .vitem &%-oA%&&~<&'file&~name'&>
4060 .oindex "&%-oA%&"
4061 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-oA%& option"
4062 This option is used by Sendmail in conjunction with &%-bi%& to specify an
4063 alternative alias file name. Exim handles &%-bi%& differently; see the
4064 description above.
4065
4066 .vitem &%-oB%&&~<&'n'&>
4067 .oindex "&%-oB%&"
4068 .cindex "SMTP" "passed connection"
4069 .cindex "SMTP" "multiple deliveries"
4070 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
4071 This is a debugging option which limits the maximum number of messages that can
4072 be delivered down one SMTP connection, overriding the value set in any &(smtp)&
4073 transport. If <&'n'&> is omitted, the limit is set to 1.
4074
4075 .vitem &%-odb%&
4076 .oindex "&%-odb%&"
4077 .cindex "background delivery"
4078 .cindex "delivery" "in the background"
4079 This option applies to all modes in which Exim accepts incoming messages,
4080 including the listening daemon. It requests &"background"& delivery of such
4081 messages, which means that the accepting process automatically starts a
4082 delivery process for each message received, but does not wait for the delivery
4083 processes to finish.
4084
4085 When all the messages have been received, the reception process exits,
4086 leaving the delivery processes to finish in their own time. The standard output
4087 and error streams are closed at the start of each delivery process.
4088 This is the default action if none of the &%-od%& options are present.
4089
4090 If one of the queueing options in the configuration file
4091 (&%queue_only%& or &%queue_only_file%&, for example) is in effect, &%-odb%&
4092 overrides it if &%queue_only_override%& is set true, which is the default
4093 setting. If &%queue_only_override%& is set false, &%-odb%& has no effect.
4094
4095 .vitem &%-odf%&
4096 .oindex "&%-odf%&"
4097 .cindex "foreground delivery"
4098 .cindex "delivery" "in the foreground"
4099 This option requests &"foreground"& (synchronous) delivery when Exim has
4100 accepted a locally-generated message. (For the daemon it is exactly the same as
4101 &%-odb%&.) A delivery process is automatically started to deliver the message,
4102 and Exim waits for it to complete before proceeding.
4103
4104 The original Exim reception process does not finish until the delivery
4105 process for the final message has ended. The standard error stream is left open
4106 during deliveries.
4107
4108 However, like &%-odb%&, this option has no effect if &%queue_only_override%& is
4109 false and one of the queueing options in the configuration file is in effect.
4110
4111 If there is a temporary delivery error during foreground delivery, the
4112 message is left on the queue for later delivery, and the original reception
4113 process exits. See chapter &<<CHAPnonqueueing>>& for a way of setting up a
4114 restricted configuration that never queues messages.
4115
4116
4117 .vitem &%-odi%&
4118 .oindex "&%-odi%&"
4119 This option is synonymous with &%-odf%&. It is provided for compatibility with
4120 Sendmail.
4121
4122 .vitem &%-odq%&
4123 .oindex "&%-odq%&"
4124 .cindex "non-immediate delivery"
4125 .cindex "delivery" "suppressing immediate"
4126 .cindex "queueing incoming messages"
4127 This option applies to all modes in which Exim accepts incoming messages,
4128 including the listening daemon. It specifies that the accepting process should
4129 not automatically start a delivery process for each message received. Messages
4130 are placed on the queue, and remain there until a subsequent queue runner
4131 process encounters them. There are several configuration options (such as
4132 &%queue_only%&) that can be used to queue incoming messages under certain
4133 conditions. This option overrides all of them and also &%-odqs%&. It always
4134 forces queueing.
4135
4136 .vitem &%-odqs%&
4137 .oindex "&%-odqs%&"
4138 .cindex "SMTP" "delaying delivery"
4139 This option is a hybrid between &%-odb%&/&%-odi%& and &%-odq%&.
4140 However, like &%-odb%& and &%-odi%&, this option has no effect if
4141 &%queue_only_override%& is false and one of the queueing options in the
4142 configuration file is in effect.
4143
4144 When &%-odqs%& does operate, a delivery process is started for each incoming
4145 message, in the background by default, but in the foreground if &%-odi%& is
4146 also present. The recipient addresses are routed, and local deliveries are done
4147 in the normal way. However, if any SMTP deliveries are required, they are not
4148 done at this time, so the message remains on the queue until a subsequent queue
4149 runner process encounters it. Because routing was done, Exim knows which
4150 messages are waiting for which hosts, and so a number of messages for the same
4151 host can be sent in a single SMTP connection. The &%queue_smtp_domains%&
4152 configuration option has the same effect for specific domains. See also the
4153 &%-qq%& option.
4154
4155 .vitem &%-oee%&
4156 .oindex "&%-oee%&"
4157 .cindex "error" "reporting"
4158 If an error is detected while a non-SMTP message is being received (for
4159 example, a malformed address), the error is reported to the sender in a mail
4160 message.
4161
4162 .cindex "return code" "for &%-oee%&"
4163 Provided
4164 this error message is successfully sent, the Exim receiving process
4165 exits with a return code of zero. If not, the return code is 2 if the problem
4166 is that the original message has no recipients, or 1 for any other error.
4167 This is the default &%-oe%&&'x'& option if Exim is called as &'rmail'&.
4168
4169 .vitem &%-oem%&
4170 .oindex "&%-oem%&"
4171 .cindex "error" "reporting"
4172 .cindex "return code" "for &%-oem%&"
4173 This is the same as &%-oee%&, except that Exim always exits with a non-zero
4174 return code, whether or not the error message was successfully sent.
4175 This is the default &%-oe%&&'x'& option, unless Exim is called as &'rmail'&.
4176
4177 .vitem &%-oep%&
4178 .oindex "&%-oep%&"
4179 .cindex "error" "reporting"
4180 If an error is detected while a non-SMTP message is being received, the
4181 error is reported by writing a message to the standard error file (stderr).
4182 .cindex "return code" "for &%-oep%&"
4183 The return code is 1 for all errors.
4184
4185 .vitem &%-oeq%&
4186 .oindex "&%-oeq%&"
4187 .cindex "error" "reporting"
4188 This option is supported for compatibility with Sendmail, but has the same
4189 effect as &%-oep%&.
4190
4191 .vitem &%-oew%&
4192 .oindex "&%-oew%&"
4193 .cindex "error" "reporting"
4194 This option is supported for compatibility with Sendmail, but has the same
4195 effect as &%-oem%&.
4196
4197 .vitem &%-oi%&
4198 .oindex "&%-oi%&"
4199 .cindex "dot" "in incoming non-SMTP message"
4200 This option, which has the same effect as &%-i%&, specifies that a dot on a
4201 line by itself should not terminate an incoming, non-SMTP message. Otherwise, a
4202 single dot does terminate, though Exim does no special processing for other
4203 lines that start with a dot. This option is set by default if Exim is called as
4204 &'rmail'&. See also &%-ti%&.
4205
4206 .vitem &%-oitrue%&
4207 .oindex "&%-oitrue%&"
4208 This option is treated as synonymous with &%-oi%&.
4209
4210 .vitem &%-oMa%&&~<&'host&~address'&>
4211 .oindex "&%-oMa%&"
4212 .cindex "sender" "host address, specifying for local message"
4213 A number of options starting with &%-oM%& can be used to set values associated
4214 with remote hosts on locally-submitted messages (that is, messages not received
4215 over TCP/IP). These options can be used by any caller in conjunction with the
4216 &%-bh%&, &%-be%&, &%-bf%&, &%-bF%&, &%-bt%&, or &%-bv%& testing options. In
4217 other circumstances, they are ignored unless the caller is trusted.
4218
4219 The &%-oMa%& option sets the sender host address. This may include a port
4220 number at the end, after a full stop (period). For example:
4221 .code
4222 exim -bs -oMa 10.9.8.7.1234
4223 .endd
4224 An alternative syntax is to enclose the IP address in square brackets,
4225 followed by a colon and the port number:
4226 .code
4227 exim -bs -oMa [10.9.8.7]:1234
4228 .endd
4229 The IP address is placed in the &$sender_host_address$& variable, and the
4230 port, if present, in &$sender_host_port$&. If both &%-oMa%& and &%-bh%&
4231 are present on the command line, the sender host IP address is taken from
4232 whichever one is last.
4233
4234 .vitem &%-oMaa%&&~<&'name'&>
4235 .oindex "&%-oMaa%&"
4236 .cindex "authentication" "name, specifying for local message"
4237 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMaa%&
4238 option sets the value of &$sender_host_authenticated$& (the authenticator
4239 name). See chapter &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>& for a discussion of SMTP authentication.
4240 This option can be used with &%-bh%& and &%-bs%& to set up an
4241 authenticated SMTP session without actually using the SMTP AUTH command.
4242
4243 .vitem &%-oMai%&&~<&'string'&>
4244 .oindex "&%-oMai%&"
4245 .cindex "authentication" "id, specifying for local message"
4246 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMai%&
4247 option sets the value of &$authenticated_id$& (the id that was authenticated).
4248 This overrides the default value (the caller's login id, except with &%-bh%&,
4249 where there is no default) for messages from local sources. See chapter
4250 &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>& for a discussion of authenticated ids.
4251
4252 .vitem &%-oMas%&&~<&'address'&>
4253 .oindex "&%-oMas%&"
4254 .cindex "authentication" "sender, specifying for local message"
4255 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMas%&
4256 option sets the authenticated sender value in &$authenticated_sender$&. It
4257 overrides the sender address that is created from the caller's login id for
4258 messages from local sources, except when &%-bh%& is used, when there is no
4259 default. For both &%-bh%& and &%-bs%&, an authenticated sender that is
4260 specified on a MAIL command overrides this value. See chapter
4261 &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>& for a discussion of authenticated senders.
4262
4263 .vitem &%-oMi%&&~<&'interface&~address'&>
4264 .oindex "&%-oMi%&"
4265 .cindex "interface" "address, specifying for local message"
4266 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMi%&
4267 option sets the IP interface address value. A port number may be included,
4268 using the same syntax as for &%-oMa%&. The interface address is placed in
4269 &$received_ip_address$& and the port number, if present, in &$received_port$&.
4270
4271 .vitem &%-oMm%&&~<&'message&~reference'&>
4272 .oindex "&%-oMm%&"
4273 .cindex "message reference" "message reference, specifying for local message"
4274 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMm%&
4275 option sets the message reference, e.g. message-id, and is logged during
4276 delivery. This is useful when some kind of audit trail is required to tie
4277 messages together. The format of the message reference is checked and will
4278 abort if the format is invalid. The option will only be accepted if exim is
4279 running in trusted mode, not as any regular user.
4280
4281 The best example of a message reference is when Exim sends a bounce message.
4282 The message reference is the message-id of the original message for which Exim
4283 is sending the bounce.
4284
4285 .vitem &%-oMr%&&~<&'protocol&~name'&>
4286 .oindex "&%-oMr%&"
4287 .cindex "protocol, specifying for local message"
4288 .vindex "&$received_protocol$&"
4289 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMr%&
4290 option sets the received protocol value that is stored in
4291 &$received_protocol$&. However, it does not apply (and is ignored) when &%-bh%&
4292 or &%-bs%& is used. For &%-bh%&, the protocol is forced to one of the standard
4293 SMTP protocol names (see the description of &$received_protocol$& in section
4294 &<<SECTexpvar>>&). For &%-bs%&, the protocol is always &"local-"& followed by
4295 one of those same names. For &%-bS%& (batched SMTP) however, the protocol can
4296 be set by &%-oMr%&. Repeated use of this option is not supported.
4297
4298 .vitem &%-oMs%&&~<&'host&~name'&>
4299 .oindex "&%-oMs%&"
4300 .cindex "sender" "host name, specifying for local message"
4301 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMs%&
4302 option sets the sender host name in &$sender_host_name$&. When this option is
4303 present, Exim does not attempt to look up a host name from an IP address; it
4304 uses the name it is given.
4305
4306 .vitem &%-oMt%&&~<&'ident&~string'&>
4307 .oindex "&%-oMt%&"
4308 .cindex "sender" "ident string, specifying for local message"
4309 See &%-oMa%& above for general remarks about the &%-oM%& options. The &%-oMt%&
4310 option sets the sender ident value in &$sender_ident$&. The default setting for
4311 local callers is the login id of the calling process, except when &%-bh%& is
4312 used, when there is no default.
4313
4314 .vitem &%-om%&
4315 .oindex "&%-om%&"
4316 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-om%& option ignored"
4317 In Sendmail, this option means &"me too"&, indicating that the sender of a
4318 message should receive a copy of the message if the sender appears in an alias
4319 expansion. Exim always does this, so the option does nothing.
4320
4321 .vitem &%-oo%&
4322 .oindex "&%-oo%&"
4323 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-oo%& option ignored"
4324 This option is ignored. In Sendmail it specifies &"old style headers"&,
4325 whatever that means.
4326
4327 .vitem &%-oP%&&~<&'path'&>
4328 .oindex "&%-oP%&"
4329 .cindex "pid (process id)" "of daemon"
4330 .cindex "daemon" "process id (pid)"
4331 This option is useful only in conjunction with &%-bd%& or &%-q%& with a time
4332 value. The option specifies the file to which the process id of the daemon is
4333 written. When &%-oX%& is used with &%-bd%&, or when &%-q%& with a time is used
4334 without &%-bd%&, this is the only way of causing Exim to write a pid file,
4335 because in those cases, the normal pid file is not used.
4336
4337 .vitem &%-or%&&~<&'time'&>
4338 .oindex "&%-or%&"
4339 .cindex "timeout" "for non-SMTP input"
4340 This option sets a timeout value for incoming non-SMTP messages. If it is not
4341 set, Exim will wait forever for the standard input. The value can also be set
4342 by the &%receive_timeout%& option. The format used for specifying times is
4343 described in section &<<SECTtimeformat>>&.
4344
4345 .vitem &%-os%&&~<&'time'&>
4346 .oindex "&%-os%&"
4347 .cindex "timeout" "for SMTP input"
4348 .cindex "SMTP" "input timeout"
4349 This option sets a timeout value for incoming SMTP messages. The timeout
4350 applies to each SMTP command and block of data. The value can also be set by
4351 the &%smtp_receive_timeout%& option; it defaults to 5 minutes. The format used
4352 for specifying times is described in section &<<SECTtimeformat>>&.
4353
4354 .vitem &%-ov%&
4355 .oindex "&%-ov%&"
4356 This option has exactly the same effect as &%-v%&.
4357
4358 .vitem &%-oX%&&~<&'number&~or&~string'&>
4359 .oindex "&%-oX%&"
4360 .cindex "TCP/IP" "setting listening ports"
4361 .cindex "TCP/IP" "setting listening interfaces"
4362 .cindex "port" "receiving TCP/IP"
4363 This option is relevant only when the &%-bd%& (start listening daemon) option
4364 is also given. It controls which ports and interfaces the daemon uses. Details
4365 of the syntax, and how it interacts with configuration file options, are given
4366 in chapter &<<CHAPinterfaces>>&. When &%-oX%& is used to start a daemon, no pid
4367 file is written unless &%-oP%& is also present to specify a pid file name.
4368
4369 .vitem &%-pd%&
4370 .oindex "&%-pd%&"
4371 .cindex "Perl" "starting the interpreter"
4372 This option applies when an embedded Perl interpreter is linked with Exim (see
4373 chapter &<<CHAPperl>>&). It overrides the setting of the &%perl_at_start%&
4374 option, forcing the starting of the interpreter to be delayed until it is
4375 needed.
4376
4377 .vitem &%-ps%&
4378 .oindex "&%-ps%&"
4379 .cindex "Perl" "starting the interpreter"
4380 This option applies when an embedded Perl interpreter is linked with Exim (see
4381 chapter &<<CHAPperl>>&). It overrides the setting of the &%perl_at_start%&
4382 option, forcing the starting of the interpreter to occur as soon as Exim is
4383 started.
4384
4385 .vitem &%-p%&<&'rval'&>:<&'sval'&>
4386 .oindex "&%-p%&"
4387 For compatibility with Sendmail, this option is equivalent to
4388 .display
4389 &`-oMr`& <&'rval'&> &`-oMs`& <&'sval'&>
4390 .endd
4391 It sets the incoming protocol and host name (for trusted callers). The
4392 host name and its colon can be omitted when only the protocol is to be set.
4393 Note the Exim already has two private options, &%-pd%& and &%-ps%&, that refer
4394 to embedded Perl. It is therefore impossible to set a protocol value of &`d`&
4395 or &`s`& using this option (but that does not seem a real limitation).
4396 Repeated use of this option is not supported.
4397
4398 .vitem &%-q%&
4399 .oindex "&%-q%&"
4400 .cindex "queue runner" "starting manually"
4401 This option is normally restricted to admin users. However, there is a
4402 configuration option called &%prod_requires_admin%& which can be set false to
4403 relax this restriction (and also the same requirement for the &%-M%&, &%-R%&,
4404 and &%-S%& options).
4405
4406 .cindex "queue runner" "description of operation"
4407 If other commandline options do not specify an action,
4408 the &%-q%& option starts one queue runner process. This scans the queue of
4409 waiting messages, and runs a delivery process for each one in turn. It waits
4410 for each delivery process to finish before starting the next one. A delivery
4411 process may not actually do any deliveries if the retry times for the addresses
4412 have not been reached. Use &%-qf%& (see below) if you want to override this.
4413
4414 If
4415 .cindex "SMTP" "passed connection"
4416 .cindex "SMTP" "multiple deliveries"
4417 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
4418 the delivery process spawns other processes to deliver other messages down
4419 passed SMTP connections, the queue runner waits for these to finish before
4420 proceeding.
4421
4422 When all the queued messages have been considered, the original queue runner
4423 process terminates. In other words, a single pass is made over the waiting
4424 mail, one message at a time. Use &%-q%& with a time (see below) if you want
4425 this to be repeated periodically.
4426
4427 Exim processes the waiting messages in an unpredictable order. It isn't very
4428 random, but it is likely to be different each time, which is all that matters.
4429 If one particular message screws up a remote MTA, other messages to the same
4430 MTA have a chance of getting through if they get tried first.
4431
4432 It is possible to cause the messages to be processed in lexical message id
4433 order, which is essentially the order in which they arrived, by setting the
4434 &%queue_run_in_order%& option, but this is not recommended for normal use.
4435
4436 .vitem &%-q%&<&'qflags'&>
4437 The &%-q%& option may be followed by one or more flag letters that change its
4438 behaviour. They are all optional, but if more than one is present, they must
4439 appear in the correct order. Each flag is described in a separate item below.
4440
4441 .vitem &%-qq...%&
4442 .oindex "&%-qq%&"
4443 .cindex "queue" "double scanning"
4444 .cindex "queue" "routing"
4445 .cindex "routing" "whole queue before delivery"
4446 An option starting with &%-qq%& requests a two-stage queue run. In the first
4447 stage, the queue is scanned as if the &%queue_smtp_domains%& option matched
4448 every domain. Addresses are routed, local deliveries happen, but no remote
4449 transports are run.
4450
4451 .cindex "hints database" "remembering routing"
4452 The hints database that remembers which messages are waiting for specific hosts
4453 is updated, as if delivery to those hosts had been deferred. After this is
4454 complete, a second, normal queue scan happens, with routing and delivery taking
4455 place as normal. Messages that are routed to the same host should mostly be
4456 delivered down a single SMTP
4457 .cindex "SMTP" "passed connection"
4458 .cindex "SMTP" "multiple deliveries"
4459 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
4460 connection because of the hints that were set up during the first queue scan.
4461 This option may be useful for hosts that are connected to the Internet
4462 intermittently.
4463
4464 .vitem &%-q[q]i...%&
4465 .oindex "&%-qi%&"
4466 .cindex "queue" "initial delivery"
4467 If the &'i'& flag is present, the queue runner runs delivery processes only for
4468 those messages that haven't previously been tried. (&'i'& stands for &"initial
4469 delivery"&.) This can be helpful if you are putting messages on the queue using
4470 &%-odq%& and want a queue runner just to process the new messages.
4471
4472 .vitem &%-q[q][i]f...%&
4473 .oindex "&%-qf%&"
4474 .cindex "queue" "forcing delivery"
4475 .cindex "delivery" "forcing in queue run"
4476 If one &'f'& flag is present, a delivery attempt is forced for each non-frozen
4477 message, whereas without &'f'& only those non-frozen addresses that have passed
4478 their retry times are tried.
4479
4480 .vitem &%-q[q][i]ff...%&
4481 .oindex "&%-qff%&"
4482 .cindex "frozen messages" "forcing delivery"
4483 If &'ff'& is present, a delivery attempt is forced for every message, whether
4484 frozen or not.
4485
4486 .vitem &%-q[q][i][f[f]]l%&
4487 .oindex "&%-ql%&"
4488 .cindex "queue" "local deliveries only"
4489 The &'l'& (the letter &"ell"&) flag specifies that only local deliveries are to
4490 be done. If a message requires any remote deliveries, it remains on the queue
4491 for later delivery.
4492
4493 .vitem &%-q[q][i][f[f]][l][G<name>[/<time>]]]%&
4494 .oindex "&%-qG%&"
4495 .cindex queue named
4496 .cindex "named queues"
4497 .cindex "queue" "delivering specific messages"
4498 If the &'G'& flag and a name is present, the queue runner operates on the
4499 queue with the given name rather than the default queue.
4500 The name should not contain a &'/'& character.
4501 For a periodic queue run (see below)
4502 append to the name a slash and a time value.
4503
4504 If other commandline options specify an action, a &'-qG<name>'& option
4505 will specify a queue to operate on.
4506 For example:
4507 .code
4508 exim -bp -qGquarantine
4509 mailq -qGquarantine
4510 exim -qGoffpeak -Rf @special.domain.example
4511 .endd
4512
4513 .vitem &%-q%&<&'qflags'&>&~<&'start&~id'&>&~<&'end&~id'&>
4514 When scanning the queue, Exim can be made to skip over messages whose ids are
4515 lexically less than a given value by following the &%-q%& option with a
4516 starting message id. For example:
4517 .code
4518 exim -q 0t5C6f-0000c8-00
4519 .endd
4520 Messages that arrived earlier than &`0t5C6f-0000c8-00`& are not inspected. If a
4521 second message id is given, messages whose ids are lexically greater than it
4522 are also skipped. If the same id is given twice, for example,
4523 .code
4524 exim -q 0t5C6f-0000c8-00 0t5C6f-0000c8-00
4525 .endd
4526 just one delivery process is started, for that message. This differs from
4527 &%-M%& in that retry data is respected, and it also differs from &%-Mc%& in
4528 that it counts as a delivery from a queue run. Note that the selection
4529 mechanism does not affect the order in which the messages are scanned. There
4530 are also other ways of selecting specific sets of messages for delivery in a
4531 queue run &-- see &%-R%& and &%-S%&.
4532
4533 .vitem &%-q%&<&'qflags'&><&'time'&>
4534 .cindex "queue runner" "starting periodically"
4535 .cindex "periodic queue running"
4536 When a time value is present, the &%-q%& option causes Exim to run as a daemon,
4537 starting a queue runner process at intervals specified by the given time value
4538 (whose format is described in section &<<SECTtimeformat>>&). This form of the
4539 &%-q%& option is commonly combined with the &%-bd%& option, in which case a
4540 single daemon process handles both functions. A common way of starting up a
4541 combined daemon at system boot time is to use a command such as
4542 .code
4543 /usr/exim/bin/exim -bd -q30m
4544 .endd
4545 Such a daemon listens for incoming SMTP calls, and also starts a queue runner
4546 process every 30 minutes.
4547
4548 When a daemon is started by &%-q%& with a time value, but without &%-bd%&, no
4549 pid file is written unless one is explicitly requested by the &%-oP%& option.
4550
4551 .vitem &%-qR%&<&'rsflags'&>&~<&'string'&>
4552 .oindex "&%-qR%&"
4553 This option is synonymous with &%-R%&. It is provided for Sendmail
4554 compatibility.
4555
4556 .vitem &%-qS%&<&'rsflags'&>&~<&'string'&>
4557 .oindex "&%-qS%&"
4558 This option is synonymous with &%-S%&.
4559
4560 .vitem &%-R%&<&'rsflags'&>&~<&'string'&>
4561 .oindex "&%-R%&"
4562 .cindex "queue runner" "for specific recipients"
4563 .cindex "delivery" "to given domain"
4564 .cindex "domain" "delivery to"
4565 The <&'rsflags'&> may be empty, in which case the white space before the string
4566 is optional, unless the string is &'f'&, &'ff'&, &'r'&, &'rf'&, or &'rff'&,
4567 which are the possible values for <&'rsflags'&>. White space is required if
4568 <&'rsflags'&> is not empty.
4569
4570 This option is similar to &%-q%& with no time value, that is, it causes Exim to
4571 perform a single queue run, except that, when scanning the messages on the
4572 queue, Exim processes only those that have at least one undelivered recipient
4573 address containing the given string, which is checked in a case-independent
4574 way. If the <&'rsflags'&> start with &'r'&, <&'string'&> is interpreted as a
4575 regular expression; otherwise it is a literal string.
4576
4577 If you want to do periodic queue runs for messages with specific recipients,
4578 you can combine &%-R%& with &%-q%& and a time value. For example:
4579 .code
4580 exim -q25m -R @special.domain.example
4581 .endd
4582 This example does a queue run for messages with recipients in the given domain
4583 every 25 minutes. Any additional flags that are specified with &%-q%& are
4584 applied to each queue run.
4585
4586 Once a message is selected for delivery by this mechanism, all its addresses
4587 are processed. For the first selected message, Exim overrides any retry
4588 information and forces a delivery attempt for each undelivered address. This
4589 means that if delivery of any address in the first message is successful, any
4590 existing retry information is deleted, and so delivery attempts for that
4591 address in subsequently selected messages (which are processed without forcing)
4592 will run. However, if delivery of any address does not succeed, the retry
4593 information is updated, and in subsequently selected messages, the failing
4594 address will be skipped.
4595
4596 .cindex "frozen messages" "forcing delivery"
4597 If the <&'rsflags'&> contain &'f'& or &'ff'&, the delivery forcing applies to
4598 all selected messages, not just the first; frozen messages are included when
4599 &'ff'& is present.
4600
4601 The &%-R%& option makes it straightforward to initiate delivery of all messages
4602 to a given domain after a host has been down for some time. When the SMTP
4603 command ETRN is accepted by its ACL (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&), its default
4604 effect is to run Exim with the &%-R%& option, but it can be configured to run
4605 an arbitrary command instead.
4606
4607 .vitem &%-r%&
4608 .oindex "&%-r%&"
4609 This is a documented (for Sendmail) obsolete alternative name for &%-f%&.
4610
4611 .vitem &%-S%&<&'rsflags'&>&~<&'string'&>
4612 .oindex "&%-S%&"
4613 .cindex "delivery" "from given sender"
4614 .cindex "queue runner" "for specific senders"
4615 This option acts like &%-R%& except that it checks the string against each
4616 message's sender instead of against the recipients. If &%-R%& is also set, both
4617 conditions must be met for a message to be selected. If either of the options
4618 has &'f'& or &'ff'& in its flags, the associated action is taken.
4619
4620 .vitem &%-Tqt%&&~<&'times'&>
4621 .oindex "&%-Tqt%&"
4622 This is an option that is exclusively for use by the Exim testing suite. It is not
4623 recognized when Exim is run normally. It allows for the setting up of explicit
4624 &"queue times"& so that various warning/retry features can be tested.
4625
4626 .vitem &%-t%&
4627 .oindex "&%-t%&"
4628 .cindex "recipient" "extracting from header lines"
4629 .cindex "&'Bcc:'& header line"
4630 .cindex "&'Cc:'& header line"
4631 .cindex "&'To:'& header line"
4632 When Exim is receiving a locally-generated, non-SMTP message on its standard
4633 input, the &%-t%& option causes the recipients of the message to be obtained
4634 from the &'To:'&, &'Cc:'&, and &'Bcc:'& header lines in the message instead of
4635 from the command arguments. The addresses are extracted before any rewriting
4636 takes place and the &'Bcc:'& header line, if present, is then removed.
4637
4638 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-t%& option"
4639 If the command has any arguments, they specify addresses to which the message
4640 is &'not'& to be delivered. That is, the argument addresses are removed from
4641 the recipients list obtained from the headers. This is compatible with Smail 3
4642 and in accordance with the documented behaviour of several versions of
4643 Sendmail, as described in man pages on a number of operating systems (e.g.
4644 Solaris 8, IRIX 6.5, HP-UX 11). However, some versions of Sendmail &'add'&
4645 argument addresses to those obtained from the headers, and the O'Reilly
4646 Sendmail book documents it that way. Exim can be made to add argument addresses
4647 instead of subtracting them by setting the option
4648 &%extract_addresses_remove_arguments%& false.
4649
4650 .cindex "&%Resent-%& header lines" "with &%-t%&"
4651 If there are any &%Resent-%& header lines in the message, Exim extracts
4652 recipients from all &'Resent-To:'&, &'Resent-Cc:'&, and &'Resent-Bcc:'& header
4653 lines instead of from &'To:'&, &'Cc:'&, and &'Bcc:'&. This is for compatibility
4654 with Sendmail and other MTAs. (Prior to release 4.20, Exim gave an error if
4655 &%-t%& was used in conjunction with &%Resent-%& header lines.)
4656
4657 RFC 2822 talks about different sets of &%Resent-%& header lines (for when a
4658 message is resent several times). The RFC also specifies that they should be
4659 added at the front of the message, and separated by &'Received:'& lines. It is
4660 not at all clear how &%-t%& should operate in the present of multiple sets,
4661 nor indeed exactly what constitutes a &"set"&.
4662 In practice, it seems that MUAs do not follow the RFC. The &%Resent-%& lines
4663 are often added at the end of the header, and if a message is resent more than
4664 once, it is common for the original set of &%Resent-%& headers to be renamed as
4665 &%X-Resent-%& when a new set is added. This removes any possible ambiguity.
4666
4667 .vitem &%-ti%&
4668 .oindex "&%-ti%&"
4669 This option is exactly equivalent to &%-t%& &%-i%&. It is provided for
4670 compatibility with Sendmail.
4671
4672 .vitem &%-tls-on-connect%&
4673 .oindex "&%-tls-on-connect%&"
4674 .cindex "TLS" "use without STARTTLS"
4675 .cindex "TLS" "automatic start"
4676 This option is available when Exim is compiled with TLS support. It forces all
4677 incoming SMTP connections to behave as if the incoming port is listed in the
4678 &%tls_on_connect_ports%& option. See section &<<SECTsupobssmt>>& and chapter
4679 &<<CHAPTLS>>& for further details.
4680
4681
4682 .vitem &%-U%&
4683 .oindex "&%-U%&"
4684 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-U%& option ignored"
4685 Sendmail uses this option for &"initial message submission"&, and its
4686 documentation states that in future releases, it may complain about
4687 syntactically invalid messages rather than fixing them when this flag is not
4688 set. Exim ignores this option.
4689
4690 .vitem &%-v%&
4691 .oindex "&%-v%&"
4692 This option causes Exim to write information to the standard error stream,
4693 describing what it is doing. In particular, it shows the log lines for
4694 receiving and delivering a message, and if an SMTP connection is made, the SMTP
4695 dialogue is shown. Some of the log lines shown may not actually be written to
4696 the log if the setting of &%log_selector%& discards them. Any relevant
4697 selectors are shown with each log line. If none are shown, the logging is
4698 unconditional.
4699
4700 .vitem &%-x%&
4701 .oindex "&%-x%&"
4702 AIX uses &%-x%& for a private purpose (&"mail from a local mail program has
4703 National Language Support extended characters in the body of the mail item"&).
4704 It sets &%-x%& when calling the MTA from its &%mail%& command. Exim ignores
4705 this option.
4706
4707 .vitem &%-X%&&~<&'logfile'&>
4708 .oindex "&%-X%&"
4709 This option is interpreted by Sendmail to cause debug information to be sent
4710 to the named file. It is ignored by Exim.
4711
4712 .vitem &%-z%&&~<&'log-line'&>
4713 .oindex "&%-z%&"
4714 This option writes its argument to Exim's logfile.
4715 Use is restricted to administrators; the intent is for operational notes.
4716 Quotes should be used to maintain a multi-word item as a single argument,
4717 under most shells.
4718 .endlist
4719
4720 .ecindex IIDclo1
4721 .ecindex IIDclo2
4722
4723
4724 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
4725 . Insert a stylized DocBook comment here, to identify the end of the command
4726 . line options. This is for the benefit of the Perl script that automatically
4727 . creates a man page for the options.
4728 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
4729
4730 .literal xml
4731 <!-- === End of command line options === -->
4732 .literal off
4733
4734
4735
4736
4737
4738 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
4739 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
4740
4741
4742 .chapter "The Exim run time configuration file" "CHAPconf" &&&
4743 "The runtime configuration file"
4744
4745 .cindex "run time configuration"
4746 .cindex "configuration file" "general description"
4747 .cindex "CONFIGURE_FILE"
4748 .cindex "configuration file" "errors in"
4749 .cindex "error" "in configuration file"
4750 .cindex "return code" "for bad configuration"
4751 Exim uses a single run time configuration file that is read whenever an Exim
4752 binary is executed. Note that in normal operation, this happens frequently,
4753 because Exim is designed to operate in a distributed manner, without central
4754 control.
4755
4756 If a syntax error is detected while reading the configuration file, Exim
4757 writes a message on the standard error, and exits with a non-zero return code.
4758 The message is also written to the panic log. &*Note*&: Only simple syntax
4759 errors can be detected at this time. The values of any expanded options are
4760 not checked until the expansion happens, even when the expansion does not
4761 actually alter the string.
4762
4763 The name of the configuration file is compiled into the binary for security
4764 reasons, and is specified by the CONFIGURE_FILE compilation option. In
4765 most configurations, this specifies a single file. However, it is permitted to
4766 give a colon-separated list of file names, in which case Exim uses the first
4767 existing file in the list.
4768
4769 .cindex "EXIM_USER"
4770 .cindex "EXIM_GROUP"
4771 .cindex "CONFIGURE_OWNER"
4772 .cindex "CONFIGURE_GROUP"
4773 .cindex "configuration file" "ownership"
4774 .cindex "ownership" "configuration file"
4775 The run time configuration file must be owned by root or by the user that is
4776 specified at compile time by the CONFIGURE_OWNER option (if set). The
4777 configuration file must not be world-writeable, or group-writeable unless its
4778 group is the root group or the one specified at compile time by the
4779 CONFIGURE_GROUP option.
4780
4781 &*Warning*&: In a conventional configuration, where the Exim binary is setuid
4782 to root, anybody who is able to edit the run time configuration file has an
4783 easy way to run commands as root. If you specify a user or group in the
4784 CONFIGURE_OWNER or CONFIGURE_GROUP options, then that user and/or any users
4785 who are members of that group will trivially be able to obtain root privileges.
4786
4787 Up to Exim version 4.72, the run time configuration file was also permitted to
4788 be writeable by the Exim user and/or group. That has been changed in Exim 4.73
4789 since it offered a simple privilege escalation for any attacker who managed to
4790 compromise the Exim user account.
4791
4792 A default configuration file, which will work correctly in simple situations,
4793 is provided in the file &_src/configure.default_&. If CONFIGURE_FILE
4794 defines just one file name, the installation process copies the default
4795 configuration to a new file of that name if it did not previously exist. If
4796 CONFIGURE_FILE is a list, no default is automatically installed. Chapter
4797 &<<CHAPdefconfil>>& is a &"walk-through"& discussion of the default
4798 configuration.
4799
4800
4801
4802 .section "Using a different configuration file" "SECID40"
4803 .cindex "configuration file" "alternate"
4804 A one-off alternate configuration can be specified by the &%-C%& command line
4805 option, which may specify a single file or a list of files. However, when
4806 &%-C%& is used, Exim gives up its root privilege, unless called by root (or
4807 unless the argument for &%-C%& is identical to the built-in value from
4808 CONFIGURE_FILE), or is listed in the TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST file and the caller
4809 is the Exim user or the user specified in the CONFIGURE_OWNER setting. &%-C%&
4810 is useful mainly for checking the syntax of configuration files before
4811 installing them. No owner or group checks are done on a configuration file
4812 specified by &%-C%&, if root privilege has been dropped.
4813
4814 Even the Exim user is not trusted to specify an arbitrary configuration file
4815 with the &%-C%& option to be used with root privileges, unless that file is
4816 listed in the TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST file. This locks out the possibility of
4817 testing a configuration using &%-C%& right through message reception and
4818 delivery, even if the caller is root. The reception works, but by that time,
4819 Exim is running as the Exim user, so when it re-execs to regain privilege for
4820 the delivery, the use of &%-C%& causes privilege to be lost. However, root
4821 can test reception and delivery using two separate commands (one to put a
4822 message on the queue, using &%-odq%&, and another to do the delivery, using
4823 &%-M%&).
4824
4825 If ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX is defined &_in Local/Makefile_&, it specifies a
4826 prefix string with which any file named in a &%-C%& command line option must
4827 start. In addition, the file name must not contain the sequence &"&`/../`&"&.
4828 There is no default setting for ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX; when it is unset, any file
4829 name can be used with &%-C%&.
4830
4831 One-off changes to a configuration can be specified by the &%-D%& command line
4832 option, which defines and overrides values for macros used inside the
4833 configuration file. However, like &%-C%&, the use of this option by a
4834 non-privileged user causes Exim to discard its root privilege.
4835 If DISABLE_D_OPTION is defined in &_Local/Makefile_&, the use of &%-D%& is
4836 completely disabled, and its use causes an immediate error exit.
4837
4838 The WHITELIST_D_MACROS option in &_Local/Makefile_& permits the binary builder
4839 to declare certain macro names trusted, such that root privilege will not
4840 necessarily be discarded.
4841 WHITELIST_D_MACROS defines a colon-separated list of macros which are
4842 considered safe and, if &%-D%& only supplies macros from this list, and the
4843 values are acceptable, then Exim will not give up root privilege if the caller
4844 is root, the Exim run-time user, or the CONFIGURE_OWNER, if set. This is a
4845 transition mechanism and is expected to be removed in the future. Acceptable
4846 values for the macros satisfy the regexp: &`^[A-Za-z0-9_/.-]*$`&
4847
4848 Some sites may wish to use the same Exim binary on different machines that
4849 share a file system, but to use different configuration files on each machine.
4850 If CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_NODE is defined in &_Local/Makefile_&, Exim first
4851 looks for a file whose name is the configuration file name followed by a dot
4852 and the machine's node name, as obtained from the &[uname()]& function. If this
4853 file does not exist, the standard name is tried. This processing occurs for
4854 each file name in the list given by CONFIGURE_FILE or &%-C%&.
4855
4856 In some esoteric situations different versions of Exim may be run under
4857 different effective uids and the CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_EUID is defined to
4858 help with this. See the comments in &_src/EDITME_& for details.
4859
4860
4861
4862 .section "Configuration file format" "SECTconffilfor"
4863 .cindex "configuration file" "format of"
4864 .cindex "format" "configuration file"
4865 Exim's configuration file is divided into a number of different parts. General
4866 option settings must always appear at the start of the file. The other parts
4867 are all optional, and may appear in any order. Each part other than the first
4868 is introduced by the word &"begin"& followed by at least one literal
4869 space, and the name of the part. The optional parts are:
4870
4871 .ilist
4872 &'ACL'&: Access control lists for controlling incoming SMTP mail (see chapter
4873 &<<CHAPACL>>&).
4874 .next
4875 .cindex "AUTH" "configuration"
4876 &'authenticators'&: Configuration settings for the authenticator drivers. These
4877 are concerned with the SMTP AUTH command (see chapter &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>&).
4878 .next
4879 &'routers'&: Configuration settings for the router drivers. Routers process
4880 addresses and determine how the message is to be delivered (see chapters
4881 &<<CHAProutergeneric>>&&--&<<CHAPredirect>>&).
4882 .next
4883 &'transports'&: Configuration settings for the transport drivers. Transports
4884 define mechanisms for copying messages to destinations (see chapters
4885 &<<CHAPtransportgeneric>>&&--&<<CHAPsmtptrans>>&).
4886 .next
4887 &'retry'&: Retry rules, for use when a message cannot be delivered immediately.
4888 If there is no retry section, or if it is empty (that is, no retry rules are
4889 defined), Exim will not retry deliveries. In this situation, temporary errors
4890 are treated the same as permanent errors. Retry rules are discussed in chapter
4891 &<<CHAPretry>>&.
4892 .next
4893 &'rewrite'&: Global address rewriting rules, for use when a message arrives and
4894 when new addresses are generated during delivery. Rewriting is discussed in
4895 chapter &<<CHAPrewrite>>&.
4896 .next
4897 &'local_scan'&: Private options for the &[local_scan()]& function. If you
4898 want to use this feature, you must set
4899 .code
4900 LOCAL_SCAN_HAS_OPTIONS=yes
4901 .endd
4902 in &_Local/Makefile_& before building Exim. Details of the &[local_scan()]&
4903 facility are given in chapter &<<CHAPlocalscan>>&.
4904 .endlist
4905
4906 .cindex "configuration file" "leading white space in"
4907 .cindex "configuration file" "trailing white space in"
4908 .cindex "white space" "in configuration file"
4909 Leading and trailing white space in configuration lines is always ignored.
4910
4911 Blank lines in the file, and lines starting with a # character (ignoring
4912 leading white space) are treated as comments and are ignored. &*Note*&: A
4913 # character other than at the beginning of a line is not treated specially,
4914 and does not introduce a comment.
4915
4916 Any non-comment line can be continued by ending it with a backslash. Note that
4917 the general rule for white space means that trailing white space after the
4918 backslash and leading white space at the start of continuation
4919 lines is ignored. Comment lines beginning with # (but not empty lines) may
4920 appear in the middle of a sequence of continuation lines.
4921
4922 A convenient way to create a configuration file is to start from the
4923 default, which is supplied in &_src/configure.default_&, and add, delete, or
4924 change settings as required.
4925
4926 The ACLs, retry rules, and rewriting rules have their own syntax which is
4927 described in chapters &<<CHAPACL>>&, &<<CHAPretry>>&, and &<<CHAPrewrite>>&,
4928 respectively. The other parts of the configuration file have some syntactic
4929 items in common, and these are described below, from section &<<SECTcos>>&
4930 onwards. Before that, the inclusion, macro, and conditional facilities are
4931 described.
4932
4933
4934
4935 .section "File inclusions in the configuration file" "SECID41"
4936 .cindex "inclusions in configuration file"
4937 .cindex "configuration file" "including other files"
4938 .cindex "&`.include`& in configuration file"
4939 .cindex "&`.include_if_exists`& in configuration file"
4940 You can include other files inside Exim's run time configuration file by
4941 using this syntax:
4942 .display
4943 &`.include`& <&'file name'&>
4944 &`.include_if_exists`& <&'file name'&>
4945 .endd
4946 on a line by itself. Double quotes round the file name are optional. If you use
4947 the first form, a configuration error occurs if the file does not exist; the
4948 second form does nothing for non-existent files.
4949 The first form allows a relative name. It is resolved relative to
4950 the directory of the including file. For the second form an absolute file
4951 name is required.
4952
4953 Includes may be nested to any depth, but remember that Exim reads its
4954 configuration file often, so it is a good idea to keep them to a minimum.
4955 If you change the contents of an included file, you must HUP the daemon,
4956 because an included file is read only when the configuration itself is read.
4957
4958 The processing of inclusions happens early, at a physical line level, so, like
4959 comment lines, an inclusion can be used in the middle of an option setting,
4960 for example:
4961 .code
4962 hosts_lookup = a.b.c \
4963 .include /some/file
4964 .endd
4965 Include processing happens after macro processing (see below). Its effect is to
4966 process the lines of the included file as if they occurred inline where the
4967 inclusion appears.
4968
4969
4970
4971 .section "Macros in the configuration file" "SECTmacrodefs"
4972 .cindex "macro" "description of"
4973 .cindex "configuration file" "macros"
4974 If a line in the main part of the configuration (that is, before the first
4975 &"begin"& line) begins with an upper case letter, it is taken as a macro
4976 definition, and must be of the form
4977 .display
4978 <&'name'&> = <&'rest of line'&>
4979 .endd
4980 The name must consist of letters, digits, and underscores, and need not all be
4981 in upper case, though that is recommended. The rest of the line, including any
4982 continuations, is the replacement text, and has leading and trailing white
4983 space removed. Quotes are not removed. The replacement text can never end with
4984 a backslash character, but this doesn't seem to be a serious limitation.
4985
4986 Macros may also be defined between router, transport, authenticator, or ACL
4987 definitions. They may not, however, be defined within an individual driver or
4988 ACL, or in the &%local_scan%&, retry, or rewrite sections of the configuration.
4989
4990 .section "Macro substitution" "SECID42"
4991 Once a macro is defined, all subsequent lines in the file (and any included
4992 files) are scanned for the macro name; if there are several macros, the line is
4993 scanned for each in turn, in the order in which the macros are defined. The
4994 replacement text is not re-scanned for the current macro, though it is scanned
4995 for subsequently defined macros. For this reason, a macro name may not contain
4996 the name of a previously defined macro as a substring. You could, for example,
4997 define
4998 .display
4999 &`ABCD_XYZ = `&<&'something'&>
5000 &`ABCD = `&<&'something else'&>
5001 .endd
5002 but putting the definitions in the opposite order would provoke a configuration
5003 error. Macro expansion is applied to individual physical lines from the file,
5004 before checking for line continuation or file inclusion (see above). If a line
5005 consists solely of a macro name, and the expansion of the macro is empty, the
5006 line is ignored. A macro at the start of a line may turn the line into a
5007 comment line or a &`.include`& line.
5008
5009
5010 .section "Redefining macros" "SECID43"
5011 Once defined, the value of a macro can be redefined later in the configuration
5012 (or in an included file). Redefinition is specified by using &'=='& instead of
5013 &'='&. For example:
5014 .code
5015 MAC = initial value
5016 ...
5017 MAC == updated value
5018 .endd
5019 Redefinition does not alter the order in which the macros are applied to the
5020 subsequent lines of the configuration file. It is still the same order in which
5021 the macros were originally defined. All that changes is the macro's value.
5022 Redefinition makes it possible to accumulate values. For example:
5023 .code
5024 MAC = initial value
5025 ...
5026 MAC == MAC and something added
5027 .endd
5028 This can be helpful in situations where the configuration file is built
5029 from a number of other files.
5030
5031 .section "Overriding macro values" "SECID44"
5032 The values set for macros in the configuration file can be overridden by the
5033 &%-D%& command line option, but Exim gives up its root privilege when &%-D%& is
5034 used, unless called by root or the Exim user. A definition on the command line
5035 using the &%-D%& option causes all definitions and redefinitions within the
5036 file to be ignored.
5037
5038
5039
5040 .section "Example of macro usage" "SECID45"
5041 As an example of macro usage, consider a configuration where aliases are looked
5042 up in a MySQL database. It helps to keep the file less cluttered if long
5043 strings such as SQL statements are defined separately as macros, for example:
5044 .code
5045 ALIAS_QUERY = select mailbox from user where \
5046 login='${quote_mysql:$local_part}';
5047 .endd
5048 This can then be used in a &(redirect)& router setting like this:
5049 .code
5050 data = ${lookup mysql{ALIAS_QUERY}}
5051 .endd
5052 In earlier versions of Exim macros were sometimes used for domain, host, or
5053 address lists. In Exim 4 these are handled better by named lists &-- see
5054 section &<<SECTnamedlists>>&.
5055
5056
5057 .section "Builtin macros" "SECTbuiltinmacros"
5058 Exim defines some macros depending on facilities available, which may
5059 differ due to build-time definitions and from one release to another.
5060 All of these macros start with an underscore.
5061 They can be used to conditionally include parts of a configuration
5062 (see below).
5063
5064 The following classes of macros are defined:
5065 .display
5066 &` _HAVE_* `& build-time defines
5067 &` _DRIVER_ROUTER_* `& router drivers
5068 &` _DRIVER_TRANSPORT_* `& transport drivers
5069 &` _DRIVER_AUTHENTICATOR_* `& authenticator drivers
5070 &` _OPT_MAIN_* `& main config options
5071 &` _OPT_ROUTERS_* `& generic router options
5072 &` _OPT_TRANSPORTS_* `& generic transport options
5073 &` _OPT_AUTHENTICATORS_* `& generic authenticator options
5074 &` _OPT_ROUTER_*_* `& private router options
5075 &` _OPT_TRANSPORT_*_* `& private transport options
5076 &` _OPT_AUTHENTICATOR_*_* `& private authenticator options
5077 .endd
5078
5079 Use an &"exim -bP macros"& command to get the list of macros.
5080
5081
5082 .section "Conditional skips in the configuration file" "SECID46"
5083 .cindex "configuration file" "conditional skips"
5084 .cindex "&`.ifdef`&"
5085 You can use the directives &`.ifdef`&, &`.ifndef`&, &`.elifdef`&,
5086 &`.elifndef`&, &`.else`&, and &`.endif`& to dynamically include or exclude
5087 portions of the configuration file. The processing happens whenever the file is
5088 read (that is, when an Exim binary starts to run).
5089
5090 The implementation is very simple. Instances of the first four directives must
5091 be followed by text that includes the names of one or macros. The condition
5092 that is tested is whether or not any macro substitution has taken place in the
5093 line. Thus:
5094 .code
5095 .ifdef AAA
5096 message_size_limit = 50M
5097 .else
5098 message_size_limit = 100M
5099 .endif
5100 .endd
5101 sets a message size limit of 50M if the macro &`AAA`& is defined
5102 (or &`A`& or &`AA`&), and 100M
5103 otherwise. If there is more than one macro named on the line, the condition
5104 is true if any of them are defined. That is, it is an &"or"& condition. To
5105 obtain an &"and"& condition, you need to use nested &`.ifdef`&s.
5106
5107 Although you can use a macro expansion to generate one of these directives,
5108 it is not very useful, because the condition &"there was a macro substitution
5109 in this line"& will always be true.
5110
5111 Text following &`.else`& and &`.endif`& is ignored, and can be used as comment
5112 to clarify complicated nestings.
5113
5114
5115
5116 .section "Common option syntax" "SECTcos"
5117 .cindex "common option syntax"
5118 .cindex "syntax of common options"
5119 .cindex "configuration file" "common option syntax"
5120 For the main set of options, driver options, and &[local_scan()]& options,
5121 each setting is on a line by itself, and starts with a name consisting of
5122 lower-case letters and underscores. Many options require a data value, and in
5123 these cases the name must be followed by an equals sign (with optional white
5124 space) and then the value. For example:
5125 .code
5126 qualify_domain = mydomain.example.com
5127 .endd
5128 .cindex "hiding configuration option values"
5129 .cindex "configuration options" "hiding value of"
5130 .cindex "options" "hiding value of"
5131 Some option settings may contain sensitive data, for example, passwords for
5132 accessing databases. To stop non-admin users from using the &%-bP%& command
5133 line option to read these values, you can precede the option settings with the
5134 word &"hide"&. For example:
5135 .code
5136 hide mysql_servers = localhost/users/admin/secret-password
5137 .endd
5138 For non-admin users, such options are displayed like this:
5139 .code
5140 mysql_servers = <value not displayable>
5141 .endd
5142 If &"hide"& is used on a driver option, it hides the value of that option on
5143 all instances of the same driver.
5144
5145 The following sections describe the syntax used for the different data types
5146 that are found in option settings.
5147
5148
5149 .section "Boolean options" "SECID47"
5150 .cindex "format" "boolean"
5151 .cindex "boolean configuration values"
5152 .oindex "&%no_%&&'xxx'&"
5153 .oindex "&%not_%&&'xxx'&"
5154 Options whose type is given as boolean are on/off switches. There are two
5155 different ways of specifying such options: with and without a data value. If
5156 the option name is specified on its own without data, the switch is turned on;
5157 if it is preceded by &"no_"& or &"not_"& the switch is turned off. However,
5158 boolean options may be followed by an equals sign and one of the words
5159 &"true"&, &"false"&, &"yes"&, or &"no"&, as an alternative syntax. For example,
5160 the following two settings have exactly the same effect:
5161 .code
5162 queue_only
5163 queue_only = true
5164 .endd
5165 The following two lines also have the same (opposite) effect:
5166 .code
5167 no_queue_only
5168 queue_only = false
5169 .endd
5170 You can use whichever syntax you prefer.
5171
5172
5173
5174
5175 .section "Integer values" "SECID48"
5176 .cindex "integer configuration values"
5177 .cindex "format" "integer"
5178 If an option's type is given as &"integer"&, the value can be given in decimal,
5179 hexadecimal, or octal. If it starts with a digit greater than zero, a decimal
5180 number is assumed. Otherwise, it is treated as an octal number unless it starts
5181 with the characters &"0x"&, in which case the remainder is interpreted as a
5182 hexadecimal number.
5183
5184 If an integer value is followed by the letter K, it is multiplied by 1024; if
5185 it is followed by the letter M, it is multiplied by 1024x1024;
5186 if by the letter G, 1024x1024x1024.
5187 When the values
5188 of integer option settings are output, values which are an exact multiple of
5189 1024 or 1024x1024 are sometimes, but not always, printed using the letters K
5190 and M. The printing style is independent of the actual input format that was
5191 used.
5192
5193
5194 .section "Octal integer values" "SECID49"
5195 .cindex "integer format"
5196 .cindex "format" "octal integer"
5197 If an option's type is given as &"octal integer"&, its value is always
5198 interpreted as an octal number, whether or not it starts with the digit zero.
5199 Such options are always output in octal.
5200
5201
5202 .section "Fixed point numbers" "SECID50"
5203 .cindex "fixed point configuration values"
5204 .cindex "format" "fixed point"
5205 If an option's type is given as &"fixed-point"&, its value must be a decimal
5206 integer, optionally followed by a decimal point and up to three further digits.
5207
5208
5209
5210 .section "Time intervals" "SECTtimeformat"
5211 .cindex "time interval" "specifying in configuration"
5212 .cindex "format" "time interval"
5213 A time interval is specified as a sequence of numbers, each followed by one of
5214 the following letters, with no intervening white space:
5215
5216 .table2 30pt
5217 .irow &%s%& seconds
5218 .irow &%m%& minutes
5219 .irow &%h%& hours
5220 .irow &%d%& days
5221 .irow &%w%& weeks
5222 .endtable
5223
5224 For example, &"3h50m"& specifies 3 hours and 50 minutes. The values of time
5225 intervals are output in the same format. Exim does not restrict the values; it
5226 is perfectly acceptable, for example, to specify &"90m"& instead of &"1h30m"&.
5227
5228
5229
5230 .section "String values" "SECTstrings"
5231 .cindex "string" "format of configuration values"
5232 .cindex "format" "string"
5233 If an option's type is specified as &"string"&, the value can be specified with
5234 or without double-quotes. If it does not start with a double-quote, the value
5235 consists of the remainder of the line plus any continuation lines, starting at
5236 the first character after any leading white space, with trailing white space
5237 removed, and with no interpretation of the characters in the string. Because
5238 Exim removes comment lines (those beginning with #) at an early stage, they can
5239 appear in the middle of a multi-line string. The following two settings are
5240 therefore equivalent:
5241 .code
5242 trusted_users = uucp:mail
5243 trusted_users = uucp:\
5244 # This comment line is ignored
5245 mail
5246 .endd
5247 .cindex "string" "quoted"
5248 .cindex "escape characters in quoted strings"
5249 If a string does start with a double-quote, it must end with a closing
5250 double-quote, and any backslash characters other than those used for line
5251 continuation are interpreted as escape characters, as follows:
5252
5253 .table2 100pt
5254 .irow &`\\`& "single backslash"
5255 .irow &`\n`& "newline"
5256 .irow &`\r`& "carriage return"
5257 .irow &`\t`& "tab"
5258 .irow "&`\`&<&'octal digits'&>" "up to 3 octal digits specify one character"
5259 .irow "&`\x`&<&'hex digits'&>" "up to 2 hexadecimal digits specify one &&&
5260 character"
5261 .endtable
5262
5263 If a backslash is followed by some other character, including a double-quote
5264 character, that character replaces the pair.
5265
5266 Quoting is necessary only if you want to make use of the backslash escapes to
5267 insert special characters, or if you need to specify a value with leading or
5268 trailing spaces. These cases are rare, so quoting is almost never needed in
5269 current versions of Exim. In versions of Exim before 3.14, quoting was required
5270 in order to continue lines, so you may come across older configuration files
5271 and examples that apparently quote unnecessarily.
5272
5273
5274 .section "Expanded strings" "SECID51"
5275 .cindex "expansion" "definition of"
5276 Some strings in the configuration file are subjected to &'string expansion'&,
5277 by which means various parts of the string may be changed according to the
5278 circumstances (see chapter &<<CHAPexpand>>&). The input syntax for such strings
5279 is as just described; in particular, the handling of backslashes in quoted
5280 strings is done as part of the input process, before expansion takes place.
5281 However, backslash is also an escape character for the expander, so any
5282 backslashes that are required for that reason must be doubled if they are
5283 within a quoted configuration string.
5284
5285
5286 .section "User and group names" "SECID52"
5287 .cindex "user name" "format of"
5288 .cindex "format" "user name"
5289 .cindex "groups" "name format"
5290 .cindex "format" "group name"
5291 User and group names are specified as strings, using the syntax described
5292 above, but the strings are interpreted specially. A user or group name must
5293 either consist entirely of digits, or be a name that can be looked up using the
5294 &[getpwnam()]& or &[getgrnam()]& function, as appropriate.
5295
5296
5297 .section "List construction" "SECTlistconstruct"
5298 .cindex "list" "syntax of in configuration"
5299 .cindex "format" "list item in configuration"
5300 .cindex "string" "list, definition of"
5301 The data for some configuration options is a list of items, with colon as the
5302 default separator. Many of these options are shown with type &"string list"& in
5303 the descriptions later in this document. Others are listed as &"domain list"&,
5304 &"host list"&, &"address list"&, or &"local part list"&. Syntactically, they
5305 are all the same; however, those other than &"string list"& are subject to
5306 particular kinds of interpretation, as described in chapter
5307 &<<CHAPdomhosaddlists>>&.
5308
5309 In all these cases, the entire list is treated as a single string as far as the
5310 input syntax is concerned. The &%trusted_users%& setting in section
5311 &<<SECTstrings>>& above is an example. If a colon is actually needed in an item
5312 in a list, it must be entered as two colons. Leading and trailing white space
5313 on each item in a list is ignored. This makes it possible to include items that
5314 start with a colon, and in particular, certain forms of IPv6 address. For
5315 example, the list
5316 .code
5317 local_interfaces = 127.0.0.1 : ::::1
5318 .endd
5319 contains two IP addresses, the IPv4 address 127.0.0.1 and the IPv6 address ::1.
5320
5321 &*Note*&: Although leading and trailing white space is ignored in individual
5322 list items, it is not ignored when parsing the list. The space after the first
5323 colon in the example above is necessary. If it were not there, the list would
5324 be interpreted as the two items 127.0.0.1:: and 1.
5325
5326 .section "Changing list separators" "SECTlistsepchange"
5327 .cindex "list separator" "changing"
5328 .cindex "IPv6" "addresses in lists"
5329 Doubling colons in IPv6 addresses is an unwelcome chore, so a mechanism was
5330 introduced to allow the separator character to be changed. If a list begins
5331 with a left angle bracket, followed by any punctuation character, that
5332 character is used instead of colon as the list separator. For example, the list
5333 above can be rewritten to use a semicolon separator like this:
5334 .code
5335 local_interfaces = <; 127.0.0.1 ; ::1
5336 .endd
5337 This facility applies to all lists, with the exception of the list in
5338 &%log_file_path%&. It is recommended that the use of non-colon separators be
5339 confined to circumstances where they really are needed.
5340
5341 .cindex "list separator" "newline as"
5342 .cindex "newline" "as list separator"
5343 It is also possible to use newline and other control characters (those with
5344 code values less than 32, plus DEL) as separators in lists. Such separators
5345 must be provided literally at the time the list is processed. For options that
5346 are string-expanded, you can write the separator using a normal escape
5347 sequence. This will be processed by the expander before the string is
5348 interpreted as a list. For example, if a newline-separated list of domains is
5349 generated by a lookup, you can process it directly by a line such as this:
5350 .code
5351 domains = <\n ${lookup mysql{.....}}
5352 .endd
5353 This avoids having to change the list separator in such data. You are unlikely
5354 to want to use a control character as a separator in an option that is not
5355 expanded, because the value is literal text. However, it can be done by giving
5356 the value in quotes. For example:
5357 .code
5358 local_interfaces = "<\n 127.0.0.1 \n ::1"
5359 .endd
5360 Unlike printing character separators, which can be included in list items by
5361 doubling, it is not possible to include a control character as data when it is
5362 set as the separator. Two such characters in succession are interpreted as
5363 enclosing an empty list item.
5364
5365
5366
5367 .section "Empty items in lists" "SECTempitelis"
5368 .cindex "list" "empty item in"
5369 An empty item at the end of a list is always ignored. In other words, trailing
5370 separator characters are ignored. Thus, the list in
5371 .code
5372 senders = user@domain :
5373 .endd
5374 contains only a single item. If you want to include an empty string as one item
5375 in a list, it must not be the last item. For example, this list contains three
5376 items, the second of which is empty:
5377 .code
5378 senders = user1@domain : : user2@domain
5379 .endd
5380 &*Note*&: There must be white space between the two colons, as otherwise they
5381 are interpreted as representing a single colon data character (and the list
5382 would then contain just one item). If you want to specify a list that contains
5383 just one, empty item, you can do it as in this example:
5384 .code
5385 senders = :
5386 .endd
5387 In this case, the first item is empty, and the second is discarded because it
5388 is at the end of the list.
5389
5390
5391
5392
5393 .section "Format of driver configurations" "SECTfordricon"
5394 .cindex "drivers" "configuration format"
5395 There are separate parts in the configuration for defining routers, transports,
5396 and authenticators. In each part, you are defining a number of driver
5397 instances, each with its own set of options. Each driver instance is defined by
5398 a sequence of lines like this:
5399 .display
5400 <&'instance name'&>:
5401 <&'option'&>
5402 ...
5403 <&'option'&>
5404 .endd
5405 In the following example, the instance name is &(localuser)&, and it is
5406 followed by three options settings:
5407 .code
5408 localuser:
5409 driver = accept
5410 check_local_user
5411 transport = local_delivery
5412 .endd
5413 For each driver instance, you specify which Exim code module it uses &-- by the
5414 setting of the &%driver%& option &-- and (optionally) some configuration
5415 settings. For example, in the case of transports, if you want a transport to
5416 deliver with SMTP you would use the &(smtp)& driver; if you want to deliver to
5417 a local file you would use the &(appendfile)& driver. Each of the drivers is
5418 described in detail in its own separate chapter later in this manual.
5419
5420 You can have several routers, transports, or authenticators that are based on
5421 the same underlying driver (each must have a different instance name).
5422
5423 The order in which routers are defined is important, because addresses are
5424 passed to individual routers one by one, in order. The order in which
5425 transports are defined does not matter at all. The order in which
5426 authenticators are defined is used only when Exim, as a client, is searching
5427 them to find one that matches an authentication mechanism offered by the
5428 server.
5429
5430 .cindex "generic options"
5431 .cindex "options" "generic &-- definition of"
5432 Within a driver instance definition, there are two kinds of option: &'generic'&
5433 and &'private'&. The generic options are those that apply to all drivers of the
5434 same type (that is, all routers, all transports or all authenticators). The
5435 &%driver%& option is a generic option that must appear in every definition.
5436 .cindex "private options"
5437 The private options are special for each driver, and none need appear, because
5438 they all have default values.
5439
5440 The options may appear in any order, except that the &%driver%& option must
5441 precede any private options, since these depend on the particular driver. For
5442 this reason, it is recommended that &%driver%& always be the first option.
5443
5444 Driver instance names, which are used for reference in log entries and
5445 elsewhere, can be any sequence of letters, digits, and underscores (starting
5446 with a letter) and must be unique among drivers of the same type. A router and
5447 a transport (for example) can each have the same name, but no two router
5448 instances can have the same name. The name of a driver instance should not be
5449 confused with the name of the underlying driver module. For example, the
5450 configuration lines:
5451 .code
5452 remote_smtp:
5453 driver = smtp
5454 .endd
5455 create an instance of the &(smtp)& transport driver whose name is
5456 &(remote_smtp)&. The same driver code can be used more than once, with
5457 different instance names and different option settings each time. A second
5458 instance of the &(smtp)& transport, with different options, might be defined
5459 thus:
5460 .code
5461 special_smtp:
5462 driver = smtp
5463 port = 1234
5464 command_timeout = 10s
5465 .endd
5466 The names &(remote_smtp)& and &(special_smtp)& would be used to reference
5467 these transport instances from routers, and these names would appear in log
5468 lines.
5469
5470 Comment lines may be present in the middle of driver specifications. The full
5471 list of option settings for any particular driver instance, including all the
5472 defaulted values, can be extracted by making use of the &%-bP%& command line
5473 option.
5474
5475
5476
5477
5478
5479
5480 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
5481 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
5482
5483 .chapter "The default configuration file" "CHAPdefconfil"
5484 .scindex IIDconfiwal "configuration file" "default &""walk through""&"
5485 .cindex "default" "configuration file &""walk through""&"
5486 The default configuration file supplied with Exim as &_src/configure.default_&
5487 is sufficient for a host with simple mail requirements. As an introduction to
5488 the way Exim is configured, this chapter &"walks through"& the default
5489 configuration, giving brief explanations of the settings. Detailed descriptions
5490 of the options are given in subsequent chapters. The default configuration file
5491 itself contains extensive comments about ways you might want to modify the
5492 initial settings. However, note that there are many options that are not
5493 mentioned at all in the default configuration.
5494
5495
5496
5497 .section "Main configuration settings" "SECTdefconfmain"
5498 The main (global) configuration option settings must always come first in the
5499 file. The first thing you'll see in the file, after some initial comments, is
5500 the line
5501 .code
5502 # primary_hostname =
5503 .endd
5504 This is a commented-out setting of the &%primary_hostname%& option. Exim needs
5505 to know the official, fully qualified name of your host, and this is where you
5506 can specify it. However, in most cases you do not need to set this option. When
5507 it is unset, Exim uses the &[uname()]& system function to obtain the host name.
5508
5509 The first three non-comment configuration lines are as follows:
5510 .code
5511 domainlist local_domains = @
5512 domainlist relay_to_domains =
5513 hostlist relay_from_hosts = 127.0.0.1
5514 .endd
5515 These are not, in fact, option settings. They are definitions of two named
5516 domain lists and one named host list. Exim allows you to give names to lists of
5517 domains, hosts, and email addresses, in order to make it easier to manage the
5518 configuration file (see section &<<SECTnamedlists>>&).
5519
5520 The first line defines a domain list called &'local_domains'&; this is used
5521 later in the configuration to identify domains that are to be delivered
5522 on the local host.
5523
5524 .cindex "@ in a domain list"
5525 There is just one item in this list, the string &"@"&. This is a special form
5526 of entry which means &"the name of the local host"&. Thus, if the local host is
5527 called &'a.host.example'&, mail to &'any.user@a.host.example'& is expected to
5528 be delivered locally. Because the local host's name is referenced indirectly,
5529 the same configuration file can be used on different hosts.
5530
5531 The second line defines a domain list called &'relay_to_domains'&, but the
5532 list itself is empty. Later in the configuration we will come to the part that
5533 controls mail relaying through the local host; it allows relaying to any
5534 domains in this list. By default, therefore, no relaying on the basis of a mail
5535 domain is permitted.
5536
5537 The third line defines a host list called &'relay_from_hosts'&. This list is
5538 used later in the configuration to permit relaying from any host or IP address
5539 that matches the list. The default contains just the IP address of the IPv4
5540 loopback interface, which means that processes on the local host are able to
5541 submit mail for relaying by sending it over TCP/IP to that interface. No other
5542 hosts are permitted to submit messages for relaying.
5543
5544 Just to be sure there's no misunderstanding: at this point in the configuration
5545 we aren't actually setting up any controls. We are just defining some domains
5546 and hosts that will be used in the controls that are specified later.
5547
5548 The next two configuration lines are genuine option settings:
5549 .code
5550 acl_smtp_rcpt = acl_check_rcpt
5551 acl_smtp_data = acl_check_data
5552 .endd
5553 These options specify &'Access Control Lists'& (ACLs) that are to be used
5554 during an incoming SMTP session for every recipient of a message (every RCPT
5555 command), and after the contents of the message have been received,
5556 respectively. The names of the lists are &'acl_check_rcpt'& and
5557 &'acl_check_data'&, and we will come to their definitions below, in the ACL
5558 section of the configuration. The RCPT ACL controls which recipients are
5559 accepted for an incoming message &-- if a configuration does not provide an ACL
5560 to check recipients, no SMTP mail can be accepted. The DATA ACL allows the
5561 contents of a message to be checked.
5562
5563 Two commented-out option settings are next:
5564 .code
5565 # av_scanner = clamd:/tmp/clamd
5566 # spamd_address = 127.0.0.1 783
5567 .endd
5568 These are example settings that can be used when Exim is compiled with the
5569 content-scanning extension. The first specifies the interface to the virus
5570 scanner, and the second specifies the interface to SpamAssassin. Further
5571 details are given in chapter &<<CHAPexiscan>>&.
5572
5573 Three more commented-out option settings follow:
5574 .code
5575 # tls_advertise_hosts = *
5576 # tls_certificate = /etc/ssl/exim.crt
5577 # tls_privatekey = /etc/ssl/exim.pem
5578 .endd
5579 These are example settings that can be used when Exim is compiled with
5580 support for TLS (aka SSL) as described in section &<<SECTinctlsssl>>&. The
5581 first one specifies the list of clients that are allowed to use TLS when
5582 connecting to this server; in this case the wildcard means all clients. The
5583 other options specify where Exim should find its TLS certificate and private
5584 key, which together prove the server's identity to any clients that connect.
5585 More details are given in chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>&.
5586
5587 Another two commented-out option settings follow:
5588 .code
5589 # daemon_smtp_ports = 25 : 465 : 587
5590 # tls_on_connect_ports = 465
5591 .endd
5592 .cindex "port" "465 and 587"
5593 .cindex "port" "for message submission"
5594 .cindex "message" "submission, ports for"
5595 .cindex "submissions protocol"
5596 .cindex "smtps protocol"
5597 .cindex "ssmtp protocol"
5598 .cindex "SMTP" "submissions protocol"
5599 .cindex "SMTP" "ssmtp protocol"
5600 .cindex "SMTP" "smtps protocol"
5601 These options provide better support for roaming users who wish to use this
5602 server for message submission. They are not much use unless you have turned on
5603 TLS (as described in the previous paragraph) and authentication (about which
5604 more in section &<<SECTdefconfauth>>&).
5605 Mail submission from mail clients (MUAs) should be separate from inbound mail
5606 to your domain (MX delivery) for various good reasons (eg, ability to impose
5607 much saner TLS protocol and ciphersuite requirements without unintended
5608 consequences).
5609 RFC 6409 (previously 4409) specifies use of port 587 for SMTP Submission,
5610 which uses STARTTLS, so this is the &"submission"& port.
5611 RFC 8314 specifies use of port 465 as the &"submissions"& protocol,
5612 which should be used in preference to 587.
5613 You should also consider deploying SRV records to help clients find
5614 these ports.
5615 Older names for &"submissions"& are &"smtps"& and &"ssmtp"&.
5616
5617 Two more commented-out options settings follow:
5618 .code
5619 # qualify_domain =
5620 # qualify_recipient =
5621 .endd
5622 The first of these specifies a domain that Exim uses when it constructs a
5623 complete email address from a local login name. This is often needed when Exim
5624 receives a message from a local process. If you do not set &%qualify_domain%&,
5625 the value of &%primary_hostname%& is used. If you set both of these options,
5626 you can have different qualification domains for sender and recipient
5627 addresses. If you set only the first one, its value is used in both cases.
5628
5629 .cindex "domain literal" "recognizing format"
5630 The following line must be uncommented if you want Exim to recognize
5631 addresses of the form &'user@[10.11.12.13]'& that is, with a &"domain literal"&
5632 (an IP address within square brackets) instead of a named domain.
5633 .code
5634 # allow_domain_literals
5635 .endd
5636 The RFCs still require this form, but many people think that in the modern
5637 Internet it makes little sense to permit mail to be sent to specific hosts by
5638 quoting their IP addresses. This ancient format has been used by people who
5639 try to abuse hosts by using them for unwanted relaying. However, some
5640 people believe there are circumstances (for example, messages addressed to
5641 &'postmaster'&) where domain literals are still useful.
5642
5643 The next configuration line is a kind of trigger guard:
5644 .code
5645 never_users = root
5646 .endd
5647 It specifies that no delivery must ever be run as the root user. The normal
5648 convention is to set up &'root'& as an alias for the system administrator. This
5649 setting is a guard against slips in the configuration.
5650 The list of users specified by &%never_users%& is not, however, the complete
5651 list; the build-time configuration in &_Local/Makefile_& has an option called
5652 FIXED_NEVER_USERS specifying a list that cannot be overridden. The
5653 contents of &%never_users%& are added to this list. By default
5654 FIXED_NEVER_USERS also specifies root.
5655
5656 When a remote host connects to Exim in order to send mail, the only information
5657 Exim has about the host's identity is its IP address. The next configuration
5658 line,
5659 .code
5660 host_lookup = *
5661 .endd
5662 specifies that Exim should do a reverse DNS lookup on all incoming connections,
5663 in order to get a host name. This improves the quality of the logging
5664 information, but if you feel it is too expensive, you can remove it entirely,
5665 or restrict the lookup to hosts on &"nearby"& networks.
5666 Note that it is not always possible to find a host name from an IP address,
5667 because not all DNS reverse zones are maintained, and sometimes DNS servers are
5668 unreachable.
5669
5670 The next two lines are concerned with &'ident'& callbacks, as defined by RFC
5671 1413 (hence their names):
5672 .code
5673 rfc1413_hosts = *
5674 rfc1413_query_timeout = 0s
5675 .endd
5676 These settings cause Exim to avoid ident callbacks for all incoming SMTP calls.
5677 Few hosts offer RFC1413 service these days; calls have to be
5678 terminated by a timeout and this needlessly delays the startup
5679 of an incoming SMTP connection.
5680 If you have hosts for which you trust RFC1413 and need this
5681 information, you can change this.
5682
5683 This line enables an efficiency SMTP option. It is negotiated by clients
5684 and not expected to cause problems but can be disabled if needed.
5685 .code
5686 prdr_enable = true
5687 .endd
5688
5689 When Exim receives messages over SMTP connections, it expects all addresses to
5690 be fully qualified with a domain, as required by the SMTP definition. However,
5691 if you are running a server to which simple clients submit messages, you may
5692 find that they send unqualified addresses. The two commented-out options:
5693 .code
5694 # sender_unqualified_hosts =
5695 # recipient_unqualified_hosts =
5696 .endd
5697 show how you can specify hosts that are permitted to send unqualified sender
5698 and recipient addresses, respectively.
5699
5700 The &%log_selector%& option is used to increase the detail of logging
5701 over the default:
5702 .code
5703 log_selector = +smtp_protocol_error +smtp_syntax_error \
5704 +tls_certificate_verified
5705 .endd
5706
5707 The &%percent_hack_domains%& option is also commented out:
5708 .code
5709 # percent_hack_domains =
5710 .endd
5711 It provides a list of domains for which the &"percent hack"& is to operate.
5712 This is an almost obsolete form of explicit email routing. If you do not know
5713 anything about it, you can safely ignore this topic.
5714
5715 The next two settings in the main part of the default configuration are
5716 concerned with messages that have been &"frozen"& on Exim's queue. When a
5717 message is frozen, Exim no longer continues to try to deliver it. Freezing
5718 occurs when a bounce message encounters a permanent failure because the sender
5719 address of the original message that caused the bounce is invalid, so the
5720 bounce cannot be delivered. This is probably the most common case, but there
5721 are also other conditions that cause freezing, and frozen messages are not
5722 always bounce messages.
5723 .code
5724 ignore_bounce_errors_after = 2d
5725 timeout_frozen_after = 7d
5726 .endd
5727 The first of these options specifies that failing bounce messages are to be
5728 discarded after 2 days on the queue. The second specifies that any frozen
5729 message (whether a bounce message or not) is to be timed out (and discarded)
5730 after a week. In this configuration, the first setting ensures that no failing
5731 bounce message ever lasts a week.
5732
5733 Exim queues it's messages in a spool directory. If you expect to have
5734 large queues, you may consider using this option. It splits the spool
5735 directory into subdirectories to avoid file system degradation from
5736 many files in a single directory, resulting in better performance.
5737 Manual manipulation of queued messages becomes more complex (though fortunately
5738 not often needed).
5739 .code
5740 # split_spool_directory = true
5741 .endd
5742
5743 In an ideal world everybody follows the standards. For non-ASCII
5744 messages RFC 2047 is a standard, allowing a maximum line length of 76
5745 characters. Exim adheres that standard and won't process messages which
5746 violate this standard. (Even ${rfc2047:...} expansions will fail.)
5747 In particular, the Exim maintainers have had multiple reports of
5748 problems from Russian administrators of issues until they disable this
5749 check, because of some popular, yet buggy, mail composition software.
5750 .code
5751 # check_rfc2047_length = false
5752 .endd
5753
5754 If you need to be strictly RFC compliant you may wish to disable the
5755 8BITMIME advertisement. Use this, if you exchange mails with systems
5756 that are not 8-bit clean.
5757 .code
5758 # accept_8bitmime = false
5759 .endd
5760
5761 Libraries you use may depend on specific environment settings. This
5762 imposes a security risk (e.g. PATH). There are two lists:
5763 &%keep_environment%& for the variables to import as they are, and
5764 &%add_environment%& for variables we want to set to a fixed value.
5765 Note that TZ is handled separately, by the $%timezone%$ runtime
5766 option and by the TIMEZONE_DEFAULT buildtime option.
5767 .code
5768 # keep_environment = ^LDAP
5769 # add_environment = PATH=/usr/bin::/bin
5770 .endd
5771
5772
5773 .section "ACL configuration" "SECID54"
5774 .cindex "default" "ACLs"
5775 .cindex "&ACL;" "default configuration"
5776 In the default configuration, the ACL section follows the main configuration.
5777 It starts with the line
5778 .code
5779 begin acl
5780 .endd
5781 and it contains the definitions of two ACLs, called &'acl_check_rcpt'& and
5782 &'acl_check_data'&, that were referenced in the settings of &%acl_smtp_rcpt%&
5783 and &%acl_smtp_data%& above.
5784
5785 .cindex "RCPT" "ACL for"
5786 The first ACL is used for every RCPT command in an incoming SMTP message. Each
5787 RCPT command specifies one of the message's recipients. The ACL statements
5788 are considered in order, until the recipient address is either accepted or
5789 rejected. The RCPT command is then accepted or rejected, according to the
5790 result of the ACL processing.
5791 .code
5792 acl_check_rcpt:
5793 .endd
5794 This line, consisting of a name terminated by a colon, marks the start of the
5795 ACL, and names it.
5796 .code
5797 accept hosts = :
5798 .endd
5799 This ACL statement accepts the recipient if the sending host matches the list.
5800 But what does that strange list mean? It doesn't actually contain any host
5801 names or IP addresses. The presence of the colon puts an empty item in the
5802 list; Exim matches this only if the incoming message did not come from a remote
5803 host, because in that case, the remote hostname is empty. The colon is
5804 important. Without it, the list itself is empty, and can never match anything.
5805
5806 What this statement is doing is to accept unconditionally all recipients in
5807 messages that are submitted by SMTP from local processes using the standard
5808 input and output (that is, not using TCP/IP). A number of MUAs operate in this
5809 manner.
5810 .code
5811 deny message = Restricted characters in address
5812 domains = +local_domains
5813 local_parts = ^[.] : ^.*[@%!/|]
5814
5815 deny message = Restricted characters in address
5816 domains = !+local_domains
5817 local_parts = ^[./|] : ^.*[@%!] : ^.*/\\.\\./
5818 .endd
5819 These statements are concerned with local parts that contain any of the
5820 characters &"@"&, &"%"&, &"!"&, &"/"&, &"|"&, or dots in unusual places.
5821 Although these characters are entirely legal in local parts (in the case of
5822 &"@"& and leading dots, only if correctly quoted), they do not commonly occur
5823 in Internet mail addresses.
5824
5825 The first three have in the past been associated with explicitly routed
5826 addresses (percent is still sometimes used &-- see the &%percent_hack_domains%&
5827 option). Addresses containing these characters are regularly tried by spammers
5828 in an attempt to bypass relaying restrictions, and also by open relay testing
5829 programs. Unless you really need them it is safest to reject these characters
5830 at this early stage. This configuration is heavy-handed in rejecting these
5831 characters for all messages it accepts from remote hosts. This is a deliberate
5832 policy of being as safe as possible.
5833
5834 The first rule above is stricter, and is applied to messages that are addressed
5835 to one of the local domains handled by this host. This is implemented by the
5836 first condition, which restricts it to domains that are listed in the
5837 &'local_domains'& domain list. The &"+"& character is used to indicate a
5838 reference to a named list. In this configuration, there is just one domain in
5839 &'local_domains'&, but in general there may be many.
5840
5841 The second condition on the first statement uses two regular expressions to
5842 block local parts that begin with a dot or contain &"@"&, &"%"&, &"!"&, &"/"&,
5843 or &"|"&. If you have local accounts that include these characters, you will
5844 have to modify this rule.
5845
5846 Empty components (two dots in a row) are not valid in RFC 2822, but Exim
5847 allows them because they have been encountered in practice. (Consider the
5848 common convention of local parts constructed as
5849 &"&'first-initial.second-initial.family-name'&"& when applied to someone like
5850 the author of Exim, who has no second initial.) However, a local part starting
5851 with a dot or containing &"/../"& can cause trouble if it is used as part of a
5852 file name (for example, for a mailing list). This is also true for local parts
5853 that contain slashes. A pipe symbol can also be troublesome if the local part
5854 is incorporated unthinkingly into a shell command line.
5855
5856 The second rule above applies to all other domains, and is less strict. This
5857 allows your own users to send outgoing messages to sites that use slashes
5858 and vertical bars in their local parts. It blocks local parts that begin
5859 with a dot, slash, or vertical bar, but allows these characters within the
5860 local part. However, the sequence &"/../"& is barred. The use of &"@"&, &"%"&,
5861 and &"!"& is blocked, as before. The motivation here is to prevent your users
5862 (or your users' viruses) from mounting certain kinds of attack on remote sites.
5863 .code
5864 accept local_parts = postmaster
5865 domains = +local_domains
5866 .endd
5867 This statement, which has two conditions, accepts an incoming address if the
5868 local part is &'postmaster'& and the domain is one of those listed in the
5869 &'local_domains'& domain list. The &"+"& character is used to indicate a
5870 reference to a named list. In this configuration, there is just one domain in
5871 &'local_domains'&, but in general there may be many.
5872
5873 The presence of this statement means that mail to postmaster is never blocked
5874 by any of the subsequent tests. This can be helpful while sorting out problems
5875 in cases where the subsequent tests are incorrectly denying access.
5876 .code
5877 require verify = sender
5878 .endd
5879 This statement requires the sender address to be verified before any subsequent
5880 ACL statement can be used. If verification fails, the incoming recipient
5881 address is refused. Verification consists of trying to route the address, to
5882 see if a bounce message could be delivered to it. In the case of remote
5883 addresses, basic verification checks only the domain, but &'callouts'& can be
5884 used for more verification if required. Section &<<SECTaddressverification>>&
5885 discusses the details of address verification.
5886 .code
5887 accept hosts = +relay_from_hosts
5888 control = submission
5889 .endd
5890 This statement accepts the address if the message is coming from one of the
5891 hosts that are defined as being allowed to relay through this host. Recipient
5892 verification is omitted here, because in many cases the clients are dumb MUAs
5893 that do not cope well with SMTP error responses. For the same reason, the
5894 second line specifies &"submission mode"& for messages that are accepted. This
5895 is described in detail in section &<<SECTsubmodnon>>&; it causes Exim to fix
5896 messages that are deficient in some way, for example, because they lack a
5897 &'Date:'& header line. If you are actually relaying out from MTAs, you should
5898 probably add recipient verification here, and disable submission mode.
5899 .code
5900 accept authenticated = *
5901 control = submission
5902 .endd
5903 This statement accepts the address if the client host has authenticated itself.
5904 Submission mode is again specified, on the grounds that such messages are most
5905 likely to come from MUAs. The default configuration does not define any
5906 authenticators, though it does include some nearly complete commented-out
5907 examples described in &<<SECTdefconfauth>>&. This means that no client can in
5908 fact authenticate until you complete the authenticator definitions.
5909 .code
5910 require message = relay not permitted
5911 domains = +local_domains : +relay_to_domains
5912 .endd
5913 This statement rejects the address if its domain is neither a local domain nor
5914 one of the domains for which this host is a relay.
5915 .code
5916 require verify = recipient
5917 .endd
5918 This statement requires the recipient address to be verified; if verification
5919 fails, the address is rejected.
5920 .code
5921 # deny message = rejected because $sender_host_address \
5922 # is in a black list at $dnslist_domain\n\
5923 # $dnslist_text
5924 # dnslists = black.list.example
5925 #
5926 # warn dnslists = black.list.example
5927 # add_header = X-Warning: $sender_host_address is in \
5928 # a black list at $dnslist_domain
5929 # log_message = found in $dnslist_domain
5930 .endd
5931 These commented-out lines are examples of how you could configure Exim to check
5932 sending hosts against a DNS black list. The first statement rejects messages
5933 from blacklisted hosts, whereas the second just inserts a warning header
5934 line.
5935 .code
5936 # require verify = csa
5937 .endd
5938 This commented-out line is an example of how you could turn on client SMTP
5939 authorization (CSA) checking. Such checks do DNS lookups for special SRV
5940 records.
5941 .code
5942 accept
5943 .endd
5944 The final statement in the first ACL unconditionally accepts any recipient
5945 address that has successfully passed all the previous tests.
5946 .code
5947 acl_check_data:
5948 .endd
5949 This line marks the start of the second ACL, and names it. Most of the contents
5950 of this ACL are commented out:
5951 .code
5952 # deny malware = *
5953 # message = This message contains a virus \
5954 # ($malware_name).
5955 .endd
5956 These lines are examples of how to arrange for messages to be scanned for
5957 viruses when Exim has been compiled with the content-scanning extension, and a
5958 suitable virus scanner is installed. If the message is found to contain a
5959 virus, it is rejected with the given custom error message.
5960 .code
5961 # warn spam = nobody
5962 # message = X-Spam_score: $spam_score\n\
5963 # X-Spam_score_int: $spam_score_int\n\
5964 # X-Spam_bar: $spam_bar\n\
5965 # X-Spam_report: $spam_report
5966 .endd
5967 These lines are an example of how to arrange for messages to be scanned by
5968 SpamAssassin when Exim has been compiled with the content-scanning extension,
5969 and SpamAssassin has been installed. The SpamAssassin check is run with
5970 &`nobody`& as its user parameter, and the results are added to the message as a
5971 series of extra header line. In this case, the message is not rejected,
5972 whatever the spam score.
5973 .code
5974 accept
5975 .endd
5976 This final line in the DATA ACL accepts the message unconditionally.
5977
5978
5979 .section "Router configuration" "SECID55"
5980 .cindex "default" "routers"
5981 .cindex "routers" "default"
5982 The router configuration comes next in the default configuration, introduced
5983 by the line
5984 .code
5985 begin routers
5986 .endd
5987 Routers are the modules in Exim that make decisions about where to send
5988 messages. An address is passed to each router in turn, until it is either
5989 accepted, or failed. This means that the order in which you define the routers
5990 matters. Each router is fully described in its own chapter later in this
5991 manual. Here we give only brief overviews.
5992 .code
5993 # domain_literal:
5994 # driver = ipliteral
5995 # domains = !+local_domains
5996 # transport = remote_smtp
5997 .endd
5998 .cindex "domain literal" "default router"
5999 This router is commented out because the majority of sites do not want to
6000 support domain literal addresses (those of the form &'user@[10.9.8.7]'&). If
6001 you uncomment this router, you also need to uncomment the setting of
6002 &%allow_domain_literals%& in the main part of the configuration.
6003 .code
6004 dnslookup:
6005 driver = dnslookup
6006 domains = ! +local_domains
6007 transport = remote_smtp
6008 ignore_target_hosts = 0.0.0.0 : 127.0.0.0/8
6009 no_more
6010 .endd
6011 The first uncommented router handles addresses that do not involve any local
6012 domains. This is specified by the line
6013 .code
6014 domains = ! +local_domains
6015 .endd
6016 The &%domains%& option lists the domains to which this router applies, but the
6017 exclamation mark is a negation sign, so the router is used only for domains
6018 that are not in the domain list called &'local_domains'& (which was defined at
6019 the start of the configuration). The plus sign before &'local_domains'&
6020 indicates that it is referring to a named list. Addresses in other domains are
6021 passed on to the following routers.
6022
6023 The name of the router driver is &(dnslookup)&,
6024 and is specified by the &%driver%& option. Do not be confused by the fact that
6025 the name of this router instance is the same as the name of the driver. The
6026 instance name is arbitrary, but the name set in the &%driver%& option must be
6027 one of the driver modules that is in the Exim binary.
6028
6029 The &(dnslookup)& router routes addresses by looking up their domains in the
6030 DNS in order to obtain a list of hosts to which the address is routed. If the
6031 router succeeds, the address is queued for the &(remote_smtp)& transport, as
6032 specified by the &%transport%& option. If the router does not find the domain
6033 in the DNS, no further routers are tried because of the &%no_more%& setting, so
6034 the address fails and is bounced.
6035
6036 The &%ignore_target_hosts%& option specifies a list of IP addresses that are to
6037 be entirely ignored. This option is present because a number of cases have been
6038 encountered where MX records in the DNS point to host names
6039 whose IP addresses are 0.0.0.0 or are in the 127 subnet (typically 127.0.0.1).
6040 Completely ignoring these IP addresses causes Exim to fail to route the
6041 email address, so it bounces. Otherwise, Exim would log a routing problem, and
6042 continue to try to deliver the message periodically until the address timed
6043 out.
6044 .code
6045 system_aliases:
6046 driver = redirect
6047 allow_fail
6048 allow_defer
6049 data = ${lookup{$local_part}lsearch{/etc/aliases}}
6050 # user = exim
6051 file_transport = address_file
6052 pipe_transport = address_pipe
6053 .endd
6054 Control reaches this and subsequent routers only for addresses in the local
6055 domains. This router checks to see whether the local part is defined as an
6056 alias in the &_/etc/aliases_& file, and if so, redirects it according to the
6057 data that it looks up from that file. If no data is found for the local part,
6058 the value of the &%data%& option is empty, causing the address to be passed to
6059 the next router.
6060
6061 &_/etc/aliases_& is a conventional name for the system aliases file that is
6062 often used. That is why it is referenced by from the default configuration
6063 file. However, you can change this by setting SYSTEM_ALIASES_FILE in
6064 &_Local/Makefile_& before building Exim.
6065 .code
6066 userforward:
6067 driver = redirect
6068 check_local_user
6069 # local_part_suffix = +* : -*
6070 # local_part_suffix_optional
6071 file = $home/.forward
6072 # allow_filter
6073 no_verify
6074 no_expn
6075 check_ancestor
6076 file_transport = address_file
6077 pipe_transport = address_pipe
6078 reply_transport = address_reply
6079 .endd
6080 This is the most complicated router in the default configuration. It is another
6081 redirection router, but this time it is looking for forwarding data set up by
6082 individual users. The &%check_local_user%& setting specifies a check that the
6083 local part of the address is the login name of a local user. If it is not, the
6084 router is skipped. The two commented options that follow &%check_local_user%&,
6085 namely:
6086 .code
6087 # local_part_suffix = +* : -*
6088 # local_part_suffix_optional
6089 .endd
6090 .vindex "&$local_part_suffix$&"
6091 show how you can specify the recognition of local part suffixes. If the first
6092 is uncommented, a suffix beginning with either a plus or a minus sign, followed
6093 by any sequence of characters, is removed from the local part and placed in the
6094 variable &$local_part_suffix$&. The second suffix option specifies that the
6095 presence of a suffix in the local part is optional. When a suffix is present,
6096 the check for a local login uses the local part with the suffix removed.
6097
6098 When a local user account is found, the file called &_.forward_& in the user's
6099 home directory is consulted. If it does not exist, or is empty, the router
6100 declines. Otherwise, the contents of &_.forward_& are interpreted as
6101 redirection data (see chapter &<<CHAPredirect>>& for more details).
6102
6103 .cindex "Sieve filter" "enabling in default router"
6104 Traditional &_.forward_& files contain just a list of addresses, pipes, or
6105 files. Exim supports this by default. However, if &%allow_filter%& is set (it
6106 is commented out by default), the contents of the file are interpreted as a set
6107 of Exim or Sieve filtering instructions, provided the file begins with &"#Exim
6108 filter"& or &"#Sieve filter"&, respectively. User filtering is discussed in the
6109 separate document entitled &'Exim's interfaces to mail filtering'&.
6110
6111 The &%no_verify%& and &%no_expn%& options mean that this router is skipped when
6112 verifying addresses, or when running as a consequence of an SMTP EXPN command.
6113 There are two reasons for doing this:
6114
6115 .olist
6116 Whether or not a local user has a &_.forward_& file is not really relevant when
6117 checking an address for validity; it makes sense not to waste resources doing
6118 unnecessary work.
6119 .next
6120 More importantly, when Exim is verifying addresses or handling an EXPN
6121 command during an SMTP session, it is running as the Exim user, not as root.
6122 The group is the Exim group, and no additional groups are set up.
6123 It may therefore not be possible for Exim to read users' &_.forward_& files at
6124 this time.
6125 .endlist
6126
6127 The setting of &%check_ancestor%& prevents the router from generating a new
6128 address that is the same as any previous address that was redirected. (This
6129 works round a problem concerning a bad interaction between aliasing and
6130 forwarding &-- see section &<<SECTredlocmai>>&).
6131
6132 The final three option settings specify the transports that are to be used when
6133 forwarding generates a direct delivery to a file, or to a pipe, or sets up an
6134 auto-reply, respectively. For example, if a &_.forward_& file contains
6135 .code
6136 a.nother@elsewhere.example, /home/spqr/archive
6137 .endd
6138 the delivery to &_/home/spqr/archive_& is done by running the &%address_file%&
6139 transport.
6140 .code
6141 localuser:
6142 driver = accept
6143 check_local_user
6144 # local_part_suffix = +* : -*
6145 # local_part_suffix_optional
6146 transport = local_delivery
6147 .endd
6148 The final router sets up delivery into local mailboxes, provided that the local
6149 part is the name of a local login, by accepting the address and assigning it to
6150 the &(local_delivery)& transport. Otherwise, we have reached the end of the
6151 routers, so the address is bounced. The commented suffix settings fulfil the
6152 same purpose as they do for the &(userforward)& router.
6153
6154
6155 .section "Transport configuration" "SECID56"
6156 .cindex "default" "transports"
6157 .cindex "transports" "default"
6158 Transports define mechanisms for actually delivering messages. They operate
6159 only when referenced from routers, so the order in which they are defined does
6160 not matter. The transports section of the configuration starts with
6161 .code
6162 begin transports
6163 .endd
6164 One remote transport and four local transports are defined.
6165 .code
6166 remote_smtp:
6167 driver = smtp
6168 hosts_try_prdr = *
6169 .endd
6170 This transport is used for delivering messages over SMTP connections.
6171 The list of remote hosts comes from the router.
6172 The &%hosts_try_prdr%& option enables an efficiency SMTP option.
6173 It is negotiated between client and server
6174 and not expected to cause problems but can be disabled if needed.
6175 All other options are defaulted.
6176 .code
6177 local_delivery:
6178 driver = appendfile
6179 file = /var/mail/$local_part
6180 delivery_date_add
6181 envelope_to_add
6182 return_path_add
6183 # group = mail
6184 # mode = 0660
6185 .endd
6186 This &(appendfile)& transport is used for local delivery to user mailboxes in
6187 traditional BSD mailbox format. By default it runs under the uid and gid of the
6188 local user, which requires the sticky bit to be set on the &_/var/mail_&
6189 directory. Some systems use the alternative approach of running mail deliveries
6190 under a particular group instead of using the sticky bit. The commented options
6191 show how this can be done.
6192
6193 Exim adds three headers to the message as it delivers it: &'Delivery-date:'&,
6194 &'Envelope-to:'& and &'Return-path:'&. This action is requested by the three
6195 similarly-named options above.
6196 .code
6197 address_pipe:
6198 driver = pipe
6199 return_output
6200 .endd
6201 This transport is used for handling deliveries to pipes that are generated by
6202 redirection (aliasing or users' &_.forward_& files). The &%return_output%&
6203 option specifies that any output on stdout or stderr generated by the pipe is to
6204 be returned to the sender.
6205 .code
6206 address_file:
6207 driver = appendfile
6208 delivery_date_add
6209 envelope_to_add
6210 return_path_add
6211 .endd
6212 This transport is used for handling deliveries to files that are generated by
6213 redirection. The name of the file is not specified in this instance of
6214 &(appendfile)&, because it comes from the &(redirect)& router.
6215 .code
6216 address_reply:
6217 driver = autoreply
6218 .endd
6219 This transport is used for handling automatic replies generated by users'
6220 filter files.
6221
6222
6223
6224 .section "Default retry rule" "SECID57"
6225 .cindex "retry" "default rule"
6226 .cindex "default" "retry rule"
6227 The retry section of the configuration file contains rules which affect the way
6228 Exim retries deliveries that cannot be completed at the first attempt. It is
6229 introduced by the line
6230 .code
6231 begin retry
6232 .endd
6233 In the default configuration, there is just one rule, which applies to all
6234 errors:
6235 .code
6236 * * F,2h,15m; G,16h,1h,1.5; F,4d,6h
6237 .endd
6238 This causes any temporarily failing address to be retried every 15 minutes for
6239 2 hours, then at intervals starting at one hour and increasing by a factor of
6240 1.5 until 16 hours have passed, then every 6 hours up to 4 days. If an address
6241 is not delivered after 4 days of temporary failure, it is bounced. The time is
6242 measured from first failure, not from the time the message was received.
6243
6244 If the retry section is removed from the configuration, or is empty (that is,
6245 if no retry rules are defined), Exim will not retry deliveries. This turns
6246 temporary errors into permanent errors.
6247
6248
6249 .section "Rewriting configuration" "SECID58"
6250 The rewriting section of the configuration, introduced by
6251 .code
6252 begin rewrite
6253 .endd
6254 contains rules for rewriting addresses in messages as they arrive. There are no
6255 rewriting rules in the default configuration file.
6256
6257
6258
6259 .section "Authenticators configuration" "SECTdefconfauth"
6260 .cindex "AUTH" "configuration"
6261 The authenticators section of the configuration, introduced by
6262 .code
6263 begin authenticators
6264 .endd
6265 defines mechanisms for the use of the SMTP AUTH command. The default
6266 configuration file contains two commented-out example authenticators
6267 which support plaintext username/password authentication using the
6268 standard PLAIN mechanism and the traditional but non-standard LOGIN
6269 mechanism, with Exim acting as the server. PLAIN and LOGIN are enough
6270 to support most MUA software.
6271
6272 The example PLAIN authenticator looks like this:
6273 .code
6274 #PLAIN:
6275 # driver = plaintext
6276 # server_set_id = $auth2
6277 # server_prompts = :
6278 # server_condition = Authentication is not yet configured
6279 # server_advertise_condition = ${if def:tls_in_cipher }
6280 .endd
6281 And the example LOGIN authenticator looks like this:
6282 .code
6283 #LOGIN:
6284 # driver = plaintext
6285 # server_set_id = $auth1
6286 # server_prompts = <| Username: | Password:
6287 # server_condition = Authentication is not yet configured
6288 # server_advertise_condition = ${if def:tls_in_cipher }
6289 .endd
6290
6291 The &%server_set_id%& option makes Exim remember the authenticated username
6292 in &$authenticated_id$&, which can be used later in ACLs or routers. The
6293 &%server_prompts%& option configures the &(plaintext)& authenticator so
6294 that it implements the details of the specific authentication mechanism,
6295 i.e. PLAIN or LOGIN. The &%server_advertise_condition%& setting controls
6296 when Exim offers authentication to clients; in the examples, this is only
6297 when TLS or SSL has been started, so to enable the authenticators you also
6298 need to add support for TLS as described in section &<<SECTdefconfmain>>&.
6299
6300 The &%server_condition%& setting defines how to verify that the username and
6301 password are correct. In the examples it just produces an error message.
6302 To make the authenticators work, you can use a string expansion
6303 expression like one of the examples in chapter &<<CHAPplaintext>>&.
6304
6305 Beware that the sequence of the parameters to PLAIN and LOGIN differ; the
6306 usercode and password are in different positions.
6307 Chapter &<<CHAPplaintext>>& covers both.
6308
6309 .ecindex IIDconfiwal
6310
6311
6312
6313 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
6314 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
6315
6316 .chapter "Regular expressions" "CHAPregexp"
6317
6318 .cindex "regular expressions" "library"
6319 .cindex "PCRE"
6320 Exim supports the use of regular expressions in many of its options. It
6321 uses the PCRE regular expression library; this provides regular expression
6322 matching that is compatible with Perl 5. The syntax and semantics of
6323 regular expressions is discussed in
6324 online Perl manpages, in
6325 many Perl reference books, and also in
6326 Jeffrey Friedl's &'Mastering Regular Expressions'&, which is published by
6327 O'Reilly (see &url(http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/regex2/)).
6328
6329 The documentation for the syntax and semantics of the regular expressions that
6330 are supported by PCRE is included in the PCRE distribution, and no further
6331 description is included here. The PCRE functions are called from Exim using
6332 the default option settings (that is, with no PCRE options set), except that
6333 the PCRE_CASELESS option is set when the matching is required to be
6334 case-insensitive.
6335
6336 In most cases, when a regular expression is required in an Exim configuration,
6337 it has to start with a circumflex, in order to distinguish it from plain text
6338 or an &"ends with"& wildcard. In this example of a configuration setting, the
6339 second item in the colon-separated list is a regular expression.
6340 .code
6341 domains = a.b.c : ^\\d{3} : *.y.z : ...
6342 .endd
6343 The doubling of the backslash is required because of string expansion that
6344 precedes interpretation &-- see section &<<SECTlittext>>& for more discussion
6345 of this issue, and a way of avoiding the need for doubling backslashes. The
6346 regular expression that is eventually used in this example contains just one
6347 backslash. The circumflex is included in the regular expression, and has the
6348 normal effect of &"anchoring"& it to the start of the string that is being
6349 matched.
6350
6351 There are, however, two cases where a circumflex is not required for the
6352 recognition of a regular expression: these are the &%match%& condition in a
6353 string expansion, and the &%matches%& condition in an Exim filter file. In
6354 these cases, the relevant string is always treated as a regular expression; if
6355 it does not start with a circumflex, the expression is not anchored, and can
6356 match anywhere in the subject string.
6357
6358 In all cases, if you want a regular expression to match at the end of a string,
6359 you must code the $ metacharacter to indicate this. For example:
6360 .code
6361 domains = ^\\d{3}\\.example
6362 .endd
6363 matches the domain &'123.example'&, but it also matches &'123.example.com'&.
6364 You need to use:
6365 .code
6366 domains = ^\\d{3}\\.example\$
6367 .endd
6368 if you want &'example'& to be the top-level domain. The backslash before the
6369 $ is needed because string expansion also interprets dollar characters.
6370
6371
6372
6373 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
6374 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
6375
6376 .chapter "File and database lookups" "CHAPfdlookup"
6377 .scindex IIDfidalo1 "file" "lookups"
6378 .scindex IIDfidalo2 "database" "lookups"
6379 .cindex "lookup" "description of"
6380 Exim can be configured to look up data in files or databases as it processes
6381 messages. Two different kinds of syntax are used:
6382
6383 .olist
6384 A string that is to be expanded may contain explicit lookup requests. These
6385 cause parts of the string to be replaced by data that is obtained from the
6386 lookup. Lookups of this type are conditional expansion items. Different results
6387 can be defined for the cases of lookup success and failure. See chapter
6388 &<<CHAPexpand>>&, where string expansions are described in detail.
6389 The key for the lookup is specified as part of the string expansion.
6390 .next
6391 Lists of domains, hosts, and email addresses can contain lookup requests as a
6392 way of avoiding excessively long linear lists. In this case, the data that is
6393 returned by the lookup is often (but not always) discarded; whether the lookup
6394 succeeds or fails is what really counts. These kinds of list are described in
6395 chapter &<<CHAPdomhosaddlists>>&.
6396 The key for the lookup is given by the context in which the list is expanded.
6397 .endlist
6398
6399 String expansions, lists, and lookups interact with each other in such a way
6400 that there is no order in which to describe any one of them that does not
6401 involve references to the others. Each of these three chapters makes more sense
6402 if you have read the other two first. If you are reading this for the first
6403 time, be aware that some of it will make a lot more sense after you have read
6404 chapters &<<CHAPdomhosaddlists>>& and &<<CHAPexpand>>&.
6405
6406 .section "Examples of different lookup syntax" "SECID60"
6407 It is easy to confuse the two different kinds of lookup, especially as the
6408 lists that may contain the second kind are always expanded before being
6409 processed as lists. Therefore, they may also contain lookups of the first kind.
6410 Be careful to distinguish between the following two examples:
6411 .code
6412 domains = ${lookup{$sender_host_address}lsearch{/some/file}}
6413 domains = lsearch;/some/file
6414 .endd
6415 The first uses a string expansion, the result of which must be a domain list.
6416 No strings have been specified for a successful or a failing lookup; the
6417 defaults in this case are the looked-up data and an empty string, respectively.
6418 The expansion takes place before the string is processed as a list, and the
6419 file that is searched could contain lines like this:
6420 .code
6421 192.168.3.4: domain1:domain2:...
6422 192.168.1.9: domain3:domain4:...
6423 .endd
6424 When the lookup succeeds, the result of the expansion is a list of domains (and
6425 possibly other types of item that are allowed in domain lists).
6426
6427 In the second example, the lookup is a single item in a domain list. It causes
6428 Exim to use a lookup to see if the domain that is being processed can be found
6429 in the file. The file could contains lines like this:
6430 .code
6431 domain1:
6432 domain2:
6433 .endd
6434 Any data that follows the keys is not relevant when checking that the domain
6435 matches the list item.
6436
6437 It is possible, though no doubt confusing, to use both kinds of lookup at once.
6438 Consider a file containing lines like this:
6439 .code
6440 192.168.5.6: lsearch;/another/file
6441 .endd
6442 If the value of &$sender_host_address$& is 192.168.5.6, expansion of the
6443 first &%domains%& setting above generates the second setting, which therefore
6444 causes a second lookup to occur.
6445
6446 The rest of this chapter describes the different lookup types that are
6447 available. Any of them can be used in any part of the configuration where a
6448 lookup is permitted.
6449
6450
6451 .section "Lookup types" "SECID61"
6452 .cindex "lookup" "types of"
6453 .cindex "single-key lookup" "definition of"
6454 Two different types of data lookup are implemented:
6455
6456 .ilist
6457 The &'single-key'& type requires the specification of a file in which to look,
6458 and a single key to search for. The key must be a non-empty string for the
6459 lookup to succeed. The lookup type determines how the file is searched.
6460 .next
6461 .cindex "query-style lookup" "definition of"
6462 The &'query-style'& type accepts a generalized database query. No particular
6463 key value is assumed by Exim for query-style lookups. You can use whichever
6464 Exim variables you need to construct the database query.
6465 .endlist
6466
6467 The code for each lookup type is in a separate source file that is included in
6468 the binary of Exim only if the corresponding compile-time option is set. The
6469 default settings in &_src/EDITME_& are:
6470 .code
6471 LOOKUP_DBM=yes
6472 LOOKUP_LSEARCH=yes
6473 .endd
6474 which means that only linear searching and DBM lookups are included by default.
6475 For some types of lookup (e.g. SQL databases), you need to install appropriate
6476 libraries and header files before building Exim.
6477
6478
6479
6480
6481 .section "Single-key lookup types" "SECTsinglekeylookups"
6482 .cindex "lookup" "single-key types"
6483 .cindex "single-key lookup" "list of types"
6484 The following single-key lookup types are implemented:
6485
6486 .ilist
6487 .cindex "cdb" "description of"
6488 .cindex "lookup" "cdb"
6489 .cindex "binary zero" "in lookup key"
6490 &(cdb)&: The given file is searched as a Constant DataBase file, using the key
6491 string without a terminating binary zero. The cdb format is designed for
6492 indexed files that are read frequently and never updated, except by total
6493 re-creation. As such, it is particularly suitable for large files containing
6494 aliases or other indexed data referenced by an MTA. Information about cdb can
6495 be found in several places:
6496 .display
6497 &url(http://www.pobox.com/~djb/cdb.html)
6498 &url(ftp://ftp.corpit.ru/pub/tinycdb/)
6499 &url(http://packages.debian.org/stable/utils/freecdb.html)
6500 .endd
6501 A cdb distribution is not needed in order to build Exim with cdb support,
6502 because the code for reading cdb files is included directly in Exim itself.
6503 However, no means of building or testing cdb files is provided with Exim, so
6504 you need to obtain a cdb distribution in order to do this.
6505 .next
6506 .cindex "DBM" "lookup type"
6507 .cindex "lookup" "dbm"
6508 .cindex "binary zero" "in lookup key"
6509 &(dbm)&: Calls to DBM library functions are used to extract data from the given
6510 DBM file by looking up the record with the given key. A terminating binary
6511 zero is included in the key that is passed to the DBM library. See section
6512 &<<SECTdb>>& for a discussion of DBM libraries.
6513
6514 .cindex "Berkeley DB library" "file format"
6515 For all versions of Berkeley DB, Exim uses the DB_HASH style of database
6516 when building DBM files using the &%exim_dbmbuild%& utility. However, when
6517 using Berkeley DB versions 3 or 4, it opens existing databases for reading with
6518 the DB_UNKNOWN option. This enables it to handle any of the types of database
6519 that the library supports, and can be useful for accessing DBM files created by
6520 other applications. (For earlier DB versions, DB_HASH is always used.)
6521 .next
6522 .cindex "lookup" "dbmjz"
6523 .cindex "lookup" "dbm &-- embedded NULs"
6524 .cindex "sasldb2"
6525 .cindex "dbmjz lookup type"
6526 &(dbmjz)&: This is the same as &(dbm)&, except that the lookup key is
6527 interpreted as an Exim list; the elements of the list are joined together with
6528 ASCII NUL characters to form the lookup key. An example usage would be to
6529 authenticate incoming SMTP calls using the passwords from Cyrus SASL's
6530 &_/etc/sasldb2_& file with the &(gsasl)& authenticator or Exim's own
6531 &(cram_md5)& authenticator.
6532 .next
6533 .cindex "lookup" "dbmnz"
6534 .cindex "lookup" "dbm &-- terminating zero"
6535 .cindex "binary zero" "in lookup key"
6536 .cindex "Courier"
6537 .cindex "&_/etc/userdbshadow.dat_&"
6538 .cindex "dbmnz lookup type"
6539 &(dbmnz)&: This is the same as &(dbm)&, except that a terminating binary zero
6540 is not included in the key that is passed to the DBM library. You may need this
6541 if you want to look up data in files that are created by or shared with some
6542 other application that does not use terminating zeros. For example, you need to
6543 use &(dbmnz)& rather than &(dbm)& if you want to authenticate incoming SMTP
6544 calls using the passwords from Courier's &_/etc/userdbshadow.dat_& file. Exim's
6545 utility program for creating DBM files (&'exim_dbmbuild'&) includes the zeros
6546 by default, but has an option to omit them (see section &<<SECTdbmbuild>>&).
6547 .next
6548 .cindex "lookup" "dsearch"
6549 .cindex "dsearch lookup type"
6550 &(dsearch)&: The given file must be a directory; this is searched for an entry
6551 whose name is the key by calling the &[lstat()]& function. The key may not
6552 contain any forward slash characters. If &[lstat()]& succeeds, the result of
6553 the lookup is the name of the entry, which may be a file, directory,
6554 symbolic link, or any other kind of directory entry. An example of how this
6555 lookup can be used to support virtual domains is given in section
6556 &<<SECTvirtualdomains>>&.
6557 .next
6558 .cindex "lookup" "iplsearch"
6559 .cindex "iplsearch lookup type"
6560 &(iplsearch)&: The given file is a text file containing keys and data. A key is
6561 terminated by a colon or white space or the end of the line. The keys in the
6562 file must be IP addresses, or IP addresses with CIDR masks. Keys that involve
6563 IPv6 addresses must be enclosed in quotes to prevent the first internal colon
6564 being interpreted as a key terminator. For example:
6565 .code
6566 1.2.3.4: data for 1.2.3.4
6567 192.168.0.0/16: data for 192.168.0.0/16
6568 "abcd::cdab": data for abcd::cdab
6569 "abcd:abcd::/32" data for abcd:abcd::/32
6570 .endd
6571 The key for an &(iplsearch)& lookup must be an IP address (without a mask). The
6572 file is searched linearly, using the CIDR masks where present, until a matching
6573 key is found. The first key that matches is used; there is no attempt to find a
6574 &"best"& match. Apart from the way the keys are matched, the processing for
6575 &(iplsearch)& is the same as for &(lsearch)&.
6576
6577 &*Warning 1*&: Unlike most other single-key lookup types, a file of data for
6578 &(iplsearch)& can &'not'& be turned into a DBM or cdb file, because those
6579 lookup types support only literal keys.
6580
6581 &*Warning 2*&: In a host list, you must always use &(net-iplsearch)& so that
6582 the implicit key is the host's IP address rather than its name (see section
6583 &<<SECThoslispatsikey>>&).
6584 .next
6585 .cindex "linear search"
6586 .cindex "lookup" "lsearch"
6587 .cindex "lsearch lookup type"
6588 .cindex "case sensitivity" "in lsearch lookup"
6589 &(lsearch)&: The given file is a text file that is searched linearly for a
6590 line beginning with the search key, terminated by a colon or white space or the
6591 end of the line. The search is case-insensitive; that is, upper and lower case
6592 letters are treated as the same. The first occurrence of the key that is found
6593 in the file is used.
6594
6595 White space between the key and the colon is permitted. The remainder of the
6596 line, with leading and trailing white space removed, is the data. This can be
6597 continued onto subsequent lines by starting them with any amount of white
6598 space, but only a single space character is included in the data at such a
6599 junction. If the data begins with a colon, the key must be terminated by a
6600 colon, for example:
6601 .code
6602 baduser: :fail:
6603 .endd
6604 Empty lines and lines beginning with # are ignored, even if they occur in the
6605 middle of an item. This is the traditional textual format of alias files. Note
6606 that the keys in an &(lsearch)& file are literal strings. There is no
6607 wildcarding of any kind.
6608
6609 .cindex "lookup" "lsearch &-- colons in keys"
6610 .cindex "white space" "in lsearch key"
6611 In most &(lsearch)& files, keys are not required to contain colons or #
6612 characters, or white space. However, if you need this feature, it is available.
6613 If a key begins with a doublequote character, it is terminated only by a
6614 matching quote (or end of line), and the normal escaping rules apply to its
6615 contents (see section &<<SECTstrings>>&). An optional colon is permitted after
6616 quoted keys (exactly as for unquoted keys). There is no special handling of
6617 quotes for the data part of an &(lsearch)& line.
6618
6619 .next
6620 .cindex "NIS lookup type"
6621 .cindex "lookup" "NIS"
6622 .cindex "binary zero" "in lookup key"
6623 &(nis)&: The given file is the name of a NIS map, and a NIS lookup is done with
6624 the given key, without a terminating binary zero. There is a variant called
6625 &(nis0)& which does include the terminating binary zero in the key. This is
6626 reportedly needed for Sun-style alias files. Exim does not recognize NIS
6627 aliases; the full map names must be used.
6628
6629 .next
6630 .cindex "wildlsearch lookup type"
6631 .cindex "lookup" "wildlsearch"
6632 .cindex "nwildlsearch lookup type"
6633 .cindex "lookup" "nwildlsearch"
6634 &(wildlsearch)& or &(nwildlsearch)&: These search a file linearly, like
6635 &(lsearch)&, but instead of being interpreted as a literal string, each key in
6636 the file may be wildcarded. The difference between these two lookup types is
6637 that for &(wildlsearch)&, each key in the file is string-expanded before being
6638 used, whereas for &(nwildlsearch)&, no expansion takes place.
6639
6640 .cindex "case sensitivity" "in (n)wildlsearch lookup"
6641 Like &(lsearch)&, the testing is done case-insensitively. However, keys in the
6642 file that are regular expressions can be made case-sensitive by the use of
6643 &`(-i)`& within the pattern. The following forms of wildcard are recognized:
6644
6645 . ==== As this is a nested list, any displays it contains must be indented
6646 . ==== as otherwise they are too far to the left.
6647
6648 .olist
6649 The string may begin with an asterisk to mean &"ends with"&. For example:
6650 .code
6651 *.a.b.c data for anything.a.b.c
6652 *fish data for anythingfish
6653 .endd
6654 .next
6655 The string may begin with a circumflex to indicate a regular expression. For
6656 example, for &(wildlsearch)&:
6657 .code
6658 ^\N\d+\.a\.b\N data for <digits>.a.b
6659 .endd
6660 Note the use of &`\N`& to disable expansion of the contents of the regular
6661 expression. If you are using &(nwildlsearch)&, where the keys are not
6662 string-expanded, the equivalent entry is:
6663 .code
6664 ^\d+\.a\.b data for <digits>.a.b
6665 .endd
6666 The case-insensitive flag is set at the start of compiling the regular
6667 expression, but it can be turned off by using &`(-i)`& at an appropriate point.
6668 For example, to make the entire pattern case-sensitive:
6669 .code
6670 ^(?-i)\d+\.a\.b data for <digits>.a.b
6671 .endd
6672
6673 If the regular expression contains white space or colon characters, you must
6674 either quote it (see &(lsearch)& above), or represent these characters in other
6675 ways. For example, &`\s`& can be used for white space and &`\x3A`& for a
6676 colon. This may be easier than quoting, because if you quote, you have to
6677 escape all the backslashes inside the quotes.
6678
6679 &*Note*&: It is not possible to capture substrings in a regular expression
6680 match for later use, because the results of all lookups are cached. If a lookup
6681 is repeated, the result is taken from the cache, and no actual pattern matching
6682 takes place. The values of all the numeric variables are unset after a
6683 &((n)wildlsearch)& match.
6684
6685 .next
6686 Although I cannot see it being of much use, the general matching function that
6687 is used to implement &((n)wildlsearch)& means that the string may begin with a
6688 lookup name terminated by a semicolon, and followed by lookup data. For
6689 example:
6690 .code
6691 cdb;/some/file data for keys that match the file
6692 .endd
6693 The data that is obtained from the nested lookup is discarded.
6694 .endlist olist
6695
6696 Keys that do not match any of these patterns are interpreted literally. The
6697 continuation rules for the data are the same as for &(lsearch)&, and keys may
6698 be followed by optional colons.
6699
6700 &*Warning*&: Unlike most other single-key lookup types, a file of data for
6701 &((n)wildlsearch)& can &'not'& be turned into a DBM or cdb file, because those
6702 lookup types support only literal keys.
6703 .endlist ilist
6704
6705
6706 .section "Query-style lookup types" "SECTquerystylelookups"
6707 .cindex "lookup" "query-style types"
6708 .cindex "query-style lookup" "list of types"
6709 The supported query-style lookup types are listed below. Further details about
6710 many of them are given in later sections.
6711
6712 .ilist
6713 .cindex "DNS" "as a lookup type"
6714 .cindex "lookup" "DNS"
6715 &(dnsdb)&: This does a DNS search for one or more records whose domain names
6716 are given in the supplied query. The resulting data is the contents of the
6717 records. See section &<<SECTdnsdb>>&.
6718 .next
6719 .cindex "InterBase lookup type"
6720 .cindex "lookup" "InterBase"
6721 &(ibase)&: This does a lookup in an InterBase database.
6722 .next
6723 .cindex "LDAP" "lookup type"
6724 .cindex "lookup" "LDAP"
6725 &(ldap)&: This does an LDAP lookup using a query in the form of a URL, and
6726 returns attributes from a single entry. There is a variant called &(ldapm)&
6727 that permits values from multiple entries to be returned. A third variant
6728 called &(ldapdn)& returns the Distinguished Name of a single entry instead of
6729 any attribute values. See section &<<SECTldap>>&.
6730 .next
6731 .cindex "MySQL" "lookup type"
6732 .cindex "lookup" "MySQL"
6733 &(mysql)&: The format of the query is an SQL statement that is passed to a
6734 MySQL database. See section &<<SECTsql>>&.
6735 .next
6736 .cindex "NIS+ lookup type"
6737 .cindex "lookup" "NIS+"
6738 &(nisplus)&: This does a NIS+ lookup using a query that can specify the name of
6739 the field to be returned. See section &<<SECTnisplus>>&.
6740 .next
6741 .cindex "Oracle" "lookup type"
6742 .cindex "lookup" "Oracle"
6743 &(oracle)&: The format of the query is an SQL statement that is passed to an
6744 Oracle database. See section &<<SECTsql>>&.
6745 .next
6746 .cindex "lookup" "passwd"
6747 .cindex "passwd lookup type"
6748 .cindex "&_/etc/passwd_&"
6749 &(passwd)& is a query-style lookup with queries that are just user names. The
6750 lookup calls &[getpwnam()]& to interrogate the system password data, and on
6751 success, the result string is the same as you would get from an &(lsearch)&
6752 lookup on a traditional &_/etc/passwd file_&, though with &`*`& for the
6753 password value. For example:
6754 .code
6755 *:42:42:King Rat:/home/kr:/bin/bash
6756 .endd
6757 .next
6758 .cindex "PostgreSQL lookup type"
6759 .cindex "lookup" "PostgreSQL"
6760 &(pgsql)&: The format of the query is an SQL statement that is passed to a
6761 PostgreSQL database. See section &<<SECTsql>>&.
6762
6763 .next
6764 .cindex "Redis lookup type"
6765 .cindex lookup Redis
6766 &(redis)&: The format of the query is either a simple get or simple set,
6767 passed to a Redis database. See section &<<SECTsql>>&.
6768
6769 .next
6770 .cindex "sqlite lookup type"
6771 .cindex "lookup" "sqlite"
6772 &(sqlite)&: The format of the query is a file name followed by an SQL statement
6773 that is passed to an SQLite database. See section &<<SECTsqlite>>&.
6774
6775 .next
6776 &(testdb)&: This is a lookup type that is used for testing Exim. It is
6777 not likely to be useful in normal operation.
6778 .next
6779 .cindex "whoson lookup type"
6780 .cindex "lookup" "whoson"
6781 &(whoson)&: &'Whoson'& (&url(http://whoson.sourceforge.net)) is a protocol that
6782 allows a server to check whether a particular (dynamically allocated) IP
6783 address is currently allocated to a known (trusted) user and, optionally, to
6784 obtain the identity of the said user. For SMTP servers, &'Whoson'& was popular
6785 at one time for &"POP before SMTP"& authentication, but that approach has been
6786 superseded by SMTP authentication. In Exim, &'Whoson'& can be used to implement
6787 &"POP before SMTP"& checking using ACL statements such as
6788 .code
6789 require condition = \
6790 ${lookup whoson {$sender_host_address}{yes}{no}}
6791 .endd
6792 The query consists of a single IP address. The value returned is the name of
6793 the authenticated user, which is stored in the variable &$value$&. However, in
6794 this example, the data in &$value$& is not used; the result of the lookup is
6795 one of the fixed strings &"yes"& or &"no"&.
6796 .endlist
6797
6798
6799
6800 .section "Temporary errors in lookups" "SECID63"
6801 .cindex "lookup" "temporary error in"
6802 Lookup functions can return temporary error codes if the lookup cannot be
6803 completed. For example, an SQL or LDAP database might be unavailable. For this
6804 reason, it is not advisable to use a lookup that might do this for critical
6805 options such as a list of local domains.
6806
6807 When a lookup cannot be completed in a router or transport, delivery
6808 of the message (to the relevant address) is deferred, as for any other
6809 temporary error. In other circumstances Exim may assume the lookup has failed,
6810 or may give up altogether.
6811
6812
6813
6814 .section "Default values in single-key lookups" "SECTdefaultvaluelookups"
6815 .cindex "wildcard lookups"
6816 .cindex "lookup" "default values"
6817 .cindex "lookup" "wildcard"
6818 .cindex "lookup" "* added to type"
6819 .cindex "default" "in single-key lookups"
6820 In this context, a &"default value"& is a value specified by the administrator
6821 that is to be used if a lookup fails.
6822
6823 &*Note:*& This section applies only to single-key lookups. For query-style
6824 lookups, the facilities of the query language must be used. An attempt to
6825 specify a default for a query-style lookup provokes an error.
6826
6827 If &"*"& is added to a single-key lookup type (for example, &%lsearch*%&)
6828 and the initial lookup fails, the key &"*"& is looked up in the file to
6829 provide a default value. See also the section on partial matching below.
6830
6831 .cindex "*@ with single-key lookup"
6832 .cindex "lookup" "*@ added to type"
6833 .cindex "alias file" "per-domain default"
6834 Alternatively, if &"*@"& is added to a single-key lookup type (for example
6835 &%dbm*@%&) then, if the initial lookup fails and the key contains an @
6836 character, a second lookup is done with everything before the last @ replaced
6837 by *. This makes it possible to provide per-domain defaults in alias files
6838 that include the domains in the keys. If the second lookup fails (or doesn't
6839 take place because there is no @ in the key), &"*"& is looked up.
6840 For example, a &(redirect)& router might contain:
6841 .code
6842 data = ${lookup{$local_part@$domain}lsearch*@{/etc/mix-aliases}}
6843 .endd
6844 Suppose the address that is being processed is &'jane@eyre.example'&. Exim
6845 looks up these keys, in this order:
6846 .code
6847 jane@eyre.example
6848 *@eyre.example
6849 *
6850 .endd
6851 The data is taken from whichever key it finds first. &*Note*&: In an
6852 &(lsearch)& file, this does not mean the first of these keys in the file. A
6853 complete scan is done for each key, and only if it is not found at all does
6854 Exim move on to try the next key.
6855
6856
6857
6858 .section "Partial matching in single-key lookups" "SECTpartiallookup"
6859 .cindex "partial matching"
6860 .cindex "wildcard lookups"
6861 .cindex "lookup" "partial matching"
6862 .cindex "lookup" "wildcard"
6863 .cindex "asterisk" "in search type"
6864 The normal operation of a single-key lookup is to search the file for an exact
6865 match with the given key. However, in a number of situations where domains are
6866 being looked up, it is useful to be able to do partial matching. In this case,
6867 information in the file that has a key starting with &"*."& is matched by any
6868 domain that ends with the components that follow the full stop. For example, if
6869 a key in a DBM file is
6870 .code
6871 *.dates.fict.example
6872 .endd
6873 then when partial matching is enabled this is matched by (amongst others)
6874 &'2001.dates.fict.example'& and &'1984.dates.fict.example'&. It is also matched
6875 by &'dates.fict.example'&, if that does not appear as a separate key in the
6876 file.
6877
6878 &*Note*&: Partial matching is not available for query-style lookups. It is
6879 also not available for any lookup items in address lists (see section
6880 &<<SECTaddresslist>>&).
6881
6882 Partial matching is implemented by doing a series of separate lookups using
6883 keys constructed by modifying the original subject key. This means that it can
6884 be used with any of the single-key lookup types, provided that
6885 partial matching keys
6886 beginning with a special prefix (default &"*."&) are included in the data file.
6887 Keys in the file that do not begin with the prefix are matched only by
6888 unmodified subject keys when partial matching is in use.
6889
6890 Partial matching is requested by adding the string &"partial-"& to the front of
6891 the name of a single-key lookup type, for example, &%partial-dbm%&. When this
6892 is done, the subject key is first looked up unmodified; if that fails, &"*."&
6893 is added at the start of the subject key, and it is looked up again. If that
6894 fails, further lookups are tried with dot-separated components removed from the
6895 start of the subject key, one-by-one, and &"*."& added on the front of what
6896 remains.
6897
6898 A minimum number of two non-* components are required. This can be adjusted
6899 by including a number before the hyphen in the search type. For example,
6900 &%partial3-lsearch%& specifies a minimum of three non-* components in the
6901 modified keys. Omitting the number is equivalent to &"partial2-"&. If the
6902 subject key is &'2250.dates.fict.example'& then the following keys are looked
6903 up when the minimum number of non-* components is two:
6904 .code
6905 2250.dates.fict.example
6906 *.2250.dates.fict.example
6907 *.dates.fict.example
6908 *.fict.example
6909 .endd
6910 As soon as one key in the sequence is successfully looked up, the lookup
6911 finishes.
6912
6913 .cindex "lookup" "partial matching &-- changing prefix"
6914 .cindex "prefix" "for partial matching"
6915 The use of &"*."& as the partial matching prefix is a default that can be
6916 changed. The motivation for this feature is to allow Exim to operate with file
6917 formats that are used by other MTAs. A different prefix can be supplied in
6918 parentheses instead of the hyphen after &"partial"&. For example:
6919 .code
6920 domains = partial(.)lsearch;/some/file
6921 .endd
6922 In this example, if the domain is &'a.b.c'&, the sequence of lookups is
6923 &`a.b.c`&, &`.a.b.c`&, and &`.b.c`& (the default minimum of 2 non-wild
6924 components is unchanged). The prefix may consist of any punctuation characters
6925 other than a closing parenthesis. It may be empty, for example:
6926 .code
6927 domains = partial1()cdb;/some/file
6928 .endd
6929 For this example, if the domain is &'a.b.c'&, the sequence of lookups is
6930 &`a.b.c`&, &`b.c`&, and &`c`&.
6931
6932 If &"partial0"& is specified, what happens at the end (when the lookup with
6933 just one non-wild component has failed, and the original key is shortened right
6934 down to the null string) depends on the prefix:
6935
6936 .ilist
6937 If the prefix has zero length, the whole lookup fails.
6938 .next
6939 If the prefix has length 1, a lookup for just the prefix is done. For
6940 example, the final lookup for &"partial0(.)"& is for &`.`& alone.
6941 .next
6942 Otherwise, if the prefix ends in a dot, the dot is removed, and the
6943 remainder is looked up. With the default prefix, therefore, the final lookup is
6944 for &"*"& on its own.
6945 .next
6946 Otherwise, the whole prefix is looked up.
6947 .endlist
6948
6949
6950 If the search type ends in &"*"& or &"*@"& (see section
6951 &<<SECTdefaultvaluelookups>>& above), the search for an ultimate default that
6952 this implies happens after all partial lookups have failed. If &"partial0"& is
6953 specified, adding &"*"& to the search type has no effect with the default
6954 prefix, because the &"*"& key is already included in the sequence of partial
6955 lookups. However, there might be a use for lookup types such as
6956 &"partial0(.)lsearch*"&.
6957
6958 The use of &"*"& in lookup partial matching differs from its use as a wildcard
6959 in domain lists and the like. Partial matching works only in terms of
6960 dot-separated components; a key such as &`*fict.example`&
6961 in a database file is useless, because the asterisk in a partial matching
6962 subject key is always followed by a dot.
6963
6964
6965
6966
6967 .section "Lookup caching" "SECID64"
6968 .cindex "lookup" "caching"
6969 .cindex "caching" "lookup data"
6970 Exim caches all lookup results in order to avoid needless repetition of
6971 lookups. However, because (apart from the daemon) Exim operates as a collection
6972 of independent, short-lived processes, this caching applies only within a
6973 single Exim process. There is no inter-process lookup caching facility.
6974
6975 For single-key lookups, Exim keeps the relevant files open in case there is
6976 another lookup that needs them. In some types of configuration this can lead to
6977 many files being kept open for messages with many recipients. To avoid hitting
6978 the operating system limit on the number of simultaneously open files, Exim
6979 closes the least recently used file when it needs to open more files than its
6980 own internal limit, which can be changed via the &%lookup_open_max%& option.
6981
6982 The single-key lookup files are closed and the lookup caches are flushed at
6983 strategic points during delivery &-- for example, after all routing is
6984 complete.
6985
6986
6987
6988
6989 .section "Quoting lookup data" "SECID65"
6990 .cindex "lookup" "quoting"
6991 .cindex "quoting" "in lookups"
6992 When data from an incoming message is included in a query-style lookup, there
6993 is the possibility of special characters in the data messing up the syntax of
6994 the query. For example, a NIS+ query that contains
6995 .code
6996 [name=$local_part]
6997 .endd
6998 will be broken if the local part happens to contain a closing square bracket.
6999 For NIS+, data can be enclosed in double quotes like this:
7000 .code
7001 [name="$local_part"]
7002 .endd
7003 but this still leaves the problem of a double quote in the data. The rule for
7004 NIS+ is that double quotes must be doubled. Other lookup types have different
7005 rules, and to cope with the differing requirements, an expansion operator
7006 of the following form is provided:
7007 .code
7008 ${quote_<lookup-type>:<string>}
7009 .endd
7010 For example, the safest way to write the NIS+ query is
7011 .code
7012 [name="${quote_nisplus:$local_part}"]
7013 .endd
7014 See chapter &<<CHAPexpand>>& for full coverage of string expansions. The quote
7015 operator can be used for all lookup types, but has no effect for single-key
7016 lookups, since no quoting is ever needed in their key strings.
7017
7018
7019
7020
7021 .section "More about dnsdb" "SECTdnsdb"
7022 .cindex "dnsdb lookup"
7023 .cindex "lookup" "dnsdb"
7024 .cindex "DNS" "as a lookup type"
7025 The &(dnsdb)& lookup type uses the DNS as its database. A simple query consists
7026 of a record type and a domain name, separated by an equals sign. For example,
7027 an expansion string could contain:
7028 .code
7029 ${lookup dnsdb{mx=a.b.example}{$value}fail}
7030 .endd
7031 If the lookup succeeds, the result is placed in &$value$&, which in this case
7032 is used on its own as the result. If the lookup does not succeed, the
7033 &`fail`& keyword causes a &'forced expansion failure'& &-- see section
7034 &<<SECTforexpfai>>& for an explanation of what this means.
7035
7036 The supported DNS record types are A, CNAME, MX, NS, PTR, SOA, SPF, SRV, TLSA
7037 and TXT, and, when Exim is compiled with IPv6 support, AAAA.
7038 If no type is given, TXT is assumed.
7039
7040 For any record type, if multiple records are found, the data is returned as a
7041 concatenation, with newline as the default separator. The order, of course,
7042 depends on the DNS resolver. You can specify a different separator character
7043 between multiple records by putting a right angle-bracket followed immediately
7044 by the new separator at the start of the query. For example:
7045 .code
7046 ${lookup dnsdb{>: a=host1.example}}
7047 .endd
7048 It is permitted to specify a space as the separator character. Further
7049 white space is ignored.
7050 For lookup types that return multiple fields per record,
7051 an alternate field separator can be specified using a comma after the main
7052 separator character, followed immediately by the field separator.
7053
7054 .cindex "PTR record" "in &(dnsdb)& lookup"
7055 When the type is PTR,
7056 the data can be an IP address, written as normal; inversion and the addition of
7057 &%in-addr.arpa%& or &%ip6.arpa%& happens automatically. For example:
7058 .code
7059 ${lookup dnsdb{ptr=192.168.4.5}{$value}fail}
7060 .endd
7061 If the data for a PTR record is not a syntactically valid IP address, it is not
7062 altered and nothing is added.
7063
7064 .cindex "MX record" "in &(dnsdb)& lookup"
7065 .cindex "SRV record" "in &(dnsdb)& lookup"
7066 For an MX lookup, both the preference value and the host name are returned for
7067 each record, separated by a space. For an SRV lookup, the priority, weight,
7068 port, and host name are returned for each record, separated by spaces.
7069 The field separator can be modified as above.
7070
7071 .cindex "TXT record" "in &(dnsdb)& lookup"
7072 .cindex "SPF record" "in &(dnsdb)& lookup"
7073 For TXT records with multiple items of data, only the first item is returned,
7074 unless a field separator is specified.
7075 To concatenate items without a separator, use a semicolon instead.
7076 For SPF records the
7077 default behaviour is to concatenate multiple items without using a separator.
7078 .code
7079 ${lookup dnsdb{>\n,: txt=a.b.example}}
7080 ${lookup dnsdb{>\n; txt=a.b.example}}
7081 ${lookup dnsdb{spf=example.org}}
7082 .endd
7083 It is permitted to specify a space as the separator character. Further
7084 white space is ignored.
7085
7086 .cindex "SOA record" "in &(dnsdb)& lookup"
7087 For an SOA lookup, while no result is obtained the lookup is redone with
7088 successively more leading components dropped from the given domain.
7089 Only the primary-nameserver field is returned unless a field separator is
7090 specified.
7091 .code
7092 ${lookup dnsdb{>:,; soa=a.b.example.com}}
7093 .endd
7094
7095 .section "Dnsdb lookup modifiers" "SECTdnsdb_mod"
7096 .cindex "dnsdb modifiers"
7097 .cindex "modifiers" "dnsdb"
7098 .cindex "options" "dnsdb"
7099 Modifiers for &(dnsdb)& lookups are given by optional keywords,
7100 each followed by a comma,
7101 that may appear before the record type.
7102
7103 The &(dnsdb)& lookup fails only if all the DNS lookups fail. If there is a
7104 temporary DNS error for any of them, the behaviour is controlled by
7105 a defer-option modifier.
7106 The possible keywords are
7107 &"defer_strict"&, &"defer_never"&, and &"defer_lax"&.
7108 With &"strict"& behaviour, any temporary DNS error causes the
7109 whole lookup to defer. With &"never"& behaviour, a temporary DNS error is
7110 ignored, and the behaviour is as if the DNS lookup failed to find anything.
7111 With &"lax"& behaviour, all the queries are attempted, but a temporary DNS
7112 error causes the whole lookup to defer only if none of the other lookups
7113 succeed. The default is &"lax"&, so the following lookups are equivalent:
7114 .code
7115 ${lookup dnsdb{defer_lax,a=one.host.com:two.host.com}}
7116 ${lookup dnsdb{a=one.host.com:two.host.com}}
7117 .endd
7118 Thus, in the default case, as long as at least one of the DNS lookups
7119 yields some data, the lookup succeeds.
7120
7121 .cindex "DNSSEC" "dns lookup"
7122 Use of &(DNSSEC)& is controlled by a dnssec modifier.
7123 The possible keywords are
7124 &"dnssec_strict"&, &"dnssec_lax"&, and &"dnssec_never"&.
7125 With &"strict"& or &"lax"& DNSSEC information is requested
7126 with the lookup.
7127 With &"strict"& a response from the DNS resolver that
7128 is not labelled as authenticated data
7129 is treated as equivalent to a temporary DNS error.
7130 The default is &"never"&.
7131
7132 See also the &$lookup_dnssec_authenticated$& variable.
7133
7134 .cindex timeout "dns lookup"
7135 .cindex "DNS" timeout
7136 Timeout for the dnsdb lookup can be controlled by a retrans modifier.
7137 The form is &"retrans_VAL"& where VAL is an Exim time specification
7138 (e.g. &"5s"&).
7139 The default value is set by the main configuration option &%dns_retrans%&.
7140
7141 Retries for the dnsdb lookup can be controlled by a retry modifier.
7142 The form if &"retry_VAL"& where VAL is an integer.
7143 The default count is set by the main configuration option &%dns_retry%&.
7144
7145 .cindex caching "of dns lookup"
7146 .cindex TTL "of dns lookup"
7147 .cindex DNS TTL
7148 Dnsdb lookup results are cached within a single process (and its children).
7149 The cache entry lifetime is limited to the smallest time-to-live (TTL)
7150 value of the set of returned DNS records.
7151
7152
7153 .section "Pseudo dnsdb record types" "SECID66"
7154 .cindex "MX record" "in &(dnsdb)& lookup"
7155 By default, both the preference value and the host name are returned for
7156 each MX record, separated by a space. If you want only host names, you can use
7157 the pseudo-type MXH:
7158 .code
7159 ${lookup dnsdb{mxh=a.b.example}}
7160 .endd
7161 In this case, the preference values are omitted, and just the host names are
7162 returned.
7163
7164 .cindex "name server for enclosing domain"
7165 Another pseudo-type is ZNS (for &"zone NS"&). It performs a lookup for NS
7166 records on the given domain, but if none are found, it removes the first
7167 component of the domain name, and tries again. This process continues until NS
7168 records are found or there are no more components left (or there is a DNS
7169 error). In other words, it may return the name servers for a top-level domain,
7170 but it never returns the root name servers. If there are no NS records for the
7171 top-level domain, the lookup fails. Consider these examples:
7172 .code
7173 ${lookup dnsdb{zns=xxx.quercite.com}}
7174 ${lookup dnsdb{zns=xxx.edu}}
7175 .endd
7176 Assuming that in each case there are no NS records for the full domain name,
7177 the first returns the name servers for &%quercite.com%&, and the second returns
7178 the name servers for &%edu%&.
7179
7180 You should be careful about how you use this lookup because, unless the
7181 top-level domain does not exist, the lookup always returns some host names. The
7182 sort of use to which this might be put is for seeing if the name servers for a
7183 given domain are on a blacklist. You can probably assume that the name servers
7184 for the high-level domains such as &%com%& or &%co.uk%& are not going to be on
7185 such a list.
7186
7187 .cindex "CSA" "in &(dnsdb)& lookup"
7188 A third pseudo-type is CSA (Client SMTP Authorization). This looks up SRV
7189 records according to the CSA rules, which are described in section
7190 &<<SECTverifyCSA>>&. Although &(dnsdb)& supports SRV lookups directly, this is
7191 not sufficient because of the extra parent domain search behaviour of CSA. The
7192 result of a successful lookup such as:
7193 .code
7194 ${lookup dnsdb {csa=$sender_helo_name}}
7195 .endd
7196 has two space-separated fields: an authorization code and a target host name.
7197 The authorization code can be &"Y"& for yes, &"N"& for no, &"X"& for explicit
7198 authorization required but absent, or &"?"& for unknown.
7199
7200 .cindex "A+" "in &(dnsdb)& lookup"
7201 The pseudo-type A+ performs an AAAA
7202 and then an A lookup. All results are returned; defer processing
7203 (see below) is handled separately for each lookup. Example:
7204 .code
7205 ${lookup dnsdb {>; a+=$sender_helo_name}}
7206 .endd
7207
7208
7209 .section "Multiple dnsdb lookups" "SECID67"
7210 In the previous sections, &(dnsdb)& lookups for a single domain are described.
7211 However, you can specify a list of domains or IP addresses in a single
7212 &(dnsdb)& lookup. The list is specified in the normal Exim way, with colon as
7213 the default separator, but with the ability to change this. For example:
7214 .code
7215 ${lookup dnsdb{one.domain.com:two.domain.com}}
7216 ${lookup dnsdb{a=one.host.com:two.host.com}}
7217 ${lookup dnsdb{ptr = <; 1.2.3.4 ; 4.5.6.8}}
7218 .endd
7219 In order to retain backwards compatibility, there is one special case: if
7220 the lookup type is PTR and no change of separator is specified, Exim looks
7221 to see if the rest of the string is precisely one IPv6 address. In this
7222 case, it does not treat it as a list.
7223
7224 The data from each lookup is concatenated, with newline separators by default,
7225 in the same way that multiple DNS records for a single item are handled. A
7226 different separator can be specified, as described above.
7227
7228
7229
7230
7231 .section "More about LDAP" "SECTldap"
7232 .cindex "LDAP" "lookup, more about"
7233 .cindex "lookup" "LDAP"
7234 .cindex "Solaris" "LDAP"
7235 The original LDAP implementation came from the University of Michigan; this has
7236 become &"Open LDAP"&, and there are now two different releases. Another
7237 implementation comes from Netscape, and Solaris 7 and subsequent releases
7238 contain inbuilt LDAP support. Unfortunately, though these are all compatible at
7239 the lookup function level, their error handling is different. For this reason
7240 it is necessary to set a compile-time variable when building Exim with LDAP, to
7241 indicate which LDAP library is in use. One of the following should appear in
7242 your &_Local/Makefile_&:
7243 .code
7244 LDAP_LIB_TYPE=UMICHIGAN
7245 LDAP_LIB_TYPE=OPENLDAP1
7246 LDAP_LIB_TYPE=OPENLDAP2
7247 LDAP_LIB_TYPE=NETSCAPE
7248 LDAP_LIB_TYPE=SOLARIS
7249 .endd
7250 If LDAP_LIB_TYPE is not set, Exim assumes &`OPENLDAP1`&, which has the
7251 same interface as the University of Michigan version.
7252
7253 There are three LDAP lookup types in Exim. These behave slightly differently in
7254 the way they handle the results of a query:
7255
7256 .ilist
7257 &(ldap)& requires the result to contain just one entry; if there are more, it
7258 gives an error.
7259 .next
7260 &(ldapdn)& also requires the result to contain just one entry, but it is the
7261 Distinguished Name that is returned rather than any attribute values.
7262 .next
7263 &(ldapm)& permits the result to contain more than one entry; the attributes
7264 from all of them are returned.
7265 .endlist
7266
7267
7268 For &(ldap)& and &(ldapm)&, if a query finds only entries with no attributes,
7269 Exim behaves as if the entry did not exist, and the lookup fails. The format of
7270 the data returned by a successful lookup is described in the next section.
7271 First we explain how LDAP queries are coded.
7272
7273
7274 .section "Format of LDAP queries" "SECTforldaque"
7275 .cindex "LDAP" "query format"
7276 An LDAP query takes the form of a URL as defined in RFC 2255. For example, in
7277 the configuration of a &(redirect)& router one might have this setting:
7278 .code
7279 data = ${lookup ldap \
7280 {ldap:///cn=$local_part,o=University%20of%20Cambridge,\
7281 c=UK?mailbox?base?}}
7282 .endd
7283 .cindex "LDAP" "with TLS"
7284 The URL may begin with &`ldap`& or &`ldaps`& if your LDAP library supports
7285 secure (encrypted) LDAP connections. The second of these ensures that an
7286 encrypted TLS connection is used.
7287
7288 With sufficiently modern LDAP libraries, Exim supports forcing TLS over regular
7289 LDAP connections, rather than the SSL-on-connect &`ldaps`&.
7290 See the &%ldap_start_tls%& option.
7291
7292 Starting with Exim 4.83, the initialization of LDAP with TLS is more tightly
7293 controlled. Every part of the TLS configuration can be configured by settings in
7294 &_exim.conf_&. Depending on the version of the client libraries installed on
7295 your system, some of the initialization may have required setting options in
7296 &_/etc/ldap.conf_& or &_~/.ldaprc_& to get TLS working with self-signed
7297 certificates. This revealed a nuance where the current UID that exim was
7298 running as could affect which config files it read. With Exim 4.83, these
7299 methods become optional, only taking effect if not specifically set in
7300 &_exim.conf_&.
7301
7302
7303 .section "LDAP quoting" "SECID68"
7304 .cindex "LDAP" "quoting"
7305 Two levels of quoting are required in LDAP queries, the first for LDAP itself
7306 and the second because the LDAP query is represented as a URL. Furthermore,
7307 within an LDAP query, two different kinds of quoting are required. For this
7308 reason, there are two different LDAP-specific quoting operators.
7309
7310 The &%quote_ldap%& operator is designed for use on strings that are part of
7311 filter specifications. Conceptually, it first does the following conversions on
7312 the string:
7313 .code
7314 * => \2A
7315 ( => \28
7316 ) => \29
7317 \ => \5C
7318 .endd
7319 in accordance with RFC 2254. The resulting string is then quoted according
7320 to the rules for URLs, that is, all non-alphanumeric characters except
7321 .code
7322 ! $ ' - . _ ( ) * +
7323 .endd
7324 are converted to their hex values, preceded by a percent sign. For example:
7325 .code
7326 ${quote_ldap: a(bc)*, a<yz>; }
7327 .endd
7328 yields
7329 .code
7330 %20a%5C28bc%5C29%5C2A%2C%20a%3Cyz%3E%3B%20
7331 .endd
7332 Removing the URL quoting, this is (with a leading and a trailing space):
7333 .code
7334 a\28bc\29\2A, a<yz>;
7335 .endd
7336 The &%quote_ldap_dn%& operator is designed for use on strings that are part of
7337 base DN specifications in queries. Conceptually, it first converts the string
7338 by inserting a backslash in front of any of the following characters:
7339 .code
7340 , + " \ < > ;
7341 .endd
7342 It also inserts a backslash before any leading spaces or # characters, and
7343 before any trailing spaces. (These rules are in RFC 2253.) The resulting string
7344 is then quoted according to the rules for URLs. For example:
7345 .code
7346 ${quote_ldap_dn: a(bc)*, a<yz>; }
7347 .endd
7348 yields
7349 .code
7350 %5C%20a(bc)*%5C%2C%20a%5C%3Cyz%5C%3E%5C%3B%5C%20
7351 .endd
7352 Removing the URL quoting, this is (with a trailing space):
7353 .code
7354 \ a(bc)*\, a\<yz\>\;\
7355 .endd
7356 There are some further comments about quoting in the section on LDAP
7357 authentication below.
7358
7359
7360 .section "LDAP connections" "SECID69"
7361 .cindex "LDAP" "connections"
7362 The connection to an LDAP server may either be over TCP/IP, or, when OpenLDAP
7363 is in use, via a Unix domain socket. The example given above does not specify
7364 an LDAP server. A server that is reached by TCP/IP can be specified in a query
7365 by starting it with
7366 .code
7367 ldap://<hostname>:<port>/...
7368 .endd
7369 If the port (and preceding colon) are omitted, the standard LDAP port (389) is
7370 used. When no server is specified in a query, a list of default servers is
7371 taken from the &%ldap_default_servers%& configuration option. This supplies a
7372 colon-separated list of servers which are tried in turn until one successfully
7373 handles a query, or there is a serious error. Successful handling either
7374 returns the requested data, or indicates that it does not exist. Serious errors
7375 are syntactical, or multiple values when only a single value is expected.
7376 Errors which cause the next server to be tried are connection failures, bind
7377 failures, and timeouts.
7378
7379 For each server name in the list, a port number can be given. The standard way
7380 of specifying a host and port is to use a colon separator (RFC 1738). Because
7381 &%ldap_default_servers%& is a colon-separated list, such colons have to be
7382 doubled. For example
7383 .code
7384 ldap_default_servers = ldap1.example.com::145:ldap2.example.com
7385 .endd
7386 If &%ldap_default_servers%& is unset, a URL with no server name is passed
7387 to the LDAP library with no server name, and the library's default (normally
7388 the local host) is used.
7389
7390 If you are using the OpenLDAP library, you can connect to an LDAP server using
7391 a Unix domain socket instead of a TCP/IP connection. This is specified by using
7392 &`ldapi`& instead of &`ldap`& in LDAP queries. What follows here applies only
7393 to OpenLDAP. If Exim is compiled with a different LDAP library, this feature is
7394 not available.
7395
7396 For this type of connection, instead of a host name for the server, a pathname
7397 for the socket is required, and the port number is not relevant. The pathname
7398 can be specified either as an item in &%ldap_default_servers%&, or inline in
7399 the query. In the former case, you can have settings such as
7400 .code
7401 ldap_default_servers = /tmp/ldap.sock : backup.ldap.your.domain
7402 .endd
7403 When the pathname is given in the query, you have to escape the slashes as
7404 &`%2F`& to fit in with the LDAP URL syntax. For example:
7405 .code
7406 ${lookup ldap {ldapi://%2Ftmp%2Fldap.sock/o=...
7407 .endd
7408 When Exim processes an LDAP lookup and finds that the &"hostname"& is really
7409 a pathname, it uses the Unix domain socket code, even if the query actually
7410 specifies &`ldap`& or &`ldaps`&. In particular, no encryption is used for a
7411 socket connection. This behaviour means that you can use a setting of
7412 &%ldap_default_servers%& such as in the example above with traditional &`ldap`&
7413 or &`ldaps`& queries, and it will work. First, Exim tries a connection via
7414 the Unix domain socket; if that fails, it tries a TCP/IP connection to the
7415 backup host.
7416
7417 If an explicit &`ldapi`& type is given in a query when a host name is
7418 specified, an error is diagnosed. However, if there are more items in
7419 &%ldap_default_servers%&, they are tried. In other words:
7420
7421 .ilist
7422 Using a pathname with &`ldap`& or &`ldaps`& forces the use of the Unix domain
7423 interface.
7424 .next
7425 Using &`ldapi`& with a host name causes an error.
7426 .endlist
7427
7428
7429 Using &`ldapi`& with no host or path in the query, and no setting of
7430 &%ldap_default_servers%&, does whatever the library does by default.
7431
7432
7433
7434 .section "LDAP authentication and control information" "SECID70"
7435 .cindex "LDAP" "authentication"
7436 The LDAP URL syntax provides no way of passing authentication and other control
7437 information to the server. To make this possible, the URL in an LDAP query may
7438 be preceded by any number of <&'name'&>=<&'value'&> settings, separated by
7439 spaces. If a value contains spaces it must be enclosed in double quotes, and
7440 when double quotes are used, backslash is interpreted in the usual way inside
7441 them. The following names are recognized:
7442 .display
7443 &`DEREFERENCE`& set the dereferencing parameter
7444 &`NETTIME `& set a timeout for a network operation
7445 &`USER `& set the DN, for authenticating the LDAP bind
7446 &`PASS `& set the password, likewise
7447 &`REFERRALS `& set the referrals parameter
7448 &`SERVERS `& set alternate server list for this query only
7449 &`SIZE `& set the limit for the number of entries returned
7450 &`TIME `& set the maximum waiting time for a query
7451 .endd
7452 The value of the DEREFERENCE parameter must be one of the words &"never"&,
7453 &"searching"&, &"finding"&, or &"always"&. The value of the REFERRALS parameter
7454 must be &"follow"& (the default) or &"nofollow"&. The latter stops the LDAP
7455 library from trying to follow referrals issued by the LDAP server.
7456
7457 .cindex LDAP timeout
7458 .cindex timeout "LDAP lookup"
7459 The name CONNECT is an obsolete name for NETTIME, retained for
7460 backwards compatibility. This timeout (specified as a number of seconds) is
7461 enforced from the client end for operations that can be carried out over a
7462 network. Specifically, it applies to network connections and calls to the
7463 &'ldap_result()'& function. If the value is greater than zero, it is used if
7464 LDAP_OPT_NETWORK_TIMEOUT is defined in the LDAP headers (OpenLDAP), or
7465 if LDAP_X_OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT is defined in the LDAP headers (Netscape
7466 SDK 4.1). A value of zero forces an explicit setting of &"no timeout"& for
7467 Netscape SDK; for OpenLDAP no action is taken.
7468
7469 The TIME parameter (also a number of seconds) is passed to the server to
7470 set a server-side limit on the time taken to complete a search.
7471
7472 The SERVERS parameter allows you to specify an alternate list of ldap servers
7473 to use for an individual lookup. The global &%ldap_default_servers%& option provides a
7474 default list of ldap servers, and a single lookup can specify a single ldap
7475 server to use. But when you need to do a lookup with a list of servers that is
7476 different than the default list (maybe different order, maybe a completely
7477 different set of servers), the SERVERS parameter allows you to specify this
7478 alternate list (colon-separated).
7479
7480 Here is an example of an LDAP query in an Exim lookup that uses some of these
7481 values. This is a single line, folded to fit on the page:
7482 .code
7483 ${lookup ldap
7484 {user="cn=manager,o=University of Cambridge,c=UK" pass=secret
7485 ldap:///o=University%20of%20Cambridge,c=UK?sn?sub?(cn=foo)}
7486 {$value}fail}
7487 .endd
7488 The encoding of spaces as &`%20`& is a URL thing which should not be done for
7489 any of the auxiliary data. Exim configuration settings that include lookups
7490 which contain password information should be preceded by &"hide"& to prevent
7491 non-admin users from using the &%-bP%& option to see their values.
7492
7493 The auxiliary data items may be given in any order. The default is no
7494 connection timeout (the system timeout is used), no user or password, no limit
7495 on the number of entries returned, and no time limit on queries.
7496
7497 When a DN is quoted in the USER= setting for LDAP authentication, Exim
7498 removes any URL quoting that it may contain before passing it LDAP. Apparently
7499 some libraries do this for themselves, but some do not. Removing the URL
7500 quoting has two advantages:
7501
7502 .ilist
7503 It makes it possible to use the same &%quote_ldap_dn%& expansion for USER=
7504 DNs as with DNs inside actual queries.
7505 .next
7506 It permits spaces inside USER= DNs.
7507 .endlist
7508
7509 For example, a setting such as
7510 .code
7511 USER=cn=${quote_ldap_dn:$1}
7512 .endd
7513 should work even if &$1$& contains spaces.
7514
7515 Expanded data for the PASS= value should be quoted using the &%quote%&
7516 expansion operator, rather than the LDAP quote operators. The only reason this
7517 field needs quoting is to ensure that it conforms to the Exim syntax, which
7518 does not allow unquoted spaces. For example:
7519 .code
7520 PASS=${quote:$3}
7521 .endd
7522 The LDAP authentication mechanism can be used to check passwords as part of
7523 SMTP authentication. See the &%ldapauth%& expansion string condition in chapter
7524 &<<CHAPexpand>>&.
7525
7526
7527
7528 .section "Format of data returned by LDAP" "SECID71"
7529 .cindex "LDAP" "returned data formats"
7530 The &(ldapdn)& lookup type returns the Distinguished Name from a single entry
7531 as a sequence of values, for example
7532 .code
7533 cn=manager,o=University of Cambridge,c=UK
7534 .endd
7535 The &(ldap)& lookup type generates an error if more than one entry matches the
7536 search filter, whereas &(ldapm)& permits this case, and inserts a newline in
7537 the result between the data from different entries. It is possible for multiple
7538 values to be returned for both &(ldap)& and &(ldapm)&, but in the former case
7539 you know that whatever values are returned all came from a single entry in the
7540 directory.
7541
7542 In the common case where you specify a single attribute in your LDAP query, the
7543 result is not quoted, and does not contain the attribute name. If the attribute
7544 has multiple values, they are separated by commas. Any comma that is
7545 part of an attribute's value is doubled.
7546
7547 If you specify multiple attributes, the result contains space-separated, quoted
7548 strings, each preceded by the attribute name and an equals sign. Within the
7549 quotes, the quote character, backslash, and newline are escaped with
7550 backslashes, and commas are used to separate multiple values for the attribute.
7551 Any commas in attribute values are doubled
7552 (permitting treatment of the values as a comma-separated list).
7553 Apart from the escaping, the string within quotes takes the same form as the
7554 output when a single attribute is requested. Specifying no attributes is the
7555 same as specifying all of an entry's attributes.
7556
7557 Here are some examples of the output format. The first line of each pair is an
7558 LDAP query, and the second is the data that is returned. The attribute called
7559 &%attr1%& has two values, one of them with an embedded comma, whereas
7560 &%attr2%& has only one value. Both attributes are derived from &%attr%&
7561 (they have SUP &%attr%& in their schema definitions).
7562
7563 .code
7564 ldap:///o=base?attr1?sub?(uid=fred)
7565 value1.1,value1,,2
7566
7567 ldap:///o=base?attr2?sub?(uid=fred)
7568 value two
7569
7570 ldap:///o=base?attr?sub?(uid=fred)
7571 value1.1,value1,,2,value two
7572
7573 ldap:///o=base?attr1,attr2?sub?(uid=fred)
7574 attr1="value1.1,value1,,2" attr2="value two"
7575
7576 ldap:///o=base??sub?(uid=fred)
7577 objectClass="top" attr1="value1.1,value1,,2" attr2="value two"
7578 .endd
7579 You can
7580 make use of Exim's &%-be%& option to run expansion tests and thereby check the
7581 results of LDAP lookups.
7582 The &%extract%& operator in string expansions can be used to pick out
7583 individual fields from data that consists of &'key'&=&'value'& pairs.
7584 The &%listextract%& operator should be used to pick out individual values
7585 of attributes, even when only a single value is expected.
7586 The doubling of embedded commas allows you to use the returned data as a
7587 comma separated list (using the "<," syntax for changing the input list separator).
7588
7589
7590
7591
7592 .section "More about NIS+" "SECTnisplus"
7593 .cindex "NIS+ lookup type"
7594 .cindex "lookup" "NIS+"
7595 NIS+ queries consist of a NIS+ &'indexed name'& followed by an optional colon
7596 and field name. If this is given, the result of a successful query is the
7597 contents of the named field; otherwise the result consists of a concatenation
7598 of &'field-name=field-value'& pairs, separated by spaces. Empty values and
7599 values containing spaces are quoted. For example, the query
7600 .code
7601 [name=mg1456],passwd.org_dir
7602 .endd
7603 might return the string
7604 .code
7605 name=mg1456 passwd="" uid=999 gid=999 gcos="Martin Guerre"
7606 home=/home/mg1456 shell=/bin/bash shadow=""
7607 .endd
7608 (split over two lines here to fit on the page), whereas
7609 .code
7610 [name=mg1456],passwd.org_dir:gcos
7611 .endd
7612 would just return
7613 .code
7614 Martin Guerre
7615 .endd
7616 with no quotes. A NIS+ lookup fails if NIS+ returns more than one table entry
7617 for the given indexed key. The effect of the &%quote_nisplus%& expansion
7618 operator is to double any quote characters within the text.
7619
7620
7621
7622 .section "SQL lookups" "SECTsql"
7623 .cindex "SQL lookup types"
7624 .cindex "MySQL" "lookup type"
7625 .cindex "PostgreSQL lookup type"
7626 .cindex "lookup" "MySQL"
7627 .cindex "lookup" "PostgreSQL"
7628 .cindex "Oracle" "lookup type"
7629 .cindex "lookup" "Oracle"
7630 .cindex "InterBase lookup type"
7631 .cindex "lookup" "InterBase"
7632 .cindex "Redis lookup type"
7633 .cindex lookup Redis
7634 Exim can support lookups in InterBase, MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL, Redis,
7635 and SQLite
7636 databases. Queries for these databases contain SQL statements, so an example
7637 might be
7638 .code
7639 ${lookup mysql{select mailbox from users where id='userx'}\
7640 {$value}fail}
7641 .endd
7642 If the result of the query contains more than one field, the data for each
7643 field in the row is returned, preceded by its name, so the result of
7644 .code
7645 ${lookup pgsql{select home,name from users where id='userx'}\
7646 {$value}}
7647 .endd
7648 might be
7649 .code
7650 home=/home/userx name="Mister X"
7651 .endd
7652 Empty values and values containing spaces are double quoted, with embedded
7653 quotes escaped by a backslash. If the result of the query contains just one
7654 field, the value is passed back verbatim, without a field name, for example:
7655 .code
7656 Mister X
7657 .endd
7658 If the result of the query yields more than one row, it is all concatenated,
7659 with a newline between the data for each row.
7660
7661
7662 .section "More about MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle, InterBase, and Redis" "SECID72"
7663 .cindex "MySQL" "lookup type"
7664 .cindex "PostgreSQL lookup type"
7665 .cindex "lookup" "MySQL"
7666 .cindex "lookup" "PostgreSQL"
7667 .cindex "Oracle" "lookup type"
7668 .cindex "lookup" "Oracle"
7669 .cindex "InterBase lookup type"
7670 .cindex "lookup" "InterBase"
7671 .cindex "Redis lookup type"
7672 .cindex lookup Redis
7673 If any MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle, InterBase or Redis lookups are used, the
7674 &%mysql_servers%&, &%pgsql_servers%&, &%oracle_servers%&, &%ibase_servers%&,
7675 or &%redis_servers%&
7676 option (as appropriate) must be set to a colon-separated list of server
7677 information.
7678 (For MySQL and PostgreSQL, the global option need not be set if all
7679 queries contain their own server information &-- see section
7680 &<<SECTspeserque>>&.)
7681 For all but Redis
7682 each item in the list is a slash-separated list of four
7683 items: host name, database name, user name, and password. In the case of
7684 Oracle, the host name field is used for the &"service name"&, and the database
7685 name field is not used and should be empty. For example:
7686 .code
7687 hide oracle_servers = oracle.plc.example//userx/abcdwxyz
7688 .endd
7689 Because password data is sensitive, you should always precede the setting with
7690 &"hide"&, to prevent non-admin users from obtaining the setting via the &%-bP%&
7691 option. Here is an example where two MySQL servers are listed:
7692 .code
7693 hide mysql_servers = localhost/users/root/secret:\
7694 otherhost/users/root/othersecret
7695 .endd
7696 For MySQL and PostgreSQL, a host may be specified as <&'name'&>:<&'port'&> but
7697 because this is a colon-separated list, the colon has to be doubled. For each
7698 query, these parameter groups are tried in order until a connection is made and
7699 a query is successfully processed. The result of a query may be that no data is
7700 found, but that is still a successful query. In other words, the list of
7701 servers provides a backup facility, not a list of different places to look.
7702
7703 For Redis the global option need not be specified if all queries contain their
7704 own server information &-- see section &<<SECTspeserque>>&.
7705 If specified, the option must be set to a colon-separated list of server
7706 information.
7707 Each item in the list is a slash-separated list of three items:
7708 host, database number, and password.
7709 .olist
7710 The host is required and may be either an IPv4 address and optional
7711 port number (separated by a colon, which needs doubling due to the
7712 higher-level list), or a Unix socket pathname enclosed in parentheses
7713 .next
7714 The database number is optional; if present that number is selected in the backend
7715 .next
7716 The password is optional; if present it is used to authenticate to the backend
7717 .endlist
7718
7719 The &%quote_mysql%&, &%quote_pgsql%&, and &%quote_oracle%& expansion operators
7720 convert newline, tab, carriage return, and backspace to \n, \t, \r, and \b
7721 respectively, and the characters single-quote, double-quote, and backslash
7722 itself are escaped with backslashes.
7723
7724 The &%quote_redis%& expansion operator
7725 escapes whitespace and backslash characters with a backslash.
7726
7727 .section "Specifying the server in the query" "SECTspeserque"
7728 For MySQL, PostgreSQL and Redis lookups (but not currently for Oracle and InterBase),
7729 it is possible to specify a list of servers with an individual query. This is
7730 done by starting the query with
7731 .display
7732 &`servers=`&&'server1:server2:server3:...'&&`;`&
7733 .endd
7734 Each item in the list may take one of two forms:
7735 .olist
7736 If it contains no slashes it is assumed to be just a host name. The appropriate
7737 global option (&%mysql_servers%& or &%pgsql_servers%&) is searched for a host
7738 of the same name, and the remaining parameters (database, user, password) are
7739 taken from there.
7740 .next
7741 If it contains any slashes, it is taken as a complete parameter set.
7742 .endlist
7743 The list of servers is used in exactly the same way as the global list.
7744 Once a connection to a server has happened and a query has been
7745 successfully executed, processing of the lookup ceases.
7746
7747 This feature is intended for use in master/slave situations where updates
7748 are occurring and you want to update the master rather than a slave. If the
7749 master is in the list as a backup for reading, you might have a global setting
7750 like this:
7751 .code
7752 mysql_servers = slave1/db/name/pw:\
7753 slave2/db/name/pw:\
7754 master/db/name/pw
7755 .endd
7756 In an updating lookup, you could then write:
7757 .code
7758 ${lookup mysql{servers=master; UPDATE ...} }
7759 .endd
7760 That query would then be sent only to the master server. If, on the other hand,
7761 the master is not to be used for reading, and so is not present in the global
7762 option, you can still update it by a query of this form:
7763 .code
7764 ${lookup pgsql{servers=master/db/name/pw; UPDATE ...} }
7765 .endd
7766
7767
7768 .section "Special MySQL features" "SECID73"
7769 For MySQL, an empty host name or the use of &"localhost"& in &%mysql_servers%&
7770 causes a connection to the server on the local host by means of a Unix domain
7771 socket. An alternate socket can be specified in parentheses.
7772 An option group name for MySQL option files can be specified in square brackets;
7773 the default value is &"exim"&.
7774 The full syntax of each item in &%mysql_servers%& is:
7775 .display
7776 <&'hostname'&>::<&'port'&>(<&'socket name'&>)[<&'option group'&>]/&&&
7777 <&'database'&>/<&'user'&>/<&'password'&>
7778 .endd
7779 Any of the four sub-parts of the first field can be omitted. For normal use on
7780 the local host it can be left blank or set to just &"localhost"&.
7781
7782 No database need be supplied &-- but if it is absent here, it must be given in
7783 the queries.
7784
7785 If a MySQL query is issued that does not request any data (an insert, update,
7786 or delete command), the result of the lookup is the number of rows affected.
7787
7788 &*Warning*&: This can be misleading. If an update does not actually change
7789 anything (for example, setting a field to the value it already has), the result
7790 is zero because no rows are affected.
7791
7792
7793 .section "Special PostgreSQL features" "SECID74"
7794 PostgreSQL lookups can also use Unix domain socket connections to the database.
7795 This is usually faster and costs less CPU time than a TCP/IP connection.
7796 However it can be used only if the mail server runs on the same machine as the
7797 database server. A configuration line for PostgreSQL via Unix domain sockets
7798 looks like this:
7799 .code
7800 hide pgsql_servers = (/tmp/.s.PGSQL.5432)/db/user/password : ...
7801 .endd
7802 In other words, instead of supplying a host name, a path to the socket is
7803 given. The path name is enclosed in parentheses so that its slashes aren't
7804 visually confused with the delimiters for the other server parameters.
7805
7806 If a PostgreSQL query is issued that does not request any data (an insert,
7807 update, or delete command), the result of the lookup is the number of rows
7808 affected.
7809
7810 .section "More about SQLite" "SECTsqlite"
7811 .cindex "lookup" "SQLite"
7812 .cindex "sqlite lookup type"
7813 SQLite is different to the other SQL lookups because a file name is required in
7814 addition to the SQL query. An SQLite database is a single file, and there is no
7815 daemon as in the other SQL databases. The interface to Exim requires the name
7816 of the file, as an absolute path, to be given at the start of the query. It is
7817 separated from the query by white space. This means that the path name cannot
7818 contain white space. Here is a lookup expansion example:
7819 .code
7820 ${lookup sqlite {/some/thing/sqlitedb \
7821 select name from aliases where id='userx';}}
7822 .endd
7823 In a list, the syntax is similar. For example:
7824 .code
7825 domainlist relay_to_domains = sqlite;/some/thing/sqlitedb \
7826 select * from relays where ip='$sender_host_address';
7827 .endd
7828 The only character affected by the &%quote_sqlite%& operator is a single
7829 quote, which it doubles.
7830
7831 .cindex timeout SQLite
7832 .cindex sqlite "lookup timeout"
7833 The SQLite library handles multiple simultaneous accesses to the database
7834 internally. Multiple readers are permitted, but only one process can
7835 update at once. Attempts to access the database while it is being updated
7836 are rejected after a timeout period, during which the SQLite library
7837 waits for the lock to be released. In Exim, the default timeout is set
7838 to 5 seconds, but it can be changed by means of the &%sqlite_lock_timeout%&
7839 option.
7840
7841 .section "More about Redis" "SECTredis"
7842 .cindex "lookup" "Redis"
7843 .cindex "redis lookup type"
7844 Redis is a non-SQL database. Commands are simple get and set.
7845 Examples:
7846 .code
7847 ${lookup redis{set keyname ${quote_redis:objvalue plus}}}
7848 ${lookup redis{get keyname}}
7849 .endd
7850
7851 As of release 4.91, "lightweight" support for Redis Cluster is available.
7852 Requires &%redis_servers%& list to contain all the servers in the cluster, all
7853 of which must be reachable from the running exim instance. If the cluster has
7854 master/slave replication, the list must contain all the master and slave
7855 servers.
7856
7857 When the Redis Cluster returns a "MOVED" response to a query, Exim does not
7858 immediately follow the redirection but treats the response as a DEFER, moving on
7859 to the next server in the &%redis_servers%& list until the correct server is
7860 reached.
7861
7862 .ecindex IIDfidalo1
7863 .ecindex IIDfidalo2
7864
7865
7866 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
7867 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
7868
7869 .chapter "Domain, host, address, and local part lists" &&&
7870 "CHAPdomhosaddlists" &&&
7871 "Domain, host, and address lists"
7872 .scindex IIDdohoadli "lists of domains; hosts; etc."
7873 A number of Exim configuration options contain lists of domains, hosts,
7874 email addresses, or local parts. For example, the &%hold_domains%& option
7875 contains a list of domains whose delivery is currently suspended. These lists
7876 are also used as data in ACL statements (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&), and as
7877 arguments to expansion conditions such as &%match_domain%&.
7878
7879 Each item in one of these lists is a pattern to be matched against a domain,
7880 host, email address, or local part, respectively. In the sections below, the
7881 different types of pattern for each case are described, but first we cover some
7882 general facilities that apply to all four kinds of list.
7883
7884 Note that other parts of Exim use a &'string list'& which does not
7885 support all the complexity available in
7886 domain, host, address and local part lists.
7887
7888
7889
7890 .section "Expansion of lists" "SECTlistexpand"
7891 .cindex "expansion" "of lists"
7892 Each list is expanded as a single string before it is used.
7893
7894 &'Exception: the router headers_remove option, where list-item
7895 splitting is done before string-expansion.'&
7896
7897 The result of
7898 expansion must be a list, possibly containing empty items, which is split up
7899 into separate items for matching. By default, colon is the separator character,
7900 but this can be varied if necessary. See sections &<<SECTlistconstruct>>& and
7901 &<<SECTempitelis>>& for details of the list syntax; the second of these
7902 discusses the way to specify empty list items.
7903
7904
7905 If the string expansion is forced to fail, Exim behaves as if the item it is
7906 testing (domain, host, address, or local part) is not in the list. Other
7907 expansion failures cause temporary errors.
7908
7909 If an item in a list is a regular expression, backslashes, dollars and possibly
7910 other special characters in the expression must be protected against
7911 misinterpretation by the string expander. The easiest way to do this is to use
7912 the &`\N`& expansion feature to indicate that the contents of the regular
7913 expression should not be expanded. For example, in an ACL you might have:
7914 .code
7915 deny senders = \N^\d{8}\w@.*\.baddomain\.example$\N : \
7916 ${lookup{$domain}lsearch{/badsenders/bydomain}}
7917 .endd
7918 The first item is a regular expression that is protected from expansion by
7919 &`\N`&, whereas the second uses the expansion to obtain a list of unwanted
7920 senders based on the receiving domain.
7921
7922
7923
7924
7925 .section "Negated items in lists" "SECID76"
7926 .cindex "list" "negation"
7927 .cindex "negation" "in lists"
7928 Items in a list may be positive or negative. Negative items are indicated by a
7929 leading exclamation mark, which may be followed by optional white space. A list
7930 defines a set of items (domains, etc). When Exim processes one of these lists,
7931 it is trying to find out whether a domain, host, address, or local part
7932 (respectively) is in the set that is defined by the list. It works like this:
7933
7934 The list is scanned from left to right. If a positive item is matched, the
7935 subject that is being checked is in the set; if a negative item is matched, the
7936 subject is not in the set. If the end of the list is reached without the
7937 subject having matched any of the patterns, it is in the set if the last item
7938 was a negative one, but not if it was a positive one. For example, the list in
7939 .code
7940 domainlist relay_to_domains = !a.b.c : *.b.c
7941 .endd
7942 matches any domain ending in &'.b.c'& except for &'a.b.c'&. Domains that match
7943 neither &'a.b.c'& nor &'*.b.c'& do not match, because the last item in the
7944 list is positive. However, if the setting were
7945 .code
7946 domainlist relay_to_domains = !a.b.c
7947 .endd
7948 then all domains other than &'a.b.c'& would match because the last item in the
7949 list is negative. In other words, a list that ends with a negative item behaves
7950 as if it had an extra item &`:*`& on the end.
7951
7952 Another way of thinking about positive and negative items in lists is to read
7953 the connector as &"or"& after a positive item and as &"and"& after a negative
7954 item.
7955
7956
7957
7958 .section "File names in lists" "SECTfilnamlis"
7959 .cindex "list" "file name in"
7960 If an item in a domain, host, address, or local part list is an absolute file
7961 name (beginning with a slash character), each line of the file is read and
7962 processed as if it were an independent item in the list, except that further
7963 file names are not allowed,
7964 and no expansion of the data from the file takes place.
7965 Empty lines in the file are ignored, and the file may also contain comment
7966 lines:
7967
7968 .ilist
7969 For domain and host lists, if a # character appears anywhere in a line of the
7970 file, it and all following characters are ignored.
7971 .next
7972 Because local parts may legitimately contain # characters, a comment in an
7973 address list or local part list file is recognized only if # is preceded by
7974 white space or the start of the line. For example:
7975 .code
7976 not#comment@x.y.z # but this is a comment
7977 .endd
7978 .endlist
7979
7980 Putting a file name in a list has the same effect as inserting each line of the
7981 file as an item in the list (blank lines and comments excepted). However, there
7982 is one important difference: the file is read each time the list is processed,
7983 so if its contents vary over time, Exim's behaviour changes.
7984
7985 If a file name is preceded by an exclamation mark, the sense of any match
7986 within the file is inverted. For example, if
7987 .code
7988 hold_domains = !/etc/nohold-domains
7989 .endd
7990 and the file contains the lines
7991 .code
7992 !a.b.c
7993 *.b.c
7994 .endd
7995 then &'a.b.c'& is in the set of domains defined by &%hold_domains%&, whereas
7996 any domain matching &`*.b.c`& is not.
7997
7998
7999
8000 .section "An lsearch file is not an out-of-line list" "SECID77"
8001 As will be described in the sections that follow, lookups can be used in lists
8002 to provide indexed methods of checking list membership. There has been some
8003 confusion about the way &(lsearch)& lookups work in lists. Because
8004 an &(lsearch)& file contains plain text and is scanned sequentially, it is
8005 sometimes thought that it is allowed to contain wild cards and other kinds of
8006 non-constant pattern. This is not the case. The keys in an &(lsearch)& file are
8007 always fixed strings, just as for any other single-key lookup type.
8008
8009 If you want to use a file to contain wild-card patterns that form part of a
8010 list, just give the file name on its own, without a search type, as described
8011 in the previous section. You could also use the &(wildlsearch)& or
8012 &(nwildlsearch)&, but there is no advantage in doing this.
8013
8014
8015
8016
8017 .section "Named lists" "SECTnamedlists"
8018 .cindex "named lists"
8019 .cindex "list" "named"
8020 A list of domains, hosts, email addresses, or local parts can be given a name
8021 which is then used to refer to the list elsewhere in the configuration. This is
8022 particularly convenient if the same list is required in several different
8023 places. It also allows lists to be given meaningful names, which can improve
8024 the readability of the configuration. For example, it is conventional to define
8025 a domain list called &'local_domains'& for all the domains that are handled
8026 locally on a host, using a configuration line such as
8027 .code
8028 domainlist local_domains = localhost:my.dom.example
8029 .endd
8030 Named lists are referenced by giving their name preceded by a plus sign, so,
8031 for example, a router that is intended to handle local domains would be
8032 configured with the line
8033 .code
8034 domains = +local_domains
8035 .endd
8036 The first router in a configuration is often one that handles all domains
8037 except the local ones, using a configuration with a negated item like this:
8038 .code
8039 dnslookup:
8040 driver = dnslookup
8041 domains = ! +local_domains
8042 transport = remote_smtp
8043 no_more
8044 .endd
8045 The four kinds of named list are created by configuration lines starting with
8046 the words &%domainlist%&, &%hostlist%&, &%addresslist%&, or &%localpartlist%&,
8047 respectively. Then there follows the name that you are defining, followed by an
8048 equals sign and the list itself. For example:
8049 .code
8050 hostlist relay_from_hosts = 192.168.23.0/24 : my.friend.example
8051 addresslist bad_senders = cdb;/etc/badsenders
8052 .endd
8053 A named list may refer to other named lists:
8054 .code
8055 domainlist dom1 = first.example : second.example
8056 domainlist dom2 = +dom1 : third.example
8057 domainlist dom3 = fourth.example : +dom2 : fifth.example
8058 .endd
8059 &*Warning*&: If the last item in a referenced list is a negative one, the
8060 effect may not be what you intended, because the negation does not propagate
8061 out to the higher level. For example, consider:
8062 .code
8063 domainlist dom1 = !a.b
8064 domainlist dom2 = +dom1 : *.b
8065 .endd
8066 The second list specifies &"either in the &%dom1%& list or &'*.b'&"&. The first
8067 list specifies just &"not &'a.b'&"&, so the domain &'x.y'& matches it. That
8068 means it matches the second list as well. The effect is not the same as
8069 .code
8070 domainlist dom2 = !a.b : *.b
8071 .endd
8072 where &'x.y'& does not match. It's best to avoid negation altogether in
8073 referenced lists if you can.
8074
8075 Named lists may have a performance advantage. When Exim is routing an
8076 address or checking an incoming message, it caches the result of tests on named
8077 lists. So, if you have a setting such as
8078 .code
8079 domains = +local_domains
8080 .endd
8081 on several of your routers
8082 or in several ACL statements,
8083 the actual test is done only for the first one. However, the caching works only
8084 if there are no expansions within the list itself or any sublists that it
8085 references. In other words, caching happens only for lists that are known to be
8086 the same each time they are referenced.
8087
8088 By default, there may be up to 16 named lists of each type. This limit can be
8089 extended by changing a compile-time variable. The use of domain and host lists
8090 is recommended for concepts such as local domains, relay domains, and relay
8091 hosts. The default configuration is set up like this.
8092
8093
8094
8095 .section "Named lists compared with macros" "SECID78"
8096 .cindex "list" "named compared with macro"
8097 .cindex "macro" "compared with named list"
8098 At first sight, named lists might seem to be no different from macros in the
8099 configuration file. However, macros are just textual substitutions. If you
8100 write
8101 .code
8102 ALIST = host1 : host2
8103 auth_advertise_hosts = !ALIST
8104 .endd
8105 it probably won't do what you want, because that is exactly the same as
8106 .code
8107 auth_advertise_hosts = !host1 : host2
8108 .endd
8109 Notice that the second host name is not negated. However, if you use a host
8110 list, and write
8111 .code
8112 hostlist alist = host1 : host2
8113 auth_advertise_hosts = ! +alist
8114 .endd
8115 the negation applies to the whole list, and so that is equivalent to
8116 .code
8117 auth_advertise_hosts = !host1 : !host2
8118 .endd
8119
8120
8121 .section "Named list caching" "SECID79"
8122 .cindex "list" "caching of named"
8123 .cindex "caching" "named lists"
8124 While processing a message, Exim caches the result of checking a named list if
8125 it is sure that the list is the same each time. In practice, this means that
8126 the cache operates only if the list contains no $ characters, which guarantees
8127 that it will not change when it is expanded. Sometimes, however, you may have
8128 an expanded list that you know will be the same each time within a given
8129 message. For example:
8130 .code
8131 domainlist special_domains = \
8132 ${lookup{$sender_host_address}cdb{/some/file}}
8133 .endd
8134 This provides a list of domains that depends only on the sending host's IP
8135 address. If this domain list is referenced a number of times (for example,
8136 in several ACL lines, or in several routers) the result of the check is not
8137 cached by default, because Exim does not know that it is going to be the
8138 same list each time.
8139
8140 By appending &`_cache`& to &`domainlist`& you can tell Exim to go ahead and
8141 cache the result anyway. For example:
8142 .code
8143 domainlist_cache special_domains = ${lookup{...
8144 .endd
8145 If you do this, you should be absolutely sure that caching is going to do
8146 the right thing in all cases. When in doubt, leave it out.
8147
8148
8149
8150 .section "Domain lists" "SECTdomainlist"
8151 .cindex "domain list" "patterns for"
8152 .cindex "list" "domain list"
8153 Domain lists contain patterns that are to be matched against a mail domain.
8154 The following types of item may appear in domain lists:
8155
8156 .ilist
8157 .cindex "primary host name"
8158 .cindex "host name" "matched in domain list"
8159 .oindex "&%primary_hostname%&"
8160 .cindex "domain list" "matching primary host name"
8161 .cindex "@ in a domain list"
8162 If a pattern consists of a single @ character, it matches the local host name,
8163 as set by the &%primary_hostname%& option (or defaulted). This makes it
8164 possible to use the same configuration file on several different hosts that
8165 differ only in their names.
8166 .next
8167 .cindex "@[] in a domain list"
8168 .cindex "domain list" "matching local IP interfaces"
8169 .cindex "domain literal"
8170 If a pattern consists of the string &`@[]`& it matches an IP address enclosed
8171 in square brackets (as in an email address that contains a domain literal), but
8172 only if that IP address is recognized as local for email routing purposes. The
8173 &%local_interfaces%& and &%extra_local_interfaces%& options can be used to
8174 control which of a host's several IP addresses are treated as local.
8175 In today's Internet, the use of domain literals is controversial.
8176 .next
8177 .cindex "@mx_any"
8178 .cindex "@mx_primary"
8179 .cindex "@mx_secondary"
8180 .cindex "domain list" "matching MX pointers to local host"
8181 If a pattern consists of the string &`@mx_any`& it matches any domain that
8182 has an MX record pointing to the local host or to any host that is listed in
8183 .oindex "&%hosts_treat_as_local%&"
8184 &%hosts_treat_as_local%&. The items &`@mx_primary`& and &`@mx_secondary`&
8185 are similar, except that the first matches only when a primary MX target is the
8186 local host, and the second only when no primary MX target is the local host,
8187 but a secondary MX target is. &"Primary"& means an MX record with the lowest
8188 preference value &-- there may of course be more than one of them.
8189
8190 The MX lookup that takes place when matching a pattern of this type is
8191 performed with the resolver options for widening names turned off. Thus, for
8192 example, a single-component domain will &'not'& be expanded by adding the
8193 resolver's default domain. See the &%qualify_single%& and &%search_parents%&
8194 options of the &(dnslookup)& router for a discussion of domain widening.
8195
8196 Sometimes you may want to ignore certain IP addresses when using one of these
8197 patterns. You can specify this by following the pattern with &`/ignore=`&<&'ip
8198 list'&>, where <&'ip list'&> is a list of IP addresses. These addresses are
8199 ignored when processing the pattern (compare the &%ignore_target_hosts%& option
8200 on a router). For example:
8201 .code
8202 domains = @mx_any/ignore=127.0.0.1
8203 .endd
8204 This example matches any domain that has an MX record pointing to one of
8205 the local host's IP addresses other than 127.0.0.1.
8206
8207 The list of IP addresses is in fact processed by the same code that processes
8208 host lists, so it may contain CIDR-coded network specifications and it may also
8209 contain negative items.
8210
8211 Because the list of IP addresses is a sublist within a domain list, you have to
8212 be careful about delimiters if there is more than one address. Like any other
8213 list, the default delimiter can be changed. Thus, you might have:
8214 .code
8215 domains = @mx_any/ignore=<;127.0.0.1;0.0.0.0 : \
8216 an.other.domain : ...
8217 .endd
8218 so that the sublist uses semicolons for delimiters. When IPv6 addresses are
8219 involved, it is easiest to change the delimiter for the main list as well:
8220 .code
8221 domains = <? @mx_any/ignore=<;127.0.0.1;::1 ? \
8222 an.other.domain ? ...
8223 .endd
8224 .next
8225 .cindex "asterisk" "in domain list"
8226 .cindex "domain list" "asterisk in"
8227 .cindex "domain list" "matching &""ends with""&"
8228 If a pattern starts with an asterisk, the remaining characters of the pattern
8229 are compared with the terminating characters of the domain. The use of &"*"& in
8230 domain lists differs from its use in partial matching lookups. In a domain
8231 list, the character following the asterisk need not be a dot, whereas partial
8232 matching works only in terms of dot-separated components. For example, a domain
8233 list item such as &`*key.ex`& matches &'donkey.ex'& as well as
8234 &'cipher.key.ex'&.
8235
8236 .next
8237 .cindex "regular expressions" "in domain list"
8238 .cindex "domain list" "matching regular expression"
8239 If a pattern starts with a circumflex character, it is treated as a regular
8240 expression, and matched against the domain using a regular expression matching
8241 function. The circumflex is treated as part of the regular expression.
8242 Email domains are case-independent, so this regular expression match is by
8243 default case-independent, but you can make it case-dependent by starting it
8244 with &`(?-i)`&. References to descriptions of the syntax of regular expressions
8245 are given in chapter &<<CHAPregexp>>&.
8246
8247 &*Warning*&: Because domain lists are expanded before being processed, you
8248 must escape any backslash and dollar characters in the regular expression, or
8249 use the special &`\N`& sequence (see chapter &<<CHAPexpand>>&) to specify that
8250 it is not to be expanded (unless you really do want to build a regular
8251 expression by expansion, of course).
8252 .next
8253 .cindex "lookup" "in domain list"
8254 .cindex "domain list" "matching by lookup"
8255 If a pattern starts with the name of a single-key lookup type followed by a
8256 semicolon (for example, &"dbm;"& or &"lsearch;"&), the remainder of the pattern
8257 must be a file name in a suitable format for the lookup type. For example, for
8258 &"cdb;"& it must be an absolute path:
8259 .code
8260 domains = cdb;/etc/mail/local_domains.cdb
8261 .endd
8262 The appropriate type of lookup is done on the file using the domain name as the
8263 key. In most cases, the data that is looked up is not used; Exim is interested
8264 only in whether or not the key is present in the file. However, when a lookup
8265 is used for the &%domains%& option on a router
8266 or a &%domains%& condition in an ACL statement, the data is preserved in the
8267 &$domain_data$& variable and can be referred to in other router options or
8268 other statements in the same ACL.
8269
8270 .next
8271 Any of the single-key lookup type names may be preceded by
8272 &`partial`&<&'n'&>&`-`&, where the <&'n'&> is optional, for example,
8273 .code
8274 domains = partial-dbm;/partial/domains
8275 .endd
8276 This causes partial matching logic to be invoked; a description of how this
8277 works is given in section &<<SECTpartiallookup>>&.
8278
8279 .next
8280 .cindex "asterisk" "in lookup type"
8281 Any of the single-key lookup types may be followed by an asterisk. This causes
8282 a default lookup for a key consisting of a single asterisk to be done if the
8283 original lookup fails. This is not a useful feature when using a domain list to
8284 select particular domains (because any domain would match), but it might have
8285 value if the result of the lookup is being used via the &$domain_data$&
8286 expansion variable.
8287 .next
8288 If the pattern starts with the name of a query-style lookup type followed by a
8289 semicolon (for example, &"nisplus;"& or &"ldap;"&), the remainder of the
8290 pattern must be an appropriate query for the lookup type, as described in
8291 chapter &<<CHAPfdlookup>>&. For example:
8292 .code
8293 hold_domains = mysql;select domain from holdlist \
8294 where domain = '${quote_mysql:$domain}';
8295 .endd
8296 In most cases, the data that is looked up is not used (so for an SQL query, for
8297 example, it doesn't matter what field you select). Exim is interested only in
8298 whether or not the query succeeds. However, when a lookup is used for the
8299 &%domains%& option on a router, the data is preserved in the &$domain_data$&
8300 variable and can be referred to in other options.
8301 .next
8302 .cindex "domain list" "matching literal domain name"
8303 If none of the above cases apply, a caseless textual comparison is made
8304 between the pattern and the domain.
8305 .endlist
8306
8307 Here is an example that uses several different kinds of pattern:
8308 .code
8309 domainlist funny_domains = \
8310 @ : \
8311 lib.unseen.edu : \
8312 *.foundation.fict.example : \
8313 \N^[1-2]\d{3}\.fict\.example$\N : \
8314 partial-dbm;/opt/data/penguin/book : \
8315 nis;domains.byname : \
8316 nisplus;[name=$domain,status=local],domains.org_dir
8317 .endd
8318 There are obvious processing trade-offs among the various matching modes. Using
8319 an asterisk is faster than a regular expression, and listing a few names
8320 explicitly probably is too. The use of a file or database lookup is expensive,
8321 but may be the only option if hundreds of names are required. Because the
8322 patterns are tested in order, it makes sense to put the most commonly matched
8323 patterns earlier.
8324
8325
8326
8327 .section "Host lists" "SECThostlist"
8328 .cindex "host list" "patterns in"
8329 .cindex "list" "host list"
8330 Host lists are used to control what remote hosts are allowed to do. For
8331 example, some hosts may be allowed to use the local host as a relay, and some
8332 may be permitted to use the SMTP ETRN command. Hosts can be identified in
8333 two different ways, by name or by IP address. In a host list, some types of
8334 pattern are matched to a host name, and some are matched to an IP address.
8335 You need to be particularly careful with this when single-key lookups are
8336 involved, to ensure that the right value is being used as the key.
8337
8338
8339 .section "Special host list patterns" "SECID80"
8340 .cindex "empty item in hosts list"
8341 .cindex "host list" "empty string in"
8342 If a host list item is the empty string, it matches only when no remote host is
8343 involved. This is the case when a message is being received from a local
8344 process using SMTP on the standard input, that is, when a TCP/IP connection is
8345 not used.
8346
8347 .cindex "asterisk" "in host list"
8348 The special pattern &"*"& in a host list matches any host or no host. Neither
8349 the IP address nor the name is actually inspected.
8350
8351
8352
8353 .section "Host list patterns that match by IP address" "SECThoslispatip"
8354 .cindex "host list" "matching IP addresses"
8355 If an IPv4 host calls an IPv6 host and the call is accepted on an IPv6 socket,
8356 the incoming address actually appears in the IPv6 host as
8357 &`::ffff:`&<&'v4address'&>. When such an address is tested against a host
8358 list, it is converted into a traditional IPv4 address first. (Not all operating
8359 systems accept IPv4 calls on IPv6 sockets, as there have been some security
8360 concerns.)
8361
8362 The following types of pattern in a host list check the remote host by
8363 inspecting its IP address:
8364
8365 .ilist
8366 If the pattern is a plain domain name (not a regular expression, not starting
8367 with *, not a lookup of any kind), Exim calls the operating system function
8368 to find the associated IP address(es). Exim uses the newer
8369 &[getipnodebyname()]& function when available, otherwise &[gethostbyname()]&.
8370 This typically causes a forward DNS lookup of the name. The result is compared
8371 with the IP address of the subject host.
8372
8373 If there is a temporary problem (such as a DNS timeout) with the host name
8374 lookup, a temporary error occurs. For example, if the list is being used in an
8375 ACL condition, the ACL gives a &"defer"& response, usually leading to a
8376 temporary SMTP error code. If no IP address can be found for the host name,
8377 what happens is described in section &<<SECTbehipnot>>& below.
8378
8379 .next
8380 .cindex "@ in a host list"
8381 If the pattern is &"@"&, the primary host name is substituted and used as a
8382 domain name, as just described.
8383
8384 .next
8385 If the pattern is an IP address, it is matched against the IP address of the
8386 subject host. IPv4 addresses are given in the normal &"dotted-quad"& notation.
8387 IPv6 addresses can be given in colon-separated format, but the colons have to
8388 be doubled so as not to be taken as item separators when the default list
8389 separator is used. IPv6 addresses are recognized even when Exim is compiled
8390 without IPv6 support. This means that if they appear in a host list on an
8391 IPv4-only host, Exim will not treat them as host names. They are just addresses
8392 that can never match a client host.
8393
8394 .next
8395 .cindex "@[] in a host list"
8396 If the pattern is &"@[]"&, it matches the IP address of any IP interface on
8397 the local host. For example, if the local host is an IPv4 host with one
8398 interface address 10.45.23.56, these two ACL statements have the same effect:
8399 .code
8400 accept hosts = 127.0.0.1 : 10.45.23.56
8401 accept hosts = @[]
8402 .endd
8403 .next
8404 .cindex "CIDR notation"
8405 If the pattern is an IP address followed by a slash and a mask length (for
8406 example 10.11.42.0/24), it is matched against the IP address of the subject
8407 host under the given mask. This allows, an entire network of hosts to be
8408 included (or excluded) by a single item. The mask uses CIDR notation; it
8409 specifies the number of address bits that must match, starting from the most
8410 significant end of the address.
8411
8412 &*Note*&: The mask is &'not'& a count of addresses, nor is it the high number
8413 of a range of addresses. It is the number of bits in the network portion of the
8414 address. The above example specifies a 24-bit netmask, so it matches all 256
8415 addresses in the 10.11.42.0 network. An item such as
8416 .code
8417 192.168.23.236/31
8418 .endd
8419 matches just two addresses, 192.168.23.236 and 192.168.23.237. A mask value of
8420 32 for an IPv4 address is the same as no mask at all; just a single address
8421 matches.
8422
8423 Here is another example which shows an IPv4 and an IPv6 network:
8424 .code
8425 recipient_unqualified_hosts = 192.168.0.0/16: \
8426 3ffe::ffff::836f::::/48
8427 .endd
8428 The doubling of list separator characters applies only when these items
8429 appear inline in a host list. It is not required when indirecting via a file.
8430 For example:
8431 .code
8432 recipient_unqualified_hosts = /opt/exim/unqualnets
8433 .endd
8434 could make use of a file containing
8435 .code
8436 172.16.0.0/12
8437 3ffe:ffff:836f::/48
8438 .endd
8439 to have exactly the same effect as the previous example. When listing IPv6
8440 addresses inline, it is usually more convenient to use the facility for
8441 changing separator characters. This list contains the same two networks:
8442 .code
8443 recipient_unqualified_hosts = <; 172.16.0.0/12; \
8444 3ffe:ffff:836f::/48
8445 .endd
8446 The separator is changed to semicolon by the leading &"<;"& at the start of the
8447 list.
8448 .endlist
8449
8450
8451
8452 .section "Host list patterns for single-key lookups by host address" &&&
8453 "SECThoslispatsikey"
8454 .cindex "host list" "lookup of IP address"
8455 When a host is to be identified by a single-key lookup of its complete IP
8456 address, the pattern takes this form:
8457 .display
8458 &`net-<`&&'single-key-search-type'&&`>;<`&&'search-data'&&`>`&
8459 .endd
8460 For example:
8461 .code
8462 hosts_lookup = net-cdb;/hosts-by-ip.db
8463 .endd
8464 The text form of the IP address of the subject host is used as the lookup key.
8465 IPv6 addresses are converted to an unabbreviated form, using lower case
8466 letters, with dots as separators because colon is the key terminator in
8467 &(lsearch)& files. [Colons can in fact be used in keys in &(lsearch)& files by
8468 quoting the keys, but this is a facility that was added later.] The data
8469 returned by the lookup is not used.
8470
8471 .cindex "IP address" "masking"
8472 .cindex "host list" "masked IP address"
8473 Single-key lookups can also be performed using masked IP addresses, using
8474 patterns of this form:
8475 .display
8476 &`net<`&&'number'&&`>-<`&&'single-key-search-type'&&`>;<`&&'search-data'&&`>`&
8477 .endd
8478 For example:
8479 .code
8480 net24-dbm;/networks.db
8481 .endd
8482 The IP address of the subject host is masked using <&'number'&> as the mask
8483 length. A textual string is constructed from the masked value, followed by the
8484 mask, and this is used as the lookup key. For example, if the host's IP address
8485 is 192.168.34.6, the key that is looked up for the above example is
8486 &"192.168.34.0/24"&.
8487
8488 When an IPv6 address is converted to a string, dots are normally used instead
8489 of colons, so that keys in &(lsearch)& files need not contain colons (which
8490 terminate &(lsearch)& keys). This was implemented some time before the ability
8491 to quote keys was made available in &(lsearch)& files. However, the more
8492 recently implemented &(iplsearch)& files do require colons in IPv6 keys
8493 (notated using the quoting facility) so as to distinguish them from IPv4 keys.
8494 For this reason, when the lookup type is &(iplsearch)&, IPv6 addresses are
8495 converted using colons and not dots. In all cases, full, unabbreviated IPv6
8496 addresses are always used.
8497
8498 Ideally, it would be nice to tidy up this anomalous situation by changing to
8499 colons in all cases, given that quoting is now available for &(lsearch)&.
8500 However, this would be an incompatible change that might break some existing
8501 configurations.
8502
8503 &*Warning*&: Specifying &%net32-%& (for an IPv4 address) or &%net128-%& (for an
8504 IPv6 address) is not the same as specifying just &%net-%& without a number. In
8505 the former case the key strings include the mask value, whereas in the latter
8506 case the IP address is used on its own.
8507
8508
8509
8510 .section "Host list patterns that match by host name" "SECThoslispatnam"
8511 .cindex "host" "lookup failures"
8512 .cindex "unknown host name"
8513 .cindex "host list" "matching host name"
8514 There are several types of pattern that require Exim to know the name of the
8515 remote host. These are either wildcard patterns or lookups by name. (If a
8516 complete hostname is given without any wildcarding, it is used to find an IP
8517 address to match against, as described in section &<<SECThoslispatip>>&
8518 above.)
8519
8520 If the remote host name is not already known when Exim encounters one of these
8521 patterns, it has to be found from the IP address.
8522 Although many sites on the Internet are conscientious about maintaining reverse
8523 DNS data for their hosts, there are also many that do not do this.
8524 Consequently, a name cannot always be found, and this may lead to unwanted
8525 effects. Take care when configuring host lists with wildcarded name patterns.
8526 Consider what will happen if a name cannot be found.
8527
8528 Because of the problems of determining host names from IP addresses, matching
8529 against host names is not as common as matching against IP addresses.
8530
8531 By default, in order to find a host name, Exim first does a reverse DNS lookup;
8532 if no name is found in the DNS, the system function (&[gethostbyaddr()]& or
8533 &[getipnodebyaddr()]& if available) is tried. The order in which these lookups
8534 are done can be changed by setting the &%host_lookup_order%& option. For
8535 security, once Exim has found one or more names, it looks up the IP addresses
8536 for these names and compares them with the IP address that it started with.
8537 Only those names whose IP addresses match are accepted. Any other names are
8538 discarded. If no names are left, Exim behaves as if the host name cannot be
8539 found. In the most common case there is only one name and one IP address.
8540
8541 There are some options that control what happens if a host name cannot be
8542 found. These are described in section &<<SECTbehipnot>>& below.
8543
8544 .cindex "host" "alias for"
8545 .cindex "alias for host"
8546 As a result of aliasing, hosts may have more than one name. When processing any
8547 of the following types of pattern, all the host's names are checked:
8548
8549 .ilist
8550 .cindex "asterisk" "in host list"
8551 If a pattern starts with &"*"& the remainder of the item must match the end of
8552 the host name. For example, &`*.b.c`& matches all hosts whose names end in
8553 &'.b.c'&. This special simple form is provided because this is a very common
8554 requirement. Other kinds of wildcarding require the use of a regular
8555 expression.
8556 .next
8557 .cindex "regular expressions" "in host list"
8558 .cindex "host list" "regular expression in"
8559 If the item starts with &"^"& it is taken to be a regular expression which is
8560 matched against the host name. Host names are case-independent, so this regular
8561 expression match is by default case-independent, but you can make it
8562 case-dependent by starting it with &`(?-i)`&. References to descriptions of the
8563 syntax of regular expressions are given in chapter &<<CHAPregexp>>&. For
8564 example,
8565 .code
8566 ^(a|b)\.c\.d$
8567 .endd
8568 is a regular expression that matches either of the two hosts &'a.c.d'& or
8569 &'b.c.d'&. When a regular expression is used in a host list, you must take care
8570 that backslash and dollar characters are not misinterpreted as part of the
8571 string expansion. The simplest way to do this is to use &`\N`& to mark that
8572 part of the string as non-expandable. For example:
8573 .code
8574 sender_unqualified_hosts = \N^(a|b)\.c\.d$\N : ....
8575 .endd
8576 &*Warning*&: If you want to match a complete host name, you must include the
8577 &`$`& terminating metacharacter in the regular expression, as in the above
8578 example. Without it, a match at the start of the host name is all that is
8579 required.
8580 .endlist
8581
8582
8583
8584
8585 .section "Behaviour when an IP address or name cannot be found" "SECTbehipnot"
8586 .cindex "host" "lookup failures, permanent"
8587 While processing a host list, Exim may need to look up an IP address from a
8588 name (see section &<<SECThoslispatip>>&), or it may need to look up a host name
8589 from an IP address (see section &<<SECThoslispatnam>>&). In either case, the
8590 behaviour when it fails to find the information it is seeking is the same.
8591
8592 &*Note*&: This section applies to permanent lookup failures. It does &'not'&
8593 apply to temporary DNS errors, whose handling is described in the next section.
8594
8595 .cindex "&`+include_unknown`&"
8596 .cindex "&`+ignore_unknown`&"
8597 Exim parses a host list from left to right. If it encounters a permanent
8598 lookup failure in any item in the host list before it has found a match,
8599 Exim treats it as a failure and the default behavior is as if the host
8600 does not match the list. This may not always be what you want to happen.
8601 To change Exim's behaviour, the special items &`+include_unknown`& or
8602 &`+ignore_unknown`& may appear in the list (at top level &-- they are
8603 not recognized in an indirected file).
8604
8605 .ilist
8606 If any item that follows &`+include_unknown`& requires information that
8607 cannot found, Exim behaves as if the host does match the list. For example,
8608 .code
8609 host_reject_connection = +include_unknown:*.enemy.ex
8610 .endd
8611 rejects connections from any host whose name matches &`*.enemy.ex`&, and also
8612 any hosts whose name it cannot find.
8613
8614 .next
8615 If any item that follows &`+ignore_unknown`& requires information that cannot
8616 be found, Exim ignores that item and proceeds to the rest of the list. For
8617 example:
8618 .code
8619 accept hosts = +ignore_unknown : friend.example : \
8620 192.168.4.5
8621 .endd
8622 accepts from any host whose name is &'friend.example'& and from 192.168.4.5,
8623 whether or not its host name can be found. Without &`+ignore_unknown`&, if no
8624 name can be found for 192.168.4.5, it is rejected.
8625 .endlist
8626
8627 Both &`+include_unknown`& and &`+ignore_unknown`& may appear in the same
8628 list. The effect of each one lasts until the next, or until the end of the
8629 list.
8630
8631 .section "Mixing wildcarded host names and addresses in host lists" &&&
8632 "SECTmixwilhos"
8633 .cindex "host list" "mixing names and addresses in"
8634
8635 This section explains the host/ip processing logic with the same concepts
8636 as the previous section, but specifically addresses what happens when a
8637 wildcarded hostname is one of the items in the hostlist.
8638
8639 .ilist
8640 If you have name lookups or wildcarded host names and
8641 IP addresses in the same host list, you should normally put the IP
8642 addresses first. For example, in an ACL you could have:
8643 .code
8644 accept hosts = 10.9.8.7 : *.friend.example
8645 .endd
8646 The reason you normally would order it this way lies in the
8647 left-to-right way that Exim processes lists. It can test IP addresses
8648 without doing any DNS lookups, but when it reaches an item that requires
8649 a host name, it fails if it cannot find a host name to compare with the
8650 pattern. If the above list is given in the opposite order, the
8651 &%accept%& statement fails for a host whose name cannot be found, even
8652 if its IP address is 10.9.8.7.
8653
8654 .next
8655 If you really do want to do the name check first, and still recognize the IP
8656 address, you can rewrite the ACL like this:
8657 .code
8658 accept hosts = *.friend.example
8659 accept hosts = 10.9.8.7
8660 .endd
8661 If the first &%accept%& fails, Exim goes on to try the second one. See chapter
8662 &<<CHAPACL>>& for details of ACLs. Alternatively, you can use
8663 &`+ignore_unknown`&, which was discussed in depth in the first example in
8664 this section.
8665 .endlist
8666
8667
8668 .section "Temporary DNS errors when looking up host information" &&&
8669 "SECTtemdnserr"
8670 .cindex "host" "lookup failures, temporary"
8671 .cindex "&`+include_defer`&"
8672 .cindex "&`+ignore_defer`&"
8673 A temporary DNS lookup failure normally causes a defer action (except when
8674 &%dns_again_means_nonexist%& converts it into a permanent error). However,
8675 host lists can include &`+ignore_defer`& and &`+include_defer`&, analogous to
8676 &`+ignore_unknown`& and &`+include_unknown`&, as described in the previous
8677 section. These options should be used with care, probably only in non-critical
8678 host lists such as whitelists.
8679
8680
8681
8682 .section "Host list patterns for single-key lookups by host name" &&&
8683 "SECThoslispatnamsk"
8684 .cindex "unknown host name"
8685 .cindex "host list" "matching host name"
8686 If a pattern is of the form
8687 .display
8688 <&'single-key-search-type'&>;<&'search-data'&>
8689 .endd
8690 for example
8691 .code
8692 dbm;/host/accept/list
8693 .endd
8694 a single-key lookup is performed, using the host name as its key. If the
8695 lookup succeeds, the host matches the item. The actual data that is looked up
8696 is not used.
8697
8698 &*Reminder*&: With this kind of pattern, you must have host &'names'& as
8699 keys in the file, not IP addresses. If you want to do lookups based on IP
8700 addresses, you must precede the search type with &"net-"& (see section
8701 &<<SECThoslispatsikey>>&). There is, however, no reason why you could not use
8702 two items in the same list, one doing an address lookup and one doing a name
8703 lookup, both using the same file.
8704
8705
8706
8707 .section "Host list patterns for query-style lookups" "SECID81"
8708 If a pattern is of the form
8709 .display
8710 <&'query-style-search-type'&>;<&'query'&>
8711 .endd
8712 the query is obeyed, and if it succeeds, the host matches the item. The actual
8713 data that is looked up is not used. The variables &$sender_host_address$& and
8714 &$sender_host_name$& can be used in the query. For example:
8715 .code
8716 hosts_lookup = pgsql;\
8717 select ip from hostlist where ip='$sender_host_address'
8718 .endd
8719 The value of &$sender_host_address$& for an IPv6 address contains colons. You
8720 can use the &%sg%& expansion item to change this if you need to. If you want to
8721 use masked IP addresses in database queries, you can use the &%mask%& expansion
8722 operator.
8723
8724 If the query contains a reference to &$sender_host_name$&, Exim automatically
8725 looks up the host name if it has not already done so. (See section
8726 &<<SECThoslispatnam>>& for comments on finding host names.)
8727
8728 Historical note: prior to release 4.30, Exim would always attempt to find a
8729 host name before running the query, unless the search type was preceded by
8730 &`net-`&. This is no longer the case. For backwards compatibility, &`net-`& is
8731 still recognized for query-style lookups, but its presence or absence has no
8732 effect. (Of course, for single-key lookups, &`net-`& &'is'& important.
8733 See section &<<SECThoslispatsikey>>&.)
8734
8735
8736
8737
8738
8739 .section "Address lists" "SECTaddresslist"
8740 .cindex "list" "address list"
8741 .cindex "address list" "empty item"
8742 .cindex "address list" "patterns"
8743 Address lists contain patterns that are matched against mail addresses. There
8744 is one special case to be considered: the sender address of a bounce message is
8745 always empty. You can test for this by providing an empty item in an address
8746 list. For example, you can set up a router to process bounce messages by
8747 using this option setting:
8748 .code
8749 senders = :
8750 .endd
8751 The presence of the colon creates an empty item. If you do not provide any
8752 data, the list is empty and matches nothing. The empty sender can also be
8753 detected by a regular expression that matches an empty string,
8754 and by a query-style lookup that succeeds when &$sender_address$& is empty.
8755
8756 Non-empty items in an address list can be straightforward email addresses. For
8757 example:
8758 .code
8759 senders = jbc@askone.example : hs@anacreon.example
8760 .endd
8761 A certain amount of wildcarding is permitted. If a pattern contains an @
8762 character, but is not a regular expression and does not begin with a
8763 semicolon-terminated lookup type (described below), the local part of the
8764 subject address is compared with the local part of the pattern, which may start
8765 with an asterisk. If the local parts match, the domain is checked in exactly
8766 the same way as for a pattern in a domain list. For example, the domain can be
8767 wildcarded, refer to a named list, or be a lookup:
8768 .code
8769 deny senders = *@*.spamming.site:\
8770 *@+hostile_domains:\
8771 bozo@partial-lsearch;/list/of/dodgy/sites:\
8772 *@dbm;/bad/domains.db
8773 .endd
8774 .cindex "local part" "starting with !"
8775 .cindex "address list" "local part starting with !"
8776 If a local part that begins with an exclamation mark is required, it has to be
8777 specified using a regular expression, because otherwise the exclamation mark is
8778 treated as a sign of negation, as is standard in lists.
8779
8780 If a non-empty pattern that is not a regular expression or a lookup does not
8781 contain an @ character, it is matched against the domain part of the subject
8782 address. The only two formats that are recognized this way are a literal
8783 domain, or a domain pattern that starts with *. In both these cases, the effect
8784 is the same as if &`*@`& preceded the pattern. For example:
8785 .code
8786 deny senders = enemy.domain : *.enemy.domain
8787 .endd
8788
8789 The following kinds of more complicated address list pattern can match any
8790 address, including the empty address that is characteristic of bounce message
8791 senders:
8792
8793 .ilist
8794 .cindex "regular expressions" "in address list"
8795 .cindex "address list" "regular expression in"
8796 If (after expansion) a pattern starts with &"^"&, a regular expression match is
8797 done against the complete address, with the pattern as the regular expression.
8798 You must take care that backslash and dollar characters are not misinterpreted
8799 as part of the string expansion. The simplest way to do this is to use &`\N`&
8800 to mark that part of the string as non-expandable. For example:
8801 .code
8802 deny senders = \N^.*this.*@example\.com$\N : \
8803 \N^\d{8}.+@spamhaus.example$\N : ...
8804 .endd
8805 The &`\N`& sequences are removed by the expansion, so these items do indeed
8806 start with &"^"& by the time they are being interpreted as address patterns.
8807
8808 .next
8809 .cindex "address list" "lookup for complete address"
8810 Complete addresses can be looked up by using a pattern that starts with a
8811 lookup type terminated by a semicolon, followed by the data for the lookup. For
8812 example:
8813 .code
8814 deny senders = cdb;/etc/blocked.senders : \
8815 mysql;select address from blocked where \
8816 address='${quote_mysql:$sender_address}'
8817 .endd
8818 Both query-style and single-key lookup types can be used. For a single-key
8819 lookup type, Exim uses the complete address as the key. However, empty keys are
8820 not supported for single-key lookups, so a match against the empty address
8821 always fails. This restriction does not apply to query-style lookups.
8822
8823 Partial matching for single-key lookups (section &<<SECTpartiallookup>>&)
8824 cannot be used, and is ignored if specified, with an entry being written to the
8825 panic log.
8826 .cindex "*@ with single-key lookup"
8827 However, you can configure lookup defaults, as described in section
8828 &<<SECTdefaultvaluelookups>>&, but this is useful only for the &"*@"& type of
8829 default. For example, with this lookup:
8830 .code
8831 accept senders = lsearch*@;/some/file
8832 .endd
8833 the file could contains lines like this:
8834 .code
8835 user1@domain1.example
8836 *@domain2.example
8837 .endd
8838 and for the sender address &'nimrod@jaeger.example'&, the sequence of keys
8839 that are tried is:
8840 .code
8841 nimrod@jaeger.example
8842 *@jaeger.example
8843 *
8844 .endd
8845 &*Warning 1*&: Do not include a line keyed by &"*"& in the file, because that
8846 would mean that every address matches, thus rendering the test useless.
8847
8848 &*Warning 2*&: Do not confuse these two kinds of item:
8849 .code
8850 deny recipients = dbm*@;/some/file
8851 deny recipients = *@dbm;/some/file
8852 .endd
8853 The first does a whole address lookup, with defaulting, as just described,
8854 because it starts with a lookup type. The second matches the local part and
8855 domain independently, as described in a bullet point below.
8856 .endlist
8857
8858
8859 The following kinds of address list pattern can match only non-empty addresses.
8860 If the subject address is empty, a match against any of these pattern types
8861 always fails.
8862
8863
8864 .ilist
8865 .cindex "@@ with single-key lookup"
8866 .cindex "address list" "@@ lookup type"
8867 .cindex "address list" "split local part and domain"
8868 If a pattern starts with &"@@"& followed by a single-key lookup item
8869 (for example, &`@@lsearch;/some/file`&), the address that is being checked is
8870 split into a local part and a domain. The domain is looked up in the file. If
8871 it is not found, there is no match. If it is found, the data that is looked up
8872 from the file is treated as a colon-separated list of local part patterns, each
8873 of which is matched against the subject local part in turn.
8874
8875 .cindex "asterisk" "in address list"
8876 The lookup may be a partial one, and/or one involving a search for a default
8877 keyed by &"*"& (see section &<<SECTdefaultvaluelookups>>&). The local part
8878 patterns that are looked up can be regular expressions or begin with &"*"&, or
8879 even be further lookups. They may also be independently negated. For example,
8880 with
8881 .code
8882 deny senders = @@dbm;/etc/reject-by-domain
8883 .endd
8884 the data from which the DBM file is built could contain lines like
8885 .code
8886 baddomain.com: !postmaster : *
8887 .endd
8888 to reject all senders except &%postmaster%& from that domain.
8889
8890 .cindex "local part" "starting with !"
8891 If a local part that actually begins with an exclamation mark is required, it
8892 has to be specified using a regular expression. In &(lsearch)& files, an entry
8893 may be split over several lines by indenting the second and subsequent lines,
8894 but the separating colon must still be included at line breaks. White space
8895 surrounding the colons is ignored. For example:
8896 .code
8897 aol.com: spammer1 : spammer2 : ^[0-9]+$ :
8898 spammer3 : spammer4
8899 .endd
8900 As in all colon-separated lists in Exim, a colon can be included in an item by
8901 doubling.
8902
8903 If the last item in the list starts with a right angle-bracket, the remainder
8904 of the item is taken as a new key to look up in order to obtain a continuation
8905 list of local parts. The new key can be any sequence of characters. Thus one
8906 might have entries like
8907 .code
8908 aol.com: spammer1 : spammer 2 : >*
8909 xyz.com: spammer3 : >*
8910 *: ^\d{8}$
8911 .endd
8912 in a file that was searched with &%@@dbm*%&, to specify a match for 8-digit
8913 local parts for all domains, in addition to the specific local parts listed for
8914 each domain. Of course, using this feature costs another lookup each time a
8915 chain is followed, but the effort needed to maintain the data is reduced.
8916
8917 .cindex "loop" "in lookups"
8918 It is possible to construct loops using this facility, and in order to catch
8919 them, the chains may be no more than fifty items long.
8920
8921 .next
8922 The @@<&'lookup'&> style of item can also be used with a query-style
8923 lookup, but in this case, the chaining facility is not available. The lookup
8924 can only return a single list of local parts.
8925 .endlist
8926
8927 &*Warning*&: There is an important difference between the address list items
8928 in these two examples:
8929 .code
8930 senders = +my_list
8931 senders = *@+my_list
8932 .endd
8933 In the first one, &`my_list`& is a named address list, whereas in the second
8934 example it is a named domain list.
8935
8936
8937
8938
8939 .section "Case of letters in address lists" "SECTcasletadd"
8940 .cindex "case of local parts"
8941 .cindex "address list" "case forcing"
8942 .cindex "case forcing in address lists"
8943 Domains in email addresses are always handled caselessly, but for local parts
8944 case may be significant on some systems (see &%caseful_local_part%& for how
8945 Exim deals with this when routing addresses). However, RFC 2505 (&'Anti-Spam
8946 Recommendations for SMTP MTAs'&) suggests that matching of addresses to
8947 blocking lists should be done in a case-independent manner. Since most address
8948 lists in Exim are used for this kind of control, Exim attempts to do this by
8949 default.
8950
8951 The domain portion of an address is always lowercased before matching it to an
8952 address list. The local part is lowercased by default, and any string
8953 comparisons that take place are done caselessly. This means that the data in
8954 the address list itself, in files included as plain file names, and in any file
8955 that is looked up using the &"@@"& mechanism, can be in any case. However, the
8956 keys in files that are looked up by a search type other than &(lsearch)& (which
8957 works caselessly) must be in lower case, because these lookups are not
8958 case-independent.
8959
8960 .cindex "&`+caseful`&"
8961 To allow for the possibility of caseful address list matching, if an item in
8962 an address list is the string &"+caseful"&, the original case of the local
8963 part is restored for any comparisons that follow, and string comparisons are no
8964 longer case-independent. This does not affect the domain, which remains in
8965 lower case. However, although independent matches on the domain alone are still
8966 performed caselessly, regular expressions that match against an entire address
8967 become case-sensitive after &"+caseful"& has been seen.
8968
8969
8970
8971 .section "Local part lists" "SECTlocparlis"
8972 .cindex "list" "local part list"
8973 .cindex "local part" "list"
8974 Case-sensitivity in local part lists is handled in the same way as for address
8975 lists, as just described. The &"+caseful"& item can be used if required. In a
8976 setting of the &%local_parts%& option in a router with &%caseful_local_part%&
8977 set false, the subject is lowercased and the matching is initially
8978 case-insensitive. In this case, &"+caseful"& will restore case-sensitive
8979 matching in the local part list, but not elsewhere in the router. If
8980 &%caseful_local_part%& is set true in a router, matching in the &%local_parts%&
8981 option is case-sensitive from the start.
8982
8983 If a local part list is indirected to a file (see section &<<SECTfilnamlis>>&),
8984 comments are handled in the same way as address lists &-- they are recognized
8985 only if the # is preceded by white space or the start of the line.
8986 Otherwise, local part lists are matched in the same way as domain lists, except
8987 that the special items that refer to the local host (&`@`&, &`@[]`&,
8988 &`@mx_any`&, &`@mx_primary`&, and &`@mx_secondary`&) are not recognized.
8989 Refer to section &<<SECTdomainlist>>& for details of the other available item
8990 types.
8991 .ecindex IIDdohoadli
8992
8993
8994
8995
8996 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8997 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8998
8999 .chapter "String expansions" "CHAPexpand"
9000 .scindex IIDstrexp "expansion" "of strings"
9001 Many strings in Exim's run time configuration are expanded before use. Some of
9002 them are expanded every time they are used; others are expanded only once.
9003
9004 When a string is being expanded it is copied verbatim from left to right except
9005 when a dollar or backslash character is encountered. A dollar specifies the
9006 start of a portion of the string that is interpreted and replaced as described
9007 below in section &<<SECTexpansionitems>>& onwards. Backslash is used as an
9008 escape character, as described in the following section.
9009
9010 Whether a string is expanded depends upon the context. Usually this is solely
9011 dependent upon the option for which a value is sought; in this documentation,
9012 options for which string expansion is performed are marked with &dagger; after
9013 the data type. ACL rules always expand strings. A couple of expansion
9014 conditions do not expand some of the brace-delimited branches, for security
9015 reasons.
9016
9017
9018
9019 .section "Literal text in expanded strings" "SECTlittext"
9020 .cindex "expansion" "including literal text"
9021 An uninterpreted dollar can be included in an expanded string by putting a
9022 backslash in front of it. A backslash can be used to prevent any special
9023 character being treated specially in an expansion, including backslash itself.
9024 If the string appears in quotes in the configuration file, two backslashes are
9025 required because the quotes themselves cause interpretation of backslashes when
9026 the string is read in (see section &<<SECTstrings>>&).
9027
9028 .cindex "expansion" "non-expandable substrings"
9029 A portion of the string can specified as non-expandable by placing it between
9030 two occurrences of &`\N`&. This is particularly useful for protecting regular
9031 expressions, which often contain backslashes and dollar signs. For example:
9032 .code
9033 deny senders = \N^\d{8}[a-z]@some\.site\.example$\N
9034 .endd
9035 On encountering the first &`\N`&, the expander copies subsequent characters
9036 without interpretation until it reaches the next &`\N`& or the end of the
9037 string.
9038
9039
9040
9041 .section "Character escape sequences in expanded strings" "SECID82"
9042 .cindex "expansion" "escape sequences"
9043 A backslash followed by one of the letters &"n"&, &"r"&, or &"t"& in an
9044 expanded string is recognized as an escape sequence for the character newline,
9045 carriage return, or tab, respectively. A backslash followed by up to three
9046 octal digits is recognized as an octal encoding for a single character, and a
9047 backslash followed by &"x"& and up to two hexadecimal digits is a hexadecimal
9048 encoding.
9049
9050 These escape sequences are also recognized in quoted strings when they are read
9051 in. Their interpretation in expansions as well is useful for unquoted strings,
9052 and for other cases such as looked-up strings that are then expanded.
9053
9054
9055 .section "Testing string expansions" "SECID83"
9056 .cindex "expansion" "testing"
9057 .cindex "testing" "string expansion"
9058 .oindex "&%-be%&"
9059 Many expansions can be tested by calling Exim with the &%-be%& option. This
9060 takes the command arguments, or lines from the standard input if there are no
9061 arguments, runs them through the string expansion code, and writes the results
9062 to the standard output. Variables based on configuration values are set up, but
9063 since no message is being processed, variables such as &$local_part$& have no
9064 value. Nevertheless the &%-be%& option can be useful for checking out file and
9065 database lookups, and the use of expansion operators such as &%sg%&, &%substr%&
9066 and &%nhash%&.
9067
9068 Exim gives up its root privilege when it is called with the &%-be%& option, and
9069 instead runs under the uid and gid it was called with, to prevent users from
9070 using &%-be%& for reading files to which they do not have access.
9071
9072 .oindex "&%-bem%&"
9073 If you want to test expansions that include variables whose values are taken
9074 from a message, there are two other options that can be used. The &%-bem%&
9075 option is like &%-be%& except that it is followed by a file name. The file is
9076 read as a message before doing the test expansions. For example:
9077 .code
9078 exim -bem /tmp/test.message '$h_subject:'
9079 .endd
9080 The &%-Mset%& option is used in conjunction with &%-be%& and is followed by an
9081 Exim message identifier. For example:
9082 .code
9083 exim -be -Mset 1GrA8W-0004WS-LQ '$recipients'
9084 .endd
9085 This loads the message from Exim's spool before doing the test expansions, and
9086 is therefore restricted to admin users.
9087
9088
9089 .section "Forced expansion failure" "SECTforexpfai"
9090 .cindex "expansion" "forced failure"
9091 A number of expansions that are described in the following section have
9092 alternative &"true"& and &"false"& substrings, enclosed in brace characters
9093 (which are sometimes called &"curly brackets"&). Which of the two strings is
9094 used depends on some condition that is evaluated as part of the expansion. If,
9095 instead of a &"false"& substring, the word &"fail"& is used (not in braces),
9096 the entire string expansion fails in a way that can be detected by the code
9097 that requested the expansion. This is called &"forced expansion failure"&, and
9098 its consequences depend on the circumstances. In some cases it is no different
9099 from any other expansion failure, but in others a different action may be
9100 taken. Such variations are mentioned in the documentation of the option that is
9101 being expanded.
9102
9103
9104
9105
9106 .section "Expansion items" "SECTexpansionitems"
9107 The following items are recognized in expanded strings. White space may be used
9108 between sub-items that are keywords or substrings enclosed in braces inside an
9109 outer set of braces, to improve readability. &*Warning*&: Within braces,
9110 white space is significant.
9111
9112 .vlist
9113 .vitem &*$*&<&'variable&~name'&>&~or&~&*${*&<&'variable&~name'&>&*}*&
9114 .cindex "expansion" "variables"
9115 Substitute the contents of the named variable, for example:
9116 .code
9117 $local_part
9118 ${domain}
9119 .endd
9120 The second form can be used to separate the name from subsequent alphanumeric
9121 characters. This form (using braces) is available only for variables; it does
9122 &'not'& apply to message headers. The names of the variables are given in
9123 section &<<SECTexpvar>>& below. If the name of a non-existent variable is
9124 given, the expansion fails.
9125
9126 .vitem &*${*&<&'op'&>&*:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
9127 .cindex "expansion" "operators"
9128 The string is first itself expanded, and then the operation specified by
9129 <&'op'&> is applied to it. For example:
9130 .code
9131 ${lc:$local_part}
9132 .endd
9133 The string starts with the first character after the colon, which may be
9134 leading white space. A list of operators is given in section &<<SECTexpop>>&
9135 below. The operator notation is used for simple expansion items that have just
9136 one argument, because it reduces the number of braces and therefore makes the
9137 string easier to understand.
9138
9139 .vitem &*$bheader_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&&~or&~&*$bh_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&
9140 This item inserts &"basic"& header lines. It is described with the &%header%&
9141 expansion item below.
9142
9143
9144 .vitem "&*${acl{*&<&'name'&>&*}{*&<&'arg'&>&*}...}*&"
9145 .cindex "expansion" "calling an acl"
9146 .cindex "&%acl%&" "call from expansion"
9147 The name and zero to nine argument strings are first expanded separately. The expanded
9148 arguments are assigned to the variables &$acl_arg1$& to &$acl_arg9$& in order.
9149 Any unused are made empty. The variable &$acl_narg$& is set to the number of
9150 arguments. The named ACL (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&) is called
9151 and may use the variables; if another acl expansion is used the values
9152 are restored after it returns. If the ACL sets
9153 a value using a "message =" modifier and returns accept or deny, the value becomes
9154 the result of the expansion.
9155 If no message is set and the ACL returns accept or deny
9156 the expansion result is an empty string.
9157 If the ACL returns defer the result is a forced-fail. Otherwise the expansion fails.
9158
9159
9160 .vitem "&*${authresults{*&<&'authserv-id'&>&*}}*&"
9161 .cindex authentication "results header"
9162 .cindex headers "authentication-results:"
9163 .cindex authentication "expansion item"
9164 This item returns a string suitable for insertion as an
9165 &'Authentication-Results"'&
9166 header line.
9167 The given <&'authserv-id'&> is included in the result; typically this
9168 will be a domain name identifying the system performing the authentications.
9169 Methods that might be present in the result include:
9170 .code
9171 none
9172 iprev
9173 auth
9174 spf
9175 dkim
9176 .endd
9177
9178 Example use (as an ACL modifier):
9179 .code
9180 add_header = :at_start:${authresults {$primary_hostname}}
9181 .endd
9182 This is safe even if no authentication results are available.
9183
9184
9185 .vitem "&*${certextract{*&<&'field'&>&*}{*&<&'certificate'&>&*}&&&
9186 {*&<&'string2'&>&*}{*&<&'string3'&>&*}}*&"
9187 .cindex "expansion" "extracting certificate fields"
9188 .cindex "&%certextract%&" "certificate fields"
9189 .cindex "certificate" "extracting fields"
9190 The <&'certificate'&> must be a variable of type certificate.
9191 The field name is expanded and used to retrieve the relevant field from
9192 the certificate. Supported fields are:
9193 .display
9194 &`version `&
9195 &`serial_number `&
9196 &`subject `& RFC4514 DN
9197 &`issuer `& RFC4514 DN
9198 &`notbefore `& time
9199 &`notafter `& time
9200 &`sig_algorithm `&
9201 &`signature `&
9202 &`subj_altname `& tagged list
9203 &`ocsp_uri `& list
9204 &`crl_uri `& list
9205 .endd
9206 If the field is found,
9207 <&'string2'&> is expanded, and replaces the whole item;
9208 otherwise <&'string3'&> is used. During the expansion of <&'string2'&> the
9209 variable &$value$& contains the value that has been extracted. Afterwards, it
9210 is restored to any previous value it might have had.
9211
9212 If {<&'string3'&>} is omitted, the item is replaced by an empty string if the
9213 key is not found. If {<&'string2'&>} is also omitted, the value that was
9214 extracted is used.
9215
9216 Some field names take optional modifiers, appended and separated by commas.
9217
9218 The field selectors marked as "RFC4514" above
9219 output a Distinguished Name string which is
9220 not quite
9221 parseable by Exim as a comma-separated tagged list
9222 (the exceptions being elements containing commas).
9223 RDN elements of a single type may be selected by
9224 a modifier of the type label; if so the expansion
9225 result is a list (newline-separated by default).
9226 The separator may be changed by another modifier of
9227 a right angle-bracket followed immediately by the new separator.
9228 Recognised RDN type labels include "CN", "O", "OU" and "DC".
9229
9230 The field selectors marked as "time" above
9231 take an optional modifier of "int"
9232 for which the result is the number of seconds since epoch.
9233 Otherwise the result is a human-readable string
9234 in the timezone selected by the main "timezone" option.
9235
9236 The field selectors marked as "list" above return a list,
9237 newline-separated by default,
9238 (embedded separator characters in elements are doubled).
9239 The separator may be changed by a modifier of
9240 a right angle-bracket followed immediately by the new separator.
9241
9242 The field selectors marked as "tagged" above
9243 prefix each list element with a type string and an equals sign.
9244 Elements of only one type may be selected by a modifier
9245 which is one of "dns", "uri" or "mail";
9246 if so the element tags are omitted.
9247
9248 If not otherwise noted field values are presented in human-readable form.
9249
9250 .vitem "&*${dlfunc{*&<&'file'&>&*}{*&<&'function'&>&*}{*&<&'arg'&>&*}&&&
9251 {*&<&'arg'&>&*}...}*&"
9252 .cindex &%dlfunc%&
9253 This expansion dynamically loads and then calls a locally-written C function.
9254 This functionality is available only if Exim is compiled with
9255 .code
9256 EXPAND_DLFUNC=yes
9257 .endd
9258 set in &_Local/Makefile_&. Once loaded, Exim remembers the dynamically loaded
9259 object so that it doesn't reload the same object file in the same Exim process
9260 (but of course Exim does start new processes frequently).
9261
9262 There may be from zero to eight arguments to the function. When compiling
9263 a local function that is to be called in this way, &_local_scan.h_& should be
9264 included. The Exim variables and functions that are defined by that API
9265 are also available for dynamically loaded functions. The function itself
9266 must have the following type:
9267 .code
9268 int dlfunction(uschar **yield, int argc, uschar *argv[])
9269 .endd
9270 Where &`uschar`& is a typedef for &`unsigned char`& in &_local_scan.h_&. The
9271 function should return one of the following values:
9272
9273 &`OK`&: Success. The string that is placed in the variable &'yield'& is put
9274 into the expanded string that is being built.
9275
9276 &`FAIL`&: A non-forced expansion failure occurs, with the error message taken
9277 from &'yield'&, if it is set.
9278
9279 &`FAIL_FORCED`&: A forced expansion failure occurs, with the error message
9280 taken from &'yield'& if it is set.
9281
9282 &`ERROR`&: Same as &`FAIL`&, except that a panic log entry is written.
9283
9284 When compiling a function that is to be used in this way with gcc,
9285 you need to add &%-shared%& to the gcc command. Also, in the Exim build-time
9286 configuration, you must add &%-export-dynamic%& to EXTRALIBS.
9287
9288
9289 .vitem "&*${env{*&<&'key'&>&*}{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}}*&"
9290 .cindex "expansion" "extracting value from environment"
9291 .cindex "environment" "values from"
9292 The key is first expanded separately, and leading and trailing white space
9293 removed.
9294 This is then searched for as a name in the environment.
9295 If a variable is found then its value is placed in &$value$&
9296 and <&'string1'&> is expanded, otherwise <&'string2'&> is expanded.
9297
9298 Instead of {<&'string2'&>} the word &"fail"& (not in curly brackets) can
9299 appear, for example:
9300 .code
9301 ${env{USER}{$value} fail }
9302 .endd
9303 This forces an expansion failure (see section &<<SECTforexpfai>>&);
9304 {<&'string1'&>} must be present for &"fail"& to be recognized.
9305
9306 If {<&'string2'&>} is omitted an empty string is substituted on
9307 search failure.
9308 If {<&'string1'&>} is omitted the search result is substituted on
9309 search success.
9310
9311 The environment is adjusted by the &%keep_environment%& and
9312 &%add_environment%& main section options.
9313
9314
9315 .vitem "&*${extract{*&<&'key'&>&*}{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}&&&
9316 {*&<&'string3'&>&*}}*&"
9317 .cindex "expansion" "extracting substrings by key"
9318 .cindex "&%extract%&" "substrings by key"
9319 The key and <&'string1'&> are first expanded separately. Leading and trailing
9320 white space is removed from the key (but not from any of the strings). The key
9321 must not be empty and must not consist entirely of digits.
9322 The expanded <&'string1'&> must be of the form:
9323 .display
9324 <&'key1'&> = <&'value1'&> <&'key2'&> = <&'value2'&> ...
9325 .endd
9326 .vindex "&$value$&"
9327 where the equals signs and spaces (but not both) are optional. If any of the
9328 values contain white space, they must be enclosed in double quotes, and any
9329 values that are enclosed in double quotes are subject to escape processing as
9330 described in section &<<SECTstrings>>&. The expanded <&'string1'&> is searched
9331 for the value that corresponds to the key. The search is case-insensitive. If
9332 the key is found, <&'string2'&> is expanded, and replaces the whole item;
9333 otherwise <&'string3'&> is used. During the expansion of <&'string2'&> the
9334 variable &$value$& contains the value that has been extracted. Afterwards, it
9335 is restored to any previous value it might have had.
9336
9337 If {<&'string3'&>} is omitted, the item is replaced by an empty string if the
9338 key is not found. If {<&'string2'&>} is also omitted, the value that was
9339 extracted is used. Thus, for example, these two expansions are identical, and
9340 yield &"2001"&:
9341 .code
9342 ${extract{gid}{uid=1984 gid=2001}}
9343 ${extract{gid}{uid=1984 gid=2001}{$value}}
9344 .endd
9345 Instead of {<&'string3'&>} the word &"fail"& (not in curly brackets) can
9346 appear, for example:
9347 .code
9348 ${extract{Z}{A=... B=...}{$value} fail }
9349 .endd
9350 This forces an expansion failure (see section &<<SECTforexpfai>>&);
9351 {<&'string2'&>} must be present for &"fail"& to be recognized.
9352
9353
9354 .vitem "&*${extract{*&<&'number'&>&*}{*&<&'separators'&>&*}&&&
9355 {*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}{*&<&'string3'&>&*}}*&"
9356 .cindex "expansion" "extracting substrings by number"
9357 .cindex "&%extract%&" "substrings by number"
9358 The <&'number'&> argument must consist entirely of decimal digits,
9359 apart from leading and trailing white space, which is ignored.
9360 This is what distinguishes this form of &%extract%& from the previous kind. It
9361 behaves in the same way, except that, instead of extracting a named field, it
9362 extracts from <&'string1'&> the field whose number is given as the first
9363 argument. You can use &$value$& in <&'string2'&> or &`fail`& instead of
9364 <&'string3'&> as before.
9365
9366 The fields in the string are separated by any one of the characters in the
9367 separator string. These may include space or tab characters.
9368 The first field is numbered one. If the number is negative, the fields are
9369 counted from the end of the string, with the rightmost one numbered -1. If the
9370 number given is zero, the entire string is returned. If the modulus of the
9371 number is greater than the number of fields in the string, the result is the
9372 expansion of <&'string3'&>, or the empty string if <&'string3'&> is not
9373 provided. For example:
9374 .code
9375 ${extract{2}{:}{x:42:99:& Mailer::/bin/bash}}
9376 .endd
9377 yields &"42"&, and
9378 .code
9379 ${extract{-4}{:}{x:42:99:& Mailer::/bin/bash}}
9380 .endd
9381 yields &"99"&. Two successive separators mean that the field between them is
9382 empty (for example, the fifth field above).
9383
9384
9385 .vitem &*${filter{*&<&'string'&>&*}{*&<&'condition'&>&*}}*&
9386 .cindex "list" "selecting by condition"
9387 .cindex "expansion" "selecting from list by condition"
9388 .vindex "&$item$&"
9389 After expansion, <&'string'&> is interpreted as a list, colon-separated by
9390 default, but the separator can be changed in the usual way. For each item
9391 in this list, its value is place in &$item$&, and then the condition is
9392 evaluated. If the condition is true, &$item$& is added to the output as an
9393 item in a new list; if the condition is false, the item is discarded. The
9394 separator used for the output list is the same as the one used for the
9395 input, but a separator setting is not included in the output. For example:
9396 .code
9397 ${filter{a:b:c}{!eq{$item}{b}}}
9398 .endd
9399 yields &`a:c`&. At the end of the expansion, the value of &$item$& is restored
9400 to what it was before. See also the &*map*& and &*reduce*& expansion items.
9401
9402
9403 .vitem &*${hash{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}{*&<&'string3'&>&*}}*&
9404 .cindex "hash function" "textual"
9405 .cindex "expansion" "textual hash"
9406 This is a textual hashing function, and was the first to be implemented in
9407 early versions of Exim. In current releases, there are other hashing functions
9408 (numeric, MD5, and SHA-1), which are described below.
9409
9410 The first two strings, after expansion, must be numbers. Call them <&'m'&> and
9411 <&'n'&>. If you are using fixed values for these numbers, that is, if
9412 <&'string1'&> and <&'string2'&> do not change when they are expanded, you can
9413 use the simpler operator notation that avoids some of the braces:
9414 .code
9415 ${hash_<n>_<m>:<string>}
9416 .endd
9417 The second number is optional (in both notations). If <&'n'&> is greater than
9418 or equal to the length of the string, the expansion item returns the string.
9419 Otherwise it computes a new string of length <&'n'&> by applying a hashing
9420 function to the string. The new string consists of characters taken from the
9421 first <&'m'&> characters of the string
9422 .code
9423 abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQWRSTUVWXYZ0123456789
9424 .endd
9425 If <&'m'&> is not present the value 26 is used, so that only lower case
9426 letters appear. For example:
9427 .display
9428 &`$hash{3}{monty}} `& yields &`jmg`&
9429 &`$hash{5}{monty}} `& yields &`monty`&
9430 &`$hash{4}{62}{monty python}}`& yields &`fbWx`&
9431 .endd
9432
9433 .vitem "&*$header_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&&~or&~&&&
9434 &*$h_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&" &&&
9435 "&*$bheader_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&&~or&~&&&
9436 &*$bh_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&" &&&
9437 "&*$rheader_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&&~or&~&&&
9438 &*$rh_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&"
9439 .cindex "expansion" "header insertion"
9440 .vindex "&$header_$&"
9441 .vindex "&$bheader_$&"
9442 .vindex "&$rheader_$&"
9443 .cindex "header lines" "in expansion strings"
9444 .cindex "header lines" "character sets"
9445 .cindex "header lines" "decoding"
9446 Substitute the contents of the named message header line, for example
9447 .code
9448 $header_reply-to:
9449 .endd
9450 The newline that terminates a header line is not included in the expansion, but
9451 internal newlines (caused by splitting the header line over several physical
9452 lines) may be present.
9453
9454 The difference between &%rheader%&, &%bheader%&, and &%header%& is in the way
9455 the data in the header line is interpreted.
9456
9457 .ilist
9458 .cindex "white space" "in header lines"
9459 &%rheader%& gives the original &"raw"& content of the header line, with no
9460 processing at all, and without the removal of leading and trailing white space.
9461
9462 .next
9463 .cindex "base64 encoding" "in header lines"
9464 &%bheader%& removes leading and trailing white space, and then decodes base64
9465 or quoted-printable MIME &"words"& within the header text, but does no
9466 character set translation. If decoding of what looks superficially like a MIME
9467 &"word"& fails, the raw string is returned. If decoding
9468 .cindex "binary zero" "in header line"
9469 produces a binary zero character, it is replaced by a question mark &-- this is
9470 what Exim does for binary zeros that are actually received in header lines.
9471
9472 .next
9473 &%header%& tries to translate the string as decoded by &%bheader%& to a
9474 standard character set. This is an attempt to produce the same string as would
9475 be displayed on a user's MUA. If translation fails, the &%bheader%& string is
9476 returned. Translation is attempted only on operating systems that support the
9477 &[iconv()]& function. This is indicated by the compile-time macro HAVE_ICONV in
9478 a system Makefile or in &_Local/Makefile_&.
9479 .endlist ilist
9480
9481 In a filter file, the target character set for &%header%& can be specified by a
9482 command of the following form:
9483 .code
9484 headers charset "UTF-8"
9485 .endd
9486 This command affects all references to &$h_$& (or &$header_$&) expansions in
9487 subsequently obeyed filter commands. In the absence of this command, the target
9488 character set in a filter is taken from the setting of the &%headers_charset%&
9489 option in the runtime configuration. The value of this option defaults to the
9490 value of HEADERS_CHARSET in &_Local/Makefile_&. The ultimate default is
9491 ISO-8859-1.
9492
9493 Header names follow the syntax of RFC 2822, which states that they may contain
9494 any printing characters except space and colon. Consequently, curly brackets
9495 &'do not'& terminate header names, and should not be used to enclose them as
9496 if they were variables. Attempting to do so causes a syntax error.
9497
9498 Only header lines that are common to all copies of a message are visible to
9499 this mechanism. These are the original header lines that are received with the
9500 message, and any that are added by an ACL statement or by a system
9501 filter. Header lines that are added to a particular copy of a message by a
9502 router or transport are not accessible.
9503
9504 For incoming SMTP messages, no header lines are visible in
9505 ACLs that are obeyed before the data phase completes,
9506 because the header structure is not set up until the message is received.
9507 They are visible in DKIM, PRDR and DATA ACLs.
9508 Header lines that are added in a RCPT ACL (for example)
9509 are saved until the message's incoming header lines are available, at which
9510 point they are added.
9511 When any of the above ACLs ar
9512 running, however, header lines added by earlier ACLs are visible.
9513
9514 Upper case and lower case letters are synonymous in header names. If the
9515 following character is white space, the terminating colon may be omitted, but
9516 this is not recommended, because you may then forget it when it is needed. When
9517 white space terminates the header name, this white space is included in the
9518 expanded string. If the message does not contain the given header, the
9519 expansion item is replaced by an empty string. (See the &%def%& condition in
9520 section &<<SECTexpcond>>& for a means of testing for the existence of a
9521 header.)
9522
9523 If there is more than one header with the same name, they are all concatenated
9524 to form the substitution string, up to a maximum length of 64K. Unless
9525 &%rheader%& is being used, leading and trailing white space is removed from
9526 each header before concatenation, and a completely empty header is ignored. A
9527 newline character is then inserted between non-empty headers, but there is no
9528 newline at the very end. For the &%header%& and &%bheader%& expansion, for
9529 those headers that contain lists of addresses, a comma is also inserted at the
9530 junctions between headers. This does not happen for the &%rheader%& expansion.
9531
9532
9533 .vitem &*${hmac{*&<&'hashname'&>&*}{*&<&'secret'&>&*}{*&<&'string'&>&*}}*&
9534 .cindex "expansion" "hmac hashing"
9535 .cindex &%hmac%&
9536 This function uses cryptographic hashing (either MD5 or SHA-1) to convert a
9537 shared secret and some text into a message authentication code, as specified in
9538 RFC 2104. This differs from &`${md5:secret_text...}`& or
9539 &`${sha1:secret_text...}`& in that the hmac step adds a signature to the
9540 cryptographic hash, allowing for authentication that is not possible with MD5
9541 or SHA-1 alone. The hash name must expand to either &`md5`& or &`sha1`& at
9542 present. For example:
9543 .code
9544 ${hmac{md5}{somesecret}{$primary_hostname $tod_log}}
9545 .endd
9546 For the hostname &'mail.example.com'& and time 2002-10-17 11:30:59, this
9547 produces:
9548 .code
9549 dd97e3ba5d1a61b5006108f8c8252953
9550 .endd
9551 As an example of how this might be used, you might put in the main part of
9552 an Exim configuration:
9553 .code
9554 SPAMSCAN_SECRET=cohgheeLei2thahw
9555 .endd
9556 In a router or a transport you could then have:
9557 .code
9558 headers_add = \
9559 X-Spam-Scanned: ${primary_hostname} ${message_exim_id} \
9560 ${hmac{md5}{SPAMSCAN_SECRET}\
9561 {${primary_hostname},${message_exim_id},$h_message-id:}}
9562 .endd
9563 Then given a message, you can check where it was scanned by looking at the
9564 &'X-Spam-Scanned:'& header line. If you know the secret, you can check that
9565 this header line is authentic by recomputing the authentication code from the
9566 host name, message ID and the &'Message-id:'& header line. This can be done
9567 using Exim's &%-be%& option, or by other means, for example by using the
9568 &'hmac_md5_hex()'& function in Perl.
9569
9570
9571 .vitem &*${if&~*&<&'condition'&>&*&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}}*&
9572 .cindex "expansion" "conditional"
9573 .cindex "&%if%&, expansion item"
9574 If <&'condition'&> is true, <&'string1'&> is expanded and replaces the whole
9575 item; otherwise <&'string2'&> is used. The available conditions are described
9576 in section &<<SECTexpcond>>& below. For example:
9577 .code
9578 ${if eq {$local_part}{postmaster} {yes}{no} }
9579 .endd
9580 The second string need not be present; if it is not and the condition is not
9581 true, the item is replaced with nothing. Alternatively, the word &"fail"& may
9582 be present instead of the second string (without any curly brackets). In this
9583 case, the expansion is forced to fail if the condition is not true (see section
9584 &<<SECTforexpfai>>&).
9585
9586 If both strings are omitted, the result is the string &`true`& if the condition
9587 is true, and the empty string if the condition is false. This makes it less
9588 cumbersome to write custom ACL and router conditions. For example, instead of
9589 .code
9590 condition = ${if >{$acl_m4}{3}{true}{false}}
9591 .endd
9592 you can use
9593 .code
9594 condition = ${if >{$acl_m4}{3}}
9595 .endd
9596
9597
9598
9599 .vitem &*${imapfolder{*&<&'foldername'&>&*}}*&
9600 .cindex expansion "imap folder"
9601 .cindex "&%imapfolder%& expansion item"
9602 This item converts a (possibly multilevel, or with non-ASCII characters)
9603 folder specification to a Maildir name for filesystem use.
9604 For information on internationalisation support see &<<SECTi18nMDA>>&.
9605
9606
9607
9608 .vitem &*${length{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}}*&
9609 .cindex "expansion" "string truncation"
9610 .cindex "&%length%& expansion item"
9611 The &%length%& item is used to extract the initial portion of a string. Both
9612 strings are expanded, and the first one must yield a number, <&'n'&>, say. If
9613 you are using a fixed value for the number, that is, if <&'string1'&> does not
9614 change when expanded, you can use the simpler operator notation that avoids
9615 some of the braces:
9616 .code
9617 ${length_<n>:<string>}
9618 .endd
9619 The result of this item is either the first <&'n'&> characters or the whole
9620 of <&'string2'&>, whichever is the shorter. Do not confuse &%length%& with
9621 &%strlen%&, which gives the length of a string.
9622
9623
9624 .vitem "&*${listextract{*&<&'number'&>&*}&&&
9625 {*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}{*&<&'string3'&>&*}}*&"
9626 .cindex "expansion" "extracting list elements by number"
9627 .cindex "&%listextract%&" "extract list elements by number"
9628 .cindex "list" "extracting elements by number"
9629 The <&'number'&> argument must consist entirely of decimal digits,
9630 apart from an optional leading minus,
9631 and leading and trailing white space (which is ignored).
9632
9633 After expansion, <&'string1'&> is interpreted as a list, colon-separated by
9634 default, but the separator can be changed in the usual way.
9635
9636 The first field of the list is numbered one.
9637 If the number is negative, the fields are
9638 counted from the end of the list, with the rightmost one numbered -1.
9639 The numbered element of the list is extracted and placed in &$value$&,
9640 then <&'string2'&> is expanded as the result.
9641
9642 If the modulus of the
9643 number is zero or greater than the number of fields in the string,
9644 the result is the expansion of <&'string3'&>.
9645
9646 For example:
9647 .code
9648 ${listextract{2}{x:42:99}}
9649 .endd
9650 yields &"42"&, and
9651 .code
9652 ${listextract{-3}{<, x,42,99,& Mailer,,/bin/bash}{result: $value}}
9653 .endd
9654 yields &"result: 42"&.
9655
9656 If {<&'string3'&>} is omitted, an empty string is used for string3.
9657 If {<&'string2'&>} is also omitted, the value that was
9658 extracted is used.
9659 You can use &`fail`& instead of {<&'string3'&>} as in a string extract.
9660
9661
9662 .vitem "&*${lookup{*&<&'key'&>&*}&~*&<&'search&~type'&>&*&~&&&
9663 {*&<&'file'&>&*}&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}&~{*&<&'string2'&>&*}}*&"
9664 This is the first of one of two different types of lookup item, which are both
9665 described in the next item.
9666
9667 .vitem "&*${lookup&~*&<&'search&~type'&>&*&~{*&<&'query'&>&*}&~&&&
9668 {*&<&'string1'&>&*}&~{*&<&'string2'&>&*}}*&"
9669 .cindex "expansion" "lookup in"
9670 .cindex "file" "lookups"
9671 .cindex "lookup" "in expanded string"
9672 The two forms of lookup item specify data lookups in files and databases, as
9673 discussed in chapter &<<CHAPfdlookup>>&. The first form is used for single-key
9674 lookups, and the second is used for query-style lookups. The <&'key'&>,
9675 <&'file'&>, and <&'query'&> strings are expanded before use.
9676
9677 If there is any white space in a lookup item which is part of a filter command,
9678 a retry or rewrite rule, a routing rule for the &(manualroute)& router, or any
9679 other place where white space is significant, the lookup item must be enclosed
9680 in double quotes. The use of data lookups in users' filter files may be locked
9681 out by the system administrator.
9682
9683 .vindex "&$value$&"
9684 If the lookup succeeds, <&'string1'&> is expanded and replaces the entire item.
9685 During its expansion, the variable &$value$& contains the data returned by the
9686 lookup. Afterwards it reverts to the value it had previously (at the outer
9687 level it is empty). If the lookup fails, <&'string2'&> is expanded and replaces
9688 the entire item. If {<&'string2'&>} is omitted, the replacement is the empty
9689 string on failure. If <&'string2'&> is provided, it can itself be a nested
9690 lookup, thus providing a mechanism for looking up a default value when the
9691 original lookup fails.
9692
9693 If a nested lookup is used as part of <&'string1'&>, &$value$& contains the
9694 data for the outer lookup while the parameters of the second lookup are
9695 expanded, and also while <&'string2'&> of the second lookup is expanded, should
9696 the second lookup fail. Instead of {<&'string2'&>} the word &"fail"& can
9697 appear, and in this case, if the lookup fails, the entire expansion is forced
9698 to fail (see section &<<SECTforexpfai>>&). If both {<&'string1'&>} and
9699 {<&'string2'&>} are omitted, the result is the looked up value in the case of a
9700 successful lookup, and nothing in the case of failure.
9701
9702 For single-key lookups, the string &"partial"& is permitted to precede the
9703 search type in order to do partial matching, and * or *@ may follow a search
9704 type to request default lookups if the key does not match (see sections
9705 &<<SECTdefaultvaluelookups>>& and &<<SECTpartiallookup>>& for details).
9706
9707 .cindex "numerical variables (&$1$& &$2$& etc)" "in lookup expansion"
9708 If a partial search is used, the variables &$1$& and &$2$& contain the wild
9709 and non-wild parts of the key during the expansion of the replacement text.
9710 They return to their previous values at the end of the lookup item.
9711
9712 This example looks up the postmaster alias in the conventional alias file:
9713 .code
9714 ${lookup {postmaster} lsearch {/etc/aliases} {$value}}
9715 .endd
9716 This example uses NIS+ to look up the full name of the user corresponding to
9717 the local part of an address, forcing the expansion to fail if it is not found:
9718 .code
9719 ${lookup nisplus {[name=$local_part],passwd.org_dir:gcos} \
9720 {$value}fail}
9721 .endd
9722
9723
9724 .vitem &*${map{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}}*&
9725 .cindex "expansion" "list creation"
9726 .vindex "&$item$&"
9727 After expansion, <&'string1'&> is interpreted as a list, colon-separated by
9728 default, but the separator can be changed in the usual way. For each item
9729 in this list, its value is place in &$item$&, and then <&'string2'&> is
9730 expanded and added to the output as an item in a new list. The separator used
9731 for the output list is the same as the one used for the input, but a separator
9732 setting is not included in the output. For example:
9733 .code
9734 ${map{a:b:c}{[$item]}} ${map{<- x-y-z}{($item)}}
9735 .endd
9736 expands to &`[a]:[b]:[c] (x)-(y)-(z)`&. At the end of the expansion, the
9737 value of &$item$& is restored to what it was before. See also the &*filter*&
9738 and &*reduce*& expansion items.
9739
9740 .vitem &*${nhash{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}{*&<&'string3'&>&*}}*&
9741 .cindex "expansion" "numeric hash"
9742 .cindex "hash function" "numeric"
9743 The three strings are expanded; the first two must yield numbers. Call them
9744 <&'n'&> and <&'m'&>. If you are using fixed values for these numbers, that is,
9745 if <&'string1'&> and <&'string2'&> do not change when they are expanded, you
9746 can use the simpler operator notation that avoids some of the braces:
9747 .code
9748 ${nhash_<n>_<m>:<string>}
9749 .endd
9750 The second number is optional (in both notations). If there is only one number,
9751 the result is a number in the range 0&--<&'n'&>-1. Otherwise, the string is
9752 processed by a div/mod hash function that returns two numbers, separated by a
9753 slash, in the ranges 0 to <&'n'&>-1 and 0 to <&'m'&>-1, respectively. For
9754 example,
9755 .code
9756 ${nhash{8}{64}{supercalifragilisticexpialidocious}}
9757 .endd
9758 returns the string &"6/33"&.
9759
9760
9761
9762 .vitem &*${perl{*&<&'subroutine'&>&*}{*&<&'arg'&>&*}{*&<&'arg'&>&*}...}*&
9763 .cindex "Perl" "use in expanded string"
9764 .cindex "expansion" "calling Perl from"
9765 This item is available only if Exim has been built to include an embedded Perl
9766 interpreter. The subroutine name and the arguments are first separately
9767 expanded, and then the Perl subroutine is called with those arguments. No
9768 additional arguments need be given; the maximum number permitted, including the
9769 name of the subroutine, is nine.
9770
9771 The return value of the subroutine is inserted into the expanded string, unless
9772 the return value is &%undef%&. In that case, the expansion fails in the same
9773 way as an explicit &"fail"& on a lookup item. The return value is a scalar.
9774 Whatever you return is evaluated in a scalar context. For example, if you
9775 return the name of a Perl vector, the return value is the size of the vector,
9776 not its contents.
9777
9778 If the subroutine exits by calling Perl's &%die%& function, the expansion fails
9779 with the error message that was passed to &%die%&. More details of the embedded
9780 Perl facility are given in chapter &<<CHAPperl>>&.
9781
9782 The &(redirect)& router has an option called &%forbid_filter_perl%& which locks
9783 out the use of this expansion item in filter files.
9784
9785
9786 .vitem &*${prvs{*&<&'address'&>&*}{*&<&'secret'&>&*}{*&<&'keynumber'&>&*}}*&
9787 .cindex "&%prvs%& expansion item"
9788 The first argument is a complete email address and the second is secret
9789 keystring. The third argument, specifying a key number, is optional. If absent,
9790 it defaults to 0. The result of the expansion is a prvs-signed email address,
9791 to be typically used with the &%return_path%& option on an &(smtp)& transport
9792 as part of a bounce address tag validation (BATV) scheme. For more discussion
9793 and an example, see section &<<SECTverifyPRVS>>&.
9794
9795 .vitem "&*${prvscheck{*&<&'address'&>&*}{*&<&'secret'&>&*}&&&
9796 {*&<&'string'&>&*}}*&"
9797 .cindex "&%prvscheck%& expansion item"
9798 This expansion item is the complement of the &%prvs%& item. It is used for
9799 checking prvs-signed addresses. If the expansion of the first argument does not
9800 yield a syntactically valid prvs-signed address, the whole item expands to the
9801 empty string. When the first argument does expand to a syntactically valid
9802 prvs-signed address, the second argument is expanded, with the prvs-decoded
9803 version of the address and the key number extracted from the address in the
9804 variables &$prvscheck_address$& and &$prvscheck_keynum$&, respectively.
9805
9806 These two variables can be used in the expansion of the second argument to
9807 retrieve the secret. The validity of the prvs-signed address is then checked
9808 against the secret. The result is stored in the variable &$prvscheck_result$&,
9809 which is empty for failure or &"1"& for success.
9810
9811 The third argument is optional; if it is missing, it defaults to an empty
9812 string. This argument is now expanded. If the result is an empty string, the
9813 result of the expansion is the decoded version of the address. This is the case
9814 whether or not the signature was valid. Otherwise, the result of the expansion
9815 is the expansion of the third argument.
9816
9817 All three variables can be used in the expansion of the third argument.
9818 However, once the expansion is complete, only &$prvscheck_result$& remains set.
9819 For more discussion and an example, see section &<<SECTverifyPRVS>>&.
9820
9821 .vitem &*${readfile{*&<&'file&~name'&>&*}{*&<&'eol&~string'&>&*}}*&
9822 .cindex "expansion" "inserting an entire file"
9823 .cindex "file" "inserting into expansion"
9824 .cindex "&%readfile%& expansion item"
9825 The file name and end-of-line string are first expanded separately. The file is
9826 then read, and its contents replace the entire item. All newline characters in
9827 the file are replaced by the end-of-line string if it is present. Otherwise,
9828 newlines are left in the string.
9829 String expansion is not applied to the contents of the file. If you want this,
9830 you must wrap the item in an &%expand%& operator. If the file cannot be read,
9831 the string expansion fails.
9832
9833 The &(redirect)& router has an option called &%forbid_filter_readfile%& which
9834 locks out the use of this expansion item in filter files.
9835
9836
9837
9838 .vitem "&*${readsocket{*&<&'name'&>&*}{*&<&'request'&>&*}&&&
9839 {*&<&'options'&>&*}{*&<&'eol&~string'&>&*}{*&<&'fail&~string'&>&*}}*&"
9840 .cindex "expansion" "inserting from a socket"
9841 .cindex "socket, use of in expansion"
9842 .cindex "&%readsocket%& expansion item"
9843 This item inserts data from a Unix domain or TCP socket into the expanded
9844 string. The minimal way of using it uses just two arguments, as in these
9845 examples:
9846 .code
9847 ${readsocket{/socket/name}{request string}}
9848 ${readsocket{inet:some.host:1234}{request string}}
9849 .endd
9850 For a Unix domain socket, the first substring must be the path to the socket.
9851 For an Internet socket, the first substring must contain &`inet:`& followed by
9852 a host name or IP address, followed by a colon and a port, which can be a
9853 number or the name of a TCP port in &_/etc/services_&. An IP address may
9854 optionally be enclosed in square brackets. This is best for IPv6 addresses. For
9855 example:
9856 .code
9857 ${readsocket{inet:[::1]:1234}{request string}}
9858 .endd
9859 Only a single host name may be given, but if looking it up yields more than
9860 one IP address, they are each tried in turn until a connection is made. For
9861 both kinds of socket, Exim makes a connection, writes the request string
9862 unless it is an empty string; and no terminating NUL is ever sent)
9863 and reads from the socket until an end-of-file
9864 is read. A timeout of 5 seconds is applied. Additional, optional arguments
9865 extend what can be done. Firstly, you can vary the timeout. For example:
9866 .code
9867 ${readsocket{/socket/name}{request string}{3s}}
9868 .endd
9869 The third argument is a list of options, of which the first element is the timeout
9870 and must be present if the argument is given.
9871 Further elements are options of form &'name=value'&.
9872 One option type is currently recognised, defining whether (the default)
9873 or not a shutdown is done on the connection after sending the request.
9874 Example, to not do so (preferred, eg. by some webservers):
9875 .code
9876 ${readsocket{/socket/name}{request string}{3s:shutdown=no}}
9877 .endd
9878 A fourth argument allows you to change any newlines that are in the data
9879 that is read, in the same way as for &%readfile%& (see above). This example
9880 turns them into spaces:
9881 .code
9882 ${readsocket{inet:127.0.0.1:3294}{request string}{3s}{ }}
9883 .endd
9884 As with all expansions, the substrings are expanded before the processing
9885 happens. Errors in these sub-expansions cause the expansion to fail. In
9886 addition, the following errors can occur:
9887
9888 .ilist
9889 Failure to create a socket file descriptor;
9890 .next
9891 Failure to connect the socket;
9892 .next
9893 Failure to write the request string;
9894 .next
9895 Timeout on reading from the socket.
9896 .endlist
9897
9898 By default, any of these errors causes the expansion to fail. However, if
9899 you supply a fifth substring, it is expanded and used when any of the above
9900 errors occurs. For example:
9901 .code
9902 ${readsocket{/socket/name}{request string}{3s}{\n}\
9903 {socket failure}}
9904 .endd
9905 You can test for the existence of a Unix domain socket by wrapping this
9906 expansion in &`${if exists`&, but there is a race condition between that test
9907 and the actual opening of the socket, so it is safer to use the fifth argument
9908 if you want to be absolutely sure of avoiding an expansion error for a
9909 non-existent Unix domain socket, or a failure to connect to an Internet socket.
9910
9911 The &(redirect)& router has an option called &%forbid_filter_readsocket%& which
9912 locks out the use of this expansion item in filter files.
9913
9914
9915 .vitem &*${reduce{*&<&'string1'&>}{<&'string2'&>&*}{*&<&'string3'&>&*}}*&
9916 .cindex "expansion" "reducing a list to a scalar"
9917 .cindex "list" "reducing to a scalar"
9918 .vindex "&$value$&"
9919 .vindex "&$item$&"
9920 This operation reduces a list to a single, scalar string. After expansion,
9921 <&'string1'&> is interpreted as a list, colon-separated by default, but the
9922 separator can be changed in the usual way. Then <&'string2'&> is expanded and
9923 assigned to the &$value$& variable. After this, each item in the <&'string1'&>
9924 list is assigned to &$item$& in turn, and <&'string3'&> is expanded for each of
9925 them. The result of that expansion is assigned to &$value$& before the next
9926 iteration. When the end of the list is reached, the final value of &$value$& is
9927 added to the expansion output. The &*reduce*& expansion item can be used in a
9928 number of ways. For example, to add up a list of numbers:
9929 .code
9930 ${reduce {<, 1,2,3}{0}{${eval:$value+$item}}}
9931 .endd
9932 The result of that expansion would be &`6`&. The maximum of a list of numbers
9933 can be found:
9934 .code
9935 ${reduce {3:0:9:4:6}{0}{${if >{$item}{$value}{$item}{$value}}}}
9936 .endd
9937 At the end of a &*reduce*& expansion, the values of &$item$& and &$value$& are
9938 restored to what they were before. See also the &*filter*& and &*map*&
9939 expansion items.
9940
9941 .vitem &*$rheader_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&&~or&~&*$rh_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&
9942 This item inserts &"raw"& header lines. It is described with the &%header%&
9943 expansion item above.
9944
9945 .vitem "&*${run{*&<&'command'&>&*&~*&<&'args'&>&*}{*&<&'string1'&>&*}&&&
9946 {*&<&'string2'&>&*}}*&"
9947 .cindex "expansion" "running a command"
9948 .cindex "&%run%& expansion item"
9949 The command and its arguments are first expanded as one string. The string is
9950 split apart into individual arguments by spaces, and then the command is run
9951 in a separate process, but under the same uid and gid. As in other command
9952 executions from Exim, a shell is not used by default. If the command requires
9953 a shell, you must explicitly code it.
9954
9955 Since the arguments are split by spaces, when there is a variable expansion
9956 which has an empty result, it will cause the situation that the argument will
9957 simply be omitted when the program is actually executed by Exim. If the
9958 script/program requires a specific number of arguments and the expanded
9959 variable could possibly result in this empty expansion, the variable must be
9960 quoted. This is more difficult if the expanded variable itself could result
9961 in a string containing quotes, because it would interfere with the quotes
9962 around the command arguments. A possible guard against this is to wrap the
9963 variable in the &%sg%& operator to change any quote marks to some other
9964 character.
9965
9966 The standard input for the command exists, but is empty. The standard output
9967 and standard error are set to the same file descriptor.
9968 .cindex "return code" "from &%run%& expansion"
9969 .vindex "&$value$&"
9970 If the command succeeds (gives a zero return code) <&'string1'&> is expanded
9971 and replaces the entire item; during this expansion, the standard output/error
9972 from the command is in the variable &$value$&. If the command fails,
9973 <&'string2'&>, if present, is expanded and used. Once again, during the
9974 expansion, the standard output/error from the command is in the variable
9975 &$value$&.
9976
9977 If <&'string2'&> is absent, the result is empty. Alternatively, <&'string2'&>
9978 can be the word &"fail"& (not in braces) to force expansion failure if the
9979 command does not succeed. If both strings are omitted, the result is contents
9980 of the standard output/error on success, and nothing on failure.
9981
9982 .vindex "&$run_in_acl$&"
9983 The standard output/error of the command is put in the variable &$value$&.
9984 In this ACL example, the output of a command is logged for the admin to
9985 troubleshoot:
9986 .code
9987 warn condition = ${run{/usr/bin/id}{yes}{no}}
9988 log_message = Output of id: $value
9989 .endd
9990 If the command requires shell idioms, such as the > redirect operator, the
9991 shell must be invoked directly, such as with:
9992 .code
9993 ${run{/bin/bash -c "/usr/bin/id >/tmp/id"}{yes}{yes}}
9994 .endd
9995
9996 .vindex "&$runrc$&"
9997 The return code from the command is put in the variable &$runrc$&, and this
9998 remains set afterwards, so in a filter file you can do things like this:
9999 .code
10000 if "${run{x y z}{}}$runrc" is 1 then ...
10001 elif $runrc is 2 then ...
10002 ...
10003 endif
10004 .endd
10005 If execution of the command fails (for example, the command does not exist),
10006 the return code is 127 &-- the same code that shells use for non-existent
10007 commands.
10008
10009 &*Warning*&: In a router or transport, you cannot assume the order in which
10010 option values are expanded, except for those preconditions whose order of
10011 testing is documented. Therefore, you cannot reliably expect to set &$runrc$&
10012 by the expansion of one option, and use it in another.
10013
10014 The &(redirect)& router has an option called &%forbid_filter_run%& which locks
10015 out the use of this expansion item in filter files.
10016
10017
10018 .vitem &*${sg{*&<&'subject'&>&*}{*&<&'regex'&>&*}{*&<&'replacement'&>&*}}*&
10019 .cindex "expansion" "string substitution"
10020 .cindex "&%sg%& expansion item"
10021 This item works like Perl's substitution operator (s) with the global (/g)
10022 option; hence its name. However, unlike the Perl equivalent, Exim does not
10023 modify the subject string; instead it returns the modified string for insertion
10024 into the overall expansion. The item takes three arguments: the subject string,
10025 a regular expression, and a substitution string. For example:
10026 .code
10027 ${sg{abcdefabcdef}{abc}{xyz}}
10028 .endd
10029 yields &"xyzdefxyzdef"&. Because all three arguments are expanded before use,
10030 if any $, } or \ characters are required in the regular expression or in the
10031 substitution string, they have to be escaped. For example:
10032 .code
10033 ${sg{abcdef}{^(...)(...)\$}{\$2\$1}}
10034 .endd
10035 yields &"defabc"&, and
10036 .code
10037 ${sg{1=A 4=D 3=C}{\N(\d+)=\N}{K\$1=}}
10038 .endd
10039 yields &"K1=A K4=D K3=C"&. Note the use of &`\N`& to protect the contents of
10040 the regular expression from string expansion.
10041
10042
10043
10044 .vitem &*${sort{*&<&'string'&>&*}{*&<&'comparator'&>&*}{*&<&'extractor'&>&*}}*&
10045 .cindex sorting "a list"
10046 .cindex list sorting
10047 .cindex expansion "list sorting"
10048 After expansion, <&'string'&> is interpreted as a list, colon-separated by
10049 default, but the separator can be changed in the usual way.
10050 The <&'comparator'&> argument is interpreted as the operator
10051 of a two-argument expansion condition.
10052 The numeric operators plus ge, gt, le, lt (and ~i variants) are supported.
10053 The comparison should return true when applied to two values
10054 if the first value should sort before the second value.
10055 The <&'extractor'&> expansion is applied repeatedly to elements of the list,
10056 the element being placed in &$item$&,
10057 to give values for comparison.
10058
10059 The item result is a sorted list,
10060 with the original list separator,
10061 of the list elements (in full) of the original.
10062
10063 Examples:
10064 .code
10065 ${sort{3:2:1:4}{<}{$item}}
10066 .endd
10067 sorts a list of numbers, and
10068 .code
10069 ${sort {${lookup dnsdb{>:,,mx=example.com}}} {<} {${listextract{1}{<,$item}}}}
10070 .endd
10071 will sort an MX lookup into priority order.
10072
10073
10074 .vitem &*${substr{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}{*&<&'string3'&>&*}}*&
10075 .cindex "&%substr%& expansion item"
10076 .cindex "substring extraction"
10077 .cindex "expansion" "substring extraction"
10078 The three strings are expanded; the first two must yield numbers. Call them
10079 <&'n'&> and <&'m'&>. If you are using fixed values for these numbers, that is,
10080 if <&'string1'&> and <&'string2'&> do not change when they are expanded, you
10081 can use the simpler operator notation that avoids some of the braces:
10082 .code
10083 ${substr_<n>_<m>:<string>}
10084 .endd
10085 The second number is optional (in both notations).
10086 If it is absent in the simpler format, the preceding underscore must also be
10087 omitted.
10088
10089 The &%substr%& item can be used to extract more general substrings than
10090 &%length%&. The first number, <&'n'&>, is a starting offset, and <&'m'&> is the
10091 length required. For example
10092 .code
10093 ${substr{3}{2}{$local_part}}
10094 .endd
10095 If the starting offset is greater than the string length the result is the
10096 null string; if the length plus starting offset is greater than the string
10097 length, the result is the right-hand part of the string, starting from the
10098 given offset. The first character in the string has offset zero.
10099
10100 The &%substr%& expansion item can take negative offset values to count
10101 from the right-hand end of its operand. The last character is offset -1, the
10102 second-last is offset -2, and so on. Thus, for example,
10103 .code
10104 ${substr{-5}{2}{1234567}}
10105 .endd
10106 yields &"34"&. If the absolute value of a negative offset is greater than the
10107 length of the string, the substring starts at the beginning of the string, and
10108 the length is reduced by the amount of overshoot. Thus, for example,
10109 .code
10110 ${substr{-5}{2}{12}}
10111 .endd
10112 yields an empty string, but
10113 .code
10114 ${substr{-3}{2}{12}}
10115 .endd
10116 yields &"1"&.
10117
10118 When the second number is omitted from &%substr%&, the remainder of the string
10119 is taken if the offset is positive. If it is negative, all characters in the
10120 string preceding the offset point are taken. For example, an offset of -1 and
10121 no length, as in these semantically identical examples:
10122 .code
10123 ${substr_-1:abcde}
10124 ${substr{-1}{abcde}}
10125 .endd
10126 yields all but the last character of the string, that is, &"abcd"&.
10127
10128
10129
10130 .vitem "&*${tr{*&<&'subject'&>&*}{*&<&'characters'&>&*}&&&
10131 {*&<&'replacements'&>&*}}*&"
10132 .cindex "expansion" "character translation"
10133 .cindex "&%tr%& expansion item"
10134 This item does single-character translation on its subject string. The second
10135 argument is a list of characters to be translated in the subject string. Each
10136 matching character is replaced by the corresponding character from the
10137 replacement list. For example
10138 .code
10139 ${tr{abcdea}{ac}{13}}
10140 .endd
10141 yields &`1b3de1`&. If there are duplicates in the second character string, the
10142 last occurrence is used. If the third string is shorter than the second, its
10143 last character is replicated. However, if it is empty, no translation takes
10144 place.
10145 .endlist
10146
10147
10148
10149 .section "Expansion operators" "SECTexpop"
10150 .cindex "expansion" "operators"
10151 For expansion items that perform transformations on a single argument string,
10152 the &"operator"& notation is used because it is simpler and uses fewer braces.
10153 The substring is first expanded before the operation is applied to it. The
10154 following operations can be performed:
10155
10156 .vlist
10157 .vitem &*${address:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10158 .cindex "expansion" "RFC 2822 address handling"
10159 .cindex "&%address%& expansion item"
10160 The string is interpreted as an RFC 2822 address, as it might appear in a
10161 header line, and the effective address is extracted from it. If the string does
10162 not parse successfully, the result is empty.
10163
10164
10165 .vitem &*${addresses:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10166 .cindex "expansion" "RFC 2822 address handling"
10167 .cindex "&%addresses%& expansion item"
10168 The string (after expansion) is interpreted as a list of addresses in RFC
10169 2822 format, such as can be found in a &'To:'& or &'Cc:'& header line. The
10170 operative address (&'local-part@domain'&) is extracted from each item, and the
10171 result of the expansion is a colon-separated list, with appropriate
10172 doubling of colons should any happen to be present in the email addresses.
10173 Syntactically invalid RFC2822 address items are omitted from the output.
10174
10175 It is possible to specify a character other than colon for the output
10176 separator by starting the string with > followed by the new separator
10177 character. For example:
10178 .code
10179 ${addresses:>& Chief <ceo@up.stairs>, sec@base.ment (dogsbody)}
10180 .endd
10181 expands to &`ceo@up.stairs&&sec@base.ment`&. The string is expanded
10182 first, so if the expanded string starts with >, it may change the output
10183 separator unintentionally. This can be avoided by setting the output
10184 separator explicitly:
10185 .code
10186 ${addresses:>:$h_from:}
10187 .endd
10188
10189 Compare the &*address*& (singular)
10190 expansion item, which extracts the working address from a single RFC2822
10191 address. See the &*filter*&, &*map*&, and &*reduce*& items for ways of
10192 processing lists.
10193
10194 To clarify "list of addresses in RFC 2822 format" mentioned above, Exim follows
10195 a strict interpretation of header line formatting. Exim parses the bare,
10196 unquoted portion of an email address and if it finds a comma, treats it as an
10197 email address separator. For the example header line:
10198 .code
10199 From: =?iso-8859-2?Q?Last=2C_First?= <user@example.com>
10200 .endd
10201 The first example below demonstrates that Q-encoded email addresses are parsed
10202 properly if it is given the raw header (in this example, &`$rheader_from:`&).
10203 It does not see the comma because it's still encoded as "=2C". The second
10204 example below is passed the contents of &`$header_from:`&, meaning it gets
10205 de-mimed. Exim sees the decoded "," so it treats it as &*two*& email addresses.
10206 The third example shows that the presence of a comma is skipped when it is
10207 quoted.
10208 .code
10209 # exim -be '${addresses:From: \
10210 =?iso-8859-2?Q?Last=2C_First?= <user@example.com>}'
10211 user@example.com
10212 # exim -be '${addresses:From: Last, First <user@example.com>}'
10213 Last:user@example.com
10214 # exim -be '${addresses:From: "Last, First" <user@example.com>}'
10215 user@example.com
10216 .endd
10217
10218 .vitem &*${base32:*&<&'digits'&>&*}*&
10219 .cindex "&%base32%& expansion item"
10220 .cindex "expansion" "conversion to base 32"
10221 The string must consist entirely of decimal digits. The number is converted to
10222 base 32 and output as a (empty, for zero) string of characters.
10223 Only lowercase letters are used.
10224
10225 .vitem &*${base32d:*&<&'base-32&~digits'&>&*}*&
10226 .cindex "&%base32d%& expansion item"
10227 .cindex "expansion" "conversion to base 32"
10228 The string must consist entirely of base-32 digits.
10229 The number is converted to decimal and output as a string.
10230
10231 .vitem &*${base62:*&<&'digits'&>&*}*&
10232 .cindex "&%base62%& expansion item"
10233 .cindex "expansion" "conversion to base 62"
10234 The string must consist entirely of decimal digits. The number is converted to
10235 base 62 and output as a string of six characters, including leading zeros. In
10236 the few operating environments where Exim uses base 36 instead of base 62 for
10237 its message identifiers (because those systems do not have case-sensitive file
10238 names), base 36 is used by this operator, despite its name. &*Note*&: Just to
10239 be absolutely clear: this is &'not'& base64 encoding.
10240
10241 .vitem &*${base62d:*&<&'base-62&~digits'&>&*}*&
10242 .cindex "&%base62d%& expansion item"
10243 .cindex "expansion" "conversion to base 62"
10244 The string must consist entirely of base-62 digits, or, in operating
10245 environments where Exim uses base 36 instead of base 62 for its message
10246 identifiers, base-36 digits. The number is converted to decimal and output as a
10247 string.
10248
10249 .vitem &*${base64:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10250 .cindex "expansion" "base64 encoding"
10251 .cindex "base64 encoding" "in string expansion"
10252 .cindex "&%base64%& expansion item"
10253 .cindex certificate "base64 of DER"
10254 This operator converts a string into one that is base64 encoded.
10255
10256 If the string is a single variable of type certificate,
10257 returns the base64 encoding of the DER form of the certificate.
10258
10259
10260 .vitem &*${base64d:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10261 .cindex "expansion" "base64 decoding"
10262 .cindex "base64 decoding" "in string expansion"
10263 .cindex "&%base64d%& expansion item"
10264 This operator converts a base64-encoded string into the un-coded form.
10265
10266
10267 .vitem &*${domain:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10268 .cindex "domain" "extraction"
10269 .cindex "expansion" "domain extraction"
10270 The string is interpreted as an RFC 2822 address and the domain is extracted
10271 from it. If the string does not parse successfully, the result is empty.
10272
10273
10274 .vitem &*${escape:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10275 .cindex "expansion" "escaping non-printing characters"
10276 .cindex "&%escape%& expansion item"
10277 If the string contains any non-printing characters, they are converted to
10278 escape sequences starting with a backslash. Whether characters with the most
10279 significant bit set (so-called &"8-bit characters"&) count as printing or not
10280 is controlled by the &%print_topbitchars%& option.
10281
10282 .vitem &*${escape8bit:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10283 .cindex "expansion" "escaping 8-bit characters"
10284 .cindex "&%escape8bit%& expansion item"
10285 If the string contains and characters with the most significant bit set,
10286 they are converted to escape sequences starting with a backslash.
10287 Backslashes and DEL characters are also converted.
10288
10289
10290 .vitem &*${eval:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&&~and&~&*${eval10:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10291 .cindex "expansion" "expression evaluation"
10292 .cindex "expansion" "arithmetic expression"
10293 .cindex "&%eval%& expansion item"
10294 These items supports simple arithmetic and bitwise logical operations in
10295 expansion strings. The string (after expansion) must be a conventional
10296 arithmetic expression, but it is limited to basic arithmetic operators, bitwise
10297 logical operators, and parentheses. All operations are carried out using
10298 integer arithmetic. The operator priorities are as follows (the same as in the
10299 C programming language):
10300 .table2 70pt 300pt
10301 .irow &'highest:'& "not (~), negate (-)"
10302 .irow "" "multiply (*), divide (/), remainder (%)"
10303 .irow "" "plus (+), minus (-)"
10304 .irow "" "shift-left (<<), shift-right (>>)"
10305 .irow "" "and (&&)"
10306 .irow "" "xor (^)"
10307 .irow &'lowest:'& "or (|)"
10308 .endtable
10309 Binary operators with the same priority are evaluated from left to right. White
10310 space is permitted before or after operators.
10311
10312 For &%eval%&, numbers may be decimal, octal (starting with &"0"&) or
10313 hexadecimal (starting with &"0x"&). For &%eval10%&, all numbers are taken as
10314 decimal, even if they start with a leading zero; hexadecimal numbers are not
10315 permitted. This can be useful when processing numbers extracted from dates or
10316 times, which often do have leading zeros.
10317
10318 A number may be followed by &"K"&, &"M"& or &"G"& to multiply it by 1024, 1024*1024
10319 or 1024*1024*1024,
10320 respectively. Negative numbers are supported. The result of the computation is
10321 a decimal representation of the answer (without &"K"&, &"M"& or &"G"&). For example:
10322
10323 .display
10324 &`${eval:1+1} `& yields 2
10325 &`${eval:1+2*3} `& yields 7
10326 &`${eval:(1+2)*3} `& yields 9
10327 &`${eval:2+42%5} `& yields 4
10328 &`${eval:0xc&amp;5} `& yields 4
10329 &`${eval:0xc|5} `& yields 13
10330 &`${eval:0xc^5} `& yields 9
10331 &`${eval:0xc>>1} `& yields 6
10332 &`${eval:0xc<<1} `& yields 24
10333 &`${eval:~255&amp;0x1234} `& yields 4608
10334 &`${eval:-(~255&amp;0x1234)} `& yields -4608
10335 .endd
10336
10337 As a more realistic example, in an ACL you might have
10338 .code
10339 deny message = Too many bad recipients
10340 condition = \
10341 ${if and { \
10342 {>{$rcpt_count}{10}} \
10343 { \
10344 < \
10345 {$recipients_count} \
10346 {${eval:$rcpt_count/2}} \
10347 } \
10348 }{yes}{no}}
10349 .endd
10350 The condition is true if there have been more than 10 RCPT commands and
10351 fewer than half of them have resulted in a valid recipient.
10352
10353
10354 .vitem &*${expand:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10355 .cindex "expansion" "re-expansion of substring"
10356 The &%expand%& operator causes a string to be expanded for a second time. For
10357 example,
10358 .code
10359 ${expand:${lookup{$domain}dbm{/some/file}{$value}}}
10360 .endd
10361 first looks up a string in a file while expanding the operand for &%expand%&,
10362 and then re-expands what it has found.
10363
10364
10365 .vitem &*${from_utf8:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10366 .cindex "Unicode"
10367 .cindex "UTF-8" "conversion from"
10368 .cindex "expansion" "UTF-8 conversion"
10369 .cindex "&%from_utf8%& expansion item"
10370 The world is slowly moving towards Unicode, although there are no standards for
10371 email yet. However, other applications (including some databases) are starting
10372 to store data in Unicode, using UTF-8 encoding. This operator converts from a
10373 UTF-8 string to an ISO-8859-1 string. UTF-8 code values greater than 255 are
10374 converted to underscores. The input must be a valid UTF-8 string. If it is not,
10375 the result is an undefined sequence of bytes.
10376
10377 Unicode code points with values less than 256 are compatible with ASCII and
10378 ISO-8859-1 (also known as Latin-1).
10379 For example, character 169 is the copyright symbol in both cases, though the
10380 way it is encoded is different. In UTF-8, more than one byte is needed for
10381 characters with code values greater than 127, whereas ISO-8859-1 is a
10382 single-byte encoding (but thereby limited to 256 characters). This makes
10383 translation from UTF-8 to ISO-8859-1 straightforward.
10384
10385
10386 .vitem &*${hash_*&<&'n'&>&*_*&<&'m'&>&*:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10387 .cindex "hash function" "textual"
10388 .cindex "expansion" "textual hash"
10389 The &%hash%& operator is a simpler interface to the hashing function that can
10390 be used when the two parameters are fixed numbers (as opposed to strings that
10391 change when expanded). The effect is the same as
10392 .code
10393 ${hash{<n>}{<m>}{<string>}}
10394 .endd
10395 See the description of the general &%hash%& item above for details. The
10396 abbreviation &%h%& can be used when &%hash%& is used as an operator.
10397
10398
10399
10400 .vitem &*${hex2b64:*&<&'hexstring'&>&*}*&
10401 .cindex "base64 encoding" "conversion from hex"
10402 .cindex "expansion" "hex to base64"
10403 .cindex "&%hex2b64%& expansion item"
10404 This operator converts a hex string into one that is base64 encoded. This can
10405 be useful for processing the output of the MD5 and SHA-1 hashing functions.
10406
10407
10408
10409 .vitem &*${hexquote:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10410 .cindex "quoting" "hex-encoded unprintable characters"
10411 .cindex "&%hexquote%& expansion item"
10412 This operator converts non-printable characters in a string into a hex
10413 escape form. Byte values between 33 (!) and 126 (~) inclusive are left
10414 as is, and other byte values are converted to &`\xNN`&, for example a
10415 byte value 127 is converted to &`\x7f`&.
10416
10417
10418 .vitem &*${ipv6denorm:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10419 .cindex "&%ipv6denorm%& expansion item"
10420 .cindex "IP address" normalisation
10421 This expands an IPv6 address to a full eight-element colon-separated set
10422 of hex digits including leading zeroes.
10423 A trailing ipv4-style dotted-decimal set is converted to hex.
10424 Pure IPv4 addresses are converted to IPv4-mapped IPv6.
10425
10426 .vitem &*${ipv6norm:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10427 .cindex "&%ipv6norm%& expansion item"
10428 .cindex "IP address" normalisation
10429 .cindex "IP address" "canonical form"
10430 This converts an IPv6 address to canonical form.
10431 Leading zeroes of groups are omitted, and the longest
10432 set of zero-valued groups is replaced with a double colon.
10433 A trailing ipv4-style dotted-decimal set is converted to hex.
10434 Pure IPv4 addresses are converted to IPv4-mapped IPv6.
10435
10436
10437 .vitem &*${lc:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10438 .cindex "case forcing in strings"
10439 .cindex "string" "case forcing"
10440 .cindex "lower casing"
10441 .cindex "expansion" "case forcing"
10442 .cindex "&%lc%& expansion item"
10443 This forces the letters in the string into lower-case, for example:
10444 .code
10445 ${lc:$local_part}
10446 .endd
10447
10448 .vitem &*${length_*&<&'number'&>&*:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10449 .cindex "expansion" "string truncation"
10450 .cindex "&%length%& expansion item"
10451 The &%length%& operator is a simpler interface to the &%length%& function that
10452 can be used when the parameter is a fixed number (as opposed to a string that
10453 changes when expanded). The effect is the same as
10454 .code
10455 ${length{<number>}{<string>}}
10456 .endd
10457 See the description of the general &%length%& item above for details. Note that
10458 &%length%& is not the same as &%strlen%&. The abbreviation &%l%& can be used
10459 when &%length%& is used as an operator.
10460
10461
10462 .vitem &*${listcount:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10463 .cindex "expansion" "list item count"
10464 .cindex "list" "item count"
10465 .cindex "list" "count of items"
10466 .cindex "&%listcount%& expansion item"
10467 The string is interpreted as a list and the number of items is returned.
10468
10469
10470 .vitem &*${listnamed:*&<&'name'&>&*}*&&~and&~&*${listnamed_*&<&'type'&>&*:*&<&'name'&>&*}*&
10471 .cindex "expansion" "named list"
10472 .cindex "&%listnamed%& expansion item"
10473 The name is interpreted as a named list and the content of the list is returned,
10474 expanding any referenced lists, re-quoting as needed for colon-separation.
10475 If the optional type is given it must be one of "a", "d", "h" or "l"
10476 and selects address-, domain-, host- or localpart- lists to search among respectively.
10477 Otherwise all types are searched in an undefined order and the first
10478 matching list is returned.
10479
10480
10481 .vitem &*${local_part:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10482 .cindex "expansion" "local part extraction"
10483 .cindex "&%local_part%& expansion item"
10484 The string is interpreted as an RFC 2822 address and the local part is
10485 extracted from it. If the string does not parse successfully, the result is
10486 empty.
10487
10488
10489 .vitem &*${mask:*&<&'IP&~address'&>&*/*&<&'bit&~count'&>&*}*&
10490 .cindex "masked IP address"
10491 .cindex "IP address" "masking"
10492 .cindex "CIDR notation"
10493 .cindex "expansion" "IP address masking"
10494 .cindex "&%mask%& expansion item"
10495 If the form of the string to be operated on is not an IP address followed by a
10496 slash and an integer (that is, a network address in CIDR notation), the
10497 expansion fails. Otherwise, this operator converts the IP address to binary,
10498 masks off the least significant bits according to the bit count, and converts
10499 the result back to text, with mask appended. For example,
10500 .code
10501 ${mask:10.111.131.206/28}
10502 .endd
10503 returns the string &"10.111.131.192/28"&. Since this operation is expected to
10504 be mostly used for looking up masked addresses in files, the result for an IPv6
10505 address uses dots to separate components instead of colons, because colon
10506 terminates a key string in lsearch files. So, for example,
10507 .code
10508 ${mask:3ffe:ffff:836f:0a00:000a:0800:200a:c031/99}
10509 .endd
10510 returns the string
10511 .code
10512 3ffe.ffff.836f.0a00.000a.0800.2000.0000/99
10513 .endd
10514 Letters in IPv6 addresses are always output in lower case.
10515
10516
10517 .vitem &*${md5:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10518 .cindex "MD5 hash"
10519 .cindex "expansion" "MD5 hash"
10520 .cindex certificate fingerprint
10521 .cindex "&%md5%& expansion item"
10522 The &%md5%& operator computes the MD5 hash value of the string, and returns it
10523 as a 32-digit hexadecimal number, in which any letters are in lower case.
10524
10525 If the string is a single variable of type certificate,
10526 returns the MD5 hash fingerprint of the certificate.
10527
10528
10529 .vitem &*${nhash_*&<&'n'&>&*_*&<&'m'&>&*:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10530 .cindex "expansion" "numeric hash"
10531 .cindex "hash function" "numeric"
10532 The &%nhash%& operator is a simpler interface to the numeric hashing function
10533 that can be used when the two parameters are fixed numbers (as opposed to
10534 strings that change when expanded). The effect is the same as
10535 .code
10536 ${nhash{<n>}{<m>}{<string>}}
10537 .endd
10538 See the description of the general &%nhash%& item above for details.
10539
10540
10541 .vitem &*${quote:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10542 .cindex "quoting" "in string expansions"
10543 .cindex "expansion" "quoting"
10544 .cindex "&%quote%& expansion item"
10545 The &%quote%& operator puts its argument into double quotes if it
10546 is an empty string or
10547 contains anything other than letters, digits, underscores, dots, and hyphens.
10548 Any occurrences of double quotes and backslashes are escaped with a backslash.
10549 Newlines and carriage returns are converted to &`\n`& and &`\r`&,
10550 respectively For example,
10551 .code
10552 ${quote:ab"*"cd}
10553 .endd
10554 becomes
10555 .code
10556 "ab\"*\"cd"
10557 .endd
10558 The place where this is useful is when the argument is a substitution from a
10559 variable or a message header.
10560
10561 .vitem &*${quote_local_part:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10562 .cindex "&%quote_local_part%& expansion item"
10563 This operator is like &%quote%&, except that it quotes the string only if
10564 required to do so by the rules of RFC 2822 for quoting local parts. For
10565 example, a plus sign would not cause quoting (but it would for &%quote%&).
10566 If you are creating a new email address from the contents of &$local_part$&
10567 (or any other unknown data), you should always use this operator.
10568
10569
10570 .vitem &*${quote_*&<&'lookup-type'&>&*:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10571 .cindex "quoting" "lookup-specific"
10572 This operator applies lookup-specific quoting rules to the string. Each
10573 query-style lookup type has its own quoting rules which are described with
10574 the lookups in chapter &<<CHAPfdlookup>>&. For example,
10575 .code
10576 ${quote_ldap:two * two}
10577 .endd
10578 returns
10579 .code
10580 two%20%5C2A%20two
10581 .endd
10582 For single-key lookup types, no quoting is ever necessary and this operator
10583 yields an unchanged string.
10584
10585
10586 .vitem &*${randint:*&<&'n'&>&*}*&
10587 .cindex "random number"
10588 This operator returns a somewhat random number which is less than the
10589 supplied number and is at least 0. The quality of this randomness depends
10590 on how Exim was built; the values are not suitable for keying material.
10591 If Exim is linked against OpenSSL then RAND_pseudo_bytes() is used.
10592 If Exim is linked against GnuTLS then gnutls_rnd(GNUTLS_RND_NONCE) is used,
10593 for versions of GnuTLS with that function.
10594 Otherwise, the implementation may be arc4random(), random() seeded by
10595 srandomdev() or srandom(), or a custom implementation even weaker than
10596 random().
10597
10598
10599 .vitem &*${reverse_ip:*&<&'ipaddr'&>&*}*&
10600 .cindex "expansion" "IP address"
10601 This operator reverses an IP address; for IPv4 addresses, the result is in
10602 dotted-quad decimal form, while for IPv6 addresses the result is in
10603 dotted-nibble hexadecimal form. In both cases, this is the "natural" form
10604 for DNS. For example,
10605 .code
10606 ${reverse_ip:192.0.2.4}
10607 ${reverse_ip:2001:0db8:c42:9:1:abcd:192.0.2.127}
10608 .endd
10609 returns
10610 .code
10611 4.2.0.192
10612 f.7.2.0.0.0.0.c.d.c.b.a.1.0.0.0.9.0.0.0.2.4.c.0.8.b.d.0.1.0.0.2
10613 .endd
10614
10615
10616 .vitem &*${rfc2047:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10617 .cindex "expansion" "RFC 2047"
10618 .cindex "RFC 2047" "expansion operator"
10619 .cindex "&%rfc2047%& expansion item"
10620 This operator encodes text according to the rules of RFC 2047. This is an
10621 encoding that is used in header lines to encode non-ASCII characters. It is
10622 assumed that the input string is in the encoding specified by the
10623 &%headers_charset%& option, which gets its default at build time. If the string
10624 contains only characters in the range 33&--126, and no instances of the
10625 characters
10626 .code
10627 ? = ( ) < > @ , ; : \ " . [ ] _
10628 .endd
10629 it is not modified. Otherwise, the result is the RFC 2047 encoding of the
10630 string, using as many &"encoded words"& as necessary to encode all the
10631 characters.
10632
10633
10634 .vitem &*${rfc2047d:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10635 .cindex "expansion" "RFC 2047"
10636 .cindex "RFC 2047" "decoding"
10637 .cindex "&%rfc2047d%& expansion item"
10638 This operator decodes strings that are encoded as per RFC 2047. Binary zero
10639 bytes are replaced by question marks. Characters are converted into the
10640 character set defined by &%headers_charset%&. Overlong RFC 2047 &"words"& are
10641 not recognized unless &%check_rfc2047_length%& is set false.
10642
10643 &*Note*&: If you use &%$header%&_&'xxx'&&*:*& (or &%$h%&_&'xxx'&&*:*&) to
10644 access a header line, RFC 2047 decoding is done automatically. You do not need
10645 to use this operator as well.
10646
10647
10648
10649 .vitem &*${rxquote:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10650 .cindex "quoting" "in regular expressions"
10651 .cindex "regular expressions" "quoting"
10652 .cindex "&%rxquote%& expansion item"
10653 The &%rxquote%& operator inserts a backslash before any non-alphanumeric
10654 characters in its argument. This is useful when substituting the values of
10655 variables or headers inside regular expressions.
10656
10657
10658 .vitem &*${sha1:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10659 .cindex "SHA-1 hash"
10660 .cindex "expansion" "SHA-1 hashing"
10661 .cindex certificate fingerprint
10662 .cindex "&%sha1%& expansion item"
10663 The &%sha1%& operator computes the SHA-1 hash value of the string, and returns
10664 it as a 40-digit hexadecimal number, in which any letters are in upper case.
10665
10666 If the string is a single variable of type certificate,
10667 returns the SHA-1 hash fingerprint of the certificate.
10668
10669
10670 .vitem &*${sha256:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10671 .cindex "SHA-256 hash"
10672 .cindex certificate fingerprint
10673 .cindex "expansion" "SHA-256 hashing"
10674 .cindex "&%sha256%& expansion item"
10675 The &%sha256%& operator computes the SHA-256 hash value of the string
10676 and returns
10677 it as a 64-digit hexadecimal number, in which any letters are in upper case.
10678
10679 If the string is a single variable of type certificate,
10680 returns the SHA-256 hash fingerprint of the certificate.
10681
10682
10683 .vitem &*${sha3:*&<&'string'&>&*}*& &&&
10684 &*${sha3_<n>:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10685 .cindex "SHA3 hash"
10686 .cindex "expansion" "SHA3 hashing"
10687 .cindex "&%sha3%& expansion item"
10688 The &%sha3%& operator computes the SHA3-256 hash value of the string
10689 and returns
10690 it as a 64-digit hexadecimal number, in which any letters are in upper case.
10691
10692 If a number is appended, separated by an underbar, it specifies
10693 the output length. Values of 224, 256, 384 and 512 are accepted;
10694 with 256 being the default.
10695
10696 The &%sha3%& expansion item is only supported if Exim has been
10697 compiled with GnuTLS 3.5.0 or later,
10698 or OpenSSL 1.1.1 or later.
10699 The macro "_CRYPTO_HASH_SHA3" will be defined if it is supported.
10700
10701
10702 .vitem &*${stat:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10703 .cindex "expansion" "statting a file"
10704 .cindex "file" "extracting characteristics"
10705 .cindex "&%stat%& expansion item"
10706 The string, after expansion, must be a file path. A call to the &[stat()]&
10707 function is made for this path. If &[stat()]& fails, an error occurs and the
10708 expansion fails. If it succeeds, the data from the stat replaces the item, as a
10709 series of <&'name'&>=<&'value'&> pairs, where the values are all numerical,
10710 except for the value of &"smode"&. The names are: &"mode"& (giving the mode as
10711 a 4-digit octal number), &"smode"& (giving the mode in symbolic format as a
10712 10-character string, as for the &'ls'& command), &"inode"&, &"device"&,
10713 &"links"&, &"uid"&, &"gid"&, &"size"&, &"atime"&, &"mtime"&, and &"ctime"&. You
10714 can extract individual fields using the &%extract%& expansion item.
10715
10716 The use of the &%stat%& expansion in users' filter files can be locked out by
10717 the system administrator. &*Warning*&: The file size may be incorrect on 32-bit
10718 systems for files larger than 2GB.
10719
10720 .vitem &*${str2b64:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10721 .cindex "&%str2b64%& expansion item"
10722 Now deprecated, a synonym for the &%base64%& expansion operator.
10723
10724
10725
10726 .vitem &*${strlen:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10727 .cindex "expansion" "string length"
10728 .cindex "string" "length in expansion"
10729 .cindex "&%strlen%& expansion item"
10730 The item is replace by the length of the expanded string, expressed as a
10731 decimal number. &*Note*&: Do not confuse &%strlen%& with &%length%&.
10732
10733
10734 .vitem &*${substr_*&<&'start'&>&*_*&<&'length'&>&*:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10735 .cindex "&%substr%& expansion item"
10736 .cindex "substring extraction"
10737 .cindex "expansion" "substring expansion"
10738 The &%substr%& operator is a simpler interface to the &%substr%& function that
10739 can be used when the two parameters are fixed numbers (as opposed to strings
10740 that change when expanded). The effect is the same as
10741 .code
10742 ${substr{<start>}{<length>}{<string>}}
10743 .endd
10744 See the description of the general &%substr%& item above for details. The
10745 abbreviation &%s%& can be used when &%substr%& is used as an operator.
10746
10747 .vitem &*${time_eval:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10748 .cindex "&%time_eval%& expansion item"
10749 .cindex "time interval" "decoding"
10750 This item converts an Exim time interval such as &`2d4h5m`& into a number of
10751 seconds.
10752
10753 .vitem &*${time_interval:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10754 .cindex "&%time_interval%& expansion item"
10755 .cindex "time interval" "formatting"
10756 The argument (after sub-expansion) must be a sequence of decimal digits that
10757 represents an interval of time as a number of seconds. It is converted into a
10758 number of larger units and output in Exim's normal time format, for example,
10759 &`1w3d4h2m6s`&.
10760
10761 .vitem &*${uc:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10762 .cindex "case forcing in strings"
10763 .cindex "string" "case forcing"
10764 .cindex "upper casing"
10765 .cindex "expansion" "case forcing"
10766 .cindex "&%uc%& expansion item"
10767 This forces the letters in the string into upper-case.
10768
10769 .vitem &*${utf8clean:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10770 .cindex "correction of invalid utf-8 sequences in strings"
10771 .cindex "utf-8" "utf-8 sequences"
10772 .cindex "incorrect utf-8"
10773 .cindex "expansion" "utf-8 forcing"
10774 .cindex "&%utf8clean%& expansion item"
10775 This replaces any invalid utf-8 sequence in the string by the character &`?`&.
10776
10777 .vitem "&*${utf8_domain_to_alabel:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&" &&&
10778 "&*${utf8_domain_from_alabel:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&" &&&
10779 "&*${utf8_localpart_to_alabel:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&" &&&
10780 "&*${utf8_localpart_from_alabel:*&<&'string'&>&*}*&"
10781 .cindex expansion UTF-8
10782 .cindex UTF-8 expansion
10783 .cindex EAI
10784 .cindex internationalisation
10785 .cindex "&%utf8_domain_to_alabel%& expansion item"
10786 .cindex "&%utf8_domain_from_alabel%& expansion item"
10787 .cindex "&%utf8_localpart_to_alabel%& expansion item"
10788 .cindex "&%utf8_localpart_from_alabel%& expansion item"
10789 These convert EAI mail name components between UTF-8 and a-label forms.
10790 For information on internationalisation support see &<<SECTi18nMTA>>&.
10791 .endlist
10792
10793
10794
10795
10796
10797
10798 .section "Expansion conditions" "SECTexpcond"
10799 .scindex IIDexpcond "expansion" "conditions"
10800 The following conditions are available for testing by the &%${if%& construct
10801 while expanding strings:
10802
10803 .vlist
10804 .vitem &*!*&<&'condition'&>
10805 .cindex "expansion" "negating a condition"
10806 .cindex "negation" "in expansion condition"
10807 Preceding any condition with an exclamation mark negates the result of the
10808 condition.
10809
10810 .vitem <&'symbolic&~operator'&>&~&*{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
10811 .cindex "numeric comparison"
10812 .cindex "expansion" "numeric comparison"
10813 There are a number of symbolic operators for doing numeric comparisons. They
10814 are:
10815 .display
10816 &`= `& equal
10817 &`== `& equal
10818 &`> `& greater
10819 &`>= `& greater or equal
10820 &`< `& less
10821 &`<= `& less or equal
10822 .endd
10823 For example:
10824 .code
10825 ${if >{$message_size}{10M} ...
10826 .endd
10827 Note that the general negation operator provides for inequality testing. The
10828 two strings must take the form of optionally signed decimal integers,
10829 optionally followed by one of the letters &"K"&, &"M"& or &"G"& (in either upper or
10830 lower case), signifying multiplication by 1024, 1024*1024 or 1024*1024*1024, respectively.
10831 As a special case, the numerical value of an empty string is taken as
10832 zero.
10833
10834 In all cases, a relative comparator OP is testing if <&'string1'&> OP
10835 <&'string2'&>; the above example is checking if &$message_size$& is larger than
10836 10M, not if 10M is larger than &$message_size$&.
10837
10838
10839 .vitem &*acl&~{{*&<&'name'&>&*}{*&<&'arg1'&>&*}&&&
10840 {*&<&'arg2'&>&*}...}*&
10841 .cindex "expansion" "calling an acl"
10842 .cindex "&%acl%&" "expansion condition"
10843 The name and zero to nine argument strings are first expanded separately. The expanded
10844 arguments are assigned to the variables &$acl_arg1$& to &$acl_arg9$& in order.
10845 Any unused are made empty. The variable &$acl_narg$& is set to the number of
10846 arguments. The named ACL (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&) is called
10847 and may use the variables; if another acl expansion is used the values
10848 are restored after it returns. If the ACL sets
10849 a value using a "message =" modifier the variable $value becomes
10850 the result of the expansion, otherwise it is empty.
10851 If the ACL returns accept the condition is true; if deny, false.
10852 If the ACL returns defer the result is a forced-fail.
10853
10854 .vitem &*bool&~{*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10855 .cindex "expansion" "boolean parsing"
10856 .cindex "&%bool%& expansion condition"
10857 This condition turns a string holding a true or false representation into
10858 a boolean state. It parses &"true"&, &"false"&, &"yes"& and &"no"&
10859 (case-insensitively); also integer numbers map to true if non-zero,
10860 false if zero.
10861 An empty string is treated as false.
10862 Leading and trailing whitespace is ignored;
10863 thus a string consisting only of whitespace is false.
10864 All other string values will result in expansion failure.
10865
10866 When combined with ACL variables, this expansion condition will let you
10867 make decisions in one place and act on those decisions in another place.
10868 For example:
10869 .code
10870 ${if bool{$acl_m_privileged_sender} ...
10871 .endd
10872
10873
10874 .vitem &*bool_lax&~{*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
10875 .cindex "expansion" "boolean parsing"
10876 .cindex "&%bool_lax%& expansion condition"
10877 Like &%bool%&, this condition turns a string into a boolean state. But
10878 where &%bool%& accepts a strict set of strings, &%bool_lax%& uses the same
10879 loose definition that the Router &%condition%& option uses. The empty string
10880 and the values &"false"&, &"no"& and &"0"& map to false, all others map to
10881 true. Leading and trailing whitespace is ignored.
10882
10883 Note that where &"bool{00}"& is false, &"bool_lax{00}"& is true.
10884
10885 .vitem &*crypteq&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
10886 .cindex "expansion" "encrypted comparison"
10887 .cindex "encrypted strings, comparing"
10888 .cindex "&%crypteq%& expansion condition"
10889 This condition is included in the Exim binary if it is built to support any
10890 authentication mechanisms (see chapter &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>&). Otherwise, it is
10891 necessary to define SUPPORT_CRYPTEQ in &_Local/Makefile_& to get &%crypteq%&
10892 included in the binary.
10893
10894 The &%crypteq%& condition has two arguments. The first is encrypted and
10895 compared against the second, which is already encrypted. The second string may
10896 be in the LDAP form for storing encrypted strings, which starts with the
10897 encryption type in curly brackets, followed by the data. If the second string
10898 does not begin with &"{"& it is assumed to be encrypted with &[crypt()]& or
10899 &[crypt16()]& (see below), since such strings cannot begin with &"{"&.
10900 Typically this will be a field from a password file. An example of an encrypted
10901 string in LDAP form is:
10902 .code
10903 {md5}CY9rzUYh03PK3k6DJie09g==
10904 .endd
10905 If such a string appears directly in an expansion, the curly brackets have to
10906 be quoted, because they are part of the expansion syntax. For example:
10907 .code
10908 ${if crypteq {test}{\{md5\}CY9rzUYh03PK3k6DJie09g==}{yes}{no}}
10909 .endd
10910 The following encryption types (whose names are matched case-independently) are
10911 supported:
10912
10913 .ilist
10914 .cindex "MD5 hash"
10915 .cindex "base64 encoding" "in encrypted password"
10916 &%{md5}%& computes the MD5 digest of the first string, and expresses this as
10917 printable characters to compare with the remainder of the second string. If the
10918 length of the comparison string is 24, Exim assumes that it is base64 encoded
10919 (as in the above example). If the length is 32, Exim assumes that it is a
10920 hexadecimal encoding of the MD5 digest. If the length not 24 or 32, the
10921 comparison fails.
10922
10923 .next
10924 .cindex "SHA-1 hash"
10925 &%{sha1}%& computes the SHA-1 digest of the first string, and expresses this as
10926 printable characters to compare with the remainder of the second string. If the
10927 length of the comparison string is 28, Exim assumes that it is base64 encoded.
10928 If the length is 40, Exim assumes that it is a hexadecimal encoding of the
10929 SHA-1 digest. If the length is not 28 or 40, the comparison fails.
10930
10931 .next
10932 .cindex "&[crypt()]&"
10933 &%{crypt}%& calls the &[crypt()]& function, which traditionally used to use
10934 only the first eight characters of the password. However, in modern operating
10935 systems this is no longer true, and in many cases the entire password is used,
10936 whatever its length.
10937
10938 .next
10939 .cindex "&[crypt16()]&"
10940 &%{crypt16}%& calls the &[crypt16()]& function, which was originally created to
10941 use up to 16 characters of the password in some operating systems. Again, in
10942 modern operating systems, more characters may be used.
10943 .endlist
10944 Exim has its own version of &[crypt16()]&, which is just a double call to
10945 &[crypt()]&. For operating systems that have their own version, setting
10946 HAVE_CRYPT16 in &_Local/Makefile_& when building Exim causes it to use the
10947 operating system version instead of its own. This option is set by default in
10948 the OS-dependent &_Makefile_& for those operating systems that are known to
10949 support &[crypt16()]&.
10950
10951 Some years after Exim's &[crypt16()]& was implemented, a user discovered that
10952 it was not using the same algorithm as some operating systems' versions. It
10953 turns out that as well as &[crypt16()]& there is a function called
10954 &[bigcrypt()]& in some operating systems. This may or may not use the same
10955 algorithm, and both of them may be different to Exim's built-in &[crypt16()]&.
10956
10957 However, since there is now a move away from the traditional &[crypt()]&
10958 functions towards using SHA1 and other algorithms, tidying up this area of
10959 Exim is seen as very low priority.
10960
10961 If you do not put a encryption type (in curly brackets) in a &%crypteq%&
10962 comparison, the default is usually either &`{crypt}`& or &`{crypt16}`&, as
10963 determined by the setting of DEFAULT_CRYPT in &_Local/Makefile_&. The default
10964 default is &`{crypt}`&. Whatever the default, you can always use either
10965 function by specifying it explicitly in curly brackets.
10966
10967 .vitem &*def:*&<&'variable&~name'&>
10968 .cindex "expansion" "checking for empty variable"
10969 .cindex "&%def%& expansion condition"
10970 The &%def%& condition must be followed by the name of one of the expansion
10971 variables defined in section &<<SECTexpvar>>&. The condition is true if the
10972 variable does not contain the empty string. For example:
10973 .code
10974 ${if def:sender_ident {from $sender_ident}}
10975 .endd
10976 Note that the variable name is given without a leading &%$%& character. If the
10977 variable does not exist, the expansion fails.
10978
10979 .vitem "&*def:header_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&&~&~or&~&&&
10980 &~&*def:h_*&<&'header&~name'&>&*:*&"
10981 .cindex "expansion" "checking header line existence"
10982 This condition is true if a message is being processed and the named header
10983 exists in the message. For example,
10984 .code
10985 ${if def:header_reply-to:{$h_reply-to:}{$h_from:}}
10986 .endd
10987 &*Note*&: No &%$%& appears before &%header_%& or &%h_%& in the condition, and
10988 the header name must be terminated by a colon if white space does not follow.
10989
10990 .vitem &*eq&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*& &&&
10991 &*eqi&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
10992 .cindex "string" "comparison"
10993 .cindex "expansion" "string comparison"
10994 .cindex "&%eq%& expansion condition"
10995 .cindex "&%eqi%& expansion condition"
10996 The two substrings are first expanded. The condition is true if the two
10997 resulting strings are identical. For &%eq%& the comparison includes the case of
10998 letters, whereas for &%eqi%& the comparison is case-independent.
10999
11000 .vitem &*exists&~{*&<&'file&~name'&>&*}*&
11001 .cindex "expansion" "file existence test"
11002 .cindex "file" "existence test"
11003 .cindex "&%exists%&, expansion condition"
11004 The substring is first expanded and then interpreted as an absolute path. The
11005 condition is true if the named file (or directory) exists. The existence test
11006 is done by calling the &[stat()]& function. The use of the &%exists%& test in
11007 users' filter files may be locked out by the system administrator.
11008
11009 .vitem &*first_delivery*&
11010 .cindex "delivery" "first"
11011 .cindex "first delivery"
11012 .cindex "expansion" "first delivery test"
11013 .cindex "&%first_delivery%& expansion condition"
11014 This condition, which has no data, is true during a message's first delivery
11015 attempt. It is false during any subsequent delivery attempts.
11016
11017
11018 .vitem "&*forall{*&<&'a list'&>&*}{*&<&'a condition'&>&*}*&" &&&
11019 "&*forany{*&<&'a list'&>&*}{*&<&'a condition'&>&*}*&"
11020 .cindex "list" "iterative conditions"
11021 .cindex "expansion" "&*forall*& condition"
11022 .cindex "expansion" "&*forany*& condition"
11023 .vindex "&$item$&"
11024 These conditions iterate over a list. The first argument is expanded to form
11025 the list. By default, the list separator is a colon, but it can be changed by
11026 the normal method. The second argument is interpreted as a condition that is to
11027 be applied to each item in the list in turn. During the interpretation of the
11028 condition, the current list item is placed in a variable called &$item$&.
11029 .ilist
11030 For &*forany*&, interpretation stops if the condition is true for any item, and
11031 the result of the whole condition is true. If the condition is false for all
11032 items in the list, the overall condition is false.
11033 .next
11034 For &*forall*&, interpretation stops if the condition is false for any item,
11035 and the result of the whole condition is false. If the condition is true for
11036 all items in the list, the overall condition is true.
11037 .endlist
11038 Note that negation of &*forany*& means that the condition must be false for all
11039 items for the overall condition to succeed, and negation of &*forall*& means
11040 that the condition must be false for at least one item. In this example, the
11041 list separator is changed to a comma:
11042 .code
11043 ${if forany{<, $recipients}{match{$item}{^user3@}}{yes}{no}}
11044 .endd
11045 The value of &$item$& is saved and restored while &*forany*& or &*forall*& is
11046 being processed, to enable these expansion items to be nested.
11047
11048 To scan a named list, expand it with the &*listnamed*& operator.
11049
11050
11051 .vitem &*ge&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*& &&&
11052 &*gei&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
11053 .cindex "string" "comparison"
11054 .cindex "expansion" "string comparison"
11055 .cindex "&%ge%& expansion condition"
11056 .cindex "&%gei%& expansion condition"
11057 The two substrings are first expanded. The condition is true if the first
11058 string is lexically greater than or equal to the second string. For &%ge%& the
11059 comparison includes the case of letters, whereas for &%gei%& the comparison is
11060 case-independent.
11061
11062 .vitem &*gt&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*& &&&
11063 &*gti&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
11064 .cindex "string" "comparison"
11065 .cindex "expansion" "string comparison"
11066 .cindex "&%gt%& expansion condition"
11067 .cindex "&%gti%& expansion condition"
11068 The two substrings are first expanded. The condition is true if the first
11069 string is lexically greater than the second string. For &%gt%& the comparison
11070 includes the case of letters, whereas for &%gti%& the comparison is
11071 case-independent.
11072
11073 .vitem &*inlist&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*& &&&
11074 &*inlisti&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
11075 .cindex "string" "comparison"
11076 .cindex "list" "iterative conditions"
11077 Both strings are expanded; the second string is treated as a list of simple
11078 strings; if the first string is a member of the second, then the condition
11079 is true.
11080
11081 These are simpler to use versions of the more powerful &*forany*& condition.
11082 Examples, and the &*forany*& equivalents:
11083 .code
11084 ${if inlist{needle}{foo:needle:bar}}
11085 ${if forany{foo:needle:bar}{eq{$item}{needle}}}
11086 ${if inlisti{Needle}{fOo:NeeDLE:bAr}}
11087 ${if forany{fOo:NeeDLE:bAr}{eqi{$item}{Needle}}}
11088 .endd
11089
11090 .vitem &*isip&~{*&<&'string'&>&*}*& &&&
11091 &*isip4&~{*&<&'string'&>&*}*& &&&
11092 &*isip6&~{*&<&'string'&>&*}*&
11093 .cindex "IP address" "testing string format"
11094 .cindex "string" "testing for IP address"
11095 .cindex "&%isip%& expansion condition"
11096 .cindex "&%isip4%& expansion condition"
11097 .cindex "&%isip6%& expansion condition"
11098 The substring is first expanded, and then tested to see if it has the form of
11099 an IP address. Both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are valid for &%isip%&, whereas
11100 &%isip4%& and &%isip6%& test specifically for IPv4 or IPv6 addresses.
11101
11102 For an IPv4 address, the test is for four dot-separated components, each of
11103 which consists of from one to three digits. For an IPv6 address, up to eight
11104 colon-separated components are permitted, each containing from one to four
11105 hexadecimal digits. There may be fewer than eight components if an empty
11106 component (adjacent colons) is present. Only one empty component is permitted.
11107
11108 &*Note*&: The checks used to be just on the form of the address; actual numerical
11109 values were not considered. Thus, for example, 999.999.999.999 passed the IPv4
11110 check.
11111 This is no longer the case.
11112
11113 The main use of these tests is to distinguish between IP addresses and
11114 host names, or between IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. For example, you could use
11115 .code
11116 ${if isip4{$sender_host_address}...
11117 .endd
11118 to test which IP version an incoming SMTP connection is using.
11119
11120 .vitem &*ldapauth&~{*&<&'ldap&~query'&>&*}*&
11121 .cindex "LDAP" "use for authentication"
11122 .cindex "expansion" "LDAP authentication test"
11123 .cindex "&%ldapauth%& expansion condition"
11124 This condition supports user authentication using LDAP. See section
11125 &<<SECTldap>>& for details of how to use LDAP in lookups and the syntax of
11126 queries. For this use, the query must contain a user name and password. The
11127 query itself is not used, and can be empty. The condition is true if the
11128 password is not empty, and the user name and password are accepted by the LDAP
11129 server. An empty password is rejected without calling LDAP because LDAP binds
11130 with an empty password are considered anonymous regardless of the username, and
11131 will succeed in most configurations. See chapter &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>& for details
11132 of SMTP authentication, and chapter &<<CHAPplaintext>>& for an example of how
11133 this can be used.
11134
11135
11136 .vitem &*le&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*& &&&
11137 &*lei&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
11138 .cindex "string" "comparison"
11139 .cindex "expansion" "string comparison"
11140 .cindex "&%le%& expansion condition"
11141 .cindex "&%lei%& expansion condition"
11142 The two substrings are first expanded. The condition is true if the first
11143 string is lexically less than or equal to the second string. For &%le%& the
11144 comparison includes the case of letters, whereas for &%lei%& the comparison is
11145 case-independent.
11146
11147 .vitem &*lt&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*& &&&
11148 &*lti&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
11149 .cindex "string" "comparison"
11150 .cindex "expansion" "string comparison"
11151 .cindex "&%lt%& expansion condition"
11152 .cindex "&%lti%& expansion condition"
11153 The two substrings are first expanded. The condition is true if the first
11154 string is lexically less than the second string. For &%lt%& the comparison
11155 includes the case of letters, whereas for &%lti%& the comparison is
11156 case-independent.
11157
11158
11159 .vitem &*match&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
11160 .cindex "expansion" "regular expression comparison"
11161 .cindex "regular expressions" "match in expanded string"
11162 .cindex "&%match%& expansion condition"
11163 The two substrings are first expanded. The second is then treated as a regular
11164 expression and applied to the first. Because of the pre-expansion, if the
11165 regular expression contains dollar, or backslash characters, they must be
11166 escaped. Care must also be taken if the regular expression contains braces
11167 (curly brackets). A closing brace must be escaped so that it is not taken as a
11168 premature termination of <&'string2'&>. The easiest approach is to use the
11169 &`\N`& feature to disable expansion of the regular expression.
11170 For example,
11171 .code
11172 ${if match {$local_part}{\N^\d{3}\N} ...
11173 .endd
11174 If the whole expansion string is in double quotes, further escaping of
11175 backslashes is also required.
11176
11177 The condition is true if the regular expression match succeeds.
11178 The regular expression is not required to begin with a circumflex
11179 metacharacter, but if there is no circumflex, the expression is not anchored,
11180 and it may match anywhere in the subject, not just at the start. If you want
11181 the pattern to match at the end of the subject, you must include the &`$`&
11182 metacharacter at an appropriate point.
11183
11184 .cindex "numerical variables (&$1$& &$2$& etc)" "in &%if%& expansion"
11185 At the start of an &%if%& expansion the values of the numeric variable
11186 substitutions &$1$& etc. are remembered. Obeying a &%match%& condition that
11187 succeeds causes them to be reset to the substrings of that condition and they
11188 will have these values during the expansion of the success string. At the end
11189 of the &%if%& expansion, the previous values are restored. After testing a
11190 combination of conditions using &%or%&, the subsequent values of the numeric
11191 variables are those of the condition that succeeded.
11192
11193 .vitem &*match_address&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
11194 .cindex "&%match_address%& expansion condition"
11195 See &*match_local_part*&.
11196
11197 .vitem &*match_domain&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
11198 .cindex "&%match_domain%& expansion condition"
11199 See &*match_local_part*&.
11200
11201 .vitem &*match_ip&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
11202 .cindex "&%match_ip%& expansion condition"
11203 This condition matches an IP address to a list of IP address patterns. It must
11204 be followed by two argument strings. The first (after expansion) must be an IP
11205 address or an empty string. The second (not expanded) is a restricted host
11206 list that can match only an IP address, not a host name. For example:
11207 .code
11208 ${if match_ip{$sender_host_address}{1.2.3.4:5.6.7.8}{...}{...}}
11209 .endd
11210 The specific types of host list item that are permitted in the list are:
11211
11212 .ilist
11213 An IP address, optionally with a CIDR mask.
11214 .next
11215 A single asterisk, which matches any IP address.
11216 .next
11217 An empty item, which matches only if the IP address is empty. This could be
11218 useful for testing for a locally submitted message or one from specific hosts
11219 in a single test such as
11220 . ==== As this is a nested list, any displays it contains must be indented
11221 . ==== as otherwise they are too far to the left. This comment applies to
11222 . ==== the use of xmlto plus fop. There's no problem when formatting with
11223 . ==== sdop, with or without the extra indent.
11224 .code
11225 ${if match_ip{$sender_host_address}{:4.3.2.1:...}{...}{...}}
11226 .endd
11227 where the first item in the list is the empty string.
11228 .next
11229 The item @[] matches any of the local host's interface addresses.
11230 .next
11231 Single-key lookups are assumed to be like &"net-"& style lookups in host lists,
11232 even if &`net-`& is not specified. There is never any attempt to turn the IP
11233 address into a host name. The most common type of linear search for
11234 &*match_ip*& is likely to be &*iplsearch*&, in which the file can contain CIDR
11235 masks. For example:
11236 .code
11237 ${if match_ip{$sender_host_address}{iplsearch;/some/file}...
11238 .endd
11239 It is of course possible to use other kinds of lookup, and in such a case, you
11240 do need to specify the &`net-`& prefix if you want to specify a specific
11241 address mask, for example:
11242 .code
11243 ${if match_ip{$sender_host_address}{net24-dbm;/some/file}...
11244 .endd
11245 However, unless you are combining a &%match_ip%& condition with others, it is
11246 just as easy to use the fact that a lookup is itself a condition, and write:
11247 .code
11248 ${lookup{${mask:$sender_host_address/24}}dbm{/a/file}...
11249 .endd
11250 .endlist ilist
11251
11252 Note that <&'string2'&> is not itself subject to string expansion, unless
11253 Exim was built with the EXPAND_LISTMATCH_RHS option.
11254
11255 Consult section &<<SECThoslispatip>>& for further details of these patterns.
11256
11257 .vitem &*match_local_part&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*}{*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
11258 .cindex "domain list" "in expansion condition"
11259 .cindex "address list" "in expansion condition"
11260 .cindex "local part" "list, in expansion condition"
11261 .cindex "&%match_local_part%& expansion condition"
11262 This condition, together with &%match_address%& and &%match_domain%&, make it
11263 possible to test domain, address, and local part lists within expansions. Each
11264 condition requires two arguments: an item and a list to match. A trivial
11265 example is:
11266 .code
11267 ${if match_domain{a.b.c}{x.y.z:a.b.c:p.q.r}{yes}{no}}
11268 .endd
11269 In each case, the second argument may contain any of the allowable items for a
11270 list of the appropriate type. Also, because the second argument
11271 is a standard form of list, it is possible to refer to a named list.
11272 Thus, you can use conditions like this:
11273 .code
11274 ${if match_domain{$domain}{+local_domains}{...
11275 .endd
11276 .cindex "&`+caseful`&"
11277 For address lists, the matching starts off caselessly, but the &`+caseful`&
11278 item can be used, as in all address lists, to cause subsequent items to
11279 have their local parts matched casefully. Domains are always matched
11280 caselessly.
11281
11282 Note that <&'string2'&> is not itself subject to string expansion, unless
11283 Exim was built with the EXPAND_LISTMATCH_RHS option.
11284
11285 &*Note*&: Host lists are &'not'& supported in this way. This is because
11286 hosts have two identities: a name and an IP address, and it is not clear
11287 how to specify cleanly how such a test would work. However, IP addresses can be
11288 matched using &%match_ip%&.
11289
11290 .vitem &*pam&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*:*&<&'string2'&>&*:...}*&
11291 .cindex "PAM authentication"
11292 .cindex "AUTH" "with PAM"
11293 .cindex "Solaris" "PAM support"
11294 .cindex "expansion" "PAM authentication test"
11295 .cindex "&%pam%& expansion condition"
11296 &'Pluggable Authentication Modules'&
11297 (&url(http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/pam/)) are a facility that is
11298 available in the latest releases of Solaris and in some GNU/Linux
11299 distributions. The Exim support, which is intended for use in conjunction with
11300 the SMTP AUTH command, is available only if Exim is compiled with
11301 .code
11302 SUPPORT_PAM=yes
11303 .endd
11304 in &_Local/Makefile_&. You probably need to add &%-lpam%& to EXTRALIBS, and
11305 in some releases of GNU/Linux &%-ldl%& is also needed.
11306
11307 The argument string is first expanded, and the result must be a
11308 colon-separated list of strings. Leading and trailing white space is ignored.
11309 The PAM module is initialized with the service name &"exim"& and the user name
11310 taken from the first item in the colon-separated data string (<&'string1'&>).
11311 The remaining items in the data string are passed over in response to requests
11312 from the authentication function. In the simple case there will only be one
11313 request, for a password, so the data consists of just two strings.
11314
11315 There can be problems if any of the strings are permitted to contain colon
11316 characters. In the usual way, these have to be doubled to avoid being taken as
11317 separators. If the data is being inserted from a variable, the &%sg%& expansion
11318 item can be used to double any existing colons. For example, the configuration
11319 of a LOGIN authenticator might contain this setting:
11320 .code
11321 server_condition = ${if pam{$auth1:${sg{$auth2}{:}{::}}}}
11322 .endd
11323 For a PLAIN authenticator you could use:
11324 .code
11325 server_condition = ${if pam{$auth2:${sg{$auth3}{:}{::}}}}
11326 .endd
11327 In some operating systems, PAM authentication can be done only from a process
11328 running as root. Since Exim is running as the Exim user when receiving
11329 messages, this means that PAM cannot be used directly in those systems.
11330 A patched version of the &'pam_unix'& module that comes with the
11331 Linux PAM package is available from &url(http://www.e-admin.de/pam_exim/).
11332 The patched module allows one special uid/gid combination, in addition to root,
11333 to authenticate. If you build the patched module to allow the Exim user and
11334 group, PAM can then be used from an Exim authenticator.
11335
11336
11337 .vitem &*pwcheck&~{*&<&'string1'&>&*:*&<&'string2'&>&*}*&
11338 .cindex "&'pwcheck'& daemon"
11339 .cindex "Cyrus"
11340 .cindex "expansion" "&'pwcheck'& authentication test"
11341 .cindex "&%pwcheck%& expansion condition"
11342 This condition supports user authentication using the Cyrus &'pwcheck'& daemon.
11343 This is one way of making it possible for passwords to be checked by a process
11344 that is not running as root. &*Note*&: The use of &'pwcheck'& is now
11345 deprecated. Its replacement is &'saslauthd'& (see below).
11346
11347 The pwcheck support is not included in Exim by default. You need to specify
11348 the location of the pwcheck daemon's socket in &_Local/Makefile_& before
11349 building Exim. For example:
11350 .code
11351 CYRUS_PWCHECK_SOCKET=/var/pwcheck/pwcheck
11352 .endd
11353 You do not need to install the full Cyrus software suite in order to use
11354 the pwcheck daemon. You can compile and install just the daemon alone
11355 from the Cyrus SASL library. Ensure that &'exim'& is the only user that has
11356 access to the &_/var/pwcheck_& directory.
11357
11358 The &%pwcheck%& condition takes one argument, which must be the user name and
11359 password, separated by a colon. For example, in a LOGIN authenticator
11360 configuration, you might have this:
11361 .code
11362 server_condition = ${if pwcheck{$auth1:$auth2}}
11363 .endd
11364 Again, for a PLAIN authenticator configuration, this would be:
11365 .code
11366 server_condition = ${if pwcheck{$auth2:$auth3}}
11367 .endd
11368 .vitem &*queue_running*&
11369 .cindex "queue runner" "detecting when delivering from"
11370 .cindex "expansion" "queue runner test"
11371 .cindex "&%queue_running%& expansion condition"
11372 This condition, which has no data, is true during delivery attempts that are
11373 initiated by queue runner processes, and false otherwise.
11374
11375
11376 .vitem &*radius&~{*&<&'authentication&~string'&>&*}*&
11377 .cindex "Radius"
11378 .cindex "expansion" "Radius authentication"
11379 .cindex "&%radius%& expansion condition"
11380 Radius authentication (RFC 2865) is supported in a similar way to PAM. You must
11381 set RADIUS_CONFIG_FILE in &_Local/Makefile_& to specify the location of
11382 the Radius client configuration file in order to build Exim with Radius
11383 support.
11384
11385 With just that one setting, Exim expects to be linked with the &%radiusclient%&
11386 library, using the original API. If you are using release 0.4.0 or later of
11387 this library, you need to set
11388 .code
11389 RADIUS_LIB_TYPE=RADIUSCLIENTNEW
11390 .endd
11391 in &_Local/Makefile_& when building Exim. You can also link Exim with the
11392 &%libradius%& library that comes with FreeBSD. To do this, set
11393 .code
11394 RADIUS_LIB_TYPE=RADLIB
11395 .endd
11396 in &_Local/Makefile_&, in addition to setting RADIUS_CONFIGURE_FILE.
11397 You may also have to supply a suitable setting in EXTRALIBS so that the
11398 Radius library can be found when Exim is linked.
11399
11400 The string specified by RADIUS_CONFIG_FILE is expanded and passed to the
11401 Radius client library, which calls the Radius server. The condition is true if
11402 the authentication is successful. For example:
11403 .code
11404 server_condition = ${if radius{<arguments>}}
11405 .endd
11406
11407
11408 .vitem "&*saslauthd&~{{*&<&'user'&>&*}{*&<&'password'&>&*}&&&
11409 {*&<&'service'&>&*}{*&<&'realm'&>&*}}*&"
11410 .cindex "&'saslauthd'& daemon"
11411 .cindex "Cyrus"
11412 .cindex "expansion" "&'saslauthd'& authentication test"
11413 .cindex "&%saslauthd%& expansion condition"
11414 This condition supports user authentication using the Cyrus &'saslauthd'&
11415 daemon. This replaces the older &'pwcheck'& daemon, which is now deprecated.
11416 Using this daemon is one way of making it possible for passwords to be checked
11417 by a process that is not running as root.
11418
11419 The saslauthd support is not included in Exim by default. You need to specify
11420 the location of the saslauthd daemon's socket in &_Local/Makefile_& before
11421 building Exim. For example:
11422 .code
11423 CYRUS_SASLAUTHD_SOCKET=/var/state/saslauthd/mux
11424 .endd
11425 You do not need to install the full Cyrus software suite in order to use
11426 the saslauthd daemon. You can compile and install just the daemon alone
11427 from the Cyrus SASL library.
11428
11429 Up to four arguments can be supplied to the &%saslauthd%& condition, but only
11430 two are mandatory. For example:
11431 .code
11432 server_condition = ${if saslauthd{{$auth1}{$auth2}}}
11433 .endd
11434 The service and the realm are optional (which is why the arguments are enclosed
11435 in their own set of braces). For details of the meaning of the service and
11436 realm, and how to run the daemon, consult the Cyrus documentation.
11437 .endlist vlist
11438
11439
11440
11441 .section "Combining expansion conditions" "SECID84"
11442 .cindex "expansion" "combining conditions"
11443 Several conditions can be tested at once by combining them using the &%and%&
11444 and &%or%& combination conditions. Note that &%and%& and &%or%& are complete
11445 conditions on their own, and precede their lists of sub-conditions. Each
11446 sub-condition must be enclosed in braces within the overall braces that contain
11447 the list. No repetition of &%if%& is used.
11448
11449
11450 .vlist
11451 .vitem &*or&~{{*&<&'cond1'&>&*}{*&<&'cond2'&>&*}...}*&
11452 .cindex "&""or""& expansion condition"
11453 .cindex "expansion" "&""or""& of conditions"
11454 The sub-conditions are evaluated from left to right. The condition is true if
11455 any one of the sub-conditions is true.
11456 For example,
11457 .code
11458 ${if or {{eq{$local_part}{spqr}}{eq{$domain}{testing.com}}}...
11459 .endd
11460 When a true sub-condition is found, the following ones are parsed but not
11461 evaluated. If there are several &"match"& sub-conditions the values of the
11462 numeric variables afterwards are taken from the first one that succeeds.
11463
11464 .vitem &*and&~{{*&<&'cond1'&>&*}{*&<&'cond2'&>&*}...}*&
11465 .cindex "&""and""& expansion condition"
11466 .cindex "expansion" "&""and""& of conditions"
11467 The sub-conditions are evaluated from left to right. The condition is true if
11468 all of the sub-conditions are true. If there are several &"match"&
11469 sub-conditions, the values of the numeric variables afterwards are taken from
11470 the last one. When a false sub-condition is found, the following ones are
11471 parsed but not evaluated.
11472 .endlist
11473 .ecindex IIDexpcond
11474
11475
11476
11477
11478 .section "Expansion variables" "SECTexpvar"
11479 .cindex "expansion" "variables, list of"
11480 This section contains an alphabetical list of all the expansion variables. Some
11481 of them are available only when Exim is compiled with specific options such as
11482 support for TLS or the content scanning extension.
11483
11484 .vlist
11485 .vitem "&$0$&, &$1$&, etc"
11486 .cindex "numerical variables (&$1$& &$2$& etc)"
11487 When a &%match%& expansion condition succeeds, these variables contain the
11488 captured substrings identified by the regular expression during subsequent
11489 processing of the success string of the containing &%if%& expansion item.
11490 In the expansion condition case
11491 they do not retain their values afterwards; in fact, their previous
11492 values are restored at the end of processing an &%if%& item. The numerical
11493 variables may also be set externally by some other matching process which
11494 precedes the expansion of the string. For example, the commands available in
11495 Exim filter files include an &%if%& command with its own regular expression
11496 matching condition.
11497
11498 .vitem "&$acl_arg1$&, &$acl_arg2$&, etc"
11499 Within an acl condition, expansion condition or expansion item
11500 any arguments are copied to these variables,
11501 any unused variables being made empty.
11502
11503 .vitem "&$acl_c...$&"
11504 Values can be placed in these variables by the &%set%& modifier in an ACL. They
11505 can be given any name that starts with &$acl_c$& and is at least six characters
11506 long, but the sixth character must be either a digit or an underscore. For
11507 example: &$acl_c5$&, &$acl_c_mycount$&. The values of the &$acl_c...$&
11508 variables persist throughout the lifetime of an SMTP connection. They can be
11509 used to pass information between ACLs and between different invocations of the
11510 same ACL. When a message is received, the values of these variables are saved
11511 with the message, and can be accessed by filters, routers, and transports
11512 during subsequent delivery.
11513
11514 .vitem "&$acl_m...$&"
11515 These variables are like the &$acl_c...$& variables, except that their values
11516 are reset after a message has been received. Thus, if several messages are
11517 received in one SMTP connection, &$acl_m...$& values are not passed on from one
11518 message to the next, as &$acl_c...$& values are. The &$acl_m...$& variables are
11519 also reset by MAIL, RSET, EHLO, HELO, and after starting a TLS session. When a
11520 message is received, the values of these variables are saved with the message,
11521 and can be accessed by filters, routers, and transports during subsequent
11522 delivery.
11523
11524 .vitem &$acl_narg$&
11525 Within an acl condition, expansion condition or expansion item
11526 this variable has the number of arguments.
11527
11528 .vitem &$acl_verify_message$&
11529 .vindex "&$acl_verify_message$&"
11530 After an address verification has failed, this variable contains the failure
11531 message. It retains its value for use in subsequent modifiers. The message can
11532 be preserved by coding like this:
11533 .code
11534 warn !verify = sender
11535 set acl_m0 = $acl_verify_message
11536 .endd
11537 You can use &$acl_verify_message$& during the expansion of the &%message%& or
11538 &%log_message%& modifiers, to include information about the verification
11539 failure.
11540
11541 .vitem &$address_data$&
11542 .vindex "&$address_data$&"
11543 This variable is set by means of the &%address_data%& option in routers. The
11544 value then remains with the address while it is processed by subsequent routers
11545 and eventually a transport. If the transport is handling multiple addresses,
11546 the value from the first address is used. See chapter &<<CHAProutergeneric>>&
11547 for more details. &*Note*&: The contents of &$address_data$& are visible in
11548 user filter files.
11549
11550 If &$address_data$& is set when the routers are called from an ACL to verify
11551 a recipient address, the final value is still in the variable for subsequent
11552 conditions and modifiers of the ACL statement. If routing the address caused it
11553 to be redirected to just one address, the child address is also routed as part
11554 of the verification, and in this case the final value of &$address_data$& is
11555 from the child's routing.
11556
11557 If &$address_data$& is set when the routers are called from an ACL to verify a
11558 sender address, the final value is also preserved, but this time in
11559 &$sender_address_data$&, to distinguish it from data from a recipient
11560 address.
11561
11562 In both cases (recipient and sender verification), the value does not persist
11563 after the end of the current ACL statement. If you want to preserve
11564 these values for longer, you can save them in ACL variables.
11565
11566 .vitem &$address_file$&
11567 .vindex "&$address_file$&"
11568 When, as a result of aliasing, forwarding, or filtering, a message is directed
11569 to a specific file, this variable holds the name of the file when the transport
11570 is running. At other times, the variable is empty. For example, using the
11571 default configuration, if user &%r2d2%& has a &_.forward_& file containing
11572 .code
11573 /home/r2d2/savemail
11574 .endd
11575 then when the &(address_file)& transport is running, &$address_file$&
11576 contains the text string &`/home/r2d2/savemail`&.
11577 .cindex "Sieve filter" "value of &$address_file$&"
11578 For Sieve filters, the value may be &"inbox"& or a relative folder name. It is
11579 then up to the transport configuration to generate an appropriate absolute path
11580 to the relevant file.
11581
11582 .vitem &$address_pipe$&
11583 .vindex "&$address_pipe$&"
11584 When, as a result of aliasing or forwarding, a message is directed to a pipe,
11585 this variable holds the pipe command when the transport is running.
11586
11587 .vitem "&$auth1$& &-- &$auth3$&"
11588 .vindex "&$auth1$&, &$auth2$&, etc"
11589 These variables are used in SMTP authenticators (see chapters
11590 &<<CHAPplaintext>>&&--&<<CHAPtlsauth>>&). Elsewhere, they are empty.
11591
11592 .vitem &$authenticated_id$&
11593 .cindex "authentication" "id"
11594 .vindex "&$authenticated_id$&"
11595 When a server successfully authenticates a client it may be configured to
11596 preserve some of the authentication information in the variable
11597 &$authenticated_id$& (see chapter &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>&). For example, a
11598 user/password authenticator configuration might preserve the user name for use
11599 in the routers. Note that this is not the same information that is saved in
11600 &$sender_host_authenticated$&.
11601
11602 When a message is submitted locally (that is, not over a TCP connection)
11603 the value of &$authenticated_id$& is normally the login name of the calling
11604 process. However, a trusted user can override this by means of the &%-oMai%&
11605 command line option.
11606 This second case also sets up inforamtion used by the
11607 &$authresults$& expansion item.
11608
11609 .vitem &$authenticated_fail_id$&
11610 .cindex "authentication" "fail" "id"
11611 .vindex "&$authenticated_fail_id$&"
11612 When an authentication attempt fails, the variable &$authenticated_fail_id$&
11613 will contain the failed authentication id. If more than one authentication
11614 id is attempted, it will contain only the last one. The variable is
11615 available for processing in the ACL's, generally the quit or notquit ACL.
11616 A message to a local recipient could still be accepted without requiring
11617 authentication, which means this variable could also be visible in all of
11618 the ACL's as well.
11619
11620
11621 .vitem &$authenticated_sender$&
11622 .cindex "sender" "authenticated"
11623 .cindex "authentication" "sender"
11624 .cindex "AUTH" "on MAIL command"
11625 .vindex "&$authenticated_sender$&"
11626 When acting as a server, Exim takes note of the AUTH= parameter on an incoming
11627 SMTP MAIL command if it believes the sender is sufficiently trusted, as
11628 described in section &<<SECTauthparamail>>&. Unless the data is the string
11629 &"<>"&, it is set as the authenticated sender of the message, and the value is
11630 available during delivery in the &$authenticated_sender$& variable. If the
11631 sender is not trusted, Exim accepts the syntax of AUTH=, but ignores the data.
11632
11633 .vindex "&$qualify_domain$&"
11634 When a message is submitted locally (that is, not over a TCP connection), the
11635 value of &$authenticated_sender$& is an address constructed from the login
11636 name of the calling process and &$qualify_domain$&, except that a trusted user
11637 can override this by means of the &%-oMas%& command line option.
11638
11639
11640 .vitem &$authentication_failed$&
11641 .cindex "authentication" "failure"
11642 .vindex "&$authentication_failed$&"
11643 This variable is set to &"1"& in an Exim server if a client issues an AUTH
11644 command that does not succeed. Otherwise it is set to &"0"&. This makes it
11645 possible to distinguish between &"did not try to authenticate"&
11646 (&$sender_host_authenticated$& is empty and &$authentication_failed$& is set to
11647 &"0"&) and &"tried to authenticate but failed"& (&$sender_host_authenticated$&
11648 is empty and &$authentication_failed$& is set to &"1"&). Failure includes any
11649 negative response to an AUTH command, including (for example) an attempt to use
11650 an undefined mechanism.
11651
11652 .vitem &$av_failed$&
11653 .cindex "content scanning" "AV scanner failure"
11654 This variable is available when Exim is compiled with the content-scanning
11655 extension. It is set to &"0"& by default, but will be set to &"1"& if any
11656 problem occurs with the virus scanner (specified by &%av_scanner%&) during
11657 the ACL malware condition.
11658
11659 .vitem &$body_linecount$&
11660 .cindex "message body" "line count"
11661 .cindex "body of message" "line count"
11662 .vindex "&$body_linecount$&"
11663 When a message is being received or delivered, this variable contains the
11664 number of lines in the message's body. See also &$message_linecount$&.
11665
11666 .vitem &$body_zerocount$&
11667 .cindex "message body" "binary zero count"
11668 .cindex "body of message" "binary zero count"
11669 .cindex "binary zero" "in message body"
11670 .vindex "&$body_zerocount$&"
11671 When a message is being received or delivered, this variable contains the
11672 number of binary zero bytes (ASCII NULs) in the message's body.
11673
11674 .vitem &$bounce_recipient$&
11675 .vindex "&$bounce_recipient$&"
11676 This is set to the recipient address of a bounce message while Exim is creating
11677 it. It is useful if a customized bounce message text file is in use (see
11678 chapter &<<CHAPemsgcust>>&).
11679
11680 .vitem &$bounce_return_size_limit$&
11681 .vindex "&$bounce_return_size_limit$&"
11682 This contains the value set in the &%bounce_return_size_limit%& option, rounded
11683 up to a multiple of 1000. It is useful when a customized error message text
11684 file is in use (see chapter &<<CHAPemsgcust>>&).
11685
11686 .vitem &$caller_gid$&
11687 .cindex "gid (group id)" "caller"
11688 .vindex "&$caller_gid$&"
11689 The real group id under which the process that called Exim was running. This is
11690 not the same as the group id of the originator of a message (see
11691 &$originator_gid$&). If Exim re-execs itself, this variable in the new
11692 incarnation normally contains the Exim gid.
11693
11694 .vitem &$caller_uid$&
11695 .cindex "uid (user id)" "caller"
11696 .vindex "&$caller_uid$&"
11697 The real user id under which the process that called Exim was running. This is
11698 not the same as the user id of the originator of a message (see
11699 &$originator_uid$&). If Exim re-execs itself, this variable in the new
11700 incarnation normally contains the Exim uid.
11701
11702 .vitem &$callout_address$&
11703 .vindex "&$callout_address$&"
11704 After a callout for verification, spamd or malware daemon service, the
11705 address that was connected to.
11706
11707 .vitem &$compile_number$&
11708 .vindex "&$compile_number$&"
11709 The building process for Exim keeps a count of the number
11710 of times it has been compiled. This serves to distinguish different
11711 compilations of the same version of the program.
11712
11713 .vitem &$config_dir$&
11714 .vindex "&$config_dir$&"
11715 The directory name of the main configuration file. That is, the content of
11716 &$config_file$& with the last component stripped. The value does not
11717 contain the trailing slash. If &$config_file$& does not contain a slash,
11718 &$config_dir$& is ".".
11719
11720 .vitem &$config_file$&
11721 .vindex "&$config_file$&"
11722 The name of the main configuration file Exim is using.
11723
11724 .vitem &$dkim_verify_status$&
11725 Results of DKIM verification.
11726 For details see section &<<SECDKIMVFY>>&.
11727
11728 .vitem &$dkim_cur_signer$& &&&
11729 &$dkim_verify_reason$& &&&
11730 &$dkim_domain$& &&&
11731 &$dkim_identity$& &&&
11732 &$dkim_selector$& &&&
11733 &$dkim_algo$& &&&
11734 &$dkim_canon_body$& &&&
11735 &$dkim_canon_headers$& &&&
11736 &$dkim_copiedheaders$& &&&
11737 &$dkim_bodylength$& &&&
11738 &$dkim_created$& &&&
11739 &$dkim_expires$& &&&
11740 &$dkim_headernames$& &&&
11741 &$dkim_key_testing$& &&&
11742 &$dkim_key_nosubdomains$& &&&
11743 &$dkim_key_srvtype$& &&&
11744 &$dkim_key_granularity$& &&&
11745 &$dkim_key_notes$& &&&
11746 &$dkim_key_length$&
11747 These variables are only available within the DKIM ACL.
11748 For details see section &<<SECDKIMVFY>>&.
11749
11750 .vitem &$dkim_signers$&
11751 .vindex &$dkim_signers$&
11752 When a message has been received this variable contains
11753 a colon-separated list of signer domains and identities for the message.
11754 For details see section &<<SECDKIMVFY>>&.
11755
11756 .vitem &$dnslist_domain$& &&&
11757 &$dnslist_matched$& &&&
11758 &$dnslist_text$& &&&
11759 &$dnslist_value$&
11760 .vindex "&$dnslist_domain$&"
11761 .vindex "&$dnslist_matched$&"
11762 .vindex "&$dnslist_text$&"
11763 .vindex "&$dnslist_value$&"
11764 .cindex "black list (DNS)"
11765 When a DNS (black) list lookup succeeds, these variables are set to contain
11766 the following data from the lookup: the list's domain name, the key that was
11767 looked up, the contents of any associated TXT record, and the value from the
11768 main A record. See section &<<SECID204>>& for more details.
11769
11770 .vitem &$domain$&
11771 .vindex "&$domain$&"
11772 When an address is being routed, or delivered on its own, this variable
11773 contains the domain. Uppercase letters in the domain are converted into lower
11774 case for &$domain$&.
11775
11776 Global address rewriting happens when a message is received, so the value of
11777 &$domain$& during routing and delivery is the value after rewriting. &$domain$&
11778 is set during user filtering, but not during system filtering, because a
11779 message may have many recipients and the system filter is called just once.
11780
11781 When more than one address is being delivered at once (for example, several
11782 RCPT commands in one SMTP delivery), &$domain$& is set only if they all
11783 have the same domain. Transports can be restricted to handling only one domain
11784 at a time if the value of &$domain$& is required at transport time &-- this is
11785 the default for local transports. For further details of the environment in
11786 which local transports are run, see chapter &<<CHAPenvironment>>&.
11787
11788 .oindex "&%delay_warning_condition%&"
11789 At the end of a delivery, if all deferred addresses have the same domain, it is
11790 set in &$domain$& during the expansion of &%delay_warning_condition%&.
11791
11792 The &$domain$& variable is also used in some other circumstances:
11793
11794 .ilist
11795 When an ACL is running for a RCPT command, &$domain$& contains the domain of
11796 the recipient address. The domain of the &'sender'& address is in
11797 &$sender_address_domain$& at both MAIL time and at RCPT time. &$domain$& is not
11798 normally set during the running of the MAIL ACL. However, if the sender address
11799 is verified with a callout during the MAIL ACL, the sender domain is placed in
11800 &$domain$& during the expansions of &%hosts%&, &%interface%&, and &%port%& in
11801 the &(smtp)& transport.
11802
11803 .next
11804 When a rewrite item is being processed (see chapter &<<CHAPrewrite>>&),
11805 &$domain$& contains the domain portion of the address that is being rewritten;
11806 it can be used in the expansion of the replacement address, for example, to
11807 rewrite domains by file lookup.
11808
11809 .next
11810 With one important exception, whenever a domain list is being scanned,
11811 &$domain$& contains the subject domain. &*Exception*&: When a domain list in
11812 a &%sender_domains%& condition in an ACL is being processed, the subject domain
11813 is in &$sender_address_domain$& and not in &$domain$&. It works this way so
11814 that, in a RCPT ACL, the sender domain list can be dependent on the
11815 recipient domain (which is what is in &$domain$& at this time).
11816
11817 .next
11818 .cindex "ETRN" "value of &$domain$&"
11819 .oindex "&%smtp_etrn_command%&"
11820 When the &%smtp_etrn_command%& option is being expanded, &$domain$& contains
11821 the complete argument of the ETRN command (see section &<<SECTETRN>>&).
11822 .endlist
11823
11824
11825 .vitem &$domain_data$&
11826 .vindex "&$domain_data$&"
11827 When the &%domains%& option on a router matches a domain by
11828 means of a lookup, the data read by the lookup is available during the running
11829 of the router as &$domain_data$&. In addition, if the driver routes the
11830 address to a transport, the value is available in that transport. If the
11831 transport is handling multiple addresses, the value from the first address is
11832 used.
11833
11834 &$domain_data$& is also set when the &%domains%& condition in an ACL matches a
11835 domain by means of a lookup. The data read by the lookup is available during
11836 the rest of the ACL statement. In all other situations, this variable expands
11837 to nothing.
11838
11839 .vitem &$exim_gid$&
11840 .vindex "&$exim_gid$&"
11841 This variable contains the numerical value of the Exim group id.
11842
11843 .vitem &$exim_path$&
11844 .vindex "&$exim_path$&"
11845 This variable contains the path to the Exim binary.
11846
11847 .vitem &$exim_uid$&
11848 .vindex "&$exim_uid$&"
11849 This variable contains the numerical value of the Exim user id.
11850
11851 .vitem &$exim_version$&
11852 .vindex "&$exim_version$&"
11853 This variable contains the version string of the Exim build.
11854 The first character is a major version number, currently 4.
11855 Then after a dot, the next group of digits is a minor version number.
11856 There may be other characters following the minor version.
11857
11858 .vitem &$header_$&<&'name'&>
11859 This is not strictly an expansion variable. It is expansion syntax for
11860 inserting the message header line with the given name. Note that the name must
11861 be terminated by colon or white space, because it may contain a wide variety of
11862 characters. Note also that braces must &'not'& be used.
11863
11864 .vitem &$headers_added$&
11865 .vindex "&$headers_added$&"
11866 Within an ACL this variable contains the headers added so far by
11867 the ACL modifier add_header (section &<<SECTaddheadacl>>&).
11868 The headers are a newline-separated list.
11869
11870 .vitem &$home$&
11871 .vindex "&$home$&"
11872 When the &%check_local_user%& option is set for a router, the user's home
11873 directory is placed in &$home$& when the check succeeds. In particular, this
11874 means it is set during the running of users' filter files. A router may also
11875 explicitly set a home directory for use by a transport; this can be overridden
11876 by a setting on the transport itself.
11877
11878 When running a filter test via the &%-bf%& option, &$home$& is set to the value
11879 of the environment variable HOME, which is subject to the
11880 &%keep_environment%& and &%add_environment%& main config options.
11881
11882 .vitem &$host$&
11883 .vindex "&$host$&"
11884 If a router assigns an address to a transport (any transport), and passes a
11885 list of hosts with the address, the value of &$host$& when the transport starts
11886 to run is the name of the first host on the list. Note that this applies both
11887 to local and remote transports.
11888
11889 .cindex "transport" "filter"
11890 .cindex "filter" "transport filter"
11891 For the &(smtp)& transport, if there is more than one host, the value of
11892 &$host$& changes as the transport works its way through the list. In
11893 particular, when the &(smtp)& transport is expanding its options for encryption
11894 using TLS, or for specifying a transport filter (see chapter
11895 &<<CHAPtransportgeneric>>&), &$host$& contains the name of the host to which it
11896 is connected.
11897
11898 When used in the client part of an authenticator configuration (see chapter
11899 &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>&), &$host$& contains the name of the server to which the
11900 client is connected.
11901
11902
11903 .vitem &$host_address$&
11904 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
11905 This variable is set to the remote host's IP address whenever &$host$& is set
11906 for a remote connection. It is also set to the IP address that is being checked
11907 when the &%ignore_target_hosts%& option is being processed.
11908
11909 .vitem &$host_data$&
11910 .vindex "&$host_data$&"
11911 If a &%hosts%& condition in an ACL is satisfied by means of a lookup, the
11912 result of the lookup is made available in the &$host_data$& variable. This
11913 allows you, for example, to do things like this:
11914 .code
11915 deny hosts = net-lsearch;/some/file
11916 message = $host_data
11917 .endd
11918 .vitem &$host_lookup_deferred$&
11919 .cindex "host name" "lookup, failure of"
11920 .vindex "&$host_lookup_deferred$&"
11921 This variable normally contains &"0"&, as does &$host_lookup_failed$&. When a
11922 message comes from a remote host and there is an attempt to look up the host's
11923 name from its IP address, and the attempt is not successful, one of these
11924 variables is set to &"1"&.
11925
11926 .ilist
11927 If the lookup receives a definite negative response (for example, a DNS lookup
11928 succeeded, but no records were found), &$host_lookup_failed$& is set to &"1"&.
11929
11930 .next
11931 If there is any kind of problem during the lookup, such that Exim cannot
11932 tell whether or not the host name is defined (for example, a timeout for a DNS
11933 lookup), &$host_lookup_deferred$& is set to &"1"&.
11934 .endlist ilist
11935
11936 Looking up a host's name from its IP address consists of more than just a
11937 single reverse lookup. Exim checks that a forward lookup of at least one of the
11938 names it receives from a reverse lookup yields the original IP address. If this
11939 is not the case, Exim does not accept the looked up name(s), and
11940 &$host_lookup_failed$& is set to &"1"&. Thus, being able to find a name from an
11941 IP address (for example, the existence of a PTR record in the DNS) is not
11942 sufficient on its own for the success of a host name lookup. If the reverse
11943 lookup succeeds, but there is a lookup problem such as a timeout when checking
11944 the result, the name is not accepted, and &$host_lookup_deferred$& is set to
11945 &"1"&. See also &$sender_host_name$&.
11946
11947 .cindex authentication "expansion item"
11948 Performing these checks sets up information used by the
11949 &$authresults$& expansion item.
11950
11951
11952 .vitem &$host_lookup_failed$&
11953 .vindex "&$host_lookup_failed$&"
11954 See &$host_lookup_deferred$&.
11955
11956 .vitem &$host_port$&
11957 .vindex "&$host_port$&"
11958 This variable is set to the remote host's TCP port whenever &$host$& is set
11959 for an outbound connection.
11960
11961 .vitem &$initial_cwd$&
11962 .vindex "&$initial_cwd$&
11963 This variable contains the full path name of the initial working
11964 directory of the current Exim process. This may differ from the current
11965 working directory, as Exim changes this to "/" during early startup, and
11966 to &$spool_directory$& later.
11967
11968 .vitem &$inode$&
11969 .vindex "&$inode$&"
11970 The only time this variable is set is while expanding the &%directory_file%&
11971 option in the &(appendfile)& transport. The variable contains the inode number
11972 of the temporary file which is about to be renamed. It can be used to construct
11973 a unique name for the file.
11974
11975 .vitem &$interface_address$&
11976 .vindex "&$interface_address$&"
11977 This is an obsolete name for &$received_ip_address$&.
11978
11979 .vitem &$interface_port$&
11980 .vindex "&$interface_port$&"
11981 This is an obsolete name for &$received_port$&.
11982
11983 .vitem &$item$&
11984 .vindex "&$item$&"
11985 This variable is used during the expansion of &*forall*& and &*forany*&
11986 conditions (see section &<<SECTexpcond>>&), and &*filter*&, &*map*&, and
11987 &*reduce*& items (see section &<<SECTexpcond>>&). In other circumstances, it is
11988 empty.
11989
11990 .vitem &$ldap_dn$&
11991 .vindex "&$ldap_dn$&"
11992 This variable, which is available only when Exim is compiled with LDAP support,
11993 contains the DN from the last entry in the most recently successful LDAP
11994 lookup.
11995
11996 .vitem &$load_average$&
11997 .vindex "&$load_average$&"
11998 This variable contains the system load average, multiplied by 1000 so that it
11999 is an integer. For example, if the load average is 0.21, the value of the
12000 variable is 210. The value is recomputed every time the variable is referenced.
12001
12002 .vitem &$local_part$&
12003 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
12004 When an address is being routed, or delivered on its own, this
12005 variable contains the local part. When a number of addresses are being
12006 delivered together (for example, multiple RCPT commands in an SMTP
12007 session), &$local_part$& is not set.
12008
12009 Global address rewriting happens when a message is received, so the value of
12010 &$local_part$& during routing and delivery is the value after rewriting.
12011 &$local_part$& is set during user filtering, but not during system filtering,
12012 because a message may have many recipients and the system filter is called just
12013 once.
12014
12015 .vindex "&$local_part_prefix$&"
12016 .vindex "&$local_part_suffix$&"
12017 If a local part prefix or suffix has been recognized, it is not included in the
12018 value of &$local_part$& during routing and subsequent delivery. The values of
12019 any prefix or suffix are in &$local_part_prefix$& and
12020 &$local_part_suffix$&, respectively.
12021
12022 When a message is being delivered to a file, pipe, or autoreply transport as a
12023 result of aliasing or forwarding, &$local_part$& is set to the local part of
12024 the parent address, not to the file name or command (see &$address_file$& and
12025 &$address_pipe$&).
12026
12027 When an ACL is running for a RCPT command, &$local_part$& contains the
12028 local part of the recipient address.
12029
12030 When a rewrite item is being processed (see chapter &<<CHAPrewrite>>&),
12031 &$local_part$& contains the local part of the address that is being rewritten;
12032 it can be used in the expansion of the replacement address, for example.
12033
12034 In all cases, all quoting is removed from the local part. For example, for both
12035 the addresses
12036 .code
12037 "abc:xyz"@test.example
12038 abc\:xyz@test.example
12039 .endd
12040 the value of &$local_part$& is
12041 .code
12042 abc:xyz
12043 .endd
12044 If you use &$local_part$& to create another address, you should always wrap it
12045 inside a quoting operator. For example, in a &(redirect)& router you could
12046 have:
12047 .code
12048 data = ${quote_local_part:$local_part}@new.domain.example
12049 .endd
12050 &*Note*&: The value of &$local_part$& is normally lower cased. If you want
12051 to process local parts in a case-dependent manner in a router, you can set the
12052 &%caseful_local_part%& option (see chapter &<<CHAProutergeneric>>&).
12053
12054 .vitem &$local_part_data$&
12055 .vindex "&$local_part_data$&"
12056 When the &%local_parts%& option on a router matches a local part by means of a
12057 lookup, the data read by the lookup is available during the running of the
12058 router as &$local_part_data$&. In addition, if the driver routes the address
12059 to a transport, the value is available in that transport. If the transport is
12060 handling multiple addresses, the value from the first address is used.
12061
12062 &$local_part_data$& is also set when the &%local_parts%& condition in an ACL
12063 matches a local part by means of a lookup. The data read by the lookup is
12064 available during the rest of the ACL statement. In all other situations, this
12065 variable expands to nothing.
12066
12067 .vitem &$local_part_prefix$&
12068 .vindex "&$local_part_prefix$&"
12069 When an address is being routed or delivered, and a
12070 specific prefix for the local part was recognized, it is available in this
12071 variable, having been removed from &$local_part$&.
12072
12073 .vitem &$local_part_suffix$&
12074 .vindex "&$local_part_suffix$&"
12075 When an address is being routed or delivered, and a
12076 specific suffix for the local part was recognized, it is available in this
12077 variable, having been removed from &$local_part$&.
12078
12079 .vitem &$local_scan_data$&
12080 .vindex "&$local_scan_data$&"
12081 This variable contains the text returned by the &[local_scan()]& function when
12082 a message is received. See chapter &<<CHAPlocalscan>>& for more details.
12083
12084 .vitem &$local_user_gid$&
12085 .vindex "&$local_user_gid$&"
12086 See &$local_user_uid$&.
12087
12088 .vitem &$local_user_uid$&
12089 .vindex "&$local_user_uid$&"
12090 This variable and &$local_user_gid$& are set to the uid and gid after the
12091 &%check_local_user%& router precondition succeeds. This means that their values
12092 are available for the remaining preconditions (&%senders%&, &%require_files%&,
12093 and &%condition%&), for the &%address_data%& expansion, and for any
12094 router-specific expansions. At all other times, the values in these variables
12095 are &`(uid_t)(-1)`& and &`(gid_t)(-1)`&, respectively.
12096
12097 .vitem &$localhost_number$&
12098 .vindex "&$localhost_number$&"
12099 This contains the expanded value of the
12100 &%localhost_number%& option. The expansion happens after the main options have
12101 been read.
12102
12103 .vitem &$log_inodes$&
12104 .vindex "&$log_inodes$&"
12105 The number of free inodes in the disk partition where Exim's
12106 log files are being written. The value is recalculated whenever the variable is
12107 referenced. If the relevant file system does not have the concept of inodes,
12108 the value of is -1. See also the &%check_log_inodes%& option.
12109
12110 .vitem &$log_space$&
12111 .vindex "&$log_space$&"
12112 The amount of free space (as a number of kilobytes) in the disk
12113 partition where Exim's log files are being written. The value is recalculated
12114 whenever the variable is referenced. If the operating system does not have the
12115 ability to find the amount of free space (only true for experimental systems),
12116 the space value is -1. See also the &%check_log_space%& option.
12117
12118
12119 .vitem &$lookup_dnssec_authenticated$&
12120 .vindex "&$lookup_dnssec_authenticated$&"
12121 This variable is set after a DNS lookup done by
12122 a dnsdb lookup expansion, dnslookup router or smtp transport.
12123 .cindex "DNS" "DNSSEC"
12124 It will be empty if &(DNSSEC)& was not requested,
12125 &"no"& if the result was not labelled as authenticated data
12126 and &"yes"& if it was.
12127 Results that are labelled as authoritative answer that match
12128 the &%dns_trust_aa%& configuration variable count also
12129 as authenticated data.
12130
12131 .vitem &$mailstore_basename$&
12132 .vindex "&$mailstore_basename$&"
12133 This variable is set only when doing deliveries in &"mailstore"& format in the
12134 &(appendfile)& transport. During the expansion of the &%mailstore_prefix%&,
12135 &%mailstore_suffix%&, &%message_prefix%&, and &%message_suffix%& options, it
12136 contains the basename of the files that are being written, that is, the name
12137 without the &".tmp"&, &".env"&, or &".msg"& suffix. At all other times, this
12138 variable is empty.
12139
12140 .vitem &$malware_name$&
12141 .vindex "&$malware_name$&"
12142 This variable is available when Exim is compiled with the
12143 content-scanning extension. It is set to the name of the virus that was found
12144 when the ACL &%malware%& condition is true (see section &<<SECTscanvirus>>&).
12145
12146 .vitem &$max_received_linelength$&
12147 .vindex "&$max_received_linelength$&"
12148 .cindex "maximum" "line length"
12149 .cindex "line length" "maximum"
12150 This variable contains the number of bytes in the longest line that was
12151 received as part of the message, not counting the line termination
12152 character(s).
12153 It is not valid if the &%spool_files_wireformat%& option is used.
12154
12155 .vitem &$message_age$&
12156 .cindex "message" "age of"
12157 .vindex "&$message_age$&"
12158 This variable is set at the start of a delivery attempt to contain the number
12159 of seconds since the message was received. It does not change during a single
12160 delivery attempt.
12161
12162 .vitem &$message_body$&
12163 .cindex "body of message" "expansion variable"
12164 .cindex "message body" "in expansion"
12165 .cindex "binary zero" "in message body"
12166 .vindex "&$message_body$&"
12167 .oindex "&%message_body_visible%&"
12168 This variable contains the initial portion of a message's body while it is
12169 being delivered, and is intended mainly for use in filter files. The maximum
12170 number of characters of the body that are put into the variable is set by the
12171 &%message_body_visible%& configuration option; the default is 500.
12172
12173 .oindex "&%message_body_newlines%&"
12174 By default, newlines are converted into spaces in &$message_body$&, to make it
12175 easier to search for phrases that might be split over a line break. However,
12176 this can be disabled by setting &%message_body_newlines%& to be true. Binary
12177 zeros are always converted into spaces.
12178
12179 .vitem &$message_body_end$&
12180 .cindex "body of message" "expansion variable"
12181 .cindex "message body" "in expansion"
12182 .vindex "&$message_body_end$&"
12183 This variable contains the final portion of a message's
12184 body while it is being delivered. The format and maximum size are as for
12185 &$message_body$&.
12186
12187 .vitem &$message_body_size$&
12188 .cindex "body of message" "size"
12189 .cindex "message body" "size"
12190 .vindex "&$message_body_size$&"
12191 When a message is being delivered, this variable contains the size of the body
12192 in bytes. The count starts from the character after the blank line that
12193 separates the body from the header. Newlines are included in the count. See
12194 also &$message_size$&, &$body_linecount$&, and &$body_zerocount$&.
12195
12196 If the spool file is wireformat
12197 (see the &%spool_files_wireformat%& main option)
12198 the CRLF line-terminators are included in the count.
12199
12200 .vitem &$message_exim_id$&
12201 .vindex "&$message_exim_id$&"
12202 When a message is being received or delivered, this variable contains the
12203 unique message id that is generated and used by Exim to identify the message.
12204 An id is not created for a message until after its header has been successfully
12205 received. &*Note*&: This is &'not'& the contents of the &'Message-ID:'& header
12206 line; it is the local id that Exim assigns to the message, for example:
12207 &`1BXTIK-0001yO-VA`&.
12208
12209 .vitem &$message_headers$&
12210 .vindex &$message_headers$&
12211 This variable contains a concatenation of all the header lines when a message
12212 is being processed, except for lines added by routers or transports. The header
12213 lines are separated by newline characters. Their contents are decoded in the
12214 same way as a header line that is inserted by &%bheader%&.
12215
12216 .vitem &$message_headers_raw$&
12217 .vindex &$message_headers_raw$&
12218 This variable is like &$message_headers$& except that no processing of the
12219 contents of header lines is done.
12220
12221 .vitem &$message_id$&
12222 This is an old name for &$message_exim_id$&. It is now deprecated.
12223
12224 .vitem &$message_linecount$&
12225 .vindex "&$message_linecount$&"
12226 This variable contains the total number of lines in the header and body of the
12227 message. Compare &$body_linecount$&, which is the count for the body only.
12228 During the DATA and content-scanning ACLs, &$message_linecount$& contains the
12229 number of lines received. Before delivery happens (that is, before filters,
12230 routers, and transports run) the count is increased to include the
12231 &'Received:'& header line that Exim standardly adds, and also any other header
12232 lines that are added by ACLs. The blank line that separates the message header
12233 from the body is not counted.
12234
12235 As with the special case of &$message_size$&, during the expansion of the
12236 appendfile transport's maildir_tag option in maildir format, the value of
12237 &$message_linecount$& is the precise size of the number of newlines in the
12238 file that has been written (minus one for the blank line between the
12239 header and the body).
12240
12241 Here is an example of the use of this variable in a DATA ACL:
12242 .code
12243 deny message = Too many lines in message header
12244 condition = \
12245 ${if <{250}{${eval:$message_linecount - $body_linecount}}}
12246 .endd
12247 In the MAIL and RCPT ACLs, the value is zero because at that stage the
12248 message has not yet been received.
12249
12250 This variable is not valid if the &%spool_files_wireformat%& option is used.
12251
12252 .vitem &$message_size$&
12253 .cindex "size" "of message"
12254 .cindex "message" "size"
12255 .vindex "&$message_size$&"
12256 When a message is being processed, this variable contains its size in bytes. In
12257 most cases, the size includes those headers that were received with the
12258 message, but not those (such as &'Envelope-to:'&) that are added to individual
12259 deliveries as they are written. However, there is one special case: during the
12260 expansion of the &%maildir_tag%& option in the &(appendfile)& transport while
12261 doing a delivery in maildir format, the value of &$message_size$& is the
12262 precise size of the file that has been written. See also
12263 &$message_body_size$&, &$body_linecount$&, and &$body_zerocount$&.
12264
12265 .cindex "RCPT" "value of &$message_size$&"
12266 While running a per message ACL (mail/rcpt/predata), &$message_size$&
12267 contains the size supplied on the MAIL command, or -1 if no size was given. The
12268 value may not, of course, be truthful.
12269
12270 .vitem &$mime_$&&'xxx'&
12271 A number of variables whose names start with &$mime$& are
12272 available when Exim is compiled with the content-scanning extension. For
12273 details, see section &<<SECTscanmimepart>>&.
12274
12275 .vitem "&$n0$& &-- &$n9$&"
12276 These variables are counters that can be incremented by means
12277 of the &%add%& command in filter files.
12278
12279 .vitem &$original_domain$&
12280 .vindex "&$domain$&"
12281 .vindex "&$original_domain$&"
12282 When a top-level address is being processed for delivery, this contains the
12283 same value as &$domain$&. However, if a &"child"& address (for example,
12284 generated by an alias, forward, or filter file) is being processed, this
12285 variable contains the domain of the original address (lower cased). This
12286 differs from &$parent_domain$& only when there is more than one level of
12287 aliasing or forwarding. When more than one address is being delivered in a
12288 single transport run, &$original_domain$& is not set.
12289
12290 If a new address is created by means of a &%deliver%& command in a system
12291 filter, it is set up with an artificial &"parent"& address. This has the local
12292 part &'system-filter'& and the default qualify domain.
12293
12294 .vitem &$original_local_part$&
12295 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
12296 .vindex "&$original_local_part$&"
12297 When a top-level address is being processed for delivery, this contains the
12298 same value as &$local_part$&, unless a prefix or suffix was removed from the
12299 local part, because &$original_local_part$& always contains the full local
12300 part. When a &"child"& address (for example, generated by an alias, forward, or
12301 filter file) is being processed, this variable contains the full local part of
12302 the original address.
12303
12304 If the router that did the redirection processed the local part
12305 case-insensitively, the value in &$original_local_part$& is in lower case.
12306 This variable differs from &$parent_local_part$& only when there is more than
12307 one level of aliasing or forwarding. When more than one address is being
12308 delivered in a single transport run, &$original_local_part$& is not set.
12309
12310 If a new address is created by means of a &%deliver%& command in a system
12311 filter, it is set up with an artificial &"parent"& address. This has the local
12312 part &'system-filter'& and the default qualify domain.
12313
12314 .vitem &$originator_gid$&
12315 .cindex "gid (group id)" "of originating user"
12316 .cindex "sender" "gid"
12317 .vindex "&$caller_gid$&"
12318 .vindex "&$originator_gid$&"
12319 This variable contains the value of &$caller_gid$& that was set when the
12320 message was received. For messages received via the command line, this is the
12321 gid of the sending user. For messages received by SMTP over TCP/IP, this is
12322 normally the gid of the Exim user.
12323
12324 .vitem &$originator_uid$&
12325 .cindex "uid (user id)" "of originating user"
12326 .cindex "sender" "uid"
12327 .vindex "&$caller_uid$&"
12328 .vindex "&$originator_uid$&"
12329 The value of &$caller_uid$& that was set when the message was received. For
12330 messages received via the command line, this is the uid of the sending user.
12331 For messages received by SMTP over TCP/IP, this is normally the uid of the Exim
12332 user.
12333
12334 .vitem &$parent_domain$&
12335 .vindex "&$parent_domain$&"
12336 This variable is similar to &$original_domain$& (see
12337 above), except that it refers to the immediately preceding parent address.
12338
12339 .vitem &$parent_local_part$&
12340 .vindex "&$parent_local_part$&"
12341 This variable is similar to &$original_local_part$&
12342 (see above), except that it refers to the immediately preceding parent address.
12343
12344 .vitem &$pid$&
12345 .cindex "pid (process id)" "of current process"
12346 .vindex "&$pid$&"
12347 This variable contains the current process id.
12348
12349 .vitem &$pipe_addresses$&
12350 .cindex "filter" "transport filter"
12351 .cindex "transport" "filter"
12352 .vindex "&$pipe_addresses$&"
12353 This is not an expansion variable, but is mentioned here because the string
12354 &`$pipe_addresses`& is handled specially in the command specification for the
12355 &(pipe)& transport (chapter &<<CHAPpipetransport>>&) and in transport filters
12356 (described under &%transport_filter%& in chapter &<<CHAPtransportgeneric>>&).
12357 It cannot be used in general expansion strings, and provokes an &"unknown
12358 variable"& error if encountered.
12359
12360 .vitem &$primary_hostname$&
12361 .vindex "&$primary_hostname$&"
12362 This variable contains the value set by &%primary_hostname%& in the
12363 configuration file, or read by the &[uname()]& function. If &[uname()]& returns
12364 a single-component name, Exim calls &[gethostbyname()]& (or
12365 &[getipnodebyname()]& where available) in an attempt to acquire a fully
12366 qualified host name. See also &$smtp_active_hostname$&.
12367
12368
12369 .vitem &$proxy_external_address$& &&&
12370 &$proxy_external_port$& &&&
12371 &$proxy_local_address$& &&&
12372 &$proxy_local_port$& &&&
12373 &$proxy_session$&
12374 These variables are only available when built with Proxy Protocol
12375 or SOCKS5 support.
12376 For details see chapter &<<SECTproxyInbound>>&.
12377
12378 .vitem &$prdr_requested$&
12379 .cindex "PRDR" "variable for"
12380 This variable is set to &"yes"& if PRDR was requested by the client for the
12381 current message, otherwise &"no"&.
12382
12383 .vitem &$prvscheck_address$&
12384 This variable is used in conjunction with the &%prvscheck%& expansion item,
12385 which is described in sections &<<SECTexpansionitems>>& and
12386 &<<SECTverifyPRVS>>&.
12387
12388 .vitem &$prvscheck_keynum$&
12389 This variable is used in conjunction with the &%prvscheck%& expansion item,
12390 which is described in sections &<<SECTexpansionitems>>& and
12391 &<<SECTverifyPRVS>>&.
12392
12393 .vitem &$prvscheck_result$&
12394 This variable is used in conjunction with the &%prvscheck%& expansion item,
12395 which is described in sections &<<SECTexpansionitems>>& and
12396 &<<SECTverifyPRVS>>&.
12397
12398 .vitem &$qualify_domain$&
12399 .vindex "&$qualify_domain$&"
12400 The value set for the &%qualify_domain%& option in the configuration file.
12401
12402 .vitem &$qualify_recipient$&
12403 .vindex "&$qualify_recipient$&"
12404 The value set for the &%qualify_recipient%& option in the configuration file,
12405 or if not set, the value of &$qualify_domain$&.
12406
12407 .vitem &$queue_name$&
12408 .vindex &$queue_name$&
12409 .cindex "named queues"
12410 .cindex queues named
12411 The name of the spool queue in use; empty for the default queue.
12412
12413 .vitem &$rcpt_count$&
12414 .vindex "&$rcpt_count$&"
12415 When a message is being received by SMTP, this variable contains the number of
12416 RCPT commands received for the current message. If this variable is used in a
12417 RCPT ACL, its value includes the current command.
12418
12419 .vitem &$rcpt_defer_count$&
12420 .vindex "&$rcpt_defer_count$&"
12421 .cindex "4&'xx'& responses" "count of"
12422 When a message is being received by SMTP, this variable contains the number of
12423 RCPT commands in the current message that have previously been rejected with a
12424 temporary (4&'xx'&) response.
12425
12426 .vitem &$rcpt_fail_count$&
12427 .vindex "&$rcpt_fail_count$&"
12428 When a message is being received by SMTP, this variable contains the number of
12429 RCPT commands in the current message that have previously been rejected with a
12430 permanent (5&'xx'&) response.
12431
12432 .vitem &$received_count$&
12433 .vindex "&$received_count$&"
12434 This variable contains the number of &'Received:'& header lines in the message,
12435 including the one added by Exim (so its value is always greater than zero). It
12436 is available in the DATA ACL, the non-SMTP ACL, and while routing and
12437 delivering.
12438
12439 .vitem &$received_for$&
12440 .vindex "&$received_for$&"
12441 If there is only a single recipient address in an incoming message, this
12442 variable contains that address when the &'Received:'& header line is being
12443 built. The value is copied after recipient rewriting has happened, but before
12444 the &[local_scan()]& function is run.
12445
12446 .vitem &$received_ip_address$&
12447 .vindex "&$received_ip_address$&"
12448 As soon as an Exim server starts processing an incoming TCP/IP connection, this
12449 variable is set to the address of the local IP interface, and &$received_port$&
12450 is set to the local port number. (The remote IP address and port are in
12451 &$sender_host_address$& and &$sender_host_port$&.) When testing with &%-bh%&,
12452 the port value is -1 unless it has been set using the &%-oMi%& command line
12453 option.
12454
12455 As well as being useful in ACLs (including the &"connect"& ACL), these variable
12456 could be used, for example, to make the file name for a TLS certificate depend
12457 on which interface and/or port is being used for the incoming connection. The
12458 values of &$received_ip_address$& and &$received_port$& are saved with any
12459 messages that are received, thus making these variables available at delivery
12460 time.
12461 For outbound connections see &$sending_ip_address$&.
12462
12463 .vitem &$received_port$&
12464 .vindex "&$received_port$&"
12465 See &$received_ip_address$&.
12466
12467 .vitem &$received_protocol$&
12468 .vindex "&$received_protocol$&"
12469 When a message is being processed, this variable contains the name of the
12470 protocol by which it was received. Most of the names used by Exim are defined
12471 by RFCs 821, 2821, and 3848. They start with &"smtp"& (the client used HELO) or
12472 &"esmtp"& (the client used EHLO). This can be followed by &"s"& for secure
12473 (encrypted) and/or &"a"& for authenticated. Thus, for example, if the protocol
12474 is set to &"esmtpsa"&, the message was received over an encrypted SMTP
12475 connection and the client was successfully authenticated.
12476
12477 Exim uses the protocol name &"smtps"& for the case when encryption is
12478 automatically set up on connection without the use of STARTTLS (see
12479 &%tls_on_connect_ports%&), and the client uses HELO to initiate the
12480 encrypted SMTP session. The name &"smtps"& is also used for the rare situation
12481 where the client initially uses EHLO, sets up an encrypted connection using
12482 STARTTLS, and then uses HELO afterwards.
12483
12484 The &%-oMr%& option provides a way of specifying a custom protocol name for
12485 messages that are injected locally by trusted callers. This is commonly used to
12486 identify messages that are being re-injected after some kind of scanning.
12487
12488 .vitem &$received_time$&
12489 .vindex "&$received_time$&"
12490 This variable contains the date and time when the current message was received,
12491 as a number of seconds since the start of the Unix epoch.
12492
12493 .vitem &$recipient_data$&
12494 .vindex "&$recipient_data$&"
12495 This variable is set after an indexing lookup success in an ACL &%recipients%&
12496 condition. It contains the data from the lookup, and the value remains set
12497 until the next &%recipients%& test. Thus, you can do things like this:
12498 .display
12499 &`require recipients = cdb*@;/some/file`&
12500 &`deny `&&'some further test involving'& &`$recipient_data`&
12501 .endd
12502 &*Warning*&: This variable is set only when a lookup is used as an indexing
12503 method in the address list, using the semicolon syntax as in the example above.
12504 The variable is not set for a lookup that is used as part of the string
12505 expansion that all such lists undergo before being interpreted.
12506
12507 .vitem &$recipient_verify_failure$&
12508 .vindex "&$recipient_verify_failure$&"
12509 In an ACL, when a recipient verification fails, this variable contains
12510 information about the failure. It is set to one of the following words:
12511
12512 .ilist
12513 &"qualify"&: The address was unqualified (no domain), and the message
12514 was neither local nor came from an exempted host.
12515
12516 .next
12517 &"route"&: Routing failed.
12518
12519 .next
12520 &"mail"&: Routing succeeded, and a callout was attempted; rejection occurred at
12521 or before the MAIL command (that is, on initial connection, HELO, or
12522 MAIL).
12523
12524 .next
12525 &"recipient"&: The RCPT command in a callout was rejected.
12526 .next
12527
12528 &"postmaster"&: The postmaster check in a callout was rejected.
12529 .endlist
12530
12531 The main use of this variable is expected to be to distinguish between
12532 rejections of MAIL and rejections of RCPT.
12533
12534 .vitem &$recipients$&
12535 .vindex "&$recipients$&"
12536 This variable contains a list of envelope recipients for a message. A comma and
12537 a space separate the addresses in the replacement text. However, the variable
12538 is not generally available, to prevent exposure of Bcc recipients in
12539 unprivileged users' filter files. You can use &$recipients$& only in these
12540 cases:
12541
12542 .olist
12543 In a system filter file.
12544 .next
12545 In the ACLs associated with the DATA command and with non-SMTP messages, that
12546 is, the ACLs defined by &%acl_smtp_predata%&, &%acl_smtp_data%&,
12547 &%acl_smtp_mime%&, &%acl_not_smtp_start%&, &%acl_not_smtp%&, and
12548 &%acl_not_smtp_mime%&.
12549 .next
12550 From within a &[local_scan()]& function.
12551 .endlist
12552
12553
12554 .vitem &$recipients_count$&
12555 .vindex "&$recipients_count$&"
12556 When a message is being processed, this variable contains the number of
12557 envelope recipients that came with the message. Duplicates are not excluded
12558 from the count. While a message is being received over SMTP, the number
12559 increases for each accepted recipient. It can be referenced in an ACL.
12560
12561
12562 .vitem &$regex_match_string$&
12563 .vindex "&$regex_match_string$&"
12564 This variable is set to contain the matching regular expression after a
12565 &%regex%& ACL condition has matched (see section &<<SECTscanregex>>&).
12566
12567 .vitem "&$regex1$&, &$regex2$&, etc"
12568 .cindex "regex submatch variables (&$1regex$& &$2regex$& etc)"
12569 When a &%regex%& or &%mime_regex%& ACL condition succeeds,
12570 these variables contain the
12571 captured substrings identified by the regular expression.
12572
12573
12574 .vitem &$reply_address$&
12575 .vindex "&$reply_address$&"
12576 When a message is being processed, this variable contains the contents of the
12577 &'Reply-To:'& header line if one exists and it is not empty, or otherwise the
12578 contents of the &'From:'& header line. Apart from the removal of leading
12579 white space, the value is not processed in any way. In particular, no RFC 2047
12580 decoding or character code translation takes place.
12581
12582 .vitem &$return_path$&
12583 .vindex "&$return_path$&"
12584 When a message is being delivered, this variable contains the return path &--
12585 the sender field that will be sent as part of the envelope. It is not enclosed
12586 in <> characters. At the start of routing an address, &$return_path$& has the
12587 same value as &$sender_address$&, but if, for example, an incoming message to a
12588 mailing list has been expanded by a router which specifies a different address
12589 for bounce messages, &$return_path$& subsequently contains the new bounce
12590 address, whereas &$sender_address$& always contains the original sender address
12591 that was received with the message. In other words, &$sender_address$& contains
12592 the incoming envelope sender, and &$return_path$& contains the outgoing
12593 envelope sender.
12594
12595 .vitem &$return_size_limit$&
12596 .vindex "&$return_size_limit$&"
12597 This is an obsolete name for &$bounce_return_size_limit$&.
12598
12599 .vitem &$router_name$&
12600 .cindex "router" "name"
12601 .cindex "name" "of router"
12602 .vindex "&$router_name$&"
12603 During the running of a router this variable contains its name.
12604
12605 .vitem &$runrc$&
12606 .cindex "return code" "from &%run%& expansion"
12607 .vindex "&$runrc$&"
12608 This variable contains the return code from a command that is run by the
12609 &%${run...}%& expansion item. &*Warning*&: In a router or transport, you cannot
12610 assume the order in which option values are expanded, except for those
12611 preconditions whose order of testing is documented. Therefore, you cannot
12612 reliably expect to set &$runrc$& by the expansion of one option, and use it in
12613 another.
12614
12615 .vitem &$self_hostname$&
12616 .oindex "&%self%&" "value of host name"
12617 .vindex "&$self_hostname$&"
12618 When an address is routed to a supposedly remote host that turns out to be the
12619 local host, what happens is controlled by the &%self%& generic router option.
12620 One of its values causes the address to be passed to another router. When this
12621 happens, &$self_hostname$& is set to the name of the local host that the
12622 original router encountered. In other circumstances its contents are null.
12623
12624 .vitem &$sender_address$&
12625 .vindex "&$sender_address$&"
12626 When a message is being processed, this variable contains the sender's address
12627 that was received in the message's envelope. The case of letters in the address
12628 is retained, in both the local part and the domain. For bounce messages, the
12629 value of this variable is the empty string. See also &$return_path$&.
12630
12631 .vitem &$sender_address_data$&
12632 .vindex "&$address_data$&"
12633 .vindex "&$sender_address_data$&"
12634 If &$address_data$& is set when the routers are called from an ACL to verify a
12635 sender address, the final value is preserved in &$sender_address_data$&, to
12636 distinguish it from data from a recipient address. The value does not persist
12637 after the end of the current ACL statement. If you want to preserve it for
12638 longer, you can save it in an ACL variable.
12639
12640 .vitem &$sender_address_domain$&
12641 .vindex "&$sender_address_domain$&"
12642 The domain portion of &$sender_address$&.
12643
12644 .vitem &$sender_address_local_part$&
12645 .vindex "&$sender_address_local_part$&"
12646 The local part portion of &$sender_address$&.
12647
12648 .vitem &$sender_data$&
12649 .vindex "&$sender_data$&"
12650 This variable is set after a lookup success in an ACL &%senders%& condition or
12651 in a router &%senders%& option. It contains the data from the lookup, and the
12652 value remains set until the next &%senders%& test. Thus, you can do things like
12653 this:
12654 .display
12655 &`require senders = cdb*@;/some/file`&
12656 &`deny `&&'some further test involving'& &`$sender_data`&
12657 .endd
12658 &*Warning*&: This variable is set only when a lookup is used as an indexing
12659 method in the address list, using the semicolon syntax as in the example above.
12660 The variable is not set for a lookup that is used as part of the string
12661 expansion that all such lists undergo before being interpreted.
12662
12663 .vitem &$sender_fullhost$&
12664 .vindex "&$sender_fullhost$&"
12665 When a message is received from a remote host, this variable contains the host
12666 name and IP address in a single string. It ends with the IP address in square
12667 brackets, followed by a colon and a port number if the logging of ports is
12668 enabled. The format of the rest of the string depends on whether the host
12669 issued a HELO or EHLO SMTP command, and whether the host name was verified by
12670 looking up its IP address. (Looking up the IP address can be forced by the
12671 &%host_lookup%& option, independent of verification.) A plain host name at the
12672 start of the string is a verified host name; if this is not present,
12673 verification either failed or was not requested. A host name in parentheses is
12674 the argument of a HELO or EHLO command. This is omitted if it is identical to
12675 the verified host name or to the host's IP address in square brackets.
12676
12677 .vitem &$sender_helo_dnssec$&
12678 .vindex "&$sender_helo_dnssec$&"
12679 This boolean variable is true if a successful HELO verification was
12680 .cindex "DNS" "DNSSEC"
12681 done using DNS information the resolver library stated was authenticated data.
12682
12683 .vitem &$sender_helo_name$&
12684 .vindex "&$sender_helo_name$&"
12685 When a message is received from a remote host that has issued a HELO or EHLO
12686 command, the argument of that command is placed in this variable. It is also
12687 set if HELO or EHLO is used when a message is received using SMTP locally via
12688 the &%-bs%& or &%-bS%& options.
12689
12690 .vitem &$sender_host_address$&
12691 .vindex "&$sender_host_address$&"
12692 When a message is received from a remote host using SMTP,
12693 this variable contains that
12694 host's IP address. For locally non-SMTP submitted messages, it is empty.
12695
12696 .vitem &$sender_host_authenticated$&
12697 .vindex "&$sender_host_authenticated$&"
12698 This variable contains the name (not the public name) of the authenticator
12699 driver that successfully authenticated the client from which the message was
12700 received. It is empty if there was no successful authentication. See also
12701 &$authenticated_id$&.
12702
12703 .vitem &$sender_host_dnssec$&
12704 .vindex "&$sender_host_dnssec$&"
12705 If an attempt to populate &$sender_host_name$& has been made
12706 (by reference, &%hosts_lookup%& or
12707 otherwise) then this boolean will have been set true if, and only if, the
12708 resolver library states that both
12709 the reverse and forward DNS were authenticated data. At all
12710 other times, this variable is false.
12711
12712 .cindex "DNS" "DNSSEC"
12713 It is likely that you will need to coerce DNSSEC support on in the resolver
12714 library, by setting:
12715 .code
12716 dns_dnssec_ok = 1
12717 .endd
12718
12719 Exim does not perform DNSSEC validation itself, instead leaving that to a
12720 validating resolver (e.g. unbound, or bind with suitable configuration).
12721
12722 If you have changed &%host_lookup_order%& so that &`bydns`& is not the first
12723 mechanism in the list, then this variable will be false.
12724
12725 This requires that your system resolver library support EDNS0 (and that
12726 DNSSEC flags exist in the system headers). If the resolver silently drops
12727 all EDNS0 options, then this will have no effect. OpenBSD's asr resolver
12728 is known to currently ignore EDNS0, documented in CAVEATS of asr_run(3).
12729
12730
12731 .vitem &$sender_host_name$&
12732 .vindex "&$sender_host_name$&"
12733 When a message is received from a remote host, this variable contains the
12734 host's name as obtained by looking up its IP address. For messages received by
12735 other means, this variable is empty.
12736
12737 .vindex "&$host_lookup_failed$&"
12738 If the host name has not previously been looked up, a reference to
12739 &$sender_host_name$& triggers a lookup (for messages from remote hosts).
12740 A looked up name is accepted only if it leads back to the original IP address
12741 via a forward lookup. If either the reverse or the forward lookup fails to find
12742 any data, or if the forward lookup does not yield the original IP address,
12743 &$sender_host_name$& remains empty, and &$host_lookup_failed$& is set to &"1"&.
12744
12745 .vindex "&$host_lookup_deferred$&"
12746 However, if either of the lookups cannot be completed (for example, there is a
12747 DNS timeout), &$host_lookup_deferred$& is set to &"1"&, and
12748 &$host_lookup_failed$& remains set to &"0"&.
12749
12750 Once &$host_lookup_failed$& is set to &"1"&, Exim does not try to look up the
12751 host name again if there is a subsequent reference to &$sender_host_name$&
12752 in the same Exim process, but it does try again if &$host_lookup_deferred$&
12753 is set to &"1"&.
12754
12755 Exim does not automatically look up every calling host's name. If you want
12756 maximum efficiency, you should arrange your configuration so that it avoids
12757 these lookups altogether. The lookup happens only if one or more of the
12758 following are true:
12759
12760 .ilist
12761 A string containing &$sender_host_name$& is expanded.
12762 .next
12763 The calling host matches the list in &%host_lookup%&. In the default
12764 configuration, this option is set to *, so it must be changed if lookups are
12765 to be avoided. (In the code, the default for &%host_lookup%& is unset.)
12766 .next
12767 Exim needs the host name in order to test an item in a host list. The items
12768 that require this are described in sections &<<SECThoslispatnam>>& and
12769 &<<SECThoslispatnamsk>>&.
12770 .next
12771 The calling host matches &%helo_try_verify_hosts%& or &%helo_verify_hosts%&.
12772 In this case, the host name is required to compare with the name quoted in any
12773 EHLO or HELO commands that the client issues.
12774 .next
12775 The remote host issues a EHLO or HELO command that quotes one of the
12776 domains in &%helo_lookup_domains%&. The default value of this option is
12777 . ==== As this is a nested list, any displays it contains must be indented
12778 . ==== as otherwise they are too far to the left.
12779 .code
12780 helo_lookup_domains = @ : @[]
12781 .endd
12782 which causes a lookup if a remote host (incorrectly) gives the server's name or
12783 IP address in an EHLO or HELO command.
12784 .endlist
12785
12786
12787 .vitem &$sender_host_port$&
12788 .vindex "&$sender_host_port$&"
12789 When a message is received from a remote host, this variable contains the port
12790 number that was used on the remote host.
12791
12792 .vitem &$sender_ident$&
12793 .vindex "&$sender_ident$&"
12794 When a message is received from a remote host, this variable contains the
12795 identification received in response to an RFC 1413 request. When a message has
12796 been received locally, this variable contains the login name of the user that
12797 called Exim.
12798
12799 .vitem &$sender_rate_$&&'xxx'&
12800 A number of variables whose names begin &$sender_rate_$& are set as part of the
12801 &%ratelimit%& ACL condition. Details are given in section
12802 &<<SECTratelimiting>>&.
12803
12804 .vitem &$sender_rcvhost$&
12805 .cindex "DNS" "reverse lookup"
12806 .cindex "reverse DNS lookup"
12807 .vindex "&$sender_rcvhost$&"
12808 This is provided specifically for use in &'Received:'& headers. It starts with
12809 either the verified host name (as obtained from a reverse DNS lookup) or, if
12810 there is no verified host name, the IP address in square brackets. After that
12811 there may be text in parentheses. When the first item is a verified host name,
12812 the first thing in the parentheses is the IP address in square brackets,
12813 followed by a colon and a port number if port logging is enabled. When the
12814 first item is an IP address, the port is recorded as &"port=&'xxxx'&"& inside
12815 the parentheses.
12816
12817 There may also be items of the form &"helo=&'xxxx'&"& if HELO or EHLO
12818 was used and its argument was not identical to the real host name or IP
12819 address, and &"ident=&'xxxx'&"& if an RFC 1413 ident string is available. If
12820 all three items are present in the parentheses, a newline and tab are inserted
12821 into the string, to improve the formatting of the &'Received:'& header.
12822
12823 .vitem &$sender_verify_failure$&
12824 .vindex "&$sender_verify_failure$&"
12825 In an ACL, when a sender verification fails, this variable contains information
12826 about the failure. The details are the same as for
12827 &$recipient_verify_failure$&.
12828
12829 .vitem &$sending_ip_address$&
12830 .vindex "&$sending_ip_address$&"
12831 This variable is set whenever an outgoing SMTP connection to another host has
12832 been set up. It contains the IP address of the local interface that is being
12833 used. This is useful if a host that has more than one IP address wants to take
12834 on different personalities depending on which one is being used. For incoming
12835 connections, see &$received_ip_address$&.
12836
12837 .vitem &$sending_port$&
12838 .vindex "&$sending_port$&"
12839 This variable is set whenever an outgoing SMTP connection to another host has
12840 been set up. It contains the local port that is being used. For incoming
12841 connections, see &$received_port$&.
12842
12843 .vitem &$smtp_active_hostname$&
12844 .vindex "&$smtp_active_hostname$&"
12845 During an incoming SMTP session, this variable contains the value of the active
12846 host name, as specified by the &%smtp_active_hostname%& option. The value of
12847 &$smtp_active_hostname$& is saved with any message that is received, so its
12848 value can be consulted during routing and delivery.
12849
12850 .vitem &$smtp_command$&
12851 .vindex "&$smtp_command$&"
12852 During the processing of an incoming SMTP command, this variable contains the
12853 entire command. This makes it possible to distinguish between HELO and EHLO in
12854 the HELO ACL, and also to distinguish between commands such as these:
12855 .code
12856 MAIL FROM:<>
12857 MAIL FROM: <>
12858 .endd
12859 For a MAIL command, extra parameters such as SIZE can be inspected. For a RCPT
12860 command, the address in &$smtp_command$& is the original address before any
12861 rewriting, whereas the values in &$local_part$& and &$domain$& are taken from
12862 the address after SMTP-time rewriting.
12863
12864 .vitem &$smtp_command_argument$&
12865 .cindex "SMTP" "command, argument for"
12866 .vindex "&$smtp_command_argument$&"
12867 While an ACL is running to check an SMTP command, this variable contains the
12868 argument, that is, the text that follows the command name, with leading white
12869 space removed. Following the introduction of &$smtp_command$&, this variable is
12870 somewhat redundant, but is retained for backwards compatibility.
12871
12872 .vitem &$smtp_command_history$&
12873 .cindex SMTP "command history"
12874 .vindex "&$smtp_command_history$&"
12875 A comma-separated list (with no whitespace) of the most-recent SMTP commands
12876 received, in time-order left to right. Only a limited number of commands
12877 are remembered.
12878
12879 .vitem &$smtp_count_at_connection_start$&
12880 .vindex "&$smtp_count_at_connection_start$&"
12881 This variable is set greater than zero only in processes spawned by the Exim
12882 daemon for handling incoming SMTP connections. The name is deliberately long,
12883 in order to emphasize what the contents are. When the daemon accepts a new
12884 connection, it increments this variable. A copy of the variable is passed to
12885 the child process that handles the connection, but its value is fixed, and
12886 never changes. It is only an approximation of how many incoming connections
12887 there actually are, because many other connections may come and go while a
12888 single connection is being processed. When a child process terminates, the
12889 daemon decrements its copy of the variable.
12890
12891 .vitem "&$sn0$& &-- &$sn9$&"
12892 These variables are copies of the values of the &$n0$& &-- &$n9$& accumulators
12893 that were current at the end of the system filter file. This allows a system
12894 filter file to set values that can be tested in users' filter files. For
12895 example, a system filter could set a value indicating how likely it is that a
12896 message is junk mail.
12897
12898 .vitem &$spam_$&&'xxx'&
12899 A number of variables whose names start with &$spam$& are available when Exim
12900 is compiled with the content-scanning extension. For details, see section
12901 &<<SECTscanspamass>>&.
12902
12903 .vitem &$spf_header_comment$& &&&
12904 &$spf_received$& &&&
12905 &$spf_result$& &&&
12906 &$spf_result_guessed$& &&&
12907 &$spf_smtp_comment$&
12908 These variables are only available if Exim is built with SPF support.
12909 For details see section &<<SECSPF>>&.
12910
12911 .vitem &$spool_directory$&
12912 .vindex "&$spool_directory$&"
12913 The name of Exim's spool directory.
12914
12915 .vitem &$spool_inodes$&
12916 .vindex "&$spool_inodes$&"
12917 The number of free inodes in the disk partition where Exim's spool files are
12918 being written. The value is recalculated whenever the variable is referenced.
12919 If the relevant file system does not have the concept of inodes, the value of
12920 is -1. See also the &%check_spool_inodes%& option.
12921
12922 .vitem &$spool_space$&
12923 .vindex "&$spool_space$&"
12924 The amount of free space (as a number of kilobytes) in the disk partition where
12925 Exim's spool files are being written. The value is recalculated whenever the
12926 variable is referenced. If the operating system does not have the ability to
12927 find the amount of free space (only true for experimental systems), the space
12928 value is -1. For example, to check in an ACL that there is at least 50
12929 megabytes free on the spool, you could write:
12930 .code
12931 condition = ${if > {$spool_space}{50000}}
12932 .endd
12933 See also the &%check_spool_space%& option.
12934
12935
12936 .vitem &$thisaddress$&
12937 .vindex "&$thisaddress$&"
12938 This variable is set only during the processing of the &%foranyaddress%&
12939 command in a filter file. Its use is explained in the description of that
12940 command, which can be found in the separate document entitled &'Exim's
12941 interfaces to mail filtering'&.
12942
12943 .vitem &$tls_in_bits$&
12944 .vindex "&$tls_in_bits$&"
12945 Contains an approximation of the TLS cipher's bit-strength
12946 on the inbound connection; the meaning of
12947 this depends upon the TLS implementation used.
12948 If TLS has not been negotiated, the value will be 0.
12949 The value of this is automatically fed into the Cyrus SASL authenticator
12950 when acting as a server, to specify the "external SSF" (a SASL term).
12951
12952 The deprecated &$tls_bits$& variable refers to the inbound side
12953 except when used in the context of an outbound SMTP delivery, when it refers to
12954 the outbound.
12955
12956 .vitem &$tls_out_bits$&
12957 .vindex "&$tls_out_bits$&"
12958 Contains an approximation of the TLS cipher's bit-strength
12959 on an outbound SMTP connection; the meaning of
12960 this depends upon the TLS implementation used.
12961 If TLS has not been negotiated, the value will be 0.
12962
12963 .vitem &$tls_in_ourcert$&
12964 .vindex "&$tls_in_ourcert$&"
12965 .cindex certificate variables
12966 This variable refers to the certificate presented to the peer of an
12967 inbound connection when the message was received.
12968 It is only useful as the argument of a
12969 &%certextract%& expansion item, &%md5%&, &%sha1%& or &%sha256%& operator,
12970 or a &%def%& condition.
12971
12972 &*Note*&: Under versions of OpenSSL preceding 1.1.1,
12973 when a list of more than one
12974 file is used for &%tls_certificate%&, this variable is not reliable.
12975
12976 .vitem &$tls_in_peercert$&
12977 .vindex "&$tls_in_peercert$&"
12978 This variable refers to the certificate presented by the peer of an
12979 inbound connection when the message was received.
12980 It is only useful as the argument of a
12981 &%certextract%& expansion item, &%md5%&, &%sha1%& or &%sha256%& operator,
12982 or a &%def%& condition.
12983 If certificate verification fails it may refer to a failing chain element
12984 which is not the leaf.
12985
12986 .vitem &$tls_out_ourcert$&
12987 .vindex "&$tls_out_ourcert$&"
12988 This variable refers to the certificate presented to the peer of an
12989 outbound connection. It is only useful as the argument of a
12990 &%certextract%& expansion item, &%md5%&, &%sha1%& or &%sha256%& operator,
12991 or a &%def%& condition.
12992
12993 .vitem &$tls_out_peercert$&
12994 .vindex "&$tls_out_peercert$&"
12995 This variable refers to the certificate presented by the peer of an
12996 outbound connection. It is only useful as the argument of a
12997 &%certextract%& expansion item, &%md5%&, &%sha1%& or &%sha256%& operator,
12998 or a &%def%& condition.
12999 If certificate verification fails it may refer to a failing chain element
13000 which is not the leaf.
13001
13002 .vitem &$tls_in_certificate_verified$&
13003 .vindex "&$tls_in_certificate_verified$&"
13004 This variable is set to &"1"& if a TLS certificate was verified when the
13005 message was received, and &"0"& otherwise.
13006
13007 The deprecated &$tls_certificate_verified$& variable refers to the inbound side
13008 except when used in the context of an outbound SMTP delivery, when it refers to
13009 the outbound.
13010
13011 .vitem &$tls_out_certificate_verified$&
13012 .vindex "&$tls_out_certificate_verified$&"
13013 This variable is set to &"1"& if a TLS certificate was verified when an
13014 outbound SMTP connection was made,
13015 and &"0"& otherwise.
13016
13017 .vitem &$tls_in_cipher$&
13018 .vindex "&$tls_in_cipher$&"
13019 .vindex "&$tls_cipher$&"
13020 When a message is received from a remote host over an encrypted SMTP
13021 connection, this variable is set to the cipher suite that was negotiated, for
13022 example DES-CBC3-SHA. In other circumstances, in particular, for message
13023 received over unencrypted connections, the variable is empty. Testing
13024 &$tls_in_cipher$& for emptiness is one way of distinguishing between encrypted and
13025 non-encrypted connections during ACL processing.
13026
13027 The deprecated &$tls_cipher$& variable is the same as &$tls_in_cipher$& during message reception,
13028 but in the context of an outward SMTP delivery taking place via the &(smtp)& transport
13029 becomes the same as &$tls_out_cipher$&.
13030
13031 .vitem &$tls_out_cipher$&
13032 .vindex "&$tls_out_cipher$&"
13033 This variable is
13034 cleared before any outgoing SMTP connection is made,
13035 and then set to the outgoing cipher suite if one is negotiated. See chapter
13036 &<<CHAPTLS>>& for details of TLS support and chapter &<<CHAPsmtptrans>>& for
13037 details of the &(smtp)& transport.
13038
13039 .vitem &$tls_out_dane$&
13040 .vindex &$tls_out_dane$&
13041 DANE active status. See section &<<SECDANE>>&.
13042
13043 .vitem &$tls_in_ocsp$&
13044 .vindex "&$tls_in_ocsp$&"
13045 When a message is received from a remote client connection
13046 the result of any OCSP request from the client is encoded in this variable:
13047 .code
13048 0 OCSP proof was not requested (default value)
13049 1 No response to request
13050 2 Response not verified
13051 3 Verification failed
13052 4 Verification succeeded
13053 .endd
13054
13055 .vitem &$tls_out_ocsp$&
13056 .vindex "&$tls_out_ocsp$&"
13057 When a message is sent to a remote host connection
13058 the result of any OCSP request made is encoded in this variable.
13059 See &$tls_in_ocsp$& for values.
13060
13061 .vitem &$tls_in_peerdn$&
13062 .vindex "&$tls_in_peerdn$&"
13063 .vindex "&$tls_peerdn$&"
13064 .cindex certificate "extracting fields"
13065 When a message is received from a remote host over an encrypted SMTP
13066 connection, and Exim is configured to request a certificate from the client,
13067 the value of the Distinguished Name of the certificate is made available in the
13068 &$tls_in_peerdn$& during subsequent processing.
13069 If certificate verification fails it may refer to a failing chain element
13070 which is not the leaf.
13071
13072 The deprecated &$tls_peerdn$& variable refers to the inbound side
13073 except when used in the context of an outbound SMTP delivery, when it refers to
13074 the outbound.
13075
13076 .vitem &$tls_out_peerdn$&
13077 .vindex "&$tls_out_peerdn$&"
13078 When a message is being delivered to a remote host over an encrypted SMTP
13079 connection, and Exim is configured to request a certificate from the server,
13080 the value of the Distinguished Name of the certificate is made available in the
13081 &$tls_out_peerdn$& during subsequent processing.
13082 If certificate verification fails it may refer to a failing chain element
13083 which is not the leaf.
13084
13085 .vitem &$tls_in_sni$&
13086 .vindex "&$tls_in_sni$&"
13087 .vindex "&$tls_sni$&"
13088 .cindex "TLS" "Server Name Indication"
13089 When a TLS session is being established, if the client sends the Server
13090 Name Indication extension, the value will be placed in this variable.
13091 If the variable appears in &%tls_certificate%& then this option and
13092 some others, described in &<<SECTtlssni>>&,
13093 will be re-expanded early in the TLS session, to permit
13094 a different certificate to be presented (and optionally a different key to be
13095 used) to the client, based upon the value of the SNI extension.
13096
13097 The deprecated &$tls_sni$& variable refers to the inbound side
13098 except when used in the context of an outbound SMTP delivery, when it refers to
13099 the outbound.
13100
13101 .vitem &$tls_out_sni$&
13102 .vindex "&$tls_out_sni$&"
13103 .cindex "TLS" "Server Name Indication"
13104 During outbound
13105 SMTP deliveries, this variable reflects the value of the &%tls_sni%& option on
13106 the transport.
13107
13108 .vitem &$tls_out_tlsa_usage$&
13109 .vindex &$tls_out_tlsa_usage$&
13110 Bitfield of TLSA record types found. See section &<<SECDANE>>&.
13111
13112 .vitem &$tod_bsdinbox$&
13113 .vindex "&$tod_bsdinbox$&"
13114 The time of day and the date, in the format required for BSD-style mailbox
13115 files, for example: Thu Oct 17 17:14:09 1995.
13116
13117 .vitem &$tod_epoch$&
13118 .vindex "&$tod_epoch$&"
13119 The time and date as a number of seconds since the start of the Unix epoch.
13120
13121 .vitem &$tod_epoch_l$&
13122 .vindex "&$tod_epoch_l$&"
13123 The time and date as a number of microseconds since the start of the Unix epoch.
13124
13125 .vitem &$tod_full$&
13126 .vindex "&$tod_full$&"
13127 A full version of the time and date, for example: Wed, 16 Oct 1995 09:51:40
13128 +0100. The timezone is always given as a numerical offset from UTC, with
13129 positive values used for timezones that are ahead (east) of UTC, and negative
13130 values for those that are behind (west).
13131
13132 .vitem &$tod_log$&
13133 .vindex "&$tod_log$&"
13134 The time and date in the format used for writing Exim's log files, for example:
13135 1995-10-12 15:32:29, but without a timezone.
13136
13137 .vitem &$tod_logfile$&
13138 .vindex "&$tod_logfile$&"
13139 This variable contains the date in the format yyyymmdd. This is the format that
13140 is used for datestamping log files when &%log_file_path%& contains the &`%D`&
13141 flag.
13142
13143 .vitem &$tod_zone$&
13144 .vindex "&$tod_zone$&"
13145 This variable contains the numerical value of the local timezone, for example:
13146 -0500.
13147
13148 .vitem &$tod_zulu$&
13149 .vindex "&$tod_zulu$&"
13150 This variable contains the UTC date and time in &"Zulu"& format, as specified
13151 by ISO 8601, for example: 20030221154023Z.
13152
13153 .vitem &$transport_name$&
13154 .cindex "transport" "name"
13155 .cindex "name" "of transport"
13156 .vindex "&$transport_name$&"
13157 During the running of a transport, this variable contains its name.
13158
13159 .vitem &$value$&
13160 .vindex "&$value$&"
13161 This variable contains the result of an expansion lookup, extraction operation,
13162 or external command, as described above. It is also used during a
13163 &*reduce*& expansion.
13164
13165 .vitem &$verify_mode$&
13166 .vindex "&$verify_mode$&"
13167 While a router or transport is being run in verify mode or for cutthrough delivery,
13168 contains "S" for sender-verification or "R" for recipient-verification.
13169 Otherwise, empty.
13170
13171 .vitem &$version_number$&
13172 .vindex "&$version_number$&"
13173 The version number of Exim.
13174
13175 .vitem &$warn_message_delay$&
13176 .vindex "&$warn_message_delay$&"
13177 This variable is set only during the creation of a message warning about a
13178 delivery delay. Details of its use are explained in section &<<SECTcustwarn>>&.
13179
13180 .vitem &$warn_message_recipients$&
13181 .vindex "&$warn_message_recipients$&"
13182 This variable is set only during the creation of a message warning about a
13183 delivery delay. Details of its use are explained in section &<<SECTcustwarn>>&.
13184 .endlist
13185 .ecindex IIDstrexp
13186
13187
13188
13189 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
13190 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
13191
13192 .chapter "Embedded Perl" "CHAPperl"
13193 .scindex IIDperl "Perl" "calling from Exim"
13194 Exim can be built to include an embedded Perl interpreter. When this is done,
13195 Perl subroutines can be called as part of the string expansion process. To make
13196 use of the Perl support, you need version 5.004 or later of Perl installed on
13197 your system. To include the embedded interpreter in the Exim binary, include
13198 the line
13199 .code
13200 EXIM_PERL = perl.o
13201 .endd
13202 in your &_Local/Makefile_& and then build Exim in the normal way.
13203
13204
13205 .section "Setting up so Perl can be used" "SECID85"
13206 .oindex "&%perl_startup%&"
13207 Access to Perl subroutines is via a global configuration option called
13208 &%perl_startup%& and an expansion string operator &%${perl ...}%&. If there is
13209 no &%perl_startup%& option in the Exim configuration file then no Perl
13210 interpreter is started and there is almost no overhead for Exim (since none of
13211 the Perl library will be paged in unless used). If there is a &%perl_startup%&
13212 option then the associated value is taken to be Perl code which is executed in
13213 a newly created Perl interpreter.
13214
13215 The value of &%perl_startup%& is not expanded in the Exim sense, so you do not
13216 need backslashes before any characters to escape special meanings. The option
13217 should usually be something like
13218 .code
13219 perl_startup = do '/etc/exim.pl'
13220 .endd
13221 where &_/etc/exim.pl_& is Perl code which defines any subroutines you want to
13222 use from Exim. Exim can be configured either to start up a Perl interpreter as
13223 soon as it is entered, or to wait until the first time it is needed. Starting
13224 the interpreter at the beginning ensures that it is done while Exim still has
13225 its setuid privilege, but can impose an unnecessary overhead if Perl is not in
13226 fact used in a particular run. Also, note that this does not mean that Exim is
13227 necessarily running as root when Perl is called at a later time. By default,
13228 the interpreter is started only when it is needed, but this can be changed in
13229 two ways:
13230
13231 .ilist
13232 .oindex "&%perl_at_start%&"
13233 Setting &%perl_at_start%& (a boolean option) in the configuration requests
13234 a startup when Exim is entered.
13235 .next
13236 The command line option &%-ps%& also requests a startup when Exim is entered,
13237 overriding the setting of &%perl_at_start%&.
13238 .endlist
13239
13240 There is also a command line option &%-pd%& (for delay) which suppresses the
13241 initial startup, even if &%perl_at_start%& is set.
13242
13243 .ilist
13244 .oindex "&%perl_taintmode%&"
13245 .cindex "Perl" "taintmode"
13246 To provide more security executing Perl code via the embedded Perl
13247 interpreter, the &%perl_taintmode%& option can be set. This enables the
13248 taint mode of the Perl interpreter. You are encouraged to set this
13249 option to a true value. To avoid breaking existing installations, it
13250 defaults to false.
13251
13252
13253 .section "Calling Perl subroutines" "SECID86"
13254 When the configuration file includes a &%perl_startup%& option you can make use
13255 of the string expansion item to call the Perl subroutines that are defined
13256 by the &%perl_startup%& code. The operator is used in any of the following
13257 forms:
13258 .code
13259 ${perl{foo}}
13260 ${perl{foo}{argument}}
13261 ${perl{foo}{argument1}{argument2} ... }
13262 .endd
13263 which calls the subroutine &%foo%& with the given arguments. A maximum of eight
13264 arguments may be passed. Passing more than this results in an expansion failure
13265 with an error message of the form
13266 .code
13267 Too many arguments passed to Perl subroutine "foo" (max is 8)
13268 .endd
13269 The return value of the Perl subroutine is evaluated in a scalar context before
13270 it is passed back to Exim to be inserted into the expanded string. If the
13271 return value is &'undef'&, the expansion is forced to fail in the same way as
13272 an explicit &"fail"& on an &%if%& or &%lookup%& item. If the subroutine aborts
13273 by obeying Perl's &%die%& function, the expansion fails with the error message
13274 that was passed to &%die%&.
13275
13276
13277 .section "Calling Exim functions from Perl" "SECID87"
13278 Within any Perl code called from Exim, the function &'Exim::expand_string()'&
13279 is available to call back into Exim's string expansion function. For example,
13280 the Perl code
13281 .code
13282 my $lp = Exim::expand_string('$local_part');
13283 .endd
13284 makes the current Exim &$local_part$& available in the Perl variable &$lp$&.
13285 Note those are single quotes and not double quotes to protect against
13286 &$local_part$& being interpolated as a Perl variable.
13287
13288 If the string expansion is forced to fail by a &"fail"& item, the result of
13289 &'Exim::expand_string()'& is &%undef%&. If there is a syntax error in the
13290 expansion string, the Perl call from the original expansion string fails with
13291 an appropriate error message, in the same way as if &%die%& were used.
13292
13293 .cindex "debugging" "from embedded Perl"
13294 .cindex "log" "writing from embedded Perl"
13295 Two other Exim functions are available for use from within Perl code.
13296 &'Exim::debug_write()'& writes a string to the standard error stream if Exim's
13297 debugging is enabled. If you want a newline at the end, you must supply it.
13298 &'Exim::log_write()'& writes a string to Exim's main log, adding a leading
13299 timestamp. In this case, you should not supply a terminating newline.
13300
13301
13302 .section "Use of standard output and error by Perl" "SECID88"
13303 .cindex "Perl" "standard output and error"
13304 You should not write to the standard error or output streams from within your
13305 Perl code, as it is not defined how these are set up. In versions of Exim
13306 before 4.50, it is possible for the standard output or error to refer to the
13307 SMTP connection during message reception via the daemon. Writing to this stream
13308 is certain to cause chaos. From Exim 4.50 onwards, the standard output and
13309 error streams are connected to &_/dev/null_& in the daemon. The chaos is
13310 avoided, but the output is lost.
13311
13312 .cindex "Perl" "use of &%warn%&"
13313 The Perl &%warn%& statement writes to the standard error stream by default.
13314 Calls to &%warn%& may be embedded in Perl modules that you use, but over which
13315 you have no control. When Exim starts up the Perl interpreter, it arranges for
13316 output from the &%warn%& statement to be written to the Exim main log. You can
13317 change this by including appropriate Perl magic somewhere in your Perl code.
13318 For example, to discard &%warn%& output completely, you need this:
13319 .code
13320 $SIG{__WARN__} = sub { };
13321 .endd
13322 Whenever a &%warn%& is obeyed, the anonymous subroutine is called. In this
13323 example, the code for the subroutine is empty, so it does nothing, but you can
13324 include any Perl code that you like. The text of the &%warn%& message is passed
13325 as the first subroutine argument.
13326 .ecindex IIDperl
13327
13328
13329 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
13330 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
13331
13332 .chapter "Starting the daemon and the use of network interfaces" &&&
13333 "CHAPinterfaces" &&&
13334 "Starting the daemon"
13335 .cindex "daemon" "starting"
13336 .cindex "interface" "listening"
13337 .cindex "network interface"
13338 .cindex "interface" "network"
13339 .cindex "IP address" "for listening"
13340 .cindex "daemon" "listening IP addresses"
13341 .cindex "TCP/IP" "setting listening interfaces"
13342 .cindex "TCP/IP" "setting listening ports"
13343 A host that is connected to a TCP/IP network may have one or more physical
13344 hardware network interfaces. Each of these interfaces may be configured as one
13345 or more &"logical"& interfaces, which are the entities that a program actually
13346 works with. Each of these logical interfaces is associated with an IP address.
13347 In addition, TCP/IP software supports &"loopback"& interfaces (127.0.0.1 in
13348 IPv4 and ::1 in IPv6), which do not use any physical hardware. Exim requires
13349 knowledge about the host's interfaces for use in three different circumstances:
13350
13351 .olist
13352 When a listening daemon is started, Exim needs to know which interfaces
13353 and ports to listen on.
13354 .next
13355 When Exim is routing an address, it needs to know which IP addresses
13356 are associated with local interfaces. This is required for the correct
13357 processing of MX lists by removing the local host and others with the
13358 same or higher priority values. Also, Exim needs to detect cases
13359 when an address is routed to an IP address that in fact belongs to the
13360 local host. Unless the &%self%& router option or the &%allow_localhost%&
13361 option of the smtp transport is set (as appropriate), this is treated
13362 as an error situation.
13363 .next
13364 When Exim connects to a remote host, it may need to know which interface to use
13365 for the outgoing connection.
13366 .endlist
13367
13368
13369 Exim's default behaviour is likely to be appropriate in the vast majority
13370 of cases. If your host has only one interface, and you want all its IP
13371 addresses to be treated in the same way, and you are using only the
13372 standard SMTP port, you should not need to take any special action. The
13373 rest of this chapter does not apply to you.
13374
13375 In a more complicated situation you may want to listen only on certain
13376 interfaces, or on different ports, and for this reason there are a number of
13377 options that can be used to influence Exim's behaviour. The rest of this
13378 chapter describes how they operate.
13379
13380 When a message is received over TCP/IP, the interface and port that were
13381 actually used are set in &$received_ip_address$& and &$received_port$&.
13382
13383
13384
13385 .section "Starting a listening daemon" "SECID89"
13386 When a listening daemon is started (by means of the &%-bd%& command line
13387 option), the interfaces and ports on which it listens are controlled by the
13388 following options:
13389
13390 .ilist
13391 &%daemon_smtp_ports%& contains a list of default ports
13392 or service names.
13393 (For backward compatibility, this option can also be specified in the singular.)
13394 .next
13395 &%local_interfaces%& contains list of interface IP addresses on which to
13396 listen. Each item may optionally also specify a port.
13397 .endlist
13398
13399 The default list separator in both cases is a colon, but this can be changed as
13400 described in section &<<SECTlistconstruct>>&. When IPv6 addresses are involved,
13401 it is usually best to change the separator to avoid having to double all the
13402 colons. For example:
13403 .code
13404 local_interfaces = <; 127.0.0.1 ; \
13405 192.168.23.65 ; \
13406 ::1 ; \
13407 3ffe:ffff:836f::fe86:a061
13408 .endd
13409 There are two different formats for specifying a port along with an IP address
13410 in &%local_interfaces%&:
13411
13412 .olist
13413 The port is added onto the address with a dot separator. For example, to listen
13414 on port 1234 on two different IP addresses:
13415 .code
13416 local_interfaces = <; 192.168.23.65.1234 ; \
13417 3ffe:ffff:836f::fe86:a061.1234
13418 .endd
13419 .next
13420 The IP address is enclosed in square brackets, and the port is added
13421 with a colon separator, for example:
13422 .code
13423 local_interfaces = <; [192.168.23.65]:1234 ; \
13424 [3ffe:ffff:836f::fe86:a061]:1234
13425 .endd
13426 .endlist
13427
13428 When a port is not specified, the value of &%daemon_smtp_ports%& is used. The
13429 default setting contains just one port:
13430 .code
13431 daemon_smtp_ports = smtp
13432 .endd
13433 If more than one port is listed, each interface that does not have its own port
13434 specified listens on all of them. Ports that are listed in
13435 &%daemon_smtp_ports%& can be identified either by name (defined in
13436 &_/etc/services_&) or by number. However, when ports are given with individual
13437 IP addresses in &%local_interfaces%&, only numbers (not names) can be used.
13438
13439
13440
13441 .section "Special IP listening addresses" "SECID90"
13442 The addresses 0.0.0.0 and ::0 are treated specially. They are interpreted
13443 as &"all IPv4 interfaces"& and &"all IPv6 interfaces"&, respectively. In each
13444 case, Exim tells the TCP/IP stack to &"listen on all IPv&'x'& interfaces"&
13445 instead of setting up separate listening sockets for each interface. The
13446 default value of &%local_interfaces%& is
13447 .code
13448 local_interfaces = 0.0.0.0
13449 .endd
13450 when Exim is built without IPv6 support; otherwise it is:
13451 .code
13452 local_interfaces = <; ::0 ; 0.0.0.0
13453 .endd
13454 Thus, by default, Exim listens on all available interfaces, on the SMTP port.
13455
13456
13457
13458 .section "Overriding local_interfaces and daemon_smtp_ports" "SECID91"
13459 The &%-oX%& command line option can be used to override the values of
13460 &%daemon_smtp_ports%& and/or &%local_interfaces%& for a particular daemon
13461 instance. Another way of doing this would be to use macros and the &%-D%&
13462 option. However, &%-oX%& can be used by any admin user, whereas modification of
13463 the runtime configuration by &%-D%& is allowed only when the caller is root or
13464 exim.
13465
13466 The value of &%-oX%& is a list of items. The default colon separator can be
13467 changed in the usual way if required. If there are any items that do not
13468 contain dots or colons (that is, are not IP addresses), the value of
13469 &%daemon_smtp_ports%& is replaced by the list of those items. If there are any
13470 items that do contain dots or colons, the value of &%local_interfaces%& is
13471 replaced by those items. Thus, for example,
13472 .code
13473 -oX 1225
13474 .endd
13475 overrides &%daemon_smtp_ports%&, but leaves &%local_interfaces%& unchanged,
13476 whereas
13477 .code
13478 -oX 192.168.34.5.1125
13479 .endd
13480 overrides &%local_interfaces%&, leaving &%daemon_smtp_ports%& unchanged.
13481 (However, since &%local_interfaces%& now contains no items without ports, the
13482 value of &%daemon_smtp_ports%& is no longer relevant in this example.)
13483
13484
13485
13486 .section "Support for the submissions (aka SSMTP or SMTPS) protocol" "SECTsupobssmt"
13487 .cindex "submissions protocol"
13488 .cindex "ssmtp protocol"
13489 .cindex "smtps protocol"
13490 .cindex "SMTP" "ssmtp protocol"
13491 .cindex "SMTP" "smtps protocol"
13492 Exim supports the use of TLS-on-connect, used by mail clients in the
13493 &"submissions"& protocol, historically also known as SMTPS or SSMTP.
13494 For some years, IETF Standards Track documents only blessed the
13495 STARTTLS-based Submission service (port 587) while common practice was to support
13496 the same feature set on port 465, but using TLS-on-connect.
13497 If your installation needs to provide service to mail clients
13498 (Mail User Agents, MUAs) then you should provide service on both the 587 and
13499 the 465 TCP ports.
13500
13501 If the &%tls_on_connect_ports%& option is set to a list of port numbers or
13502 service names, connections to those ports must first establish TLS, before
13503 proceeding to the application layer use of the SMTP protocol.
13504
13505 The common use of this option is expected to be
13506 .code
13507 tls_on_connect_ports = 465
13508 .endd
13509 per RFC 8314.
13510 There is also a command line option &%-tls-on-connect%&, which forces all ports
13511 to behave in this way when a daemon is started.
13512
13513 &*Warning*&: Setting &%tls_on_connect_ports%& does not of itself cause the
13514 daemon to listen on those ports. You must still specify them in
13515 &%daemon_smtp_ports%&, &%local_interfaces%&, or the &%-oX%& option. (This is
13516 because &%tls_on_connect_ports%& applies to &%inetd%& connections as well as to
13517 connections via the daemon.)
13518
13519
13520
13521
13522 .section "IPv6 address scopes" "SECID92"
13523 .cindex "IPv6" "address scopes"
13524 IPv6 addresses have &"scopes"&, and a host with multiple hardware interfaces
13525 can, in principle, have the same link-local IPv6 address on different
13526 interfaces. Thus, additional information is needed, over and above the IP
13527 address, to distinguish individual interfaces. A convention of using a
13528 percent sign followed by something (often the interface name) has been
13529 adopted in some cases, leading to addresses like this:
13530 .code
13531 fe80::202:b3ff:fe03:45c1%eth0
13532 .endd
13533 To accommodate this usage, a percent sign followed by an arbitrary string is
13534 allowed at the end of an IPv6 address. By default, Exim calls &[getaddrinfo()]&
13535 to convert a textual IPv6 address for actual use. This function recognizes the
13536 percent convention in operating systems that support it, and it processes the
13537 address appropriately. Unfortunately, some older libraries have problems with
13538 &[getaddrinfo()]&. If
13539 .code
13540 IPV6_USE_INET_PTON=yes
13541 .endd
13542 is set in &_Local/Makefile_& (or an OS-dependent Makefile) when Exim is built,
13543 Exim uses &'inet_pton()'& to convert a textual IPv6 address for actual use,
13544 instead of &[getaddrinfo()]&. (Before version 4.14, it always used this
13545 function.) Of course, this means that the additional functionality of
13546 &[getaddrinfo()]& &-- recognizing scoped addresses &-- is lost.
13547
13548 .section "Disabling IPv6" "SECID93"
13549 .cindex "IPv6" "disabling"
13550 Sometimes it happens that an Exim binary that was compiled with IPv6 support is
13551 run on a host whose kernel does not support IPv6. The binary will fall back to
13552 using IPv4, but it may waste resources looking up AAAA records, and trying to
13553 connect to IPv6 addresses, causing delays to mail delivery. If you set the
13554 .oindex "&%disable_ipv6%&"
13555 &%disable_ipv6%& option true, even if the Exim binary has IPv6 support, no IPv6
13556 activities take place. AAAA records are never looked up, and any IPv6 addresses
13557 that are listed in &%local_interfaces%&, data for the &(manualroute)& router,
13558 etc. are ignored. If IP literals are enabled, the &(ipliteral)& router declines
13559 to handle IPv6 literal addresses.
13560
13561 On the other hand, when IPv6 is in use, there may be times when you want to
13562 disable it for certain hosts or domains. You can use the &%dns_ipv4_lookup%&
13563 option to globally suppress the lookup of AAAA records for specified domains,
13564 and you can use the &%ignore_target_hosts%& generic router option to ignore
13565 IPv6 addresses in an individual router.
13566
13567
13568
13569 .section "Examples of starting a listening daemon" "SECID94"
13570 The default case in an IPv6 environment is
13571 .code
13572 daemon_smtp_ports = smtp
13573 local_interfaces = <; ::0 ; 0.0.0.0
13574 .endd
13575 This specifies listening on the smtp port on all IPv6 and IPv4 interfaces.
13576 Either one or two sockets may be used, depending on the characteristics of
13577 the TCP/IP stack. (This is complicated and messy; for more information,
13578 read the comments in the &_daemon.c_& source file.)
13579
13580 To specify listening on ports 25 and 26 on all interfaces:
13581 .code
13582 daemon_smtp_ports = 25 : 26
13583 .endd
13584 (leaving &%local_interfaces%& at the default setting) or, more explicitly:
13585 .code
13586 local_interfaces = <; ::0.25 ; ::0.26 \
13587 0.0.0.0.25 ; 0.0.0.0.26
13588 .endd
13589 To listen on the default port on all IPv4 interfaces, and on port 26 on the
13590 IPv4 loopback address only:
13591 .code
13592 local_interfaces = 0.0.0.0 : 127.0.0.1.26
13593 .endd
13594 To specify listening on the default port on specific interfaces only:
13595 .code
13596 local_interfaces = 10.0.0.67 : 192.168.34.67
13597 .endd
13598 &*Warning*&: Such a setting excludes listening on the loopback interfaces.
13599
13600
13601
13602 .section "Recognizing the local host" "SECTreclocipadd"
13603 The &%local_interfaces%& option is also used when Exim needs to determine
13604 whether or not an IP address refers to the local host. That is, the IP
13605 addresses of all the interfaces on which a daemon is listening are always
13606 treated as local.
13607
13608 For this usage, port numbers in &%local_interfaces%& are ignored. If either of
13609 the items 0.0.0.0 or ::0 are encountered, Exim gets a complete list of
13610 available interfaces from the operating system, and extracts the relevant
13611 (that is, IPv4 or IPv6) addresses to use for checking.
13612
13613 Some systems set up large numbers of virtual interfaces in order to provide
13614 many virtual web servers. In this situation, you may want to listen for
13615 email on only a few of the available interfaces, but nevertheless treat all
13616 interfaces as local when routing. You can do this by setting
13617 &%extra_local_interfaces%& to a list of IP addresses, possibly including the
13618 &"all"& wildcard values. These addresses are recognized as local, but are not
13619 used for listening. Consider this example:
13620 .code
13621 local_interfaces = <; 127.0.0.1 ; ::1 ; \
13622 192.168.53.235 ; \
13623 3ffe:2101:12:1:a00:20ff:fe86:a061
13624
13625 extra_local_interfaces = <; ::0 ; 0.0.0.0
13626 .endd
13627 The daemon listens on the loopback interfaces and just one IPv4 and one IPv6
13628 address, but all available interface addresses are treated as local when
13629 Exim is routing.
13630
13631 In some environments the local host name may be in an MX list, but with an IP
13632 address that is not assigned to any local interface. In other cases it may be
13633 desirable to treat other host names as if they referred to the local host. Both
13634 these cases can be handled by setting the &%hosts_treat_as_local%& option.
13635 This contains host names rather than IP addresses. When a host is referenced
13636 during routing, either via an MX record or directly, it is treated as the local
13637 host if its name matches &%hosts_treat_as_local%&, or if any of its IP
13638 addresses match &%local_interfaces%& or &%extra_local_interfaces%&.
13639
13640
13641
13642 .section "Delivering to a remote host" "SECID95"
13643 Delivery to a remote host is handled by the smtp transport. By default, it
13644 allows the system's TCP/IP functions to choose which interface to use (if
13645 there is more than one) when connecting to a remote host. However, the
13646 &%interface%& option can be set to specify which interface is used. See the
13647 description of the smtp transport in chapter &<<CHAPsmtptrans>>& for more
13648 details.
13649
13650
13651
13652
13653 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
13654 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
13655
13656 .chapter "Main configuration" "CHAPmainconfig"
13657 .scindex IIDconfima "configuration file" "main section"
13658 .scindex IIDmaiconf "main configuration"
13659 The first part of the run time configuration file contains three types of item:
13660
13661 .ilist
13662 Macro definitions: These lines start with an upper case letter. See section
13663 &<<SECTmacrodefs>>& for details of macro processing.
13664 .next
13665 Named list definitions: These lines start with one of the words &"domainlist"&,
13666 &"hostlist"&, &"addresslist"&, or &"localpartlist"&. Their use is described in
13667 section &<<SECTnamedlists>>&.
13668 .next
13669 Main configuration settings: Each setting occupies one line of the file
13670 (with possible continuations). If any setting is preceded by the word
13671 &"hide"&, the &%-bP%& command line option displays its value to admin users
13672 only. See section &<<SECTcos>>& for a description of the syntax of these option
13673 settings.
13674 .endlist
13675
13676 This chapter specifies all the main configuration options, along with their
13677 types and default values. For ease of finding a particular option, they appear
13678 in alphabetical order in section &<<SECTalomo>>& below. However, because there
13679 are now so many options, they are first listed briefly in functional groups, as
13680 an aid to finding the name of the option you are looking for. Some options are
13681 listed in more than one group.
13682
13683 .section "Miscellaneous" "SECID96"
13684 .table2
13685 .row &%bi_command%& "to run for &%-bi%& command line option"
13686 .row &%debug_store%& "do extra internal checks"
13687 .row &%disable_ipv6%& "do no IPv6 processing"
13688 .row &%keep_malformed%& "for broken files &-- should not happen"
13689 .row &%localhost_number%& "for unique message ids in clusters"
13690 .row &%message_body_newlines%& "retain newlines in &$message_body$&"
13691 .row &%message_body_visible%& "how much to show in &$message_body$&"
13692 .row &%mua_wrapper%& "run in &""MUA wrapper""& mode"
13693 .row &%print_topbitchars%& "top-bit characters are printing"
13694 .row &%spool_wireformat%& "use wire-format spool data files when possible"
13695 .row &%timezone%& "force time zone"
13696 .endtable
13697
13698
13699 .section "Exim parameters" "SECID97"
13700 .table2
13701 .row &%exim_group%& "override compiled-in value"
13702 .row &%exim_path%& "override compiled-in value"
13703 .row &%exim_user%& "override compiled-in value"
13704 .row &%primary_hostname%& "default from &[uname()]&"
13705 .row &%split_spool_directory%& "use multiple directories"
13706 .row &%spool_directory%& "override compiled-in value"
13707 .endtable
13708
13709
13710
13711 .section "Privilege controls" "SECID98"
13712 .table2
13713 .row &%admin_groups%& "groups that are Exim admin users"
13714 .row &%commandline_checks_require_admin%& "require admin for various checks"
13715 .row &%deliver_drop_privilege%& "drop root for delivery processes"
13716 .row &%local_from_check%& "insert &'Sender:'& if necessary"
13717 .row &%local_from_prefix%& "for testing &'From:'& for local sender"
13718 .row &%local_from_suffix%& "for testing &'From:'& for local sender"
13719 .row &%local_sender_retain%& "keep &'Sender:'& from untrusted user"
13720 .row &%never_users%& "do not run deliveries as these"
13721 .row &%prod_requires_admin%& "forced delivery requires admin user"
13722 .row &%queue_list_requires_admin%& "queue listing requires admin user"
13723 .row &%trusted_groups%& "groups that are trusted"
13724 .row &%trusted_users%& "users that are trusted"
13725 .endtable
13726
13727
13728
13729 .section "Logging" "SECID99"
13730 .table2
13731 .row &%event_action%& "custom logging"
13732 .row &%hosts_connection_nolog%& "exemption from connect logging"
13733 .row &%log_file_path%& "override compiled-in value"
13734 .row &%log_selector%& "set/unset optional logging"
13735 .row &%log_timezone%& "add timezone to log lines"
13736 .row &%message_logs%& "create per-message logs"
13737 .row &%preserve_message_logs%& "after message completion"
13738 .row &%process_log_path%& "for SIGUSR1 and &'exiwhat'&"
13739 .row &%slow_lookup_log%& "control logging of slow DNS lookups"
13740 .row &%syslog_duplication%& "controls duplicate log lines on syslog"
13741 .row &%syslog_facility%& "set syslog &""facility""& field"
13742 .row &%syslog_pid%& "pid in syslog lines"
13743 .row &%syslog_processname%& "set syslog &""ident""& field"
13744 .row &%syslog_timestamp%& "timestamp syslog lines"
13745 .row &%write_rejectlog%& "control use of message log"
13746 .endtable
13747
13748
13749
13750 .section "Frozen messages" "SECID100"
13751 .table2
13752 .row &%auto_thaw%& "sets time for retrying frozen messages"
13753 .row &%freeze_tell%& "send message when freezing"
13754 .row &%move_frozen_messages%& "to another directory"
13755 .row &%timeout_frozen_after%& "keep frozen messages only so long"
13756 .endtable
13757
13758
13759
13760 .section "Data lookups" "SECID101"
13761 .table2
13762 .row &%ibase_servers%& "InterBase servers"
13763 .row &%ldap_ca_cert_dir%& "dir of CA certs to verify LDAP server's"
13764 .row &%ldap_ca_cert_file%& "file of CA certs to verify LDAP server's"
13765 .row &%ldap_cert_file%& "client cert file for LDAP"
13766 .row &%ldap_cert_key%& "client key file for LDAP"
13767 .row &%ldap_cipher_suite%& "TLS negotiation preference control"
13768 .row &%ldap_default_servers%& "used if no server in query"
13769 .row &%ldap_require_cert%& "action to take without LDAP server cert"
13770 .row &%ldap_start_tls%& "require TLS within LDAP"
13771 .row &%ldap_version%& "set protocol version"
13772 .row &%lookup_open_max%& "lookup files held open"
13773 .row &%mysql_servers%& "default MySQL servers"
13774 .row &%oracle_servers%& "Oracle servers"
13775 .row &%pgsql_servers%& "default PostgreSQL servers"
13776 .row &%sqlite_lock_timeout%& "as it says"
13777 .endtable
13778
13779
13780
13781 .section "Message ids" "SECID102"
13782 .table2
13783 .row &%message_id_header_domain%& "used to build &'Message-ID:'& header"
13784 .row &%message_id_header_text%& "ditto"
13785 .endtable
13786
13787
13788
13789 .section "Embedded Perl Startup" "SECID103"
13790 .table2
13791 .row &%perl_at_start%& "always start the interpreter"
13792 .row &%perl_startup%& "code to obey when starting Perl"
13793 .row &%perl_taintmode%& "enable taint mode in Perl"
13794 .endtable
13795
13796
13797
13798 .section "Daemon" "SECID104"
13799 .table2
13800 .row &%daemon_smtp_ports%& "default ports"
13801 .row &%daemon_startup_retries%& "number of times to retry"
13802 .row &%daemon_startup_sleep%& "time to sleep between tries"
13803 .row &%extra_local_interfaces%& "not necessarily listened on"
13804 .row &%local_interfaces%& "on which to listen, with optional ports"
13805 .row &%pid_file_path%& "override compiled-in value"
13806 .row &%queue_run_max%& "maximum simultaneous queue runners"
13807 .endtable
13808
13809
13810
13811 .section "Resource control" "SECID105"
13812 .table2
13813 .row &%check_log_inodes%& "before accepting a message"
13814 .row &%check_log_space%& "before accepting a message"
13815 .row &%check_spool_inodes%& "before accepting a message"
13816 .row &%check_spool_space%& "before accepting a message"
13817 .row &%deliver_queue_load_max%& "no queue deliveries if load high"
13818 .row &%queue_only_load%& "queue incoming if load high"
13819 .row &%queue_only_load_latch%& "don't re-evaluate load for each message"
13820 .row &%queue_run_max%& "maximum simultaneous queue runners"
13821 .row &%remote_max_parallel%& "parallel SMTP delivery per message"
13822 .row &%smtp_accept_max%& "simultaneous incoming connections"
13823 .row &%smtp_accept_max_nonmail%& "non-mail commands"
13824 .row &%smtp_accept_max_nonmail_hosts%& "hosts to which the limit applies"
13825 .row &%smtp_accept_max_per_connection%& "messages per connection"
13826 .row &%smtp_accept_max_per_host%& "connections from one host"
13827 .row &%smtp_accept_queue%& "queue mail if more connections"
13828 .row &%smtp_accept_queue_per_connection%& "queue if more messages per &&&
13829 connection"
13830 .row &%smtp_accept_reserve%& "only reserve hosts if more connections"
13831 .row &%smtp_check_spool_space%& "from SIZE on MAIL command"
13832 .row &%smtp_connect_backlog%& "passed to TCP/IP stack"
13833 .row &%smtp_load_reserve%& "SMTP from reserved hosts if load high"
13834 .row &%smtp_reserve_hosts%& "these are the reserve hosts"
13835 .endtable
13836
13837
13838
13839 .section "Policy controls" "SECID106"
13840 .table2
13841 .row &%acl_not_smtp%& "ACL for non-SMTP messages"
13842 .row &%acl_not_smtp_mime%& "ACL for non-SMTP MIME parts"
13843 .row &%acl_not_smtp_start%& "ACL for start of non-SMTP message"
13844 .row &%acl_smtp_auth%& "ACL for AUTH"
13845 .row &%acl_smtp_connect%& "ACL for connection"
13846 .row &%acl_smtp_data%& "ACL for DATA"
13847 .row &%acl_smtp_data_prdr%& "ACL for DATA, per-recipient"
13848 .row &%acl_smtp_dkim%& "ACL for DKIM verification"
13849 .row &%acl_smtp_etrn%& "ACL for ETRN"
13850 .row &%acl_smtp_expn%& "ACL for EXPN"
13851 .row &%acl_smtp_helo%& "ACL for EHLO or HELO"
13852 .row &%acl_smtp_mail%& "ACL for MAIL"
13853 .row &%acl_smtp_mailauth%& "ACL for AUTH on MAIL command"
13854 .row &%acl_smtp_mime%& "ACL for MIME parts"
13855 .row &%acl_smtp_notquit%& "ACL for non-QUIT terminations"
13856 .row &%acl_smtp_predata%& "ACL for start of data"
13857 .row &%acl_smtp_quit%& "ACL for QUIT"
13858 .row &%acl_smtp_rcpt%& "ACL for RCPT"
13859 .row &%acl_smtp_starttls%& "ACL for STARTTLS"
13860 .row &%acl_smtp_vrfy%& "ACL for VRFY"
13861 .row &%av_scanner%& "specify virus scanner"
13862 .row &%check_rfc2047_length%& "check length of RFC 2047 &""encoded &&&
13863 words""&"
13864 .row &%dns_csa_search_limit%& "control CSA parent search depth"
13865 .row &%dns_csa_use_reverse%& "en/disable CSA IP reverse search"
13866 .row &%header_maxsize%& "total size of message header"
13867 .row &%header_line_maxsize%& "individual header line limit"
13868 .row &%helo_accept_junk_hosts%& "allow syntactic junk from these hosts"
13869 .row &%helo_allow_chars%& "allow illegal chars in HELO names"
13870 .row &%helo_lookup_domains%& "lookup hostname for these HELO names"
13871 .row &%helo_try_verify_hosts%& "HELO soft-checked for these hosts"
13872 .row &%helo_verify_hosts%& "HELO hard-checked for these hosts"
13873 .row &%host_lookup%& "host name looked up for these hosts"
13874 .row &%host_lookup_order%& "order of DNS and local name lookups"
13875 .row &%hosts_proxy%& "use proxy protocol for these hosts"
13876 .row &%host_reject_connection%& "reject connection from these hosts"
13877 .row &%hosts_treat_as_local%& "useful in some cluster configurations"
13878 .row &%local_scan_timeout%& "timeout for &[local_scan()]&"
13879 .row &%message_size_limit%& "for all messages"
13880 .row &%percent_hack_domains%& "recognize %-hack for these domains"
13881 .row &%spamd_address%& "set interface to SpamAssassin"
13882 .row &%strict_acl_vars%& "object to unset ACL variables"
13883 .endtable
13884
13885
13886
13887 .section "Callout cache" "SECID107"
13888 .table2
13889 .row &%callout_domain_negative_expire%& "timeout for negative domain cache &&&
13890 item"
13891 .row &%callout_domain_positive_expire%& "timeout for positive domain cache &&&
13892 item"
13893 .row &%callout_negative_expire%& "timeout for negative address cache item"
13894 .row &%callout_positive_expire%& "timeout for positive address cache item"
13895 .row &%callout_random_local_part%& "string to use for &""random""& testing"
13896 .endtable
13897
13898
13899
13900 .section "TLS" "SECID108"
13901 .table2
13902 .row &%gnutls_compat_mode%& "use GnuTLS compatibility mode"
13903 .row &%gnutls_allow_auto_pkcs11%& "allow GnuTLS to autoload PKCS11 modules"
13904 .row &%openssl_options%& "adjust OpenSSL compatibility options"
13905 .row &%tls_advertise_hosts%& "advertise TLS to these hosts"
13906 .row &%tls_certificate%& "location of server certificate"
13907 .row &%tls_crl%& "certificate revocation list"
13908 .row &%tls_dh_max_bits%& "clamp D-H bit count suggestion"
13909 .row &%tls_dhparam%& "DH parameters for server"
13910 .row &%tls_eccurve%& "EC curve selection for server"
13911 .row &%tls_ocsp_file%& "location of server certificate status proof"
13912 .row &%tls_on_connect_ports%& "specify SSMTP (SMTPS) ports"
13913 .row &%tls_privatekey%& "location of server private key"
13914 .row &%tls_remember_esmtp%& "don't reset after starting TLS"
13915 .row &%tls_require_ciphers%& "specify acceptable ciphers"
13916 .row &%tls_try_verify_hosts%& "try to verify client certificate"
13917 .row &%tls_verify_certificates%& "expected client certificates"
13918 .row &%tls_verify_hosts%& "insist on client certificate verify"
13919 .endtable
13920
13921
13922
13923 .section "Local user handling" "SECID109"
13924 .table2
13925 .row &%finduser_retries%& "useful in NIS environments"
13926 .row &%gecos_name%& "used when creating &'Sender:'&"
13927 .row &%gecos_pattern%& "ditto"
13928 .row &%max_username_length%& "for systems that truncate"
13929 .row &%unknown_login%& "used when no login name found"
13930 .row &%unknown_username%& "ditto"
13931 .row &%uucp_from_pattern%& "for recognizing &""From ""& lines"
13932 .row &%uucp_from_sender%& "ditto"
13933 .endtable
13934
13935
13936
13937 .section "All incoming messages (SMTP and non-SMTP)" "SECID110"
13938 .table2
13939 .row &%header_maxsize%& "total size of message header"
13940 .row &%header_line_maxsize%& "individual header line limit"
13941 .row &%message_size_limit%& "applies to all messages"
13942 .row &%percent_hack_domains%& "recognize %-hack for these domains"
13943 .row &%received_header_text%& "expanded to make &'Received:'&"
13944 .row &%received_headers_max%& "for mail loop detection"
13945 .row &%recipients_max%& "limit per message"
13946 .row &%recipients_max_reject%& "permanently reject excess recipients"
13947 .endtable
13948
13949
13950
13951
13952 .section "Non-SMTP incoming messages" "SECID111"
13953 .table2
13954 .row &%receive_timeout%& "for non-SMTP messages"
13955 .endtable
13956
13957
13958
13959
13960
13961 .section "Incoming SMTP messages" "SECID112"
13962 See also the &'Policy controls'& section above.
13963
13964 .table2
13965 .row &%dkim_verify_signers%& "DKIM domain for which DKIM ACL is run"
13966 .row &%host_lookup%& "host name looked up for these hosts"
13967 .row &%host_lookup_order%& "order of DNS and local name lookups"
13968 .row &%recipient_unqualified_hosts%& "may send unqualified recipients"
13969 .row &%rfc1413_hosts%& "make ident calls to these hosts"
13970 .row &%rfc1413_query_timeout%& "zero disables ident calls"
13971 .row &%sender_unqualified_hosts%& "may send unqualified senders"
13972 .row &%smtp_accept_keepalive%& "some TCP/IP magic"
13973 .row &%smtp_accept_max%& "simultaneous incoming connections"
13974 .row &%smtp_accept_max_nonmail%& "non-mail commands"
13975 .row &%smtp_accept_max_nonmail_hosts%& "hosts to which the limit applies"
13976 .row &%smtp_accept_max_per_connection%& "messages per connection"
13977 .row &%smtp_accept_max_per_host%& "connections from one host"
13978 .row &%smtp_accept_queue%& "queue mail if more connections"
13979 .row &%smtp_accept_queue_per_connection%& "queue if more messages per &&&
13980 connection"
13981 .row &%smtp_accept_reserve%& "only reserve hosts if more connections"
13982 .row &%smtp_active_hostname%& "host name to use in messages"
13983 .row &%smtp_banner%& "text for welcome banner"
13984 .row &%smtp_check_spool_space%& "from SIZE on MAIL command"
13985 .row &%smtp_connect_backlog%& "passed to TCP/IP stack"
13986 .row &%smtp_enforce_sync%& "of SMTP command/responses"
13987 .row &%smtp_etrn_command%& "what to run for ETRN"
13988 .row &%smtp_etrn_serialize%& "only one at once"
13989 .row &%smtp_load_reserve%& "only reserve hosts if this load"
13990 .row &%smtp_max_unknown_commands%& "before dropping connection"
13991 .row &%smtp_ratelimit_hosts%& "apply ratelimiting to these hosts"
13992 .row &%smtp_ratelimit_mail%& "ratelimit for MAIL commands"
13993 .row &%smtp_ratelimit_rcpt%& "ratelimit for RCPT commands"
13994 .row &%smtp_receive_timeout%& "per command or data line"
13995 .row &%smtp_reserve_hosts%& "these are the reserve hosts"
13996 .row &%smtp_return_error_details%& "give detail on rejections"
13997 .endtable
13998
13999
14000
14001 .section "SMTP extensions" "SECID113"
14002 .table2
14003 .row &%accept_8bitmime%& "advertise 8BITMIME"
14004 .row &%auth_advertise_hosts%& "advertise AUTH to these hosts"
14005 .row &%chunking_advertise_hosts%& "advertise CHUNKING to these hosts"
14006 .row &%dsn_advertise_hosts%& "advertise DSN extensions to these hosts"
14007 .row &%ignore_fromline_hosts%& "allow &""From ""& from these hosts"
14008 .row &%ignore_fromline_local%& "allow &""From ""& from local SMTP"
14009 .row &%pipelining_advertise_hosts%& "advertise pipelining to these hosts"
14010 .row &%prdr_enable%& "advertise PRDR to all hosts"
14011 .row &%smtputf8_advertise_hosts%& "advertise SMTPUTF8 to these hosts"
14012 .row &%tls_advertise_hosts%& "advertise TLS to these hosts"
14013 .endtable
14014
14015
14016
14017 .section "Processing messages" "SECID114"
14018 .table2
14019 .row &%allow_domain_literals%& "recognize domain literal syntax"
14020 .row &%allow_mx_to_ip%& "allow MX to point to IP address"
14021 .row &%allow_utf8_domains%& "in addresses"
14022 .row &%check_rfc2047_length%& "check length of RFC 2047 &""encoded &&&
14023 words""&"
14024 .row &%delivery_date_remove%& "from incoming messages"
14025 .row &%envelope_to_remove%& "from incoming messages"
14026 .row &%extract_addresses_remove_arguments%& "affects &%-t%& processing"
14027 .row &%headers_charset%& "default for translations"
14028 .row &%qualify_domain%& "default for senders"
14029 .row &%qualify_recipient%& "default for recipients"
14030 .row &%return_path_remove%& "from incoming messages"
14031 .row &%strip_excess_angle_brackets%& "in addresses"
14032 .row &%strip_trailing_dot%& "at end of addresses"
14033 .row &%untrusted_set_sender%& "untrusted can set envelope sender"
14034 .endtable
14035
14036
14037
14038 .section "System filter" "SECID115"
14039 .table2
14040 .row &%system_filter%& "locate system filter"
14041 .row &%system_filter_directory_transport%& "transport for delivery to a &&&
14042 directory"
14043 .row &%system_filter_file_transport%& "transport for delivery to a file"
14044 .row &%system_filter_group%& "group for filter running"
14045 .row &%system_filter_pipe_transport%& "transport for delivery to a pipe"
14046 .row &%system_filter_reply_transport%& "transport for autoreply delivery"
14047 .row &%system_filter_user%& "user for filter running"
14048 .endtable
14049
14050
14051
14052 .section "Routing and delivery" "SECID116"
14053 .table2
14054 .row &%disable_ipv6%& "do no IPv6 processing"
14055 .row &%dns_again_means_nonexist%& "for broken domains"
14056 .row &%dns_check_names_pattern%& "pre-DNS syntax check"
14057 .row &%dns_dnssec_ok%& "parameter for resolver"
14058 .row &%dns_ipv4_lookup%& "only v4 lookup for these domains"
14059 .row &%dns_retrans%& "parameter for resolver"
14060 .row &%dns_retry%& "parameter for resolver"
14061 .row &%dns_trust_aa%& "DNS zones trusted as authentic"
14062 .row &%dns_use_edns0%& "parameter for resolver"
14063 .row &%hold_domains%& "hold delivery for these domains"
14064 .row &%local_interfaces%& "for routing checks"
14065 .row &%queue_domains%& "no immediate delivery for these"
14066 .row &%queue_only%& "no immediate delivery at all"
14067 .row &%queue_only_file%& "no immediate delivery if file exists"
14068 .row &%queue_only_load%& "no immediate delivery if load is high"
14069 .row &%queue_only_load_latch%& "don't re-evaluate load for each message"
14070 .row &%queue_only_override%& "allow command line to override"
14071 .row &%queue_run_in_order%& "order of arrival"
14072 .row &%queue_run_max%& "of simultaneous queue runners"
14073 .row &%queue_smtp_domains%& "no immediate SMTP delivery for these"
14074 .row &%remote_max_parallel%& "parallel SMTP delivery per message"
14075 .row &%remote_sort_domains%& "order of remote deliveries"
14076 .row &%retry_data_expire%& "timeout for retry data"
14077 .row &%retry_interval_max%& "safety net for retry rules"
14078 .endtable
14079
14080
14081
14082 .section "Bounce and warning messages" "SECID117"
14083 .table2
14084 .row &%bounce_message_file%& "content of bounce"
14085 .row &%bounce_message_text%& "content of bounce"
14086 .row &%bounce_return_body%& "include body if returning message"
14087 .row &%bounce_return_linesize_limit%& "limit on returned message line length"
14088 .row &%bounce_return_message%& "include original message in bounce"
14089 .row &%bounce_return_size_limit%& "limit on returned message"
14090 .row &%bounce_sender_authentication%& "send authenticated sender with bounce"
14091 .row &%dsn_from%& "set &'From:'& contents in bounces"
14092 .row &%errors_copy%& "copy bounce messages"
14093 .row &%errors_reply_to%& "&'Reply-to:'& in bounces"
14094 .row &%delay_warning%& "time schedule"
14095 .row &%delay_warning_condition%& "condition for warning messages"
14096 .row &%ignore_bounce_errors_after%& "discard undeliverable bounces"
14097 .row &%smtp_return_error_details%& "give detail on rejections"
14098 .row &%warn_message_file%& "content of warning message"
14099 .endtable
14100
14101
14102
14103 .section "Alphabetical list of main options" "SECTalomo"
14104 Those options that undergo string expansion before use are marked with
14105 &dagger;.
14106
14107 .option accept_8bitmime main boolean true
14108 .cindex "8BITMIME"
14109 .cindex "8-bit characters"
14110 .cindex "log" "selectors"
14111 .cindex "log" "8BITMIME"
14112 This option causes Exim to send 8BITMIME in its response to an SMTP
14113 EHLO command, and to accept the BODY= parameter on MAIL commands.
14114 However, though Exim is 8-bit clean, it is not a protocol converter, and it
14115 takes no steps to do anything special with messages received by this route.
14116
14117 Historically Exim kept this option off by default, but the maintainers
14118 feel that in today's Internet, this causes more problems than it solves.
14119 It now defaults to true.
14120 A more detailed analysis of the issues is provided by Dan Bernstein:
14121 .display
14122 &url(http://cr.yp.to/smtp/8bitmime.html)
14123 .endd
14124
14125 To log received 8BITMIME status use
14126 .code
14127 log_selector = +8bitmime
14128 .endd
14129
14130 .option acl_not_smtp main string&!! unset
14131 .cindex "&ACL;" "for non-SMTP messages"
14132 .cindex "non-SMTP messages" "ACLs for"
14133 This option defines the ACL that is run when a non-SMTP message has been
14134 read and is on the point of being accepted. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for
14135 further details.
14136
14137 .option acl_not_smtp_mime main string&!! unset
14138 This option defines the ACL that is run for individual MIME parts of non-SMTP
14139 messages. It operates in exactly the same way as &%acl_smtp_mime%& operates for
14140 SMTP messages.
14141
14142 .option acl_not_smtp_start main string&!! unset
14143 .cindex "&ACL;" "at start of non-SMTP message"
14144 .cindex "non-SMTP messages" "ACLs for"
14145 This option defines the ACL that is run before Exim starts reading a
14146 non-SMTP message. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14147
14148 .option acl_smtp_auth main string&!! unset
14149 .cindex "&ACL;" "setting up for SMTP commands"
14150 .cindex "AUTH" "ACL for"
14151 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP AUTH command is
14152 received. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14153
14154 .option acl_smtp_connect main string&!! unset
14155 .cindex "&ACL;" "on SMTP connection"
14156 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP connection is received.
14157 See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14158
14159 .option acl_smtp_data main string&!! unset
14160 .cindex "DATA" "ACL for"
14161 This option defines the ACL that is run after an SMTP DATA command has been
14162 processed and the message itself has been received, but before the final
14163 acknowledgment is sent. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14164
14165 .option acl_smtp_data_prdr main string&!! accept
14166 .cindex "PRDR" "ACL for"
14167 .cindex "DATA" "PRDR ACL for"
14168 .cindex "&ACL;" "PRDR-related"
14169 .cindex "&ACL;" "per-user data processing"
14170 This option defines the ACL that,
14171 if the PRDR feature has been negotiated,
14172 is run for each recipient after an SMTP DATA command has been
14173 processed and the message itself has been received, but before the
14174 acknowledgment is sent. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14175
14176 .option acl_smtp_dkim main string&!! unset
14177 .cindex DKIM "ACL for"
14178 This option defines the ACL that is run for each DKIM signature
14179 (by default, or as specified in the dkim_verify_signers option)
14180 of a received message.
14181 See section &<<SECDKIMVFY>>& for further details.
14182
14183 .option acl_smtp_etrn main string&!! unset
14184 .cindex "ETRN" "ACL for"
14185 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP ETRN command is
14186 received. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14187
14188 .option acl_smtp_expn main string&!! unset
14189 .cindex "EXPN" "ACL for"
14190 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP EXPN command is
14191 received. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14192
14193 .option acl_smtp_helo main string&!! unset
14194 .cindex "EHLO" "ACL for"
14195 .cindex "HELO" "ACL for"
14196 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP EHLO or HELO
14197 command is received. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14198
14199
14200 .option acl_smtp_mail main string&!! unset
14201 .cindex "MAIL" "ACL for"
14202 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP MAIL command is
14203 received. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14204
14205 .option acl_smtp_mailauth main string&!! unset
14206 .cindex "AUTH" "on MAIL command"
14207 This option defines the ACL that is run when there is an AUTH parameter on
14208 a MAIL command. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for details of ACLs, and chapter
14209 &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>& for details of authentication.
14210
14211 .option acl_smtp_mime main string&!! unset
14212 .cindex "MIME content scanning" "ACL for"
14213 This option is available when Exim is built with the content-scanning
14214 extension. It defines the ACL that is run for each MIME part in a message. See
14215 section &<<SECTscanmimepart>>& for details.
14216
14217 .option acl_smtp_notquit main string&!! unset
14218 .cindex "not-QUIT, ACL for"
14219 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP session
14220 ends without a QUIT command being received.
14221 See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14222
14223 .option acl_smtp_predata main string&!! unset
14224 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP DATA command is
14225 received, before the message itself is received. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for
14226 further details.
14227
14228 .option acl_smtp_quit main string&!! unset
14229 .cindex "QUIT, ACL for"
14230 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP QUIT command is
14231 received. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14232
14233 .option acl_smtp_rcpt main string&!! unset
14234 .cindex "RCPT" "ACL for"
14235 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP RCPT command is
14236 received. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14237
14238 .option acl_smtp_starttls main string&!! unset
14239 .cindex "STARTTLS, ACL for"
14240 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP STARTTLS command is
14241 received. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14242
14243 .option acl_smtp_vrfy main string&!! unset
14244 .cindex "VRFY" "ACL for"
14245 This option defines the ACL that is run when an SMTP VRFY command is
14246 received. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for further details.
14247
14248 .option add_environment main "string list" empty
14249 .cindex "environment" "set values"
14250 This option allows to set individual environment variables that the
14251 currently linked libraries and programs in child processes use.
14252 See &<<SECTpipeenv>>& for the environment of &(pipe)& transports.
14253
14254 .option admin_groups main "string list&!!" unset
14255 .cindex "admin user"
14256 This option is expanded just once, at the start of Exim's processing. If the
14257 current group or any of the supplementary groups of an Exim caller is in this
14258 colon-separated list, the caller has admin privileges. If all your system
14259 programmers are in a specific group, for example, you can give them all Exim
14260 admin privileges by putting that group in &%admin_groups%&. However, this does
14261 not permit them to read Exim's spool files (whose group owner is the Exim gid).
14262 To permit this, you have to add individuals to the Exim group.
14263
14264 .option allow_domain_literals main boolean false
14265 .cindex "domain literal"
14266 If this option is set, the RFC 2822 domain literal format is permitted in
14267 email addresses. The option is not set by default, because the domain literal
14268 format is not normally required these days, and few people know about it. It
14269 has, however, been exploited by mail abusers.
14270
14271 Unfortunately, it seems that some DNS black list maintainers are using this
14272 format to report black listing to postmasters. If you want to accept messages
14273 addressed to your hosts by IP address, you need to set
14274 &%allow_domain_literals%& true, and also to add &`@[]`& to the list of local
14275 domains (defined in the named domain list &%local_domains%& in the default
14276 configuration). This &"magic string"& matches the domain literal form of all
14277 the local host's IP addresses.
14278
14279
14280 .option allow_mx_to_ip main boolean false
14281 .cindex "MX record" "pointing to IP address"
14282 It appears that more and more DNS zone administrators are breaking the rules
14283 and putting domain names that look like IP addresses on the right hand side of
14284 MX records. Exim follows the rules and rejects this, giving an error message
14285 that explains the misconfiguration. However, some other MTAs support this
14286 practice, so to avoid &"Why can't Exim do this?"& complaints,
14287 &%allow_mx_to_ip%& exists, in order to enable this heinous activity. It is not
14288 recommended, except when you have no other choice.
14289
14290 .option allow_utf8_domains main boolean false
14291 .cindex "domain" "UTF-8 characters in"
14292 .cindex "UTF-8" "in domain name"
14293 Lots of discussion is going on about internationalized domain names. One
14294 camp is strongly in favour of just using UTF-8 characters, and it seems
14295 that at least two other MTAs permit this. This option allows Exim users to
14296 experiment if they wish.
14297
14298 If it is set true, Exim's domain parsing function allows valid
14299 UTF-8 multicharacters to appear in domain name components, in addition to
14300 letters, digits, and hyphens. However, just setting this option is not
14301 enough; if you want to look up these domain names in the DNS, you must also
14302 adjust the value of &%dns_check_names_pattern%& to match the extended form. A
14303 suitable setting is:
14304 .code
14305 dns_check_names_pattern = (?i)^(?>(?(1)\.|())[a-z0-9\xc0-\xff]\
14306 (?>[-a-z0-9\x80-\xff]*[a-z0-9\x80-\xbf])?)+$
14307 .endd
14308 Alternatively, you can just disable this feature by setting
14309 .code
14310 dns_check_names_pattern =
14311 .endd
14312 That is, set the option to an empty string so that no check is done.
14313
14314
14315 .option auth_advertise_hosts main "host list&!!" *
14316 .cindex "authentication" "advertising"
14317 .cindex "AUTH" "advertising"
14318 If any server authentication mechanisms are configured, Exim advertises them in
14319 response to an EHLO command only if the calling host matches this list.
14320 Otherwise, Exim does not advertise AUTH.
14321 Exim does not accept AUTH commands from clients to which it has not
14322 advertised the availability of AUTH. The advertising of individual
14323 authentication mechanisms can be controlled by the use of the
14324 &%server_advertise_condition%& generic authenticator option on the individual
14325 authenticators. See chapter &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>& for further details.
14326
14327 Certain mail clients (for example, Netscape) require the user to provide a name
14328 and password for authentication if AUTH is advertised, even though it may
14329 not be needed (the host may accept messages from hosts on its local LAN without
14330 authentication, for example). The &%auth_advertise_hosts%& option can be used
14331 to make these clients more friendly by excluding them from the set of hosts to
14332 which Exim advertises AUTH.
14333
14334 .cindex "AUTH" "advertising when encrypted"
14335 If you want to advertise the availability of AUTH only when the connection
14336 is encrypted using TLS, you can make use of the fact that the value of this
14337 option is expanded, with a setting like this:
14338 .code
14339 auth_advertise_hosts = ${if eq{$tls_in_cipher}{}{}{*}}
14340 .endd
14341 .vindex "&$tls_in_cipher$&"
14342 If &$tls_in_cipher$& is empty, the session is not encrypted, and the result of
14343 the expansion is empty, thus matching no hosts. Otherwise, the result of the
14344 expansion is *, which matches all hosts.
14345
14346
14347 .option auto_thaw main time 0s
14348 .cindex "thawing messages"
14349 .cindex "unfreezing messages"
14350 If this option is set to a time greater than zero, a queue runner will try a
14351 new delivery attempt on any frozen message, other than a bounce message, if
14352 this much time has passed since it was frozen. This may result in the message
14353 being re-frozen if nothing has changed since the last attempt. It is a way of
14354 saying &"keep on trying, even though there are big problems"&.
14355
14356 &*Note*&: This is an old option, which predates &%timeout_frozen_after%& and
14357 &%ignore_bounce_errors_after%&. It is retained for compatibility, but it is not
14358 thought to be very useful any more, and its use should probably be avoided.
14359
14360
14361 .option av_scanner main string "see below"
14362 This option is available if Exim is built with the content-scanning extension.
14363 It specifies which anti-virus scanner to use. The default value is:
14364 .code
14365 sophie:/var/run/sophie
14366 .endd
14367 If the value of &%av_scanner%& starts with a dollar character, it is expanded
14368 before use. See section &<<SECTscanvirus>>& for further details.
14369
14370
14371 .option bi_command main string unset
14372 .oindex "&%-bi%&"
14373 This option supplies the name of a command that is run when Exim is called with
14374 the &%-bi%& option (see chapter &<<CHAPcommandline>>&). The string value is
14375 just the command name, it is not a complete command line. If an argument is
14376 required, it must come from the &%-oA%& command line option.
14377
14378
14379 .option bounce_message_file main string unset
14380 .cindex "bounce message" "customizing"
14381 .cindex "customizing" "bounce message"
14382 This option defines a template file containing paragraphs of text to be used
14383 for constructing bounce messages. Details of the file's contents are given in
14384 chapter &<<CHAPemsgcust>>&. See also &%warn_message_file%&.
14385
14386
14387 .option bounce_message_text main string unset
14388 When this option is set, its contents are included in the default bounce
14389 message immediately after &"This message was created automatically by mail
14390 delivery software."& It is not used if &%bounce_message_file%& is set.
14391
14392 .option bounce_return_body main boolean true
14393 .cindex "bounce message" "including body"
14394 This option controls whether the body of an incoming message is included in a
14395 bounce message when &%bounce_return_message%& is true. The default setting
14396 causes the entire message, both header and body, to be returned (subject to the
14397 value of &%bounce_return_size_limit%&). If this option is false, only the
14398 message header is included. In the case of a non-SMTP message containing an
14399 error that is detected during reception, only those header lines preceding the
14400 point at which the error was detected are returned.
14401 .cindex "bounce message" "including original"
14402
14403 .option bounce_return_linesize_limit main integer 998
14404 .cindex "size" "of bounce lines, limit"
14405 .cindex "bounce message" "line length limit"
14406 .cindex "limit" "bounce message line length"
14407 This option sets a limit in bytes on the line length of messages
14408 that are returned to senders due to delivery problems,
14409 when &%bounce_return_message%& is true.
14410 The default value corresponds to RFC limits.
14411 If the message being returned has lines longer than this value it is
14412 treated as if the &%bounce_return_size_limit%& (below) restriction was exceeded.
14413
14414 The option also applies to bounces returned when an error is detected
14415 during reception of a message.
14416 In this case lines from the original are truncated.
14417
14418 The option does not apply to messages generated by an &(autoreply)& transport.
14419
14420
14421 .option bounce_return_message main boolean true
14422 If this option is set false, none of the original message is included in
14423 bounce messages generated by Exim. See also &%bounce_return_size_limit%& and
14424 &%bounce_return_body%&.
14425
14426
14427 .option bounce_return_size_limit main integer 100K
14428 .cindex "size" "of bounce, limit"
14429 .cindex "bounce message" "size limit"
14430 .cindex "limit" "bounce message size"
14431 This option sets a limit in bytes on the size of messages that are returned to
14432 senders as part of bounce messages when &%bounce_return_message%& is true. The
14433 limit should be less than the value of the global &%message_size_limit%& and of
14434 any &%message_size_limit%& settings on transports, to allow for the bounce text
14435 that Exim generates. If this option is set to zero there is no limit.
14436
14437 When the body of any message that is to be included in a bounce message is
14438 greater than the limit, it is truncated, and a comment pointing this out is
14439 added at the top. The actual cutoff may be greater than the value given, owing
14440 to the use of buffering for transferring the message in chunks (typically 8K in
14441 size). The idea is to save bandwidth on those undeliverable 15-megabyte
14442 messages.
14443
14444 .option bounce_sender_authentication main string unset
14445 .cindex "bounce message" "sender authentication"
14446 .cindex "authentication" "bounce message"
14447 .cindex "AUTH" "on bounce message"
14448 This option provides an authenticated sender address that is sent with any
14449 bounce messages generated by Exim that are sent over an authenticated SMTP
14450 connection. A typical setting might be:
14451 .code
14452 bounce_sender_authentication = mailer-daemon@my.domain.example
14453 .endd
14454 which would cause bounce messages to be sent using the SMTP command:
14455 .code
14456 MAIL FROM:<> AUTH=mailer-daemon@my.domain.example
14457 .endd
14458 The value of &%bounce_sender_authentication%& must always be a complete email
14459 address.
14460
14461 .option callout_domain_negative_expire main time 3h
14462 .cindex "caching" "callout timeouts"
14463 .cindex "callout" "caching timeouts"
14464 This option specifies the expiry time for negative callout cache data for a
14465 domain. See section &<<SECTcallver>>& for details of callout verification, and
14466 section &<<SECTcallvercache>>& for details of the caching.
14467
14468
14469 .option callout_domain_positive_expire main time 7d
14470 This option specifies the expiry time for positive callout cache data for a
14471 domain. See section &<<SECTcallver>>& for details of callout verification, and
14472 section &<<SECTcallvercache>>& for details of the caching.
14473
14474
14475 .option callout_negative_expire main time 2h
14476 This option specifies the expiry time for negative callout cache data for an
14477 address. See section &<<SECTcallver>>& for details of callout verification, and
14478 section &<<SECTcallvercache>>& for details of the caching.
14479
14480
14481 .option callout_positive_expire main time 24h
14482 This option specifies the expiry time for positive callout cache data for an
14483 address. See section &<<SECTcallver>>& for details of callout verification, and
14484 section &<<SECTcallvercache>>& for details of the caching.
14485
14486
14487 .option callout_random_local_part main string&!! "see below"
14488 This option defines the &"random"& local part that can be used as part of
14489 callout verification. The default value is
14490 .code
14491 $primary_hostname-$tod_epoch-testing
14492 .endd
14493 See section &<<CALLaddparcall>>& for details of how this value is used.
14494
14495
14496 .option check_log_inodes main integer 100
14497 See &%check_spool_space%& below.
14498
14499
14500 .option check_log_space main integer 10M
14501 See &%check_spool_space%& below.
14502
14503 .oindex "&%check_rfc2047_length%&"
14504 .cindex "RFC 2047" "disabling length check"
14505 .option check_rfc2047_length main boolean true
14506 RFC 2047 defines a way of encoding non-ASCII characters in headers using a
14507 system of &"encoded words"&. The RFC specifies a maximum length for an encoded
14508 word; strings to be encoded that exceed this length are supposed to use
14509 multiple encoded words. By default, Exim does not recognize encoded words that
14510 exceed the maximum length. However, it seems that some software, in violation
14511 of the RFC, generates overlong encoded words. If &%check_rfc2047_length%& is
14512 set false, Exim recognizes encoded words of any length.
14513
14514
14515 .option check_spool_inodes main integer 100
14516 See &%check_spool_space%& below.
14517
14518
14519 .option check_spool_space main integer 10M
14520 .cindex "checking disk space"
14521 .cindex "disk space, checking"
14522 .cindex "spool directory" "checking space"
14523 The four &%check_...%& options allow for checking of disk resources before a
14524 message is accepted.
14525
14526 .vindex "&$log_inodes$&"
14527 .vindex "&$log_space$&"
14528 .vindex "&$spool_inodes$&"
14529 .vindex "&$spool_space$&"
14530 When any of these options are nonzero, they apply to all incoming messages. If you
14531 want to apply different checks to different kinds of message, you can do so by
14532 testing the variables &$log_inodes$&, &$log_space$&, &$spool_inodes$&, and
14533 &$spool_space$& in an ACL with appropriate additional conditions.
14534
14535
14536 &%check_spool_space%& and &%check_spool_inodes%& check the spool partition if
14537 either value is greater than zero, for example:
14538 .code
14539 check_spool_space = 100M
14540 check_spool_inodes = 100
14541 .endd
14542 The spool partition is the one that contains the directory defined by
14543 SPOOL_DIRECTORY in &_Local/Makefile_&. It is used for holding messages in
14544 transit.
14545
14546 &%check_log_space%& and &%check_log_inodes%& check the partition in which log
14547 files are written if either is greater than zero. These should be set only if
14548 &%log_file_path%& and &%spool_directory%& refer to different partitions.
14549
14550 If there is less space or fewer inodes than requested, Exim refuses to accept
14551 incoming mail. In the case of SMTP input this is done by giving a 452 temporary
14552 error response to the MAIL command. If ESMTP is in use and there was a
14553 SIZE parameter on the MAIL command, its value is added to the
14554 &%check_spool_space%& value, and the check is performed even if
14555 &%check_spool_space%& is zero, unless &%no_smtp_check_spool_space%& is set.
14556
14557 The values for &%check_spool_space%& and &%check_log_space%& are held as a
14558 number of kilobytes (though specified in bytes).
14559 If a non-multiple of 1024 is specified, it is rounded up.
14560
14561 For non-SMTP input and for batched SMTP input, the test is done at start-up; on
14562 failure a message is written to stderr and Exim exits with a non-zero code, as
14563 it obviously cannot send an error message of any kind.
14564
14565 There is a slight performance penalty for these checks.
14566 Versions of Exim preceding 4.88 had these disabled by default;
14567 high-rate installations confident they will never run out of resources
14568 may wish to deliberately disable them.
14569
14570 .option chunking_advertise_hosts main "host list&!!" *
14571 .cindex CHUNKING advertisement
14572 .cindex "RFC 3030" "CHUNKING"
14573 The CHUNKING extension (RFC3030) will be advertised in the EHLO message to
14574 these hosts.
14575 Hosts may use the BDAT command as an alternate to DATA.
14576
14577 .option commandline_checks_require_admin main boolean &`false`&
14578 .cindex "restricting access to features"
14579 This option restricts various basic checking features to require an
14580 administrative user.
14581 This affects most of the &%-b*%& options, such as &%-be%&.
14582
14583 .option debug_store main boolean &`false`&
14584 .cindex debugging "memory corruption"
14585 .cindex memory debugging
14586 This option, when true, enables extra checking in Exim's internal memory
14587 management. For use when a memory corruption issue is being investigated,
14588 it should normally be left as default.
14589
14590 .option daemon_smtp_ports main string &`smtp`&
14591 .cindex "port" "for daemon"
14592 .cindex "TCP/IP" "setting listening ports"
14593 This option specifies one or more default SMTP ports on which the Exim daemon
14594 listens. See chapter &<<CHAPinterfaces>>& for details of how it is used. For
14595 backward compatibility, &%daemon_smtp_port%& (singular) is a synonym.
14596
14597 .option daemon_startup_retries main integer 9
14598 .cindex "daemon startup, retrying"
14599 This option, along with &%daemon_startup_sleep%&, controls the retrying done by
14600 the daemon at startup when it cannot immediately bind a listening socket
14601 (typically because the socket is already in use): &%daemon_startup_retries%&
14602 defines the number of retries after the first failure, and
14603 &%daemon_startup_sleep%& defines the length of time to wait between retries.
14604
14605 .option daemon_startup_sleep main time 30s
14606 See &%daemon_startup_retries%&.
14607
14608 .option delay_warning main "time list" 24h
14609 .cindex "warning of delay"
14610 .cindex "delay warning, specifying"
14611 .cindex "queue" "delay warning"
14612 When a message is delayed, Exim sends a warning message to the sender at
14613 intervals specified by this option. The data is a colon-separated list of times
14614 after which to send warning messages. If the value of the option is an empty
14615 string or a zero time, no warnings are sent. Up to 10 times may be given. If a
14616 message has been on the queue for longer than the last time, the last interval
14617 between the times is used to compute subsequent warning times. For example,
14618 with
14619 .code
14620 delay_warning = 4h:8h:24h
14621 .endd
14622 the first message is sent after 4 hours, the second after 8 hours, and
14623 the third one after 24 hours. After that, messages are sent every 16 hours,
14624 because that is the interval between the last two times on the list. If you set
14625 just one time, it specifies the repeat interval. For example, with:
14626 .code
14627 delay_warning = 6h
14628 .endd
14629 messages are repeated every six hours. To stop warnings after a given time, set
14630 a very large time at the end of the list. For example:
14631 .code
14632 delay_warning = 2h:12h:99d
14633 .endd
14634 Note that the option is only evaluated at the time a delivery attempt fails,
14635 which depends on retry and queue-runner configuration.
14636 Typically retries will be configured more frequently than warning messages.
14637
14638 .option delay_warning_condition main string&!! "see below"
14639 .vindex "&$domain$&"
14640 The string is expanded at the time a warning message might be sent. If all the
14641 deferred addresses have the same domain, it is set in &$domain$& during the
14642 expansion. Otherwise &$domain$& is empty. If the result of the expansion is a
14643 forced failure, an empty string, or a string matching any of &"0"&, &"no"& or
14644 &"false"& (the comparison being done caselessly) then the warning message is
14645 not sent. The default is:
14646 .code
14647 delay_warning_condition = ${if or {\
14648 { !eq{$h_list-id:$h_list-post:$h_list-subscribe:}{} }\
14649 { match{$h_precedence:}{(?i)bulk|list|junk} }\
14650 { match{$h_auto-submitted:}{(?i)auto-generated|auto-replied} }\
14651 } {no}{yes}}
14652 .endd
14653 This suppresses the sending of warnings for messages that contain &'List-ID:'&,
14654 &'List-Post:'&, or &'List-Subscribe:'& headers, or have &"bulk"&, &"list"& or
14655 &"junk"& in a &'Precedence:'& header, or have &"auto-generated"& or
14656 &"auto-replied"& in an &'Auto-Submitted:'& header.
14657
14658 .option deliver_drop_privilege main boolean false
14659 .cindex "unprivileged delivery"
14660 .cindex "delivery" "unprivileged"
14661 If this option is set true, Exim drops its root privilege at the start of a
14662 delivery process, and runs as the Exim user throughout. This severely restricts
14663 the kinds of local delivery that are possible, but is viable in certain types
14664 of configuration. There is a discussion about the use of root privilege in
14665 chapter &<<CHAPsecurity>>&.
14666
14667 .option deliver_queue_load_max main fixed-point unset
14668 .cindex "load average"
14669 .cindex "queue runner" "abandoning"
14670 When this option is set, a queue run is abandoned if the system load average
14671 becomes greater than the value of the option. The option has no effect on
14672 ancient operating systems on which Exim cannot determine the load average.
14673 See also &%queue_only_load%& and &%smtp_load_reserve%&.
14674
14675
14676 .option delivery_date_remove main boolean true
14677 .cindex "&'Delivery-date:'& header line"
14678 Exim's transports have an option for adding a &'Delivery-date:'& header to a
14679 message when it is delivered, in exactly the same way as &'Return-path:'& is
14680 handled. &'Delivery-date:'& records the actual time of delivery. Such headers
14681 should not be present in incoming messages, and this option causes them to be
14682 removed at the time the message is received, to avoid any problems that might
14683 occur when a delivered message is subsequently sent on to some other recipient.
14684
14685 .option disable_fsync main boolean false
14686 .cindex "&[fsync()]&, disabling"
14687 This option is available only if Exim was built with the compile-time option
14688 ENABLE_DISABLE_FSYNC. When this is not set, a reference to &%disable_fsync%& in
14689 a runtime configuration generates an &"unknown option"& error. You should not
14690 build Exim with ENABLE_DISABLE_FSYNC or set &%disable_fsync%& unless you
14691 really, really, really understand what you are doing. &'No pre-compiled
14692 distributions of Exim should ever make this option available.'&
14693
14694 When &%disable_fsync%& is set true, Exim no longer calls &[fsync()]& to force
14695 updated files' data to be written to disc before continuing. Unexpected events
14696 such as crashes and power outages may cause data to be lost or scrambled.
14697 Here be Dragons. &*Beware.*&
14698
14699
14700 .option disable_ipv6 main boolean false
14701 .cindex "IPv6" "disabling"
14702 If this option is set true, even if the Exim binary has IPv6 support, no IPv6
14703 activities take place. AAAA records are never looked up, and any IPv6 addresses
14704 that are listed in &%local_interfaces%&, data for the &%manualroute%& router,
14705 etc. are ignored. If IP literals are enabled, the &(ipliteral)& router declines
14706 to handle IPv6 literal addresses.
14707
14708
14709 .option dkim_verify_signers main "domain list&!!" $dkim_signers
14710 .cindex DKIM "controlling calls to the ACL"
14711 This option gives a list of DKIM domains for which the DKIM ACL is run.
14712 It is expanded after the message is received; by default it runs
14713 the ACL once for each signature in the message.
14714 See section &<<SECDKIMVFY>>&.
14715
14716
14717 .option dns_again_means_nonexist main "domain list&!!" unset
14718 .cindex "DNS" "&""try again""& response; overriding"
14719 DNS lookups give a &"try again"& response for the DNS errors
14720 &"non-authoritative host not found"& and &"SERVERFAIL"&. This can cause Exim to
14721 keep trying to deliver a message, or to give repeated temporary errors to
14722 incoming mail. Sometimes the effect is caused by a badly set up name server and
14723 may persist for a long time. If a domain which exhibits this problem matches
14724 anything in &%dns_again_means_nonexist%&, it is treated as if it did not exist.
14725 This option should be used with care. You can make it apply to reverse lookups
14726 by a setting such as this:
14727 .code
14728 dns_again_means_nonexist = *.in-addr.arpa
14729 .endd
14730 This option applies to all DNS lookups that Exim does. It also applies when the
14731 &[gethostbyname()]& or &[getipnodebyname()]& functions give temporary errors,
14732 since these are most likely to be caused by DNS lookup problems. The
14733 &(dnslookup)& router has some options of its own for controlling what happens
14734 when lookups for MX or SRV records give temporary errors. These more specific
14735 options are applied after this global option.
14736
14737 .option dns_check_names_pattern main string "see below"
14738 .cindex "DNS" "pre-check of name syntax"
14739 When this option is set to a non-empty string, it causes Exim to check domain
14740 names for characters that are not allowed in host names before handing them to
14741 the DNS resolver, because some resolvers give temporary errors for names that
14742 contain unusual characters. If a domain name contains any unwanted characters,
14743 a &"not found"& result is forced, and the resolver is not called. The check is
14744 done by matching the domain name against a regular expression, which is the
14745 value of this option. The default pattern is
14746 .code
14747 dns_check_names_pattern = \
14748 (?i)^(?>(?(1)\.|())[^\W_](?>[a-z0-9/-]*[^\W_])?)+$
14749 .endd
14750 which permits only letters, digits, slashes, and hyphens in components, but
14751 they must start and end with a letter or digit. Slashes are not, in fact,
14752 permitted in host names, but they are found in certain NS records (which can be
14753 accessed in Exim by using a &%dnsdb%& lookup). If you set
14754 &%allow_utf8_domains%&, you must modify this pattern, or set the option to an
14755 empty string.
14756
14757 .option dns_csa_search_limit main integer 5
14758 This option controls the depth of parental searching for CSA SRV records in the
14759 DNS, as described in more detail in section &<<SECTverifyCSA>>&.
14760
14761 .option dns_csa_use_reverse main boolean true
14762 This option controls whether or not an IP address, given as a CSA domain, is
14763 reversed and looked up in the reverse DNS, as described in more detail in
14764 section &<<SECTverifyCSA>>&.
14765
14766
14767 .option dns_dnssec_ok main integer -1
14768 .cindex "DNS" "resolver options"
14769 .cindex "DNS" "DNSSEC"
14770 If this option is set to a non-negative number then Exim will initialise the
14771 DNS resolver library to either use or not use DNSSEC, overriding the system
14772 default. A value of 0 coerces DNSSEC off, a value of 1 coerces DNSSEC on.
14773
14774 If the resolver library does not support DNSSEC then this option has no effect.
14775
14776
14777 .option dns_ipv4_lookup main "domain list&!!" unset
14778 .cindex "IPv6" "DNS lookup for AAAA records"
14779 .cindex "DNS" "IPv6 lookup for AAAA records"
14780 .cindex DNS "IPv6 disabling"
14781 When Exim is compiled with IPv6 support and &%disable_ipv6%& is not set, it
14782 looks for IPv6 address records (AAAA records) as well as IPv4 address records
14783 (A records) when trying to find IP addresses for hosts, unless the host's
14784 domain matches this list.
14785
14786 This is a fudge to help with name servers that give big delays or otherwise do
14787 not work for the AAAA record type. In due course, when the world's name
14788 servers have all been upgraded, there should be no need for this option.
14789
14790
14791 .option dns_retrans main time 0s
14792 .cindex "DNS" "resolver options"
14793 .cindex timeout "dns lookup"
14794 .cindex "DNS" timeout
14795 The options &%dns_retrans%& and &%dns_retry%& can be used to set the
14796 retransmission and retry parameters for DNS lookups. Values of zero (the
14797 defaults) leave the system default settings unchanged. The first value is the
14798 time between retries, and the second is the number of retries. It isn't
14799 totally clear exactly how these settings affect the total time a DNS lookup may
14800 take. I haven't found any documentation about timeouts on DNS lookups; these
14801 parameter values are available in the external resolver interface structure,
14802 but nowhere does it seem to describe how they are used or what you might want
14803 to set in them.
14804 See also the &%slow_lookup_log%& option.
14805
14806
14807 .option dns_retry main integer 0
14808 See &%dns_retrans%& above.
14809
14810
14811 .option dns_trust_aa main "domain list&!!" unset
14812 .cindex "DNS" "resolver options"
14813 .cindex "DNS" "DNSSEC"
14814 If this option is set then lookup results marked with the AA bit
14815 (Authoritative Answer) are trusted the same way as if they were
14816 DNSSEC-verified. The authority section's name of the answer must
14817 match with this expanded domain list.
14818
14819 Use this option only if you talk directly to a resolver that is
14820 authoritative for some zones and does not set the AD (Authentic Data)
14821 bit in the answer. Some DNS servers may have an configuration option to
14822 mark the answers from their own zones as verified (they set the AD bit).
14823 Others do not have this option. It is considered as poor practice using
14824 a resolver that is an authoritative server for some zones.
14825
14826 Use this option only if you really have to (e.g. if you want
14827 to use DANE for remote delivery to a server that is listed in the DNS
14828 zones that your resolver is authoritative for).
14829
14830 If the DNS answer packet has the AA bit set and contains resource record
14831 in the answer section, the name of the first NS record appearing in the
14832 authority section is compared against the list. If the answer packet is
14833 authoritative but the answer section is empty, the name of the first SOA
14834 record in the authoritative section is used instead.
14835
14836 .cindex "DNS" "resolver options"
14837 .option dns_use_edns0 main integer -1
14838 .cindex "DNS" "resolver options"
14839 .cindex "DNS" "EDNS0"
14840 .cindex "DNS" "OpenBSD
14841 If this option is set to a non-negative number then Exim will initialise the
14842 DNS resolver library to either use or not use EDNS0 extensions, overriding
14843 the system default. A value of 0 coerces EDNS0 off, a value of 1 coerces EDNS0
14844 on.
14845
14846 If the resolver library does not support EDNS0 then this option has no effect.
14847
14848 OpenBSD's asr resolver routines are known to ignore the EDNS0 option; this
14849 means that DNSSEC will not work with Exim on that platform either, unless Exim
14850 is linked against an alternative DNS client library.
14851
14852
14853 .option drop_cr main boolean false
14854 This is an obsolete option that is now a no-op. It used to affect the way Exim
14855 handled CR and LF characters in incoming messages. What happens now is
14856 described in section &<<SECTlineendings>>&.
14857
14858 .option dsn_advertise_hosts main "host list&!!" unset
14859 .cindex "bounce messages" "success"
14860 .cindex "DSN" "success"
14861 .cindex "Delivery Status Notification" "success"
14862 DSN extensions (RFC3461) will be advertised in the EHLO message to,
14863 and accepted from, these hosts.
14864 Hosts may use the NOTIFY and ENVID options on RCPT TO commands,
14865 and RET and ORCPT options on MAIL FROM commands.
14866 A NOTIFY=SUCCESS option requests success-DSN messages.
14867 A NOTIFY= option with no argument requests that no delay or failure DSNs
14868 are sent.
14869
14870 .option dsn_from main "string&!!" "see below"
14871 .cindex "&'From:'& header line" "in bounces"
14872 .cindex "bounce messages" "&'From:'& line, specifying"
14873 This option can be used to vary the contents of &'From:'& header lines in
14874 bounces and other automatically generated messages (&"Delivery Status
14875 Notifications"& &-- hence the name of the option). The default setting is:
14876 .code
14877 dsn_from = Mail Delivery System <Mailer-Daemon@$qualify_domain>
14878 .endd
14879 The value is expanded every time it is needed. If the expansion fails, a
14880 panic is logged, and the default value is used.
14881
14882 .option envelope_to_remove main boolean true
14883 .cindex "&'Envelope-to:'& header line"
14884 Exim's transports have an option for adding an &'Envelope-to:'& header to a
14885 message when it is delivered, in exactly the same way as &'Return-path:'& is
14886 handled. &'Envelope-to:'& records the original recipient address from the
14887 message's envelope that caused the delivery to happen. Such headers should not
14888 be present in incoming messages, and this option causes them to be removed at
14889 the time the message is received, to avoid any problems that might occur when a
14890 delivered message is subsequently sent on to some other recipient.
14891
14892
14893 .option errors_copy main "string list&!!" unset
14894 .cindex "bounce message" "copy to other address"
14895 .cindex "copy of bounce message"
14896 Setting this option causes Exim to send bcc copies of bounce messages that it
14897 generates to other addresses. &*Note*&: This does not apply to bounce messages
14898 coming from elsewhere. The value of the option is a colon-separated list of
14899 items. Each item consists of a pattern, terminated by white space, followed by
14900 a comma-separated list of email addresses. If a pattern contains spaces, it
14901 must be enclosed in double quotes.
14902
14903 Each pattern is processed in the same way as a single item in an address list
14904 (see section &<<SECTaddresslist>>&). When a pattern matches the recipient of
14905 the bounce message, the message is copied to the addresses on the list. The
14906 items are scanned in order, and once a matching one is found, no further items
14907 are examined. For example:
14908 .code
14909 errors_copy = spqr@mydomain postmaster@mydomain.example :\
14910 rqps@mydomain hostmaster@mydomain.example,\
14911 postmaster@mydomain.example
14912 .endd
14913 .vindex "&$domain$&"
14914 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
14915 The address list is expanded before use. The expansion variables &$local_part$&
14916 and &$domain$& are set from the original recipient of the error message, and if
14917 there was any wildcard matching in the pattern, the expansion
14918 .cindex "numerical variables (&$1$& &$2$& etc)" "in &%errors_copy%&"
14919 variables &$0$&, &$1$&, etc. are set in the normal way.
14920
14921
14922 .option errors_reply_to main string unset
14923 .cindex "bounce message" "&'Reply-to:'& in"
14924 By default, Exim's bounce and delivery warning messages contain the header line
14925 .display
14926 &`From: Mail Delivery System <Mailer-Daemon@`&&'qualify-domain'&&`>`&
14927 .endd
14928 .oindex &%quota_warn_message%&
14929 where &'qualify-domain'& is the value of the &%qualify_domain%& option.
14930 A warning message that is generated by the &%quota_warn_message%& option in an
14931 &(appendfile)& transport may contain its own &'From:'& header line that
14932 overrides the default.
14933
14934 Experience shows that people reply to bounce messages. If the
14935 &%errors_reply_to%& option is set, a &'Reply-To:'& header is added to bounce
14936 and warning messages. For example:
14937 .code
14938 errors_reply_to = postmaster@my.domain.example
14939 .endd
14940 The value of the option is not expanded. It must specify a valid RFC 2822
14941 address. However, if a warning message that is generated by the
14942 &%quota_warn_message%& option in an &(appendfile)& transport contain its
14943 own &'Reply-To:'& header line, the value of the &%errors_reply_to%& option is
14944 not used.
14945
14946
14947 .option event_action main string&!! unset
14948 .cindex events
14949 This option declares a string to be expanded for Exim's events mechanism.
14950 For details see chapter &<<CHAPevents>>&.
14951
14952
14953 .option exim_group main string "compile-time configured"
14954 .cindex "gid (group id)" "Exim's own"
14955 .cindex "Exim group"
14956 This option changes the gid under which Exim runs when it gives up root
14957 privilege. The default value is compiled into the binary. The value of this
14958 option is used only when &%exim_user%& is also set. Unless it consists entirely
14959 of digits, the string is looked up using &[getgrnam()]&, and failure causes a
14960 configuration error. See chapter &<<CHAPsecurity>>& for a discussion of
14961 security issues.
14962
14963
14964 .option exim_path main string "see below"
14965 .cindex "Exim binary, path name"
14966 This option specifies the path name of the Exim binary, which is used when Exim
14967 needs to re-exec itself. The default is set up to point to the file &'exim'& in
14968 the directory configured at compile time by the BIN_DIRECTORY setting. It
14969 is necessary to change &%exim_path%& if, exceptionally, Exim is run from some
14970 other place.
14971 &*Warning*&: Do not use a macro to define the value of this option, because
14972 you will break those Exim utilities that scan the configuration file to find
14973 where the binary is. (They then use the &%-bP%& option to extract option
14974 settings such as the value of &%spool_directory%&.)
14975
14976
14977 .option exim_user main string "compile-time configured"
14978 .cindex "uid (user id)" "Exim's own"
14979 .cindex "Exim user"
14980 This option changes the uid under which Exim runs when it gives up root
14981 privilege. The default value is compiled into the binary. Ownership of the run
14982 time configuration file and the use of the &%-C%& and &%-D%& command line
14983 options is checked against the values in the binary, not what is set here.
14984
14985 Unless it consists entirely of digits, the string is looked up using
14986 &[getpwnam()]&, and failure causes a configuration error. If &%exim_group%& is
14987 not also supplied, the gid is taken from the result of &[getpwnam()]& if it is
14988 used. See chapter &<<CHAPsecurity>>& for a discussion of security issues.
14989
14990
14991 .option extra_local_interfaces main "string list" unset
14992 This option defines network interfaces that are to be considered local when
14993 routing, but which are not used for listening by the daemon. See section
14994 &<<SECTreclocipadd>>& for details.
14995
14996
14997 . Allow this long option name to split; give it unsplit as a fifth argument
14998 . for the automatic .oindex that is generated by .option.
14999
15000 .option "extract_addresses_remove_arguments" main boolean true &&&
15001 extract_addresses_remove_arguments
15002 .oindex "&%-t%&"
15003 .cindex "command line" "addresses with &%-t%&"
15004 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&%-t%& option"
15005 According to some Sendmail documentation (Sun, IRIX, HP-UX), if any addresses
15006 are present on the command line when the &%-t%& option is used to build an
15007 envelope from a message's &'To:'&, &'Cc:'& and &'Bcc:'& headers, the command
15008 line addresses are removed from the recipients list. This is also how Smail
15009 behaves. However, other Sendmail documentation (the O'Reilly book) states that
15010 command line addresses are added to those obtained from the header lines. When
15011 &%extract_addresses_remove_arguments%& is true (the default), Exim subtracts
15012 argument headers. If it is set false, Exim adds rather than removes argument
15013 addresses.
15014
15015
15016 .option finduser_retries main integer 0
15017 .cindex "NIS, retrying user lookups"
15018 On systems running NIS or other schemes in which user and group information is
15019 distributed from a remote system, there can be times when &[getpwnam()]& and
15020 related functions fail, even when given valid data, because things time out.
15021 Unfortunately these failures cannot be distinguished from genuine &"not found"&
15022 errors. If &%finduser_retries%& is set greater than zero, Exim will try that
15023 many extra times to find a user or a group, waiting for one second between
15024 retries.
15025
15026 .cindex "&_/etc/passwd_&" "multiple reading of"
15027 You should not set this option greater than zero if your user information is in
15028 a traditional &_/etc/passwd_& file, because it will cause Exim needlessly to
15029 search the file multiple times for non-existent users, and also cause delay.
15030
15031
15032
15033 .option freeze_tell main "string list, comma separated" unset
15034 .cindex "freezing messages" "sending a message when freezing"
15035 On encountering certain errors, or when configured to do so in a system filter,
15036 ACL, or special router, Exim freezes a message. This means that no further
15037 delivery attempts take place until an administrator thaws the message, or the
15038 &%auto_thaw%&, &%ignore_bounce_errors_after%&, or &%timeout_frozen_after%&
15039 feature cause it to be processed. If &%freeze_tell%& is set, Exim generates a
15040 warning message whenever it freezes something, unless the message it is
15041 freezing is a locally-generated bounce message. (Without this exception there
15042 is the possibility of looping.) The warning message is sent to the addresses
15043 supplied as the comma-separated value of this option. If several of the
15044 message's addresses cause freezing, only a single message is sent. If the
15045 freezing was automatic, the reason(s) for freezing can be found in the message
15046 log. If you configure freezing in a filter or ACL, you must arrange for any
15047 logging that you require.
15048
15049
15050 .option gecos_name main string&!! unset
15051 .cindex "HP-UX"
15052 .cindex "&""gecos""& field, parsing"
15053 Some operating systems, notably HP-UX, use the &"gecos"& field in the system
15054 password file to hold other information in addition to users' real names. Exim
15055 looks up this field for use when it is creating &'Sender:'& or &'From:'&
15056 headers. If either &%gecos_pattern%& or &%gecos_name%& are unset, the contents
15057 of the field are used unchanged, except that, if an ampersand is encountered,
15058 it is replaced by the user's login name with the first character forced to
15059 upper case, since this is a convention that is observed on many systems.
15060
15061 When these options are set, &%gecos_pattern%& is treated as a regular
15062 expression that is to be applied to the field (again with && replaced by the
15063 login name), and if it matches, &%gecos_name%& is expanded and used as the
15064 user's name.
15065
15066 .cindex "numerical variables (&$1$& &$2$& etc)" "in &%gecos_name%&"
15067 Numeric variables such as &$1$&, &$2$&, etc. can be used in the expansion to
15068 pick up sub-fields that were matched by the pattern. In HP-UX, where the user's
15069 name terminates at the first comma, the following can be used:
15070 .code
15071 gecos_pattern = ([^,]*)
15072 gecos_name = $1
15073 .endd
15074
15075 .option gecos_pattern main string unset
15076 See &%gecos_name%& above.
15077
15078
15079 .option gnutls_compat_mode main boolean unset
15080 This option controls whether GnuTLS is used in compatibility mode in an Exim
15081 server. This reduces security slightly, but improves interworking with older
15082 implementations of TLS.
15083
15084
15085 .option gnutls_allow_auto_pkcs11 main boolean unset
15086 This option will let GnuTLS (2.12.0 or later) autoload PKCS11 modules with
15087 the p11-kit configuration files in &_/etc/pkcs11/modules/_&.
15088
15089 See
15090 &url(http://www.gnutls.org/manual/gnutls.html#Smart-cards-and-HSMs)
15091 for documentation.
15092
15093
15094
15095 .option headers_charset main string "see below"
15096 This option sets a default character set for translating from encoded MIME
15097 &"words"& in header lines, when referenced by an &$h_xxx$& expansion item. The
15098 default is the value of HEADERS_CHARSET in &_Local/Makefile_&. The
15099 ultimate default is ISO-8859-1. For more details see the description of header
15100 insertions in section &<<SECTexpansionitems>>&.
15101
15102
15103
15104 .option header_maxsize main integer "see below"
15105 .cindex "header section" "maximum size of"
15106 .cindex "limit" "size of message header section"
15107 This option controls the overall maximum size of a message's header
15108 section. The default is the value of HEADER_MAXSIZE in
15109 &_Local/Makefile_&; the default for that is 1M. Messages with larger header
15110 sections are rejected.
15111
15112
15113 .option header_line_maxsize main integer 0
15114 .cindex "header lines" "maximum size of"
15115 .cindex "limit" "size of one header line"
15116 This option limits the length of any individual header line in a message, after
15117 all the continuations have been joined together. Messages with individual
15118 header lines that are longer than the limit are rejected. The default value of
15119 zero means &"no limit"&.
15120
15121
15122
15123
15124 .option helo_accept_junk_hosts main "host list&!!" unset
15125 .cindex "HELO" "accepting junk data"
15126 .cindex "EHLO" "accepting junk data"
15127 Exim checks the syntax of HELO and EHLO commands for incoming SMTP
15128 mail, and gives an error response for invalid data. Unfortunately, there are
15129 some SMTP clients that send syntactic junk. They can be accommodated by setting
15130 this option. Note that this is a syntax check only. See &%helo_verify_hosts%&
15131 if you want to do semantic checking.
15132 See also &%helo_allow_chars%& for a way of extending the permitted character
15133 set.
15134
15135
15136 .option helo_allow_chars main string unset
15137 .cindex "HELO" "underscores in"
15138 .cindex "EHLO" "underscores in"
15139 .cindex "underscore in EHLO/HELO"
15140 This option can be set to a string of rogue characters that are permitted in
15141 all EHLO and HELO names in addition to the standard letters, digits,
15142 hyphens, and dots. If you really must allow underscores, you can set
15143 .code
15144 helo_allow_chars = _
15145 .endd
15146 Note that the value is one string, not a list.
15147
15148
15149 .option helo_lookup_domains main "domain list&!!" &`@:@[]`&
15150 .cindex "HELO" "forcing reverse lookup"
15151 .cindex "EHLO" "forcing reverse lookup"
15152 If the domain given by a client in a HELO or EHLO command matches this
15153 list, a reverse lookup is done in order to establish the host's true name. The
15154 default forces a lookup if the client host gives the server's name or any of
15155 its IP addresses (in brackets), something that broken clients have been seen to
15156 do.
15157
15158
15159 .option helo_try_verify_hosts main "host list&!!" unset
15160 .cindex "HELO verifying" "optional"
15161 .cindex "EHLO" "verifying, optional"
15162 By default, Exim just checks the syntax of HELO and EHLO commands (see
15163 &%helo_accept_junk_hosts%& and &%helo_allow_chars%&). However, some sites like
15164 to do more extensive checking of the data supplied by these commands. The ACL
15165 condition &`verify = helo`& is provided to make this possible.
15166 Formerly, it was necessary also to set this option (&%helo_try_verify_hosts%&)
15167 to force the check to occur. From release 4.53 onwards, this is no longer
15168 necessary. If the check has not been done before &`verify = helo`& is
15169 encountered, it is done at that time. Consequently, this option is obsolete.
15170 Its specification is retained here for backwards compatibility.
15171
15172 When an EHLO or HELO command is received, if the calling host matches
15173 &%helo_try_verify_hosts%&, Exim checks that the host name given in the HELO or
15174 EHLO command either:
15175
15176 .ilist
15177 is an IP literal matching the calling address of the host, or
15178 .next
15179 .cindex "DNS" "reverse lookup"
15180 .cindex "reverse DNS lookup"
15181 matches the host name that Exim obtains by doing a reverse lookup of the
15182 calling host address, or
15183 .next
15184 when looked up in DNS yields the calling host address.
15185 .endlist
15186
15187 However, the EHLO or HELO command is not rejected if any of the checks
15188 fail. Processing continues, but the result of the check is remembered, and can
15189 be detected later in an ACL by the &`verify = helo`& condition.
15190
15191 If DNS was used for successful verification, the variable
15192 .cindex "DNS" "DNSSEC"
15193 &$helo_verify_dnssec$& records the DNSSEC status of the lookups.
15194
15195 .option helo_verify_hosts main "host list&!!" unset
15196 .cindex "HELO verifying" "mandatory"
15197 .cindex "EHLO" "verifying, mandatory"
15198 Like &%helo_try_verify_hosts%&, this option is obsolete, and retained only for
15199 backwards compatibility. For hosts that match this option, Exim checks the host
15200 name given in the HELO or EHLO in the same way as for
15201 &%helo_try_verify_hosts%&. If the check fails, the HELO or EHLO command is
15202 rejected with a 550 error, and entries are written to the main and reject logs.
15203 If a MAIL command is received before EHLO or HELO, it is rejected with a 503
15204 error.
15205
15206 .option hold_domains main "domain list&!!" unset
15207 .cindex "domain" "delaying delivery"
15208 .cindex "delivery" "delaying certain domains"
15209 This option allows mail for particular domains to be held on the queue
15210 manually. The option is overridden if a message delivery is forced with the
15211 &%-M%&, &%-qf%&, &%-Rf%& or &%-Sf%& options, and also while testing or
15212 verifying addresses using &%-bt%& or &%-bv%&. Otherwise, if a domain matches an
15213 item in &%hold_domains%&, no routing or delivery for that address is done, and
15214 it is deferred every time the message is looked at.
15215
15216 This option is intended as a temporary operational measure for delaying the
15217 delivery of mail while some problem is being sorted out, or some new
15218 configuration tested. If you just want to delay the processing of some
15219 domains until a queue run occurs, you should use &%queue_domains%& or
15220 &%queue_smtp_domains%&, not &%hold_domains%&.
15221
15222 A setting of &%hold_domains%& does not override Exim's code for removing
15223 messages from the queue if they have been there longer than the longest retry
15224 time in any retry rule. If you want to hold messages for longer than the normal
15225 retry times, insert a dummy retry rule with a long retry time.
15226
15227
15228 .option host_lookup main "host list&!!" unset
15229 .cindex "host name" "lookup, forcing"
15230 Exim does not look up the name of a calling host from its IP address unless it
15231 is required to compare against some host list, or the host matches
15232 &%helo_try_verify_hosts%& or &%helo_verify_hosts%&, or the host matches this
15233 option (which normally contains IP addresses rather than host names). The
15234 default configuration file contains
15235 .code
15236 host_lookup = *
15237 .endd
15238 which causes a lookup to happen for all hosts. If the expense of these lookups
15239 is felt to be too great, the setting can be changed or removed.
15240
15241 After a successful reverse lookup, Exim does a forward lookup on the name it
15242 has obtained, to verify that it yields the IP address that it started with. If
15243 this check fails, Exim behaves as if the name lookup failed.
15244
15245 .vindex "&$host_lookup_failed$&"
15246 .vindex "&$sender_host_name$&"
15247 After any kind of failure, the host name (in &$sender_host_name$&) remains
15248 unset, and &$host_lookup_failed$& is set to the string &"1"&. See also
15249 &%dns_again_means_nonexist%&, &%helo_lookup_domains%&, and
15250 &`verify = reverse_host_lookup`& in ACLs.
15251
15252
15253 .option host_lookup_order main "string list" &`bydns:byaddr`&
15254 This option specifies the order of different lookup methods when Exim is trying
15255 to find a host name from an IP address. The default is to do a DNS lookup
15256 first, and then to try a local lookup (using &[gethostbyaddr()]& or equivalent)
15257 if that fails. You can change the order of these lookups, or omit one entirely,
15258 if you want.
15259
15260 &*Warning*&: The &"byaddr"& method does not always yield aliases when there are
15261 multiple PTR records in the DNS and the IP address is not listed in
15262 &_/etc/hosts_&. Different operating systems give different results in this
15263 case. That is why the default tries a DNS lookup first.
15264
15265
15266
15267 .option host_reject_connection main "host list&!!" unset
15268 .cindex "host" "rejecting connections from"
15269 If this option is set, incoming SMTP calls from the hosts listed are rejected
15270 as soon as the connection is made.
15271 This option is obsolete, and retained only for backward compatibility, because
15272 nowadays the ACL specified by &%acl_smtp_connect%& can also reject incoming
15273 connections immediately.
15274
15275 The ability to give an immediate rejection (either by this option or using an
15276 ACL) is provided for use in unusual cases. Many hosts will just try again,
15277 sometimes without much delay. Normally, it is better to use an ACL to reject
15278 incoming messages at a later stage, such as after RCPT commands. See
15279 chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&.
15280
15281
15282 .option hosts_connection_nolog main "host list&!!" unset
15283 .cindex "host" "not logging connections from"
15284 This option defines a list of hosts for which connection logging does not
15285 happen, even though the &%smtp_connection%& log selector is set. For example,
15286 you might want not to log SMTP connections from local processes, or from
15287 127.0.0.1, or from your local LAN. This option is consulted in the main loop of
15288 the daemon; you should therefore strive to restrict its value to a short inline
15289 list of IP addresses and networks. To disable logging SMTP connections from
15290 local processes, you must create a host list with an empty item. For example:
15291 .code
15292 hosts_connection_nolog = :
15293 .endd
15294 If the &%smtp_connection%& log selector is not set, this option has no effect.
15295
15296
15297
15298 .option hosts_proxy main "host list&!!" unset
15299 .cindex proxy "proxy protocol"
15300 This option enables use of Proxy Protocol proxies for incoming
15301 connections. For details see section &<<SECTproxyInbound>>&.
15302
15303
15304 .option hosts_treat_as_local main "domain list&!!" unset
15305 .cindex "local host" "domains treated as"
15306 .cindex "host" "treated as local"
15307 If this option is set, any host names that match the domain list are treated as
15308 if they were the local host when Exim is scanning host lists obtained from MX
15309 records
15310 or other sources. Note that the value of this option is a domain list, not a
15311 host list, because it is always used to check host names, not IP addresses.
15312
15313 This option also applies when Exim is matching the special items
15314 &`@mx_any`&, &`@mx_primary`&, and &`@mx_secondary`& in a domain list (see
15315 section &<<SECTdomainlist>>&), and when checking the &%hosts%& option in the
15316 &(smtp)& transport for the local host (see the &%allow_localhost%& option in
15317 that transport). See also &%local_interfaces%&, &%extra_local_interfaces%&, and
15318 chapter &<<CHAPinterfaces>>&, which contains a discussion about local network
15319 interfaces and recognizing the local host.
15320
15321
15322 .option ibase_servers main "string list" unset
15323 .cindex "InterBase" "server list"
15324 This option provides a list of InterBase servers and associated connection data,
15325 to be used in conjunction with &(ibase)& lookups (see section &<<SECID72>>&).
15326 The option is available only if Exim has been built with InterBase support.
15327
15328
15329
15330 .option ignore_bounce_errors_after main time 10w
15331 .cindex "bounce message" "discarding"
15332 .cindex "discarding bounce message"
15333 This option affects the processing of bounce messages that cannot be delivered,
15334 that is, those that suffer a permanent delivery failure. (Bounce messages that
15335 suffer temporary delivery failures are of course retried in the usual way.)
15336
15337 After a permanent delivery failure, bounce messages are frozen,
15338 because there is no sender to whom they can be returned. When a frozen bounce
15339 message has been on the queue for more than the given time, it is unfrozen at
15340 the next queue run, and a further delivery is attempted. If delivery fails
15341 again, the bounce message is discarded. This makes it possible to keep failed
15342 bounce messages around for a shorter time than the normal maximum retry time
15343 for frozen messages. For example,
15344 .code
15345 ignore_bounce_errors_after = 12h
15346 .endd
15347 retries failed bounce message deliveries after 12 hours, discarding any further
15348 failures. If the value of this option is set to a zero time period, bounce
15349 failures are discarded immediately. Setting a very long time (as in the default
15350 value) has the effect of disabling this option. For ways of automatically
15351 dealing with other kinds of frozen message, see &%auto_thaw%& and
15352 &%timeout_frozen_after%&.
15353
15354
15355 .option ignore_fromline_hosts main "host list&!!" unset
15356 .cindex "&""From""& line"
15357 .cindex "UUCP" "&""From""& line"
15358 Some broken SMTP clients insist on sending a UUCP-like &"From&~"& line before
15359 the headers of a message. By default this is treated as the start of the
15360 message's body, which means that any following headers are not recognized as
15361 such. Exim can be made to ignore it by setting &%ignore_fromline_hosts%& to
15362 match those hosts that insist on sending it. If the sender is actually a local
15363 process rather than a remote host, and is using &%-bs%& to inject the messages,
15364 &%ignore_fromline_local%& must be set to achieve this effect.
15365
15366
15367 .option ignore_fromline_local main boolean false
15368 See &%ignore_fromline_hosts%& above.
15369
15370 .option keep_environment main "string list" unset
15371 .cindex "environment" "values from"
15372 This option contains a string list of environment variables to keep.
15373 You have to trust these variables or you have to be sure that
15374 these variables do not impose any security risk. Keep in mind that
15375 during the startup phase Exim is running with an effective UID 0 in most
15376 installations. As the default value is an empty list, the default
15377 environment for using libraries, running embedded Perl code, or running
15378 external binaries is empty, and does not not even contain PATH or HOME.
15379
15380 Actually the list is interpreted as a list of patterns
15381 (&<<SECTlistexpand>>&), except that it is not expanded first.
15382
15383 WARNING: Macro substitution is still done first, so having a macro
15384 FOO and having FOO_HOME in your &%keep_environment%& option may have
15385 unexpected results. You may work around this using a regular expression
15386 that does not match the macro name: ^[F]OO_HOME$.
15387
15388 Current versions of Exim issue a warning during startup if you do not mention
15389 &%keep_environment%& in your runtime configuration file and if your
15390 current environment is not empty. Future versions may not issue that warning
15391 anymore.
15392
15393 See the &%add_environment%& main config option for a way to set
15394 environment variables to a fixed value. The environment for &(pipe)&
15395 transports is handled separately, see section &<<SECTpipeenv>>& for
15396 details.
15397
15398
15399 .option keep_malformed main time 4d
15400 This option specifies the length of time to keep messages whose spool files
15401 have been corrupted in some way. This should, of course, never happen. At the
15402 next attempt to deliver such a message, it gets removed. The incident is
15403 logged.
15404
15405
15406 .option ldap_ca_cert_dir main string unset
15407 .cindex "LDAP", "TLS CA certificate directory"
15408 .cindex certificate "directory for LDAP"
15409 This option indicates which directory contains CA certificates for verifying
15410 a TLS certificate presented by an LDAP server.
15411 While Exim does not provide a default value, your SSL library may.
15412 Analogous to &%tls_verify_certificates%& but as a client-side option for LDAP
15413 and constrained to be a directory.
15414
15415
15416 .option ldap_ca_cert_file main string unset
15417 .cindex "LDAP", "TLS CA certificate file"
15418 .cindex certificate "file for LDAP"
15419 This option indicates which file contains CA certificates for verifying
15420 a TLS certificate presented by an LDAP server.
15421 While Exim does not provide a default value, your SSL library may.
15422 Analogous to &%tls_verify_certificates%& but as a client-side option for LDAP
15423 and constrained to be a file.
15424
15425
15426 .option ldap_cert_file main string unset
15427 .cindex "LDAP" "TLS client certificate file"
15428 .cindex certificate "file for LDAP"
15429 This option indicates which file contains an TLS client certificate which
15430 Exim should present to the LDAP server during TLS negotiation.
15431 Should be used together with &%ldap_cert_key%&.
15432
15433
15434 .option ldap_cert_key main string unset
15435 .cindex "LDAP" "TLS client key file"
15436 .cindex certificate "key for LDAP"
15437 This option indicates which file contains the secret/private key to use
15438 to prove identity to the LDAP server during TLS negotiation.
15439 Should be used together with &%ldap_cert_file%&, which contains the
15440 identity to be proven.
15441
15442
15443 .option ldap_cipher_suite main string unset
15444 .cindex "LDAP" "TLS cipher suite"
15445 This controls the TLS cipher-suite negotiation during TLS negotiation with
15446 the LDAP server. See &<<SECTreqciphssl>>& for more details of the format of
15447 cipher-suite options with OpenSSL (as used by LDAP client libraries).
15448
15449
15450 .option ldap_default_servers main "string list" unset
15451 .cindex "LDAP" "default servers"
15452 This option provides a list of LDAP servers which are tried in turn when an
15453 LDAP query does not contain a server. See section &<<SECTforldaque>>& for
15454 details of LDAP queries. This option is available only when Exim has been built
15455 with LDAP support.
15456
15457
15458 .option ldap_require_cert main string unset.
15459 .cindex "LDAP" "policy for LDAP server TLS cert presentation"
15460 This should be one of the values "hard", "demand", "allow", "try" or "never".
15461 A value other than one of these is interpreted as "never".
15462 See the entry "TLS_REQCERT" in your system man page for ldap.conf(5).
15463 Although Exim does not set a default, the LDAP library probably defaults
15464 to hard/demand.
15465
15466
15467 .option ldap_start_tls main boolean false
15468 .cindex "LDAP" "whether or not to negotiate TLS"
15469 If set, Exim will attempt to negotiate TLS with the LDAP server when
15470 connecting on a regular LDAP port. This is the LDAP equivalent of SMTP's
15471 "STARTTLS". This is distinct from using "ldaps", which is the LDAP form
15472 of SSL-on-connect.
15473 In the event of failure to negotiate TLS, the action taken is controlled
15474 by &%ldap_require_cert%&.
15475 This option is ignored for &`ldapi`& connections.
15476
15477
15478 .option ldap_version main integer unset
15479 .cindex "LDAP" "protocol version, forcing"
15480 This option can be used to force Exim to set a specific protocol version for
15481 LDAP. If it option is unset, it is shown by the &%-bP%& command line option as
15482 -1. When this is the case, the default is 3 if LDAP_VERSION3 is defined in
15483 the LDAP headers; otherwise it is 2. This option is available only when Exim
15484 has been built with LDAP support.
15485
15486
15487
15488 .option local_from_check main boolean true
15489 .cindex "&'Sender:'& header line" "disabling addition of"
15490 .cindex "&'From:'& header line" "disabling checking of"
15491 When a message is submitted locally (that is, not over a TCP/IP connection) by
15492 an untrusted user, Exim removes any existing &'Sender:'& header line, and
15493 checks that the &'From:'& header line matches the login of the calling user and
15494 the domain specified by &%qualify_domain%&.
15495
15496 &*Note*&: An unqualified address (no domain) in the &'From:'& header in a
15497 locally submitted message is automatically qualified by Exim, unless the
15498 &%-bnq%& command line option is used.
15499
15500 You can use &%local_from_prefix%& and &%local_from_suffix%& to permit affixes
15501 on the local part. If the &'From:'& header line does not match, Exim adds a
15502 &'Sender:'& header with an address constructed from the calling user's login
15503 and the default qualify domain.
15504
15505 If &%local_from_check%& is set false, the &'From:'& header check is disabled,
15506 and no &'Sender:'& header is ever added. If, in addition, you want to retain
15507 &'Sender:'& header lines supplied by untrusted users, you must also set
15508 &%local_sender_retain%& to be true.
15509
15510 .cindex "envelope sender"
15511 These options affect only the header lines in the message. The envelope sender
15512 is still forced to be the login id at the qualify domain unless
15513 &%untrusted_set_sender%& permits the user to supply an envelope sender.
15514
15515 For messages received over TCP/IP, an ACL can specify &"submission mode"& to
15516 request similar header line checking. See section &<<SECTthesenhea>>&, which
15517 has more details about &'Sender:'& processing.
15518
15519
15520
15521
15522 .option local_from_prefix main string unset
15523 When Exim checks the &'From:'& header line of locally submitted messages for
15524 matching the login id (see &%local_from_check%& above), it can be configured to
15525 ignore certain prefixes and suffixes in the local part of the address. This is
15526 done by setting &%local_from_prefix%& and/or &%local_from_suffix%& to
15527 appropriate lists, in the same form as the &%local_part_prefix%& and
15528 &%local_part_suffix%& router options (see chapter &<<CHAProutergeneric>>&). For
15529 example, if
15530 .code
15531 local_from_prefix = *-
15532 .endd
15533 is set, a &'From:'& line containing
15534 .code
15535 From: anything-user@your.domain.example
15536 .endd
15537 will not cause a &'Sender:'& header to be added if &'user@your.domain.example'&
15538 matches the actual sender address that is constructed from the login name and
15539 qualify domain.
15540
15541
15542 .option local_from_suffix main string unset
15543 See &%local_from_prefix%& above.
15544
15545
15546 .option local_interfaces main "string list" "see below"
15547 This option controls which network interfaces are used by the daemon for
15548 listening; they are also used to identify the local host when routing. Chapter
15549 &<<CHAPinterfaces>>& contains a full description of this option and the related
15550 options &%daemon_smtp_ports%&, &%extra_local_interfaces%&,
15551 &%hosts_treat_as_local%&, and &%tls_on_connect_ports%&. The default value for
15552 &%local_interfaces%& is
15553 .code
15554 local_interfaces = 0.0.0.0
15555 .endd
15556 when Exim is built without IPv6 support; otherwise it is
15557 .code
15558 local_interfaces = <; ::0 ; 0.0.0.0
15559 .endd
15560
15561 .option local_scan_timeout main time 5m
15562 .cindex "timeout" "for &[local_scan()]& function"
15563 .cindex "&[local_scan()]& function" "timeout"
15564 This timeout applies to the &[local_scan()]& function (see chapter
15565 &<<CHAPlocalscan>>&). Zero means &"no timeout"&. If the timeout is exceeded,
15566 the incoming message is rejected with a temporary error if it is an SMTP
15567 message. For a non-SMTP message, the message is dropped and Exim ends with a
15568 non-zero code. The incident is logged on the main and reject logs.
15569
15570
15571
15572 .option local_sender_retain main boolean false
15573 .cindex "&'Sender:'& header line" "retaining from local submission"
15574 When a message is submitted locally (that is, not over a TCP/IP connection) by
15575 an untrusted user, Exim removes any existing &'Sender:'& header line. If you
15576 do not want this to happen, you must set &%local_sender_retain%&, and you must
15577 also set &%local_from_check%& to be false (Exim will complain if you do not).
15578 See also the ACL modifier &`control = suppress_local_fixups`&. Section
15579 &<<SECTthesenhea>>& has more details about &'Sender:'& processing.
15580
15581
15582
15583
15584 .option localhost_number main string&!! unset
15585 .cindex "host" "locally unique number for"
15586 .cindex "message ids" "with multiple hosts"
15587 .vindex "&$localhost_number$&"
15588 Exim's message ids are normally unique only within the local host. If
15589 uniqueness among a set of hosts is required, each host must set a different
15590 value for the &%localhost_number%& option. The string is expanded immediately
15591 after reading the configuration file (so that a number can be computed from the
15592 host name, for example) and the result of the expansion must be a number in the
15593 range 0&--16 (or 0&--10 on operating systems with case-insensitive file
15594 systems). This is available in subsequent string expansions via the variable
15595 &$localhost_number$&. When &%localhost_number is set%&, the final two
15596 characters of the message id, instead of just being a fractional part of the
15597 time, are computed from the time and the local host number as described in
15598 section &<<SECTmessiden>>&.
15599
15600
15601
15602 .option log_file_path main "string list&!!" "set at compile time"
15603 .cindex "log" "file path for"
15604 This option sets the path which is used to determine the names of Exim's log
15605 files, or indicates that logging is to be to syslog, or both. It is expanded
15606 when Exim is entered, so it can, for example, contain a reference to the host
15607 name. If no specific path is set for the log files at compile or run time,
15608 or if the option is unset at run time (i.e. &`log_file_path = `&)
15609 they are written in a sub-directory called &_log_& in Exim's spool directory.
15610 Chapter &<<CHAPlog>>& contains further details about Exim's logging, and
15611 section &<<SECTwhelogwri>>& describes how the contents of &%log_file_path%& are
15612 used. If this string is fixed at your installation (contains no expansion
15613 variables) it is recommended that you do not set this option in the
15614 configuration file, but instead supply the path using LOG_FILE_PATH in
15615 &_Local/Makefile_& so that it is available to Exim for logging errors detected
15616 early on &-- in particular, failure to read the configuration file.
15617
15618
15619 .option log_selector main string unset
15620 .cindex "log" "selectors"
15621 This option can be used to reduce or increase the number of things that Exim
15622 writes to its log files. Its argument is made up of names preceded by plus or
15623 minus characters. For example:
15624 .code
15625 log_selector = +arguments -retry_defer
15626 .endd
15627 A list of possible names and what they control is given in the chapter on
15628 logging, in section &<<SECTlogselector>>&.
15629
15630
15631 .option log_timezone main boolean false
15632 .cindex "log" "timezone for entries"
15633 .vindex "&$tod_log$&"
15634 .vindex "&$tod_zone$&"
15635 By default, the timestamps on log lines are in local time without the
15636 timezone. This means that if your timezone changes twice a year, the timestamps
15637 in log lines are ambiguous for an hour when the clocks go back. One way of
15638 avoiding this problem is to set the timezone to UTC. An alternative is to set
15639 &%log_timezone%& true. This turns on the addition of the timezone offset to
15640 timestamps in log lines. Turning on this option can add quite a lot to the size
15641 of log files because each line is extended by 6 characters. Note that the
15642 &$tod_log$& variable contains the log timestamp without the zone, but there is
15643 another variable called &$tod_zone$& that contains just the timezone offset.
15644
15645
15646 .option lookup_open_max main integer 25
15647 .cindex "too many open files"
15648 .cindex "open files, too many"
15649 .cindex "file" "too many open"
15650 .cindex "lookup" "maximum open files"
15651 .cindex "limit" "open files for lookups"
15652 This option limits the number of simultaneously open files for single-key
15653 lookups that use regular files (that is, &(lsearch)&, &(dbm)&, and &(cdb)&).
15654 Exim normally keeps these files open during routing, because often the same
15655 file is required several times. If the limit is reached, Exim closes the least
15656 recently used file. Note that if you are using the &'ndbm'& library, it
15657 actually opens two files for each logical DBM database, though it still counts
15658 as one for the purposes of &%lookup_open_max%&. If you are getting &"too many
15659 open files"& errors with NDBM, you need to reduce the value of
15660 &%lookup_open_max%&.
15661
15662
15663 .option max_username_length main integer 0
15664 .cindex "length of login name"
15665 .cindex "user name" "maximum length"
15666 .cindex "limit" "user name length"
15667 Some operating systems are broken in that they truncate long arguments to
15668 &[getpwnam()]& to eight characters, instead of returning &"no such user"&. If
15669 this option is set greater than zero, any attempt to call &[getpwnam()]& with
15670 an argument that is longer behaves as if &[getpwnam()]& failed.
15671
15672
15673 .option message_body_newlines main bool false
15674 .cindex "message body" "newlines in variables"
15675 .cindex "newline" "in message body variables"
15676 .vindex "&$message_body$&"
15677 .vindex "&$message_body_end$&"
15678 By default, newlines in the message body are replaced by spaces when setting
15679 the &$message_body$& and &$message_body_end$& expansion variables. If this
15680 option is set true, this no longer happens.
15681
15682
15683 .option message_body_visible main integer 500
15684 .cindex "body of message" "visible size"
15685 .cindex "message body" "visible size"
15686 .vindex "&$message_body$&"
15687 .vindex "&$message_body_end$&"
15688 This option specifies how much of a message's body is to be included in the
15689 &$message_body$& and &$message_body_end$& expansion variables.
15690
15691
15692 .option message_id_header_domain main string&!! unset
15693 .cindex "&'Message-ID:'& header line"
15694 If this option is set, the string is expanded and used as the right hand side
15695 (domain) of the &'Message-ID:'& header that Exim creates if a
15696 locally-originated incoming message does not have one. &"Locally-originated"&
15697 means &"not received over TCP/IP."&
15698 Otherwise, the primary host name is used.
15699 Only letters, digits, dot and hyphen are accepted; any other characters are
15700 replaced by hyphens. If the expansion is forced to fail, or if the result is an
15701 empty string, the option is ignored.
15702
15703
15704 .option message_id_header_text main string&!! unset
15705 If this variable is set, the string is expanded and used to augment the text of
15706 the &'Message-id:'& header that Exim creates if a locally-originated incoming
15707 message does not have one. The text of this header is required by RFC 2822 to
15708 take the form of an address. By default, Exim uses its internal message id as
15709 the local part, and the primary host name as the domain. If this option is set,
15710 it is expanded, and provided the expansion is not forced to fail, and does not
15711 yield an empty string, the result is inserted into the header immediately
15712 before the @, separated from the internal message id by a dot. Any characters
15713 that are illegal in an address are automatically converted into hyphens. This
15714 means that variables such as &$tod_log$& can be used, because the spaces and
15715 colons will become hyphens.
15716
15717
15718 .option message_logs main boolean true
15719 .cindex "message logs" "disabling"
15720 .cindex "log" "message log; disabling"
15721 If this option is turned off, per-message log files are not created in the
15722 &_msglog_& spool sub-directory. This reduces the amount of disk I/O required by
15723 Exim, by reducing the number of files involved in handling a message from a
15724 minimum of four (header spool file, body spool file, delivery journal, and
15725 per-message log) to three. The other major I/O activity is Exim's main log,
15726 which is not affected by this option.
15727
15728
15729 .option message_size_limit main string&!! 50M
15730 .cindex "message" "size limit"
15731 .cindex "limit" "message size"
15732 .cindex "size" "of message, limit"
15733 This option limits the maximum size of message that Exim will process. The
15734 value is expanded for each incoming connection so, for example, it can be made
15735 to depend on the IP address of the remote host for messages arriving via
15736 TCP/IP. After expansion, the value must be a sequence of decimal digits,
15737 optionally followed by K or M.
15738
15739 &*Note*&: This limit cannot be made to depend on a message's sender or any
15740 other properties of an individual message, because it has to be advertised in
15741 the server's response to EHLO. String expansion failure causes a temporary
15742 error. A value of zero means no limit, but its use is not recommended. See also
15743 &%bounce_return_size_limit%&.
15744
15745 Incoming SMTP messages are failed with a 552 error if the limit is
15746 exceeded; locally-generated messages either get a stderr message or a delivery
15747 failure message to the sender, depending on the &%-oe%& setting. Rejection of
15748 an oversized message is logged in both the main and the reject logs. See also
15749 the generic transport option &%message_size_limit%&, which limits the size of
15750 message that an individual transport can process.
15751
15752 If you use a virus-scanner and set this option to to a value larger than the
15753 maximum size that your virus-scanner is configured to support, you may get
15754 failures triggered by large mails. The right size to configure for the
15755 virus-scanner depends upon what data is passed and the options in use but it's
15756 probably safest to just set it to a little larger than this value. E.g., with a
15757 default Exim message size of 50M and a default ClamAV StreamMaxLength of 10M,
15758 some problems may result.
15759
15760 A value of 0 will disable size limit checking; Exim will still advertise the
15761 SIZE extension in an EHLO response, but without a limit, so as to permit
15762 SMTP clients to still indicate the message size along with the MAIL verb.
15763
15764
15765 .option move_frozen_messages main boolean false
15766 .cindex "frozen messages" "moving"
15767 This option, which is available only if Exim has been built with the setting
15768 .code
15769 SUPPORT_MOVE_FROZEN_MESSAGES=yes
15770 .endd
15771 in &_Local/Makefile_&, causes frozen messages and their message logs to be
15772 moved from the &_input_& and &_msglog_& directories on the spool to &_Finput_&
15773 and &_Fmsglog_&, respectively. There is currently no support in Exim or the
15774 standard utilities for handling such moved messages, and they do not show up in
15775 lists generated by &%-bp%& or by the Exim monitor.
15776
15777
15778 .option mua_wrapper main boolean false
15779 Setting this option true causes Exim to run in a very restrictive mode in which
15780 it passes messages synchronously to a smart host. Chapter &<<CHAPnonqueueing>>&
15781 contains a full description of this facility.
15782
15783
15784
15785 .option mysql_servers main "string list" unset
15786 .cindex "MySQL" "server list"
15787 This option provides a list of MySQL servers and associated connection data, to
15788 be used in conjunction with &(mysql)& lookups (see section &<<SECID72>>&). The
15789 option is available only if Exim has been built with MySQL support.
15790
15791
15792 .option never_users main "string list&!!" unset
15793 This option is expanded just once, at the start of Exim's processing. Local
15794 message deliveries are normally run in processes that are setuid to the
15795 recipient, and remote deliveries are normally run under Exim's own uid and gid.
15796 It is usually desirable to prevent any deliveries from running as root, as a
15797 safety precaution.
15798
15799 When Exim is built, an option called FIXED_NEVER_USERS can be set to a
15800 list of users that must not be used for local deliveries. This list is fixed in
15801 the binary and cannot be overridden by the configuration file. By default, it
15802 contains just the single user name &"root"&. The &%never_users%& runtime option
15803 can be used to add more users to the fixed list.
15804
15805 If a message is to be delivered as one of the users on the fixed list or the
15806 &%never_users%& list, an error occurs, and delivery is deferred. A common
15807 example is
15808 .code
15809 never_users = root:daemon:bin
15810 .endd
15811 Including root is redundant if it is also on the fixed list, but it does no
15812 harm. This option overrides the &%pipe_as_creator%& option of the &(pipe)&
15813 transport driver.
15814
15815
15816 .option openssl_options main "string list" "+no_sslv2 +single_dh_use +no_ticket"
15817 .cindex "OpenSSL "compatibility options"
15818 This option allows an administrator to adjust the SSL options applied
15819 by OpenSSL to connections. It is given as a space-separated list of items,
15820 each one to be +added or -subtracted from the current value.
15821
15822 This option is only available if Exim is built against OpenSSL. The values
15823 available for this option vary according to the age of your OpenSSL install.
15824 The &"all"& value controls a subset of flags which are available, typically
15825 the bug workaround options. The &'SSL_CTX_set_options'& man page will
15826 list the values known on your system and Exim should support all the
15827 &"bug workaround"& options and many of the &"modifying"& options. The Exim
15828 names lose the leading &"SSL_OP_"& and are lower-cased.
15829
15830 Note that adjusting the options can have severe impact upon the security of
15831 SSL as used by Exim. It is possible to disable safety checks and shoot
15832 yourself in the foot in various unpleasant ways. This option should not be
15833 adjusted lightly. An unrecognised item will be detected at startup, by
15834 invoking Exim with the &%-bV%& flag.
15835
15836 The option affects Exim operating both as a server and as a client.
15837
15838 Historical note: prior to release 4.80, Exim defaulted this value to
15839 "+dont_insert_empty_fragments", which may still be needed for compatibility
15840 with some clients, but which lowers security by increasing exposure to
15841 some now infamous attacks.
15842
15843 Examples:
15844 .code
15845 # Make both old MS and old Eudora happy:
15846 openssl_options = -all +microsoft_big_sslv3_buffer \
15847 +dont_insert_empty_fragments
15848
15849 # Disable older protocol versions:
15850 openssl_options = +no_sslv2 +no_sslv3
15851 .endd
15852
15853 Possible options may include:
15854 .ilist
15855 &`all`&
15856 .next
15857 &`allow_unsafe_legacy_renegotiation`&
15858 .next
15859 &`cipher_server_preference`&
15860 .next
15861 &`dont_insert_empty_fragments`&
15862 .next
15863 &`ephemeral_rsa`&
15864 .next
15865 &`legacy_server_connect`&
15866 .next
15867 &`microsoft_big_sslv3_buffer`&
15868 .next
15869 &`microsoft_sess_id_bug`&
15870 .next
15871 &`msie_sslv2_rsa_padding`&
15872 .next
15873 &`netscape_challenge_bug`&
15874 .next
15875 &`netscape_reuse_cipher_change_bug`&
15876 .next
15877 &`no_compression`&
15878 .next
15879 &`no_session_resumption_on_renegotiation`&
15880 .next
15881 &`no_sslv2`&
15882 .next
15883 &`no_sslv3`&
15884 .next
15885 &`no_ticket`&
15886 .next
15887 &`no_tlsv1`&
15888 .next
15889 &`no_tlsv1_1`&
15890 .next
15891 &`no_tlsv1_2`&
15892 .next
15893 &`safari_ecdhe_ecdsa_bug`&
15894 .next
15895 &`single_dh_use`&
15896 .next
15897 &`single_ecdh_use`&
15898 .next
15899 &`ssleay_080_client_dh_bug`&
15900 .next
15901 &`sslref2_reuse_cert_type_bug`&
15902 .next
15903 &`tls_block_padding_bug`&
15904 .next
15905 &`tls_d5_bug`&
15906 .next
15907 &`tls_rollback_bug`&
15908 .endlist
15909
15910 As an aside, the &`safari_ecdhe_ecdsa_bug`& item is a misnomer and affects
15911 all clients connecting using the MacOS SecureTransport TLS facility prior
15912 to MacOS 10.8.4, including email clients. If you see old MacOS clients failing
15913 to negotiate TLS then this option value might help, provided that your OpenSSL
15914 release is new enough to contain this work-around. This may be a situation
15915 where you have to upgrade OpenSSL to get buggy clients working.
15916
15917
15918 .option oracle_servers main "string list" unset
15919 .cindex "Oracle" "server list"
15920 This option provides a list of Oracle servers and associated connection data,
15921 to be used in conjunction with &(oracle)& lookups (see section &<<SECID72>>&).
15922 The option is available only if Exim has been built with Oracle support.
15923
15924
15925 .option percent_hack_domains main "domain list&!!" unset
15926 .cindex "&""percent hack""&"
15927 .cindex "source routing" "in email address"
15928 .cindex "address" "source-routed"
15929 The &"percent hack"& is the convention whereby a local part containing a
15930 percent sign is re-interpreted as a new email address, with the percent
15931 replaced by @. This is sometimes called &"source routing"&, though that term is
15932 also applied to RFC 2822 addresses that begin with an @ character. If this
15933 option is set, Exim implements the percent facility for those domains listed,
15934 but no others. This happens before an incoming SMTP address is tested against
15935 an ACL.
15936
15937 &*Warning*&: The &"percent hack"& has often been abused by people who are
15938 trying to get round relaying restrictions. For this reason, it is best avoided
15939 if at all possible. Unfortunately, a number of less security-conscious MTAs
15940 implement it unconditionally. If you are running Exim on a gateway host, and
15941 routing mail through to internal MTAs without processing the local parts, it is
15942 a good idea to reject recipient addresses with percent characters in their
15943 local parts. Exim's default configuration does this.
15944
15945
15946 .option perl_at_start main boolean false
15947 .cindex "Perl"
15948 This option is available only when Exim is built with an embedded Perl
15949 interpreter. See chapter &<<CHAPperl>>& for details of its use.
15950
15951
15952 .option perl_startup main string unset
15953 .cindex "Perl"
15954 This option is available only when Exim is built with an embedded Perl
15955 interpreter. See chapter &<<CHAPperl>>& for details of its use.
15956
15957 .option perl_startup main boolean false
15958 .cindex "Perl"
15959 This Option enables the taint mode of the embedded Perl interpreter.
15960
15961
15962 .option pgsql_servers main "string list" unset
15963 .cindex "PostgreSQL lookup type" "server list"
15964 This option provides a list of PostgreSQL servers and associated connection
15965 data, to be used in conjunction with &(pgsql)& lookups (see section
15966 &<<SECID72>>&). The option is available only if Exim has been built with
15967 PostgreSQL support.
15968
15969
15970 .option pid_file_path main string&!! "set at compile time"
15971 .cindex "daemon" "pid file path"
15972 .cindex "pid file, path for"
15973 This option sets the name of the file to which the Exim daemon writes its
15974 process id. The string is expanded, so it can contain, for example, references
15975 to the host name:
15976 .code
15977 pid_file_path = /var/log/$primary_hostname/exim.pid
15978 .endd
15979 If no path is set, the pid is written to the file &_exim-daemon.pid_& in Exim's
15980 spool directory.
15981 The value set by the option can be overridden by the &%-oP%& command line
15982 option. A pid file is not written if a &"non-standard"& daemon is run by means
15983 of the &%-oX%& option, unless a path is explicitly supplied by &%-oP%&.
15984
15985
15986 .option pipelining_advertise_hosts main "host list&!!" *
15987 .cindex "PIPELINING" "suppressing advertising"
15988 This option can be used to suppress the advertisement of the SMTP
15989 PIPELINING extension to specific hosts. See also the &*no_pipelining*&
15990 control in section &<<SECTcontrols>>&. When PIPELINING is not advertised and
15991 &%smtp_enforce_sync%& is true, an Exim server enforces strict synchronization
15992 for each SMTP command and response. When PIPELINING is advertised, Exim assumes
15993 that clients will use it; &"out of order"& commands that are &"expected"& do
15994 not count as protocol errors (see &%smtp_max_synprot_errors%&).
15995
15996
15997 .option prdr_enable main boolean false
15998 .cindex "PRDR" "enabling on server"
15999 This option can be used to enable the Per-Recipient Data Response extension
16000 to SMTP, defined by Eric Hall.
16001 If the option is set, PRDR is advertised by Exim when operating as a server.
16002 If the client requests PRDR, and more than one recipient, for a message
16003 an additional ACL is called for each recipient after the message content
16004 is received. See section &<<SECTPRDRACL>>&.
16005
16006 .option preserve_message_logs main boolean false
16007 .cindex "message logs" "preserving"
16008 If this option is set, message log files are not deleted when messages are
16009 completed. Instead, they are moved to a sub-directory of the spool directory
16010 called &_msglog.OLD_&, where they remain available for statistical or debugging
16011 purposes. This is a dangerous option to set on systems with any appreciable
16012 volume of mail. Use with care!
16013
16014
16015 .option primary_hostname main string "see below"
16016 .cindex "name" "of local host"
16017 .cindex "host" "name of local"
16018 .cindex "local host" "name of"
16019 .vindex "&$primary_hostname$&"
16020 This specifies the name of the current host. It is used in the default EHLO or
16021 HELO command for outgoing SMTP messages (changeable via the &%helo_data%&
16022 option in the &(smtp)& transport), and as the default for &%qualify_domain%&.
16023 The value is also used by default in some SMTP response messages from an Exim
16024 server. This can be changed dynamically by setting &%smtp_active_hostname%&.
16025
16026 If &%primary_hostname%& is not set, Exim calls &[uname()]& to find the host
16027 name. If this fails, Exim panics and dies. If the name returned by &[uname()]&
16028 contains only one component, Exim passes it to &[gethostbyname()]& (or
16029 &[getipnodebyname()]& when available) in order to obtain the fully qualified
16030 version. The variable &$primary_hostname$& contains the host name, whether set
16031 explicitly by this option, or defaulted.
16032
16033
16034 .option print_topbitchars main boolean false
16035 .cindex "printing characters"
16036 .cindex "8-bit characters"
16037 By default, Exim considers only those characters whose codes lie in the range
16038 32&--126 to be printing characters. In a number of circumstances (for example,
16039 when writing log entries) non-printing characters are converted into escape
16040 sequences, primarily to avoid messing up the layout. If &%print_topbitchars%&
16041 is set, code values of 128 and above are also considered to be printing
16042 characters.
16043
16044 This option also affects the header syntax checks performed by the
16045 &(autoreply)& transport, and whether Exim uses RFC 2047 encoding of
16046 the user's full name when constructing From: and Sender: addresses (as
16047 described in section &<<SECTconstr>>&). Setting this option can cause
16048 Exim to generate eight bit message headers that do not conform to the
16049 standards.
16050
16051
16052 .option process_log_path main string unset
16053 .cindex "process log path"
16054 .cindex "log" "process log"
16055 .cindex "&'exiwhat'&"
16056 This option sets the name of the file to which an Exim process writes its
16057 &"process log"& when sent a USR1 signal. This is used by the &'exiwhat'&
16058 utility script. If this option is unset, the file called &_exim-process.info_&
16059 in Exim's spool directory is used. The ability to specify the name explicitly
16060 can be useful in environments where two different Exims are running, using
16061 different spool directories.
16062
16063
16064 .option prod_requires_admin main boolean true
16065 .cindex "restricting access to features"
16066 .oindex "&%-M%&"
16067 .oindex "&%-R%&"
16068 .oindex "&%-q%&"
16069 The &%-M%&, &%-R%&, and &%-q%& command-line options require the caller to be an
16070 admin user unless &%prod_requires_admin%& is set false. See also
16071 &%queue_list_requires_admin%& and &%commandline_checks_require_admin%&.
16072
16073
16074 .option qualify_domain main string "see below"
16075 .cindex "domain" "for qualifying addresses"
16076 .cindex "address" "qualification"
16077 This option specifies the domain name that is added to any envelope sender
16078 addresses that do not have a domain qualification. It also applies to
16079 recipient addresses if &%qualify_recipient%& is not set. Unqualified addresses
16080 are accepted by default only for locally-generated messages. Qualification is
16081 also applied to addresses in header lines such as &'From:'& and &'To:'& for
16082 locally-generated messages, unless the &%-bnq%& command line option is used.
16083
16084 Messages from external sources must always contain fully qualified addresses,
16085 unless the sending host matches &%sender_unqualified_hosts%& or
16086 &%recipient_unqualified_hosts%& (as appropriate), in which case incoming
16087 addresses are qualified with &%qualify_domain%& or &%qualify_recipient%& as
16088 necessary. Internally, Exim always works with fully qualified envelope
16089 addresses. If &%qualify_domain%& is not set, it defaults to the
16090 &%primary_hostname%& value.
16091
16092
16093 .option qualify_recipient main string "see below"
16094 This option allows you to specify a different domain for qualifying recipient
16095 addresses to the one that is used for senders. See &%qualify_domain%& above.
16096
16097
16098
16099 .option queue_domains main "domain list&!!" unset
16100 .cindex "domain" "specifying non-immediate delivery"
16101 .cindex "queueing incoming messages"
16102 .cindex "message" "queueing certain domains"
16103 This option lists domains for which immediate delivery is not required.
16104 A delivery process is started whenever a message is received, but only those
16105 domains that do not match are processed. All other deliveries wait until the
16106 next queue run. See also &%hold_domains%& and &%queue_smtp_domains%&.
16107
16108
16109 .option queue_list_requires_admin main boolean true
16110 .cindex "restricting access to features"
16111 .oindex "&%-bp%&"
16112 The &%-bp%& command-line option, which lists the messages that are on the
16113 queue, requires the caller to be an admin user unless
16114 &%queue_list_requires_admin%& is set false.
16115 See also &%prod_requires_admin%& and &%commandline_checks_require_admin%&.
16116
16117
16118 .option queue_only main boolean false
16119 .cindex "queueing incoming messages"
16120 .cindex "message" "queueing unconditionally"
16121 If &%queue_only%& is set, a delivery process is not automatically started
16122 whenever a message is received. Instead, the message waits on the queue for the
16123 next queue run. Even if &%queue_only%& is false, incoming messages may not get
16124 delivered immediately when certain conditions (such as heavy load) occur.
16125
16126 The &%-odq%& command line has the same effect as &%queue_only%&. The &%-odb%&
16127 and &%-odi%& command line options override &%queue_only%& unless
16128 &%queue_only_override%& is set false. See also &%queue_only_file%&,
16129 &%queue_only_load%&, and &%smtp_accept_queue%&.
16130
16131
16132 .option queue_only_file main string unset
16133 .cindex "queueing incoming messages"
16134 .cindex "message" "queueing by file existence"
16135 This option can be set to a colon-separated list of absolute path names, each
16136 one optionally preceded by &"smtp"&. When Exim is receiving a message,
16137 it tests for the existence of each listed path using a call to &[stat()]&. For
16138 each path that exists, the corresponding queueing option is set.
16139 For paths with no prefix, &%queue_only%& is set; for paths prefixed by
16140 &"smtp"&, &%queue_smtp_domains%& is set to match all domains. So, for example,
16141 .code
16142 queue_only_file = smtp/some/file
16143 .endd
16144 causes Exim to behave as if &%queue_smtp_domains%& were set to &"*"& whenever
16145 &_/some/file_& exists.
16146
16147
16148 .option queue_only_load main fixed-point unset
16149 .cindex "load average"
16150 .cindex "queueing incoming messages"
16151 .cindex "message" "queueing by load"
16152 If the system load average is higher than this value, incoming messages from
16153 all sources are queued, and no automatic deliveries are started. If this
16154 happens during local or remote SMTP input, all subsequent messages received on
16155 the same SMTP connection are queued by default, whatever happens to the load in
16156 the meantime, but this can be changed by setting &%queue_only_load_latch%&
16157 false.
16158
16159 Deliveries will subsequently be performed by queue runner processes. This
16160 option has no effect on ancient operating systems on which Exim cannot
16161 determine the load average. See also &%deliver_queue_load_max%& and
16162 &%smtp_load_reserve%&.
16163
16164
16165 .option queue_only_load_latch main boolean true
16166 .cindex "load average" "re-evaluating per message"
16167 When this option is true (the default), once one message has been queued
16168 because the load average is higher than the value set by &%queue_only_load%&,
16169 all subsequent messages received on the same SMTP connection are also queued.
16170 This is a deliberate choice; even though the load average may fall below the
16171 threshold, it doesn't seem right to deliver later messages on the same
16172 connection when not delivering earlier ones. However, there are special
16173 circumstances such as very long-lived connections from scanning appliances
16174 where this is not the best strategy. In such cases, &%queue_only_load_latch%&
16175 should be set false. This causes the value of the load average to be
16176 re-evaluated for each message.
16177
16178
16179 .option queue_only_override main boolean true
16180 .cindex "queueing incoming messages"
16181 When this option is true, the &%-od%&&'x'& command line options override the
16182 setting of &%queue_only%& or &%queue_only_file%& in the configuration file. If
16183 &%queue_only_override%& is set false, the &%-od%&&'x'& options cannot be used
16184 to override; they are accepted, but ignored.
16185
16186
16187 .option queue_run_in_order main boolean false
16188 .cindex "queue runner" "processing messages in order"
16189 If this option is set, queue runs happen in order of message arrival instead of
16190 in an arbitrary order. For this to happen, a complete list of the entire queue
16191 must be set up before the deliveries start. When the queue is all held in a
16192 single directory (the default), a single list is created for both the ordered
16193 and the non-ordered cases. However, if &%split_spool_directory%& is set, a
16194 single list is not created when &%queue_run_in_order%& is false. In this case,
16195 the sub-directories are processed one at a time (in a random order), and this
16196 avoids setting up one huge list for the whole queue. Thus, setting
16197 &%queue_run_in_order%& with &%split_spool_directory%& may degrade performance
16198 when the queue is large, because of the extra work in setting up the single,
16199 large list. In most situations, &%queue_run_in_order%& should not be set.
16200
16201
16202
16203 .option queue_run_max main integer&!! 5
16204 .cindex "queue runner" "maximum number of"
16205 This controls the maximum number of queue runner processes that an Exim daemon
16206 can run simultaneously. This does not mean that it starts them all at once,
16207 but rather that if the maximum number are still running when the time comes to
16208 start another one, it refrains from starting another one. This can happen with
16209 very large queues and/or very sluggish deliveries. This option does not,
16210 however, interlock with other processes, so additional queue runners can be
16211 started by other means, or by killing and restarting the daemon.
16212
16213 Setting this option to zero does not suppress queue runs; rather, it disables
16214 the limit, allowing any number of simultaneous queue runner processes to be
16215 run. If you do not want queue runs to occur, omit the &%-q%&&'xx'& setting on
16216 the daemon's command line.
16217
16218 .cindex queues named
16219 .cindex "named queues"
16220 To set limits for different named queues use
16221 an expansion depending on the &$queue_name$& variable.
16222
16223 .option queue_smtp_domains main "domain list&!!" unset
16224 .cindex "queueing incoming messages"
16225 .cindex "message" "queueing remote deliveries"
16226 When this option is set, a delivery process is started whenever a message is
16227 received, routing is performed, and local deliveries take place.
16228 However, if any SMTP deliveries are required for domains that match
16229 &%queue_smtp_domains%&, they are not immediately delivered, but instead the
16230 message waits on the queue for the next queue run. Since routing of the message
16231 has taken place, Exim knows to which remote hosts it must be delivered, and so
16232 when the queue run happens, multiple messages for the same host are delivered
16233 over a single SMTP connection. The &%-odqs%& command line option causes all
16234 SMTP deliveries to be queued in this way, and is equivalent to setting
16235 &%queue_smtp_domains%& to &"*"&. See also &%hold_domains%& and
16236 &%queue_domains%&.
16237
16238
16239 .option receive_timeout main time 0s
16240 .cindex "timeout" "for non-SMTP input"
16241 This option sets the timeout for accepting a non-SMTP message, that is, the
16242 maximum time that Exim waits when reading a message on the standard input. If
16243 the value is zero, it will wait for ever. This setting is overridden by the
16244 &%-or%& command line option. The timeout for incoming SMTP messages is
16245 controlled by &%smtp_receive_timeout%&.
16246
16247 .option received_header_text main string&!! "see below"
16248 .cindex "customizing" "&'Received:'& header"
16249 .cindex "&'Received:'& header line" "customizing"
16250 This string defines the contents of the &'Received:'& message header that is
16251 added to each message, except for the timestamp, which is automatically added
16252 on at the end (preceded by a semicolon). The string is expanded each time it is
16253 used. If the expansion yields an empty string, no &'Received:'& header line is
16254 added to the message. Otherwise, the string should start with the text
16255 &"Received:"& and conform to the RFC 2822 specification for &'Received:'&
16256 header lines. The default setting is:
16257
16258 .code
16259 received_header_text = Received: \
16260 ${if def:sender_rcvhost {from $sender_rcvhost\n\t}\
16261 {${if def:sender_ident \
16262 {from ${quote_local_part:$sender_ident} }}\
16263 ${if def:sender_helo_name {(helo=$sender_helo_name)\n\t}}}}\
16264 by $primary_hostname \
16265 ${if def:received_protocol {with $received_protocol}} \
16266 ${if def:tls_in_cipher {($tls_in_cipher)\n\t}}\
16267 (Exim $version_number)\n\t\
16268 ${if def:sender_address \
16269 {(envelope-from <$sender_address>)\n\t}}\
16270 id $message_exim_id\
16271 ${if def:received_for {\n\tfor $received_for}}
16272 .endd
16273
16274 The reference to the TLS cipher is omitted when Exim is built without TLS
16275 support. The use of conditional expansions ensures that this works for both
16276 locally generated messages and messages received from remote hosts, giving
16277 header lines such as the following:
16278 .code
16279 Received: from scrooge.carol.example ([192.168.12.25] ident=root)
16280 by marley.carol.example with esmtp (Exim 4.00)
16281 (envelope-from <bob@carol.example>)
16282 id 16IOWa-00019l-00
16283 for chas@dickens.example; Tue, 25 Dec 2001 14:43:44 +0000
16284 Received: by scrooge.carol.example with local (Exim 4.00)
16285 id 16IOWW-000083-00; Tue, 25 Dec 2001 14:43:41 +0000
16286 .endd
16287 Until the body of the message has been received, the timestamp is the time when
16288 the message started to be received. Once the body has arrived, and all policy
16289 checks have taken place, the timestamp is updated to the time at which the
16290 message was accepted.
16291
16292
16293 .option received_headers_max main integer 30
16294 .cindex "loop" "prevention"
16295 .cindex "mail loop prevention"
16296 .cindex "&'Received:'& header line" "counting"
16297 When a message is to be delivered, the number of &'Received:'& headers is
16298 counted, and if it is greater than this parameter, a mail loop is assumed to
16299 have occurred, the delivery is abandoned, and an error message is generated.
16300 This applies to both local and remote deliveries.
16301
16302
16303 .option recipient_unqualified_hosts main "host list&!!" unset
16304 .cindex "unqualified addresses"
16305 .cindex "host" "unqualified addresses from"
16306 This option lists those hosts from which Exim is prepared to accept unqualified
16307 recipient addresses in message envelopes. The addresses are made fully
16308 qualified by the addition of the &%qualify_recipient%& value. This option also
16309 affects message header lines. Exim does not reject unqualified recipient
16310 addresses in headers, but it qualifies them only if the message came from a
16311 host that matches &%recipient_unqualified_hosts%&,
16312 or if the message was submitted locally (not using TCP/IP), and the &%-bnq%&
16313 option was not set.
16314
16315
16316 .option recipients_max main integer 0
16317 .cindex "limit" "number of recipients"
16318 .cindex "recipient" "maximum number"
16319 If this option is set greater than zero, it specifies the maximum number of
16320 original recipients for any message. Additional recipients that are generated
16321 by aliasing or forwarding do not count. SMTP messages get a 452 response for
16322 all recipients over the limit; earlier recipients are delivered as normal.
16323 Non-SMTP messages with too many recipients are failed, and no deliveries are
16324 done.
16325
16326 .cindex "RCPT" "maximum number of incoming"
16327 &*Note*&: The RFCs specify that an SMTP server should accept at least 100
16328 RCPT commands in a single message.
16329
16330
16331 .option recipients_max_reject main boolean false
16332 If this option is set true, Exim rejects SMTP messages containing too many
16333 recipients by giving 552 errors to the surplus RCPT commands, and a 554
16334 error to the eventual DATA command. Otherwise (the default) it gives a 452
16335 error to the surplus RCPT commands and accepts the message on behalf of the
16336 initial set of recipients. The remote server should then re-send the message
16337 for the remaining recipients at a later time.
16338
16339
16340 .option remote_max_parallel main integer 2
16341 .cindex "delivery" "parallelism for remote"
16342 This option controls parallel delivery of one message to a number of remote
16343 hosts. If the value is less than 2, parallel delivery is disabled, and Exim
16344 does all the remote deliveries for a message one by one. Otherwise, if a single
16345 message has to be delivered to more than one remote host, or if several copies
16346 have to be sent to the same remote host, up to &%remote_max_parallel%&
16347 deliveries are done simultaneously. If more than &%remote_max_parallel%&
16348 deliveries are required, the maximum number of processes are started, and as
16349 each one finishes, another is begun. The order of starting processes is the
16350 same as if sequential delivery were being done, and can be controlled by the
16351 &%remote_sort_domains%& option. If parallel delivery takes place while running
16352 with debugging turned on, the debugging output from each delivery process is
16353 tagged with its process id.
16354
16355 This option controls only the maximum number of parallel deliveries for one
16356 message in one Exim delivery process. Because Exim has no central queue
16357 manager, there is no way of controlling the total number of simultaneous
16358 deliveries if the configuration allows a delivery attempt as soon as a message
16359 is received.
16360
16361 .cindex "number of deliveries"
16362 .cindex "delivery" "maximum number of"
16363 If you want to control the total number of deliveries on the system, you
16364 need to set the &%queue_only%& option. This ensures that all incoming messages
16365 are added to the queue without starting a delivery process. Then set up an Exim
16366 daemon to start queue runner processes at appropriate intervals (probably
16367 fairly often, for example, every minute), and limit the total number of queue
16368 runners by setting the &%queue_run_max%& parameter. Because each queue runner
16369 delivers only one message at a time, the maximum number of deliveries that can
16370 then take place at once is &%queue_run_max%& multiplied by
16371 &%remote_max_parallel%&.
16372
16373 If it is purely remote deliveries you want to control, use
16374 &%queue_smtp_domains%& instead of &%queue_only%&. This has the added benefit of
16375 doing the SMTP routing before queueing, so that several messages for the same
16376 host will eventually get delivered down the same connection.
16377
16378
16379 .option remote_sort_domains main "domain list&!!" unset
16380 .cindex "sorting remote deliveries"
16381 .cindex "delivery" "sorting remote"
16382 When there are a number of remote deliveries for a message, they are sorted by
16383 domain into the order given by this list. For example,
16384 .code
16385 remote_sort_domains = *.cam.ac.uk:*.uk
16386 .endd
16387 would attempt to deliver to all addresses in the &'cam.ac.uk'& domain first,
16388 then to those in the &%uk%& domain, then to any others.
16389
16390
16391 .option retry_data_expire main time 7d
16392 .cindex "hints database" "data expiry"
16393 This option sets a &"use before"& time on retry information in Exim's hints
16394 database. Any older retry data is ignored. This means that, for example, once a
16395 host has not been tried for 7 days, Exim behaves as if it has no knowledge of
16396 past failures.
16397
16398
16399 .option retry_interval_max main time 24h
16400 .cindex "retry" "limit on interval"
16401 .cindex "limit" "on retry interval"
16402 Chapter &<<CHAPretry>>& describes Exim's mechanisms for controlling the
16403 intervals between delivery attempts for messages that cannot be delivered
16404 straight away. This option sets an overall limit to the length of time between
16405 retries. It cannot be set greater than 24 hours; any attempt to do so forces
16406 the default value.
16407
16408
16409 .option return_path_remove main boolean true
16410 .cindex "&'Return-path:'& header line" "removing"
16411 RFC 2821, section 4.4, states that an SMTP server must insert a
16412 &'Return-path:'& header line into a message when it makes a &"final delivery"&.
16413 The &'Return-path:'& header preserves the sender address as received in the
16414 MAIL command. This description implies that this header should not be present
16415 in an incoming message. If &%return_path_remove%& is true, any existing
16416 &'Return-path:'& headers are removed from messages at the time they are
16417 received. Exim's transports have options for adding &'Return-path:'& headers at
16418 the time of delivery. They are normally used only for final local deliveries.
16419
16420
16421 .option return_size_limit main integer 100K
16422 This option is an obsolete synonym for &%bounce_return_size_limit%&.
16423
16424
16425 .option rfc1413_hosts main "host list&!!" @[]
16426 .cindex "RFC 1413"
16427 .cindex "host" "for RFC 1413 calls"
16428 RFC 1413 identification calls are made to any client host which matches
16429 an item in the list.
16430 The default value specifies just this host, being any local interface
16431 for the system.
16432
16433 .option rfc1413_query_timeout main time 0s
16434 .cindex "RFC 1413" "query timeout"
16435 .cindex "timeout" "for RFC 1413 call"
16436 This sets the timeout on RFC 1413 identification calls. If it is set to zero,
16437 no RFC 1413 calls are ever made.
16438
16439
16440 .option sender_unqualified_hosts main "host list&!!" unset
16441 .cindex "unqualified addresses"
16442 .cindex "host" "unqualified addresses from"
16443 This option lists those hosts from which Exim is prepared to accept unqualified
16444 sender addresses. The addresses are made fully qualified by the addition of
16445 &%qualify_domain%&. This option also affects message header lines. Exim does
16446 not reject unqualified addresses in headers that contain sender addresses, but
16447 it qualifies them only if the message came from a host that matches
16448 &%sender_unqualified_hosts%&, or if the message was submitted locally (not
16449 using TCP/IP), and the &%-bnq%& option was not set.
16450
16451 .option set_environment main "string list" empty
16452 .cindex "environment"
16453 This option allows to set individual environment variables that the
16454 currently linked libraries and programs in child processes use. The
16455 default list is empty,
16456
16457
16458 .option slow_lookup_log main integer 0
16459 .cindex "logging" "slow lookups"
16460 .cindex "dns" "logging slow lookups"
16461 This option controls logging of slow lookups.
16462 If the value is nonzero it is taken as a number of milliseconds
16463 and lookups taking longer than this are logged.
16464 Currently this applies only to DNS lookups.
16465
16466
16467
16468 .option smtp_accept_keepalive main boolean true
16469 .cindex "keepalive" "on incoming connection"
16470 This option controls the setting of the SO_KEEPALIVE option on incoming
16471 TCP/IP socket connections. When set, it causes the kernel to probe idle
16472 connections periodically, by sending packets with &"old"& sequence numbers. The
16473 other end of the connection should send an acknowledgment if the connection is
16474 still okay or a reset if the connection has been aborted. The reason for doing
16475 this is that it has the beneficial effect of freeing up certain types of
16476 connection that can get stuck when the remote host is disconnected without
16477 tidying up the TCP/IP call properly. The keepalive mechanism takes several
16478 hours to detect unreachable hosts.
16479
16480
16481
16482 .option smtp_accept_max main integer 20
16483 .cindex "limit" "incoming SMTP connections"
16484 .cindex "SMTP" "incoming connection count"
16485 .cindex "inetd"
16486 This option specifies the maximum number of simultaneous incoming SMTP calls
16487 that Exim will accept. It applies only to the listening daemon; there is no
16488 control (in Exim) when incoming SMTP is being handled by &'inetd'&. If the
16489 value is set to zero, no limit is applied. However, it is required to be
16490 non-zero if either &%smtp_accept_max_per_host%& or &%smtp_accept_queue%& is
16491 set. See also &%smtp_accept_reserve%& and &%smtp_load_reserve%&.
16492
16493 A new SMTP connection is immediately rejected if the &%smtp_accept_max%& limit
16494 has been reached. If not, Exim first checks &%smtp_accept_max_per_host%&. If
16495 that limit has not been reached for the client host, &%smtp_accept_reserve%&
16496 and &%smtp_load_reserve%& are then checked before accepting the connection.
16497
16498
16499 .option smtp_accept_max_nonmail main integer 10
16500 .cindex "limit" "non-mail SMTP commands"
16501 .cindex "SMTP" "limiting non-mail commands"
16502 Exim counts the number of &"non-mail"& commands in an SMTP session, and drops
16503 the connection if there are too many. This option defines &"too many"&. The
16504 check catches some denial-of-service attacks, repeated failing AUTHs, or a mad
16505 client looping sending EHLO, for example. The check is applied only if the
16506 client host matches &%smtp_accept_max_nonmail_hosts%&.
16507
16508 When a new message is expected, one occurrence of RSET is not counted. This
16509 allows a client to send one RSET between messages (this is not necessary,
16510 but some clients do it). Exim also allows one uncounted occurrence of HELO
16511 or EHLO, and one occurrence of STARTTLS between messages. After
16512 starting up a TLS session, another EHLO is expected, and so it too is not
16513 counted. The first occurrence of AUTH in a connection, or immediately
16514 following STARTTLS is not counted. Otherwise, all commands other than
16515 MAIL, RCPT, DATA, and QUIT are counted.
16516
16517
16518 .option smtp_accept_max_nonmail_hosts main "host list&!!" *
16519 You can control which hosts are subject to the &%smtp_accept_max_nonmail%&
16520 check by setting this option. The default value makes it apply to all hosts. By
16521 changing the value, you can exclude any badly-behaved hosts that you have to
16522 live with.
16523
16524
16525 . Allow this long option name to split; give it unsplit as a fifth argument
16526 . for the automatic .oindex that is generated by .option.
16527 . We insert " &~&~" which is both pretty nasty visually and results in
16528 . non-searchable text. HowItWorks.txt mentions an option for inserting
16529 . zero-width-space, which would be nicer visually and results in (at least)
16530 . html that Firefox will split on when it's forced to reflow (rather than
16531 . inserting a horizontal scrollbar). However, the text is still not
16532 . searchable. NM changed this occurrence for bug 1197 to no longer allow
16533 . the option name to split.
16534
16535 .option "smtp_accept_max_per_connection" main integer 1000 &&&
16536 smtp_accept_max_per_connection
16537 .cindex "SMTP" "limiting incoming message count"
16538 .cindex "limit" "messages per SMTP connection"
16539 The value of this option limits the number of MAIL commands that Exim is
16540 prepared to accept over a single SMTP connection, whether or not each command
16541 results in the transfer of a message. After the limit is reached, a 421
16542 response is given to subsequent MAIL commands. This limit is a safety
16543 precaution against a client that goes mad (incidents of this type have been
16544 seen).
16545
16546
16547 .option smtp_accept_max_per_host main string&!! unset
16548 .cindex "limit" "SMTP connections from one host"
16549 .cindex "host" "limiting SMTP connections from"
16550 This option restricts the number of simultaneous IP connections from a single
16551 host (strictly, from a single IP address) to the Exim daemon. The option is
16552 expanded, to enable different limits to be applied to different hosts by
16553 reference to &$sender_host_address$&. Once the limit is reached, additional
16554 connection attempts from the same host are rejected with error code 421. This
16555 is entirely independent of &%smtp_accept_reserve%&. The option's default value
16556 of zero imposes no limit. If this option is set greater than zero, it is
16557 required that &%smtp_accept_max%& be non-zero.
16558
16559 &*Warning*&: When setting this option you should not use any expansion
16560 constructions that take an appreciable amount of time. The expansion and test
16561 happen in the main daemon loop, in order to reject additional connections
16562 without forking additional processes (otherwise a denial-of-service attack
16563 could cause a vast number or processes to be created). While the daemon is
16564 doing this processing, it cannot accept any other incoming connections.
16565
16566
16567
16568 .option smtp_accept_queue main integer 0
16569 .cindex "SMTP" "incoming connection count"
16570 .cindex "queueing incoming messages"
16571 .cindex "message" "queueing by SMTP connection count"
16572 If the number of simultaneous incoming SMTP connections being handled via the
16573 listening daemon exceeds this value, messages received by SMTP are just placed
16574 on the queue; no delivery processes are started automatically. The count is
16575 fixed at the start of an SMTP connection. It cannot be updated in the
16576 subprocess that receives messages, and so the queueing or not queueing applies
16577 to all messages received in the same connection.
16578
16579 A value of zero implies no limit, and clearly any non-zero value is useful only
16580 if it is less than the &%smtp_accept_max%& value (unless that is zero). See
16581 also &%queue_only%&, &%queue_only_load%&, &%queue_smtp_domains%&, and the
16582 various &%-od%&&'x'& command line options.
16583
16584
16585 . See the comment on smtp_accept_max_per_connection
16586
16587 .option "smtp_accept_queue_per_connection" main integer 10 &&&
16588 smtp_accept_queue_per_connection
16589 .cindex "queueing incoming messages"
16590 .cindex "message" "queueing by message count"
16591 This option limits the number of delivery processes that Exim starts
16592 automatically when receiving messages via SMTP, whether via the daemon or by
16593 the use of &%-bs%& or &%-bS%&. If the value of the option is greater than zero,
16594 and the number of messages received in a single SMTP session exceeds this
16595 number, subsequent messages are placed on the queue, but no delivery processes
16596 are started. This helps to limit the number of Exim processes when a server
16597 restarts after downtime and there is a lot of mail waiting for it on other
16598 systems. On large systems, the default should probably be increased, and on
16599 dial-in client systems it should probably be set to zero (that is, disabled).
16600
16601
16602 .option smtp_accept_reserve main integer 0
16603 .cindex "SMTP" "incoming call count"
16604 .cindex "host" "reserved"
16605 When &%smtp_accept_max%& is set greater than zero, this option specifies a
16606 number of SMTP connections that are reserved for connections from the hosts
16607 that are specified in &%smtp_reserve_hosts%&. The value set in
16608 &%smtp_accept_max%& includes this reserve pool. The specified hosts are not
16609 restricted to this number of connections; the option specifies a minimum number
16610 of connection slots for them, not a maximum. It is a guarantee that this group
16611 of hosts can always get at least &%smtp_accept_reserve%& connections. However,
16612 the limit specified by &%smtp_accept_max_per_host%& is still applied to each
16613 individual host.
16614
16615 For example, if &%smtp_accept_max%& is set to 50 and &%smtp_accept_reserve%& is
16616 set to 5, once there are 45 active connections (from any hosts), new
16617 connections are accepted only from hosts listed in &%smtp_reserve_hosts%&,
16618 provided the other criteria for acceptance are met.
16619
16620
16621 .option smtp_active_hostname main string&!! unset
16622 .cindex "host" "name in SMTP responses"
16623 .cindex "SMTP" "host name in responses"
16624 .vindex "&$primary_hostname$&"
16625 This option is provided for multi-homed servers that want to masquerade as
16626 several different hosts. At the start of an incoming SMTP connection, its value
16627 is expanded and used instead of the value of &$primary_hostname$& in SMTP
16628 responses. For example, it is used as domain name in the response to an
16629 incoming HELO or EHLO command.
16630
16631 .vindex "&$smtp_active_hostname$&"
16632 The active hostname is placed in the &$smtp_active_hostname$& variable, which
16633 is saved with any messages that are received. It is therefore available for use
16634 in routers and transports when the message is later delivered.
16635
16636 If this option is unset, or if its expansion is forced to fail, or if the
16637 expansion results in an empty string, the value of &$primary_hostname$& is
16638 used. Other expansion failures cause a message to be written to the main and
16639 panic logs, and the SMTP command receives a temporary error. Typically, the
16640 value of &%smtp_active_hostname%& depends on the incoming interface address.
16641 For example:
16642 .code
16643 smtp_active_hostname = ${if eq{$received_ip_address}{10.0.0.1}\
16644 {cox.mydomain}{box.mydomain}}
16645 .endd
16646
16647 Although &$smtp_active_hostname$& is primarily concerned with incoming
16648 messages, it is also used as the default for HELO commands in callout
16649 verification if there is no remote transport from which to obtain a
16650 &%helo_data%& value.
16651
16652 .option smtp_banner main string&!! "see below"
16653 .cindex "SMTP" "welcome banner"
16654 .cindex "banner for SMTP"
16655 .cindex "welcome banner for SMTP"
16656 .cindex "customizing" "SMTP banner"
16657 This string, which is expanded every time it is used, is output as the initial
16658 positive response to an SMTP connection. The default setting is:
16659 .code
16660 smtp_banner = $smtp_active_hostname ESMTP Exim \
16661 $version_number $tod_full
16662 .endd
16663 Failure to expand the string causes a panic error. If you want to create a
16664 multiline response to the initial SMTP connection, use &"\n"& in the string at
16665 appropriate points, but not at the end. Note that the 220 code is not included
16666 in this string. Exim adds it automatically (several times in the case of a
16667 multiline response).
16668
16669
16670 .option smtp_check_spool_space main boolean true
16671 .cindex "checking disk space"
16672 .cindex "disk space, checking"
16673 .cindex "spool directory" "checking space"
16674 When this option is set, if an incoming SMTP session encounters the SIZE
16675 option on a MAIL command, it checks that there is enough space in the
16676 spool directory's partition to accept a message of that size, while still
16677 leaving free the amount specified by &%check_spool_space%& (even if that value
16678 is zero). If there isn't enough space, a temporary error code is returned.
16679
16680
16681 .option smtp_connect_backlog main integer 20
16682 .cindex "connection backlog"
16683 .cindex "SMTP" "connection backlog"
16684 .cindex "backlog of connections"
16685 This option specifies a maximum number of waiting SMTP connections. Exim passes
16686 this value to the TCP/IP system when it sets up its listener. Once this number
16687 of connections are waiting for the daemon's attention, subsequent connection
16688 attempts are refused at the TCP/IP level. At least, that is what the manuals
16689 say; in some circumstances such connection attempts have been observed to time
16690 out instead. For large systems it is probably a good idea to increase the
16691 value (to 50, say). It also gives some protection against denial-of-service
16692 attacks by SYN flooding.
16693
16694
16695 .option smtp_enforce_sync main boolean true
16696 .cindex "SMTP" "synchronization checking"
16697 .cindex "synchronization checking in SMTP"
16698 The SMTP protocol specification requires the client to wait for a response from
16699 the server at certain points in the dialogue. Without PIPELINING these
16700 synchronization points are after every command; with PIPELINING they are
16701 fewer, but they still exist.
16702
16703 Some spamming sites send out a complete set of SMTP commands without waiting
16704 for any response. Exim protects against this by rejecting a message if the
16705 client has sent further input when it should not have. The error response &"554
16706 SMTP synchronization error"& is sent, and the connection is dropped. Testing
16707 for this error cannot be perfect because of transmission delays (unexpected
16708 input may be on its way but not yet received when Exim checks). However, it
16709 does detect many instances.
16710
16711 The check can be globally disabled by setting &%smtp_enforce_sync%& false.
16712 If you want to disable the check selectively (for example, only for certain
16713 hosts), you can do so by an appropriate use of a &%control%& modifier in an ACL
16714 (see section &<<SECTcontrols>>&). See also &%pipelining_advertise_hosts%&.
16715
16716
16717
16718 .option smtp_etrn_command main string&!! unset
16719 .cindex "ETRN" "command to be run"
16720 .vindex "&$domain$&"
16721 If this option is set, the given command is run whenever an SMTP ETRN
16722 command is received from a host that is permitted to issue such commands (see
16723 chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&). The string is split up into separate arguments which
16724 are independently expanded. The expansion variable &$domain$& is set to the
16725 argument of the ETRN command, and no syntax checking is done on it. For
16726 example:
16727 .code
16728 smtp_etrn_command = /etc/etrn_command $domain \
16729 $sender_host_address
16730 .endd
16731 A new process is created to run the command, but Exim does not wait for it to
16732 complete. Consequently, its status cannot be checked. If the command cannot be
16733 run, a line is written to the panic log, but the ETRN caller still receives
16734 a 250 success response. Exim is normally running under its own uid when
16735 receiving SMTP, so it is not possible for it to change the uid before running
16736 the command.
16737
16738
16739 .option smtp_etrn_serialize main boolean true
16740 .cindex "ETRN" "serializing"
16741 When this option is set, it prevents the simultaneous execution of more than
16742 one identical command as a result of ETRN in an SMTP connection. See
16743 section &<<SECTETRN>>& for details.
16744
16745
16746 .option smtp_load_reserve main fixed-point unset
16747 .cindex "load average"
16748 If the system load average ever gets higher than this, incoming SMTP calls are
16749 accepted only from those hosts that match an entry in &%smtp_reserve_hosts%&.
16750 If &%smtp_reserve_hosts%& is not set, no incoming SMTP calls are accepted when
16751 the load is over the limit. The option has no effect on ancient operating
16752 systems on which Exim cannot determine the load average. See also
16753 &%deliver_queue_load_max%& and &%queue_only_load%&.
16754
16755
16756
16757 .option smtp_max_synprot_errors main integer 3
16758 .cindex "SMTP" "limiting syntax and protocol errors"
16759 .cindex "limit" "SMTP syntax and protocol errors"
16760 Exim rejects SMTP commands that contain syntax or protocol errors. In
16761 particular, a syntactically invalid email address, as in this command:
16762 .code
16763 RCPT TO:<abc xyz@a.b.c>
16764 .endd
16765 causes immediate rejection of the command, before any other tests are done.
16766 (The ACL cannot be run if there is no valid address to set up for it.) An
16767 example of a protocol error is receiving RCPT before MAIL. If there are
16768 too many syntax or protocol errors in one SMTP session, the connection is
16769 dropped. The limit is set by this option.
16770
16771 .cindex "PIPELINING" "expected errors"
16772 When the PIPELINING extension to SMTP is in use, some protocol errors are
16773 &"expected"&, for instance, a RCPT command after a rejected MAIL command.
16774 Exim assumes that PIPELINING will be used if it advertises it (see
16775 &%pipelining_advertise_hosts%&), and in this situation, &"expected"& errors do
16776 not count towards the limit.
16777
16778
16779
16780 .option smtp_max_unknown_commands main integer 3
16781 .cindex "SMTP" "limiting unknown commands"
16782 .cindex "limit" "unknown SMTP commands"
16783 If there are too many unrecognized commands in an incoming SMTP session, an
16784 Exim server drops the connection. This is a defence against some kinds of abuse
16785 that subvert web
16786 clients
16787 into making connections to SMTP ports; in these circumstances, a number of
16788 non-SMTP command lines are sent first.
16789
16790
16791
16792 .option smtp_ratelimit_hosts main "host list&!!" unset
16793 .cindex "SMTP" "rate limiting"
16794 .cindex "limit" "rate of message arrival"
16795 .cindex "RCPT" "rate limiting"
16796 Some sites find it helpful to be able to limit the rate at which certain hosts
16797 can send them messages, and the rate at which an individual message can specify
16798 recipients.
16799
16800 Exim has two rate-limiting facilities. This section describes the older
16801 facility, which can limit rates within a single connection. The newer
16802 &%ratelimit%& ACL condition can limit rates across all connections. See section
16803 &<<SECTratelimiting>>& for details of the newer facility.
16804
16805 When a host matches &%smtp_ratelimit_hosts%&, the values of
16806 &%smtp_ratelimit_mail%& and &%smtp_ratelimit_rcpt%& are used to control the
16807 rate of acceptance of MAIL and RCPT commands in a single SMTP session,
16808 respectively. Each option, if set, must contain a set of four comma-separated
16809 values:
16810
16811 .ilist
16812 A threshold, before which there is no rate limiting.
16813 .next
16814 An initial time delay. Unlike other times in Exim, numbers with decimal
16815 fractional parts are allowed here.
16816 .next
16817 A factor by which to increase the delay each time.
16818 .next
16819 A maximum value for the delay. This should normally be less than 5 minutes,
16820 because after that time, the client is liable to timeout the SMTP command.
16821 .endlist
16822
16823 For example, these settings have been used successfully at the site which
16824 first suggested this feature, for controlling mail from their customers:
16825 .code
16826 smtp_ratelimit_mail = 2,0.5s,1.05,4m
16827 smtp_ratelimit_rcpt = 4,0.25s,1.015,4m
16828 .endd
16829 The first setting specifies delays that are applied to MAIL commands after
16830 two have been received over a single connection. The initial delay is 0.5
16831 seconds, increasing by a factor of 1.05 each time. The second setting applies
16832 delays to RCPT commands when more than four occur in a single message.
16833
16834
16835 .option smtp_ratelimit_mail main string unset
16836 See &%smtp_ratelimit_hosts%& above.
16837
16838
16839 .option smtp_ratelimit_rcpt main string unset
16840 See &%smtp_ratelimit_hosts%& above.
16841
16842
16843 .option smtp_receive_timeout main time&!! 5m
16844 .cindex "timeout" "for SMTP input"
16845 .cindex "SMTP" "input timeout"
16846 This sets a timeout value for SMTP reception. It applies to all forms of SMTP
16847 input, including batch SMTP. If a line of input (either an SMTP command or a
16848 data line) is not received within this time, the SMTP connection is dropped and
16849 the message is abandoned.
16850 A line is written to the log containing one of the following messages:
16851 .code
16852 SMTP command timeout on connection from...
16853 SMTP data timeout on connection from...
16854 .endd
16855 The former means that Exim was expecting to read an SMTP command; the latter
16856 means that it was in the DATA phase, reading the contents of a message.
16857
16858 If the first character of the option is a &"$"& the option is
16859 expanded before use and may depend on
16860 &$sender_host_name$&, &$sender_host_address$& and &$sender_host_port$&.
16861
16862
16863 .oindex "&%-os%&"
16864 The value set by this option can be overridden by the
16865 &%-os%& command-line option. A setting of zero time disables the timeout, but
16866 this should never be used for SMTP over TCP/IP. (It can be useful in some cases
16867 of local input using &%-bs%& or &%-bS%&.) For non-SMTP input, the reception
16868 timeout is controlled by &%receive_timeout%& and &%-or%&.
16869
16870
16871 .option smtp_reserve_hosts main "host list&!!" unset
16872 This option defines hosts for which SMTP connections are reserved; see
16873 &%smtp_accept_reserve%& and &%smtp_load_reserve%& above.
16874
16875
16876 .option smtp_return_error_details main boolean false
16877 .cindex "SMTP" "details policy failures"
16878 .cindex "policy control" "rejection, returning details"
16879 In the default state, Exim uses bland messages such as
16880 &"Administrative prohibition"& when it rejects SMTP commands for policy
16881 reasons. Many sysadmins like this because it gives away little information
16882 to spammers. However, some other sysadmins who are applying strict checking
16883 policies want to give out much fuller information about failures. Setting
16884 &%smtp_return_error_details%& true causes Exim to be more forthcoming. For
16885 example, instead of &"Administrative prohibition"&, it might give:
16886 .code
16887 550-Rejected after DATA: '>' missing at end of address:
16888 550 failing address in "From" header is: <user@dom.ain
16889 .endd
16890
16891
16892 .option smtputf8_advertise_hosts main "host list&!!" *
16893 .cindex "SMTPUTF8" "advertising"
16894 When Exim is built with support for internationalised mail names,
16895 the availability thereof is advertised in
16896 response to EHLO only to those client hosts that match this option. See
16897 chapter &<<CHAPi18n>>& for details of Exim's support for internationalisation.
16898
16899
16900 .option spamd_address main string "127.0.0.1 783"
16901 This option is available when Exim is compiled with the content-scanning
16902 extension. It specifies how Exim connects to SpamAssassin's &%spamd%& daemon.
16903 See section &<<SECTscanspamass>>& for more details.
16904
16905
16906
16907 .option spf_guess main string "v=spf1 a/24 mx/24 ptr ?all"
16908 This option is available when Exim is compiled with SPF support.
16909 See section &<<SECSPF>>& for more details.
16910
16911
16912
16913 .option split_spool_directory main boolean false
16914 .cindex "multiple spool directories"
16915 .cindex "spool directory" "split"
16916 .cindex "directories, multiple"
16917 If this option is set, it causes Exim to split its input directory into 62
16918 subdirectories, each with a single alphanumeric character as its name. The
16919 sixth character of the message id is used to allocate messages to
16920 subdirectories; this is the least significant base-62 digit of the time of
16921 arrival of the message.
16922
16923 Splitting up the spool in this way may provide better performance on systems
16924 where there are long mail queues, by reducing the number of files in any one
16925 directory. The msglog directory is also split up in a similar way to the input
16926 directory; however, if &%preserve_message_logs%& is set, all old msglog files
16927 are still placed in the single directory &_msglog.OLD_&.
16928
16929 It is not necessary to take any special action for existing messages when
16930 changing &%split_spool_directory%&. Exim notices messages that are in the
16931 &"wrong"& place, and continues to process them. If the option is turned off
16932 after a period of being on, the subdirectories will eventually empty and be
16933 automatically deleted.
16934
16935 When &%split_spool_directory%& is set, the behaviour of queue runner processes
16936 changes. Instead of creating a list of all messages in the queue, and then
16937 trying to deliver each one in turn, it constructs a list of those in one
16938 sub-directory and tries to deliver them, before moving on to the next
16939 sub-directory. The sub-directories are processed in a random order. This
16940 spreads out the scanning of the input directories, and uses less memory. It is
16941 particularly beneficial when there are lots of messages on the queue. However,
16942 if &%queue_run_in_order%& is set, none of this new processing happens. The
16943 entire queue has to be scanned and sorted before any deliveries can start.
16944
16945
16946 .option spool_directory main string&!! "set at compile time"
16947 .cindex "spool directory" "path to"
16948 This defines the directory in which Exim keeps its spool, that is, the messages
16949 it is waiting to deliver. The default value is taken from the compile-time
16950 configuration setting, if there is one. If not, this option must be set. The
16951 string is expanded, so it can contain, for example, a reference to
16952 &$primary_hostname$&.
16953
16954 If the spool directory name is fixed on your installation, it is recommended
16955 that you set it at build time rather than from this option, particularly if the
16956 log files are being written to the spool directory (see &%log_file_path%&).
16957 Otherwise log files cannot be used for errors that are detected early on, such
16958 as failures in the configuration file.
16959
16960 By using this option to override the compiled-in path, it is possible to run
16961 tests of Exim without using the standard spool.
16962
16963 .option spool_wireformat main boolean false
16964 .cindex "spool directory" "file formats"
16965 If this option is set, Exim may for some messages use an alternative format
16966 for data-files in the spool which matches the wire format.
16967 Doing this permits more efficient message reception and transmission.
16968 Currently it is only done for messages received using the ESMTP CHUNKING
16969 option.
16970
16971 The following variables will not have useful values:
16972 .code
16973 $max_received_linelength
16974 $body_linecount
16975 $body_zerocount
16976 .endd
16977
16978 Users of the local_scan() API (see &<<CHAPlocalscan>>&),
16979 and any external programs which are passed a reference to a message data file
16980 (except via the &"regex"&, &"malware"& or &"spam"&) ACL conditions)
16981 will need to be aware of the different formats potentially available.
16982
16983 Using any of the ACL conditions noted will negate the reception benefit
16984 (as a Unix-mbox-format file is constructed for them).
16985 The transmission benefit is maintained.
16986
16987 .option sqlite_lock_timeout main time 5s
16988 .cindex "sqlite lookup type" "lock timeout"
16989 This option controls the timeout that the &(sqlite)& lookup uses when trying to
16990 access an SQLite database. See section &<<SECTsqlite>>& for more details.
16991
16992 .option strict_acl_vars main boolean false
16993 .cindex "&ACL;" "variables, handling unset"
16994 This option controls what happens if a syntactically valid but undefined ACL
16995 variable is referenced. If it is false (the default), an empty string
16996 is substituted; if it is true, an error is generated. See section
16997 &<<SECTaclvariables>>& for details of ACL variables.
16998
16999 .option strip_excess_angle_brackets main boolean false
17000 .cindex "angle brackets, excess"
17001 If this option is set, redundant pairs of angle brackets round &"route-addr"&
17002 items in addresses are stripped. For example, &'<<xxx@a.b.c.d>>'& is
17003 treated as &'<xxx@a.b.c.d>'&. If this is in the envelope and the message is
17004 passed on to another MTA, the excess angle brackets are not passed on. If this
17005 option is not set, multiple pairs of angle brackets cause a syntax error.
17006
17007
17008 .option strip_trailing_dot main boolean false
17009 .cindex "trailing dot on domain"
17010 .cindex "dot" "trailing on domain"
17011 If this option is set, a trailing dot at the end of a domain in an address is
17012 ignored. If this is in the envelope and the message is passed on to another
17013 MTA, the dot is not passed on. If this option is not set, a dot at the end of a
17014 domain causes a syntax error.
17015 However, addresses in header lines are checked only when an ACL requests header
17016 syntax checking.
17017
17018
17019 .option syslog_duplication main boolean true
17020 .cindex "syslog" "duplicate log lines; suppressing"
17021 When Exim is logging to syslog, it writes the log lines for its three
17022 separate logs at different syslog priorities so that they can in principle
17023 be separated on the logging hosts. Some installations do not require this
17024 separation, and in those cases, the duplication of certain log lines is a
17025 nuisance. If &%syslog_duplication%& is set false, only one copy of any
17026 particular log line is written to syslog. For lines that normally go to
17027 both the main log and the reject log, the reject log version (possibly
17028 containing message header lines) is written, at LOG_NOTICE priority.
17029 Lines that normally go to both the main and the panic log are written at
17030 the LOG_ALERT priority.
17031
17032
17033 .option syslog_facility main string unset
17034 .cindex "syslog" "facility; setting"
17035 This option sets the syslog &"facility"& name, used when Exim is logging to
17036 syslog. The value must be one of the strings &"mail"&, &"user"&, &"news"&,
17037 &"uucp"&, &"daemon"&, or &"local&'x'&"& where &'x'& is a digit between 0 and 7.
17038 If this option is unset, &"mail"& is used. See chapter &<<CHAPlog>>& for
17039 details of Exim's logging.
17040
17041
17042 .option syslog_pid main boolean true
17043 .cindex "syslog" "pid"
17044 If &%syslog_pid%& is set false, the PID on Exim's log lines are
17045 omitted when these lines are sent to syslog. (Syslog normally prefixes
17046 the log lines with the PID of the logging process automatically.) You need
17047 to enable the &`+pid`& log selector item, if you want Exim to write it's PID
17048 into the logs.) See chapter &<<CHAPlog>>& for details of Exim's logging.
17049
17050
17051
17052 .option syslog_processname main string &`exim`&
17053 .cindex "syslog" "process name; setting"
17054 This option sets the syslog &"ident"& name, used when Exim is logging to
17055 syslog. The value must be no longer than 32 characters. See chapter
17056 &<<CHAPlog>>& for details of Exim's logging.
17057
17058
17059
17060 .option syslog_timestamp main boolean true
17061 .cindex "syslog" "timestamps"
17062 If &%syslog_timestamp%& is set false, the timestamps on Exim's log lines are
17063 omitted when these lines are sent to syslog. See chapter &<<CHAPlog>>& for
17064 details of Exim's logging.
17065
17066
17067 .option system_filter main string&!! unset
17068 .cindex "filter" "system filter"
17069 .cindex "system filter" "specifying"
17070 .cindex "Sieve filter" "not available for system filter"
17071 This option specifies an Exim filter file that is applied to all messages at
17072 the start of each delivery attempt, before any routing is done. System filters
17073 must be Exim filters; they cannot be Sieve filters. If the system filter
17074 generates any deliveries to files or pipes, or any new mail messages, the
17075 appropriate &%system_filter_..._transport%& option(s) must be set, to define
17076 which transports are to be used. Details of this facility are given in chapter
17077 &<<CHAPsystemfilter>>&.
17078 A forced expansion failure results in no filter operation.
17079
17080
17081 .option system_filter_directory_transport main string&!! unset
17082 .vindex "&$address_file$&"
17083 This sets the name of the transport driver that is to be used when the
17084 &%save%& command in a system message filter specifies a path ending in &"/"&,
17085 implying delivery of each message into a separate file in some directory.
17086 During the delivery, the variable &$address_file$& contains the path name.
17087
17088
17089 .option system_filter_file_transport main string&!! unset
17090 .cindex "file" "transport for system filter"
17091 This sets the name of the transport driver that is to be used when the &%save%&
17092 command in a system message filter specifies a path not ending in &"/"&. During
17093 the delivery, the variable &$address_file$& contains the path name.
17094
17095 .option system_filter_group main string unset
17096 .cindex "gid (group id)" "system filter"
17097 This option is used only when &%system_filter_user%& is also set. It sets the
17098 gid under which the system filter is run, overriding any gid that is associated
17099 with the user. The value may be numerical or symbolic.
17100
17101 .option system_filter_pipe_transport main string&!! unset
17102 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport" "for system filter"
17103 .vindex "&$address_pipe$&"
17104 This specifies the transport driver that is to be used when a &%pipe%& command
17105 is used in a system filter. During the delivery, the variable &$address_pipe$&
17106 contains the pipe command.
17107
17108
17109 .option system_filter_reply_transport main string&!! unset
17110 .cindex "&(autoreply)& transport" "for system filter"
17111 This specifies the transport driver that is to be used when a &%mail%& command
17112 is used in a system filter.
17113
17114
17115 .option system_filter_user main string unset
17116 .cindex "uid (user id)" "system filter"
17117 If this option is set to root, the system filter is run in the main Exim
17118 delivery process, as root. Otherwise, the system filter runs in a separate
17119 process, as the given user, defaulting to the Exim run-time user.
17120 Unless the string consists entirely of digits, it
17121 is looked up in the password data. Failure to find the named user causes a
17122 configuration error. The gid is either taken from the password data, or
17123 specified by &%system_filter_group%&. When the uid is specified numerically,
17124 &%system_filter_group%& is required to be set.
17125
17126 If the system filter generates any pipe, file, or reply deliveries, the uid
17127 under which the filter is run is used when transporting them, unless a
17128 transport option overrides.
17129
17130
17131 .option tcp_nodelay main boolean true
17132 .cindex "daemon" "TCP_NODELAY on sockets"
17133 .cindex "Nagle algorithm"
17134 .cindex "TCP_NODELAY on listening sockets"
17135 If this option is set false, it stops the Exim daemon setting the
17136 TCP_NODELAY option on its listening sockets. Setting TCP_NODELAY
17137 turns off the &"Nagle algorithm"&, which is a way of improving network
17138 performance in interactive (character-by-character) situations. Turning it off
17139 should improve Exim's performance a bit, so that is what happens by default.
17140 However, it appears that some broken clients cannot cope, and time out. Hence
17141 this option. It affects only those sockets that are set up for listening by the
17142 daemon. Sockets created by the smtp transport for delivering mail always set
17143 TCP_NODELAY.
17144
17145
17146 .option timeout_frozen_after main time 0s
17147 .cindex "frozen messages" "timing out"
17148 .cindex "timeout" "frozen messages"
17149 If &%timeout_frozen_after%& is set to a time greater than zero, a frozen
17150 message of any kind that has been on the queue for longer than the given time
17151 is automatically cancelled at the next queue run. If the frozen message is a
17152 bounce message, it is just discarded; otherwise, a bounce is sent to the
17153 sender, in a similar manner to cancellation by the &%-Mg%& command line option.
17154 If you want to timeout frozen bounce messages earlier than other kinds of
17155 frozen message, see &%ignore_bounce_errors_after%&.
17156
17157 &*Note:*& the default value of zero means no timeouts; with this setting,
17158 frozen messages remain on the queue forever (except for any frozen bounce
17159 messages that are released by &%ignore_bounce_errors_after%&).
17160
17161
17162 .option timezone main string unset
17163 .cindex "timezone, setting"
17164 .cindex "environment" "values from"
17165 The value of &%timezone%& is used to set the environment variable TZ while
17166 running Exim (if it is different on entry). This ensures that all timestamps
17167 created by Exim are in the required timezone. If you want all your timestamps
17168 to be in UTC (aka GMT) you should set
17169 .code
17170 timezone = UTC
17171 .endd
17172 The default value is taken from TIMEZONE_DEFAULT in &_Local/Makefile_&,
17173 or, if that is not set, from the value of the TZ environment variable when Exim
17174 is built. If &%timezone%& is set to the empty string, either at build or run
17175 time, any existing TZ variable is removed from the environment when Exim
17176 runs. This is appropriate behaviour for obtaining wall-clock time on some, but
17177 unfortunately not all, operating systems.
17178
17179
17180 .option tls_advertise_hosts main "host list&!!" *
17181 .cindex "TLS" "advertising"
17182 .cindex "encryption" "on SMTP connection"
17183 .cindex "SMTP" "encrypted connection"
17184 When Exim is built with support for TLS encrypted connections, the availability
17185 of the STARTTLS command to set up an encrypted session is advertised in
17186 response to EHLO only to those client hosts that match this option. See
17187 chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>& for details of Exim's support for TLS.
17188 Note that the default value requires that a certificate be supplied
17189 using the &%tls_certificate%& option. If TLS support for incoming connections
17190 is not required the &%tls_advertise_hosts%& option should be set empty.
17191
17192
17193 .option tls_certificate main string list&!! unset
17194 .cindex "TLS" "server certificate; location of"
17195 .cindex "certificate" "server, location of"
17196 The value of this option is expanded, and must then be a list of absolute paths to
17197 files which contains the server's certificates. Commonly only one file is
17198 needed.
17199 The server's private key is also
17200 assumed to be in this file if &%tls_privatekey%& is unset. See chapter
17201 &<<CHAPTLS>>& for further details.
17202
17203 &*Note*&: The certificates defined by this option are used only when Exim is
17204 receiving incoming messages as a server. If you want to supply certificates for
17205 use when sending messages as a client, you must set the &%tls_certificate%&
17206 option in the relevant &(smtp)& transport.
17207
17208 &*Note*&: If you use filenames based on IP addresses, change the list
17209 separator in the usual way to avoid confusion under IPv6.
17210
17211 &*Note*&: Under versions of OpenSSL preceding 1.1.1,
17212 when a list of more than one
17213 file is used, the &$tls_in_ourcert$& variable is unreliable.
17214
17215 &*Note*&: OCSP stapling is not usable under OpenSSL
17216 when a list of more than one file is used.
17217
17218 If the option contains &$tls_out_sni$& and Exim is built against OpenSSL, then
17219 if the OpenSSL build supports TLS extensions and the TLS client sends the
17220 Server Name Indication extension, then this option and others documented in
17221 &<<SECTtlssni>>& will be re-expanded.
17222
17223 If this option is unset or empty a fresh self-signed certificate will be
17224 generated for every connection.
17225
17226 .option tls_crl main string&!! unset
17227 .cindex "TLS" "server certificate revocation list"
17228 .cindex "certificate" "revocation list for server"
17229 This option specifies a certificate revocation list. The expanded value must
17230 be the name of a file that contains CRLs in PEM format.
17231
17232 Under OpenSSL the option can specify a directory with CRL files.
17233
17234 &*Note:*& Under OpenSSL the option must, if given, supply a CRL
17235 for each signing element of the certificate chain (i.e. all but the leaf).
17236 For the file variant this can be multiple PEM blocks in the one file.
17237
17238 See &<<SECTtlssni>>& for discussion of when this option might be re-expanded.
17239
17240
17241 .option tls_dh_max_bits main integer 2236
17242 .cindex "TLS" "D-H bit count"
17243 The number of bits used for Diffie-Hellman key-exchange may be suggested by
17244 the chosen TLS library. That value might prove to be too high for
17245 interoperability. This option provides a maximum clamp on the value
17246 suggested, trading off security for interoperability.
17247
17248 The value must be at least 1024.
17249
17250 The value 2236 was chosen because, at time of adding the option, it was the
17251 hard-coded maximum value supported by the NSS cryptographic library, as used
17252 by Thunderbird, while GnuTLS was suggesting 2432 bits as normal.
17253
17254 If you prefer more security and are willing to break some clients, raise this
17255 number.
17256
17257 Note that the value passed to GnuTLS for *generating* a new prime may be a
17258 little less than this figure, because GnuTLS is inexact and may produce a
17259 larger prime than requested.
17260
17261
17262 .option tls_dhparam main string&!! unset
17263 .cindex "TLS" "D-H parameters for server"
17264 The value of this option is expanded and indicates the source of DH parameters
17265 to be used by Exim.
17266
17267 &*Note: The Exim Maintainers strongly recommend using a filename with site-generated
17268 local DH parameters*&, which has been supported across all versions of Exim. The
17269 other specific constants available are a fallback so that even when
17270 "unconfigured", Exim can offer Perfect Forward Secrecy in older ciphersuites in TLS.
17271
17272 If &%tls_dhparam%& is a filename starting with a &`/`&,
17273 then it names a file from which DH
17274 parameters should be loaded. If the file exists, it should hold a PEM-encoded
17275 PKCS#3 representation of the DH prime. If the file does not exist, for
17276 OpenSSL it is an error. For GnuTLS, Exim will attempt to create the file and
17277 fill it with a generated DH prime. For OpenSSL, if the DH bit-count from
17278 loading the file is greater than &%tls_dh_max_bits%& then it will be ignored,
17279 and treated as though the &%tls_dhparam%& were set to "none".
17280
17281 If this option expands to the string "none", then no DH parameters will be
17282 loaded by Exim.
17283
17284 If this option expands to the string "historic" and Exim is using GnuTLS, then
17285 Exim will attempt to load a file from inside the spool directory. If the file
17286 does not exist, Exim will attempt to create it.
17287 See section &<<SECTgnutlsparam>>& for further details.
17288
17289 If Exim is using OpenSSL and this option is empty or unset, then Exim will load
17290 a default DH prime; the default is Exim-specific but lacks verifiable provenance.
17291
17292 In older versions of Exim the default was the 2048 bit prime described in section
17293 2.2 of RFC 5114, "2048-bit MODP Group with 224-bit Prime Order Subgroup", which
17294 in IKE is assigned number 23.
17295
17296 Otherwise, the option must expand to the name used by Exim for any of a number
17297 of DH primes specified in RFC 2409, RFC 3526, RFC 5114, RFC 7919, or from other
17298 sources. As names, Exim uses a standard specified name, else "ike" followed by
17299 the number used by IKE, or "default" which corresponds to
17300 &`exim.dev.20160529.3`&.
17301
17302 The available standard primes are:
17303 &`ffdhe2048`&, &`ffdhe3072`&, &`ffdhe4096`&, &`ffdhe6144`&, &`ffdhe8192`&,
17304 &`ike1`&, &`ike2`&, &`ike5`&,
17305 &`ike14`&, &`ike15`&, &`ike16`&, &`ike17`&, &`ike18`&,
17306 &`ike22`&, &`ike23`& and &`ike24`&.
17307
17308 The available additional primes are:
17309 &`exim.dev.20160529.1`&, &`exim.dev.20160529.2`& and &`exim.dev.20160529.3`&.
17310
17311 Some of these will be too small to be accepted by clients.
17312 Some may be too large to be accepted by clients.
17313 The open cryptographic community has suspicions about the integrity of some
17314 of the later IKE values, which led into RFC7919 providing new fixed constants
17315 (the "ffdhe" identifiers).
17316
17317 At this point, all of the "ike" values should be considered obsolete;
17318 they're still in Exim to avoid breaking unusual configurations, but are
17319 candidates for removal the next time we have backwards-incompatible changes.
17320
17321 The TLS protocol does not negotiate an acceptable size for this; clients tend
17322 to hard-drop connections if what is offered by the server is unacceptable,
17323 whether too large or too small, and there's no provision for the client to
17324 tell the server what these constraints are. Thus, as a server operator, you
17325 need to make an educated guess as to what is most likely to work for your
17326 userbase.
17327
17328 Some known size constraints suggest that a bit-size in the range 2048 to 2236
17329 is most likely to maximise interoperability. The upper bound comes from
17330 applications using the Mozilla Network Security Services (NSS) library, which
17331 used to set its &`DH_MAX_P_BITS`& upper-bound to 2236. This affects many
17332 mail user agents (MUAs). The lower bound comes from Debian installs of Exim4
17333 prior to the 4.80 release, as Debian used to patch Exim to raise the minimum
17334 acceptable bound from 1024 to 2048.
17335
17336
17337 .option tls_eccurve main string&!! &`auto`&
17338 .cindex TLS "EC cryptography"
17339 This option selects a EC curve for use by Exim when used with OpenSSL.
17340 It has no effect when Exim is used with GnuTLS.
17341
17342 After expansion it must contain a valid EC curve parameter, such as
17343 &`prime256v1`&, &`secp384r1`&, or &`P-512`&. Consult your OpenSSL manual
17344 for valid selections.
17345
17346 For OpenSSL versions before (and not including) 1.0.2, the string
17347 &`auto`& selects &`prime256v1`&. For more recent OpenSSL versions
17348 &`auto`& tells the library to choose.
17349
17350 If the option expands to an empty string, no EC curves will be enabled.
17351
17352
17353 .option tls_ocsp_file main string&!! unset
17354 .cindex TLS "certificate status"
17355 .cindex TLS "OCSP proof file"
17356 This option
17357 must if set expand to the absolute path to a file which contains a current
17358 status proof for the server's certificate, as obtained from the
17359 Certificate Authority.
17360
17361 Usable for GnuTLS 3.4.4 or 3.3.17 or OpenSSL 1.1.0 (or later).
17362
17363 For GnuTLS 3.5.6 or later the expanded value of this option can be a list
17364 of files, to match a list given for the &%tls_certificate%& option.
17365 The ordering of the two lists must match.
17366
17367
17368 .option tls_on_connect_ports main "string list" unset
17369 .cindex SSMTP
17370 .cindex SMTPS
17371 This option specifies a list of incoming SSMTP (aka SMTPS) ports that should
17372 operate the SSMTP (SMTPS) protocol, where a TLS session is immediately
17373 set up without waiting for the client to issue a STARTTLS command. For
17374 further details, see section &<<SECTsupobssmt>>&.
17375
17376
17377
17378 .option tls_privatekey main string list&!! unset
17379 .cindex "TLS" "server private key; location of"
17380 The value of this option is expanded, and must then be a list of absolute paths to
17381 files which contains the server's private keys.
17382 If this option is unset, or if
17383 the expansion is forced to fail, or the result is an empty string, the private
17384 key is assumed to be in the same file as the server's certificates. See chapter
17385 &<<CHAPTLS>>& for further details.
17386
17387 See &<<SECTtlssni>>& for discussion of when this option might be re-expanded.
17388
17389
17390 .option tls_remember_esmtp main boolean false
17391 .cindex "TLS" "esmtp state; remembering"
17392 .cindex "TLS" "broken clients"
17393 If this option is set true, Exim violates the RFCs by remembering that it is in
17394 &"esmtp"& state after successfully negotiating a TLS session. This provides
17395 support for broken clients that fail to send a new EHLO after starting a
17396 TLS session.
17397
17398
17399 .option tls_require_ciphers main string&!! unset
17400 .cindex "TLS" "requiring specific ciphers"
17401 .cindex "cipher" "requiring specific"
17402 This option controls which ciphers can be used for incoming TLS connections.
17403 The &(smtp)& transport has an option of the same name for controlling outgoing
17404 connections. This option is expanded for each connection, so can be varied for
17405 different clients if required. The value of this option must be a list of
17406 permitted cipher suites. The OpenSSL and GnuTLS libraries handle cipher control
17407 in somewhat different ways. If GnuTLS is being used, the client controls the
17408 preference order of the available ciphers. Details are given in sections
17409 &<<SECTreqciphssl>>& and &<<SECTreqciphgnu>>&.
17410
17411
17412 .option tls_try_verify_hosts main "host list&!!" unset
17413 .cindex "TLS" "client certificate verification"
17414 .cindex "certificate" "verification of client"
17415 See &%tls_verify_hosts%& below.
17416
17417
17418 .option tls_verify_certificates main string&!! system
17419 .cindex "TLS" "client certificate verification"
17420 .cindex "certificate" "verification of client"
17421 The value of this option is expanded, and must then be either the
17422 word "system"
17423 or the absolute path to
17424 a file or directory containing permitted certificates for clients that
17425 match &%tls_verify_hosts%& or &%tls_try_verify_hosts%&.
17426
17427 The "system" value for the option will use a
17428 system default location compiled into the SSL library.
17429 This is not available for GnuTLS versions preceding 3.0.20,
17430 and will be taken as empty; an explicit location
17431 must be specified.
17432
17433 The use of a directory for the option value is not available for GnuTLS versions
17434 preceding 3.3.6 and a single file must be used.
17435
17436 With OpenSSL the certificates specified
17437 explicitly
17438 either by file or directory
17439 are added to those given by the system default location.
17440
17441 These certificates should be for the certificate authorities trusted, rather
17442 than the public cert of individual clients. With both OpenSSL and GnuTLS, if
17443 the value is a file then the certificates are sent by Exim as a server to
17444 connecting clients, defining the list of accepted certificate authorities.
17445 Thus the values defined should be considered public data. To avoid this,
17446 use the explicit directory version.
17447
17448 See &<<SECTtlssni>>& for discussion of when this option might be re-expanded.
17449
17450 A forced expansion failure or setting to an empty string is equivalent to
17451 being unset.
17452
17453
17454 .option tls_verify_hosts main "host list&!!" unset
17455 .cindex "TLS" "client certificate verification"
17456 .cindex "certificate" "verification of client"
17457 This option, along with &%tls_try_verify_hosts%&, controls the checking of
17458 certificates from clients. The expected certificates are defined by
17459 &%tls_verify_certificates%&, which must be set. A configuration error occurs if
17460 either &%tls_verify_hosts%& or &%tls_try_verify_hosts%& is set and
17461 &%tls_verify_certificates%& is not set.
17462
17463 Any client that matches &%tls_verify_hosts%& is constrained by
17464 &%tls_verify_certificates%&. When the client initiates a TLS session, it must
17465 present one of the listed certificates. If it does not, the connection is
17466 aborted. &*Warning*&: Including a host in &%tls_verify_hosts%& does not require
17467 the host to use TLS. It can still send SMTP commands through unencrypted
17468 connections. Forcing a client to use TLS has to be done separately using an
17469 ACL to reject inappropriate commands when the connection is not encrypted.
17470
17471 A weaker form of checking is provided by &%tls_try_verify_hosts%&. If a client
17472 matches this option (but not &%tls_verify_hosts%&), Exim requests a
17473 certificate and checks it against &%tls_verify_certificates%&, but does not
17474 abort the connection if there is no certificate or if it does not match. This
17475 state can be detected in an ACL, which makes it possible to implement policies
17476 such as &"accept for relay only if a verified certificate has been received,
17477 but accept for local delivery if encrypted, even without a verified
17478 certificate"&.
17479
17480 Client hosts that match neither of these lists are not asked to present
17481 certificates.
17482
17483
17484 .option trusted_groups main "string list&!!" unset
17485 .cindex "trusted groups"
17486 .cindex "groups" "trusted"
17487 This option is expanded just once, at the start of Exim's processing. If this
17488 option is set, any process that is running in one of the listed groups, or
17489 which has one of them as a supplementary group, is trusted. The groups can be
17490 specified numerically or by name. See section &<<SECTtrustedadmin>>& for
17491 details of what trusted callers are permitted to do. If neither
17492 &%trusted_groups%& nor &%trusted_users%& is set, only root and the Exim user
17493 are trusted.
17494
17495 .option trusted_users main "string list&!!" unset
17496 .cindex "trusted users"
17497 .cindex "user" "trusted"
17498 This option is expanded just once, at the start of Exim's processing. If this
17499 option is set, any process that is running as one of the listed users is
17500 trusted. The users can be specified numerically or by name. See section
17501 &<<SECTtrustedadmin>>& for details of what trusted callers are permitted to do.
17502 If neither &%trusted_groups%& nor &%trusted_users%& is set, only root and the
17503 Exim user are trusted.
17504
17505 .option unknown_login main string&!! unset
17506 .cindex "uid (user id)" "unknown caller"
17507 .vindex "&$caller_uid$&"
17508 This is a specialized feature for use in unusual configurations. By default, if
17509 the uid of the caller of Exim cannot be looked up using &[getpwuid()]&, Exim
17510 gives up. The &%unknown_login%& option can be used to set a login name to be
17511 used in this circumstance. It is expanded, so values like &%user$caller_uid%&
17512 can be set. When &%unknown_login%& is used, the value of &%unknown_username%&
17513 is used for the user's real name (gecos field), unless this has been set by the
17514 &%-F%& option.
17515
17516 .option unknown_username main string unset
17517 See &%unknown_login%&.
17518
17519 .option untrusted_set_sender main "address list&!!" unset
17520 .cindex "trusted users"
17521 .cindex "sender" "setting by untrusted user"
17522 .cindex "untrusted user setting sender"
17523 .cindex "user" "untrusted setting sender"
17524 .cindex "envelope sender"
17525 When an untrusted user submits a message to Exim using the standard input, Exim
17526 normally creates an envelope sender address from the user's login and the
17527 default qualification domain. Data from the &%-f%& option (for setting envelope
17528 senders on non-SMTP messages) or the SMTP MAIL command (if &%-bs%& or &%-bS%&
17529 is used) is ignored.
17530
17531 However, untrusted users are permitted to set an empty envelope sender address,
17532 to declare that a message should never generate any bounces. For example:
17533 .code
17534 exim -f '<>' user@domain.example
17535 .endd
17536 .vindex "&$sender_ident$&"
17537 The &%untrusted_set_sender%& option allows you to permit untrusted users to set
17538 other envelope sender addresses in a controlled way. When it is set, untrusted
17539 users are allowed to set envelope sender addresses that match any of the
17540 patterns in the list. Like all address lists, the string is expanded. The
17541 identity of the user is in &$sender_ident$&, so you can, for example, restrict
17542 users to setting senders that start with their login ids
17543 followed by a hyphen
17544 by a setting like this:
17545 .code
17546 untrusted_set_sender = ^$sender_ident-
17547 .endd
17548 If you want to allow untrusted users to set envelope sender addresses without
17549 restriction, you can use
17550 .code
17551 untrusted_set_sender = *
17552 .endd
17553 The &%untrusted_set_sender%& option applies to all forms of local input, but
17554 only to the setting of the envelope sender. It does not permit untrusted users
17555 to use the other options which trusted user can use to override message
17556 parameters. Furthermore, it does not stop Exim from removing an existing
17557 &'Sender:'& header in the message, or from adding a &'Sender:'& header if
17558 necessary. See &%local_sender_retain%& and &%local_from_check%& for ways of
17559 overriding these actions. The handling of the &'Sender:'& header is also
17560 described in section &<<SECTthesenhea>>&.
17561
17562 The log line for a message's arrival shows the envelope sender following
17563 &"<="&. For local messages, the user's login always follows, after &"U="&. In
17564 &%-bp%& displays, and in the Exim monitor, if an untrusted user sets an
17565 envelope sender address, the user's login is shown in parentheses after the
17566 sender address.
17567
17568
17569 .option uucp_from_pattern main string "see below"
17570 .cindex "&""From""& line"
17571 .cindex "UUCP" "&""From""& line"
17572 Some applications that pass messages to an MTA via a command line interface use
17573 an initial line starting with &"From&~"& to pass the envelope sender. In
17574 particular, this is used by UUCP software. Exim recognizes such a line by means
17575 of a regular expression that is set in &%uucp_from_pattern%&. When the pattern
17576 matches, the sender address is constructed by expanding the contents of
17577 &%uucp_from_sender%&, provided that the caller of Exim is a trusted user. The
17578 default pattern recognizes lines in the following two forms:
17579 .code
17580 From ph10 Fri Jan 5 12:35 GMT 1996
17581 From ph10 Fri, 7 Jan 97 14:00:00 GMT
17582 .endd
17583 The pattern can be seen by running
17584 .code
17585 exim -bP uucp_from_pattern
17586 .endd
17587 It checks only up to the hours and minutes, and allows for a 2-digit or 4-digit
17588 year in the second case. The first word after &"From&~"& is matched in the
17589 regular expression by a parenthesized subpattern. The default value for
17590 &%uucp_from_sender%& is &"$1"&, which therefore just uses this first word
17591 (&"ph10"& in the example above) as the message's sender. See also
17592 &%ignore_fromline_hosts%&.
17593
17594
17595 .option uucp_from_sender main string&!! &`$1`&
17596 See &%uucp_from_pattern%& above.
17597
17598
17599 .option warn_message_file main string unset
17600 .cindex "warning of delay" "customizing the message"
17601 .cindex "customizing" "warning message"
17602 This option defines a template file containing paragraphs of text to be used
17603 for constructing the warning message which is sent by Exim when a message has
17604 been on the queue for a specified amount of time, as specified by
17605 &%delay_warning%&. Details of the file's contents are given in chapter
17606 &<<CHAPemsgcust>>&. See also &%bounce_message_file%&.
17607
17608
17609 .option write_rejectlog main boolean true
17610 .cindex "reject log" "disabling"
17611 If this option is set false, Exim no longer writes anything to the reject log.
17612 See chapter &<<CHAPlog>>& for details of what Exim writes to its logs.
17613 .ecindex IIDconfima
17614 .ecindex IIDmaiconf
17615
17616
17617
17618
17619 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
17620 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
17621
17622 .chapter "Generic options for routers" "CHAProutergeneric"
17623 .scindex IIDgenoprou1 "options" "generic; for routers"
17624 .scindex IIDgenoprou2 "generic options" "router"
17625 This chapter describes the generic options that apply to all routers.
17626 Those that are preconditions are marked with &Dagger; in the &"use"& field.
17627
17628 For a general description of how a router operates, see sections
17629 &<<SECTrunindrou>>& and &<<SECTrouprecon>>&. The latter specifies the order in
17630 which the preconditions are tested. The order of expansion of the options that
17631 provide data for a transport is: &%errors_to%&, &%headers_add%&,
17632 &%headers_remove%&, &%transport%&.
17633
17634
17635
17636 .option address_data routers string&!! unset
17637 .cindex "router" "data attached to address"
17638 The string is expanded just before the router is run, that is, after all the
17639 precondition tests have succeeded. If the expansion is forced to fail, the
17640 router declines, the value of &%address_data%& remains unchanged, and the
17641 &%more%& option controls what happens next. Other expansion failures cause
17642 delivery of the address to be deferred.
17643
17644 .vindex "&$address_data$&"
17645 When the expansion succeeds, the value is retained with the address, and can be
17646 accessed using the variable &$address_data$& in the current router, subsequent
17647 routers, and the eventual transport.
17648
17649 &*Warning*&: If the current or any subsequent router is a &(redirect)& router
17650 that runs a user's filter file, the contents of &$address_data$& are accessible
17651 in the filter. This is not normally a problem, because such data is usually
17652 either not confidential or it &"belongs"& to the current user, but if you do
17653 put confidential data into &$address_data$& you need to remember this point.
17654
17655 Even if the router declines or passes, the value of &$address_data$& remains
17656 with the address, though it can be changed by another &%address_data%& setting
17657 on a subsequent router. If a router generates child addresses, the value of
17658 &$address_data$& propagates to them. This also applies to the special kind of
17659 &"child"& that is generated by a router with the &%unseen%& option.
17660
17661 The idea of &%address_data%& is that you can use it to look up a lot of data
17662 for the address once, and then pick out parts of the data later. For example,
17663 you could use a single LDAP lookup to return a string of the form
17664 .code
17665 uid=1234 gid=5678 mailbox=/mail/xyz forward=/home/xyz/.forward
17666 .endd
17667 In the transport you could pick out the mailbox by a setting such as
17668 .code
17669 file = ${extract{mailbox}{$address_data}}
17670 .endd
17671 This makes the configuration file less messy, and also reduces the number of
17672 lookups (though Exim does cache lookups).
17673
17674 .vindex "&$sender_address_data$&"
17675 .vindex "&$address_data$&"
17676 The &%address_data%& facility is also useful as a means of passing information
17677 from one router to another, and from a router to a transport. In addition, if
17678 &$address_data$& is set by a router when verifying a recipient address from an
17679 ACL, it remains available for use in the rest of the ACL statement. After
17680 verifying a sender, the value is transferred to &$sender_address_data$&.
17681
17682
17683
17684 .option address_test routers&!? boolean true
17685 .oindex "&%-bt%&"
17686 .cindex "router" "skipping when address testing"
17687 If this option is set false, the router is skipped when routing is being tested
17688 by means of the &%-bt%& command line option. This can be a convenience when
17689 your first router sends messages to an external scanner, because it saves you
17690 having to set the &"already scanned"& indicator when testing real address
17691 routing.
17692
17693
17694
17695 .option cannot_route_message routers string&!! unset
17696 .cindex "router" "customizing &""cannot route""& message"
17697 .cindex "customizing" "&""cannot route""& message"
17698 This option specifies a text message that is used when an address cannot be
17699 routed because Exim has run out of routers. The default message is
17700 &"Unrouteable address"&. This option is useful only on routers that have
17701 &%more%& set false, or on the very last router in a configuration, because the
17702 value that is used is taken from the last router that is considered. This
17703 includes a router that is skipped because its preconditions are not met, as
17704 well as a router that declines. For example, using the default configuration,
17705 you could put:
17706 .code
17707 cannot_route_message = Remote domain not found in DNS
17708 .endd
17709 on the first router, which is a &(dnslookup)& router with &%more%& set false,
17710 and
17711 .code
17712 cannot_route_message = Unknown local user
17713 .endd
17714 on the final router that checks for local users. If string expansion fails for
17715 this option, the default message is used. Unless the expansion failure was
17716 explicitly forced, a message about the failure is written to the main and panic
17717 logs, in addition to the normal message about the routing failure.
17718
17719
17720 .option caseful_local_part routers boolean false
17721 .cindex "case of local parts"
17722 .cindex "router" "case of local parts"
17723 By default, routers handle the local parts of addresses in a case-insensitive
17724 manner, though the actual case is preserved for transmission with the message.
17725 If you want the case of letters to be significant in a router, you must set
17726 this option true. For individual router options that contain address or local
17727 part lists (for example, &%local_parts%&), case-sensitive matching can be
17728 turned on by &"+caseful"& as a list item. See section &<<SECTcasletadd>>& for
17729 more details.
17730
17731 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
17732 .vindex "&$original_local_part$&"
17733 .vindex "&$parent_local_part$&"
17734 The value of the &$local_part$& variable is forced to lower case while a
17735 router is running unless &%caseful_local_part%& is set. When a router assigns
17736 an address to a transport, the value of &$local_part$& when the transport runs
17737 is the same as it was in the router. Similarly, when a router generates child
17738 addresses by aliasing or forwarding, the values of &$original_local_part$&
17739 and &$parent_local_part$& are those that were used by the redirecting router.
17740
17741 This option applies to the processing of an address by a router. When a
17742 recipient address is being processed in an ACL, there is a separate &%control%&
17743 modifier that can be used to specify case-sensitive processing within the ACL
17744 (see section &<<SECTcontrols>>&).
17745
17746
17747
17748 .option check_local_user routers&!? boolean false
17749 .cindex "local user, checking in router"
17750 .cindex "router" "checking for local user"
17751 .cindex "&_/etc/passwd_&"
17752 .vindex "&$home$&"
17753 When this option is true, Exim checks that the local part of the recipient
17754 address (with affixes removed if relevant) is the name of an account on the
17755 local system. The check is done by calling the &[getpwnam()]& function rather
17756 than trying to read &_/etc/passwd_& directly. This means that other methods of
17757 holding password data (such as NIS) are supported. If the local part is a local
17758 user, &$home$& is set from the password data, and can be tested in other
17759 preconditions that are evaluated after this one (the order of evaluation is
17760 given in section &<<SECTrouprecon>>&). However, the value of &$home$& can be
17761 overridden by &%router_home_directory%&. If the local part is not a local user,
17762 the router is skipped.
17763
17764 If you want to check that the local part is either the name of a local user
17765 or matches something else, you cannot combine &%check_local_user%& with a
17766 setting of &%local_parts%&, because that specifies the logical &'and'& of the
17767 two conditions. However, you can use a &(passwd)& lookup in a &%local_parts%&
17768 setting to achieve this. For example:
17769 .code
17770 local_parts = passwd;$local_part : lsearch;/etc/other/users
17771 .endd
17772 Note, however, that the side effects of &%check_local_user%& (such as setting
17773 up a home directory) do not occur when a &(passwd)& lookup is used in a
17774 &%local_parts%& (or any other) precondition.
17775
17776
17777
17778 .option condition routers&!? string&!! unset
17779 .cindex "router" "customized precondition"
17780 This option specifies a general precondition test that has to succeed for the
17781 router to be called. The &%condition%& option is the last precondition to be
17782 evaluated (see section &<<SECTrouprecon>>&). The string is expanded, and if the
17783 result is a forced failure, or an empty string, or one of the strings &"0"& or
17784 &"no"& or &"false"& (checked without regard to the case of the letters), the
17785 router is skipped, and the address is offered to the next one.
17786
17787 If the result is any other value, the router is run (as this is the last
17788 precondition to be evaluated, all the other preconditions must be true).
17789
17790 This option is unusual in that multiple &%condition%& options may be present.
17791 All &%condition%& options must succeed.
17792
17793 The &%condition%& option provides a means of applying custom conditions to the
17794 running of routers. Note that in the case of a simple conditional expansion,
17795 the default expansion values are exactly what is wanted. For example:
17796 .code
17797 condition = ${if >{$message_age}{600}}
17798 .endd
17799 Because of the default behaviour of the string expansion, this is equivalent to
17800 .code
17801 condition = ${if >{$message_age}{600}{true}{}}
17802 .endd
17803
17804 A multiple condition example, which succeeds:
17805 .code
17806 condition = ${if >{$message_age}{600}}
17807 condition = ${if !eq{${lc:$local_part}}{postmaster}}
17808 condition = foobar
17809 .endd
17810
17811 If the expansion fails (other than forced failure) delivery is deferred. Some
17812 of the other precondition options are common special cases that could in fact
17813 be specified using &%condition%&.
17814
17815 Historical note: We have &%condition%& on ACLs and on Routers. Routers
17816 are far older, and use one set of semantics. ACLs are newer and when
17817 they were created, the ACL &%condition%& process was given far stricter
17818 parse semantics. The &%bool{}%& expansion condition uses the same rules as
17819 ACLs. The &%bool_lax{}%& expansion condition uses the same rules as
17820 Routers. More pointedly, the &%bool_lax{}%& was written to match the existing
17821 Router rules processing behavior.
17822
17823 This is best illustrated in an example:
17824 .code
17825 # If used in an ACL condition will fail with a syntax error, but
17826 # in a router condition any extra characters are treated as a string
17827
17828 $ exim -be '${if eq {${lc:GOOGLE.com}} {google.com}} {yes} {no}}'
17829 true {yes} {no}}
17830
17831 $ exim -be '${if eq {${lc:WHOIS.com}} {google.com}} {yes} {no}}'
17832 {yes} {no}}
17833 .endd
17834 In each example above, the &%if%& statement actually ends after
17835 &"{google.com}}"&. Since no true or false braces were defined, the
17836 default &%if%& behavior is to return a boolean true or a null answer
17837 (which evaluates to false). The rest of the line is then treated as a
17838 string. So the first example resulted in the boolean answer &"true"&
17839 with the string &" {yes} {no}}"& appended to it. The second example
17840 resulted in the null output (indicating false) with the string
17841 &" {yes} {no}}"& appended to it.
17842
17843 In fact you can put excess forward braces in too. In the router
17844 &%condition%&, Exim's parser only looks for &"{"& symbols when they
17845 mean something, like after a &"$"& or when required as part of a
17846 conditional. But otherwise &"{"& and &"}"& are treated as ordinary
17847 string characters.
17848
17849 Thus, in a Router, the above expansion strings will both always evaluate
17850 true, as the result of expansion is a non-empty string which doesn't
17851 match an explicit false value. This can be tricky to debug. By
17852 contrast, in an ACL either of those strings will always result in an
17853 expansion error because the result doesn't look sufficiently boolean.
17854
17855
17856 .option debug_print routers string&!! unset
17857 .cindex "testing" "variables in drivers"
17858 If this option is set and debugging is enabled (see the &%-d%& command line
17859 option) or in address-testing mode (see the &%-bt%& command line option),
17860 the string is expanded and included in the debugging output.
17861 If expansion of the string fails, the error message is written to the debugging
17862 output, and Exim carries on processing.
17863 This option is provided to help with checking out the values of variables and
17864 so on when debugging router configurations. For example, if a &%condition%&
17865 option appears not to be working, &%debug_print%& can be used to output the
17866 variables it references. The output happens after checks for &%domains%&,
17867 &%local_parts%&, and &%check_local_user%& but before any other preconditions
17868 are tested. A newline is added to the text if it does not end with one.
17869 The variable &$router_name$& contains the name of the router.
17870
17871
17872
17873 .option disable_logging routers boolean false
17874 If this option is set true, nothing is logged for any routing errors
17875 or for any deliveries caused by this router. You should not set this option
17876 unless you really, really know what you are doing. See also the generic
17877 transport option of the same name.
17878
17879 .option dnssec_request_domains routers "domain list&!!" unset
17880 .cindex "MX record" "security"
17881 .cindex "DNSSEC" "MX lookup"
17882 .cindex "security" "MX lookup"
17883 .cindex "DNS" "DNSSEC"
17884 DNS lookups for domains matching &%dnssec_request_domains%& will be done with
17885 the dnssec request bit set.
17886 This applies to all of the SRV, MX, AAAA, A lookup sequence.
17887
17888 .option dnssec_require_domains routers "domain list&!!" unset
17889 .cindex "MX record" "security"
17890 .cindex "DNSSEC" "MX lookup"
17891 .cindex "security" "MX lookup"
17892 .cindex "DNS" "DNSSEC"
17893 DNS lookups for domains matching &%dnssec_require_domains%& will be done with
17894 the dnssec request bit set. Any returns not having the Authenticated Data bit
17895 (AD bit) set will be ignored and logged as a host-lookup failure.
17896 This applies to all of the SRV, MX, AAAA, A lookup sequence.
17897
17898
17899 .option domains routers&!? "domain list&!!" unset
17900 .cindex "router" "restricting to specific domains"
17901 .vindex "&$domain_data$&"
17902 If this option is set, the router is skipped unless the current domain matches
17903 the list. If the match is achieved by means of a file lookup, the data that the
17904 lookup returned for the domain is placed in &$domain_data$& for use in string
17905 expansions of the driver's private options. See section &<<SECTrouprecon>>& for
17906 a list of the order in which preconditions are evaluated.
17907
17908
17909
17910 .option driver routers string unset
17911 This option must always be set. It specifies which of the available routers is
17912 to be used.
17913
17914
17915 .option dsn_lasthop routers boolean false
17916 .cindex "DSN" "success"
17917 .cindex "Delivery Status Notification" "success"
17918 If this option is set true, and extended DSN (RFC3461) processing is in effect,
17919 Exim will not pass on DSN requests to downstream DSN-aware hosts but will
17920 instead send a success DSN as if the next hop does not support DSN.
17921 Not effective on redirect routers.
17922
17923
17924
17925 .option errors_to routers string&!! unset
17926 .cindex "envelope sender"
17927 .cindex "router" "changing address for errors"
17928 If a router successfully handles an address, it may assign the address to a
17929 transport for delivery or it may generate child addresses. In both cases, if
17930 there is a delivery problem during later processing, the resulting bounce
17931 message is sent to the address that results from expanding this string,
17932 provided that the address verifies successfully. The &%errors_to%& option is
17933 expanded before &%headers_add%&, &%headers_remove%&, and &%transport%&.
17934
17935 The &%errors_to%& setting associated with an address can be overridden if it
17936 subsequently passes through other routers that have their own &%errors_to%&
17937 settings, or if the message is delivered by a transport with a &%return_path%&
17938 setting.
17939
17940 If &%errors_to%& is unset, or the expansion is forced to fail, or the result of
17941 the expansion fails to verify, the errors address associated with the incoming
17942 address is used. At top level, this is the envelope sender. A non-forced
17943 expansion failure causes delivery to be deferred.
17944
17945 If an address for which &%errors_to%& has been set ends up being delivered over
17946 SMTP, the envelope sender for that delivery is the &%errors_to%& value, so that
17947 any bounces that are generated by other MTAs on the delivery route are also
17948 sent there. You can set &%errors_to%& to the empty string by either of these
17949 settings:
17950 .code
17951 errors_to =
17952 errors_to = ""
17953 .endd
17954 An expansion item that yields an empty string has the same effect. If you do
17955 this, a locally detected delivery error for addresses processed by this router
17956 no longer gives rise to a bounce message; the error is discarded. If the
17957 address is delivered to a remote host, the return path is set to &`<>`&, unless
17958 overridden by the &%return_path%& option on the transport.
17959
17960 .vindex "&$address_data$&"
17961 If for some reason you want to discard local errors, but use a non-empty
17962 MAIL command for remote delivery, you can preserve the original return
17963 path in &$address_data$& in the router, and reinstate it in the transport by
17964 setting &%return_path%&.
17965
17966 The most common use of &%errors_to%& is to direct mailing list bounces to the
17967 manager of the list, as described in section &<<SECTmailinglists>>&, or to
17968 implement VERP (Variable Envelope Return Paths) (see section &<<SECTverp>>&).
17969
17970
17971
17972 .option expn routers&!? boolean true
17973 .cindex "address" "testing"
17974 .cindex "testing" "addresses"
17975 .cindex "EXPN" "router skipping"
17976 .cindex "router" "skipping for EXPN"
17977 If this option is turned off, the router is skipped when testing an address
17978 as a result of processing an SMTP EXPN command. You might, for example,
17979 want to turn it off on a router for users' &_.forward_& files, while leaving it
17980 on for the system alias file.
17981 See section &<<SECTrouprecon>>& for a list of the order in which preconditions
17982 are evaluated.
17983
17984 The use of the SMTP EXPN command is controlled by an ACL (see chapter
17985 &<<CHAPACL>>&). When Exim is running an EXPN command, it is similar to testing
17986 an address with &%-bt%&. Compare VRFY, whose counterpart is &%-bv%&.
17987
17988
17989
17990 .option fail_verify routers boolean false
17991 .cindex "router" "forcing verification failure"
17992 Setting this option has the effect of setting both &%fail_verify_sender%& and
17993 &%fail_verify_recipient%& to the same value.
17994
17995
17996
17997 .option fail_verify_recipient routers boolean false
17998 If this option is true and an address is accepted by this router when
17999 verifying a recipient, verification fails.
18000
18001
18002
18003 .option fail_verify_sender routers boolean false
18004 If this option is true and an address is accepted by this router when
18005 verifying a sender, verification fails.
18006
18007
18008
18009 .option fallback_hosts routers "string list" unset
18010 .cindex "router" "fallback hosts"
18011 .cindex "fallback" "hosts specified on router"
18012 String expansion is not applied to this option. The argument must be a
18013 colon-separated list of host names or IP addresses. The list separator can be
18014 changed (see section &<<SECTlistconstruct>>&), and a port can be specified with
18015 each name or address. In fact, the format of each item is exactly the same as
18016 defined for the list of hosts in a &(manualroute)& router (see section
18017 &<<SECTformatonehostitem>>&).
18018
18019 If a router queues an address for a remote transport, this host list is
18020 associated with the address, and used instead of the transport's fallback host
18021 list. If &%hosts_randomize%& is set on the transport, the order of the list is
18022 randomized for each use. See the &%fallback_hosts%& option of the &(smtp)&
18023 transport for further details.
18024
18025
18026 .option group routers string&!! "see below"
18027 .cindex "gid (group id)" "local delivery"
18028 .cindex "local transports" "uid and gid"
18029 .cindex "transport" "local"
18030 .cindex "router" "setting group"
18031 When a router queues an address for a transport, and the transport does not
18032 specify a group, the group given here is used when running the delivery
18033 process.
18034 The group may be specified numerically or by name. If expansion fails, the
18035 error is logged and delivery is deferred.
18036 The default is unset, unless &%check_local_user%& is set, when the default
18037 is taken from the password information. See also &%initgroups%& and &%user%&
18038 and the discussion in chapter &<<CHAPenvironment>>&.
18039
18040
18041
18042 .option headers_add routers list&!! unset
18043 .cindex "header lines" "adding"
18044 .cindex "router" "adding header lines"
18045 This option specifies a list of text headers,
18046 newline-separated (by default, changeable in the usual way),
18047 that is associated with any addresses that are accepted by the router.
18048 Each item is separately expanded, at routing time. However, this
18049 option has no effect when an address is just being verified. The way in which
18050 the text is used to add header lines at transport time is described in section
18051 &<<SECTheadersaddrem>>&. New header lines are not actually added until the
18052 message is in the process of being transported. This means that references to
18053 header lines in string expansions in the transport's configuration do not
18054 &"see"& the added header lines.
18055
18056 The &%headers_add%& option is expanded after &%errors_to%&, but before
18057 &%headers_remove%& and &%transport%&. If an item is empty, or if
18058 an item expansion is forced to fail, the item has no effect. Other expansion
18059 failures are treated as configuration errors.
18060
18061 Unlike most options, &%headers_add%& can be specified multiple times
18062 for a router; all listed headers are added.
18063
18064 &*Warning 1*&: The &%headers_add%& option cannot be used for a &(redirect)&
18065 router that has the &%one_time%& option set.
18066
18067 .cindex "duplicate addresses"
18068 .oindex "&%unseen%&"
18069 &*Warning 2*&: If the &%unseen%& option is set on the router, all header
18070 additions are deleted when the address is passed on to subsequent routers.
18071 For a &%redirect%& router, if a generated address is the same as the incoming
18072 address, this can lead to duplicate addresses with different header
18073 modifications. Exim does not do duplicate deliveries (except, in certain
18074 circumstances, to pipes -- see section &<<SECTdupaddr>>&), but it is undefined
18075 which of the duplicates is discarded, so this ambiguous situation should be
18076 avoided. The &%repeat_use%& option of the &%redirect%& router may be of help.
18077
18078
18079
18080 .option headers_remove routers list&!! unset
18081 .cindex "header lines" "removing"
18082 .cindex "router" "removing header lines"
18083 This option specifies a list of text headers,
18084 colon-separated (by default, changeable in the usual way),
18085 that is associated with any addresses that are accepted by the router.
18086 Each item is separately expanded, at routing time. However, this
18087 option has no effect when an address is just being verified. The way in which
18088 the text is used to remove header lines at transport time is described in
18089 section &<<SECTheadersaddrem>>&. Header lines are not actually removed until
18090 the message is in the process of being transported. This means that references
18091 to header lines in string expansions in the transport's configuration still
18092 &"see"& the original header lines.
18093
18094 The &%headers_remove%& option is expanded after &%errors_to%& and
18095 &%headers_add%&, but before &%transport%&. If an item expansion is forced to fail,
18096 the item has no effect. Other expansion failures are treated as configuration
18097 errors.
18098
18099 Unlike most options, &%headers_remove%& can be specified multiple times
18100 for a router; all listed headers are removed.
18101
18102 &*Warning 1*&: The &%headers_remove%& option cannot be used for a &(redirect)&
18103 router that has the &%one_time%& option set.
18104
18105 &*Warning 2*&: If the &%unseen%& option is set on the router, all header
18106 removal requests are deleted when the address is passed on to subsequent
18107 routers, and this can lead to problems with duplicates -- see the similar
18108 warning for &%headers_add%& above.
18109
18110 &*Warning 3*&: Because of the separate expansion of the list items,
18111 items that contain a list separator must have it doubled.
18112 To avoid this, change the list separator (&<<SECTlistsepchange>>&).
18113
18114
18115
18116 .option ignore_target_hosts routers "host list&!!" unset
18117 .cindex "IP address" "discarding"
18118 .cindex "router" "discarding IP addresses"
18119 Although this option is a host list, it should normally contain IP address
18120 entries rather than names. If any host that is looked up by the router has an
18121 IP address that matches an item in this list, Exim behaves as if that IP
18122 address did not exist. This option allows you to cope with rogue DNS entries
18123 like
18124 .code
18125 remote.domain.example. A 127.0.0.1
18126 .endd
18127 by setting
18128 .code
18129 ignore_target_hosts = 127.0.0.1
18130 .endd
18131 on the relevant router. If all the hosts found by a &(dnslookup)& router are
18132 discarded in this way, the router declines. In a conventional configuration, an
18133 attempt to mail to such a domain would normally provoke the &"unrouteable
18134 domain"& error, and an attempt to verify an address in the domain would fail.
18135 Similarly, if &%ignore_target_hosts%& is set on an &(ipliteral)& router, the
18136 router declines if presented with one of the listed addresses.
18137
18138 You can use this option to disable the use of IPv4 or IPv6 for mail delivery by
18139 means of the first or the second of the following settings, respectively:
18140 .code
18141 ignore_target_hosts = 0.0.0.0/0
18142 ignore_target_hosts = <; 0::0/0
18143 .endd
18144 The pattern in the first line matches all IPv4 addresses, whereas the pattern
18145 in the second line matches all IPv6 addresses.
18146
18147 This option may also be useful for ignoring link-local and site-local IPv6
18148 addresses. Because, like all host lists, the value of &%ignore_target_hosts%&
18149 is expanded before use as a list, it is possible to make it dependent on the
18150 domain that is being routed.
18151
18152 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
18153 During its expansion, &$host_address$& is set to the IP address that is being
18154 checked.
18155
18156 .option initgroups routers boolean false
18157 .cindex "additional groups"
18158 .cindex "groups" "additional"
18159 .cindex "local transports" "uid and gid"
18160 .cindex "transport" "local"
18161 If the router queues an address for a transport, and this option is true, and
18162 the uid supplied by the router is not overridden by the transport, the
18163 &[initgroups()]& function is called when running the transport to ensure that
18164 any additional groups associated with the uid are set up. See also &%group%&
18165 and &%user%& and the discussion in chapter &<<CHAPenvironment>>&.
18166
18167
18168
18169 .option local_part_prefix routers&!? "string list" unset
18170 .cindex "router" "prefix for local part"
18171 .cindex "prefix" "for local part, used in router"
18172 If this option is set, the router is skipped unless the local part starts with
18173 one of the given strings, or &%local_part_prefix_optional%& is true. See
18174 section &<<SECTrouprecon>>& for a list of the order in which preconditions are
18175 evaluated.
18176
18177 The list is scanned from left to right, and the first prefix that matches is
18178 used. A limited form of wildcard is available; if the prefix begins with an
18179 asterisk, it matches the longest possible sequence of arbitrary characters at
18180 the start of the local part. An asterisk should therefore always be followed by
18181 some character that does not occur in normal local parts.
18182 .cindex "multiple mailboxes"
18183 .cindex "mailbox" "multiple"
18184 Wildcarding can be used to set up multiple user mailboxes, as described in
18185 section &<<SECTmulbox>>&.
18186
18187 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
18188 .vindex "&$local_part_prefix$&"
18189 During the testing of the &%local_parts%& option, and while the router is
18190 running, the prefix is removed from the local part, and is available in the
18191 expansion variable &$local_part_prefix$&. When a message is being delivered, if
18192 the router accepts the address, this remains true during subsequent delivery by
18193 a transport. In particular, the local part that is transmitted in the RCPT
18194 command for LMTP, SMTP, and BSMTP deliveries has the prefix removed by default.
18195 This behaviour can be overridden by setting &%rcpt_include_affixes%& true on
18196 the relevant transport.
18197
18198 When an address is being verified, &%local_part_prefix%& affects only the
18199 behaviour of the router. If the callout feature of verification is in use, this
18200 means that the full address, including the prefix, will be used during the
18201 callout.
18202
18203 The prefix facility is commonly used to handle local parts of the form
18204 &%owner-something%&. Another common use is to support local parts of the form
18205 &%real-username%& to bypass a user's &_.forward_& file &-- helpful when trying
18206 to tell a user their forwarding is broken &-- by placing a router like this one
18207 immediately before the router that handles &_.forward_& files:
18208 .code
18209 real_localuser:
18210 driver = accept
18211 local_part_prefix = real-
18212 check_local_user
18213 transport = local_delivery
18214 .endd
18215 For security, it would probably be a good idea to restrict the use of this
18216 router to locally-generated messages, using a condition such as this:
18217 .code
18218 condition = ${if match {$sender_host_address}\
18219 {\N^(|127\.0\.0\.1)$\N}}
18220 .endd
18221
18222 If both &%local_part_prefix%& and &%local_part_suffix%& are set for a router,
18223 both conditions must be met if not optional. Care must be taken if wildcards
18224 are used in both a prefix and a suffix on the same router. Different
18225 separator characters must be used to avoid ambiguity.
18226
18227
18228 .option local_part_prefix_optional routers boolean false
18229 See &%local_part_prefix%& above.
18230
18231
18232
18233 .option local_part_suffix routers&!? "string list" unset
18234 .cindex "router" "suffix for local part"
18235 .cindex "suffix for local part" "used in router"
18236 This option operates in the same way as &%local_part_prefix%&, except that the
18237 local part must end (rather than start) with the given string, the
18238 &%local_part_suffix_optional%& option determines whether the suffix is
18239 mandatory, and the wildcard * character, if present, must be the last
18240 character of the suffix. This option facility is commonly used to handle local
18241 parts of the form &%something-request%& and multiple user mailboxes of the form
18242 &%username-foo%&.
18243
18244
18245 .option local_part_suffix_optional routers boolean false
18246 See &%local_part_suffix%& above.
18247
18248
18249
18250 .option local_parts routers&!? "local part list&!!" unset
18251 .cindex "router" "restricting to specific local parts"
18252 .cindex "local part" "checking in router"
18253 The router is run only if the local part of the address matches the list.
18254 See section &<<SECTrouprecon>>& for a list of the order in which preconditions
18255 are evaluated, and
18256 section &<<SECTlocparlis>>& for a discussion of local part lists. Because the
18257 string is expanded, it is possible to make it depend on the domain, for
18258 example:
18259 .code
18260 local_parts = dbm;/usr/local/specials/$domain
18261 .endd
18262 .vindex "&$local_part_data$&"
18263 If the match is achieved by a lookup, the data that the lookup returned
18264 for the local part is placed in the variable &$local_part_data$& for use in
18265 expansions of the router's private options. You might use this option, for
18266 example, if you have a large number of local virtual domains, and you want to
18267 send all postmaster mail to the same place without having to set up an alias in
18268 each virtual domain:
18269 .code
18270 postmaster:
18271 driver = redirect
18272 local_parts = postmaster
18273 data = postmaster@real.domain.example
18274 .endd
18275
18276
18277 .option log_as_local routers boolean "see below"
18278 .cindex "log" "delivery line"
18279 .cindex "delivery" "log line format"
18280 Exim has two logging styles for delivery, the idea being to make local
18281 deliveries stand out more visibly from remote ones. In the &"local"& style, the
18282 recipient address is given just as the local part, without a domain. The use of
18283 this style is controlled by this option. It defaults to true for the &(accept)&
18284 router, and false for all the others. This option applies only when a
18285 router assigns an address to a transport. It has no effect on routers that
18286 redirect addresses.
18287
18288
18289
18290 .option more routers boolean&!! true
18291 The result of string expansion for this option must be a valid boolean value,
18292 that is, one of the strings &"yes"&, &"no"&, &"true"&, or &"false"&. Any other
18293 result causes an error, and delivery is deferred. If the expansion is forced to
18294 fail, the default value for the option (true) is used. Other failures cause
18295 delivery to be deferred.
18296
18297 If this option is set false, and the router declines to handle the address, no
18298 further routers are tried, routing fails, and the address is bounced.
18299 .oindex "&%self%&"
18300 However, if the router explicitly passes an address to the following router by
18301 means of the setting
18302 .code
18303 self = pass
18304 .endd
18305 or otherwise, the setting of &%more%& is ignored. Also, the setting of &%more%&
18306 does not affect the behaviour if one of the precondition tests fails. In that
18307 case, the address is always passed to the next router.
18308
18309 Note that &%address_data%& is not considered to be a precondition. If its
18310 expansion is forced to fail, the router declines, and the value of &%more%&
18311 controls what happens next.
18312
18313
18314 .option pass_on_timeout routers boolean false
18315 .cindex "timeout" "of router"
18316 .cindex "router" "timeout"
18317 If a router times out during a host lookup, it normally causes deferral of the
18318 address. If &%pass_on_timeout%& is set, the address is passed on to the next
18319 router, overriding &%no_more%&. This may be helpful for systems that are
18320 intermittently connected to the Internet, or those that want to pass to a smart
18321 host any messages that cannot immediately be delivered.
18322
18323 There are occasional other temporary errors that can occur while doing DNS
18324 lookups. They are treated in the same way as a timeout, and this option
18325 applies to all of them.
18326
18327
18328
18329 .option pass_router routers string unset
18330 .cindex "router" "go to after &""pass""&"
18331 Routers that recognize the generic &%self%& option (&(dnslookup)&,
18332 &(ipliteral)&, and &(manualroute)&) are able to return &"pass"&, forcing
18333 routing to continue, and overriding a false setting of &%more%&. When one of
18334 these routers returns &"pass"&, the address is normally handed on to the next
18335 router in sequence. This can be changed by setting &%pass_router%& to the name
18336 of another router. However (unlike &%redirect_router%&) the named router must
18337 be below the current router, to avoid loops. Note that this option applies only
18338 to the special case of &"pass"&. It does not apply when a router returns
18339 &"decline"& because it cannot handle an address.
18340
18341
18342
18343 .option redirect_router routers string unset
18344 .cindex "router" "start at after redirection"
18345 Sometimes an administrator knows that it is pointless to reprocess addresses
18346 generated from alias or forward files with the same router again. For
18347 example, if an alias file translates real names into login ids there is no
18348 point searching the alias file a second time, especially if it is a large file.
18349
18350 The &%redirect_router%& option can be set to the name of any router instance.
18351 It causes the routing of any generated addresses to start at the named router
18352 instead of at the first router. This option has no effect if the router in
18353 which it is set does not generate new addresses.
18354
18355
18356
18357 .option require_files routers&!? "string list&!!" unset
18358 .cindex "file" "requiring for router"
18359 .cindex "router" "requiring file existence"
18360 This option provides a general mechanism for predicating the running of a
18361 router on the existence or non-existence of certain files or directories.
18362 Before running a router, as one of its precondition tests, Exim works its way
18363 through the &%require_files%& list, expanding each item separately.
18364
18365 Because the list is split before expansion, any colons in expansion items must
18366 be doubled, or the facility for using a different list separator must be used.
18367 If any expansion is forced to fail, the item is ignored. Other expansion
18368 failures cause routing of the address to be deferred.
18369
18370 If any expanded string is empty, it is ignored. Otherwise, except as described
18371 below, each string must be a fully qualified file path, optionally preceded by
18372 &"!"&. The paths are passed to the &[stat()]& function to test for the
18373 existence of the files or directories. The router is skipped if any paths not
18374 preceded by &"!"& do not exist, or if any paths preceded by &"!"& do exist.
18375
18376 .cindex "NFS"
18377 If &[stat()]& cannot determine whether a file exists or not, delivery of
18378 the message is deferred. This can happen when NFS-mounted filesystems are
18379 unavailable.
18380
18381 This option is checked after the &%domains%&, &%local_parts%&, and &%senders%&
18382 options, so you cannot use it to check for the existence of a file in which to
18383 look up a domain, local part, or sender. (See section &<<SECTrouprecon>>& for a
18384 full list of the order in which preconditions are evaluated.) However, as
18385 these options are all expanded, you can use the &%exists%& expansion condition
18386 to make such tests. The &%require_files%& option is intended for checking files
18387 that the router may be going to use internally, or which are needed by a
18388 transport (for example &_.procmailrc_&).
18389
18390 During delivery, the &[stat()]& function is run as root, but there is a
18391 facility for some checking of the accessibility of a file by another user.
18392 This is not a proper permissions check, but just a &"rough"& check that
18393 operates as follows:
18394
18395 If an item in a &%require_files%& list does not contain any forward slash
18396 characters, it is taken to be the user (and optional group, separated by a
18397 comma) to be checked for subsequent files in the list. If no group is specified
18398 but the user is specified symbolically, the gid associated with the uid is
18399 used. For example:
18400 .code
18401 require_files = mail:/some/file
18402 require_files = $local_part:$home/.procmailrc
18403 .endd
18404 If a user or group name in a &%require_files%& list does not exist, the
18405 &%require_files%& condition fails.
18406
18407 Exim performs the check by scanning along the components of the file path, and
18408 checking the access for the given uid and gid. It checks for &"x"& access on
18409 directories, and &"r"& access on the final file. Note that this means that file
18410 access control lists, if the operating system has them, are ignored.
18411
18412 &*Warning 1*&: When the router is being run to verify addresses for an
18413 incoming SMTP message, Exim is not running as root, but under its own uid. This
18414 may affect the result of a &%require_files%& check. In particular, &[stat()]&
18415 may yield the error EACCES (&"Permission denied"&). This means that the Exim
18416 user is not permitted to read one of the directories on the file's path.
18417
18418 &*Warning 2*&: Even when Exim is running as root while delivering a message,
18419 &[stat()]& can yield EACCES for a file in an NFS directory that is mounted
18420 without root access. In this case, if a check for access by a particular user
18421 is requested, Exim creates a subprocess that runs as that user, and tries the
18422 check again in that process.
18423
18424 The default action for handling an unresolved EACCES is to consider it to
18425 be caused by a configuration error, and routing is deferred because the
18426 existence or non-existence of the file cannot be determined. However, in some
18427 circumstances it may be desirable to treat this condition as if the file did
18428 not exist. If the file name (or the exclamation mark that precedes the file
18429 name for non-existence) is preceded by a plus sign, the EACCES error is treated
18430 as if the file did not exist. For example:
18431 .code
18432 require_files = +/some/file
18433 .endd
18434 If the router is not an essential part of verification (for example, it
18435 handles users' &_.forward_& files), another solution is to set the &%verify%&
18436 option false so that the router is skipped when verifying.
18437
18438
18439
18440 .option retry_use_local_part routers boolean "see below"
18441 .cindex "hints database" "retry keys"
18442 .cindex "local part" "in retry keys"
18443 When a delivery suffers a temporary routing failure, a retry record is created
18444 in Exim's hints database. For addresses whose routing depends only on the
18445 domain, the key for the retry record should not involve the local part, but for
18446 other addresses, both the domain and the local part should be included.
18447 Usually, remote routing is of the former kind, and local routing is of the
18448 latter kind.
18449
18450 This option controls whether the local part is used to form the key for retry
18451 hints for addresses that suffer temporary errors while being handled by this
18452 router. The default value is true for any router that has &%check_local_user%&
18453 set, and false otherwise. Note that this option does not apply to hints keys
18454 for transport delays; they are controlled by a generic transport option of the
18455 same name.
18456
18457 The setting of &%retry_use_local_part%& applies only to the router on which it
18458 appears. If the router generates child addresses, they are routed
18459 independently; this setting does not become attached to them.
18460
18461
18462
18463 .option router_home_directory routers string&!! unset
18464 .cindex "router" "home directory for"
18465 .cindex "home directory" "for router"
18466 .vindex "&$home$&"
18467 This option sets a home directory for use while the router is running. (Compare
18468 &%transport_home_directory%&, which sets a home directory for later
18469 transporting.) In particular, if used on a &(redirect)& router, this option
18470 sets a value for &$home$& while a filter is running. The value is expanded;
18471 forced expansion failure causes the option to be ignored &-- other failures
18472 cause the router to defer.
18473
18474 Expansion of &%router_home_directory%& happens immediately after the
18475 &%check_local_user%& test (if configured), before any further expansions take
18476 place.
18477 (See section &<<SECTrouprecon>>& for a list of the order in which preconditions
18478 are evaluated.)
18479 While the router is running, &%router_home_directory%& overrides the value of
18480 &$home$& that came from &%check_local_user%&.
18481
18482 When a router accepts an address and assigns it to a local transport (including
18483 the cases when a &(redirect)& router generates a pipe, file, or autoreply
18484 delivery), the home directory setting for the transport is taken from the first
18485 of these values that is set:
18486
18487 .ilist
18488 The &%home_directory%& option on the transport;
18489 .next
18490 The &%transport_home_directory%& option on the router;
18491 .next
18492 The password data if &%check_local_user%& is set on the router;
18493 .next
18494 The &%router_home_directory%& option on the router.
18495 .endlist
18496
18497 In other words, &%router_home_directory%& overrides the password data for the
18498 router, but not for the transport.
18499
18500
18501
18502 .option self routers string freeze
18503 .cindex "MX record" "pointing to local host"
18504 .cindex "local host" "MX pointing to"
18505 This option applies to those routers that use a recipient address to find a
18506 list of remote hosts. Currently, these are the &(dnslookup)&, &(ipliteral)&,
18507 and &(manualroute)& routers.
18508 Certain configurations of the &(queryprogram)& router can also specify a list
18509 of remote hosts.
18510 Usually such routers are configured to send the message to a remote host via an
18511 &(smtp)& transport. The &%self%& option specifies what happens when the first
18512 host on the list turns out to be the local host.
18513 The way in which Exim checks for the local host is described in section
18514 &<<SECTreclocipadd>>&.
18515
18516 Normally this situation indicates either an error in Exim's configuration (for
18517 example, the router should be configured not to process this domain), or an
18518 error in the DNS (for example, the MX should not point to this host). For this
18519 reason, the default action is to log the incident, defer the address, and
18520 freeze the message. The following alternatives are provided for use in special
18521 cases:
18522
18523 .vlist
18524 .vitem &%defer%&
18525 Delivery of the message is tried again later, but the message is not frozen.
18526
18527 .vitem "&%reroute%&: <&'domain'&>"
18528 The domain is changed to the given domain, and the address is passed back to
18529 be reprocessed by the routers. No rewriting of headers takes place. This
18530 behaviour is essentially a redirection.
18531
18532 .vitem "&%reroute: rewrite:%& <&'domain'&>"
18533 The domain is changed to the given domain, and the address is passed back to be
18534 reprocessed by the routers. Any headers that contain the original domain are
18535 rewritten.
18536
18537 .vitem &%pass%&
18538 .oindex "&%more%&"
18539 .vindex "&$self_hostname$&"
18540 The router passes the address to the next router, or to the router named in the
18541 &%pass_router%& option if it is set. This overrides &%no_more%&. During
18542 subsequent routing and delivery, the variable &$self_hostname$& contains the
18543 name of the local host that the router encountered. This can be used to
18544 distinguish between different cases for hosts with multiple names. The
18545 combination
18546 .code
18547 self = pass
18548 no_more
18549 .endd
18550 ensures that only those addresses that routed to the local host are passed on.
18551 Without &%no_more%&, addresses that were declined for other reasons would also
18552 be passed to the next router.
18553
18554 .vitem &%fail%&
18555 Delivery fails and an error report is generated.
18556
18557 .vitem &%send%&
18558 .cindex "local host" "sending to"
18559 The anomaly is ignored and the address is queued for the transport. This
18560 setting should be used with extreme caution. For an &(smtp)& transport, it
18561 makes sense only in cases where the program that is listening on the SMTP port
18562 is not this version of Exim. That is, it must be some other MTA, or Exim with a
18563 different configuration file that handles the domain in another way.
18564 .endlist
18565
18566
18567
18568 .option senders routers&!? "address list&!!" unset
18569 .cindex "router" "checking senders"
18570 If this option is set, the router is skipped unless the message's sender
18571 address matches something on the list.
18572 See section &<<SECTrouprecon>>& for a list of the order in which preconditions
18573 are evaluated.
18574
18575 There are issues concerning verification when the running of routers is
18576 dependent on the sender. When Exim is verifying the address in an &%errors_to%&
18577 setting, it sets the sender to the null string. When using the &%-bt%& option
18578 to check a configuration file, it is necessary also to use the &%-f%& option to
18579 set an appropriate sender. For incoming mail, the sender is unset when
18580 verifying the sender, but is available when verifying any recipients. If the
18581 SMTP VRFY command is enabled, it must be used after MAIL if the sender address
18582 matters.
18583
18584
18585 .option translate_ip_address routers string&!! unset
18586 .cindex "IP address" "translating"
18587 .cindex "packet radio"
18588 .cindex "router" "IP address translation"
18589 There exist some rare networking situations (for example, packet radio) where
18590 it is helpful to be able to translate IP addresses generated by normal routing
18591 mechanisms into other IP addresses, thus performing a kind of manual IP
18592 routing. This should be done only if the normal IP routing of the TCP/IP stack
18593 is inadequate or broken. Because this is an extremely uncommon requirement, the
18594 code to support this option is not included in the Exim binary unless
18595 SUPPORT_TRANSLATE_IP_ADDRESS=yes is set in &_Local/Makefile_&.
18596
18597 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
18598 The &%translate_ip_address%& string is expanded for every IP address generated
18599 by the router, with the generated address set in &$host_address$&. If the
18600 expansion is forced to fail, no action is taken.
18601 For any other expansion error, delivery of the message is deferred.
18602 If the result of the expansion is an IP address, that replaces the original
18603 address; otherwise the result is assumed to be a host name &-- this is looked
18604 up using &[gethostbyname()]& (or &[getipnodebyname()]& when available) to
18605 produce one or more replacement IP addresses. For example, to subvert all IP
18606 addresses in some specific networks, this could be added to a router:
18607 .code
18608 translate_ip_address = \
18609 ${lookup{${mask:$host_address/26}}lsearch{/some/file}\
18610 {$value}fail}}
18611 .endd
18612 The file would contain lines like
18613 .code
18614 10.2.3.128/26 some.host
18615 10.8.4.34/26 10.44.8.15
18616 .endd
18617 You should not make use of this facility unless you really understand what you
18618 are doing.
18619
18620
18621
18622 .option transport routers string&!! unset
18623 This option specifies the transport to be used when a router accepts an address
18624 and sets it up for delivery. A transport is never needed if a router is used
18625 only for verification. The value of the option is expanded at routing time,
18626 after the expansion of &%errors_to%&, &%headers_add%&, and &%headers_remove%&,
18627 and result must be the name of one of the configured transports. If it is not,
18628 delivery is deferred.
18629
18630 The &%transport%& option is not used by the &(redirect)& router, but it does
18631 have some private options that set up transports for pipe and file deliveries
18632 (see chapter &<<CHAPredirect>>&).
18633
18634
18635
18636 .option transport_current_directory routers string&!! unset
18637 .cindex "current directory for local transport"
18638 This option associates a current directory with any address that is routed
18639 to a local transport. This can happen either because a transport is
18640 explicitly configured for the router, or because it generates a delivery to a
18641 file or a pipe. During the delivery process (that is, at transport time), this
18642 option string is expanded and is set as the current directory, unless
18643 overridden by a setting on the transport.
18644 If the expansion fails for any reason, including forced failure, an error is
18645 logged, and delivery is deferred.
18646 See chapter &<<CHAPenvironment>>& for details of the local delivery
18647 environment.
18648
18649
18650
18651
18652 .option transport_home_directory routers string&!! "see below"
18653 .cindex "home directory" "for local transport"
18654 This option associates a home directory with any address that is routed to a
18655 local transport. This can happen either because a transport is explicitly
18656 configured for the router, or because it generates a delivery to a file or a
18657 pipe. During the delivery process (that is, at transport time), the option
18658 string is expanded and is set as the home directory, unless overridden by a
18659 setting of &%home_directory%& on the transport.
18660 If the expansion fails for any reason, including forced failure, an error is
18661 logged, and delivery is deferred.
18662
18663 If the transport does not specify a home directory, and
18664 &%transport_home_directory%& is not set for the router, the home directory for
18665 the transport is taken from the password data if &%check_local_user%& is set for
18666 the router. Otherwise it is taken from &%router_home_directory%& if that option
18667 is set; if not, no home directory is set for the transport.
18668
18669 See chapter &<<CHAPenvironment>>& for further details of the local delivery
18670 environment.
18671
18672
18673
18674
18675 .option unseen routers boolean&!! false
18676 .cindex "router" "carrying on after success"
18677 The result of string expansion for this option must be a valid boolean value,
18678 that is, one of the strings &"yes"&, &"no"&, &"true"&, or &"false"&. Any other
18679 result causes an error, and delivery is deferred. If the expansion is forced to
18680 fail, the default value for the option (false) is used. Other failures cause
18681 delivery to be deferred.
18682
18683 When this option is set true, routing does not cease if the router accepts the
18684 address. Instead, a copy of the incoming address is passed to the next router,
18685 overriding a false setting of &%more%&. There is little point in setting
18686 &%more%& false if &%unseen%& is always true, but it may be useful in cases when
18687 the value of &%unseen%& contains expansion items (and therefore, presumably, is
18688 sometimes true and sometimes false).
18689
18690 .cindex "copy of message (&%unseen%& option)"
18691 Setting the &%unseen%& option has a similar effect to the &%unseen%& command
18692 qualifier in filter files. It can be used to cause copies of messages to be
18693 delivered to some other destination, while also carrying out a normal delivery.
18694 In effect, the current address is made into a &"parent"& that has two children
18695 &-- one that is delivered as specified by this router, and a clone that goes on
18696 to be routed further. For this reason, &%unseen%& may not be combined with the
18697 &%one_time%& option in a &(redirect)& router.
18698
18699 &*Warning*&: Header lines added to the address (or specified for removal) by
18700 this router or by previous routers affect the &"unseen"& copy of the message
18701 only. The clone that continues to be processed by further routers starts with
18702 no added headers and none specified for removal. For a &%redirect%& router, if
18703 a generated address is the same as the incoming address, this can lead to
18704 duplicate addresses with different header modifications. Exim does not do
18705 duplicate deliveries (except, in certain circumstances, to pipes -- see section
18706 &<<SECTdupaddr>>&), but it is undefined which of the duplicates is discarded,
18707 so this ambiguous situation should be avoided. The &%repeat_use%& option of the
18708 &%redirect%& router may be of help.
18709
18710 Unlike the handling of header modifications, any data that was set by the
18711 &%address_data%& option in the current or previous routers &'is'& passed on to
18712 subsequent routers.
18713
18714
18715 .option user routers string&!! "see below"
18716 .cindex "uid (user id)" "local delivery"
18717 .cindex "local transports" "uid and gid"
18718 .cindex "transport" "local"
18719 .cindex "router" "user for filter processing"
18720 .cindex "filter" "user for processing"
18721 When a router queues an address for a transport, and the transport does not
18722 specify a user, the user given here is used when running the delivery process.
18723 The user may be specified numerically or by name. If expansion fails, the
18724 error is logged and delivery is deferred.
18725 This user is also used by the &(redirect)& router when running a filter file.
18726 The default is unset, except when &%check_local_user%& is set. In this case,
18727 the default is taken from the password information. If the user is specified as
18728 a name, and &%group%& is not set, the group associated with the user is used.
18729 See also &%initgroups%& and &%group%& and the discussion in chapter
18730 &<<CHAPenvironment>>&.
18731
18732
18733
18734 .option verify routers&!? boolean true
18735 Setting this option has the effect of setting &%verify_sender%& and
18736 &%verify_recipient%& to the same value.
18737
18738
18739 .option verify_only routers&!? boolean false
18740 .cindex "EXPN" "with &%verify_only%&"
18741 .oindex "&%-bv%&"
18742 .cindex "router" "used only when verifying"
18743 If this option is set, the router is used only when verifying an address,
18744 delivering in cutthrough mode or
18745 testing with the &%-bv%& option, not when actually doing a delivery, testing
18746 with the &%-bt%& option, or running the SMTP EXPN command. It can be further
18747 restricted to verifying only senders or recipients by means of
18748 &%verify_sender%& and &%verify_recipient%&.
18749
18750 &*Warning*&: When the router is being run to verify addresses for an incoming
18751 SMTP message, Exim is not running as root, but under its own uid. If the router
18752 accesses any files, you need to make sure that they are accessible to the Exim
18753 user or group.
18754
18755
18756 .option verify_recipient routers&!? boolean true
18757 If this option is false, the router is skipped when verifying recipient
18758 addresses,
18759 delivering in cutthrough mode
18760 or testing recipient verification using &%-bv%&.
18761 See section &<<SECTrouprecon>>& for a list of the order in which preconditions
18762 are evaluated.
18763 See also the &$verify_mode$& variable.
18764
18765
18766 .option verify_sender routers&!? boolean true
18767 If this option is false, the router is skipped when verifying sender addresses
18768 or testing sender verification using &%-bvs%&.
18769 See section &<<SECTrouprecon>>& for a list of the order in which preconditions
18770 are evaluated.
18771 See also the &$verify_mode$& variable.
18772 .ecindex IIDgenoprou1
18773 .ecindex IIDgenoprou2
18774
18775
18776
18777
18778
18779
18780 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
18781 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
18782
18783 .chapter "The accept router" "CHID4"
18784 .cindex "&(accept)& router"
18785 .cindex "routers" "&(accept)&"
18786 The &(accept)& router has no private options of its own. Unless it is being
18787 used purely for verification (see &%verify_only%&) a transport is required to
18788 be defined by the generic &%transport%& option. If the preconditions that are
18789 specified by generic options are met, the router accepts the address and queues
18790 it for the given transport. The most common use of this router is for setting
18791 up deliveries to local mailboxes. For example:
18792 .code
18793 localusers:
18794 driver = accept
18795 domains = mydomain.example
18796 check_local_user
18797 transport = local_delivery
18798 .endd
18799 The &%domains%& condition in this example checks the domain of the address, and
18800 &%check_local_user%& checks that the local part is the login of a local user.
18801 When both preconditions are met, the &(accept)& router runs, and queues the
18802 address for the &(local_delivery)& transport.
18803
18804
18805
18806
18807
18808
18809 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
18810 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
18811
18812 .chapter "The dnslookup router" "CHAPdnslookup"
18813 .scindex IIDdnsrou1 "&(dnslookup)& router"
18814 .scindex IIDdnsrou2 "routers" "&(dnslookup)&"
18815 The &(dnslookup)& router looks up the hosts that handle mail for the
18816 recipient's domain in the DNS. A transport must always be set for this router,
18817 unless &%verify_only%& is set.
18818
18819 If SRV support is configured (see &%check_srv%& below), Exim first searches for
18820 SRV records. If none are found, or if SRV support is not configured,
18821 MX records are looked up. If no MX records exist, address records are sought.
18822 However, &%mx_domains%& can be set to disable the direct use of address
18823 records.
18824
18825 MX records of equal priority are sorted by Exim into a random order. Exim then
18826 looks for address records for the host names obtained from MX or SRV records.
18827 When a host has more than one IP address, they are sorted into a random order,
18828 except that IPv6 addresses are sorted before IPv4 addresses. If all the
18829 IP addresses found are discarded by a setting of the &%ignore_target_hosts%&
18830 generic option, the router declines.
18831
18832 Unless they have the highest priority (lowest MX value), MX records that point
18833 to the local host, or to any host name that matches &%hosts_treat_as_local%&,
18834 are discarded, together with any other MX records of equal or lower priority.
18835
18836 .cindex "MX record" "pointing to local host"
18837 .cindex "local host" "MX pointing to"
18838 .oindex "&%self%&" "in &(dnslookup)& router"
18839 If the host pointed to by the highest priority MX record, or looked up as an
18840 address record, is the local host, or matches &%hosts_treat_as_local%&, what
18841 happens is controlled by the generic &%self%& option.
18842
18843
18844 .section "Problems with DNS lookups" "SECTprowitdnsloo"
18845 There have been problems with DNS servers when SRV records are looked up.
18846 Some misbehaving servers return a DNS error or timeout when a non-existent
18847 SRV record is sought. Similar problems have in the past been reported for
18848 MX records. The global &%dns_again_means_nonexist%& option can help with this
18849 problem, but it is heavy-handed because it is a global option.
18850
18851 For this reason, there are two options, &%srv_fail_domains%& and
18852 &%mx_fail_domains%&, that control what happens when a DNS lookup in a
18853 &(dnslookup)& router results in a DNS failure or a &"try again"& response. If
18854 an attempt to look up an SRV or MX record causes one of these results, and the
18855 domain matches the relevant list, Exim behaves as if the DNS had responded &"no
18856 such record"&. In the case of an SRV lookup, this means that the router
18857 proceeds to look for MX records; in the case of an MX lookup, it proceeds to
18858 look for A or AAAA records, unless the domain matches &%mx_domains%&, in which
18859 case routing fails.
18860
18861
18862 .section "Declining addresses by dnslookup" "SECTdnslookupdecline"
18863 .cindex "&(dnslookup)& router" "declines"
18864 There are a few cases where a &(dnslookup)& router will decline to accept
18865 an address; if such a router is expected to handle "all remaining non-local
18866 domains", then it is important to set &%no_more%&.
18867
18868 The router will defer rather than decline if the domain
18869 is found in the &%fail_defer_domains%& router option.
18870
18871 Reasons for a &(dnslookup)& router to decline currently include:
18872 .ilist
18873 The domain does not exist in DNS
18874 .next
18875 The domain exists but the MX record's host part is just "."; this is a common
18876 convention (borrowed from SRV) used to indicate that there is no such service
18877 for this domain and to not fall back to trying A/AAAA records.
18878 .next
18879 Ditto, but for SRV records, when &%check_srv%& is set on this router.
18880 .next
18881 MX record points to a non-existent host.
18882 .next
18883 MX record points to an IP address and the main section option
18884 &%allow_mx_to_ip%& is not set.
18885 .next
18886 MX records exist and point to valid hosts, but all hosts resolve only to
18887 addresses blocked by the &%ignore_target_hosts%& generic option on this router.
18888 .next
18889 The domain is not syntactically valid (see also &%allow_utf8_domains%& and
18890 &%dns_check_names_pattern%& for handling one variant of this)
18891 .next
18892 &%check_secondary_mx%& is set on this router but the local host can
18893 not be found in the MX records (see below)
18894 .endlist
18895
18896
18897
18898
18899 .section "Private options for dnslookup" "SECID118"
18900 .cindex "options" "&(dnslookup)& router"
18901 The private options for the &(dnslookup)& router are as follows:
18902
18903 .option check_secondary_mx dnslookup boolean false
18904 .cindex "MX record" "checking for secondary"
18905 If this option is set, the router declines unless the local host is found in
18906 (and removed from) the list of hosts obtained by MX lookup. This can be used to
18907 process domains for which the local host is a secondary mail exchanger
18908 differently to other domains. The way in which Exim decides whether a host is
18909 the local host is described in section &<<SECTreclocipadd>>&.
18910
18911
18912 .option check_srv dnslookup string&!! unset
18913 .cindex "SRV record" "enabling use of"
18914 The &(dnslookup)& router supports the use of SRV records (see RFC 2782) in
18915 addition to MX and address records. The support is disabled by default. To
18916 enable SRV support, set the &%check_srv%& option to the name of the service
18917 required. For example,
18918 .code
18919 check_srv = smtp
18920 .endd
18921 looks for SRV records that refer to the normal smtp service. The option is
18922 expanded, so the service name can vary from message to message or address
18923 to address. This might be helpful if SRV records are being used for a
18924 submission service. If the expansion is forced to fail, the &%check_srv%&
18925 option is ignored, and the router proceeds to look for MX records in the
18926 normal way.
18927
18928 When the expansion succeeds, the router searches first for SRV records for
18929 the given service (it assumes TCP protocol). A single SRV record with a
18930 host name that consists of just a single dot indicates &"no such service for
18931 this domain"&; if this is encountered, the router declines. If other kinds of
18932 SRV record are found, they are used to construct a host list for delivery
18933 according to the rules of RFC 2782. MX records are not sought in this case.
18934
18935 When no SRV records are found, MX records (and address records) are sought in
18936 the traditional way. In other words, SRV records take precedence over MX
18937 records, just as MX records take precedence over address records. Note that
18938 this behaviour is not sanctioned by RFC 2782, though a previous draft RFC
18939 defined it. It is apparently believed that MX records are sufficient for email
18940 and that SRV records should not be used for this purpose. However, SRV records
18941 have an additional &"weight"& feature which some people might find useful when
18942 trying to split an SMTP load between hosts of different power.
18943
18944 See section &<<SECTprowitdnsloo>>& above for a discussion of Exim's behaviour
18945 when there is a DNS lookup error.
18946
18947
18948
18949
18950 .option fail_defer_domains dnslookup "domain list&!!" unset
18951 .cindex "MX record" "not found"
18952 DNS lookups for domains matching &%fail_defer_domains%&
18953 which find no matching record will cause the router to defer
18954 rather than the default behaviour of decline.
18955 This maybe be useful for queueing messages for a newly created
18956 domain while the DNS configuration is not ready.
18957 However, it will result in any message with mistyped domains
18958 also being queued.
18959
18960
18961 .option ipv4_only "string&!!" unset
18962 .cindex IPv6 disabling
18963 .cindex DNS "IPv6 disabling"
18964 The string is expanded, and if the result is anything but a forced failure,
18965 or an empty string, or one of the strings “0” or “no” or “false”
18966 (checked without regard to the case of the letters),
18967 only A records are used.
18968
18969 .option ipv4_prefer "string&!!" unset
18970 .cindex IPv4 preference
18971 .cindex DNS "IPv4 preference"
18972 The string is expanded, and if the result is anything but a forced failure,
18973 or an empty string, or one of the strings “0” or “no” or “false”
18974 (checked without regard to the case of the letters),
18975 A records are sorted before AAAA records (inverting the default).
18976
18977 .option mx_domains dnslookup "domain list&!!" unset
18978 .cindex "MX record" "required to exist"
18979 .cindex "SRV record" "required to exist"
18980 A domain that matches &%mx_domains%& is required to have either an MX or an SRV
18981 record in order to be recognized. (The name of this option could be improved.)
18982 For example, if all the mail hosts in &'fict.example'& are known to have MX
18983 records, except for those in &'discworld.fict.example'&, you could use this
18984 setting:
18985 .code
18986 mx_domains = ! *.discworld.fict.example : *.fict.example
18987 .endd
18988 This specifies that messages addressed to a domain that matches the list but
18989 has no MX record should be bounced immediately instead of being routed using
18990 the address record.
18991
18992
18993 .option mx_fail_domains dnslookup "domain list&!!" unset
18994 If the DNS lookup for MX records for one of the domains in this list causes a
18995 DNS lookup error, Exim behaves as if no MX records were found. See section
18996 &<<SECTprowitdnsloo>>& for more discussion.
18997
18998
18999
19000
19001 .option qualify_single dnslookup boolean true
19002 .cindex "DNS" "resolver options"
19003 .cindex "DNS" "qualifying single-component names"
19004 When this option is true, the resolver option RES_DEFNAMES is set for DNS
19005 lookups. Typically, but not standardly, this causes the resolver to qualify
19006 single-component names with the default domain. For example, on a machine
19007 called &'dictionary.ref.example'&, the domain &'thesaurus'& would be changed to
19008 &'thesaurus.ref.example'& inside the resolver. For details of what your
19009 resolver actually does, consult your man pages for &'resolver'& and
19010 &'resolv.conf'&.
19011
19012
19013
19014 .option rewrite_headers dnslookup boolean true
19015 .cindex "rewriting" "header lines"
19016 .cindex "header lines" "rewriting"
19017 If the domain name in the address that is being processed is not fully
19018 qualified, it may be expanded to its full form by a DNS lookup. For example, if
19019 an address is specified as &'dormouse@teaparty'&, the domain might be
19020 expanded to &'teaparty.wonderland.fict.example'&. Domain expansion can also
19021 occur as a result of setting the &%widen_domains%& option. If
19022 &%rewrite_headers%& is true, all occurrences of the abbreviated domain name in
19023 any &'Bcc:'&, &'Cc:'&, &'From:'&, &'Reply-to:'&, &'Sender:'&, and &'To:'&
19024 header lines of the message are rewritten with the full domain name.
19025
19026 This option should be turned off only when it is known that no message is
19027 ever going to be sent outside an environment where the abbreviation makes
19028 sense.
19029
19030 When an MX record is looked up in the DNS and matches a wildcard record, name
19031 servers normally return a record containing the name that has been looked up,
19032 making it impossible to detect whether a wildcard was present or not. However,
19033 some name servers have recently been seen to return the wildcard entry. If the
19034 name returned by a DNS lookup begins with an asterisk, it is not used for
19035 header rewriting.
19036
19037
19038 .option same_domain_copy_routing dnslookup boolean false
19039 .cindex "address" "copying routing"
19040 Addresses with the same domain are normally routed by the &(dnslookup)& router
19041 to the same list of hosts. However, this cannot be presumed, because the router
19042 options and preconditions may refer to the local part of the address. By
19043 default, therefore, Exim routes each address in a message independently. DNS
19044 servers run caches, so repeated DNS lookups are not normally expensive, and in
19045 any case, personal messages rarely have more than a few recipients.
19046
19047 If you are running mailing lists with large numbers of subscribers at the same
19048 domain, and you are using a &(dnslookup)& router which is independent of the
19049 local part, you can set &%same_domain_copy_routing%& to bypass repeated DNS
19050 lookups for identical domains in one message. In this case, when &(dnslookup)&
19051 routes an address to a remote transport, any other unrouted addresses in the
19052 message that have the same domain are automatically given the same routing
19053 without processing them independently,
19054 provided the following conditions are met:
19055
19056 .ilist
19057 No router that processed the address specified &%headers_add%& or
19058 &%headers_remove%&.
19059 .next
19060 The router did not change the address in any way, for example, by &"widening"&
19061 the domain.
19062 .endlist
19063
19064
19065
19066
19067 .option search_parents dnslookup boolean false
19068 .cindex "DNS" "resolver options"
19069 When this option is true, the resolver option RES_DNSRCH is set for DNS
19070 lookups. This is different from the &%qualify_single%& option in that it
19071 applies to domains containing dots. Typically, but not standardly, it causes
19072 the resolver to search for the name in the current domain and in parent
19073 domains. For example, on a machine in the &'fict.example'& domain, if looking
19074 up &'teaparty.wonderland'& failed, the resolver would try
19075 &'teaparty.wonderland.fict.example'&. For details of what your resolver
19076 actually does, consult your man pages for &'resolver'& and &'resolv.conf'&.
19077
19078 Setting this option true can cause problems in domains that have a wildcard MX
19079 record, because any domain that does not have its own MX record matches the
19080 local wildcard.
19081
19082
19083
19084 .option srv_fail_domains dnslookup "domain list&!!" unset
19085 If the DNS lookup for SRV records for one of the domains in this list causes a
19086 DNS lookup error, Exim behaves as if no SRV records were found. See section
19087 &<<SECTprowitdnsloo>>& for more discussion.
19088
19089
19090
19091
19092 .option widen_domains dnslookup "string list" unset
19093 .cindex "domain" "partial; widening"
19094 If a DNS lookup fails and this option is set, each of its strings in turn is
19095 added onto the end of the domain, and the lookup is tried again. For example,
19096 if
19097 .code
19098 widen_domains = fict.example:ref.example
19099 .endd
19100 is set and a lookup of &'klingon.dictionary'& fails,
19101 &'klingon.dictionary.fict.example'& is looked up, and if this fails,
19102 &'klingon.dictionary.ref.example'& is tried. Note that the &%qualify_single%&
19103 and &%search_parents%& options can cause some widening to be undertaken inside
19104 the DNS resolver. &%widen_domains%& is not applied to sender addresses
19105 when verifying, unless &%rewrite_headers%& is false (not the default).
19106
19107
19108 .section "Effect of qualify_single and search_parents" "SECID119"
19109 When a domain from an envelope recipient is changed by the resolver as a result
19110 of the &%qualify_single%& or &%search_parents%& options, Exim rewrites the
19111 corresponding address in the message's header lines unless &%rewrite_headers%&
19112 is set false. Exim then re-routes the address, using the full domain.
19113
19114 These two options affect only the DNS lookup that takes place inside the router
19115 for the domain of the address that is being routed. They do not affect lookups
19116 such as that implied by
19117 .code
19118 domains = @mx_any
19119 .endd
19120 that may happen while processing a router precondition before the router is
19121 entered. No widening ever takes place for these lookups.
19122 .ecindex IIDdnsrou1
19123 .ecindex IIDdnsrou2
19124
19125
19126
19127
19128
19129
19130
19131
19132
19133 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
19134 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
19135
19136 .chapter "The ipliteral router" "CHID5"
19137 .cindex "&(ipliteral)& router"
19138 .cindex "domain literal" "routing"
19139 .cindex "routers" "&(ipliteral)&"
19140 This router has no private options. Unless it is being used purely for
19141 verification (see &%verify_only%&) a transport is required to be defined by the
19142 generic &%transport%& option. The router accepts the address if its domain part
19143 takes the form of an RFC 2822 domain literal. For example, the &(ipliteral)&
19144 router handles the address
19145 .code
19146 root@[192.168.1.1]
19147 .endd
19148 by setting up delivery to the host with that IP address. IPv4 domain literals
19149 consist of an IPv4 address enclosed in square brackets. IPv6 domain literals
19150 are similar, but the address is preceded by &`ipv6:`&. For example:
19151 .code
19152 postmaster@[ipv6:fe80::a00:20ff:fe86:a061.5678]
19153 .endd
19154 Exim allows &`ipv4:`& before IPv4 addresses, for consistency, and on the
19155 grounds that sooner or later somebody will try it.
19156
19157 .oindex "&%self%&" "in &(ipliteral)& router"
19158 If the IP address matches something in &%ignore_target_hosts%&, the router
19159 declines. If an IP literal turns out to refer to the local host, the generic
19160 &%self%& option determines what happens.
19161
19162 The RFCs require support for domain literals; however, their use is
19163 controversial in today's Internet. If you want to use this router, you must
19164 also set the main configuration option &%allow_domain_literals%&. Otherwise,
19165 Exim will not recognize the domain literal syntax in addresses.
19166
19167
19168
19169 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
19170 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
19171
19172 .chapter "The iplookup router" "CHID6"
19173 .cindex "&(iplookup)& router"
19174 .cindex "routers" "&(iplookup)&"
19175 The &(iplookup)& router was written to fulfil a specific requirement in
19176 Cambridge University (which in fact no longer exists). For this reason, it is
19177 not included in the binary of Exim by default. If you want to include it, you
19178 must set
19179 .code
19180 ROUTER_IPLOOKUP=yes
19181 .endd
19182 in your &_Local/Makefile_& configuration file.
19183
19184 The &(iplookup)& router routes an address by sending it over a TCP or UDP
19185 connection to one or more specific hosts. The host can then return the same or
19186 a different address &-- in effect rewriting the recipient address in the
19187 message's envelope. The new address is then passed on to subsequent routers. If
19188 this process fails, the address can be passed on to other routers, or delivery
19189 can be deferred. Since &(iplookup)& is just a rewriting router, a transport
19190 must not be specified for it.
19191
19192 .cindex "options" "&(iplookup)& router"
19193 .option hosts iplookup string unset
19194 This option must be supplied. Its value is a colon-separated list of host
19195 names. The hosts are looked up using &[gethostbyname()]&
19196 (or &[getipnodebyname()]& when available)
19197 and are tried in order until one responds to the query. If none respond, what
19198 happens is controlled by &%optional%&.
19199
19200
19201 .option optional iplookup boolean false
19202 If &%optional%& is true, if no response is obtained from any host, the address
19203 is passed to the next router, overriding &%no_more%&. If &%optional%& is false,
19204 delivery to the address is deferred.
19205
19206
19207 .option port iplookup integer 0
19208 .cindex "port" "&(iplookup)& router"
19209 This option must be supplied. It specifies the port number for the TCP or UDP
19210 call.
19211
19212
19213 .option protocol iplookup string udp
19214 This option can be set to &"udp"& or &"tcp"& to specify which of the two
19215 protocols is to be used.
19216
19217
19218 .option query iplookup string&!! "see below"
19219 This defines the content of the query that is sent to the remote hosts. The
19220 default value is:
19221 .code
19222 $local_part@$domain $local_part@$domain
19223 .endd
19224 The repetition serves as a way of checking that a response is to the correct
19225 query in the default case (see &%response_pattern%& below).
19226
19227
19228 .option reroute iplookup string&!! unset
19229 If this option is not set, the rerouted address is precisely the byte string
19230 returned by the remote host, up to the first white space, if any. If set, the
19231 string is expanded to form the rerouted address. It can include parts matched
19232 in the response by &%response_pattern%& by means of numeric variables such as
19233 &$1$&, &$2$&, etc. The variable &$0$& refers to the entire input string,
19234 whether or not a pattern is in use. In all cases, the rerouted address must end
19235 up in the form &'local_part@domain'&.
19236
19237
19238 .option response_pattern iplookup string unset
19239 This option can be set to a regular expression that is applied to the string
19240 returned from the remote host. If the pattern does not match the response, the
19241 router declines. If &%response_pattern%& is not set, no checking of the
19242 response is done, unless the query was defaulted, in which case there is a
19243 check that the text returned after the first white space is the original
19244 address. This checks that the answer that has been received is in response to
19245 the correct question. For example, if the response is just a new domain, the
19246 following could be used:
19247 .code
19248 response_pattern = ^([^@]+)$
19249 reroute = $local_part@$1
19250 .endd
19251
19252 .option timeout iplookup time 5s
19253 This specifies the amount of time to wait for a response from the remote
19254 machine. The same timeout is used for the &[connect()]& function for a TCP
19255 call. It does not apply to UDP.
19256
19257
19258
19259
19260 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
19261 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
19262
19263 .chapter "The manualroute router" "CHID7"
19264 .scindex IIDmanrou1 "&(manualroute)& router"
19265 .scindex IIDmanrou2 "routers" "&(manualroute)&"
19266 .cindex "domain" "manually routing"
19267 The &(manualroute)& router is so-called because it provides a way of manually
19268 routing an address according to its domain. It is mainly used when you want to
19269 route addresses to remote hosts according to your own rules, bypassing the
19270 normal DNS routing that looks up MX records. However, &(manualroute)& can also
19271 route to local transports, a facility that may be useful if you want to save
19272 messages for dial-in hosts in local files.
19273
19274 The &(manualroute)& router compares a list of domain patterns with the domain
19275 it is trying to route. If there is no match, the router declines. Each pattern
19276 has associated with it a list of hosts and some other optional data, which may
19277 include a transport. The combination of a pattern and its data is called a
19278 &"routing rule"&. For patterns that do not have an associated transport, the
19279 generic &%transport%& option must specify a transport, unless the router is
19280 being used purely for verification (see &%verify_only%&).
19281
19282 .vindex "&$host$&"
19283 In the case of verification, matching the domain pattern is sufficient for the
19284 router to accept the address. When actually routing an address for delivery,
19285 an address that matches a domain pattern is queued for the associated
19286 transport. If the transport is not a local one, a host list must be associated
19287 with the pattern; IP addresses are looked up for the hosts, and these are
19288 passed to the transport along with the mail address. For local transports, a
19289 host list is optional. If it is present, it is passed in &$host$& as a single
19290 text string.
19291
19292 The list of routing rules can be provided as an inline string in
19293 &%route_list%&, or the data can be obtained by looking up the domain in a file
19294 or database by setting &%route_data%&. Only one of these settings may appear in
19295 any one instance of &(manualroute)&. The format of routing rules is described
19296 below, following the list of private options.
19297
19298
19299 .section "Private options for manualroute" "SECTprioptman"
19300
19301 .cindex "options" "&(manualroute)& router"
19302 The private options for the &(manualroute)& router are as follows:
19303
19304 .option host_all_ignored manualroute string defer
19305 See &%host_find_failed%&.
19306
19307 .option host_find_failed manualroute string freeze
19308 This option controls what happens when &(manualroute)& tries to find an IP
19309 address for a host, and the host does not exist. The option can be set to one
19310 of the following values:
19311 .code
19312 decline
19313 defer
19314 fail
19315 freeze
19316 ignore
19317 pass
19318 .endd
19319 The default (&"freeze"&) assumes that this state is a serious configuration
19320 error. The difference between &"pass"& and &"decline"& is that the former
19321 forces the address to be passed to the next router (or the router defined by
19322 &%pass_router%&),
19323 .oindex "&%more%&"
19324 overriding &%no_more%&, whereas the latter passes the address to the next
19325 router only if &%more%& is true.
19326
19327 The value &"ignore"& causes Exim to completely ignore a host whose IP address
19328 cannot be found. If all the hosts in the list are ignored, the behaviour is
19329 controlled by the &%host_all_ignored%& option. This takes the same values
19330 as &%host_find_failed%&, except that it cannot be set to &"ignore"&.
19331
19332 The &%host_find_failed%& option applies only to a definite &"does not exist"&
19333 state; if a host lookup gets a temporary error, delivery is deferred unless the
19334 generic &%pass_on_timeout%& option is set.
19335
19336
19337 .option hosts_randomize manualroute boolean false
19338 .cindex "randomized host list"
19339 .cindex "host" "list of; randomized"
19340 If this option is set, the order of the items in a host list in a routing rule
19341 is randomized each time the list is used, unless an option in the routing rule
19342 overrides (see below). Randomizing the order of a host list can be used to do
19343 crude load sharing. However, if more than one mail address is routed by the
19344 same router to the same host list, the host lists are considered to be the same
19345 (even though they may be randomized into different orders) for the purpose of
19346 deciding whether to batch the deliveries into a single SMTP transaction.
19347
19348 When &%hosts_randomize%& is true, a host list may be split
19349 into groups whose order is separately randomized. This makes it possible to
19350 set up MX-like behaviour. The boundaries between groups are indicated by an
19351 item that is just &`+`& in the host list. For example:
19352 .code
19353 route_list = * host1:host2:host3:+:host4:host5
19354 .endd
19355 The order of the first three hosts and the order of the last two hosts is
19356 randomized for each use, but the first three always end up before the last two.
19357 If &%hosts_randomize%& is not set, a &`+`& item in the list is ignored. If a
19358 randomized host list is passed to an &(smtp)& transport that also has
19359 &%hosts_randomize set%&, the list is not re-randomized.
19360
19361
19362 .option route_data manualroute string&!! unset
19363 If this option is set, it must expand to yield the data part of a routing rule.
19364 Typically, the expansion string includes a lookup based on the domain. For
19365 example:
19366 .code
19367 route_data = ${lookup{$domain}dbm{/etc/routes}}
19368 .endd
19369 If the expansion is forced to fail, or the result is an empty string, the
19370 router declines. Other kinds of expansion failure cause delivery to be
19371 deferred.
19372
19373
19374 .option route_list manualroute "string list" unset
19375 This string is a list of routing rules, in the form defined below. Note that,
19376 unlike most string lists, the items are separated by semicolons. This is so
19377 that they may contain colon-separated host lists.
19378
19379
19380 .option same_domain_copy_routing manualroute boolean false
19381 .cindex "address" "copying routing"
19382 Addresses with the same domain are normally routed by the &(manualroute)&
19383 router to the same list of hosts. However, this cannot be presumed, because the
19384 router options and preconditions may refer to the local part of the address. By
19385 default, therefore, Exim routes each address in a message independently. DNS
19386 servers run caches, so repeated DNS lookups are not normally expensive, and in
19387 any case, personal messages rarely have more than a few recipients.
19388
19389 If you are running mailing lists with large numbers of subscribers at the same
19390 domain, and you are using a &(manualroute)& router which is independent of the
19391 local part, you can set &%same_domain_copy_routing%& to bypass repeated DNS
19392 lookups for identical domains in one message. In this case, when
19393 &(manualroute)& routes an address to a remote transport, any other unrouted
19394 addresses in the message that have the same domain are automatically given the
19395 same routing without processing them independently. However, this is only done
19396 if &%headers_add%& and &%headers_remove%& are unset.
19397
19398
19399
19400
19401 .section "Routing rules in route_list" "SECID120"
19402 The value of &%route_list%& is a string consisting of a sequence of routing
19403 rules, separated by semicolons. If a semicolon is needed in a rule, it can be
19404 entered as two semicolons. Alternatively, the list separator can be changed as
19405 described (for colon-separated lists) in section &<<SECTlistconstruct>>&.
19406 Empty rules are ignored. The format of each rule is
19407 .display
19408 <&'domain pattern'&> <&'list of hosts'&> <&'options'&>
19409 .endd
19410 The following example contains two rules, each with a simple domain pattern and
19411 no options:
19412 .code
19413 route_list = \
19414 dict.ref.example mail-1.ref.example:mail-2.ref.example ; \
19415 thes.ref.example mail-3.ref.example:mail-4.ref.example
19416 .endd
19417 The three parts of a rule are separated by white space. The pattern and the
19418 list of hosts can be enclosed in quotes if necessary, and if they are, the
19419 usual quoting rules apply. Each rule in a &%route_list%& must start with a
19420 single domain pattern, which is the only mandatory item in the rule. The
19421 pattern is in the same format as one item in a domain list (see section
19422 &<<SECTdomainlist>>&),
19423 except that it may not be the name of an interpolated file.
19424 That is, it may be wildcarded, or a regular expression, or a file or database
19425 lookup (with semicolons doubled, because of the use of semicolon as a separator
19426 in a &%route_list%&).
19427
19428 The rules in &%route_list%& are searched in order until one of the patterns
19429 matches the domain that is being routed. The list of hosts and then options are
19430 then used as described below. If there is no match, the router declines. When
19431 &%route_list%& is set, &%route_data%& must not be set.
19432
19433
19434
19435 .section "Routing rules in route_data" "SECID121"
19436 The use of &%route_list%& is convenient when there are only a small number of
19437 routing rules. For larger numbers, it is easier to use a file or database to
19438 hold the routing information, and use the &%route_data%& option instead.
19439 The value of &%route_data%& is a list of hosts, followed by (optional) options.
19440 Most commonly, &%route_data%& is set as a string that contains an
19441 expansion lookup. For example, suppose we place two routing rules in a file
19442 like this:
19443 .code
19444 dict.ref.example: mail-1.ref.example:mail-2.ref.example
19445 thes.ref.example: mail-3.ref.example:mail-4.ref.example
19446 .endd
19447 This data can be accessed by setting
19448 .code
19449 route_data = ${lookup{$domain}lsearch{/the/file/name}}
19450 .endd
19451 Failure of the lookup results in an empty string, causing the router to
19452 decline. However, you do not have to use a lookup in &%route_data%&. The only
19453 requirement is that the result of expanding the string is a list of hosts,
19454 possibly followed by options, separated by white space. The list of hosts must
19455 be enclosed in quotes if it contains white space.
19456
19457
19458
19459
19460 .section "Format of the list of hosts" "SECID122"
19461 A list of hosts, whether obtained via &%route_data%& or &%route_list%&, is
19462 always separately expanded before use. If the expansion fails, the router
19463 declines. The result of the expansion must be a colon-separated list of names
19464 and/or IP addresses, optionally also including ports. The format of each item
19465 in the list is described in the next section. The list separator can be changed
19466 as described in section &<<SECTlistconstruct>>&.
19467
19468 If the list of hosts was obtained from a &%route_list%& item, the following
19469 variables are set during its expansion:
19470
19471 .ilist
19472 .cindex "numerical variables (&$1$& &$2$& etc)" "in &(manualroute)& router"
19473 If the domain was matched against a regular expression, the numeric variables
19474 &$1$&, &$2$&, etc. may be set. For example:
19475 .code
19476 route_list = ^domain(\d+) host-$1.text.example
19477 .endd
19478 .next
19479 &$0$& is always set to the entire domain.
19480 .next
19481 &$1$& is also set when partial matching is done in a file lookup.
19482
19483 .next
19484 .vindex "&$value$&"
19485 If the pattern that matched the domain was a lookup item, the data that was
19486 looked up is available in the expansion variable &$value$&. For example:
19487 .code
19488 route_list = lsearch;;/some/file.routes $value
19489 .endd
19490 .endlist
19491
19492 Note the doubling of the semicolon in the pattern that is necessary because
19493 semicolon is the default route list separator.
19494
19495
19496
19497 .section "Format of one host item" "SECTformatonehostitem"
19498 Each item in the list of hosts is either a host name or an IP address,
19499 optionally with an attached port number. When no port is given, an IP address
19500 is not enclosed in brackets. When a port is specified, it overrides the port
19501 specification on the transport. The port is separated from the name or address
19502 by a colon. This leads to some complications:
19503
19504 .ilist
19505 Because colon is the default separator for the list of hosts, either
19506 the colon that specifies a port must be doubled, or the list separator must
19507 be changed. The following two examples have the same effect:
19508 .code
19509 route_list = * "host1.tld::1225 : host2.tld::1226"
19510 route_list = * "<+ host1.tld:1225 + host2.tld:1226"
19511 .endd
19512 .next
19513 When IPv6 addresses are involved, it gets worse, because they contain
19514 colons of their own. To make this case easier, it is permitted to
19515 enclose an IP address (either v4 or v6) in square brackets if a port
19516 number follows. For example:
19517 .code
19518 route_list = * "</ [10.1.1.1]:1225 / [::1]:1226"
19519 .endd
19520 .endlist
19521
19522 .section "How the list of hosts is used" "SECThostshowused"
19523 When an address is routed to an &(smtp)& transport by &(manualroute)&, each of
19524 the hosts is tried, in the order specified, when carrying out the SMTP
19525 delivery. However, the order can be changed by setting the &%hosts_randomize%&
19526 option, either on the router (see section &<<SECTprioptman>>& above), or on the
19527 transport.
19528
19529 Hosts may be listed by name or by IP address. An unadorned name in the list of
19530 hosts is interpreted as a host name. A name that is followed by &`/MX`& is
19531 interpreted as an indirection to a sublist of hosts obtained by looking up MX
19532 records in the DNS. For example:
19533 .code
19534 route_list = * x.y.z:p.q.r/MX:e.f.g
19535 .endd
19536 If this feature is used with a port specifier, the port must come last. For
19537 example:
19538 .code
19539 route_list = * dom1.tld/mx::1225
19540 .endd
19541 If the &%hosts_randomize%& option is set, the order of the items in the list is
19542 randomized before any lookups are done. Exim then scans the list; for any name
19543 that is not followed by &`/MX`& it looks up an IP address. If this turns out to
19544 be an interface on the local host and the item is not the first in the list,
19545 Exim discards it and any subsequent items. If it is the first item, what
19546 happens is controlled by the
19547 .oindex "&%self%&" "in &(manualroute)& router"
19548 &%self%& option of the router.
19549
19550 A name on the list that is followed by &`/MX`& is replaced with the list of
19551 hosts obtained by looking up MX records for the name. This is always a DNS
19552 lookup; the &%bydns%& and &%byname%& options (see section &<<SECThowoptused>>&
19553 below) are not relevant here. The order of these hosts is determined by the
19554 preference values in the MX records, according to the usual rules. Because
19555 randomizing happens before the MX lookup, it does not affect the order that is
19556 defined by MX preferences.
19557
19558 If the local host is present in the sublist obtained from MX records, but is
19559 not the most preferred host in that list, it and any equally or less
19560 preferred hosts are removed before the sublist is inserted into the main list.
19561
19562 If the local host is the most preferred host in the MX list, what happens
19563 depends on where in the original list of hosts the &`/MX`& item appears. If it
19564 is not the first item (that is, there are previous hosts in the main list),
19565 Exim discards this name and any subsequent items in the main list.
19566
19567 If the MX item is first in the list of hosts, and the local host is the
19568 most preferred host, what happens is controlled by the &%self%& option of the
19569 router.
19570
19571 DNS failures when lookup up the MX records are treated in the same way as DNS
19572 failures when looking up IP addresses: &%pass_on_timeout%& and
19573 &%host_find_failed%& are used when relevant.
19574
19575 The generic &%ignore_target_hosts%& option applies to all hosts in the list,
19576 whether obtained from an MX lookup or not.
19577
19578
19579
19580 .section "How the options are used" "SECThowoptused"
19581 The options are a sequence of words, space-separated.
19582 One of the words can be the name of a transport; this overrides the
19583 &%transport%& option on the router for this particular routing rule only. The
19584 other words (if present) control randomization of the list of hosts on a
19585 per-rule basis, and how the IP addresses of the hosts are to be found when
19586 routing to a remote transport. These options are as follows:
19587
19588 .ilist
19589 &%randomize%&: randomize the order of the hosts in this list, overriding the
19590 setting of &%hosts_randomize%& for this routing rule only.
19591 .next
19592 &%no_randomize%&: do not randomize the order of the hosts in this list,
19593 overriding the setting of &%hosts_randomize%& for this routing rule only.
19594 .next
19595 &%byname%&: use &[getipnodebyname()]& (&[gethostbyname()]& on older systems) to
19596 find IP addresses. This function may ultimately cause a DNS lookup, but it may
19597 also look in &_/etc/hosts_& or other sources of information.
19598 .next
19599 &%bydns%&: look up address records for the hosts directly in the DNS; fail if
19600 no address records are found. If there is a temporary DNS error (such as a
19601 timeout), delivery is deferred.
19602 .next
19603 &%ipv4_only%&: in direct DNS lookups, look up only A records.
19604 .next
19605 &%ipv4_prefer%&: in direct DNS lookups, sort A records before AAAA records.
19606 .endlist
19607
19608 For example:
19609 .code
19610 route_list = domain1 host1:host2:host3 randomize bydns;\
19611 domain2 host4:host5
19612 .endd
19613 If neither &%byname%& nor &%bydns%& is given, Exim behaves as follows: First, a
19614 DNS lookup is done. If this yields anything other than HOST_NOT_FOUND, that
19615 result is used. Otherwise, Exim goes on to try a call to &[getipnodebyname()]&
19616 or &[gethostbyname()]&, and the result of the lookup is the result of that
19617 call.
19618
19619 &*Warning*&: It has been discovered that on some systems, if a DNS lookup
19620 called via &[getipnodebyname()]& times out, HOST_NOT_FOUND is returned
19621 instead of TRY_AGAIN. That is why the default action is to try a DNS
19622 lookup first. Only if that gives a definite &"no such host"& is the local
19623 function called.
19624
19625 &*Compatibility*&: From Exim 4.85 until fixed for 4.90, there was an
19626 inadvertent constraint that a transport name as an option had to be the last
19627 option specified.
19628
19629
19630
19631 If no IP address for a host can be found, what happens is controlled by the
19632 &%host_find_failed%& option.
19633
19634 .vindex "&$host$&"
19635 When an address is routed to a local transport, IP addresses are not looked up.
19636 The host list is passed to the transport in the &$host$& variable.
19637
19638
19639
19640 .section "Manualroute examples" "SECID123"
19641 In some of the examples that follow, the presence of the &%remote_smtp%&
19642 transport, as defined in the default configuration file, is assumed:
19643
19644 .ilist
19645 .cindex "smart host" "example router"
19646 The &(manualroute)& router can be used to forward all external mail to a
19647 &'smart host'&. If you have set up, in the main part of the configuration, a
19648 named domain list that contains your local domains, for example:
19649 .code
19650 domainlist local_domains = my.domain.example
19651 .endd
19652 You can arrange for all other domains to be routed to a smart host by making
19653 your first router something like this:
19654 .code
19655 smart_route:
19656 driver = manualroute
19657 domains = !+local_domains
19658 transport = remote_smtp
19659 route_list = * smarthost.ref.example
19660 .endd
19661 This causes all non-local addresses to be sent to the single host
19662 &'smarthost.ref.example'&. If a colon-separated list of smart hosts is given,
19663 they are tried in order
19664 (but you can use &%hosts_randomize%& to vary the order each time).
19665 Another way of configuring the same thing is this:
19666 .code
19667 smart_route:
19668 driver = manualroute
19669 transport = remote_smtp
19670 route_list = !+local_domains smarthost.ref.example
19671 .endd
19672 There is no difference in behaviour between these two routers as they stand.
19673 However, they behave differently if &%no_more%& is added to them. In the first
19674 example, the router is skipped if the domain does not match the &%domains%&
19675 precondition; the following router is always tried. If the router runs, it
19676 always matches the domain and so can never decline. Therefore, &%no_more%&
19677 would have no effect. In the second case, the router is never skipped; it
19678 always runs. However, if it doesn't match the domain, it declines. In this case
19679 &%no_more%& would prevent subsequent routers from running.
19680
19681 .next
19682 .cindex "mail hub example"
19683 A &'mail hub'& is a host which receives mail for a number of domains via MX
19684 records in the DNS and delivers it via its own private routing mechanism. Often
19685 the final destinations are behind a firewall, with the mail hub being the one
19686 machine that can connect to machines both inside and outside the firewall. The
19687 &(manualroute)& router is usually used on a mail hub to route incoming messages
19688 to the correct hosts. For a small number of domains, the routing can be inline,
19689 using the &%route_list%& option, but for a larger number a file or database
19690 lookup is easier to manage.
19691
19692 If the domain names are in fact the names of the machines to which the mail is
19693 to be sent by the mail hub, the configuration can be quite simple. For
19694 example:
19695 .code
19696 hub_route:
19697 driver = manualroute
19698 transport = remote_smtp
19699 route_list = *.rhodes.tvs.example $domain
19700 .endd
19701 This configuration routes domains that match &`*.rhodes.tvs.example`& to hosts
19702 whose names are the same as the mail domains. A similar approach can be taken
19703 if the host name can be obtained from the domain name by a string manipulation
19704 that the expansion facilities can handle. Otherwise, a lookup based on the
19705 domain can be used to find the host:
19706 .code
19707 through_firewall:
19708 driver = manualroute
19709 transport = remote_smtp
19710 route_data = ${lookup {$domain} cdb {/internal/host/routes}}
19711 .endd
19712 The result of the lookup must be the name or IP address of the host (or
19713 hosts) to which the address is to be routed. If the lookup fails, the route
19714 data is empty, causing the router to decline. The address then passes to the
19715 next router.
19716
19717 .next
19718 .cindex "batched SMTP output example"
19719 .cindex "SMTP" "batched outgoing; example"
19720 You can use &(manualroute)& to deliver messages to pipes or files in batched
19721 SMTP format for onward transportation by some other means. This is one way of
19722 storing mail for a dial-up host when it is not connected. The route list entry
19723 can be as simple as a single domain name in a configuration like this:
19724 .code
19725 save_in_file:
19726 driver = manualroute
19727 transport = batchsmtp_appendfile
19728 route_list = saved.domain.example
19729 .endd
19730 though often a pattern is used to pick up more than one domain. If there are
19731 several domains or groups of domains with different transport requirements,
19732 different transports can be listed in the routing information:
19733 .code
19734 save_in_file:
19735 driver = manualroute
19736 route_list = \
19737 *.saved.domain1.example $domain batch_appendfile; \
19738 *.saved.domain2.example \
19739 ${lookup{$domain}dbm{/domain2/hosts}{$value}fail} \
19740 batch_pipe
19741 .endd
19742 .vindex "&$domain$&"
19743 .vindex "&$host$&"
19744 The first of these just passes the domain in the &$host$& variable, which
19745 doesn't achieve much (since it is also in &$domain$&), but the second does a
19746 file lookup to find a value to pass, causing the router to decline to handle
19747 the address if the lookup fails.
19748
19749 .next
19750 .cindex "UUCP" "example of router for"
19751 Routing mail directly to UUCP software is a specific case of the use of
19752 &(manualroute)& in a gateway to another mail environment. This is an example of
19753 one way it can be done:
19754 .code
19755 # Transport
19756 uucp:
19757 driver = pipe
19758 user = nobody
19759 command = /usr/local/bin/uux -r - \
19760 ${substr_-5:$host}!rmail ${local_part}
19761 return_fail_output = true
19762
19763 # Router
19764 uucphost:
19765 transport = uucp
19766 driver = manualroute
19767 route_data = \
19768 ${lookup{$domain}lsearch{/usr/local/exim/uucphosts}}
19769 .endd
19770 The file &_/usr/local/exim/uucphosts_& contains entries like
19771 .code
19772 darksite.ethereal.example: darksite.UUCP
19773 .endd
19774 It can be set up more simply without adding and removing &".UUCP"& but this way
19775 makes clear the distinction between the domain name
19776 &'darksite.ethereal.example'& and the UUCP host name &'darksite'&.
19777 .endlist
19778 .ecindex IIDmanrou1
19779 .ecindex IIDmanrou2
19780
19781
19782
19783
19784
19785
19786
19787
19788 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
19789 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
19790
19791 .chapter "The queryprogram router" "CHAPdriverlast"
19792 .scindex IIDquerou1 "&(queryprogram)& router"
19793 .scindex IIDquerou2 "routers" "&(queryprogram)&"
19794 .cindex "routing" "by external program"
19795 The &(queryprogram)& router routes an address by running an external command
19796 and acting on its output. This is an expensive way to route, and is intended
19797 mainly for use in lightly-loaded systems, or for performing experiments.
19798 However, if it is possible to use the precondition options (&%domains%&,
19799 &%local_parts%&, etc) to skip this router for most addresses, it could sensibly
19800 be used in special cases, even on a busy host. There are the following private
19801 options:
19802 .cindex "options" "&(queryprogram)& router"
19803
19804 .option command queryprogram string&!! unset
19805 This option must be set. It specifies the command that is to be run. The
19806 command is split up into a command name and arguments, and then each is
19807 expanded separately (exactly as for a &(pipe)& transport, described in chapter
19808 &<<CHAPpipetransport>>&).
19809
19810
19811 .option command_group queryprogram string unset
19812 .cindex "gid (group id)" "in &(queryprogram)& router"
19813 This option specifies a gid to be set when running the command while routing an
19814 address for deliver. It must be set if &%command_user%& specifies a numerical
19815 uid. If it begins with a digit, it is interpreted as the numerical value of the
19816 gid. Otherwise it is looked up using &[getgrnam()]&.
19817
19818
19819 .option command_user queryprogram string unset
19820 .cindex "uid (user id)" "for &(queryprogram)&"
19821 This option must be set. It specifies the uid which is set when running the
19822 command while routing an address for delivery. If the value begins with a digit,
19823 it is interpreted as the numerical value of the uid. Otherwise, it is looked up
19824 using &[getpwnam()]& to obtain a value for the uid and, if &%command_group%& is
19825 not set, a value for the gid also.
19826
19827 &*Warning:*& Changing uid and gid is possible only when Exim is running as
19828 root, which it does during a normal delivery in a conventional configuration.
19829 However, when an address is being verified during message reception, Exim is
19830 usually running as the Exim user, not as root. If the &(queryprogram)& router
19831 is called from a non-root process, Exim cannot change uid or gid before running
19832 the command. In this circumstance the command runs under the current uid and
19833 gid.
19834
19835
19836 .option current_directory queryprogram string /
19837 This option specifies an absolute path which is made the current directory
19838 before running the command.
19839
19840
19841 .option timeout queryprogram time 1h
19842 If the command does not complete within the timeout period, its process group
19843 is killed and the message is frozen. A value of zero time specifies no
19844 timeout.
19845
19846
19847 The standard output of the command is connected to a pipe, which is read when
19848 the command terminates. It should consist of a single line of output,
19849 containing up to five fields, separated by white space. The maximum length of
19850 the line is 1023 characters. Longer lines are silently truncated. The first
19851 field is one of the following words (case-insensitive):
19852
19853 .ilist
19854 &'Accept'&: routing succeeded; the remaining fields specify what to do (see
19855 below).
19856 .next
19857 &'Decline'&: the router declines; pass the address to the next router, unless
19858 &%no_more%& is set.
19859 .next
19860 &'Fail'&: routing failed; do not pass the address to any more routers. Any
19861 subsequent text on the line is an error message. If the router is run as part
19862 of address verification during an incoming SMTP message, the message is
19863 included in the SMTP response.
19864 .next
19865 &'Defer'&: routing could not be completed at this time; try again later. Any
19866 subsequent text on the line is an error message which is logged. It is not
19867 included in any SMTP response.
19868 .next
19869 &'Freeze'&: the same as &'defer'&, except that the message is frozen.
19870 .next
19871 &'Pass'&: pass the address to the next router (or the router specified by
19872 &%pass_router%&), overriding &%no_more%&.
19873 .next
19874 &'Redirect'&: the message is redirected. The remainder of the line is a list of
19875 new addresses, which are routed independently, starting with the first router,
19876 or the router specified by &%redirect_router%&, if set.
19877 .endlist
19878
19879 When the first word is &'accept'&, the remainder of the line consists of a
19880 number of keyed data values, as follows (split into two lines here, to fit on
19881 the page):
19882 .code
19883 ACCEPT TRANSPORT=<transport> HOSTS=<list of hosts>
19884 LOOKUP=byname|bydns DATA=<text>
19885 .endd
19886 The data items can be given in any order, and all are optional. If no transport
19887 is included, the transport specified by the generic &%transport%& option is
19888 used. The list of hosts and the lookup type are needed only if the transport is
19889 an &(smtp)& transport that does not itself supply a list of hosts.
19890
19891 The format of the list of hosts is the same as for the &(manualroute)& router.
19892 As well as host names and IP addresses with optional port numbers, as described
19893 in section &<<SECTformatonehostitem>>&, it may contain names followed by
19894 &`/MX`& to specify sublists of hosts that are obtained by looking up MX records
19895 (see section &<<SECThostshowused>>&).
19896
19897 If the lookup type is not specified, Exim behaves as follows when trying to
19898 find an IP address for each host: First, a DNS lookup is done. If this yields
19899 anything other than HOST_NOT_FOUND, that result is used. Otherwise, Exim
19900 goes on to try a call to &[getipnodebyname()]& or &[gethostbyname()]&, and the
19901 result of the lookup is the result of that call.
19902
19903 .vindex "&$address_data$&"
19904 If the DATA field is set, its value is placed in the &$address_data$&
19905 variable. For example, this return line
19906 .code
19907 accept hosts=x1.y.example:x2.y.example data="rule1"
19908 .endd
19909 routes the address to the default transport, passing a list of two hosts. When
19910 the transport runs, the string &"rule1"& is in &$address_data$&.
19911 .ecindex IIDquerou1
19912 .ecindex IIDquerou2
19913
19914
19915
19916
19917 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
19918 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
19919
19920 .chapter "The redirect router" "CHAPredirect"
19921 .scindex IIDredrou1 "&(redirect)& router"
19922 .scindex IIDredrou2 "routers" "&(redirect)&"
19923 .cindex "alias file" "in a &(redirect)& router"
19924 .cindex "address redirection" "&(redirect)& router"
19925 The &(redirect)& router handles several kinds of address redirection. Its most
19926 common uses are for resolving local part aliases from a central alias file
19927 (usually called &_/etc/aliases_&) and for handling users' personal &_.forward_&
19928 files, but it has many other potential uses. The incoming address can be
19929 redirected in several different ways:
19930
19931 .ilist
19932 It can be replaced by one or more new addresses which are themselves routed
19933 independently.
19934 .next
19935 It can be routed to be delivered to a given file or directory.
19936 .next
19937 It can be routed to be delivered to a specified pipe command.
19938 .next
19939 It can cause an automatic reply to be generated.
19940 .next
19941 It can be forced to fail, optionally with a custom error message.
19942 .next
19943 It can be temporarily deferred, optionally with a custom message.
19944 .next
19945 It can be discarded.
19946 .endlist
19947
19948 The generic &%transport%& option must not be set for &(redirect)& routers.
19949 However, there are some private options which define transports for delivery to
19950 files and pipes, and for generating autoreplies. See the &%file_transport%&,
19951 &%pipe_transport%& and &%reply_transport%& descriptions below.
19952
19953 If success DSNs have been requested
19954 .cindex "DSN" "success"
19955 .cindex "Delivery Status Notification" "success"
19956 redirection triggers one and the DSN options are not passed any further.
19957
19958
19959
19960 .section "Redirection data" "SECID124"
19961 The router operates by interpreting a text string which it obtains either by
19962 expanding the contents of the &%data%& option, or by reading the entire
19963 contents of a file whose name is given in the &%file%& option. These two
19964 options are mutually exclusive. The first is commonly used for handling system
19965 aliases, in a configuration like this:
19966 .code
19967 system_aliases:
19968 driver = redirect
19969 data = ${lookup{$local_part}lsearch{/etc/aliases}}
19970 .endd
19971 If the lookup fails, the expanded string in this example is empty. When the
19972 expansion of &%data%& results in an empty string, the router declines. A forced
19973 expansion failure also causes the router to decline; other expansion failures
19974 cause delivery to be deferred.
19975
19976 A configuration using &%file%& is commonly used for handling users'
19977 &_.forward_& files, like this:
19978 .code
19979 userforward:
19980 driver = redirect
19981 check_local_user
19982 file = $home/.forward
19983 no_verify
19984 .endd
19985 If the file does not exist, or causes no action to be taken (for example, it is
19986 empty or consists only of comments), the router declines. &*Warning*&: This
19987 is not the case when the file contains syntactically valid items that happen to
19988 yield empty addresses, for example, items containing only RFC 2822 address
19989 comments.
19990
19991
19992
19993 .section "Forward files and address verification" "SECID125"
19994 .cindex "address redirection" "while verifying"
19995 It is usual to set &%no_verify%& on &(redirect)& routers which handle users'
19996 &_.forward_& files, as in the example above. There are two reasons for this:
19997
19998 .ilist
19999 When Exim is receiving an incoming SMTP message from a remote host, it is
20000 running under the Exim uid, not as root. Exim is unable to change uid to read
20001 the file as the user, and it may not be able to read it as the Exim user. So in
20002 practice the router may not be able to operate.
20003 .next
20004 However, even when the router can operate, the existence of a &_.forward_& file
20005 is unimportant when verifying an address. What should be checked is whether the
20006 local part is a valid user name or not. Cutting out the redirection processing
20007 saves some resources.
20008 .endlist
20009
20010
20011
20012
20013
20014
20015 .section "Interpreting redirection data" "SECID126"
20016 .cindex "Sieve filter" "specifying in redirection data"
20017 .cindex "filter" "specifying in redirection data"
20018 The contents of the data string, whether obtained from &%data%& or &%file%&,
20019 can be interpreted in two different ways:
20020
20021 .ilist
20022 If the &%allow_filter%& option is set true, and the data begins with the text
20023 &"#Exim filter"& or &"#Sieve filter"&, it is interpreted as a list of
20024 &'filtering'& instructions in the form of an Exim or Sieve filter file,
20025 respectively. Details of the syntax and semantics of filter files are described
20026 in a separate document entitled &'Exim's interfaces to mail filtering'&; this
20027 document is intended for use by end users.
20028 .next
20029 Otherwise, the data must be a comma-separated list of redirection items, as
20030 described in the next section.
20031 .endlist
20032
20033 When a message is redirected to a file (a &"mail folder"&), the file name given
20034 in a non-filter redirection list must always be an absolute path. A filter may
20035 generate a relative path &-- how this is handled depends on the transport's
20036 configuration. See section &<<SECTfildiropt>>& for a discussion of this issue
20037 for the &(appendfile)& transport.
20038
20039
20040
20041 .section "Items in a non-filter redirection list" "SECTitenonfilred"
20042 .cindex "address redirection" "non-filter list items"
20043 When the redirection data is not an Exim or Sieve filter, for example, if it
20044 comes from a conventional alias or forward file, it consists of a list of
20045 addresses, file names, pipe commands, or certain special items (see section
20046 &<<SECTspecitredli>>& below). The special items can be individually enabled or
20047 disabled by means of options whose names begin with &%allow_%& or &%forbid_%&,
20048 depending on their default values. The items in the list are separated by
20049 commas or newlines.
20050 If a comma is required in an item, the entire item must be enclosed in double
20051 quotes.
20052
20053 Lines starting with a # character are comments, and are ignored, and # may
20054 also appear following a comma, in which case everything between the # and the
20055 next newline character is ignored.
20056
20057 If an item is entirely enclosed in double quotes, these are removed. Otherwise
20058 double quotes are retained because some forms of mail address require their use
20059 (but never to enclose the entire address). In the following description,
20060 &"item"& refers to what remains after any surrounding double quotes have been
20061 removed.
20062
20063 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
20064 &*Warning*&: If you use an Exim expansion to construct a redirection address,
20065 and the expansion contains a reference to &$local_part$&, you should make use
20066 of the &%quote_local_part%& expansion operator, in case the local part contains
20067 special characters. For example, to redirect all mail for the domain
20068 &'obsolete.example'&, retaining the existing local part, you could use this
20069 setting:
20070 .code
20071 data = ${quote_local_part:$local_part}@newdomain.example
20072 .endd
20073
20074
20075 .section "Redirecting to a local mailbox" "SECTredlocmai"
20076 .cindex "routing" "loops in"
20077 .cindex "loop" "while routing, avoidance of"
20078 .cindex "address redirection" "to local mailbox"
20079 A redirection item may safely be the same as the address currently under
20080 consideration. This does not cause a routing loop, because a router is
20081 automatically skipped if any ancestor of the address that is being processed
20082 is the same as the current address and was processed by the current router.
20083 Such an address is therefore passed to the following routers, so it is handled
20084 as if there were no redirection. When making this loop-avoidance test, the
20085 complete local part, including any prefix or suffix, is used.
20086
20087 .cindex "address redirection" "local part without domain"
20088 Specifying the same local part without a domain is a common usage in personal
20089 filter files when the user wants to have messages delivered to the local
20090 mailbox and also forwarded elsewhere. For example, the user whose login is
20091 &'cleo'& might have a &_.forward_& file containing this:
20092 .code
20093 cleo, cleopatra@egypt.example
20094 .endd
20095 .cindex "backslash in alias file"
20096 .cindex "alias file" "backslash in"
20097 For compatibility with other MTAs, such unqualified local parts may be
20098 preceded by &"\"&, but this is not a requirement for loop prevention. However,
20099 it does make a difference if more than one domain is being handled
20100 synonymously.
20101
20102 If an item begins with &"\"& and the rest of the item parses as a valid RFC
20103 2822 address that does not include a domain, the item is qualified using the
20104 domain of the incoming address. In the absence of a leading &"\"&, unqualified
20105 addresses are qualified using the value in &%qualify_recipient%&, but you can
20106 force the incoming domain to be used by setting &%qualify_preserve_domain%&.
20107
20108 Care must be taken if there are alias names for local users.
20109 Consider an MTA handling a single local domain where the system alias file
20110 contains:
20111 .code
20112 Sam.Reman: spqr
20113 .endd
20114 Now suppose that Sam (whose login id is &'spqr'&) wants to save copies of
20115 messages in the local mailbox, and also forward copies elsewhere. He creates
20116 this forward file:
20117 .code
20118 Sam.Reman, spqr@reme.elsewhere.example
20119 .endd
20120 With these settings, an incoming message addressed to &'Sam.Reman'& fails. The
20121 &(redirect)& router for system aliases does not process &'Sam.Reman'& the
20122 second time round, because it has previously routed it,
20123 and the following routers presumably cannot handle the alias. The forward file
20124 should really contain
20125 .code
20126 spqr, spqr@reme.elsewhere.example
20127 .endd
20128 but because this is such a common error, the &%check_ancestor%& option (see
20129 below) exists to provide a way to get round it. This is normally set on a
20130 &(redirect)& router that is handling users' &_.forward_& files.
20131
20132
20133
20134 .section "Special items in redirection lists" "SECTspecitredli"
20135 In addition to addresses, the following types of item may appear in redirection
20136 lists (that is, in non-filter redirection data):
20137
20138 .ilist
20139 .cindex "pipe" "in redirection list"
20140 .cindex "address redirection" "to pipe"
20141 An item is treated as a pipe command if it begins with &"|"& and does not parse
20142 as a valid RFC 2822 address that includes a domain. A transport for running the
20143 command must be specified by the &%pipe_transport%& option.
20144 Normally, either the router or the transport specifies a user and a group under
20145 which to run the delivery. The default is to use the Exim user and group.
20146
20147 Single or double quotes can be used for enclosing the individual arguments of
20148 the pipe command; no interpretation of escapes is done for single quotes. If
20149 the command contains a comma character, it is necessary to put the whole item
20150 in double quotes, for example:
20151 .code
20152 "|/some/command ready,steady,go"
20153 .endd
20154 since items in redirection lists are terminated by commas. Do not, however,
20155 quote just the command. An item such as
20156 .code
20157 |"/some/command ready,steady,go"
20158 .endd
20159 is interpreted as a pipe with a rather strange command name, and no arguments.
20160
20161 Note that the above example assumes that the text comes from a lookup source
20162 of some sort, so that the quotes are part of the data. If composing a
20163 redirect router with a &%data%& option directly specifying this command, the
20164 quotes will be used by the configuration parser to define the extent of one
20165 string, but will not be passed down into the redirect router itself. There
20166 are two main approaches to get around this: escape quotes to be part of the
20167 data itself, or avoid using this mechanism and instead create a custom
20168 transport with the &%command%& option set and reference that transport from
20169 an &%accept%& router.
20170
20171 .next
20172 .cindex "file" "in redirection list"
20173 .cindex "address redirection" "to file"
20174 An item is interpreted as a path name if it begins with &"/"& and does not
20175 parse as a valid RFC 2822 address that includes a domain. For example,
20176 .code
20177 /home/world/minbari
20178 .endd
20179 is treated as a file name, but
20180 .code
20181 /s=molari/o=babylon/@x400gate.way
20182 .endd
20183 is treated as an address. For a file name, a transport must be specified using
20184 the &%file_transport%& option. However, if the generated path name ends with a
20185 forward slash character, it is interpreted as a directory name rather than a
20186 file name, and &%directory_transport%& is used instead.
20187
20188 Normally, either the router or the transport specifies a user and a group under
20189 which to run the delivery. The default is to use the Exim user and group.
20190
20191 .cindex "&_/dev/null_&"
20192 However, if a redirection item is the path &_/dev/null_&, delivery to it is
20193 bypassed at a high level, and the log entry shows &"**bypassed**"&
20194 instead of a transport name. In this case the user and group are not used.
20195
20196 .next
20197 .cindex "included address list"
20198 .cindex "address redirection" "included external list"
20199 If an item is of the form
20200 .code
20201 :include:<path name>
20202 .endd
20203 a list of further items is taken from the given file and included at that
20204 point. &*Note*&: Such a file can not be a filter file; it is just an
20205 out-of-line addition to the list. The items in the included list are separated
20206 by commas or newlines and are not subject to expansion. If this is the first
20207 item in an alias list in an &(lsearch)& file, a colon must be used to terminate
20208 the alias name. This example is incorrect:
20209 .code
20210 list1 :include:/opt/lists/list1
20211 .endd
20212 It must be given as
20213 .code
20214 list1: :include:/opt/lists/list1
20215 .endd
20216 .next
20217 .cindex "address redirection" "to black hole"
20218 .cindex "delivery" "discard"
20219 .cindex "delivery" "blackhole"
20220 .cindex "black hole"
20221 .cindex "abandoning mail"
20222 Sometimes you want to throw away mail to a particular local part. Making the
20223 &%data%& option expand to an empty string does not work, because that causes
20224 the router to decline. Instead, the alias item
20225 .code
20226 :blackhole:
20227 .endd
20228 can be used. It does what its name implies. No delivery is
20229 done, and no error message is generated. This has the same effect as specifying
20230 &_/dev/null_& as a destination, but it can be independently disabled.
20231
20232 &*Warning*&: If &':blackhole:'& appears anywhere in a redirection list, no
20233 delivery is done for the original local part, even if other redirection items
20234 are present. If you are generating a multi-item list (for example, by reading a
20235 database) and need the ability to provide a no-op item, you must use
20236 &_/dev/null_&.
20237
20238 .next
20239 .cindex "delivery" "forcing failure"
20240 .cindex "delivery" "forcing deferral"
20241 .cindex "failing delivery" "forcing"
20242 .cindex "deferred delivery, forcing"
20243 .cindex "customizing" "failure message"
20244 An attempt to deliver a particular address can be deferred or forced to fail by
20245 redirection items of the form
20246 .code
20247 :defer:
20248 :fail:
20249 .endd
20250 respectively. When a redirection list contains such an item, it applies
20251 to the entire redirection; any other items in the list are ignored. Any
20252 text following &':fail:'& or &':defer:'& is placed in the error text
20253 associated with the failure. For example, an alias file might contain:
20254 .code
20255 X.Employee: :fail: Gone away, no forwarding address
20256 .endd
20257 In the case of an address that is being verified from an ACL or as the subject
20258 of a
20259 .cindex "VRFY" "error text, display of"
20260 VRFY command, the text is included in the SMTP error response by
20261 default.
20262 .cindex "EXPN" "error text, display of"
20263 The text is not included in the response to an EXPN command. In non-SMTP cases
20264 the text is included in the error message that Exim generates.
20265
20266 .cindex "SMTP" "error codes"
20267 By default, Exim sends a 451 SMTP code for a &':defer:'&, and 550 for
20268 &':fail:'&. However, if the message starts with three digits followed by a
20269 space, optionally followed by an extended code of the form &'n.n.n'&, also
20270 followed by a space, and the very first digit is the same as the default error
20271 code, the code from the message is used instead. If the very first digit is
20272 incorrect, a panic error is logged, and the default code is used. You can
20273 suppress the use of the supplied code in a redirect router by setting the
20274 &%forbid_smtp_code%& option true. In this case, any SMTP code is quietly
20275 ignored.
20276
20277 .vindex "&$acl_verify_message$&"
20278 In an ACL, an explicitly provided message overrides the default, but the
20279 default message is available in the variable &$acl_verify_message$& and can
20280 therefore be included in a custom message if this is desired.
20281
20282 Normally the error text is the rest of the redirection list &-- a comma does
20283 not terminate it &-- but a newline does act as a terminator. Newlines are not
20284 normally present in alias expansions. In &(lsearch)& lookups they are removed
20285 as part of the continuation process, but they may exist in other kinds of
20286 lookup and in &':include:'& files.
20287
20288 During routing for message delivery (as opposed to verification), a redirection
20289 containing &':fail:'& causes an immediate failure of the incoming address,
20290 whereas &':defer:'& causes the message to remain on the queue so that a
20291 subsequent delivery attempt can happen at a later time. If an address is
20292 deferred for too long, it will ultimately fail, because the normal retry
20293 rules still apply.
20294
20295 .next
20296 .cindex "alias file" "exception to default"
20297 Sometimes it is useful to use a single-key search type with a default (see
20298 chapter &<<CHAPfdlookup>>&) to look up aliases. However, there may be a need
20299 for exceptions to the default. These can be handled by aliasing them to
20300 &':unknown:'&. This differs from &':fail:'& in that it causes the &(redirect)&
20301 router to decline, whereas &':fail:'& forces routing to fail. A lookup which
20302 results in an empty redirection list has the same effect.
20303 .endlist
20304
20305
20306 .section "Duplicate addresses" "SECTdupaddr"
20307 .cindex "duplicate addresses"
20308 .cindex "address duplicate, discarding"
20309 .cindex "pipe" "duplicated"
20310 Exim removes duplicate addresses from the list to which it is delivering, so as
20311 to deliver just one copy to each address. This does not apply to deliveries
20312 routed to pipes by different immediate parent addresses, but an indirect
20313 aliasing scheme of the type
20314 .code
20315 pipe: |/some/command $local_part
20316 localpart1: pipe
20317 localpart2: pipe
20318 .endd
20319 does not work with a message that is addressed to both local parts, because
20320 when the second is aliased to the intermediate local part &"pipe"& it gets
20321 discarded as being the same as a previously handled address. However, a scheme
20322 such as
20323 .code
20324 localpart1: |/some/command $local_part
20325 localpart2: |/some/command $local_part
20326 .endd
20327 does result in two different pipe deliveries, because the immediate parents of
20328 the pipes are distinct.
20329
20330
20331
20332 .section "Repeated redirection expansion" "SECID128"
20333 .cindex "repeated redirection expansion"
20334 .cindex "address redirection" "repeated for each delivery attempt"
20335 When a message cannot be delivered to all of its recipients immediately,
20336 leading to two or more delivery attempts, redirection expansion is carried out
20337 afresh each time for those addresses whose children were not all previously
20338 delivered. If redirection is being used as a mailing list, this can lead to new
20339 members of the list receiving copies of old messages. The &%one_time%& option
20340 can be used to avoid this.
20341
20342
20343 .section "Errors in redirection lists" "SECID129"
20344 .cindex "address redirection" "errors"
20345 If &%skip_syntax_errors%& is set, a malformed address that causes a parsing
20346 error is skipped, and an entry is written to the main log. This may be useful
20347 for mailing lists that are automatically managed. Otherwise, if an error is
20348 detected while generating the list of new addresses, the original address is
20349 deferred. See also &%syntax_errors_to%&.
20350
20351
20352
20353 .section "Private options for the redirect router" "SECID130"
20354
20355 .cindex "options" "&(redirect)& router"
20356 The private options for the &(redirect)& router are as follows:
20357
20358
20359 .option allow_defer redirect boolean false
20360 Setting this option allows the use of &':defer:'& in non-filter redirection
20361 data, or the &%defer%& command in an Exim filter file.
20362
20363
20364 .option allow_fail redirect boolean false
20365 .cindex "failing delivery" "from filter"
20366 If this option is true, the &':fail:'& item can be used in a redirection list,
20367 and the &%fail%& command may be used in an Exim filter file.
20368
20369
20370 .option allow_filter redirect boolean false
20371 .cindex "filter" "enabling use of"
20372 .cindex "Sieve filter" "enabling use of"
20373 Setting this option allows Exim to interpret redirection data that starts with
20374 &"#Exim filter"& or &"#Sieve filter"& as a set of filtering instructions. There
20375 are some features of Exim filter files that some administrators may wish to
20376 lock out; see the &%forbid_filter_%&&'xxx'& options below.
20377
20378 It is also possible to lock out Exim filters or Sieve filters while allowing
20379 the other type; see &%forbid_exim_filter%& and &%forbid_sieve_filter%&.
20380
20381
20382 The filter is run using the uid and gid set by the generic &%user%& and
20383 &%group%& options. These take their defaults from the password data if
20384 &%check_local_user%& is set, so in the normal case of users' personal filter
20385 files, the filter is run as the relevant user. When &%allow_filter%& is set
20386 true, Exim insists that either &%check_local_user%& or &%user%& is set.
20387
20388
20389
20390 .option allow_freeze redirect boolean false
20391 .cindex "freezing messages" "allowing in filter"
20392 Setting this option allows the use of the &%freeze%& command in an Exim filter.
20393 This command is more normally encountered in system filters, and is disabled by
20394 default for redirection filters because it isn't something you usually want to
20395 let ordinary users do.
20396
20397
20398
20399 .option check_ancestor redirect boolean false
20400 This option is concerned with handling generated addresses that are the same
20401 as some address in the list of redirection ancestors of the current address.
20402 Although it is turned off by default in the code, it is set in the default
20403 configuration file for handling users' &_.forward_& files. It is recommended
20404 for this use of the &(redirect)& router.
20405
20406 When &%check_ancestor%& is set, if a generated address (including the domain)
20407 is the same as any ancestor of the current address, it is replaced by a copy of
20408 the current address. This helps in the case where local part A is aliased to B,
20409 and B has a &_.forward_& file pointing back to A. For example, within a single
20410 domain, the local part &"Joe.Bloggs"& is aliased to &"jb"& and
20411 &_&~jb/.forward_& contains:
20412 .code
20413 \Joe.Bloggs, <other item(s)>
20414 .endd
20415 Without the &%check_ancestor%& setting, either local part (&"jb"& or
20416 &"joe.bloggs"&) gets processed once by each router and so ends up as it was
20417 originally. If &"jb"& is the real mailbox name, mail to &"jb"& gets delivered
20418 (having been turned into &"joe.bloggs"& by the &_.forward_& file and back to
20419 &"jb"& by the alias), but mail to &"joe.bloggs"& fails. Setting
20420 &%check_ancestor%& on the &(redirect)& router that handles the &_.forward_&
20421 file prevents it from turning &"jb"& back into &"joe.bloggs"& when that was the
20422 original address. See also the &%repeat_use%& option below.
20423
20424
20425 .option check_group redirect boolean "see below"
20426 When the &%file%& option is used, the group owner of the file is checked only
20427 when this option is set. The permitted groups are those listed in the
20428 &%owngroups%& option, together with the user's default group if
20429 &%check_local_user%& is set. If the file has the wrong group, routing is
20430 deferred. The default setting for this option is true if &%check_local_user%&
20431 is set and the &%modemask%& option permits the group write bit, or if the
20432 &%owngroups%& option is set. Otherwise it is false, and no group check occurs.
20433
20434
20435
20436 .option check_owner redirect boolean "see below"
20437 When the &%file%& option is used, the owner of the file is checked only when
20438 this option is set. If &%check_local_user%& is set, the local user is
20439 permitted; otherwise the owner must be one of those listed in the &%owners%&
20440 option. The default value for this option is true if &%check_local_user%& or
20441 &%owners%& is set. Otherwise the default is false, and no owner check occurs.
20442
20443
20444 .option data redirect string&!! unset
20445 This option is mutually exclusive with &%file%&. One or other of them must be
20446 set, but not both. The contents of &%data%& are expanded, and then used as the
20447 list of forwarding items, or as a set of filtering instructions. If the
20448 expansion is forced to fail, or the result is an empty string or a string that
20449 has no effect (consists entirely of comments), the router declines.
20450
20451 When filtering instructions are used, the string must begin with &"#Exim
20452 filter"&, and all comments in the string, including this initial one, must be
20453 terminated with newline characters. For example:
20454 .code
20455 data = #Exim filter\n\
20456 if $h_to: contains Exim then save $home/mail/exim endif
20457 .endd
20458 If you are reading the data from a database where newlines cannot be included,
20459 you can use the &${sg}$& expansion item to turn the escape string of your
20460 choice into a newline.
20461
20462
20463 .option directory_transport redirect string&!! unset
20464 A &(redirect)& router sets up a direct delivery to a directory when a path name
20465 ending with a slash is specified as a new &"address"&. The transport used is
20466 specified by this option, which, after expansion, must be the name of a
20467 configured transport. This should normally be an &(appendfile)& transport.
20468
20469
20470 .option file redirect string&!! unset
20471 This option specifies the name of a file that contains the redirection data. It
20472 is mutually exclusive with the &%data%& option. The string is expanded before
20473 use; if the expansion is forced to fail, the router declines. Other expansion
20474 failures cause delivery to be deferred. The result of a successful expansion
20475 must be an absolute path. The entire file is read and used as the redirection
20476 data. If the data is an empty string or a string that has no effect (consists
20477 entirely of comments), the router declines.
20478
20479 .cindex "NFS" "checking for file existence"
20480 If the attempt to open the file fails with a &"does not exist"& error, Exim
20481 runs a check on the containing directory,
20482 unless &%ignore_enotdir%& is true (see below).
20483 If the directory does not appear to exist, delivery is deferred. This can
20484 happen when users' &_.forward_& files are in NFS-mounted directories, and there
20485 is a mount problem. If the containing directory does exist, but the file does
20486 not, the router declines.
20487
20488
20489 .option file_transport redirect string&!! unset
20490 .vindex "&$address_file$&"
20491 A &(redirect)& router sets up a direct delivery to a file when a path name not
20492 ending in a slash is specified as a new &"address"&. The transport used is
20493 specified by this option, which, after expansion, must be the name of a
20494 configured transport. This should normally be an &(appendfile)& transport. When
20495 it is running, the file name is in &$address_file$&.
20496
20497
20498 .option filter_prepend_home redirect boolean true
20499 When this option is true, if a &(save)& command in an Exim filter specifies a
20500 relative path, and &$home$& is defined, it is automatically prepended to the
20501 relative path. If this option is set false, this action does not happen. The
20502 relative path is then passed to the transport unmodified.
20503
20504
20505 .option forbid_blackhole redirect boolean false
20506 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20507 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20508 If this option is true, the &':blackhole:'& item may not appear in a
20509 redirection list.
20510
20511
20512 .option forbid_exim_filter redirect boolean false
20513 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20514 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20515 If this option is set true, only Sieve filters are permitted when
20516 &%allow_filter%& is true.
20517
20518
20519
20520
20521 .option forbid_file redirect boolean false
20522 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20523 .cindex "delivery" "to file; forbidding"
20524 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20525 .cindex "Sieve filter" "forbidding delivery to a file"
20526 .cindex "Sieve filter" "&""keep""& facility; disabling"
20527 If this option is true, this router may not generate a new address that
20528 specifies delivery to a local file or directory, either from a filter or from a
20529 conventional forward file. This option is forced to be true if &%one_time%& is
20530 set. It applies to Sieve filters as well as to Exim filters, but if true, it
20531 locks out the Sieve's &"keep"& facility.
20532
20533
20534 .option forbid_filter_dlfunc redirect boolean false
20535 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20536 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20537 If this option is true, string expansions in Exim filters are not allowed to
20538 make use of the &%dlfunc%& expansion facility to run dynamically loaded
20539 functions.
20540
20541 .option forbid_filter_existstest redirect boolean false
20542 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20543 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20544 .cindex "expansion" "statting a file"
20545 If this option is true, string expansions in Exim filters are not allowed to
20546 make use of the &%exists%& condition or the &%stat%& expansion item.
20547
20548 .option forbid_filter_logwrite redirect boolean false
20549 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20550 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20551 If this option is true, use of the logging facility in Exim filters is not
20552 permitted. Logging is in any case available only if the filter is being run
20553 under some unprivileged uid (which is normally the case for ordinary users'
20554 &_.forward_& files).
20555
20556
20557 .option forbid_filter_lookup redirect boolean false
20558 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20559 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20560 If this option is true, string expansions in Exim filter files are not allowed
20561 to make use of &%lookup%& items.
20562
20563
20564 .option forbid_filter_perl redirect boolean false
20565 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20566 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20567 This option has an effect only if Exim is built with embedded Perl support. If
20568 it is true, string expansions in Exim filter files are not allowed to make use
20569 of the embedded Perl support.
20570
20571
20572 .option forbid_filter_readfile redirect boolean false
20573 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20574 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20575 If this option is true, string expansions in Exim filter files are not allowed
20576 to make use of &%readfile%& items.
20577
20578
20579 .option forbid_filter_readsocket redirect boolean false
20580 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20581 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20582 If this option is true, string expansions in Exim filter files are not allowed
20583 to make use of &%readsocket%& items.
20584
20585
20586 .option forbid_filter_reply redirect boolean false
20587 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20588 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20589 If this option is true, this router may not generate an automatic reply
20590 message. Automatic replies can be generated only from Exim or Sieve filter
20591 files, not from traditional forward files. This option is forced to be true if
20592 &%one_time%& is set.
20593
20594
20595 .option forbid_filter_run redirect boolean false
20596 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20597 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20598 If this option is true, string expansions in Exim filter files are not allowed
20599 to make use of &%run%& items.
20600
20601
20602 .option forbid_include redirect boolean false
20603 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20604 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20605 If this option is true, items of the form
20606 .code
20607 :include:<path name>
20608 .endd
20609 are not permitted in non-filter redirection lists.
20610
20611
20612 .option forbid_pipe redirect boolean false
20613 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20614 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20615 .cindex "delivery" "to pipe; forbidding"
20616 If this option is true, this router may not generate a new address which
20617 specifies delivery to a pipe, either from an Exim filter or from a conventional
20618 forward file. This option is forced to be true if &%one_time%& is set.
20619
20620
20621 .option forbid_sieve_filter redirect boolean false
20622 .cindex "restricting access to features"
20623 .cindex "filter" "locking out certain features"
20624 If this option is set true, only Exim filters are permitted when
20625 &%allow_filter%& is true.
20626
20627
20628 .cindex "SMTP" "error codes"
20629 .option forbid_smtp_code redirect boolean false
20630 If this option is set true, any SMTP error codes that are present at the start
20631 of messages specified for &`:defer:`& or &`:fail:`& are quietly ignored, and
20632 the default codes (451 and 550, respectively) are always used.
20633
20634
20635
20636
20637 .option hide_child_in_errmsg redirect boolean false
20638 .cindex "bounce message" "redirection details; suppressing"
20639 If this option is true, it prevents Exim from quoting a child address if it
20640 generates a bounce or delay message for it. Instead it says &"an address
20641 generated from <&'the top level address'&>"&. Of course, this applies only to
20642 bounces generated locally. If a message is forwarded to another host, &'its'&
20643 bounce may well quote the generated address.
20644
20645
20646 .option ignore_eacces redirect boolean false
20647 .cindex "EACCES"
20648 If this option is set and an attempt to open a redirection file yields the
20649 EACCES error (permission denied), the &(redirect)& router behaves as if the
20650 file did not exist.
20651
20652
20653 .option ignore_enotdir redirect boolean false
20654 .cindex "ENOTDIR"
20655 If this option is set and an attempt to open a redirection file yields the
20656 ENOTDIR error (something on the path is not a directory), the &(redirect)&
20657 router behaves as if the file did not exist.
20658
20659 Setting &%ignore_enotdir%& has another effect as well: When a &(redirect)&
20660 router that has the &%file%& option set discovers that the file does not exist
20661 (the ENOENT error), it tries to &[stat()]& the parent directory, as a check
20662 against unmounted NFS directories. If the parent can not be statted, delivery
20663 is deferred. However, it seems wrong to do this check when &%ignore_enotdir%&
20664 is set, because that option tells Exim to ignore &"something on the path is not
20665 a directory"& (the ENOTDIR error). This is a confusing area, because it seems
20666 that some operating systems give ENOENT where others give ENOTDIR.
20667
20668
20669
20670 .option include_directory redirect string unset
20671 If this option is set, the path names of any &':include:'& items in a
20672 redirection list must start with this directory.
20673
20674
20675 .option modemask redirect "octal integer" 022
20676 This specifies mode bits which must not be set for a file specified by the
20677 &%file%& option. If any of the forbidden bits are set, delivery is deferred.
20678
20679
20680 .option one_time redirect boolean false
20681 .cindex "one-time aliasing/forwarding expansion"
20682 .cindex "alias file" "one-time expansion"
20683 .cindex "forward file" "one-time expansion"
20684 .cindex "mailing lists" "one-time expansion"
20685 .cindex "address redirection" "one-time expansion"
20686 Sometimes the fact that Exim re-evaluates aliases and reprocesses redirection
20687 files each time it tries to deliver a message causes a problem when one or more
20688 of the generated addresses fails be delivered at the first attempt. The problem
20689 is not one of duplicate delivery &-- Exim is clever enough to handle that &--
20690 but of what happens when the redirection list changes during the time that the
20691 message is on Exim's queue. This is particularly true in the case of mailing
20692 lists, where new subscribers might receive copies of messages that were posted
20693 before they subscribed.
20694
20695 If &%one_time%& is set and any addresses generated by the router fail to
20696 deliver at the first attempt, the failing addresses are added to the message as
20697 &"top level"& addresses, and the parent address that generated them is marked
20698 &"delivered"&. Thus, redirection does not happen again at the next delivery
20699 attempt.
20700
20701 &*Warning 1*&: Any header line addition or removal that is specified by this
20702 router would be lost if delivery did not succeed at the first attempt. For this
20703 reason, the &%headers_add%& and &%headers_remove%& generic options are not
20704 permitted when &%one_time%& is set.
20705
20706 &*Warning 2*&: To ensure that the router generates only addresses (as opposed
20707 to pipe or file deliveries or auto-replies) &%forbid_file%&, &%forbid_pipe%&,
20708 and &%forbid_filter_reply%& are forced to be true when &%one_time%& is set.
20709
20710 &*Warning 3*&: The &%unseen%& generic router option may not be set with
20711 &%one_time%&.
20712
20713 The original top-level address is remembered with each of the generated
20714 addresses, and is output in any log messages. However, any intermediate parent
20715 addresses are not recorded. This makes a difference to the log only if
20716 &%all_parents%& log selector is set. It is expected that &%one_time%& will
20717 typically be used for mailing lists, where there is normally just one level of
20718 expansion.
20719
20720
20721 .option owners redirect "string list" unset
20722 .cindex "ownership" "alias file"
20723 .cindex "ownership" "forward file"
20724 .cindex "alias file" "ownership"
20725 .cindex "forward file" "ownership"
20726 This specifies a list of permitted owners for the file specified by &%file%&.
20727 This list is in addition to the local user when &%check_local_user%& is set.
20728 See &%check_owner%& above.
20729
20730
20731 .option owngroups redirect "string list" unset
20732 This specifies a list of permitted groups for the file specified by &%file%&.
20733 The list is in addition to the local user's primary group when
20734 &%check_local_user%& is set. See &%check_group%& above.
20735
20736
20737 .option pipe_transport redirect string&!! unset
20738 .vindex "&$address_pipe$&"
20739 A &(redirect)& router sets up a direct delivery to a pipe when a string
20740 starting with a vertical bar character is specified as a new &"address"&. The
20741 transport used is specified by this option, which, after expansion, must be the
20742 name of a configured transport. This should normally be a &(pipe)& transport.
20743 When the transport is run, the pipe command is in &$address_pipe$&.
20744
20745
20746 .option qualify_domain redirect string&!! unset
20747 .vindex "&$qualify_recipient$&"
20748 If this option is set, and an unqualified address (one without a domain) is
20749 generated, and that address would normally be qualified by the global setting
20750 in &%qualify_recipient%&, it is instead qualified with the domain specified by
20751 expanding this string. If the expansion fails, the router declines. If you want
20752 to revert to the default, you can have the expansion generate
20753 &$qualify_recipient$&.
20754
20755 This option applies to all unqualified addresses generated by Exim filters,
20756 but for traditional &_.forward_& files, it applies only to addresses that are
20757 not preceded by a backslash. Sieve filters cannot generate unqualified
20758 addresses.
20759
20760 .option qualify_preserve_domain redirect boolean false
20761 .cindex "domain" "in redirection; preserving"
20762 .cindex "preserving domain in redirection"
20763 .cindex "address redirection" "domain; preserving"
20764 If this option is set, the router's local &%qualify_domain%& option must not be
20765 set (a configuration error occurs if it is). If an unqualified address (one
20766 without a domain) is generated, it is qualified with the domain of the parent
20767 address (the immediately preceding ancestor) instead of the global
20768 &%qualify_recipient%& value. In the case of a traditional &_.forward_& file,
20769 this applies whether or not the address is preceded by a backslash.
20770
20771
20772 .option repeat_use redirect boolean true
20773 If this option is set false, the router is skipped for a child address that has
20774 any ancestor that was routed by this router. This test happens before any of
20775 the other preconditions are tested. Exim's default anti-looping rules skip
20776 only when the ancestor is the same as the current address. See also
20777 &%check_ancestor%& above and the generic &%redirect_router%& option.
20778
20779
20780 .option reply_transport redirect string&!! unset
20781 A &(redirect)& router sets up an automatic reply when a &%mail%& or
20782 &%vacation%& command is used in a filter file. The transport used is specified
20783 by this option, which, after expansion, must be the name of a configured
20784 transport. This should normally be an &(autoreply)& transport. Other transports
20785 are unlikely to do anything sensible or useful.
20786
20787
20788 .option rewrite redirect boolean true
20789 .cindex "address redirection" "disabling rewriting"
20790 If this option is set false, addresses generated by the router are not
20791 subject to address rewriting. Otherwise, they are treated like new addresses
20792 and are rewritten according to the global rewriting rules.
20793
20794
20795 .option sieve_subaddress redirect string&!! unset
20796 The value of this option is passed to a Sieve filter to specify the
20797 :subaddress part of an address.
20798
20799 .option sieve_useraddress redirect string&!! unset
20800 The value of this option is passed to a Sieve filter to specify the :user part
20801 of an address. However, if it is unset, the entire original local part
20802 (including any prefix or suffix) is used for :user.
20803
20804
20805 .option sieve_vacation_directory redirect string&!! unset
20806 .cindex "Sieve filter" "vacation directory"
20807 To enable the &"vacation"& extension for Sieve filters, you must set
20808 &%sieve_vacation_directory%& to the directory where vacation databases are held
20809 (do not put anything else in that directory), and ensure that the
20810 &%reply_transport%& option refers to an &(autoreply)& transport. Each user
20811 needs their own directory; Exim will create it if necessary.
20812
20813
20814
20815 .option skip_syntax_errors redirect boolean false
20816 .cindex "forward file" "broken"
20817 .cindex "address redirection" "broken files"
20818 .cindex "alias file" "broken"
20819 .cindex "broken alias or forward files"
20820 .cindex "ignoring faulty addresses"
20821 .cindex "skipping faulty addresses"
20822 .cindex "error" "skipping bad syntax"
20823 If &%skip_syntax_errors%& is set, syntactically malformed addresses in
20824 non-filter redirection data are skipped, and each failing address is logged. If
20825 &%syntax_errors_to%& is set, a message is sent to the address it defines,
20826 giving details of the failures. If &%syntax_errors_text%& is set, its contents
20827 are expanded and placed at the head of the error message generated by
20828 &%syntax_errors_to%&. Usually it is appropriate to set &%syntax_errors_to%& to
20829 be the same address as the generic &%errors_to%& option. The
20830 &%skip_syntax_errors%& option is often used when handling mailing lists.
20831
20832 If all the addresses in a redirection list are skipped because of syntax
20833 errors, the router declines to handle the original address, and it is passed to
20834 the following routers.
20835
20836 If &%skip_syntax_errors%& is set when an Exim filter is interpreted, any syntax
20837 error in the filter causes filtering to be abandoned without any action being
20838 taken. The incident is logged, and the router declines to handle the address,
20839 so it is passed to the following routers.
20840
20841 .cindex "Sieve filter" "syntax errors in"
20842 Syntax errors in a Sieve filter file cause the &"keep"& action to occur. This
20843 action is specified by RFC 3028. The values of &%skip_syntax_errors%&,
20844 &%syntax_errors_to%&, and &%syntax_errors_text%& are not used.
20845
20846 &%skip_syntax_errors%& can be used to specify that errors in users' forward
20847 lists or filter files should not prevent delivery. The &%syntax_errors_to%&
20848 option, used with an address that does not get redirected, can be used to
20849 notify users of these errors, by means of a router like this:
20850 .code
20851 userforward:
20852 driver = redirect
20853 allow_filter
20854 check_local_user
20855 file = $home/.forward
20856 file_transport = address_file
20857 pipe_transport = address_pipe
20858 reply_transport = address_reply
20859 no_verify
20860 skip_syntax_errors
20861 syntax_errors_to = real-$local_part@$domain
20862 syntax_errors_text = \
20863 This is an automatically generated message. An error has\n\
20864 been found in your .forward file. Details of the error are\n\
20865 reported below. While this error persists, you will receive\n\
20866 a copy of this message for every message that is addressed\n\
20867 to you. If your .forward file is a filter file, or if it is\n\
20868 a non-filter file containing no valid forwarding addresses,\n\
20869 a copy of each incoming message will be put in your normal\n\
20870 mailbox. If a non-filter file contains at least one valid\n\
20871 forwarding address, forwarding to the valid addresses will\n\
20872 happen, and those will be the only deliveries that occur.
20873 .endd
20874 You also need a router to ensure that local addresses that are prefixed by
20875 &`real-`& are recognized, but not forwarded or filtered. For example, you could
20876 put this immediately before the &(userforward)& router:
20877 .code
20878 real_localuser:
20879 driver = accept
20880 check_local_user
20881 local_part_prefix = real-
20882 transport = local_delivery
20883 .endd
20884 For security, it would probably be a good idea to restrict the use of this
20885 router to locally-generated messages, using a condition such as this:
20886 .code
20887 condition = ${if match {$sender_host_address}\
20888 {\N^(|127\.0\.0\.1)$\N}}
20889 .endd
20890
20891
20892 .option syntax_errors_text redirect string&!! unset
20893 See &%skip_syntax_errors%& above.
20894
20895
20896 .option syntax_errors_to redirect string unset
20897 See &%skip_syntax_errors%& above.
20898 .ecindex IIDredrou1
20899 .ecindex IIDredrou2
20900
20901
20902
20903
20904
20905
20906 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
20907 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
20908
20909 .chapter "Environment for running local transports" "CHAPenvironment" &&&
20910 "Environment for local transports"
20911 .scindex IIDenvlotra1 "local transports" "environment for"
20912 .scindex IIDenvlotra2 "environment" "local transports"
20913 .scindex IIDenvlotra3 "transport" "local; environment for"
20914 Local transports handle deliveries to files and pipes. (The &(autoreply)&
20915 transport can be thought of as similar to a pipe.) Exim always runs transports
20916 in subprocesses, under specified uids and gids. Typical deliveries to local
20917 mailboxes run under the uid and gid of the local user.
20918
20919 Exim also sets a specific current directory while running the transport; for
20920 some transports a home directory setting is also relevant. The &(pipe)&
20921 transport is the only one that sets up environment variables; see section
20922 &<<SECTpipeenv>>& for details.
20923
20924 The values used for the uid, gid, and the directories may come from several
20925 different places. In many cases, the router that handles the address associates
20926 settings with that address as a result of its &%check_local_user%&, &%group%&,
20927 or &%user%& options. However, values may also be given in the transport's own
20928 configuration, and these override anything that comes from the router.
20929
20930
20931
20932 .section "Concurrent deliveries" "SECID131"
20933 .cindex "concurrent deliveries"
20934 .cindex "simultaneous deliveries"
20935 If two different messages for the same local recipient arrive more or less
20936 simultaneously, the two delivery processes are likely to run concurrently. When
20937 the &(appendfile)& transport is used to write to a file, Exim applies locking
20938 rules to stop concurrent processes from writing to the same file at the same
20939 time.
20940
20941 However, when you use a &(pipe)& transport, it is up to you to arrange any
20942 locking that is needed. Here is a silly example:
20943 .code
20944 my_transport:
20945 driver = pipe
20946 command = /bin/sh -c 'cat >>/some/file'
20947 .endd
20948 This is supposed to write the message at the end of the file. However, if two
20949 messages arrive at the same time, the file will be scrambled. You can use the
20950 &%exim_lock%& utility program (see section &<<SECTmailboxmaint>>&) to lock a
20951 file using the same algorithm that Exim itself uses.
20952
20953
20954
20955
20956 .section "Uids and gids" "SECTenvuidgid"
20957 .cindex "local transports" "uid and gid"
20958 .cindex "transport" "local; uid and gid"
20959 All transports have the options &%group%& and &%user%&. If &%group%& is set, it
20960 overrides any group that the router set in the address, even if &%user%& is not
20961 set for the transport. This makes it possible, for example, to run local mail
20962 delivery under the uid of the recipient (set by the router), but in a special
20963 group (set by the transport). For example:
20964 .code
20965 # Routers ...
20966 # User/group are set by check_local_user in this router
20967 local_users:
20968 driver = accept
20969 check_local_user
20970 transport = group_delivery
20971
20972 # Transports ...
20973 # This transport overrides the group
20974 group_delivery:
20975 driver = appendfile
20976 file = /var/spool/mail/$local_part
20977 group = mail
20978 .endd
20979 If &%user%& is set for a transport, its value overrides what is set in the
20980 address by the router. If &%user%& is non-numeric and &%group%& is not set, the
20981 gid associated with the user is used. If &%user%& is numeric, &%group%& must be
20982 set.
20983
20984 .oindex "&%initgroups%&"
20985 When the uid is taken from the transport's configuration, the &[initgroups()]&
20986 function is called for the groups associated with that uid if the
20987 &%initgroups%& option is set for the transport. When the uid is not specified
20988 by the transport, but is associated with the address by a router, the option
20989 for calling &[initgroups()]& is taken from the router configuration.
20990
20991 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport" "uid for"
20992 The &(pipe)& transport contains the special option &%pipe_as_creator%&. If this
20993 is set and &%user%& is not set, the uid of the process that called Exim to
20994 receive the message is used, and if &%group%& is not set, the corresponding
20995 original gid is also used.
20996
20997 This is the detailed preference order for obtaining a gid; the first of the
20998 following that is set is used:
20999
21000 .ilist
21001 A &%group%& setting of the transport;
21002 .next
21003 A &%group%& setting of the router;
21004 .next
21005 A gid associated with a user setting of the router, either as a result of
21006 &%check_local_user%& or an explicit non-numeric &%user%& setting;
21007 .next
21008 The group associated with a non-numeric &%user%& setting of the transport;
21009 .next
21010 In a &(pipe)& transport, the creator's gid if &%deliver_as_creator%& is set and
21011 the uid is the creator's uid;
21012 .next
21013 The Exim gid if the Exim uid is being used as a default.
21014 .endlist
21015
21016 If, for example, the user is specified numerically on the router and there are
21017 no group settings, no gid is available. In this situation, an error occurs.
21018 This is different for the uid, for which there always is an ultimate default.
21019 The first of the following that is set is used:
21020
21021 .ilist
21022 A &%user%& setting of the transport;
21023 .next
21024 In a &(pipe)& transport, the creator's uid if &%deliver_as_creator%& is set;
21025 .next
21026 A &%user%& setting of the router;
21027 .next
21028 A &%check_local_user%& setting of the router;
21029 .next
21030 The Exim uid.
21031 .endlist
21032
21033 Of course, an error will still occur if the uid that is chosen is on the
21034 &%never_users%& list.
21035
21036
21037
21038
21039
21040 .section "Current and home directories" "SECID132"
21041 .cindex "current directory for local transport"
21042 .cindex "home directory" "for local transport"
21043 .cindex "transport" "local; home directory for"
21044 .cindex "transport" "local; current directory for"
21045 Routers may set current and home directories for local transports by means of
21046 the &%transport_current_directory%& and &%transport_home_directory%& options.
21047 However, if the transport's &%current_directory%& or &%home_directory%& options
21048 are set, they override the router's values. In detail, the home directory
21049 for a local transport is taken from the first of these values that is set:
21050
21051 .ilist
21052 The &%home_directory%& option on the transport;
21053 .next
21054 The &%transport_home_directory%& option on the router;
21055 .next
21056 The password data if &%check_local_user%& is set on the router;
21057 .next
21058 The &%router_home_directory%& option on the router.
21059 .endlist
21060
21061 The current directory is taken from the first of these values that is set:
21062
21063 .ilist
21064 The &%current_directory%& option on the transport;
21065 .next
21066 The &%transport_current_directory%& option on the router.
21067 .endlist
21068
21069
21070 If neither the router nor the transport sets a current directory, Exim uses the
21071 value of the home directory, if it is set. Otherwise it sets the current
21072 directory to &_/_& before running a local transport.
21073
21074
21075
21076 .section "Expansion variables derived from the address" "SECID133"
21077 .vindex "&$domain$&"
21078 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
21079 .vindex "&$original_domain$&"
21080 Normally a local delivery is handling a single address, and in that case the
21081 variables such as &$domain$& and &$local_part$& are set during local
21082 deliveries. However, in some circumstances more than one address may be handled
21083 at once (for example, while writing batch SMTP for onward transmission by some
21084 other means). In this case, the variables associated with the local part are
21085 never set, &$domain$& is set only if all the addresses have the same domain,
21086 and &$original_domain$& is never set.
21087 .ecindex IIDenvlotra1
21088 .ecindex IIDenvlotra2
21089 .ecindex IIDenvlotra3
21090
21091
21092
21093
21094
21095
21096
21097 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
21098 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
21099
21100 .chapter "Generic options for transports" "CHAPtransportgeneric"
21101 .scindex IIDgenoptra1 "generic options" "transport"
21102 .scindex IIDgenoptra2 "options" "generic; for transports"
21103 .scindex IIDgenoptra3 "transport" "generic options for"
21104 The following generic options apply to all transports:
21105
21106
21107 .option body_only transports boolean false
21108 .cindex "transport" "body only"
21109 .cindex "message" "transporting body only"
21110 .cindex "body of message" "transporting"
21111 If this option is set, the message's headers are not transported. It is
21112 mutually exclusive with &%headers_only%&. If it is used with the &(appendfile)&
21113 or &(pipe)& transports, the settings of &%message_prefix%& and
21114 &%message_suffix%& should be checked, because this option does not
21115 automatically suppress them.
21116
21117
21118 .option current_directory transports string&!! unset
21119 .cindex "transport" "current directory for"
21120 This specifies the current directory that is to be set while running the
21121 transport, overriding any value that may have been set by the router.
21122 If the expansion fails for any reason, including forced failure, an error is
21123 logged, and delivery is deferred.
21124
21125
21126 .option disable_logging transports boolean false
21127 If this option is set true, nothing is logged for any
21128 deliveries by the transport or for any
21129 transport errors. You should not set this option unless you really, really know
21130 what you are doing.
21131
21132
21133 .option debug_print transports string&!! unset
21134 .cindex "testing" "variables in drivers"
21135 If this option is set and debugging is enabled (see the &%-d%& command line
21136 option), the string is expanded and included in the debugging output when the
21137 transport is run.
21138 If expansion of the string fails, the error message is written to the debugging
21139 output, and Exim carries on processing.
21140 This facility is provided to help with checking out the values of variables and
21141 so on when debugging driver configurations. For example, if a &%headers_add%&
21142 option is not working properly, &%debug_print%& could be used to output the
21143 variables it references. A newline is added to the text if it does not end with
21144 one.
21145 The variables &$transport_name$& and &$router_name$& contain the name of the
21146 transport and the router that called it.
21147
21148 .option delivery_date_add transports boolean false
21149 .cindex "&'Delivery-date:'& header line"
21150 If this option is true, a &'Delivery-date:'& header is added to the message.
21151 This gives the actual time the delivery was made. As this is not a standard
21152 header, Exim has a configuration option (&%delivery_date_remove%&) which
21153 requests its removal from incoming messages, so that delivered messages can
21154 safely be resent to other recipients.
21155
21156
21157 .option driver transports string unset
21158 This specifies which of the available transport drivers is to be used.
21159 There is no default, and this option must be set for every transport.
21160
21161
21162 .option envelope_to_add transports boolean false
21163 .cindex "&'Envelope-to:'& header line"
21164 If this option is true, an &'Envelope-to:'& header is added to the message.
21165 This gives the original address(es) in the incoming envelope that caused this
21166 delivery to happen. More than one address may be present if the transport is
21167 configured to handle several addresses at once, or if more than one original
21168 address was redirected to the same final address. As this is not a standard
21169 header, Exim has a configuration option (&%envelope_to_remove%&) which requests
21170 its removal from incoming messages, so that delivered messages can safely be
21171 resent to other recipients.
21172
21173
21174 .option event_action transports string&!! unset
21175 .cindex events
21176 This option declares a string to be expanded for Exim's events mechanism.
21177 For details see chapter &<<CHAPevents>>&.
21178
21179
21180 .option group transports string&!! "Exim group"
21181 .cindex "transport" "group; specifying"
21182 This option specifies a gid for running the transport process, overriding any
21183 value that the router supplies, and also overriding any value associated with
21184 &%user%& (see below).
21185
21186
21187 .option headers_add transports list&!! unset
21188 .cindex "header lines" "adding in transport"
21189 .cindex "transport" "header lines; adding"
21190 This option specifies a list of text headers,
21191 newline-separated (by default, changeable in the usual way),
21192 which are (separately) expanded and added to the header
21193 portion of a message as it is transported, as described in section
21194 &<<SECTheadersaddrem>>&. Additional header lines can also be specified by
21195 routers. If the result of the expansion is an empty string, or if the expansion
21196 is forced to fail, no action is taken. Other expansion failures are treated as
21197 errors and cause the delivery to be deferred.
21198
21199 Unlike most options, &%headers_add%& can be specified multiple times
21200 for a transport; all listed headers are added.
21201
21202
21203 .option headers_only transports boolean false
21204 .cindex "transport" "header lines only"
21205 .cindex "message" "transporting headers only"
21206 .cindex "header lines" "transporting"
21207 If this option is set, the message's body is not transported. It is mutually
21208 exclusive with &%body_only%&. If it is used with the &(appendfile)& or &(pipe)&
21209 transports, the settings of &%message_prefix%& and &%message_suffix%& should be
21210 checked, since this option does not automatically suppress them.
21211
21212
21213 .option headers_remove transports list&!! unset
21214 .cindex "header lines" "removing"
21215 .cindex "transport" "header lines; removing"
21216 This option specifies a list of header names,
21217 colon-separated (by default, changeable in the usual way);
21218 these headers are omitted from the message as it is transported, as described
21219 in section &<<SECTheadersaddrem>>&. Header removal can also be specified by
21220 routers.
21221 Each list item is separately expanded.
21222 If the result of the expansion is an empty string, or if the expansion
21223 is forced to fail, no action is taken. Other expansion failures are treated as
21224 errors and cause the delivery to be deferred.
21225
21226 Unlike most options, &%headers_remove%& can be specified multiple times
21227 for a transport; all listed headers are removed.
21228
21229 &*Warning*&: Because of the separate expansion of the list items,
21230 items that contain a list separator must have it doubled.
21231 To avoid this, change the list separator (&<<SECTlistsepchange>>&).
21232
21233
21234
21235 .option headers_rewrite transports string unset
21236 .cindex "transport" "header lines; rewriting"
21237 .cindex "rewriting" "at transport time"
21238 This option allows addresses in header lines to be rewritten at transport time,
21239 that is, as the message is being copied to its destination. The contents of the
21240 option are a colon-separated list of rewriting rules. Each rule is in exactly
21241 the same form as one of the general rewriting rules that are applied when a
21242 message is received. These are described in chapter &<<CHAPrewrite>>&. For
21243 example,
21244 .code
21245 headers_rewrite = a@b c@d f : \
21246 x@y w@z
21247 .endd
21248 changes &'a@b'& into &'c@d'& in &'From:'& header lines, and &'x@y'& into
21249 &'w@z'& in all address-bearing header lines. The rules are applied to the
21250 header lines just before they are written out at transport time, so they affect
21251 only those copies of the message that pass through the transport. However, only
21252 the message's original header lines, and any that were added by a system
21253 filter, are rewritten. If a router or transport adds header lines, they are not
21254 affected by this option. These rewriting rules are &'not'& applied to the
21255 envelope. You can change the return path using &%return_path%&, but you cannot
21256 change envelope recipients at this time.
21257
21258
21259 .option home_directory transports string&!! unset
21260 .cindex "transport" "home directory for"
21261 .vindex "&$home$&"
21262 This option specifies a home directory setting for a local transport,
21263 overriding any value that may be set by the router. The home directory is
21264 placed in &$home$& while expanding the transport's private options. It is also
21265 used as the current directory if no current directory is set by the
21266 &%current_directory%& option on the transport or the
21267 &%transport_current_directory%& option on the router. If the expansion fails
21268 for any reason, including forced failure, an error is logged, and delivery is
21269 deferred.
21270
21271
21272 .option initgroups transports boolean false
21273 .cindex "additional groups"
21274 .cindex "groups" "additional"
21275 .cindex "transport" "group; additional"
21276 If this option is true and the uid for the delivery process is provided by the
21277 transport, the &[initgroups()]& function is called when running the transport
21278 to ensure that any additional groups associated with the uid are set up.
21279
21280
21281 .option max_parallel transports integer&!! unset
21282 .cindex limit "transport parallelism"
21283 .cindex transport "parallel processes"
21284 .cindex transport "concurrency limit"
21285 .cindex "delivery" "parallelism for transport"
21286 If this option is set and expands to an integer greater than zero
21287 it limits the number of concurrent runs of the transport.
21288 The control does not apply to shadow transports.
21289
21290 .cindex "hints database" "transport concurrency control"
21291 Exim implements this control by means of a hints database in which a record is
21292 incremented whenever a transport process is being created. The record
21293 is decremented and possibly removed when the process terminates.
21294 Obviously there is scope for
21295 records to get left lying around if there is a system or program crash. To
21296 guard against this, Exim ignores any records that are more than six hours old.
21297
21298 If you use this option, you should also arrange to delete the
21299 relevant hints database whenever your system reboots. The names of the files
21300 start with &_misc_& and they are kept in the &_spool/db_& directory. There
21301 may be one or two files, depending on the type of DBM in use. The same files
21302 are used for ETRN and smtp transport serialization.
21303
21304
21305 .option message_size_limit transports string&!! 0
21306 .cindex "limit" "message size per transport"
21307 .cindex "size" "of message, limit"
21308 .cindex "transport" "message size; limiting"
21309 This option controls the size of messages passed through the transport. It is
21310 expanded before use; the result of the expansion must be a sequence of decimal
21311 digits, optionally followed by K or M. If the expansion fails for any reason,
21312 including forced failure, or if the result is not of the required form,
21313 delivery is deferred. If the value is greater than zero and the size of a
21314 message exceeds this limit, the address is failed. If there is any chance that
21315 the resulting bounce message could be routed to the same transport, you should
21316 ensure that &%return_size_limit%& is less than the transport's
21317 &%message_size_limit%&, as otherwise the bounce message will fail to get
21318 delivered.
21319
21320
21321
21322 .option rcpt_include_affixes transports boolean false
21323 .cindex "prefix" "for local part, including in envelope"
21324 .cindex "suffix for local part" "including in envelope"
21325 .cindex "local part" "prefix"
21326 .cindex "local part" "suffix"
21327 When this option is false (the default), and an address that has had any
21328 affixes (prefixes or suffixes) removed from the local part is delivered by any
21329 form of SMTP or LMTP, the affixes are not included. For example, if a router
21330 that contains
21331 .code
21332 local_part_prefix = *-
21333 .endd
21334 routes the address &'abc-xyz@some.domain'& to an SMTP transport, the envelope
21335 is delivered with
21336 .code
21337 RCPT TO:<xyz@some.domain>
21338 .endd
21339 This is also the case when an ACL-time callout is being used to verify a
21340 recipient address. However, if &%rcpt_include_affixes%& is set true, the
21341 whole local part is included in the RCPT command. This option applies to BSMTP
21342 deliveries by the &(appendfile)& and &(pipe)& transports as well as to the
21343 &(lmtp)& and &(smtp)& transports.
21344
21345
21346 .option retry_use_local_part transports boolean "see below"
21347 .cindex "hints database" "retry keys"
21348 When a delivery suffers a temporary failure, a retry record is created
21349 in Exim's hints database. For remote deliveries, the key for the retry record
21350 is based on the name and/or IP address of the failing remote host. For local
21351 deliveries, the key is normally the entire address, including both the local
21352 part and the domain. This is suitable for most common cases of local delivery
21353 temporary failure &-- for example, exceeding a mailbox quota should delay only
21354 deliveries to that mailbox, not to the whole domain.
21355
21356 However, in some special cases you may want to treat a temporary local delivery
21357 as a failure associated with the domain, and not with a particular local part.
21358 (For example, if you are storing all mail for some domain in files.) You can do
21359 this by setting &%retry_use_local_part%& false.
21360
21361 For all the local transports, its default value is true. For remote transports,
21362 the default value is false for tidiness, but changing the value has no effect
21363 on a remote transport in the current implementation.
21364
21365
21366 .option return_path transports string&!! unset
21367 .cindex "envelope sender"
21368 .cindex "transport" "return path; changing"
21369 .cindex "return path" "changing in transport"
21370 If this option is set, the string is expanded at transport time and replaces
21371 the existing return path (envelope sender) value in the copy of the message
21372 that is being delivered. An empty return path is permitted. This feature is
21373 designed for remote deliveries, where the value of this option is used in the
21374 SMTP MAIL command. If you set &%return_path%& for a local transport, the
21375 only effect is to change the address that is placed in the &'Return-path:'&
21376 header line, if one is added to the message (see the next option).
21377
21378 &*Note:*& A changed return path is not logged unless you add
21379 &%return_path_on_delivery%& to the log selector.
21380
21381 .vindex "&$return_path$&"
21382 The expansion can refer to the existing value via &$return_path$&. This is
21383 either the message's envelope sender, or an address set by the
21384 &%errors_to%& option on a router. If the expansion is forced to fail, no
21385 replacement occurs; if it fails for another reason, delivery is deferred. This
21386 option can be used to support VERP (Variable Envelope Return Paths) &-- see
21387 section &<<SECTverp>>&.
21388
21389 &*Note*&: If a delivery error is detected locally, including the case when a
21390 remote server rejects a message at SMTP time, the bounce message is not sent to
21391 the value of this option. It is sent to the previously set errors address.
21392 This defaults to the incoming sender address, but can be changed by setting
21393 &%errors_to%& in a router.
21394
21395
21396
21397 .option return_path_add transports boolean false
21398 .cindex "&'Return-path:'& header line"
21399 If this option is true, a &'Return-path:'& header is added to the message.
21400 Although the return path is normally available in the prefix line of BSD
21401 mailboxes, this is commonly not displayed by MUAs, and so the user does not
21402 have easy access to it.
21403
21404 RFC 2821 states that the &'Return-path:'& header is added to a message &"when
21405 the delivery SMTP server makes the final delivery"&. This implies that this
21406 header should not be present in incoming messages. Exim has a configuration
21407 option, &%return_path_remove%&, which requests removal of this header from
21408 incoming messages, so that delivered messages can safely be resent to other
21409 recipients.
21410
21411
21412 .option shadow_condition transports string&!! unset
21413 See &%shadow_transport%& below.
21414
21415
21416 .option shadow_transport transports string unset
21417 .cindex "shadow transport"
21418 .cindex "transport" "shadow"
21419 A local transport may set the &%shadow_transport%& option to the name of
21420 another local transport. Shadow remote transports are not supported.
21421
21422 Whenever a delivery to the main transport succeeds, and either
21423 &%shadow_condition%& is unset, or its expansion does not result in the empty
21424 string or one of the strings &"0"& or &"no"& or &"false"&, the message is also
21425 passed to the shadow transport, with the same delivery address or addresses. If
21426 expansion fails, no action is taken except that non-forced expansion failures
21427 cause a log line to be written.
21428
21429 The result of the shadow transport is discarded and does not affect the
21430 subsequent processing of the message. Only a single level of shadowing is
21431 provided; the &%shadow_transport%& option is ignored on any transport when it
21432 is running as a shadow. Options concerned with output from pipes are also
21433 ignored. The log line for the successful delivery has an item added on the end,
21434 of the form
21435 .code
21436 ST=<shadow transport name>
21437 .endd
21438 If the shadow transport did not succeed, the error message is put in
21439 parentheses afterwards. Shadow transports can be used for a number of different
21440 purposes, including keeping more detailed log information than Exim normally
21441 provides, and implementing automatic acknowledgment policies based on message
21442 headers that some sites insist on.
21443
21444
21445 .option transport_filter transports string&!! unset
21446 .cindex "transport" "filter"
21447 .cindex "filter" "transport filter"
21448 This option sets up a filtering (in the Unix shell sense) process for messages
21449 at transport time. It should not be confused with mail filtering as set up by
21450 individual users or via a system filter.
21451 If unset, or expanding to an empty string, no filtering is done.
21452
21453 When the message is about to be written out, the command specified by
21454 &%transport_filter%& is started up in a separate, parallel process, and
21455 the entire message, including the header lines, is passed to it on its standard
21456 input (this in fact is done from a third process, to avoid deadlock). The
21457 command must be specified as an absolute path.
21458
21459 The lines of the message that are written to the transport filter are
21460 terminated by newline (&"\n"&). The message is passed to the filter before any
21461 SMTP-specific processing, such as turning &"\n"& into &"\r\n"& and escaping
21462 lines beginning with a dot, and also before any processing implied by the
21463 settings of &%check_string%& and &%escape_string%& in the &(appendfile)& or
21464 &(pipe)& transports.
21465
21466 The standard error for the filter process is set to the same destination as its
21467 standard output; this is read and written to the message's ultimate
21468 destination. The process that writes the message to the filter, the
21469 filter itself, and the original process that reads the result and delivers it
21470 are all run in parallel, like a shell pipeline.
21471
21472 The filter can perform any transformations it likes, but of course should take
21473 care not to break RFC 2822 syntax. Exim does not check the result, except to
21474 test for a final newline when SMTP is in use. All messages transmitted over
21475 SMTP must end with a newline, so Exim supplies one if it is missing.
21476
21477 .cindex "content scanning" "per user"
21478 A transport filter can be used to provide content-scanning on a per-user basis
21479 at delivery time if the only required effect of the scan is to modify the
21480 message. For example, a content scan could insert a new header line containing
21481 a spam score. This could be interpreted by a filter in the user's MUA. It is
21482 not possible to discard a message at this stage.
21483
21484 .cindex "SMTP" "SIZE"
21485 A problem might arise if the filter increases the size of a message that is
21486 being sent down an SMTP connection. If the receiving SMTP server has indicated
21487 support for the SIZE parameter, Exim will have sent the size of the message
21488 at the start of the SMTP session. If what is actually sent is substantially
21489 more, the server might reject the message. This can be worked round by setting
21490 the &%size_addition%& option on the &(smtp)& transport, either to allow for
21491 additions to the message, or to disable the use of SIZE altogether.
21492
21493 .vindex "&$pipe_addresses$&"
21494 The value of the &%transport_filter%& option is the command string for starting
21495 the filter, which is run directly from Exim, not under a shell. The string is
21496 parsed by Exim in the same way as a command string for the &(pipe)& transport:
21497 Exim breaks it up into arguments and then expands each argument separately (see
21498 section &<<SECThowcommandrun>>&). Any kind of expansion failure causes delivery
21499 to be deferred. The special argument &$pipe_addresses$& is replaced by a number
21500 of arguments, one for each address that applies to this delivery. (This isn't
21501 an ideal name for this feature here, but as it was already implemented for the
21502 &(pipe)& transport, it seemed sensible not to change it.)
21503
21504 .vindex "&$host$&"
21505 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
21506 The expansion variables &$host$& and &$host_address$& are available when the
21507 transport is a remote one. They contain the name and IP address of the host to
21508 which the message is being sent. For example:
21509 .code
21510 transport_filter = /some/directory/transport-filter.pl \
21511 $host $host_address $sender_address $pipe_addresses
21512 .endd
21513
21514 Two problems arise if you want to use more complicated expansion items to
21515 generate transport filter commands, both of which due to the fact that the
21516 command is split up &'before'& expansion.
21517 .ilist
21518 If an expansion item contains white space, you must quote it, so that it is all
21519 part of the same command item. If the entire option setting is one such
21520 expansion item, you have to take care what kind of quoting you use. For
21521 example:
21522 .code
21523 transport_filter = '/bin/cmd${if eq{$host}{a.b.c}{1}{2}}'
21524 .endd
21525 This runs the command &(/bin/cmd1)& if the host name is &'a.b.c'&, and
21526 &(/bin/cmd2)& otherwise. If double quotes had been used, they would have been
21527 stripped by Exim when it read the option's value. When the value is used, if
21528 the single quotes were missing, the line would be split into two items,
21529 &`/bin/cmd${if`& and &`eq{$host}{a.b.c}{1}{2}`&, and an error would occur when
21530 Exim tried to expand the first one.
21531 .next
21532 Except for the special case of &$pipe_addresses$& that is mentioned above, an
21533 expansion cannot generate multiple arguments, or a command name followed by
21534 arguments. Consider this example:
21535 .code
21536 transport_filter = ${lookup{$host}lsearch{/a/file}\
21537 {$value}{/bin/cat}}
21538 .endd
21539 The result of the lookup is interpreted as the name of the command, even
21540 if it contains white space. The simplest way round this is to use a shell:
21541 .code
21542 transport_filter = /bin/sh -c ${lookup{$host}lsearch{/a/file}\
21543 {$value}{/bin/cat}}
21544 .endd
21545 .endlist
21546
21547 The filter process is run under the same uid and gid as the normal delivery.
21548 For remote deliveries this is the Exim uid/gid by default. The command should
21549 normally yield a zero return code. Transport filters are not supposed to fail.
21550 A non-zero code is taken to mean that the transport filter encountered some
21551 serious problem. Delivery of the message is deferred; the message remains on
21552 the queue and is tried again later. It is not possible to cause a message to be
21553 bounced from a transport filter.
21554
21555 If a transport filter is set on an autoreply transport, the original message is
21556 passed through the filter as it is being copied into the newly generated
21557 message, which happens if the &%return_message%& option is set.
21558
21559
21560 .option transport_filter_timeout transports time 5m
21561 .cindex "transport" "filter, timeout"
21562 When Exim is reading the output of a transport filter, it applies a timeout
21563 that can be set by this option. Exceeding the timeout is normally treated as a
21564 temporary delivery failure. However, if a transport filter is used with a
21565 &(pipe)& transport, a timeout in the transport filter is treated in the same
21566 way as a timeout in the pipe command itself. By default, a timeout is a hard
21567 error, but if the &(pipe)& transport's &%timeout_defer%& option is set true, it
21568 becomes a temporary error.
21569
21570
21571 .option user transports string&!! "Exim user"
21572 .cindex "uid (user id)" "local delivery"
21573 .cindex "transport" "user, specifying"
21574 This option specifies the user under whose uid the delivery process is to be
21575 run, overriding any uid that may have been set by the router. If the user is
21576 given as a name, the uid is looked up from the password data, and the
21577 associated group is taken as the value of the gid to be used if the &%group%&
21578 option is not set.
21579
21580 For deliveries that use local transports, a user and group are normally
21581 specified explicitly or implicitly (for example, as a result of
21582 &%check_local_user%&) by the router or transport.
21583
21584 .cindex "hints database" "access by remote transport"
21585 For remote transports, you should leave this option unset unless you really are
21586 sure you know what you are doing. When a remote transport is running, it needs
21587 to be able to access Exim's hints databases, because each host may have its own
21588 retry data.
21589 .ecindex IIDgenoptra1
21590 .ecindex IIDgenoptra2
21591 .ecindex IIDgenoptra3
21592
21593
21594
21595
21596
21597
21598 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
21599 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
21600
21601 .chapter "Address batching in local transports" "CHAPbatching" &&&
21602 "Address batching"
21603 .cindex "transport" "local; address batching in"
21604 The only remote transport (&(smtp)&) is normally configured to handle more than
21605 one address at a time, so that when several addresses are routed to the same
21606 remote host, just one copy of the message is sent. Local transports, however,
21607 normally handle one address at a time. That is, a separate instance of the
21608 transport is run for each address that is routed to the transport. A separate
21609 copy of the message is delivered each time.
21610
21611 .cindex "batched local delivery"
21612 .oindex "&%batch_max%&"
21613 .oindex "&%batch_id%&"
21614 In special cases, it may be desirable to handle several addresses at once in a
21615 local transport, for example:
21616
21617 .ilist
21618 In an &(appendfile)& transport, when storing messages in files for later
21619 delivery by some other means, a single copy of the message with multiple
21620 recipients saves space.
21621 .next
21622 In an &(lmtp)& transport, when delivering over &"local SMTP"& to some process,
21623 a single copy saves time, and is the normal way LMTP is expected to work.
21624 .next
21625 In a &(pipe)& transport, when passing the message
21626 to a scanner program or
21627 to some other delivery mechanism such as UUCP, multiple recipients may be
21628 acceptable.
21629 .endlist
21630
21631 These three local transports all have the same options for controlling multiple
21632 (&"batched"&) deliveries, namely &%batch_max%& and &%batch_id%&. To save
21633 repeating the information for each transport, these options are described here.
21634
21635 The &%batch_max%& option specifies the maximum number of addresses that can be
21636 delivered together in a single run of the transport. Its default value is one
21637 (no batching). When more than one address is routed to a transport that has a
21638 &%batch_max%& value greater than one, the addresses are delivered in a batch
21639 (that is, in a single run of the transport with multiple recipients), subject
21640 to certain conditions:
21641
21642 .ilist
21643 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
21644 If any of the transport's options contain a reference to &$local_part$&, no
21645 batching is possible.
21646 .next
21647 .vindex "&$domain$&"
21648 If any of the transport's options contain a reference to &$domain$&, only
21649 addresses with the same domain are batched.
21650 .next
21651 .cindex "customizing" "batching condition"
21652 If &%batch_id%& is set, it is expanded for each address, and only those
21653 addresses with the same expanded value are batched. This allows you to specify
21654 customized batching conditions. Failure of the expansion for any reason,
21655 including forced failure, disables batching, but it does not stop the delivery
21656 from taking place.
21657 .next
21658 Batched addresses must also have the same errors address (where to send
21659 delivery errors), the same header additions and removals, the same user and
21660 group for the transport, and if a host list is present, the first host must
21661 be the same.
21662 .endlist
21663
21664 In the case of the &(appendfile)& and &(pipe)& transports, batching applies
21665 both when the file or pipe command is specified in the transport, and when it
21666 is specified by a &(redirect)& router, but all the batched addresses must of
21667 course be routed to the same file or pipe command. These two transports have an
21668 option called &%use_bsmtp%&, which causes them to deliver the message in
21669 &"batched SMTP"& format, with the envelope represented as SMTP commands. The
21670 &%check_string%& and &%escape_string%& options are forced to the values
21671 .code
21672 check_string = "."
21673 escape_string = ".."
21674 .endd
21675 when batched SMTP is in use. A full description of the batch SMTP mechanism is
21676 given in section &<<SECTbatchSMTP>>&. The &(lmtp)& transport does not have a
21677 &%use_bsmtp%& option, because it always delivers using the SMTP protocol.
21678
21679 .cindex "&'Envelope-to:'& header line"
21680 If the generic &%envelope_to_add%& option is set for a batching transport, the
21681 &'Envelope-to:'& header that is added to the message contains all the addresses
21682 that are being processed together. If you are using a batching &(appendfile)&
21683 transport without &%use_bsmtp%&, the only way to preserve the recipient
21684 addresses is to set the &%envelope_to_add%& option.
21685
21686 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport" "with multiple addresses"
21687 .vindex "&$pipe_addresses$&"
21688 If you are using a &(pipe)& transport without BSMTP, and setting the
21689 transport's &%command%& option, you can include &$pipe_addresses$& as part of
21690 the command. This is not a true variable; it is a bit of magic that causes each
21691 of the recipient addresses to be inserted into the command as a separate
21692 argument. This provides a way of accessing all the addresses that are being
21693 delivered in the batch. &*Note:*& This is not possible for pipe commands that
21694 are specified by a &(redirect)& router.
21695
21696
21697
21698
21699 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
21700 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
21701
21702 .chapter "The appendfile transport" "CHAPappendfile"
21703 .scindex IIDapptra1 "&(appendfile)& transport"
21704 .scindex IIDapptra2 "transports" "&(appendfile)&"
21705 .cindex "directory creation"
21706 .cindex "creating directories"
21707 The &(appendfile)& transport delivers a message by appending it to an existing
21708 file, or by creating an entirely new file in a specified directory. Single
21709 files to which messages are appended can be in the traditional Unix mailbox
21710 format, or optionally in the MBX format supported by the Pine MUA and
21711 University of Washington IMAP daemon, &'inter alia'&. When each message is
21712 being delivered as a separate file, &"maildir"& format can optionally be used
21713 to give added protection against failures that happen part-way through the
21714 delivery. A third form of separate-file delivery known as &"mailstore"& is also
21715 supported. For all file formats, Exim attempts to create as many levels of
21716 directory as necessary, provided that &%create_directory%& is set.
21717
21718 The code for the optional formats is not included in the Exim binary by
21719 default. It is necessary to set SUPPORT_MBX, SUPPORT_MAILDIR and/or
21720 SUPPORT_MAILSTORE in &_Local/Makefile_& to have the appropriate code
21721 included.
21722
21723 .cindex "quota" "system"
21724 Exim recognizes system quota errors, and generates an appropriate message. Exim
21725 also supports its own quota control within the transport, for use when the
21726 system facility is unavailable or cannot be used for some reason.
21727
21728 If there is an error while appending to a file (for example, quota exceeded or
21729 partition filled), Exim attempts to reset the file's length and last
21730 modification time back to what they were before. If there is an error while
21731 creating an entirely new file, the new file is removed.
21732
21733 Before appending to a file, a number of security checks are made, and the
21734 file is locked. A detailed description is given below, after the list of
21735 private options.
21736
21737 The &(appendfile)& transport is most commonly used for local deliveries to
21738 users' mailboxes. However, it can also be used as a pseudo-remote transport for
21739 putting messages into files for remote delivery by some means other than Exim.
21740 &"Batch SMTP"& format is often used in this case (see the &%use_bsmtp%&
21741 option).
21742
21743
21744
21745 .section "The file and directory options" "SECTfildiropt"
21746 The &%file%& option specifies a single file, to which the message is appended;
21747 the &%directory%& option specifies a directory, in which a new file containing
21748 the message is created. Only one of these two options can be set, and for
21749 normal deliveries to mailboxes, one of them &'must'& be set.
21750
21751 .vindex "&$address_file$&"
21752 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
21753 However, &(appendfile)& is also used for delivering messages to files or
21754 directories whose names (or parts of names) are obtained from alias,
21755 forwarding, or filtering operations (for example, a &%save%& command in a
21756 user's Exim filter). When such a transport is running, &$local_part$& contains
21757 the local part that was aliased or forwarded, and &$address_file$& contains the
21758 name (or partial name) of the file or directory generated by the redirection
21759 operation. There are two cases:
21760
21761 .ilist
21762 If neither &%file%& nor &%directory%& is set, the redirection operation
21763 must specify an absolute path (one that begins with &`/`&). This is the most
21764 common case when users with local accounts use filtering to sort mail into
21765 different folders. See for example, the &(address_file)& transport in the
21766 default configuration. If the path ends with a slash, it is assumed to be the
21767 name of a directory. A delivery to a directory can also be forced by setting
21768 &%maildir_format%& or &%mailstore_format%&.
21769 .next
21770 If &%file%& or &%directory%& is set for a delivery from a redirection, it is
21771 used to determine the file or directory name for the delivery. Normally, the
21772 contents of &$address_file$& are used in some way in the string expansion.
21773 .endlist
21774
21775
21776 .cindex "Sieve filter" "configuring &(appendfile)&"
21777 .cindex "Sieve filter" "relative mailbox path handling"
21778 As an example of the second case, consider an environment where users do not
21779 have home directories. They may be permitted to use Exim filter commands of the
21780 form:
21781 .code
21782 save folder23
21783 .endd
21784 or Sieve filter commands of the form:
21785 .code
21786 require "fileinto";
21787 fileinto "folder23";
21788 .endd
21789 In this situation, the expansion of &%file%& or &%directory%& in the transport
21790 must transform the relative path into an appropriate absolute file name. In the
21791 case of Sieve filters, the name &'inbox'& must be handled. It is the name that
21792 is used as a result of a &"keep"& action in the filter. This example shows one
21793 way of handling this requirement:
21794 .code
21795 file = ${if eq{$address_file}{inbox} \
21796 {/var/mail/$local_part} \
21797 {${if eq{${substr_0_1:$address_file}}{/} \
21798 {$address_file} \
21799 {$home/mail/$address_file} \
21800 }} \
21801 }
21802 .endd
21803 With this setting of &%file%&, &'inbox'& refers to the standard mailbox
21804 location, absolute paths are used without change, and other folders are in the
21805 &_mail_& directory within the home directory.
21806
21807 &*Note 1*&: While processing an Exim filter, a relative path such as
21808 &_folder23_& is turned into an absolute path if a home directory is known to
21809 the router. In particular, this is the case if &%check_local_user%& is set. If
21810 you want to prevent this happening at routing time, you can set
21811 &%router_home_directory%& empty. This forces the router to pass the relative
21812 path to the transport.
21813
21814 &*Note 2*&: An absolute path in &$address_file$& is not treated specially;
21815 the &%file%& or &%directory%& option is still used if it is set.
21816
21817
21818
21819
21820 .section "Private options for appendfile" "SECID134"
21821 .cindex "options" "&(appendfile)& transport"
21822
21823
21824
21825 .option allow_fifo appendfile boolean false
21826 .cindex "fifo (named pipe)"
21827 .cindex "named pipe (fifo)"
21828 .cindex "pipe" "named (fifo)"
21829 Setting this option permits delivery to named pipes (FIFOs) as well as to
21830 regular files. If no process is reading the named pipe at delivery time, the
21831 delivery is deferred.
21832
21833
21834 .option allow_symlink appendfile boolean false
21835 .cindex "symbolic link" "to mailbox"
21836 .cindex "mailbox" "symbolic link"
21837 By default, &(appendfile)& will not deliver if the path name for the file is
21838 that of a symbolic link. Setting this option relaxes that constraint, but there
21839 are security issues involved in the use of symbolic links. Be sure you know
21840 what you are doing if you set this. Details of exactly what this option affects
21841 are included in the discussion which follows this list of options.
21842
21843
21844 .option batch_id appendfile string&!! unset
21845 See the description of local delivery batching in chapter &<<CHAPbatching>>&.
21846 However, batching is automatically disabled for &(appendfile)& deliveries that
21847 happen as a result of forwarding or aliasing or other redirection directly to a
21848 file.
21849
21850
21851 .option batch_max appendfile integer 1
21852 See the description of local delivery batching in chapter &<<CHAPbatching>>&.
21853
21854
21855 .option check_group appendfile boolean false
21856 When this option is set, the group owner of the file defined by the &%file%&
21857 option is checked to see that it is the same as the group under which the
21858 delivery process is running. The default setting is false because the default
21859 file mode is 0600, which means that the group is irrelevant.
21860
21861
21862 .option check_owner appendfile boolean true
21863 When this option is set, the owner of the file defined by the &%file%& option
21864 is checked to ensure that it is the same as the user under which the delivery
21865 process is running.
21866
21867
21868 .option check_string appendfile string "see below"
21869 .cindex "&""From""& line"
21870 As &(appendfile)& writes the message, the start of each line is tested for
21871 matching &%check_string%&, and if it does, the initial matching characters are
21872 replaced by the contents of &%escape_string%&. The value of &%check_string%& is
21873 a literal string, not a regular expression, and the case of any letters it
21874 contains is significant.
21875
21876 If &%use_bsmtp%& is set the values of &%check_string%& and &%escape_string%&
21877 are forced to &"."& and &".."& respectively, and any settings in the
21878 configuration are ignored. Otherwise, they default to &"From&~"& and
21879 &">From&~"& when the &%file%& option is set, and unset when any of the
21880 &%directory%&, &%maildir%&, or &%mailstore%& options are set.
21881
21882 The default settings, along with &%message_prefix%& and &%message_suffix%&, are
21883 suitable for traditional &"BSD"& mailboxes, where a line beginning with
21884 &"From&~"& indicates the start of a new message. All four options need changing
21885 if another format is used. For example, to deliver to mailboxes in MMDF format:
21886 .cindex "MMDF format mailbox"
21887 .cindex "mailbox" "MMDF format"
21888 .code
21889 check_string = "\1\1\1\1\n"
21890 escape_string = "\1\1\1\1 \n"
21891 message_prefix = "\1\1\1\1\n"
21892 message_suffix = "\1\1\1\1\n"
21893 .endd
21894 .option create_directory appendfile boolean true
21895 .cindex "directory creation"
21896 When this option is true, Exim attempts to create any missing superior
21897 directories for the file that it is about to write. A created directory's mode
21898 is given by the &%directory_mode%& option.
21899
21900 The group ownership of a newly created directory is highly dependent on the
21901 operating system (and possibly the file system) that is being used. For
21902 example, in Solaris, if the parent directory has the setgid bit set, its group
21903 is propagated to the child; if not, the currently set group is used. However,
21904 in FreeBSD, the parent's group is always used.
21905
21906
21907
21908 .option create_file appendfile string anywhere
21909 This option constrains the location of files and directories that are created
21910 by this transport. It applies to files defined by the &%file%& option and
21911 directories defined by the &%directory%& option. In the case of maildir
21912 delivery, it applies to the top level directory, not the maildir directories
21913 beneath.
21914
21915 The option must be set to one of the words &"anywhere"&, &"inhome"&, or
21916 &"belowhome"&. In the second and third cases, a home directory must have been
21917 set for the transport. This option is not useful when an explicit file name is
21918 given for normal mailbox deliveries. It is intended for the case when file
21919 names are generated from users' &_.forward_& files. These are usually handled
21920 by an &(appendfile)& transport called &%address_file%&. See also
21921 &%file_must_exist%&.
21922
21923
21924 .option directory appendfile string&!! unset
21925 This option is mutually exclusive with the &%file%& option, but one of &%file%&
21926 or &%directory%& must be set, unless the delivery is the direct result of a
21927 redirection (see section &<<SECTfildiropt>>&).
21928
21929 When &%directory%& is set, the string is expanded, and the message is delivered
21930 into a new file or files in or below the given directory, instead of being
21931 appended to a single mailbox file. A number of different formats are provided
21932 (see &%maildir_format%& and &%mailstore_format%&), and see section
21933 &<<SECTopdir>>& for further details of this form of delivery.
21934
21935
21936 .option directory_file appendfile string&!! "see below"
21937 .cindex "base62"
21938 .vindex "&$inode$&"
21939 When &%directory%& is set, but neither &%maildir_format%& nor
21940 &%mailstore_format%& is set, &(appendfile)& delivers each message into a file
21941 whose name is obtained by expanding this string. The default value is:
21942 .code
21943 q${base62:$tod_epoch}-$inode
21944 .endd
21945 This generates a unique name from the current time, in base 62 form, and the
21946 inode of the file. The variable &$inode$& is available only when expanding this
21947 option.
21948
21949
21950 .option directory_mode appendfile "octal integer" 0700
21951 If &(appendfile)& creates any directories as a result of the
21952 &%create_directory%& option, their mode is specified by this option.
21953
21954
21955 .option escape_string appendfile string "see description"
21956 See &%check_string%& above.
21957
21958
21959 .option file appendfile string&!! unset
21960 This option is mutually exclusive with the &%directory%& option, but one of
21961 &%file%& or &%directory%& must be set, unless the delivery is the direct result
21962 of a redirection (see section &<<SECTfildiropt>>&). The &%file%& option
21963 specifies a single file, to which the message is appended. One or more of
21964 &%use_fcntl_lock%&, &%use_flock_lock%&, or &%use_lockfile%& must be set with
21965 &%file%&.
21966
21967 .cindex "NFS" "lock file"
21968 .cindex "locking files"
21969 .cindex "lock files"
21970 If you are using more than one host to deliver over NFS into the same
21971 mailboxes, you should always use lock files.
21972
21973 The string value is expanded for each delivery, and must yield an absolute
21974 path. The most common settings of this option are variations on one of these
21975 examples:
21976 .code
21977 file = /var/spool/mail/$local_part
21978 file = /home/$local_part/inbox
21979 file = $home/inbox
21980 .endd
21981 .cindex "&""sticky""& bit"
21982 In the first example, all deliveries are done into the same directory. If Exim
21983 is configured to use lock files (see &%use_lockfile%& below) it must be able to
21984 create a file in the directory, so the &"sticky"& bit must be turned on for
21985 deliveries to be possible, or alternatively the &%group%& option can be used to
21986 run the delivery under a group id which has write access to the directory.
21987
21988
21989
21990 .option file_format appendfile string unset
21991 .cindex "file" "mailbox; checking existing format"
21992 This option requests the transport to check the format of an existing file
21993 before adding to it. The check consists of matching a specific string at the
21994 start of the file. The value of the option consists of an even number of
21995 colon-separated strings. The first of each pair is the test string, and the
21996 second is the name of a transport. If the transport associated with a matched
21997 string is not the current transport, control is passed over to the other
21998 transport. For example, suppose the standard &(local_delivery)& transport has
21999 this added to it:
22000 .code
22001 file_format = "From : local_delivery :\
22002 \1\1\1\1\n : local_mmdf_delivery"
22003 .endd
22004 Mailboxes that begin with &"From"& are still handled by this transport, but if
22005 a mailbox begins with four binary ones followed by a newline, control is passed
22006 to a transport called &%local_mmdf_delivery%&, which presumably is configured
22007 to do the delivery in MMDF format. If a mailbox does not exist or is empty, it
22008 is assumed to match the current transport. If the start of a mailbox doesn't
22009 match any string, or if the transport named for a given string is not defined,
22010 delivery is deferred.
22011
22012
22013 .option file_must_exist appendfile boolean false
22014 If this option is true, the file specified by the &%file%& option must exist.
22015 A temporary error occurs if it does not, causing delivery to be deferred.
22016 If this option is false, the file is created if it does not exist.
22017
22018
22019 .option lock_fcntl_timeout appendfile time 0s
22020 .cindex "timeout" "mailbox locking"
22021 .cindex "mailbox" "locking, blocking and non-blocking"
22022 .cindex "locking files"
22023 By default, the &(appendfile)& transport uses non-blocking calls to &[fcntl()]&
22024 when locking an open mailbox file. If the call fails, the delivery process
22025 sleeps for &%lock_interval%& and tries again, up to &%lock_retries%& times.
22026 Non-blocking calls are used so that the file is not kept open during the wait
22027 for the lock; the reason for this is to make it as safe as possible for
22028 deliveries over NFS in the case when processes might be accessing an NFS
22029 mailbox without using a lock file. This should not be done, but
22030 misunderstandings and hence misconfigurations are not unknown.
22031
22032 On a busy system, however, the performance of a non-blocking lock approach is
22033 not as good as using a blocking lock with a timeout. In this case, the waiting
22034 is done inside the system call, and Exim's delivery process acquires the lock
22035 and can proceed as soon as the previous lock holder releases it.
22036
22037 If &%lock_fcntl_timeout%& is set to a non-zero time, blocking locks, with that
22038 timeout, are used. There may still be some retrying: the maximum number of
22039 retries is
22040 .code
22041 (lock_retries * lock_interval) / lock_fcntl_timeout
22042 .endd
22043 rounded up to the next whole number. In other words, the total time during
22044 which &(appendfile)& is trying to get a lock is roughly the same, unless
22045 &%lock_fcntl_timeout%& is set very large.
22046
22047 You should consider setting this option if you are getting a lot of delayed
22048 local deliveries because of errors of the form
22049 .code
22050 failed to lock mailbox /some/file (fcntl)
22051 .endd
22052
22053 .option lock_flock_timeout appendfile time 0s
22054 This timeout applies to file locking when using &[flock()]& (see
22055 &%use_flock%&); the timeout operates in a similar manner to
22056 &%lock_fcntl_timeout%&.
22057
22058
22059 .option lock_interval appendfile time 3s
22060 This specifies the time to wait between attempts to lock the file. See below
22061 for details of locking.
22062
22063
22064 .option lock_retries appendfile integer 10
22065 This specifies the maximum number of attempts to lock the file. A value of zero
22066 is treated as 1. See below for details of locking.
22067
22068
22069 .option lockfile_mode appendfile "octal integer" 0600
22070 This specifies the mode of the created lock file, when a lock file is being
22071 used (see &%use_lockfile%& and &%use_mbx_lock%&).
22072
22073
22074 .option lockfile_timeout appendfile time 30m
22075 .cindex "timeout" "mailbox locking"
22076 When a lock file is being used (see &%use_lockfile%&), if a lock file already
22077 exists and is older than this value, it is assumed to have been left behind by
22078 accident, and Exim attempts to remove it.
22079
22080
22081 .option mailbox_filecount appendfile string&!! unset
22082 .cindex "mailbox" "specifying size of"
22083 .cindex "size" "of mailbox"
22084 If this option is set, it is expanded, and the result is taken as the current
22085 number of files in the mailbox. It must be a decimal number, optionally
22086 followed by K or M. This provides a way of obtaining this information from an
22087 external source that maintains the data.
22088
22089
22090 .option mailbox_size appendfile string&!! unset
22091 .cindex "mailbox" "specifying size of"
22092 .cindex "size" "of mailbox"
22093 If this option is set, it is expanded, and the result is taken as the current
22094 size the mailbox. It must be a decimal number, optionally followed by K or M.
22095 This provides a way of obtaining this information from an external source that
22096 maintains the data. This is likely to be helpful for maildir deliveries where
22097 it is computationally expensive to compute the size of a mailbox.
22098
22099
22100
22101 .option maildir_format appendfile boolean false
22102 .cindex "maildir format" "specifying"
22103 If this option is set with the &%directory%& option, the delivery is into a new
22104 file, in the &"maildir"& format that is used by other mail software. When the
22105 transport is activated directly from a &(redirect)& router (for example, the
22106 &(address_file)& transport in the default configuration), setting
22107 &%maildir_format%& causes the path received from the router to be treated as a
22108 directory, whether or not it ends with &`/`&. This option is available only if
22109 SUPPORT_MAILDIR is present in &_Local/Makefile_&. See section
22110 &<<SECTmaildirdelivery>>& below for further details.
22111
22112
22113 .option maildir_quota_directory_regex appendfile string "See below"
22114 .cindex "maildir format" "quota; directories included in"
22115 .cindex "quota" "maildir; directories included in"
22116 This option is relevant only when &%maildir_use_size_file%& is set. It defines
22117 a regular expression for specifying directories, relative to the quota
22118 directory (see &%quota_directory%&), that should be included in the quota
22119 calculation. The default value is:
22120 .code
22121 maildir_quota_directory_regex = ^(?:cur|new|\..*)$
22122 .endd
22123 This includes the &_cur_& and &_new_& directories, and any maildir++ folders
22124 (directories whose names begin with a dot). If you want to exclude the
22125 &_Trash_&
22126 folder from the count (as some sites do), you need to change this setting to
22127 .code
22128 maildir_quota_directory_regex = ^(?:cur|new|\.(?!Trash).*)$
22129 .endd
22130 This uses a negative lookahead in the regular expression to exclude the
22131 directory whose name is &_.Trash_&. When a directory is excluded from quota
22132 calculations, quota processing is bypassed for any messages that are delivered
22133 directly into that directory.
22134
22135
22136 .option maildir_retries appendfile integer 10
22137 This option specifies the number of times to retry when writing a file in
22138 &"maildir"& format. See section &<<SECTmaildirdelivery>>& below.
22139
22140
22141 .option maildir_tag appendfile string&!! unset
22142 This option applies only to deliveries in maildir format, and is described in
22143 section &<<SECTmaildirdelivery>>& below.
22144
22145
22146 .option maildir_use_size_file appendfile&!! boolean false
22147 .cindex "maildir format" "&_maildirsize_& file"
22148 The result of string expansion for this option must be a valid boolean value.
22149 If it is true, it enables support for &_maildirsize_& files. Exim
22150 creates a &_maildirsize_& file in a maildir if one does not exist, taking the
22151 quota from the &%quota%& option of the transport. If &%quota%& is unset, the
22152 value is zero. See &%maildir_quota_directory_regex%& above and section
22153 &<<SECTmaildirdelivery>>& below for further details.
22154
22155 .option maildirfolder_create_regex appendfile string unset
22156 .cindex "maildir format" "&_maildirfolder_& file"
22157 .cindex "&_maildirfolder_&, creating"
22158 The value of this option is a regular expression. If it is unset, it has no
22159 effect. Otherwise, before a maildir delivery takes place, the pattern is
22160 matched against the name of the maildir directory, that is, the directory
22161 containing the &_new_& and &_tmp_& subdirectories that will be used for the
22162 delivery. If there is a match, Exim checks for the existence of a file called
22163 &_maildirfolder_& in the directory, and creates it if it does not exist.
22164 See section &<<SECTmaildirdelivery>>& for more details.
22165
22166
22167 .option mailstore_format appendfile boolean false
22168 .cindex "mailstore format" "specifying"
22169 If this option is set with the &%directory%& option, the delivery is into two
22170 new files in &"mailstore"& format. The option is available only if
22171 SUPPORT_MAILSTORE is present in &_Local/Makefile_&. See section &<<SECTopdir>>&
22172 below for further details.
22173
22174
22175 .option mailstore_prefix appendfile string&!! unset
22176 This option applies only to deliveries in mailstore format, and is described in
22177 section &<<SECTopdir>>& below.
22178
22179
22180 .option mailstore_suffix appendfile string&!! unset
22181 This option applies only to deliveries in mailstore format, and is described in
22182 section &<<SECTopdir>>& below.
22183
22184
22185 .option mbx_format appendfile boolean false
22186 .cindex "locking files"
22187 .cindex "file" "locking"
22188 .cindex "file" "MBX format"
22189 .cindex "MBX format, specifying"
22190 This option is available only if Exim has been compiled with SUPPORT_MBX
22191 set in &_Local/Makefile_&. If &%mbx_format%& is set with the &%file%& option,
22192 the message is appended to the mailbox file in MBX format instead of
22193 traditional Unix format. This format is supported by Pine4 and its associated
22194 IMAP and POP daemons, by means of the &'c-client'& library that they all use.
22195
22196 &*Note*&: The &%message_prefix%& and &%message_suffix%& options are not
22197 automatically changed by the use of &%mbx_format%&. They should normally be set
22198 empty when using MBX format, so this option almost always appears in this
22199 combination:
22200 .code
22201 mbx_format = true
22202 message_prefix =
22203 message_suffix =
22204 .endd
22205 If none of the locking options are mentioned in the configuration,
22206 &%use_mbx_lock%& is assumed and the other locking options default to false. It
22207 is possible to specify the other kinds of locking with &%mbx_format%&, but
22208 &%use_fcntl_lock%& and &%use_mbx_lock%& are mutually exclusive. MBX locking
22209 interworks with &'c-client'&, providing for shared access to the mailbox. It
22210 should not be used if any program that does not use this form of locking is
22211 going to access the mailbox, nor should it be used if the mailbox file is NFS
22212 mounted, because it works only when the mailbox is accessed from a single host.
22213
22214 If you set &%use_fcntl_lock%& with an MBX-format mailbox, you cannot use
22215 the standard version of &'c-client'&, because as long as it has a mailbox open
22216 (this means for the whole of a Pine or IMAP session), Exim will not be able to
22217 append messages to it.
22218
22219
22220 .option message_prefix appendfile string&!! "see below"
22221 .cindex "&""From""& line"
22222 The string specified here is expanded and output at the start of every message.
22223 The default is unset unless &%file%& is specified and &%use_bsmtp%& is not set,
22224 in which case it is:
22225 .code
22226 message_prefix = "From ${if def:return_path{$return_path}\
22227 {MAILER-DAEMON}} $tod_bsdinbox\n"
22228 .endd
22229 &*Note:*& If you set &%use_crlf%& true, you must change any occurrences of
22230 &`\n`& to &`\r\n`& in &%message_prefix%&.
22231
22232 .option message_suffix appendfile string&!! "see below"
22233 The string specified here is expanded and output at the end of every message.
22234 The default is unset unless &%file%& is specified and &%use_bsmtp%& is not set,
22235 in which case it is a single newline character. The suffix can be suppressed by
22236 setting
22237 .code
22238 message_suffix =
22239 .endd
22240 &*Note:*& If you set &%use_crlf%& true, you must change any occurrences of
22241 &`\n`& to &`\r\n`& in &%message_suffix%&.
22242
22243 .option mode appendfile "octal integer" 0600
22244 If the output file is created, it is given this mode. If it already exists and
22245 has wider permissions, they are reduced to this mode. If it has narrower
22246 permissions, an error occurs unless &%mode_fail_narrower%& is false. However,
22247 if the delivery is the result of a &%save%& command in a filter file specifying
22248 a particular mode, the mode of the output file is always forced to take that
22249 value, and this option is ignored.
22250
22251
22252 .option mode_fail_narrower appendfile boolean true
22253 This option applies in the case when an existing mailbox file has a narrower
22254 mode than that specified by the &%mode%& option. If &%mode_fail_narrower%& is
22255 true, the delivery is deferred (&"mailbox has the wrong mode"&); otherwise Exim
22256 continues with the delivery attempt, using the existing mode of the file.
22257
22258
22259 .option notify_comsat appendfile boolean false
22260 If this option is true, the &'comsat'& daemon is notified after every
22261 successful delivery to a user mailbox. This is the daemon that notifies logged
22262 on users about incoming mail.
22263
22264
22265 .option quota appendfile string&!! unset
22266 .cindex "quota" "imposed by Exim"
22267 This option imposes a limit on the size of the file to which Exim is appending,
22268 or to the total space used in the directory tree when the &%directory%& option
22269 is set. In the latter case, computation of the space used is expensive, because
22270 all the files in the directory (and any sub-directories) have to be
22271 individually inspected and their sizes summed. (See &%quota_size_regex%& and
22272 &%maildir_use_size_file%& for ways to avoid this in environments where users
22273 have no shell access to their mailboxes).
22274
22275 As there is no interlock against two simultaneous deliveries into a
22276 multi-file mailbox, it is possible for the quota to be overrun in this case.
22277 For single-file mailboxes, of course, an interlock is a necessity.
22278
22279 A file's size is taken as its &'used'& value. Because of blocking effects, this
22280 may be a lot less than the actual amount of disk space allocated to the file.
22281 If the sizes of a number of files are being added up, the rounding effect can
22282 become quite noticeable, especially on systems that have large block sizes.
22283 Nevertheless, it seems best to stick to the &'used'& figure, because this is
22284 the obvious value which users understand most easily.
22285
22286 The value of the option is expanded, and must then be a numerical value
22287 (decimal point allowed), optionally followed by one of the letters K, M, or G,
22288 for kilobytes, megabytes, or gigabytes, optionally followed by a slash
22289 and further option modifiers. If Exim is running on a system with
22290 large file support (Linux and FreeBSD have this), mailboxes larger than 2G can
22291 be handled.
22292
22293 The option modifier &%no_check%& can be used to force delivery even if the over
22294 quota condition is met. The quota gets updated as usual.
22295
22296 &*Note*&: A value of zero is interpreted as &"no quota"&.
22297
22298 The expansion happens while Exim is running as root, before it changes uid for
22299 the delivery. This means that files that are inaccessible to the end user can
22300 be used to hold quota values that are looked up in the expansion. When delivery
22301 fails because this quota is exceeded, the handling of the error is as for
22302 system quota failures.
22303
22304 By default, Exim's quota checking mimics system quotas, and restricts the
22305 mailbox to the specified maximum size, though the value is not accurate to the
22306 last byte, owing to separator lines and additional headers that may get added
22307 during message delivery. When a mailbox is nearly full, large messages may get
22308 refused even though small ones are accepted, because the size of the current
22309 message is added to the quota when the check is made. This behaviour can be
22310 changed by setting &%quota_is_inclusive%& false. When this is done, the check
22311 for exceeding the quota does not include the current message. Thus, deliveries
22312 continue until the quota has been exceeded; thereafter, no further messages are
22313 delivered. See also &%quota_warn_threshold%&.
22314
22315
22316 .option quota_directory appendfile string&!! unset
22317 This option defines the directory to check for quota purposes when delivering
22318 into individual files. The default is the delivery directory, or, if a file
22319 called &_maildirfolder_& exists in a maildir directory, the parent of the
22320 delivery directory.
22321
22322
22323 .option quota_filecount appendfile string&!! 0
22324 This option applies when the &%directory%& option is set. It limits the total
22325 number of files in the directory (compare the inode limit in system quotas). It
22326 can only be used if &%quota%& is also set. The value is expanded; an expansion
22327 failure causes delivery to be deferred. A value of zero is interpreted as
22328 &"no quota"&.
22329
22330 The option modifier &%no_check%& can be used to force delivery even if the over
22331 quota condition is met. The quota gets updated as usual.
22332
22333 .option quota_is_inclusive appendfile boolean true
22334 See &%quota%& above.
22335
22336
22337 .option quota_size_regex appendfile string unset
22338 This option applies when one of the delivery modes that writes a separate file
22339 for each message is being used. When Exim wants to find the size of one of
22340 these files in order to test the quota, it first checks &%quota_size_regex%&.
22341 If this is set to a regular expression that matches the file name, and it
22342 captures one string, that string is interpreted as a representation of the
22343 file's size. The value of &%quota_size_regex%& is not expanded.
22344
22345 This feature is useful only when users have no shell access to their mailboxes
22346 &-- otherwise they could defeat the quota simply by renaming the files. This
22347 facility can be used with maildir deliveries, by setting &%maildir_tag%& to add
22348 the file length to the file name. For example:
22349 .code
22350 maildir_tag = ,S=$message_size
22351 quota_size_regex = ,S=(\d+)
22352 .endd
22353 An alternative to &$message_size$& is &$message_linecount$&, which contains the
22354 number of lines in the message.
22355
22356 The regular expression should not assume that the length is at the end of the
22357 file name (even though &%maildir_tag%& puts it there) because maildir MUAs
22358 sometimes add other information onto the ends of message file names.
22359
22360 Section &<<SECID136>>& contains further information.
22361
22362
22363 .option quota_warn_message appendfile string&!! "see below"
22364 See below for the use of this option. If it is not set when
22365 &%quota_warn_threshold%& is set, it defaults to
22366 .code
22367 quota_warn_message = "\
22368 To: $local_part@$domain\n\
22369 Subject: Your mailbox\n\n\
22370 This message is automatically created \
22371 by mail delivery software.\n\n\
22372 The size of your mailbox has exceeded \
22373 a warning threshold that is\n\
22374 set by the system administrator.\n"
22375 .endd
22376
22377
22378 .option quota_warn_threshold appendfile string&!! 0
22379 .cindex "quota" "warning threshold"
22380 .cindex "mailbox" "size warning"
22381 .cindex "size" "of mailbox"
22382 This option is expanded in the same way as &%quota%& (see above). If the
22383 resulting value is greater than zero, and delivery of the message causes the
22384 size of the file or total space in the directory tree to cross the given
22385 threshold, a warning message is sent. If &%quota%& is also set, the threshold
22386 may be specified as a percentage of it by following the value with a percent
22387 sign. For example:
22388 .code
22389 quota = 10M
22390 quota_warn_threshold = 75%
22391 .endd
22392 If &%quota%& is not set, a setting of &%quota_warn_threshold%& that ends with a
22393 percent sign is ignored.
22394
22395 The warning message itself is specified by the &%quota_warn_message%& option,
22396 and it must start with a &'To:'& header line containing the recipient(s) of the
22397 warning message. These do not necessarily have to include the recipient(s) of
22398 the original message. A &'Subject:'& line should also normally be supplied. You
22399 can include any other header lines that you want. If you do not include a
22400 &'From:'& line, the default is:
22401 .code
22402 From: Mail Delivery System <mailer-daemon@$qualify_domain_sender>
22403 .endd
22404 .oindex &%errors_reply_to%&
22405 If you supply a &'Reply-To:'& line, it overrides the global &%errors_reply_to%&
22406 option.
22407
22408 The &%quota%& option does not have to be set in order to use this option; they
22409 are independent of one another except when the threshold is specified as a
22410 percentage.
22411
22412
22413 .option use_bsmtp appendfile boolean false
22414 .cindex "envelope sender"
22415 If this option is set true, &(appendfile)& writes messages in &"batch SMTP"&
22416 format, with the envelope sender and recipient(s) included as SMTP commands. If
22417 you want to include a leading HELO command with such messages, you can do
22418 so by setting the &%message_prefix%& option. See section &<<SECTbatchSMTP>>&
22419 for details of batch SMTP.
22420
22421
22422 .option use_crlf appendfile boolean false
22423 .cindex "carriage return"
22424 .cindex "linefeed"
22425 This option causes lines to be terminated with the two-character CRLF sequence
22426 (carriage return, linefeed) instead of just a linefeed character. In the case
22427 of batched SMTP, the byte sequence written to the file is then an exact image
22428 of what would be sent down a real SMTP connection.
22429
22430 &*Note:*& The contents of the &%message_prefix%& and &%message_suffix%& options
22431 (which are used to supply the traditional &"From&~"& and blank line separators
22432 in Berkeley-style mailboxes) are written verbatim, so must contain their own
22433 carriage return characters if these are needed. In cases where these options
22434 have non-empty defaults, the values end with a single linefeed, so they must be
22435 changed to end with &`\r\n`& if &%use_crlf%& is set.
22436
22437
22438 .option use_fcntl_lock appendfile boolean "see below"
22439 This option controls the use of the &[fcntl()]& function to lock a file for
22440 exclusive use when a message is being appended. It is set by default unless
22441 &%use_flock_lock%& is set. Otherwise, it should be turned off only if you know
22442 that all your MUAs use lock file locking. When both &%use_fcntl_lock%& and
22443 &%use_flock_lock%& are unset, &%use_lockfile%& must be set.
22444
22445
22446 .option use_flock_lock appendfile boolean false
22447 This option is provided to support the use of &[flock()]& for file locking, for
22448 the few situations where it is needed. Most modern operating systems support
22449 &[fcntl()]& and &[lockf()]& locking, and these two functions interwork with
22450 each other. Exim uses &[fcntl()]& locking by default.
22451
22452 This option is required only if you are using an operating system where
22453 &[flock()]& is used by programs that access mailboxes (typically MUAs), and
22454 where &[flock()]& does not correctly interwork with &[fcntl()]&. You can use
22455 both &[fcntl()]& and &[flock()]& locking simultaneously if you want.
22456
22457 .cindex "Solaris" "&[flock()]& support"
22458 Not all operating systems provide &[flock()]&. Some versions of Solaris do not
22459 have it (and some, I think, provide a not quite right version built on top of
22460 &[lockf()]&). If the OS does not have &[flock()]&, Exim will be built without
22461 the ability to use it, and any attempt to do so will cause a configuration
22462 error.
22463
22464 &*Warning*&: &[flock()]& locks do not work on NFS files (unless &[flock()]&
22465 is just being mapped onto &[fcntl()]& by the OS).
22466
22467
22468 .option use_lockfile appendfile boolean "see below"
22469 If this option is turned off, Exim does not attempt to create a lock file when
22470 appending to a mailbox file. In this situation, the only locking is by
22471 &[fcntl()]&. You should only turn &%use_lockfile%& off if you are absolutely
22472 sure that every MUA that is ever going to look at your users' mailboxes uses
22473 &[fcntl()]& rather than a lock file, and even then only when you are not
22474 delivering over NFS from more than one host.
22475
22476 .cindex "NFS" "lock file"
22477 In order to append to an NFS file safely from more than one host, it is
22478 necessary to take out a lock &'before'& opening the file, and the lock file
22479 achieves this. Otherwise, even with &[fcntl()]& locking, there is a risk of
22480 file corruption.
22481
22482 The &%use_lockfile%& option is set by default unless &%use_mbx_lock%& is set.
22483 It is not possible to turn both &%use_lockfile%& and &%use_fcntl_lock%& off,
22484 except when &%mbx_format%& is set.
22485
22486
22487 .option use_mbx_lock appendfile boolean "see below"
22488 This option is available only if Exim has been compiled with SUPPORT_MBX
22489 set in &_Local/Makefile_&. Setting the option specifies that special MBX
22490 locking rules be used. It is set by default if &%mbx_format%& is set and none
22491 of the locking options are mentioned in the configuration. The locking rules
22492 are the same as are used by the &'c-client'& library that underlies Pine and
22493 the IMAP4 and POP daemons that come with it (see the discussion below). The
22494 rules allow for shared access to the mailbox. However, this kind of locking
22495 does not work when the mailbox is NFS mounted.
22496
22497 You can set &%use_mbx_lock%& with either (or both) of &%use_fcntl_lock%& and
22498 &%use_flock_lock%& to control what kind of locking is used in implementing the
22499 MBX locking rules. The default is to use &[fcntl()]& if &%use_mbx_lock%& is set
22500 without &%use_fcntl_lock%& or &%use_flock_lock%&.
22501
22502
22503
22504
22505 .section "Operational details for appending" "SECTopappend"
22506 .cindex "appending to a file"
22507 .cindex "file" "appending"
22508 Before appending to a file, the following preparations are made:
22509
22510 .ilist
22511 If the name of the file is &_/dev/null_&, no action is taken, and a success
22512 return is given.
22513
22514 .next
22515 .cindex "directory creation"
22516 If any directories on the file's path are missing, Exim creates them if the
22517 &%create_directory%& option is set. A created directory's mode is given by the
22518 &%directory_mode%& option.
22519
22520 .next
22521 If &%file_format%& is set, the format of an existing file is checked. If this
22522 indicates that a different transport should be used, control is passed to that
22523 transport.
22524
22525 .next
22526 .cindex "file" "locking"
22527 .cindex "locking files"
22528 .cindex "NFS" "lock file"
22529 If &%use_lockfile%& is set, a lock file is built in a way that will work
22530 reliably over NFS, as follows:
22531
22532 .olist
22533 Create a &"hitching post"& file whose name is that of the lock file with the
22534 current time, primary host name, and process id added, by opening for writing
22535 as a new file. If this fails with an access error, delivery is deferred.
22536 .next
22537 Close the hitching post file, and hard link it to the lock file name.
22538 .next
22539 If the call to &[link()]& succeeds, creation of the lock file has succeeded.
22540 Unlink the hitching post name.
22541 .next
22542 Otherwise, use &[stat()]& to get information about the hitching post file, and
22543 then unlink hitching post name. If the number of links is exactly two, creation
22544 of the lock file succeeded but something (for example, an NFS server crash and
22545 restart) caused this fact not to be communicated to the &[link()]& call.
22546 .next
22547 If creation of the lock file failed, wait for &%lock_interval%& and try again,
22548 up to &%lock_retries%& times. However, since any program that writes to a
22549 mailbox should complete its task very quickly, it is reasonable to time out old
22550 lock files that are normally the result of user agent and system crashes. If an
22551 existing lock file is older than &%lockfile_timeout%& Exim attempts to unlink
22552 it before trying again.
22553 .endlist olist
22554
22555 .next
22556 A call is made to &[lstat()]& to discover whether the main file exists, and if
22557 so, what its characteristics are. If &[lstat()]& fails for any reason other
22558 than non-existence, delivery is deferred.
22559
22560 .next
22561 .cindex "symbolic link" "to mailbox"
22562 .cindex "mailbox" "symbolic link"
22563 If the file does exist and is a symbolic link, delivery is deferred, unless the
22564 &%allow_symlink%& option is set, in which case the ownership of the link is
22565 checked, and then &[stat()]& is called to find out about the real file, which
22566 is then subjected to the checks below. The check on the top-level link
22567 ownership prevents one user creating a link for another's mailbox in a sticky
22568 directory, though allowing symbolic links in this case is definitely not a good
22569 idea. If there is a chain of symbolic links, the intermediate ones are not
22570 checked.
22571
22572 .next
22573 If the file already exists but is not a regular file, or if the file's owner
22574 and group (if the group is being checked &-- see &%check_group%& above) are
22575 different from the user and group under which the delivery is running,
22576 delivery is deferred.
22577
22578 .next
22579 If the file's permissions are more generous than specified, they are reduced.
22580 If they are insufficient, delivery is deferred, unless &%mode_fail_narrower%&
22581 is set false, in which case the delivery is tried using the existing
22582 permissions.
22583
22584 .next
22585 The file's inode number is saved, and the file is then opened for appending.
22586 If this fails because the file has vanished, &(appendfile)& behaves as if it
22587 hadn't existed (see below). For any other failures, delivery is deferred.
22588
22589 .next
22590 If the file is opened successfully, check that the inode number hasn't
22591 changed, that it is still a regular file, and that the owner and permissions
22592 have not changed. If anything is wrong, defer delivery and freeze the message.
22593
22594 .next
22595 If the file did not exist originally, defer delivery if the &%file_must_exist%&
22596 option is set. Otherwise, check that the file is being created in a permitted
22597 directory if the &%create_file%& option is set (deferring on failure), and then
22598 open for writing as a new file, with the O_EXCL and O_CREAT options,
22599 except when dealing with a symbolic link (the &%allow_symlink%& option must be
22600 set). In this case, which can happen if the link points to a non-existent file,
22601 the file is opened for writing using O_CREAT but not O_EXCL, because
22602 that prevents link following.
22603
22604 .next
22605 .cindex "loop" "while file testing"
22606 If opening fails because the file exists, obey the tests given above for
22607 existing files. However, to avoid looping in a situation where the file is
22608 being continuously created and destroyed, the exists/not-exists loop is broken
22609 after 10 repetitions, and the message is then frozen.
22610
22611 .next
22612 If opening fails with any other error, defer delivery.
22613
22614 .next
22615 .cindex "file" "locking"
22616 .cindex "locking files"
22617 Once the file is open, unless both &%use_fcntl_lock%& and &%use_flock_lock%&
22618 are false, it is locked using &[fcntl()]& or &[flock()]& or both. If
22619 &%use_mbx_lock%& is false, an exclusive lock is requested in each case.
22620 However, if &%use_mbx_lock%& is true, Exim takes out a shared lock on the open
22621 file, and an exclusive lock on the file whose name is
22622 .code
22623 /tmp/.<device-number>.<inode-number>
22624 .endd
22625 using the device and inode numbers of the open mailbox file, in accordance with
22626 the MBX locking rules. This file is created with a mode that is specified by
22627 the &%lockfile_mode%& option.
22628
22629 If Exim fails to lock the file, there are two possible courses of action,
22630 depending on the value of the locking timeout. This is obtained from
22631 &%lock_fcntl_timeout%& or &%lock_flock_timeout%&, as appropriate.
22632
22633 If the timeout value is zero, the file is closed, Exim waits for
22634 &%lock_interval%&, and then goes back and re-opens the file as above and tries
22635 to lock it again. This happens up to &%lock_retries%& times, after which the
22636 delivery is deferred.
22637
22638 If the timeout has a value greater than zero, blocking calls to &[fcntl()]& or
22639 &[flock()]& are used (with the given timeout), so there has already been some
22640 waiting involved by the time locking fails. Nevertheless, Exim does not give up
22641 immediately. It retries up to
22642 .code
22643 (lock_retries * lock_interval) / <timeout>
22644 .endd
22645 times (rounded up).
22646 .endlist
22647
22648 At the end of delivery, Exim closes the file (which releases the &[fcntl()]&
22649 and/or &[flock()]& locks) and then deletes the lock file if one was created.
22650
22651
22652 .section "Operational details for delivery to a new file" "SECTopdir"
22653 .cindex "delivery" "to single file"
22654 .cindex "&""From""& line"
22655 When the &%directory%& option is set instead of &%file%&, each message is
22656 delivered into a newly-created file or set of files. When &(appendfile)& is
22657 activated directly from a &(redirect)& router, neither &%file%& nor
22658 &%directory%& is normally set, because the path for delivery is supplied by the
22659 router. (See for example, the &(address_file)& transport in the default
22660 configuration.) In this case, delivery is to a new file if either the path name
22661 ends in &`/`&, or the &%maildir_format%& or &%mailstore_format%& option is set.
22662
22663 No locking is required while writing the message to a new file, so the various
22664 locking options of the transport are ignored. The &"From"& line that by default
22665 separates messages in a single file is not normally needed, nor is the escaping
22666 of message lines that start with &"From"&, and there is no need to ensure a
22667 newline at the end of each message. Consequently, the default values for
22668 &%check_string%&, &%message_prefix%&, and &%message_suffix%& are all unset when
22669 any of &%directory%&, &%maildir_format%&, or &%mailstore_format%& is set.
22670
22671 If Exim is required to check a &%quota%& setting, it adds up the sizes of all
22672 the files in the delivery directory by default. However, you can specify a
22673 different directory by setting &%quota_directory%&. Also, for maildir
22674 deliveries (see below) the &_maildirfolder_& convention is honoured.
22675
22676
22677 .cindex "maildir format"
22678 .cindex "mailstore format"
22679 There are three different ways in which delivery to individual files can be
22680 done, controlled by the settings of the &%maildir_format%& and
22681 &%mailstore_format%& options. Note that code to support maildir or mailstore
22682 formats is not included in the binary unless SUPPORT_MAILDIR or
22683 SUPPORT_MAILSTORE, respectively, is set in &_Local/Makefile_&.
22684
22685 .cindex "directory creation"
22686 In all three cases an attempt is made to create the directory and any necessary
22687 sub-directories if they do not exist, provided that the &%create_directory%&
22688 option is set (the default). The location of a created directory can be
22689 constrained by setting &%create_file%&. A created directory's mode is given by
22690 the &%directory_mode%& option. If creation fails, or if the
22691 &%create_directory%& option is not set when creation is required, delivery is
22692 deferred.
22693
22694
22695
22696 .section "Maildir delivery" "SECTmaildirdelivery"
22697 .cindex "maildir format" "description of"
22698 If the &%maildir_format%& option is true, Exim delivers each message by writing
22699 it to a file whose name is &_tmp/<stime>.H<mtime>P<pid>.<host>_& in the
22700 directory that is defined by the &%directory%& option (the &"delivery
22701 directory"&). If the delivery is successful, the file is renamed into the
22702 &_new_& subdirectory.
22703
22704 In the file name, <&'stime'&> is the current time of day in seconds, and
22705 <&'mtime'&> is the microsecond fraction of the time. After a maildir delivery,
22706 Exim checks that the time-of-day clock has moved on by at least one microsecond
22707 before terminating the delivery process. This guarantees uniqueness for the
22708 file name. However, as a precaution, Exim calls &[stat()]& for the file before
22709 opening it. If any response other than ENOENT (does not exist) is given,
22710 Exim waits 2 seconds and tries again, up to &%maildir_retries%& times.
22711
22712 Before Exim carries out a maildir delivery, it ensures that subdirectories
22713 called &_new_&, &_cur_&, and &_tmp_& exist in the delivery directory. If they
22714 do not exist, Exim tries to create them and any superior directories in their
22715 path, subject to the &%create_directory%& and &%create_file%& options. If the
22716 &%maildirfolder_create_regex%& option is set, and the regular expression it
22717 contains matches the delivery directory, Exim also ensures that a file called
22718 &_maildirfolder_& exists in the delivery directory. If a missing directory or
22719 &_maildirfolder_& file cannot be created, delivery is deferred.
22720
22721 These features make it possible to use Exim to create all the necessary files
22722 and directories in a maildir mailbox, including subdirectories for maildir++
22723 folders. Consider this example:
22724 .code
22725 maildir_format = true
22726 directory = /var/mail/$local_part\
22727 ${if eq{$local_part_suffix}{}{}\
22728 {/.${substr_1:$local_part_suffix}}}
22729 maildirfolder_create_regex = /\.[^/]+$
22730 .endd
22731 If &$local_part_suffix$& is empty (there was no suffix for the local part),
22732 delivery is into a toplevel maildir with a name like &_/var/mail/pimbo_& (for
22733 the user called &'pimbo'&). The pattern in &%maildirfolder_create_regex%& does
22734 not match this name, so Exim will not look for or create the file
22735 &_/var/mail/pimbo/maildirfolder_&, though it will create
22736 &_/var/mail/pimbo/{cur,new,tmp}_& if necessary.
22737
22738 However, if &$local_part_suffix$& contains &`-eximusers`& (for example),
22739 delivery is into the maildir++ folder &_/var/mail/pimbo/.eximusers_&, which
22740 does match &%maildirfolder_create_regex%&. In this case, Exim will create
22741 &_/var/mail/pimbo/.eximusers/maildirfolder_& as well as the three maildir
22742 directories &_/var/mail/pimbo/.eximusers/{cur,new,tmp}_&.
22743
22744 &*Warning:*& Take care when setting &%maildirfolder_create_regex%& that it does
22745 not inadvertently match the toplevel maildir directory, because a
22746 &_maildirfolder_& file at top level would completely break quota calculations.
22747
22748 .cindex "quota" "in maildir delivery"
22749 .cindex "maildir++"
22750 If Exim is required to check a &%quota%& setting before a maildir delivery, and
22751 &%quota_directory%& is not set, it looks for a file called &_maildirfolder_& in
22752 the maildir directory (alongside &_new_&, &_cur_&, &_tmp_&). If this exists,
22753 Exim assumes the directory is a maildir++ folder directory, which is one level
22754 down from the user's top level mailbox directory. This causes it to start at
22755 the parent directory instead of the current directory when calculating the
22756 amount of space used.
22757
22758 One problem with delivering into a multi-file mailbox is that it is
22759 computationally expensive to compute the size of the mailbox for quota
22760 checking. Various approaches have been taken to reduce the amount of work
22761 needed. The next two sections describe two of them. A third alternative is to
22762 use some external process for maintaining the size data, and use the expansion
22763 of the &%mailbox_size%& option as a way of importing it into Exim.
22764
22765
22766
22767
22768 .section "Using tags to record message sizes" "SECID135"
22769 If &%maildir_tag%& is set, the string is expanded for each delivery.
22770 When the maildir file is renamed into the &_new_& sub-directory, the
22771 tag is added to its name. However, if adding the tag takes the length of the
22772 name to the point where the test &[stat()]& call fails with ENAMETOOLONG,
22773 the tag is dropped and the maildir file is created with no tag.
22774
22775
22776 .vindex "&$message_size$&"
22777 Tags can be used to encode the size of files in their names; see
22778 &%quota_size_regex%& above for an example. The expansion of &%maildir_tag%&
22779 happens after the message has been written. The value of the &$message_size$&
22780 variable is set to the number of bytes actually written. If the expansion is
22781 forced to fail, the tag is ignored, but a non-forced failure causes delivery to
22782 be deferred. The expanded tag may contain any printing characters except &"/"&.
22783 Non-printing characters in the string are ignored; if the resulting string is
22784 empty, it is ignored. If it starts with an alphanumeric character, a leading
22785 colon is inserted; this default has not proven to be the path that popular
22786 maildir implementations have chosen (but changing it in Exim would break
22787 backwards compatibility).
22788
22789 For one common implementation, you might set:
22790 .code
22791 maildir_tag = ,S=${message_size}
22792 .endd
22793 but you should check the documentation of the other software to be sure.
22794
22795 It is advisable to also set &%quota_size_regex%& when setting &%maildir_tag%&
22796 as this allows Exim to extract the size from your tag, instead of having to
22797 &[stat()]& each message file.
22798
22799
22800 .section "Using a maildirsize file" "SECID136"
22801 .cindex "quota" "in maildir delivery"
22802 .cindex "maildir format" "&_maildirsize_& file"
22803 If &%maildir_use_size_file%& is true, Exim implements the maildir++ rules for
22804 storing quota and message size information in a file called &_maildirsize_&
22805 within the toplevel maildir directory. If this file does not exist, Exim
22806 creates it, setting the quota from the &%quota%& option of the transport. If
22807 the maildir directory itself does not exist, it is created before any attempt
22808 to write a &_maildirsize_& file.
22809
22810 The &_maildirsize_& file is used to hold information about the sizes of
22811 messages in the maildir, thus speeding up quota calculations. The quota value
22812 in the file is just a cache; if the quota is changed in the transport, the new
22813 value overrides the cached value when the next message is delivered. The cache
22814 is maintained for the benefit of other programs that access the maildir and
22815 need to know the quota.
22816
22817 If the &%quota%& option in the transport is unset or zero, the &_maildirsize_&
22818 file is maintained (with a zero quota setting), but no quota is imposed.
22819
22820 A regular expression is available for controlling which directories in the
22821 maildir participate in quota calculations when a &_maildirsizefile_& is in use.
22822 See the description of the &%maildir_quota_directory_regex%& option above for
22823 details.
22824
22825
22826 .section "Mailstore delivery" "SECID137"
22827 .cindex "mailstore format" "description of"
22828 If the &%mailstore_format%& option is true, each message is written as two
22829 files in the given directory. A unique base name is constructed from the
22830 message id and the current delivery process, and the files that are written use
22831 this base name plus the suffixes &_.env_& and &_.msg_&. The &_.env_& file
22832 contains the message's envelope, and the &_.msg_& file contains the message
22833 itself. The base name is placed in the variable &$mailstore_basename$&.
22834
22835 During delivery, the envelope is first written to a file with the suffix
22836 &_.tmp_&. The &_.msg_& file is then written, and when it is complete, the
22837 &_.tmp_& file is renamed as the &_.env_& file. Programs that access messages in
22838 mailstore format should wait for the presence of both a &_.msg_& and a &_.env_&
22839 file before accessing either of them. An alternative approach is to wait for
22840 the absence of a &_.tmp_& file.
22841
22842 The envelope file starts with any text defined by the &%mailstore_prefix%&
22843 option, expanded and terminated by a newline if there isn't one. Then follows
22844 the sender address on one line, then all the recipient addresses, one per line.
22845 There can be more than one recipient only if the &%batch_max%& option is set
22846 greater than one. Finally, &%mailstore_suffix%& is expanded and the result
22847 appended to the file, followed by a newline if it does not end with one.
22848
22849 If expansion of &%mailstore_prefix%& or &%mailstore_suffix%& ends with a forced
22850 failure, it is ignored. Other expansion errors are treated as serious
22851 configuration errors, and delivery is deferred. The variable
22852 &$mailstore_basename$& is available for use during these expansions.
22853
22854
22855 .section "Non-special new file delivery" "SECID138"
22856 If neither &%maildir_format%& nor &%mailstore_format%& is set, a single new
22857 file is created directly in the named directory. For example, when delivering
22858 messages into files in batched SMTP format for later delivery to some host (see
22859 section &<<SECTbatchSMTP>>&), a setting such as
22860 .code
22861 directory = /var/bsmtp/$host
22862 .endd
22863 might be used. A message is written to a file with a temporary name, which is
22864 then renamed when the delivery is complete. The final name is obtained by
22865 expanding the contents of the &%directory_file%& option.
22866 .ecindex IIDapptra1
22867 .ecindex IIDapptra2
22868
22869
22870
22871
22872
22873
22874 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
22875 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
22876
22877 .chapter "The autoreply transport" "CHID8"
22878 .scindex IIDauttra1 "transports" "&(autoreply)&"
22879 .scindex IIDauttra2 "&(autoreply)& transport"
22880 The &(autoreply)& transport is not a true transport in that it does not cause
22881 the message to be transmitted. Instead, it generates a new mail message as an
22882 automatic reply to the incoming message. &'References:'& and
22883 &'Auto-Submitted:'& header lines are included. These are constructed according
22884 to the rules in RFCs 2822 and 3834, respectively.
22885
22886 If the router that passes the message to this transport does not have the
22887 &%unseen%& option set, the original message (for the current recipient) is not
22888 delivered anywhere. However, when the &%unseen%& option is set on the router
22889 that passes the message to this transport, routing of the address continues, so
22890 another router can set up a normal message delivery.
22891
22892
22893 The &(autoreply)& transport is usually run as the result of mail filtering, a
22894 &"vacation"& message being the standard example. However, it can also be run
22895 directly from a router like any other transport. To reduce the possibility of
22896 message cascades, messages created by the &(autoreply)& transport always have
22897 empty envelope sender addresses, like bounce messages.
22898
22899 The parameters of the message to be sent can be specified in the configuration
22900 by options described below. However, these are used only when the address
22901 passed to the transport does not contain its own reply information. When the
22902 transport is run as a consequence of a
22903 &%mail%&
22904 or &%vacation%& command in a filter file, the parameters of the message are
22905 supplied by the filter, and passed with the address. The transport's options
22906 that define the message are then ignored (so they are not usually set in this
22907 case). The message is specified entirely by the filter or by the transport; it
22908 is never built from a mixture of options. However, the &%file_optional%&,
22909 &%mode%&, and &%return_message%& options apply in all cases.
22910
22911 &(Autoreply)& is implemented as a local transport. When used as a result of a
22912 command in a user's filter file, &(autoreply)& normally runs under the uid and
22913 gid of the user, and with appropriate current and home directories (see chapter
22914 &<<CHAPenvironment>>&).
22915
22916 There is a subtle difference between routing a message to a &(pipe)& transport
22917 that generates some text to be returned to the sender, and routing it to an
22918 &(autoreply)& transport. This difference is noticeable only if more than one
22919 address from the same message is so handled. In the case of a pipe, the
22920 separate outputs from the different addresses are gathered up and returned to
22921 the sender in a single message, whereas if &(autoreply)& is used, a separate
22922 message is generated for each address that is passed to it.
22923
22924 Non-printing characters are not permitted in the header lines generated for the
22925 message that &(autoreply)& creates, with the exception of newlines that are
22926 immediately followed by white space. If any non-printing characters are found,
22927 the transport defers.
22928 Whether characters with the top bit set count as printing characters or not is
22929 controlled by the &%print_topbitchars%& global option.
22930
22931 If any of the generic options for manipulating headers (for example,
22932 &%headers_add%&) are set on an &(autoreply)& transport, they apply to the copy
22933 of the original message that is included in the generated message when
22934 &%return_message%& is set. They do not apply to the generated message itself.
22935
22936 .vindex "&$sender_address$&"
22937 If the &(autoreply)& transport receives return code 2 from Exim when it submits
22938 the message, indicating that there were no recipients, it does not treat this
22939 as an error. This means that autoreplies sent to &$sender_address$& when this
22940 is empty (because the incoming message is a bounce message) do not cause
22941 problems. They are just discarded.
22942
22943
22944
22945 .section "Private options for autoreply" "SECID139"
22946 .cindex "options" "&(autoreply)& transport"
22947
22948 .option bcc autoreply string&!! unset
22949 This specifies the addresses that are to receive &"blind carbon copies"& of the
22950 message when the message is specified by the transport.
22951
22952
22953 .option cc autoreply string&!! unset
22954 This specifies recipients of the message and the contents of the &'Cc:'& header
22955 when the message is specified by the transport.
22956
22957
22958 .option file autoreply string&!! unset
22959 The contents of the file are sent as the body of the message when the message
22960 is specified by the transport. If both &%file%& and &%text%& are set, the text
22961 string comes first.
22962
22963
22964 .option file_expand autoreply boolean false
22965 If this is set, the contents of the file named by the &%file%& option are
22966 subjected to string expansion as they are added to the message.
22967
22968
22969 .option file_optional autoreply boolean false
22970 If this option is true, no error is generated if the file named by the &%file%&
22971 option or passed with the address does not exist or cannot be read.
22972
22973
22974 .option from autoreply string&!! unset
22975 This specifies the contents of the &'From:'& header when the message is
22976 specified by the transport.
22977
22978
22979 .option headers autoreply string&!! unset
22980 This specifies additional RFC 2822 headers that are to be added to the message
22981 when the message is specified by the transport. Several can be given by using
22982 &"\n"& to separate them. There is no check on the format.
22983
22984
22985 .option log autoreply string&!! unset
22986 This option names a file in which a record of every message sent is logged when
22987 the message is specified by the transport.
22988
22989
22990 .option mode autoreply "octal integer" 0600
22991 If either the log file or the &"once"& file has to be created, this mode is
22992 used.
22993
22994
22995 .option never_mail autoreply "address list&!!" unset
22996 If any run of the transport creates a message with a recipient that matches any
22997 item in the list, that recipient is quietly discarded. If all recipients are
22998 discarded, no message is created. This applies both when the recipients are
22999 generated by a filter and when they are specified in the transport.
23000
23001
23002
23003 .option once autoreply string&!! unset
23004 This option names a file or DBM database in which a record of each &'To:'&
23005 recipient is kept when the message is specified by the transport. &*Note*&:
23006 This does not apply to &'Cc:'& or &'Bcc:'& recipients.
23007
23008 If &%once%& is unset, or is set to an empty string, the message is always sent.
23009 By default, if &%once%& is set to a non-empty file name, the message
23010 is not sent if a potential recipient is already listed in the database.
23011 However, if the &%once_repeat%& option specifies a time greater than zero, the
23012 message is sent if that much time has elapsed since a message was last sent to
23013 this recipient. A setting of zero time for &%once_repeat%& (the default)
23014 prevents a message from being sent a second time &-- in this case, zero means
23015 infinity.
23016
23017 If &%once_file_size%& is zero, a DBM database is used to remember recipients,
23018 and it is allowed to grow as large as necessary. If &%once_file_size%& is set
23019 greater than zero, it changes the way Exim implements the &%once%& option.
23020 Instead of using a DBM file to record every recipient it sends to, it uses a
23021 regular file, whose size will never get larger than the given value.
23022
23023 In the file, Exim keeps a linear list of recipient addresses and the times at
23024 which they were sent messages. If the file is full when a new address needs to
23025 be added, the oldest address is dropped. If &%once_repeat%& is not set, this
23026 means that a given recipient may receive multiple messages, but at
23027 unpredictable intervals that depend on the rate of turnover of addresses in the
23028 file. If &%once_repeat%& is set, it specifies a maximum time between repeats.
23029
23030
23031 .option once_file_size autoreply integer 0
23032 See &%once%& above.
23033
23034
23035 .option once_repeat autoreply time&!! 0s
23036 See &%once%& above.
23037 After expansion, the value of this option must be a valid time value.
23038
23039
23040 .option reply_to autoreply string&!! unset
23041 This specifies the contents of the &'Reply-To:'& header when the message is
23042 specified by the transport.
23043
23044
23045 .option return_message autoreply boolean false
23046 If this is set, a copy of the original message is returned with the new
23047 message, subject to the maximum size set in the &%return_size_limit%& global
23048 configuration option.
23049
23050
23051 .option subject autoreply string&!! unset
23052 This specifies the contents of the &'Subject:'& header when the message is
23053 specified by the transport. It is tempting to quote the original subject in
23054 automatic responses. For example:
23055 .code
23056 subject = Re: $h_subject:
23057 .endd
23058 There is a danger in doing this, however. It may allow a third party to
23059 subscribe your users to an opt-in mailing list, provided that the list accepts
23060 bounce messages as subscription confirmations. Well-managed lists require a
23061 non-bounce message to confirm a subscription, so the danger is relatively
23062 small.
23063
23064
23065
23066 .option text autoreply string&!! unset
23067 This specifies a single string to be used as the body of the message when the
23068 message is specified by the transport. If both &%text%& and &%file%& are set,
23069 the text comes first.
23070
23071
23072 .option to autoreply string&!! unset
23073 This specifies recipients of the message and the contents of the &'To:'& header
23074 when the message is specified by the transport.
23075 .ecindex IIDauttra1
23076 .ecindex IIDauttra2
23077
23078
23079
23080
23081 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
23082 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
23083
23084 .chapter "The lmtp transport" "CHAPLMTP"
23085 .cindex "transports" "&(lmtp)&"
23086 .cindex "&(lmtp)& transport"
23087 .cindex "LMTP" "over a pipe"
23088 .cindex "LMTP" "over a socket"
23089 The &(lmtp)& transport runs the LMTP protocol (RFC 2033) over a pipe to a
23090 specified command
23091 or by interacting with a Unix domain socket.
23092 This transport is something of a cross between the &(pipe)& and &(smtp)&
23093 transports. Exim also has support for using LMTP over TCP/IP; this is
23094 implemented as an option for the &(smtp)& transport. Because LMTP is expected
23095 to be of minority interest, the default build-time configure in &_src/EDITME_&
23096 has it commented out. You need to ensure that
23097 .code
23098 TRANSPORT_LMTP=yes
23099 .endd
23100 .cindex "options" "&(lmtp)& transport"
23101 is present in your &_Local/Makefile_& in order to have the &(lmtp)& transport
23102 included in the Exim binary. The private options of the &(lmtp)& transport are
23103 as follows:
23104
23105 .option batch_id lmtp string&!! unset
23106 See the description of local delivery batching in chapter &<<CHAPbatching>>&.
23107
23108
23109 .option batch_max lmtp integer 1
23110 This limits the number of addresses that can be handled in a single delivery.
23111 Most LMTP servers can handle several addresses at once, so it is normally a
23112 good idea to increase this value. See the description of local delivery
23113 batching in chapter &<<CHAPbatching>>&.
23114
23115
23116 .option command lmtp string&!! unset
23117 This option must be set if &%socket%& is not set. The string is a command which
23118 is run in a separate process. It is split up into a command name and list of
23119 arguments, each of which is separately expanded (so expansion cannot change the
23120 number of arguments). The command is run directly, not via a shell. The message
23121 is passed to the new process using the standard input and output to operate the
23122 LMTP protocol.
23123
23124 .option ignore_quota lmtp boolean false
23125 .cindex "LMTP" "ignoring quota errors"
23126 If this option is set true, the string &`IGNOREQUOTA`& is added to RCPT
23127 commands, provided that the LMTP server has advertised support for IGNOREQUOTA
23128 in its response to the LHLO command.
23129
23130 .option socket lmtp string&!! unset
23131 This option must be set if &%command%& is not set. The result of expansion must
23132 be the name of a Unix domain socket. The transport connects to the socket and
23133 delivers the message to it using the LMTP protocol.
23134
23135
23136 .option timeout lmtp time 5m
23137 The transport is aborted if the created process or Unix domain socket does not
23138 respond to LMTP commands or message input within this timeout. Delivery
23139 is deferred, and will be tried again later. Here is an example of a typical
23140 LMTP transport:
23141 .code
23142 lmtp:
23143 driver = lmtp
23144 command = /some/local/lmtp/delivery/program
23145 batch_max = 20
23146 user = exim
23147 .endd
23148 This delivers up to 20 addresses at a time, in a mixture of domains if
23149 necessary, running as the user &'exim'&.
23150
23151
23152
23153 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
23154 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
23155
23156 .chapter "The pipe transport" "CHAPpipetransport"
23157 .scindex IIDpiptra1 "transports" "&(pipe)&"
23158 .scindex IIDpiptra2 "&(pipe)& transport"
23159 The &(pipe)& transport is used to deliver messages via a pipe to a command
23160 running in another process. One example is the use of &(pipe)& as a
23161 pseudo-remote transport for passing messages to some other delivery mechanism
23162 (such as UUCP). Another is the use by individual users to automatically process
23163 their incoming messages. The &(pipe)& transport can be used in one of the
23164 following ways:
23165
23166 .ilist
23167 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
23168 A router routes one address to a transport in the normal way, and the
23169 transport is configured as a &(pipe)& transport. In this case, &$local_part$&
23170 contains the local part of the address (as usual), and the command that is run
23171 is specified by the &%command%& option on the transport.
23172 .next
23173 .vindex "&$pipe_addresses$&"
23174 If the &%batch_max%& option is set greater than 1 (the default is 1), the
23175 transport can handle more than one address in a single run. In this case, when
23176 more than one address is routed to the transport, &$local_part$& is not set
23177 (because it is not unique). However, the pseudo-variable &$pipe_addresses$&
23178 (described in section &<<SECThowcommandrun>>& below) contains all the addresses
23179 that are routed to the transport.
23180 .next
23181 .vindex "&$address_pipe$&"
23182 A router redirects an address directly to a pipe command (for example, from an
23183 alias or forward file). In this case, &$address_pipe$& contains the text of the
23184 pipe command, and the &%command%& option on the transport is ignored unless
23185 &%force_command%& is set. If only one address is being transported
23186 (&%batch_max%& is not greater than one, or only one address was redirected to
23187 this pipe command), &$local_part$& contains the local part that was redirected.
23188 .endlist
23189
23190
23191 The &(pipe)& transport is a non-interactive delivery method. Exim can also
23192 deliver messages over pipes using the LMTP interactive protocol. This is
23193 implemented by the &(lmtp)& transport.
23194
23195 In the case when &(pipe)& is run as a consequence of an entry in a local user's
23196 &_.forward_& file, the command runs under the uid and gid of that user. In
23197 other cases, the uid and gid have to be specified explicitly, either on the
23198 transport or on the router that handles the address. Current and &"home"&
23199 directories are also controllable. See chapter &<<CHAPenvironment>>& for
23200 details of the local delivery environment and chapter &<<CHAPbatching>>&
23201 for a discussion of local delivery batching.
23202
23203
23204 .section "Concurrent delivery" "SECID140"
23205 If two messages arrive at almost the same time, and both are routed to a pipe
23206 delivery, the two pipe transports may be run concurrently. You must ensure that
23207 any pipe commands you set up are robust against this happening. If the commands
23208 write to a file, the &%exim_lock%& utility might be of use.
23209 Alternatively the &%max_parallel%& option could be used with a value
23210 of "1" to enforce serialization.
23211
23212
23213
23214
23215 .section "Returned status and data" "SECID141"
23216 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport" "returned data"
23217 If the command exits with a non-zero return code, the delivery is deemed to
23218 have failed, unless either the &%ignore_status%& option is set (in which case
23219 the return code is treated as zero), or the return code is one of those listed
23220 in the &%temp_errors%& option, which are interpreted as meaning &"try again
23221 later"&. In this case, delivery is deferred. Details of a permanent failure are
23222 logged, but are not included in the bounce message, which merely contains
23223 &"local delivery failed"&.
23224
23225 If the command exits on a signal and the &%freeze_signal%& option is set then
23226 the message will be frozen in the queue. If that option is not set, a bounce
23227 will be sent as normal.
23228
23229 If the return code is greater than 128 and the command being run is a shell
23230 script, it normally means that the script was terminated by a signal whose
23231 value is the return code minus 128. The &%freeze_signal%& option does not
23232 apply in this case.
23233
23234 If Exim is unable to run the command (that is, if &[execve()]& fails), the
23235 return code is set to 127. This is the value that a shell returns if it is
23236 asked to run a non-existent command. The wording for the log line suggests that
23237 a non-existent command may be the problem.
23238
23239 The &%return_output%& option can affect the result of a pipe delivery. If it is
23240 set and the command produces any output on its standard output or standard
23241 error streams, the command is considered to have failed, even if it gave a zero
23242 return code or if &%ignore_status%& is set. The output from the command is
23243 included as part of the bounce message. The &%return_fail_output%& option is
23244 similar, except that output is returned only when the command exits with a
23245 failure return code, that is, a value other than zero or a code that matches
23246 &%temp_errors%&.
23247
23248
23249
23250 .section "How the command is run" "SECThowcommandrun"
23251 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport" "path for command"
23252 The command line is (by default) broken down into a command name and arguments
23253 by the &(pipe)& transport itself. The &%allow_commands%& and
23254 &%restrict_to_path%& options can be used to restrict the commands that may be
23255 run.
23256
23257 .cindex "quoting" "in pipe command"
23258 Unquoted arguments are delimited by white space. If an argument appears in
23259 double quotes, backslash is interpreted as an escape character in the usual
23260 way. If an argument appears in single quotes, no escaping is done.
23261
23262 String expansion is applied to the command line except when it comes from a
23263 traditional &_.forward_& file (commands from a filter file are expanded). The
23264 expansion is applied to each argument in turn rather than to the whole line.
23265 For this reason, any string expansion item that contains white space must be
23266 quoted so as to be contained within a single argument. A setting such as
23267 .code
23268 command = /some/path ${if eq{$local_part}{postmaster}{xx}{yy}}
23269 .endd
23270 will not work, because the expansion item gets split between several
23271 arguments. You have to write
23272 .code
23273 command = /some/path "${if eq{$local_part}{postmaster}{xx}{yy}}"
23274 .endd
23275 to ensure that it is all in one argument. The expansion is done in this way,
23276 argument by argument, so that the number of arguments cannot be changed as a
23277 result of expansion, and quotes or backslashes in inserted variables do not
23278 interact with external quoting. However, this leads to problems if you want to
23279 generate multiple arguments (or the command name plus arguments) from a single
23280 expansion. In this situation, the simplest solution is to use a shell. For
23281 example:
23282 .code
23283 command = /bin/sh -c ${lookup{$local_part}lsearch{/some/file}}
23284 .endd
23285
23286 .cindex "transport" "filter"
23287 .cindex "filter" "transport filter"
23288 .vindex "&$pipe_addresses$&"
23289 Special handling takes place when an argument consists of precisely the text
23290 &`$pipe_addresses`&. This is not a general expansion variable; the only
23291 place this string is recognized is when it appears as an argument for a pipe or
23292 transport filter command. It causes each address that is being handled to be
23293 inserted in the argument list at that point &'as a separate argument'&. This
23294 avoids any problems with spaces or shell metacharacters, and is of use when a
23295 &(pipe)& transport is handling groups of addresses in a batch.
23296
23297 If &%force_command%& is enabled on the transport, Special handling takes place
23298 for an argument that consists of precisely the text &`$address_pipe`&. It
23299 is handled similarly to &$pipe_addresses$& above. It is expanded and each
23300 argument is inserted in the argument list at that point
23301 &'as a separate argument'&. The &`$address_pipe`& item does not need to be
23302 the only item in the argument; in fact, if it were then &%force_command%&
23303 should behave as a no-op. Rather, it should be used to adjust the command
23304 run while preserving the argument vector separation.
23305
23306 After splitting up into arguments and expansion, the resulting command is run
23307 in a subprocess directly from the transport, &'not'& under a shell. The
23308 message that is being delivered is supplied on the standard input, and the
23309 standard output and standard error are both connected to a single pipe that is
23310 read by Exim. The &%max_output%& option controls how much output the command
23311 may produce, and the &%return_output%& and &%return_fail_output%& options
23312 control what is done with it.
23313
23314 Not running the command under a shell (by default) lessens the security risks
23315 in cases when a command from a user's filter file is built out of data that was
23316 taken from an incoming message. If a shell is required, it can of course be
23317 explicitly specified as the command to be run. However, there are circumstances
23318 where existing commands (for example, in &_.forward_& files) expect to be run
23319 under a shell and cannot easily be modified. To allow for these cases, there is
23320 an option called &%use_shell%&, which changes the way the &(pipe)& transport
23321 works. Instead of breaking up the command line as just described, it expands it
23322 as a single string and passes the result to &_/bin/sh_&. The
23323 &%restrict_to_path%& option and the &$pipe_addresses$& facility cannot be used
23324 with &%use_shell%&, and the whole mechanism is inherently less secure.
23325
23326
23327
23328 .section "Environment variables" "SECTpipeenv"
23329 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport" "environment for command"
23330 .cindex "environment" "&(pipe)& transport"
23331 The environment variables listed below are set up when the command is invoked.
23332 This list is a compromise for maximum compatibility with other MTAs. Note that
23333 the &%environment%& option can be used to add additional variables to this
23334 environment. The environment for the &(pipe)& transport is not subject
23335 to the &%add_environment%& and &%keep_environment%& main config options.
23336 .display
23337 &`DOMAIN `& the domain of the address
23338 &`HOME `& the home directory, if set
23339 &`HOST `& the host name when called from a router (see below)
23340 &`LOCAL_PART `& see below
23341 &`LOCAL_PART_PREFIX `& see below
23342 &`LOCAL_PART_SUFFIX `& see below
23343 &`LOGNAME `& see below
23344 &`MESSAGE_ID `& Exim's local ID for the message
23345 &`PATH `& as specified by the &%path%& option below
23346 &`QUALIFY_DOMAIN `& the sender qualification domain
23347 &`RECIPIENT `& the complete recipient address
23348 &`SENDER `& the sender of the message (empty if a bounce)
23349 &`SHELL `& &`/bin/sh`&
23350 &`TZ `& the value of the &%timezone%& option, if set
23351 &`USER `& see below
23352 .endd
23353 When a &(pipe)& transport is called directly from (for example) an &(accept)&
23354 router, LOCAL_PART is set to the local part of the address. When it is
23355 called as a result of a forward or alias expansion, LOCAL_PART is set to
23356 the local part of the address that was expanded. In both cases, any affixes are
23357 removed from the local part, and made available in LOCAL_PART_PREFIX and
23358 LOCAL_PART_SUFFIX, respectively. LOGNAME and USER are set to the
23359 same value as LOCAL_PART for compatibility with other MTAs.
23360
23361 .cindex "HOST"
23362 HOST is set only when a &(pipe)& transport is called from a router that
23363 associates hosts with an address, typically when using &(pipe)& as a
23364 pseudo-remote transport. HOST is set to the first host name specified by
23365 the router.
23366
23367 .cindex "HOME"
23368 If the transport's generic &%home_directory%& option is set, its value is used
23369 for the HOME environment variable. Otherwise, a home directory may be set
23370 by the router's &%transport_home_directory%& option, which defaults to the
23371 user's home directory if &%check_local_user%& is set.
23372
23373
23374 .section "Private options for pipe" "SECID142"
23375 .cindex "options" "&(pipe)& transport"
23376
23377
23378
23379 .option allow_commands pipe "string list&!!" unset
23380 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport" "permitted commands"
23381 The string is expanded, and is then interpreted as a colon-separated list of
23382 permitted commands. If &%restrict_to_path%& is not set, the only commands
23383 permitted are those in the &%allow_commands%& list. They need not be absolute
23384 paths; the &%path%& option is still used for relative paths. If
23385 &%restrict_to_path%& is set with &%allow_commands%&, the command must either be
23386 in the &%allow_commands%& list, or a name without any slashes that is found on
23387 the path. In other words, if neither &%allow_commands%& nor
23388 &%restrict_to_path%& is set, there is no restriction on the command, but
23389 otherwise only commands that are permitted by one or the other are allowed. For
23390 example, if
23391 .code
23392 allow_commands = /usr/bin/vacation
23393 .endd
23394 and &%restrict_to_path%& is not set, the only permitted command is
23395 &_/usr/bin/vacation_&. The &%allow_commands%& option may not be set if
23396 &%use_shell%& is set.
23397
23398
23399 .option batch_id pipe string&!! unset
23400 See the description of local delivery batching in chapter &<<CHAPbatching>>&.
23401
23402
23403 .option batch_max pipe integer 1
23404 This limits the number of addresses that can be handled in a single delivery.
23405 See the description of local delivery batching in chapter &<<CHAPbatching>>&.
23406
23407
23408 .option check_string pipe string unset
23409 As &(pipe)& writes the message, the start of each line is tested for matching
23410 &%check_string%&, and if it does, the initial matching characters are replaced
23411 by the contents of &%escape_string%&, provided both are set. The value of
23412 &%check_string%& is a literal string, not a regular expression, and the case of
23413 any letters it contains is significant. When &%use_bsmtp%& is set, the contents
23414 of &%check_string%& and &%escape_string%& are forced to values that implement
23415 the SMTP escaping protocol. Any settings made in the configuration file are
23416 ignored.
23417
23418
23419 .option command pipe string&!! unset
23420 This option need not be set when &(pipe)& is being used to deliver to pipes
23421 obtained directly from address redirections. In other cases, the option must be
23422 set, to provide a command to be run. It need not yield an absolute path (see
23423 the &%path%& option below). The command is split up into separate arguments by
23424 Exim, and each argument is separately expanded, as described in section
23425 &<<SECThowcommandrun>>& above.
23426
23427
23428 .option environment pipe string&!! unset
23429 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport" "environment for command"
23430 .cindex "environment" "&(pipe)& transport"
23431 This option is used to add additional variables to the environment in which the
23432 command runs (see section &<<SECTpipeenv>>& for the default list). Its value is
23433 a string which is expanded, and then interpreted as a colon-separated list of
23434 environment settings of the form <&'name'&>=<&'value'&>.
23435
23436
23437 .option escape_string pipe string unset
23438 See &%check_string%& above.
23439
23440
23441 .option freeze_exec_fail pipe boolean false
23442 .cindex "exec failure"
23443 .cindex "failure of exec"
23444 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport" "failure of exec"
23445 Failure to exec the command in a pipe transport is by default treated like
23446 any other failure while running the command. However, if &%freeze_exec_fail%&
23447 is set, failure to exec is treated specially, and causes the message to be
23448 frozen, whatever the setting of &%ignore_status%&.
23449
23450
23451 .option freeze_signal pipe boolean false
23452 .cindex "signal exit"
23453 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport", "signal exit"
23454 Normally if the process run by a command in a pipe transport exits on a signal,
23455 a bounce message is sent. If &%freeze_signal%& is set, the message will be
23456 frozen in Exim's queue instead.
23457
23458
23459 .option force_command pipe boolean false
23460 .cindex "force command"
23461 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport", "force command"
23462 Normally when a router redirects an address directly to a pipe command
23463 the &%command%& option on the transport is ignored. If &%force_command%&
23464 is set, the &%command%& option will used. This is especially
23465 useful for forcing a wrapper or additional argument to be added to the
23466 command. For example:
23467 .code
23468 command = /usr/bin/remote_exec myhost -- $address_pipe
23469 force_command
23470 .endd
23471
23472 Note that &$address_pipe$& is handled specially in &%command%& when
23473 &%force_command%& is set, expanding out to the original argument vector as
23474 separate items, similarly to a Unix shell &`"$@"`& construct.
23475
23476
23477 .option ignore_status pipe boolean false
23478 If this option is true, the status returned by the subprocess that is set up to
23479 run the command is ignored, and Exim behaves as if zero had been returned.
23480 Otherwise, a non-zero status or termination by signal causes an error return
23481 from the transport unless the status value is one of those listed in
23482 &%temp_errors%&; these cause the delivery to be deferred and tried again later.
23483
23484 &*Note*&: This option does not apply to timeouts, which do not return a status.
23485 See the &%timeout_defer%& option for how timeouts are handled.
23486
23487
23488 .option log_defer_output pipe boolean false
23489 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport" "logging output"
23490 If this option is set, and the status returned by the command is
23491 one of the codes listed in &%temp_errors%& (that is, delivery was deferred),
23492 and any output was produced on stdout or stderr, the first line of it is
23493 written to the main log.
23494
23495
23496 .option log_fail_output pipe boolean false
23497 If this option is set, and the command returns any output on stdout or
23498 stderr, and also ends with a return code that is neither zero nor one of
23499 the return codes listed in &%temp_errors%& (that is, the delivery
23500 failed), the first line of output is written to the main log. This
23501 option and &%log_output%& are mutually exclusive. Only one of them may
23502 be set.
23503
23504
23505 .option log_output pipe boolean false
23506 If this option is set and the command returns any output on stdout or
23507 stderr, the first line of output is written to the main log, whatever
23508 the return code. This option and &%log_fail_output%& are mutually
23509 exclusive. Only one of them may be set.
23510
23511
23512 .option max_output pipe integer 20K
23513 This specifies the maximum amount of output that the command may produce on its
23514 standard output and standard error file combined. If the limit is exceeded, the
23515 process running the command is killed. This is intended as a safety measure to
23516 catch runaway processes. The limit is applied independently of the settings of
23517 the options that control what is done with such output (for example,
23518 &%return_output%&). Because of buffering effects, the amount of output may
23519 exceed the limit by a small amount before Exim notices.
23520
23521
23522 .option message_prefix pipe string&!! "see below"
23523 The string specified here is expanded and output at the start of every message.
23524 The default is unset if &%use_bsmtp%& is set. Otherwise it is
23525 .code
23526 message_prefix = \
23527 From ${if def:return_path{$return_path}{MAILER-DAEMON}}\
23528 ${tod_bsdinbox}\n
23529 .endd
23530 .cindex "Cyrus"
23531 .cindex "&%tmail%&"
23532 .cindex "&""From""& line"
23533 This is required by the commonly used &_/usr/bin/vacation_& program.
23534 However, it must &'not'& be present if delivery is to the Cyrus IMAP server,
23535 or to the &%tmail%& local delivery agent. The prefix can be suppressed by
23536 setting
23537 .code
23538 message_prefix =
23539 .endd
23540 &*Note:*& If you set &%use_crlf%& true, you must change any occurrences of
23541 &`\n`& to &`\r\n`& in &%message_prefix%&.
23542
23543
23544 .option message_suffix pipe string&!! "see below"
23545 The string specified here is expanded and output at the end of every message.
23546 The default is unset if &%use_bsmtp%& is set. Otherwise it is a single newline.
23547 The suffix can be suppressed by setting
23548 .code
23549 message_suffix =
23550 .endd
23551 &*Note:*& If you set &%use_crlf%& true, you must change any occurrences of
23552 &`\n`& to &`\r\n`& in &%message_suffix%&.
23553
23554
23555 .option path pipe string&!! "/bin:/usr/bin"
23556 This option is expanded and
23557 specifies the string that is set up in the PATH environment
23558 variable of the subprocess.
23559 If the &%command%& option does not yield an absolute path name, the command is
23560 sought in the PATH directories, in the usual way. &*Warning*&: This does not
23561 apply to a command specified as a transport filter.
23562
23563
23564 .option permit_coredump pipe boolean false
23565 Normally Exim inhibits core-dumps during delivery. If you have a need to get
23566 a core-dump of a pipe command, enable this command. This enables core-dumps
23567 during delivery and affects both the Exim binary and the pipe command run.
23568 It is recommended that this option remain off unless and until you have a need
23569 for it and that this only be enabled when needed, as the risk of excessive
23570 resource consumption can be quite high. Note also that Exim is typically
23571 installed as a setuid binary and most operating systems will inhibit coredumps
23572 of these by default, so further OS-specific action may be required.
23573
23574
23575 .option pipe_as_creator pipe boolean false
23576 .cindex "uid (user id)" "local delivery"
23577 If the generic &%user%& option is not set and this option is true, the delivery
23578 process is run under the uid that was in force when Exim was originally called
23579 to accept the message. If the group id is not otherwise set (via the generic
23580 &%group%& option), the gid that was in force when Exim was originally called to
23581 accept the message is used.
23582
23583
23584 .option restrict_to_path pipe boolean false
23585 When this option is set, any command name not listed in &%allow_commands%& must
23586 contain no slashes. The command is searched for only in the directories listed
23587 in the &%path%& option. This option is intended for use in the case when a pipe
23588 command has been generated from a user's &_.forward_& file. This is usually
23589 handled by a &(pipe)& transport called &%address_pipe%&.
23590
23591
23592 .option return_fail_output pipe boolean false
23593 If this option is true, and the command produced any output and ended with a
23594 return code other than zero or one of the codes listed in &%temp_errors%& (that
23595 is, the delivery failed), the output is returned in the bounce message.
23596 However, if the message has a null sender (that is, it is itself a bounce
23597 message), output from the command is discarded. This option and
23598 &%return_output%& are mutually exclusive. Only one of them may be set.
23599
23600
23601
23602 .option return_output pipe boolean false
23603 If this option is true, and the command produced any output, the delivery is
23604 deemed to have failed whatever the return code from the command, and the output
23605 is returned in the bounce message. Otherwise, the output is just discarded.
23606 However, if the message has a null sender (that is, it is a bounce message),
23607 output from the command is always discarded, whatever the setting of this
23608 option. This option and &%return_fail_output%& are mutually exclusive. Only one
23609 of them may be set.
23610
23611
23612
23613 .option temp_errors pipe "string list" "see below"
23614 .cindex "&(pipe)& transport" "temporary failure"
23615 This option contains either a colon-separated list of numbers, or a single
23616 asterisk. If &%ignore_status%& is false
23617 and &%return_output%& is not set,
23618 and the command exits with a non-zero return code, the failure is treated as
23619 temporary and the delivery is deferred if the return code matches one of the
23620 numbers, or if the setting is a single asterisk. Otherwise, non-zero return
23621 codes are treated as permanent errors. The default setting contains the codes
23622 defined by EX_TEMPFAIL and EX_CANTCREAT in &_sysexits.h_&. If Exim is
23623 compiled on a system that does not define these macros, it assumes values of 75
23624 and 73, respectively.
23625
23626
23627 .option timeout pipe time 1h
23628 If the command fails to complete within this time, it is killed. This normally
23629 causes the delivery to fail (but see &%timeout_defer%&). A zero time interval
23630 specifies no timeout. In order to ensure that any subprocesses created by the
23631 command are also killed, Exim makes the initial process a process group leader,
23632 and kills the whole process group on a timeout. However, this can be defeated
23633 if one of the processes starts a new process group.
23634
23635 .option timeout_defer pipe boolean false
23636 A timeout in a &(pipe)& transport, either in the command that the transport
23637 runs, or in a transport filter that is associated with it, is by default
23638 treated as a hard error, and the delivery fails. However, if &%timeout_defer%&
23639 is set true, both kinds of timeout become temporary errors, causing the
23640 delivery to be deferred.
23641
23642 .option umask pipe "octal integer" 022
23643 This specifies the umask setting for the subprocess that runs the command.
23644
23645
23646 .option use_bsmtp pipe boolean false
23647 .cindex "envelope sender"
23648 If this option is set true, the &(pipe)& transport writes messages in &"batch
23649 SMTP"& format, with the envelope sender and recipient(s) included as SMTP
23650 commands. If you want to include a leading HELO command with such messages,
23651 you can do so by setting the &%message_prefix%& option. See section
23652 &<<SECTbatchSMTP>>& for details of batch SMTP.
23653
23654 .option use_classresources pipe boolean false
23655 .cindex "class resources (BSD)"
23656 This option is available only when Exim is running on FreeBSD, NetBSD, or
23657 BSD/OS. If it is set true, the &[setclassresources()]& function is used to set
23658 resource limits when a &(pipe)& transport is run to perform a delivery. The
23659 limits for the uid under which the pipe is to run are obtained from the login
23660 class database.
23661
23662
23663 .option use_crlf pipe boolean false
23664 .cindex "carriage return"
23665 .cindex "linefeed"
23666 This option causes lines to be terminated with the two-character CRLF sequence
23667 (carriage return, linefeed) instead of just a linefeed character. In the case
23668 of batched SMTP, the byte sequence written to the pipe is then an exact image
23669 of what would be sent down a real SMTP connection.
23670
23671 The contents of the &%message_prefix%& and &%message_suffix%& options are
23672 written verbatim, so must contain their own carriage return characters if these
23673 are needed. When &%use_bsmtp%& is not set, the default values for both
23674 &%message_prefix%& and &%message_suffix%& end with a single linefeed, so their
23675 values must be changed to end with &`\r\n`& if &%use_crlf%& is set.
23676
23677
23678 .option use_shell pipe boolean false
23679 .vindex "&$pipe_addresses$&"
23680 If this option is set, it causes the command to be passed to &_/bin/sh_&
23681 instead of being run directly from the transport, as described in section
23682 &<<SECThowcommandrun>>&. This is less secure, but is needed in some situations
23683 where the command is expected to be run under a shell and cannot easily be
23684 modified. The &%allow_commands%& and &%restrict_to_path%& options, and the
23685 &`$pipe_addresses`& facility are incompatible with &%use_shell%&. The
23686 command is expanded as a single string, and handed to &_/bin/sh_& as data for
23687 its &%-c%& option.
23688
23689
23690
23691 .section "Using an external local delivery agent" "SECID143"
23692 .cindex "local delivery" "using an external agent"
23693 .cindex "&'procmail'&"
23694 .cindex "external local delivery"
23695 .cindex "delivery" "&'procmail'&"
23696 .cindex "delivery" "by external agent"
23697 The &(pipe)& transport can be used to pass all messages that require local
23698 delivery to a separate local delivery agent such as &%procmail%&. When doing
23699 this, care must be taken to ensure that the pipe is run under an appropriate
23700 uid and gid. In some configurations one wants this to be a uid that is trusted
23701 by the delivery agent to supply the correct sender of the message. It may be
23702 necessary to recompile or reconfigure the delivery agent so that it trusts an
23703 appropriate user. The following is an example transport and router
23704 configuration for &%procmail%&:
23705 .code
23706 # transport
23707 procmail_pipe:
23708 driver = pipe
23709 command = /usr/local/bin/procmail -d $local_part
23710 return_path_add
23711 delivery_date_add
23712 envelope_to_add
23713 check_string = "From "
23714 escape_string = ">From "
23715 umask = 077
23716 user = $local_part
23717 group = mail
23718
23719 # router
23720 procmail:
23721 driver = accept
23722 check_local_user
23723 transport = procmail_pipe
23724 .endd
23725 In this example, the pipe is run as the local user, but with the group set to
23726 &'mail'&. An alternative is to run the pipe as a specific user such as &'mail'&
23727 or &'exim'&, but in this case you must arrange for &%procmail%& to trust that
23728 user to supply a correct sender address. If you do not specify either a
23729 &%group%& or a &%user%& option, the pipe command is run as the local user. The
23730 home directory is the user's home directory by default.
23731
23732 &*Note*&: The command that the pipe transport runs does &'not'& begin with
23733 .code
23734 IFS=" "
23735 .endd
23736 as shown in some &%procmail%& documentation, because Exim does not by default
23737 use a shell to run pipe commands.
23738
23739 .cindex "Cyrus"
23740 The next example shows a transport and a router for a system where local
23741 deliveries are handled by the Cyrus IMAP server.
23742 .code
23743 # transport
23744 local_delivery_cyrus:
23745 driver = pipe
23746 command = /usr/cyrus/bin/deliver \
23747 -m ${substr_1:$local_part_suffix} -- $local_part
23748 user = cyrus
23749 group = mail
23750 return_output
23751 log_output
23752 message_prefix =
23753 message_suffix =
23754
23755 # router
23756 local_user_cyrus:
23757 driver = accept
23758 check_local_user
23759 local_part_suffix = .*
23760 transport = local_delivery_cyrus
23761 .endd
23762 Note the unsetting of &%message_prefix%& and &%message_suffix%&, and the use of
23763 &%return_output%& to cause any text written by Cyrus to be returned to the
23764 sender.
23765 .ecindex IIDpiptra1
23766 .ecindex IIDpiptra2
23767
23768
23769 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
23770 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
23771
23772 .chapter "The smtp transport" "CHAPsmtptrans"
23773 .scindex IIDsmttra1 "transports" "&(smtp)&"
23774 .scindex IIDsmttra2 "&(smtp)& transport"
23775 The &(smtp)& transport delivers messages over TCP/IP connections using the SMTP
23776 or LMTP protocol. The list of hosts to try can either be taken from the address
23777 that is being processed (having been set up by the router), or specified
23778 explicitly for the transport. Timeout and retry processing (see chapter
23779 &<<CHAPretry>>&) is applied to each IP address independently.
23780
23781
23782 .section "Multiple messages on a single connection" "SECID144"
23783 The sending of multiple messages over a single TCP/IP connection can arise in
23784 two ways:
23785
23786 .ilist
23787 If a message contains more than &%max_rcpt%& (see below) addresses that are
23788 routed to the same host, more than one copy of the message has to be sent to
23789 that host. In this situation, multiple copies may be sent in a single run of
23790 the &(smtp)& transport over a single TCP/IP connection. (What Exim actually
23791 does when it has too many addresses to send in one message also depends on the
23792 value of the global &%remote_max_parallel%& option. Details are given in
23793 section &<<SECToutSMTPTCP>>&.)
23794 .next
23795 .cindex "hints database" "remembering routing"
23796 When a message has been successfully delivered over a TCP/IP connection, Exim
23797 looks in its hints database to see if there are any other messages awaiting a
23798 connection to the same host. If there are, a new delivery process is started
23799 for one of them, and the current TCP/IP connection is passed on to it. The new
23800 process may in turn send multiple copies and possibly create yet another
23801 process.
23802 .endlist
23803
23804
23805 For each copy sent over the same TCP/IP connection, a sequence counter is
23806 incremented, and if it ever gets to the value of &%connection_max_messages%&,
23807 no further messages are sent over that connection.
23808
23809
23810
23811 .section "Use of the $host and $host_address variables" "SECID145"
23812 .vindex "&$host$&"
23813 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
23814 At the start of a run of the &(smtp)& transport, the values of &$host$& and
23815 &$host_address$& are the name and IP address of the first host on the host list
23816 passed by the router. However, when the transport is about to connect to a
23817 specific host, and while it is connected to that host, &$host$& and
23818 &$host_address$& are set to the values for that host. These are the values
23819 that are in force when the &%helo_data%&, &%hosts_try_auth%&, &%interface%&,
23820 &%serialize_hosts%&, and the various TLS options are expanded.
23821
23822
23823 .section "Use of $tls_cipher and $tls_peerdn" "usecippeer"
23824 .vindex &$tls_bits$&
23825 .vindex &$tls_cipher$&
23826 .vindex &$tls_peerdn$&
23827 .vindex &$tls_sni$&
23828 At the start of a run of the &(smtp)& transport, the values of &$tls_bits$&,
23829 &$tls_cipher$&, &$tls_peerdn$& and &$tls_sni$&
23830 are the values that were set when the message was received.
23831 These are the values that are used for options that are expanded before any
23832 SMTP connections are made. Just before each connection is made, these four
23833 variables are emptied. If TLS is subsequently started, they are set to the
23834 appropriate values for the outgoing connection, and these are the values that
23835 are in force when any authenticators are run and when the
23836 &%authenticated_sender%& option is expanded.
23837
23838 These variables are deprecated in favour of &$tls_in_cipher$& et. al.
23839 and will be removed in a future release.
23840
23841
23842 .section "Private options for smtp" "SECID146"
23843 .cindex "options" "&(smtp)& transport"
23844 The private options of the &(smtp)& transport are as follows:
23845
23846
23847 .option address_retry_include_sender smtp boolean true
23848 .cindex "4&'xx'& responses" "retrying after"
23849 When an address is delayed because of a 4&'xx'& response to a RCPT command, it
23850 is the combination of sender and recipient that is delayed in subsequent queue
23851 runs until the retry time is reached. You can delay the recipient without
23852 reference to the sender (which is what earlier versions of Exim did), by
23853 setting &%address_retry_include_sender%& false. However, this can lead to
23854 problems with servers that regularly issue 4&'xx'& responses to RCPT commands.
23855
23856 .option allow_localhost smtp boolean false
23857 .cindex "local host" "sending to"
23858 .cindex "fallback" "hosts specified on transport"
23859 When a host specified in &%hosts%& or &%fallback_hosts%& (see below) turns out
23860 to be the local host, or is listed in &%hosts_treat_as_local%&, delivery is
23861 deferred by default. However, if &%allow_localhost%& is set, Exim goes on to do
23862 the delivery anyway. This should be used only in special cases when the
23863 configuration ensures that no looping will result (for example, a differently
23864 configured Exim is listening on the port to which the message is sent).
23865
23866
23867 .option authenticated_sender smtp string&!! unset
23868 .cindex "Cyrus"
23869 When Exim has authenticated as a client, or if &%authenticated_sender_force%&
23870 is true, this option sets a value for the AUTH= item on outgoing MAIL commands,
23871 overriding any existing authenticated sender value. If the string expansion is
23872 forced to fail, the option is ignored. Other expansion failures cause delivery
23873 to be deferred. If the result of expansion is an empty string, that is also
23874 ignored.
23875
23876 The expansion happens after the outgoing connection has been made and TLS
23877 started, if required. This means that the &$host$&, &$host_address$&,
23878 &$tls_out_cipher$&, and &$tls_out_peerdn$& variables are set according to the
23879 particular connection.
23880
23881 If the SMTP session is not authenticated, the expansion of
23882 &%authenticated_sender%& still happens (and can cause the delivery to be
23883 deferred if it fails), but no AUTH= item is added to MAIL commands
23884 unless &%authenticated_sender_force%& is true.
23885
23886 This option allows you to use the &(smtp)& transport in LMTP mode to
23887 deliver mail to Cyrus IMAP and provide the proper local part as the
23888 &"authenticated sender"&, via a setting such as:
23889 .code
23890 authenticated_sender = $local_part
23891 .endd
23892 This removes the need for IMAP subfolders to be assigned special ACLs to
23893 allow direct delivery to those subfolders.
23894
23895 Because of expected uses such as that just described for Cyrus (when no
23896 domain is involved), there is no checking on the syntax of the provided
23897 value.
23898
23899
23900 .option authenticated_sender_force smtp boolean false
23901 If this option is set true, the &%authenticated_sender%& option's value
23902 is used for the AUTH= item on outgoing MAIL commands, even if Exim has not
23903 authenticated as a client.
23904
23905
23906 .option command_timeout smtp time 5m
23907 This sets a timeout for receiving a response to an SMTP command that has been
23908 sent out. It is also used when waiting for the initial banner line from the
23909 remote host. Its value must not be zero.
23910
23911
23912 .option connect_timeout smtp time 5m
23913 This sets a timeout for the &[connect()]& function, which sets up a TCP/IP call
23914 to a remote host. A setting of zero allows the system timeout (typically
23915 several minutes) to act. To have any effect, the value of this option must be
23916 less than the system timeout. However, it has been observed that on some
23917 systems there is no system timeout, which is why the default value for this
23918 option is 5 minutes, a value recommended by RFC 1123.
23919
23920
23921 .option connection_max_messages smtp integer 500
23922 .cindex "SMTP" "passed connection"
23923 .cindex "SMTP" "multiple deliveries"
23924 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
23925 This controls the maximum number of separate message deliveries that are sent
23926 over a single TCP/IP connection. If the value is zero, there is no limit.
23927 For testing purposes, this value can be overridden by the &%-oB%& command line
23928 option.
23929
23930
23931 .option dane_require_tls_ciphers smtp string&!! unset
23932 .cindex "TLS" "requiring specific ciphers for DANE"
23933 .cindex "cipher" "requiring specific"
23934 .cindex DANE "TLS ciphers"
23935 This option may be used to override &%tls_require_ciphers%& for connections
23936 where DANE has been determined to be in effect.
23937 If not set, then &%tls_require_ciphers%& will be used.
23938 Normal SMTP delivery is not able to make strong demands of TLS cipher
23939 configuration, because delivery will fall back to plaintext. Once DANE has
23940 been determined to be in effect, there is no plaintext fallback and making the
23941 TLS cipherlist configuration stronger will increase security, rather than
23942 counter-intuitively decreasing it.
23943 If the option expands to be empty or is forced to fail, then it will
23944 be treated as unset and &%tls_require_ciphers%& will be used instead.
23945
23946
23947 .option data_timeout smtp time 5m
23948 This sets a timeout for the transmission of each block in the data portion of
23949 the message. As a result, the overall timeout for a message depends on the size
23950 of the message. Its value must not be zero. See also &%final_timeout%&.
23951
23952
23953 .option dkim_domain smtp string list&!! unset
23954 .option dkim_selector smtp string&!! unset
23955 .option dkim_private_key smtp string&!! unset
23956 .option dkim_canon smtp string&!! unset
23957 .option dkim_strict smtp string&!! unset
23958 .option dkim_sign_headers smtp string&!! "per RFC"
23959 .option dkim_hash smtp string&!! sha256
23960 .option dkim_identity smtp string&!! unset
23961 DKIM signing options. For details see section &<<SECDKIMSIGN>>&.
23962
23963
23964 .option delay_after_cutoff smtp boolean true
23965 This option controls what happens when all remote IP addresses for a given
23966 domain have been inaccessible for so long that they have passed their retry
23967 cutoff times.
23968
23969 In the default state, if the next retry time has not been reached for any of
23970 them, the address is bounced without trying any deliveries. In other words,
23971 Exim delays retrying an IP address after the final cutoff time until a new
23972 retry time is reached, and can therefore bounce an address without ever trying
23973 a delivery, when machines have been down for a long time. Some people are
23974 unhappy at this prospect, so...
23975
23976 If &%delay_after_cutoff%& is set false, Exim behaves differently. If all IP
23977 addresses are past their final cutoff time, Exim tries to deliver to those
23978 IP addresses that have not been tried since the message arrived. If there are
23979 none, of if they all fail, the address is bounced. In other words, it does not
23980 delay when a new message arrives, but immediately tries those expired IP
23981 addresses that haven't been tried since the message arrived. If there is a
23982 continuous stream of messages for the dead hosts, unsetting
23983 &%delay_after_cutoff%& means that there will be many more attempts to deliver
23984 to them.
23985
23986
23987 .option dns_qualify_single smtp boolean true
23988 If the &%hosts%& or &%fallback_hosts%& option is being used,
23989 and the &%gethostbyname%& option is false,
23990 the RES_DEFNAMES resolver option is set. See the &%qualify_single%& option
23991 in chapter &<<CHAPdnslookup>>& for more details.
23992
23993
23994 .option dns_search_parents smtp boolean false
23995 If the &%hosts%& or &%fallback_hosts%& option is being used, and the
23996 &%gethostbyname%& option is false, the RES_DNSRCH resolver option is set.
23997 See the &%search_parents%& option in chapter &<<CHAPdnslookup>>& for more
23998 details.
23999
24000
24001 .option dnssec_request_domains smtp "domain list&!!" unset
24002 .cindex "MX record" "security"
24003 .cindex "DNSSEC" "MX lookup"
24004 .cindex "security" "MX lookup"
24005 .cindex "DNS" "DNSSEC"
24006 DNS lookups for domains matching &%dnssec_request_domains%& will be done with
24007 the dnssec request bit set.
24008 This applies to all of the SRV, MX, AAAA, A lookup sequence.
24009
24010
24011
24012 .option dnssec_require_domains smtp "domain list&!!" unset
24013 .cindex "MX record" "security"
24014 .cindex "DNSSEC" "MX lookup"
24015 .cindex "security" "MX lookup"
24016 .cindex "DNS" "DNSSEC"
24017 DNS lookups for domains matching &%dnssec_require_domains%& will be done with
24018 the dnssec request bit set. Any returns not having the Authenticated Data bit
24019 (AD bit) set will be ignored and logged as a host-lookup failure.
24020 This applies to all of the SRV, MX, AAAA, A lookup sequence.
24021
24022
24023
24024 .option dscp smtp string&!! unset
24025 .cindex "DCSP" "outbound"
24026 This option causes the DSCP value associated with a socket to be set to one
24027 of a number of fixed strings or to numeric value.
24028 The &%-bI:dscp%& option may be used to ask Exim which names it knows of.
24029 Common values include &`throughput`&, &`mincost`&, and on newer systems
24030 &`ef`&, &`af41`&, etc. Numeric values may be in the range 0 to 0x3F.
24031
24032 The outbound packets from Exim will be marked with this value in the header
24033 (for IPv4, the TOS field; for IPv6, the TCLASS field); there is no guarantee
24034 that these values will have any effect, not be stripped by networking
24035 equipment, or do much of anything without cooperation with your Network
24036 Engineer and those of all network operators between the source and destination.
24037
24038
24039 .option fallback_hosts smtp "string list" unset
24040 .cindex "fallback" "hosts specified on transport"
24041 String expansion is not applied to this option. The argument must be a
24042 colon-separated list of host names or IP addresses, optionally also including
24043 port numbers, though the separator can be changed, as described in section
24044 &<<SECTlistconstruct>>&. Each individual item in the list is the same as an
24045 item in a &%route_list%& setting for the &(manualroute)& router, as described
24046 in section &<<SECTformatonehostitem>>&.
24047
24048 Fallback hosts can also be specified on routers, which associate them with the
24049 addresses they process. As for the &%hosts%& option without &%hosts_override%&,
24050 &%fallback_hosts%& specified on the transport is used only if the address does
24051 not have its own associated fallback host list. Unlike &%hosts%&, a setting of
24052 &%fallback_hosts%& on an address is not overridden by &%hosts_override%&.
24053 However, &%hosts_randomize%& does apply to fallback host lists.
24054
24055 If Exim is unable to deliver to any of the hosts for a particular address, and
24056 the errors are not permanent rejections, the address is put on a separate
24057 transport queue with its host list replaced by the fallback hosts, unless the
24058 address was routed via MX records and the current host was in the original MX
24059 list. In that situation, the fallback host list is not used.
24060
24061 Once normal deliveries are complete, the fallback queue is delivered by
24062 re-running the same transports with the new host lists. If several failing
24063 addresses have the same fallback hosts (and &%max_rcpt%& permits it), a single
24064 copy of the message is sent.
24065
24066 The resolution of the host names on the fallback list is controlled by the
24067 &%gethostbyname%& option, as for the &%hosts%& option. Fallback hosts apply
24068 both to cases when the host list comes with the address and when it is taken
24069 from &%hosts%&. This option provides a &"use a smart host only if delivery
24070 fails"& facility.
24071
24072
24073 .option final_timeout smtp time 10m
24074 This is the timeout that applies while waiting for the response to the final
24075 line containing just &"."& that terminates a message. Its value must not be
24076 zero.
24077
24078 .option gethostbyname smtp boolean false
24079 If this option is true when the &%hosts%& and/or &%fallback_hosts%& options are
24080 being used, names are looked up using &[gethostbyname()]&
24081 (or &[getipnodebyname()]& when available)
24082 instead of using the DNS. Of course, that function may in fact use the DNS, but
24083 it may also consult other sources of information such as &_/etc/hosts_&.
24084
24085 .option gnutls_compat_mode smtp boolean unset
24086 This option controls whether GnuTLS is used in compatibility mode in an Exim
24087 server. This reduces security slightly, but improves interworking with older
24088 implementations of TLS.
24089
24090 .option helo_data smtp string&!! "see below"
24091 .cindex "HELO" "argument, setting"
24092 .cindex "EHLO" "argument, setting"
24093 .cindex "LHLO argument setting"
24094 The value of this option is expanded after a connection to a another host has
24095 been set up. The result is used as the argument for the EHLO, HELO, or LHLO
24096 command that starts the outgoing SMTP or LMTP session. The default value of the
24097 option is:
24098 .code
24099 $primary_hostname
24100 .endd
24101 During the expansion, the variables &$host$& and &$host_address$& are set to
24102 the identity of the remote host, and the variables &$sending_ip_address$& and
24103 &$sending_port$& are set to the local IP address and port number that are being
24104 used. These variables can be used to generate different values for different
24105 servers or different local IP addresses. For example, if you want the string
24106 that is used for &%helo_data%& to be obtained by a DNS lookup of the outgoing
24107 interface address, you could use this:
24108 .code
24109 helo_data = ${lookup dnsdb{ptr=$sending_ip_address}{$value}\
24110 {$primary_hostname}}
24111 .endd
24112 The use of &%helo_data%& applies both to sending messages and when doing
24113 callouts.
24114
24115 .option hosts smtp "string list&!!" unset
24116 Hosts are associated with an address by a router such as &(dnslookup)&, which
24117 finds the hosts by looking up the address domain in the DNS, or by
24118 &(manualroute)&, which has lists of hosts in its configuration. However,
24119 email addresses can be passed to the &(smtp)& transport by any router, and not
24120 all of them can provide an associated list of hosts.
24121
24122 The &%hosts%& option specifies a list of hosts to be used if the address being
24123 processed does not have any hosts associated with it. The hosts specified by
24124 &%hosts%& are also used, whether or not the address has its own hosts, if
24125 &%hosts_override%& is set.
24126
24127 The string is first expanded, before being interpreted as a colon-separated
24128 list of host names or IP addresses, possibly including port numbers. The
24129 separator may be changed to something other than colon, as described in section
24130 &<<SECTlistconstruct>>&. Each individual item in the list is the same as an
24131 item in a &%route_list%& setting for the &(manualroute)& router, as described
24132 in section &<<SECTformatonehostitem>>&. However, note that the &`/MX`& facility
24133 of the &(manualroute)& router is not available here.
24134
24135 If the expansion fails, delivery is deferred. Unless the failure was caused by
24136 the inability to complete a lookup, the error is logged to the panic log as
24137 well as the main log. Host names are looked up either by searching directly for
24138 address records in the DNS or by calling &[gethostbyname()]& (or
24139 &[getipnodebyname()]& when available), depending on the setting of the
24140 &%gethostbyname%& option. When Exim is compiled with IPv6 support, if a host
24141 that is looked up in the DNS has both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, both types of
24142 address are used.
24143
24144 During delivery, the hosts are tried in order, subject to their retry status,
24145 unless &%hosts_randomize%& is set.
24146
24147
24148 .option hosts_avoid_esmtp smtp "host list&!!" unset
24149 .cindex "ESMTP, avoiding use of"
24150 .cindex "HELO" "forcing use of"
24151 .cindex "EHLO" "avoiding use of"
24152 .cindex "PIPELINING" "avoiding the use of"
24153 This option is for use with broken hosts that announce ESMTP facilities (for
24154 example, PIPELINING) and then fail to implement them properly. When a host
24155 matches &%hosts_avoid_esmtp%&, Exim sends HELO rather than EHLO at the
24156 start of the SMTP session. This means that it cannot use any of the ESMTP
24157 facilities such as AUTH, PIPELINING, SIZE, and STARTTLS.
24158
24159
24160 .option hosts_avoid_pipelining smtp "host list&!!" unset
24161 .cindex "PIPELINING" "avoiding the use of"
24162 Exim will not use the SMTP PIPELINING extension when delivering to any host
24163 that matches this list, even if the server host advertises PIPELINING support.
24164
24165
24166 .option hosts_avoid_tls smtp "host list&!!" unset
24167 .cindex "TLS" "avoiding for certain hosts"
24168 Exim will not try to start a TLS session when delivering to any host that
24169 matches this list. See chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>& for details of TLS.
24170
24171 .option hosts_verify_avoid_tls smtp "host list&!!" unset
24172 .cindex "TLS" "avoiding for certain hosts"
24173 Exim will not try to start a TLS session for a verify callout,
24174 or when delivering in cutthrough mode,
24175 to any host that matches this list.
24176
24177
24178 .option hosts_max_try smtp integer 5
24179 .cindex "host" "maximum number to try"
24180 .cindex "limit" "number of hosts tried"
24181 .cindex "limit" "number of MX tried"
24182 .cindex "MX record" "maximum tried"
24183 This option limits the number of IP addresses that are tried for any one
24184 delivery in cases where there are temporary delivery errors. Section
24185 &<<SECTvalhosmax>>& describes in detail how the value of this option is used.
24186
24187
24188 .option hosts_max_try_hardlimit smtp integer 50
24189 This is an additional check on the maximum number of IP addresses that Exim
24190 tries for any one delivery. Section &<<SECTvalhosmax>>& describes its use and
24191 why it exists.
24192
24193
24194
24195 .option hosts_nopass_tls smtp "host list&!!" unset
24196 .cindex "TLS" "passing connection"
24197 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
24198 .cindex "TLS" "multiple message deliveries"
24199 For any host that matches this list, a connection on which a TLS session has
24200 been started will not be passed to a new delivery process for sending another
24201 message on the same connection. See section &<<SECTmulmessam>>& for an
24202 explanation of when this might be needed.
24203
24204 .option hosts_noproxy_tls smtp "host list&!!" *
24205 .cindex "TLS" "passing connection"
24206 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
24207 .cindex "TLS" "multiple message deliveries"
24208 For any host that matches this list, a TLS session which has
24209 been started will not be passed to a new delivery process for sending another
24210 message on the same session.
24211
24212 The traditional implementation closes down TLS and re-starts it in the new
24213 process, on the same open TCP connection, for each successive message
24214 sent. If permitted by this option a pipe to to the new process is set up
24215 instead, and the original process maintains the TLS connection and proxies
24216 the SMTP connection from and to the new process and any subsequents.
24217 The new process has no access to TLS information, so cannot include it in
24218 logging.
24219
24220
24221
24222 .option hosts_override smtp boolean false
24223 If this option is set and the &%hosts%& option is also set, any hosts that are
24224 attached to the address are ignored, and instead the hosts specified by the
24225 &%hosts%& option are always used. This option does not apply to
24226 &%fallback_hosts%&.
24227
24228
24229 .option hosts_randomize smtp boolean false
24230 .cindex "randomized host list"
24231 .cindex "host" "list of; randomized"
24232 .cindex "fallback" "randomized hosts"
24233 If this option is set, and either the list of hosts is taken from the
24234 &%hosts%& or the &%fallback_hosts%& option, or the hosts supplied by the router
24235 were not obtained from MX records (this includes fallback hosts from the
24236 router), and were not randomized by the router, the order of trying the hosts
24237 is randomized each time the transport runs. Randomizing the order of a host
24238 list can be used to do crude load sharing.
24239
24240 When &%hosts_randomize%& is true, a host list may be split into groups whose
24241 order is separately randomized. This makes it possible to set up MX-like
24242 behaviour. The boundaries between groups are indicated by an item that is just
24243 &`+`& in the host list. For example:
24244 .code
24245 hosts = host1:host2:host3:+:host4:host5
24246 .endd
24247 The order of the first three hosts and the order of the last two hosts is
24248 randomized for each use, but the first three always end up before the last two.
24249 If &%hosts_randomize%& is not set, a &`+`& item in the list is ignored.
24250
24251 .option hosts_require_auth smtp "host list&!!" unset
24252 .cindex "authentication" "required by client"
24253 This option provides a list of servers for which authentication must succeed
24254 before Exim will try to transfer a message. If authentication fails for
24255 servers which are not in this list, Exim tries to send unauthenticated. If
24256 authentication fails for one of these servers, delivery is deferred. This
24257 temporary error is detectable in the retry rules, so it can be turned into a
24258 hard failure if required. See also &%hosts_try_auth%&, and chapter
24259 &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>& for details of authentication.
24260
24261
24262 .option hosts_request_ocsp smtp "host list&!!" *
24263 .cindex "TLS" "requiring for certain servers"
24264 Exim will request a Certificate Status on a
24265 TLS session for any host that matches this list.
24266 &%tls_verify_certificates%& should also be set for the transport.
24267
24268 .option hosts_require_dane smtp "host list&!!" unset
24269 .cindex DANE "transport options"
24270 .cindex DANE "requiring for certain servers"
24271 If built with DANE support, Exim will require that a DNSSEC-validated
24272 TLSA record is present for any host matching the list,
24273 and that a DANE-verified TLS connection is made.
24274 There will be no fallback to in-clear communication.
24275 See section &<<SECDANE>>&.
24276
24277 .option hosts_require_ocsp smtp "host list&!!" unset
24278 .cindex "TLS" "requiring for certain servers"
24279 Exim will request, and check for a valid Certificate Status being given, on a
24280 TLS session for any host that matches this list.
24281 &%tls_verify_certificates%& should also be set for the transport.
24282
24283 .option hosts_require_tls smtp "host list&!!" unset
24284 .cindex "TLS" "requiring for certain servers"
24285 Exim will insist on using a TLS session when delivering to any host that
24286 matches this list. See chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>& for details of TLS.
24287 &*Note*&: This option affects outgoing mail only. To insist on TLS for
24288 incoming messages, use an appropriate ACL.
24289
24290 .option hosts_try_auth smtp "host list&!!" unset
24291 .cindex "authentication" "optional in client"
24292 This option provides a list of servers to which, provided they announce
24293 authentication support, Exim will attempt to authenticate as a client when it
24294 connects. If authentication fails, Exim will try to transfer the message
24295 unauthenticated. See also &%hosts_require_auth%&, and chapter
24296 &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>& for details of authentication.
24297
24298 .option hosts_try_chunking smtp "host list&!!" *
24299 .cindex CHUNKING "enabling, in client"
24300 .cindex BDAT "SMTP command"
24301 .cindex "RFC 3030" "CHUNKING"
24302 This option provides a list of servers to which, provided they announce
24303 CHUNKING support, Exim will attempt to use BDAT commands rather than DATA.
24304 BDAT will not be used in conjunction with a transport filter.
24305
24306 .option hosts_try_dane smtp "host list&!!" unset
24307 .cindex DANE "transport options"
24308 .cindex DANE "attempting for certain servers"
24309 If built with DANE support, Exim will lookup a
24310 TLSA record for any host matching the list.
24311 If found and verified by DNSSEC,
24312 a DANE-verified TLS connection is made to that host;
24313 there will be no fallback to in-clear communication.
24314 See section &<<SECDANE>>&.
24315
24316 .option hosts_try_fastopen smtp "host list&!!" unset
24317 .cindex "fast open, TCP" "enabling, in client"
24318 .cindex "TCP Fast Open" "enabling, in client"
24319 .cindex "RFC 7413" "TCP Fast Open"
24320 This option provides a list of servers to which, provided
24321 the facility is supported by this system, Exim will attempt to
24322 perform a TCP Fast Open.
24323 No data is sent on the SYN segment but, if the remote server also
24324 supports the facility, it can send its SMTP banner immediately after
24325 the SYN,ACK segment. This can save up to one round-trip time.
24326
24327 The facility is only active for previously-contacted servers,
24328 as the initiator must present a cookie in the SYN segment.
24329
24330 On (at least some) current Linux distributions the facility must be enabled
24331 in the kernel by the sysadmin before the support is usable.
24332 There is no option for control of the server side; if the system supports
24333 it it is always enabled. Note that lengthy operations in the connect ACL,
24334 such as DNSBL lookups, will still delay the emission of the SMTP banner.
24335
24336 .option hosts_try_prdr smtp "host list&!!" *
24337 .cindex "PRDR" "enabling, optional in client"
24338 This option provides a list of servers to which, provided they announce
24339 PRDR support, Exim will attempt to negotiate PRDR
24340 for multi-recipient messages.
24341 The option can usually be left as default.
24342
24343 .option interface smtp "string list&!!" unset
24344 .cindex "bind IP address"
24345 .cindex "IP address" "binding"
24346 .vindex "&$host$&"
24347 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
24348 This option specifies which interface to bind to when making an outgoing SMTP
24349 call. The value is an IP address, not an interface name such as
24350 &`eth0`&. Do not confuse this with the interface address that was used when a
24351 message was received, which is in &$received_ip_address$&, formerly known as
24352 &$interface_address$&. The name was changed to minimize confusion with the
24353 outgoing interface address. There is no variable that contains an outgoing
24354 interface address because, unless it is set by this option, its value is
24355 unknown.
24356
24357 During the expansion of the &%interface%& option the variables &$host$& and
24358 &$host_address$& refer to the host to which a connection is about to be made
24359 during the expansion of the string. Forced expansion failure, or an empty
24360 string result causes the option to be ignored. Otherwise, after expansion, the
24361 string must be a list of IP addresses, colon-separated by default, but the
24362 separator can be changed in the usual way. For example:
24363 .code
24364 interface = <; 192.168.123.123 ; 3ffe:ffff:836f::fe86:a061
24365 .endd
24366 The first interface of the correct type (IPv4 or IPv6) is used for the outgoing
24367 connection. If none of them are the correct type, the option is ignored. If
24368 &%interface%& is not set, or is ignored, the system's IP functions choose which
24369 interface to use if the host has more than one.
24370
24371
24372 .option keepalive smtp boolean true
24373 .cindex "keepalive" "on outgoing connection"
24374 This option controls the setting of SO_KEEPALIVE on outgoing TCP/IP socket
24375 connections. When set, it causes the kernel to probe idle connections
24376 periodically, by sending packets with &"old"& sequence numbers. The other end
24377 of the connection should send a acknowledgment if the connection is still okay
24378 or a reset if the connection has been aborted. The reason for doing this is
24379 that it has the beneficial effect of freeing up certain types of connection
24380 that can get stuck when the remote host is disconnected without tidying up the
24381 TCP/IP call properly. The keepalive mechanism takes several hours to detect
24382 unreachable hosts.
24383
24384
24385 .option lmtp_ignore_quota smtp boolean false
24386 .cindex "LMTP" "ignoring quota errors"
24387 If this option is set true when the &%protocol%& option is set to &"lmtp"&, the
24388 string &`IGNOREQUOTA`& is added to RCPT commands, provided that the LMTP server
24389 has advertised support for IGNOREQUOTA in its response to the LHLO command.
24390
24391 .option max_rcpt smtp integer 100
24392 .cindex "RCPT" "maximum number of outgoing"
24393 This option limits the number of RCPT commands that are sent in a single
24394 SMTP message transaction. Each set of addresses is treated independently, and
24395 so can cause parallel connections to the same host if &%remote_max_parallel%&
24396 permits this.
24397
24398
24399 .option multi_domain smtp boolean&!! true
24400 .vindex "&$domain$&"
24401 When this option is set, the &(smtp)& transport can handle a number of
24402 addresses containing a mixture of different domains provided they all resolve
24403 to the same list of hosts. Turning the option off restricts the transport to
24404 handling only one domain at a time. This is useful if you want to use
24405 &$domain$& in an expansion for the transport, because it is set only when there
24406 is a single domain involved in a remote delivery.
24407
24408 It is expanded per-address and can depend on any of
24409 &$address_data$&, &$domain_data$&, &$local_part_data$&,
24410 &$host$&, &$host_address$& and &$host_port$&.
24411
24412 .option port smtp string&!! "see below"
24413 .cindex "port" "sending TCP/IP"
24414 .cindex "TCP/IP" "setting outgoing port"
24415 This option specifies the TCP/IP port on the server to which Exim connects.
24416 &*Note:*& Do not confuse this with the port that was used when a message was
24417 received, which is in &$received_port$&, formerly known as &$interface_port$&.
24418 The name was changed to minimize confusion with the outgoing port. There is no
24419 variable that contains an outgoing port.
24420
24421 If the value of this option begins with a digit it is taken as a port number;
24422 otherwise it is looked up using &[getservbyname()]&. The default value is
24423 normally &"smtp"&, but if &%protocol%& is set to &"lmtp"&, the default is
24424 &"lmtp"&. If the expansion fails, or if a port number cannot be found, delivery
24425 is deferred.
24426
24427
24428
24429 .option protocol smtp string smtp
24430 .cindex "LMTP" "over TCP/IP"
24431 .cindex "ssmtp protocol" "outbound"
24432 .cindex "TLS" "SSL-on-connect outbound"
24433 .vindex "&$port$&"
24434 If this option is set to &"lmtp"& instead of &"smtp"&, the default value for
24435 the &%port%& option changes to &"lmtp"&, and the transport operates the LMTP
24436 protocol (RFC 2033) instead of SMTP. This protocol is sometimes used for local
24437 deliveries into closed message stores. Exim also has support for running LMTP
24438 over a pipe to a local process &-- see chapter &<<CHAPLMTP>>&.
24439
24440 If this option is set to &"smtps"&, the default value for the &%port%& option
24441 changes to &"smtps"&, and the transport initiates TLS immediately after
24442 connecting, as an outbound SSL-on-connect, instead of using STARTTLS to upgrade.
24443 The Internet standards bodies strongly discourage use of this mode.
24444
24445
24446 .option retry_include_ip_address smtp boolean&!! true
24447 Exim normally includes both the host name and the IP address in the key it
24448 constructs for indexing retry data after a temporary delivery failure. This
24449 means that when one of several IP addresses for a host is failing, it gets
24450 tried periodically (controlled by the retry rules), but use of the other IP
24451 addresses is not affected.
24452
24453 However, in some dialup environments hosts are assigned a different IP address
24454 each time they connect. In this situation the use of the IP address as part of
24455 the retry key leads to undesirable behaviour. Setting this option false causes
24456 Exim to use only the host name.
24457 Since it is expanded it can be made to depend on the host or domain.
24458
24459
24460 .option serialize_hosts smtp "host list&!!" unset
24461 .cindex "serializing connections"
24462 .cindex "host" "serializing connections"
24463 Because Exim operates in a distributed manner, if several messages for the same
24464 host arrive at around the same time, more than one simultaneous connection to
24465 the remote host can occur. This is not usually a problem except when there is a
24466 slow link between the hosts. In that situation it may be helpful to restrict
24467 Exim to one connection at a time. This can be done by setting
24468 &%serialize_hosts%& to match the relevant hosts.
24469
24470 .cindex "hints database" "serializing deliveries to a host"
24471 Exim implements serialization by means of a hints database in which a record is
24472 written whenever a process connects to one of the restricted hosts. The record
24473 is deleted when the connection is completed. Obviously there is scope for
24474 records to get left lying around if there is a system or program crash. To
24475 guard against this, Exim ignores any records that are more than six hours old.
24476
24477 If you set up this kind of serialization, you should also arrange to delete the
24478 relevant hints database whenever your system reboots. The names of the files
24479 start with &_misc_& and they are kept in the &_spool/db_& directory. There
24480 may be one or two files, depending on the type of DBM in use. The same files
24481 are used for ETRN serialization.
24482
24483 See also the &%max_parallel%& generic transport option.
24484
24485
24486 .option size_addition smtp integer 1024
24487 .cindex "SMTP" "SIZE"
24488 .cindex "message" "size issue for transport filter"
24489 .cindex "size" "of message"
24490 .cindex "transport" "filter"
24491 .cindex "filter" "transport filter"
24492 If a remote SMTP server indicates that it supports the SIZE option of the
24493 MAIL command, Exim uses this to pass over the message size at the start of
24494 an SMTP transaction. It adds the value of &%size_addition%& to the value it
24495 sends, to allow for headers and other text that may be added during delivery by
24496 configuration options or in a transport filter. It may be necessary to increase
24497 this if a lot of text is added to messages.
24498
24499 Alternatively, if the value of &%size_addition%& is set negative, it disables
24500 the use of the SIZE option altogether.
24501
24502
24503 .option socks_proxy smtp string&!! unset
24504 .cindex proxy SOCKS
24505 This option enables use of SOCKS proxies for connections made by the
24506 transport. For details see section &<<SECTproxySOCKS>>&.
24507
24508
24509 .option tls_certificate smtp string&!! unset
24510 .cindex "TLS" "client certificate, location of"
24511 .cindex "certificate" "client, location of"
24512 .vindex "&$host$&"
24513 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
24514 The value of this option must be the absolute path to a file which contains the
24515 client's certificate, for possible use when sending a message over an encrypted
24516 connection. The values of &$host$& and &$host_address$& are set to the name and
24517 address of the server during the expansion. See chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>& for
24518 details of TLS.
24519
24520 &*Note*&: This option must be set if you want Exim to be able to use a TLS
24521 certificate when sending messages as a client. The global option of the same
24522 name specifies the certificate for Exim as a server; it is not automatically
24523 assumed that the same certificate should be used when Exim is operating as a
24524 client.
24525
24526
24527 .option tls_crl smtp string&!! unset
24528 .cindex "TLS" "client certificate revocation list"
24529 .cindex "certificate" "revocation list for client"
24530 This option specifies a certificate revocation list. The expanded value must
24531 be the name of a file that contains a CRL in PEM format.
24532
24533
24534 .option tls_dh_min_bits smtp integer 1024
24535 .cindex "TLS" "Diffie-Hellman minimum acceptable size"
24536 When establishing a TLS session, if a ciphersuite which uses Diffie-Hellman
24537 key agreement is negotiated, the server will provide a large prime number
24538 for use. This option establishes the minimum acceptable size of that number.
24539 If the parameter offered by the server is too small, then the TLS handshake
24540 will fail.
24541
24542 Only supported when using GnuTLS.
24543
24544
24545 .option tls_privatekey smtp string&!! unset
24546 .cindex "TLS" "client private key, location of"
24547 .vindex "&$host$&"
24548 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
24549 The value of this option must be the absolute path to a file which contains the
24550 client's private key. This is used when sending a message over an encrypted
24551 connection using a client certificate. The values of &$host$& and
24552 &$host_address$& are set to the name and address of the server during the
24553 expansion. If this option is unset, or the expansion is forced to fail, or the
24554 result is an empty string, the private key is assumed to be in the same file as
24555 the certificate. See chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>& for details of TLS.
24556
24557
24558 .option tls_require_ciphers smtp string&!! unset
24559 .cindex "TLS" "requiring specific ciphers"
24560 .cindex "cipher" "requiring specific"
24561 .vindex "&$host$&"
24562 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
24563 The value of this option must be a list of permitted cipher suites, for use
24564 when setting up an outgoing encrypted connection. (There is a global option of
24565 the same name for controlling incoming connections.) The values of &$host$& and
24566 &$host_address$& are set to the name and address of the server during the
24567 expansion. See chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>& for details of TLS; note that this option
24568 is used in different ways by OpenSSL and GnuTLS (see sections
24569 &<<SECTreqciphssl>>& and &<<SECTreqciphgnu>>&). For GnuTLS, the order of the
24570 ciphers is a preference order.
24571
24572
24573
24574 .option tls_sni smtp string&!! unset
24575 .cindex "TLS" "Server Name Indication"
24576 .vindex "&$tls_sni$&"
24577 If this option is set then it sets the $tls_out_sni variable and causes any
24578 TLS session to pass this value as the Server Name Indication extension to
24579 the remote side, which can be used by the remote side to select an appropriate
24580 certificate and private key for the session.
24581
24582 See &<<SECTtlssni>>& for more information.
24583
24584 Note that for OpenSSL, this feature requires a build of OpenSSL that supports
24585 TLS extensions.
24586
24587
24588
24589
24590 .option tls_tempfail_tryclear smtp boolean true
24591 .cindex "4&'xx'& responses" "to STARTTLS"
24592 When the server host is not in &%hosts_require_tls%&, and there is a problem in
24593 setting up a TLS session, this option determines whether or not Exim should try
24594 to deliver the message unencrypted. If it is set false, delivery to the
24595 current host is deferred; if there are other hosts, they are tried. If this
24596 option is set true, Exim attempts to deliver unencrypted after a 4&'xx'&
24597 response to STARTTLS. Also, if STARTTLS is accepted, but the subsequent
24598 TLS negotiation fails, Exim closes the current connection (because it is in an
24599 unknown state), opens a new one to the same host, and then tries the delivery
24600 in clear.
24601
24602
24603 .option tls_try_verify_hosts smtp "host list&!!" *
24604 .cindex "TLS" "server certificate verification"
24605 .cindex "certificate" "verification of server"
24606 This option gives a list of hosts for which, on encrypted connections,
24607 certificate verification will be tried but need not succeed.
24608 The &%tls_verify_certificates%& option must also be set.
24609 Note that unless the host is in this list
24610 TLS connections will be denied to hosts using self-signed certificates
24611 when &%tls_verify_certificates%& is matched.
24612 The &$tls_out_certificate_verified$& variable is set when
24613 certificate verification succeeds.
24614
24615
24616 .option tls_verify_cert_hostnames smtp "host list&!!" *
24617 .cindex "TLS" "server certificate hostname verification"
24618 .cindex "certificate" "verification of server"
24619 This option give a list of hosts for which,
24620 while verifying the server certificate,
24621 checks will be included on the host name
24622 (note that this will generally be the result of a DNS MX lookup)
24623 versus Subject and Subject-Alternate-Name fields. Wildcard names are permitted
24624 limited to being the initial component of a 3-or-more component FQDN.
24625
24626 There is no equivalent checking on client certificates.
24627
24628
24629 .option tls_verify_certificates smtp string&!! system
24630 .cindex "TLS" "server certificate verification"
24631 .cindex "certificate" "verification of server"
24632 .vindex "&$host$&"
24633 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
24634 The value of this option must be either the
24635 word "system"
24636 or the absolute path to
24637 a file or directory containing permitted certificates for servers,
24638 for use when setting up an encrypted connection.
24639
24640 The "system" value for the option will use a location compiled into the SSL library.
24641 This is not available for GnuTLS versions preceding 3.0.20; a value of "system"
24642 is taken as empty and an explicit location
24643 must be specified.
24644
24645 The use of a directory for the option value is not available for GnuTLS versions
24646 preceding 3.3.6 and a single file must be used.
24647
24648 With OpenSSL the certificates specified
24649 explicitly
24650 either by file or directory
24651 are added to those given by the system default location.
24652
24653 The values of &$host$& and
24654 &$host_address$& are set to the name and address of the server during the
24655 expansion of this option. See chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>& for details of TLS.
24656
24657 For back-compatibility,
24658 if neither tls_verify_hosts nor tls_try_verify_hosts are set
24659 (a single-colon empty list counts as being set)
24660 and certificate verification fails the TLS connection is closed.
24661
24662
24663 .option tls_verify_hosts smtp "host list&!!" unset
24664 .cindex "TLS" "server certificate verification"
24665 .cindex "certificate" "verification of server"
24666 This option gives a list of hosts for which, on encrypted connections,
24667 certificate verification must succeed.
24668 The &%tls_verify_certificates%& option must also be set.
24669 If both this option and &%tls_try_verify_hosts%& are unset
24670 operation is as if this option selected all hosts.
24671
24672
24673
24674
24675 .section "How the limits for the number of hosts to try are used" &&&
24676 "SECTvalhosmax"
24677 .cindex "host" "maximum number to try"
24678 .cindex "limit" "hosts; maximum number tried"
24679 There are two options that are concerned with the number of hosts that are
24680 tried when an SMTP delivery takes place. They are &%hosts_max_try%& and
24681 &%hosts_max_try_hardlimit%&.
24682
24683
24684 The &%hosts_max_try%& option limits the number of hosts that are tried
24685 for a single delivery. However, despite the term &"host"& in its name, the
24686 option actually applies to each IP address independently. In other words, a
24687 multihomed host is treated as several independent hosts, just as it is for
24688 retrying.
24689
24690 Many of the larger ISPs have multiple MX records which often point to
24691 multihomed hosts. As a result, a list of a dozen or more IP addresses may be
24692 created as a result of routing one of these domains.
24693
24694 Trying every single IP address on such a long list does not seem sensible; if
24695 several at the top of the list fail, it is reasonable to assume there is some
24696 problem that is likely to affect all of them. Roughly speaking, the value of
24697 &%hosts_max_try%& is the maximum number that are tried before deferring the
24698 delivery. However, the logic cannot be quite that simple.
24699
24700 Firstly, IP addresses that are skipped because their retry times have not
24701 arrived do not count, and in addition, addresses that are past their retry
24702 limits are also not counted, even when they are tried. This means that when
24703 some IP addresses are past their retry limits, more than the value of
24704 &%hosts_max_retry%& may be tried. The reason for this behaviour is to ensure
24705 that all IP addresses are considered before timing out an email address (but
24706 see below for an exception).
24707
24708 Secondly, when the &%hosts_max_try%& limit is reached, Exim looks down the host
24709 list to see if there is a subsequent host with a different (higher valued) MX.
24710 If there is, that host is considered next, and the current IP address is used
24711 but not counted. This behaviour helps in the case of a domain with a retry rule
24712 that hardly ever delays any hosts, as is now explained:
24713
24714 Consider the case of a long list of hosts with one MX value, and a few with a
24715 higher MX value. If &%hosts_max_try%& is small (the default is 5) only a few
24716 hosts at the top of the list are tried at first. With the default retry rule,
24717 which specifies increasing retry times, the higher MX hosts are eventually
24718 tried when those at the top of the list are skipped because they have not
24719 reached their retry times.
24720
24721 However, it is common practice to put a fixed short retry time on domains for
24722 large ISPs, on the grounds that their servers are rarely down for very long.
24723 Unfortunately, these are exactly the domains that tend to resolve to long lists
24724 of hosts. The short retry time means that the lowest MX hosts are tried every
24725 time. The attempts may be in a different order because of random sorting, but
24726 without the special MX check, the higher MX hosts would never be tried until
24727 all the lower MX hosts had timed out (which might be several days), because
24728 there are always some lower MX hosts that have reached their retry times. With
24729 the special check, Exim considers at least one IP address from each MX value at
24730 every delivery attempt, even if the &%hosts_max_try%& limit has already been
24731 reached.
24732
24733 The above logic means that &%hosts_max_try%& is not a hard limit, and in
24734 particular, Exim normally eventually tries all the IP addresses before timing
24735 out an email address. When &%hosts_max_try%& was implemented, this seemed a
24736 reasonable thing to do. Recently, however, some lunatic DNS configurations have
24737 been set up with hundreds of IP addresses for some domains. It can
24738 take a very long time indeed for an address to time out in these cases.
24739
24740 The &%hosts_max_try_hardlimit%& option was added to help with this problem.
24741 Exim never tries more than this number of IP addresses; if it hits this limit
24742 and they are all timed out, the email address is bounced, even though not all
24743 possible IP addresses have been tried.
24744 .ecindex IIDsmttra1
24745 .ecindex IIDsmttra2
24746
24747
24748
24749
24750
24751 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
24752 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
24753
24754 .chapter "Address rewriting" "CHAPrewrite"
24755 .scindex IIDaddrew "rewriting" "addresses"
24756 There are some circumstances in which Exim automatically rewrites domains in
24757 addresses. The two most common are when an address is given without a domain
24758 (referred to as an &"unqualified address"&) or when an address contains an
24759 abbreviated domain that is expanded by DNS lookup.
24760
24761 Unqualified envelope addresses are accepted only for locally submitted
24762 messages, or for messages that are received from hosts matching
24763 &%sender_unqualified_hosts%& or &%recipient_unqualified_hosts%&, as
24764 appropriate. Unqualified addresses in header lines are qualified if they are in
24765 locally submitted messages, or messages from hosts that are permitted to send
24766 unqualified envelope addresses. Otherwise, unqualified addresses in header
24767 lines are neither qualified nor rewritten.
24768
24769 One situation in which Exim does &'not'& automatically rewrite a domain is
24770 when it is the name of a CNAME record in the DNS. The older RFCs suggest that
24771 such a domain should be rewritten using the &"canonical"& name, and some MTAs
24772 do this. The new RFCs do not contain this suggestion.
24773
24774
24775 .section "Explicitly configured address rewriting" "SECID147"
24776 This chapter describes the rewriting rules that can be used in the
24777 main rewrite section of the configuration file, and also in the generic
24778 &%headers_rewrite%& option that can be set on any transport.
24779
24780 Some people believe that configured address rewriting is a Mortal Sin.
24781 Others believe that life is not possible without it. Exim provides the
24782 facility; you do not have to use it.
24783
24784 The main rewriting rules that appear in the &"rewrite"& section of the
24785 configuration file are applied to addresses in incoming messages, both envelope
24786 addresses and addresses in header lines. Each rule specifies the types of
24787 address to which it applies.
24788
24789 Whether or not addresses in header lines are rewritten depends on the origin of
24790 the headers and the type of rewriting. Global rewriting, that is, rewriting
24791 rules from the rewrite section of the configuration file, is applied only to
24792 those headers that were received with the message. Header lines that are added
24793 by ACLs or by a system filter or by individual routers or transports (which
24794 are specific to individual recipient addresses) are not rewritten by the global
24795 rules.
24796
24797 Rewriting at transport time, by means of the &%headers_rewrite%& option,
24798 applies all headers except those added by routers and transports. That is, as
24799 well as the headers that were received with the message, it also applies to
24800 headers that were added by an ACL or a system filter.
24801
24802
24803 In general, rewriting addresses from your own system or domain has some
24804 legitimacy. Rewriting other addresses should be done only with great care and
24805 in special circumstances. The author of Exim believes that rewriting should be
24806 used sparingly, and mainly for &"regularizing"& addresses in your own domains.
24807 Although it can sometimes be used as a routing tool, this is very strongly
24808 discouraged.
24809
24810 There are two commonly encountered circumstances where rewriting is used, as
24811 illustrated by these examples:
24812
24813 .ilist
24814 The company whose domain is &'hitch.fict.example'& has a number of hosts that
24815 exchange mail with each other behind a firewall, but there is only a single
24816 gateway to the outer world. The gateway rewrites &'*.hitch.fict.example'& as
24817 &'hitch.fict.example'& when sending mail off-site.
24818 .next
24819 A host rewrites the local parts of its own users so that, for example,
24820 &'fp42@hitch.fict.example'& becomes &'Ford.Prefect@hitch.fict.example'&.
24821 .endlist
24822
24823
24824
24825 .section "When does rewriting happen?" "SECID148"
24826 .cindex "rewriting" "timing of"
24827 .cindex "&ACL;" "rewriting addresses in"
24828 Configured address rewriting can take place at several different stages of a
24829 message's processing.
24830
24831 .vindex "&$sender_address$&"
24832 At the start of an ACL for MAIL, the sender address may have been rewritten
24833 by a special SMTP-time rewrite rule (see section &<<SECTrewriteS>>&), but no
24834 ordinary rewrite rules have yet been applied. If, however, the sender address
24835 is verified in the ACL, it is rewritten before verification, and remains
24836 rewritten thereafter. The subsequent value of &$sender_address$& is the
24837 rewritten address. This also applies if sender verification happens in a
24838 RCPT ACL. Otherwise, when the sender address is not verified, it is
24839 rewritten as soon as a message's header lines have been received.
24840
24841 .vindex "&$domain$&"
24842 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
24843 Similarly, at the start of an ACL for RCPT, the current recipient's address
24844 may have been rewritten by a special SMTP-time rewrite rule, but no ordinary
24845 rewrite rules have yet been applied to it. However, the behaviour is different
24846 from the sender address when a recipient is verified. The address is rewritten
24847 for the verification, but the rewriting is not remembered at this stage. The
24848 value of &$local_part$& and &$domain$& after verification are always the same
24849 as they were before (that is, they contain the unrewritten &-- except for
24850 SMTP-time rewriting &-- address).
24851
24852 As soon as a message's header lines have been received, all the envelope
24853 recipient addresses are permanently rewritten, and rewriting is also applied to
24854 the addresses in the header lines (if configured). This happens before adding
24855 any header lines that were specified in MAIL or RCPT ACLs, and
24856 .cindex "&[local_scan()]& function" "address rewriting; timing of"
24857 before the DATA ACL and &[local_scan()]& functions are run.
24858
24859 When an address is being routed, either for delivery or for verification,
24860 rewriting is applied immediately to child addresses that are generated by
24861 redirection, unless &%no_rewrite%& is set on the router.
24862
24863 .cindex "envelope sender" "rewriting at transport time"
24864 .cindex "rewriting" "at transport time"
24865 .cindex "header lines" "rewriting at transport time"
24866 At transport time, additional rewriting of addresses in header lines can be
24867 specified by setting the generic &%headers_rewrite%& option on a transport.
24868 This option contains rules that are identical in form to those in the rewrite
24869 section of the configuration file. They are applied to the original message
24870 header lines and any that were added by ACLs or a system filter. They are not
24871 applied to header lines that are added by routers or the transport.
24872
24873 The outgoing envelope sender can be rewritten by means of the &%return_path%&
24874 transport option. However, it is not possible to rewrite envelope recipients at
24875 transport time.
24876
24877
24878
24879
24880 .section "Testing the rewriting rules that apply on input" "SECID149"
24881 .cindex "rewriting" "testing"
24882 .cindex "testing" "rewriting"
24883 Exim's input rewriting configuration appears in a part of the run time
24884 configuration file headed by &"begin rewrite"&. It can be tested by the
24885 &%-brw%& command line option. This takes an address (which can be a full RFC
24886 2822 address) as its argument. The output is a list of how the address would be
24887 transformed by the rewriting rules for each of the different places it might
24888 appear in an incoming message, that is, for each different header and for the
24889 envelope sender and recipient fields. For example,
24890 .code
24891 exim -brw ph10@exim.workshop.example
24892 .endd
24893 might produce the output
24894 .code
24895 sender: Philip.Hazel@exim.workshop.example
24896 from: Philip.Hazel@exim.workshop.example
24897 to: ph10@exim.workshop.example
24898 cc: ph10@exim.workshop.example
24899 bcc: ph10@exim.workshop.example
24900 reply-to: Philip.Hazel@exim.workshop.example
24901 env-from: Philip.Hazel@exim.workshop.example
24902 env-to: ph10@exim.workshop.example
24903 .endd
24904 which shows that rewriting has been set up for that address when used in any of
24905 the source fields, but not when it appears as a recipient address. At the
24906 present time, there is no equivalent way of testing rewriting rules that are
24907 set for a particular transport.
24908
24909
24910 .section "Rewriting rules" "SECID150"
24911 .cindex "rewriting" "rules"
24912 The rewrite section of the configuration file consists of lines of rewriting
24913 rules in the form
24914 .display
24915 <&'source pattern'&> <&'replacement'&> <&'flags'&>
24916 .endd
24917 Rewriting rules that are specified for the &%headers_rewrite%& generic
24918 transport option are given as a colon-separated list. Each item in the list
24919 takes the same form as a line in the main rewriting configuration (except that
24920 any colons must be doubled, of course).
24921
24922 The formats of source patterns and replacement strings are described below.
24923 Each is terminated by white space, unless enclosed in double quotes, in which
24924 case normal quoting conventions apply inside the quotes. The flags are single
24925 characters which may appear in any order. Spaces and tabs between them are
24926 ignored.
24927
24928 For each address that could potentially be rewritten, the rules are scanned in
24929 order, and replacements for the address from earlier rules can themselves be
24930 replaced by later rules (but see the &"q"& and &"R"& flags).
24931
24932 The order in which addresses are rewritten is undefined, may change between
24933 releases, and must not be relied on, with one exception: when a message is
24934 received, the envelope sender is always rewritten first, before any header
24935 lines are rewritten. For example, the replacement string for a rewrite of an
24936 address in &'To:'& must not assume that the message's address in &'From:'& has
24937 (or has not) already been rewritten. However, a rewrite of &'From:'& may assume
24938 that the envelope sender has already been rewritten.
24939
24940 .vindex "&$domain$&"
24941 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
24942 The variables &$local_part$& and &$domain$& can be used in the replacement
24943 string to refer to the address that is being rewritten. Note that lookup-driven
24944 rewriting can be done by a rule of the form
24945 .code
24946 *@* ${lookup ...
24947 .endd
24948 where the lookup key uses &$1$& and &$2$& or &$local_part$& and &$domain$& to
24949 refer to the address that is being rewritten.
24950
24951
24952 .section "Rewriting patterns" "SECID151"
24953 .cindex "rewriting" "patterns"
24954 .cindex "address list" "in a rewriting pattern"
24955 The source pattern in a rewriting rule is any item which may appear in an
24956 address list (see section &<<SECTaddresslist>>&). It is in fact processed as a
24957 single-item address list, which means that it is expanded before being tested
24958 against the address. As always, if you use a regular expression as a pattern,
24959 you must take care to escape dollar and backslash characters, or use the &`\N`&
24960 facility to suppress string expansion within the regular expression.
24961
24962 Domains in patterns should be given in lower case. Local parts in patterns are
24963 case-sensitive. If you want to do case-insensitive matching of local parts, you
24964 can use a regular expression that starts with &`^(?i)`&.
24965
24966 .cindex "numerical variables (&$1$& &$2$& etc)" "in rewriting rules"
24967 After matching, the numerical variables &$1$&, &$2$&, etc. may be set,
24968 depending on the type of match which occurred. These can be used in the
24969 replacement string to insert portions of the incoming address. &$0$& always
24970 refers to the complete incoming address. When a regular expression is used, the
24971 numerical variables are set from its capturing subexpressions. For other types
24972 of pattern they are set as follows:
24973
24974 .ilist
24975 If a local part or domain starts with an asterisk, the numerical variables
24976 refer to the character strings matched by asterisks, with &$1$& associated with
24977 the first asterisk, and &$2$& with the second, if present. For example, if the
24978 pattern
24979 .code
24980 *queen@*.fict.example
24981 .endd
24982 is matched against the address &'hearts-queen@wonderland.fict.example'& then
24983 .code
24984 $0 = hearts-queen@wonderland.fict.example
24985 $1 = hearts-
24986 $2 = wonderland
24987 .endd
24988 Note that if the local part does not start with an asterisk, but the domain
24989 does, it is &$1$& that contains the wild part of the domain.
24990
24991 .next
24992 If the domain part of the pattern is a partial lookup, the wild and fixed parts
24993 of the domain are placed in the next available numerical variables. Suppose,
24994 for example, that the address &'foo@bar.baz.example'& is processed by a
24995 rewriting rule of the form
24996 .display
24997 &`*@partial-dbm;/some/dbm/file`& <&'replacement string'&>
24998 .endd
24999 and the key in the file that matches the domain is &`*.baz.example`&. Then
25000 .code
25001 $1 = foo
25002 $2 = bar
25003 $3 = baz.example
25004 .endd
25005 If the address &'foo@baz.example'& is looked up, this matches the same
25006 wildcard file entry, and in this case &$2$& is set to the empty string, but
25007 &$3$& is still set to &'baz.example'&. If a non-wild key is matched in a
25008 partial lookup, &$2$& is again set to the empty string and &$3$& is set to the
25009 whole domain. For non-partial domain lookups, no numerical variables are set.
25010 .endlist
25011
25012
25013 .section "Rewriting replacements" "SECID152"
25014 .cindex "rewriting" "replacements"
25015 If the replacement string for a rule is a single asterisk, addresses that
25016 match the pattern and the flags are &'not'& rewritten, and no subsequent
25017 rewriting rules are scanned. For example,
25018 .code
25019 hatta@lookingglass.fict.example * f
25020 .endd
25021 specifies that &'hatta@lookingglass.fict.example'& is never to be rewritten in
25022 &'From:'& headers.
25023
25024 .vindex "&$domain$&"
25025 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
25026 If the replacement string is not a single asterisk, it is expanded, and must
25027 yield a fully qualified address. Within the expansion, the variables
25028 &$local_part$& and &$domain$& refer to the address that is being rewritten.
25029 Any letters they contain retain their original case &-- they are not lower
25030 cased. The numerical variables are set up according to the type of pattern that
25031 matched the address, as described above. If the expansion is forced to fail by
25032 the presence of &"fail"& in a conditional or lookup item, rewriting by the
25033 current rule is abandoned, but subsequent rules may take effect. Any other
25034 expansion failure causes the entire rewriting operation to be abandoned, and an
25035 entry written to the panic log.
25036
25037
25038
25039 .section "Rewriting flags" "SECID153"
25040 There are three different kinds of flag that may appear on rewriting rules:
25041
25042 .ilist
25043 Flags that specify which headers and envelope addresses to rewrite: E, F, T, b,
25044 c, f, h, r, s, t.
25045 .next
25046 A flag that specifies rewriting at SMTP time: S.
25047 .next
25048 Flags that control the rewriting process: Q, q, R, w.
25049 .endlist
25050
25051 For rules that are part of the &%headers_rewrite%& generic transport option,
25052 E, F, T, and S are not permitted.
25053
25054
25055
25056 .section "Flags specifying which headers and envelope addresses to rewrite" &&&
25057 "SECID154"
25058 .cindex "rewriting" "flags"
25059 If none of the following flag letters, nor the &"S"& flag (see section
25060 &<<SECTrewriteS>>&) are present, a main rewriting rule applies to all headers
25061 and to both the sender and recipient fields of the envelope, whereas a
25062 transport-time rewriting rule just applies to all headers. Otherwise, the
25063 rewriting rule is skipped unless the relevant addresses are being processed.
25064 .display
25065 &`E`& rewrite all envelope fields
25066 &`F`& rewrite the envelope From field
25067 &`T`& rewrite the envelope To field
25068 &`b`& rewrite the &'Bcc:'& header
25069 &`c`& rewrite the &'Cc:'& header
25070 &`f`& rewrite the &'From:'& header
25071 &`h`& rewrite all headers
25072 &`r`& rewrite the &'Reply-To:'& header
25073 &`s`& rewrite the &'Sender:'& header
25074 &`t`& rewrite the &'To:'& header
25075 .endd
25076 "All headers" means all of the headers listed above that can be selected
25077 individually, plus their &'Resent-'& versions. It does not include
25078 other headers such as &'Subject:'& etc.
25079
25080 You should be particularly careful about rewriting &'Sender:'& headers, and
25081 restrict this to special known cases in your own domains.
25082
25083
25084 .section "The SMTP-time rewriting flag" "SECTrewriteS"
25085 .cindex "SMTP" "rewriting malformed addresses"
25086 .cindex "RCPT" "rewriting argument of"
25087 .cindex "MAIL" "rewriting argument of"
25088 The rewrite flag &"S"& specifies a rewrite of incoming envelope addresses at
25089 SMTP time, as soon as an address is received in a MAIL or RCPT command, and
25090 before any other processing; even before syntax checking. The pattern is
25091 required to be a regular expression, and it is matched against the whole of the
25092 data for the command, including any surrounding angle brackets.
25093
25094 .vindex "&$domain$&"
25095 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
25096 This form of rewrite rule allows for the handling of addresses that are not
25097 compliant with RFCs 2821 and 2822 (for example, &"bang paths"& in batched SMTP
25098 input). Because the input is not required to be a syntactically valid address,
25099 the variables &$local_part$& and &$domain$& are not available during the
25100 expansion of the replacement string. The result of rewriting replaces the
25101 original address in the MAIL or RCPT command.
25102
25103
25104 .section "Flags controlling the rewriting process" "SECID155"
25105 There are four flags which control the way the rewriting process works. These
25106 take effect only when a rule is invoked, that is, when the address is of the
25107 correct type (matches the flags) and matches the pattern:
25108
25109 .ilist
25110 If the &"Q"& flag is set on a rule, the rewritten address is permitted to be an
25111 unqualified local part. It is qualified with &%qualify_recipient%&. In the
25112 absence of &"Q"& the rewritten address must always include a domain.
25113 .next
25114 If the &"q"& flag is set on a rule, no further rewriting rules are considered,
25115 even if no rewriting actually takes place because of a &"fail"& in the
25116 expansion. The &"q"& flag is not effective if the address is of the wrong type
25117 (does not match the flags) or does not match the pattern.
25118 .next
25119 The &"R"& flag causes a successful rewriting rule to be re-applied to the new
25120 address, up to ten times. It can be combined with the &"q"& flag, to stop
25121 rewriting once it fails to match (after at least one successful rewrite).
25122 .next
25123 .cindex "rewriting" "whole addresses"
25124 When an address in a header is rewritten, the rewriting normally applies only
25125 to the working part of the address, with any comments and RFC 2822 &"phrase"&
25126 left unchanged. For example, rewriting might change
25127 .code
25128 From: Ford Prefect <fp42@restaurant.hitch.fict.example>
25129 .endd
25130 into
25131 .code
25132 From: Ford Prefect <prefectf@hitch.fict.example>
25133 .endd
25134 .cindex "RFC 2047"
25135 Sometimes there is a need to replace the whole address item, and this can be
25136 done by adding the flag letter &"w"& to a rule. If this is set on a rule that
25137 causes an address in a header line to be rewritten, the entire address is
25138 replaced, not just the working part. The replacement must be a complete RFC
25139 2822 address, including the angle brackets if necessary. If text outside angle
25140 brackets contains a character whose value is greater than 126 or less than 32
25141 (except for tab), the text is encoded according to RFC 2047. The character set
25142 is taken from &%headers_charset%&, which gets its default at build time.
25143
25144 When the &"w"& flag is set on a rule that causes an envelope address to be
25145 rewritten, all but the working part of the replacement address is discarded.
25146 .endlist
25147
25148
25149 .section "Rewriting examples" "SECID156"
25150 Here is an example of the two common rewriting paradigms:
25151 .code
25152 *@*.hitch.fict.example $1@hitch.fict.example
25153 *@hitch.fict.example ${lookup{$1}dbm{/etc/realnames}\
25154 {$value}fail}@hitch.fict.example bctfrF
25155 .endd
25156 Note the use of &"fail"& in the lookup expansion in the second rule, forcing
25157 the string expansion to fail if the lookup does not succeed. In this context it
25158 has the effect of leaving the original address unchanged, but Exim goes on to
25159 consider subsequent rewriting rules, if any, because the &"q"& flag is not
25160 present in that rule. An alternative to &"fail"& would be to supply &$1$&
25161 explicitly, which would cause the rewritten address to be the same as before,
25162 at the cost of a small bit of processing. Not supplying either of these is an
25163 error, since the rewritten address would then contain no local part.
25164
25165 The first example above replaces the domain with a superior, more general
25166 domain. This may not be desirable for certain local parts. If the rule
25167 .code
25168 root@*.hitch.fict.example *
25169 .endd
25170 were inserted before the first rule, rewriting would be suppressed for the
25171 local part &'root'& at any domain ending in &'hitch.fict.example'&.
25172
25173 Rewriting can be made conditional on a number of tests, by making use of
25174 &${if$& in the expansion item. For example, to apply a rewriting rule only to
25175 messages that originate outside the local host:
25176 .code
25177 *@*.hitch.fict.example "${if !eq {$sender_host_address}{}\
25178 {$1@hitch.fict.example}fail}"
25179 .endd
25180 The replacement string is quoted in this example because it contains white
25181 space.
25182
25183 .cindex "rewriting" "bang paths"
25184 .cindex "bang paths" "rewriting"
25185 Exim does not handle addresses in the form of &"bang paths"&. If it sees such
25186 an address it treats it as an unqualified local part which it qualifies with
25187 the local qualification domain (if the source of the message is local or if the
25188 remote host is permitted to send unqualified addresses). Rewriting can
25189 sometimes be used to handle simple bang paths with a fixed number of
25190 components. For example, the rule
25191 .code
25192 \N^([^!]+)!(.*)@your.domain.example$\N $2@$1
25193 .endd
25194 rewrites a two-component bang path &'host.name!user'& as the domain address
25195 &'user@host.name'&. However, there is a security implication in using this as
25196 a global rewriting rule for envelope addresses. It can provide a backdoor
25197 method for using your system as a relay, because the incoming addresses appear
25198 to be local. If the bang path addresses are received via SMTP, it is safer to
25199 use the &"S"& flag to rewrite them as they are received, so that relay checking
25200 can be done on the rewritten addresses.
25201 .ecindex IIDaddrew
25202
25203
25204
25205
25206
25207 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
25208 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
25209
25210 .chapter "Retry configuration" "CHAPretry"
25211 .scindex IIDretconf1 "retry" "configuration, description of"
25212 .scindex IIDregconf2 "configuration file" "retry section"
25213 The &"retry"& section of the runtime configuration file contains a list of
25214 retry rules that control how often Exim tries to deliver messages that cannot
25215 be delivered at the first attempt. If there are no retry rules (the section is
25216 empty or not present), there are no retries. In this situation, temporary
25217 errors are treated as permanent. The default configuration contains a single,
25218 general-purpose retry rule (see section &<<SECID57>>&). The &%-brt%& command
25219 line option can be used to test which retry rule will be used for a given
25220 address, domain and error.
25221
25222 The most common cause of retries is temporary failure to deliver to a remote
25223 host because the host is down, or inaccessible because of a network problem.
25224 Exim's retry processing in this case is applied on a per-host (strictly, per IP
25225 address) basis, not on a per-message basis. Thus, if one message has recently
25226 been delayed, delivery of a new message to the same host is not immediately
25227 tried, but waits for the host's retry time to arrive. If the &%retry_defer%&
25228 log selector is set, the message
25229 .cindex "retry" "time not reached"
25230 &"retry time not reached"& is written to the main log whenever a delivery is
25231 skipped for this reason. Section &<<SECToutSMTPerr>>& contains more details of
25232 the handling of errors during remote deliveries.
25233
25234 Retry processing applies to routing as well as to delivering, except as covered
25235 in the next paragraph. The retry rules do not distinguish between these
25236 actions. It is not possible, for example, to specify different behaviour for
25237 failures to route the domain &'snark.fict.example'& and failures to deliver to
25238 the host &'snark.fict.example'&. I didn't think anyone would ever need this
25239 added complication, so did not implement it. However, although they share the
25240 same retry rule, the actual retry times for routing and transporting a given
25241 domain are maintained independently.
25242
25243 When a delivery is not part of a queue run (typically an immediate delivery on
25244 receipt of a message), the routers are always run, and local deliveries are
25245 always attempted, even if retry times are set for them. This makes for better
25246 behaviour if one particular message is causing problems (for example, causing
25247 quota overflow, or provoking an error in a filter file). If such a delivery
25248 suffers a temporary failure, the retry data is updated as normal, and
25249 subsequent delivery attempts from queue runs occur only when the retry time for
25250 the local address is reached.
25251
25252 .section "Changing retry rules" "SECID157"
25253 If you change the retry rules in your configuration, you should consider
25254 whether or not to delete the retry data that is stored in Exim's spool area in
25255 files with names like &_db/retry_&. Deleting any of Exim's hints files is
25256 always safe; that is why they are called &"hints"&.
25257
25258 The hints retry data contains suggested retry times based on the previous
25259 rules. In the case of a long-running problem with a remote host, it might
25260 record the fact that the host has timed out. If your new rules increase the
25261 timeout time for such a host, you should definitely remove the old retry data
25262 and let Exim recreate it, based on the new rules. Otherwise Exim might bounce
25263 messages that it should now be retaining.
25264
25265
25266
25267 .section "Format of retry rules" "SECID158"
25268 .cindex "retry" "rules"
25269 Each retry rule occupies one line and consists of three or four parts,
25270 separated by white space: a pattern, an error name, an optional list of sender
25271 addresses, and a list of retry parameters. The pattern and sender lists must be
25272 enclosed in double quotes if they contain white space. The rules are searched
25273 in order until one is found where the pattern, error name, and sender list (if
25274 present) match the failing host or address, the error that occurred, and the
25275 message's sender, respectively.
25276
25277
25278 The pattern is any single item that may appear in an address list (see section
25279 &<<SECTaddresslist>>&). It is in fact processed as a one-item address list,
25280 which means that it is expanded before being tested against the address that
25281 has been delayed. A negated address list item is permitted. Address
25282 list processing treats a plain domain name as if it were preceded by &"*@"&,
25283 which makes it possible for many retry rules to start with just a domain. For
25284 example,
25285 .code
25286 lookingglass.fict.example * F,24h,30m;
25287 .endd
25288 provides a rule for any address in the &'lookingglass.fict.example'& domain,
25289 whereas
25290 .code
25291 alice@lookingglass.fict.example * F,24h,30m;
25292 .endd
25293 applies only to temporary failures involving the local part &%alice%&.
25294 In practice, almost all rules start with a domain name pattern without a local
25295 part.
25296
25297 .cindex "regular expressions" "in retry rules"
25298 &*Warning*&: If you use a regular expression in a retry rule pattern, it
25299 must match a complete address, not just a domain, because that is how regular
25300 expressions work in address lists.
25301 .display
25302 &`^\Nxyz\d+\.abc\.example$\N * G,1h,10m,2`& &%Wrong%&
25303 &`^\N[^@]+@xyz\d+\.abc\.example$\N * G,1h,10m,2`& &%Right%&
25304 .endd
25305
25306
25307 .section "Choosing which retry rule to use for address errors" "SECID159"
25308 When Exim is looking for a retry rule after a routing attempt has failed (for
25309 example, after a DNS timeout), each line in the retry configuration is tested
25310 against the complete address only if &%retry_use_local_part%& is set for the
25311 router. Otherwise, only the domain is used, except when matching against a
25312 regular expression, when the local part of the address is replaced with &"*"&.
25313 A domain on its own can match a domain pattern, or a pattern that starts with
25314 &"*@"&. By default, &%retry_use_local_part%& is true for routers where
25315 &%check_local_user%& is true, and false for other routers.
25316
25317 Similarly, when Exim is looking for a retry rule after a local delivery has
25318 failed (for example, after a mailbox full error), each line in the retry
25319 configuration is tested against the complete address only if
25320 &%retry_use_local_part%& is set for the transport (it defaults true for all
25321 local transports).
25322
25323 .cindex "4&'xx'& responses" "retry rules for"
25324 However, when Exim is looking for a retry rule after a remote delivery attempt
25325 suffers an address error (a 4&'xx'& SMTP response for a recipient address), the
25326 whole address is always used as the key when searching the retry rules. The
25327 rule that is found is used to create a retry time for the combination of the
25328 failing address and the message's sender. It is the combination of sender and
25329 recipient that is delayed in subsequent queue runs until its retry time is
25330 reached. You can delay the recipient without regard to the sender by setting
25331 &%address_retry_include_sender%& false in the &(smtp)& transport but this can
25332 lead to problems with servers that regularly issue 4&'xx'& responses to RCPT
25333 commands.
25334
25335
25336
25337 .section "Choosing which retry rule to use for host and message errors" &&&
25338 "SECID160"
25339 For a temporary error that is not related to an individual address (for
25340 example, a connection timeout), each line in the retry configuration is checked
25341 twice. First, the name of the remote host is used as a domain name (preceded by
25342 &"*@"& when matching a regular expression). If this does not match the line,
25343 the domain from the email address is tried in a similar fashion. For example,
25344 suppose the MX records for &'a.b.c.example'& are
25345 .code
25346 a.b.c.example MX 5 x.y.z.example
25347 MX 6 p.q.r.example
25348 MX 7 m.n.o.example
25349 .endd
25350 and the retry rules are
25351 .code
25352 p.q.r.example * F,24h,30m;
25353 a.b.c.example * F,4d,45m;
25354 .endd
25355 and a delivery to the host &'x.y.z.example'& suffers a connection failure. The
25356 first rule matches neither the host nor the domain, so Exim looks at the second
25357 rule. This does not match the host, but it does match the domain, so it is used
25358 to calculate the retry time for the host &'x.y.z.example'&. Meanwhile, Exim
25359 tries to deliver to &'p.q.r.example'&. If this also suffers a host error, the
25360 first retry rule is used, because it matches the host.
25361
25362 In other words, temporary failures to deliver to host &'p.q.r.example'& use the
25363 first rule to determine retry times, but for all the other hosts for the domain
25364 &'a.b.c.example'&, the second rule is used. The second rule is also used if
25365 routing to &'a.b.c.example'& suffers a temporary failure.
25366
25367 &*Note*&: The host name is used when matching the patterns, not its IP address.
25368 However, if a message is routed directly to an IP address without the use of a
25369 host name, for example, if a &(manualroute)& router contains a setting such as:
25370 .code
25371 route_list = *.a.example 192.168.34.23
25372 .endd
25373 then the &"host name"& that is used when searching for a retry rule is the
25374 textual form of the IP address.
25375
25376 .section "Retry rules for specific errors" "SECID161"
25377 .cindex "retry" "specific errors; specifying"
25378 The second field in a retry rule is the name of a particular error, or an
25379 asterisk, which matches any error. The errors that can be tested for are:
25380
25381 .vlist
25382 .vitem &%auth_failed%&
25383 Authentication failed when trying to send to a host in the
25384 &%hosts_require_auth%& list in an &(smtp)& transport.
25385
25386 .vitem &%data_4xx%&
25387 A 4&'xx'& error was received for an outgoing DATA command, either immediately
25388 after the command, or after sending the message's data.
25389
25390 .vitem &%mail_4xx%&
25391 A 4&'xx'& error was received for an outgoing MAIL command.
25392
25393 .vitem &%rcpt_4xx%&
25394 A 4&'xx'& error was received for an outgoing RCPT command.
25395 .endlist
25396
25397 For the three 4&'xx'& errors, either the first or both of the x's can be given
25398 as specific digits, for example: &`mail_45x`& or &`rcpt_436`&. For example, to
25399 recognize 452 errors given to RCPT commands for addresses in a certain domain,
25400 and have retries every ten minutes with a one-hour timeout, you could set up a
25401 retry rule of this form:
25402 .code
25403 the.domain.name rcpt_452 F,1h,10m
25404 .endd
25405 These errors apply to both outgoing SMTP (the &(smtp)& transport) and outgoing
25406 LMTP (either the &(lmtp)& transport, or the &(smtp)& transport in LMTP mode).
25407
25408 .vlist
25409 .vitem &%lost_connection%&
25410 A server unexpectedly closed the SMTP connection. There may, of course,
25411 legitimate reasons for this (host died, network died), but if it repeats a lot
25412 for the same host, it indicates something odd.
25413
25414 .vitem &%lookup%&
25415 A DNS lookup for a host failed.
25416 Note that a &%dnslookup%& router will need to have matched
25417 its &%fail_defer_domains%& option for this retry type to be usable.
25418 Also note that a &%manualroute%& router will probably need
25419 its &%host_find_failed%& option set to &%defer%&.
25420
25421 .vitem &%refused_MX%&
25422 A connection to a host obtained from an MX record was refused.
25423
25424 .vitem &%refused_A%&
25425 A connection to a host not obtained from an MX record was refused.
25426
25427 .vitem &%refused%&
25428 A connection was refused.
25429
25430 .vitem &%timeout_connect_MX%&
25431 A connection attempt to a host obtained from an MX record timed out.
25432
25433 .vitem &%timeout_connect_A%&
25434 A connection attempt to a host not obtained from an MX record timed out.
25435
25436 .vitem &%timeout_connect%&
25437 A connection attempt timed out.
25438
25439 .vitem &%timeout_MX%&
25440 There was a timeout while connecting or during an SMTP session with a host
25441 obtained from an MX record.
25442
25443 .vitem &%timeout_A%&
25444 There was a timeout while connecting or during an SMTP session with a host not
25445 obtained from an MX record.
25446
25447 .vitem &%timeout%&
25448 There was a timeout while connecting or during an SMTP session.
25449
25450 .vitem &%tls_required%&
25451 The server was required to use TLS (it matched &%hosts_require_tls%& in the
25452 &(smtp)& transport), but either did not offer TLS, or it responded with 4&'xx'&
25453 to STARTTLS, or there was a problem setting up the TLS connection.
25454
25455 .vitem &%quota%&
25456 A mailbox quota was exceeded in a local delivery by the &(appendfile)&
25457 transport.
25458
25459 .vitem &%quota_%&<&'time'&>
25460 .cindex "quota" "error testing in retry rule"
25461 .cindex "retry" "quota error testing"
25462 A mailbox quota was exceeded in a local delivery by the &(appendfile)&
25463 transport, and the mailbox has not been accessed for <&'time'&>. For example,
25464 &'quota_4d'& applies to a quota error when the mailbox has not been accessed
25465 for four days.
25466 .endlist
25467
25468 .cindex "mailbox" "time of last read"
25469 The idea of &%quota_%&<&'time'&> is to make it possible to have shorter
25470 timeouts when the mailbox is full and is not being read by its owner. Ideally,
25471 it should be based on the last time that the user accessed the mailbox.
25472 However, it is not always possible to determine this. Exim uses the following
25473 heuristic rules:
25474
25475 .ilist
25476 If the mailbox is a single file, the time of last access (the &"atime"&) is
25477 used. As no new messages are being delivered (because the mailbox is over
25478 quota), Exim does not access the file, so this is the time of last user access.
25479 .next
25480 .cindex "maildir format" "time of last read"
25481 For a maildir delivery, the time of last modification of the &_new_&
25482 subdirectory is used. As the mailbox is over quota, no new files are created in
25483 the &_new_& subdirectory, because no new messages are being delivered. Any
25484 change to the &_new_& subdirectory is therefore assumed to be the result of an
25485 MUA moving a new message to the &_cur_& directory when it is first read. The
25486 time that is used is therefore the last time that the user read a new message.
25487 .next
25488 For other kinds of multi-file mailbox, the time of last access cannot be
25489 obtained, so a retry rule that uses this type of error field is never matched.
25490 .endlist
25491
25492 The quota errors apply both to system-enforced quotas and to Exim's own quota
25493 mechanism in the &(appendfile)& transport. The &'quota'& error also applies
25494 when a local delivery is deferred because a partition is full (the ENOSPC
25495 error).
25496
25497
25498
25499 .section "Retry rules for specified senders" "SECID162"
25500 .cindex "retry" "rules; sender-specific"
25501 You can specify retry rules that apply only when the failing message has a
25502 specific sender. In particular, this can be used to define retry rules that
25503 apply only to bounce messages. The third item in a retry rule can be of this
25504 form:
25505 .display
25506 &`senders=`&<&'address list'&>
25507 .endd
25508 The retry timings themselves are then the fourth item. For example:
25509 .code
25510 * rcpt_4xx senders=: F,1h,30m
25511 .endd
25512 matches recipient 4&'xx'& errors for bounce messages sent to any address at any
25513 host. If the address list contains white space, it must be enclosed in quotes.
25514 For example:
25515 .code
25516 a.domain rcpt_452 senders="xb.dom : yc.dom" G,8h,10m,1.5
25517 .endd
25518 &*Warning*&: This facility can be unhelpful if it is used for host errors
25519 (which do not depend on the recipient). The reason is that the sender is used
25520 only to match the retry rule. Once the rule has been found for a host error,
25521 its contents are used to set a retry time for the host, and this will apply to
25522 all messages, not just those with specific senders.
25523
25524 When testing retry rules using &%-brt%&, you can supply a sender using the
25525 &%-f%& command line option, like this:
25526 .code
25527 exim -f "" -brt user@dom.ain
25528 .endd
25529 If you do not set &%-f%& with &%-brt%&, a retry rule that contains a senders
25530 list is never matched.
25531
25532
25533
25534
25535
25536 .section "Retry parameters" "SECID163"
25537 .cindex "retry" "parameters in rules"
25538 The third (or fourth, if a senders list is present) field in a retry rule is a
25539 sequence of retry parameter sets, separated by semicolons. Each set consists of
25540 .display
25541 <&'letter'&>,<&'cutoff time'&>,<&'arguments'&>
25542 .endd
25543 The letter identifies the algorithm for computing a new retry time; the cutoff
25544 time is the time beyond which this algorithm no longer applies, and the
25545 arguments vary the algorithm's action. The cutoff time is measured from the
25546 time that the first failure for the domain (combined with the local part if
25547 relevant) was detected, not from the time the message was received.
25548
25549 .cindex "retry" "algorithms"
25550 .cindex "retry" "fixed intervals"
25551 .cindex "retry" "increasing intervals"
25552 .cindex "retry" "random intervals"
25553 The available algorithms are:
25554
25555 .ilist
25556 &'F'&: retry at fixed intervals. There is a single time parameter specifying
25557 the interval.
25558 .next
25559 &'G'&: retry at geometrically increasing intervals. The first argument
25560 specifies a starting value for the interval, and the second a multiplier, which
25561 is used to increase the size of the interval at each retry.
25562 .next
25563 &'H'&: retry at randomized intervals. The arguments are as for &'G'&. For each
25564 retry, the previous interval is multiplied by the factor in order to get a
25565 maximum for the next interval. The minimum interval is the first argument of
25566 the parameter, and an actual interval is chosen randomly between them. Such a
25567 rule has been found to be helpful in cluster configurations when all the
25568 members of the cluster restart at once, and may therefore synchronize their
25569 queue processing times.
25570 .endlist
25571
25572 When computing the next retry time, the algorithm definitions are scanned in
25573 order until one whose cutoff time has not yet passed is reached. This is then
25574 used to compute a new retry time that is later than the current time. In the
25575 case of fixed interval retries, this simply means adding the interval to the
25576 current time. For geometrically increasing intervals, retry intervals are
25577 computed from the rule's parameters until one that is greater than the previous
25578 interval is found. The main configuration variable
25579 .cindex "limit" "retry interval"
25580 .cindex "retry" "interval, maximum"
25581 .oindex "&%retry_interval_max%&"
25582 &%retry_interval_max%& limits the maximum interval between retries. It
25583 cannot be set greater than &`24h`&, which is its default value.
25584
25585 A single remote domain may have a number of hosts associated with it, and each
25586 host may have more than one IP address. Retry algorithms are selected on the
25587 basis of the domain name, but are applied to each IP address independently. If,
25588 for example, a host has two IP addresses and one is unusable, Exim will
25589 generate retry times for it and will not try to use it until its next retry
25590 time comes. Thus the good IP address is likely to be tried first most of the
25591 time.
25592
25593 .cindex "hints database" "use for retrying"
25594 Retry times are hints rather than promises. Exim does not make any attempt to
25595 run deliveries exactly at the computed times. Instead, a queue runner process
25596 starts delivery processes for delayed messages periodically, and these attempt
25597 new deliveries only for those addresses that have passed their next retry time.
25598 If a new message arrives for a deferred address, an immediate delivery attempt
25599 occurs only if the address has passed its retry time. In the absence of new
25600 messages, the minimum time between retries is the interval between queue runner
25601 processes. There is not much point in setting retry times of five minutes if
25602 your queue runners happen only once an hour, unless there are a significant
25603 number of incoming messages (which might be the case on a system that is
25604 sending everything to a smart host, for example).
25605
25606 The data in the retry hints database can be inspected by using the
25607 &'exim_dumpdb'& or &'exim_fixdb'& utility programs (see chapter
25608 &<<CHAPutils>>&). The latter utility can also be used to change the data. The
25609 &'exinext'& utility script can be used to find out what the next retry times
25610 are for the hosts associated with a particular mail domain, and also for local
25611 deliveries that have been deferred.
25612
25613
25614 .section "Retry rule examples" "SECID164"
25615 Here are some example retry rules:
25616 .code
25617 alice@wonderland.fict.example quota_5d F,7d,3h
25618 wonderland.fict.example quota_5d
25619 wonderland.fict.example * F,1h,15m; G,2d,1h,2;
25620 lookingglass.fict.example * F,24h,30m;
25621 * refused_A F,2h,20m;
25622 * * F,2h,15m; G,16h,1h,1.5; F,5d,8h
25623 .endd
25624 The first rule sets up special handling for mail to
25625 &'alice@wonderland.fict.example'& when there is an over-quota error and the
25626 mailbox has not been read for at least 5 days. Retries continue every three
25627 hours for 7 days. The second rule handles over-quota errors for all other local
25628 parts at &'wonderland.fict.example'&; the absence of a local part has the same
25629 effect as supplying &"*@"&. As no retry algorithms are supplied, messages that
25630 fail are bounced immediately if the mailbox has not been read for at least 5
25631 days.
25632
25633 The third rule handles all other errors at &'wonderland.fict.example'&; retries
25634 happen every 15 minutes for an hour, then with geometrically increasing
25635 intervals until two days have passed since a delivery first failed. After the
25636 first hour there is a delay of one hour, then two hours, then four hours, and
25637 so on (this is a rather extreme example).
25638
25639 The fourth rule controls retries for the domain &'lookingglass.fict.example'&.
25640 They happen every 30 minutes for 24 hours only. The remaining two rules handle
25641 all other domains, with special action for connection refusal from hosts that
25642 were not obtained from an MX record.
25643
25644 The final rule in a retry configuration should always have asterisks in the
25645 first two fields so as to provide a general catch-all for any addresses that do
25646 not have their own special handling. This example tries every 15 minutes for 2
25647 hours, then with intervals starting at one hour and increasing by a factor of
25648 1.5 up to 16 hours, then every 8 hours up to 5 days.
25649
25650
25651
25652 .section "Timeout of retry data" "SECID165"
25653 .cindex "timeout" "of retry data"
25654 .oindex "&%retry_data_expire%&"
25655 .cindex "hints database" "data expiry"
25656 .cindex "retry" "timeout of data"
25657 Exim timestamps the data that it writes to its retry hints database. When it
25658 consults the data during a delivery it ignores any that is older than the value
25659 set in &%retry_data_expire%& (default 7 days). If, for example, a host hasn't
25660 been tried for 7 days, Exim will try to deliver to it immediately a message
25661 arrives, and if that fails, it will calculate a retry time as if it were
25662 failing for the first time.
25663
25664 This improves the behaviour for messages routed to rarely-used hosts such as MX
25665 backups. If such a host was down at one time, and happens to be down again when
25666 Exim tries a month later, using the old retry data would imply that it had been
25667 down all the time, which is not a justified assumption.
25668
25669 If a host really is permanently dead, this behaviour causes a burst of retries
25670 every now and again, but only if messages routed to it are rare. If there is a
25671 message at least once every 7 days the retry data never expires.
25672
25673
25674
25675
25676 .section "Long-term failures" "SECID166"
25677 .cindex "delivery failure, long-term"
25678 .cindex "retry" "after long-term failure"
25679 Special processing happens when an email address has been failing for so long
25680 that the cutoff time for the last algorithm is reached. For example, using the
25681 default retry rule:
25682 .code
25683 * * F,2h,15m; G,16h,1h,1.5; F,4d,6h
25684 .endd
25685 the cutoff time is four days. Reaching the retry cutoff is independent of how
25686 long any specific message has been failing; it is the length of continuous
25687 failure for the recipient address that counts.
25688
25689 When the cutoff time is reached for a local delivery, or for all the IP
25690 addresses associated with a remote delivery, a subsequent delivery failure
25691 causes Exim to give up on the address, and a bounce message is generated.
25692 In order to cater for new messages that use the failing address, a next retry
25693 time is still computed from the final algorithm, and is used as follows:
25694
25695 For local deliveries, one delivery attempt is always made for any subsequent
25696 messages. If this delivery fails, the address fails immediately. The
25697 post-cutoff retry time is not used.
25698
25699 If the delivery is remote, there are two possibilities, controlled by the
25700 .oindex "&%delay_after_cutoff%&"
25701 &%delay_after_cutoff%& option of the &(smtp)& transport. The option is true by
25702 default. Until the post-cutoff retry time for one of the IP addresses is
25703 reached, the failing email address is bounced immediately, without a delivery
25704 attempt taking place. After that time, one new delivery attempt is made to
25705 those IP addresses that are past their retry times, and if that still fails,
25706 the address is bounced and new retry times are computed.
25707
25708 In other words, when all the hosts for a given email address have been failing
25709 for a long time, Exim bounces rather then defers until one of the hosts' retry
25710 times is reached. Then it tries once, and bounces if that attempt fails. This
25711 behaviour ensures that few resources are wasted in repeatedly trying to deliver
25712 to a broken destination, but if the host does recover, Exim will eventually
25713 notice.
25714
25715 If &%delay_after_cutoff%& is set false, Exim behaves differently. If all IP
25716 addresses are past their final cutoff time, Exim tries to deliver to those IP
25717 addresses that have not been tried since the message arrived. If there are
25718 no suitable IP addresses, or if they all fail, the address is bounced. In other
25719 words, it does not delay when a new message arrives, but tries the expired
25720 addresses immediately, unless they have been tried since the message arrived.
25721 If there is a continuous stream of messages for the failing domains, setting
25722 &%delay_after_cutoff%& false means that there will be many more attempts to
25723 deliver to permanently failing IP addresses than when &%delay_after_cutoff%& is
25724 true.
25725
25726 .section "Deliveries that work intermittently" "SECID167"
25727 .cindex "retry" "intermittently working deliveries"
25728 Some additional logic is needed to cope with cases where a host is
25729 intermittently available, or when a message has some attribute that prevents
25730 its delivery when others to the same address get through. In this situation,
25731 because some messages are successfully delivered, the &"retry clock"& for the
25732 host or address keeps getting reset by the successful deliveries, and so
25733 failing messages remain on the queue for ever because the cutoff time is never
25734 reached.
25735
25736 Two exceptional actions are applied to prevent this happening. The first
25737 applies to errors that are related to a message rather than a remote host.
25738 Section &<<SECToutSMTPerr>>& has a discussion of the different kinds of error;
25739 examples of message-related errors are 4&'xx'& responses to MAIL or DATA
25740 commands, and quota failures. For this type of error, if a message's arrival
25741 time is earlier than the &"first failed"& time for the error, the earlier time
25742 is used when scanning the retry rules to decide when to try next and when to
25743 time out the address.
25744
25745 The exceptional second action applies in all cases. If a message has been on
25746 the queue for longer than the cutoff time of any applicable retry rule for a
25747 given address, a delivery is attempted for that address, even if it is not yet
25748 time, and if this delivery fails, the address is timed out. A new retry time is
25749 not computed in this case, so that other messages for the same address are
25750 considered immediately.
25751 .ecindex IIDretconf1
25752 .ecindex IIDregconf2
25753
25754
25755
25756
25757
25758
25759 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
25760 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
25761
25762 .chapter "SMTP authentication" "CHAPSMTPAUTH"
25763 .scindex IIDauthconf1 "SMTP" "authentication configuration"
25764 .scindex IIDauthconf2 "authentication"
25765 The &"authenticators"& section of Exim's run time configuration is concerned
25766 with SMTP authentication. This facility is an extension to the SMTP protocol,
25767 described in RFC 2554, which allows a client SMTP host to authenticate itself
25768 to a server. This is a common way for a server to recognize clients that are
25769 permitted to use it as a relay. SMTP authentication is not of relevance to the
25770 transfer of mail between servers that have no managerial connection with each
25771 other.
25772
25773 .cindex "AUTH" "description of"
25774 Very briefly, the way SMTP authentication works is as follows:
25775
25776 .ilist
25777 The server advertises a number of authentication &'mechanisms'& in response to
25778 the client's EHLO command.
25779 .next
25780 The client issues an AUTH command, naming a specific mechanism. The command
25781 may, optionally, contain some authentication data.
25782 .next
25783 The server may issue one or more &'challenges'&, to which the client must send
25784 appropriate responses. In simple authentication mechanisms, the challenges are
25785 just prompts for user names and passwords. The server does not have to issue
25786 any challenges &-- in some mechanisms the relevant data may all be transmitted
25787 with the AUTH command.
25788 .next
25789 The server either accepts or denies authentication.
25790 .next
25791 If authentication succeeds, the client may optionally make use of the AUTH
25792 option on the MAIL command to pass an authenticated sender in subsequent
25793 mail transactions. Authentication lasts for the remainder of the SMTP
25794 connection.
25795 .next
25796 If authentication fails, the client may give up, or it may try a different
25797 authentication mechanism, or it may try transferring mail over the
25798 unauthenticated connection.
25799 .endlist
25800
25801 If you are setting up a client, and want to know which authentication
25802 mechanisms the server supports, you can use Telnet to connect to port 25 (the
25803 SMTP port) on the server, and issue an EHLO command. The response to this
25804 includes the list of supported mechanisms. For example:
25805 .display
25806 &`$ `&&*&`telnet server.example 25`&*&
25807 &`Trying 192.168.34.25...`&
25808 &`Connected to server.example.`&
25809 &`Escape character is &#x0027;^]&#x0027;.`&
25810 &`220 server.example ESMTP Exim 4.20 ...`&
25811 &*&`ehlo client.example`&*&
25812 &`250-server.example Hello client.example [10.8.4.5]`&
25813 &`250-SIZE 52428800`&
25814 &`250-PIPELINING`&
25815 &`250-AUTH PLAIN`&
25816 &`250 HELP`&
25817 .endd
25818 The second-last line of this example output shows that the server supports
25819 authentication using the PLAIN mechanism. In Exim, the different authentication
25820 mechanisms are configured by specifying &'authenticator'& drivers. Like the
25821 routers and transports, which authenticators are included in the binary is
25822 controlled by build-time definitions. The following are currently available,
25823 included by setting
25824 .code
25825 AUTH_CRAM_MD5=yes
25826 AUTH_CYRUS_SASL=yes
25827 AUTH_DOVECOT=yes
25828 AUTH_GSASL=yes
25829 AUTH_HEIMDAL_GSSAPI=yes
25830 AUTH_PLAINTEXT=yes
25831 AUTH_SPA=yes
25832 AUTH_TLS=yes
25833 .endd
25834 in &_Local/Makefile_&, respectively. The first of these supports the CRAM-MD5
25835 authentication mechanism (RFC 2195), and the second provides an interface to
25836 the Cyrus SASL authentication library.
25837 The third is an interface to Dovecot's authentication system, delegating the
25838 work via a socket interface.
25839 The fourth provides an interface to the GNU SASL authentication library, which
25840 provides mechanisms but typically not data sources.
25841 The fifth provides direct access to Heimdal GSSAPI, geared for Kerberos, but
25842 supporting setting a server keytab.
25843 The sixth can be configured to support
25844 the PLAIN authentication mechanism (RFC 2595) or the LOGIN mechanism, which is
25845 not formally documented, but used by several MUAs. The seventh authenticator
25846 supports Microsoft's &'Secure Password Authentication'& mechanism.
25847 The eighth is an Exim authenticator but not an SMTP one;
25848 instead it can use information from a TLS negotiation.
25849
25850 The authenticators are configured using the same syntax as other drivers (see
25851 section &<<SECTfordricon>>&). If no authenticators are required, no
25852 authentication section need be present in the configuration file. Each
25853 authenticator can in principle have both server and client functions. When Exim
25854 is receiving SMTP mail, it is acting as a server; when it is sending out
25855 messages over SMTP, it is acting as a client. Authenticator configuration
25856 options are provided for use in both these circumstances.
25857
25858 To make it clear which options apply to which situation, the prefixes
25859 &%server_%& and &%client_%& are used on option names that are specific to
25860 either the server or the client function, respectively. Server and client
25861 functions are disabled if none of their options are set. If an authenticator is
25862 to be used for both server and client functions, a single definition, using
25863 both sets of options, is required. For example:
25864 .code
25865 cram:
25866 driver = cram_md5
25867 public_name = CRAM-MD5
25868 server_secret = ${if eq{$auth1}{ph10}{secret1}fail}
25869 client_name = ph10
25870 client_secret = secret2
25871 .endd
25872 The &%server_%& option is used when Exim is acting as a server, and the
25873 &%client_%& options when it is acting as a client.
25874
25875 Descriptions of the individual authenticators are given in subsequent chapters.
25876 The remainder of this chapter covers the generic options for the
25877 authenticators, followed by general discussion of the way authentication works
25878 in Exim.
25879
25880 &*Beware:*& the meaning of &$auth1$&, &$auth2$&, ... varies on a per-driver and
25881 per-mechanism basis. Please read carefully to determine which variables hold
25882 account labels such as usercodes and which hold passwords or other
25883 authenticating data.
25884
25885 Note that some mechanisms support two different identifiers for accounts: the
25886 &'authentication id'& and the &'authorization id'&. The contractions &'authn'&
25887 and &'authz'& are commonly encountered. The American spelling is standard here.
25888 Conceptually, authentication data such as passwords are tied to the identifier
25889 used to authenticate; servers may have rules to permit one user to act as a
25890 second user, so that after login the session is treated as though that second
25891 user had logged in. That second user is the &'authorization id'&. A robust
25892 configuration might confirm that the &'authz'& field is empty or matches the
25893 &'authn'& field. Often this is just ignored. The &'authn'& can be considered
25894 as verified data, the &'authz'& as an unverified request which the server might
25895 choose to honour.
25896
25897 A &'realm'& is a text string, typically a domain name, presented by a server
25898 to a client to help it select an account and credentials to use. In some
25899 mechanisms, the client and server provably agree on the realm, but clients
25900 typically can not treat the realm as secure data to be blindly trusted.
25901
25902
25903
25904 .section "Generic options for authenticators" "SECID168"
25905 .cindex "authentication" "generic options"
25906 .cindex "options" "generic; for authenticators"
25907
25908 .option client_condition authenticators string&!! unset
25909 When Exim is authenticating as a client, it skips any authenticator whose
25910 &%client_condition%& expansion yields &"0"&, &"no"&, or &"false"&. This can be
25911 used, for example, to skip plain text authenticators when the connection is not
25912 encrypted by a setting such as:
25913 .code
25914 client_condition = ${if !eq{$tls_out_cipher}{}}
25915 .endd
25916
25917
25918 .option client_set_id authenticators string&!! unset
25919 When client authentication succeeds, this condition is expanded; the
25920 result is used in the log lines for outbound messages.
25921 Typically it will be the user name used for authentication.
25922
25923
25924 .option driver authenticators string unset
25925 This option must always be set. It specifies which of the available
25926 authenticators is to be used.
25927
25928
25929 .option public_name authenticators string unset
25930 This option specifies the name of the authentication mechanism that the driver
25931 implements, and by which it is known to the outside world. These names should
25932 contain only upper case letters, digits, underscores, and hyphens (RFC 2222),
25933 but Exim in fact matches them caselessly. If &%public_name%& is not set, it
25934 defaults to the driver's instance name.
25935
25936
25937 .option server_advertise_condition authenticators string&!! unset
25938 When a server is about to advertise an authentication mechanism, the condition
25939 is expanded. If it yields the empty string, &"0"&, &"no"&, or &"false"&, the
25940 mechanism is not advertised.
25941 If the expansion fails, the mechanism is not advertised. If the failure was not
25942 forced, and was not caused by a lookup defer, the incident is logged.
25943 See section &<<SECTauthexiser>>& below for further discussion.
25944
25945
25946 .option server_condition authenticators string&!! unset
25947 This option must be set for a &%plaintext%& server authenticator, where it
25948 is used directly to control authentication. See section &<<SECTplainserver>>&
25949 for details.
25950
25951 For the &(gsasl)& authenticator, this option is required for various
25952 mechanisms; see chapter &<<CHAPgsasl>>& for details.
25953
25954 For the other authenticators, &%server_condition%& can be used as an additional
25955 authentication or authorization mechanism that is applied after the other
25956 authenticator conditions succeed. If it is set, it is expanded when the
25957 authenticator would otherwise return a success code. If the expansion is forced
25958 to fail, authentication fails. Any other expansion failure causes a temporary
25959 error code to be returned. If the result of a successful expansion is an empty
25960 string, &"0"&, &"no"&, or &"false"&, authentication fails. If the result of the
25961 expansion is &"1"&, &"yes"&, or &"true"&, authentication succeeds. For any
25962 other result, a temporary error code is returned, with the expanded string as
25963 the error text.
25964
25965
25966 .option server_debug_print authenticators string&!! unset
25967 If this option is set and authentication debugging is enabled (see the &%-d%&
25968 command line option), the string is expanded and included in the debugging
25969 output when the authenticator is run as a server. This can help with checking
25970 out the values of variables.
25971 If expansion of the string fails, the error message is written to the debugging
25972 output, and Exim carries on processing.
25973
25974
25975 .option server_set_id authenticators string&!! unset
25976 .vindex "&$authenticated_id$&"
25977 When an Exim server successfully authenticates a client, this string is
25978 expanded using data from the authentication, and preserved for any incoming
25979 messages in the variable &$authenticated_id$&. It is also included in the log
25980 lines for incoming messages. For example, a user/password authenticator
25981 configuration might preserve the user name that was used to authenticate, and
25982 refer to it subsequently during delivery of the message.
25983 If expansion fails, the option is ignored.
25984
25985
25986 .option server_mail_auth_condition authenticators string&!! unset
25987 This option allows a server to discard authenticated sender addresses supplied
25988 as part of MAIL commands in SMTP connections that are authenticated by the
25989 driver on which &%server_mail_auth_condition%& is set. The option is not used
25990 as part of the authentication process; instead its (unexpanded) value is
25991 remembered for later use.
25992 How it is used is described in the following section.
25993
25994
25995
25996
25997
25998 .section "The AUTH parameter on MAIL commands" "SECTauthparamail"
25999 .cindex "authentication" "sender; authenticated"
26000 .cindex "AUTH" "on MAIL command"
26001 When a client supplied an AUTH= item on a MAIL command, Exim applies
26002 the following checks before accepting it as the authenticated sender of the
26003 message:
26004
26005 .ilist
26006 If the connection is not using extended SMTP (that is, HELO was used rather
26007 than EHLO), the use of AUTH= is a syntax error.
26008 .next
26009 If the value of the AUTH= parameter is &"<>"&, it is ignored.
26010 .next
26011 .vindex "&$authenticated_sender$&"
26012 If &%acl_smtp_mailauth%& is defined, the ACL it specifies is run. While it is
26013 running, the value of &$authenticated_sender$& is set to the value obtained
26014 from the AUTH= parameter. If the ACL does not yield &"accept"&, the value of
26015 &$authenticated_sender$& is deleted. The &%acl_smtp_mailauth%& ACL may not
26016 return &"drop"& or &"discard"&. If it defers, a temporary error code (451) is
26017 given for the MAIL command.
26018 .next
26019 If &%acl_smtp_mailauth%& is not defined, the value of the AUTH= parameter
26020 is accepted and placed in &$authenticated_sender$& only if the client has
26021 authenticated.
26022 .next
26023 If the AUTH= value was accepted by either of the two previous rules, and
26024 the client has authenticated, and the authenticator has a setting for the
26025 &%server_mail_auth_condition%&, the condition is checked at this point. The
26026 valued that was saved from the authenticator is expanded. If the expansion
26027 fails, or yields an empty string, &"0"&, &"no"&, or &"false"&, the value of
26028 &$authenticated_sender$& is deleted. If the expansion yields any other value,
26029 the value of &$authenticated_sender$& is retained and passed on with the
26030 message.
26031 .endlist
26032
26033
26034 When &$authenticated_sender$& is set for a message, it is passed on to other
26035 hosts to which Exim authenticates as a client. Do not confuse this value with
26036 &$authenticated_id$&, which is a string obtained from the authentication
26037 process, and which is not usually a complete email address.
26038
26039 .vindex "&$sender_address$&"
26040 Whenever an AUTH= value is ignored, the incident is logged. The ACL for
26041 MAIL, if defined, is run after AUTH= is accepted or ignored. It can
26042 therefore make use of &$authenticated_sender$&. The converse is not true: the
26043 value of &$sender_address$& is not yet set up when the &%acl_smtp_mailauth%&
26044 ACL is run.
26045
26046
26047
26048 .section "Authentication on an Exim server" "SECTauthexiser"
26049 .cindex "authentication" "on an Exim server"
26050 When Exim receives an EHLO command, it advertises the public names of those
26051 authenticators that are configured as servers, subject to the following
26052 conditions:
26053
26054 .ilist
26055 The client host must match &%auth_advertise_hosts%& (default *).
26056 .next
26057 It the &%server_advertise_condition%& option is set, its expansion must not
26058 yield the empty string, &"0"&, &"no"&, or &"false"&.
26059 .endlist
26060
26061 The order in which the authenticators are defined controls the order in which
26062 the mechanisms are advertised.
26063
26064 Some mail clients (for example, some versions of Netscape) require the user to
26065 provide a name and password for authentication whenever AUTH is advertised,
26066 even though authentication may not in fact be needed (for example, Exim may be
26067 set up to allow unconditional relaying from the client by an IP address check).
26068 You can make such clients more friendly by not advertising AUTH to them.
26069 For example, if clients on the 10.9.8.0/24 network are permitted (by the ACL
26070 that runs for RCPT) to relay without authentication, you should set
26071 .code
26072 auth_advertise_hosts = ! 10.9.8.0/24
26073 .endd
26074 so that no authentication mechanisms are advertised to them.
26075
26076 The &%server_advertise_condition%& controls the advertisement of individual
26077 authentication mechanisms. For example, it can be used to restrict the
26078 advertisement of a particular mechanism to encrypted connections, by a setting
26079 such as:
26080 .code
26081 server_advertise_condition = ${if eq{$tls_in_cipher}{}{no}{yes}}
26082 .endd
26083 .vindex "&$tls_in_cipher$&"
26084 If the session is encrypted, &$tls_in_cipher$& is not empty, and so the expansion
26085 yields &"yes"&, which allows the advertisement to happen.
26086
26087 When an Exim server receives an AUTH command from a client, it rejects it
26088 immediately if AUTH was not advertised in response to an earlier EHLO
26089 command. This is the case if
26090
26091 .ilist
26092 The client host does not match &%auth_advertise_hosts%&; or
26093 .next
26094 No authenticators are configured with server options; or
26095 .next
26096 Expansion of &%server_advertise_condition%& blocked the advertising of all the
26097 server authenticators.
26098 .endlist
26099
26100
26101 Otherwise, Exim runs the ACL specified by &%acl_smtp_auth%& in order
26102 to decide whether to accept the command. If &%acl_smtp_auth%& is not set,
26103 AUTH is accepted from any client host.
26104
26105 If AUTH is not rejected by the ACL, Exim searches its configuration for a
26106 server authentication mechanism that was advertised in response to EHLO and
26107 that matches the one named in the AUTH command. If it finds one, it runs
26108 the appropriate authentication protocol, and authentication either succeeds or
26109 fails. If there is no matching advertised mechanism, the AUTH command is
26110 rejected with a 504 error.
26111
26112 .vindex "&$received_protocol$&"
26113 .vindex "&$sender_host_authenticated$&"
26114 When a message is received from an authenticated host, the value of
26115 &$received_protocol$& is set to &"esmtpa"& or &"esmtpsa"& instead of &"esmtp"&
26116 or &"esmtps"&, and &$sender_host_authenticated$& contains the name (not the
26117 public name) of the authenticator driver that successfully authenticated the
26118 client from which the message was received. This variable is empty if there was
26119 no successful authentication.
26120
26121 .cindex authentication "expansion item"
26122 Successful authentication sets up information used by the
26123 &$authresults$& expansion item.
26124
26125
26126
26127
26128 .section "Testing server authentication" "SECID169"
26129 .cindex "authentication" "testing a server"
26130 .cindex "AUTH" "testing a server"
26131 .cindex "base64 encoding" "creating authentication test data"
26132 Exim's &%-bh%& option can be useful for testing server authentication
26133 configurations. The data for the AUTH command has to be sent using base64
26134 encoding. A quick way to produce such data for testing is the following Perl
26135 script:
26136 .code
26137 use MIME::Base64;
26138 printf ("%s", encode_base64(eval "\"$ARGV[0]\""));
26139 .endd
26140 .cindex "binary zero" "in authentication data"
26141 This interprets its argument as a Perl string, and then encodes it. The
26142 interpretation as a Perl string allows binary zeros, which are required for
26143 some kinds of authentication, to be included in the data. For example, a
26144 command line to run this script on such data might be
26145 .code
26146 encode '\0user\0password'
26147 .endd
26148 Note the use of single quotes to prevent the shell interpreting the
26149 backslashes, so that they can be interpreted by Perl to specify characters
26150 whose code value is zero.
26151
26152 &*Warning 1*&: If either of the user or password strings starts with an octal
26153 digit, you must use three zeros instead of one after the leading backslash. If
26154 you do not, the octal digit that starts your string will be incorrectly
26155 interpreted as part of the code for the first character.
26156
26157 &*Warning 2*&: If there are characters in the strings that Perl interprets
26158 specially, you must use a Perl escape to prevent them being misinterpreted. For
26159 example, a command such as
26160 .code
26161 encode '\0user@domain.com\0pas$$word'
26162 .endd
26163 gives an incorrect answer because of the unescaped &"@"& and &"$"& characters.
26164
26165 If you have the &%mimencode%& command installed, another way to do produce
26166 base64-encoded strings is to run the command
26167 .code
26168 echo -e -n `\0user\0password' | mimencode
26169 .endd
26170 The &%-e%& option of &%echo%& enables the interpretation of backslash escapes
26171 in the argument, and the &%-n%& option specifies no newline at the end of its
26172 output. However, not all versions of &%echo%& recognize these options, so you
26173 should check your version before relying on this suggestion.
26174
26175
26176
26177 .section "Authentication by an Exim client" "SECID170"
26178 .cindex "authentication" "on an Exim client"
26179 The &(smtp)& transport has two options called &%hosts_require_auth%& and
26180 &%hosts_try_auth%&. When the &(smtp)& transport connects to a server that
26181 announces support for authentication, and the host matches an entry in either
26182 of these options, Exim (as a client) tries to authenticate as follows:
26183
26184 .ilist
26185 For each authenticator that is configured as a client, in the order in which
26186 they are defined in the configuration, it searches the authentication
26187 mechanisms announced by the server for one whose name matches the public name
26188 of the authenticator.
26189 .next
26190 .vindex "&$host$&"
26191 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
26192 When it finds one that matches, it runs the authenticator's client code. The
26193 variables &$host$& and &$host_address$& are available for any string expansions
26194 that the client might do. They are set to the server's name and IP address. If
26195 any expansion is forced to fail, the authentication attempt is abandoned, and
26196 Exim moves on to the next authenticator. Otherwise an expansion failure causes
26197 delivery to be deferred.
26198 .next
26199 If the result of the authentication attempt is a temporary error or a timeout,
26200 Exim abandons trying to send the message to the host for the moment. It will
26201 try again later. If there are any backup hosts available, they are tried in the
26202 usual way.
26203 .next
26204 If the response to authentication is a permanent error (5&'xx'& code), Exim
26205 carries on searching the list of authenticators and tries another one if
26206 possible. If all authentication attempts give permanent errors, or if there are
26207 no attempts because no mechanisms match (or option expansions force failure),
26208 what happens depends on whether the host matches &%hosts_require_auth%& or
26209 &%hosts_try_auth%&. In the first case, a temporary error is generated, and
26210 delivery is deferred. The error can be detected in the retry rules, and thereby
26211 turned into a permanent error if you wish. In the second case, Exim tries to
26212 deliver the message unauthenticated.
26213 .endlist
26214
26215 Note that the hostlist test for whether to do authentication can be
26216 confused if name-IP lookups change between the time the peer is decided
26217 upon and the time that the transport runs. For example, with a manualroute
26218 router given a host name, and with DNS "round-robin" used by that name: if
26219 the local resolver cache times out between the router and the transport
26220 running, the transport may get an IP for the name for its authentication
26221 check which does not match the connection peer IP.
26222 No authentication will then be done, despite the names being identical.
26223
26224 For such cases use a separate transport which always authenticates.
26225
26226 .cindex "AUTH" "on MAIL command"
26227 When Exim has authenticated itself to a remote server, it adds the AUTH
26228 parameter to the MAIL commands it sends, if it has an authenticated sender for
26229 the message. If the message came from a remote host, the authenticated sender
26230 is the one that was receiving on an incoming MAIL command, provided that the
26231 incoming connection was authenticated and the &%server_mail_auth%& condition
26232 allowed the authenticated sender to be retained. If a local process calls Exim
26233 to send a message, the sender address that is built from the login name and
26234 &%qualify_domain%& is treated as authenticated. However, if the
26235 &%authenticated_sender%& option is set on the &(smtp)& transport, it overrides
26236 the authenticated sender that was received with the message.
26237 .ecindex IIDauthconf1
26238 .ecindex IIDauthconf2
26239
26240
26241
26242
26243
26244
26245 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26246 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26247
26248 .chapter "The plaintext authenticator" "CHAPplaintext"
26249 .scindex IIDplaiauth1 "&(plaintext)& authenticator"
26250 .scindex IIDplaiauth2 "authenticators" "&(plaintext)&"
26251 The &(plaintext)& authenticator can be configured to support the PLAIN and
26252 LOGIN authentication mechanisms, both of which transfer authentication data as
26253 plain (unencrypted) text (though base64 encoded). The use of plain text is a
26254 security risk; you are strongly advised to insist on the use of SMTP encryption
26255 (see chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>&) if you use the PLAIN or LOGIN mechanisms. If you do
26256 use unencrypted plain text, you should not use the same passwords for SMTP
26257 connections as you do for login accounts.
26258
26259 .section "Plaintext options" "SECID171"
26260 .cindex "options" "&(plaintext)& authenticator (server)"
26261 When configured as a server, &(plaintext)& uses the following options:
26262
26263 .option server_condition authenticators string&!! unset
26264 This is actually a global authentication option, but it must be set in order to
26265 configure the &(plaintext)& driver as a server. Its use is described below.
26266
26267 .option server_prompts plaintext string&!! unset
26268 The contents of this option, after expansion, must be a colon-separated list of
26269 prompt strings. If expansion fails, a temporary authentication rejection is
26270 given.
26271
26272 .section "Using plaintext in a server" "SECTplainserver"
26273 .cindex "AUTH" "in &(plaintext)& authenticator"
26274 .cindex "binary zero" "in &(plaintext)& authenticator"
26275 .cindex "numerical variables (&$1$& &$2$& etc)" &&&
26276 "in &(plaintext)& authenticator"
26277 .vindex "&$auth1$&, &$auth2$&, etc"
26278 .cindex "base64 encoding" "in &(plaintext)& authenticator"
26279
26280 When running as a server, &(plaintext)& performs the authentication test by
26281 expanding a string. The data sent by the client with the AUTH command, or in
26282 response to subsequent prompts, is base64 encoded, and so may contain any byte
26283 values when decoded. If any data is supplied with the command, it is treated as
26284 a list of strings, separated by NULs (binary zeros), the first three of which
26285 are placed in the expansion variables &$auth1$&, &$auth2$&, and &$auth3$&
26286 (neither LOGIN nor PLAIN uses more than three strings).
26287
26288 For compatibility with previous releases of Exim, the values are also placed in
26289 the expansion variables &$1$&, &$2$&, and &$3$&. However, the use of these
26290 variables for this purpose is now deprecated, as it can lead to confusion in
26291 string expansions that also use them for other things.
26292
26293 If there are more strings in &%server_prompts%& than the number of strings
26294 supplied with the AUTH command, the remaining prompts are used to obtain more
26295 data. Each response from the client may be a list of NUL-separated strings.
26296
26297 .vindex "&$authenticated_id$&"
26298 Once a sufficient number of data strings have been received,
26299 &%server_condition%& is expanded. If the expansion is forced to fail,
26300 authentication fails. Any other expansion failure causes a temporary error code
26301 to be returned. If the result of a successful expansion is an empty string,
26302 &"0"&, &"no"&, or &"false"&, authentication fails. If the result of the
26303 expansion is &"1"&, &"yes"&, or &"true"&, authentication succeeds and the
26304 generic &%server_set_id%& option is expanded and saved in &$authenticated_id$&.
26305 For any other result, a temporary error code is returned, with the expanded
26306 string as the error text
26307
26308 &*Warning*&: If you use a lookup in the expansion to find the user's
26309 password, be sure to make the authentication fail if the user is unknown.
26310 There are good and bad examples at the end of the next section.
26311
26312
26313
26314 .section "The PLAIN authentication mechanism" "SECID172"
26315 .cindex "PLAIN authentication mechanism"
26316 .cindex "authentication" "PLAIN mechanism"
26317 .cindex "binary zero" "in &(plaintext)& authenticator"
26318 The PLAIN authentication mechanism (RFC 2595) specifies that three strings be
26319 sent as one item of data (that is, one combined string containing two NUL
26320 separators). The data is sent either as part of the AUTH command, or
26321 subsequently in response to an empty prompt from the server.
26322
26323 The second and third strings are a user name and a corresponding password.
26324 Using a single fixed user name and password as an example, this could be
26325 configured as follows:
26326 .code
26327 fixed_plain:
26328 driver = plaintext
26329 public_name = PLAIN
26330 server_prompts = :
26331 server_condition = \
26332 ${if and {{eq{$auth2}{username}}{eq{$auth3}{mysecret}}}}
26333 server_set_id = $auth2
26334 .endd
26335 Note that the default result strings from &%if%& (&"true"& or an empty string)
26336 are exactly what we want here, so they need not be specified. Obviously, if the
26337 password contains expansion-significant characters such as dollar, backslash,
26338 or closing brace, they have to be escaped.
26339
26340 The &%server_prompts%& setting specifies a single, empty prompt (empty items at
26341 the end of a string list are ignored). If all the data comes as part of the
26342 AUTH command, as is commonly the case, the prompt is not used. This
26343 authenticator is advertised in the response to EHLO as
26344 .code
26345 250-AUTH PLAIN
26346 .endd
26347 and a client host can authenticate itself by sending the command
26348 .code
26349 AUTH PLAIN AHVzZXJuYW1lAG15c2VjcmV0
26350 .endd
26351 As this contains three strings (more than the number of prompts), no further
26352 data is required from the client. Alternatively, the client may just send
26353 .code
26354 AUTH PLAIN
26355 .endd
26356 to initiate authentication, in which case the server replies with an empty
26357 prompt. The client must respond with the combined data string.
26358
26359 The data string is base64 encoded, as required by the RFC. This example,
26360 when decoded, is <&'NUL'&>&`username`&<&'NUL'&>&`mysecret`&, where <&'NUL'&>
26361 represents a zero byte. This is split up into three strings, the first of which
26362 is empty. The &%server_condition%& option in the authenticator checks that the
26363 second two are &`username`& and &`mysecret`& respectively.
26364
26365 Having just one fixed user name and password, as in this example, is not very
26366 realistic, though for a small organization with only a handful of
26367 authenticating clients it could make sense.
26368
26369 A more sophisticated instance of this authenticator could use the user name in
26370 &$auth2$& to look up a password in a file or database, and maybe do an encrypted
26371 comparison (see &%crypteq%& in chapter &<<CHAPexpand>>&). Here is a example of
26372 this approach, where the passwords are looked up in a DBM file. &*Warning*&:
26373 This is an incorrect example:
26374 .code
26375 server_condition = \
26376 ${if eq{$auth3}{${lookup{$auth2}dbm{/etc/authpwd}}}}
26377 .endd
26378 The expansion uses the user name (&$auth2$&) as the key to look up a password,
26379 which it then compares to the supplied password (&$auth3$&). Why is this example
26380 incorrect? It works fine for existing users, but consider what happens if a
26381 non-existent user name is given. The lookup fails, but as no success/failure
26382 strings are given for the lookup, it yields an empty string. Thus, to defeat
26383 the authentication, all a client has to do is to supply a non-existent user
26384 name and an empty password. The correct way of writing this test is:
26385 .code
26386 server_condition = ${lookup{$auth2}dbm{/etc/authpwd}\
26387 {${if eq{$value}{$auth3}}} {false}}
26388 .endd
26389 In this case, if the lookup succeeds, the result is checked; if the lookup
26390 fails, &"false"& is returned and authentication fails. If &%crypteq%& is being
26391 used instead of &%eq%&, the first example is in fact safe, because &%crypteq%&
26392 always fails if its second argument is empty. However, the second way of
26393 writing the test makes the logic clearer.
26394
26395
26396 .section "The LOGIN authentication mechanism" "SECID173"
26397 .cindex "LOGIN authentication mechanism"
26398 .cindex "authentication" "LOGIN mechanism"
26399 The LOGIN authentication mechanism is not documented in any RFC, but is in use
26400 in a number of programs. No data is sent with the AUTH command. Instead, a
26401 user name and password are supplied separately, in response to prompts. The
26402 plaintext authenticator can be configured to support this as in this example:
26403 .code
26404 fixed_login:
26405 driver = plaintext
26406 public_name = LOGIN
26407 server_prompts = User Name : Password
26408 server_condition = \
26409 ${if and {{eq{$auth1}{username}}{eq{$auth2}{mysecret}}}}
26410 server_set_id = $auth1
26411 .endd
26412 Because of the way plaintext operates, this authenticator accepts data supplied
26413 with the AUTH command (in contravention of the specification of LOGIN), but
26414 if the client does not supply it (as is the case for LOGIN clients), the prompt
26415 strings are used to obtain two data items.
26416
26417 Some clients are very particular about the precise text of the prompts. For
26418 example, Outlook Express is reported to recognize only &"Username:"& and
26419 &"Password:"&. Here is an example of a LOGIN authenticator that uses those
26420 strings. It uses the &%ldapauth%& expansion condition to check the user
26421 name and password by binding to an LDAP server:
26422 .code
26423 login:
26424 driver = plaintext
26425 public_name = LOGIN
26426 server_prompts = Username:: : Password::
26427 server_condition = ${if and{{ \
26428 !eq{}{$auth1} }{ \
26429 ldapauth{\
26430 user="uid=${quote_ldap_dn:$auth1},ou=people,o=example.org" \
26431 pass=${quote:$auth2} \
26432 ldap://ldap.example.org/} }} }
26433 server_set_id = uid=$auth1,ou=people,o=example.org
26434 .endd
26435 We have to check that the username is not empty before using it, because LDAP
26436 does not permit empty DN components. We must also use the &%quote_ldap_dn%&
26437 operator to correctly quote the DN for authentication. However, the basic
26438 &%quote%& operator, rather than any of the LDAP quoting operators, is the
26439 correct one to use for the password, because quoting is needed only to make
26440 the password conform to the Exim syntax. At the LDAP level, the password is an
26441 uninterpreted string.
26442
26443
26444 .section "Support for different kinds of authentication" "SECID174"
26445 A number of string expansion features are provided for the purpose of
26446 interfacing to different ways of user authentication. These include checking
26447 traditionally encrypted passwords from &_/etc/passwd_& (or equivalent), PAM,
26448 Radius, &%ldapauth%&, &'pwcheck'&, and &'saslauthd'&. For details see section
26449 &<<SECTexpcond>>&.
26450
26451
26452
26453
26454 .section "Using plaintext in a client" "SECID175"
26455 .cindex "options" "&(plaintext)& authenticator (client)"
26456 The &(plaintext)& authenticator has two client options:
26457
26458 .option client_ignore_invalid_base64 plaintext boolean false
26459 If the client receives a server prompt that is not a valid base64 string,
26460 authentication is abandoned by default. However, if this option is set true,
26461 the error in the challenge is ignored and the client sends the response as
26462 usual.
26463
26464 .option client_send plaintext string&!! unset
26465 The string is a colon-separated list of authentication data strings. Each
26466 string is independently expanded before being sent to the server. The first
26467 string is sent with the AUTH command; any more strings are sent in response
26468 to prompts from the server. Before each string is expanded, the value of the
26469 most recent prompt is placed in the next &$auth$&<&'n'&> variable, starting
26470 with &$auth1$& for the first prompt. Up to three prompts are stored in this
26471 way. Thus, the prompt that is received in response to sending the first string
26472 (with the AUTH command) can be used in the expansion of the second string, and
26473 so on. If an invalid base64 string is received when
26474 &%client_ignore_invalid_base64%& is set, an empty string is put in the
26475 &$auth$&<&'n'&> variable.
26476
26477 &*Note*&: You cannot use expansion to create multiple strings, because
26478 splitting takes priority and happens first.
26479
26480 Because the PLAIN authentication mechanism requires NUL (binary zero) bytes in
26481 the data, further processing is applied to each string before it is sent. If
26482 there are any single circumflex characters in the string, they are converted to
26483 NULs. Should an actual circumflex be required as data, it must be doubled in
26484 the string.
26485
26486 This is an example of a client configuration that implements the PLAIN
26487 authentication mechanism with a fixed user name and password:
26488 .code
26489 fixed_plain:
26490 driver = plaintext
26491 public_name = PLAIN
26492 client_send = ^username^mysecret
26493 .endd
26494 The lack of colons means that the entire text is sent with the AUTH
26495 command, with the circumflex characters converted to NULs. A similar example
26496 that uses the LOGIN mechanism is:
26497 .code
26498 fixed_login:
26499 driver = plaintext
26500 public_name = LOGIN
26501 client_send = : username : mysecret
26502 .endd
26503 The initial colon means that the first string is empty, so no data is sent with
26504 the AUTH command itself. The remaining strings are sent in response to
26505 prompts.
26506 .ecindex IIDplaiauth1
26507 .ecindex IIDplaiauth2
26508
26509
26510
26511
26512 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26513 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26514
26515 .chapter "The cram_md5 authenticator" "CHID9"
26516 .scindex IIDcramauth1 "&(cram_md5)& authenticator"
26517 .scindex IIDcramauth2 "authenticators" "&(cram_md5)&"
26518 .cindex "CRAM-MD5 authentication mechanism"
26519 .cindex "authentication" "CRAM-MD5 mechanism"
26520 The CRAM-MD5 authentication mechanism is described in RFC 2195. The server
26521 sends a challenge string to the client, and the response consists of a user
26522 name and the CRAM-MD5 digest of the challenge string combined with a secret
26523 string (password) which is known to both server and client. Thus, the secret
26524 is not sent over the network as plain text, which makes this authenticator more
26525 secure than &(plaintext)&. However, the downside is that the secret has to be
26526 available in plain text at either end.
26527
26528
26529 .section "Using cram_md5 as a server" "SECID176"
26530 .cindex "options" "&(cram_md5)& authenticator (server)"
26531 This authenticator has one server option, which must be set to configure the
26532 authenticator as a server:
26533
26534 .option server_secret cram_md5 string&!! unset
26535 .cindex "numerical variables (&$1$& &$2$& etc)" "in &(cram_md5)& authenticator"
26536 When the server receives the client's response, the user name is placed in
26537 the expansion variable &$auth1$&, and &%server_secret%& is expanded to
26538 obtain the password for that user. The server then computes the CRAM-MD5 digest
26539 that the client should have sent, and checks that it received the correct
26540 string. If the expansion of &%server_secret%& is forced to fail, authentication
26541 fails. If the expansion fails for some other reason, a temporary error code is
26542 returned to the client.
26543
26544 For compatibility with previous releases of Exim, the user name is also placed
26545 in &$1$&. However, the use of this variables for this purpose is now
26546 deprecated, as it can lead to confusion in string expansions that also use
26547 numeric variables for other things.
26548
26549 For example, the following authenticator checks that the user name given by the
26550 client is &"ph10"&, and if so, uses &"secret"& as the password. For any other
26551 user name, authentication fails.
26552 .code
26553 fixed_cram:
26554 driver = cram_md5
26555 public_name = CRAM-MD5
26556 server_secret = ${if eq{$auth1}{ph10}{secret}fail}
26557 server_set_id = $auth1
26558 .endd
26559 .vindex "&$authenticated_id$&"
26560 If authentication succeeds, the setting of &%server_set_id%& preserves the user
26561 name in &$authenticated_id$&. A more typical configuration might look up the
26562 secret string in a file, using the user name as the key. For example:
26563 .code
26564 lookup_cram:
26565 driver = cram_md5
26566 public_name = CRAM-MD5
26567 server_secret = ${lookup{$auth1}lsearch{/etc/authpwd}\
26568 {$value}fail}
26569 server_set_id = $auth1
26570 .endd
26571 Note that this expansion explicitly forces failure if the lookup fails
26572 because &$auth1$& contains an unknown user name.
26573
26574 As another example, if you wish to re-use a Cyrus SASL sasldb2 file without
26575 using the relevant libraries, you need to know the realm to specify in the
26576 lookup and then ask for the &"userPassword"& attribute for that user in that
26577 realm, with:
26578 .code
26579 cyrusless_crammd5:
26580 driver = cram_md5
26581 public_name = CRAM-MD5
26582 server_secret = ${lookup{$auth1:mail.example.org:userPassword}\
26583 dbmjz{/etc/sasldb2}{$value}fail}
26584 server_set_id = $auth1
26585 .endd
26586
26587 .section "Using cram_md5 as a client" "SECID177"
26588 .cindex "options" "&(cram_md5)& authenticator (client)"
26589 When used as a client, the &(cram_md5)& authenticator has two options:
26590
26591
26592
26593 .option client_name cram_md5 string&!! "the primary host name"
26594 This string is expanded, and the result used as the user name data when
26595 computing the response to the server's challenge.
26596
26597
26598 .option client_secret cram_md5 string&!! unset
26599 This option must be set for the authenticator to work as a client. Its value is
26600 expanded and the result used as the secret string when computing the response.
26601
26602
26603 .vindex "&$host$&"
26604 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
26605 Different user names and secrets can be used for different servers by referring
26606 to &$host$& or &$host_address$& in the options. Forced failure of either
26607 expansion string is treated as an indication that this authenticator is not
26608 prepared to handle this case. Exim moves on to the next configured client
26609 authenticator. Any other expansion failure causes Exim to give up trying to
26610 send the message to the current server.
26611
26612 A simple example configuration of a &(cram_md5)& authenticator, using fixed
26613 strings, is:
26614 .code
26615 fixed_cram:
26616 driver = cram_md5
26617 public_name = CRAM-MD5
26618 client_name = ph10
26619 client_secret = secret
26620 .endd
26621 .ecindex IIDcramauth1
26622 .ecindex IIDcramauth2
26623
26624
26625
26626 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26627 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26628
26629 .chapter "The cyrus_sasl authenticator" "CHID10"
26630 .scindex IIDcyrauth1 "&(cyrus_sasl)& authenticator"
26631 .scindex IIDcyrauth2 "authenticators" "&(cyrus_sasl)&"
26632 .cindex "Cyrus" "SASL library"
26633 .cindex "Kerberos"
26634 The code for this authenticator was provided by Matthew Byng-Maddick of A L
26635 Digital Ltd (&url(http://www.aldigital.co.uk)).
26636
26637 The &(cyrus_sasl)& authenticator provides server support for the Cyrus SASL
26638 library implementation of the RFC 2222 (&"Simple Authentication and Security
26639 Layer"&). This library supports a number of authentication mechanisms,
26640 including PLAIN and LOGIN, but also several others that Exim does not support
26641 directly. In particular, there is support for Kerberos authentication.
26642
26643 The &(cyrus_sasl)& authenticator provides a gatewaying mechanism directly to
26644 the Cyrus interface, so if your Cyrus library can do, for example, CRAM-MD5,
26645 then so can the &(cyrus_sasl)& authenticator. By default it uses the public
26646 name of the driver to determine which mechanism to support.
26647
26648 Where access to some kind of secret file is required, for example in GSSAPI
26649 or CRAM-MD5, it is worth noting that the authenticator runs as the Exim
26650 user, and that the Cyrus SASL library has no way of escalating privileges
26651 by default. You may also find you need to set environment variables,
26652 depending on the driver you are using.
26653
26654 The application name provided by Exim is &"exim"&, so various SASL options may
26655 be set in &_exim.conf_& in your SASL directory. If you are using GSSAPI for
26656 Kerberos, note that because of limitations in the GSSAPI interface,
26657 changing the server keytab might need to be communicated down to the Kerberos
26658 layer independently. The mechanism for doing so is dependent upon the Kerberos
26659 implementation.
26660
26661 For example, for older releases of Heimdal, the environment variable KRB5_KTNAME
26662 may be set to point to an alternative keytab file. Exim will pass this
26663 variable through from its own inherited environment when started as root or the
26664 Exim user. The keytab file needs to be readable by the Exim user.
26665 With newer releases of Heimdal, a setuid Exim may cause Heimdal to discard the
26666 environment variable. In practice, for those releases, the Cyrus authenticator
26667 is not a suitable interface for GSSAPI (Kerberos) support. Instead, consider
26668 the &(heimdal_gssapi)& authenticator, described in chapter &<<CHAPheimdalgss>>&
26669
26670
26671 .section "Using cyrus_sasl as a server" "SECID178"
26672 The &(cyrus_sasl)& authenticator has four private options. It puts the username
26673 (on a successful authentication) into &$auth1$&. For compatibility with
26674 previous releases of Exim, the username is also placed in &$1$&. However, the
26675 use of this variable for this purpose is now deprecated, as it can lead to
26676 confusion in string expansions that also use numeric variables for other
26677 things.
26678
26679
26680 .option server_hostname cyrus_sasl string&!! "see below"
26681 This option selects the hostname that is used when communicating with the
26682 library. The default value is &`$primary_hostname`&. It is up to the underlying
26683 SASL plug-in what it does with this data.
26684
26685
26686 .option server_mech cyrus_sasl string "see below"
26687 This option selects the authentication mechanism this driver should use. The
26688 default is the value of the generic &%public_name%& option. This option allows
26689 you to use a different underlying mechanism from the advertised name. For
26690 example:
26691 .code
26692 sasl:
26693 driver = cyrus_sasl
26694 public_name = X-ANYTHING
26695 server_mech = CRAM-MD5
26696 server_set_id = $auth1
26697 .endd
26698
26699 .option server_realm cyrus_sasl string&!! unset
26700 This specifies the SASL realm that the server claims to be in.
26701
26702
26703 .option server_service cyrus_sasl string &`smtp`&
26704 This is the SASL service that the server claims to implement.
26705
26706
26707 For straightforward cases, you do not need to set any of the authenticator's
26708 private options. All you need to do is to specify an appropriate mechanism as
26709 the public name. Thus, if you have a SASL library that supports CRAM-MD5 and
26710 PLAIN, you could have two authenticators as follows:
26711 .code
26712 sasl_cram_md5:
26713 driver = cyrus_sasl
26714 public_name = CRAM-MD5
26715 server_set_id = $auth1
26716
26717 sasl_plain:
26718 driver = cyrus_sasl
26719 public_name = PLAIN
26720 server_set_id = $auth2
26721 .endd
26722 Cyrus SASL does implement the LOGIN authentication method, even though it is
26723 not a standard method. It is disabled by default in the source distribution,
26724 but it is present in many binary distributions.
26725 .ecindex IIDcyrauth1
26726 .ecindex IIDcyrauth2
26727
26728
26729
26730
26731 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26732 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26733 .chapter "The dovecot authenticator" "CHAPdovecot"
26734 .scindex IIDdcotauth1 "&(dovecot)& authenticator"
26735 .scindex IIDdcotauth2 "authenticators" "&(dovecot)&"
26736 This authenticator is an interface to the authentication facility of the
26737 Dovecot POP/IMAP server, which can support a number of authentication methods.
26738 Note that Dovecot must be configured to use auth-client not auth-userdb.
26739 If you are using Dovecot to authenticate POP/IMAP clients, it might be helpful
26740 to use the same mechanisms for SMTP authentication. This is a server
26741 authenticator only. There is only one option:
26742
26743 .option server_socket dovecot string unset
26744
26745 This option must specify the socket that is the interface to Dovecot
26746 authentication. The &%public_name%& option must specify an authentication
26747 mechanism that Dovecot is configured to support. You can have several
26748 authenticators for different mechanisms. For example:
26749 .code
26750 dovecot_plain:
26751 driver = dovecot
26752 public_name = PLAIN
26753 server_socket = /var/run/dovecot/auth-client
26754 server_set_id = $auth1
26755
26756 dovecot_ntlm:
26757 driver = dovecot
26758 public_name = NTLM
26759 server_socket = /var/run/dovecot/auth-client
26760 server_set_id = $auth1
26761 .endd
26762 If the SMTP connection is encrypted, or if &$sender_host_address$& is equal to
26763 &$received_ip_address$& (that is, the connection is local), the &"secured"&
26764 option is passed in the Dovecot authentication command. If, for a TLS
26765 connection, a client certificate has been verified, the &"valid-client-cert"&
26766 option is passed. When authentication succeeds, the identity of the user
26767 who authenticated is placed in &$auth1$&.
26768 .ecindex IIDdcotauth1
26769 .ecindex IIDdcotauth2
26770
26771
26772 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26773 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26774 .chapter "The gsasl authenticator" "CHAPgsasl"
26775 .scindex IIDgsaslauth1 "&(gsasl)& authenticator"
26776 .scindex IIDgsaslauth2 "authenticators" "&(gsasl)&"
26777 .cindex "authentication" "GNU SASL"
26778 .cindex "authentication" "SASL"
26779 .cindex "authentication" "EXTERNAL"
26780 .cindex "authentication" "ANONYMOUS"
26781 .cindex "authentication" "PLAIN"
26782 .cindex "authentication" "LOGIN"
26783 .cindex "authentication" "DIGEST-MD5"
26784 .cindex "authentication" "CRAM-MD5"
26785 .cindex "authentication" "SCRAM-SHA-1"
26786 The &(gsasl)& authenticator provides server integration for the GNU SASL
26787 library and the mechanisms it provides. This is new as of the 4.80 release
26788 and there are a few areas where the library does not let Exim smoothly
26789 scale to handle future authentication mechanisms, so no guarantee can be
26790 made that any particular new authentication mechanism will be supported
26791 without code changes in Exim.
26792
26793
26794 .option server_channelbinding gsasl boolean false
26795 Some authentication mechanisms are able to use external context at both ends
26796 of the session to bind the authentication to that context, and fail the
26797 authentication process if that context differs. Specifically, some TLS
26798 ciphersuites can provide identifying information about the cryptographic
26799 context.
26800
26801 This means that certificate identity and verification becomes a non-issue,
26802 as a man-in-the-middle attack will cause the correct client and server to
26803 see different identifiers and authentication will fail.
26804
26805 This is currently only supported when using the GnuTLS library. This is
26806 only usable by mechanisms which support "channel binding"; at time of
26807 writing, that's the SCRAM family.
26808
26809 This defaults off to ensure smooth upgrade across Exim releases, in case
26810 this option causes some clients to start failing. Some future release
26811 of Exim may switch the default to be true.
26812
26813
26814 .option server_hostname gsasl string&!! "see below"
26815 This option selects the hostname that is used when communicating with the
26816 library. The default value is &`$primary_hostname`&.
26817 Some mechanisms will use this data.
26818
26819
26820 .option server_mech gsasl string "see below"
26821 This option selects the authentication mechanism this driver should use. The
26822 default is the value of the generic &%public_name%& option. This option allows
26823 you to use a different underlying mechanism from the advertised name. For
26824 example:
26825 .code
26826 sasl:
26827 driver = gsasl
26828 public_name = X-ANYTHING
26829 server_mech = CRAM-MD5
26830 server_set_id = $auth1
26831 .endd
26832
26833
26834 .option server_password gsasl string&!! unset
26835 Various mechanisms need access to the cleartext password on the server, so
26836 that proof-of-possession can be demonstrated on the wire, without sending
26837 the password itself.
26838
26839 The data available for lookup varies per mechanism.
26840 In all cases, &$auth1$& is set to the &'authentication id'&.
26841 The &$auth2$& variable will always be the &'authorization id'& (&'authz'&)
26842 if available, else the empty string.
26843 The &$auth3$& variable will always be the &'realm'& if available,
26844 else the empty string.
26845
26846 A forced failure will cause authentication to defer.
26847
26848 If using this option, it may make sense to set the &%server_condition%&
26849 option to be simply "true".
26850
26851
26852 .option server_realm gsasl string&!! unset
26853 This specifies the SASL realm that the server claims to be in.
26854 Some mechanisms will use this data.
26855
26856
26857 .option server_scram_iter gsasl string&!! unset
26858 This option provides data for the SCRAM family of mechanisms.
26859 &$auth1$& is not available at evaluation time.
26860 (This may change, as we receive feedback on use)
26861
26862
26863 .option server_scram_salt gsasl string&!! unset
26864 This option provides data for the SCRAM family of mechanisms.
26865 &$auth1$& is not available at evaluation time.
26866 (This may change, as we receive feedback on use)
26867
26868
26869 .option server_service gsasl string &`smtp`&
26870 This is the SASL service that the server claims to implement.
26871 Some mechanisms will use this data.
26872
26873
26874 .section "&(gsasl)& auth variables" "SECTgsaslauthvar"
26875 .vindex "&$auth1$&, &$auth2$&, etc"
26876 These may be set when evaluating specific options, as detailed above.
26877 They will also be set when evaluating &%server_condition%&.
26878
26879 Unless otherwise stated below, the &(gsasl)& integration will use the following
26880 meanings for these variables:
26881
26882 .ilist
26883 .vindex "&$auth1$&"
26884 &$auth1$&: the &'authentication id'&
26885 .next
26886 .vindex "&$auth2$&"
26887 &$auth2$&: the &'authorization id'&
26888 .next
26889 .vindex "&$auth3$&"
26890 &$auth3$&: the &'realm'&
26891 .endlist
26892
26893 On a per-mechanism basis:
26894
26895 .ilist
26896 .cindex "authentication" "EXTERNAL"
26897 EXTERNAL: only &$auth1$& is set, to the possibly empty &'authorization id'&;
26898 the &%server_condition%& option must be present.
26899 .next
26900 .cindex "authentication" "ANONYMOUS"
26901 ANONYMOUS: only &$auth1$& is set, to the possibly empty &'anonymous token'&;
26902 the &%server_condition%& option must be present.
26903 .next
26904 .cindex "authentication" "GSSAPI"
26905 GSSAPI: &$auth1$& will be set to the &'GSSAPI Display Name'&;
26906 &$auth2$& will be set to the &'authorization id'&,
26907 the &%server_condition%& option must be present.
26908 .endlist
26909
26910 An &'anonymous token'& is something passed along as an unauthenticated
26911 identifier; this is analogous to FTP anonymous authentication passing an
26912 email address, or software-identifier@, as the "password".
26913
26914
26915 An example showing the password having the realm specified in the callback
26916 and demonstrating a Cyrus SASL to GSASL migration approach is:
26917 .code
26918 gsasl_cyrusless_crammd5:
26919 driver = gsasl
26920 public_name = CRAM-MD5
26921 server_realm = imap.example.org
26922 server_password = ${lookup{$auth1:$auth3:userPassword}\
26923 dbmjz{/etc/sasldb2}{$value}fail}
26924 server_set_id = ${quote:$auth1}
26925 server_condition = yes
26926 .endd
26927
26928
26929 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26930 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26931
26932 .chapter "The heimdal_gssapi authenticator" "CHAPheimdalgss"
26933 .scindex IIDheimdalgssauth1 "&(heimdal_gssapi)& authenticator"
26934 .scindex IIDheimdalgssauth2 "authenticators" "&(heimdal_gssapi)&"
26935 .cindex "authentication" "GSSAPI"
26936 .cindex "authentication" "Kerberos"
26937 The &(heimdal_gssapi)& authenticator provides server integration for the
26938 Heimdal GSSAPI/Kerberos library, permitting Exim to set a keytab pathname
26939 reliably.
26940
26941 .option server_hostname heimdal_gssapi string&!! "see below"
26942 This option selects the hostname that is used, with &%server_service%&,
26943 for constructing the GSS server name, as a &'GSS_C_NT_HOSTBASED_SERVICE'&
26944 identifier. The default value is &`$primary_hostname`&.
26945
26946 .option server_keytab heimdal_gssapi string&!! unset
26947 If set, then Heimdal will not use the system default keytab (typically
26948 &_/etc/krb5.keytab_&) but instead the pathname given in this option.
26949 The value should be a pathname, with no &"file:"& prefix.
26950
26951 .option server_service heimdal_gssapi string&!! "smtp"
26952 This option specifies the service identifier used, in conjunction with
26953 &%server_hostname%&, for building the identifier for finding credentials
26954 from the keytab.
26955
26956
26957 .section "&(heimdal_gssapi)& auth variables" "SECTheimdalgssauthvar"
26958 Beware that these variables will typically include a realm, thus will appear
26959 to be roughly like an email address already. The &'authzid'& in &$auth2$& is
26960 not verified, so a malicious client can set it to anything.
26961
26962 The &$auth1$& field should be safely trustable as a value from the Key
26963 Distribution Center. Note that these are not quite email addresses.
26964 Each identifier is for a role, and so the left-hand-side may include a
26965 role suffix. For instance, &"joe/admin@EXAMPLE.ORG"&.
26966
26967 .vindex "&$auth1$&, &$auth2$&, etc"
26968 .ilist
26969 .vindex "&$auth1$&"
26970 &$auth1$&: the &'authentication id'&, set to the GSS Display Name.
26971 .next
26972 .vindex "&$auth2$&"
26973 &$auth2$&: the &'authorization id'&, sent within SASL encapsulation after
26974 authentication. If that was empty, this will also be set to the
26975 GSS Display Name.
26976 .endlist
26977
26978
26979 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26980 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
26981
26982 .chapter "The spa authenticator" "CHAPspa"
26983 .scindex IIDspaauth1 "&(spa)& authenticator"
26984 .scindex IIDspaauth2 "authenticators" "&(spa)&"
26985 .cindex "authentication" "Microsoft Secure Password"
26986 .cindex "authentication" "NTLM"
26987 .cindex "Microsoft Secure Password Authentication"
26988 .cindex "NTLM authentication"
26989 The &(spa)& authenticator provides client support for Microsoft's &'Secure
26990 Password Authentication'& mechanism,
26991 which is also sometimes known as NTLM (NT LanMan). The code for client side of
26992 this authenticator was contributed by Marc Prud'hommeaux, and much of it is
26993 taken from the Samba project (&url(http://www.samba.org)). The code for the
26994 server side was subsequently contributed by Tom Kistner. The mechanism works as
26995 follows:
26996
26997 .ilist
26998 After the AUTH command has been accepted, the client sends an SPA
26999 authentication request based on the user name and optional domain.
27000 .next
27001 The server sends back a challenge.
27002 .next
27003 The client builds a challenge response which makes use of the user's password
27004 and sends it to the server, which then accepts or rejects it.
27005 .endlist
27006
27007 Encryption is used to protect the password in transit.
27008
27009
27010
27011 .section "Using spa as a server" "SECID179"
27012 .cindex "options" "&(spa)& authenticator (server)"
27013 The &(spa)& authenticator has just one server option:
27014
27015 .option server_password spa string&!! unset
27016 .cindex "numerical variables (&$1$& &$2$& etc)" "in &(spa)& authenticator"
27017 This option is expanded, and the result must be the cleartext password for the
27018 authenticating user, whose name is at this point in &$auth1$&. For
27019 compatibility with previous releases of Exim, the user name is also placed in
27020 &$1$&. However, the use of this variable for this purpose is now deprecated, as
27021 it can lead to confusion in string expansions that also use numeric variables
27022 for other things. For example:
27023 .code
27024 spa:
27025 driver = spa
27026 public_name = NTLM
27027 server_password = \
27028 ${lookup{$auth1}lsearch{/etc/exim/spa_clearpass}{$value}fail}
27029 .endd
27030 If the expansion is forced to fail, authentication fails. Any other expansion
27031 failure causes a temporary error code to be returned.
27032
27033
27034
27035
27036
27037 .section "Using spa as a client" "SECID180"
27038 .cindex "options" "&(spa)& authenticator (client)"
27039 The &(spa)& authenticator has the following client options:
27040
27041
27042
27043 .option client_domain spa string&!! unset
27044 This option specifies an optional domain for the authentication.
27045
27046
27047 .option client_password spa string&!! unset
27048 This option specifies the user's password, and must be set.
27049
27050
27051 .option client_username spa string&!! unset
27052 This option specifies the user name, and must be set. Here is an example of a
27053 configuration of this authenticator for use with the mail servers at
27054 &'msn.com'&:
27055 .code
27056 msn:
27057 driver = spa
27058 public_name = MSN
27059 client_username = msn/msn_username
27060 client_password = msn_plaintext_password
27061 client_domain = DOMAIN_OR_UNSET
27062 .endd
27063 .ecindex IIDspaauth1
27064 .ecindex IIDspaauth2
27065
27066
27067
27068
27069
27070 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
27071 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
27072
27073 .chapter "The tls authenticator" "CHAPtlsauth"
27074 .scindex IIDtlsauth1 "&(tls)& authenticator"
27075 .scindex IIDtlsauth2 "authenticators" "&(tls)&"
27076 .cindex "authentication" "Client Certificate"
27077 .cindex "authentication" "X509"
27078 .cindex "Certificate-based authentication"
27079 The &(tls)& authenticator provides server support for
27080 authentication based on client certificates.
27081
27082 It is not an SMTP authentication mechanism and is not
27083 advertised by the server as part of the SMTP EHLO response.
27084 It is an Exim authenticator in the sense that it affects
27085 the protocol element of the log line, can be tested for
27086 by the &%authenticated%& ACL condition, and can set
27087 the &$authenticated_id$& variable.
27088
27089 The client must present a verifiable certificate,
27090 for which it must have been requested via the
27091 &%tls_verify_hosts%& or &%tls_try_verify_hosts%& main options
27092 (see &<<CHAPTLS>>&).
27093
27094 If an authenticator of this type is configured it is
27095 run before any SMTP-level communication is done,
27096 and can authenticate the connection.
27097 If it does, SMTP authentication is not offered.
27098
27099 A maximum of one authenticator of this type may be present.
27100
27101
27102 .cindex "options" "&(tls)& authenticator (server)"
27103 The &(tls)& authenticator has three server options:
27104
27105 .option server_param1 tls string&!! unset
27106 .cindex "variables (&$auth1$& &$auth2$& etc)" "in &(tls)& authenticator"
27107 This option is expanded after the TLS negotiation and
27108 the result is placed in &$auth1$&.
27109 If the expansion is forced to fail, authentication fails. Any other expansion
27110 failure causes a temporary error code to be returned.
27111
27112 .option server_param2 tls string&!! unset
27113 .option server_param3 tls string&!! unset
27114 As above, for &$auth2$& and &$auth3$&.
27115
27116 &%server_param1%& may also be spelled &%server_param%&.
27117
27118
27119 Example:
27120 .code
27121 tls:
27122 driver = tls
27123 server_param1 = ${certextract {subj_altname,mail,>:} \
27124 {$tls_in_peercert}}
27125 server_condition = ${if forany {$auth1} \
27126 {!= {0} \
27127 {${lookup ldap{ldap:///\
27128 mailname=${quote_ldap_dn:${lc:$item}},\
27129 ou=users,LDAP_DC?mailid} {$value}{0} \
27130 } } } }
27131 server_set_id = ${if = {1}{${listcount:$auth1}} {$auth1}{}}
27132 .endd
27133 This accepts a client certificate that is verifiable against any
27134 of your configured trust-anchors
27135 (which usually means the full set of public CAs)
27136 and which has a SAN with a good account name.
27137 Note that the client cert is on the wire in-clear, including the SAN,
27138 whereas a plaintext SMTP AUTH done inside TLS is not.
27139
27140 . An alternative might use
27141 . .code
27142 . server_param1 = ${sha256:$tls_in_peercert}
27143 . .endd
27144 . to require one of a set of specific certs that define a given account
27145 . (the verification is still required, but mostly irrelevant).
27146 . This would help for per-device use.
27147 .
27148 . However, for the future we really need support for checking a
27149 . user cert in LDAP - which probably wants a base-64 DER.
27150
27151 .ecindex IIDtlsauth1
27152 .ecindex IIDtlsauth2
27153
27154
27155 Note that because authentication is traditionally an SMTP operation,
27156 the &%authenticated%& ACL condition cannot be used in
27157 a connect- or helo-ACL.
27158
27159
27160
27161 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
27162 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
27163
27164 .chapter "Encrypted SMTP connections using TLS/SSL" "CHAPTLS" &&&
27165 "Encrypted SMTP connections"
27166 .scindex IIDencsmtp1 "encryption" "on SMTP connection"
27167 .scindex IIDencsmtp2 "SMTP" "encryption"
27168 .cindex "TLS" "on SMTP connection"
27169 .cindex "OpenSSL"
27170 .cindex "GnuTLS"
27171 Support for TLS (Transport Layer Security), formerly known as SSL (Secure
27172 Sockets Layer), is implemented by making use of the OpenSSL library or the
27173 GnuTLS library (Exim requires GnuTLS release 1.0 or later). There is no
27174 cryptographic code in the Exim distribution itself for implementing TLS. In
27175 order to use this feature you must install OpenSSL or GnuTLS, and then build a
27176 version of Exim that includes TLS support (see section &<<SECTinctlsssl>>&).
27177 You also need to understand the basic concepts of encryption at a managerial
27178 level, and in particular, the way that public keys, private keys, and
27179 certificates are used.
27180
27181 RFC 3207 defines how SMTP connections can make use of encryption. Once a
27182 connection is established, the client issues a STARTTLS command. If the
27183 server accepts this, the client and the server negotiate an encryption
27184 mechanism. If the negotiation succeeds, the data that subsequently passes
27185 between them is encrypted.
27186
27187 Exim's ACLs can detect whether the current SMTP session is encrypted or not,
27188 and if so, what cipher suite is in use, whether the client supplied a
27189 certificate, and whether or not that certificate was verified. This makes it
27190 possible for an Exim server to deny or accept certain commands based on the
27191 encryption state.
27192
27193 &*Warning*&: Certain types of firewall and certain anti-virus products can
27194 disrupt TLS connections. You need to turn off SMTP scanning for these products
27195 in order to get TLS to work.
27196
27197
27198
27199 .section "Support for the &""submissions""& (aka &""ssmtp""& and &""smtps""&) protocol" &&&
27200 "SECID284"
27201 .cindex "submissions protocol"
27202 .cindex "ssmtp protocol"
27203 .cindex "smtps protocol"
27204 .cindex "SMTP" "submissions protocol"
27205 .cindex "SMTP" "ssmtp protocol"
27206 .cindex "SMTP" "smtps protocol"
27207 The history of port numbers for TLS in SMTP is a little messy and has been
27208 contentious. As of RFC 8314, the common practice of using the historically
27209 allocated port 465 for "email submission but with TLS immediately upon connect
27210 instead of using STARTTLS" is officially blessed by the IETF, and recommended
27211 by them in preference to STARTTLS.
27212
27213 The name originally assigned to the port was &"ssmtp"& or &"smtps"&, but as
27214 clarity emerged over the dual roles of SMTP, for MX delivery and Email
27215 Submission, nomenclature has shifted. The modern name is now &"submissions"&.
27216
27217 This approach was, for a while, officially abandoned when encrypted SMTP was
27218 standardized, but many clients kept using it, even as the TCP port number was
27219 reassigned for other use.
27220 Thus you may encounter guidance claiming that you shouldn't enable use of
27221 this port.
27222 In practice, a number of mail-clients have only ever supported submissions,
27223 not submission with STARTTLS upgrade.
27224 Ideally, offer both submission (587) and submissions (465) service.
27225
27226 Exim supports TLS-on-connect by means of the &%tls_on_connect_ports%&
27227 global option. Its value must be a list of port numbers;
27228 the most common use is expected to be:
27229 .code
27230 tls_on_connect_ports = 465
27231 .endd
27232 The port numbers specified by this option apply to all SMTP connections, both
27233 via the daemon and via &'inetd'&. You still need to specify all the ports that
27234 the daemon uses (by setting &%daemon_smtp_ports%& or &%local_interfaces%& or
27235 the &%-oX%& command line option) because &%tls_on_connect_ports%& does not add
27236 an extra port &-- rather, it specifies different behaviour on a port that is
27237 defined elsewhere.
27238
27239 There is also a &%-tls-on-connect%& command line option. This overrides
27240 &%tls_on_connect_ports%&; it forces the TLS-only behaviour for all ports.
27241
27242
27243
27244
27245
27246
27247 .section "OpenSSL vs GnuTLS" "SECTopenvsgnu"
27248 .cindex "TLS" "OpenSSL &'vs'& GnuTLS"
27249 The first TLS support in Exim was implemented using OpenSSL. Support for GnuTLS
27250 followed later, when the first versions of GnuTLS were released. To build Exim
27251 to use GnuTLS, you need to set
27252 .code
27253 USE_GNUTLS=yes
27254 .endd
27255 in Local/Makefile, in addition to
27256 .code
27257 SUPPORT_TLS=yes
27258 .endd
27259 You must also set TLS_LIBS and TLS_INCLUDE appropriately, so that the
27260 include files and libraries for GnuTLS can be found.
27261
27262 There are some differences in usage when using GnuTLS instead of OpenSSL:
27263
27264 .ilist
27265 The &%tls_verify_certificates%& option
27266 cannot be the path of a directory
27267 for GnuTLS versions before 3.3.6
27268 (for later versions, or OpenSSL, it can be either).
27269 .next
27270 The default value for &%tls_dhparam%& differs for historical reasons.
27271 .next
27272 .vindex "&$tls_in_peerdn$&"
27273 .vindex "&$tls_out_peerdn$&"
27274 Distinguished Name (DN) strings reported by the OpenSSL library use a slash for
27275 separating fields; GnuTLS uses commas, in accordance with RFC 2253. This
27276 affects the value of the &$tls_in_peerdn$& and &$tls_out_peerdn$& variables.
27277 .next
27278 OpenSSL identifies cipher suites using hyphens as separators, for example:
27279 DES-CBC3-SHA. GnuTLS historically used underscores, for example:
27280 RSA_ARCFOUR_SHA. What is more, OpenSSL complains if underscores are present
27281 in a cipher list. To make life simpler, Exim changes underscores to hyphens
27282 for OpenSSL and passes the string unchanged to GnuTLS (expecting the library
27283 to handle its own older variants) when processing lists of cipher suites in the
27284 &%tls_require_ciphers%& options (the global option and the &(smtp)& transport
27285 option).
27286 .next
27287 The &%tls_require_ciphers%& options operate differently, as described in the
27288 sections &<<SECTreqciphssl>>& and &<<SECTreqciphgnu>>&.
27289 .next
27290 The &%tls_dh_min_bits%& SMTP transport option is only honoured by GnuTLS.
27291 When using OpenSSL, this option is ignored.
27292 (If an API is found to let OpenSSL be configured in this way,
27293 let the Exim Maintainers know and we'll likely use it).
27294 .next
27295 With GnuTLS, if an explicit list is used for the &%tls_privatekey%& main option
27296 main option, it must be ordered to match the &%tls_certificate%& list.
27297 .next
27298 Some other recently added features may only be available in one or the other.
27299 This should be documented with the feature. If the documentation does not
27300 explicitly state that the feature is infeasible in the other TLS
27301 implementation, then patches are welcome.
27302 .endlist
27303
27304
27305 .section "GnuTLS parameter computation" "SECTgnutlsparam"
27306 This section only applies if &%tls_dhparam%& is set to &`historic`& or to
27307 an explicit path; if the latter, then the text about generation still applies,
27308 but not the chosen filename.
27309 By default, as of Exim 4.80 a hard-coded D-H prime is used.
27310 See the documentation of &%tls_dhparam%& for more information.
27311
27312 GnuTLS uses D-H parameters that may take a substantial amount of time
27313 to compute. It is unreasonable to re-compute them for every TLS session.
27314 Therefore, Exim keeps this data in a file in its spool directory, called
27315 &_gnutls-params-NNNN_& for some value of NNNN, corresponding to the number
27316 of bits requested.
27317 The file is owned by the Exim user and is readable only by
27318 its owner. Every Exim process that start up GnuTLS reads the D-H
27319 parameters from this file. If the file does not exist, the first Exim process
27320 that needs it computes the data and writes it to a temporary file which is
27321 renamed once it is complete. It does not matter if several Exim processes do
27322 this simultaneously (apart from wasting a few resources). Once a file is in
27323 place, new Exim processes immediately start using it.
27324
27325 For maximum security, the parameters that are stored in this file should be
27326 recalculated periodically, the frequency depending on your paranoia level.
27327 If you are avoiding using the fixed D-H primes published in RFCs, then you
27328 are concerned about some advanced attacks and will wish to do this; if you do
27329 not regenerate then you might as well stick to the standard primes.
27330
27331 Arranging this is easy in principle; just delete the file when you want new
27332 values to be computed. However, there may be a problem. The calculation of new
27333 parameters needs random numbers, and these are obtained from &_/dev/random_&.
27334 If the system is not very active, &_/dev/random_& may delay returning data
27335 until enough randomness (entropy) is available. This may cause Exim to hang for
27336 a substantial amount of time, causing timeouts on incoming connections.
27337
27338 The solution is to generate the parameters externally to Exim. They are stored
27339 in &_gnutls-params-N_& in PEM format, which means that they can be
27340 generated externally using the &(certtool)& command that is part of GnuTLS.
27341
27342 To replace the parameters with new ones, instead of deleting the file
27343 and letting Exim re-create it, you can generate new parameters using
27344 &(certtool)& and, when this has been done, replace Exim's cache file by
27345 renaming. The relevant commands are something like this:
27346 .code
27347 # ls
27348 [ look for file; assume gnutls-params-2236 is the most recent ]
27349 # rm -f new-params
27350 # touch new-params
27351 # chown exim:exim new-params
27352 # chmod 0600 new-params
27353 # certtool --generate-dh-params --bits 2236 >>new-params
27354 # openssl dhparam -noout -text -in new-params | head
27355 [ check the first line, make sure it's not more than 2236;
27356 if it is, then go back to the start ("rm") and repeat
27357 until the size generated is at most the size requested ]
27358 # chmod 0400 new-params
27359 # mv new-params gnutls-params-2236
27360 .endd
27361 If Exim never has to generate the parameters itself, the possibility of
27362 stalling is removed.
27363
27364 The filename changed in Exim 4.80, to gain the -bits suffix. The value which
27365 Exim will choose depends upon the version of GnuTLS in use. For older GnuTLS,
27366 the value remains hard-coded in Exim as 1024. As of GnuTLS 2.12.x, there is
27367 a way for Exim to ask for the "normal" number of bits for D-H public-key usage,
27368 and Exim does so. This attempt to remove Exim from TLS policy decisions
27369 failed, as GnuTLS 2.12 returns a value higher than the current hard-coded limit
27370 of the NSS library. Thus Exim gains the &%tls_dh_max_bits%& global option,
27371 which applies to all D-H usage, client or server. If the value returned by
27372 GnuTLS is greater than &%tls_dh_max_bits%& then the value will be clamped down
27373 to &%tls_dh_max_bits%&. The default value has been set at the current NSS
27374 limit, which is still much higher than Exim historically used.
27375
27376 The filename and bits used will change as the GnuTLS maintainers change the
27377 value for their parameter &`GNUTLS_SEC_PARAM_NORMAL`&, as clamped by
27378 &%tls_dh_max_bits%&. At the time of writing (mid 2012), GnuTLS 2.12 recommends
27379 2432 bits, while NSS is limited to 2236 bits.
27380
27381 In fact, the requested value will be *lower* than &%tls_dh_max_bits%&, to
27382 increase the chance of the generated prime actually being within acceptable
27383 bounds, as GnuTLS has been observed to overshoot. Note the check step in the
27384 procedure above. There is no sane procedure available to Exim to double-check
27385 the size of the generated prime, so it might still be too large.
27386
27387
27388 .section "Requiring specific ciphers in OpenSSL" "SECTreqciphssl"
27389 .cindex "TLS" "requiring specific ciphers (OpenSSL)"
27390 .oindex "&%tls_require_ciphers%&" "OpenSSL"
27391 There is a function in the OpenSSL library that can be passed a list of cipher
27392 suites before the cipher negotiation takes place. This specifies which ciphers
27393 are acceptable. The list is colon separated and may contain names like
27394 DES-CBC3-SHA. Exim passes the expanded value of &%tls_require_ciphers%&
27395 directly to this function call.
27396 Many systems will install the OpenSSL manual-pages, so you may have
27397 &'ciphers(1)'& available to you.
27398 The following quotation from the OpenSSL
27399 documentation specifies what forms of item are allowed in the cipher string:
27400
27401 .ilist
27402 It can consist of a single cipher suite such as RC4-SHA.
27403 .next
27404 It can represent a list of cipher suites containing a certain algorithm,
27405 or cipher suites of a certain type. For example SHA1 represents all
27406 ciphers suites using the digest algorithm SHA1 and SSLv3 represents all
27407 SSL v3 algorithms.
27408 .next
27409 Lists of cipher suites can be combined in a single cipher string using
27410 the + character. This is used as a logical and operation. For example
27411 SHA1+DES represents all cipher suites containing the SHA1 and the DES
27412 algorithms.
27413 .endlist
27414
27415 Each cipher string can be optionally preceded by one of the characters &`!`&,
27416 &`-`& or &`+`&.
27417 .ilist
27418 If &`!`& is used, the ciphers are permanently deleted from the list. The
27419 ciphers deleted can never reappear in the list even if they are explicitly
27420 stated.
27421 .next
27422 If &`-`& is used, the ciphers are deleted from the list, but some or all
27423 of the ciphers can be added again by later options.
27424 .next
27425 If &`+`& is used, the ciphers are moved to the end of the list. This
27426 option does not add any new ciphers; it just moves matching existing ones.
27427 .endlist
27428
27429 If none of these characters is present, the string is interpreted as
27430 a list of ciphers to be appended to the current preference list. If the list
27431 includes any ciphers already present they will be ignored: that is, they will
27432 not be moved to the end of the list.
27433 .endlist
27434
27435 The OpenSSL &'ciphers(1)'& command may be used to test the results of a given
27436 string:
27437 .code
27438 # note single-quotes to get ! past any shell history expansion
27439 $ openssl ciphers 'HIGH:!MD5:!SHA1'
27440 .endd
27441
27442 This example will let the library defaults be permitted on the MX port, where
27443 there's probably no identity verification anyway, but ups the ante on the
27444 submission ports where the administrator might have some influence on the
27445 choice of clients used:
27446 .code
27447 # OpenSSL variant; see man ciphers(1)
27448 tls_require_ciphers = ${if =={$received_port}{25}\
27449 {DEFAULT}\
27450 {HIGH:!MD5:!SHA1}}
27451 .endd
27452
27453 This example will prefer ECDSA-authenticated ciphers over RSA ones:
27454 .code
27455 tls_require_ciphers = ECDSA:RSA:!COMPLEMENTOFDEFAULT
27456 .endd
27457
27458
27459 .section "Requiring specific ciphers or other parameters in GnuTLS" &&&
27460 "SECTreqciphgnu"
27461 .cindex "GnuTLS" "specifying parameters for"
27462 .cindex "TLS" "specifying ciphers (GnuTLS)"
27463 .cindex "TLS" "specifying key exchange methods (GnuTLS)"
27464 .cindex "TLS" "specifying MAC algorithms (GnuTLS)"
27465 .cindex "TLS" "specifying protocols (GnuTLS)"
27466 .cindex "TLS" "specifying priority string (GnuTLS)"
27467 .oindex "&%tls_require_ciphers%&" "GnuTLS"
27468 The GnuTLS library allows the caller to provide a "priority string", documented
27469 as part of the &[gnutls_priority_init]& function. This is very similar to the
27470 ciphersuite specification in OpenSSL.
27471
27472 The &%tls_require_ciphers%& option is treated as the GnuTLS priority string
27473 and controls both protocols and ciphers.
27474
27475 The &%tls_require_ciphers%& option is available both as an global option,
27476 controlling how Exim behaves as a server, and also as an option of the
27477 &(smtp)& transport, controlling how Exim behaves as a client. In both cases
27478 the value is string expanded. The resulting string is not an Exim list and
27479 the string is given to the GnuTLS library, so that Exim does not need to be
27480 aware of future feature enhancements of GnuTLS.
27481
27482 Documentation of the strings accepted may be found in the GnuTLS manual, under
27483 "Priority strings". This is online as
27484 &url(http://www.gnutls.org/manual/html_node/Priority-Strings.html),
27485 but beware that this relates to GnuTLS 3, which may be newer than the version
27486 installed on your system. If you are using GnuTLS 3,
27487 then the example code
27488 &url(http://www.gnutls.org/manual/gnutls.html#Listing-the-ciphersuites-in-a-priority-string)
27489 on that site can be used to test a given string.
27490
27491 For example:
27492 .code
27493 # Disable older versions of protocols
27494 tls_require_ciphers = NORMAL:%LATEST_RECORD_VERSION:-VERS-SSL3.0
27495 .endd
27496
27497 Prior to Exim 4.80, an older API of GnuTLS was used, and Exim supported three
27498 additional options, "&%gnutls_require_kx%&", "&%gnutls_require_mac%&" and
27499 "&%gnutls_require_protocols%&". &%tls_require_ciphers%& was an Exim list.
27500
27501 This example will let the library defaults be permitted on the MX port, where
27502 there's probably no identity verification anyway, and lowers security further
27503 by increasing compatibility; but this ups the ante on the submission ports
27504 where the administrator might have some influence on the choice of clients
27505 used:
27506 .code
27507 # GnuTLS variant
27508 tls_require_ciphers = ${if =={$received_port}{25}\
27509 {NORMAL:%COMPAT}\
27510 {SECURE128}}
27511 .endd
27512
27513
27514 .section "Configuring an Exim server to use TLS" "SECID182"
27515 .cindex "TLS" "configuring an Exim server"
27516 When Exim has been built with TLS support, it advertises the availability of
27517 the STARTTLS command to client hosts that match &%tls_advertise_hosts%&,
27518 but not to any others. The default value of this option is *, which means
27519 that STARTTLS is always advertised. Set it to blank to never advertise;
27520 this is reasonable for systems that want to use TLS only as a client.
27521
27522 If STARTTLS is to be used you
27523 need to set some other options in order to make TLS available.
27524
27525 If a client issues a STARTTLS command and there is some configuration
27526 problem in the server, the command is rejected with a 454 error. If the client
27527 persists in trying to issue SMTP commands, all except QUIT are rejected
27528 with the error
27529 .code
27530 554 Security failure
27531 .endd
27532 If a STARTTLS command is issued within an existing TLS session, it is
27533 rejected with a 554 error code.
27534
27535 To enable TLS operations on a server, the &%tls_advertise_hosts%& option
27536 must be set to match some hosts. The default is * which matches all hosts.
27537
27538 If this is all you do, TLS encryption will be enabled but not authentication -
27539 meaning that the peer has no assurance it is actually you he is talking to.
27540 You gain protection from a passive sniffer listening on the wire but not
27541 from someone able to intercept the communication.
27542
27543 Further protection requires some further configuration at the server end.
27544
27545 To make TLS work you need to set, in the server,
27546 .code
27547 tls_certificate = /some/file/name
27548 tls_privatekey = /some/file/name
27549 .endd
27550 These options are, in fact, expanded strings, so you can make them depend on
27551 the identity of the client that is connected if you wish. The first file
27552 contains the server's X509 certificate, and the second contains the private key
27553 that goes with it. These files need to be
27554 PEM format and readable by the Exim user, and must
27555 always be given as full path names.
27556 The key must not be password-protected.
27557 They can be the same file if both the
27558 certificate and the key are contained within it. If &%tls_privatekey%& is not
27559 set, or if its expansion is forced to fail or results in an empty string, this
27560 is assumed to be the case. The certificate file may also contain intermediate
27561 certificates that need to be sent to the client to enable it to authenticate
27562 the server's certificate.
27563
27564 For dual-stack (eg. RSA and ECDSA) configurations, these options can be
27565 colon-separated lists of file paths. Ciphers using given authentication
27566 algorithms require the presence of a suitable certificate to supply the
27567 public-key. The server selects among the certificates to present to the
27568 client depending on the selected cipher, hence the priority ordering for
27569 ciphers will affect which certificate is used.
27570
27571 If you do not understand about certificates and keys, please try to find a
27572 source of this background information, which is not Exim-specific. (There are a
27573 few comments below in section &<<SECTcerandall>>&.)
27574
27575 &*Note*&: These options do not apply when Exim is operating as a client &--
27576 they apply only in the case of a server. If you need to use a certificate in an
27577 Exim client, you must set the options of the same names in an &(smtp)&
27578 transport.
27579
27580 With just these options, an Exim server will be able to use TLS. It does not
27581 require the client to have a certificate (but see below for how to insist on
27582 this). There is one other option that may be needed in other situations. If
27583 .code
27584 tls_dhparam = /some/file/name
27585 .endd
27586 is set, the SSL library is initialized for the use of Diffie-Hellman ciphers
27587 with the parameters contained in the file.
27588 Set this to &`none`& to disable use of DH entirely, by making no prime
27589 available:
27590 .code
27591 tls_dhparam = none
27592 .endd
27593 This may also be set to a string identifying a standard prime to be used for
27594 DH; if it is set to &`default`& or, for OpenSSL, is unset, then the prime
27595 used is &`ike23`&. There are a few standard primes available, see the
27596 documentation for &%tls_dhparam%& for the complete list.
27597
27598 See the command
27599 .code
27600 openssl dhparam
27601 .endd
27602 for a way of generating file data.
27603
27604 The strings supplied for these three options are expanded every time a client
27605 host connects. It is therefore possible to use different certificates and keys
27606 for different hosts, if you so wish, by making use of the client's IP address
27607 in &$sender_host_address$& to control the expansion. If a string expansion is
27608 forced to fail, Exim behaves as if the option is not set.
27609
27610 .cindex "cipher" "logging"
27611 .cindex "log" "TLS cipher"
27612 .vindex "&$tls_in_cipher$&"
27613 The variable &$tls_in_cipher$& is set to the cipher suite that was negotiated for
27614 an incoming TLS connection. It is included in the &'Received:'& header of an
27615 incoming message (by default &-- you can, of course, change this), and it is
27616 also included in the log line that records a message's arrival, keyed by
27617 &"X="&, unless the &%tls_cipher%& log selector is turned off. The &%encrypted%&
27618 condition can be used to test for specific cipher suites in ACLs.
27619
27620 Once TLS has been established, the ACLs that run for subsequent SMTP commands
27621 can check the name of the cipher suite and vary their actions accordingly. The
27622 cipher suite names vary, depending on which TLS library is being used. For
27623 example, OpenSSL uses the name DES-CBC3-SHA for the cipher suite which in other
27624 contexts is known as TLS_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA. Check the OpenSSL or GnuTLS
27625 documentation for more details.
27626
27627 For outgoing SMTP deliveries, &$tls_out_cipher$& is used and logged
27628 (again depending on the &%tls_cipher%& log selector).
27629
27630
27631 .section "Requesting and verifying client certificates" "SECID183"
27632 .cindex "certificate" "verification of client"
27633 .cindex "TLS" "client certificate verification"
27634 If you want an Exim server to request a certificate when negotiating a TLS
27635 session with a client, you must set either &%tls_verify_hosts%& or
27636 &%tls_try_verify_hosts%&. You can, of course, set either of them to * to
27637 apply to all TLS connections. For any host that matches one of these options,
27638 Exim requests a certificate as part of the setup of the TLS session. The
27639 contents of the certificate are verified by comparing it with a list of
27640 expected certificates.
27641 These may be the system default set (depending on library version),
27642 an explicit file or,
27643 depending on library version, a directory, identified by
27644 &%tls_verify_certificates%&.
27645
27646 A file can contain multiple certificates, concatenated end to end. If a
27647 directory is used
27648 (OpenSSL only),
27649 each certificate must be in a separate file, with a name (or a symbolic link)
27650 of the form <&'hash'&>.0, where <&'hash'&> is a hash value constructed from the
27651 certificate. You can compute the relevant hash by running the command
27652 .code
27653 openssl x509 -hash -noout -in /cert/file
27654 .endd
27655 where &_/cert/file_& contains a single certificate.
27656
27657 The difference between &%tls_verify_hosts%& and &%tls_try_verify_hosts%& is
27658 what happens if the client does not supply a certificate, or if the certificate
27659 does not match any of the certificates in the collection named by
27660 &%tls_verify_certificates%&. If the client matches &%tls_verify_hosts%&, the
27661 attempt to set up a TLS session is aborted, and the incoming connection is
27662 dropped. If the client matches &%tls_try_verify_hosts%&, the (encrypted) SMTP
27663 session continues. ACLs that run for subsequent SMTP commands can detect the
27664 fact that no certificate was verified, and vary their actions accordingly. For
27665 example, you can insist on a certificate before accepting a message for
27666 relaying, but not when the message is destined for local delivery.
27667
27668 .vindex "&$tls_in_peerdn$&"
27669 When a client supplies a certificate (whether it verifies or not), the value of
27670 the Distinguished Name of the certificate is made available in the variable
27671 &$tls_in_peerdn$& during subsequent processing of the message.
27672
27673 .cindex "log" "distinguished name"
27674 Because it is often a long text string, it is not included in the log line or
27675 &'Received:'& header by default. You can arrange for it to be logged, keyed by
27676 &"DN="&, by setting the &%tls_peerdn%& log selector, and you can use
27677 &%received_header_text%& to change the &'Received:'& header. When no
27678 certificate is supplied, &$tls_in_peerdn$& is empty.
27679
27680
27681 .section "Revoked certificates" "SECID184"
27682 .cindex "TLS" "revoked certificates"
27683 .cindex "revocation list"
27684 .cindex "certificate" "revocation list"
27685 .cindex "OCSP" "stapling"
27686 Certificate issuing authorities issue Certificate Revocation Lists (CRLs) when
27687 certificates are revoked. If you have such a list, you can pass it to an Exim
27688 server using the global option called &%tls_crl%& and to an Exim client using
27689 an identically named option for the &(smtp)& transport. In each case, the value
27690 of the option is expanded and must then be the name of a file that contains a
27691 CRL in PEM format.
27692 The downside is that clients have to periodically re-download a potentially huge
27693 file from every certificate authority they know of.
27694
27695 The way with most moving parts at query time is Online Certificate
27696 Status Protocol (OCSP), where the client verifies the certificate
27697 against an OCSP server run by the CA. This lets the CA track all
27698 usage of the certs. It requires running software with access to the
27699 private key of the CA, to sign the responses to the OCSP queries. OCSP
27700 is based on HTTP and can be proxied accordingly.
27701
27702 The only widespread OCSP server implementation (known to this writer)
27703 comes as part of OpenSSL and aborts on an invalid request, such as
27704 connecting to the port and then disconnecting. This requires
27705 re-entering the passphrase each time some random client does this.
27706
27707 The third way is OCSP Stapling; in this, the server using a certificate
27708 issued by the CA periodically requests an OCSP proof of validity from
27709 the OCSP server, then serves it up inline as part of the TLS
27710 negotiation. This approach adds no extra round trips, does not let the
27711 CA track users, scales well with number of certs issued by the CA and is
27712 resilient to temporary OCSP server failures, as long as the server
27713 starts retrying to fetch an OCSP proof some time before its current
27714 proof expires. The downside is that it requires server support.
27715
27716 Unless Exim is built with the support disabled,
27717 or with GnuTLS earlier than version 3.3.16 / 3.4.8
27718 support for OCSP stapling is included.
27719
27720 There is a global option called &%tls_ocsp_file%&.
27721 The file specified therein is expected to be in DER format, and contain
27722 an OCSP proof. Exim will serve it as part of the TLS handshake. This
27723 option will be re-expanded for SNI, if the &%tls_certificate%& option
27724 contains &`tls_in_sni`&, as per other TLS options.
27725
27726 Exim does not at this time implement any support for fetching a new OCSP
27727 proof. The burden is on the administrator to handle this, outside of
27728 Exim. The file specified should be replaced atomically, so that the
27729 contents are always valid. Exim will expand the &%tls_ocsp_file%& option
27730 on each connection, so a new file will be handled transparently on the
27731 next connection.
27732
27733 When built with OpenSSL Exim will check for a valid next update timestamp
27734 in the OCSP proof; if not present, or if the proof has expired, it will be
27735 ignored.
27736
27737 For the client to be able to verify the stapled OCSP the server must
27738 also supply, in its stapled information, any intermediate
27739 certificates for the chain leading to the OCSP proof from the signer
27740 of the server certificate. There may be zero or one such. These
27741 intermediate certificates should be added to the server OCSP stapling
27742 file named by &%tls_ocsp_file%&.
27743
27744 Note that the proof only covers the terminal server certificate,
27745 not any of the chain from CA to it.
27746
27747 There is no current way to staple a proof for a client certificate.
27748
27749 .code
27750 A helper script "ocsp_fetch.pl" for fetching a proof from a CA
27751 OCSP server is supplied. The server URL may be included in the
27752 server certificate, if the CA is helpful.
27753
27754 One failure mode seen was the OCSP Signer cert expiring before the end
27755 of validity of the OCSP proof. The checking done by Exim/OpenSSL
27756 noted this as invalid overall, but the re-fetch script did not.
27757 .endd
27758
27759
27760
27761
27762 .section "Configuring an Exim client to use TLS" "SECID185"
27763 .cindex "cipher" "logging"
27764 .cindex "log" "TLS cipher"
27765 .cindex "log" "distinguished name"
27766 .cindex "TLS" "configuring an Exim client"
27767 The &%tls_cipher%& and &%tls_peerdn%& log selectors apply to outgoing SMTP
27768 deliveries as well as to incoming, the latter one causing logging of the
27769 server certificate's DN. The remaining client configuration for TLS is all
27770 within the &(smtp)& transport.
27771
27772 It is not necessary to set any options to have TLS work in the &(smtp)&
27773 transport. If Exim is built with TLS support, and TLS is advertised by a
27774 server, the &(smtp)& transport always tries to start a TLS session. However,
27775 this can be prevented by setting &%hosts_avoid_tls%& (an option of the
27776 transport) to a list of server hosts for which TLS should not be used.
27777
27778 If you do not want Exim to attempt to send messages unencrypted when an attempt
27779 to set up an encrypted connection fails in any way, you can set
27780 &%hosts_require_tls%& to a list of hosts for which encryption is mandatory. For
27781 those hosts, delivery is always deferred if an encrypted connection cannot be
27782 set up. If there are any other hosts for the address, they are tried in the
27783 usual way.
27784
27785 When the server host is not in &%hosts_require_tls%&, Exim may try to deliver
27786 the message unencrypted. It always does this if the response to STARTTLS is
27787 a 5&'xx'& code. For a temporary error code, or for a failure to negotiate a TLS
27788 session after a success response code, what happens is controlled by the
27789 &%tls_tempfail_tryclear%& option of the &(smtp)& transport. If it is false,
27790 delivery to this host is deferred, and other hosts (if available) are tried. If
27791 it is true, Exim attempts to deliver unencrypted after a 4&'xx'& response to
27792 STARTTLS, and if STARTTLS is accepted, but the subsequent TLS
27793 negotiation fails, Exim closes the current connection (because it is in an
27794 unknown state), opens a new one to the same host, and then tries the delivery
27795 unencrypted.
27796
27797 The &%tls_certificate%& and &%tls_privatekey%& options of the &(smtp)&
27798 transport provide the client with a certificate, which is passed to the server
27799 if it requests it. If the server is Exim, it will request a certificate only if
27800 &%tls_verify_hosts%& or &%tls_try_verify_hosts%& matches the client.
27801
27802 If the &%tls_verify_certificates%& option is set on the &(smtp)& transport, it
27803 specifies a collection of expected server certificates.
27804 These may be
27805 the system default set (depending on library version),
27806 a file,
27807 or (depending on library version) a directory.
27808 The client verifies the server's certificate
27809 against this collection, taking into account any revoked certificates that are
27810 in the list defined by &%tls_crl%&.
27811 Failure to verify fails the TLS connection unless either of the
27812 &%tls_verify_hosts%& or &%tls_try_verify_hosts%& options are set.
27813
27814 The &%tls_verify_hosts%& and &%tls_try_verify_hosts%& options restrict
27815 certificate verification to the listed servers. Verification either must
27816 or need not succeed respectively.
27817
27818 The &(smtp)& transport has two OCSP-related options:
27819 &%hosts_require_ocsp%&; a host-list for which a Certificate Status
27820 is requested and required for the connection to proceed. The default
27821 value is empty.
27822 &%hosts_request_ocsp%&; a host-list for which (additionally)
27823 a Certificate Status is requested (but not necessarily verified). The default
27824 value is "*" meaning that requests are made unless configured
27825 otherwise.
27826
27827 The host(s) should also be in &%hosts_require_tls%&, and
27828 &%tls_verify_certificates%& configured for the transport,
27829 for OCSP to be relevant.
27830
27831 If
27832 &%tls_require_ciphers%& is set on the &(smtp)& transport, it must contain a
27833 list of permitted cipher suites. If either of these checks fails, delivery to
27834 the current host is abandoned, and the &(smtp)& transport tries to deliver to
27835 alternative hosts, if any.
27836
27837 &*Note*&:
27838 These options must be set in the &(smtp)& transport for Exim to use TLS when it
27839 is operating as a client. Exim does not assume that a server certificate (set
27840 by the global options of the same name) should also be used when operating as a
27841 client.
27842
27843 .vindex "&$host$&"
27844 .vindex "&$host_address$&"
27845 All the TLS options in the &(smtp)& transport are expanded before use, with
27846 &$host$& and &$host_address$& containing the name and address of the server to
27847 which the client is connected. Forced failure of an expansion causes Exim to
27848 behave as if the relevant option were unset.
27849
27850 .vindex &$tls_out_bits$&
27851 .vindex &$tls_out_cipher$&
27852 .vindex &$tls_out_peerdn$&
27853 .vindex &$tls_out_sni$&
27854 Before an SMTP connection is established, the
27855 &$tls_out_bits$&, &$tls_out_cipher$&, &$tls_out_peerdn$& and &$tls_out_sni$&
27856 variables are emptied. (Until the first connection, they contain the values
27857 that were set when the message was received.) If STARTTLS is subsequently
27858 successfully obeyed, these variables are set to the relevant values for the
27859 outgoing connection.
27860
27861
27862
27863 .section "Use of TLS Server Name Indication" "SECTtlssni"
27864 .cindex "TLS" "Server Name Indication"
27865 .vindex "&$tls_in_sni$&"
27866 .oindex "&%tls_in_sni%&"
27867 With TLS1.0 or above, there is an extension mechanism by which extra
27868 information can be included at various points in the protocol. One of these
27869 extensions, documented in RFC 6066 (and before that RFC 4366) is
27870 &"Server Name Indication"&, commonly &"SNI"&. This extension is sent by the
27871 client in the initial handshake, so that the server can examine the servername
27872 within and possibly choose to use different certificates and keys (and more)
27873 for this session.
27874
27875 This is analogous to HTTP's &"Host:"& header, and is the main mechanism by
27876 which HTTPS-enabled web-sites can be virtual-hosted, many sites to one IP
27877 address.
27878
27879 With SMTP to MX, there are the same problems here as in choosing the identity
27880 against which to validate a certificate: you can't rely on insecure DNS to
27881 provide the identity which you then cryptographically verify. So this will
27882 be of limited use in that environment.
27883
27884 With SMTP to Submission, there is a well-defined hostname which clients are
27885 connecting to and can validate certificates against. Thus clients &*can*&
27886 choose to include this information in the TLS negotiation. If this becomes
27887 wide-spread, then hosters can choose to present different certificates to
27888 different clients. Or even negotiate different cipher suites.
27889
27890 The &%tls_sni%& option on an SMTP transport is an expanded string; the result,
27891 if not empty, will be sent on a TLS session as part of the handshake. There's
27892 nothing more to it. Choosing a sensible value not derived insecurely is the
27893 only point of caution. The &$tls_out_sni$& variable will be set to this string
27894 for the lifetime of the client connection (including during authentication).
27895
27896 Except during SMTP client sessions, if &$tls_in_sni$& is set then it is a string
27897 received from a client.
27898 It can be logged with the &%log_selector%& item &`+tls_sni`&.
27899
27900 If the string &`tls_in_sni`& appears in the main section's &%tls_certificate%&
27901 option (prior to expansion) then the following options will be re-expanded
27902 during TLS session handshake, to permit alternative values to be chosen:
27903
27904 .ilist
27905 &%tls_certificate%&
27906 .next
27907 &%tls_crl%&
27908 .next
27909 &%tls_privatekey%&
27910 .next
27911 &%tls_verify_certificates%&
27912 .next
27913 &%tls_ocsp_file%&
27914 .endlist
27915
27916 Great care should be taken to deal with matters of case, various injection
27917 attacks in the string (&`../`& or SQL), and ensuring that a valid filename
27918 can always be referenced; it is important to remember that &$tls_in_sni$& is
27919 arbitrary unverified data provided prior to authentication.
27920 Further, the initial certificate is loaded before SNI is arrived, so
27921 an expansion for &%tls_certificate%& must have a default which is used
27922 when &$tls_in_sni$& is empty.
27923
27924 The Exim developers are proceeding cautiously and so far no other TLS options
27925 are re-expanded.
27926
27927 When Exim is built against OpenSSL, OpenSSL must have been built with support
27928 for TLS Extensions. This holds true for OpenSSL 1.0.0+ and 0.9.8+ with
27929 enable-tlsext in EXTRACONFIGURE. If you invoke &(openssl s_client -h)& and
27930 see &`-servername`& in the output, then OpenSSL has support.
27931
27932 When Exim is built against GnuTLS, SNI support is available as of GnuTLS
27933 0.5.10. (Its presence predates the current API which Exim uses, so if Exim
27934 built, then you have SNI support).
27935
27936
27937
27938 .section "Multiple messages on the same encrypted TCP/IP connection" &&&
27939 "SECTmulmessam"
27940 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries with TLS"
27941 .cindex "TLS" "multiple message deliveries"
27942 Exim sends multiple messages down the same TCP/IP connection by starting up
27943 an entirely new delivery process for each message, passing the socket from
27944 one process to the next. This implementation does not fit well with the use
27945 of TLS, because there is quite a lot of state information associated with a TLS
27946 connection, not just a socket identification. Passing all the state information
27947 to a new process is not feasible. Consequently, for sending using TLS Exim
27948 starts an additional proxy process for handling the encryption, piping the
27949 unencrypted data stream from and to the delivery processes.
27950
27951 An older mode of operation can be enabled on a per-host basis by the
27952 &%hosts_noproxy_tls%& option on the &(smtp)& transport. If the host matches
27953 this list the proxy process described above is not used; instead Exim
27954 shuts down an existing TLS session being run by the delivery process
27955 before passing the socket to a new process. The new process may then
27956 try to start a new TLS session, and if successful, may try to re-authenticate
27957 if AUTH is in use, before sending the next message.
27958
27959 The RFC is not clear as to whether or not an SMTP session continues in clear
27960 after TLS has been shut down, or whether TLS may be restarted again later, as
27961 just described. However, if the server is Exim, this shutdown and
27962 reinitialization works. It is not known which (if any) other servers operate
27963 successfully if the client closes a TLS session and continues with unencrypted
27964 SMTP, but there are certainly some that do not work. For such servers, Exim
27965 should not pass the socket to another process, because the failure of the
27966 subsequent attempt to use it would cause Exim to record a temporary host error,
27967 and delay other deliveries to that host.
27968
27969 To test for this case, Exim sends an EHLO command to the server after
27970 closing down the TLS session. If this fails in any way, the connection is
27971 closed instead of being passed to a new delivery process, but no retry
27972 information is recorded.
27973
27974 There is also a manual override; you can set &%hosts_nopass_tls%& on the
27975 &(smtp)& transport to match those hosts for which Exim should not pass
27976 connections to new processes if TLS has been used.
27977
27978
27979
27980
27981 .section "Certificates and all that" "SECTcerandall"
27982 .cindex "certificate" "references to discussion"
27983 In order to understand fully how TLS works, you need to know about
27984 certificates, certificate signing, and certificate authorities. This is not the
27985 place to give a tutorial, especially as I do not know very much about it
27986 myself. Some helpful introduction can be found in the FAQ for the SSL addition
27987 to Apache, currently at
27988 .display
27989 &url(http://www.modssl.org/docs/2.7/ssl_faq.html#ToC24)
27990 .endd
27991 Other parts of the &'modssl'& documentation are also helpful, and have
27992 links to further files.
27993 Eric Rescorla's book, &'SSL and TLS'&, published by Addison-Wesley (ISBN
27994 0-201-61598-3), contains both introductory and more in-depth descriptions.
27995 Some sample programs taken from the book are available from
27996 .display
27997 &url(http://www.rtfm.com/openssl-examples/)
27998 .endd
27999
28000
28001 .section "Certificate chains" "SECID186"
28002 The file named by &%tls_certificate%& may contain more than one
28003 certificate. This is useful in the case where the certificate that is being
28004 sent is validated by an intermediate certificate which the other end does
28005 not have. Multiple certificates must be in the correct order in the file.
28006 First the host's certificate itself, then the first intermediate
28007 certificate to validate the issuer of the host certificate, then the next
28008 intermediate certificate to validate the issuer of the first intermediate
28009 certificate, and so on, until finally (optionally) the root certificate.
28010 The root certificate must already be trusted by the recipient for
28011 validation to succeed, of course, but if it's not preinstalled, sending the
28012 root certificate along with the rest makes it available for the user to
28013 install if the receiving end is a client MUA that can interact with a user.
28014
28015 Note that certificates using MD5 are unlikely to work on today's Internet;
28016 even if your libraries allow loading them for use in Exim when acting as a
28017 server, increasingly clients will not accept such certificates. The error
28018 diagnostics in such a case can be frustratingly vague.
28019
28020
28021
28022 .section "Self-signed certificates" "SECID187"
28023 .cindex "certificate" "self-signed"
28024 You can create a self-signed certificate using the &'req'& command provided
28025 with OpenSSL, like this:
28026 . ==== Do not shorten the duration here without reading and considering
28027 . ==== the text below. Please leave it at 9999 days.
28028 .code
28029 openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:1024 -keyout file1 -out file2 \
28030 -days 9999 -nodes
28031 .endd
28032 &_file1_& and &_file2_& can be the same file; the key and the certificate are
28033 delimited and so can be identified independently. The &%-days%& option
28034 specifies a period for which the certificate is valid. The &%-nodes%& option is
28035 important: if you do not set it, the key is encrypted with a passphrase
28036 that you are prompted for, and any use that is made of the key causes more
28037 prompting for the passphrase. This is not helpful if you are going to use
28038 this certificate and key in an MTA, where prompting is not possible.
28039
28040 . ==== I expect to still be working 26 years from now. The less technical
28041 . ==== debt I create, in terms of storing up trouble for my later years, the
28042 . ==== happier I will be then. We really have reached the point where we
28043 . ==== should start, at the very least, provoking thought and making folks
28044 . ==== pause before proceeding, instead of leaving all the fixes until two
28045 . ==== years before 2^31 seconds after the 1970 Unix epoch.
28046 . ==== -pdp, 2012
28047 NB: we are now past the point where 9999 days takes us past the 32-bit Unix
28048 epoch. If your system uses unsigned time_t (most do) and is 32-bit, then
28049 the above command might produce a date in the past. Think carefully about
28050 the lifetime of the systems you're deploying, and either reduce the duration
28051 of the certificate or reconsider your platform deployment. (At time of
28052 writing, reducing the duration is the most likely choice, but the inexorable
28053 progression of time takes us steadily towards an era where this will not
28054 be a sensible resolution).
28055
28056 A self-signed certificate made in this way is sufficient for testing, and
28057 may be adequate for all your requirements if you are mainly interested in
28058 encrypting transfers, and not in secure identification.
28059
28060 However, many clients require that the certificate presented by the server be a
28061 user (also called &"leaf"& or &"site"&) certificate, and not a self-signed
28062 certificate. In this situation, the self-signed certificate described above
28063 must be installed on the client host as a trusted root &'certification
28064 authority'& (CA), and the certificate used by Exim must be a user certificate
28065 signed with that self-signed certificate.
28066
28067 For information on creating self-signed CA certificates and using them to sign
28068 user certificates, see the &'General implementation overview'& chapter of the
28069 Open-source PKI book, available online at
28070 &url(http://ospkibook.sourceforge.net/).
28071 .ecindex IIDencsmtp1
28072 .ecindex IIDencsmtp2
28073
28074
28075
28076 .section DANE "SECDANE"
28077 .cindex DANE
28078 DNS-based Authentication of Named Entities, as applied to SMTP over TLS, provides assurance to a client that
28079 it is actually talking to the server it wants to rather than some attacker operating a Man In The Middle (MITM)
28080 operation. The latter can terminate the TLS connection you make, and make another one to the server (so both
28081 you and the server still think you have an encrypted connection) and, if one of the "well known" set of
28082 Certificate Authorities has been suborned - something which *has* been seen already (2014), a verifiable
28083 certificate (if you're using normal root CAs, eg. the Mozilla set, as your trust anchors).
28084
28085 What DANE does is replace the CAs with the DNS as the trust anchor. The assurance is limited to a) the possibility
28086 that the DNS has been suborned, b) mistakes made by the admins of the target server. The attack surface presented
28087 by (a) is thought to be smaller than that of the set of root CAs.
28088
28089 It also allows the server to declare (implicitly) that connections to it should use TLS. An MITM could simply
28090 fail to pass on a server's STARTTLS.
28091
28092 DANE scales better than having to maintain (and side-channel communicate) copies of server certificates
28093 for every possible target server. It also scales (slightly) better than having to maintain on an SMTP
28094 client a copy of the standard CAs bundle. It also means not having to pay a CA for certificates.
28095
28096 DANE requires a server operator to do three things: 1) run DNSSEC. This provides assurance to clients
28097 that DNS lookups they do for the server have not been tampered with. The domain MX record applying
28098 to this server, its A record, its TLSA record and any associated CNAME records must all be covered by
28099 DNSSEC.
28100 2) add TLSA DNS records. These say what the server certificate for a TLS connection should be.
28101 3) offer a server certificate, or certificate chain, in TLS connections which is is anchored by one of the TLSA records.
28102
28103 There are no changes to Exim specific to server-side operation of DANE.
28104 Support for client-side operation of DANE can be included at compile time by defining SUPPORT_DANE=yes
28105 in &_Local/Makefile_&.
28106 If it has been included, the macro "_HAVE_DANE" will be defined.
28107
28108 The TLSA record for the server may have "certificate usage" of DANE-TA(2) or DANE-EE(3). The latter specifies
28109 the End Entity directly, i.e. the certificate involved is that of the server (and should be the sole one transmitted
28110 during the TLS handshake); this is appropriate for a single system, using a self-signed certificate.
28111 DANE-TA usage is effectively declaring a specific CA to be used; this might be a private CA or a public,
28112 well-known one. A private CA at simplest is just a self-signed certificate which is used to sign
28113 cerver certificates, but running one securely does require careful arrangement. If a private CA is used
28114 then either all clients must be primed with it, or (probably simpler) the server TLS handshake must transmit
28115 the entire certificate chain from CA to server-certificate. If a public CA is used then all clients must be primed with it
28116 (losing one advantage of DANE) - but the attack surface is reduced from all public CAs to that single CA.
28117 DANE-TA is commonly used for several services and/or servers, each having a TLSA query-domain CNAME record,
28118 all of which point to a single TLSA record.
28119
28120 Another approach which should be seriously considered is to use DANE with a certificate
28121 from a public CA, because of another technology, "MTA-STS", described below.
28122
28123 The TLSA record should have a Selector field of SPKI(1) and a Matching Type field of SHA2-512(2).
28124
28125 At the time of writing, &url(https://www.huque.com/bin/gen_tlsa)
28126 is useful for quickly generating TLSA records; and commands like
28127
28128 .code
28129 openssl x509 -in -pubkey -noout <certificate.pem \
28130 | openssl rsa -outform der -pubin 2>/dev/null \
28131 | openssl sha512 \
28132 | awk '{print $2}'
28133 .endd
28134
28135 are workable for 4th-field hashes.
28136
28137 For use with the DANE-TA model, server certificates must have a correct name (SubjectName or SubjectAltName).
28138
28139 The use of OCSP-stapling should be considered, allowing for fast revocation of certificates (which would otherwise
28140 be limited by the DNS TTL on the TLSA records). However, this is likely to only be usable with DANE-TA. NOTE: the
28141 default of requesting OCSP for all hosts is modified iff DANE is in use, to:
28142
28143 .code
28144 hosts_request_ocsp = ${if or { {= {0}{$tls_out_tlsa_usage}} \
28145 {= {4}{$tls_out_tlsa_usage}} } \
28146 {*}{}}
28147 .endd
28148
28149 The (new) variable &$tls_out_tlsa_usage$& is a bitfield with numbered bits set for TLSA record usage codes.
28150 The zero above means DANE was not in use, the four means that only DANE-TA usage TLSA records were
28151 found. If the definition of &%hosts_request_ocsp%& includes the
28152 string "tls_out_tlsa_usage", they are re-expanded in time to
28153 control the OCSP request.
28154
28155 This modification of hosts_request_ocsp is only done if it has the default value of "*". Admins who change it, and
28156 those who use &%hosts_require_ocsp%&, should consider the interaction with DANE in their OCSP settings.
28157
28158
28159 For client-side DANE there are three new smtp transport options, &%hosts_try_dane%&, &%hosts_require_dane%&
28160 and &%dane_require_tls_ciphers%&.
28161 The require variant will result in failure if the target host is not DNSSEC-secured.
28162
28163 DANE will only be usable if the target host has DNSSEC-secured MX, A and TLSA records.
28164
28165 A TLSA lookup will be done if either of the above options match and the host-lookup succeeded using dnssec.
28166 If a TLSA lookup is done and succeeds, a DANE-verified TLS connection
28167 will be required for the host. If it does not, the host will not
28168 be used; there is no fallback to non-DANE or non-TLS.
28169
28170 If DANE is requested and usable, then the TLS cipher list configuration
28171 prefers to use the option &%dane_require_tls_ciphers%& and falls
28172 back to &%tls_require_ciphers%& only if that is unset.
28173 This lets you configure "decent crypto" for DANE and "better than nothing
28174 crypto" as the default. Note though that while GnuTLS lets the string control
28175 which versions of TLS/SSL will be negotiated, OpenSSL does not and you're
28176 limited to ciphersuite constraints.
28177
28178 If DANE is requested and useable (see above) the following transport options are ignored:
28179 .code
28180 hosts_require_tls
28181 tls_verify_hosts
28182 tls_try_verify_hosts
28183 tls_verify_certificates
28184 tls_crl
28185 tls_verify_cert_hostnames
28186 .endd
28187
28188 If DANE is not usable, whether requested or not, and CA-anchored
28189 verification evaluation is wanted, the above variables should be set appropriately.
28190
28191 Currently the &%dnssec_request_domains%& must be active and &%dnssec_require_domains%& is ignored.
28192
28193 If verification was successful using DANE then the "CV" item in the delivery log line will show as "CV=dane".
28194
28195 There is a new variable &$tls_out_dane$& which will have "yes" if
28196 verification succeeded using DANE and "no" otherwise (only useful
28197 in combination with events; see &<<CHAPevents>>&),
28198 and a new variable &$tls_out_tlsa_usage$& (detailed above).
28199
28200 .cindex DANE reporting
28201 An event (see &<<CHAPevents>>&) of type "dane:fail" will be raised on failures
28202 to achieve DANE-verified connection, if one was either requested and offered, or
28203 required. This is intended to support TLS-reporting as defined in
28204 &url(https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-uta-smtp-tlsrpt-17).
28205 The &$event_data$& will be one of the Result Types defined in
28206 Section 4.3 of that document.
28207
28208 Under GnuTLS, DANE is only supported from version 3.0.0 onwards.
28209
28210 DANE is specified in published RFCs and decouples certificate authority trust
28211 selection from a "race to the bottom" of "you must trust everything for mail
28212 to get through". There is an alternative technology called MTA-STS, which
28213 instead publishes MX trust anchor information on an HTTPS website. At the
28214 time this text was last updated, MTA-STS was still a draft, not yet an RFC.
28215 Exim has no support for MTA-STS as a client, but Exim mail server operators
28216 can choose to publish information describing their TLS configuration using
28217 MTA-STS to let those clients who do use that protocol derive trust
28218 information.
28219
28220 The MTA-STS design requires a certificate from a public Certificate Authority
28221 which is recognized by clients sending to you. That selection is outside your
28222 control.
28223
28224 The most interoperable course of action is probably to use
28225 &url(https://letsencrypt.org/,Let's Encrypt), with automated certificate
28226 renewal; to publish the anchor information in DNSSEC-secured DNS via TLSA
28227 records for DANE clients (such as Exim and Postfix) and to publish anchor
28228 information for MTA-STS as well. This is what is done for the &'exim.org'&
28229 domain itself (with caveats around occasionally broken MTA-STS because of
28230 incompatible specification changes prior to reaching RFC status).
28231
28232
28233
28234 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
28235 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
28236
28237 .chapter "Access control lists" "CHAPACL"
28238 .scindex IIDacl "&ACL;" "description"
28239 .cindex "control of incoming mail"
28240 .cindex "message" "controlling incoming"
28241 .cindex "policy control" "access control lists"
28242 Access Control Lists (ACLs) are defined in a separate section of the run time
28243 configuration file, headed by &"begin acl"&. Each ACL definition starts with a
28244 name, terminated by a colon. Here is a complete ACL section that contains just
28245 one very small ACL:
28246 .code
28247 begin acl
28248 small_acl:
28249 accept hosts = one.host.only
28250 .endd
28251 You can have as many lists as you like in the ACL section, and the order in
28252 which they appear does not matter. The lists are self-terminating.
28253
28254 The majority of ACLs are used to control Exim's behaviour when it receives
28255 certain SMTP commands. This applies both to incoming TCP/IP connections, and
28256 when a local process submits a message using SMTP by specifying the &%-bs%&
28257 option. The most common use is for controlling which recipients are accepted
28258 in incoming messages. In addition, you can define an ACL that is used to check
28259 local non-SMTP messages. The default configuration file contains an example of
28260 a realistic ACL for checking RCPT commands. This is discussed in chapter
28261 &<<CHAPdefconfil>>&.
28262
28263
28264 .section "Testing ACLs" "SECID188"
28265 The &%-bh%& command line option provides a way of testing your ACL
28266 configuration locally by running a fake SMTP session with which you interact.
28267
28268
28269 .section "Specifying when ACLs are used" "SECID189"
28270 .cindex "&ACL;" "options for specifying"
28271 In order to cause an ACL to be used, you have to name it in one of the relevant
28272 options in the main part of the configuration. These options are:
28273 .cindex "AUTH" "ACL for"
28274 .cindex "DATA" "ACLs for"
28275 .cindex "ETRN" "ACL for"
28276 .cindex "EXPN" "ACL for"
28277 .cindex "HELO" "ACL for"
28278 .cindex "EHLO" "ACL for"
28279 .cindex "DKIM" "ACL for"
28280 .cindex "MAIL" "ACL for"
28281 .cindex "QUIT, ACL for"
28282 .cindex "RCPT" "ACL for"
28283 .cindex "STARTTLS, ACL for"
28284 .cindex "VRFY" "ACL for"
28285 .cindex "SMTP" "connection, ACL for"
28286 .cindex "non-SMTP messages" "ACLs for"
28287 .cindex "MIME content scanning" "ACL for"
28288 .cindex "PRDR" "ACL for"
28289
28290 .table2 140pt
28291 .irow &%acl_not_smtp%& "ACL for non-SMTP messages"
28292 .irow &%acl_not_smtp_mime%& "ACL for non-SMTP MIME parts"
28293 .irow &%acl_not_smtp_start%& "ACL at start of non-SMTP message"
28294 .irow &%acl_smtp_auth%& "ACL for AUTH"
28295 .irow &%acl_smtp_connect%& "ACL for start of SMTP connection"
28296 .irow &%acl_smtp_data%& "ACL after DATA is complete"
28297 .irow &%acl_smtp_data_prdr%& "ACL for each recipient, after DATA is complete"
28298 .irow &%acl_smtp_dkim%& "ACL for each DKIM signer"
28299 .irow &%acl_smtp_etrn%& "ACL for ETRN"
28300 .irow &%acl_smtp_expn%& "ACL for EXPN"
28301 .irow &%acl_smtp_helo%& "ACL for HELO or EHLO"
28302 .irow &%acl_smtp_mail%& "ACL for MAIL"
28303 .irow &%acl_smtp_mailauth%& "ACL for the AUTH parameter of MAIL"
28304 .irow &%acl_smtp_mime%& "ACL for content-scanning MIME parts"
28305 .irow &%acl_smtp_notquit%& "ACL for non-QUIT terminations"
28306 .irow &%acl_smtp_predata%& "ACL at start of DATA command"
28307 .irow &%acl_smtp_quit%& "ACL for QUIT"
28308 .irow &%acl_smtp_rcpt%& "ACL for RCPT"
28309 .irow &%acl_smtp_starttls%& "ACL for STARTTLS"
28310 .irow &%acl_smtp_vrfy%& "ACL for VRFY"
28311 .endtable
28312
28313 For example, if you set
28314 .code
28315 acl_smtp_rcpt = small_acl
28316 .endd
28317 the little ACL defined above is used whenever Exim receives a RCPT command
28318 in an SMTP dialogue. The majority of policy tests on incoming messages can be
28319 done when RCPT commands arrive. A rejection of RCPT should cause the
28320 sending MTA to give up on the recipient address contained in the RCPT
28321 command, whereas rejection at other times may cause the client MTA to keep on
28322 trying to deliver the message. It is therefore recommended that you do as much
28323 testing as possible at RCPT time.
28324
28325
28326 .section "The non-SMTP ACLs" "SECID190"
28327 .cindex "non-SMTP messages" "ACLs for"
28328 The non-SMTP ACLs apply to all non-interactive incoming messages, that is, they
28329 apply to batched SMTP as well as to non-SMTP messages. (Batched SMTP is not
28330 really SMTP.) Many of the ACL conditions (for example, host tests, and tests on
28331 the state of the SMTP connection such as encryption and authentication) are not
28332 relevant and are forbidden in these ACLs. However, the sender and recipients
28333 are known, so the &%senders%& and &%sender_domains%& conditions and the
28334 &$sender_address$& and &$recipients$& variables can be used. Variables such as
28335 &$authenticated_sender$& are also available. You can specify added header lines
28336 in any of these ACLs.
28337
28338 The &%acl_not_smtp_start%& ACL is run right at the start of receiving a
28339 non-SMTP message, before any of the message has been read. (This is the
28340 analogue of the &%acl_smtp_predata%& ACL for SMTP input.) In the case of
28341 batched SMTP input, it runs after the DATA command has been reached. The
28342 result of this ACL is ignored; it cannot be used to reject a message. If you
28343 really need to, you could set a value in an ACL variable here and reject based
28344 on that in the &%acl_not_smtp%& ACL. However, this ACL can be used to set
28345 controls, and in particular, it can be used to set
28346 .code
28347 control = suppress_local_fixups
28348 .endd
28349 This cannot be used in the other non-SMTP ACLs because by the time they are
28350 run, it is too late.
28351
28352 The &%acl_not_smtp_mime%& ACL is available only when Exim is compiled with the
28353 content-scanning extension. For details, see chapter &<<CHAPexiscan>>&.
28354
28355 The &%acl_not_smtp%& ACL is run just before the &[local_scan()]& function. Any
28356 kind of rejection is treated as permanent, because there is no way of sending a
28357 temporary error for these kinds of message.
28358
28359
28360 .section "The SMTP connect ACL" "SECID191"
28361 .cindex "SMTP" "connection, ACL for"
28362 .oindex &%smtp_banner%&
28363 The ACL test specified by &%acl_smtp_connect%& happens at the start of an SMTP
28364 session, after the test specified by &%host_reject_connection%& (which is now
28365 an anomaly) and any TCP Wrappers testing (if configured). If the connection is
28366 accepted by an &%accept%& verb that has a &%message%& modifier, the contents of
28367 the message override the banner message that is otherwise specified by the
28368 &%smtp_banner%& option.
28369
28370
28371 .section "The EHLO/HELO ACL" "SECID192"
28372 .cindex "EHLO" "ACL for"
28373 .cindex "HELO" "ACL for"
28374 The ACL test specified by &%acl_smtp_helo%& happens when the client issues an
28375 EHLO or HELO command, after the tests specified by &%helo_accept_junk_hosts%&,
28376 &%helo_allow_chars%&, &%helo_verify_hosts%&, and &%helo_try_verify_hosts%&.
28377 Note that a client may issue more than one EHLO or HELO command in an SMTP
28378 session, and indeed is required to issue a new EHLO or HELO after successfully
28379 setting up encryption following a STARTTLS command.
28380
28381 Note also that a deny neither forces the client to go away nor means that
28382 mail will be refused on the connection. Consider checking for
28383 &$sender_helo_name$& being defined in a MAIL or RCPT ACL to do that.
28384
28385 If the command is accepted by an &%accept%& verb that has a &%message%&
28386 modifier, the message may not contain more than one line (it will be truncated
28387 at the first newline and a panic logged if it does). Such a message cannot
28388 affect the EHLO options that are listed on the second and subsequent lines of
28389 an EHLO response.
28390
28391
28392 .section "The DATA ACLs" "SECID193"
28393 .cindex "DATA" "ACLs for"
28394 Two ACLs are associated with the DATA command, because it is two-stage
28395 command, with two responses being sent to the client.
28396 When the DATA command is received, the ACL defined by &%acl_smtp_predata%&
28397 is obeyed. This gives you control after all the RCPT commands, but before
28398 the message itself is received. It offers the opportunity to give a negative
28399 response to the DATA command before the data is transmitted. Header lines
28400 added by MAIL or RCPT ACLs are not visible at this time, but any that
28401 are defined here are visible when the &%acl_smtp_data%& ACL is run.
28402
28403 You cannot test the contents of the message, for example, to verify addresses
28404 in the headers, at RCPT time or when the DATA command is received. Such
28405 tests have to appear in the ACL that is run after the message itself has been
28406 received, before the final response to the DATA command is sent. This is
28407 the ACL specified by &%acl_smtp_data%&, which is the second ACL that is
28408 associated with the DATA command.
28409
28410 .cindex CHUNKING "BDAT command"
28411 .cindex BDAT "SMTP command"
28412 .cindex "RFC 3030" CHUNKING
28413 If CHUNKING was advertised and a BDAT command sequence is received,
28414 the &%acl_smtp_predata%& ACL is not run.
28415 . XXX why not? It should be possible, for the first BDAT.
28416 The &%acl_smtp_data%& is run after the last BDAT command and all of
28417 the data specified is received.
28418
28419 For both of these ACLs, it is not possible to reject individual recipients. An
28420 error response rejects the entire message. Unfortunately, it is known that some
28421 MTAs do not treat hard (5&'xx'&) responses to the DATA command (either
28422 before or after the data) correctly &-- they keep the message on their queues
28423 and try again later, but that is their problem, though it does waste some of
28424 your resources.
28425
28426 The &%acl_smtp_data%& ACL is run after
28427 the &%acl_smtp_data_prdr%&,
28428 the &%acl_smtp_dkim%&
28429 and the &%acl_smtp_mime%& ACLs.
28430
28431 .section "The SMTP DKIM ACL" "SECTDKIMACL"
28432 The &%acl_smtp_dkim%& ACL is available only when Exim is compiled with DKIM support
28433 enabled (which is the default).
28434
28435 The ACL test specified by &%acl_smtp_dkim%& happens after a message has been
28436 received, and is executed for each DKIM signature found in a message. If not
28437 otherwise specified, the default action is to accept.
28438
28439 This ACL is evaluated before &%acl_smtp_mime%& and &%acl_smtp_data%&.
28440
28441 For details on the operation of DKIM, see section &<<SECDKIM>>&.
28442
28443
28444 .section "The SMTP MIME ACL" "SECID194"
28445 The &%acl_smtp_mime%& option is available only when Exim is compiled with the
28446 content-scanning extension. For details, see chapter &<<CHAPexiscan>>&.
28447
28448 This ACL is evaluated after &%acl_smtp_dkim%& but before &%acl_smtp_data%&.
28449
28450
28451 .section "The SMTP PRDR ACL" "SECTPRDRACL"
28452 .cindex "PRDR" "ACL for"
28453 .oindex "&%prdr_enable%&"
28454 The &%acl_smtp_data_prdr%& ACL is available only when Exim is compiled
28455 with PRDR support enabled (which is the default).
28456 It becomes active only when the PRDR feature is negotiated between
28457 client and server for a message, and more than one recipient
28458 has been accepted.
28459
28460 The ACL test specified by &%acl_smtp_data_prdr%& happens after a message
28461 has been received, and is executed once for each recipient of the message
28462 with &$local_part$& and &$domain$& valid.
28463 The test may accept, defer or deny for individual recipients.
28464 The &%acl_smtp_data%& will still be called after this ACL and
28465 can reject the message overall, even if this ACL has accepted it
28466 for some or all recipients.
28467
28468 PRDR may be used to support per-user content filtering. Without it
28469 one must defer any recipient after the first that has a different
28470 content-filter configuration. With PRDR, the RCPT-time check
28471 .cindex "PRDR" "variable for"
28472 for this can be disabled when the variable &$prdr_requested$&
28473 is &"yes"&.
28474 Any required difference in behaviour of the main DATA-time
28475 ACL should however depend on the PRDR-time ACL having run, as Exim
28476 will avoid doing so in some situations (e.g. single-recipient mails).
28477
28478 See also the &%prdr_enable%& global option
28479 and the &%hosts_try_prdr%& smtp transport option.
28480
28481 This ACL is evaluated after &%acl_smtp_dkim%& but before &%acl_smtp_data%&.
28482 If the ACL is not defined, processing completes as if
28483 the feature was not requested by the client.
28484
28485 .section "The QUIT ACL" "SECTQUITACL"
28486 .cindex "QUIT, ACL for"
28487 The ACL for the SMTP QUIT command is anomalous, in that the outcome of the ACL
28488 does not affect the response code to QUIT, which is always 221. Thus, the ACL
28489 does not in fact control any access.
28490 For this reason, it may only accept
28491 or warn as its final result.
28492
28493 This ACL can be used for tasks such as custom logging at the end of an SMTP
28494 session. For example, you can use ACL variables in other ACLs to count
28495 messages, recipients, etc., and log the totals at QUIT time using one or
28496 more &%logwrite%& modifiers on a &%warn%& verb.
28497
28498 &*Warning*&: Only the &$acl_c$&&'x'& variables can be used for this, because
28499 the &$acl_m$&&'x'& variables are reset at the end of each incoming message.
28500
28501 You do not need to have a final &%accept%&, but if you do, you can use a
28502 &%message%& modifier to specify custom text that is sent as part of the 221
28503 response to QUIT.
28504
28505 This ACL is run only for a &"normal"& QUIT. For certain kinds of disastrous
28506 failure (for example, failure to open a log file, or when Exim is bombing out
28507 because it has detected an unrecoverable error), all SMTP commands from the
28508 client are given temporary error responses until QUIT is received or the
28509 connection is closed. In these special cases, the QUIT ACL does not run.
28510
28511
28512 .section "The not-QUIT ACL" "SECTNOTQUITACL"
28513 .vindex &$acl_smtp_notquit$&
28514 The not-QUIT ACL, specified by &%acl_smtp_notquit%&, is run in most cases when
28515 an SMTP session ends without sending QUIT. However, when Exim itself is in bad
28516 trouble, such as being unable to write to its log files, this ACL is not run,
28517 because it might try to do things (such as write to log files) that make the
28518 situation even worse.
28519
28520 Like the QUIT ACL, this ACL is provided to make it possible to do customized
28521 logging or to gather statistics, and its outcome is ignored. The &%delay%&
28522 modifier is forbidden in this ACL, and the only permitted verbs are &%accept%&
28523 and &%warn%&.
28524
28525 .vindex &$smtp_notquit_reason$&
28526 When the not-QUIT ACL is running, the variable &$smtp_notquit_reason$& is set
28527 to a string that indicates the reason for the termination of the SMTP
28528 connection. The possible values are:
28529 .table2
28530 .irow &`acl-drop`& "Another ACL issued a &%drop%& command"
28531 .irow &`bad-commands`& "Too many unknown or non-mail commands"
28532 .irow &`command-timeout`& "Timeout while reading SMTP commands"
28533 .irow &`connection-lost`& "The SMTP connection has been lost"
28534 .irow &`data-timeout`& "Timeout while reading message data"
28535 .irow &`local-scan-error`& "The &[local_scan()]& function crashed"
28536 .irow &`local-scan-timeout`& "The &[local_scan()]& function timed out"
28537 .irow &`signal-exit`& "SIGTERM or SIGINT"
28538 .irow &`synchronization-error`& "SMTP synchronization error"
28539 .irow &`tls-failed`& "TLS failed to start"
28540 .endtable
28541 In most cases when an SMTP connection is closed without having received QUIT,
28542 Exim sends an SMTP response message before actually closing the connection.
28543 With the exception of the &`acl-drop`& case, the default message can be
28544 overridden by the &%message%& modifier in the not-QUIT ACL. In the case of a
28545 &%drop%& verb in another ACL, it is the message from the other ACL that is
28546 used.
28547
28548
28549 .section "Finding an ACL to use" "SECID195"
28550 .cindex "&ACL;" "finding which to use"
28551 The value of an &%acl_smtp_%&&'xxx'& option is expanded before use, so
28552 you can use different ACLs in different circumstances. For example,
28553 .code
28554 acl_smtp_rcpt = ${if ={25}{$interface_port} \
28555 {acl_check_rcpt} {acl_check_rcpt_submit} }
28556 .endd
28557 In the default configuration file there are some example settings for
28558 providing an RFC 4409 message &"submission"& service on port 587 and
28559 an RFC 8314 &"submissions"& service on port 465. You can use a string
28560 expansion like this to choose an ACL for MUAs on these ports which is
28561 more appropriate for this purpose than the default ACL on port 25.
28562
28563 The expanded string does not have to be the name of an ACL in the
28564 configuration file; there are other possibilities. Having expanded the
28565 string, Exim searches for an ACL as follows:
28566
28567 .ilist
28568 If the string begins with a slash, Exim uses it as a file name, and reads its
28569 contents as an ACL. The lines are processed in the same way as lines in the
28570 Exim configuration file. In particular, continuation lines are supported, blank
28571 lines are ignored, as are lines whose first non-whitespace character is &"#"&.
28572 If the file does not exist or cannot be read, an error occurs (typically
28573 causing a temporary failure of whatever caused the ACL to be run). For example:
28574 .code
28575 acl_smtp_data = /etc/acls/\
28576 ${lookup{$sender_host_address}lsearch\
28577 {/etc/acllist}{$value}{default}}
28578 .endd
28579 This looks up an ACL file to use on the basis of the host's IP address, falling
28580 back to a default if the lookup fails. If an ACL is successfully read from a
28581 file, it is retained in memory for the duration of the Exim process, so that it
28582 can be re-used without having to re-read the file.
28583 .next
28584 If the string does not start with a slash, and does not contain any spaces,
28585 Exim searches the ACL section of the configuration for an ACL whose name
28586 matches the string.
28587 .next
28588 If no named ACL is found, or if the string contains spaces, Exim parses
28589 the string as an inline ACL. This can save typing in cases where you just
28590 want to have something like
28591 .code
28592 acl_smtp_vrfy = accept
28593 .endd
28594 in order to allow free use of the VRFY command. Such a string may contain
28595 newlines; it is processed in the same way as an ACL that is read from a file.
28596 .endlist
28597
28598
28599
28600
28601 .section "ACL return codes" "SECID196"
28602 .cindex "&ACL;" "return codes"
28603 Except for the QUIT ACL, which does not affect the SMTP return code (see
28604 section &<<SECTQUITACL>>& above), the result of running an ACL is either
28605 &"accept"& or &"deny"&, or, if some test cannot be completed (for example, if a
28606 database is down), &"defer"&. These results cause 2&'xx'&, 5&'xx'&, and 4&'xx'&
28607 return codes, respectively, to be used in the SMTP dialogue. A fourth return,
28608 &"error"&, occurs when there is an error such as invalid syntax in the ACL.
28609 This also causes a 4&'xx'& return code.
28610
28611 For the non-SMTP ACL, &"defer"& and &"error"& are treated in the same way as
28612 &"deny"&, because there is no mechanism for passing temporary errors to the
28613 submitters of non-SMTP messages.
28614
28615
28616 ACLs that are relevant to message reception may also return &"discard"&. This
28617 has the effect of &"accept"&, but causes either the entire message or an
28618 individual recipient address to be discarded. In other words, it is a
28619 blackholing facility. Use it with care.
28620
28621 If the ACL for MAIL returns &"discard"&, all recipients are discarded, and no
28622 ACL is run for subsequent RCPT commands. The effect of &"discard"& in a
28623 RCPT ACL is to discard just the one recipient address. If there are no
28624 recipients left when the message's data is received, the DATA ACL is not
28625 run. A &"discard"& return from the DATA or the non-SMTP ACL discards all the
28626 remaining recipients. The &"discard"& return is not permitted for the
28627 &%acl_smtp_predata%& ACL.
28628
28629 If the ACL for VRFY returns &"accept"&, a recipient verify (without callout)
28630 is done on the address and the result determines the SMTP response.
28631
28632
28633 .cindex "&[local_scan()]& function" "when all recipients discarded"
28634 The &[local_scan()]& function is always run, even if there are no remaining
28635 recipients; it may create new recipients.
28636
28637
28638
28639 .section "Unset ACL options" "SECID197"
28640 .cindex "&ACL;" "unset options"
28641 The default actions when any of the &%acl_%&&'xxx'& options are unset are not
28642 all the same. &*Note*&: These defaults apply only when the relevant ACL is
28643 not defined at all. For any defined ACL, the default action when control
28644 reaches the end of the ACL statements is &"deny"&.
28645
28646 For &%acl_smtp_quit%& and &%acl_not_smtp_start%& there is no default because
28647 these two are ACLs that are used only for their side effects. They cannot be
28648 used to accept or reject anything.
28649
28650 For &%acl_not_smtp%&, &%acl_smtp_auth%&, &%acl_smtp_connect%&,
28651 &%acl_smtp_data%&, &%acl_smtp_helo%&, &%acl_smtp_mail%&, &%acl_smtp_mailauth%&,
28652 &%acl_smtp_mime%&, &%acl_smtp_predata%&, and &%acl_smtp_starttls%&, the action
28653 when the ACL is not defined is &"accept"&.
28654
28655 For the others (&%acl_smtp_etrn%&, &%acl_smtp_expn%&, &%acl_smtp_rcpt%&, and
28656 &%acl_smtp_vrfy%&), the action when the ACL is not defined is &"deny"&.
28657 This means that &%acl_smtp_rcpt%& must be defined in order to receive any
28658 messages over an SMTP connection. For an example, see the ACL in the default
28659 configuration file.
28660
28661
28662
28663
28664 .section "Data for message ACLs" "SECID198"
28665 .cindex "&ACL;" "data for message ACL"
28666 .vindex &$domain$&
28667 .vindex &$local_part$&
28668 .vindex &$sender_address$&
28669 .vindex &$sender_host_address$&
28670 .vindex &$smtp_command$&
28671 When a MAIL or RCPT ACL, or either of the DATA ACLs, is running, the variables
28672 that contain information about the host and the message's sender (for example,
28673 &$sender_host_address$& and &$sender_address$&) are set, and can be used in ACL
28674 statements. In the case of RCPT (but not MAIL or DATA), &$domain$& and
28675 &$local_part$& are set from the argument address. The entire SMTP command
28676 is available in &$smtp_command$&.
28677
28678 When an ACL for the AUTH parameter of MAIL is running, the variables that
28679 contain information about the host are set, but &$sender_address$& is not yet
28680 set. Section &<<SECTauthparamail>>& contains a discussion of this parameter and
28681 how it is used.
28682
28683 .vindex "&$message_size$&"
28684 The &$message_size$& variable is set to the value of the SIZE parameter on
28685 the MAIL command at MAIL, RCPT and pre-data time, or to -1 if
28686 that parameter is not given. The value is updated to the true message size by
28687 the time the final DATA ACL is run (after the message data has been
28688 received).
28689
28690 .vindex "&$rcpt_count$&"
28691 .vindex "&$recipients_count$&"
28692 The &$rcpt_count$& variable increases by one for each RCPT command received.
28693 The &$recipients_count$& variable increases by one each time a RCPT command is
28694 accepted, so while an ACL for RCPT is being processed, it contains the number
28695 of previously accepted recipients. At DATA time (for both the DATA ACLs),
28696 &$rcpt_count$& contains the total number of RCPT commands, and
28697 &$recipients_count$& contains the total number of accepted recipients.
28698
28699
28700
28701
28702
28703 .section "Data for non-message ACLs" "SECTdatfornon"
28704 .cindex "&ACL;" "data for non-message ACL"
28705 .vindex &$smtp_command_argument$&
28706 .vindex &$smtp_command$&
28707 When an ACL is being run for AUTH, EHLO, ETRN, EXPN, HELO, STARTTLS, or VRFY,
28708 the remainder of the SMTP command line is placed in &$smtp_command_argument$&,
28709 and the entire SMTP command is available in &$smtp_command$&.
28710 These variables can be tested using a &%condition%& condition. For example,
28711 here is an ACL for use with AUTH, which insists that either the session is
28712 encrypted, or the CRAM-MD5 authentication method is used. In other words, it
28713 does not permit authentication methods that use cleartext passwords on
28714 unencrypted connections.
28715 .code
28716 acl_check_auth:
28717 accept encrypted = *
28718 accept condition = ${if eq{${uc:$smtp_command_argument}}\
28719 {CRAM-MD5}}
28720 deny message = TLS encryption or CRAM-MD5 required
28721 .endd
28722 (Another way of applying this restriction is to arrange for the authenticators
28723 that use cleartext passwords not to be advertised when the connection is not
28724 encrypted. You can use the generic &%server_advertise_condition%& authenticator
28725 option to do this.)
28726
28727
28728
28729 .section "Format of an ACL" "SECID199"
28730 .cindex "&ACL;" "format of"
28731 .cindex "&ACL;" "verbs, definition of"
28732 An individual ACL consists of a number of statements. Each statement starts
28733 with a verb, optionally followed by a number of conditions and &"modifiers"&.
28734 Modifiers can change the way the verb operates, define error and log messages,
28735 set variables, insert delays, and vary the processing of accepted messages.
28736
28737 If all the conditions are met, the verb is obeyed. The same condition may be
28738 used (with different arguments) more than once in the same statement. This
28739 provides a means of specifying an &"and"& conjunction between conditions. For
28740 example:
28741 .code
28742 deny dnslists = list1.example
28743 dnslists = list2.example
28744 .endd
28745 If there are no conditions, the verb is always obeyed. Exim stops evaluating
28746 the conditions and modifiers when it reaches a condition that fails. What
28747 happens then depends on the verb (and in one case, on a special modifier). Not
28748 all the conditions make sense at every testing point. For example, you cannot
28749 test a sender address in the ACL that is run for a VRFY command.
28750
28751
28752 .section "ACL verbs" "SECID200"
28753 The ACL verbs are as follows:
28754
28755 .ilist
28756 .cindex "&%accept%& ACL verb"
28757 &%accept%&: If all the conditions are met, the ACL returns &"accept"&. If any
28758 of the conditions are not met, what happens depends on whether &%endpass%&
28759 appears among the conditions (for syntax see below). If the failing condition
28760 is before &%endpass%&, control is passed to the next ACL statement; if it is
28761 after &%endpass%&, the ACL returns &"deny"&. Consider this statement, used to
28762 check a RCPT command:
28763 .code
28764 accept domains = +local_domains
28765 endpass
28766 verify = recipient
28767 .endd
28768 If the recipient domain does not match the &%domains%& condition, control
28769 passes to the next statement. If it does match, the recipient is verified, and
28770 the command is accepted if verification succeeds. However, if verification
28771 fails, the ACL yields &"deny"&, because the failing condition is after
28772 &%endpass%&.
28773
28774 The &%endpass%& feature has turned out to be confusing to many people, so its
28775 use is not recommended nowadays. It is always possible to rewrite an ACL so
28776 that &%endpass%& is not needed, and it is no longer used in the default
28777 configuration.
28778
28779 .cindex "&%message%& ACL modifier" "with &%accept%&"
28780 If a &%message%& modifier appears on an &%accept%& statement, its action
28781 depends on whether or not &%endpass%& is present. In the absence of &%endpass%&
28782 (when an &%accept%& verb either accepts or passes control to the next
28783 statement), &%message%& can be used to vary the message that is sent when an
28784 SMTP command is accepted. For example, in a RCPT ACL you could have:
28785 .display
28786 &`accept `&<&'some conditions'&>
28787 &` message = OK, I will allow you through today`&
28788 .endd
28789 You can specify an SMTP response code, optionally followed by an &"extended
28790 response code"& at the start of the message, but the first digit must be the
28791 same as would be sent by default, which is 2 for an &%accept%& verb.
28792
28793 If &%endpass%& is present in an &%accept%& statement, &%message%& specifies
28794 an error message that is used when access is denied. This behaviour is retained
28795 for backward compatibility, but current &"best practice"& is to avoid the use
28796 of &%endpass%&.
28797
28798
28799 .next
28800 .cindex "&%defer%& ACL verb"
28801 &%defer%&: If all the conditions are true, the ACL returns &"defer"& which, in
28802 an SMTP session, causes a 4&'xx'& response to be given. For a non-SMTP ACL,
28803 &%defer%& is the same as &%deny%&, because there is no way of sending a
28804 temporary error. For a RCPT command, &%defer%& is much the same as using a
28805 &(redirect)& router and &`:defer:`& while verifying, but the &%defer%& verb can
28806 be used in any ACL, and even for a recipient it might be a simpler approach.
28807
28808
28809 .next
28810 .cindex "&%deny%& ACL verb"
28811 &%deny%&: If all the conditions are met, the ACL returns &"deny"&. If any of
28812 the conditions are not met, control is passed to the next ACL statement. For
28813 example,
28814 .code
28815 deny dnslists = blackholes.mail-abuse.org
28816 .endd
28817 rejects commands from hosts that are on a DNS black list.
28818
28819
28820 .next
28821 .cindex "&%discard%& ACL verb"
28822 &%discard%&: This verb behaves like &%accept%&, except that it returns
28823 &"discard"& from the ACL instead of &"accept"&. It is permitted only on ACLs
28824 that are concerned with receiving messages. When all the conditions are true,
28825 the sending entity receives a &"success"& response. However, &%discard%& causes
28826 recipients to be discarded. If it is used in an ACL for RCPT, just the one
28827 recipient is discarded; if used for MAIL, DATA or in the non-SMTP ACL, all the
28828 message's recipients are discarded. Recipients that are discarded before DATA
28829 do not appear in the log line when the &%received_recipients%& log selector is set.
28830
28831 If the &%log_message%& modifier is set when &%discard%& operates,
28832 its contents are added to the line that is automatically written to the log.
28833 The &%message%& modifier operates exactly as it does for &%accept%&.
28834
28835
28836 .next
28837 .cindex "&%drop%& ACL verb"
28838 &%drop%&: This verb behaves like &%deny%&, except that an SMTP connection is
28839 forcibly closed after the 5&'xx'& error message has been sent. For example:
28840 .code
28841 drop message = I don't take more than 20 RCPTs
28842 condition = ${if > {$rcpt_count}{20}}
28843 .endd
28844 There is no difference between &%deny%& and &%drop%& for the connect-time ACL.
28845 The connection is always dropped after sending a 550 response.
28846
28847 .next
28848 .cindex "&%require%& ACL verb"
28849 &%require%&: If all the conditions are met, control is passed to the next ACL
28850 statement. If any of the conditions are not met, the ACL returns &"deny"&. For
28851 example, when checking a RCPT command,
28852 .code
28853 require message = Sender did not verify
28854 verify = sender
28855 .endd
28856 passes control to subsequent statements only if the message's sender can be
28857 verified. Otherwise, it rejects the command. Note the positioning of the
28858 &%message%& modifier, before the &%verify%& condition. The reason for this is
28859 discussed in section &<<SECTcondmodproc>>&.
28860
28861 .next
28862 .cindex "&%warn%& ACL verb"
28863 &%warn%&: If all the conditions are true, a line specified by the
28864 &%log_message%& modifier is written to Exim's main log. Control always passes
28865 to the next ACL statement. If any condition is false, the log line is not
28866 written. If an identical log line is requested several times in the same
28867 message, only one copy is actually written to the log. If you want to force
28868 duplicates to be written, use the &%logwrite%& modifier instead.
28869
28870 If &%log_message%& is not present, a &%warn%& verb just checks its conditions
28871 and obeys any &"immediate"& modifiers (such as &%control%&, &%set%&,
28872 &%logwrite%&, &%add_header%&, and &%remove_header%&) that appear before the
28873 first failing condition. There is more about adding header lines in section
28874 &<<SECTaddheadacl>>&.
28875
28876 If any condition on a &%warn%& statement cannot be completed (that is, there is
28877 some sort of defer), the log line specified by &%log_message%& is not written.
28878 This does not include the case of a forced failure from a lookup, which
28879 is considered to be a successful completion. After a defer, no further
28880 conditions or modifiers in the &%warn%& statement are processed. The incident
28881 is logged, and the ACL continues to be processed, from the next statement
28882 onwards.
28883
28884
28885 .vindex "&$acl_verify_message$&"
28886 When one of the &%warn%& conditions is an address verification that fails, the
28887 text of the verification failure message is in &$acl_verify_message$&. If you
28888 want this logged, you must set it up explicitly. For example:
28889 .code
28890 warn !verify = sender
28891 log_message = sender verify failed: $acl_verify_message
28892 .endd
28893 .endlist
28894
28895 At the end of each ACL there is an implicit unconditional &%deny%&.
28896
28897 As you can see from the examples above, the conditions and modifiers are
28898 written one to a line, with the first one on the same line as the verb, and
28899 subsequent ones on following lines. If you have a very long condition, you can
28900 continue it onto several physical lines by the usual backslash continuation
28901 mechanism. It is conventional to align the conditions vertically.
28902
28903
28904
28905 .section "ACL variables" "SECTaclvariables"
28906 .cindex "&ACL;" "variables"
28907 There are some special variables that can be set during ACL processing. They
28908 can be used to pass information between different ACLs, different invocations
28909 of the same ACL in the same SMTP connection, and between ACLs and the routers,
28910 transports, and filters that are used to deliver a message. The names of these
28911 variables must begin with &$acl_c$& or &$acl_m$&, followed either by a digit or
28912 an underscore, but the remainder of the name can be any sequence of
28913 alphanumeric characters and underscores that you choose. There is no limit on
28914 the number of ACL variables. The two sets act as follows:
28915 .ilist
28916 The values of those variables whose names begin with &$acl_c$& persist
28917 throughout an SMTP connection. They are never reset. Thus, a value that is set
28918 while receiving one message is still available when receiving the next message
28919 on the same SMTP connection.
28920 .next
28921 The values of those variables whose names begin with &$acl_m$& persist only
28922 while a message is being received. They are reset afterwards. They are also
28923 reset by MAIL, RSET, EHLO, HELO, and after starting up a TLS session.
28924 .endlist
28925
28926 When a message is accepted, the current values of all the ACL variables are
28927 preserved with the message and are subsequently made available at delivery
28928 time. The ACL variables are set by a modifier called &%set%&. For example:
28929 .code
28930 accept hosts = whatever
28931 set acl_m4 = some value
28932 accept authenticated = *
28933 set acl_c_auth = yes
28934 .endd
28935 &*Note*&: A leading dollar sign is not used when naming a variable that is to
28936 be set. If you want to set a variable without taking any action, you can use a
28937 &%warn%& verb without any other modifiers or conditions.
28938
28939 .oindex &%strict_acl_vars%&
28940 What happens if a syntactically valid but undefined ACL variable is
28941 referenced depends on the setting of the &%strict_acl_vars%& option. If it is
28942 false (the default), an empty string is substituted; if it is true, an
28943 error is generated.
28944
28945 Versions of Exim before 4.64 have a limited set of numbered variables, but
28946 their names are compatible, so there is no problem with upgrading.
28947
28948
28949 .section "Condition and modifier processing" "SECTcondmodproc"
28950 .cindex "&ACL;" "conditions; processing"
28951 .cindex "&ACL;" "modifiers; processing"
28952 An exclamation mark preceding a condition negates its result. For example:
28953 .code
28954 deny domains = *.dom.example
28955 !verify = recipient
28956 .endd
28957 causes the ACL to return &"deny"& if the recipient domain ends in
28958 &'dom.example'& and the recipient address cannot be verified. Sometimes
28959 negation can be used on the right-hand side of a condition. For example, these
28960 two statements are equivalent:
28961 .code
28962 deny hosts = !192.168.3.4
28963 deny !hosts = 192.168.3.4
28964 .endd
28965 However, for many conditions (&%verify%& being a good example), only left-hand
28966 side negation of the whole condition is possible.
28967
28968 The arguments of conditions and modifiers are expanded. A forced failure
28969 of an expansion causes a condition to be ignored, that is, it behaves as if the
28970 condition is true. Consider these two statements:
28971 .code
28972 accept senders = ${lookup{$host_name}lsearch\
28973 {/some/file}{$value}fail}
28974 accept senders = ${lookup{$host_name}lsearch\
28975 {/some/file}{$value}{}}
28976 .endd
28977 Each attempts to look up a list of acceptable senders. If the lookup succeeds,
28978 the returned list is searched, but if the lookup fails the behaviour is
28979 different in the two cases. The &%fail%& in the first statement causes the
28980 condition to be ignored, leaving no further conditions. The &%accept%& verb
28981 therefore succeeds. The second statement, however, generates an empty list when
28982 the lookup fails. No sender can match an empty list, so the condition fails,
28983 and therefore the &%accept%& also fails.
28984
28985 ACL modifiers appear mixed in with conditions in ACL statements. Some of them
28986 specify actions that are taken as the conditions for a statement are checked;
28987 others specify text for messages that are used when access is denied or a
28988 warning is generated. The &%control%& modifier affects the way an incoming
28989 message is handled.
28990
28991 The positioning of the modifiers in an ACL statement is important, because the
28992 processing of a verb ceases as soon as its outcome is known. Only those
28993 modifiers that have already been encountered will take effect. For example,
28994 consider this use of the &%message%& modifier:
28995 .code
28996 require message = Can't verify sender
28997 verify = sender
28998 message = Can't verify recipient
28999 verify = recipient
29000 message = This message cannot be used
29001 .endd
29002 If sender verification fails, Exim knows that the result of the statement is
29003 &"deny"&, so it goes no further. The first &%message%& modifier has been seen,
29004 so its text is used as the error message. If sender verification succeeds, but
29005 recipient verification fails, the second message is used. If recipient
29006 verification succeeds, the third message becomes &"current"&, but is never used
29007 because there are no more conditions to cause failure.
29008
29009 For the &%deny%& verb, on the other hand, it is always the last &%message%&
29010 modifier that is used, because all the conditions must be true for rejection to
29011 happen. Specifying more than one &%message%& modifier does not make sense, and
29012 the message can even be specified after all the conditions. For example:
29013 .code
29014 deny hosts = ...
29015 !senders = *@my.domain.example
29016 message = Invalid sender from client host
29017 .endd
29018 The &"deny"& result does not happen until the end of the statement is reached,
29019 by which time Exim has set up the message.
29020
29021
29022
29023 .section "ACL modifiers" "SECTACLmodi"
29024 .cindex "&ACL;" "modifiers; list of"
29025 The ACL modifiers are as follows:
29026
29027 .vlist
29028 .vitem &*add_header*&&~=&~<&'text'&>
29029 This modifier specifies one or more header lines that are to be added to an
29030 incoming message, assuming, of course, that the message is ultimately
29031 accepted. For details, see section &<<SECTaddheadacl>>&.
29032
29033 .vitem &*continue*&&~=&~<&'text'&>
29034 .cindex "&%continue%& ACL modifier"
29035 .cindex "database" "updating in ACL"
29036 This modifier does nothing of itself, and processing of the ACL always
29037 continues with the next condition or modifier. The value of &%continue%& is in
29038 the side effects of expanding its argument. Typically this could be used to
29039 update a database. It is really just a syntactic tidiness, to avoid having to
29040 write rather ugly lines like this:
29041 .display
29042 &`condition = ${if eq{0}{`&<&'some expansion'&>&`}{true}{true}}`&
29043 .endd
29044 Instead, all you need is
29045 .display
29046 &`continue = `&<&'some expansion'&>
29047 .endd
29048
29049 .vitem &*control*&&~=&~<&'text'&>
29050 .cindex "&%control%& ACL modifier"
29051 This modifier affects the subsequent processing of the SMTP connection or of an
29052 incoming message that is accepted. The effect of the first type of control
29053 lasts for the duration of the connection, whereas the effect of the second type
29054 lasts only until the current message has been received. The message-specific
29055 controls always apply to the whole message, not to individual recipients,
29056 even if the &%control%& modifier appears in a RCPT ACL.
29057
29058 As there are now quite a few controls that can be applied, they are described
29059 separately in section &<<SECTcontrols>>&. The &%control%& modifier can be used
29060 in several different ways. For example:
29061
29062 . ==== As this is a nested list, any displays it contains must be indented
29063 . ==== as otherwise they are too far to the left. That comment applies only
29064 . ==== when xmlto and fop are used; formatting with sdop gets it right either
29065 . ==== way.
29066
29067 .ilist
29068 It can be at the end of an &%accept%& statement:
29069 .code
29070 accept ...some conditions
29071 control = queue_only
29072 .endd
29073 In this case, the control is applied when this statement yields &"accept"&, in
29074 other words, when the conditions are all true.
29075
29076 .next
29077 It can be in the middle of an &%accept%& statement:
29078 .code
29079 accept ...some conditions...
29080 control = queue_only
29081 ...some more conditions...
29082 .endd
29083 If the first set of conditions are true, the control is applied, even if the
29084 statement does not accept because one of the second set of conditions is false.
29085 In this case, some subsequent statement must yield &"accept"& for the control
29086 to be relevant.
29087
29088 .next
29089 It can be used with &%warn%& to apply the control, leaving the
29090 decision about accepting or denying to a subsequent verb. For
29091 example:
29092 .code
29093 warn ...some conditions...
29094 control = freeze
29095 accept ...
29096 .endd
29097 This example of &%warn%& does not contain &%message%&, &%log_message%&, or
29098 &%logwrite%&, so it does not add anything to the message and does not write a
29099 log entry.
29100
29101 .next
29102 If you want to apply a control unconditionally, you can use it with a
29103 &%require%& verb. For example:
29104 .code
29105 require control = no_multiline_responses
29106 .endd
29107 .endlist
29108
29109 .vitem &*delay*&&~=&~<&'time'&>
29110 .cindex "&%delay%& ACL modifier"
29111 .oindex "&%-bh%&"
29112 This modifier may appear in any ACL except notquit. It causes Exim to wait for
29113 the time interval before proceeding. However, when testing Exim using the
29114 &%-bh%& option, the delay is not actually imposed (an appropriate message is
29115 output instead). The time is given in the usual Exim notation, and the delay
29116 happens as soon as the modifier is processed. In an SMTP session, pending
29117 output is flushed before the delay is imposed.
29118
29119 Like &%control%&, &%delay%& can be used with &%accept%& or &%deny%&, for
29120 example:
29121 .code
29122 deny ...some conditions...
29123 delay = 30s
29124 .endd
29125 The delay happens if all the conditions are true, before the statement returns
29126 &"deny"&. Compare this with:
29127 .code
29128 deny delay = 30s
29129 ...some conditions...
29130 .endd
29131 which waits for 30s before processing the conditions. The &%delay%& modifier
29132 can also be used with &%warn%& and together with &%control%&:
29133 .code
29134 warn ...some conditions...
29135 delay = 2m
29136 control = freeze
29137 accept ...
29138 .endd
29139
29140 If &%delay%& is encountered when the SMTP PIPELINING extension is in use,
29141 responses to several commands are no longer buffered and sent in one packet (as
29142 they would normally be) because all output is flushed before imposing the
29143 delay. This optimization is disabled so that a number of small delays do not
29144 appear to the client as one large aggregated delay that might provoke an
29145 unwanted timeout. You can, however, disable output flushing for &%delay%& by
29146 using a &%control%& modifier to set &%no_delay_flush%&.
29147
29148
29149 .vitem &*endpass*&
29150 .cindex "&%endpass%& ACL modifier"
29151 This modifier, which has no argument, is recognized only in &%accept%& and
29152 &%discard%& statements. It marks the boundary between the conditions whose
29153 failure causes control to pass to the next statement, and the conditions whose
29154 failure causes the ACL to return &"deny"&. This concept has proved to be
29155 confusing to some people, so the use of &%endpass%& is no longer recommended as
29156 &"best practice"&. See the description of &%accept%& above for more details.
29157
29158
29159 .vitem &*log_message*&&~=&~<&'text'&>
29160 .cindex "&%log_message%& ACL modifier"
29161 This modifier sets up a message that is used as part of the log message if the
29162 ACL denies access or a &%warn%& statement's conditions are true. For example:
29163 .code
29164 require log_message = wrong cipher suite $tls_in_cipher
29165 encrypted = DES-CBC3-SHA
29166 .endd
29167 &%log_message%& is also used when recipients are discarded by &%discard%&. For
29168 example:
29169 .display
29170 &`discard `&<&'some conditions'&>
29171 &` log_message = Discarded $local_part@$domain because...`&
29172 .endd
29173 When access is denied, &%log_message%& adds to any underlying error message
29174 that may exist because of a condition failure. For example, while verifying a
29175 recipient address, a &':fail:'& redirection might have already set up a
29176 message.
29177
29178 The message may be defined before the conditions to which it applies, because
29179 the string expansion does not happen until Exim decides that access is to be
29180 denied. This means that any variables that are set by the condition are
29181 available for inclusion in the message. For example, the &$dnslist_$&<&'xxx'&>
29182 variables are set after a DNS black list lookup succeeds. If the expansion of
29183 &%log_message%& fails, or if the result is an empty string, the modifier is
29184 ignored.
29185
29186 .vindex "&$acl_verify_message$&"
29187 If you want to use a &%warn%& statement to log the result of an address
29188 verification, you can use &$acl_verify_message$& to include the verification
29189 error message.
29190
29191 If &%log_message%& is used with a &%warn%& statement, &"Warning:"& is added to
29192 the start of the logged message. If the same warning log message is requested
29193 more than once while receiving a single email message, only one copy is
29194 actually logged. If you want to log multiple copies, use &%logwrite%& instead
29195 of &%log_message%&. In the absence of &%log_message%& and &%logwrite%&, nothing
29196 is logged for a successful &%warn%& statement.
29197
29198 If &%log_message%& is not present and there is no underlying error message (for
29199 example, from the failure of address verification), but &%message%& is present,
29200 the &%message%& text is used for logging rejections. However, if any text for
29201 logging contains newlines, only the first line is logged. In the absence of
29202 both &%log_message%& and &%message%&, a default built-in message is used for
29203 logging rejections.
29204
29205
29206 .vitem "&*log_reject_target*&&~=&~<&'log name list'&>"
29207 .cindex "&%log_reject_target%& ACL modifier"
29208 .cindex "logging in ACL" "specifying which log"
29209 This modifier makes it possible to specify which logs are used for messages
29210 about ACL rejections. Its argument is a colon-separated list of words that can
29211 be &"main"&, &"reject"&, or &"panic"&. The default is &`main:reject`&. The list
29212 may be empty, in which case a rejection is not logged at all. For example, this
29213 ACL fragment writes no logging information when access is denied:
29214 .display
29215 &`deny `&<&'some conditions'&>
29216 &` log_reject_target =`&
29217 .endd
29218 This modifier can be used in SMTP and non-SMTP ACLs. It applies to both
29219 permanent and temporary rejections. Its effect lasts for the rest of the
29220 current ACL.
29221
29222
29223 .vitem &*logwrite*&&~=&~<&'text'&>
29224 .cindex "&%logwrite%& ACL modifier"
29225 .cindex "logging in ACL" "immediate"
29226 This modifier writes a message to a log file as soon as it is encountered when
29227 processing an ACL. (Compare &%log_message%&, which, except in the case of
29228 &%warn%& and &%discard%&, is used only if the ACL statement denies
29229 access.) The &%logwrite%& modifier can be used to log special incidents in
29230 ACLs. For example:
29231 .display
29232 &`accept `&<&'some special conditions'&>
29233 &` control = freeze`&
29234 &` logwrite = froze message because ...`&
29235 .endd
29236 By default, the message is written to the main log. However, it may begin
29237 with a colon, followed by a comma-separated list of log names, and then
29238 another colon, to specify exactly which logs are to be written. For
29239 example:
29240 .code
29241 logwrite = :main,reject: text for main and reject logs
29242 logwrite = :panic: text for panic log only
29243 .endd
29244
29245
29246 .vitem &*message*&&~=&~<&'text'&>
29247 .cindex "&%message%& ACL modifier"
29248 This modifier sets up a text string that is expanded and used as a response
29249 message when an ACL statement terminates the ACL with an &"accept"&, &"deny"&,
29250 or &"defer"& response. (In the case of the &%accept%& and &%discard%& verbs,
29251 there is some complication if &%endpass%& is involved; see the description of
29252 &%accept%& for details.)
29253
29254 The expansion of the message happens at the time Exim decides that the ACL is
29255 to end, not at the time it processes &%message%&. If the expansion fails, or
29256 generates an empty string, the modifier is ignored. Here is an example where
29257 &%message%& must be specified first, because the ACL ends with a rejection if
29258 the &%hosts%& condition fails:
29259 .code
29260 require message = Host not recognized
29261 hosts = 10.0.0.0/8
29262 .endd
29263 (Once a condition has failed, no further conditions or modifiers are
29264 processed.)
29265
29266 .cindex "SMTP" "error codes"
29267 .oindex "&%smtp_banner%&
29268 For ACLs that are triggered by SMTP commands, the message is returned as part
29269 of the SMTP response. The use of &%message%& with &%accept%& (or &%discard%&)
29270 is meaningful only for SMTP, as no message is returned when a non-SMTP message
29271 is accepted. In the case of the connect ACL, accepting with a message modifier
29272 overrides the value of &%smtp_banner%&. For the EHLO/HELO ACL, a customized
29273 accept message may not contain more than one line (otherwise it will be
29274 truncated at the first newline and a panic logged), and it cannot affect the
29275 EHLO options.
29276
29277 When SMTP is involved, the message may begin with an overriding response code,
29278 consisting of three digits optionally followed by an &"extended response code"&
29279 of the form &'n.n.n'&, each code being followed by a space. For example:
29280 .code
29281 deny message = 599 1.2.3 Host not welcome
29282 hosts = 192.168.34.0/24
29283 .endd
29284 The first digit of the supplied response code must be the same as would be sent
29285 by default. A panic occurs if it is not. Exim uses a 550 code when it denies
29286 access, but for the predata ACL, note that the default success code is 354, not
29287 2&'xx'&.
29288
29289 Notwithstanding the previous paragraph, for the QUIT ACL, unlike the others,
29290 the message modifier cannot override the 221 response code.
29291
29292 The text in a &%message%& modifier is literal; any quotes are taken as
29293 literals, but because the string is expanded, backslash escapes are processed
29294 anyway. If the message contains newlines, this gives rise to a multi-line SMTP
29295 response.
29296
29297 .vindex "&$acl_verify_message$&"
29298 For ACLs that are called by an &%acl =%& ACL condition, the message is
29299 stored in &$acl_verify_message$&, from which the calling ACL may use it.
29300
29301 If &%message%& is used on a statement that verifies an address, the message
29302 specified overrides any message that is generated by the verification process.
29303 However, the original message is available in the variable
29304 &$acl_verify_message$&, so you can incorporate it into your message if you
29305 wish. In particular, if you want the text from &%:fail:%& items in &(redirect)&
29306 routers to be passed back as part of the SMTP response, you should either not
29307 use a &%message%& modifier, or make use of &$acl_verify_message$&.
29308
29309 For compatibility with previous releases of Exim, a &%message%& modifier that
29310 is used with a &%warn%& verb behaves in a similar way to the &%add_header%&
29311 modifier, but this usage is now deprecated. However, &%message%& acts only when
29312 all the conditions are true, wherever it appears in an ACL command, whereas
29313 &%add_header%& acts as soon as it is encountered. If &%message%& is used with
29314 &%warn%& in an ACL that is not concerned with receiving a message, it has no
29315 effect.
29316
29317
29318 .vitem &*queue*&&~=&~<&'text'&>
29319 .cindex "&%queue%& ACL modifier"
29320 .cindex "named queues" "selecting in ACL"
29321 This modifier specifies the use of a named queue for spool files
29322 for the message.
29323 It can only be used before the message is received (i.e. not in
29324 the DATA ACL).
29325 This could be used, for example, for known high-volume burst sources
29326 of traffic, or for quarantine of messages.
29327 Separate queue-runner processes will be needed for named queues.
29328 If the text after expansion is empty, the default queue is used.
29329
29330
29331 .vitem &*remove_header*&&~=&~<&'text'&>
29332 This modifier specifies one or more header names in a colon-separated list
29333 that are to be removed from an incoming message, assuming, of course, that
29334 the message is ultimately accepted. For details, see section &<<SECTremoveheadacl>>&.
29335
29336
29337 .vitem &*set*&&~<&'acl_name'&>&~=&~<&'value'&>
29338 .cindex "&%set%& ACL modifier"
29339 This modifier puts a value into one of the ACL variables (see section
29340 &<<SECTaclvariables>>&).
29341
29342
29343 .vitem &*udpsend*&&~=&~<&'parameters'&>
29344 .cindex "UDP communications"
29345 This modifier sends a UDP packet, for purposes such as statistics
29346 collection or behaviour monitoring. The parameters are expanded, and
29347 the result of the expansion must be a colon-separated list consisting
29348 of a destination server, port number, and the packet contents. The
29349 server can be specified as a host name or IPv4 or IPv6 address. The
29350 separator can be changed with the usual angle bracket syntax. For
29351 example, you might want to collect information on which hosts connect
29352 when:
29353 .code
29354 udpsend = <; 2001:dB8::dead:beef ; 1234 ;\
29355 $tod_zulu $sender_host_address
29356 .endd
29357 .endlist
29358
29359
29360
29361
29362 .section "Use of the control modifier" "SECTcontrols"
29363 .cindex "&%control%& ACL modifier"
29364 The &%control%& modifier supports the following settings:
29365
29366 .vlist
29367 .vitem &*control&~=&~allow_auth_unadvertised*&
29368 This modifier allows a client host to use the SMTP AUTH command even when it
29369 has not been advertised in response to EHLO. Furthermore, because there are
29370 apparently some really broken clients that do this, Exim will accept AUTH after
29371 HELO (rather than EHLO) when this control is set. It should be used only if you
29372 really need it, and you should limit its use to those broken clients that do
29373 not work without it. For example:
29374 .code
29375 warn hosts = 192.168.34.25
29376 control = allow_auth_unadvertised
29377 .endd
29378 Normally, when an Exim server receives an AUTH command, it checks the name of
29379 the authentication mechanism that is given in the command to ensure that it
29380 matches an advertised mechanism. When this control is set, the check that a
29381 mechanism has been advertised is bypassed. Any configured mechanism can be used
29382 by the client. This control is permitted only in the connection and HELO ACLs.
29383
29384
29385 .vitem &*control&~=&~caseful_local_part*& &&&
29386 &*control&~=&~caselower_local_part*&
29387 .cindex "&ACL;" "case of local part in"
29388 .cindex "case of local parts"
29389 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
29390 These two controls are permitted only in the ACL specified by &%acl_smtp_rcpt%&
29391 (that is, during RCPT processing). By default, the contents of &$local_part$&
29392 are lower cased before ACL processing. If &"caseful_local_part"& is specified,
29393 any uppercase letters in the original local part are restored in &$local_part$&
29394 for the rest of the ACL, or until a control that sets &"caselower_local_part"&
29395 is encountered.
29396
29397 These controls affect only the current recipient. Moreover, they apply only to
29398 local part handling that takes place directly in the ACL (for example, as a key
29399 in lookups). If a test to verify the recipient is obeyed, the case-related
29400 handling of the local part during the verification is controlled by the router
29401 configuration (see the &%caseful_local_part%& generic router option).
29402
29403 This facility could be used, for example, to add a spam score to local parts
29404 containing upper case letters. For example, using &$acl_m4$& to accumulate the
29405 spam score:
29406 .code
29407 warn control = caseful_local_part
29408 set acl_m4 = ${eval:\
29409 $acl_m4 + \
29410 ${if match{$local_part}{[A-Z]}{1}{0}}\
29411 }
29412 control = caselower_local_part
29413 .endd
29414 Notice that we put back the lower cased version afterwards, assuming that
29415 is what is wanted for subsequent tests.
29416
29417
29418 .vitem &*control&~=&~cutthrough_delivery/*&<&'options'&>
29419 .cindex "&ACL;" "cutthrough routing"
29420 .cindex "cutthrough" "requesting"
29421 This option requests delivery be attempted while the item is being received.
29422
29423 The option is usable in the RCPT ACL.
29424 If enabled for a message received via smtp and routed to an smtp transport,
29425 and only one transport, interface, destination host and port combination
29426 is used for all recipients of the message,
29427 then the delivery connection is made while the receiving connection is open
29428 and data is copied from one to the other.
29429
29430 An attempt to set this option for any recipient but the first
29431 for a mail will be quietly ignored.
29432 If a recipient-verify callout
29433 (with use_sender)
29434 connection is subsequently
29435 requested in the same ACL it is held open and used for
29436 any subsequent recipients and the data,
29437 otherwise one is made after the initial RCPT ACL completes.
29438
29439 Note that routers are used in verify mode,
29440 and cannot depend on content of received headers.
29441 Note also that headers cannot be
29442 modified by any of the post-data ACLs (DATA, MIME and DKIM).
29443 Headers may be modified by routers (subject to the above) and transports.
29444 The &'Received-By:'& header is generated as soon as the body reception starts,
29445 rather than the traditional time after the full message is received;
29446 this will affect the timestamp.
29447
29448 All the usual ACLs are called; if one results in the message being
29449 rejected, all effort spent in delivery (including the costs on
29450 the ultimate destination) will be wasted.
29451 Note that in the case of data-time ACLs this includes the entire
29452 message body.
29453
29454 Cutthrough delivery is not supported via transport-filters or when DKIM signing
29455 of outgoing messages is done, because it sends data to the ultimate destination
29456 before the entire message has been received from the source.
29457 It is not supported for messages received with the SMTP PRDR
29458 or CHUNKING
29459 options in use.
29460
29461 Should the ultimate destination system positively accept or reject the mail,
29462 a corresponding indication is given to the source system and nothing is queued.
29463 If the item is successfully delivered in cutthrough mode
29464 the delivery log lines are tagged with ">>" rather than "=>" and appear
29465 before the acceptance "<=" line.
29466
29467 If there is a temporary error the item is queued for later delivery in the
29468 usual fashion.
29469 This behaviour can be adjusted by appending the option &*defer=*&<&'value'&>
29470 to the control; the default value is &"spool"& and the alternate value
29471 &"pass"& copies an SMTP defer response from the target back to the initiator
29472 and does not queue the message.
29473 Note that this is independent of any recipient verify conditions in the ACL.
29474
29475 Delivery in this mode avoids the generation of a bounce mail to a
29476 (possibly faked)
29477 sender when the destination system is doing content-scan based rejection.
29478
29479
29480 .vitem &*control&~=&~debug/*&<&'options'&>
29481 .cindex "&ACL;" "enabling debug logging"
29482 .cindex "debugging" "enabling from an ACL"
29483 This control turns on debug logging, almost as though Exim had been invoked
29484 with &`-d`&, with the output going to a new logfile in the usual logs directory,
29485 by default called &'debuglog'&.
29486 The filename can be adjusted with the &'tag'& option, which
29487 may access any variables already defined. The logging may be adjusted with
29488 the &'opts'& option, which takes the same values as the &`-d`& command-line
29489 option.
29490 Logging started this way may be stopped, and the file removed,
29491 with the &'kill'& option.
29492 Some examples (which depend on variables that don't exist in all
29493 contexts):
29494 .code
29495 control = debug
29496 control = debug/tag=.$sender_host_address
29497 control = debug/opts=+expand+acl
29498 control = debug/tag=.$message_exim_id/opts=+expand
29499 control = debug/kill
29500 .endd
29501
29502
29503 .vitem &*control&~=&~dkim_disable_verify*&
29504 .cindex "disable DKIM verify"
29505 .cindex "DKIM" "disable verify"
29506 This control turns off DKIM verification processing entirely. For details on
29507 the operation and configuration of DKIM, see section &<<SECDKIM>>&.
29508
29509
29510 .vitem &*control&~=&~dscp/*&<&'value'&>
29511 .cindex "&ACL;" "setting DSCP value"
29512 .cindex "DSCP" "inbound"
29513 This option causes the DSCP value associated with the socket for the inbound
29514 connection to be adjusted to a given value, given as one of a number of fixed
29515 strings or to numeric value.
29516 The &%-bI:dscp%& option may be used to ask Exim which names it knows of.
29517 Common values include &`throughput`&, &`mincost`&, and on newer systems
29518 &`ef`&, &`af41`&, etc. Numeric values may be in the range 0 to 0x3F.
29519
29520 The outbound packets from Exim will be marked with this value in the header
29521 (for IPv4, the TOS field; for IPv6, the TCLASS field); there is no guarantee
29522 that these values will have any effect, not be stripped by networking
29523 equipment, or do much of anything without cooperation with your Network
29524 Engineer and those of all network operators between the source and destination.
29525
29526
29527 .vitem &*control&~=&~enforce_sync*& &&&
29528 &*control&~=&~no_enforce_sync*&
29529 .cindex "SMTP" "synchronization checking"
29530 .cindex "synchronization checking in SMTP"
29531 These controls make it possible to be selective about when SMTP synchronization
29532 is enforced. The global option &%smtp_enforce_sync%& specifies the initial
29533 state of the switch (it is true by default). See the description of this option
29534 in chapter &<<CHAPmainconfig>>& for details of SMTP synchronization checking.
29535
29536 The effect of these two controls lasts for the remainder of the SMTP
29537 connection. They can appear in any ACL except the one for the non-SMTP
29538 messages. The most straightforward place to put them is in the ACL defined by
29539 &%acl_smtp_connect%&, which is run at the start of an incoming SMTP connection,
29540 before the first synchronization check. The expected use is to turn off the
29541 synchronization checks for badly-behaved hosts that you nevertheless need to
29542 work with.
29543
29544
29545 .vitem &*control&~=&~fakedefer/*&<&'message'&>
29546 .cindex "fake defer"
29547 .cindex "defer, fake"
29548 This control works in exactly the same way as &%fakereject%& (described below)
29549 except that it causes an SMTP 450 response after the message data instead of a
29550 550 response. You must take care when using &%fakedefer%& because it causes the
29551 messages to be duplicated when the sender retries. Therefore, you should not
29552 use &%fakedefer%& if the message is to be delivered normally.
29553
29554 .vitem &*control&~=&~fakereject/*&<&'message'&>
29555 .cindex "fake rejection"
29556 .cindex "rejection, fake"
29557 This control is permitted only for the MAIL, RCPT, and DATA ACLs, in other
29558 words, only when an SMTP message is being received. If Exim accepts the
29559 message, instead the final 250 response, a 550 rejection message is sent.
29560 However, Exim proceeds to deliver the message as normal. The control applies
29561 only to the current message, not to any subsequent ones that may be received in
29562 the same SMTP connection.
29563
29564 The text for the 550 response is taken from the &%control%& modifier. If no
29565 message is supplied, the following is used:
29566 .code
29567 550-Your message has been rejected but is being
29568 550-kept for evaluation.
29569 550-If it was a legitimate message, it may still be
29570 550 delivered to the target recipient(s).
29571 .endd
29572 This facility should be used with extreme caution.
29573
29574 .vitem &*control&~=&~freeze*&
29575 .cindex "frozen messages" "forcing in ACL"
29576 This control is permitted only for the MAIL, RCPT, DATA, and non-SMTP ACLs, in
29577 other words, only when a message is being received. If the message is accepted,
29578 it is placed on Exim's queue and frozen. The control applies only to the
29579 current message, not to any subsequent ones that may be received in the same
29580 SMTP connection.
29581
29582 This modifier can optionally be followed by &`/no_tell`&. If the global option
29583 &%freeze_tell%& is set, it is ignored for the current message (that is, nobody
29584 is told about the freezing), provided all the &*control=freeze*& modifiers that
29585 are obeyed for the current message have the &`/no_tell`& option.
29586
29587 .vitem &*control&~=&~no_delay_flush*&
29588 .cindex "SMTP" "output flushing, disabling for delay"
29589 Exim normally flushes SMTP output before implementing a delay in an ACL, to
29590 avoid unexpected timeouts in clients when the SMTP PIPELINING extension is in
29591 use. This control, as long as it is encountered before the &%delay%& modifier,
29592 disables such output flushing.
29593
29594 .vitem &*control&~=&~no_callout_flush*&
29595 .cindex "SMTP" "output flushing, disabling for callout"
29596 Exim normally flushes SMTP output before performing a callout in an ACL, to
29597 avoid unexpected timeouts in clients when the SMTP PIPELINING extension is in
29598 use. This control, as long as it is encountered before the &%verify%& condition
29599 that causes the callout, disables such output flushing.
29600
29601 .vitem &*control&~=&~no_mbox_unspool*&
29602 This control is available when Exim is compiled with the content scanning
29603 extension. Content scanning may require a copy of the current message, or parts
29604 of it, to be written in &"mbox format"& to a spool file, for passing to a virus
29605 or spam scanner. Normally, such copies are deleted when they are no longer
29606 needed. If this control is set, the copies are not deleted. The control applies
29607 only to the current message, not to any subsequent ones that may be received in
29608 the same SMTP connection. It is provided for debugging purposes and is unlikely
29609 to be useful in production.
29610
29611 .vitem &*control&~=&~no_multiline_responses*&
29612 .cindex "multiline responses, suppressing"
29613 This control is permitted for any ACL except the one for non-SMTP messages.
29614 It seems that there are broken clients in use that cannot handle multiline
29615 SMTP responses, despite the fact that RFC 821 defined them over 20 years ago.
29616
29617 If this control is set, multiline SMTP responses from ACL rejections are
29618 suppressed. One way of doing this would have been to put out these responses as
29619 one long line. However, RFC 2821 specifies a maximum of 512 bytes per response
29620 (&"use multiline responses for more"& it says &-- ha!), and some of the
29621 responses might get close to that. So this facility, which is after all only a
29622 sop to broken clients, is implemented by doing two very easy things:
29623
29624 .ilist
29625 Extra information that is normally output as part of a rejection caused by
29626 sender verification failure is omitted. Only the final line (typically &"sender
29627 verification failed"&) is sent.
29628 .next
29629 If a &%message%& modifier supplies a multiline response, only the first
29630 line is output.
29631 .endlist
29632
29633 The setting of the switch can, of course, be made conditional on the
29634 calling host. Its effect lasts until the end of the SMTP connection.
29635
29636 .vitem &*control&~=&~no_pipelining*&
29637 .cindex "PIPELINING" "suppressing advertising"
29638 This control turns off the advertising of the PIPELINING extension to SMTP in
29639 the current session. To be useful, it must be obeyed before Exim sends its
29640 response to an EHLO command. Therefore, it should normally appear in an ACL
29641 controlled by &%acl_smtp_connect%& or &%acl_smtp_helo%&. See also
29642 &%pipelining_advertise_hosts%&.
29643
29644 .vitem &*control&~=&~queue_only*&
29645 .oindex "&%queue_only%&"
29646 .cindex "queueing incoming messages"
29647 This control is permitted only for the MAIL, RCPT, DATA, and non-SMTP ACLs, in
29648 other words, only when a message is being received. If the message is accepted,
29649 it is placed on Exim's queue and left there for delivery by a subsequent queue
29650 runner. No immediate delivery process is started. In other words, it has the
29651 effect as the &%queue_only%& global option. However, the control applies only
29652 to the current message, not to any subsequent ones that may be received in the
29653 same SMTP connection.
29654
29655 .vitem &*control&~=&~submission/*&<&'options'&>
29656 .cindex "message" "submission"
29657 .cindex "submission mode"
29658 This control is permitted only for the MAIL, RCPT, and start of data ACLs (the
29659 latter is the one defined by &%acl_smtp_predata%&). Setting it tells Exim that
29660 the current message is a submission from a local MUA. In this case, Exim
29661 operates in &"submission mode"&, and applies certain fixups to the message if
29662 necessary. For example, it adds a &'Date:'& header line if one is not present.
29663 This control is not permitted in the &%acl_smtp_data%& ACL, because that is too
29664 late (the message has already been created).
29665
29666 Chapter &<<CHAPmsgproc>>& describes the processing that Exim applies to
29667 messages. Section &<<SECTsubmodnon>>& covers the processing that happens in
29668 submission mode; the available options for this control are described there.
29669 The control applies only to the current message, not to any subsequent ones
29670 that may be received in the same SMTP connection.
29671
29672 .vitem &*control&~=&~suppress_local_fixups*&
29673 .cindex "submission fixups, suppressing"
29674 This control applies to locally submitted (non TCP/IP) messages, and is the
29675 complement of &`control = submission`&. It disables the fixups that are
29676 normally applied to locally-submitted messages. Specifically:
29677
29678 .ilist
29679 Any &'Sender:'& header line is left alone (in this respect, it is a
29680 dynamic version of &%local_sender_retain%&).
29681 .next
29682 No &'Message-ID:'&, &'From:'&, or &'Date:'& header lines are added.
29683 .next
29684 There is no check that &'From:'& corresponds to the actual sender.
29685 .endlist ilist
29686
29687 This control may be useful when a remotely-originated message is accepted,
29688 passed to some scanning program, and then re-submitted for delivery. It can be
29689 used only in the &%acl_smtp_mail%&, &%acl_smtp_rcpt%&, &%acl_smtp_predata%&,
29690 and &%acl_not_smtp_start%& ACLs, because it has to be set before the message's
29691 data is read.
29692
29693 &*Note:*& This control applies only to the current message, not to any others
29694 that are being submitted at the same time using &%-bs%& or &%-bS%&.
29695
29696 .vitem &*control&~=&~utf8_downconvert*&
29697 This control enables conversion of UTF-8 in message addresses
29698 to a-label form.
29699 For details see section &<<SECTi18nMTA>>&.
29700 .endlist vlist
29701
29702
29703 .section "Summary of message fixup control" "SECTsummesfix"
29704 All four possibilities for message fixups can be specified:
29705
29706 .ilist
29707 Locally submitted, fixups applied: the default.
29708 .next
29709 Locally submitted, no fixups applied: use
29710 &`control = suppress_local_fixups`&.
29711 .next
29712 Remotely submitted, no fixups applied: the default.
29713 .next
29714 Remotely submitted, fixups applied: use &`control = submission`&.
29715 .endlist
29716
29717
29718
29719 .section "Adding header lines in ACLs" "SECTaddheadacl"
29720 .cindex "header lines" "adding in an ACL"
29721 .cindex "header lines" "position of added lines"
29722 .cindex "&%add_header%& ACL modifier"
29723 The &%add_header%& modifier can be used to add one or more extra header lines
29724 to an incoming message, as in this example:
29725 .code
29726 warn dnslists = sbl.spamhaus.org : \
29727 dialup.mail-abuse.org
29728 add_header = X-blacklisted-at: $dnslist_domain
29729 .endd
29730 The &%add_header%& modifier is permitted in the MAIL, RCPT, PREDATA, DATA,
29731 MIME, DKIM, and non-SMTP ACLs (in other words, those that are concerned with
29732 receiving a message). The message must ultimately be accepted for
29733 &%add_header%& to have any significant effect. You can use &%add_header%& with
29734 any ACL verb, including &%deny%& (though this is potentially useful only in a
29735 RCPT ACL).
29736
29737 Headers will not be added to the message if the modifier is used in
29738 DATA, MIME or DKIM ACLs for a message delivered by cutthrough routing.
29739
29740 Leading and trailing newlines are removed from
29741 the data for the &%add_header%& modifier; if it then
29742 contains one or more newlines that
29743 are not followed by a space or a tab, it is assumed to contain multiple header
29744 lines. Each one is checked for valid syntax; &`X-ACL-Warn:`& is added to the
29745 front of any line that is not a valid header line.
29746
29747 Added header lines are accumulated during the MAIL, RCPT, and predata ACLs.
29748 They are added to the message before processing the DATA and MIME ACLs.
29749 However, if an identical header line is requested more than once, only one copy
29750 is actually added to the message. Further header lines may be accumulated
29751 during the DATA and MIME ACLs, after which they are added to the message, again
29752 with duplicates suppressed. Thus, it is possible to add two identical header
29753 lines to an SMTP message, but only if one is added before DATA and one after.
29754 In the case of non-SMTP messages, new headers are accumulated during the
29755 non-SMTP ACLs, and are added to the message after all the ACLs have run. If a
29756 message is rejected after DATA or by the non-SMTP ACL, all added header lines
29757 are included in the entry that is written to the reject log.
29758
29759 .cindex "header lines" "added; visibility of"
29760 Header lines are not visible in string expansions
29761 of message headers
29762 until they are added to the
29763 message. It follows that header lines defined in the MAIL, RCPT, and predata
29764 ACLs are not visible until the DATA ACL and MIME ACLs are run. Similarly,
29765 header lines that are added by the DATA or MIME ACLs are not visible in those
29766 ACLs. Because of this restriction, you cannot use header lines as a way of
29767 passing data between (for example) the MAIL and RCPT ACLs. If you want to do
29768 this, you can use ACL variables, as described in section
29769 &<<SECTaclvariables>>&.
29770
29771 The list of headers yet to be added is given by the &%$headers_added%& variable.
29772
29773 The &%add_header%& modifier acts immediately as it is encountered during the
29774 processing of an ACL. Notice the difference between these two cases:
29775 .display
29776 &`accept add_header = ADDED: some text`&
29777 &` `&<&'some condition'&>
29778
29779 &`accept `&<&'some condition'&>
29780 &` add_header = ADDED: some text`&
29781 .endd
29782 In the first case, the header line is always added, whether or not the
29783 condition is true. In the second case, the header line is added only if the
29784 condition is true. Multiple occurrences of &%add_header%& may occur in the same
29785 ACL statement. All those that are encountered before a condition fails are
29786 honoured.
29787
29788 .cindex "&%warn%& ACL verb"
29789 For compatibility with previous versions of Exim, a &%message%& modifier for a
29790 &%warn%& verb acts in the same way as &%add_header%&, except that it takes
29791 effect only if all the conditions are true, even if it appears before some of
29792 them. Furthermore, only the last occurrence of &%message%& is honoured. This
29793 usage of &%message%& is now deprecated. If both &%add_header%& and &%message%&
29794 are present on a &%warn%& verb, both are processed according to their
29795 specifications.
29796
29797 By default, new header lines are added to a message at the end of the existing
29798 header lines. However, you can specify that any particular header line should
29799 be added right at the start (before all the &'Received:'& lines), immediately
29800 after the first block of &'Received:'& lines, or immediately before any line
29801 that is not a &'Received:'& or &'Resent-something:'& header.
29802
29803 This is done by specifying &":at_start:"&, &":after_received:"&, or
29804 &":at_start_rfc:"& (or, for completeness, &":at_end:"&) before the text of the
29805 header line, respectively. (Header text cannot start with a colon, as there has
29806 to be a header name first.) For example:
29807 .code
29808 warn add_header = \
29809 :after_received:X-My-Header: something or other...
29810 .endd
29811 If more than one header line is supplied in a single &%add_header%& modifier,
29812 each one is treated independently and can therefore be placed differently. If
29813 you add more than one line at the start, or after the Received: block, they end
29814 up in reverse order.
29815
29816 &*Warning*&: This facility currently applies only to header lines that are
29817 added in an ACL. It does NOT work for header lines that are added in a
29818 system filter or in a router or transport.
29819
29820
29821
29822 .section "Removing header lines in ACLs" "SECTremoveheadacl"
29823 .cindex "header lines" "removing in an ACL"
29824 .cindex "header lines" "position of removed lines"
29825 .cindex "&%remove_header%& ACL modifier"
29826 The &%remove_header%& modifier can be used to remove one or more header lines
29827 from an incoming message, as in this example:
29828 .code
29829 warn message = Remove internal headers
29830 remove_header = x-route-mail1 : x-route-mail2
29831 .endd
29832 The &%remove_header%& modifier is permitted in the MAIL, RCPT, PREDATA, DATA,
29833 MIME, DKIM, and non-SMTP ACLs (in other words, those that are concerned with
29834 receiving a message). The message must ultimately be accepted for
29835 &%remove_header%& to have any significant effect. You can use &%remove_header%&
29836 with any ACL verb, including &%deny%&, though this is really not useful for
29837 any verb that doesn't result in a delivered message.
29838
29839 Headers will not be removed from the message if the modifier is used in
29840 DATA, MIME or DKIM ACLs for a message delivered by cutthrough routing.
29841
29842 More than one header can be removed at the same time by using a colon separated
29843 list of header names. The header matching is case insensitive. Wildcards are
29844 not permitted, nor is list expansion performed, so you cannot use hostlists to
29845 create a list of headers, however both connection and message variable expansion
29846 are performed (&%$acl_c_*%& and &%$acl_m_*%&), illustrated in this example:
29847 .code
29848 warn hosts = +internal_hosts
29849 set acl_c_ihdrs = x-route-mail1 : x-route-mail2
29850 warn message = Remove internal headers
29851 remove_header = $acl_c_ihdrs
29852 .endd
29853 Removed header lines are accumulated during the MAIL, RCPT, and predata ACLs.
29854 They are removed from the message before processing the DATA and MIME ACLs.
29855 There is no harm in attempting to remove the same header twice nor is removing
29856 a non-existent header. Further header lines to be removed may be accumulated
29857 during the DATA and MIME ACLs, after which they are removed from the message,
29858 if present. In the case of non-SMTP messages, headers to be removed are
29859 accumulated during the non-SMTP ACLs, and are removed from the message after
29860 all the ACLs have run. If a message is rejected after DATA or by the non-SMTP
29861 ACL, there really is no effect because there is no logging of what headers
29862 would have been removed.
29863
29864 .cindex "header lines" "removed; visibility of"
29865 Header lines are not visible in string expansions until the DATA phase when it
29866 is received. Any header lines removed in the MAIL, RCPT, and predata ACLs are
29867 not visible in the DATA ACL and MIME ACLs. Similarly, header lines that are
29868 removed by the DATA or MIME ACLs are still visible in those ACLs. Because of
29869 this restriction, you cannot use header lines as a way of controlling data
29870 passed between (for example) the MAIL and RCPT ACLs. If you want to do this,
29871 you should instead use ACL variables, as described in section
29872 &<<SECTaclvariables>>&.
29873
29874 The &%remove_header%& modifier acts immediately as it is encountered during the
29875 processing of an ACL. Notice the difference between these two cases:
29876 .display
29877 &`accept remove_header = X-Internal`&
29878 &` `&<&'some condition'&>
29879
29880 &`accept `&<&'some condition'&>
29881 &` remove_header = X-Internal`&
29882 .endd
29883 In the first case, the header line is always removed, whether or not the
29884 condition is true. In the second case, the header line is removed only if the
29885 condition is true. Multiple occurrences of &%remove_header%& may occur in the
29886 same ACL statement. All those that are encountered before a condition fails
29887 are honoured.
29888
29889 &*Warning*&: This facility currently applies only to header lines that are
29890 present during ACL processing. It does NOT remove header lines that are added
29891 in a system filter or in a router or transport.
29892
29893
29894
29895
29896 .section "ACL conditions" "SECTaclconditions"
29897 .cindex "&ACL;" "conditions; list of"
29898 Some of the conditions listed in this section are available only when Exim is
29899 compiled with the content-scanning extension. They are included here briefly
29900 for completeness. More detailed descriptions can be found in the discussion on
29901 content scanning in chapter &<<CHAPexiscan>>&.
29902
29903 Not all conditions are relevant in all circumstances. For example, testing
29904 senders and recipients does not make sense in an ACL that is being run as the
29905 result of the arrival of an ETRN command, and checks on message headers can be
29906 done only in the ACLs specified by &%acl_smtp_data%& and &%acl_not_smtp%&. You
29907 can use the same condition (with different parameters) more than once in the
29908 same ACL statement. This provides a way of specifying an &"and"& conjunction.
29909 The conditions are as follows:
29910
29911
29912 .vlist
29913 .vitem &*acl&~=&~*&<&'name&~of&~acl&~or&~ACL&~string&~or&~file&~name&~'&>
29914 .cindex "&ACL;" "nested"
29915 .cindex "&ACL;" "indirect"
29916 .cindex "&ACL;" "arguments"
29917 .cindex "&%acl%& ACL condition"
29918 The possible values of the argument are the same as for the
29919 &%acl_smtp_%&&'xxx'& options. The named or inline ACL is run. If it returns
29920 &"accept"& the condition is true; if it returns &"deny"& the condition is
29921 false. If it returns &"defer"&, the current ACL returns &"defer"& unless the
29922 condition is on a &%warn%& verb. In that case, a &"defer"& return makes the
29923 condition false. This means that further processing of the &%warn%& verb
29924 ceases, but processing of the ACL continues.
29925
29926 If the argument is a named ACL, up to nine space-separated optional values
29927 can be appended; they appear within the called ACL in $acl_arg1 to $acl_arg9,
29928 and $acl_narg is set to the count of values.
29929 Previous values of these variables are restored after the call returns.
29930 The name and values are expanded separately.
29931 Note that spaces in complex expansions which are used as arguments
29932 will act as argument separators.
29933
29934 If the nested &%acl%& returns &"drop"& and the outer condition denies access,
29935 the connection is dropped. If it returns &"discard"&, the verb must be
29936 &%accept%& or &%discard%&, and the action is taken immediately &-- no further
29937 conditions are tested.
29938
29939 ACLs may be nested up to 20 deep; the limit exists purely to catch runaway
29940 loops. This condition allows you to use different ACLs in different
29941 circumstances. For example, different ACLs can be used to handle RCPT commands
29942 for different local users or different local domains.
29943
29944 .vitem &*authenticated&~=&~*&<&'string&~list'&>
29945 .cindex "&%authenticated%& ACL condition"
29946 .cindex "authentication" "ACL checking"
29947 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing for authentication"
29948 If the SMTP connection is not authenticated, the condition is false. Otherwise,
29949 the name of the authenticator is tested against the list. To test for
29950 authentication by any authenticator, you can set
29951 .code
29952 authenticated = *
29953 .endd
29954
29955 .vitem &*condition&~=&~*&<&'string'&>
29956 .cindex "&%condition%& ACL condition"
29957 .cindex "customizing" "ACL condition"
29958 .cindex "&ACL;" "customized test"
29959 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing, customized"
29960 This feature allows you to make up custom conditions. If the result of
29961 expanding the string is an empty string, the number zero, or one of the strings
29962 &"no"& or &"false"&, the condition is false. If the result is any non-zero
29963 number, or one of the strings &"yes"& or &"true"&, the condition is true. For
29964 any other value, some error is assumed to have occurred, and the ACL returns
29965 &"defer"&. However, if the expansion is forced to fail, the condition is
29966 ignored. The effect is to treat it as true, whether it is positive or
29967 negative.
29968
29969 .vitem &*decode&~=&~*&<&'location'&>
29970 .cindex "&%decode%& ACL condition"
29971 This condition is available only when Exim is compiled with the
29972 content-scanning extension, and it is allowed only in the ACL defined by
29973 &%acl_smtp_mime%&. It causes the current MIME part to be decoded into a file.
29974 If all goes well, the condition is true. It is false only if there are
29975 problems such as a syntax error or a memory shortage. For more details, see
29976 chapter &<<CHAPexiscan>>&.
29977
29978 .vitem &*dnslists&~=&~*&<&'list&~of&~domain&~names&~and&~other&~data'&>
29979 .cindex "&%dnslists%& ACL condition"
29980 .cindex "DNS list" "in ACL"
29981 .cindex "black list (DNS)"
29982 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing a DNS list"
29983 This condition checks for entries in DNS black lists. These are also known as
29984 &"RBL lists"&, after the original Realtime Blackhole List, but note that the
29985 use of the lists at &'mail-abuse.org'& now carries a charge. There are too many
29986 different variants of this condition to describe briefly here. See sections
29987 &<<SECTmorednslists>>&&--&<<SECTmorednslistslast>>& for details.
29988
29989 .vitem &*domains&~=&~*&<&'domain&~list'&>
29990 .cindex "&%domains%& ACL condition"
29991 .cindex "domain" "ACL checking"
29992 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing a recipient domain"
29993 .vindex "&$domain_data$&"
29994 This condition is relevant only after a RCPT command. It checks that the domain
29995 of the recipient address is in the domain list. If percent-hack processing is
29996 enabled, it is done before this test is done. If the check succeeds with a
29997 lookup, the result of the lookup is placed in &$domain_data$& until the next
29998 &%domains%& test.
29999
30000 &*Note carefully*& (because many people seem to fall foul of this): you cannot
30001 use &%domains%& in a DATA ACL.
30002
30003
30004 .vitem &*encrypted&~=&~*&<&'string&~list'&>
30005 .cindex "&%encrypted%& ACL condition"
30006 .cindex "encryption" "checking in an ACL"
30007 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing for encryption"
30008 If the SMTP connection is not encrypted, the condition is false. Otherwise, the
30009 name of the cipher suite in use is tested against the list. To test for
30010 encryption without testing for any specific cipher suite(s), set
30011 .code
30012 encrypted = *
30013 .endd
30014
30015
30016 .vitem &*hosts&~=&~*&<&'host&~list'&>
30017 .cindex "&%hosts%& ACL condition"
30018 .cindex "host" "ACL checking"
30019 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing the client host"
30020 This condition tests that the calling host matches the host list. If you have
30021 name lookups or wildcarded host names and IP addresses in the same host list,
30022 you should normally put the IP addresses first. For example, you could have:
30023 .code
30024 accept hosts = 10.9.8.7 : dbm;/etc/friendly/hosts
30025 .endd
30026 The lookup in this example uses the host name for its key. This is implied by
30027 the lookup type &"dbm"&. (For a host address lookup you would use &"net-dbm"&
30028 and it wouldn't matter which way round you had these two items.)
30029
30030 The reason for the problem with host names lies in the left-to-right way that
30031 Exim processes lists. It can test IP addresses without doing any DNS lookups,
30032 but when it reaches an item that requires a host name, it fails if it cannot
30033 find a host name to compare with the pattern. If the above list is given in the
30034 opposite order, the &%accept%& statement fails for a host whose name cannot be
30035 found, even if its IP address is 10.9.8.7.
30036
30037 If you really do want to do the name check first, and still recognize the IP
30038 address even if the name lookup fails, you can rewrite the ACL like this:
30039 .code
30040 accept hosts = dbm;/etc/friendly/hosts
30041 accept hosts = 10.9.8.7
30042 .endd
30043 The default action on failing to find the host name is to assume that the host
30044 is not in the list, so the first &%accept%& statement fails. The second
30045 statement can then check the IP address.
30046
30047 .vindex "&$host_data$&"
30048 If a &%hosts%& condition is satisfied by means of a lookup, the result
30049 of the lookup is made available in the &$host_data$& variable. This
30050 allows you, for example, to set up a statement like this:
30051 .code
30052 deny hosts = net-lsearch;/some/file
30053 message = $host_data
30054 .endd
30055 which gives a custom error message for each denied host.
30056
30057 .vitem &*local_parts&~=&~*&<&'local&~part&~list'&>
30058 .cindex "&%local_parts%& ACL condition"
30059 .cindex "local part" "ACL checking"
30060 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing a local part"
30061 .vindex "&$local_part_data$&"
30062 This condition is relevant only after a RCPT command. It checks that the local
30063 part of the recipient address is in the list. If percent-hack processing is
30064 enabled, it is done before this test. If the check succeeds with a lookup, the
30065 result of the lookup is placed in &$local_part_data$&, which remains set until
30066 the next &%local_parts%& test.
30067
30068 .vitem &*malware&~=&~*&<&'option'&>
30069 .cindex "&%malware%& ACL condition"
30070 .cindex "&ACL;" "virus scanning"
30071 .cindex "&ACL;" "scanning for viruses"
30072 This condition is available only when Exim is compiled with the
30073 content-scanning extension. It causes the incoming message to be scanned for
30074 viruses. For details, see chapter &<<CHAPexiscan>>&.
30075
30076 .vitem &*mime_regex&~=&~*&<&'list&~of&~regular&~expressions'&>
30077 .cindex "&%mime_regex%& ACL condition"
30078 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing by regex matching"
30079 This condition is available only when Exim is compiled with the
30080 content-scanning extension, and it is allowed only in the ACL defined by
30081 &%acl_smtp_mime%&. It causes the current MIME part to be scanned for a match
30082 with any of the regular expressions. For details, see chapter
30083 &<<CHAPexiscan>>&.
30084
30085 .vitem &*ratelimit&~=&~*&<&'parameters'&>
30086 .cindex "rate limiting"
30087 This condition can be used to limit the rate at which a user or host submits
30088 messages. Details are given in section &<<SECTratelimiting>>&.
30089
30090 .vitem &*recipients&~=&~*&<&'address&~list'&>
30091 .cindex "&%recipients%& ACL condition"
30092 .cindex "recipient" "ACL checking"
30093 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing a recipient"
30094 This condition is relevant only after a RCPT command. It checks the entire
30095 recipient address against a list of recipients.
30096
30097 .vitem &*regex&~=&~*&<&'list&~of&~regular&~expressions'&>
30098 .cindex "&%regex%& ACL condition"
30099 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing by regex matching"
30100 This condition is available only when Exim is compiled with the
30101 content-scanning extension, and is available only in the DATA, MIME, and
30102 non-SMTP ACLs. It causes the incoming message to be scanned for a match with
30103 any of the regular expressions. For details, see chapter &<<CHAPexiscan>>&.
30104
30105 .vitem &*sender_domains&~=&~*&<&'domain&~list'&>
30106 .cindex "&%sender_domains%& ACL condition"
30107 .cindex "sender" "ACL checking"
30108 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing a sender domain"
30109 .vindex "&$domain$&"
30110 .vindex "&$sender_address_domain$&"
30111 This condition tests the domain of the sender of the message against the given
30112 domain list. &*Note*&: The domain of the sender address is in
30113 &$sender_address_domain$&. It is &'not'& put in &$domain$& during the testing
30114 of this condition. This is an exception to the general rule for testing domain
30115 lists. It is done this way so that, if this condition is used in an ACL for a
30116 RCPT command, the recipient's domain (which is in &$domain$&) can be used to
30117 influence the sender checking.
30118
30119 &*Warning*&: It is a bad idea to use this condition on its own as a control on
30120 relaying, because sender addresses are easily, and commonly, forged.
30121
30122 .vitem &*senders&~=&~*&<&'address&~list'&>
30123 .cindex "&%senders%& ACL condition"
30124 .cindex "sender" "ACL checking"
30125 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing a sender"
30126 This condition tests the sender of the message against the given list. To test
30127 for a bounce message, which has an empty sender, set
30128 .code
30129 senders = :
30130 .endd
30131 &*Warning*&: It is a bad idea to use this condition on its own as a control on
30132 relaying, because sender addresses are easily, and commonly, forged.
30133
30134 .vitem &*spam&~=&~*&<&'username'&>
30135 .cindex "&%spam%& ACL condition"
30136 .cindex "&ACL;" "scanning for spam"
30137 This condition is available only when Exim is compiled with the
30138 content-scanning extension. It causes the incoming message to be scanned by
30139 SpamAssassin. For details, see chapter &<<CHAPexiscan>>&.
30140
30141 .vitem &*verify&~=&~certificate*&
30142 .cindex "&%verify%& ACL condition"
30143 .cindex "TLS" "client certificate verification"
30144 .cindex "certificate" "verification of client"
30145 .cindex "&ACL;" "certificate verification"
30146 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing a TLS certificate"
30147 This condition is true in an SMTP session if the session is encrypted, and a
30148 certificate was received from the client, and the certificate was verified. The
30149 server requests a certificate only if the client matches &%tls_verify_hosts%&
30150 or &%tls_try_verify_hosts%& (see chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>&).
30151
30152 .vitem &*verify&~=&~csa*&
30153 .cindex "CSA verification"
30154 This condition checks whether the sending host (the client) is authorized to
30155 send email. Details of how this works are given in section
30156 &<<SECTverifyCSA>>&.
30157
30158 .vitem &*verify&~=&~header_names_ascii*&
30159 .cindex "&%verify%& ACL condition"
30160 .cindex "&ACL;" "verifying header names only ASCII"
30161 .cindex "header lines" "verifying header names only ASCII"
30162 .cindex "verifying" "header names only ASCII"
30163 This condition is relevant only in an ACL that is run after a message has been
30164 received, that is, in an ACL specified by &%acl_smtp_data%& or
30165 &%acl_not_smtp%&. It checks all header names (not the content) to make sure
30166 there are no non-ASCII characters, also excluding control characters. The
30167 allowable characters are decimal ASCII values 33 through 126.
30168
30169 Exim itself will handle headers with non-ASCII characters, but it can cause
30170 problems for downstream applications, so this option will allow their
30171 detection and rejection in the DATA ACL's.
30172
30173 .vitem &*verify&~=&~header_sender/*&<&'options'&>
30174 .cindex "&%verify%& ACL condition"
30175 .cindex "&ACL;" "verifying sender in the header"
30176 .cindex "header lines" "verifying the sender in"
30177 .cindex "sender" "verifying in header"
30178 .cindex "verifying" "sender in header"
30179 This condition is relevant only in an ACL that is run after a message has been
30180 received, that is, in an ACL specified by &%acl_smtp_data%& or
30181 &%acl_not_smtp%&. It checks that there is a verifiable address in at least one
30182 of the &'Sender:'&, &'Reply-To:'&, or &'From:'& header lines. Such an address
30183 is loosely thought of as a &"sender"& address (hence the name of the test).
30184 However, an address that appears in one of these headers need not be an address
30185 that accepts bounce messages; only sender addresses in envelopes are required
30186 to accept bounces. Therefore, if you use the callout option on this check, you
30187 might want to arrange for a non-empty address in the MAIL command.
30188
30189 Details of address verification and the options are given later, starting at
30190 section &<<SECTaddressverification>>& (callouts are described in section
30191 &<<SECTcallver>>&). You can combine this condition with the &%senders%&
30192 condition to restrict it to bounce messages only:
30193 .code
30194 deny senders = :
30195 message = A valid sender header is required for bounces
30196 !verify = header_sender
30197 .endd
30198
30199 .vitem &*verify&~=&~header_syntax*&
30200 .cindex "&%verify%& ACL condition"
30201 .cindex "&ACL;" "verifying header syntax"
30202 .cindex "header lines" "verifying syntax"
30203 .cindex "verifying" "header syntax"
30204 This condition is relevant only in an ACL that is run after a message has been
30205 received, that is, in an ACL specified by &%acl_smtp_data%& or
30206 &%acl_not_smtp%&. It checks the syntax of all header lines that can contain
30207 lists of addresses (&'Sender:'&, &'From:'&, &'Reply-To:'&, &'To:'&, &'Cc:'&,
30208 and &'Bcc:'&), returning true if there are no problems.
30209 Unqualified addresses (local parts without domains) are
30210 permitted only in locally generated messages and from hosts that match
30211 &%sender_unqualified_hosts%& or &%recipient_unqualified_hosts%&, as
30212 appropriate.
30213
30214 Note that this condition is a syntax check only. However, a common spamming
30215 ploy used to be to send syntactically invalid headers such as
30216 .code
30217 To: @
30218 .endd
30219 and this condition can be used to reject such messages, though they are not as
30220 common as they used to be.
30221
30222 .vitem &*verify&~=&~helo*&
30223 .cindex "&%verify%& ACL condition"
30224 .cindex "&ACL;" "verifying HELO/EHLO"
30225 .cindex "HELO" "verifying"
30226 .cindex "EHLO" "verifying"
30227 .cindex "verifying" "EHLO"
30228 .cindex "verifying" "HELO"
30229 This condition is true if a HELO or EHLO command has been received from the
30230 client host, and its contents have been verified. If there has been no previous
30231 attempt to verify the HELO/EHLO contents, it is carried out when this
30232 condition is encountered. See the description of the &%helo_verify_hosts%& and
30233 &%helo_try_verify_hosts%& options for details of how to request verification
30234 independently of this condition.
30235
30236 For SMTP input that does not come over TCP/IP (the &%-bs%& command line
30237 option), this condition is always true.
30238
30239
30240 .vitem &*verify&~=&~not_blind*&
30241 .cindex "verifying" "not blind"
30242 .cindex "bcc recipients, verifying none"
30243 This condition checks that there are no blind (bcc) recipients in the message.
30244 Every envelope recipient must appear either in a &'To:'& header line or in a
30245 &'Cc:'& header line for this condition to be true. Local parts are checked
30246 case-sensitively; domains are checked case-insensitively. If &'Resent-To:'& or
30247 &'Resent-Cc:'& header lines exist, they are also checked. This condition can be
30248 used only in a DATA or non-SMTP ACL.
30249
30250 There are, of course, many legitimate messages that make use of blind (bcc)
30251 recipients. This check should not be used on its own for blocking messages.
30252
30253
30254 .vitem &*verify&~=&~recipient/*&<&'options'&>
30255 .cindex "&%verify%& ACL condition"
30256 .cindex "&ACL;" "verifying recipient"
30257 .cindex "recipient" "verifying"
30258 .cindex "verifying" "recipient"
30259 .vindex "&$address_data$&"
30260 This condition is relevant only after a RCPT command. It verifies the current
30261 recipient. Details of address verification are given later, starting at section
30262 &<<SECTaddressverification>>&. After a recipient has been verified, the value
30263 of &$address_data$& is the last value that was set while routing the address.
30264 This applies even if the verification fails. When an address that is being
30265 verified is redirected to a single address, verification continues with the new
30266 address, and in that case, the subsequent value of &$address_data$& is the
30267 value for the child address.
30268
30269 .vitem &*verify&~=&~reverse_host_lookup/*&<&'options'&>
30270 .cindex "&%verify%& ACL condition"
30271 .cindex "&ACL;" "verifying host reverse lookup"
30272 .cindex "host" "verifying reverse lookup"
30273 This condition ensures that a verified host name has been looked up from the IP
30274 address of the client host. (This may have happened already if the host name
30275 was needed for checking a host list, or if the host matched &%host_lookup%&.)
30276 Verification ensures that the host name obtained from a reverse DNS lookup, or
30277 one of its aliases, does, when it is itself looked up in the DNS, yield the
30278 original IP address.
30279
30280 There is one possible option, &`defer_ok`&. If this is present and a
30281 DNS operation returns a temporary error, the verify condition succeeds.
30282
30283 If this condition is used for a locally generated message (that is, when there
30284 is no client host involved), it always succeeds.
30285
30286 .vitem &*verify&~=&~sender/*&<&'options'&>
30287 .cindex "&%verify%& ACL condition"
30288 .cindex "&ACL;" "verifying sender"
30289 .cindex "sender" "verifying"
30290 .cindex "verifying" "sender"
30291 This condition is relevant only after a MAIL or RCPT command, or after a
30292 message has been received (the &%acl_smtp_data%& or &%acl_not_smtp%& ACLs). If
30293 the message's sender is empty (that is, this is a bounce message), the
30294 condition is true. Otherwise, the sender address is verified.
30295
30296 .vindex "&$address_data$&"
30297 .vindex "&$sender_address_data$&"
30298 If there is data in the &$address_data$& variable at the end of routing, its
30299 value is placed in &$sender_address_data$& at the end of verification. This
30300 value can be used in subsequent conditions and modifiers in the same ACL
30301 statement. It does not persist after the end of the current statement. If you
30302 want to preserve the value for longer, you can save it in an ACL variable.
30303
30304 Details of verification are given later, starting at section
30305 &<<SECTaddressverification>>&. Exim caches the result of sender verification,
30306 to avoid doing it more than once per message.
30307
30308 .vitem &*verify&~=&~sender=*&<&'address'&>&*/*&<&'options'&>
30309 .cindex "&%verify%& ACL condition"
30310 This is a variation of the previous option, in which a modified address is
30311 verified as a sender.
30312
30313 Note that '/' is legal in local-parts; if the address may have such
30314 (eg. is generated from the received message)
30315 they must be protected from the options parsing by doubling:
30316 .code
30317 verify = sender=${sg{${address:$h_sender:}}{/}{//}}
30318 .endd
30319 .endlist
30320
30321
30322
30323 .section "Using DNS lists" "SECTmorednslists"
30324 .cindex "DNS list" "in ACL"
30325 .cindex "black list (DNS)"
30326 .cindex "&ACL;" "testing a DNS list"
30327 In its simplest form, the &%dnslists%& condition tests whether the calling host
30328 is on at least one of a number of DNS lists by looking up the inverted IP
30329 address in one or more DNS domains. (Note that DNS list domains are not mail
30330 domains, so the &`+`& syntax for named lists doesn't work - it is used for
30331 special options instead.) For example, if the calling host's IP
30332 address is 192.168.62.43, and the ACL statement is
30333 .code
30334 deny dnslists = blackholes.mail-abuse.org : \
30335 dialups.mail-abuse.org
30336 .endd
30337 the following records are looked up:
30338 .code
30339 43.62.168.192.blackholes.mail-abuse.org
30340 43.62.168.192.dialups.mail-abuse.org
30341 .endd
30342 As soon as Exim finds an existing DNS record, processing of the list stops.
30343 Thus, multiple entries on the list provide an &"or"& conjunction. If you want
30344 to test that a host is on more than one list (an &"and"& conjunction), you can
30345 use two separate conditions:
30346 .code
30347 deny dnslists = blackholes.mail-abuse.org
30348 dnslists = dialups.mail-abuse.org
30349 .endd
30350 If a DNS lookup times out or otherwise fails to give a decisive answer, Exim
30351 behaves as if the host does not match the list item, that is, as if the DNS
30352 record does not exist. If there are further items in the DNS list, they are
30353 processed.
30354
30355 This is usually the required action when &%dnslists%& is used with &%deny%&
30356 (which is the most common usage), because it prevents a DNS failure from
30357 blocking mail. However, you can change this behaviour by putting one of the
30358 following special items in the list:
30359 .display
30360 &`+include_unknown `& behave as if the item is on the list
30361 &`+exclude_unknown `& behave as if the item is not on the list (default)
30362 &`+defer_unknown `& give a temporary error
30363 .endd
30364 .cindex "&`+include_unknown`&"
30365 .cindex "&`+exclude_unknown`&"
30366 .cindex "&`+defer_unknown`&"
30367 Each of these applies to any subsequent items on the list. For example:
30368 .code
30369 deny dnslists = +defer_unknown : foo.bar.example
30370 .endd
30371 Testing the list of domains stops as soon as a match is found. If you want to
30372 warn for one list and block for another, you can use two different statements:
30373 .code
30374 deny dnslists = blackholes.mail-abuse.org
30375 warn message = X-Warn: sending host is on dialups list
30376 dnslists = dialups.mail-abuse.org
30377 .endd
30378 .cindex caching "of dns lookup"
30379 .cindex DNS TTL
30380 DNS list lookups are cached by Exim for the duration of the SMTP session
30381 (but limited by the DNS return TTL value),
30382 so a lookup based on the IP address is done at most once for any incoming
30383 connection (assuming long-enough TTL).
30384 Exim does not share information between multiple incoming
30385 connections (but your local name server cache should be active).
30386
30387
30388
30389 .section "Specifying the IP address for a DNS list lookup" "SECID201"
30390 .cindex "DNS list" "keyed by explicit IP address"
30391 By default, the IP address that is used in a DNS list lookup is the IP address
30392 of the calling host. However, you can specify another IP address by listing it
30393 after the domain name, introduced by a slash. For example:
30394 .code
30395 deny dnslists = black.list.tld/192.168.1.2
30396 .endd
30397 This feature is not very helpful with explicit IP addresses; it is intended for
30398 use with IP addresses that are looked up, for example, the IP addresses of the
30399 MX hosts or nameservers of an email sender address. For an example, see section
30400 &<<SECTmulkeyfor>>& below.
30401
30402
30403
30404
30405 .section "DNS lists keyed on domain names" "SECID202"
30406 .cindex "DNS list" "keyed by domain name"
30407 There are some lists that are keyed on domain names rather than inverted IP
30408 addresses (see for example the &'domain based zones'& link at
30409 &url(http://www.rfc-ignorant.org/)). No reversing of components is used
30410 with these lists. You can change the name that is looked up in a DNS list by
30411 listing it after the domain name, introduced by a slash. For example,
30412 .code
30413 deny message = Sender's domain is listed at $dnslist_domain
30414 dnslists = dsn.rfc-ignorant.org/$sender_address_domain
30415 .endd
30416 This particular example is useful only in ACLs that are obeyed after the
30417 RCPT or DATA commands, when a sender address is available. If (for
30418 example) the message's sender is &'user@tld.example'& the name that is looked
30419 up by this example is
30420 .code
30421 tld.example.dsn.rfc-ignorant.org
30422 .endd
30423 A single &%dnslists%& condition can contain entries for both names and IP
30424 addresses. For example:
30425 .code
30426 deny dnslists = sbl.spamhaus.org : \
30427 dsn.rfc-ignorant.org/$sender_address_domain
30428 .endd
30429 The first item checks the sending host's IP address; the second checks a domain
30430 name. The whole condition is true if either of the DNS lookups succeeds.
30431
30432
30433
30434
30435 .section "Multiple explicit keys for a DNS list" "SECTmulkeyfor"
30436 .cindex "DNS list" "multiple keys for"
30437 The syntax described above for looking up explicitly-defined values (either
30438 names or IP addresses) in a DNS blacklist is a simplification. After the domain
30439 name for the DNS list, what follows the slash can in fact be a list of items.
30440 As with all lists in Exim, the default separator is a colon. However, because
30441 this is a sublist within the list of DNS blacklist domains, it is necessary
30442 either to double the separators like this:
30443 .code
30444 dnslists = black.list.tld/name.1::name.2
30445 .endd
30446 or to change the separator character, like this:
30447 .code
30448 dnslists = black.list.tld/<;name.1;name.2
30449 .endd
30450 If an item in the list is an IP address, it is inverted before the DNS
30451 blacklist domain is appended. If it is not an IP address, no inversion
30452 occurs. Consider this condition:
30453 .code
30454 dnslists = black.list.tld/<;192.168.1.2;a.domain
30455 .endd
30456 The DNS lookups that occur are:
30457 .code
30458 2.1.168.192.black.list.tld
30459 a.domain.black.list.tld
30460 .endd
30461 Once a DNS record has been found (that matches a specific IP return
30462 address, if specified &-- see section &<<SECTaddmatcon>>&), no further lookups
30463 are done. If there is a temporary DNS error, the rest of the sublist of domains
30464 or IP addresses is tried. A temporary error for the whole dnslists item occurs
30465 only if no other DNS lookup in this sublist succeeds. In other words, a
30466 successful lookup for any of the items in the sublist overrides a temporary
30467 error for a previous item.
30468
30469 The ability to supply a list of items after the slash is in some sense just a
30470 syntactic convenience. These two examples have the same effect:
30471 .code
30472 dnslists = black.list.tld/a.domain : black.list.tld/b.domain
30473 dnslists = black.list.tld/a.domain::b.domain
30474 .endd
30475 However, when the data for the list is obtained from a lookup, the second form
30476 is usually much more convenient. Consider this example:
30477 .code
30478 deny message = The mail servers for the domain \
30479 $sender_address_domain \
30480 are listed at $dnslist_domain ($dnslist_value); \
30481 see $dnslist_text.
30482 dnslists = sbl.spamhaus.org/<|${lookup dnsdb {>|a=<|\
30483 ${lookup dnsdb {>|mxh=\
30484 $sender_address_domain} }} }
30485 .endd
30486 Note the use of &`>|`& in the dnsdb lookup to specify the separator for
30487 multiple DNS records. The inner dnsdb lookup produces a list of MX hosts
30488 and the outer dnsdb lookup finds the IP addresses for these hosts. The result
30489 of expanding the condition might be something like this:
30490 .code
30491 dnslists = sbl.spamhaus.org/<|192.168.2.3|192.168.5.6|...
30492 .endd
30493 Thus, this example checks whether or not the IP addresses of the sender
30494 domain's mail servers are on the Spamhaus black list.
30495
30496 The key that was used for a successful DNS list lookup is put into the variable
30497 &$dnslist_matched$& (see section &<<SECID204>>&).
30498
30499
30500
30501
30502 .section "Data returned by DNS lists" "SECID203"
30503 .cindex "DNS list" "data returned from"
30504 DNS lists are constructed using address records in the DNS. The original RBL
30505 just used the address 127.0.0.1 on the right hand side of each record, but the
30506 RBL+ list and some other lists use a number of values with different meanings.
30507 The values used on the RBL+ list are:
30508 .display
30509 127.1.0.1 RBL
30510 127.1.0.2 DUL
30511 127.1.0.3 DUL and RBL
30512 127.1.0.4 RSS
30513 127.1.0.5 RSS and RBL
30514 127.1.0.6 RSS and DUL
30515 127.1.0.7 RSS and DUL and RBL
30516 .endd
30517 Section &<<SECTaddmatcon>>& below describes how you can distinguish between
30518 different values. Some DNS lists may return more than one address record;
30519 see section &<<SECThanmuldnsrec>>& for details of how they are checked.
30520
30521
30522 .section "Variables set from DNS lists" "SECID204"
30523 .cindex "expansion" "variables, set from DNS list"
30524 .cindex "DNS list" "variables set from"
30525 .vindex "&$dnslist_domain$&"
30526 .vindex "&$dnslist_matched$&"
30527 .vindex "&$dnslist_text$&"
30528 .vindex "&$dnslist_value$&"
30529 When an entry is found in a DNS list, the variable &$dnslist_domain$& contains
30530 the name of the overall domain that matched (for example,
30531 &`spamhaus.example`&), &$dnslist_matched$& contains the key within that domain
30532 (for example, &`192.168.5.3`&), and &$dnslist_value$& contains the data from
30533 the DNS record. When the key is an IP address, it is not reversed in
30534 &$dnslist_matched$& (though it is, of course, in the actual lookup). In simple
30535 cases, for example:
30536 .code
30537 deny dnslists = spamhaus.example
30538 .endd
30539 the key is also available in another variable (in this case,
30540 &$sender_host_address$&). In more complicated cases, however, this is not true.
30541 For example, using a data lookup (as described in section &<<SECTmulkeyfor>>&)
30542 might generate a dnslists lookup like this:
30543 .code
30544 deny dnslists = spamhaus.example/<|192.168.1.2|192.168.6.7|...
30545 .endd
30546 If this condition succeeds, the value in &$dnslist_matched$& might be
30547 &`192.168.6.7`& (for example).
30548
30549 If more than one address record is returned by the DNS lookup, all the IP
30550 addresses are included in &$dnslist_value$&, separated by commas and spaces.
30551 The variable &$dnslist_text$& contains the contents of any associated TXT
30552 record. For lists such as RBL+ the TXT record for a merged entry is often not
30553 very meaningful. See section &<<SECTmordetinf>>& for a way of obtaining more
30554 information.
30555
30556 You can use the DNS list variables in &%message%& or &%log_message%& modifiers
30557 &-- although these appear before the condition in the ACL, they are not
30558 expanded until after it has failed. For example:
30559 .code
30560 deny hosts = !+local_networks
30561 message = $sender_host_address is listed \
30562 at $dnslist_domain
30563 dnslists = rbl-plus.mail-abuse.example
30564 .endd
30565
30566
30567
30568 .section "Additional matching conditions for DNS lists" "SECTaddmatcon"
30569 .cindex "DNS list" "matching specific returned data"
30570 You can add an equals sign and an IP address after a &%dnslists%& domain name
30571 in order to restrict its action to DNS records with a matching right hand side.
30572 For example,
30573 .code
30574 deny dnslists = rblplus.mail-abuse.org=127.0.0.2
30575 .endd
30576 rejects only those hosts that yield 127.0.0.2. Without this additional data,
30577 any address record is considered to be a match. For the moment, we assume
30578 that the DNS lookup returns just one record. Section &<<SECThanmuldnsrec>>&
30579 describes how multiple records are handled.
30580
30581 More than one IP address may be given for checking, using a comma as a
30582 separator. These are alternatives &-- if any one of them matches, the
30583 &%dnslists%& condition is true. For example:
30584 .code
30585 deny dnslists = a.b.c=127.0.0.2,127.0.0.3
30586 .endd
30587 If you want to specify a constraining address list and also specify names or IP
30588 addresses to be looked up, the constraining address list must be specified
30589 first. For example:
30590 .code
30591 deny dnslists = dsn.rfc-ignorant.org\
30592 =127.0.0.2/$sender_address_domain
30593 .endd
30594
30595 If the character &`&&`& is used instead of &`=`&, the comparison for each
30596 listed IP address is done by a bitwise &"and"& instead of by an equality test.
30597 In other words, the listed addresses are used as bit masks. The comparison is
30598 true if all the bits in the mask are present in the address that is being
30599 tested. For example:
30600 .code
30601 dnslists = a.b.c&0.0.0.3
30602 .endd
30603 matches if the address is &'x.x.x.'&3, &'x.x.x.'&7, &'x.x.x.'&11, etc. If you
30604 want to test whether one bit or another bit is present (as opposed to both
30605 being present), you must use multiple values. For example:
30606 .code
30607 dnslists = a.b.c&0.0.0.1,0.0.0.2
30608 .endd
30609 matches if the final component of the address is an odd number or two times
30610 an odd number.
30611
30612
30613
30614 .section "Negated DNS matching conditions" "SECID205"
30615 You can supply a negative list of IP addresses as part of a &%dnslists%&
30616 condition. Whereas
30617 .code
30618 deny dnslists = a.b.c=127.0.0.2,127.0.0.3
30619 .endd
30620 means &"deny if the host is in the black list at the domain &'a.b.c'& and the
30621 IP address yielded by the list is either 127.0.0.2 or 127.0.0.3"&,
30622 .code
30623 deny dnslists = a.b.c!=127.0.0.2,127.0.0.3
30624 .endd
30625 means &"deny if the host is in the black list at the domain &'a.b.c'& and the
30626 IP address yielded by the list is not 127.0.0.2 and not 127.0.0.3"&. In other
30627 words, the result of the test is inverted if an exclamation mark appears before
30628 the &`=`& (or the &`&&`&) sign.
30629
30630 &*Note*&: This kind of negation is not the same as negation in a domain,
30631 host, or address list (which is why the syntax is different).
30632
30633 If you are using just one list, the negation syntax does not gain you much. The
30634 previous example is precisely equivalent to
30635 .code
30636 deny dnslists = a.b.c
30637 !dnslists = a.b.c=127.0.0.2,127.0.0.3
30638 .endd
30639 However, if you are using multiple lists, the negation syntax is clearer.
30640 Consider this example:
30641 .code
30642 deny dnslists = sbl.spamhaus.org : \
30643 list.dsbl.org : \
30644 dnsbl.njabl.org!=127.0.0.3 : \
30645 relays.ordb.org
30646 .endd
30647 Using only positive lists, this would have to be:
30648 .code
30649 deny dnslists = sbl.spamhaus.org : \
30650 list.dsbl.org
30651 deny dnslists = dnsbl.njabl.org
30652 !dnslists = dnsbl.njabl.org=127.0.0.3
30653 deny dnslists = relays.ordb.org
30654 .endd
30655 which is less clear, and harder to maintain.
30656
30657
30658
30659
30660 .section "Handling multiple DNS records from a DNS list" "SECThanmuldnsrec"
30661 A DNS lookup for a &%dnslists%& condition may return more than one DNS record,
30662 thereby providing more than one IP address. When an item in a &%dnslists%& list
30663 is followed by &`=`& or &`&&`& and a list of IP addresses, in order to restrict
30664 the match to specific results from the DNS lookup, there are two ways in which
30665 the checking can be handled. For example, consider the condition:
30666 .code
30667 dnslists = a.b.c=127.0.0.1
30668 .endd
30669 What happens if the DNS lookup for the incoming IP address yields both
30670 127.0.0.1 and 127.0.0.2 by means of two separate DNS records? Is the
30671 condition true because at least one given value was found, or is it false
30672 because at least one of the found values was not listed? And how does this
30673 affect negated conditions? Both possibilities are provided for with the help of
30674 additional separators &`==`& and &`=&&`&.
30675
30676 .ilist
30677 If &`=`& or &`&&`& is used, the condition is true if any one of the looked up
30678 IP addresses matches one of the listed addresses. For the example above, the
30679 condition is true because 127.0.0.1 matches.
30680 .next
30681 If &`==`& or &`=&&`& is used, the condition is true only if every one of the
30682 looked up IP addresses matches one of the listed addresses. If the condition is
30683 changed to:
30684 .code
30685 dnslists = a.b.c==127.0.0.1
30686 .endd
30687 and the DNS lookup yields both 127.0.0.1 and 127.0.0.2, the condition is
30688 false because 127.0.0.2 is not listed. You would need to have:
30689 .code
30690 dnslists = a.b.c==127.0.0.1,127.0.0.2
30691 .endd
30692 for the condition to be true.
30693 .endlist
30694
30695 When &`!`& is used to negate IP address matching, it inverts the result, giving
30696 the precise opposite of the behaviour above. Thus:
30697 .ilist
30698 If &`!=`& or &`!&&`& is used, the condition is true if none of the looked up IP
30699 addresses matches one of the listed addresses. Consider:
30700 .code
30701 dnslists = a.b.c!&0.0.0.1
30702 .endd
30703 If the DNS lookup yields both 127.0.0.1 and 127.0.0.2, the condition is
30704 false because 127.0.0.1 matches.
30705 .next
30706 If &`!==`& or &`!=&&`& is used, the condition is true if there is at least one
30707 looked up IP address that does not match. Consider:
30708 .code
30709 dnslists = a.b.c!=&0.0.0.1
30710 .endd
30711 If the DNS lookup yields both 127.0.0.1 and 127.0.0.2, the condition is
30712 true, because 127.0.0.2 does not match. You would need to have:
30713 .code
30714 dnslists = a.b.c!=&0.0.0.1,0.0.0.2
30715 .endd
30716 for the condition to be false.
30717 .endlist
30718 When the DNS lookup yields only a single IP address, there is no difference
30719 between &`=`& and &`==`& and between &`&&`& and &`=&&`&.
30720
30721
30722
30723
30724 .section "Detailed information from merged DNS lists" "SECTmordetinf"
30725 .cindex "DNS list" "information from merged"
30726 When the facility for restricting the matching IP values in a DNS list is used,
30727 the text from the TXT record that is set in &$dnslist_text$& may not reflect
30728 the true reason for rejection. This happens when lists are merged and the IP
30729 address in the A record is used to distinguish them; unfortunately there is
30730 only one TXT record. One way round this is not to use merged lists, but that
30731 can be inefficient because it requires multiple DNS lookups where one would do
30732 in the vast majority of cases when the host of interest is not on any of the
30733 lists.
30734
30735 A less inefficient way of solving this problem is available. If
30736 two domain names, comma-separated, are given, the second is used first to
30737 do an initial check, making use of any IP value restrictions that are set.
30738 If there is a match, the first domain is used, without any IP value
30739 restrictions, to get the TXT record. As a byproduct of this, there is also
30740 a check that the IP being tested is indeed on the first list. The first
30741 domain is the one that is put in &$dnslist_domain$&. For example:
30742 .code
30743 deny message = \
30744 rejected because $sender_host_address is blacklisted \
30745 at $dnslist_domain\n$dnslist_text
30746 dnslists = \
30747 sbl.spamhaus.org,sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org=127.0.0.2 : \
30748 dul.dnsbl.sorbs.net,dnsbl.sorbs.net=127.0.0.10
30749 .endd
30750 For the first blacklist item, this starts by doing a lookup in
30751 &'sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org'& and testing for a 127.0.0.2 return. If there is a
30752 match, it then looks in &'sbl.spamhaus.org'&, without checking the return
30753 value, and as long as something is found, it looks for the corresponding TXT
30754 record. If there is no match in &'sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org'&, nothing more is done.
30755 The second blacklist item is processed similarly.
30756
30757 If you are interested in more than one merged list, the same list must be
30758 given several times, but because the results of the DNS lookups are cached,
30759 the DNS calls themselves are not repeated. For example:
30760 .code
30761 deny dnslists = \
30762 http.dnsbl.sorbs.net,dnsbl.sorbs.net=127.0.0.2 : \
30763 socks.dnsbl.sorbs.net,dnsbl.sorbs.net=127.0.0.3 : \
30764 misc.dnsbl.sorbs.net,dnsbl.sorbs.net=127.0.0.4 : \
30765 dul.dnsbl.sorbs.net,dnsbl.sorbs.net=127.0.0.10
30766 .endd
30767 In this case there is one lookup in &'dnsbl.sorbs.net'&, and if none of the IP
30768 values matches (or if no record is found), this is the only lookup that is
30769 done. Only if there is a match is one of the more specific lists consulted.
30770
30771
30772
30773 .section "DNS lists and IPv6" "SECTmorednslistslast"
30774 .cindex "IPv6" "DNS black lists"
30775 .cindex "DNS list" "IPv6 usage"
30776 If Exim is asked to do a dnslist lookup for an IPv6 address, it inverts it
30777 nibble by nibble. For example, if the calling host's IP address is
30778 3ffe:ffff:836f:0a00:000a:0800:200a:c031, Exim might look up
30779 .code
30780 1.3.0.c.a.0.0.2.0.0.8.0.a.0.0.0.0.0.a.0.f.6.3.8.
30781 f.f.f.f.e.f.f.3.blackholes.mail-abuse.org
30782 .endd
30783 (split over two lines here to fit on the page). Unfortunately, some of the DNS
30784 lists contain wildcard records, intended for IPv4, that interact badly with
30785 IPv6. For example, the DNS entry
30786 .code
30787 *.3.some.list.example. A 127.0.0.1
30788 .endd
30789 is probably intended to put the entire 3.0.0.0/8 IPv4 network on the list.
30790 Unfortunately, it also matches the entire 3::/4 IPv6 network.
30791
30792 You can exclude IPv6 addresses from DNS lookups by making use of a suitable
30793 &%condition%& condition, as in this example:
30794 .code
30795 deny condition = ${if isip4{$sender_host_address}}
30796 dnslists = some.list.example
30797 .endd
30798
30799 If an explicit key is being used for a DNS lookup and it may be an IPv6
30800 address you should specify alternate list separators for both the outer
30801 (DNS list name) list and inner (lookup keys) list:
30802 .code
30803 dnslists = <; dnsbl.example.com/<|$acl_m_addrslist
30804 .endd
30805
30806 .section "Rate limiting incoming messages" "SECTratelimiting"
30807 .cindex "rate limiting" "client sending"
30808 .cindex "limiting client sending rates"
30809 .oindex "&%smtp_ratelimit_*%&"
30810 The &%ratelimit%& ACL condition can be used to measure and control the rate at
30811 which clients can send email. This is more powerful than the
30812 &%smtp_ratelimit_*%& options, because those options control the rate of
30813 commands in a single SMTP session only, whereas the &%ratelimit%& condition
30814 works across all connections (concurrent and sequential) from the same client
30815 host. The syntax of the &%ratelimit%& condition is:
30816 .display
30817 &`ratelimit =`& <&'m'&> &`/`& <&'p'&> &`/`& <&'options'&> &`/`& <&'key'&>
30818 .endd
30819 If the average client sending rate is less than &'m'& messages per time
30820 period &'p'& then the condition is false; otherwise it is true.
30821
30822 As a side-effect, the &%ratelimit%& condition sets the expansion variable
30823 &$sender_rate$& to the client's computed rate, &$sender_rate_limit$& to the
30824 configured value of &'m'&, and &$sender_rate_period$& to the configured value
30825 of &'p'&.
30826
30827 The parameter &'p'& is the smoothing time constant, in the form of an Exim
30828 time interval, for example, &`8h`& for eight hours. A larger time constant
30829 means that it takes Exim longer to forget a client's past behaviour. The
30830 parameter &'m'& is the maximum number of messages that a client is permitted to
30831 send in each time interval. It also specifies the number of messages permitted
30832 in a fast burst. By increasing both &'m'& and &'p'& but keeping &'m/p'&
30833 constant, you can allow a client to send more messages in a burst without
30834 changing its long-term sending rate limit. Conversely, if &'m'& and &'p'& are
30835 both small, messages must be sent at an even rate.
30836
30837 There is a script in &_util/ratelimit.pl_& which extracts sending rates from
30838 log files, to assist with choosing appropriate settings for &'m'& and &'p'&
30839 when deploying the &%ratelimit%& ACL condition. The script prints usage
30840 instructions when it is run with no arguments.
30841
30842 The key is used to look up the data for calculating the client's average
30843 sending rate. This data is stored in Exim's spool directory, alongside the
30844 retry and other hints databases. The default key is &$sender_host_address$&,
30845 which means Exim computes the sending rate of each client host IP address.
30846 By changing the key you can change how Exim identifies clients for the purpose
30847 of ratelimiting. For example, to limit the sending rate of each authenticated
30848 user, independent of the computer they are sending from, set the key to
30849 &$authenticated_id$&. You must ensure that the lookup key is meaningful; for
30850 example, &$authenticated_id$& is only meaningful if the client has
30851 authenticated (which you can check with the &%authenticated%& ACL condition).
30852
30853 The lookup key does not have to identify clients: If you want to limit the
30854 rate at which a recipient receives messages, you can use the key
30855 &`$local_part@$domain`& with the &%per_rcpt%& option (see below) in a RCPT
30856 ACL.
30857
30858 Each &%ratelimit%& condition can have up to four options. A &%per_*%& option
30859 specifies what Exim measures the rate of, for example messages or recipients
30860 or bytes. You can adjust the measurement using the &%unique=%& and/or
30861 &%count=%& options. You can also control when Exim updates the recorded rate
30862 using a &%strict%&, &%leaky%&, or &%readonly%& option. The options are
30863 separated by a slash, like the other parameters. They may appear in any order.
30864
30865 Internally, Exim appends the smoothing constant &'p'& onto the lookup key with
30866 any options that alter the meaning of the stored data. The limit &'m'& is not
30867 stored, so you can alter the configured maximum rate and Exim will still
30868 remember clients' past behaviour. If you change the &%per_*%& mode or add or
30869 remove the &%unique=%& option, the lookup key changes so Exim will forget past
30870 behaviour. The lookup key is not affected by changes to the update mode and
30871 the &%count=%& option.
30872
30873
30874 .section "Ratelimit options for what is being measured" "ratoptmea"
30875 .cindex "rate limiting" "per_* options"
30876 The &%per_conn%& option limits the client's connection rate. It is not
30877 normally used in the &%acl_not_smtp%&, &%acl_not_smtp_mime%&, or
30878 &%acl_not_smtp_start%& ACLs.
30879
30880 The &%per_mail%& option limits the client's rate of sending messages. This is
30881 the default if none of the &%per_*%& options is specified. It can be used in
30882 &%acl_smtp_mail%&, &%acl_smtp_rcpt%&, &%acl_smtp_predata%&, &%acl_smtp_mime%&,
30883 &%acl_smtp_data%&, or &%acl_not_smtp%&.
30884
30885 The &%per_byte%& option limits the sender's email bandwidth. It can be used in
30886 the same ACLs as the &%per_mail%& option, though it is best to use this option
30887 in the &%acl_smtp_mime%&, &%acl_smtp_data%& or &%acl_not_smtp%& ACLs; if it is
30888 used in an earlier ACL, Exim relies on the SIZE parameter given by the client
30889 in its MAIL command, which may be inaccurate or completely missing. You can
30890 follow the limit &'m'& in the configuration with K, M, or G to specify limits
30891 in kilobytes, megabytes, or gigabytes, respectively.
30892
30893 The &%per_rcpt%& option causes Exim to limit the rate at which recipients are
30894 accepted. It can be used in the &%acl_smtp_rcpt%&, &%acl_smtp_predata%&,
30895 &%acl_smtp_mime%&, &%acl_smtp_data%&, or &%acl_smtp_rcpt%& ACLs. In
30896 &%acl_smtp_rcpt%& the rate is updated one recipient at a time; in the other
30897 ACLs the rate is updated with the total (accepted) recipient count in one go. Note that
30898 in either case the rate limiting engine will see a message with many
30899 recipients as a large high-speed burst.
30900
30901 The &%per_addr%& option is like the &%per_rcpt%& option, except it counts the
30902 number of different recipients that the client has sent messages to in the
30903 last time period. That is, if the client repeatedly sends messages to the same
30904 recipient, its measured rate is not increased. This option can only be used in
30905 &%acl_smtp_rcpt%&.
30906
30907 The &%per_cmd%& option causes Exim to recompute the rate every time the
30908 condition is processed. This can be used to limit the rate of any SMTP
30909 command. If it is used in multiple ACLs it can limit the aggregate rate of
30910 multiple different commands.
30911
30912 The &%count=%& option can be used to alter how much Exim adds to the client's
30913 measured rate. For example, the &%per_byte%& option is equivalent to
30914 &`per_mail/count=$message_size`&. If there is no &%count=%& option, Exim
30915 increases the measured rate by one (except for the &%per_rcpt%& option in ACLs
30916 other than &%acl_smtp_rcpt%&). The count does not have to be an integer.
30917
30918 The &%unique=%& option is described in section &<<ratoptuniq>>& below.
30919
30920
30921 .section "Ratelimit update modes" "ratoptupd"
30922 .cindex "rate limiting" "reading data without updating"
30923 You can specify one of three options with the &%ratelimit%& condition to
30924 control when its database is updated. This section describes the &%readonly%&
30925 mode, and the next section describes the &%strict%& and &%leaky%& modes.
30926
30927 If the &%ratelimit%& condition is used in &%readonly%& mode, Exim looks up a
30928 previously-computed rate to check against the limit.
30929
30930 For example, you can test the client's sending rate and deny it access (when
30931 it is too fast) in the connect ACL. If the client passes this check then it
30932 can go on to send a message, in which case its recorded rate will be updated
30933 in the MAIL ACL. Subsequent connections from the same client will check this
30934 new rate.
30935 .code
30936 acl_check_connect:
30937 deny ratelimit = 100 / 5m / readonly
30938 log_message = RATE CHECK: $sender_rate/$sender_rate_period \
30939 (max $sender_rate_limit)
30940 # ...
30941 acl_check_mail:
30942 warn ratelimit = 100 / 5m / strict
30943 log_message = RATE UPDATE: $sender_rate/$sender_rate_period \
30944 (max $sender_rate_limit)
30945 .endd
30946
30947 If Exim encounters multiple &%ratelimit%& conditions with the same key when
30948 processing a message then it may increase the client's measured rate more than
30949 it should. For example, this will happen if you check the &%per_rcpt%& option
30950 in both &%acl_smtp_rcpt%& and &%acl_smtp_data%&. However it's OK to check the
30951 same &%ratelimit%& condition multiple times in the same ACL. You can avoid any
30952 multiple update problems by using the &%readonly%& option on later ratelimit
30953 checks.
30954
30955 The &%per_*%& options described above do not make sense in some ACLs. If you
30956 use a &%per_*%& option in an ACL where it is not normally permitted then the
30957 update mode defaults to &%readonly%& and you cannot specify the &%strict%& or
30958 &%leaky%& modes. In other ACLs the default update mode is &%leaky%& (see the
30959 next section) so you must specify the &%readonly%& option explicitly.
30960
30961
30962 .section "Ratelimit options for handling fast clients" "ratoptfast"
30963 .cindex "rate limiting" "strict and leaky modes"
30964 If a client's average rate is greater than the maximum, the rate limiting
30965 engine can react in two possible ways, depending on the presence of the
30966 &%strict%& or &%leaky%& update modes. This is independent of the other
30967 counter-measures (such as rejecting the message) that may be specified by the
30968 rest of the ACL.
30969
30970 The &%leaky%& (default) option means that the client's recorded rate is not
30971 updated if it is above the limit. The effect of this is that Exim measures the
30972 client's average rate of successfully sent email,
30973 .new
30974 up to the given limit.
30975 This is appropriate if the countermeasure when the condition is true
30976 consists of refusing the message, and
30977 is generally the better choice if you have clients that retry automatically.
30978 If the action when true is anything more complex then this option is
30979 likely not what is wanted.
30980 .wen
30981
30982 The &%strict%& option means that the client's recorded rate is always
30983 updated. The effect of this is that Exim measures the client's average rate
30984 of attempts to send email, which can be much higher than the maximum it is
30985 actually allowed. If the client is over the limit it may be subjected to
30986 counter-measures by the ACL. It must slow down and allow sufficient time to
30987 pass that its computed rate falls below the maximum before it can send email
30988 again. The time (the number of smoothing periods) it must wait and not
30989 attempt to send mail can be calculated with this formula:
30990 .code
30991 ln(peakrate/maxrate)
30992 .endd
30993
30994
30995 .section "Limiting the rate of different events" "ratoptuniq"
30996 .cindex "rate limiting" "counting unique events"
30997 The &%ratelimit%& &%unique=%& option controls a mechanism for counting the
30998 rate of different events. For example, the &%per_addr%& option uses this
30999 mechanism to count the number of different recipients that the client has
31000 sent messages to in the last time period; it is equivalent to
31001 &`per_rcpt/unique=$local_part@$domain`&. You could use this feature to
31002 measure the rate that a client uses different sender addresses with the
31003 options &`per_mail/unique=$sender_address`&.
31004
31005 For each &%ratelimit%& key Exim stores the set of &%unique=%& values that it
31006 has seen for that key. The whole set is thrown away when it is older than the
31007 rate smoothing period &'p'&, so each different event is counted at most once
31008 per period. In the &%leaky%& update mode, an event that causes the client to
31009 go over the limit is not added to the set, in the same way that the client's
31010 recorded rate is not updated in the same situation.
31011
31012 When you combine the &%unique=%& and &%readonly%& options, the specific
31013 &%unique=%& value is ignored, and Exim just retrieves the client's stored
31014 rate.
31015
31016 The &%unique=%& mechanism needs more space in the ratelimit database than the
31017 other &%ratelimit%& options in order to store the event set. The number of
31018 unique values is potentially as large as the rate limit, so the extra space
31019 required increases with larger limits.
31020
31021 The uniqueification is not perfect: there is a small probability that Exim
31022 will think a new event has happened before. If the sender's rate is less than
31023 the limit, Exim should be more than 99.9% correct. However in &%strict%& mode
31024 the measured rate can go above the limit, in which case Exim may under-count
31025 events by a significant margin. Fortunately, if the rate is high enough (2.7
31026 times the limit) that the false positive rate goes above 9%, then Exim will
31027 throw away the over-full event set before the measured rate falls below the
31028 limit. Therefore the only harm should be that exceptionally high sending rates
31029 are logged incorrectly; any countermeasures you configure will be as effective
31030 as intended.
31031
31032
31033 .section "Using rate limiting" "useratlim"
31034 Exim's other ACL facilities are used to define what counter-measures are taken
31035 when the rate limit is exceeded. This might be anything from logging a warning
31036 (for example, while measuring existing sending rates in order to define
31037 policy), through time delays to slow down fast senders, up to rejecting the
31038 message. For example:
31039 .code
31040 # Log all senders' rates
31041 warn ratelimit = 0 / 1h / strict
31042 log_message = Sender rate $sender_rate / $sender_rate_period
31043
31044 # Slow down fast senders; note the need to truncate $sender_rate
31045 # at the decimal point.
31046 warn ratelimit = 100 / 1h / per_rcpt / strict
31047 delay = ${eval: ${sg{$sender_rate}{[.].*}{}} - \
31048 $sender_rate_limit }s
31049
31050 # Keep authenticated users under control
31051 deny authenticated = *
31052 ratelimit = 100 / 1d / strict / $authenticated_id
31053
31054 # System-wide rate limit
31055 defer message = Sorry, too busy. Try again later.
31056 ratelimit = 10 / 1s / $primary_hostname
31057
31058 # Restrict incoming rate from each host, with a default
31059 # set using a macro and special cases looked up in a table.
31060 defer message = Sender rate exceeds $sender_rate_limit \
31061 messages per $sender_rate_period
31062 ratelimit = ${lookup {$sender_host_address} \
31063 cdb {DB/ratelimits.cdb} \
31064 {$value} {RATELIMIT} }
31065 .endd
31066 &*Warning*&: If you have a busy server with a lot of &%ratelimit%& tests,
31067 especially with the &%per_rcpt%& option, you may suffer from a performance
31068 bottleneck caused by locking on the ratelimit hints database. Apart from
31069 making your ACLs less complicated, you can reduce the problem by using a
31070 RAM disk for Exim's hints directory (usually &_/var/spool/exim/db/_&). However
31071 this means that Exim will lose its hints data after a reboot (including retry
31072 hints, the callout cache, and ratelimit data).
31073
31074
31075
31076 .section "Address verification" "SECTaddressverification"
31077 .cindex "verifying address" "options for"
31078 .cindex "policy control" "address verification"
31079 Several of the &%verify%& conditions described in section
31080 &<<SECTaclconditions>>& cause addresses to be verified. Section
31081 &<<SECTsenaddver>>& discusses the reporting of sender verification failures.
31082 The verification conditions can be followed by options that modify the
31083 verification process. The options are separated from the keyword and from each
31084 other by slashes, and some of them contain parameters. For example:
31085 .code
31086 verify = sender/callout
31087 verify = recipient/defer_ok/callout=10s,defer_ok
31088 .endd
31089 The first stage of address verification, which always happens, is to run the
31090 address through the routers, in &"verify mode"&. Routers can detect the
31091 difference between verification and routing for delivery, and their actions can
31092 be varied by a number of generic options such as &%verify%& and &%verify_only%&
31093 (see chapter &<<CHAProutergeneric>>&). If routing fails, verification fails.
31094 The available options are as follows:
31095
31096 .ilist
31097 If the &%callout%& option is specified, successful routing to one or more
31098 remote hosts is followed by a &"callout"& to those hosts as an additional
31099 check. Callouts and their sub-options are discussed in the next section.
31100 .next
31101 If there is a defer error while doing verification routing, the ACL
31102 normally returns &"defer"&. However, if you include &%defer_ok%& in the
31103 options, the condition is forced to be true instead. Note that this is a main
31104 verification option as well as a suboption for callouts.
31105 .next
31106 The &%no_details%& option is covered in section &<<SECTsenaddver>>&, which
31107 discusses the reporting of sender address verification failures.
31108 .next
31109 The &%success_on_redirect%& option causes verification always to succeed
31110 immediately after a successful redirection. By default, if a redirection
31111 generates just one address, that address is also verified. See further
31112 discussion in section &<<SECTredirwhilveri>>&.
31113 .endlist
31114
31115 .cindex "verifying address" "differentiating failures"
31116 .vindex "&$recipient_verify_failure$&"
31117 .vindex "&$sender_verify_failure$&"
31118 .vindex "&$acl_verify_message$&"
31119 After an address verification failure, &$acl_verify_message$& contains the
31120 error message that is associated with the failure. It can be preserved by
31121 coding like this:
31122 .code
31123 warn !verify = sender
31124 set acl_m0 = $acl_verify_message
31125 .endd
31126 If you are writing your own custom rejection message or log message when
31127 denying access, you can use this variable to include information about the
31128 verification failure.
31129
31130 In addition, &$sender_verify_failure$& or &$recipient_verify_failure$& (as
31131 appropriate) contains one of the following words:
31132
31133 .ilist
31134 &%qualify%&: The address was unqualified (no domain), and the message
31135 was neither local nor came from an exempted host.
31136 .next
31137 &%route%&: Routing failed.
31138 .next
31139 &%mail%&: Routing succeeded, and a callout was attempted; rejection
31140 occurred at or before the MAIL command (that is, on initial
31141 connection, HELO, or MAIL).
31142 .next
31143 &%recipient%&: The RCPT command in a callout was rejected.
31144 .next
31145 &%postmaster%&: The postmaster check in a callout was rejected.
31146 .endlist
31147
31148 The main use of these variables is expected to be to distinguish between
31149 rejections of MAIL and rejections of RCPT in callouts.
31150
31151
31152
31153
31154 .section "Callout verification" "SECTcallver"
31155 .cindex "verifying address" "by callout"
31156 .cindex "callout" "verification"
31157 .cindex "SMTP" "callout verification"
31158 For non-local addresses, routing verifies the domain, but is unable to do any
31159 checking of the local part. There are situations where some means of verifying
31160 the local part is desirable. One way this can be done is to make an SMTP
31161 &'callback'& to a delivery host for the sender address or a &'callforward'& to
31162 a subsequent host for a recipient address, to see if the host accepts the
31163 address. We use the term &'callout'& to cover both cases. Note that for a
31164 sender address, the callback is not to the client host that is trying to
31165 deliver the message, but to one of the hosts that accepts incoming mail for the
31166 sender's domain.
31167
31168 Exim does not do callouts by default. If you want them to happen, you must
31169 request them by setting appropriate options on the &%verify%& condition, as
31170 described below. This facility should be used with care, because it can add a
31171 lot of resource usage to the cost of verifying an address. However, Exim does
31172 cache the results of callouts, which helps to reduce the cost. Details of
31173 caching are in section &<<SECTcallvercache>>&.
31174
31175 Recipient callouts are usually used only between hosts that are controlled by
31176 the same administration. For example, a corporate gateway host could use
31177 callouts to check for valid recipients on an internal mailserver. A successful
31178 callout does not guarantee that a real delivery to the address would succeed;
31179 on the other hand, a failing callout does guarantee that a delivery would fail.
31180
31181 If the &%callout%& option is present on a condition that verifies an address, a
31182 second stage of verification occurs if the address is successfully routed to
31183 one or more remote hosts. The usual case is routing by a &(dnslookup)& or a
31184 &(manualroute)& router, where the router specifies the hosts. However, if a
31185 router that does not set up hosts routes to an &(smtp)& transport with a
31186 &%hosts%& setting, the transport's hosts are used. If an &(smtp)& transport has
31187 &%hosts_override%& set, its hosts are always used, whether or not the router
31188 supplies a host list.
31189 Callouts are only supported on &(smtp)& transports.
31190
31191 The port that is used is taken from the transport, if it is specified and is a
31192 remote transport. (For routers that do verification only, no transport need be
31193 specified.) Otherwise, the default SMTP port is used. If a remote transport
31194 specifies an outgoing interface, this is used; otherwise the interface is not
31195 specified. Likewise, the text that is used for the HELO command is taken from
31196 the transport's &%helo_data%& option; if there is no transport, the value of
31197 &$smtp_active_hostname$& is used.
31198
31199 For a sender callout check, Exim makes SMTP connections to the remote hosts, to
31200 test whether a bounce message could be delivered to the sender address. The
31201 following SMTP commands are sent:
31202 .display
31203 &`HELO `&<&'local host name'&>
31204 &`MAIL FROM:<>`&
31205 &`RCPT TO:`&<&'the address to be tested'&>
31206 &`QUIT`&
31207 .endd
31208 LHLO is used instead of HELO if the transport's &%protocol%& option is
31209 set to &"lmtp"&.
31210
31211 The callout may use EHLO, AUTH and/or STARTTLS given appropriate option
31212 settings.
31213
31214 A recipient callout check is similar. By default, it also uses an empty address
31215 for the sender. This default is chosen because most hosts do not make use of
31216 the sender address when verifying a recipient. Using the same address means
31217 that a single cache entry can be used for each recipient. Some sites, however,
31218 do make use of the sender address when verifying. These are catered for by the
31219 &%use_sender%& and &%use_postmaster%& options, described in the next section.
31220
31221 If the response to the RCPT command is a 2&'xx'& code, the verification
31222 succeeds. If it is 5&'xx'&, the verification fails. For any other condition,
31223 Exim tries the next host, if any. If there is a problem with all the remote
31224 hosts, the ACL yields &"defer"&, unless the &%defer_ok%& parameter of the
31225 &%callout%& option is given, in which case the condition is forced to succeed.
31226
31227 .cindex "SMTP" "output flushing, disabling for callout"
31228 A callout may take a little time. For this reason, Exim normally flushes SMTP
31229 output before performing a callout in an ACL, to avoid unexpected timeouts in
31230 clients when the SMTP PIPELINING extension is in use. The flushing can be
31231 disabled by using a &%control%& modifier to set &%no_callout_flush%&.
31232
31233
31234
31235
31236 .section "Additional parameters for callouts" "CALLaddparcall"
31237 .cindex "callout" "additional parameters for"
31238 The &%callout%& option can be followed by an equals sign and a number of
31239 optional parameters, separated by commas. For example:
31240 .code
31241 verify = recipient/callout=10s,defer_ok
31242 .endd
31243 The old syntax, which had &%callout_defer_ok%& and &%check_postmaster%& as
31244 separate verify options, is retained for backwards compatibility, but is now
31245 deprecated. The additional parameters for &%callout%& are as follows:
31246
31247
31248 .vlist
31249 .vitem <&'a&~time&~interval'&>
31250 .cindex "callout" "timeout, specifying"
31251 This specifies the timeout that applies for the callout attempt to each host.
31252 For example:
31253 .code
31254 verify = sender/callout=5s
31255 .endd
31256 The default is 30 seconds. The timeout is used for each response from the
31257 remote host. It is also used for the initial connection, unless overridden by
31258 the &%connect%& parameter.
31259
31260
31261 .vitem &*connect&~=&~*&<&'time&~interval'&>
31262 .cindex "callout" "connection timeout, specifying"
31263 This parameter makes it possible to set a different (usually smaller) timeout
31264 for making the SMTP connection. For example:
31265 .code
31266 verify = sender/callout=5s,connect=1s
31267 .endd
31268 If not specified, this timeout defaults to the general timeout value.
31269
31270 .vitem &*defer_ok*&
31271 .cindex "callout" "defer, action on"
31272 When this parameter is present, failure to contact any host, or any other kind
31273 of temporary error, is treated as success by the ACL. However, the cache is not
31274 updated in this circumstance.
31275
31276 .vitem &*fullpostmaster*&
31277 .cindex "callout" "full postmaster check"
31278 This operates like the &%postmaster%& option (see below), but if the check for
31279 &'postmaster@domain'& fails, it tries just &'postmaster'&, without a domain, in
31280 accordance with the specification in RFC 2821. The RFC states that the
31281 unqualified address &'postmaster'& should be accepted.
31282
31283
31284 .vitem &*mailfrom&~=&~*&<&'email&~address'&>
31285 .cindex "callout" "sender when verifying header"
31286 When verifying addresses in header lines using the &%header_sender%&
31287 verification option, Exim behaves by default as if the addresses are envelope
31288 sender addresses from a message. Callout verification therefore tests to see
31289 whether a bounce message could be delivered, by using an empty address in the
31290 MAIL command. However, it is arguable that these addresses might never be used
31291 as envelope senders, and could therefore justifiably reject bounce messages
31292 (empty senders). The &%mailfrom%& callout parameter allows you to specify what
31293 address to use in the MAIL command. For example:
31294 .code
31295 require verify = header_sender/callout=mailfrom=abcd@x.y.z
31296 .endd
31297 This parameter is available only for the &%header_sender%& verification option.
31298
31299
31300 .vitem &*maxwait&~=&~*&<&'time&~interval'&>
31301 .cindex "callout" "overall timeout, specifying"
31302 This parameter sets an overall timeout for performing a callout verification.
31303 For example:
31304 .code
31305 verify = sender/callout=5s,maxwait=30s
31306 .endd
31307 This timeout defaults to four times the callout timeout for individual SMTP
31308 commands. The overall timeout applies when there is more than one host that can
31309 be tried. The timeout is checked before trying the next host. This prevents
31310 very long delays if there are a large number of hosts and all are timing out
31311 (for example, when network connections are timing out).
31312
31313
31314 .vitem &*no_cache*&
31315 .cindex "callout" "cache, suppressing"
31316 .cindex "caching callout, suppressing"
31317 When this parameter is given, the callout cache is neither read nor updated.
31318
31319 .vitem &*postmaster*&
31320 .cindex "callout" "postmaster; checking"
31321 When this parameter is set, a successful callout check is followed by a similar
31322 check for the local part &'postmaster'& at the same domain. If this address is
31323 rejected, the callout fails (but see &%fullpostmaster%& above). The result of
31324 the postmaster check is recorded in a cache record; if it is a failure, this is
31325 used to fail subsequent callouts for the domain without a connection being
31326 made, until the cache record expires.
31327
31328 .vitem &*postmaster_mailfrom&~=&~*&<&'email&~address'&>
31329 The postmaster check uses an empty sender in the MAIL command by default.
31330 You can use this parameter to do a postmaster check using a different address.
31331 For example:
31332 .code
31333 require verify = sender/callout=postmaster_mailfrom=abc@x.y.z
31334 .endd
31335 If both &%postmaster%& and &%postmaster_mailfrom%& are present, the rightmost
31336 one overrides. The &%postmaster%& parameter is equivalent to this example:
31337 .code
31338 require verify = sender/callout=postmaster_mailfrom=
31339 .endd
31340 &*Warning*&: The caching arrangements for postmaster checking do not take
31341 account of the sender address. It is assumed that either the empty address or
31342 a fixed non-empty address will be used. All that Exim remembers is that the
31343 postmaster check for the domain succeeded or failed.
31344
31345
31346 .vitem &*random*&
31347 .cindex "callout" "&""random""& check"
31348 When this parameter is set, before doing the normal callout check, Exim does a
31349 check for a &"random"& local part at the same domain. The local part is not
31350 really random &-- it is defined by the expansion of the option
31351 &%callout_random_local_part%&, which defaults to
31352 .code
31353 $primary_hostname-$tod_epoch-testing
31354 .endd
31355 The idea here is to try to determine whether the remote host accepts all local
31356 parts without checking. If it does, there is no point in doing callouts for
31357 specific local parts. If the &"random"& check succeeds, the result is saved in
31358 a cache record, and used to force the current and subsequent callout checks to
31359 succeed without a connection being made, until the cache record expires.
31360
31361 .vitem &*use_postmaster*&
31362 .cindex "callout" "sender for recipient check"
31363 This parameter applies to recipient callouts only. For example:
31364 .code
31365 deny !verify = recipient/callout=use_postmaster
31366 .endd
31367 .vindex "&$qualify_domain$&"
31368 It causes a non-empty postmaster address to be used in the MAIL command when
31369 performing the callout for the recipient, and also for a &"random"& check if
31370 that is configured. The local part of the address is &`postmaster`& and the
31371 domain is the contents of &$qualify_domain$&.
31372
31373 .vitem &*use_sender*&
31374 This option applies to recipient callouts only. For example:
31375 .code
31376 require verify = recipient/callout=use_sender
31377 .endd
31378 It causes the message's actual sender address to be used in the MAIL
31379 command when performing the callout, instead of an empty address. There is no
31380 need to use this option unless you know that the called hosts make use of the
31381 sender when checking recipients. If used indiscriminately, it reduces the
31382 usefulness of callout caching.
31383
31384 .vitem &*hold*&
31385 This option applies to recipient callouts only. For example:
31386 .code
31387 require verify = recipient/callout=use_sender,hold
31388 .endd
31389 It causes the connection to be held open and used for any further recipients
31390 and for eventual delivery (should that be done quickly).
31391 Doing this saves on TCP and SMTP startup costs, and TLS costs also
31392 when that is used for the connections.
31393 The advantage is only gained if there are no callout cache hits
31394 (which could be enforced by the no_cache option),
31395 if the use_sender option is used,
31396 if neither the random nor the use_postmaster option is used,
31397 and if no other callouts intervene.
31398 .endlist
31399
31400 If you use any of the parameters that set a non-empty sender for the MAIL
31401 command (&%mailfrom%&, &%postmaster_mailfrom%&, &%use_postmaster%&, or
31402 &%use_sender%&), you should think about possible loops. Recipient checking is
31403 usually done between two hosts that are under the same management, and the host
31404 that receives the callouts is not normally configured to do callouts itself.
31405 Therefore, it is normally safe to use &%use_postmaster%& or &%use_sender%& in
31406 these circumstances.
31407
31408 However, if you use a non-empty sender address for a callout to an arbitrary
31409 host, there is the likelihood that the remote host will itself initiate a
31410 callout check back to your host. As it is checking what appears to be a message
31411 sender, it is likely to use an empty address in MAIL, thus avoiding a
31412 callout loop. However, to be on the safe side it would be best to set up your
31413 own ACLs so that they do not do sender verification checks when the recipient
31414 is the address you use for header sender or postmaster callout checking.
31415
31416 Another issue to think about when using non-empty senders for callouts is
31417 caching. When you set &%mailfrom%& or &%use_sender%&, the cache record is keyed
31418 by the sender/recipient combination; thus, for any given recipient, many more
31419 actual callouts are performed than when an empty sender or postmaster is used.
31420
31421
31422
31423
31424 .section "Callout caching" "SECTcallvercache"
31425 .cindex "hints database" "callout cache"
31426 .cindex "callout" "cache, description of"
31427 .cindex "caching" "callout"
31428 Exim caches the results of callouts in order to reduce the amount of resources
31429 used, unless you specify the &%no_cache%& parameter with the &%callout%&
31430 option. A hints database called &"callout"& is used for the cache. Two
31431 different record types are used: one records the result of a callout check for
31432 a specific address, and the other records information that applies to the
31433 entire domain (for example, that it accepts the local part &'postmaster'&).
31434
31435 When an original callout fails, a detailed SMTP error message is given about
31436 the failure. However, for subsequent failures use the cache data, this message
31437 is not available.
31438
31439 The expiry times for negative and positive address cache records are
31440 independent, and can be set by the global options &%callout_negative_expire%&
31441 (default 2h) and &%callout_positive_expire%& (default 24h), respectively.
31442
31443 If a host gives a negative response to an SMTP connection, or rejects any
31444 commands up to and including
31445 .code
31446 MAIL FROM:<>
31447 .endd
31448 (but not including the MAIL command with a non-empty address),
31449 any callout attempt is bound to fail. Exim remembers such failures in a
31450 domain cache record, which it uses to fail callouts for the domain without
31451 making new connections, until the domain record times out. There are two
31452 separate expiry times for domain cache records:
31453 &%callout_domain_negative_expire%& (default 3h) and
31454 &%callout_domain_positive_expire%& (default 7d).
31455
31456 Domain records expire when the negative expiry time is reached if callouts
31457 cannot be made for the domain, or if the postmaster check failed.
31458 Otherwise, they expire when the positive expiry time is reached. This
31459 ensures that, for example, a host that stops accepting &"random"& local parts
31460 will eventually be noticed.
31461
31462 The callout caching mechanism is based on the domain of the address that is
31463 being tested. If the domain routes to several hosts, it is assumed that their
31464 behaviour will be the same.
31465
31466
31467
31468 .section "Sender address verification reporting" "SECTsenaddver"
31469 .cindex "verifying" "suppressing error details"
31470 See section &<<SECTaddressverification>>& for a general discussion of
31471 verification. When sender verification fails in an ACL, the details of the
31472 failure are given as additional output lines before the 550 response to the
31473 relevant SMTP command (RCPT or DATA). For example, if sender callout is in use,
31474 you might see:
31475 .code
31476 MAIL FROM:<xyz@abc.example>
31477 250 OK
31478 RCPT TO:<pqr@def.example>
31479 550-Verification failed for <xyz@abc.example>
31480 550-Called: 192.168.34.43
31481 550-Sent: RCPT TO:<xyz@abc.example>
31482 550-Response: 550 Unknown local part xyz in <xyz@abc.example>
31483 550 Sender verification failed
31484 .endd
31485 If more than one RCPT command fails in the same way, the details are given
31486 only for the first of them. However, some administrators do not want to send
31487 out this much information. You can suppress the details by adding
31488 &`/no_details`& to the ACL statement that requests sender verification. For
31489 example:
31490 .code
31491 verify = sender/no_details
31492 .endd
31493
31494 .section "Redirection while verifying" "SECTredirwhilveri"
31495 .cindex "verifying" "redirection while"
31496 .cindex "address redirection" "while verifying"
31497 A dilemma arises when a local address is redirected by aliasing or forwarding
31498 during verification: should the generated addresses themselves be verified,
31499 or should the successful expansion of the original address be enough to verify
31500 it? By default, Exim takes the following pragmatic approach:
31501
31502 .ilist
31503 When an incoming address is redirected to just one child address, verification
31504 continues with the child address, and if that fails to verify, the original
31505 verification also fails.
31506 .next
31507 When an incoming address is redirected to more than one child address,
31508 verification does not continue. A success result is returned.
31509 .endlist
31510
31511 This seems the most reasonable behaviour for the common use of aliasing as a
31512 way of redirecting different local parts to the same mailbox. It means, for
31513 example, that a pair of alias entries of the form
31514 .code
31515 A.Wol: aw123
31516 aw123: :fail: Gone away, no forwarding address
31517 .endd
31518 work as expected, with both local parts causing verification failure. When a
31519 redirection generates more than one address, the behaviour is more like a
31520 mailing list, where the existence of the alias itself is sufficient for
31521 verification to succeed.
31522
31523 It is possible, however, to change the default behaviour so that all successful
31524 redirections count as successful verifications, however many new addresses are
31525 generated. This is specified by the &%success_on_redirect%& verification
31526 option. For example:
31527 .code
31528 require verify = recipient/success_on_redirect/callout=10s
31529 .endd
31530 In this example, verification succeeds if a router generates a new address, and
31531 the callout does not occur, because no address was routed to a remote host.
31532
31533 When verification is being tested via the &%-bv%& option, the treatment of
31534 redirections is as just described, unless the &%-v%& or any debugging option is
31535 also specified. In that case, full verification is done for every generated
31536 address and a report is output for each of them.
31537
31538
31539
31540 .section "Client SMTP authorization (CSA)" "SECTverifyCSA"
31541 .cindex "CSA" "verifying"
31542 Client SMTP Authorization is a system that allows a site to advertise
31543 which machines are and are not permitted to send email. This is done by placing
31544 special SRV records in the DNS; these are looked up using the client's HELO
31545 domain. At the time of writing, CSA is still an Internet Draft. Client SMTP
31546 Authorization checks in Exim are performed by the ACL condition:
31547 .code
31548 verify = csa
31549 .endd
31550 This fails if the client is not authorized. If there is a DNS problem, or if no
31551 valid CSA SRV record is found, or if the client is authorized, the condition
31552 succeeds. These three cases can be distinguished using the expansion variable
31553 &$csa_status$&, which can take one of the values &"fail"&, &"defer"&,
31554 &"unknown"&, or &"ok"&. The condition does not itself defer because that would
31555 be likely to cause problems for legitimate email.
31556
31557 The error messages produced by the CSA code include slightly more
31558 detail. If &$csa_status$& is &"defer"&, this may be because of problems
31559 looking up the CSA SRV record, or problems looking up the CSA target
31560 address record. There are four reasons for &$csa_status$& being &"fail"&:
31561
31562 .ilist
31563 The client's host name is explicitly not authorized.
31564 .next
31565 The client's IP address does not match any of the CSA target IP addresses.
31566 .next
31567 The client's host name is authorized but it has no valid target IP addresses
31568 (for example, the target's addresses are IPv6 and the client is using IPv4).
31569 .next
31570 The client's host name has no CSA SRV record but a parent domain has asserted
31571 that all subdomains must be explicitly authorized.
31572 .endlist
31573
31574 The &%csa%& verification condition can take an argument which is the domain to
31575 use for the DNS query. The default is:
31576 .code
31577 verify = csa/$sender_helo_name
31578 .endd
31579 This implementation includes an extension to CSA. If the query domain
31580 is an address literal such as [192.0.2.95], or if it is a bare IP
31581 address, Exim searches for CSA SRV records in the reverse DNS as if
31582 the HELO domain was (for example) &'95.2.0.192.in-addr.arpa'&. Therefore it is
31583 meaningful to say:
31584 .code
31585 verify = csa/$sender_host_address
31586 .endd
31587 In fact, this is the check that Exim performs if the client does not say HELO.
31588 This extension can be turned off by setting the main configuration option
31589 &%dns_csa_use_reverse%& to be false.
31590
31591 If a CSA SRV record is not found for the domain itself, a search
31592 is performed through its parent domains for a record which might be
31593 making assertions about subdomains. The maximum depth of this search is limited
31594 using the main configuration option &%dns_csa_search_limit%&, which is 5 by
31595 default. Exim does not look for CSA SRV records in a top level domain, so the
31596 default settings handle HELO domains as long as seven
31597 (&'hostname.five.four.three.two.one.com'&). This encompasses the vast majority
31598 of legitimate HELO domains.
31599
31600 The &'dnsdb'& lookup also has support for CSA. Although &'dnsdb'& also supports
31601 direct SRV lookups, this is not sufficient because of the extra parent domain
31602 search behaviour of CSA, and (as with PTR lookups) &'dnsdb'& also turns IP
31603 addresses into lookups in the reverse DNS space. The result of a successful
31604 lookup such as:
31605 .code
31606 ${lookup dnsdb {csa=$sender_helo_name}}
31607 .endd
31608 has two space-separated fields: an authorization code and a target host name.
31609 The authorization code can be &"Y"& for yes, &"N"& for no, &"X"& for explicit
31610 authorization required but absent, or &"?"& for unknown.
31611
31612
31613
31614
31615 .section "Bounce address tag validation" "SECTverifyPRVS"
31616 .cindex "BATV, verifying"
31617 Bounce address tag validation (BATV) is a scheme whereby the envelope senders
31618 of outgoing messages have a cryptographic, timestamped &"tag"& added to them.
31619 Genuine incoming bounce messages should therefore always be addressed to
31620 recipients that have a valid tag. This scheme is a way of detecting unwanted
31621 bounce messages caused by sender address forgeries (often called &"collateral
31622 spam"&), because the recipients of such messages do not include valid tags.
31623
31624 There are two expansion items to help with the implementation of the BATV
31625 &"prvs"& (private signature) scheme in an Exim configuration. This scheme signs
31626 the original envelope sender address by using a simple key to add a hash of the
31627 address and some time-based randomizing information. The &%prvs%& expansion
31628 item creates a signed address, and the &%prvscheck%& expansion item checks one.
31629 The syntax of these expansion items is described in section
31630 &<<SECTexpansionitems>>&.
31631 The validity period on signed addresses is seven days.
31632
31633 As an example, suppose the secret per-address keys are stored in an MySQL
31634 database. A query to look up the key for an address could be defined as a macro
31635 like this:
31636 .code
31637 PRVSCHECK_SQL = ${lookup mysql{SELECT secret FROM batv_prvs \
31638 WHERE sender='${quote_mysql:$prvscheck_address}'\
31639 }{$value}}
31640 .endd
31641 Suppose also that the senders who make use of BATV are defined by an address
31642 list called &%batv_senders%&. Then, in the ACL for RCPT commands, you could
31643 use this:
31644 .code
31645 # Bounces: drop unsigned addresses for BATV senders
31646 deny message = This address does not send an unsigned reverse path
31647 senders = :
31648 recipients = +batv_senders
31649
31650 # Bounces: In case of prvs-signed address, check signature.
31651 deny message = Invalid reverse path signature.
31652 senders = :
31653 condition = ${prvscheck {$local_part@$domain}\
31654 {PRVSCHECK_SQL}{1}}
31655 !condition = $prvscheck_result
31656 .endd
31657 The first statement rejects recipients for bounce messages that are addressed
31658 to plain BATV sender addresses, because it is known that BATV senders do not
31659 send out messages with plain sender addresses. The second statement rejects
31660 recipients that are prvs-signed, but with invalid signatures (either because
31661 the key is wrong, or the signature has timed out).
31662
31663 A non-prvs-signed address is not rejected by the second statement, because the
31664 &%prvscheck%& expansion yields an empty string if its first argument is not a
31665 prvs-signed address, thus causing the &%condition%& condition to be false. If
31666 the first argument is a syntactically valid prvs-signed address, the yield is
31667 the third string (in this case &"1"&), whether or not the cryptographic and
31668 timeout checks succeed. The &$prvscheck_result$& variable contains the result
31669 of the checks (empty for failure, &"1"& for success).
31670
31671 There is one more issue you must consider when implementing prvs-signing:
31672 you have to ensure that the routers accept prvs-signed addresses and
31673 deliver them correctly. The easiest way to handle this is to use a &(redirect)&
31674 router to remove the signature with a configuration along these lines:
31675 .code
31676 batv_redirect:
31677 driver = redirect
31678 data = ${prvscheck {$local_part@$domain}{PRVSCHECK_SQL}}
31679 .endd
31680 This works because, if the third argument of &%prvscheck%& is empty, the result
31681 of the expansion of a prvs-signed address is the decoded value of the original
31682 address. This router should probably be the first of your routers that handles
31683 local addresses.
31684
31685 To create BATV-signed addresses in the first place, a transport of this form
31686 can be used:
31687 .code
31688 external_smtp_batv:
31689 driver = smtp
31690 return_path = ${prvs {$return_path} \
31691 {${lookup mysql{SELECT \
31692 secret FROM batv_prvs WHERE \
31693 sender='${quote_mysql:$sender_address}'} \
31694 {$value}fail}}}
31695 .endd
31696 If no key can be found for the existing return path, no signing takes place.
31697
31698
31699
31700 .section "Using an ACL to control relaying" "SECTrelaycontrol"
31701 .cindex "&ACL;" "relay control"
31702 .cindex "relaying" "control by ACL"
31703 .cindex "policy control" "relay control"
31704 An MTA is said to &'relay'& a message if it receives it from some host and
31705 delivers it directly to another host as a result of a remote address contained
31706 within it. Redirecting a local address via an alias or forward file and then
31707 passing the message on to another host is not relaying,
31708 .cindex "&""percent hack""&"
31709 but a redirection as a result of the &"percent hack"& is.
31710
31711 Two kinds of relaying exist, which are termed &"incoming"& and &"outgoing"&.
31712 A host which is acting as a gateway or an MX backup is concerned with incoming
31713 relaying from arbitrary hosts to a specific set of domains. On the other hand,
31714 a host which is acting as a smart host for a number of clients is concerned
31715 with outgoing relaying from those clients to the Internet at large. Often the
31716 same host is fulfilling both functions,
31717 . ///
31718 . as illustrated in the diagram below,
31719 . ///
31720 but in principle these two kinds of relaying are entirely independent. What is
31721 not wanted is the transmission of mail from arbitrary remote hosts through your
31722 system to arbitrary domains.
31723
31724
31725 You can implement relay control by means of suitable statements in the ACL that
31726 runs for each RCPT command. For convenience, it is often easiest to use
31727 Exim's named list facility to define the domains and hosts involved. For
31728 example, suppose you want to do the following:
31729
31730 .ilist
31731 Deliver a number of domains to mailboxes on the local host (or process them
31732 locally in some other way). Let's say these are &'my.dom1.example'& and
31733 &'my.dom2.example'&.
31734 .next
31735 Relay mail for a number of other domains for which you are the secondary MX.
31736 These might be &'friend1.example'& and &'friend2.example'&.
31737 .next
31738 Relay mail from the hosts on your local LAN, to whatever domains are involved.
31739 Suppose your LAN is 192.168.45.0/24.
31740 .endlist
31741
31742
31743 In the main part of the configuration, you put the following definitions:
31744 .code
31745 domainlist local_domains = my.dom1.example : my.dom2.example
31746 domainlist relay_to_domains = friend1.example : friend2.example
31747 hostlist relay_from_hosts = 192.168.45.0/24
31748 .endd
31749 Now you can use these definitions in the ACL that is run for every RCPT
31750 command:
31751 .code
31752 acl_check_rcpt:
31753 accept domains = +local_domains : +relay_to_domains
31754 accept hosts = +relay_from_hosts
31755 .endd
31756 The first statement accepts any RCPT command that contains an address in
31757 the local or relay domains. For any other domain, control passes to the second
31758 statement, which accepts the command only if it comes from one of the relay
31759 hosts. In practice, you will probably want to make your ACL more sophisticated
31760 than this, for example, by including sender and recipient verification. The
31761 default configuration includes a more comprehensive example, which is described
31762 in chapter &<<CHAPdefconfil>>&.
31763
31764
31765
31766 .section "Checking a relay configuration" "SECTcheralcon"
31767 .cindex "relaying" "checking control of"
31768 You can check the relay characteristics of your configuration in the same way
31769 that you can test any ACL behaviour for an incoming SMTP connection, by using
31770 the &%-bh%& option to run a fake SMTP session with which you interact.
31771 .ecindex IIDacl
31772
31773
31774
31775 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
31776 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
31777
31778 .chapter "Content scanning at ACL time" "CHAPexiscan"
31779 .scindex IIDcosca "content scanning" "at ACL time"
31780 The extension of Exim to include content scanning at ACL time, formerly known
31781 as &"exiscan"&, was originally implemented as a patch by Tom Kistner. The code
31782 was integrated into the main source for Exim release 4.50, and Tom continues to
31783 maintain it. Most of the wording of this chapter is taken from Tom's
31784 specification.
31785
31786 It is also possible to scan the content of messages at other times. The
31787 &[local_scan()]& function (see chapter &<<CHAPlocalscan>>&) allows for content
31788 scanning after all the ACLs have run. A transport filter can be used to scan
31789 messages at delivery time (see the &%transport_filter%& option, described in
31790 chapter &<<CHAPtransportgeneric>>&).
31791
31792 If you want to include the ACL-time content-scanning features when you compile
31793 Exim, you need to arrange for WITH_CONTENT_SCAN to be defined in your
31794 &_Local/Makefile_&. When you do that, the Exim binary is built with:
31795
31796 .ilist
31797 Two additional ACLs (&%acl_smtp_mime%& and &%acl_not_smtp_mime%&) that are run
31798 for all MIME parts for SMTP and non-SMTP messages, respectively.
31799 .next
31800 Additional ACL conditions and modifiers: &%decode%&, &%malware%&,
31801 &%mime_regex%&, &%regex%&, and &%spam%&. These can be used in the ACL that is
31802 run at the end of message reception (the &%acl_smtp_data%& ACL).
31803 .next
31804 An additional control feature (&"no_mbox_unspool"&) that saves spooled copies
31805 of messages, or parts of messages, for debugging purposes.
31806 .next
31807 Additional expansion variables that are set in the new ACL and by the new
31808 conditions.
31809 .next
31810 Two new main configuration options: &%av_scanner%& and &%spamd_address%&.
31811 .endlist
31812
31813 Content-scanning is continually evolving, and new features are still being
31814 added. While such features are still unstable and liable to incompatible
31815 changes, they are made available in Exim by setting options whose names begin
31816 EXPERIMENTAL_ in &_Local/Makefile_&. Such features are not documented in
31817 this manual. You can find out about them by reading the file called
31818 &_doc/experimental.txt_&.
31819
31820 All the content-scanning facilities work on a MBOX copy of the message that is
31821 temporarily created in a file called:
31822 .display
31823 <&'spool_directory'&>&`/scan/`&<&'message_id'&>/<&'message_id'&>&`.eml`&
31824 .endd
31825 The &_.eml_& extension is a friendly hint to virus scanners that they can
31826 expect an MBOX-like structure inside that file. The file is created when the
31827 first content scanning facility is called. Subsequent calls to content
31828 scanning conditions open the same file again. The directory is recursively
31829 removed when the &%acl_smtp_data%& ACL has finished running, unless
31830 .code
31831 control = no_mbox_unspool
31832 .endd
31833 has been encountered. When the MIME ACL decodes files, they are put into the
31834 same directory by default.
31835
31836
31837
31838 .section "Scanning for viruses" "SECTscanvirus"
31839 .cindex "virus scanning"
31840 .cindex "content scanning" "for viruses"
31841 .cindex "content scanning" "the &%malware%& condition"
31842 The &%malware%& ACL condition lets you connect virus scanner software to Exim.
31843 It supports a &"generic"& interface to scanners called via the shell, and
31844 specialized interfaces for &"daemon"& type virus scanners, which are resident
31845 in memory and thus are much faster.
31846
31847 A timeout of 2 minutes is applied to a scanner call (by default);
31848 if it expires then a defer action is taken.
31849
31850 .oindex "&%av_scanner%&"
31851 You can set the &%av_scanner%& option in the main part of the configuration
31852 to specify which scanner to use, together with any additional options that
31853 are needed. The basic syntax is as follows:
31854 .display
31855 &`av_scanner = <`&&'scanner-type'&&`>:<`&&'option1'&&`>:<`&&'option2'&&`>:[...]`&
31856 .endd
31857 If you do not set &%av_scanner%&, it defaults to
31858 .code
31859 av_scanner = sophie:/var/run/sophie
31860 .endd
31861 If the value of &%av_scanner%& starts with a dollar character, it is expanded
31862 before use.
31863 The usual list-parsing of the content (see &<<SECTlistconstruct>>&) applies.
31864 The following scanner types are supported in this release,
31865 though individual ones can be included or not at build time:
31866
31867 .vlist
31868 .vitem &%avast%&
31869 .cindex "virus scanners" "avast"
31870 This is the scanner daemon of Avast. It has been tested with Avast Core
31871 Security (currently at version 2.2.0).
31872 You can get a trial version at &url(https://www.avast.com) or for Linux
31873 at &url(https://www.avast.com/linux-server-antivirus).
31874 This scanner type takes one option,
31875 which can be either a full path to a UNIX socket,
31876 or host and port specifiers separated by white space.
31877 The host may be a name or an IP address; the port is either a
31878 single number or a pair of numbers with a dash between.
31879 A list of options may follow. These options are interpreted on the
31880 Exim's side of the malware scanner, or are given on separate lines to
31881 the daemon as options before the main scan command.
31882
31883 .cindex &`pass_unscanned`& "avast"
31884 If &`pass_unscanned`&
31885 is set, any files the Avast scanner can't scan (e.g.
31886 decompression bombs, or invalid archives) are considered clean. Use with
31887 care.
31888
31889 For example:
31890 .code
31891 av_scanner = avast:/var/run/avast/scan.sock:FLAGS -fullfiles:SENSITIVITY -pup
31892 av_scanner = avast:/var/run/avast/scan.sock:pass_unscanned:FLAGS -fullfiles:SENSITIVITY -pup
31893 av_scanner = avast:192.168.2.22 5036
31894 .endd
31895 If you omit the argument, the default path
31896 &_/var/run/avast/scan.sock_&
31897 is used.
31898 If you use a remote host,
31899 you need to make Exim's spool directory available to it,
31900 as the scanner is passed a file path, not file contents.
31901 For information about available commands and their options you may use
31902 .code
31903 $ socat UNIX:/var/run/avast/scan.sock STDIO:
31904 FLAGS
31905 SENSITIVITY
31906 PACK
31907 .endd
31908
31909 If the scanner returns a temporary failure (e.g. license issues, or
31910 permission problems), the message is deferred and a paniclog entry is
31911 written. The usual &`defer_ok`& option is available.
31912
31913 .vitem &%aveserver%&
31914 .cindex "virus scanners" "Kaspersky"
31915 This is the scanner daemon of Kaspersky Version 5. You can get a trial version
31916 at &url(http://www.kaspersky.com). This scanner type takes one option,
31917 which is the path to the daemon's UNIX socket. The default is shown in this
31918 example:
31919 .code
31920 av_scanner = aveserver:/var/run/aveserver
31921 .endd
31922
31923
31924 .vitem &%clamd%&
31925 .cindex "virus scanners" "clamd"
31926 This daemon-type scanner is GPL and free. You can get it at
31927 &url(http://www.clamav.net/). Some older versions of clamd do not seem to
31928 unpack MIME containers, so it used to be recommended to unpack MIME attachments
31929 in the MIME ACL. This is no longer believed to be necessary.
31930
31931 The options are a list of server specifiers, which may be
31932 a UNIX socket specification,
31933 a TCP socket specification,
31934 or a (global) option.
31935
31936 A socket specification consists of a space-separated list.
31937 For a Unix socket the first element is a full path for the socket,
31938 for a TCP socket the first element is the IP address
31939 and the second a port number,
31940 Any further elements are per-server (non-global) options.
31941 These per-server options are supported:
31942 .code
31943 retry=<timespec> Retry on connect fail
31944 .endd
31945
31946 The &`retry`& option specifies a time after which a single retry for
31947 a failed connect is made. The default is to not retry.
31948
31949 If a Unix socket file is specified, only one server is supported.
31950
31951 Examples:
31952 .code
31953 av_scanner = clamd:/opt/clamd/socket
31954 av_scanner = clamd:192.0.2.3 1234
31955 av_scanner = clamd:192.0.2.3 1234:local
31956 av_scanner = clamd:192.0.2.3 1234 retry=10s
31957 av_scanner = clamd:192.0.2.3 1234 : 192.0.2.4 1234
31958 .endd
31959 If the value of av_scanner points to a UNIX socket file or contains the
31960 &`local`&
31961 option, then the ClamAV interface will pass a filename containing the data
31962 to be scanned, which should normally result in less I/O happening and be
31963 more efficient. Normally in the TCP case, the data is streamed to ClamAV as
31964 Exim does not assume that there is a common filesystem with the remote host.
31965
31966 The final example shows that multiple TCP targets can be specified. Exim will
31967 randomly use one for each incoming email (i.e. it load balances them). Note
31968 that only TCP targets may be used if specifying a list of scanners; a UNIX
31969 socket cannot be mixed in with TCP targets. If one of the servers becomes
31970 unavailable, Exim will try the remaining one(s) until it finds one that works.
31971 When a clamd server becomes unreachable, Exim will log a message. Exim does
31972 not keep track of scanner state between multiple messages, and the scanner
31973 selection is random, so the message will get logged in the mainlog for each
31974 email that the down scanner gets chosen first (message wrapped to be readable):
31975 .code
31976 2013-10-09 14:30:39 1VTumd-0000Y8-BQ malware acl condition:
31977 clamd: connection to localhost, port 3310 failed
31978 (Connection refused)
31979 .endd
31980
31981 If the option is unset, the default is &_/tmp/clamd_&. Thanks to David Saez for
31982 contributing the code for this scanner.
31983
31984 .vitem &%cmdline%&
31985 .cindex "virus scanners" "command line interface"
31986 This is the keyword for the generic command line scanner interface. It can be
31987 used to attach virus scanners that are invoked from the shell. This scanner
31988 type takes 3 mandatory options:
31989
31990 .olist
31991 The full path and name of the scanner binary, with all command line options,
31992 and a placeholder (&`%s`&) for the directory to scan.
31993
31994 .next
31995 A regular expression to match against the STDOUT and STDERR output of the
31996 virus scanner. If the expression matches, a virus was found. You must make
31997 absolutely sure that this expression matches on &"virus found"&. This is called
31998 the &"trigger"& expression.
31999
32000 .next
32001 Another regular expression, containing exactly one pair of parentheses, to
32002 match the name of the virus found in the scanners output. This is called the
32003 &"name"& expression.
32004 .endlist olist
32005
32006 For example, Sophos Sweep reports a virus on a line like this:
32007 .code
32008 Virus 'W32/Magistr-B' found in file ./those.bat
32009 .endd
32010 For the trigger expression, we can match the phrase &"found in file"&. For the
32011 name expression, we want to extract the W32/Magistr-B string, so we can match
32012 for the single quotes left and right of it. Altogether, this makes the
32013 configuration setting:
32014 .code
32015 av_scanner = cmdline:\
32016 /path/to/sweep -ss -all -rec -archive %s:\
32017 found in file:'(.+)'
32018 .endd
32019 .vitem &%drweb%&
32020 .cindex "virus scanners" "DrWeb"
32021 The DrWeb daemon scanner (&url(http://www.sald.com/)) interface
32022 takes one option,
32023 either a full path to a UNIX socket,
32024 or host and port specifiers separated by white space.
32025 The host may be a name or an IP address; the port is either a
32026 single number or a pair of numbers with a dash between.
32027 For example:
32028 .code
32029 av_scanner = drweb:/var/run/drwebd.sock
32030 av_scanner = drweb:192.168.2.20 31337
32031 .endd
32032 If you omit the argument, the default path &_/usr/local/drweb/run/drwebd.sock_&
32033 is used. Thanks to Alex Miller for contributing the code for this scanner.
32034
32035 .vitem &%f-protd%&
32036 .cindex "virus scanners" "f-protd"
32037 The f-protd scanner is accessed via HTTP over TCP.
32038 One argument is taken, being a space-separated hostname and port number
32039 (or port-range).
32040 For example:
32041 .code
32042 av_scanner = f-protd:localhost 10200-10204
32043 .endd
32044 If you omit the argument, the default values shown above are used.
32045
32046 .vitem &%f-prot6d%&
32047 .cindex "virus scanners" "f-prot6d"
32048 The f-prot6d scanner is accessed using the FPSCAND protocol over TCP.
32049 One argument is taken, being a space-separated hostname and port number.
32050 For example:
32051 .code
32052 av_scanner = f-prot6d:localhost 10200
32053 .endd
32054 If you omit the argument, the default values show above are used.
32055
32056 .vitem &%fsecure%&
32057 .cindex "virus scanners" "F-Secure"
32058 The F-Secure daemon scanner (&url(http://www.f-secure.com)) takes one
32059 argument which is the path to a UNIX socket. For example:
32060 .code
32061 av_scanner = fsecure:/path/to/.fsav
32062 .endd
32063 If no argument is given, the default is &_/var/run/.fsav_&. Thanks to Johan
32064 Thelmen for contributing the code for this scanner.
32065
32066 .vitem &%kavdaemon%&
32067 .cindex "virus scanners" "Kaspersky"
32068 This is the scanner daemon of Kaspersky Version 4. This version of the
32069 Kaspersky scanner is outdated. Please upgrade (see &%aveserver%& above). This
32070 scanner type takes one option, which is the path to the daemon's UNIX socket.
32071 For example:
32072 .code
32073 av_scanner = kavdaemon:/opt/AVP/AvpCtl
32074 .endd
32075 The default path is &_/var/run/AvpCtl_&.
32076
32077 .vitem &%mksd%&
32078 .cindex "virus scanners" "mksd"
32079 This is a daemon type scanner that is aimed mainly at Polish users, though some
32080 parts of documentation are now available in English. You can get it at
32081 &url(http://linux.mks.com.pl/). The only option for this scanner type is
32082 the maximum number of processes used simultaneously to scan the attachments,
32083 provided that mksd has
32084 been run with at least the same number of child processes. For example:
32085 .code
32086 av_scanner = mksd:2
32087 .endd
32088 You can safely omit this option (the default value is 1).
32089
32090 .vitem &%sock%&
32091 .cindex "virus scanners" "simple socket-connected"
32092 This is a general-purpose way of talking to simple scanner daemons
32093 running on the local machine.
32094 There are four options:
32095 an address (which may be an IP address and port, or the path of a Unix socket),
32096 a commandline to send (may include a single %s which will be replaced with
32097 the path to the mail file to be scanned),
32098 an RE to trigger on from the returned data,
32099 and an RE to extract malware_name from the returned data.
32100 For example:
32101 .code
32102 av_scanner = sock:127.0.0.1 6001:%s:(SPAM|VIRUS):(.*)$
32103 .endd
32104 Note that surrounding whitespace is stripped from each option, meaning
32105 there is no way to specify a trailing newline.
32106 The socket specifier and both regular-expressions are required.
32107 Default for the commandline is &_%s\n_& (note this does have a trailing newline);
32108 specify an empty element to get this.
32109
32110 .vitem &%sophie%&
32111 .cindex "virus scanners" "Sophos and Sophie"
32112 Sophie is a daemon that uses Sophos' &%libsavi%& library to scan for viruses.
32113 You can get Sophie at &url(http://www.clanfield.info/sophie/). The only option
32114 for this scanner type is the path to the UNIX socket that Sophie uses for
32115 client communication. For example:
32116 .code
32117 av_scanner = sophie:/tmp/sophie
32118 .endd
32119 The default path is &_/var/run/sophie_&, so if you are using this, you can omit
32120 the option.
32121 .endlist
32122
32123 When &%av_scanner%& is correctly set, you can use the &%malware%& condition in
32124 the DATA ACL. &*Note*&: You cannot use the &%malware%& condition in the MIME
32125 ACL.
32126
32127 The &%av_scanner%& option is expanded each time &%malware%& is called. This
32128 makes it possible to use different scanners. See further below for an example.
32129 The &%malware%& condition caches its results, so when you use it multiple times
32130 for the same message, the actual scanning process is only carried out once.
32131 However, using expandable items in &%av_scanner%& disables this caching, in
32132 which case each use of the &%malware%& condition causes a new scan of the
32133 message.
32134
32135 The &%malware%& condition takes a right-hand argument that is expanded before
32136 use and taken as a list, slash-separated by default.
32137 The first element can then be one of
32138
32139 .ilist
32140 &"true"&, &"*"&, or &"1"&, in which case the message is scanned for viruses.
32141 The condition succeeds if a virus was found, and fail otherwise. This is the
32142 recommended usage.
32143 .next
32144 &"false"& or &"0"& or an empty string, in which case no scanning is done and
32145 the condition fails immediately.
32146 .next
32147 A regular expression, in which case the message is scanned for viruses. The
32148 condition succeeds if a virus is found and its name matches the regular
32149 expression. This allows you to take special actions on certain types of virus.
32150 Note that &"/"& characters in the RE must be doubled due to the list-processing,
32151 unless the separator is changed (in the usual way).
32152 .endlist
32153
32154 You can append a &`defer_ok`& element to the &%malware%& argument list to accept
32155 messages even if there is a problem with the virus scanner.
32156 Otherwise, such a problem causes the ACL to defer.
32157
32158 You can append a &`tmo=<val>`& element to the &%malware%& argument list to
32159 specify a non-default timeout. The default is two minutes.
32160 For example:
32161 .code
32162 malware = * / defer_ok / tmo=10s
32163 .endd
32164 A timeout causes the ACL to defer.
32165
32166 .vindex "&$callout_address$&"
32167 When a connection is made to the scanner the expansion variable &$callout_address$&
32168 is set to record the actual address used.
32169
32170 .vindex "&$malware_name$&"
32171 When a virus is found, the condition sets up an expansion variable called
32172 &$malware_name$& that contains the name of the virus. You can use it in a
32173 &%message%& modifier that specifies the error returned to the sender, and/or in
32174 logging data.
32175
32176 Beware the interaction of Exim's &%message_size_limit%& with any size limits
32177 imposed by your anti-virus scanner.
32178
32179 Here is a very simple scanning example:
32180 .code
32181 deny message = This message contains malware ($malware_name)
32182 malware = *
32183 .endd
32184 The next example accepts messages when there is a problem with the scanner:
32185 .code
32186 deny message = This message contains malware ($malware_name)
32187 malware = */defer_ok
32188 .endd
32189 The next example shows how to use an ACL variable to scan with both sophie and
32190 aveserver. It assumes you have set:
32191 .code
32192 av_scanner = $acl_m0
32193 .endd
32194 in the main Exim configuration.
32195 .code
32196 deny message = This message contains malware ($malware_name)
32197 set acl_m0 = sophie
32198 malware = *
32199
32200 deny message = This message contains malware ($malware_name)
32201 set acl_m0 = aveserver
32202 malware = *
32203 .endd
32204
32205
32206 .section "Scanning with SpamAssassin and Rspamd" "SECTscanspamass"
32207 .cindex "content scanning" "for spam"
32208 .cindex "spam scanning"
32209 .cindex "SpamAssassin"
32210 .cindex "Rspamd"
32211 The &%spam%& ACL condition calls SpamAssassin's &%spamd%& daemon to get a spam
32212 score and a report for the message.
32213 Support is also provided for Rspamd.
32214
32215 For more information about installation and configuration of SpamAssassin or
32216 Rspamd refer to their respective websites at
32217 &url(http://spamassassin.apache.org) and &url(http://www.rspamd.com)
32218
32219 SpamAssassin can be installed with CPAN by running:
32220 .code
32221 perl -MCPAN -e 'install Mail::SpamAssassin'
32222 .endd
32223 SpamAssassin has its own set of configuration files. Please review its
32224 documentation to see how you can tweak it. The default installation should work
32225 nicely, however.
32226
32227 .oindex "&%spamd_address%&"
32228 By default, SpamAssassin listens on 127.0.0.1, TCP port 783 and if you
32229 intend to use an instance running on the local host you do not need to set
32230 &%spamd_address%&. If you intend to use another host or port for SpamAssassin,
32231 you must set the &%spamd_address%& option in the global part of the Exim
32232 configuration as follows (example):
32233 .code
32234 spamd_address = 192.168.99.45 387
32235 .endd
32236 The SpamAssassin protocol relies on a TCP half-close from the client.
32237 If your SpamAssassin client side is running a Linux system with an
32238 iptables firewall, consider setting
32239 &%net.netfilter.nf_conntrack_tcp_timeout_close_wait%& to at least the
32240 timeout, Exim uses when waiting for a response from the SpamAssassin
32241 server (currently defaulting to 120s). With a lower value the Linux
32242 connection tracking may consider your half-closed connection as dead too
32243 soon.
32244
32245
32246 To use Rspamd (which by default listens on all local addresses
32247 on TCP port 11333)
32248 you should add &%variant=rspamd%& after the address/port pair, for example:
32249 .code
32250 spamd_address = 127.0.0.1 11333 variant=rspamd
32251 .endd
32252
32253 As of version 2.60, &%SpamAssassin%& also supports communication over UNIX
32254 sockets. If you want to us these, supply &%spamd_address%& with an absolute
32255 file name instead of an address/port pair:
32256 .code
32257 spamd_address = /var/run/spamd_socket
32258 .endd
32259 You can have multiple &%spamd%& servers to improve scalability. These can
32260 reside on other hardware reachable over the network. To specify multiple
32261 &%spamd%& servers, put multiple address/port pairs in the &%spamd_address%&
32262 option, separated with colons (the separator can be changed in the usual way):
32263 .code
32264 spamd_address = 192.168.2.10 783 : \
32265 192.168.2.11 783 : \
32266 192.168.2.12 783
32267 .endd
32268 Up to 32 &%spamd%& servers are supported.
32269 When a server fails to respond to the connection attempt, all other
32270 servers are tried until one succeeds. If no server responds, the &%spam%&
32271 condition defers.
32272
32273 Unix and TCP socket specifications may be mixed in any order.
32274 Each element of the list is a list itself, space-separated by default
32275 and changeable in the usual way; take care to not double the separator.
32276
32277 For TCP socket specifications a host name or IP (v4 or v6, but
32278 subject to list-separator quoting rules) address can be used,
32279 and the port can be one or a dash-separated pair.
32280 In the latter case, the range is tried in strict order.
32281
32282 Elements after the first for Unix sockets, or second for TCP socket,
32283 are options.
32284 The supported options are:
32285 .code
32286 pri=<priority> Selection priority
32287 weight=<value> Selection bias
32288 time=<start>-<end> Use only between these times of day
32289 retry=<timespec> Retry on connect fail
32290 tmo=<timespec> Connection time limit
32291 variant=rspamd Use Rspamd rather than SpamAssassin protocol
32292 .endd
32293
32294 The &`pri`& option specifies a priority for the server within the list,
32295 higher values being tried first.
32296 The default priority is 1.
32297
32298 The &`weight`& option specifies a selection bias.
32299 Within a priority set
32300 servers are queried in a random fashion, weighted by this value.
32301 The default value for selection bias is 1.
32302
32303 Time specifications for the &`time`& option are <hour>.<minute>.<second>
32304 in the local time zone; each element being one or more digits.
32305 Either the seconds or both minutes and seconds, plus the leading &`.`&
32306 characters, may be omitted and will be taken as zero.
32307
32308 Timeout specifications for the &`retry`& and &`tmo`& options
32309 are the usual Exim time interval standard, e.g. &`20s`& or &`1m`&.
32310
32311 The &`tmo`& option specifies an overall timeout for communication.
32312 The default value is two minutes.
32313
32314 The &`retry`& option specifies a time after which a single retry for
32315 a failed connect is made.
32316 The default is to not retry.
32317
32318 The &%spamd_address%& variable is expanded before use if it starts with
32319 a dollar sign. In this case, the expansion may return a string that is
32320 used as the list so that multiple spamd servers can be the result of an
32321 expansion.
32322
32323 .vindex "&$callout_address$&"
32324 When a connection is made to the server the expansion variable &$callout_address$&
32325 is set to record the actual address used.
32326
32327 .section "Calling SpamAssassin from an Exim ACL" "SECID206"
32328 Here is a simple example of the use of the &%spam%& condition in a DATA ACL:
32329 .code
32330 deny message = This message was classified as SPAM
32331 spam = joe
32332 .endd
32333 The right-hand side of the &%spam%& condition specifies a name. This is
32334 relevant if you have set up multiple SpamAssassin profiles. If you do not want
32335 to scan using a specific profile, but rather use the SpamAssassin system-wide
32336 default profile, you can scan for an unknown name, or simply use &"nobody"&.
32337 Rspamd does not use this setting. However, you must put something on the
32338 right-hand side.
32339
32340 The name allows you to use per-domain or per-user antispam profiles in
32341 principle, but this is not straightforward in practice, because a message may
32342 have multiple recipients, not necessarily all in the same domain. Because the
32343 &%spam%& condition has to be called from a DATA-time ACL in order to be able to
32344 read the contents of the message, the variables &$local_part$& and &$domain$&
32345 are not set.
32346 Careful enforcement of single-recipient messages
32347 (e.g. by responding with defer in the recipient ACL for all recipients
32348 after the first),
32349 or the use of PRDR,
32350 .cindex "PRDR" "use for per-user SpamAssassin profiles"
32351 are needed to use this feature.
32352
32353 The right-hand side of the &%spam%& condition is expanded before being used, so
32354 you can put lookups or conditions there. When the right-hand side evaluates to
32355 &"0"& or &"false"&, no scanning is done and the condition fails immediately.
32356
32357
32358 Scanning with SpamAssassin uses a lot of resources. If you scan every message,
32359 large ones may cause significant performance degradation. As most spam messages
32360 are quite small, it is recommended that you do not scan the big ones. For
32361 example:
32362 .code
32363 deny message = This message was classified as SPAM
32364 condition = ${if < {$message_size}{10K}}
32365 spam = nobody
32366 .endd
32367
32368 The &%spam%& condition returns true if the threshold specified in the user's
32369 SpamAssassin profile has been matched or exceeded. If you want to use the
32370 &%spam%& condition for its side effects (see the variables below), you can make
32371 it always return &"true"& by appending &`:true`& to the username.
32372
32373 .cindex "spam scanning" "returned variables"
32374 When the &%spam%& condition is run, it sets up a number of expansion
32375 variables.
32376 Except for &$spam_report$&,
32377 these variables are saved with the received message so are
32378 available for use at delivery time.
32379
32380 .vlist
32381 .vitem &$spam_score$&
32382 The spam score of the message, for example &"3.4"& or &"30.5"&. This is useful
32383 for inclusion in log or reject messages.
32384
32385 .vitem &$spam_score_int$&
32386 The spam score of the message, multiplied by ten, as an integer value. For
32387 example &"34"& or &"305"&. It may appear to disagree with &$spam_score$&
32388 because &$spam_score$& is rounded and &$spam_score_int$& is truncated.
32389 The integer value is useful for numeric comparisons in conditions.
32390
32391 .vitem &$spam_bar$&
32392 A string consisting of a number of &"+"& or &"-"& characters, representing the
32393 integer part of the spam score value. A spam score of 4.4 would have a
32394 &$spam_bar$& value of &"++++"&. This is useful for inclusion in warning
32395 headers, since MUAs can match on such strings. The maximum length of the
32396 spam bar is 50 characters.
32397
32398 .vitem &$spam_report$&
32399 A multiline text table, containing the full SpamAssassin report for the
32400 message. Useful for inclusion in headers or reject messages.
32401 This variable is only usable in a DATA-time ACL.
32402 Beware that SpamAssassin may return non-ASCII characters, especially
32403 when running in country-specific locales, which are not legal
32404 unencoded in headers.
32405
32406 .vitem &$spam_action$&
32407 For SpamAssassin either 'reject' or 'no action' depending on the
32408 spam score versus threshold.
32409 For Rspamd, the recommended action.
32410
32411 .endlist
32412
32413 The &%spam%& condition caches its results unless expansion in
32414 spamd_address was used. If you call it again with the same user name, it
32415 does not scan again, but rather returns the same values as before.
32416
32417 The &%spam%& condition returns DEFER if there is any error while running
32418 the message through SpamAssassin or if the expansion of spamd_address
32419 failed. If you want to treat DEFER as FAIL (to pass on to the next ACL
32420 statement block), append &`/defer_ok`& to the right-hand side of the
32421 spam condition, like this:
32422 .code
32423 deny message = This message was classified as SPAM
32424 spam = joe/defer_ok
32425 .endd
32426 This causes messages to be accepted even if there is a problem with &%spamd%&.
32427
32428 Here is a longer, commented example of the use of the &%spam%&
32429 condition:
32430 .code
32431 # put headers in all messages (no matter if spam or not)
32432 warn spam = nobody:true
32433 add_header = X-Spam-Score: $spam_score ($spam_bar)
32434 add_header = X-Spam-Report: $spam_report
32435
32436 # add second subject line with *SPAM* marker when message
32437 # is over threshold
32438 warn spam = nobody
32439 add_header = Subject: *SPAM* $h_Subject:
32440
32441 # reject spam at high scores (> 12)
32442 deny message = This message scored $spam_score spam points.
32443 spam = nobody:true
32444 condition = ${if >{$spam_score_int}{120}{1}{0}}
32445 .endd
32446
32447
32448
32449 .section "Scanning MIME parts" "SECTscanmimepart"
32450 .cindex "content scanning" "MIME parts"
32451 .cindex "MIME content scanning"
32452 .oindex "&%acl_smtp_mime%&"
32453 .oindex "&%acl_not_smtp_mime%&"
32454 The &%acl_smtp_mime%& global option specifies an ACL that is called once for
32455 each MIME part of an SMTP message, including multipart types, in the sequence
32456 of their position in the message. Similarly, the &%acl_not_smtp_mime%& option
32457 specifies an ACL that is used for the MIME parts of non-SMTP messages. These
32458 options may both refer to the same ACL if you want the same processing in both
32459 cases.
32460
32461 These ACLs are called (possibly many times) just before the &%acl_smtp_data%&
32462 ACL in the case of an SMTP message, or just before the &%acl_not_smtp%& ACL in
32463 the case of a non-SMTP message. However, a MIME ACL is called only if the
32464 message contains a &'Content-Type:'& header line. When a call to a MIME
32465 ACL does not yield &"accept"&, ACL processing is aborted and the appropriate
32466 result code is sent to the client. In the case of an SMTP message, the
32467 &%acl_smtp_data%& ACL is not called when this happens.
32468
32469 You cannot use the &%malware%& or &%spam%& conditions in a MIME ACL; these can
32470 only be used in the DATA or non-SMTP ACLs. However, you can use the &%regex%&
32471 condition to match against the raw MIME part. You can also use the
32472 &%mime_regex%& condition to match against the decoded MIME part (see section
32473 &<<SECTscanregex>>&).
32474
32475 At the start of a MIME ACL, a number of variables are set from the header
32476 information for the relevant MIME part. These are described below. The contents
32477 of the MIME part are not by default decoded into a disk file except for MIME
32478 parts whose content-type is &"message/rfc822"&. If you want to decode a MIME
32479 part into a disk file, you can use the &%decode%& condition. The general
32480 syntax is:
32481 .display
32482 &`decode = [/`&<&'path'&>&`/]`&<&'filename'&>
32483 .endd
32484 The right hand side is expanded before use. After expansion,
32485 the value can be:
32486
32487 .olist
32488 &"0"& or &"false"&, in which case no decoding is done.
32489 .next
32490 The string &"default"&. In that case, the file is put in the temporary
32491 &"default"& directory <&'spool_directory'&>&_/scan/_&<&'message_id'&>&_/_& with
32492 a sequential file name consisting of the message id and a sequence number. The
32493 full path and name is available in &$mime_decoded_filename$& after decoding.
32494 .next
32495 A full path name starting with a slash. If the full name is an existing
32496 directory, it is used as a replacement for the default directory. The filename
32497 is then sequentially assigned. If the path does not exist, it is used as
32498 the full path and file name.
32499 .next
32500 If the string does not start with a slash, it is used as the
32501 filename, and the default path is then used.
32502 .endlist
32503 The &%decode%& condition normally succeeds. It is only false for syntax
32504 errors or unusual circumstances such as memory shortages. You can easily decode
32505 a file with its original, proposed filename using
32506 .code
32507 decode = $mime_filename
32508 .endd
32509 However, you should keep in mind that &$mime_filename$& might contain
32510 anything. If you place files outside of the default path, they are not
32511 automatically unlinked.
32512
32513 For RFC822 attachments (these are messages attached to messages, with a
32514 content-type of &"message/rfc822"&), the ACL is called again in the same manner
32515 as for the primary message, only that the &$mime_is_rfc822$& expansion
32516 variable is set (see below). Attached messages are always decoded to disk
32517 before being checked, and the files are unlinked once the check is done.
32518
32519 The MIME ACL supports the &%regex%& and &%mime_regex%& conditions. These can be
32520 used to match regular expressions against raw and decoded MIME parts,
32521 respectively. They are described in section &<<SECTscanregex>>&.
32522
32523 .cindex "MIME content scanning" "returned variables"
32524 The following list describes all expansion variables that are
32525 available in the MIME ACL:
32526
32527 .vlist
32528 .vitem &$mime_boundary$&
32529 If the current part is a multipart (see &$mime_is_multipart$&) below, it should
32530 have a boundary string, which is stored in this variable. If the current part
32531 has no boundary parameter in the &'Content-Type:'& header, this variable
32532 contains the empty string.
32533
32534 .vitem &$mime_charset$&
32535 This variable contains the character set identifier, if one was found in the
32536 &'Content-Type:'& header. Examples for charset identifiers are:
32537 .code
32538 us-ascii
32539 gb2312 (Chinese)
32540 iso-8859-1
32541 .endd
32542 Please note that this value is not normalized, so you should do matches
32543 case-insensitively.
32544
32545 .vitem &$mime_content_description$&
32546 This variable contains the normalized content of the &'Content-Description:'&
32547 header. It can contain a human-readable description of the parts content. Some
32548 implementations repeat the filename for attachments here, but they are usually
32549 only used for display purposes.
32550
32551 .vitem &$mime_content_disposition$&
32552 This variable contains the normalized content of the &'Content-Disposition:'&
32553 header. You can expect strings like &"attachment"& or &"inline"& here.
32554
32555 .vitem &$mime_content_id$&
32556 This variable contains the normalized content of the &'Content-ID:'& header.
32557 This is a unique ID that can be used to reference a part from another part.
32558
32559 .vitem &$mime_content_size$&
32560 This variable is set only after the &%decode%& modifier (see above) has been
32561 successfully run. It contains the size of the decoded part in kilobytes. The
32562 size is always rounded up to full kilobytes, so only a completely empty part
32563 has a &$mime_content_size$& of zero.
32564
32565 .vitem &$mime_content_transfer_encoding$&
32566 This variable contains the normalized content of the
32567 &'Content-transfer-encoding:'& header. This is a symbolic name for an encoding
32568 type. Typical values are &"base64"& and &"quoted-printable"&.
32569
32570 .vitem &$mime_content_type$&
32571 If the MIME part has a &'Content-Type:'& header, this variable contains its
32572 value, lowercased, and without any options (like &"name"& or &"charset"&). Here
32573 are some examples of popular MIME types, as they may appear in this variable:
32574 .code
32575 text/plain
32576 text/html
32577 application/octet-stream
32578 image/jpeg
32579 audio/midi
32580 .endd
32581 If the MIME part has no &'Content-Type:'& header, this variable contains the
32582 empty string.
32583
32584 .vitem &$mime_decoded_filename$&
32585 This variable is set only after the &%decode%& modifier (see above) has been
32586 successfully run. It contains the full path and file name of the file
32587 containing the decoded data.
32588 .endlist
32589
32590 .cindex "RFC 2047"
32591 .vlist
32592 .vitem &$mime_filename$&
32593 This is perhaps the most important of the MIME variables. It contains a
32594 proposed filename for an attachment, if one was found in either the
32595 &'Content-Type:'& or &'Content-Disposition:'& headers. The filename will be
32596 RFC2047
32597 or RFC2231
32598 decoded, but no additional sanity checks are done.
32599 If no filename was
32600 found, this variable contains the empty string.
32601
32602 .vitem &$mime_is_coverletter$&
32603 This variable attempts to differentiate the &"cover letter"& of an e-mail from
32604 attached data. It can be used to clamp down on flashy or unnecessarily encoded
32605 content in the cover letter, while not restricting attachments at all.
32606
32607 The variable contains 1 (true) for a MIME part believed to be part of the
32608 cover letter, and 0 (false) for an attachment. At present, the algorithm is as
32609 follows:
32610
32611 .olist
32612 The outermost MIME part of a message is always a cover letter.
32613
32614 .next
32615 If a multipart/alternative or multipart/related MIME part is a cover letter,
32616 so are all MIME subparts within that multipart.
32617
32618 .next
32619 If any other multipart is a cover letter, the first subpart is a cover letter,
32620 and the rest are attachments.
32621
32622 .next
32623 All parts contained within an attachment multipart are attachments.
32624 .endlist olist
32625
32626 As an example, the following will ban &"HTML mail"& (including that sent with
32627 alternative plain text), while allowing HTML files to be attached. HTML
32628 coverletter mail attached to non-HTML coverletter mail will also be allowed:
32629 .code
32630 deny message = HTML mail is not accepted here
32631 !condition = $mime_is_rfc822
32632 condition = $mime_is_coverletter
32633 condition = ${if eq{$mime_content_type}{text/html}{1}{0}}
32634 .endd
32635 .vitem &$mime_is_multipart$&
32636 This variable has the value 1 (true) when the current part has the main type
32637 &"multipart"&, for example &"multipart/alternative"& or &"multipart/mixed"&.
32638 Since multipart entities only serve as containers for other parts, you may not
32639 want to carry out specific actions on them.
32640
32641 .vitem &$mime_is_rfc822$&
32642 This variable has the value 1 (true) if the current part is not a part of the
32643 checked message itself, but part of an attached message. Attached message
32644 decoding is fully recursive.
32645
32646 .vitem &$mime_part_count$&
32647 This variable is a counter that is raised for each processed MIME part. It
32648 starts at zero for the very first part (which is usually a multipart). The
32649 counter is per-message, so it is reset when processing RFC822 attachments (see
32650 &$mime_is_rfc822$&). The counter stays set after &%acl_smtp_mime%& is
32651 complete, so you can use it in the DATA ACL to determine the number of MIME
32652 parts of a message. For non-MIME messages, this variable contains the value -1.
32653 .endlist
32654
32655
32656
32657 .section "Scanning with regular expressions" "SECTscanregex"
32658 .cindex "content scanning" "with regular expressions"
32659 .cindex "regular expressions" "content scanning with"
32660 You can specify your own custom regular expression matches on the full body of
32661 the message, or on individual MIME parts.
32662
32663 The &%regex%& condition takes one or more regular expressions as arguments and
32664 matches them against the full message (when called in the DATA ACL) or a raw
32665 MIME part (when called in the MIME ACL). The &%regex%& condition matches
32666 linewise, with a maximum line length of 32K characters. That means you cannot
32667 have multiline matches with the &%regex%& condition.
32668
32669 The &%mime_regex%& condition can be called only in the MIME ACL. It matches up
32670 to 32K of decoded content (the whole content at once, not linewise). If the
32671 part has not been decoded with the &%decode%& modifier earlier in the ACL, it
32672 is decoded automatically when &%mime_regex%& is executed (using default path
32673 and filename values). If the decoded data is larger than 32K, only the first
32674 32K characters are checked.
32675
32676 The regular expressions are passed as a colon-separated list. To include a
32677 literal colon, you must double it. Since the whole right-hand side string is
32678 expanded before being used, you must also escape dollar signs and backslashes
32679 with more backslashes, or use the &`\N`& facility to disable expansion.
32680 Here is a simple example that contains two regular expressions:
32681 .code
32682 deny message = contains blacklisted regex ($regex_match_string)
32683 regex = [Mm]ortgage : URGENT BUSINESS PROPOSAL
32684 .endd
32685 The conditions returns true if any one of the regular expressions matches. The
32686 &$regex_match_string$& expansion variable is then set up and contains the
32687 matching regular expression.
32688 The expansion variables &$regex1$& &$regex2$& etc
32689 are set to any substrings captured by the regular expression.
32690
32691 &*Warning*&: With large messages, these conditions can be fairly
32692 CPU-intensive.
32693
32694 .ecindex IIDcosca
32695
32696
32697
32698
32699 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
32700 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
32701
32702 .chapter "Adding a local scan function to Exim" "CHAPlocalscan" &&&
32703 "Local scan function"
32704 .scindex IIDlosca "&[local_scan()]& function" "description of"
32705 .cindex "customizing" "input scan using C function"
32706 .cindex "policy control" "by local scan function"
32707 In these days of email worms, viruses, and ever-increasing spam, some sites
32708 want to apply a lot of checking to messages before accepting them.
32709
32710 The content scanning extension (chapter &<<CHAPexiscan>>&) has facilities for
32711 passing messages to external virus and spam scanning software. You can also do
32712 a certain amount in Exim itself through string expansions and the &%condition%&
32713 condition in the ACL that runs after the SMTP DATA command or the ACL for
32714 non-SMTP messages (see chapter &<<CHAPACL>>&), but this has its limitations.
32715
32716 To allow for further customization to a site's own requirements, there is the
32717 possibility of linking Exim with a private message scanning function, written
32718 in C. If you want to run code that is written in something other than C, you
32719 can of course use a little C stub to call it.
32720
32721 The local scan function is run once for every incoming message, at the point
32722 when Exim is just about to accept the message.
32723 It can therefore be used to control non-SMTP messages from local processes as
32724 well as messages arriving via SMTP.
32725
32726 Exim applies a timeout to calls of the local scan function, and there is an
32727 option called &%local_scan_timeout%& for setting it. The default is 5 minutes.
32728 Zero means &"no timeout"&.
32729 Exim also sets up signal handlers for SIGSEGV, SIGILL, SIGFPE, and SIGBUS
32730 before calling the local scan function, so that the most common types of crash
32731 are caught. If the timeout is exceeded or one of those signals is caught, the
32732 incoming message is rejected with a temporary error if it is an SMTP message.
32733 For a non-SMTP message, the message is dropped and Exim ends with a non-zero
32734 code. The incident is logged on the main and reject logs.
32735
32736
32737
32738 .section "Building Exim to use a local scan function" "SECID207"
32739 .cindex "&[local_scan()]& function" "building Exim to use"
32740 To make use of the local scan function feature, you must tell Exim where your
32741 function is before building Exim, by setting
32742 .new
32743 both HAVE_LOCAL_SCAN and
32744 .wen
32745 LOCAL_SCAN_SOURCE in your
32746 &_Local/Makefile_&. A recommended place to put it is in the &_Local_&
32747 directory, so you might set
32748 .code
32749 HAVE_LOCAL_SCAN=yes
32750 LOCAL_SCAN_SOURCE=Local/local_scan.c
32751 .endd
32752 for example. The function must be called &[local_scan()]&. It is called by
32753 Exim after it has received a message, when the success return code is about to
32754 be sent. This is after all the ACLs have been run. The return code from your
32755 function controls whether the message is actually accepted or not. There is a
32756 commented template function (that just accepts the message) in the file
32757 _src/local_scan.c_.
32758
32759 If you want to make use of Exim's run time configuration file to set options
32760 for your &[local_scan()]& function, you must also set
32761 .code
32762 LOCAL_SCAN_HAS_OPTIONS=yes
32763 .endd
32764 in &_Local/Makefile_& (see section &<<SECTconoptloc>>& below).
32765
32766
32767
32768
32769 .section "API for local_scan()" "SECTapiforloc"
32770 .cindex "&[local_scan()]& function" "API description"
32771 You must include this line near the start of your code:
32772 .code
32773 #include "local_scan.h"
32774 .endd
32775 This header file defines a number of variables and other values, and the
32776 prototype for the function itself. Exim is coded to use unsigned char values
32777 almost exclusively, and one of the things this header defines is a shorthand
32778 for &`unsigned char`& called &`uschar`&.
32779 It also contains the following macro definitions, to simplify casting character
32780 strings and pointers to character strings:
32781 .code
32782 #define CS (char *)
32783 #define CCS (const char *)
32784 #define CSS (char **)
32785 #define US (unsigned char *)
32786 #define CUS (const unsigned char *)
32787 #define USS (unsigned char **)
32788 .endd
32789 The function prototype for &[local_scan()]& is:
32790 .code
32791 extern int local_scan(int fd, uschar **return_text);
32792 .endd
32793 The arguments are as follows:
32794
32795 .ilist
32796 &%fd%& is a file descriptor for the file that contains the body of the message
32797 (the -D file). The file is open for reading and writing, but updating it is not
32798 recommended. &*Warning*&: You must &'not'& close this file descriptor.
32799
32800 The descriptor is positioned at character 19 of the file, which is the first
32801 character of the body itself, because the first 19 characters are the message
32802 id followed by &`-D`& and a newline. If you rewind the file, you should use the
32803 macro SPOOL_DATA_START_OFFSET to reset to the start of the data, just in
32804 case this changes in some future version.
32805 .next
32806 &%return_text%& is an address which you can use to return a pointer to a text
32807 string at the end of the function. The value it points to on entry is NULL.
32808 .endlist
32809
32810 The function must return an &%int%& value which is one of the following macros:
32811
32812 .vlist
32813 .vitem &`LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT`&
32814 .vindex "&$local_scan_data$&"
32815 The message is accepted. If you pass back a string of text, it is saved with
32816 the message, and made available in the variable &$local_scan_data$&. No
32817 newlines are permitted (if there are any, they are turned into spaces) and the
32818 maximum length of text is 1000 characters.
32819
32820 .vitem &`LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT_FREEZE`&
32821 This behaves as LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT, except that the accepted message is
32822 queued without immediate delivery, and is frozen.
32823
32824 .vitem &`LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT_QUEUE`&
32825 This behaves as LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT, except that the accepted message is
32826 queued without immediate delivery.
32827
32828 .vitem &`LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT`&
32829 The message is rejected; the returned text is used as an error message which is
32830 passed back to the sender and which is also logged. Newlines are permitted &--
32831 they cause a multiline response for SMTP rejections, but are converted to
32832 &`\n`& in log lines. If no message is given, &"Administrative prohibition"& is
32833 used.
32834
32835 .vitem &`LOCAL_SCAN_TEMPREJECT`&
32836 The message is temporarily rejected; the returned text is used as an error
32837 message as for LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT. If no message is given, &"Temporary local
32838 problem"& is used.
32839
32840 .vitem &`LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT_NOLOGHDR`&
32841 This behaves as LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT, except that the header of the rejected
32842 message is not written to the reject log. It has the effect of unsetting the
32843 &%rejected_header%& log selector for just this rejection. If
32844 &%rejected_header%& is already unset (see the discussion of the
32845 &%log_selection%& option in section &<<SECTlogselector>>&), this code is the
32846 same as LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT.
32847
32848 .vitem &`LOCAL_SCAN_TEMPREJECT_NOLOGHDR`&
32849 This code is a variation of LOCAL_SCAN_TEMPREJECT in the same way that
32850 LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT_NOLOGHDR is a variation of LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT.
32851 .endlist
32852
32853 If the message is not being received by interactive SMTP, rejections are
32854 reported by writing to &%stderr%& or by sending an email, as configured by the
32855 &%-oe%& command line options.
32856
32857
32858
32859 .section "Configuration options for local_scan()" "SECTconoptloc"
32860 .cindex "&[local_scan()]& function" "configuration options"
32861 It is possible to have option settings in the main configuration file
32862 that set values in static variables in the &[local_scan()]& module. If you
32863 want to do this, you must have the line
32864 .code
32865 LOCAL_SCAN_HAS_OPTIONS=yes
32866 .endd
32867 in your &_Local/Makefile_& when you build Exim. (This line is in
32868 &_OS/Makefile-Default_&, commented out). Then, in the &[local_scan()]& source
32869 file, you must define static variables to hold the option values, and a table
32870 to define them.
32871
32872 The table must be a vector called &%local_scan_options%&, of type
32873 &`optionlist`&. Each entry is a triplet, consisting of a name, an option type,
32874 and a pointer to the variable that holds the value. The entries must appear in
32875 alphabetical order. Following &%local_scan_options%& you must also define a
32876 variable called &%local_scan_options_count%& that contains the number of
32877 entries in the table. Here is a short example, showing two kinds of option:
32878 .code
32879 static int my_integer_option = 42;
32880 static uschar *my_string_option = US"a default string";
32881
32882 optionlist local_scan_options[] = {
32883 { "my_integer", opt_int, &my_integer_option },
32884 { "my_string", opt_stringptr, &my_string_option }
32885 };
32886
32887 int local_scan_options_count =
32888 sizeof(local_scan_options)/sizeof(optionlist);
32889 .endd
32890 The values of the variables can now be changed from Exim's runtime
32891 configuration file by including a local scan section as in this example:
32892 .code
32893 begin local_scan
32894 my_integer = 99
32895 my_string = some string of text...
32896 .endd
32897 The available types of option data are as follows:
32898
32899 .vlist
32900 .vitem &*opt_bool*&
32901 This specifies a boolean (true/false) option. The address should point to a
32902 variable of type &`BOOL`&, which will be set to TRUE or FALSE, which are macros
32903 that are defined as &"1"& and &"0"&, respectively. If you want to detect
32904 whether such a variable has been set at all, you can initialize it to
32905 TRUE_UNSET. (BOOL variables are integers underneath, so can hold more than two
32906 values.)
32907
32908 .vitem &*opt_fixed*&
32909 This specifies a fixed point number, such as is used for load averages.
32910 The address should point to a variable of type &`int`&. The value is stored
32911 multiplied by 1000, so, for example, 1.4142 is truncated and stored as 1414.
32912
32913 .vitem &*opt_int*&
32914 This specifies an integer; the address should point to a variable of type
32915 &`int`&. The value may be specified in any of the integer formats accepted by
32916 Exim.
32917
32918 .vitem &*opt_mkint*&
32919 This is the same as &%opt_int%&, except that when such a value is output in a
32920 &%-bP%& listing, if it is an exact number of kilobytes or megabytes, it is
32921 printed with the suffix K or M.
32922
32923 .vitem &*opt_octint*&
32924 This also specifies an integer, but the value is always interpreted as an
32925 octal integer, whether or not it starts with the digit zero, and it is
32926 always output in octal.
32927
32928 .vitem &*opt_stringptr*&
32929 This specifies a string value; the address must be a pointer to a
32930 variable that points to a string (for example, of type &`uschar *`&).
32931
32932 .vitem &*opt_time*&
32933 This specifies a time interval value. The address must point to a variable of
32934 type &`int`&. The value that is placed there is a number of seconds.
32935 .endlist
32936
32937 If the &%-bP%& command line option is followed by &`local_scan`&, Exim prints
32938 out the values of all the &[local_scan()]& options.
32939
32940
32941
32942 .section "Available Exim variables" "SECID208"
32943 .cindex "&[local_scan()]& function" "available Exim variables"
32944 The header &_local_scan.h_& gives you access to a number of C variables. These
32945 are the only ones that are guaranteed to be maintained from release to release.
32946 Note, however, that you can obtain the value of any Exim expansion variable,
32947 including &$recipients$&, by calling &'expand_string()'&. The exported
32948 C variables are as follows:
32949
32950 .vlist
32951 .vitem &*int&~body_linecount*&
32952 This variable contains the number of lines in the message's body.
32953 It is not valid if the &%spool_files_wireformat%& option is used.
32954
32955 .vitem &*int&~body_zerocount*&
32956 This variable contains the number of binary zero bytes in the message's body.
32957 It is not valid if the &%spool_files_wireformat%& option is used.
32958
32959 .vitem &*unsigned&~int&~debug_selector*&
32960 This variable is set to zero when no debugging is taking place. Otherwise, it
32961 is a bitmap of debugging selectors. Two bits are identified for use in
32962 &[local_scan()]&; they are defined as macros:
32963
32964 .ilist
32965 The &`D_v`& bit is set when &%-v%& was present on the command line. This is a
32966 testing option that is not privileged &-- any caller may set it. All the
32967 other selector bits can be set only by admin users.
32968
32969 .next
32970 The &`D_local_scan`& bit is provided for use by &[local_scan()]&; it is set
32971 by the &`+local_scan`& debug selector. It is not included in the default set
32972 of debugging bits.
32973 .endlist ilist
32974
32975 Thus, to write to the debugging output only when &`+local_scan`& has been
32976 selected, you should use code like this:
32977 .code
32978 if ((debug_selector & D_local_scan) != 0)
32979 debug_printf("xxx", ...);
32980 .endd
32981 .vitem &*uschar&~*expand_string_message*&
32982 After a failing call to &'expand_string()'& (returned value NULL), the
32983 variable &%expand_string_message%& contains the error message, zero-terminated.
32984
32985 .vitem &*header_line&~*header_list*&
32986 A pointer to a chain of header lines. The &%header_line%& structure is
32987 discussed below.
32988
32989 .vitem &*header_line&~*header_last*&
32990 A pointer to the last of the header lines.
32991
32992 .vitem &*uschar&~*headers_charset*&
32993 The value of the &%headers_charset%& configuration option.
32994
32995 .vitem &*BOOL&~host_checking*&
32996 This variable is TRUE during a host checking session that is initiated by the
32997 &%-bh%& command line option.
32998
32999 .vitem &*uschar&~*interface_address*&
33000 The IP address of the interface that received the message, as a string. This
33001 is NULL for locally submitted messages.
33002
33003 .vitem &*int&~interface_port*&
33004 The port on which this message was received. When testing with the &%-bh%&
33005 command line option, the value of this variable is -1 unless a port has been
33006 specified via the &%-oMi%& option.
33007
33008 .vitem &*uschar&~*message_id*&
33009 This variable contains Exim's message id for the incoming message (the value of
33010 &$message_exim_id$&) as a zero-terminated string.
33011
33012 .vitem &*uschar&~*received_protocol*&
33013 The name of the protocol by which the message was received.
33014
33015 .vitem &*int&~recipients_count*&
33016 The number of accepted recipients.
33017
33018 .vitem &*recipient_item&~*recipients_list*&
33019 .cindex "recipient" "adding in local scan"
33020 .cindex "recipient" "removing in local scan"
33021 The list of accepted recipients, held in a vector of length
33022 &%recipients_count%&. The &%recipient_item%& structure is discussed below. You
33023 can add additional recipients by calling &'receive_add_recipient()'& (see
33024 below). You can delete recipients by removing them from the vector and
33025 adjusting the value in &%recipients_count%&. In particular, by setting
33026 &%recipients_count%& to zero you remove all recipients. If you then return the
33027 value &`LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT`&, the message is accepted, but immediately
33028 blackholed. To replace the recipients, you can set &%recipients_count%& to zero
33029 and then call &'receive_add_recipient()'& as often as needed.
33030
33031 .vitem &*uschar&~*sender_address*&
33032 The envelope sender address. For bounce messages this is the empty string.
33033
33034 .vitem &*uschar&~*sender_host_address*&
33035 The IP address of the sending host, as a string. This is NULL for
33036 locally-submitted messages.
33037
33038 .vitem &*uschar&~*sender_host_authenticated*&
33039 The name of the authentication mechanism that was used, or NULL if the message
33040 was not received over an authenticated SMTP connection.
33041
33042 .vitem &*uschar&~*sender_host_name*&
33043 The name of the sending host, if known.
33044
33045 .vitem &*int&~sender_host_port*&
33046 The port on the sending host.
33047
33048 .vitem &*BOOL&~smtp_input*&
33049 This variable is TRUE for all SMTP input, including BSMTP.
33050
33051 .vitem &*BOOL&~smtp_batched_input*&
33052 This variable is TRUE for BSMTP input.
33053
33054 .vitem &*int&~store_pool*&
33055 The contents of this variable control which pool of memory is used for new
33056 requests. See section &<<SECTmemhanloc>>& for details.
33057 .endlist
33058
33059
33060 .section "Structure of header lines" "SECID209"
33061 The &%header_line%& structure contains the members listed below.
33062 You can add additional header lines by calling the &'header_add()'& function
33063 (see below). You can cause header lines to be ignored (deleted) by setting
33064 their type to *.
33065
33066
33067 .vlist
33068 .vitem &*struct&~header_line&~*next*&
33069 A pointer to the next header line, or NULL for the last line.
33070
33071 .vitem &*int&~type*&
33072 A code identifying certain headers that Exim recognizes. The codes are printing
33073 characters, and are documented in chapter &<<CHAPspool>>& of this manual.
33074 Notice in particular that any header line whose type is * is not transmitted
33075 with the message. This flagging is used for header lines that have been
33076 rewritten, or are to be removed (for example, &'Envelope-sender:'& header
33077 lines.) Effectively, * means &"deleted"&.
33078
33079 .vitem &*int&~slen*&
33080 The number of characters in the header line, including the terminating and any
33081 internal newlines.
33082
33083 .vitem &*uschar&~*text*&
33084 A pointer to the text of the header. It always ends with a newline, followed by
33085 a zero byte. Internal newlines are preserved.
33086 .endlist
33087
33088
33089
33090 .section "Structure of recipient items" "SECID210"
33091 The &%recipient_item%& structure contains these members:
33092
33093 .vlist
33094 .vitem &*uschar&~*address*&
33095 This is a pointer to the recipient address as it was received.
33096
33097 .vitem &*int&~pno*&
33098 This is used in later Exim processing when top level addresses are created by
33099 the &%one_time%& option. It is not relevant at the time &[local_scan()]& is run
33100 and must always contain -1 at this stage.
33101
33102 .vitem &*uschar&~*errors_to*&
33103 If this value is not NULL, bounce messages caused by failing to deliver to the
33104 recipient are sent to the address it contains. In other words, it overrides the
33105 envelope sender for this one recipient. (Compare the &%errors_to%& generic
33106 router option.) If a &[local_scan()]& function sets an &%errors_to%& field to
33107 an unqualified address, Exim qualifies it using the domain from
33108 &%qualify_recipient%&. When &[local_scan()]& is called, the &%errors_to%& field
33109 is NULL for all recipients.
33110 .endlist
33111
33112
33113
33114 .section "Available Exim functions" "SECID211"
33115 .cindex "&[local_scan()]& function" "available Exim functions"
33116 The header &_local_scan.h_& gives you access to a number of Exim functions.
33117 These are the only ones that are guaranteed to be maintained from release to
33118 release:
33119
33120 .vlist
33121 .vitem "&*pid_t&~child_open(uschar&~**argv,&~uschar&~**envp,&~int&~newumask,&&&
33122 &~int&~*infdptr,&~int&~*outfdptr, &~&~BOOL&~make_leader)*&"
33123
33124 This function creates a child process that runs the command specified by
33125 &%argv%&. The environment for the process is specified by &%envp%&, which can
33126 be NULL if no environment variables are to be passed. A new umask is supplied
33127 for the process in &%newumask%&.
33128
33129 Pipes to the standard input and output of the new process are set up
33130 and returned to the caller via the &%infdptr%& and &%outfdptr%& arguments. The
33131 standard error is cloned to the standard output. If there are any file
33132 descriptors &"in the way"& in the new process, they are closed. If the final
33133 argument is TRUE, the new process is made into a process group leader.
33134
33135 The function returns the pid of the new process, or -1 if things go wrong.
33136
33137 .vitem &*int&~child_close(pid_t&~pid,&~int&~timeout)*&
33138 This function waits for a child process to terminate, or for a timeout (in
33139 seconds) to expire. A timeout value of zero means wait as long as it takes. The
33140 return value is as follows:
33141
33142 .ilist
33143 >= 0
33144
33145 The process terminated by a normal exit and the value is the process
33146 ending status.
33147
33148 .next
33149 < 0 and > &--256
33150
33151 The process was terminated by a signal and the value is the negation of the
33152 signal number.
33153
33154 .next
33155 &--256
33156
33157 The process timed out.
33158 .next
33159 &--257
33160
33161 The was some other error in wait(); &%errno%& is still set.
33162 .endlist
33163
33164 .vitem &*pid_t&~child_open_exim(int&~*fd)*&
33165 This function provide you with a means of submitting a new message to
33166 Exim. (Of course, you can also call &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_& yourself if you
33167 want, but this packages it all up for you.) The function creates a pipe,
33168 forks a subprocess that is running
33169 .code
33170 exim -t -oem -oi -f <>
33171 .endd
33172 and returns to you (via the &`int *`& argument) a file descriptor for the pipe
33173 that is connected to the standard input. The yield of the function is the PID
33174 of the subprocess. You can then write a message to the file descriptor, with
33175 recipients in &'To:'&, &'Cc:'&, and/or &'Bcc:'& header lines.
33176
33177 When you have finished, call &'child_close()'& to wait for the process to
33178 finish and to collect its ending status. A timeout value of zero is usually
33179 fine in this circumstance. Unless you have made a mistake with the recipient
33180 addresses, you should get a return code of zero.
33181
33182
33183 .vitem &*pid_t&~child_open_exim2(int&~*fd,&~uschar&~*sender,&~uschar&~&&&
33184 *sender_authentication)*&
33185 This function is a more sophisticated version of &'child_open()'&. The command
33186 that it runs is:
33187 .display
33188 &`exim -t -oem -oi -f `&&'sender'&&` -oMas `&&'sender_authentication'&
33189 .endd
33190 The third argument may be NULL, in which case the &%-oMas%& option is omitted.
33191
33192
33193 .vitem &*void&~debug_printf(char&~*,&~...)*&
33194 This is Exim's debugging function, with arguments as for &'(printf()'&. The
33195 output is written to the standard error stream. If no debugging is selected,
33196 calls to &'debug_printf()'& have no effect. Normally, you should make calls
33197 conditional on the &`local_scan`& debug selector by coding like this:
33198 .code
33199 if ((debug_selector & D_local_scan) != 0)
33200 debug_printf("xxx", ...);
33201 .endd
33202
33203 .vitem &*uschar&~*expand_string(uschar&~*string)*&
33204 This is an interface to Exim's string expansion code. The return value is the
33205 expanded string, or NULL if there was an expansion failure.
33206 The C variable &%expand_string_message%& contains an error message after an
33207 expansion failure. If expansion does not change the string, the return value is
33208 the pointer to the input string. Otherwise, the return value points to a new
33209 block of memory that was obtained by a call to &'store_get()'&. See section
33210 &<<SECTmemhanloc>>& below for a discussion of memory handling.
33211
33212 .vitem &*void&~header_add(int&~type,&~char&~*format,&~...)*&
33213 This function allows you to an add additional header line at the end of the
33214 existing ones. The first argument is the type, and should normally be a space
33215 character. The second argument is a format string and any number of
33216 substitution arguments as for &[sprintf()]&. You may include internal newlines
33217 if you want, and you must ensure that the string ends with a newline.
33218
33219 .vitem "&*void&~header_add_at_position(BOOL&~after,&~uschar&~*name,&~&&&
33220 BOOL&~topnot,&~int&~type,&~char&~*format, &~&~...)*&"
33221 This function adds a new header line at a specified point in the header
33222 chain. The header itself is specified as for &'header_add()'&.
33223
33224 If &%name%& is NULL, the new header is added at the end of the chain if
33225 &%after%& is true, or at the start if &%after%& is false. If &%name%& is not
33226 NULL, the header lines are searched for the first non-deleted header that
33227 matches the name. If one is found, the new header is added before it if
33228 &%after%& is false. If &%after%& is true, the new header is added after the
33229 found header and any adjacent subsequent ones with the same name (even if
33230 marked &"deleted"&). If no matching non-deleted header is found, the &%topnot%&
33231 option controls where the header is added. If it is true, addition is at the
33232 top; otherwise at the bottom. Thus, to add a header after all the &'Received:'&
33233 headers, or at the top if there are no &'Received:'& headers, you could use
33234 .code
33235 header_add_at_position(TRUE, US"Received", TRUE,
33236 ' ', "X-xxx: ...");
33237 .endd
33238 Normally, there is always at least one non-deleted &'Received:'& header, but
33239 there may not be if &%received_header_text%& expands to an empty string.
33240
33241
33242 .vitem &*void&~header_remove(int&~occurrence,&~uschar&~*name)*&
33243 This function removes header lines. If &%occurrence%& is zero or negative, all
33244 occurrences of the header are removed. If occurrence is greater than zero, that
33245 particular instance of the header is removed. If no header(s) can be found that
33246 match the specification, the function does nothing.
33247
33248
33249 .vitem "&*BOOL&~header_testname(header_line&~*hdr,&~uschar&~*name,&~&&&
33250 int&~length,&~BOOL&~notdel)*&"
33251 This function tests whether the given header has the given name. It is not just
33252 a string comparison, because white space is permitted between the name and the
33253 colon. If the &%notdel%& argument is true, a false return is forced for all
33254 &"deleted"& headers; otherwise they are not treated specially. For example:
33255 .code
33256 if (header_testname(h, US"X-Spam", 6, TRUE)) ...
33257 .endd
33258 .vitem &*uschar&~*lss_b64encode(uschar&~*cleartext,&~int&~length)*&
33259 .cindex "base64 encoding" "functions for &[local_scan()]& use"
33260 This function base64-encodes a string, which is passed by address and length.
33261 The text may contain bytes of any value, including zero. The result is passed
33262 back in dynamic memory that is obtained by calling &'store_get()'&. It is
33263 zero-terminated.
33264
33265 .vitem &*int&~lss_b64decode(uschar&~*codetext,&~uschar&~**cleartext)*&
33266 This function decodes a base64-encoded string. Its arguments are a
33267 zero-terminated base64-encoded string and the address of a variable that is set
33268 to point to the result, which is in dynamic memory. The length of the decoded
33269 string is the yield of the function. If the input is invalid base64 data, the
33270 yield is -1. A zero byte is added to the end of the output string to make it
33271 easy to interpret as a C string (assuming it contains no zeros of its own). The
33272 added zero byte is not included in the returned count.
33273
33274 .vitem &*int&~lss_match_domain(uschar&~*domain,&~uschar&~*list)*&
33275 This function checks for a match in a domain list. Domains are always
33276 matched caselessly. The return value is one of the following:
33277 .display
33278 &`OK `& match succeeded
33279 &`FAIL `& match failed
33280 &`DEFER `& match deferred
33281 .endd
33282 DEFER is usually caused by some kind of lookup defer, such as the
33283 inability to contact a database.
33284
33285 .vitem "&*int&~lss_match_local_part(uschar&~*localpart,&~uschar&~*list,&~&&&
33286 BOOL&~caseless)*&"
33287 This function checks for a match in a local part list. The third argument
33288 controls case-sensitivity. The return values are as for
33289 &'lss_match_domain()'&.
33290
33291 .vitem "&*int&~lss_match_address(uschar&~*address,&~uschar&~*list,&~&&&
33292 BOOL&~caseless)*&"
33293 This function checks for a match in an address list. The third argument
33294 controls the case-sensitivity of the local part match. The domain is always
33295 matched caselessly. The return values are as for &'lss_match_domain()'&.
33296
33297 .vitem "&*int&~lss_match_host(uschar&~*host_name,&~uschar&~*host_address,&~&&&
33298 uschar&~*list)*&"
33299 This function checks for a match in a host list. The most common usage is
33300 expected to be
33301 .code
33302 lss_match_host(sender_host_name, sender_host_address, ...)
33303 .endd
33304 .vindex "&$sender_host_address$&"
33305 An empty address field matches an empty item in the host list. If the host name
33306 is NULL, the name corresponding to &$sender_host_address$& is automatically
33307 looked up if a host name is required to match an item in the list. The return
33308 values are as for &'lss_match_domain()'&, but in addition, &'lss_match_host()'&
33309 returns ERROR in the case when it had to look up a host name, but the lookup
33310 failed.
33311
33312 .vitem "&*void&~log_write(unsigned&~int&~selector,&~int&~which,&~char&~&&&
33313 *format,&~...)*&"
33314 This function writes to Exim's log files. The first argument should be zero (it
33315 is concerned with &%log_selector%&). The second argument can be &`LOG_MAIN`& or
33316 &`LOG_REJECT`& or &`LOG_PANIC`& or the inclusive &"or"& of any combination of
33317 them. It specifies to which log or logs the message is written. The remaining
33318 arguments are a format and relevant insertion arguments. The string should not
33319 contain any newlines, not even at the end.
33320
33321
33322 .vitem &*void&~receive_add_recipient(uschar&~*address,&~int&~pno)*&
33323 This function adds an additional recipient to the message. The first argument
33324 is the recipient address. If it is unqualified (has no domain), it is qualified
33325 with the &%qualify_recipient%& domain. The second argument must always be -1.
33326
33327 This function does not allow you to specify a private &%errors_to%& address (as
33328 described with the structure of &%recipient_item%& above), because it pre-dates
33329 the addition of that field to the structure. However, it is easy to add such a
33330 value afterwards. For example:
33331 .code
33332 receive_add_recipient(US"monitor@mydom.example", -1);
33333 recipients_list[recipients_count-1].errors_to =
33334 US"postmaster@mydom.example";
33335 .endd
33336
33337 .vitem &*BOOL&~receive_remove_recipient(uschar&~*recipient)*&
33338 This is a convenience function to remove a named recipient from the list of
33339 recipients. It returns true if a recipient was removed, and false if no
33340 matching recipient could be found. The argument must be a complete email
33341 address.
33342 .endlist
33343
33344
33345 .cindex "RFC 2047"
33346 .vlist
33347 .vitem "&*uschar&~rfc2047_decode(uschar&~*string,&~BOOL&~lencheck,&&&
33348 &~uschar&~*target,&~int&~zeroval,&~int&~*lenptr, &~&~uschar&~**error)*&"
33349 This function decodes strings that are encoded according to RFC 2047. Typically
33350 these are the contents of header lines. First, each &"encoded word"& is decoded
33351 from the Q or B encoding into a byte-string. Then, if provided with the name of
33352 a charset encoding, and if the &[iconv()]& function is available, an attempt is
33353 made to translate the result to the named character set. If this fails, the
33354 binary string is returned with an error message.
33355
33356 The first argument is the string to be decoded. If &%lencheck%& is TRUE, the
33357 maximum MIME word length is enforced. The third argument is the target
33358 encoding, or NULL if no translation is wanted.
33359
33360 .cindex "binary zero" "in RFC 2047 decoding"
33361 .cindex "RFC 2047" "binary zero in"
33362 If a binary zero is encountered in the decoded string, it is replaced by the
33363 contents of the &%zeroval%& argument. For use with Exim headers, the value must
33364 not be 0 because header lines are handled as zero-terminated strings.
33365
33366 The function returns the result of processing the string, zero-terminated; if
33367 &%lenptr%& is not NULL, the length of the result is set in the variable to
33368 which it points. When &%zeroval%& is 0, &%lenptr%& should not be NULL.
33369
33370 If an error is encountered, the function returns NULL and uses the &%error%&
33371 argument to return an error message. The variable pointed to by &%error%& is
33372 set to NULL if there is no error; it may be set non-NULL even when the function
33373 returns a non-NULL value if decoding was successful, but there was a problem
33374 with translation.
33375
33376
33377 .vitem &*int&~smtp_fflush(void)*&
33378 This function is used in conjunction with &'smtp_printf()'&, as described
33379 below.
33380
33381 .vitem &*void&~smtp_printf(char&~*,&~...)*&
33382 The arguments of this function are like &[printf()]&; it writes to the SMTP
33383 output stream. You should use this function only when there is an SMTP output
33384 stream, that is, when the incoming message is being received via interactive
33385 SMTP. This is the case when &%smtp_input%& is TRUE and &%smtp_batched_input%&
33386 is FALSE. If you want to test for an incoming message from another host (as
33387 opposed to a local process that used the &%-bs%& command line option), you can
33388 test the value of &%sender_host_address%&, which is non-NULL when a remote host
33389 is involved.
33390
33391 If an SMTP TLS connection is established, &'smtp_printf()'& uses the TLS
33392 output function, so it can be used for all forms of SMTP connection.
33393
33394 Strings that are written by &'smtp_printf()'& from within &[local_scan()]&
33395 must start with an appropriate response code: 550 if you are going to return
33396 LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT, 451 if you are going to return
33397 LOCAL_SCAN_TEMPREJECT, and 250 otherwise. Because you are writing the
33398 initial lines of a multi-line response, the code must be followed by a hyphen
33399 to indicate that the line is not the final response line. You must also ensure
33400 that the lines you write terminate with CRLF. For example:
33401 .code
33402 smtp_printf("550-this is some extra info\r\n");
33403 return LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT;
33404 .endd
33405 Note that you can also create multi-line responses by including newlines in
33406 the data returned via the &%return_text%& argument. The added value of using
33407 &'smtp_printf()'& is that, for instance, you could introduce delays between
33408 multiple output lines.
33409
33410 The &'smtp_printf()'& function does not return any error indication, because it
33411 does not automatically flush pending output, and therefore does not test
33412 the state of the stream. (In the main code of Exim, flushing and error
33413 detection is done when Exim is ready for the next SMTP input command.) If
33414 you want to flush the output and check for an error (for example, the
33415 dropping of a TCP/IP connection), you can call &'smtp_fflush()'&, which has no
33416 arguments. It flushes the output stream, and returns a non-zero value if there
33417 is an error.
33418
33419 .vitem &*void&~*store_get(int)*&
33420 This function accesses Exim's internal store (memory) manager. It gets a new
33421 chunk of memory whose size is given by the argument. Exim bombs out if it ever
33422 runs out of memory. See the next section for a discussion of memory handling.
33423
33424 .vitem &*void&~*store_get_perm(int)*&
33425 This function is like &'store_get()'&, but it always gets memory from the
33426 permanent pool. See the next section for a discussion of memory handling.
33427
33428 .vitem &*uschar&~*string_copy(uschar&~*string)*&
33429 See below.
33430
33431 .vitem &*uschar&~*string_copyn(uschar&~*string,&~int&~length)*&
33432 See below.
33433
33434 .vitem &*uschar&~*string_sprintf(char&~*format,&~...)*&
33435 These three functions create strings using Exim's dynamic memory facilities.
33436 The first makes a copy of an entire string. The second copies up to a maximum
33437 number of characters, indicated by the second argument. The third uses a format
33438 and insertion arguments to create a new string. In each case, the result is a
33439 pointer to a new string in the current memory pool. See the next section for
33440 more discussion.
33441 .endlist
33442
33443
33444
33445 .section "More about Exim's memory handling" "SECTmemhanloc"
33446 .cindex "&[local_scan()]& function" "memory handling"
33447 No function is provided for freeing memory, because that is never needed.
33448 The dynamic memory that Exim uses when receiving a message is automatically
33449 recycled if another message is received by the same process (this applies only
33450 to incoming SMTP connections &-- other input methods can supply only one
33451 message at a time). After receiving the last message, a reception process
33452 terminates.
33453
33454 Because it is recycled, the normal dynamic memory cannot be used for holding
33455 data that must be preserved over a number of incoming messages on the same SMTP
33456 connection. However, Exim in fact uses two pools of dynamic memory; the second
33457 one is not recycled, and can be used for this purpose.
33458
33459 If you want to allocate memory that remains available for subsequent messages
33460 in the same SMTP connection, you should set
33461 .code
33462 store_pool = POOL_PERM
33463 .endd
33464 before calling the function that does the allocation. There is no need to
33465 restore the value if you do not need to; however, if you do want to revert to
33466 the normal pool, you can either restore the previous value of &%store_pool%& or
33467 set it explicitly to POOL_MAIN.
33468
33469 The pool setting applies to all functions that get dynamic memory, including
33470 &'expand_string()'&, &'store_get()'&, and the &'string_xxx()'& functions.
33471 There is also a convenience function called &'store_get_perm()'& that gets a
33472 block of memory from the permanent pool while preserving the value of
33473 &%store_pool%&.
33474 .ecindex IIDlosca
33475
33476
33477
33478
33479 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
33480 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
33481
33482 .chapter "System-wide message filtering" "CHAPsystemfilter"
33483 .scindex IIDsysfil1 "filter" "system filter"
33484 .scindex IIDsysfil2 "filtering all mail"
33485 .scindex IIDsysfil3 "system filter"
33486 The previous chapters (on ACLs and the local scan function) describe checks
33487 that can be applied to messages before they are accepted by a host. There is
33488 also a mechanism for checking messages once they have been received, but before
33489 they are delivered. This is called the &'system filter'&.
33490
33491 The system filter operates in a similar manner to users' filter files, but it
33492 is run just once per message (however many recipients the message has).
33493 It should not normally be used as a substitute for routing, because &%deliver%&
33494 commands in a system router provide new envelope recipient addresses.
33495 The system filter must be an Exim filter. It cannot be a Sieve filter.
33496
33497 The system filter is run at the start of a delivery attempt, before any routing
33498 is done. If a message fails to be completely delivered at the first attempt,
33499 the system filter is run again at the start of every retry.
33500 If you want your filter to do something only once per message, you can make use
33501 of the &%first_delivery%& condition in an &%if%& command in the filter to
33502 prevent it happening on retries.
33503
33504 .vindex "&$domain$&"
33505 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
33506 &*Warning*&: Because the system filter runs just once, variables that are
33507 specific to individual recipient addresses, such as &$local_part$& and
33508 &$domain$&, are not set, and the &"personal"& condition is not meaningful. If
33509 you want to run a centrally-specified filter for each recipient address
33510 independently, you can do so by setting up a suitable &(redirect)& router, as
33511 described in section &<<SECTperaddfil>>& below.
33512
33513
33514 .section "Specifying a system filter" "SECID212"
33515 .cindex "uid (user id)" "system filter"
33516 .cindex "gid (group id)" "system filter"
33517 The name of the file that contains the system filter must be specified by
33518 setting &%system_filter%&. If you want the filter to run under a uid and gid
33519 other than root, you must also set &%system_filter_user%& and
33520 &%system_filter_group%& as appropriate. For example:
33521 .code
33522 system_filter = /etc/mail/exim.filter
33523 system_filter_user = exim
33524 .endd
33525 If a system filter generates any deliveries directly to files or pipes (via the
33526 &%save%& or &%pipe%& commands), transports to handle these deliveries must be
33527 specified by setting &%system_filter_file_transport%& and
33528 &%system_filter_pipe_transport%&, respectively. Similarly,
33529 &%system_filter_reply_transport%& must be set to handle any messages generated
33530 by the &%reply%& command.
33531
33532
33533 .section "Testing a system filter" "SECID213"
33534 You can run simple tests of a system filter in the same way as for a user
33535 filter, but you should use &%-bF%& rather than &%-bf%&, so that features that
33536 are permitted only in system filters are recognized.
33537
33538 If you want to test the combined effect of a system filter and a user filter,
33539 you can use both &%-bF%& and &%-bf%& on the same command line.
33540
33541
33542
33543 .section "Contents of a system filter" "SECID214"
33544 The language used to specify system filters is the same as for users' filter
33545 files. It is described in the separate end-user document &'Exim's interface to
33546 mail filtering'&. However, there are some additional features that are
33547 available only in system filters; these are described in subsequent sections.
33548 If they are encountered in a user's filter file or when testing with &%-bf%&,
33549 they cause errors.
33550
33551 .cindex "frozen messages" "manual thaw; testing in filter"
33552 There are two special conditions which, though available in users' filter
33553 files, are designed for use in system filters. The condition &%first_delivery%&
33554 is true only for the first attempt at delivering a message, and
33555 &%manually_thawed%& is true only if the message has been frozen, and
33556 subsequently thawed by an admin user. An explicit forced delivery counts as a
33557 manual thaw, but thawing as a result of the &%auto_thaw%& setting does not.
33558
33559 &*Warning*&: If a system filter uses the &%first_delivery%& condition to
33560 specify an &"unseen"& (non-significant) delivery, and that delivery does not
33561 succeed, it will not be tried again.
33562 If you want Exim to retry an unseen delivery until it succeeds, you should
33563 arrange to set it up every time the filter runs.
33564
33565 When a system filter finishes running, the values of the variables &$n0$& &--
33566 &$n9$& are copied into &$sn0$& &-- &$sn9$& and are thereby made available to
33567 users' filter files. Thus a system filter can, for example, set up &"scores"&
33568 to which users' filter files can refer.
33569
33570
33571
33572 .section "Additional variable for system filters" "SECID215"
33573 .vindex "&$recipients$&"
33574 The expansion variable &$recipients$&, containing a list of all the recipients
33575 of the message (separated by commas and white space), is available in system
33576 filters. It is not available in users' filters for privacy reasons.
33577
33578
33579
33580 .section "Defer, freeze, and fail commands for system filters" "SECID216"
33581 .cindex "freezing messages"
33582 .cindex "message" "freezing"
33583 .cindex "message" "forced failure"
33584 .cindex "&%fail%&" "in system filter"
33585 .cindex "&%freeze%& in system filter"
33586 .cindex "&%defer%& in system filter"
33587 There are three extra commands (&%defer%&, &%freeze%& and &%fail%&) which are
33588 always available in system filters, but are not normally enabled in users'
33589 filters. (See the &%allow_defer%&, &%allow_freeze%& and &%allow_fail%& options
33590 for the &(redirect)& router.) These commands can optionally be followed by the
33591 word &%text%& and a string containing an error message, for example:
33592 .code
33593 fail text "this message looks like spam to me"
33594 .endd
33595 The keyword &%text%& is optional if the next character is a double quote.
33596
33597 The &%defer%& command defers delivery of the original recipients of the
33598 message. The &%fail%& command causes all the original recipients to be failed,
33599 and a bounce message to be created. The &%freeze%& command suspends all
33600 delivery attempts for the original recipients. In all cases, any new deliveries
33601 that are specified by the filter are attempted as normal after the filter has
33602 run.
33603
33604 The &%freeze%& command is ignored if the message has been manually unfrozen and
33605 not manually frozen since. This means that automatic freezing by a system
33606 filter can be used as a way of checking out suspicious messages. If a message
33607 is found to be all right, manually unfreezing it allows it to be delivered.
33608
33609 .cindex "log" "&%fail%& command log line"
33610 .cindex "&%fail%&" "log line; reducing"
33611 The text given with a fail command is used as part of the bounce message as
33612 well as being written to the log. If the message is quite long, this can fill
33613 up a lot of log space when such failures are common. To reduce the size of the
33614 log message, Exim interprets the text in a special way if it starts with the
33615 two characters &`<<`& and contains &`>>`& later. The text between these two
33616 strings is written to the log, and the rest of the text is used in the bounce
33617 message. For example:
33618 .code
33619 fail "<<filter test 1>>Your message is rejected \
33620 because it contains attachments that we are \
33621 not prepared to receive."
33622 .endd
33623
33624 .cindex "loop" "caused by &%fail%&"
33625 Take great care with the &%fail%& command when basing the decision to fail on
33626 the contents of the message, because the bounce message will of course include
33627 the contents of the original message and will therefore trigger the &%fail%&
33628 command again (causing a mail loop) unless steps are taken to prevent this.
33629 Testing the &%error_message%& condition is one way to prevent this. You could
33630 use, for example
33631 .code
33632 if $message_body contains "this is spam" and not error_message
33633 then fail text "spam is not wanted here" endif
33634 .endd
33635 though of course that might let through unwanted bounce messages. The
33636 alternative is clever checking of the body and/or headers to detect bounces
33637 generated by the filter.
33638
33639 The interpretation of a system filter file ceases after a
33640 &%defer%&,
33641 &%freeze%&, or &%fail%& command is obeyed. However, any deliveries that were
33642 set up earlier in the filter file are honoured, so you can use a sequence such
33643 as
33644 .code
33645 mail ...
33646 freeze
33647 .endd
33648 to send a specified message when the system filter is freezing (or deferring or
33649 failing) a message. The normal deliveries for the message do not, of course,
33650 take place.
33651
33652
33653
33654 .section "Adding and removing headers in a system filter" "SECTaddremheasys"
33655 .cindex "header lines" "adding; in system filter"
33656 .cindex "header lines" "removing; in system filter"
33657 .cindex "filter" "header lines; adding/removing"
33658 Two filter commands that are available only in system filters are:
33659 .code
33660 headers add <string>
33661 headers remove <string>
33662 .endd
33663 The argument for the &%headers add%& is a string that is expanded and then
33664 added to the end of the message's headers. It is the responsibility of the
33665 filter maintainer to make sure it conforms to RFC 2822 syntax. Leading white
33666 space is ignored, and if the string is otherwise empty, or if the expansion is
33667 forced to fail, the command has no effect.
33668
33669 You can use &"\n"& within the string, followed by white space, to specify
33670 continued header lines. More than one header may be added in one command by
33671 including &"\n"& within the string without any following white space. For
33672 example:
33673 .code
33674 headers add "X-header-1: ....\n \
33675 continuation of X-header-1 ...\n\
33676 X-header-2: ...."
33677 .endd
33678 Note that the header line continuation white space after the first newline must
33679 be placed before the backslash that continues the input string, because white
33680 space after input continuations is ignored.
33681
33682 The argument for &%headers remove%& is a colon-separated list of header names.
33683 This command applies only to those headers that are stored with the message;
33684 those that are added at delivery time (such as &'Envelope-To:'& and
33685 &'Return-Path:'&) cannot be removed by this means. If there is more than one
33686 header with the same name, they are all removed.
33687
33688 The &%headers%& command in a system filter makes an immediate change to the set
33689 of header lines that was received with the message (with possible additions
33690 from ACL processing). Subsequent commands in the system filter operate on the
33691 modified set, which also forms the basis for subsequent message delivery.
33692 Unless further modified during routing or transporting, this set of headers is
33693 used for all recipients of the message.
33694
33695 During routing and transporting, the variables that refer to the contents of
33696 header lines refer only to those lines that are in this set. Thus, header lines
33697 that are added by a system filter are visible to users' filter files and to all
33698 routers and transports. This contrasts with the manipulation of header lines by
33699 routers and transports, which is not immediate, but which instead is saved up
33700 until the message is actually being written (see section
33701 &<<SECTheadersaddrem>>&).
33702
33703 If the message is not delivered at the first attempt, header lines that were
33704 added by the system filter are stored with the message, and so are still
33705 present at the next delivery attempt. Header lines that were removed are still
33706 present, but marked &"deleted"& so that they are not transported with the
33707 message. For this reason, it is usual to make the &%headers%& command
33708 conditional on &%first_delivery%& so that the set of header lines is not
33709 modified more than once.
33710
33711 Because header modification in a system filter acts immediately, you have to
33712 use an indirect approach if you want to modify the contents of a header line.
33713 For example:
33714 .code
33715 headers add "Old-Subject: $h_subject:"
33716 headers remove "Subject"
33717 headers add "Subject: new subject (was: $h_old-subject:)"
33718 headers remove "Old-Subject"
33719 .endd
33720
33721
33722
33723 .section "Setting an errors address in a system filter" "SECID217"
33724 .cindex "envelope sender"
33725 In a system filter, if a &%deliver%& command is followed by
33726 .code
33727 errors_to <some address>
33728 .endd
33729 in order to change the envelope sender (and hence the error reporting) for that
33730 delivery, any address may be specified. (In a user filter, only the current
33731 user's address can be set.) For example, if some mail is being monitored, you
33732 might use
33733 .code
33734 unseen deliver monitor@spying.example errors_to root@local.example
33735 .endd
33736 to take a copy which would not be sent back to the normal error reporting
33737 address if its delivery failed.
33738
33739
33740
33741 .section "Per-address filtering" "SECTperaddfil"
33742 .vindex "&$domain$&"
33743 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
33744 In contrast to the system filter, which is run just once per message for each
33745 delivery attempt, it is also possible to set up a system-wide filtering
33746 operation that runs once for each recipient address. In this case, variables
33747 such as &$local_part$& and &$domain$& can be used, and indeed, the choice of
33748 filter file could be made dependent on them. This is an example of a router
33749 which implements such a filter:
33750 .code
33751 central_filter:
33752 check_local_user
33753 driver = redirect
33754 domains = +local_domains
33755 file = /central/filters/$local_part
33756 no_verify
33757 allow_filter
33758 allow_freeze
33759 .endd
33760 The filter is run in a separate process under its own uid. Therefore, either
33761 &%check_local_user%& must be set (as above), in which case the filter is run as
33762 the local user, or the &%user%& option must be used to specify which user to
33763 use. If both are set, &%user%& overrides.
33764
33765 Care should be taken to ensure that none of the commands in the filter file
33766 specify a significant delivery if the message is to go on to be delivered to
33767 its intended recipient. The router will not then claim to have dealt with the
33768 address, so it will be passed on to subsequent routers to be delivered in the
33769 normal way.
33770 .ecindex IIDsysfil1
33771 .ecindex IIDsysfil2
33772 .ecindex IIDsysfil3
33773
33774
33775
33776
33777
33778
33779 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
33780 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
33781
33782 .chapter "Message processing" "CHAPmsgproc"
33783 .scindex IIDmesproc "message" "general processing"
33784 Exim performs various transformations on the sender and recipient addresses of
33785 all messages that it handles, and also on the messages' header lines. Some of
33786 these are optional and configurable, while others always take place. All of
33787 this processing, except rewriting as a result of routing, and the addition or
33788 removal of header lines while delivering, happens when a message is received,
33789 before it is placed on Exim's queue.
33790
33791 Some of the automatic processing takes place by default only for
33792 &"locally-originated"& messages. This adjective is used to describe messages
33793 that are not received over TCP/IP, but instead are passed to an Exim process on
33794 its standard input. This includes the interactive &"local SMTP"& case that is
33795 set up by the &%-bs%& command line option.
33796
33797 &*Note*&: Messages received over TCP/IP on the loopback interface (127.0.0.1
33798 or ::1) are not considered to be locally-originated. Exim does not treat the
33799 loopback interface specially in any way.
33800
33801 If you want the loopback interface to be treated specially, you must ensure
33802 that there are appropriate entries in your ACLs.
33803
33804
33805
33806
33807 .section "Submission mode for non-local messages" "SECTsubmodnon"
33808 .cindex "message" "submission"
33809 .cindex "submission mode"
33810 Processing that happens automatically for locally-originated messages (unless
33811 &%suppress_local_fixups%& is set) can also be requested for messages that are
33812 received over TCP/IP. The term &"submission mode"& is used to describe this
33813 state. Submission mode is set by the modifier
33814 .code
33815 control = submission
33816 .endd
33817 in a MAIL, RCPT, or pre-data ACL for an incoming message (see sections
33818 &<<SECTACLmodi>>& and &<<SECTcontrols>>&). This makes Exim treat the message as
33819 a local submission, and is normally used when the source of the message is
33820 known to be an MUA running on a client host (as opposed to an MTA). For
33821 example, to set submission mode for messages originating on the IPv4 loopback
33822 interface, you could include the following in the MAIL ACL:
33823 .code
33824 warn hosts = 127.0.0.1
33825 control = submission
33826 .endd
33827 .cindex "&%sender_retain%& submission option"
33828 There are some options that can be used when setting submission mode. A slash
33829 is used to separate options. For example:
33830 .code
33831 control = submission/sender_retain
33832 .endd
33833 Specifying &%sender_retain%& has the effect of setting &%local_sender_retain%&
33834 true and &%local_from_check%& false for the current incoming message. The first
33835 of these allows an existing &'Sender:'& header in the message to remain, and
33836 the second suppresses the check to ensure that &'From:'& matches the
33837 authenticated sender. With this setting, Exim still fixes up messages by adding
33838 &'Date:'& and &'Message-ID:'& header lines if they are missing, but makes no
33839 attempt to check sender authenticity in header lines.
33840
33841 When &%sender_retain%& is not set, a submission mode setting may specify a
33842 domain to be used when generating a &'From:'& or &'Sender:'& header line. For
33843 example:
33844 .code
33845 control = submission/domain=some.domain
33846 .endd
33847 The domain may be empty. How this value is used is described in sections
33848 &<<SECTthefrohea>>& and &<<SECTthesenhea>>&. There is also a &%name%& option
33849 that allows you to specify the user's full name for inclusion in a created
33850 &'Sender:'& or &'From:'& header line. For example:
33851 .code
33852 accept authenticated = *
33853 control = submission/domain=wonderland.example/\
33854 name=${lookup {$authenticated_id} \
33855 lsearch {/etc/exim/namelist}}
33856 .endd
33857 Because the name may contain any characters, including slashes, the &%name%&
33858 option must be given last. The remainder of the string is used as the name. For
33859 the example above, if &_/etc/exim/namelist_& contains:
33860 .code
33861 bigegg: Humpty Dumpty
33862 .endd
33863 then when the sender has authenticated as &'bigegg'&, the generated &'Sender:'&
33864 line would be:
33865 .code
33866 Sender: Humpty Dumpty <bigegg@wonderland.example>
33867 .endd
33868 .cindex "return path" "in submission mode"
33869 By default, submission mode forces the return path to the same address as is
33870 used to create the &'Sender:'& header. However, if &%sender_retain%& is
33871 specified, the return path is also left unchanged.
33872
33873 &*Note*&: The changes caused by submission mode take effect after the predata
33874 ACL. This means that any sender checks performed before the fix-ups use the
33875 untrusted sender address specified by the user, not the trusted sender address
33876 specified by submission mode. Although this might be slightly unexpected, it
33877 does mean that you can configure ACL checks to spot that a user is trying to
33878 spoof another's address.
33879
33880 .section "Line endings" "SECTlineendings"
33881 .cindex "line endings"
33882 .cindex "carriage return"
33883 .cindex "linefeed"
33884 RFC 2821 specifies that CRLF (two characters: carriage-return, followed by
33885 linefeed) is the line ending for messages transmitted over the Internet using
33886 SMTP over TCP/IP. However, within individual operating systems, different
33887 conventions are used. For example, Unix-like systems use just LF, but others
33888 use CRLF or just CR.
33889
33890 Exim was designed for Unix-like systems, and internally, it stores messages
33891 using the system's convention of a single LF as a line terminator. When
33892 receiving a message, all line endings are translated to this standard format.
33893 Originally, it was thought that programs that passed messages directly to an
33894 MTA within an operating system would use that system's convention. Experience
33895 has shown that this is not the case; for example, there are Unix applications
33896 that use CRLF in this circumstance. For this reason, and for compatibility with
33897 other MTAs, the way Exim handles line endings for all messages is now as
33898 follows:
33899
33900 .ilist
33901 LF not preceded by CR is treated as a line ending.
33902 .next
33903 CR is treated as a line ending; if it is immediately followed by LF, the LF
33904 is ignored.
33905 .next
33906 The sequence &"CR, dot, CR"& does not terminate an incoming SMTP message,
33907 nor a local message in the state where a line containing only a dot is a
33908 terminator.
33909 .next
33910 If a bare CR is encountered within a header line, an extra space is added after
33911 the line terminator so as not to end the header line. The reasoning behind this
33912 is that bare CRs in header lines are most likely either to be mistakes, or
33913 people trying to play silly games.
33914 .next
33915 If the first header line received in a message ends with CRLF, a subsequent
33916 bare LF in a header line is treated in the same way as a bare CR in a header
33917 line.
33918 .endlist
33919
33920
33921
33922
33923
33924 .section "Unqualified addresses" "SECID218"
33925 .cindex "unqualified addresses"
33926 .cindex "address" "qualification"
33927 By default, Exim expects every envelope address it receives from an external
33928 host to be fully qualified. Unqualified addresses cause negative responses to
33929 SMTP commands. However, because SMTP is used as a means of transporting
33930 messages from MUAs running on personal workstations, there is sometimes a
33931 requirement to accept unqualified addresses from specific hosts or IP networks.
33932
33933 Exim has two options that separately control which hosts may send unqualified
33934 sender or recipient addresses in SMTP commands, namely
33935 &%sender_unqualified_hosts%& and &%recipient_unqualified_hosts%&. In both
33936 cases, if an unqualified address is accepted, it is qualified by adding the
33937 value of &%qualify_domain%& or &%qualify_recipient%&, as appropriate.
33938
33939 .oindex "&%qualify_domain%&"
33940 .oindex "&%qualify_recipient%&"
33941 Unqualified addresses in header lines are automatically qualified for messages
33942 that are locally originated, unless the &%-bnq%& option is given on the command
33943 line. For messages received over SMTP, unqualified addresses in header lines
33944 are qualified only if unqualified addresses are permitted in SMTP commands. In
33945 other words, such qualification is also controlled by
33946 &%sender_unqualified_hosts%& and &%recipient_unqualified_hosts%&,
33947
33948
33949
33950
33951 .section "The UUCP From line" "SECID219"
33952 .cindex "&""From""& line"
33953 .cindex "UUCP" "&""From""& line"
33954 .cindex "sender" "address"
33955 .oindex "&%uucp_from_pattern%&"
33956 .oindex "&%uucp_from_sender%&"
33957 .cindex "envelope sender"
33958 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&""From""& line"
33959 Messages that have come from UUCP (and some other applications) often begin
33960 with a line containing the envelope sender and a timestamp, following the word
33961 &"From"&. Examples of two common formats are:
33962 .code
33963 From a.oakley@berlin.mus Fri Jan 5 12:35 GMT 1996
33964 From f.butler@berlin.mus Fri, 7 Jan 97 14:00:00 GMT
33965 .endd
33966 This line precedes the RFC 2822 header lines. For compatibility with Sendmail,
33967 Exim recognizes such lines at the start of messages that are submitted to it
33968 via the command line (that is, on the standard input). It does not recognize
33969 such lines in incoming SMTP messages, unless the sending host matches
33970 &%ignore_fromline_hosts%& or the &%-bs%& option was used for a local message
33971 and &%ignore_fromline_local%& is set. The recognition is controlled by a
33972 regular expression that is defined by the &%uucp_from_pattern%& option, whose
33973 default value matches the two common cases shown above and puts the address
33974 that follows &"From"& into &$1$&.
33975
33976 .cindex "numerical variables (&$1$& &$2$& etc)" "in &""From ""& line handling"
33977 When the caller of Exim for a non-SMTP message that contains a &"From"& line is
33978 a trusted user, the message's sender address is constructed by expanding the
33979 contents of &%uucp_sender_address%&, whose default value is &"$1"&. This is
33980 then parsed as an RFC 2822 address. If there is no domain, the local part is
33981 qualified with &%qualify_domain%& unless it is the empty string. However, if
33982 the command line &%-f%& option is used, it overrides the &"From"& line.
33983
33984 If the caller of Exim is not trusted, the &"From"& line is recognized, but the
33985 sender address is not changed. This is also the case for incoming SMTP messages
33986 that are permitted to contain &"From"& lines.
33987
33988 Only one &"From"& line is recognized. If there is more than one, the second is
33989 treated as a data line that starts the body of the message, as it is not valid
33990 as a header line. This also happens if a &"From"& line is present in an
33991 incoming SMTP message from a source that is not permitted to send them.
33992
33993
33994
33995 .section "Resent- header lines" "SECID220"
33996 .cindex "&%Resent-%& header lines"
33997 .cindex "header lines" "Resent-"
33998 RFC 2822 makes provision for sets of header lines starting with the string
33999 &`Resent-`& to be added to a message when it is resent by the original
34000 recipient to somebody else. These headers are &'Resent-Date:'&,
34001 &'Resent-From:'&, &'Resent-Sender:'&, &'Resent-To:'&, &'Resent-Cc:'&,
34002 &'Resent-Bcc:'& and &'Resent-Message-ID:'&. The RFC says:
34003
34004 .blockquote
34005 &'Resent fields are strictly informational. They MUST NOT be used in the normal
34006 processing of replies or other such automatic actions on messages.'&
34007 .endblockquote
34008
34009 This leaves things a bit vague as far as other processing actions such as
34010 address rewriting are concerned. Exim treats &%Resent-%& header lines as
34011 follows:
34012
34013 .ilist
34014 A &'Resent-From:'& line that just contains the login id of the submitting user
34015 is automatically rewritten in the same way as &'From:'& (see below).
34016 .next
34017 If there's a rewriting rule for a particular header line, it is also applied to
34018 &%Resent-%& header lines of the same type. For example, a rule that rewrites
34019 &'From:'& also rewrites &'Resent-From:'&.
34020 .next
34021 For local messages, if &'Sender:'& is removed on input, &'Resent-Sender:'& is
34022 also removed.
34023 .next
34024 For a locally-submitted message,
34025 if there are any &%Resent-%& header lines but no &'Resent-Date:'&,
34026 &'Resent-From:'&, or &'Resent-Message-Id:'&, they are added as necessary. It is
34027 the contents of &'Resent-Message-Id:'& (rather than &'Message-Id:'&) which are
34028 included in log lines in this case.
34029 .next
34030 The logic for adding &'Sender:'& is duplicated for &'Resent-Sender:'& when any
34031 &%Resent-%& header lines are present.
34032 .endlist
34033
34034
34035
34036
34037 .section "The Auto-Submitted: header line" "SECID221"
34038 Whenever Exim generates an autoreply, a bounce, or a delay warning message, it
34039 includes the header line:
34040 .code
34041 Auto-Submitted: auto-replied
34042 .endd
34043
34044 .section "The Bcc: header line" "SECID222"
34045 .cindex "&'Bcc:'& header line"
34046 If Exim is called with the &%-t%& option, to take recipient addresses from a
34047 message's header, it removes any &'Bcc:'& header line that may exist (after
34048 extracting its addresses). If &%-t%& is not present on the command line, any
34049 existing &'Bcc:'& is not removed.
34050
34051
34052 .section "The Date: header line" "SECID223"
34053 .cindex "&'Date:'& header line"
34054 .cindex "header lines" "Date:"
34055 If a locally-generated or submission-mode message has no &'Date:'& header line,
34056 Exim adds one, using the current date and time, unless the
34057 &%suppress_local_fixups%& control has been specified.
34058
34059 .section "The Delivery-date: header line" "SECID224"
34060 .cindex "&'Delivery-date:'& header line"
34061 .oindex "&%delivery_date_remove%&"
34062 &'Delivery-date:'& header lines are not part of the standard RFC 2822 header
34063 set. Exim can be configured to add them to the final delivery of messages. (See
34064 the generic &%delivery_date_add%& transport option.) They should not be present
34065 in messages in transit. If the &%delivery_date_remove%& configuration option is
34066 set (the default), Exim removes &'Delivery-date:'& header lines from incoming
34067 messages.
34068
34069
34070 .section "The Envelope-to: header line" "SECID225"
34071 .cindex "&'Envelope-to:'& header line"
34072 .cindex "header lines" "Envelope-to:"
34073 .oindex "&%envelope_to_remove%&"
34074 &'Envelope-to:'& header lines are not part of the standard RFC 2822 header set.
34075 Exim can be configured to add them to the final delivery of messages. (See the
34076 generic &%envelope_to_add%& transport option.) They should not be present in
34077 messages in transit. If the &%envelope_to_remove%& configuration option is set
34078 (the default), Exim removes &'Envelope-to:'& header lines from incoming
34079 messages.
34080
34081
34082 .section "The From: header line" "SECTthefrohea"
34083 .cindex "&'From:'& header line"
34084 .cindex "header lines" "From:"
34085 .cindex "Sendmail compatibility" "&""From""& line"
34086 .cindex "message" "submission"
34087 .cindex "submission mode"
34088 If a submission-mode message does not contain a &'From:'& header line, Exim
34089 adds one if either of the following conditions is true:
34090
34091 .ilist
34092 The envelope sender address is not empty (that is, this is not a bounce
34093 message). The added header line copies the envelope sender address.
34094 .next
34095 .vindex "&$authenticated_id$&"
34096 The SMTP session is authenticated and &$authenticated_id$& is not empty.
34097 .olist
34098 .vindex "&$qualify_domain$&"
34099 If no domain is specified by the submission control, the local part is
34100 &$authenticated_id$& and the domain is &$qualify_domain$&.
34101 .next
34102 If a non-empty domain is specified by the submission control, the local
34103 part is &$authenticated_id$&, and the domain is the specified domain.
34104 .next
34105 If an empty domain is specified by the submission control,
34106 &$authenticated_id$& is assumed to be the complete address.
34107 .endlist
34108 .endlist
34109
34110 A non-empty envelope sender takes precedence.
34111
34112 If a locally-generated incoming message does not contain a &'From:'& header
34113 line, and the &%suppress_local_fixups%& control is not set, Exim adds one
34114 containing the sender's address. The calling user's login name and full name
34115 are used to construct the address, as described in section &<<SECTconstr>>&.
34116 They are obtained from the password data by calling &[getpwuid()]& (but see the
34117 &%unknown_login%& configuration option). The address is qualified with
34118 &%qualify_domain%&.
34119
34120 For compatibility with Sendmail, if an incoming, non-SMTP message has a
34121 &'From:'& header line containing just the unqualified login name of the calling
34122 user, this is replaced by an address containing the user's login name and full
34123 name as described in section &<<SECTconstr>>&.
34124
34125
34126 .section "The Message-ID: header line" "SECID226"
34127 .cindex "&'Message-ID:'& header line"
34128 .cindex "header lines" "Message-ID:"
34129 .cindex "message" "submission"
34130 .oindex "&%message_id_header_text%&"
34131 If a locally-generated or submission-mode incoming message does not contain a
34132 &'Message-ID:'& or &'Resent-Message-ID:'& header line, and the
34133 &%suppress_local_fixups%& control is not set, Exim adds a suitable header line
34134 to the message. If there are any &'Resent-:'& headers in the message, it
34135 creates &'Resent-Message-ID:'&. The id is constructed from Exim's internal
34136 message id, preceded by the letter E to ensure it starts with a letter, and
34137 followed by @ and the primary host name. Additional information can be included
34138 in this header line by setting the &%message_id_header_text%& and/or
34139 &%message_id_header_domain%& options.
34140
34141
34142 .section "The Received: header line" "SECID227"
34143 .cindex "&'Received:'& header line"
34144 .cindex "header lines" "Received:"
34145 A &'Received:'& header line is added at the start of every message. The
34146 contents are defined by the &%received_header_text%& configuration option, and
34147 Exim automatically adds a semicolon and a timestamp to the configured string.
34148
34149 The &'Received:'& header is generated as soon as the message's header lines
34150 have been received. At this stage, the timestamp in the &'Received:'& header
34151 line is the time that the message started to be received. This is the value
34152 that is seen by the DATA ACL and by the &[local_scan()]& function.
34153
34154 Once a message is accepted, the timestamp in the &'Received:'& header line is
34155 changed to the time of acceptance, which is (apart from a small delay while the
34156 -H spool file is written) the earliest time at which delivery could start.
34157
34158
34159 .section "The References: header line" "SECID228"
34160 .cindex "&'References:'& header line"
34161 .cindex "header lines" "References:"
34162 Messages created by the &(autoreply)& transport include a &'References:'&
34163 header line. This is constructed according to the rules that are described in
34164 section 3.64 of RFC 2822 (which states that replies should contain such a
34165 header line), and section 3.14 of RFC 3834 (which states that automatic
34166 responses are not different in this respect). However, because some mail
34167 processing software does not cope well with very long header lines, no more
34168 than 12 message IDs are copied from the &'References:'& header line in the
34169 incoming message. If there are more than 12, the first one and then the final
34170 11 are copied, before adding the message ID of the incoming message.
34171
34172
34173
34174 .section "The Return-path: header line" "SECID229"
34175 .cindex "&'Return-path:'& header line"
34176 .cindex "header lines" "Return-path:"
34177 .oindex "&%return_path_remove%&"
34178 &'Return-path:'& header lines are defined as something an MTA may insert when
34179 it does the final delivery of messages. (See the generic &%return_path_add%&
34180 transport option.) Therefore, they should not be present in messages in
34181 transit. If the &%return_path_remove%& configuration option is set (the
34182 default), Exim removes &'Return-path:'& header lines from incoming messages.
34183
34184
34185
34186 .section "The Sender: header line" "SECTthesenhea"
34187 .cindex "&'Sender:'& header line"
34188 .cindex "message" "submission"
34189 .cindex "header lines" "Sender:"
34190 For a locally-originated message from an untrusted user, Exim may remove an
34191 existing &'Sender:'& header line, and it may add a new one. You can modify
34192 these actions by setting the &%local_sender_retain%& option true, the
34193 &%local_from_check%& option false, or by using the &%suppress_local_fixups%&
34194 control setting.
34195
34196 When a local message is received from an untrusted user and
34197 &%local_from_check%& is true (the default), and the &%suppress_local_fixups%&
34198 control has not been set, a check is made to see if the address given in the
34199 &'From:'& header line is the correct (local) sender of the message. The address
34200 that is expected has the login name as the local part and the value of
34201 &%qualify_domain%& as the domain. Prefixes and suffixes for the local part can
34202 be permitted by setting &%local_from_prefix%& and &%local_from_suffix%&
34203 appropriately. If &'From:'& does not contain the correct sender, a &'Sender:'&
34204 line is added to the message.
34205
34206 If you set &%local_from_check%& false, this checking does not occur. However,
34207 the removal of an existing &'Sender:'& line still happens, unless you also set
34208 &%local_sender_retain%& to be true. It is not possible to set both of these
34209 options true at the same time.
34210
34211 .cindex "submission mode"
34212 By default, no processing of &'Sender:'& header lines is done for messages
34213 received over TCP/IP or for messages submitted by trusted users. However, when
34214 a message is received over TCP/IP in submission mode, and &%sender_retain%& is
34215 not specified on the submission control, the following processing takes place:
34216
34217 .vindex "&$authenticated_id$&"
34218 First, any existing &'Sender:'& lines are removed. Then, if the SMTP session is
34219 authenticated, and &$authenticated_id$& is not empty, a sender address is
34220 created as follows:
34221
34222 .ilist
34223 .vindex "&$qualify_domain$&"
34224 If no domain is specified by the submission control, the local part is
34225 &$authenticated_id$& and the domain is &$qualify_domain$&.
34226 .next
34227 If a non-empty domain is specified by the submission control, the local part
34228 is &$authenticated_id$&, and the domain is the specified domain.
34229 .next
34230 If an empty domain is specified by the submission control,
34231 &$authenticated_id$& is assumed to be the complete address.
34232 .endlist
34233
34234 This address is compared with the address in the &'From:'& header line. If they
34235 are different, a &'Sender:'& header line containing the created address is
34236 added. Prefixes and suffixes for the local part in &'From:'& can be permitted
34237 by setting &%local_from_prefix%& and &%local_from_suffix%& appropriately.
34238
34239 .cindex "return path" "created from &'Sender:'&"
34240 &*Note*&: Whenever a &'Sender:'& header line is created, the return path for
34241 the message (the envelope sender address) is changed to be the same address,
34242 except in the case of submission mode when &%sender_retain%& is specified.
34243
34244
34245
34246 .section "Adding and removing header lines in routers and transports" &&&
34247 "SECTheadersaddrem"
34248 .cindex "header lines" "adding; in router or transport"
34249 .cindex "header lines" "removing; in router or transport"
34250 When a message is delivered, the addition and removal of header lines can be
34251 specified in a system filter, or on any of the routers and transports that
34252 process the message. Section &<<SECTaddremheasys>>& contains details about
34253 modifying headers in a system filter. Header lines can also be added in an ACL
34254 as a message is received (see section &<<SECTaddheadacl>>&).
34255
34256 In contrast to what happens in a system filter, header modifications that are
34257 specified on routers and transports apply only to the particular recipient
34258 addresses that are being processed by those routers and transports. These
34259 changes do not actually take place until a copy of the message is being
34260 transported. Therefore, they do not affect the basic set of header lines, and
34261 they do not affect the values of the variables that refer to header lines.
34262
34263 &*Note*&: In particular, this means that any expansions in the configuration of
34264 the transport cannot refer to the modified header lines, because such
34265 expansions all occur before the message is actually transported.
34266
34267 For both routers and transports, the argument of a &%headers_add%&
34268 option must be in the form of one or more RFC 2822 header lines, separated by
34269 newlines (coded as &"\n"&). For example:
34270 .code
34271 headers_add = X-added-header: added by $primary_hostname\n\
34272 X-added-second: another added header line
34273 .endd
34274 Exim does not check the syntax of these added header lines.
34275
34276 Multiple &%headers_add%& options for a single router or transport can be
34277 specified; the values will append to a single list of header lines.
34278 Each header-line is separately expanded.
34279
34280 The argument of a &%headers_remove%& option must consist of a colon-separated
34281 list of header names. This is confusing, because header names themselves are
34282 often terminated by colons. In this case, the colons are the list separators,
34283 not part of the names. For example:
34284 .code
34285 headers_remove = return-receipt-to:acknowledge-to
34286 .endd
34287
34288 Multiple &%headers_remove%& options for a single router or transport can be
34289 specified; the arguments will append to a single header-names list.
34290 Each item is separately expanded.
34291 Note that colons in complex expansions which are used to
34292 form all or part of a &%headers_remove%& list
34293 will act as list separators.
34294
34295 When &%headers_add%& or &%headers_remove%& is specified on a router,
34296 items are expanded at routing time,
34297 and then associated with all addresses that are
34298 accepted by that router, and also with any new addresses that it generates. If
34299 an address passes through several routers as a result of aliasing or
34300 forwarding, the changes are cumulative.
34301
34302 .oindex "&%unseen%&"
34303 However, this does not apply to multiple routers that result from the use of
34304 the &%unseen%& option. Any header modifications that were specified by the
34305 &"unseen"& router or its predecessors apply only to the &"unseen"& delivery.
34306
34307 Addresses that end up with different &%headers_add%& or &%headers_remove%&
34308 settings cannot be delivered together in a batch, so a transport is always
34309 dealing with a set of addresses that have the same header-processing
34310 requirements.
34311
34312 The transport starts by writing the original set of header lines that arrived
34313 with the message, possibly modified by the system filter. As it writes out
34314 these lines, it consults the list of header names that were attached to the
34315 recipient address(es) by &%headers_remove%& options in routers, and it also
34316 consults the transport's own &%headers_remove%& option. Header lines whose
34317 names are on either of these lists are not written out. If there are multiple
34318 instances of any listed header, they are all skipped.
34319
34320 After the remaining original header lines have been written, new header
34321 lines that were specified by routers' &%headers_add%& options are written, in
34322 the order in which they were attached to the address. These are followed by any
34323 header lines specified by the transport's &%headers_add%& option.
34324
34325 This way of handling header line modifications in routers and transports has
34326 the following consequences:
34327
34328 .ilist
34329 The original set of header lines, possibly modified by the system filter,
34330 remains &"visible"&, in the sense that the &$header_$&&'xxx'& variables refer
34331 to it, at all times.
34332 .next
34333 Header lines that are added by a router's
34334 &%headers_add%& option are not accessible by means of the &$header_$&&'xxx'&
34335 expansion syntax in subsequent routers or the transport.
34336 .next
34337 Conversely, header lines that are specified for removal by &%headers_remove%&
34338 in a router remain visible to subsequent routers and the transport.
34339 .next
34340 Headers added to an address by &%headers_add%& in a router cannot be removed by
34341 a later router or by a transport.
34342 .next
34343 An added header can refer to the contents of an original header that is to be
34344 removed, even it has the same name as the added header. For example:
34345 .code
34346 headers_remove = subject
34347 headers_add = Subject: new subject (was: $h_subject:)
34348 .endd
34349 .endlist
34350
34351 &*Warning*&: The &%headers_add%& and &%headers_remove%& options cannot be used
34352 for a &(redirect)& router that has the &%one_time%& option set.
34353
34354
34355
34356
34357
34358 .section "Constructed addresses" "SECTconstr"
34359 .cindex "address" "constructed"
34360 .cindex "constructed address"
34361 When Exim constructs a sender address for a locally-generated message, it uses
34362 the form
34363 .display
34364 <&'user name'&>&~&~<&'login'&&`@`&&'qualify_domain'&>
34365 .endd
34366 For example:
34367 .code
34368 Zaphod Beeblebrox <zaphod@end.univ.example>
34369 .endd
34370 The user name is obtained from the &%-F%& command line option if set, or
34371 otherwise by looking up the calling user by &[getpwuid()]& and extracting the
34372 &"gecos"& field from the password entry. If the &"gecos"& field contains an
34373 ampersand character, this is replaced by the login name with the first letter
34374 upper cased, as is conventional in a number of operating systems. See the
34375 &%gecos_name%& option for a way to tailor the handling of the &"gecos"& field.
34376 The &%unknown_username%& option can be used to specify user names in cases when
34377 there is no password file entry.
34378
34379 .cindex "RFC 2047"
34380 In all cases, the user name is made to conform to RFC 2822 by quoting all or
34381 parts of it if necessary. In addition, if it contains any non-printing
34382 characters, it is encoded as described in RFC 2047, which defines a way of
34383 including non-ASCII characters in header lines. The value of the
34384 &%headers_charset%& option specifies the name of the encoding that is used (the
34385 characters are assumed to be in this encoding). The setting of
34386 &%print_topbitchars%& controls whether characters with the top bit set (that
34387 is, with codes greater than 127) count as printing characters or not.
34388
34389
34390
34391 .section "Case of local parts" "SECID230"
34392 .cindex "case of local parts"
34393 .cindex "local part" "case of"
34394 RFC 2822 states that the case of letters in the local parts of addresses cannot
34395 be assumed to be non-significant. Exim preserves the case of local parts of
34396 addresses, but by default it uses a lower-cased form when it is routing,
34397 because on most Unix systems, usernames are in lower case and case-insensitive
34398 routing is required. However, any particular router can be made to use the
34399 original case for local parts by setting the &%caseful_local_part%& generic
34400 router option.
34401
34402 .cindex "mixed-case login names"
34403 If you must have mixed-case user names on your system, the best way to proceed,
34404 assuming you want case-independent handling of incoming email, is to set up
34405 your first router to convert incoming local parts in your domains to the
34406 correct case by means of a file lookup. For example:
34407 .code
34408 correct_case:
34409 driver = redirect
34410 domains = +local_domains
34411 data = ${lookup{$local_part}cdb\
34412 {/etc/usercased.cdb}{$value}fail}\
34413 @$domain
34414 .endd
34415 For this router, the local part is forced to lower case by the default action
34416 (&%caseful_local_part%& is not set). The lower-cased local part is used to look
34417 up a new local part in the correct case. If you then set &%caseful_local_part%&
34418 on any subsequent routers which process your domains, they will operate on
34419 local parts with the correct case in a case-sensitive manner.
34420
34421
34422
34423 .section "Dots in local parts" "SECID231"
34424 .cindex "dot" "in local part"
34425 .cindex "local part" "dots in"
34426 RFC 2822 forbids empty components in local parts. That is, an unquoted local
34427 part may not begin or end with a dot, nor have two consecutive dots in the
34428 middle. However, it seems that many MTAs do not enforce this, so Exim permits
34429 empty components for compatibility.
34430
34431
34432
34433 .section "Rewriting addresses" "SECID232"
34434 .cindex "rewriting" "addresses"
34435 Rewriting of sender and recipient addresses, and addresses in headers, can
34436 happen automatically, or as the result of configuration options, as described
34437 in chapter &<<CHAPrewrite>>&. The headers that may be affected by this are
34438 &'Bcc:'&, &'Cc:'&, &'From:'&, &'Reply-To:'&, &'Sender:'&, and &'To:'&.
34439
34440 Automatic rewriting includes qualification, as mentioned above. The other case
34441 in which it can happen is when an incomplete non-local domain is given. The
34442 routing process may cause this to be expanded into the full domain name. For
34443 example, a header such as
34444 .code
34445 To: hare@teaparty
34446 .endd
34447 might get rewritten as
34448 .code
34449 To: hare@teaparty.wonderland.fict.example
34450 .endd
34451 Rewriting as a result of routing is the one kind of message processing that
34452 does not happen at input time, as it cannot be done until the address has
34453 been routed.
34454
34455 Strictly, one should not do &'any'& deliveries of a message until all its
34456 addresses have been routed, in case any of the headers get changed as a
34457 result of routing. However, doing this in practice would hold up many
34458 deliveries for unreasonable amounts of time, just because one address could not
34459 immediately be routed. Exim therefore does not delay other deliveries when
34460 routing of one or more addresses is deferred.
34461 .ecindex IIDmesproc
34462
34463
34464
34465 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
34466 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
34467
34468 .chapter "SMTP processing" "CHAPSMTP"
34469 .scindex IIDsmtpproc1 "SMTP" "processing details"
34470 .scindex IIDsmtpproc2 "LMTP" "processing details"
34471 Exim supports a number of different ways of using the SMTP protocol, and its
34472 LMTP variant, which is an interactive protocol for transferring messages into a
34473 closed mail store application. This chapter contains details of how SMTP is
34474 processed. For incoming mail, the following are available:
34475
34476 .ilist
34477 SMTP over TCP/IP (Exim daemon or &'inetd'&);
34478 .next
34479 SMTP over the standard input and output (the &%-bs%& option);
34480 .next
34481 Batched SMTP on the standard input (the &%-bS%& option).
34482 .endlist
34483
34484 For mail delivery, the following are available:
34485
34486 .ilist
34487 SMTP over TCP/IP (the &(smtp)& transport);
34488 .next
34489 LMTP over TCP/IP (the &(smtp)& transport with the &%protocol%& option set to
34490 &"lmtp"&);
34491 .next
34492 LMTP over a pipe to a process running in the local host (the &(lmtp)&
34493 transport);
34494 .next
34495 Batched SMTP to a file or pipe (the &(appendfile)& and &(pipe)& transports with
34496 the &%use_bsmtp%& option set).
34497 .endlist
34498
34499 &'Batched SMTP'& is the name for a process in which batches of messages are
34500 stored in or read from files (or pipes), in a format in which SMTP commands are
34501 used to contain the envelope information.
34502
34503
34504
34505 .section "Outgoing SMTP and LMTP over TCP/IP" "SECToutSMTPTCP"
34506 .cindex "SMTP" "outgoing over TCP/IP"
34507 .cindex "outgoing SMTP over TCP/IP"
34508 .cindex "LMTP" "over TCP/IP"
34509 .cindex "outgoing LMTP over TCP/IP"
34510 .cindex "EHLO"
34511 .cindex "HELO"
34512 .cindex "SIZE option on MAIL command"
34513 Outgoing SMTP and LMTP over TCP/IP is implemented by the &(smtp)& transport.
34514 The &%protocol%& option selects which protocol is to be used, but the actual
34515 processing is the same in both cases.
34516
34517 If, in response to its EHLO command, Exim is told that the SIZE
34518 parameter is supported, it adds SIZE=<&'n'&> to each subsequent MAIL
34519 command. The value of <&'n'&> is the message size plus the value of the
34520 &%size_addition%& option (default 1024) to allow for additions to the message
34521 such as per-transport header lines, or changes made in a
34522 .cindex "transport" "filter"
34523 .cindex "filter" "transport filter"
34524 transport filter. If &%size_addition%& is set negative, the use of SIZE is
34525 suppressed.
34526
34527 If the remote server advertises support for PIPELINING, Exim uses the
34528 pipelining extension to SMTP (RFC 2197) to reduce the number of TCP/IP packets
34529 required for the transaction.
34530
34531 If the remote server advertises support for the STARTTLS command, and Exim
34532 was built to support TLS encryption, it tries to start a TLS session unless the
34533 server matches &%hosts_avoid_tls%&. See chapter &<<CHAPTLS>>& for more details.
34534 Either a match in that or &%hosts_verify_avoid_tls%& apply when the transport
34535 is called for verification.
34536
34537 If the remote server advertises support for the AUTH command, Exim scans
34538 the authenticators configuration for any suitable client settings, as described
34539 in chapter &<<CHAPSMTPAUTH>>&.
34540
34541 .cindex "carriage return"
34542 .cindex "linefeed"
34543 Responses from the remote host are supposed to be terminated by CR followed by
34544 LF. However, there are known to be hosts that do not send CR characters, so in
34545 order to be able to interwork with such hosts, Exim treats LF on its own as a
34546 line terminator.
34547
34548 If a message contains a number of different addresses, all those with the same
34549 characteristics (for example, the same envelope sender) that resolve to the
34550 same set of hosts, in the same order, are sent in a single SMTP transaction,
34551 even if they are for different domains, unless there are more than the setting
34552 of the &%max_rcpt%&s option in the &(smtp)& transport allows, in which case
34553 they are split into groups containing no more than &%max_rcpt%&s addresses
34554 each. If &%remote_max_parallel%& is greater than one, such groups may be sent
34555 in parallel sessions. The order of hosts with identical MX values is not
34556 significant when checking whether addresses can be batched in this way.
34557
34558 When the &(smtp)& transport suffers a temporary failure that is not
34559 message-related, Exim updates its transport-specific database, which contains
34560 records indexed by host name that remember which messages are waiting for each
34561 particular host. It also updates the retry database with new retry times.
34562
34563 .cindex "hints database" "retry keys"
34564 Exim's retry hints are based on host name plus IP address, so if one address of
34565 a multi-homed host is broken, it will soon be skipped most of the time.
34566 See the next section for more detail about error handling.
34567
34568 .cindex "SMTP" "passed connection"
34569 .cindex "SMTP" "batching over TCP/IP"
34570 When a message is successfully delivered over a TCP/IP SMTP connection, Exim
34571 looks in the hints database for the transport to see if there are any queued
34572 messages waiting for the host to which it is connected. If it finds one, it
34573 creates a new Exim process using the &%-MC%& option (which can only be used by
34574 a process running as root or the Exim user) and passes the TCP/IP socket to it
34575 so that it can deliver another message using the same socket. The new process
34576 does only those deliveries that are routed to the connected host, and may in
34577 turn pass the socket on to a third process, and so on.
34578
34579 The &%connection_max_messages%& option of the &(smtp)& transport can be used to
34580 limit the number of messages sent down a single TCP/IP connection.
34581
34582 .cindex "asterisk" "after IP address"
34583 The second and subsequent messages delivered down an existing connection are
34584 identified in the main log by the addition of an asterisk after the closing
34585 square bracket of the IP address.
34586
34587
34588
34589
34590 .section "Errors in outgoing SMTP" "SECToutSMTPerr"
34591 .cindex "error" "in outgoing SMTP"
34592 .cindex "SMTP" "errors in outgoing"
34593 .cindex "host" "error"
34594 Three different kinds of error are recognized for outgoing SMTP: host errors,
34595 message errors, and recipient errors.
34596
34597 .vlist
34598 .vitem "&*Host errors*&"
34599 A host error is not associated with a particular message or with a
34600 particular recipient of a message. The host errors are:
34601
34602 .ilist
34603 Connection refused or timed out,
34604 .next
34605 Any error response code on connection,
34606 .next
34607 Any error response code to EHLO or HELO,
34608 .next
34609 Loss of connection at any time, except after &"."&,
34610 .next
34611 I/O errors at any time,
34612 .next
34613 Timeouts during the session, other than in response to MAIL, RCPT or
34614 the &"."& at the end of the data.
34615 .endlist ilist
34616
34617 For a host error, a permanent error response on connection, or in response to
34618 EHLO, causes all addresses routed to the host to be failed. Any other host
34619 error causes all addresses to be deferred, and retry data to be created for the
34620 host. It is not tried again, for any message, until its retry time arrives. If
34621 the current set of addresses are not all delivered in this run (to some
34622 alternative host), the message is added to the list of those waiting for this
34623 host, so if it is still undelivered when a subsequent successful delivery is
34624 made to the host, it will be sent down the same SMTP connection.
34625
34626 .vitem "&*Message errors*&"
34627 .cindex "message" "error"
34628 A message error is associated with a particular message when sent to a
34629 particular host, but not with a particular recipient of the message. The
34630 message errors are:
34631
34632 .ilist
34633 Any error response code to MAIL, DATA, or the &"."& that terminates
34634 the data,
34635 .next
34636 Timeout after MAIL,
34637 .next
34638 Timeout or loss of connection after the &"."& that terminates the data. A
34639 timeout after the DATA command itself is treated as a host error, as is loss of
34640 connection at any other time.
34641 .endlist ilist
34642
34643 For a message error, a permanent error response (5&'xx'&) causes all addresses
34644 to be failed, and a delivery error report to be returned to the sender. A
34645 temporary error response (4&'xx'&), or one of the timeouts, causes all
34646 addresses to be deferred. Retry data is not created for the host, but instead,
34647 a retry record for the combination of host plus message id is created. The
34648 message is not added to the list of those waiting for this host. This ensures
34649 that the failing message will not be sent to this host again until the retry
34650 time arrives. However, other messages that are routed to the host are not
34651 affected, so if it is some property of the message that is causing the error,
34652 it will not stop the delivery of other mail.
34653
34654 If the remote host specified support for the SIZE parameter in its response
34655 to EHLO, Exim adds SIZE=&'nnn'& to the MAIL command, so an
34656 over-large message will cause a message error because the error arrives as a
34657 response to MAIL.
34658
34659 .vitem "&*Recipient errors*&"
34660 .cindex "recipient" "error"
34661 A recipient error is associated with a particular recipient of a message. The
34662 recipient errors are:
34663
34664 .ilist
34665 Any error response to RCPT,
34666 .next
34667 Timeout after RCPT.
34668 .endlist
34669
34670 For a recipient error, a permanent error response (5&'xx'&) causes the
34671 recipient address to be failed, and a bounce message to be returned to the
34672 sender. A temporary error response (4&'xx'&) or a timeout causes the failing
34673 address to be deferred, and routing retry data to be created for it. This is
34674 used to delay processing of the address in subsequent queue runs, until its
34675 routing retry time arrives. This applies to all messages, but because it
34676 operates only in queue runs, one attempt will be made to deliver a new message
34677 to the failing address before the delay starts to operate. This ensures that,
34678 if the failure is really related to the message rather than the recipient
34679 (&"message too big for this recipient"& is a possible example), other messages
34680 have a chance of getting delivered. If a delivery to the address does succeed,
34681 the retry information gets cleared, so all stuck messages get tried again, and
34682 the retry clock is reset.
34683
34684 The message is not added to the list of those waiting for this host. Use of the
34685 host for other messages is unaffected, and except in the case of a timeout,
34686 other recipients are processed independently, and may be successfully delivered
34687 in the current SMTP session. After a timeout it is of course impossible to
34688 proceed with the session, so all addresses get deferred. However, those other
34689 than the one that failed do not suffer any subsequent retry delays. Therefore,
34690 if one recipient is causing trouble, the others have a chance of getting
34691 through when a subsequent delivery attempt occurs before the failing
34692 recipient's retry time.
34693 .endlist
34694
34695 In all cases, if there are other hosts (or IP addresses) available for the
34696 current set of addresses (for example, from multiple MX records), they are
34697 tried in this run for any undelivered addresses, subject of course to their
34698 own retry data. In other words, recipient error retry data does not take effect
34699 until the next delivery attempt.
34700
34701 Some hosts have been observed to give temporary error responses to every
34702 MAIL command at certain times (&"insufficient space"& has been seen). It
34703 would be nice if such circumstances could be recognized, and defer data for the
34704 host itself created, but this is not possible within the current Exim design.
34705 What actually happens is that retry data for every (host, message) combination
34706 is created.
34707
34708 The reason that timeouts after MAIL and RCPT are treated specially is that
34709 these can sometimes arise as a result of the remote host's verification
34710 procedures. Exim makes this assumption, and treats them as if a temporary error
34711 response had been received. A timeout after &"."& is treated specially because
34712 it is known that some broken implementations fail to recognize the end of the
34713 message if the last character of the last line is a binary zero. Thus, it is
34714 helpful to treat this case as a message error.
34715
34716 Timeouts at other times are treated as host errors, assuming a problem with the
34717 host, or the connection to it. If a timeout after MAIL, RCPT,
34718 or &"."& is really a connection problem, the assumption is that at the next try
34719 the timeout is likely to occur at some other point in the dialogue, causing it
34720 then to be treated as a host error.
34721
34722 There is experimental evidence that some MTAs drop the connection after the
34723 terminating &"."& if they do not like the contents of the message for some
34724 reason, in contravention of the RFC, which indicates that a 5&'xx'& response
34725 should be given. That is why Exim treats this case as a message rather than a
34726 host error, in order not to delay other messages to the same host.
34727
34728
34729
34730
34731 .section "Incoming SMTP messages over TCP/IP" "SECID233"
34732 .cindex "SMTP" "incoming over TCP/IP"
34733 .cindex "incoming SMTP over TCP/IP"
34734 .cindex "inetd"
34735 .cindex "daemon"
34736 Incoming SMTP messages can be accepted in one of two ways: by running a
34737 listening daemon, or by using &'inetd'&. In the latter case, the entry in
34738 &_/etc/inetd.conf_& should be like this:
34739 .code
34740 smtp stream tcp nowait exim /opt/exim/bin/exim in.exim -bs
34741 .endd
34742 Exim distinguishes between this case and the case of a locally running user
34743 agent using the &%-bs%& option by checking whether or not the standard input is
34744 a socket. When it is, either the port must be privileged (less than 1024), or
34745 the caller must be root or the Exim user. If any other user passes a socket
34746 with an unprivileged port number, Exim prints a message on the standard error
34747 stream and exits with an error code.
34748
34749 By default, Exim does not make a log entry when a remote host connects or
34750 disconnects (either via the daemon or &'inetd'&), unless the disconnection is
34751 unexpected. It can be made to write such log entries by setting the
34752 &%smtp_connection%& log selector.
34753
34754 .cindex "carriage return"
34755 .cindex "linefeed"
34756 Commands from the remote host are supposed to be terminated by CR followed by
34757 LF. However, there are known to be hosts that do not send CR characters. In
34758 order to be able to interwork with such hosts, Exim treats LF on its own as a
34759 line terminator.
34760 Furthermore, because common code is used for receiving messages from all
34761 sources, a CR on its own is also interpreted as a line terminator. However, the
34762 sequence &"CR, dot, CR"& does not terminate incoming SMTP data.
34763
34764 .cindex "EHLO" "invalid data"
34765 .cindex "HELO" "invalid data"
34766 One area that sometimes gives rise to problems concerns the EHLO or
34767 HELO commands. Some clients send syntactically invalid versions of these
34768 commands, which Exim rejects by default. (This is nothing to do with verifying
34769 the data that is sent, so &%helo_verify_hosts%& is not relevant.) You can tell
34770 Exim not to apply a syntax check by setting &%helo_accept_junk_hosts%& to
34771 match the broken hosts that send invalid commands.
34772
34773 .cindex "SIZE option on MAIL command"
34774 .cindex "MAIL" "SIZE option"
34775 The amount of disk space available is checked whenever SIZE is received on
34776 a MAIL command, independently of whether &%message_size_limit%& or
34777 &%check_spool_space%& is configured, unless &%smtp_check_spool_space%& is set
34778 false. A temporary error is given if there is not enough space. If
34779 &%check_spool_space%& is set, the check is for that amount of space plus the
34780 value given with SIZE, that is, it checks that the addition of the incoming
34781 message will not reduce the space below the threshold.
34782
34783 When a message is successfully received, Exim includes the local message id in
34784 its response to the final &"."& that terminates the data. If the remote host
34785 logs this text it can help with tracing what has happened to a message.
34786
34787 The Exim daemon can limit the number of simultaneous incoming connections it is
34788 prepared to handle (see the &%smtp_accept_max%& option). It can also limit the
34789 number of simultaneous incoming connections from a single remote host (see the
34790 &%smtp_accept_max_per_host%& option). Additional connection attempts are
34791 rejected using the SMTP temporary error code 421.
34792
34793 The Exim daemon does not rely on the SIGCHLD signal to detect when a
34794 subprocess has finished, as this can get lost at busy times. Instead, it looks
34795 for completed subprocesses every time it wakes up. Provided there are other
34796 things happening (new incoming calls, starts of queue runs), completed
34797 processes will be noticed and tidied away. On very quiet systems you may
34798 sometimes see a &"defunct"& Exim process hanging about. This is not a problem;
34799 it will be noticed when the daemon next wakes up.
34800
34801 When running as a daemon, Exim can reserve some SMTP slots for specific hosts,
34802 and can also be set up to reject SMTP calls from non-reserved hosts at times of
34803 high system load &-- for details see the &%smtp_accept_reserve%&,
34804 &%smtp_load_reserve%&, and &%smtp_reserve_hosts%& options. The load check
34805 applies in both the daemon and &'inetd'& cases.
34806
34807 Exim normally starts a delivery process for each message received, though this
34808 can be varied by means of the &%-odq%& command line option and the
34809 &%queue_only%&, &%queue_only_file%&, and &%queue_only_load%& options. The
34810 number of simultaneously running delivery processes started in this way from
34811 SMTP input can be limited by the &%smtp_accept_queue%& and
34812 &%smtp_accept_queue_per_connection%& options. When either limit is reached,
34813 subsequently received messages are just put on the input queue without starting
34814 a delivery process.
34815
34816 The controls that involve counts of incoming SMTP calls (&%smtp_accept_max%&,
34817 &%smtp_accept_queue%&, &%smtp_accept_reserve%&) are not available when Exim is
34818 started up from the &'inetd'& daemon, because in that case each connection is
34819 handled by an entirely independent Exim process. Control by load average is,
34820 however, available with &'inetd'&.
34821
34822 Exim can be configured to verify addresses in incoming SMTP commands as they
34823 are received. See chapter &<<CHAPACL>>& for details. It can also be configured
34824 to rewrite addresses at this time &-- before any syntax checking is done. See
34825 section &<<SECTrewriteS>>&.
34826
34827 Exim can also be configured to limit the rate at which a client host submits
34828 MAIL and RCPT commands in a single SMTP session. See the
34829 &%smtp_ratelimit_hosts%& option.
34830
34831
34832
34833 .section "Unrecognized SMTP commands" "SECID234"
34834 .cindex "SMTP" "unrecognized commands"
34835 If Exim receives more than &%smtp_max_unknown_commands%& unrecognized SMTP
34836 commands during a single SMTP connection, it drops the connection after sending
34837 the error response to the last command. The default value for
34838 &%smtp_max_unknown_commands%& is 3. This is a defence against some kinds of
34839 abuse that subvert web servers into making connections to SMTP ports; in these
34840 circumstances, a number of non-SMTP lines are sent first.
34841
34842
34843 .section "Syntax and protocol errors in SMTP commands" "SECID235"
34844 .cindex "SMTP" "syntax errors"
34845 .cindex "SMTP" "protocol errors"
34846 A syntax error is detected if an SMTP command is recognized, but there is
34847 something syntactically wrong with its data, for example, a malformed email
34848 address in a RCPT command. Protocol errors include invalid command
34849 sequencing such as RCPT before MAIL. If Exim receives more than
34850 &%smtp_max_synprot_errors%& such commands during a single SMTP connection, it
34851 drops the connection after sending the error response to the last command. The
34852 default value for &%smtp_max_synprot_errors%& is 3. This is a defence against
34853 broken clients that loop sending bad commands (yes, it has been seen).
34854
34855
34856
34857 .section "Use of non-mail SMTP commands" "SECID236"
34858 .cindex "SMTP" "non-mail commands"
34859 The &"non-mail"& SMTP commands are those other than MAIL, RCPT, and
34860 DATA. Exim counts such commands, and drops the connection if there are too
34861 many of them in a single SMTP session. This action catches some
34862 denial-of-service attempts and things like repeated failing AUTHs, or a mad
34863 client looping sending EHLO. The global option &%smtp_accept_max_nonmail%&
34864 defines what &"too many"& means. Its default value is 10.
34865
34866 When a new message is expected, one occurrence of RSET is not counted. This
34867 allows a client to send one RSET between messages (this is not necessary,
34868 but some clients do it). Exim also allows one uncounted occurrence of HELO
34869 or EHLO, and one occurrence of STARTTLS between messages. After
34870 starting up a TLS session, another EHLO is expected, and so it too is not
34871 counted.
34872
34873 The first occurrence of AUTH in a connection, or immediately following
34874 STARTTLS is also not counted. Otherwise, all commands other than MAIL,
34875 RCPT, DATA, and QUIT are counted.
34876
34877 You can control which hosts are subject to the limit set by
34878 &%smtp_accept_max_nonmail%& by setting
34879 &%smtp_accept_max_nonmail_hosts%&. The default value is &`*`&, which makes
34880 the limit apply to all hosts. This option means that you can exclude any
34881 specific badly-behaved hosts that you have to live with.
34882
34883
34884
34885
34886 .section "The VRFY and EXPN commands" "SECID237"
34887 When Exim receives a VRFY or EXPN command on a TCP/IP connection, it
34888 runs the ACL specified by &%acl_smtp_vrfy%& or &%acl_smtp_expn%& (as
34889 appropriate) in order to decide whether the command should be accepted or not.
34890
34891 .cindex "VRFY" "processing"
34892 When no ACL is defined for VRFY, or if it rejects without
34893 setting an explicit response code, the command is accepted
34894 (with a 252 SMTP response code)
34895 in order to support awkward clients that do a VRFY before every RCPT.
34896 When VRFY is accepted, it runs exactly the same code as when Exim is
34897 called with the &%-bv%& option, and returns 250/451/550
34898 SMTP response codes.
34899
34900 .cindex "EXPN" "processing"
34901 If no ACL for EXPN is defined, the command is rejected.
34902 When EXPN is accepted, a single-level expansion of the address is done.
34903 EXPN is treated as an &"address test"& (similar to the &%-bt%& option) rather
34904 than a verification (the &%-bv%& option). If an unqualified local part is given
34905 as the argument to EXPN, it is qualified with &%qualify_domain%&. Rejections
34906 of VRFY and EXPN commands are logged on the main and reject logs, and
34907 VRFY verification failures are logged on the main log for consistency with
34908 RCPT failures.
34909
34910
34911
34912 .section "The ETRN command" "SECTETRN"
34913 .cindex "ETRN" "processing"
34914 RFC 1985 describes an SMTP command called ETRN that is designed to
34915 overcome the security problems of the TURN command (which has fallen into
34916 disuse). When Exim receives an ETRN command on a TCP/IP connection, it runs
34917 the ACL specified by &%acl_smtp_etrn%& in order to decide whether the command
34918 should be accepted or not. If no ACL is defined, the command is rejected.
34919
34920 The ETRN command is concerned with &"releasing"& messages that are awaiting
34921 delivery to certain hosts. As Exim does not organize its message queue by host,
34922 the only form of ETRN that is supported by default is the one where the
34923 text starts with the &"#"& prefix, in which case the remainder of the text is
34924 specific to the SMTP server. A valid ETRN command causes a run of Exim with
34925 the &%-R%& option to happen, with the remainder of the ETRN text as its
34926 argument. For example,
34927 .code
34928 ETRN #brigadoon
34929 .endd
34930 runs the command
34931 .code
34932 exim -R brigadoon
34933 .endd
34934 which causes a delivery attempt on all messages with undelivered addresses
34935 containing the text &"brigadoon"&. When &%smtp_etrn_serialize%& is set (the
34936 default), Exim prevents the simultaneous execution of more than one queue run
34937 for the same argument string as a result of an ETRN command. This stops
34938 a misbehaving client from starting more than one queue runner at once.
34939
34940 .cindex "hints database" "ETRN serialization"
34941 Exim implements the serialization by means of a hints database in which a
34942 record is written whenever a process is started by ETRN, and deleted when
34943 the process completes. However, Exim does not keep the SMTP session waiting for
34944 the ETRN process to complete. Once ETRN is accepted, the client is sent
34945 a &"success"& return code. Obviously there is scope for hints records to get
34946 left lying around if there is a system or program crash. To guard against this,
34947 Exim ignores any records that are more than six hours old.
34948
34949 .oindex "&%smtp_etrn_command%&"
34950 For more control over what ETRN does, the &%smtp_etrn_command%& option can
34951 used. This specifies a command that is run whenever ETRN is received,
34952 whatever the form of its argument. For
34953 example:
34954 .code
34955 smtp_etrn_command = /etc/etrn_command $domain \
34956 $sender_host_address
34957 .endd
34958 .vindex "&$domain$&"
34959 The string is split up into arguments which are independently expanded. The
34960 expansion variable &$domain$& is set to the argument of the ETRN command,
34961 and no syntax checking is done on the contents of this argument. Exim does not
34962 wait for the command to complete, so its status code is not checked. Exim runs
34963 under its own uid and gid when receiving incoming SMTP, so it is not possible
34964 for it to change them before running the command.
34965
34966
34967
34968 .section "Incoming local SMTP" "SECID238"
34969 .cindex "SMTP" "local incoming"
34970 Some user agents use SMTP to pass messages to their local MTA using the
34971 standard input and output, as opposed to passing the envelope on the command
34972 line and writing the message to the standard input. This is supported by the
34973 &%-bs%& option. This form of SMTP is handled in the same way as incoming
34974 messages over TCP/IP (including the use of ACLs), except that the envelope
34975 sender given in a MAIL command is ignored unless the caller is trusted. In
34976 an ACL you can detect this form of SMTP input by testing for an empty host
34977 identification. It is common to have this as the first line in the ACL that
34978 runs for RCPT commands:
34979 .code
34980 accept hosts = :
34981 .endd
34982 This accepts SMTP messages from local processes without doing any other tests.
34983
34984
34985
34986 .section "Outgoing batched SMTP" "SECTbatchSMTP"
34987 .cindex "SMTP" "batched outgoing"
34988 .cindex "batched SMTP output"
34989 Both the &(appendfile)& and &(pipe)& transports can be used for handling
34990 batched SMTP. Each has an option called &%use_bsmtp%& which causes messages to
34991 be output in BSMTP format. No SMTP responses are possible for this form of
34992 delivery. All it is doing is using SMTP commands as a way of transmitting the
34993 envelope along with the message.
34994
34995 The message is written to the file or pipe preceded by the SMTP commands
34996 MAIL and RCPT, and followed by a line containing a single dot. Lines in
34997 the message that start with a dot have an extra dot added. The SMTP command
34998 HELO is not normally used. If it is required, the &%message_prefix%& option
34999 can be used to specify it.
35000
35001 Because &(appendfile)& and &(pipe)& are both local transports, they accept only
35002 one recipient address at a time by default. However, you can arrange for them
35003 to handle several addresses at once by setting the &%batch_max%& option. When
35004 this is done for BSMTP, messages may contain multiple RCPT commands. See
35005 chapter &<<CHAPbatching>>& for more details.
35006
35007 .vindex "&$host$&"
35008 When one or more addresses are routed to a BSMTP transport by a router that
35009 sets up a host list, the name of the first host on the list is available to the
35010 transport in the variable &$host$&. Here is an example of such a transport and
35011 router:
35012 .code
35013 begin routers
35014 route_append:
35015 driver = manualroute
35016 transport = smtp_appendfile
35017 route_list = domain.example batch.host.example
35018
35019 begin transports
35020 smtp_appendfile:
35021 driver = appendfile
35022 directory = /var/bsmtp/$host
35023 batch_max = 1000
35024 use_bsmtp
35025 user = exim
35026 .endd
35027 This causes messages addressed to &'domain.example'& to be written in BSMTP
35028 format to &_/var/bsmtp/batch.host.example_&, with only a single copy of each
35029 message (unless there are more than 1000 recipients).
35030
35031
35032
35033 .section "Incoming batched SMTP" "SECTincomingbatchedSMTP"
35034 .cindex "SMTP" "batched incoming"
35035 .cindex "batched SMTP input"
35036 The &%-bS%& command line option causes Exim to accept one or more messages by
35037 reading SMTP on the standard input, but to generate no responses. If the caller
35038 is trusted, the senders in the MAIL commands are believed; otherwise the
35039 sender is always the caller of Exim. Unqualified senders and receivers are not
35040 rejected (there seems little point) but instead just get qualified. HELO
35041 and EHLO act as RSET; VRFY, EXPN, ETRN and HELP, act
35042 as NOOP; QUIT quits.
35043
35044 Minimal policy checking is done for BSMTP input. Only the non-SMTP
35045 ACL is run in the same way as for non-SMTP local input.
35046
35047 If an error is detected while reading a message, including a missing &"."& at
35048 the end, Exim gives up immediately. It writes details of the error to the
35049 standard output in a stylized way that the calling program should be able to
35050 make some use of automatically, for example:
35051 .code
35052 554 Unexpected end of file
35053 Transaction started in line 10
35054 Error detected in line 14
35055 .endd
35056 It writes a more verbose version, for human consumption, to the standard error
35057 file, for example:
35058 .code
35059 An error was detected while processing a file of BSMTP input.
35060 The error message was:
35061
35062 501 '>' missing at end of address
35063
35064 The SMTP transaction started in line 10.
35065 The error was detected in line 12.
35066 The SMTP command at fault was:
35067
35068 rcpt to:<malformed@in.com.plete
35069
35070 1 previous message was successfully processed.
35071 The rest of the batch was abandoned.
35072 .endd
35073 The return code from Exim is zero only if there were no errors. It is 1 if some
35074 messages were accepted before an error was detected, and 2 if no messages were
35075 accepted.
35076 .ecindex IIDsmtpproc1
35077 .ecindex IIDsmtpproc2
35078
35079
35080
35081 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
35082 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
35083
35084 .chapter "Customizing bounce and warning messages" "CHAPemsgcust" &&&
35085 "Customizing messages"
35086 When a message fails to be delivered, or remains on the queue for more than a
35087 configured amount of time, Exim sends a message to the original sender, or
35088 to an alternative configured address. The text of these messages is built into
35089 the code of Exim, but it is possible to change it, either by adding a single
35090 string, or by replacing each of the paragraphs by text supplied in a file.
35091
35092 The &'From:'& and &'To:'& header lines are automatically generated; you can
35093 cause a &'Reply-To:'& line to be added by setting the &%errors_reply_to%&
35094 option. Exim also adds the line
35095 .code
35096 Auto-Submitted: auto-generated
35097 .endd
35098 to all warning and bounce messages,
35099
35100
35101 .section "Customizing bounce messages" "SECID239"
35102 .cindex "customizing" "bounce message"
35103 .cindex "bounce message" "customizing"
35104 If &%bounce_message_text%& is set, its contents are included in the default
35105 message immediately after &"This message was created automatically by mail
35106 delivery software."& The string is not expanded. It is not used if
35107 &%bounce_message_file%& is set.
35108
35109 When &%bounce_message_file%& is set, it must point to a template file for
35110 constructing error messages. The file consists of a series of text items,
35111 separated by lines consisting of exactly four asterisks. If the file cannot be
35112 opened, default text is used and a message is written to the main and panic
35113 logs. If any text item in the file is empty, default text is used for that
35114 item.
35115
35116 .vindex "&$bounce_recipient$&"
35117 .vindex "&$bounce_return_size_limit$&"
35118 Each item of text that is read from the file is expanded, and there are two
35119 expansion variables which can be of use here: &$bounce_recipient$& is set to
35120 the recipient of an error message while it is being created, and
35121 &$bounce_return_size_limit$& contains the value of the &%return_size_limit%&
35122 option, rounded to a whole number.
35123
35124 The items must appear in the file in the following order:
35125
35126 .ilist
35127 The first item is included in the headers, and should include at least a
35128 &'Subject:'& header. Exim does not check the syntax of these headers.
35129 .next
35130 The second item forms the start of the error message. After it, Exim lists the
35131 failing addresses with their error messages.
35132 .next
35133 The third item is used to introduce any text from pipe transports that is to be
35134 returned to the sender. It is omitted if there is no such text.
35135 .next
35136 The fourth, fifth and sixth items will be ignored and may be empty.
35137 The fields exist for back-compatibility
35138 .endlist
35139
35140 The default state (&%bounce_message_file%& unset) is equivalent to the
35141 following file, in which the sixth item is empty. The &'Subject:'& and some
35142 other lines have been split in order to fit them on the page:
35143 .code
35144 Subject: Mail delivery failed
35145 ${if eq{$sender_address}{$bounce_recipient}
35146 {: returning message to sender}}
35147 ****
35148 This message was created automatically by mail delivery software.
35149
35150 A message ${if eq{$sender_address}{$bounce_recipient}
35151 {that you sent }{sent by
35152
35153 <$sender_address>
35154
35155 }}could not be delivered to all of its recipients.
35156 This is a permanent error. The following address(es) failed:
35157 ****
35158 The following text was generated during the delivery attempt(s):
35159 ****
35160 ------ This is a copy of the message, including all the headers.
35161 ------
35162 ****
35163 ------ The body of the message is $message_size characters long;
35164 only the first
35165 ------ $bounce_return_size_limit or so are included here.
35166 ****
35167 .endd
35168 .section "Customizing warning messages" "SECTcustwarn"
35169 .cindex "customizing" "warning message"
35170 .cindex "warning of delay" "customizing the message"
35171 The option &%warn_message_file%& can be pointed at a template file for use when
35172 warnings about message delays are created. In this case there are only three
35173 text sections:
35174
35175 .ilist
35176 The first item is included in the headers, and should include at least a
35177 &'Subject:'& header. Exim does not check the syntax of these headers.
35178 .next
35179 The second item forms the start of the warning message. After it, Exim lists
35180 the delayed addresses.
35181 .next
35182 The third item then ends the message.
35183 .endlist
35184
35185 The default state is equivalent to the following file, except that some lines
35186 have been split here, in order to fit them on the page:
35187 .code
35188 Subject: Warning: message $message_exim_id delayed
35189 $warn_message_delay
35190 ****
35191 This message was created automatically by mail delivery software.
35192
35193 A message ${if eq{$sender_address}{$warn_message_recipients}
35194 {that you sent }{sent by
35195
35196 <$sender_address>
35197
35198 }}has not been delivered to all of its recipients after
35199 more than $warn_message_delay on the queue on $primary_hostname.
35200
35201 The message identifier is: $message_exim_id
35202 The subject of the message is: $h_subject
35203 The date of the message is: $h_date
35204
35205 The following address(es) have not yet been delivered:
35206 ****
35207 No action is required on your part. Delivery attempts will
35208 continue for some time, and this warning may be repeated at
35209 intervals if the message remains undelivered. Eventually the
35210 mail delivery software will give up, and when that happens,
35211 the message will be returned to you.
35212 .endd
35213 .vindex "&$warn_message_delay$&"
35214 .vindex "&$warn_message_recipients$&"
35215 However, in the default state the subject and date lines are omitted if no
35216 appropriate headers exist. During the expansion of this file,
35217 &$warn_message_delay$& is set to the delay time in one of the forms &"<&'n'&>
35218 minutes"& or &"<&'n'&> hours"&, and &$warn_message_recipients$& contains a list
35219 of recipients for the warning message. There may be more than one if there are
35220 multiple addresses with different &%errors_to%& settings on the routers that
35221 handled them.
35222
35223
35224
35225
35226 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
35227 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
35228
35229 .chapter "Some common configuration settings" "CHAPcomconreq"
35230 This chapter discusses some configuration settings that seem to be fairly
35231 common. More examples and discussion can be found in the Exim book.
35232
35233
35234
35235 .section "Sending mail to a smart host" "SECID240"
35236 .cindex "smart host" "example router"
35237 If you want to send all mail for non-local domains to a &"smart host"&, you
35238 should replace the default &(dnslookup)& router with a router which does the
35239 routing explicitly:
35240 .code
35241 send_to_smart_host:
35242 driver = manualroute
35243 route_list = !+local_domains smart.host.name
35244 transport = remote_smtp
35245 .endd
35246 You can use the smart host's IP address instead of the name if you wish.
35247 If you are using Exim only to submit messages to a smart host, and not for
35248 receiving incoming messages, you can arrange for it to do the submission
35249 synchronously by setting the &%mua_wrapper%& option (see chapter
35250 &<<CHAPnonqueueing>>&).
35251
35252
35253
35254
35255 .section "Using Exim to handle mailing lists" "SECTmailinglists"
35256 .cindex "mailing lists"
35257 Exim can be used to run simple mailing lists, but for large and/or complicated
35258 requirements, the use of additional specialized mailing list software such as
35259 Majordomo or Mailman is recommended.
35260
35261 The &(redirect)& router can be used to handle mailing lists where each list
35262 is maintained in a separate file, which can therefore be managed by an
35263 independent manager. The &%domains%& router option can be used to run these
35264 lists in a separate domain from normal mail. For example:
35265 .code
35266 lists:
35267 driver = redirect
35268 domains = lists.example
35269 file = /usr/lists/$local_part
35270 forbid_pipe
35271 forbid_file
35272 errors_to = $local_part-request@lists.example
35273 no_more
35274 .endd
35275 This router is skipped for domains other than &'lists.example'&. For addresses
35276 in that domain, it looks for a file that matches the local part. If there is no
35277 such file, the router declines, but because &%no_more%& is set, no subsequent
35278 routers are tried, and so the whole delivery fails.
35279
35280 The &%forbid_pipe%& and &%forbid_file%& options prevent a local part from being
35281 expanded into a file name or a pipe delivery, which is usually inappropriate in
35282 a mailing list.
35283
35284 .oindex "&%errors_to%&"
35285 The &%errors_to%& option specifies that any delivery errors caused by addresses
35286 taken from a mailing list are to be sent to the given address rather than the
35287 original sender of the message. However, before acting on this, Exim verifies
35288 the error address, and ignores it if verification fails.
35289
35290 For example, using the configuration above, mail sent to
35291 &'dicts@lists.example'& is passed on to those addresses contained in
35292 &_/usr/lists/dicts_&, with error reports directed to
35293 &'dicts-request@lists.example'&, provided that this address can be verified.
35294 There could be a file called &_/usr/lists/dicts-request_& containing
35295 the address(es) of this particular list's manager(s), but other approaches,
35296 such as setting up an earlier router (possibly using the &%local_part_prefix%&
35297 or &%local_part_suffix%& options) to handle addresses of the form
35298 &%owner-%&&'xxx'& or &%xxx-%&&'request'&, are also possible.
35299
35300
35301
35302 .section "Syntax errors in mailing lists" "SECID241"
35303 .cindex "mailing lists" "syntax errors in"
35304 If an entry in redirection data contains a syntax error, Exim normally defers
35305 delivery of the original address. That means that a syntax error in a mailing
35306 list holds up all deliveries to the list. This may not be appropriate when a
35307 list is being maintained automatically from data supplied by users, and the
35308 addresses are not rigorously checked.
35309
35310 If the &%skip_syntax_errors%& option is set, the &(redirect)& router just skips
35311 entries that fail to parse, noting the incident in the log. If in addition
35312 &%syntax_errors_to%& is set to a verifiable address, a message is sent to it
35313 whenever a broken address is skipped. It is usually appropriate to set
35314 &%syntax_errors_to%& to the same address as &%errors_to%&.
35315
35316
35317
35318 .section "Re-expansion of mailing lists" "SECID242"
35319 .cindex "mailing lists" "re-expansion of"
35320 Exim remembers every individual address to which a message has been delivered,
35321 in order to avoid duplication, but it normally stores only the original
35322 recipient addresses with a message. If all the deliveries to a mailing list
35323 cannot be done at the first attempt, the mailing list is re-expanded when the
35324 delivery is next tried. This means that alterations to the list are taken into
35325 account at each delivery attempt, so addresses that have been added to
35326 the list since the message arrived will therefore receive a copy of the
35327 message, even though it pre-dates their subscription.
35328
35329 If this behaviour is felt to be undesirable, the &%one_time%& option can be set
35330 on the &(redirect)& router. If this is done, any addresses generated by the
35331 router that fail to deliver at the first attempt are added to the message as
35332 &"top level"& addresses, and the parent address that generated them is marked
35333 &"delivered"&. Thus, expansion of the mailing list does not happen again at the
35334 subsequent delivery attempts. The disadvantage of this is that if any of the
35335 failing addresses are incorrect, correcting them in the file has no effect on
35336 pre-existing messages.
35337
35338 The original top-level address is remembered with each of the generated
35339 addresses, and is output in any log messages. However, any intermediate parent
35340 addresses are not recorded. This makes a difference to the log only if the
35341 &%all_parents%& selector is set, but for mailing lists there is normally only
35342 one level of expansion anyway.
35343
35344
35345
35346 .section "Closed mailing lists" "SECID243"
35347 .cindex "mailing lists" "closed"
35348 The examples so far have assumed open mailing lists, to which anybody may
35349 send mail. It is also possible to set up closed lists, where mail is accepted
35350 from specified senders only. This is done by making use of the generic
35351 &%senders%& option to restrict the router that handles the list.
35352
35353 The following example uses the same file as a list of recipients and as a list
35354 of permitted senders. It requires three routers:
35355 .code
35356 lists_request:
35357 driver = redirect
35358 domains = lists.example
35359 local_part_suffix = -request
35360 file = /usr/lists/$local_part$local_part_suffix
35361 no_more
35362
35363 lists_post:
35364 driver = redirect
35365 domains = lists.example
35366 senders = ${if exists {/usr/lists/$local_part}\
35367 {lsearch;/usr/lists/$local_part}{*}}
35368 file = /usr/lists/$local_part
35369 forbid_pipe
35370 forbid_file
35371 errors_to = $local_part-request@lists.example
35372 no_more
35373
35374 lists_closed:
35375 driver = redirect
35376 domains = lists.example
35377 allow_fail
35378 data = :fail: $local_part@lists.example is a closed mailing list
35379 .endd
35380 All three routers have the same &%domains%& setting, so for any other domains,
35381 they are all skipped. The first router runs only if the local part ends in
35382 &%-request%&. It handles messages to the list manager(s) by means of an open
35383 mailing list.
35384
35385 The second router runs only if the &%senders%& precondition is satisfied. It
35386 checks for the existence of a list that corresponds to the local part, and then
35387 checks that the sender is on the list by means of a linear search. It is
35388 necessary to check for the existence of the file before trying to search it,
35389 because otherwise Exim thinks there is a configuration error. If the file does
35390 not exist, the expansion of &%senders%& is *, which matches all senders. This
35391 means that the router runs, but because there is no list, declines, and
35392 &%no_more%& ensures that no further routers are run. The address fails with an
35393 &"unrouteable address"& error.
35394
35395 The third router runs only if the second router is skipped, which happens when
35396 a mailing list exists, but the sender is not on it. This router forcibly fails
35397 the address, giving a suitable error message.
35398
35399
35400
35401
35402 .section "Variable Envelope Return Paths (VERP)" "SECTverp"
35403 .cindex "VERP"
35404 .cindex "Variable Envelope Return Paths"
35405 .cindex "envelope sender"
35406 Variable Envelope Return Paths &-- see &url(http://cr.yp.to/proto/verp.txt) &--
35407 are a way of helping mailing list administrators discover which subscription
35408 address is the cause of a particular delivery failure. The idea is to encode
35409 the original recipient address in the outgoing envelope sender address, so that
35410 if the message is forwarded by another host and then subsequently bounces, the
35411 original recipient can be extracted from the recipient address of the bounce.
35412
35413 .oindex &%errors_to%&
35414 .oindex &%return_path%&
35415 Envelope sender addresses can be modified by Exim using two different
35416 facilities: the &%errors_to%& option on a router (as shown in previous mailing
35417 list examples), or the &%return_path%& option on a transport. The second of
35418 these is effective only if the message is successfully delivered to another
35419 host; it is not used for errors detected on the local host (see the description
35420 of &%return_path%& in chapter &<<CHAPtransportgeneric>>&). Here is an example
35421 of the use of &%return_path%& to implement VERP on an &(smtp)& transport:
35422 .code
35423 verp_smtp:
35424 driver = smtp
35425 max_rcpt = 1
35426 return_path = \
35427 ${if match {$return_path}{^(.+?)-request@your.dom.example\$}\
35428 {$1-request+$local_part=$domain@your.dom.example}fail}
35429 .endd
35430 This has the effect of rewriting the return path (envelope sender) on outgoing
35431 SMTP messages, if the local part of the original return path ends in
35432 &"-request"&, and the domain is &'your.dom.example'&. The rewriting inserts the
35433 local part and domain of the recipient into the return path. Suppose, for
35434 example, that a message whose return path has been set to
35435 &'somelist-request@your.dom.example'& is sent to
35436 &'subscriber@other.dom.example'&. In the transport, the return path is
35437 rewritten as
35438 .code
35439 somelist-request+subscriber=other.dom.example@your.dom.example
35440 .endd
35441 .vindex "&$local_part$&"
35442 For this to work, you must tell Exim to send multiple copies of messages that
35443 have more than one recipient, so that each copy has just one recipient. This is
35444 achieved by setting &%max_rcpt%& to 1. Without this, a single copy of a message
35445 might be sent to several different recipients in the same domain, in which case
35446 &$local_part$& is not available in the transport, because it is not unique.
35447
35448 Unless your host is doing nothing but mailing list deliveries, you should
35449 probably use a separate transport for the VERP deliveries, so as not to use
35450 extra resources in making one-per-recipient copies for other deliveries. This
35451 can easily be done by expanding the &%transport%& option in the router:
35452 .code
35453 dnslookup:
35454 driver = dnslookup
35455 domains = ! +local_domains
35456 transport = \
35457 ${if match {$return_path}{^(.+?)-request@your.dom.example\$}\
35458 {verp_smtp}{remote_smtp}}
35459 no_more
35460 .endd
35461 If you want to change the return path using &%errors_to%& in a router instead
35462 of using &%return_path%& in the transport, you need to set &%errors_to%& on all
35463 routers that handle mailing list addresses. This will ensure that all delivery
35464 errors, including those detected on the local host, are sent to the VERP
35465 address.
35466
35467 On a host that does no local deliveries and has no manual routing, only the
35468 &(dnslookup)& router needs to be changed. A special transport is not needed for
35469 SMTP deliveries. Every mailing list recipient has its own return path value,
35470 and so Exim must hand them to the transport one at a time. Here is an example
35471 of a &(dnslookup)& router that implements VERP:
35472 .code
35473 verp_dnslookup:
35474 driver = dnslookup
35475 domains = ! +local_domains
35476 transport = remote_smtp
35477 errors_to = \
35478 ${if match {$return_path}{^(.+?)-request@your.dom.example\$}}
35479 {$1-request+$local_part=$domain@your.dom.example}fail}
35480 no_more
35481 .endd
35482 Before you start sending out messages with VERPed return paths, you must also
35483 configure Exim to accept the bounce messages that come back to those paths.
35484 Typically this is done by setting a &%local_part_suffix%& option for a
35485 router, and using this to route the messages to wherever you want to handle
35486 them.
35487
35488 The overhead incurred in using VERP depends very much on the size of the
35489 message, the number of recipient addresses that resolve to the same remote
35490 host, and the speed of the connection over which the message is being sent. If
35491 a lot of addresses resolve to the same host and the connection is slow, sending
35492 a separate copy of the message for each address may take substantially longer
35493 than sending a single copy with many recipients (for which VERP cannot be
35494 used).
35495
35496
35497
35498
35499
35500
35501 .section "Virtual domains" "SECTvirtualdomains"
35502 .cindex "virtual domains"
35503 .cindex "domain" "virtual"
35504 The phrase &'virtual domain'& is unfortunately used with two rather different
35505 meanings:
35506
35507 .ilist
35508 A domain for which there are no real mailboxes; all valid local parts are
35509 aliases for other email addresses. Common examples are organizational
35510 top-level domains and &"vanity"& domains.
35511 .next
35512 One of a number of independent domains that are all handled by the same host,
35513 with mailboxes on that host, but where the mailbox owners do not necessarily
35514 have login accounts on that host.
35515 .endlist
35516
35517 The first usage is probably more common, and does seem more &"virtual"& than
35518 the second. This kind of domain can be handled in Exim with a straightforward
35519 aliasing router. One approach is to create a separate alias file for each
35520 virtual domain. Exim can test for the existence of the alias file to determine
35521 whether the domain exists. The &(dsearch)& lookup type is useful here, leading
35522 to a router of this form:
35523 .code
35524 virtual:
35525 driver = redirect
35526 domains = dsearch;/etc/mail/virtual
35527 data = ${lookup{$local_part}lsearch{/etc/mail/virtual/$domain}}
35528 no_more
35529 .endd
35530 The &%domains%& option specifies that the router is to be skipped, unless there
35531 is a file in the &_/etc/mail/virtual_& directory whose name is the same as the
35532 domain that is being processed. When the router runs, it looks up the local
35533 part in the file to find a new address (or list of addresses). The &%no_more%&
35534 setting ensures that if the lookup fails (leading to &%data%& being an empty
35535 string), Exim gives up on the address without trying any subsequent routers.
35536
35537 This one router can handle all the virtual domains because the alias file names
35538 follow a fixed pattern. Permissions can be arranged so that appropriate people
35539 can edit the different alias files. A successful aliasing operation results in
35540 a new envelope recipient address, which is then routed from scratch.
35541
35542 The other kind of &"virtual"& domain can also be handled in a straightforward
35543 way. One approach is to create a file for each domain containing a list of
35544 valid local parts, and use it in a router like this:
35545 .code
35546 my_domains:
35547 driver = accept
35548 domains = dsearch;/etc/mail/domains
35549 local_parts = lsearch;/etc/mail/domains/$domain
35550 transport = my_mailboxes
35551 .endd
35552 The address is accepted if there is a file for the domain, and the local part
35553 can be found in the file. The &%domains%& option is used to check for the
35554 file's existence because &%domains%& is tested before the &%local_parts%&
35555 option (see section &<<SECTrouprecon>>&). You cannot use &%require_files%&,
35556 because that option is tested after &%local_parts%&. The transport is as
35557 follows:
35558 .code
35559 my_mailboxes:
35560 driver = appendfile
35561 file = /var/mail/$domain/$local_part
35562 user = mail
35563 .endd
35564 This uses a directory of mailboxes for each domain. The &%user%& setting is
35565 required, to specify which uid is to be used for writing to the mailboxes.
35566
35567 The configuration shown here is just one example of how you might support this
35568 requirement. There are many other ways this kind of configuration can be set
35569 up, for example, by using a database instead of separate files to hold all the
35570 information about the domains.
35571
35572
35573
35574 .section "Multiple user mailboxes" "SECTmulbox"
35575 .cindex "multiple mailboxes"
35576 .cindex "mailbox" "multiple"
35577 .cindex "local part" "prefix"
35578 .cindex "local part" "suffix"
35579 Heavy email users often want to operate with multiple mailboxes, into which
35580 incoming mail is automatically sorted. A popular way of handling this is to
35581 allow users to use multiple sender addresses, so that replies can easily be
35582 identified. Users are permitted to add prefixes or suffixes to their local
35583 parts for this purpose. The wildcard facility of the generic router options
35584 &%local_part_prefix%& and &%local_part_suffix%& can be used for this. For
35585 example, consider this router:
35586 .code
35587 userforward:
35588 driver = redirect
35589 check_local_user
35590 file = $home/.forward
35591 local_part_suffix = -*
35592 local_part_suffix_optional
35593 allow_filter
35594 .endd
35595 .vindex "&$local_part_suffix$&"
35596 It runs a user's &_.forward_& file for all local parts of the form
35597 &'username-*'&. Within the filter file the user can distinguish different
35598 cases by testing the variable &$local_part_suffix$&. For example:
35599 .code
35600 if $local_part_suffix contains -special then
35601 save /home/$local_part/Mail/special
35602 endif
35603 .endd
35604 If the filter file does not exist, or does not deal with such addresses, they
35605 fall through to subsequent routers, and, assuming no subsequent use of the
35606 &%local_part_suffix%& option is made, they presumably fail. Thus, users have
35607 control over which suffixes are valid.
35608
35609 Alternatively, a suffix can be used to trigger the use of a different
35610 &_.forward_& file &-- which is the way a similar facility is implemented in
35611 another MTA:
35612 .code
35613 userforward:
35614 driver = redirect
35615 check_local_user
35616 file = $home/.forward$local_part_suffix
35617 local_part_suffix = -*
35618 local_part_suffix_optional
35619 allow_filter
35620 .endd
35621 If there is no suffix, &_.forward_& is used; if the suffix is &'-special'&, for
35622 example, &_.forward-special_& is used. Once again, if the appropriate file
35623 does not exist, or does not deal with the address, it is passed on to
35624 subsequent routers, which could, if required, look for an unqualified
35625 &_.forward_& file to use as a default.
35626
35627
35628
35629 .section "Simplified vacation processing" "SECID244"
35630 .cindex "vacation processing"
35631 The traditional way of running the &'vacation'& program is for a user to set up
35632 a pipe command in a &_.forward_& file
35633 (see section &<<SECTspecitredli>>& for syntax details).
35634 This is prone to error by inexperienced users. There are two features of Exim
35635 that can be used to make this process simpler for users:
35636
35637 .ilist
35638 A local part prefix such as &"vacation-"& can be specified on a router which
35639 can cause the message to be delivered directly to the &'vacation'& program, or
35640 alternatively can use Exim's &(autoreply)& transport. The contents of a user's
35641 &_.forward_& file are then much simpler. For example:
35642 .code
35643 spqr, vacation-spqr
35644 .endd
35645 .next
35646 The &%require_files%& generic router option can be used to trigger a
35647 vacation delivery by checking for the existence of a certain file in the
35648 user's home directory. The &%unseen%& generic option should also be used, to
35649 ensure that the original delivery also proceeds. In this case, all the user has
35650 to do is to create a file called, say, &_.vacation_&, containing a vacation
35651 message.
35652 .endlist
35653
35654 Another advantage of both these methods is that they both work even when the
35655 use of arbitrary pipes by users is locked out.
35656
35657
35658
35659 .section "Taking copies of mail" "SECID245"
35660 .cindex "message" "copying every"
35661 Some installations have policies that require archive copies of all messages to
35662 be made. A single copy of each message can easily be taken by an appropriate
35663 command in a system filter, which could, for example, use a different file for
35664 each day's messages.
35665
35666 There is also a shadow transport mechanism that can be used to take copies of
35667 messages that are successfully delivered by local transports, one copy per
35668 delivery. This could be used, &'inter alia'&, to implement automatic
35669 notification of delivery by sites that insist on doing such things.
35670
35671
35672
35673 .section "Intermittently connected hosts" "SECID246"
35674 .cindex "intermittently connected hosts"
35675 It has become quite common (because it is cheaper) for hosts to connect to the
35676 Internet periodically rather than remain connected all the time. The normal
35677 arrangement is that mail for such hosts accumulates on a system that is
35678 permanently connected.
35679
35680 Exim was designed for use on permanently connected hosts, and so it is not
35681 particularly well-suited to use in an intermittently connected environment.
35682 Nevertheless there are some features that can be used.
35683
35684
35685 .section "Exim on the upstream server host" "SECID247"
35686 It is tempting to arrange for incoming mail for the intermittently connected
35687 host to remain on Exim's queue until the client connects. However, this
35688 approach does not scale very well. Two different kinds of waiting message are
35689 being mixed up in the same queue &-- those that cannot be delivered because of
35690 some temporary problem, and those that are waiting for their destination host
35691 to connect. This makes it hard to manage the queue, as well as wasting
35692 resources, because each queue runner scans the entire queue.
35693
35694 A better approach is to separate off those messages that are waiting for an
35695 intermittently connected host. This can be done by delivering these messages
35696 into local files in batch SMTP, &"mailstore"&, or other envelope-preserving
35697 format, from where they are transmitted by other software when their
35698 destination connects. This makes it easy to collect all the mail for one host
35699 in a single directory, and to apply local timeout rules on a per-message basis
35700 if required.
35701
35702 On a very small scale, leaving the mail on Exim's queue can be made to work. If
35703 you are doing this, you should configure Exim with a long retry period for the
35704 intermittent host. For example:
35705 .code
35706 cheshire.wonderland.fict.example * F,5d,24h
35707 .endd
35708 This stops a lot of failed delivery attempts from occurring, but Exim remembers
35709 which messages it has queued up for that host. Once the intermittent host comes
35710 online, forcing delivery of one message (either by using the &%-M%& or &%-R%&
35711 options, or by using the ETRN SMTP command (see section &<<SECTETRN>>&)
35712 causes all the queued up messages to be delivered, often down a single SMTP
35713 connection. While the host remains connected, any new messages get delivered
35714 immediately.
35715
35716 If the connecting hosts do not have fixed IP addresses, that is, if a host is
35717 issued with a different IP address each time it connects, Exim's retry
35718 mechanisms on the holding host get confused, because the IP address is normally
35719 used as part of the key string for holding retry information. This can be
35720 avoided by unsetting &%retry_include_ip_address%& on the &(smtp)& transport.
35721 Since this has disadvantages for permanently connected hosts, it is best to
35722 arrange a separate transport for the intermittently connected ones.
35723
35724
35725
35726 .section "Exim on the intermittently connected client host" "SECID248"
35727 The value of &%smtp_accept_queue_per_connection%& should probably be
35728 increased, or even set to zero (that is, disabled) on the intermittently
35729 connected host, so that all incoming messages down a single connection get
35730 delivered immediately.
35731
35732 .cindex "SMTP" "passed connection"
35733 .cindex "SMTP" "multiple deliveries"
35734 .cindex "multiple SMTP deliveries"
35735 Mail waiting to be sent from an intermittently connected host will probably
35736 not have been routed, because without a connection DNS lookups are not
35737 possible. This means that if a normal queue run is done at connection time,
35738 each message is likely to be sent in a separate SMTP session. This can be
35739 avoided by starting the queue run with a command line option beginning with
35740 &%-qq%& instead of &%-q%&. In this case, the queue is scanned twice. In the
35741 first pass, routing is done but no deliveries take place. The second pass is a
35742 normal queue run; since all the messages have been previously routed, those
35743 destined for the same host are likely to get sent as multiple deliveries in a
35744 single SMTP connection.
35745
35746
35747
35748 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
35749 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
35750
35751 .chapter "Using Exim as a non-queueing client" "CHAPnonqueueing" &&&
35752 "Exim as a non-queueing client"
35753 .cindex "client, non-queueing"
35754 .cindex "smart host" "suppressing queueing"
35755 On a personal computer, it is a common requirement for all
35756 email to be sent to a &"smart host"&. There are plenty of MUAs that can be
35757 configured to operate that way, for all the popular operating systems.
35758 However, there are some MUAs for Unix-like systems that cannot be so
35759 configured: they submit messages using the command line interface of
35760 &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_&. Furthermore, utility programs such as &'cron'& submit
35761 messages this way.
35762
35763 If the personal computer runs continuously, there is no problem, because it can
35764 run a conventional MTA that handles delivery to the smart host, and deal with
35765 any delays via its queueing mechanism. However, if the computer does not run
35766 continuously or runs different operating systems at different times, queueing
35767 email is not desirable.
35768
35769 There is therefore a requirement for something that can provide the
35770 &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_& interface but deliver messages to a smart host without
35771 any queueing or retrying facilities. Furthermore, the delivery to the smart
35772 host should be synchronous, so that if it fails, the sending MUA is immediately
35773 informed. In other words, we want something that extends an MUA that submits
35774 to a local MTA via the command line so that it behaves like one that submits
35775 to a remote smart host using TCP/SMTP.
35776
35777 There are a number of applications (for example, there is one called &'ssmtp'&)
35778 that do this job. However, people have found them to be lacking in various
35779 ways. For instance, you might want to allow aliasing and forwarding to be done
35780 before sending a message to the smart host.
35781
35782 Exim already had the necessary infrastructure for doing this job. Just a few
35783 tweaks were needed to make it behave as required, though it is somewhat of an
35784 overkill to use a fully-featured MTA for this purpose.
35785
35786 .oindex "&%mua_wrapper%&"
35787 There is a Boolean global option called &%mua_wrapper%&, defaulting false.
35788 Setting &%mua_wrapper%& true causes Exim to run in a special mode where it
35789 assumes that it is being used to &"wrap"& a command-line MUA in the manner
35790 just described. As well as setting &%mua_wrapper%&, you also need to provide a
35791 compatible router and transport configuration. Typically there will be just one
35792 router and one transport, sending everything to a smart host.
35793
35794 When run in MUA wrapping mode, the behaviour of Exim changes in the
35795 following ways:
35796
35797 .ilist
35798 A daemon cannot be run, nor will Exim accept incoming messages from &'inetd'&.
35799 In other words, the only way to submit messages is via the command line.
35800 .next
35801 Each message is synchronously delivered as soon as it is received (&%-odi%& is
35802 assumed). All queueing options (&%queue_only%&, &%queue_smtp_domains%&,
35803 &%control%& in an ACL, etc.) are quietly ignored. The Exim reception process
35804 does not finish until the delivery attempt is complete. If the delivery is
35805 successful, a zero return code is given.
35806 .next
35807 Address redirection is permitted, but the final routing for all addresses must
35808 be to the same remote transport, and to the same list of hosts. Furthermore,
35809 the return address (envelope sender) must be the same for all recipients, as
35810 must any added or deleted header lines. In other words, it must be possible to
35811 deliver the message in a single SMTP transaction, however many recipients there
35812 are.
35813 .next
35814 If these conditions are not met, or if routing any address results in a
35815 failure or defer status, or if Exim is unable to deliver all the recipients
35816 successfully to one of the smart hosts, delivery of the entire message fails.
35817 .next
35818 Because no queueing is allowed, all failures are treated as permanent; there
35819 is no distinction between 4&'xx'& and 5&'xx'& SMTP response codes from the
35820 smart host. Furthermore, because only a single yes/no response can be given to
35821 the caller, it is not possible to deliver to some recipients and not others. If
35822 there is an error (temporary or permanent) for any recipient, all are failed.
35823 .next
35824 If more than one smart host is listed, Exim will try another host after a
35825 connection failure or a timeout, in the normal way. However, if this kind of
35826 failure happens for all the hosts, the delivery fails.
35827 .next
35828 When delivery fails, an error message is written to the standard error stream
35829 (as well as to Exim's log), and Exim exits to the caller with a return code
35830 value 1. The message is expunged from Exim's spool files. No bounce messages
35831 are ever generated.
35832 .next
35833 No retry data is maintained, and any retry rules are ignored.
35834 .next
35835 A number of Exim options are overridden: &%deliver_drop_privilege%& is forced
35836 true, &%max_rcpt%& in the &(smtp)& transport is forced to &"unlimited"&,
35837 &%remote_max_parallel%& is forced to one, and fallback hosts are ignored.
35838 .endlist
35839
35840 The overall effect is that Exim makes a single synchronous attempt to deliver
35841 the message, failing if there is any kind of problem. Because no local
35842 deliveries are done and no daemon can be run, Exim does not need root
35843 privilege. It should be possible to run it setuid to &'exim'& instead of setuid
35844 to &'root'&. See section &<<SECTrunexiwitpri>>& for a general discussion about
35845 the advantages and disadvantages of running without root privilege.
35846
35847
35848
35849
35850 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
35851 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
35852
35853 .chapter "Log files" "CHAPlog"
35854 .scindex IIDloggen "log" "general description"
35855 .cindex "log" "types of"
35856 Exim writes three different logs, referred to as the main log, the reject log,
35857 and the panic log:
35858
35859 .ilist
35860 .cindex "main log"
35861 The main log records the arrival of each message and each delivery in a single
35862 line in each case. The format is as compact as possible, in an attempt to keep
35863 down the size of log files. Two-character flag sequences make it easy to pick
35864 out these lines. A number of other events are recorded in the main log. Some of
35865 them are optional, in which case the &%log_selector%& option controls whether
35866 they are included or not. A Perl script called &'eximstats'&, which does simple
35867 analysis of main log files, is provided in the Exim distribution (see section
35868 &<<SECTmailstat>>&).
35869 .next
35870 .cindex "reject log"
35871 The reject log records information from messages that are rejected as a result
35872 of a configuration option (that is, for policy reasons).
35873 The first line of each rejection is a copy of the line that is also written to
35874 the main log. Then, if the message's header has been read at the time the log
35875 is written, its contents are written to this log. Only the original header
35876 lines are available; header lines added by ACLs are not logged. You can use the
35877 reject log to check that your policy controls are working correctly; on a busy
35878 host this may be easier than scanning the main log for rejection messages. You
35879 can suppress the writing of the reject log by setting &%write_rejectlog%&
35880 false.
35881 .next
35882 .cindex "panic log"
35883 .cindex "system log"
35884 When certain serious errors occur, Exim writes entries to its panic log. If the
35885 error is sufficiently disastrous, Exim bombs out afterwards. Panic log entries
35886 are usually written to the main log as well, but can get lost amid the mass of
35887 other entries. The panic log should be empty under normal circumstances. It is
35888 therefore a good idea to check it (or to have a &'cron'& script check it)
35889 regularly, in order to become aware of any problems. When Exim cannot open its
35890 panic log, it tries as a last resort to write to the system log (syslog). This
35891 is opened with LOG_PID+LOG_CONS and the facility code of LOG_MAIL. The
35892 message itself is written at priority LOG_CRIT.
35893 .endlist
35894
35895 Every log line starts with a timestamp, in the format shown in the following
35896 example. Note that many of the examples shown in this chapter are line-wrapped.
35897 In the log file, this would be all on one line:
35898 .code
35899 2001-09-16 16:09:47 SMTP connection from [127.0.0.1] closed
35900 by QUIT
35901 .endd
35902 By default, the timestamps are in the local timezone. There are two
35903 ways of changing this:
35904
35905 .ilist
35906 You can set the &%timezone%& option to a different time zone; in particular, if
35907 you set
35908 .code
35909 timezone = UTC
35910 .endd
35911 the timestamps will be in UTC (aka GMT).
35912 .next
35913 If you set &%log_timezone%& true, the time zone is added to the timestamp, for
35914 example:
35915 .code
35916 2003-04-25 11:17:07 +0100 Start queue run: pid=12762
35917 .endd
35918 .endlist
35919
35920 .cindex "log" "process ids in"
35921 .cindex "pid (process id)" "in log lines"
35922 Exim does not include its process id in log lines by default, but you can
35923 request that it does so by specifying the &`pid`& log selector (see section
35924 &<<SECTlogselector>>&). When this is set, the process id is output, in square
35925 brackets, immediately after the time and date.
35926
35927
35928
35929
35930 .section "Where the logs are written" "SECTwhelogwri"
35931 .cindex "log" "destination"
35932 .cindex "log" "to file"
35933 .cindex "log" "to syslog"
35934 .cindex "syslog"
35935 The logs may be written to local files, or to syslog, or both. However, it
35936 should be noted that many syslog implementations use UDP as a transport, and
35937 are therefore unreliable in the sense that messages are not guaranteed to
35938 arrive at the loghost, nor is the ordering of messages necessarily maintained.
35939 It has also been reported that on large log files (tens of megabytes) you may
35940 need to tweak syslog to prevent it syncing the file with each write &-- on
35941 Linux this has been seen to make syslog take 90% plus of CPU time.
35942
35943 The destination for Exim's logs is configured by setting LOG_FILE_PATH in
35944 &_Local/Makefile_& or by setting &%log_file_path%& in the run time
35945 configuration. This latter string is expanded, so it can contain, for example,
35946 references to the host name:
35947 .code
35948 log_file_path = /var/log/$primary_hostname/exim_%slog
35949 .endd
35950 It is generally advisable, however, to set the string in &_Local/Makefile_&
35951 rather than at run time, because then the setting is available right from the
35952 start of Exim's execution. Otherwise, if there's something it wants to log
35953 before it has read the configuration file (for example, an error in the
35954 configuration file) it will not use the path you want, and may not be able to
35955 log at all.
35956
35957 The value of LOG_FILE_PATH or &%log_file_path%& is a colon-separated
35958 list, currently limited to at most two items. This is one option where the
35959 facility for changing a list separator may not be used. The list must always be
35960 colon-separated. If an item in the list is &"syslog"& then syslog is used;
35961 otherwise the item must either be an absolute path, containing &`%s`& at the
35962 point where &"main"&, &"reject"&, or &"panic"& is to be inserted, or be empty,
35963 implying the use of a default path.
35964
35965 When Exim encounters an empty item in the list, it searches the list defined by
35966 LOG_FILE_PATH, and uses the first item it finds that is neither empty nor
35967 &"syslog"&. This means that an empty item in &%log_file_path%& can be used to
35968 mean &"use the path specified at build time"&. It no such item exists, log
35969 files are written in the &_log_& subdirectory of the spool directory. This is
35970 equivalent to the setting:
35971 .code
35972 log_file_path = $spool_directory/log/%slog
35973 .endd
35974 If you do not specify anything at build time or run time,
35975 or if you unset the option at run time (i.e. &`log_file_path = `&),
35976 that is where the logs are written.
35977
35978 A log file path may also contain &`%D`& or &`%M`& if datestamped log file names
35979 are in use &-- see section &<<SECTdatlogfil>>& below.
35980
35981 Here are some examples of possible settings:
35982 .display
35983 &`LOG_FILE_PATH=syslog `& syslog only
35984 &`LOG_FILE_PATH=:syslog `& syslog and default path
35985 &`LOG_FILE_PATH=syslog : /usr/log/exim_%s `& syslog and specified path
35986 &`LOG_FILE_PATH=/usr/log/exim_%s `& specified path only
35987 .endd
35988 If there are more than two paths in the list, the first is used and a panic
35989 error is logged.
35990
35991
35992
35993 .section "Logging to local files that are periodically &""cycled""&" "SECID285"
35994 .cindex "log" "cycling local files"
35995 .cindex "cycling logs"
35996 .cindex "&'exicyclog'&"
35997 .cindex "log" "local files; writing to"
35998 Some operating systems provide centralized and standardized methods for cycling
35999 log files. For those that do not, a utility script called &'exicyclog'& is
36000 provided (see section &<<SECTcyclogfil>>&). This renames and compresses the
36001 main and reject logs each time it is called. The maximum number of old logs to
36002 keep can be set. It is suggested this script is run as a daily &'cron'& job.
36003
36004 An Exim delivery process opens the main log when it first needs to write to it,
36005 and it keeps the file open in case subsequent entries are required &-- for
36006 example, if a number of different deliveries are being done for the same
36007 message. However, remote SMTP deliveries can take a long time, and this means
36008 that the file may be kept open long after it is renamed if &'exicyclog'& or
36009 something similar is being used to rename log files on a regular basis. To
36010 ensure that a switch of log files is noticed as soon as possible, Exim calls
36011 &[stat()]& on the main log's name before reusing an open file, and if the file
36012 does not exist, or its inode has changed, the old file is closed and Exim
36013 tries to open the main log from scratch. Thus, an old log file may remain open
36014 for quite some time, but no Exim processes should write to it once it has been
36015 renamed.
36016
36017
36018
36019 .section "Datestamped log files" "SECTdatlogfil"
36020 .cindex "log" "datestamped files"
36021 Instead of cycling the main and reject log files by renaming them
36022 periodically, some sites like to use files whose names contain a datestamp,
36023 for example, &_mainlog-20031225_&. The datestamp is in the form &_yyyymmdd_& or
36024 &_yyyymm_&. Exim has support for this way of working. It is enabled by setting
36025 the &%log_file_path%& option to a path that includes &`%D`& or &`%M`& at the
36026 point where the datestamp is required. For example:
36027 .code
36028 log_file_path = /var/spool/exim/log/%slog-%D
36029 log_file_path = /var/log/exim-%s-%D.log
36030 log_file_path = /var/spool/exim/log/%D-%slog
36031 log_file_path = /var/log/exim/%s.%M
36032 .endd
36033 As before, &`%s`& is replaced by &"main"& or &"reject"&; the following are
36034 examples of names generated by the above examples:
36035 .code
36036 /var/spool/exim/log/mainlog-20021225
36037 /var/log/exim-reject-20021225.log
36038 /var/spool/exim/log/20021225-mainlog
36039 /var/log/exim/main.200212
36040 .endd
36041 When this form of log file is specified, Exim automatically switches to new
36042 files at midnight. It does not make any attempt to compress old logs; you
36043 will need to write your own script if you require this. You should not
36044 run &'exicyclog'& with this form of logging.
36045
36046 The location of the panic log is also determined by &%log_file_path%&, but it
36047 is not datestamped, because rotation of the panic log does not make sense.
36048 When generating the name of the panic log, &`%D`& or &`%M`& are removed from
36049 the string. In addition, if it immediately follows a slash, a following
36050 non-alphanumeric character is removed; otherwise a preceding non-alphanumeric
36051 character is removed. Thus, the four examples above would give these panic
36052 log names:
36053 .code
36054 /var/spool/exim/log/paniclog
36055 /var/log/exim-panic.log
36056 /var/spool/exim/log/paniclog
36057 /var/log/exim/panic
36058 .endd
36059
36060
36061 .section "Logging to syslog" "SECID249"
36062 .cindex "log" "syslog; writing to"
36063 The use of syslog does not change what Exim logs or the format of its messages,
36064 except in one respect. If &%syslog_timestamp%& is set false, the timestamps on
36065 Exim's log lines are omitted when these lines are sent to syslog. Apart from
36066 that, the same strings are written to syslog as to log files. The syslog
36067 &"facility"& is set to LOG_MAIL, and the program name to &"exim"&
36068 by default, but you can change these by setting the &%syslog_facility%& and
36069 &%syslog_processname%& options, respectively. If Exim was compiled with
36070 SYSLOG_LOG_PID set in &_Local/Makefile_& (this is the default in
36071 &_src/EDITME_&), then, on systems that permit it (all except ULTRIX), the
36072 LOG_PID flag is set so that the &[syslog()]& call adds the pid as well as
36073 the time and host name to each line.
36074 The three log streams are mapped onto syslog priorities as follows:
36075
36076 .ilist
36077 &'mainlog'& is mapped to LOG_INFO
36078 .next
36079 &'rejectlog'& is mapped to LOG_NOTICE
36080 .next
36081 &'paniclog'& is mapped to LOG_ALERT
36082 .endlist
36083
36084 Many log lines are written to both &'mainlog'& and &'rejectlog'&, and some are
36085 written to both &'mainlog'& and &'paniclog'&, so there will be duplicates if
36086 these are routed by syslog to the same place. You can suppress this duplication
36087 by setting &%syslog_duplication%& false.
36088
36089 Exim's log lines can sometimes be very long, and some of its &'rejectlog'&
36090 entries contain multiple lines when headers are included. To cope with both
36091 these cases, entries written to syslog are split into separate &[syslog()]&
36092 calls at each internal newline, and also after a maximum of
36093 870 data characters. (This allows for a total syslog line length of 1024, when
36094 additions such as timestamps are added.) If you are running a syslog
36095 replacement that can handle lines longer than the 1024 characters allowed by
36096 RFC 3164, you should set
36097 .code
36098 SYSLOG_LONG_LINES=yes
36099 .endd
36100 in &_Local/Makefile_& before building Exim. That stops Exim from splitting long
36101 lines, but it still splits at internal newlines in &'reject'& log entries.
36102
36103 To make it easy to re-assemble split lines later, each component of a split
36104 entry starts with a string of the form [<&'n'&>/<&'m'&>] or [<&'n'&>\<&'m'&>]
36105 where <&'n'&> is the component number and <&'m'&> is the total number of
36106 components in the entry. The / delimiter is used when the line was split
36107 because it was too long; if it was split because of an internal newline, the \
36108 delimiter is used. For example, supposing the length limit to be 50 instead of
36109 870, the following would be the result of a typical rejection message to
36110 &'mainlog'& (LOG_INFO), each line in addition being preceded by the time, host
36111 name, and pid as added by syslog:
36112 .code
36113 [1/5] 2002-09-16 16:09:43 16RdAL-0006pc-00 rejected from
36114 [2/5] [127.0.0.1] (ph10): syntax error in 'From' header
36115 [3/5] when scanning for sender: missing or malformed lo
36116 [4/5] cal part in "<>" (envelope sender is <ph10@cam.exa
36117 [5/5] mple>)
36118 .endd
36119 The same error might cause the following lines to be written to &"rejectlog"&
36120 (LOG_NOTICE):
36121 .code
36122 [1/18] 2002-09-16 16:09:43 16RdAL-0006pc-00 rejected fro
36123 [2/18] m [127.0.0.1] (ph10): syntax error in 'From' head
36124 [3/18] er when scanning for sender: missing or malformed
36125 [4/18] local part in "<>" (envelope sender is <ph10@cam
36126 [5\18] .example>)
36127 [6\18] Recipients: ph10@some.domain.cam.example
36128 [7\18] P Received: from [127.0.0.1] (ident=ph10)
36129 [8\18] by xxxxx.cam.example with smtp (Exim 4.00)
36130 [9\18] id 16RdAL-0006pc-00
36131 [10/18] for ph10@cam.example; Mon, 16 Sep 2002 16:
36132 [11\18] 09:43 +0100
36133 [12\18] F From: <>
36134 [13\18] Subject: this is a test header
36135 [18\18] X-something: this is another header
36136 [15/18] I Message-Id: <E16RdAL-0006pc-00@xxxxx.cam.examp
36137 [16\18] le>
36138 [17\18] B Bcc:
36139 [18/18] Date: Mon, 16 Sep 2002 16:09:43 +0100
36140 .endd
36141 Log lines that are neither too long nor contain newlines are written to syslog
36142 without modification.
36143
36144 If only syslog is being used, the Exim monitor is unable to provide a log tail
36145 display, unless syslog is routing &'mainlog'& to a file on the local host and
36146 the environment variable EXIMON_LOG_FILE_PATH is set to tell the monitor
36147 where it is.
36148
36149
36150
36151 .section "Log line flags" "SECID250"
36152 One line is written to the main log for each message received, and for each
36153 successful, unsuccessful, and delayed delivery. These lines can readily be
36154 picked out by the distinctive two-character flags that immediately follow the
36155 timestamp. The flags are:
36156 .display
36157 &`<=`& message arrival
36158 &`(=`& message fakereject
36159 &`=>`& normal message delivery
36160 &`->`& additional address in same delivery
36161 &`>>`& cutthrough message delivery
36162 &`*>`& delivery suppressed by &%-N%&
36163 &`**`& delivery failed; address bounced
36164 &`==`& delivery deferred; temporary problem
36165 .endd
36166
36167
36168 .section "Logging message reception" "SECID251"
36169 .cindex "log" "reception line"
36170 The format of the single-line entry in the main log that is written for every
36171 message received is shown in the basic example below, which is split over
36172 several lines in order to fit it on the page:
36173 .code
36174 2002-10-31 08:57:53 16ZCW1-0005MB-00 <= kryten@dwarf.fict.example
36175 H=mailer.fict.example [192.168.123.123] U=exim
36176 P=smtp S=5678 id=<incoming message id>
36177 .endd
36178 The address immediately following &"<="& is the envelope sender address. A
36179 bounce message is shown with the sender address &"<>"&, and if it is locally
36180 generated, this is followed by an item of the form
36181 .code
36182 R=<message id>
36183 .endd
36184 which is a reference to the message that caused the bounce to be sent.
36185
36186 .cindex "HELO"
36187 .cindex "EHLO"
36188 For messages from other hosts, the H and U fields identify the remote host and
36189 record the RFC 1413 identity of the user that sent the message, if one was
36190 received. The number given in square brackets is the IP address of the sending
36191 host. If there is a single, unparenthesized host name in the H field, as
36192 above, it has been verified to correspond to the IP address (see the
36193 &%host_lookup%& option). If the name is in parentheses, it was the name quoted
36194 by the remote host in the SMTP HELO or EHLO command, and has not been
36195 verified. If verification yields a different name to that given for HELO or
36196 EHLO, the verified name appears first, followed by the HELO or EHLO
36197 name in parentheses.
36198
36199 Misconfigured hosts (and mail forgers) sometimes put an IP address, with or
36200 without brackets, in the HELO or EHLO command, leading to entries in
36201 the log containing text like these examples:
36202 .code
36203 H=(10.21.32.43) [192.168.8.34]
36204 H=([10.21.32.43]) [192.168.8.34]
36205 .endd
36206 This can be confusing. Only the final address in square brackets can be relied
36207 on.
36208
36209 For locally generated messages (that is, messages not received over TCP/IP),
36210 the H field is omitted, and the U field contains the login name of the caller
36211 of Exim.
36212
36213 .cindex "authentication" "logging"
36214 .cindex "AUTH" "logging"
36215 For all messages, the P field specifies the protocol used to receive the
36216 message. This is the value that is stored in &$received_protocol$&. In the case
36217 of incoming SMTP messages, the value indicates whether or not any SMTP
36218 extensions (ESMTP), encryption, or authentication were used. If the SMTP
36219 session was encrypted, there is an additional X field that records the cipher
36220 suite that was used.
36221
36222 .cindex log protocol
36223 The protocol is set to &"esmtpsa"& or &"esmtpa"& for messages received from
36224 hosts that have authenticated themselves using the SMTP AUTH command. The first
36225 value is used when the SMTP connection was encrypted (&"secure"&). In this case
36226 there is an additional item A= followed by the name of the authenticator that
36227 was used. If an authenticated identification was set up by the authenticator's
36228 &%server_set_id%& option, this is logged too, separated by a colon from the
36229 authenticator name.
36230
36231 .cindex "size" "of message"
36232 The id field records the existing message id, if present. The size of the
36233 received message is given by the S field. When the message is delivered,
36234 headers may be removed or added, so that the size of delivered copies of the
36235 message may not correspond with this value (and indeed may be different to each
36236 other).
36237
36238 The &%log_selector%& option can be used to request the logging of additional
36239 data when a message is received. See section &<<SECTlogselector>>& below.
36240
36241
36242
36243 .section "Logging deliveries" "SECID252"
36244 .cindex "log" "delivery line"
36245 The format of the single-line entry in the main log that is written for every
36246 delivery is shown in one of the examples below, for local and remote
36247 deliveries, respectively. Each example has been split into multiple lines in order
36248 to fit it on the page:
36249 .code
36250 2002-10-31 08:59:13 16ZCW1-0005MB-00 => marv
36251 <marv@hitch.fict.example> R=localuser T=local_delivery
36252 2002-10-31 09:00:10 16ZCW1-0005MB-00 =>
36253 monk@holistic.fict.example R=dnslookup T=remote_smtp
36254 H=holistic.fict.example [192.168.234.234]
36255 .endd
36256 For ordinary local deliveries, the original address is given in angle brackets
36257 after the final delivery address, which might be a pipe or a file. If
36258 intermediate address(es) exist between the original and the final address, the
36259 last of these is given in parentheses after the final address. The R and T
36260 fields record the router and transport that were used to process the address.
36261
36262 If SMTP AUTH was used for the delivery there is an additional item A=
36263 followed by the name of the authenticator that was used.
36264 If an authenticated identification was set up by the authenticator's &%client_set_id%&
36265 option, this is logged too, separated by a colon from the authenticator name.
36266
36267 If a shadow transport was run after a successful local delivery, the log line
36268 for the successful delivery has an item added on the end, of the form
36269 .display
36270 &`ST=<`&&'shadow transport name'&&`>`&
36271 .endd
36272 If the shadow transport did not succeed, the error message is put in
36273 parentheses afterwards.
36274
36275 .cindex "asterisk" "after IP address"
36276 When more than one address is included in a single delivery (for example, two
36277 SMTP RCPT commands in one transaction) the second and subsequent addresses are
36278 flagged with &`->`& instead of &`=>`&. When two or more messages are delivered
36279 down a single SMTP connection, an asterisk follows the IP address in the log
36280 lines for the second and subsequent messages.
36281 When two or more messages are delivered down a single TLS connection, the
36282 DNS and some TLS-related information logged for the first message delivered
36283 will not be present in the log lines for the second and subsequent messages.
36284 TLS cipher information is still available.
36285
36286 .cindex "delivery" "cutthrough; logging"
36287 .cindex "cutthrough" "logging"
36288 When delivery is done in cutthrough mode it is flagged with &`>>`& and the log
36289 line precedes the reception line, since cutthrough waits for a possible
36290 rejection from the destination in case it can reject the sourced item.
36291
36292 The generation of a reply message by a filter file gets logged as a
36293 &"delivery"& to the addressee, preceded by &">"&.
36294
36295 The &%log_selector%& option can be used to request the logging of additional
36296 data when a message is delivered. See section &<<SECTlogselector>>& below.
36297
36298
36299 .section "Discarded deliveries" "SECID253"
36300 .cindex "discarded messages"
36301 .cindex "message" "discarded"
36302 .cindex "delivery" "discarded; logging"
36303 When a message is discarded as a result of the command &"seen finish"& being
36304 obeyed in a filter file which generates no deliveries, a log entry of the form
36305 .code
36306 2002-12-10 00:50:49 16auJc-0001UB-00 => discarded
36307 <low.club@bridge.example> R=userforward
36308 .endd
36309 is written, to record why no deliveries are logged. When a message is discarded
36310 because it is aliased to &":blackhole:"& the log line is like this:
36311 .code
36312 1999-03-02 09:44:33 10HmaX-0005vi-00 => :blackhole:
36313 <hole@nowhere.example> R=blackhole_router
36314 .endd
36315
36316
36317 .section "Deferred deliveries" "SECID254"
36318 When a delivery is deferred, a line of the following form is logged:
36319 .code
36320 2002-12-19 16:20:23 16aiQz-0002Q5-00 == marvin@endrest.example
36321 R=dnslookup T=smtp defer (146): Connection refused
36322 .endd
36323 In the case of remote deliveries, the error is the one that was given for the
36324 last IP address that was tried. Details of individual SMTP failures are also
36325 written to the log, so the above line would be preceded by something like
36326 .code
36327 2002-12-19 16:20:23 16aiQz-0002Q5-00 Failed to connect to
36328 mail1.endrest.example [192.168.239.239]: Connection refused
36329 .endd
36330 When a deferred address is skipped because its retry time has not been reached,
36331 a message is written to the log, but this can be suppressed by setting an
36332 appropriate value in &%log_selector%&.
36333
36334
36335
36336 .section "Delivery failures" "SECID255"
36337 .cindex "delivery" "failure; logging"
36338 If a delivery fails because an address cannot be routed, a line of the
36339 following form is logged:
36340 .code
36341 1995-12-19 16:20:23 0tRiQz-0002Q5-00 ** jim@trek99.example
36342 <jim@trek99.example>: unknown mail domain
36343 .endd
36344 If a delivery fails at transport time, the router and transport are shown, and
36345 the response from the remote host is included, as in this example:
36346 .code
36347 2002-07-11 07:14:17 17SXDU-000189-00 ** ace400@pb.example
36348 R=dnslookup T=remote_smtp: SMTP error from remote mailer
36349 after pipelined RCPT TO:<ace400@pb.example>: host
36350 pbmail3.py.example [192.168.63.111]: 553 5.3.0
36351 <ace400@pb.example>...Addressee unknown
36352 .endd
36353 The word &"pipelined"& indicates that the SMTP PIPELINING extension was being
36354 used. See &%hosts_avoid_esmtp%& in the &(smtp)& transport for a way of
36355 disabling PIPELINING. The log lines for all forms of delivery failure are
36356 flagged with &`**`&.
36357
36358
36359
36360 .section "Fake deliveries" "SECID256"
36361 .cindex "delivery" "fake; logging"
36362 If a delivery does not actually take place because the &%-N%& option has been
36363 used to suppress it, a normal delivery line is written to the log, except that
36364 &"=>"& is replaced by &"*>"&.
36365
36366
36367
36368 .section "Completion" "SECID257"
36369 A line of the form
36370 .code
36371 2002-10-31 09:00:11 16ZCW1-0005MB-00 Completed
36372 .endd
36373 is written to the main log when a message is about to be removed from the spool
36374 at the end of its processing.
36375
36376
36377
36378
36379 .section "Summary of Fields in Log Lines" "SECID258"
36380 .cindex "log" "summary of fields"
36381 A summary of the field identifiers that are used in log lines is shown in
36382 the following table:
36383 .display
36384 &`A `& authenticator name (and optional id and sender)
36385 &`C `& SMTP confirmation on delivery
36386 &` `& command list for &"no mail in SMTP session"&
36387 &`CV `& certificate verification status
36388 &`D `& duration of &"no mail in SMTP session"&
36389 &`DKIM`& domain verified in incoming message
36390 &`DN `& distinguished name from peer certificate
36391 &`DS `& DNSSEC secured lookups
36392 &`DT `& on &`=>`& lines: time taken for a delivery
36393 &`F `& sender address (on delivery lines)
36394 &`H `& host name and IP address
36395 &`I `& local interface used
36396 &`K `& CHUNKING extension used
36397 &`id `& message id for incoming message
36398 &`M8S `& 8BITMIME status for incoming message
36399 &`P `& on &`<=`& lines: protocol used
36400 &` `& on &`=>`& and &`**`& lines: return path
36401 &`PRDR`& PRDR extension used
36402 &`PRX `& on &`<=`& and &`=>`& lines: proxy address
36403 &`Q `& alternate queue name
36404 &`QT `& on &`=>`& lines: time spent on queue so far
36405 &` `& on &"Completed"& lines: time spent on queue
36406 &`R `& on &`<=`& lines: reference for local bounce
36407 &` `& on &`=>`& &`>>`& &`**`& and &`==`& lines: router name
36408 &`RT `& on &`<=`& lines: time taken for reception
36409 &`S `& size of message in bytes
36410 &`SNI `& server name indication from TLS client hello
36411 &`ST `& shadow transport name
36412 &`T `& on &`<=`& lines: message subject (topic)
36413 &`TFO `& connection took advantage of TCP Fast Open
36414 &` `& on &`=>`& &`**`& and &`==`& lines: transport name
36415 &`U `& local user or RFC 1413 identity
36416 &`X `& TLS cipher suite
36417 .endd
36418
36419
36420 .section "Other log entries" "SECID259"
36421 Various other types of log entry are written from time to time. Most should be
36422 self-explanatory. Among the more common are:
36423
36424 .ilist
36425 .cindex "retry" "time not reached"
36426 &'retry time not reached'&&~&~An address previously suffered a temporary error
36427 during routing or local delivery, and the time to retry has not yet arrived.
36428 This message is not written to an individual message log file unless it happens
36429 during the first delivery attempt.
36430 .next
36431 &'retry time not reached for any host'&&~&~An address previously suffered
36432 temporary errors during remote delivery, and the retry time has not yet arrived
36433 for any of the hosts to which it is routed.
36434 .next
36435 .cindex "spool directory" "file locked"
36436 &'spool file locked'&&~&~An attempt to deliver a message cannot proceed because
36437 some other Exim process is already working on the message. This can be quite
36438 common if queue running processes are started at frequent intervals. The
36439 &'exiwhat'& utility script can be used to find out what Exim processes are
36440 doing.
36441 .next
36442 .cindex "error" "ignored"
36443 &'error ignored'&&~&~There are several circumstances that give rise to this
36444 message:
36445 .olist
36446 Exim failed to deliver a bounce message whose age was greater than
36447 &%ignore_bounce_errors_after%&. The bounce was discarded.
36448 .next
36449 A filter file set up a delivery using the &"noerror"& option, and the delivery
36450 failed. The delivery was discarded.
36451 .next
36452 A delivery set up by a router configured with
36453 . ==== As this is a nested list, any displays it contains must be indented
36454 . ==== as otherwise they are too far to the left.
36455 .code
36456 errors_to = <>
36457 .endd
36458 failed. The delivery was discarded.
36459 .endlist olist
36460 .next
36461 .cindex DKIM "log line"
36462 &'DKIM: d='&&~&~Verbose results of a DKIM verification attempt, if enabled for
36463 logging and the message has a DKIM signature header.
36464 .endlist ilist
36465
36466
36467
36468
36469
36470 .section "Reducing or increasing what is logged" "SECTlogselector"
36471 .cindex "log" "selectors"
36472 By setting the &%log_selector%& global option, you can disable some of Exim's
36473 default logging, or you can request additional logging. The value of
36474 &%log_selector%& is made up of names preceded by plus or minus characters. For
36475 example:
36476 .code
36477 log_selector = +arguments -retry_defer
36478 .endd
36479 The list of optional log items is in the following table, with the default
36480 selection marked by asterisks:
36481 .display
36482 &` 8bitmime `& received 8BITMIME status
36483 &`*acl_warn_skipped `& skipped &%warn%& statement in ACL
36484 &` address_rewrite `& address rewriting
36485 &` all_parents `& all parents in => lines
36486 &` arguments `& command line arguments
36487 &`*connection_reject `& connection rejections
36488 &`*delay_delivery `& immediate delivery delayed
36489 &` deliver_time `& time taken to perform delivery
36490 &` delivery_size `& add &`S=`&&'nnn'& to => lines
36491 &`*dkim `& DKIM verified domain on <= lines
36492 &` dkim_verbose `& separate full DKIM verification result line, per signature
36493 &`*dnslist_defer `& defers of DNS list (aka RBL) lookups
36494 &` dnssec `& DNSSEC secured lookups
36495 &`*etrn `& ETRN commands
36496 &`*host_lookup_failed `& as it says
36497 &` ident_timeout `& timeout for ident connection
36498 &` incoming_interface `& local interface on <= and => lines
36499 &` incoming_port `& remote port on <= lines
36500 &`*lost_incoming_connection `& as it says (includes timeouts)
36501 &` millisec `& millisecond timestamps and RT,QT,DT,D times
36502 &` outgoing_interface `& local interface on => lines
36503 &` outgoing_port `& add remote port to => lines
36504 &`*queue_run `& start and end queue runs
36505 &` queue_time `& time on queue for one recipient
36506 &` queue_time_overall `& time on queue for whole message
36507 &` pid `& Exim process id
36508 &` proxy `& proxy address on <= and => lines
36509 &` receive_time `& time taken to receive message
36510 &` received_recipients `& recipients on <= lines
36511 &` received_sender `& sender on <= lines
36512 &`*rejected_header `& header contents on reject log
36513 &`*retry_defer `& &"retry time not reached"&
36514 &` return_path_on_delivery `& put return path on => and ** lines
36515 &` sender_on_delivery `& add sender to => lines
36516 &`*sender_verify_fail `& sender verification failures
36517 &`*size_reject `& rejection because too big
36518 &`*skip_delivery `& delivery skipped in a queue run
36519 &`*smtp_confirmation `& SMTP confirmation on => lines
36520 &` smtp_connection `& incoming SMTP connections
36521 &` smtp_incomplete_transaction`& incomplete SMTP transactions
36522 &` smtp_mailauth `& AUTH argument to MAIL commands
36523 &` smtp_no_mail `& session with no MAIL commands
36524 &` smtp_protocol_error `& SMTP protocol errors
36525 &` smtp_syntax_error `& SMTP syntax errors
36526 &` subject `& contents of &'Subject:'& on <= lines
36527 &`*tls_certificate_verified `& certificate verification status
36528 &`*tls_cipher `& TLS cipher suite on <= and => lines
36529 &` tls_peerdn `& TLS peer DN on <= and => lines
36530 &` tls_sni `& TLS SNI on <= lines
36531 &` unknown_in_list `& DNS lookup failed in list match
36532
36533 &` all `& all of the above
36534 .endd
36535 See also the &%slow_lookup_log%& main configuration option,
36536 section &<<SECID99>>&
36537
36538 More details on each of these items follows:
36539
36540 .ilist
36541 .cindex "8BITMIME"
36542 .cindex "log" "8BITMIME"
36543 &%8bitmime%&: This causes Exim to log any 8BITMIME status of received messages,
36544 which may help in tracking down interoperability issues with ancient MTAs
36545 that are not 8bit clean. This is added to the &"<="& line, tagged with
36546 &`M8S=`& and a value of &`0`&, &`7`& or &`8`&, corresponding to "not given",
36547 &`7BIT`& and &`8BITMIME`& respectively.
36548 .next
36549 .cindex "&%warn%& ACL verb" "log when skipping"
36550 &%acl_warn_skipped%&: When an ACL &%warn%& statement is skipped because one of
36551 its conditions cannot be evaluated, a log line to this effect is written if
36552 this log selector is set.
36553 .next
36554 .cindex "log" "rewriting"
36555 .cindex "rewriting" "logging"
36556 &%address_rewrite%&: This applies both to global rewrites and per-transport
36557 rewrites, but not to rewrites in filters run as an unprivileged user (because
36558 such users cannot access the log).
36559 .next
36560 .cindex "log" "full parentage"
36561 &%all_parents%&: Normally only the original and final addresses are logged on
36562 delivery lines; with this selector, intermediate parents are given in
36563 parentheses between them.
36564 .next
36565 .cindex "log" "Exim arguments"
36566 .cindex "Exim arguments, logging"
36567 &%arguments%&: This causes Exim to write the arguments with which it was called
36568 to the main log, preceded by the current working directory. This is a debugging
36569 feature, added to make it easier to find out how certain MUAs call
36570 &_/usr/sbin/sendmail_&. The logging does not happen if Exim has given up root
36571 privilege because it was called with the &%-C%& or &%-D%& options. Arguments
36572 that are empty or that contain white space are quoted. Non-printing characters
36573 are shown as escape sequences. This facility cannot log unrecognized arguments,
36574 because the arguments are checked before the configuration file is read. The
36575 only way to log such cases is to interpose a script such as &_util/logargs.sh_&
36576 between the caller and Exim.
36577 .next
36578 .cindex "log" "connection rejections"
36579 &%connection_reject%&: A log entry is written whenever an incoming SMTP
36580 connection is rejected, for whatever reason.
36581 .next
36582 .cindex "log" "delayed delivery"
36583 .cindex "delayed delivery, logging"
36584 &%delay_delivery%&: A log entry is written whenever a delivery process is not
36585 started for an incoming message because the load is too high or too many
36586 messages were received on one connection. Logging does not occur if no delivery
36587 process is started because &%queue_only%& is set or &%-odq%& was used.
36588 .next
36589 .cindex "log" "delivery duration"
36590 &%deliver_time%&: For each delivery, the amount of real time it has taken to
36591 perform the actual delivery is logged as DT=<&'time'&>, for example, &`DT=1s`&.
36592 If millisecond logging is enabled, short times will be shown with greater
36593 precision, eg. &`DT=0.304s`&.
36594 .next
36595 .cindex "log" "message size on delivery"
36596 .cindex "size" "of message"
36597 &%delivery_size%&: For each delivery, the size of message delivered is added to
36598 the &"=>"& line, tagged with S=.
36599 .next
36600 .cindex log "DKIM verification"
36601 .cindex DKIM "verification logging"
36602 &%dkim%&: For message acceptance log lines, when an DKIM signature in the header
36603 verifies successfully a tag of DKIM is added, with one of the verified domains.
36604 .next
36605 .cindex log "DKIM verification"
36606 .cindex DKIM "verification logging"
36607 &%dkim_verbose%&: A log entry is written for each attempted DKIM verification.
36608 .next
36609 .cindex "log" "dnslist defer"
36610 .cindex "DNS list" "logging defer"
36611 .cindex "black list (DNS)"
36612 &%dnslist_defer%&: A log entry is written if an attempt to look up a host in a
36613 DNS black list suffers a temporary error.
36614 .next
36615 .cindex log dnssec
36616 .cindex dnssec logging
36617 &%dnssec%&: For message acceptance and (attempted) delivery log lines, when
36618 dns lookups gave secure results a tag of DS is added.
36619 For acceptance this covers the reverse and forward lookups for host name verification.
36620 It does not cover helo-name verification.
36621 For delivery this covers the SRV, MX, A and/or AAAA lookups.
36622 .next
36623 .cindex "log" "ETRN commands"
36624 .cindex "ETRN" "logging"
36625 &%etrn%&: Every valid ETRN command that is received is logged, before the ACL
36626 is run to determine whether or not it is actually accepted. An invalid ETRN
36627 command, or one received within a message transaction is not logged by this
36628 selector (see &%smtp_syntax_error%& and &%smtp_protocol_error%&).
36629 .next
36630 .cindex "log" "host lookup failure"
36631 &%host_lookup_failed%&: When a lookup of a host's IP addresses fails to find
36632 any addresses, or when a lookup of an IP address fails to find a host name, a
36633 log line is written. This logging does not apply to direct DNS lookups when
36634 routing email addresses, but it does apply to &"byname"& lookups.
36635 .next
36636 .cindex "log" "ident timeout"
36637 .cindex "RFC 1413" "logging timeout"
36638 &%ident_timeout%&: A log line is written whenever an attempt to connect to a
36639 client's ident port times out.
36640 .next
36641 .cindex "log" "incoming interface"
36642 .cindex "log" "local interface"
36643 .cindex "log" "local address and port"
36644 .cindex "TCP/IP" "logging local address and port"
36645 .cindex "interface" "logging"
36646 &%incoming_interface%&: The interface on which a message was received is added
36647 to the &"<="& line as an IP address in square brackets, tagged by I= and
36648 followed by a colon and the port number. The local interface and port are also
36649 added to other SMTP log lines, for example &"SMTP connection from"&, to
36650 rejection lines, and (despite the name) to outgoing &"=>"& and &"->"& lines.
36651 The latter can be disabled by turning off the &%outgoing_interface%& option.
36652 .next
36653 .cindex log "incoming proxy address"
36654 .cindex proxy "logging proxy address"
36655 .cindex "TCP/IP" "logging proxy address"
36656 &%proxy%&: The internal (closest to the system running Exim) IP address
36657 of the proxy, tagged by PRX=, on the &"<="& line for a message accepted
36658 on a proxied connection
36659 or the &"=>"& line for a message delivered on a proxied connection.
36660 See &<<SECTproxyInbound>>& for more information.
36661 .next
36662 .cindex "log" "incoming remote port"
36663 .cindex "port" "logging remote"
36664 .cindex "TCP/IP" "logging incoming remote port"
36665 .vindex "&$sender_fullhost$&"
36666 .vindex "&$sender_rcvhost$&"
36667 &%incoming_port%&: The remote port number from which a message was received is
36668 added to log entries and &'Received:'& header lines, following the IP address
36669 in square brackets, and separated from it by a colon. This is implemented by
36670 changing the value that is put in the &$sender_fullhost$& and
36671 &$sender_rcvhost$& variables. Recording the remote port number has become more
36672 important with the widening use of NAT (see RFC 2505).
36673 .next
36674 .cindex "log" "dropped connection"
36675 &%lost_incoming_connection%&: A log line is written when an incoming SMTP
36676 connection is unexpectedly dropped.
36677 .next
36678 .cindex "log" "millisecond timestamps"
36679 .cindex millisecond logging
36680 .cindex timestamps "millisecond, in logs"
36681 &%millisec%&: Timestamps have a period and three decimal places of finer granularity
36682 appended to the seconds value.
36683 .next
36684 .cindex "log" "outgoing interface"
36685 .cindex "log" "local interface"
36686 .cindex "log" "local address and port"
36687 .cindex "TCP/IP" "logging local address and port"
36688 .cindex "interface" "logging"
36689 &%outgoing_interface%&: If &%incoming_interface%& is turned on, then the
36690 interface on which a message was sent is added to delivery lines as an I= tag
36691 followed by IP address in square brackets. You can disable this by turning
36692 off the &%outgoing_interface%& option.
36693 .next
36694 .cindex "log" "outgoing remote port"
36695 .cindex "port" "logging outgoing remote"
36696 .cindex "TCP/IP" "logging outgoing remote port"
36697 &%outgoing_port%&: The remote port number is added to delivery log lines (those
36698 containing => tags) following the IP address.
36699 The local port is also added if &%incoming_interface%& and
36700 &%outgoing_interface%& are both enabled.
36701 This option is not included in the default setting, because for most ordinary
36702 configurations, the remote port number is always 25 (the SMTP port), and the
36703 local port is a random ephemeral port.
36704 .next
36705 .cindex "log" "process ids in"
36706 .cindex "pid (process id)" "in log lines"
36707 &%pid%&: The current process id is added to every log line, in square brackets,
36708 immediately after the time and date.
36709 .next
36710 .cindex "log" "queue run"
36711 .cindex "queue runner" "logging"
36712 &%queue_run%&: The start and end of every queue run are logged.
36713 .next
36714 .cindex "log" "queue time"
36715 &%queue_time%&: The amount of time the message has been in the queue on the
36716 local host is logged as QT=<&'time'&> on delivery (&`=>`&) lines, for example,
36717 &`QT=3m45s`&. The clock starts when Exim starts to receive the message, so it
36718 includes reception time as well as the delivery time for the current address.
36719 This means that it may be longer than the difference between the arrival and
36720 delivery log line times, because the arrival log line is not written until the
36721 message has been successfully received.
36722 If millisecond logging is enabled, short times will be shown with greater
36723 precision, eg. &`QT=1.578s`&.
36724 .next
36725 &%queue_time_overall%&: The amount of time the message has been in the queue on
36726 the local host is logged as QT=<&'time'&> on &"Completed"& lines, for
36727 example, &`QT=3m45s`&. The clock starts when Exim starts to receive the
36728 message, so it includes reception time as well as the total delivery time.
36729 .next
36730 .cindex "log" "receive duration"
36731 &%receive_time%&: For each message, the amount of real time it has taken to
36732 perform the reception is logged as RT=<&'time'&>, for example, &`RT=1s`&.
36733 If millisecond logging is enabled, short times will be shown with greater
36734 precision, eg. &`RT=0.204s`&.
36735 .next
36736 .cindex "log" "recipients"
36737 &%received_recipients%&: The recipients of a message are listed in the main log
36738 as soon as the message is received. The list appears at the end of the log line
36739 that is written when a message is received, preceded by the word &"for"&. The
36740 addresses are listed after they have been qualified, but before any rewriting
36741 has taken place.
36742 Recipients that were discarded by an ACL for MAIL or RCPT do not appear
36743 in the list.
36744 .next
36745 .cindex "log" "sender reception"
36746 &%received_sender%&: The unrewritten original sender of a message is added to
36747 the end of the log line that records the message's arrival, after the word
36748 &"from"& (before the recipients if &%received_recipients%& is also set).
36749 .next
36750 .cindex "log" "header lines for rejection"
36751 &%rejected_header%&: If a message's header has been received at the time a
36752 rejection is written to the reject log, the complete header is added to the
36753 log. Header logging can be turned off individually for messages that are
36754 rejected by the &[local_scan()]& function (see section &<<SECTapiforloc>>&).
36755 .next
36756 .cindex "log" "retry defer"
36757 &%retry_defer%&: A log line is written if a delivery is deferred because a
36758 retry time has not yet been reached. However, this &"retry time not reached"&
36759 message is always omitted from individual message logs after the first delivery
36760 attempt.
36761 .next
36762 .cindex "log" "return path"
36763 &%return_path_on_delivery%&: The return path that is being transmitted with
36764 the message is included in delivery and bounce lines, using the tag P=.
36765 This is omitted if no delivery actually happens, for example, if routing fails,
36766 or if delivery is to &_/dev/null_& or to &`:blackhole:`&.
36767 .next
36768 .cindex "log" "sender on delivery"
36769 &%sender_on_delivery%&: The message's sender address is added to every delivery
36770 and bounce line, tagged by F= (for &"from"&).
36771 This is the original sender that was received with the message; it is not
36772 necessarily the same as the outgoing return path.
36773 .next
36774 .cindex "log" "sender verify failure"
36775 &%sender_verify_fail%&: If this selector is unset, the separate log line that
36776 gives details of a sender verification failure is not written. Log lines for
36777 the rejection of SMTP commands contain just &"sender verify failed"&, so some
36778 detail is lost.
36779 .next
36780 .cindex "log" "size rejection"
36781 &%size_reject%&: A log line is written whenever a message is rejected because
36782 it is too big.
36783 .next
36784 .cindex "log" "frozen messages; skipped"
36785 .cindex "frozen messages" "logging skipping"
36786 &%skip_delivery%&: A log line is written whenever a message is skipped during a
36787 queue run because it is frozen or because another process is already delivering
36788 it.
36789 .cindex "&""spool file is locked""&"
36790 The message that is written is &"spool file is locked"&.
36791 .next
36792 .cindex "log" "smtp confirmation"
36793 .cindex "SMTP" "logging confirmation"
36794 .cindex "LMTP" "logging confirmation"
36795 &%smtp_confirmation%&: The response to the final &"."& in the SMTP or LMTP dialogue for
36796 outgoing messages is added to delivery log lines in the form &`C=`&<&'text'&>.
36797 A number of MTAs (including Exim) return an identifying string in this
36798 response.
36799 .next
36800 .cindex "log" "SMTP connections"
36801 .cindex "SMTP" "logging connections"
36802 &%smtp_connection%&: A log line is written whenever an incoming SMTP connection is
36803 established or closed, unless the connection is from a host that matches
36804 &%hosts_connection_nolog%&. (In contrast, &%lost_incoming_connection%& applies
36805 only when the closure is unexpected.) This applies to connections from local
36806 processes that use &%-bs%& as well as to TCP/IP connections. If a connection is
36807 dropped in the middle of a message, a log line is always written, whether or
36808 not this selector is set, but otherwise nothing is written at the start and end
36809 of connections unless this selector is enabled.
36810
36811 For TCP/IP connections to an Exim daemon, the current number of connections is
36812 included in the log message for each new connection, but note that the count is
36813 reset if the daemon is restarted.
36814 Also, because connections are closed (and the closure is logged) in
36815 subprocesses, the count may not include connections that have been closed but
36816 whose termination the daemon has not yet noticed. Thus, while it is possible to
36817 match up the opening and closing of connections in the log, the value of the
36818 logged counts may not be entirely accurate.
36819 .next
36820 .cindex "log" "SMTP transaction; incomplete"
36821 .cindex "SMTP" "logging incomplete transactions"
36822 &%smtp_incomplete_transaction%&: When a mail transaction is aborted by
36823 RSET, QUIT, loss of connection, or otherwise, the incident is logged,
36824 and the message sender plus any accepted recipients are included in the log
36825 line. This can provide evidence of dictionary attacks.
36826 .next
36827 .cindex "log" "non-MAIL SMTP sessions"
36828 .cindex "MAIL" "logging session without"
36829 &%smtp_no_mail%&: A line is written to the main log whenever an accepted SMTP
36830 connection terminates without having issued a MAIL command. This includes both
36831 the case when the connection is dropped, and the case when QUIT is used. It
36832 does not include cases where the connection is rejected right at the start (by
36833 an ACL, or because there are too many connections, or whatever). These cases
36834 already have their own log lines.
36835
36836 The log line that is written contains the identity of the client in the usual
36837 way, followed by D= and a time, which records the duration of the connection.
36838 If the connection was authenticated, this fact is logged exactly as it is for
36839 an incoming message, with an A= item. If the connection was encrypted, CV=,
36840 DN=, and X= items may appear as they do for an incoming message, controlled by
36841 the same logging options.
36842
36843 Finally, if any SMTP commands were issued during the connection, a C= item
36844 is added to the line, listing the commands that were used. For example,
36845 .code
36846 C=EHLO,QUIT
36847 .endd
36848 shows that the client issued QUIT straight after EHLO. If there were fewer
36849 than 20 commands, they are all listed. If there were more than 20 commands,
36850 the last 20 are listed, preceded by &"..."&. However, with the default
36851 setting of 10 for &%smtp_accept_max_nonmail%&, the connection will in any case
36852 have been aborted before 20 non-mail commands are processed.
36853 .next
36854 &%smtp_mailauth%&: A third subfield with the authenticated sender,
36855 colon-separated, is appended to the A= item for a message arrival or delivery
36856 log line, if an AUTH argument to the SMTP MAIL command (see &<<SECTauthparamail>>&)
36857 was accepted or used.
36858 .next
36859 .cindex "log" "SMTP protocol error"
36860 .cindex "SMTP" "logging protocol error"
36861 &%smtp_protocol_error%&: A log line is written for every SMTP protocol error
36862 encountered. Exim does not have perfect detection of all protocol errors
36863 because of transmission delays and the use of pipelining. If PIPELINING has
36864 been advertised to a client, an Exim server assumes that the client will use
36865 it, and therefore it does not count &"expected"& errors (for example, RCPT
36866 received after rejecting MAIL) as protocol errors.
36867 .next
36868 .cindex "SMTP" "logging syntax errors"
36869 .cindex "SMTP" "syntax errors; logging"
36870 .cindex "SMTP" "unknown command; logging"
36871 .cindex "log" "unknown SMTP command"
36872 .cindex "log" "SMTP syntax error"
36873 &%smtp_syntax_error%&: A log line is written for every SMTP syntax error
36874 encountered. An unrecognized command is treated as a syntax error. For an
36875 external connection, the host identity is given; for an internal connection
36876 using &%-bs%& the sender identification (normally the calling user) is given.
36877 .next
36878 .cindex "log" "subject"
36879 .cindex "subject, logging"
36880 &%subject%&: The subject of the message is added to the arrival log line,
36881 preceded by &"T="& (T for &"topic"&, since S is already used for &"size"&).
36882 Any MIME &"words"& in the subject are decoded. The &%print_topbitchars%& option
36883 specifies whether characters with values greater than 127 should be logged
36884 unchanged, or whether they should be rendered as escape sequences.
36885 .next
36886 .cindex "log" "certificate verification"
36887 .cindex log DANE
36888 .cindex DANE logging
36889 &%tls_certificate_verified%&: An extra item is added to <= and => log lines
36890 when TLS is in use. The item is &`CV=yes`& if the peer's certificate was
36891 verified
36892 using a CA trust anchor,
36893 &`CA=dane`& if using a DNS trust anchor,
36894 and &`CV=no`& if not.
36895 .next
36896 .cindex "log" "TLS cipher"
36897 .cindex "TLS" "logging cipher"
36898 &%tls_cipher%&: When a message is sent or received over an encrypted
36899 connection, the cipher suite used is added to the log line, preceded by X=.
36900 .next
36901 .cindex "log" "TLS peer DN"
36902 .cindex "TLS" "logging peer DN"
36903 &%tls_peerdn%&: When a message is sent or received over an encrypted
36904 connection, and a certificate is supplied by the remote host, the peer DN is
36905 added to the log line, preceded by DN=.
36906 .next
36907 .cindex "log" "TLS SNI"
36908 .cindex "TLS" "logging SNI"
36909 &%tls_sni%&: When a message is received over an encrypted connection, and
36910 the remote host provided the Server Name Indication extension, the SNI is
36911 added to the log line, preceded by SNI=.
36912 .next
36913 .cindex "log" "DNS failure in list"
36914 &%unknown_in_list%&: This setting causes a log entry to be written when the
36915 result of a list match is failure because a DNS lookup failed.
36916 .endlist
36917
36918
36919 .section "Message log" "SECID260"
36920 .cindex "message" "log file for"
36921 .cindex "log" "message log; description of"
36922 .cindex "&_msglog_& directory"
36923 .oindex "&%preserve_message_logs%&"
36924 In addition to the general log files, Exim writes a log file for each message
36925 that it handles. The names of these per-message logs are the message ids, and
36926 they are kept in the &_msglog_& sub-directory of the spool directory. Each
36927 message log contains copies of the log lines that apply to the message. This
36928 makes it easier to inspect the status of an individual message without having
36929 to search the main log. A message log is deleted when processing of the message
36930 is complete, unless &%preserve_message_logs%& is set, but this should be used
36931 only with great care because they can fill up your disk very quickly.
36932
36933 On a heavily loaded system, it may be desirable to disable the use of
36934 per-message logs, in order to reduce disk I/O. This can be done by setting the
36935 &%message_logs%& option false.
36936 .ecindex IIDloggen
36937
36938
36939
36940
36941 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
36942 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
36943
36944 .chapter "Exim utilities" "CHAPutils"
36945 .scindex IIDutils "utilities"
36946 A number of utility scripts and programs are supplied with Exim and are
36947 described in this chapter. There is also the Exim Monitor, which is covered in
36948 the next chapter. The utilities described here are:
36949
36950 .itable none 0 0 3 7* left 15* left 40* left
36951 .irow &<<SECTfinoutwha>>& &'exiwhat'& &&&
36952 "list what Exim processes are doing"
36953 .irow &<<SECTgreptheque>>& &'exiqgrep'& "grep the queue"
36954 .irow &<<SECTsumtheque>>& &'exiqsumm'& "summarize the queue"
36955 .irow &<<SECTextspeinf>>& &'exigrep'& "search the main log"
36956 .irow &<<SECTexipick>>& &'exipick'& "select messages on &&&
36957 various criteria"
36958 .irow &<<SECTcyclogfil>>& &'exicyclog'& "cycle (rotate) log files"
36959 .irow &<<SECTmailstat>>& &'eximstats'& &&&
36960 "extract statistics from the log"
36961 .irow &<<SECTcheckaccess>>& &'exim_checkaccess'& &&&
36962 "check address acceptance from given IP"
36963 .irow &<<SECTdbmbuild>>& &'exim_dbmbuild'& "build a DBM file"
36964 .irow &<<SECTfinindret>>& &'exinext'& "extract retry information"
36965 .irow &<<SECThindatmai>>& &'exim_dumpdb'& "dump a hints database"
36966 .irow &<<SECThindatmai>>& &'exim_tidydb'& "clean up a hints database"
36967 .irow &<<SECThindatmai>>& &'exim_fixdb'& "patch a hints database"
36968 .irow &<<SECTmailboxmaint>>& &'exim_lock'& "lock a mailbox file"
36969 .endtable
36970
36971 Another utility that might be of use to sites with many MTAs is Tom Kistner's
36972 &'exilog'&. It provides log visualizations across multiple Exim servers. See
36973 &url(http://duncanthrax.net/exilog/) for details.
36974
36975
36976
36977
36978 .section "Finding out what Exim processes are doing (exiwhat)" "SECTfinoutwha"
36979 .cindex "&'exiwhat'&"
36980 .cindex "process, querying"
36981 .cindex "SIGUSR1"
36982 On operating systems that can restart a system call after receiving a signal
36983 (most modern OS), an Exim process responds to the SIGUSR1 signal by writing
36984 a line describing what it is doing to the file &_exim-process.info_& in the
36985 Exim spool directory. The &'exiwhat'& script sends the signal to all Exim
36986 processes it can find, having first emptied the file. It then waits for one
36987 second to allow the Exim processes to react before displaying the results. In
36988 order to run &'exiwhat'& successfully you have to have sufficient privilege to
36989 send the signal to the Exim processes, so it is normally run as root.
36990
36991 &*Warning*&: This is not an efficient process. It is intended for occasional
36992 use by system administrators. It is not sensible, for example, to set up a
36993 script that sends SIGUSR1 signals to Exim processes at short intervals.
36994
36995
36996 Unfortunately, the &'ps'& command that &'exiwhat'& uses to find Exim processes
36997 varies in different operating systems. Not only are different options used,
36998 but the format of the output is different. For this reason, there are some
36999 system configuration options that configure exactly how &'exiwhat'& works. If
37000 it doesn't seem to be working for you, check the following compile-time
37001 options:
37002 .display
37003 &`EXIWHAT_PS_CMD `& the command for running &'ps'&
37004 &`EXIWHAT_PS_ARG `& the argument for &'ps'&
37005 &`EXIWHAT_EGREP_ARG `& the argument for &'egrep'& to select from &'ps'& output
37006 &`EXIWHAT_KILL_ARG `& the argument for the &'kill'& command
37007 .endd
37008 An example of typical output from &'exiwhat'& is
37009 .code
37010 164 daemon: -q1h, listening on port 25
37011 10483 running queue: waiting for 0tAycK-0002ij-00 (10492)
37012 10492 delivering 0tAycK-0002ij-00 to mail.ref.example
37013 [10.19.42.42] (editor@ref.example)
37014 10592 handling incoming call from [192.168.243.242]
37015 10628 accepting a local non-SMTP message
37016 .endd
37017 The first number in the output line is the process number. The third line has
37018 been split here, in order to fit it on the page.
37019
37020
37021
37022 .section "Selective queue listing (exiqgrep)" "SECTgreptheque"
37023 .cindex "&'exiqgrep'&"
37024 .cindex "queue" "grepping"
37025 This utility is a Perl script contributed by Matt Hubbard. It runs
37026 .code
37027 exim -bpu
37028 .endd
37029 or (in case &*-a*& switch is specified)
37030 .code
37031 exim -bp
37032 .endd
37033 The &*-C*& option is used to specify an alternate &_exim.conf_& which might
37034 contain alternate exim configuration the queue management might be using.
37035
37036 to obtain a queue listing, and then greps the output to select messages
37037 that match given criteria. The following selection options are available:
37038
37039 .vlist
37040 .vitem &*-f*&&~<&'regex'&>
37041 Match the sender address using a case-insensitive search. The field that is
37042 tested is enclosed in angle brackets, so you can test for bounce messages with
37043 .code
37044 exiqgrep -f '^<>$'
37045 .endd
37046 .vitem &*-r*&&~<&'regex'&>
37047 Match a recipient address using a case-insensitive search. The field that is
37048 tested is not enclosed in angle brackets.
37049
37050 .vitem &*-s*&&~<&'regex'&>
37051 Match against the size field.
37052
37053 .vitem &*-y*&&~<&'seconds'&>
37054 Match messages that are younger than the given time.
37055
37056 .vitem &*-o*&&~<&'seconds'&>
37057 Match messages that are older than the given time.
37058
37059 .vitem &*-z*&
37060 Match only frozen messages.
37061
37062 .vitem &*-x*&
37063 Match only non-frozen messages.
37064 .endlist
37065
37066 The following options control the format of the output:
37067
37068 .vlist
37069 .vitem &*-c*&
37070 Display only the count of matching messages.
37071
37072 .vitem &*-l*&
37073 Long format &-- display the full message information as output by Exim. This is
37074 the default.
37075
37076 .vitem &*-i*&
37077 Display message ids only.
37078
37079 .vitem &*-b*&
37080 Brief format &-- one line per message.
37081
37082 .vitem &*-R*&
37083 Display messages in reverse order.
37084
37085 .vitem &*-a*&
37086 Include delivered recipients in queue listing.
37087 .endlist
37088
37089 There is one more option, &%-h%&, which outputs a list of options.
37090
37091
37092
37093 .section "Summarizing the queue (exiqsumm)" "SECTsumtheque"
37094 .cindex "&'exiqsumm'&"
37095 .cindex "queue" "summary"
37096 The &'exiqsumm'& utility is a Perl script which reads the output of &`exim
37097 -bp`& and produces a summary of the messages on the queue. Thus, you use it by
37098 running a command such as
37099 .code
37100 exim -bp | exiqsumm
37101 .endd
37102 The output consists of one line for each domain that has messages waiting for
37103 it, as in the following example:
37104 .code
37105 3 2322 74m 66m msn.com.example
37106 .endd
37107 Each line lists the number of pending deliveries for a domain, their total
37108 volume, and the length of time that the oldest and the newest messages have
37109 been waiting. Note that the number of pending deliveries is greater than the
37110 number of messages when messages have more than one recipient.
37111
37112 A summary line is output at the end. By default the output is sorted on the
37113 domain name, but &'exiqsumm'& has the options &%-a%& and &%-c%&, which cause
37114 the output to be sorted by oldest message and by count of messages,
37115 respectively. There are also three options that split the messages for each
37116 domain into two or more subcounts: &%-b%& separates bounce messages, &%-f%&
37117 separates frozen messages, and &%-s%& separates messages according to their
37118 sender.
37119
37120 The output of &'exim -bp'& contains the original addresses in the message, so
37121 this also applies to the output from &'exiqsumm'&. No domains from addresses
37122 generated by aliasing or forwarding are included (unless the &%one_time%&
37123 option of the &(redirect)& router has been used to convert them into &"top
37124 level"& addresses).
37125
37126
37127
37128
37129 .section "Extracting specific information from the log (exigrep)" &&&
37130 "SECTextspeinf"
37131 .cindex "&'exigrep'&"
37132 .cindex "log" "extracts; grepping for"
37133 The &'exigrep'& utility is a Perl script that searches one or more main log
37134 files for entries that match a given pattern. When it finds a match, it
37135 extracts all the log entries for the relevant message, not just those that
37136 match the pattern. Thus, &'exigrep'& can extract complete log entries for a
37137 given message, or all mail for a given user, or for a given host, for example.
37138 The input files can be in Exim log format or syslog format.
37139 If a matching log line is not associated with a specific message, it is
37140 included in &'exigrep'&'s output without any additional lines. The usage is:
37141 .display
37142 &`exigrep [-t<`&&'n'&&`>] [-I] [-l] [-M] [-v] <`&&'pattern'&&`> [<`&&'log file'&&`>] ...`&
37143 .endd
37144 If no log file names are given on the command line, the standard input is read.
37145
37146 The &%-t%& argument specifies a number of seconds. It adds an additional
37147 condition for message selection. Messages that are complete are shown only if
37148 they spent more than <&'n'&> seconds on the queue.
37149
37150 By default, &'exigrep'& does case-insensitive matching. The &%-I%& option
37151 makes it case-sensitive. This may give a performance improvement when searching
37152 large log files. Without &%-I%&, the Perl pattern matches use Perl's &`/i`&
37153 option; with &%-I%& they do not. In both cases it is possible to change the
37154 case sensitivity within the pattern by using &`(?i)`& or &`(?-i)`&.
37155
37156 The &%-l%& option means &"literal"&, that is, treat all characters in the
37157 pattern as standing for themselves. Otherwise the pattern must be a Perl
37158 regular expression.
37159
37160 The &%-v%& option inverts the matching condition. That is, a line is selected
37161 if it does &'not'& match the pattern.
37162
37163 The &%-M%& options means &"related messages"&. &'exigrep'& will show messages
37164 that are generated as a result/response to a message that &'exigrep'& matched
37165 normally.
37166
37167 Example of &%-M%&:
37168 user_a sends a message to user_b, which generates a bounce back to user_b. If
37169 &'exigrep'& is used to search for &"user_a"&, only the first message will be
37170 displayed. But if &'exigrep'& is used to search for &"user_b"&, the first and
37171 the second (bounce) message will be displayed. Using &%-M%& with &'exigrep'&
37172 when searching for &"user_a"& will show both messages since the bounce is
37173 &"related"& to or a &"result"& of the first message that was found by the
37174 search term.
37175
37176 If the location of a &'zcat'& command is known from the definition of
37177 ZCAT_COMMAND in &_Local/Makefile_&, &'exigrep'& automatically passes any file
37178 whose name ends in COMPRESS_SUFFIX through &'zcat'& as it searches it.
37179 If the ZCAT_COMMAND is not executable, &'exigrep'& tries to use
37180 autodetection of some well known compression extensions.
37181
37182
37183 .section "Selecting messages by various criteria (exipick)" "SECTexipick"
37184 .cindex "&'exipick'&"
37185 John Jetmore's &'exipick'& utility is included in the Exim distribution. It
37186 lists messages from the queue according to a variety of criteria. For details
37187 of &'exipick'&'s facilities, run &'exipick'& with
37188 the &%--help%& option.
37189
37190
37191 .section "Cycling log files (exicyclog)" "SECTcyclogfil"
37192 .cindex "log" "cycling local files"
37193 .cindex "cycling logs"
37194 .cindex "&'exicyclog'&"
37195 The &'exicyclog'& script can be used to cycle (rotate) &'mainlog'& and
37196 &'rejectlog'& files. This is not necessary if only syslog is being used, or if
37197 you are using log files with datestamps in their names (see section
37198 &<<SECTdatlogfil>>&). Some operating systems have their own standard mechanisms
37199 for log cycling, and these can be used instead of &'exicyclog'& if preferred.
37200 There are two command line options for &'exicyclog'&:
37201 .ilist
37202 &%-k%& <&'count'&> specifies the number of log files to keep, overriding the
37203 default that is set when Exim is built. The default default is 10.
37204 .next
37205 &%-l%& <&'path'&> specifies the log file path, in the same format as Exim's
37206 &%log_file_path%& option (for example, &`/var/log/exim_%slog`&), again
37207 overriding the script's default, which is to find the setting from Exim's
37208 configuration.
37209 .endlist
37210
37211 Each time &'exicyclog'& is run the file names get &"shuffled down"& by one. If
37212 the main log file name is &_mainlog_& (the default) then when &'exicyclog'& is
37213 run &_mainlog_& becomes &_mainlog.01_&, the previous &_mainlog.01_& becomes
37214 &_mainlog.02_& and so on, up to the limit that is set in the script or by the
37215 &%-k%& option. Log files whose numbers exceed the limit are discarded. Reject
37216 logs are handled similarly.
37217
37218 If the limit is greater than 99, the script uses 3-digit numbers such as
37219 &_mainlog.001_&, &_mainlog.002_&, etc. If you change from a number less than 99
37220 to one that is greater, or &'vice versa'&, you will have to fix the names of
37221 any existing log files.
37222
37223 If no &_mainlog_& file exists, the script does nothing. Files that &"drop off"&
37224 the end are deleted. All files with numbers greater than 01 are compressed,
37225 using a compression command which is configured by the COMPRESS_COMMAND
37226 setting in &_Local/Makefile_&. It is usual to run &'exicyclog'& daily from a
37227 root &%crontab%& entry of the form
37228 .code
37229 1 0 * * * su exim -c /usr/exim/bin/exicyclog
37230 .endd
37231 assuming you have used the name &"exim"& for the Exim user. You can run
37232 &'exicyclog'& as root if you wish, but there is no need.
37233
37234
37235
37236 .section "Mail statistics (eximstats)" "SECTmailstat"
37237 .cindex "statistics"
37238 .cindex "&'eximstats'&"
37239 A Perl script called &'eximstats'& is provided for extracting statistical
37240 information from log files. The output is either plain text, or HTML.
37241 Exim log files are also supported by the &'Lire'& system produced by the
37242 LogReport Foundation &url(http://www.logreport.org).
37243
37244 The &'eximstats'& script has been hacked about quite a bit over time. The
37245 latest version is the result of some extensive revision by Steve Campbell. A
37246 lot of information is given by default, but there are options for suppressing
37247 various parts of it. Following any options, the arguments to the script are a
37248 list of files, which should be main log files. For example:
37249 .code
37250 eximstats -nr /var/spool/exim/log/mainlog.01
37251 .endd
37252 By default, &'eximstats'& extracts information about the number and volume of
37253 messages received from or delivered to various hosts. The information is sorted
37254 both by message count and by volume, and the top fifty hosts in each category
37255 are listed on the standard output. Similar information, based on email
37256 addresses or domains instead of hosts can be requested by means of various
37257 options. For messages delivered and received locally, similar statistics are
37258 also produced per user.
37259
37260 The output also includes total counts and statistics about delivery errors, and
37261 histograms showing the number of messages received and deliveries made in each
37262 hour of the day. A delivery with more than one address in its envelope (for
37263 example, an SMTP transaction with more than one RCPT command) is counted
37264 as a single delivery by &'eximstats'&.
37265
37266 Though normally more deliveries than receipts are reported (as messages may
37267 have multiple recipients), it is possible for &'eximstats'& to report more
37268 messages received than delivered, even though the queue is empty at the start
37269 and end of the period in question. If an incoming message contains no valid
37270 recipients, no deliveries are recorded for it. A bounce message is handled as
37271 an entirely separate message.
37272
37273 &'eximstats'& always outputs a grand total summary giving the volume and number
37274 of messages received and deliveries made, and the number of hosts involved in
37275 each case. It also outputs the number of messages that were delayed (that is,
37276 not completely delivered at the first attempt), and the number that had at
37277 least one address that failed.
37278
37279 The remainder of the output is in sections that can be independently disabled
37280 or modified by various options. It consists of a summary of deliveries by
37281 transport, histograms of messages received and delivered per time interval
37282 (default per hour), information about the time messages spent on the queue,
37283 a list of relayed messages, lists of the top fifty sending hosts, local
37284 senders, destination hosts, and destination local users by count and by volume,
37285 and a list of delivery errors that occurred.
37286
37287 The relay information lists messages that were actually relayed, that is, they
37288 came from a remote host and were directly delivered to some other remote host,
37289 without being processed (for example, for aliasing or forwarding) locally.
37290
37291 There are quite a few options for &'eximstats'& to control exactly what it
37292 outputs. These are documented in the Perl script itself, and can be extracted
37293 by running the command &(perldoc)& on the script. For example:
37294 .code
37295 perldoc /usr/exim/bin/eximstats
37296 .endd
37297
37298 .section "Checking access policy (exim_checkaccess)" "SECTcheckaccess"
37299 .cindex "&'exim_checkaccess'&"
37300 .cindex "policy control" "checking access"
37301 .cindex "checking access"
37302 The &%-bh%& command line argument allows you to run a fake SMTP session with
37303 debugging output, in order to check what Exim is doing when it is applying
37304 policy controls to incoming SMTP mail. However, not everybody is sufficiently
37305 familiar with the SMTP protocol to be able to make full use of &%-bh%&, and
37306 sometimes you just want to answer the question &"Does this address have
37307 access?"& without bothering with any further details.
37308
37309 The &'exim_checkaccess'& utility is a &"packaged"& version of &%-bh%&. It takes
37310 two arguments, an IP address and an email address:
37311 .code
37312 exim_checkaccess 10.9.8.7 A.User@a.domain.example
37313 .endd
37314 The utility runs a call to Exim with the &%-bh%& option, to test whether the
37315 given email address would be accepted in a RCPT command in a TCP/IP
37316 connection from the host with the given IP address. The output of the utility
37317 is either the word &"accepted"&, or the SMTP error response, for example:
37318 .code
37319 Rejected:
37320 550 Relay not permitted
37321 .endd
37322 When running this test, the utility uses &`<>`& as the envelope sender address
37323 for the MAIL command, but you can change this by providing additional
37324 options. These are passed directly to the Exim command. For example, to specify
37325 that the test is to be run with the sender address &'himself@there.example'&
37326 you can use:
37327 .code
37328 exim_checkaccess 10.9.8.7 A.User@a.domain.example \
37329 -f himself@there.example
37330 .endd
37331 Note that these additional Exim command line items must be given after the two
37332 mandatory arguments.
37333
37334 Because the &%exim_checkaccess%& uses &%-bh%&, it does not perform callouts
37335 while running its checks. You can run checks that include callouts by using
37336 &%-bhc%&, but this is not yet available in a &"packaged"& form.
37337
37338
37339
37340 .section "Making DBM files (exim_dbmbuild)" "SECTdbmbuild"
37341 .cindex "DBM" "building dbm files"
37342 .cindex "building DBM files"
37343 .cindex "&'exim_dbmbuild'&"
37344 .cindex "lower casing"
37345 .cindex "binary zero" "in lookup key"
37346 The &'exim_dbmbuild'& program reads an input file containing keys and data in
37347 the format used by the &(lsearch)& lookup (see section
37348 &<<SECTsinglekeylookups>>&). It writes a DBM file using the lower-cased alias
37349 names as keys and the remainder of the information as data. The lower-casing
37350 can be prevented by calling the program with the &%-nolc%& option.
37351
37352 A terminating zero is included as part of the key string. This is expected by
37353 the &(dbm)& lookup type. However, if the option &%-nozero%& is given,
37354 &'exim_dbmbuild'& creates files without terminating zeroes in either the key
37355 strings or the data strings. The &(dbmnz)& lookup type can be used with such
37356 files.
37357
37358 The program requires two arguments: the name of the input file (which can be a
37359 single hyphen to indicate the standard input), and the name of the output file.
37360 It creates the output under a temporary name, and then renames it if all went
37361 well.
37362
37363 .cindex "USE_DB"
37364 If the native DB interface is in use (USE_DB is set in a compile-time
37365 configuration file &-- this is common in free versions of Unix) the two file
37366 names must be different, because in this mode the Berkeley DB functions create
37367 a single output file using exactly the name given. For example,
37368 .code
37369 exim_dbmbuild /etc/aliases /etc/aliases.db
37370 .endd
37371 reads the system alias file and creates a DBM version of it in
37372 &_/etc/aliases.db_&.
37373
37374 In systems that use the &'ndbm'& routines (mostly proprietary versions of
37375 Unix), two files are used, with the suffixes &_.dir_& and &_.pag_&. In this
37376 environment, the suffixes are added to the second argument of
37377 &'exim_dbmbuild'&, so it can be the same as the first. This is also the case
37378 when the Berkeley functions are used in compatibility mode (though this is not
37379 recommended), because in that case it adds a &_.db_& suffix to the file name.
37380
37381 If a duplicate key is encountered, the program outputs a warning, and when it
37382 finishes, its return code is 1 rather than zero, unless the &%-noduperr%&
37383 option is used. By default, only the first of a set of duplicates is used &--
37384 this makes it compatible with &(lsearch)& lookups. There is an option
37385 &%-lastdup%& which causes it to use the data for the last duplicate instead.
37386 There is also an option &%-nowarn%&, which stops it listing duplicate keys to
37387 &%stderr%&. For other errors, where it doesn't actually make a new file, the
37388 return code is 2.
37389
37390
37391
37392
37393 .section "Finding individual retry times (exinext)" "SECTfinindret"
37394 .cindex "retry" "times"
37395 .cindex "&'exinext'&"
37396 A utility called &'exinext'& (mostly a Perl script) provides the ability to
37397 fish specific information out of the retry database. Given a mail domain (or a
37398 complete address), it looks up the hosts for that domain, and outputs any retry
37399 information for the hosts or for the domain. At present, the retry information
37400 is obtained by running &'exim_dumpdb'& (see below) and post-processing the
37401 output. For example:
37402 .code
37403 $ exinext piglet@milne.fict.example
37404 kanga.milne.example:192.168.8.1 error 146: Connection refused
37405 first failed: 21-Feb-1996 14:57:34
37406 last tried: 21-Feb-1996 14:57:34
37407 next try at: 21-Feb-1996 15:02:34
37408 roo.milne.example:192.168.8.3 error 146: Connection refused
37409 first failed: 20-Jan-1996 13:12:08
37410 last tried: 21-Feb-1996 11:42:03
37411 next try at: 21-Feb-1996 19:42:03
37412 past final cutoff time
37413 .endd
37414 You can also give &'exinext'& a local part, without a domain, and it
37415 will give any retry information for that local part in your default domain.
37416 A message id can be used to obtain retry information pertaining to a specific
37417 message. This exists only when an attempt to deliver a message to a remote host
37418 suffers a message-specific error (see section &<<SECToutSMTPerr>>&).
37419 &'exinext'& is not particularly efficient, but then it is not expected to be
37420 run very often.
37421
37422 The &'exinext'& utility calls Exim to find out information such as the location
37423 of the spool directory. The utility has &%-C%& and &%-D%& options, which are
37424 passed on to the &'exim'& commands. The first specifies an alternate Exim
37425 configuration file, and the second sets macros for use within the configuration
37426 file. These features are mainly to help in testing, but might also be useful in
37427 environments where more than one configuration file is in use.
37428
37429
37430
37431 .section "Hints database maintenance" "SECThindatmai"
37432 .cindex "hints database" "maintenance"
37433 .cindex "maintaining Exim's hints database"
37434 Three utility programs are provided for maintaining the DBM files that Exim
37435 uses to contain its delivery hint information. Each program requires two
37436 arguments. The first specifies the name of Exim's spool directory, and the
37437 second is the name of the database it is to operate on. These are as follows:
37438
37439 .ilist
37440 &'retry'&: the database of retry information
37441 .next
37442 &'wait-'&<&'transport name'&>: databases of information about messages waiting
37443 for remote hosts
37444 .next
37445 &'callout'&: the callout cache
37446 .next
37447 &'ratelimit'&: the data for implementing the ratelimit ACL condition
37448 .next
37449 &'misc'&: other hints data
37450 .endlist
37451
37452 The &'misc'& database is used for
37453
37454 .ilist
37455 Serializing ETRN runs (when &%smtp_etrn_serialize%& is set)
37456 .next
37457 Serializing delivery to a specific host (when &%serialize_hosts%& is set in an
37458 &(smtp)& transport)
37459 .next
37460 Limiting the concurrency of specific transports (when &%max_parallel%& is set
37461 in a transport)
37462 .endlist
37463
37464
37465
37466 .section "exim_dumpdb" "SECID261"
37467 .cindex "&'exim_dumpdb'&"
37468 The entire contents of a database are written to the standard output by the
37469 &'exim_dumpdb'& program, which has no options or arguments other than the
37470 spool and database names. For example, to dump the retry database:
37471 .code
37472 exim_dumpdb /var/spool/exim retry
37473 .endd
37474 Two lines of output are produced for each entry:
37475 .code
37476 T:mail.ref.example:192.168.242.242 146 77 Connection refused
37477 31-Oct-1995 12:00:12 02-Nov-1995 12:21:39 02-Nov-1995 20:21:39 *
37478 .endd
37479 The first item on the first line is the key of the record. It starts with one
37480 of the letters R, or T, depending on whether it refers to a routing or
37481 transport retry. For a local delivery, the next part is the local address; for
37482 a remote delivery it is the name of the remote host, followed by its failing IP
37483 address (unless &%retry_include_ip_address%& is set false on the &(smtp)&
37484 transport). If the remote port is not the standard one (port 25), it is added
37485 to the IP address. Then there follows an error code, an additional error code,
37486 and a textual description of the error.
37487
37488 The three times on the second line are the time of first failure, the time of
37489 the last delivery attempt, and the computed time for the next attempt. The line
37490 ends with an asterisk if the cutoff time for the last retry rule has been
37491 exceeded.
37492
37493 Each output line from &'exim_dumpdb'& for the &'wait-xxx'& databases
37494 consists of a host name followed by a list of ids for messages that are or were
37495 waiting to be delivered to that host. If there are a very large number for any
37496 one host, continuation records, with a sequence number added to the host name,
37497 may be seen. The data in these records is often out of date, because a message
37498 may be routed to several alternative hosts, and Exim makes no effort to keep
37499 cross-references.
37500
37501
37502
37503 .section "exim_tidydb" "SECID262"
37504 .cindex "&'exim_tidydb'&"
37505 The &'exim_tidydb'& utility program is used to tidy up the contents of a hints
37506 database. If run with no options, it removes all records that are more than 30
37507 days old. The age is calculated from the date and time that the record was last
37508 updated. Note that, in the case of the retry database, it is &'not'& the time
37509 since the first delivery failure. Information about a host that has been down
37510 for more than 30 days will remain in the database, provided that the record is
37511 updated sufficiently often.
37512
37513 The cutoff date can be altered by means of the &%-t%& option, which must be
37514 followed by a time. For example, to remove all records older than a week from
37515 the retry database:
37516 .code
37517 exim_tidydb -t 7d /var/spool/exim retry
37518 .endd
37519 Both the &'wait-xxx'& and &'retry'& databases contain items that involve
37520 message ids. In the former these appear as data in records keyed by host &--
37521 they were messages that were waiting for that host &-- and in the latter they
37522 are the keys for retry information for messages that have suffered certain
37523 types of error. When &'exim_tidydb'& is run, a check is made to ensure that
37524 message ids in database records are those of messages that are still on the
37525 queue. Message ids for messages that no longer exist are removed from
37526 &'wait-xxx'& records, and if this leaves any records empty, they are deleted.
37527 For the &'retry'& database, records whose keys are non-existent message ids are
37528 removed. The &'exim_tidydb'& utility outputs comments on the standard output
37529 whenever it removes information from the database.
37530
37531 Certain records are automatically removed by Exim when they are no longer
37532 needed, but others are not. For example, if all the MX hosts for a domain are
37533 down, a retry record is created for each one. If the primary MX host comes back
37534 first, its record is removed when Exim successfully delivers to it, but the
37535 records for the others remain because Exim has not tried to use those hosts.
37536
37537 It is important, therefore, to run &'exim_tidydb'& periodically on all the
37538 hints databases. You should do this at a quiet time of day, because it requires
37539 a database to be locked (and therefore inaccessible to Exim) while it does its
37540 work. Removing records from a DBM file does not normally make the file smaller,
37541 but all the common DBM libraries are able to re-use the space that is released.
37542 After an initial phase of increasing in size, the databases normally reach a
37543 point at which they no longer get any bigger, as long as they are regularly
37544 tidied.
37545
37546 &*Warning*&: If you never run &'exim_tidydb'&, the space used by the hints
37547 databases is likely to keep on increasing.
37548
37549
37550
37551
37552 .section "exim_fixdb" "SECID263"
37553 .cindex "&'exim_fixdb'&"
37554 The &'exim_fixdb'& program is a utility for interactively modifying databases.
37555 Its main use is for testing Exim, but it might also be occasionally useful for
37556 getting round problems in a live system. It has no options, and its interface
37557 is somewhat crude. On entry, it prompts for input with a right angle-bracket. A
37558 key of a database record can then be entered, and the data for that record is
37559 displayed.
37560
37561 If &"d"& is typed at the next prompt, the entire record is deleted. For all
37562 except the &'retry'& database, that is the only operation that can be carried
37563 out. For the &'retry'& database, each field is output preceded by a number, and
37564 data for individual fields can be changed by typing the field number followed
37565 by new data, for example:
37566 .code
37567 > 4 951102:1000
37568 .endd
37569 resets the time of the next delivery attempt. Time values are given as a
37570 sequence of digit pairs for year, month, day, hour, and minute. Colons can be
37571 used as optional separators.
37572
37573
37574
37575
37576 .section "Mailbox maintenance (exim_lock)" "SECTmailboxmaint"
37577 .cindex "mailbox" "maintenance"
37578 .cindex "&'exim_lock'&"
37579 .cindex "locking mailboxes"
37580 The &'exim_lock'& utility locks a mailbox file using the same algorithm as
37581 Exim. For a discussion of locking issues, see section &<<SECTopappend>>&.
37582 &'Exim_lock'& can be used to prevent any modification of a mailbox by Exim or
37583 a user agent while investigating a problem. The utility requires the name of
37584 the file as its first argument. If the locking is successful, the second
37585 argument is run as a command (using C's &[system()]& function); if there is no
37586 second argument, the value of the SHELL environment variable is used; if this
37587 is unset or empty, &_/bin/sh_& is run. When the command finishes, the mailbox
37588 is unlocked and the utility ends. The following options are available:
37589
37590 .vlist
37591 .vitem &%-fcntl%&
37592 Use &[fcntl()]& locking on the open mailbox.
37593
37594 .vitem &%-flock%&
37595 Use &[flock()]& locking on the open mailbox, provided the operating system
37596 supports it.
37597
37598 .vitem &%-interval%&
37599 This must be followed by a number, which is a number of seconds; it sets the
37600 interval to sleep between retries (default 3).
37601
37602 .vitem &%-lockfile%&
37603 Create a lock file before opening the mailbox.
37604
37605 .vitem &%-mbx%&
37606 Lock the mailbox using MBX rules.
37607
37608 .vitem &%-q%&
37609 Suppress verification output.
37610
37611 .vitem &%-retries%&
37612 This must be followed by a number; it sets the number of times to try to get
37613 the lock (default 10).
37614
37615 .vitem &%-restore_time%&
37616 This option causes &%exim_lock%& to restore the modified and read times to the
37617 locked file before exiting. This allows you to access a locked mailbox (for
37618 example, to take a backup copy) without disturbing the times that the user
37619 subsequently sees.
37620
37621 .vitem &%-timeout%&
37622 This must be followed by a number, which is a number of seconds; it sets a
37623 timeout to be used with a blocking &[fcntl()]& lock. If it is not set (the
37624 default), a non-blocking call is used.
37625
37626 .vitem &%-v%&
37627 Generate verbose output.
37628 .endlist
37629
37630 If none of &%-fcntl%&, &%-flock%&, &%-lockfile%& or &%-mbx%& are given, the
37631 default is to create a lock file and also to use &[fcntl()]& locking on the
37632 mailbox, which is the same as Exim's default. The use of &%-flock%& or
37633 &%-fcntl%& requires that the file be writeable; the use of &%-lockfile%&
37634 requires that the directory containing the file be writeable. Locking by lock
37635 file does not last for ever; Exim assumes that a lock file is expired if it is
37636 more than 30 minutes old.
37637
37638 The &%-mbx%& option can be used with either or both of &%-fcntl%& or
37639 &%-flock%&. It assumes &%-fcntl%& by default. MBX locking causes a shared lock
37640 to be taken out on the open mailbox, and an exclusive lock on the file
37641 &_/tmp/.n.m_& where &'n'& and &'m'& are the device number and inode
37642 number of the mailbox file. When the locking is released, if an exclusive lock
37643 can be obtained for the mailbox, the file in &_/tmp_& is deleted.
37644
37645 The default output contains verification of the locking that takes place. The
37646 &%-v%& option causes some additional information to be given. The &%-q%& option
37647 suppresses all output except error messages.
37648
37649 A command such as
37650 .code
37651 exim_lock /var/spool/mail/spqr
37652 .endd
37653 runs an interactive shell while the file is locked, whereas
37654 .display
37655 &`exim_lock -q /var/spool/mail/spqr <<End`&
37656 <&'some commands'&>
37657 &`End`&
37658 .endd
37659 runs a specific non-interactive sequence of commands while the file is locked,
37660 suppressing all verification output. A single command can be run by a command
37661 such as
37662 .code
37663 exim_lock -q /var/spool/mail/spqr \
37664 "cp /var/spool/mail/spqr /some/where"
37665 .endd
37666 Note that if a command is supplied, it must be entirely contained within the
37667 second argument &-- hence the quotes.
37668 .ecindex IIDutils
37669
37670
37671 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
37672 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
37673
37674 .chapter "The Exim monitor" "CHAPeximon"
37675 .scindex IIDeximon "Exim monitor" "description"
37676 .cindex "X-windows"
37677 .cindex "&'eximon'&"
37678 .cindex "Local/eximon.conf"
37679 .cindex "&_exim_monitor/EDITME_&"
37680 The Exim monitor is an application which displays in an X window information
37681 about the state of Exim's queue and what Exim is doing. An admin user can
37682 perform certain operations on messages from this GUI interface; however all
37683 such facilities are also available from the command line, and indeed, the
37684 monitor itself makes use of the command line to perform any actions requested.
37685
37686
37687
37688 .section "Running the monitor" "SECID264"
37689 The monitor is started by running the script called &'eximon'&. This is a shell
37690 script that sets up a number of environment variables, and then runs the
37691 binary called &_eximon.bin_&. The default appearance of the monitor window can
37692 be changed by editing the &_Local/eximon.conf_& file created by editing
37693 &_exim_monitor/EDITME_&. Comments in that file describe what the various
37694 parameters are for.
37695
37696 The parameters that get built into the &'eximon'& script can be overridden for
37697 a particular invocation by setting up environment variables of the same names,
37698 preceded by &`EXIMON_`&. For example, a shell command such as
37699 .code
37700 EXIMON_LOG_DEPTH=400 eximon
37701 .endd
37702 (in a Bourne-compatible shell) runs &'eximon'& with an overriding setting of
37703 the LOG_DEPTH parameter. If EXIMON_LOG_FILE_PATH is set in the environment, it
37704 overrides the Exim log file configuration. This makes it possible to have
37705 &'eximon'& tailing log data that is written to syslog, provided that MAIL.INFO
37706 syslog messages are routed to a file on the local host.
37707
37708 X resources can be used to change the appearance of the window in the normal
37709 way. For example, a resource setting of the form
37710 .code
37711 Eximon*background: gray94
37712 .endd
37713 changes the colour of the background to light grey rather than white. The
37714 stripcharts are drawn with both the data lines and the reference lines in
37715 black. This means that the reference lines are not visible when on top of the
37716 data. However, their colour can be changed by setting a resource called
37717 &"highlight"& (an odd name, but that's what the Athena stripchart widget uses).
37718 For example, if your X server is running Unix, you could set up lighter
37719 reference lines in the stripcharts by obeying
37720 .code
37721 xrdb -merge <<End
37722 Eximon*highlight: gray
37723 End
37724 .endd
37725 .cindex "admin user"
37726 In order to see the contents of messages on the queue, and to operate on them,
37727 &'eximon'& must either be run as root or by an admin user.
37728
37729 The command-line parameters of &'eximon'& are passed to &_eximon.bin_& and may
37730 contain X11 resource parameters interpreted by the X11 library. In addition,
37731 if the first parameter starts with the string "gdb" then it is removed and the
37732 binary is invoked under gdb (the parameter is used as the gdb command-name, so
37733 versioned variants of gdb can be invoked).
37734
37735 The monitor's window is divided into three parts. The first contains one or
37736 more stripcharts and two action buttons, the second contains a &"tail"& of the
37737 main log file, and the third is a display of the queue of messages awaiting
37738 delivery, with two more action buttons. The following sections describe these
37739 different parts of the display.
37740
37741
37742
37743
37744 .section "The stripcharts" "SECID265"
37745 .cindex "stripchart"
37746 The first stripchart is always a count of messages on the queue. Its name can
37747 be configured by setting QUEUE_STRIPCHART_NAME in the
37748 &_Local/eximon.conf_& file. The remaining stripcharts are defined in the
37749 configuration script by regular expression matches on log file entries, making
37750 it possible to display, for example, counts of messages delivered to certain
37751 hosts or using certain transports. The supplied defaults display counts of
37752 received and delivered messages, and of local and SMTP deliveries. The default
37753 period between stripchart updates is one minute; this can be adjusted by a
37754 parameter in the &_Local/eximon.conf_& file.
37755
37756 The stripchart displays rescale themselves automatically as the value they are
37757 displaying changes. There are always 10 horizontal lines in each chart; the
37758 title string indicates the value of each division when it is greater than one.
37759 For example, &"x2"& means that each division represents a value of 2.
37760
37761 It is also possible to have a stripchart which shows the percentage fullness of
37762 a particular disk partition, which is useful when local deliveries are confined
37763 to a single partition.
37764
37765 .cindex "&%statvfs%& function"
37766 This relies on the availability of the &[statvfs()]& function or equivalent in
37767 the operating system. Most, but not all versions of Unix that support Exim have
37768 this. For this particular stripchart, the top of the chart always represents
37769 100%, and the scale is given as &"x10%"&. This chart is configured by setting
37770 SIZE_STRIPCHART and (optionally) SIZE_STRIPCHART_NAME in the
37771 &_Local/eximon.conf_& file.
37772
37773
37774
37775
37776 .section "Main action buttons" "SECID266"
37777 .cindex "size" "of monitor window"
37778 .cindex "Exim monitor" "window size"
37779 .cindex "window size"
37780 Below the stripcharts there is an action button for quitting the monitor. Next
37781 to this is another button marked &"Size"&. They are placed here so that
37782 shrinking the window to its default minimum size leaves just the queue count
37783 stripchart and these two buttons visible. Pressing the &"Size"& button causes
37784 the window to expand to its maximum size, unless it is already at the maximum,
37785 in which case it is reduced to its minimum.
37786
37787 When expanding to the maximum, if the window cannot be fully seen where it
37788 currently is, it is moved back to where it was the last time it was at full
37789 size. When it is expanding from its minimum size, the old position is
37790 remembered, and next time it is reduced to the minimum it is moved back there.
37791
37792 The idea is that you can keep a reduced window just showing one or two
37793 stripcharts at a convenient place on your screen, easily expand it to show
37794 the full window when required, and just as easily put it back to what it was.
37795 The idea is copied from what the &'twm'& window manager does for its
37796 &'f.fullzoom'& action. The minimum size of the window can be changed by setting
37797 the MIN_HEIGHT and MIN_WIDTH values in &_Local/eximon.conf_&.
37798
37799 Normally, the monitor starts up with the window at its full size, but it can be
37800 built so that it starts up with the window at its smallest size, by setting
37801 START_SMALL=yes in &_Local/eximon.conf_&.
37802
37803
37804
37805 .section "The log display" "SECID267"
37806 .cindex "log" "tail of; in monitor"
37807 The second section of the window is an area in which a display of the tail of
37808 the main log is maintained.
37809 To save space on the screen, the timestamp on each log line is shortened by
37810 removing the date and, if &%log_timezone%& is set, the timezone.
37811 The log tail is not available when the only destination for logging data is
37812 syslog, unless the syslog lines are routed to a local file whose name is passed
37813 to &'eximon'& via the EXIMON_LOG_FILE_PATH environment variable.
37814
37815 The log sub-window has a scroll bar at its lefthand side which can be used to
37816 move back to look at earlier text, and the up and down arrow keys also have a
37817 scrolling effect. The amount of log that is kept depends on the setting of
37818 LOG_BUFFER in &_Local/eximon.conf_&, which specifies the amount of memory
37819 to use. When this is full, the earlier 50% of data is discarded &-- this is
37820 much more efficient than throwing it away line by line. The sub-window also has
37821 a horizontal scroll bar for accessing the ends of long log lines. This is the
37822 only means of horizontal scrolling; the right and left arrow keys are not
37823 available. Text can be cut from this part of the window using the mouse in the
37824 normal way. The size of this subwindow is controlled by parameters in the
37825 configuration file &_Local/eximon.conf_&.
37826
37827 Searches of the text in the log window can be carried out by means of the ^R
37828 and ^S keystrokes, which default to a reverse and a forward search,
37829 respectively. The search covers only the text that is displayed in the window.
37830 It cannot go further back up the log.
37831
37832 The point from which the search starts is indicated by a caret marker. This is
37833 normally at the end of the text in the window, but can be positioned explicitly
37834 by pointing and clicking with the left mouse button, and is moved automatically
37835 by a successful search. If new text arrives in the window when it is scrolled
37836 back, the caret remains where it is, but if the window is not scrolled back,
37837 the caret is moved to the end of the new text.
37838
37839 Pressing ^R or ^S pops up a window into which the search text can be typed.
37840 There are buttons for selecting forward or reverse searching, for carrying out
37841 the search, and for cancelling. If the &"Search"& button is pressed, the search
37842 happens and the window remains so that further searches can be done. If the
37843 &"Return"& key is pressed, a single search is done and the window is closed. If
37844 ^C is typed the search is cancelled.
37845
37846 The searching facility is implemented using the facilities of the Athena text
37847 widget. By default this pops up a window containing both &"search"& and
37848 &"replace"& options. In order to suppress the unwanted &"replace"& portion for
37849 eximon, a modified version of the &%TextPop%& widget is distributed with Exim.
37850 However, the linkers in BSDI and HP-UX seem unable to handle an externally
37851 provided version of &%TextPop%& when the remaining parts of the text widget
37852 come from the standard libraries. The compile-time option EXIMON_TEXTPOP can be
37853 unset to cut out the modified &%TextPop%&, making it possible to build Eximon
37854 on these systems, at the expense of having unwanted items in the search popup
37855 window.
37856
37857
37858
37859 .section "The queue display" "SECID268"
37860 .cindex "queue" "display in monitor"
37861 The bottom section of the monitor window contains a list of all messages that
37862 are on the queue, which includes those currently being received or delivered,
37863 as well as those awaiting delivery. The size of this subwindow is controlled by
37864 parameters in the configuration file &_Local/eximon.conf_&, and the frequency
37865 at which it is updated is controlled by another parameter in the same file &--
37866 the default is 5 minutes, since queue scans can be quite expensive. However,
37867 there is an &"Update"& action button just above the display which can be used
37868 to force an update of the queue display at any time.
37869
37870 When a host is down for some time, a lot of pending mail can build up for it,
37871 and this can make it hard to deal with other messages on the queue. To help
37872 with this situation there is a button next to &"Update"& called &"Hide"&. If
37873 pressed, a dialogue box called &"Hide addresses ending with"& is put up. If you
37874 type anything in here and press &"Return"&, the text is added to a chain of
37875 such texts, and if every undelivered address in a message matches at least one
37876 of the texts, the message is not displayed.
37877
37878 If there is an address that does not match any of the texts, all the addresses
37879 are displayed as normal. The matching happens on the ends of addresses so, for
37880 example, &'cam.ac.uk'& specifies all addresses in Cambridge, while
37881 &'xxx@foo.com.example'& specifies just one specific address. When any hiding
37882 has been set up, a button called &"Unhide"& is displayed. If pressed, it
37883 cancels all hiding. Also, to ensure that hidden messages do not get forgotten,
37884 a hide request is automatically cancelled after one hour.
37885
37886 While the dialogue box is displayed, you can't press any buttons or do anything
37887 else to the monitor window. For this reason, if you want to cut text from the
37888 queue display to use in the dialogue box, you have to do the cutting before
37889 pressing the &"Hide"& button.
37890
37891 The queue display contains, for each unhidden queued message, the length of
37892 time it has been on the queue, the size of the message, the message id, the
37893 message sender, and the first undelivered recipient, all on one line. If it is
37894 a bounce message, the sender is shown as &"<>"&. If there is more than one
37895 recipient to which the message has not yet been delivered, subsequent ones are
37896 listed on additional lines, up to a maximum configured number, following which
37897 an ellipsis is displayed. Recipients that have already received the message are
37898 not shown.
37899
37900 .cindex "frozen messages" "display"
37901 If a message is frozen, an asterisk is displayed at the left-hand side.
37902
37903 The queue display has a vertical scroll bar, and can also be scrolled by means
37904 of the arrow keys. Text can be cut from it using the mouse in the normal way.
37905 The text searching facilities, as described above for the log window, are also
37906 available, but the caret is always moved to the end of the text when the queue
37907 display is updated.
37908
37909
37910
37911 .section "The queue menu" "SECID269"
37912 .cindex "queue" "menu in monitor"
37913 If the &%shift%& key is held down and the left button is clicked when the mouse
37914 pointer is over the text for any message, an action menu pops up, and the first
37915 line of the queue display for the message is highlighted. This does not affect
37916 any selected text.
37917
37918 If you want to use some other event for popping up the menu, you can set the
37919 MENU_EVENT parameter in &_Local/eximon.conf_& to change the default, or
37920 set EXIMON_MENU_EVENT in the environment before starting the monitor. The
37921 value set in this parameter is a standard X event description. For example, to
37922 run eximon using &%ctrl%& rather than &%shift%& you could use
37923 .code
37924 EXIMON_MENU_EVENT='Ctrl<Btn1Down>' eximon
37925 .endd
37926 The title of the menu is the message id, and it contains entries which act as
37927 follows:
37928
37929 .ilist
37930 &'message log'&: The contents of the message log for the message are displayed
37931 in a new text window.
37932 .next
37933 &'headers'&: Information from the spool file that contains the envelope
37934 information and headers is displayed in a new text window. See chapter
37935 &<<CHAPspool>>& for a description of the format of spool files.
37936 .next
37937 &'body'&: The contents of the spool file containing the body of the message are
37938 displayed in a new text window. There is a default limit of 20,000 bytes to the
37939 amount of data displayed. This can be changed by setting the BODY_MAX
37940 option at compile time, or the EXIMON_BODY_MAX option at run time.
37941 .next
37942 &'deliver message'&: A call to Exim is made using the &%-M%& option to request
37943 delivery of the message. This causes an automatic thaw if the message is
37944 frozen. The &%-v%& option is also set, and the output from Exim is displayed in
37945 a new text window. The delivery is run in a separate process, to avoid holding
37946 up the monitor while the delivery proceeds.
37947 .next
37948 &'freeze message'&: A call to Exim is made using the &%-Mf%& option to request
37949 that the message be frozen.
37950 .next
37951 .cindex "thawing messages"
37952 .cindex "unfreezing messages"
37953 .cindex "frozen messages" "thawing"
37954 &'thaw message'&: A call to Exim is made using the &%-Mt%& option to request
37955 that the message be thawed.
37956 .next
37957 .cindex "delivery" "forcing failure"
37958 &'give up on msg'&: A call to Exim is made using the &%-Mg%& option to request
37959 that Exim gives up trying to deliver the message. A bounce message is generated
37960 for any remaining undelivered addresses.
37961 .next
37962 &'remove message'&: A call to Exim is made using the &%-Mrm%& option to request
37963 that the message be deleted from the system without generating a bounce
37964 message.
37965 .next
37966 &'add recipient'&: A dialog box is displayed into which a recipient address can
37967 be typed. If the address is not qualified and the QUALIFY_DOMAIN parameter
37968 is set in &_Local/eximon.conf_&, the address is qualified with that domain.
37969 Otherwise it must be entered as a fully qualified address. Pressing RETURN
37970 causes a call to Exim to be made using the &%-Mar%& option to request that an
37971 additional recipient be added to the message, unless the entry box is empty, in
37972 which case no action is taken.
37973 .next
37974 &'mark delivered'&: A dialog box is displayed into which a recipient address
37975 can be typed. If the address is not qualified and the QUALIFY_DOMAIN parameter
37976 is set in &_Local/eximon.conf_&, the address is qualified with that domain.
37977 Otherwise it must be entered as a fully qualified address. Pressing RETURN
37978 causes a call to Exim to be made using the &%-Mmd%& option to mark the given
37979 recipient address as already delivered, unless the entry box is empty, in which
37980 case no action is taken.
37981 .next
37982 &'mark all delivered'&: A call to Exim is made using the &%-Mmad%& option to
37983 mark all recipient addresses as already delivered.
37984 .next
37985 &'edit sender'&: A dialog box is displayed initialized with the current
37986 sender's address. Pressing RETURN causes a call to Exim to be made using the
37987 &%-Mes%& option to replace the sender address, unless the entry box is empty,
37988 in which case no action is taken. If you want to set an empty sender (as in
37989 bounce messages), you must specify it as &"<>"&. Otherwise, if the address is
37990 not qualified and the QUALIFY_DOMAIN parameter is set in &_Local/eximon.conf_&,
37991 the address is qualified with that domain.
37992 .endlist
37993
37994 When a delivery is forced, a window showing the &%-v%& output is displayed. In
37995 other cases when a call to Exim is made, if there is any output from Exim (in
37996 particular, if the command fails) a window containing the command and the
37997 output is displayed. Otherwise, the results of the action are normally apparent
37998 from the log and queue displays. However, if you set ACTION_OUTPUT=yes in
37999 &_Local/eximon.conf_&, a window showing the Exim command is always opened, even
38000 if no output is generated.
38001
38002 The queue display is automatically updated for actions such as freezing and
38003 thawing, unless ACTION_QUEUE_UPDATE=no has been set in
38004 &_Local/eximon.conf_&. In this case the &"Update"& button has to be used to
38005 force an update of the display after one of these actions.
38006
38007 In any text window that is displayed as result of a menu action, the normal
38008 cut-and-paste facility is available, and searching can be carried out using ^R
38009 and ^S, as described above for the log tail window.
38010 .ecindex IIDeximon
38011
38012
38013
38014
38015
38016 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
38017 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
38018
38019 .chapter "Security considerations" "CHAPsecurity"
38020 .scindex IIDsecurcon "security" "discussion of"
38021 This chapter discusses a number of issues concerned with security, some of
38022 which are also covered in other parts of this manual.
38023
38024 For reasons that this author does not understand, some people have promoted
38025 Exim as a &"particularly secure"& mailer. Perhaps it is because of the
38026 existence of this chapter in the documentation. However, the intent of the
38027 chapter is simply to describe the way Exim works in relation to certain
38028 security concerns, not to make any specific claims about the effectiveness of
38029 its security as compared with other MTAs.
38030
38031 What follows is a description of the way Exim is supposed to be. Best efforts
38032 have been made to try to ensure that the code agrees with the theory, but an
38033 absence of bugs can never be guaranteed. Any that are reported will get fixed
38034 as soon as possible.
38035
38036
38037 .section "Building a more &""hardened""& Exim" "SECID286"
38038 .cindex "security" "build-time features"
38039 There are a number of build-time options that can be set in &_Local/Makefile_&
38040 to create Exim binaries that are &"harder"& to attack, in particular by a rogue
38041 Exim administrator who does not have the root password, or by someone who has
38042 penetrated the Exim (but not the root) account. These options are as follows:
38043
38044 .ilist
38045 ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX can be set to a string that is required to match the
38046 start of any file names used with the &%-C%& option. When it is set, these file
38047 names are also not allowed to contain the sequence &"/../"&. (However, if the
38048 value of the &%-C%& option is identical to the value of CONFIGURE_FILE in
38049 &_Local/Makefile_&, Exim ignores &%-C%& and proceeds as usual.) There is no
38050 default setting for &%ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX%&.
38051
38052 If the permitted configuration files are confined to a directory to
38053 which only root has access, this guards against someone who has broken
38054 into the Exim account from running a privileged Exim with an arbitrary
38055 configuration file, and using it to break into other accounts.
38056 .next
38057
38058 If a non-trusted configuration file (i.e. not the default configuration file
38059 or one which is trusted by virtue of being listed in the TRUSTED_CONFIG_LIST
38060 file) is specified with &%-C%&, or if macros are given with &%-D%& (but see
38061 the next item), then root privilege is retained only if the caller of Exim is
38062 root. This locks out the possibility of testing a configuration using &%-C%&
38063 right through message reception and delivery, even if the caller is root. The
38064 reception works, but by that time, Exim is running as the Exim user, so when
38065 it re-execs to regain privilege for the delivery, the use of &%-C%& causes
38066 privilege to be lost. However, root can test reception and delivery using two
38067 separate commands.
38068
38069 .next
38070 The WHITELIST_D_MACROS build option declares some macros to be safe to override
38071 with &%-D%& if the real uid is one of root, the Exim run-time user or the
38072 CONFIGURE_OWNER, if defined. The potential impact of this option is limited by
38073 requiring the run-time value supplied to &%-D%& to match a regex that errs on
38074 the restrictive side. Requiring build-time selection of safe macros is onerous
38075 but this option is intended solely as a transition mechanism to permit
38076 previously-working configurations to continue to work after release 4.73.
38077 .next
38078 If DISABLE_D_OPTION is defined, the use of the &%-D%& command line option
38079 is disabled.
38080 .next
38081 FIXED_NEVER_USERS can be set to a colon-separated list of users that are
38082 never to be used for any deliveries. This is like the &%never_users%& runtime
38083 option, but it cannot be overridden; the runtime option adds additional users
38084 to the list. The default setting is &"root"&; this prevents a non-root user who
38085 is permitted to modify the runtime file from using Exim as a way to get root.
38086 .endlist
38087
38088
38089
38090 .section "Root privilege" "SECID270"
38091 .cindex "setuid"
38092 .cindex "root privilege"
38093 The Exim binary is normally setuid to root, which means that it gains root
38094 privilege (runs as root) when it starts execution. In some special cases (for
38095 example, when the daemon is not in use and there are no local deliveries), it
38096 may be possible to run Exim setuid to some user other than root. This is
38097 discussed in the next section. However, in most installations, root privilege
38098 is required for two things:
38099
38100 .ilist
38101 To set up a socket connected to the standard SMTP port (25) when initialising
38102 the listening daemon. If Exim is run from &'inetd'&, this privileged action is
38103 not required.
38104 .next
38105 To be able to change uid and gid in order to read users' &_.forward_& files and
38106 perform local deliveries as the receiving user or as specified in the
38107 configuration.
38108 .endlist
38109
38110 It is not necessary to be root to do any of the other things Exim does, such as
38111 receiving messages and delivering them externally over SMTP, and it is
38112 obviously more secure if Exim does not run as root except when necessary.
38113 For this reason, a user and group for Exim to use must be defined in
38114 &_Local/Makefile_&. These are known as &"the Exim user"& and &"the Exim
38115 group"&. Their values can be changed by the run time configuration, though this
38116 is not recommended. Often a user called &'exim'& is used, but some sites use
38117 &'mail'& or another user name altogether.
38118
38119 Exim uses &[setuid()]& whenever it gives up root privilege. This is a permanent
38120 abdication; the process cannot regain root afterwards. Prior to release 4.00,
38121 &[seteuid()]& was used in some circumstances, but this is no longer the case.
38122
38123 After a new Exim process has interpreted its command line options, it changes
38124 uid and gid in the following cases:
38125
38126 .ilist
38127 .oindex "&%-C%&"
38128 .oindex "&%-D%&"
38129 If the &%-C%& option is used to specify an alternate configuration file, or if
38130 the &%-D%& option is used to define macro values for the configuration, and the
38131 calling process is not running as root, the uid and gid are changed to those of
38132 the calling process.
38133 However, if DISABLE_D_OPTION is defined in &_Local/Makefile_&, the &%-D%&
38134 option may not be used at all.
38135 If WHITELIST_D_MACROS is defined in &_Local/Makefile_&, then some macro values
38136 can be supplied if the calling process is running as root, the Exim run-time
38137 user or CONFIGURE_OWNER, if defined.
38138 .next
38139 .oindex "&%-be%&"
38140 .oindex "&%-bf%&"
38141 .oindex "&%-bF%&"
38142 If the expansion test option (&%-be%&) or one of the filter testing options
38143 (&%-bf%& or &%-bF%&) are used, the uid and gid are changed to those of the
38144 calling process.
38145 .next
38146 If the process is not a daemon process or a queue runner process or a delivery
38147 process or a process for testing address routing (started with &%-bt%&), the
38148 uid and gid are changed to the Exim user and group. This means that Exim always
38149 runs under its own uid and gid when receiving messages. This also applies when
38150 testing address verification
38151 .oindex "&%-bv%&"
38152 .oindex "&%-bh%&"
38153 (the &%-bv%& option) and testing incoming message policy controls (the &%-bh%&
38154 option).
38155 .next
38156 For a daemon, queue runner, delivery, or address testing process, the uid
38157 remains as root at this stage, but the gid is changed to the Exim group.
38158 .endlist
38159
38160 The processes that initially retain root privilege behave as follows:
38161
38162 .ilist
38163 A daemon process changes the gid to the Exim group and the uid to the Exim
38164 user after setting up one or more listening sockets. The &[initgroups()]&
38165 function is called, so that if the Exim user is in any additional groups, they
38166 will be used during message reception.
38167 .next
38168 A queue runner process retains root privilege throughout its execution. Its
38169 job is to fork a controlled sequence of delivery processes.
38170 .next
38171 A delivery process retains root privilege throughout most of its execution,
38172 but any actual deliveries (that is, the transports themselves) are run in
38173 subprocesses which always change to a non-root uid and gid. For local
38174 deliveries this is typically the uid and gid of the owner of the mailbox; for
38175 remote deliveries, the Exim uid and gid are used. Once all the delivery
38176 subprocesses have been run, a delivery process changes to the Exim uid and gid
38177 while doing post-delivery tidying up such as updating the retry database and
38178 generating bounce and warning messages.
38179
38180 While the recipient addresses in a message are being routed, the delivery
38181 process runs as root. However, if a user's filter file has to be processed,
38182 this is done in a subprocess that runs under the individual user's uid and
38183 gid. A system filter is run as root unless &%system_filter_user%& is set.
38184 .next
38185 A process that is testing addresses (the &%-bt%& option) runs as root so that
38186 the routing is done in the same environment as a message delivery.
38187 .endlist
38188
38189
38190
38191
38192 .section "Running Exim without privilege" "SECTrunexiwitpri"
38193 .cindex "privilege, running without"
38194 .cindex "unprivileged running"
38195 .cindex "root privilege" "running without"
38196 Some installations like to run Exim in an unprivileged state for more of its
38197 operation, for added security. Support for this mode of operation is provided
38198 by the global option &%deliver_drop_privilege%&. When this is set, the uid and
38199 gid are changed to the Exim user and group at the start of a delivery process
38200 (and also queue runner and address testing processes). This means that address
38201 routing is no longer run as root, and the deliveries themselves cannot change
38202 to any other uid.
38203
38204 .cindex SIGHUP
38205 .cindex "daemon" "restarting"
38206 Leaving the binary setuid to root, but setting &%deliver_drop_privilege%& means
38207 that the daemon can still be started in the usual way, and it can respond
38208 correctly to SIGHUP because the re-invocation regains root privilege.
38209
38210 An alternative approach is to make Exim setuid to the Exim user and also setgid
38211 to the Exim group. If you do this, the daemon must be started from a root
38212 process. (Calling Exim from a root process makes it behave in the way it does
38213 when it is setuid root.) However, the daemon cannot restart itself after a
38214 SIGHUP signal because it cannot regain privilege.
38215
38216 It is still useful to set &%deliver_drop_privilege%& in this case, because it
38217 stops Exim from trying to re-invoke itself to do a delivery after a message has
38218 been received. Such a re-invocation is a waste of resources because it has no
38219 effect.
38220
38221 If restarting the daemon is not an issue (for example, if &%mua_wrapper%& is
38222 set, or &'inetd'& is being used instead of a daemon), having the binary setuid
38223 to the Exim user seems a clean approach, but there is one complication:
38224
38225 In this style of operation, Exim is running with the real uid and gid set to
38226 those of the calling process, and the effective uid/gid set to Exim's values.
38227 Ideally, any association with the calling process' uid/gid should be dropped,
38228 that is, the real uid/gid should be reset to the effective values so as to
38229 discard any privileges that the caller may have. While some operating systems
38230 have a function that permits this action for a non-root effective uid, quite a
38231 number of them do not. Because of this lack of standardization, Exim does not
38232 address this problem at this time.
38233
38234 For this reason, the recommended approach for &"mostly unprivileged"& running
38235 is to keep the Exim binary setuid to root, and to set
38236 &%deliver_drop_privilege%&. This also has the advantage of allowing a daemon to
38237 be used in the most straightforward way.
38238
38239 If you configure Exim not to run delivery processes as root, there are a
38240 number of restrictions on what you can do:
38241
38242 .ilist
38243 You can deliver only as the Exim user/group. You should explicitly use the
38244 &%user%& and &%group%& options to override routers or local transports that
38245 normally deliver as the recipient. This makes sure that configurations that
38246 work in this mode function the same way in normal mode. Any implicit or
38247 explicit specification of another user causes an error.
38248 .next
38249 Use of &_.forward_& files is severely restricted, such that it is usually
38250 not worthwhile to include them in the configuration.
38251 .next
38252 Users who wish to use &_.forward_& would have to make their home directory and
38253 the file itself accessible to the Exim user. Pipe and append-to-file entries,
38254 and their equivalents in Exim filters, cannot be used. While they could be
38255 enabled in the Exim user's name, that would be insecure and not very useful.
38256 .next
38257 Unless the local user mailboxes are all owned by the Exim user (possible in
38258 some POP3 or IMAP-only environments):
38259
38260 .olist
38261 They must be owned by the Exim group and be writeable by that group. This
38262 implies you must set &%mode%& in the appendfile configuration, as well as the
38263 mode of the mailbox files themselves.
38264 .next
38265 You must set &%no_check_owner%&, since most or all of the files will not be
38266 owned by the Exim user.
38267 .next
38268 You must set &%file_must_exist%&, because Exim cannot set the owner correctly
38269 on a newly created mailbox when unprivileged. This also implies that new
38270 mailboxes need to be created manually.
38271 .endlist olist
38272 .endlist ilist
38273
38274
38275 These restrictions severely restrict what can be done in local deliveries.
38276 However, there are no restrictions on remote deliveries. If you are running a
38277 gateway host that does no local deliveries, setting &%deliver_drop_privilege%&
38278 gives more security at essentially no cost.
38279
38280 If you are using the &%mua_wrapper%& facility (see chapter
38281 &<<CHAPnonqueueing>>&), &%deliver_drop_privilege%& is forced to be true.
38282
38283
38284
38285
38286 .section "Delivering to local files" "SECID271"
38287 Full details of the checks applied by &(appendfile)& before it writes to a file
38288 are given in chapter &<<CHAPappendfile>>&.
38289
38290
38291
38292 .section "Running local commands" "SECTsecconslocalcmds"
38293 .cindex "security" "local commands"
38294 .cindex "security" "command injection attacks"
38295 There are a number of ways in which an administrator can configure Exim to run
38296 commands based upon received, untrustworthy, data. Further, in some
38297 configurations a user who can control a &_.forward_& file can also arrange to
38298 run commands. Configuration to check includes, but is not limited to:
38299
38300 .ilist
38301 Use of &%use_shell%& in the pipe transport: various forms of shell command
38302 injection may be possible with this option present. It is dangerous and should
38303 be used only with considerable caution. Consider constraints which whitelist
38304 allowed characters in a variable which is to be used in a pipe transport that
38305 has &%use_shell%& enabled.
38306 .next
38307 A number of options such as &%forbid_filter_run%&, &%forbid_filter_perl%&,
38308 &%forbid_filter_dlfunc%& and so forth which restrict facilities available to
38309 &_.forward_& files in a redirect router. If Exim is running on a central mail
38310 hub to which ordinary users do not have shell access, but home directories are
38311 NFS mounted (for instance) then administrators should review the list of these
38312 forbid options available, and should bear in mind that the options that may
38313 need forbidding can change as new features are added between releases.
38314 .next
38315 The &%${run...}%& expansion item does not use a shell by default, but
38316 administrators can configure use of &_/bin/sh_& as part of the command.
38317 Such invocations should be viewed with prejudicial suspicion.
38318 .next
38319 Administrators who use embedded Perl are advised to explore how Perl's
38320 taint checking might apply to their usage.
38321 .next
38322 Use of &%${expand...}%& is somewhat analogous to shell's eval builtin and
38323 administrators are well advised to view its use with suspicion, in case (for
38324 instance) it allows a local-part to contain embedded Exim directives.
38325 .next
38326 Use of &%${match_local_part...}%& and friends becomes more dangerous if
38327 Exim was built with EXPAND_LISTMATCH_RHS defined: the second string in
38328 each can reference arbitrary lists and files, rather than just being a list
38329 of opaque strings.
38330 The EXPAND_LISTMATCH_RHS option was added and set false by default because of
38331 real-world security vulnerabilities caused by its use with untrustworthy data
38332 injected in, for SQL injection attacks.
38333 Consider the use of the &%inlisti%& expansion condition instead.
38334 .endlist
38335
38336
38337
38338
38339 .section "Trust in configuration data" "SECTsecconfdata"
38340 .cindex "security" "data sources"
38341 .cindex "security" "regular expressions"
38342 .cindex "regular expressions" "security"
38343 .cindex "PCRE" "security"
38344 If configuration data for Exim can come from untrustworthy sources, there
38345 are some issues to be aware of:
38346
38347 .ilist
38348 Use of &%${expand...}%& may provide a path for shell injection attacks.
38349 .next
38350 Letting untrusted data provide a regular expression is unwise.
38351 .next
38352 Using &%${match...}%& to apply a fixed regular expression against untrusted
38353 data may result in pathological behaviour within PCRE. Be aware of what
38354 "backtracking" means and consider options for being more strict with a regular
38355 expression. Avenues to explore include limiting what can match (avoiding &`.`&
38356 when &`[a-z0-9]`& or other character class will do), use of atomic grouping and
38357 possessive quantifiers or just not using regular expressions against untrusted
38358 data.
38359 .next
38360 It can be important to correctly use &%${quote:...}%&,
38361 &%${quote_local_part:...}%& and &%${quote_%&<&'lookup-type'&>&%:...}%& expansion
38362 items to ensure that data is correctly constructed.
38363 .next
38364 Some lookups might return multiple results, even though normal usage is only
38365 expected to yield one result.
38366 .endlist
38367
38368
38369
38370
38371 .section "IPv4 source routing" "SECID272"
38372 .cindex "source routing" "in IP packets"
38373 .cindex "IP source routing"
38374 Many operating systems suppress IP source-routed packets in the kernel, but
38375 some cannot be made to do this, so Exim does its own check. It logs incoming
38376 IPv4 source-routed TCP calls, and then drops them. Things are all different in
38377 IPv6. No special checking is currently done.
38378
38379
38380
38381 .section "The VRFY, EXPN, and ETRN commands in SMTP" "SECID273"
38382 Support for these SMTP commands is disabled by default. If required, they can
38383 be enabled by defining suitable ACLs.
38384
38385
38386
38387
38388 .section "Privileged users" "SECID274"
38389 .cindex "trusted users"
38390 .cindex "admin user"
38391 .cindex "privileged user"
38392 .cindex "user" "trusted"
38393 .cindex "user" "admin"
38394 Exim recognizes two sets of users with special privileges. Trusted users are
38395 able to submit new messages to Exim locally, but supply their own sender
38396 addresses and information about a sending host. For other users submitting
38397 local messages, Exim sets up the sender address from the uid, and doesn't
38398 permit a remote host to be specified.
38399
38400 .oindex "&%-f%&"
38401 However, an untrusted user is permitted to use the &%-f%& command line option
38402 in the special form &%-f <>%& to indicate that a delivery failure for the
38403 message should not cause an error report. This affects the message's envelope,
38404 but it does not affect the &'Sender:'& header. Untrusted users may also be
38405 permitted to use specific forms of address with the &%-f%& option by setting
38406 the &%untrusted_set_sender%& option.
38407
38408 Trusted users are used to run processes that receive mail messages from some
38409 other mail domain and pass them on to Exim for delivery either locally, or over
38410 the Internet. Exim trusts a caller that is running as root, as the Exim user,
38411 as any user listed in the &%trusted_users%& configuration option, or under any
38412 group listed in the &%trusted_groups%& option.
38413
38414 Admin users are permitted to do things to the messages on Exim's queue. They
38415 can freeze or thaw messages, cause them to be returned to their senders, remove
38416 them entirely, or modify them in various ways. In addition, admin users can run
38417 the Exim monitor and see all the information it is capable of providing, which
38418 includes the contents of files on the spool.
38419
38420 .oindex "&%-M%&"
38421 .oindex "&%-q%&"
38422 By default, the use of the &%-M%& and &%-q%& options to cause Exim to attempt
38423 delivery of messages on its queue is restricted to admin users. This
38424 restriction can be relaxed by setting the &%no_prod_requires_admin%& option.
38425 Similarly, the use of &%-bp%& (and its variants) to list the contents of the
38426 queue is also restricted to admin users. This restriction can be relaxed by
38427 setting &%no_queue_list_requires_admin%&.
38428
38429 Exim recognizes an admin user if the calling process is running as root or as
38430 the Exim user or if any of the groups associated with the calling process is
38431 the Exim group. It is not necessary actually to be running under the Exim
38432 group. However, if admin users who are not root or the Exim user are to access
38433 the contents of files on the spool via the Exim monitor (which runs
38434 unprivileged), Exim must be built to allow group read access to its spool
38435 files.
38436
38437 By default, regular users are trusted to perform basic testing and
38438 introspection commands, as themselves. This setting can be tightened by
38439 setting the &%commandline_checks_require_admin%& option.
38440 This affects most of the checking options,
38441 such as &%-be%& and anything else &%-b*%&.
38442
38443
38444 .section "Spool files" "SECID275"
38445 .cindex "spool directory" "files"
38446 Exim's spool directory and everything it contains is owned by the Exim user and
38447 set to the Exim group. The mode for spool files is defined in the
38448 &_Local/Makefile_& configuration file, and defaults to 0640. This means that
38449 any user who is a member of the Exim group can access these files.
38450
38451
38452
38453 .section "Use of argv[0]" "SECID276"
38454 Exim examines the last component of &%argv[0]%&, and if it matches one of a set
38455 of specific strings, Exim assumes certain options. For example, calling Exim
38456 with the last component of &%argv[0]%& set to &"rsmtp"& is exactly equivalent
38457 to calling it with the option &%-bS%&. There are no security implications in
38458 this.
38459
38460
38461
38462 .section "Use of %f formatting" "SECID277"
38463 The only use made of &"%f"& by Exim is in formatting load average values. These
38464 are actually stored in integer variables as 1000 times the load average.
38465 Consequently, their range is limited and so therefore is the length of the
38466 converted output.
38467
38468
38469
38470 .section "Embedded Exim path" "SECID278"
38471 Exim uses its own path name, which is embedded in the code, only when it needs
38472 to re-exec in order to regain root privilege. Therefore, it is not root when it
38473 does so. If some bug allowed the path to get overwritten, it would lead to an
38474 arbitrary program's being run as exim, not as root.
38475
38476
38477
38478 .section "Dynamic module directory" "SECTdynmoddir"
38479 Any dynamically loadable modules must be installed into the directory
38480 defined in &`LOOKUP_MODULE_DIR`& in &_Local/Makefile_& for Exim to permit
38481 loading it.
38482
38483
38484 .section "Use of sprintf()" "SECID279"
38485 .cindex "&[sprintf()]&"
38486 A large number of occurrences of &"sprintf"& in the code are actually calls to
38487 &'string_sprintf()'&, a function that returns the result in malloc'd store.
38488 The intermediate formatting is done into a large fixed buffer by a function
38489 that runs through the format string itself, and checks the length of each
38490 conversion before performing it, thus preventing buffer overruns.
38491
38492 The remaining uses of &[sprintf()]& happen in controlled circumstances where
38493 the output buffer is known to be sufficiently long to contain the converted
38494 string.
38495
38496
38497
38498 .section "Use of debug_printf() and log_write()" "SECID280"
38499 Arbitrary strings are passed to both these functions, but they do their
38500 formatting by calling the function &'string_vformat()'&, which runs through
38501 the format string itself, and checks the length of each conversion.
38502
38503
38504
38505 .section "Use of strcat() and strcpy()" "SECID281"
38506 These are used only in cases where the output buffer is known to be large
38507 enough to hold the result.
38508 .ecindex IIDsecurcon
38509
38510
38511
38512
38513 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
38514 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
38515
38516 .chapter "Format of spool files" "CHAPspool"
38517 .scindex IIDforspo1 "format" "spool files"
38518 .scindex IIDforspo2 "spool directory" "format of files"
38519 .scindex IIDforspo3 "spool files" "format of"
38520 .cindex "spool files" "editing"
38521 A message on Exim's queue consists of two files, whose names are the message id
38522 followed by -D and -H, respectively. The data portion of the message is kept in
38523 the -D file on its own. The message's envelope, status, and headers are all
38524 kept in the -H file, whose format is described in this chapter. Each of these
38525 two files contains the final component of its own name as its first line. This
38526 is insurance against disk crashes where the directory is lost but the files
38527 themselves are recoverable.
38528
38529 Some people are tempted into editing -D files in order to modify messages. You
38530 need to be extremely careful if you do this; it is not recommended and you are
38531 on your own if you do it. Here are some of the pitfalls:
38532
38533 .ilist
38534 You must ensure that Exim does not try to deliver the message while you are
38535 fiddling with it. The safest way is to take out a write lock on the -D file,
38536 which is what Exim itself does, using &[fcntl()]&. If you update the file in
38537 place, the lock will be retained. If you write a new file and rename it, the
38538 lock will be lost at the instant of rename.
38539 .next
38540 .vindex "&$body_linecount$&"
38541 If you change the number of lines in the file, the value of
38542 &$body_linecount$&, which is stored in the -H file, will be incorrect and can
38543 cause incomplete transmission of messages or undeliverable messages.
38544 .next
38545 If the message is in MIME format, you must take care not to break it.
38546 .next
38547 If the message is cryptographically signed, any change will invalidate the
38548 signature.
38549 .endlist
38550 All in all, modifying -D files is fraught with danger.
38551
38552 Files whose names end with -J may also be seen in the &_input_& directory (or
38553 its subdirectories when &%split_spool_directory%& is set). These are journal
38554 files, used to record addresses to which the message has been delivered during
38555 the course of a delivery attempt. If there are still undelivered recipients at
38556 the end, the -H file is updated, and the -J file is deleted. If, however, there
38557 is some kind of crash (for example, a power outage) before this happens, the -J
38558 file remains in existence. When Exim next processes the message, it notices the
38559 -J file and uses it to update the -H file before starting the next delivery
38560 attempt.
38561
38562 Files whose names end with -K or .eml may also be seen in the spool.
38563 These are temporaries used for DKIM or malware processing, when that is used.
38564 They should be tidied up by normal operations; any old ones are probably
38565 relics of crashes and can be removed.
38566
38567 .section "Format of the -H file" "SECID282"
38568 .cindex "uid (user id)" "in spool file"
38569 .cindex "gid (group id)" "in spool file"
38570 The second line of the -H file contains the login name for the uid of the
38571 process that called Exim to read the message, followed by the numerical uid and
38572 gid. For a locally generated message, this is normally the user who sent the
38573 message. For a message received over TCP/IP via the daemon, it is
38574 normally the Exim user.
38575
38576 The third line of the file contains the address of the message's sender as
38577 transmitted in the envelope, contained in angle brackets. The sender address is
38578 empty for bounce messages. For incoming SMTP mail, the sender address is given
38579 in the MAIL command. For locally generated mail, the sender address is
38580 created by Exim from the login name of the current user and the configured
38581 &%qualify_domain%&. However, this can be overridden by the &%-f%& option or a
38582 leading &"From&~"& line if the caller is trusted, or if the supplied address is
38583 &"<>"& or an address that matches &%untrusted_set_senders%&.
38584
38585 The fourth line contains two numbers. The first is the time that the message
38586 was received, in the conventional Unix form &-- the number of seconds since the
38587 start of the epoch. The second number is a count of the number of messages
38588 warning of delayed delivery that have been sent to the sender.
38589
38590 There follow a number of lines starting with a hyphen. These can appear in any
38591 order, and are omitted when not relevant:
38592
38593 .vlist
38594 .vitem "&%-acl%&&~<&'number'&>&~<&'length'&>"
38595 This item is obsolete, and is not generated from Exim release 4.61 onwards;
38596 &%-aclc%& and &%-aclm%& are used instead. However, &%-acl%& is still
38597 recognized, to provide backward compatibility. In the old format, a line of
38598 this form is present for every ACL variable that is not empty. The number
38599 identifies the variable; the &%acl_c%&&*x*& variables are numbered 0&--9 and
38600 the &%acl_m%&&*x*& variables are numbered 10&--19. The length is the length of
38601 the data string for the variable. The string itself starts at the beginning of
38602 the next line, and is followed by a newline character. It may contain internal
38603 newlines.
38604
38605 .vitem "&%-aclc%&&~<&'rest-of-name'&>&~<&'length'&>"
38606 A line of this form is present for every ACL connection variable that is
38607 defined. Note that there is a space between &%-aclc%& and the rest of the name.
38608 The length is the length of the data string for the variable. The string itself
38609 starts at the beginning of the next line, and is followed by a newline
38610 character. It may contain internal newlines.
38611
38612 .vitem "&%-aclm%&&~<&'rest-of-name'&>&~<&'length'&>"
38613 A line of this form is present for every ACL message variable that is defined.
38614 Note that there is a space between &%-aclm%& and the rest of the name. The
38615 length is the length of the data string for the variable. The string itself
38616 starts at the beginning of the next line, and is followed by a newline
38617 character. It may contain internal newlines.
38618
38619 .vitem "&%-active_hostname%&&~<&'hostname'&>"
38620 This is present if, when the message was received over SMTP, the value of
38621 &$smtp_active_hostname$& was different to the value of &$primary_hostname$&.
38622
38623 .vitem &%-allow_unqualified_recipient%&
38624 This is present if unqualified recipient addresses are permitted in header
38625 lines (to stop such addresses from being qualified if rewriting occurs at
38626 transport time). Local messages that were input using &%-bnq%& and remote
38627 messages from hosts that match &%recipient_unqualified_hosts%& set this flag.
38628
38629 .vitem &%-allow_unqualified_sender%&
38630 This is present if unqualified sender addresses are permitted in header lines
38631 (to stop such addresses from being qualified if rewriting occurs at transport
38632 time). Local messages that were input using &%-bnq%& and remote messages from
38633 hosts that match &%sender_unqualified_hosts%& set this flag.
38634
38635 .vitem "&%-auth_id%&&~<&'text'&>"
38636 The id information for a message received on an authenticated SMTP connection
38637 &-- the value of the &$authenticated_id$& variable.
38638
38639 .vitem "&%-auth_sender%&&~<&'address'&>"
38640 The address of an authenticated sender &-- the value of the
38641 &$authenticated_sender$& variable.
38642
38643 .vitem "&%-body_linecount%&&~<&'number'&>"
38644 This records the number of lines in the body of the message, and is
38645 present unless &%-spool_file_wireformat%& is.
38646
38647 .vitem "&%-body_zerocount%&&~<&'number'&>"
38648 This records the number of binary zero bytes in the body of the message, and is
38649 present if the number is greater than zero.
38650
38651 .vitem &%-deliver_firsttime%&
38652 This is written when a new message is first added to the spool. When the spool
38653 file is updated after a deferral, it is omitted.
38654
38655 .vitem "&%-frozen%&&~<&'time'&>"
38656 .cindex "frozen messages" "spool data"
38657 The message is frozen, and the freezing happened at <&'time'&>.
38658
38659 .vitem "&%-helo_name%&&~<&'text'&>"
38660 This records the host name as specified by a remote host in a HELO or EHLO
38661 command.
38662
38663 .vitem "&%-host_address%&&~<&'address'&>.<&'port'&>"
38664 This records the IP address of the host from which the message was received and
38665 the remote port number that was used. It is omitted for locally generated
38666 messages.
38667
38668 .vitem "&%-host_auth%&&~<&'text'&>"
38669 If the message was received on an authenticated SMTP connection, this records
38670 the name of the authenticator &-- the value of the
38671 &$sender_host_authenticated$& variable.
38672
38673 .vitem &%-host_lookup_failed%&
38674 This is present if an attempt to look up the sending host's name from its IP
38675 address failed. It corresponds to the &$host_lookup_failed$& variable.
38676
38677 .vitem "&%-host_name%&&~<&'text'&>"
38678 .cindex "reverse DNS lookup"
38679 .cindex "DNS" "reverse lookup"
38680 This records the name of the remote host from which the message was received,
38681 if the host name was looked up from the IP address when the message was being
38682 received. It is not present if no reverse lookup was done.
38683
38684 .vitem "&%-ident%&&~<&'text'&>"
38685 For locally submitted messages, this records the login of the originating user,
38686 unless it was a trusted user and the &%-oMt%& option was used to specify an
38687 ident value. For messages received over TCP/IP, this records the ident string
38688 supplied by the remote host, if any.
38689
38690 .vitem "&%-interface_address%&&~<&'address'&>.<&'port'&>"
38691 This records the IP address of the local interface and the port number through
38692 which a message was received from a remote host. It is omitted for locally
38693 generated messages.
38694
38695 .vitem &%-local%&
38696 The message is from a local sender.
38697
38698 .vitem &%-localerror%&
38699 The message is a locally-generated bounce message.
38700
38701 .vitem "&%-local_scan%&&~<&'string'&>"
38702 This records the data string that was returned by the &[local_scan()]& function
38703 when the message was received &-- the value of the &$local_scan_data$&
38704 variable. It is omitted if no data was returned.
38705
38706 .vitem &%-manual_thaw%&
38707 The message was frozen but has been thawed manually, that is, by an explicit
38708 Exim command rather than via the auto-thaw process.
38709
38710 .vitem &%-N%&
38711 A testing delivery process was started using the &%-N%& option to suppress any
38712 actual deliveries, but delivery was deferred. At any further delivery attempts,
38713 &%-N%& is assumed.
38714
38715 .vitem &%-received_protocol%&
38716 This records the value of the &$received_protocol$& variable, which contains
38717 the name of the protocol by which the message was received.
38718
38719 .vitem &%-sender_set_untrusted%&
38720 The envelope sender of this message was set by an untrusted local caller (used
38721 to ensure that the caller is displayed in queue listings).
38722
38723 .vitem "&%-spam_score_int%&&~<&'number'&>"
38724 If a message was scanned by SpamAssassin, this is present. It records the value
38725 of &$spam_score_int$&.
38726
38727 .vitem &%-spool_file_wireformat%&
38728 The -D file for this message is in wire-format (for ESMTP CHUNKING)
38729 rather than Unix-format.
38730 The line-ending is CRLF rather than newline.
38731 There is still, however, no leading-dot-stuffing.
38732
38733 .vitem &%-tls_certificate_verified%&
38734 A TLS certificate was received from the client that sent this message, and the
38735 certificate was verified by the server.
38736
38737 .vitem "&%-tls_cipher%&&~<&'cipher name'&>"
38738 When the message was received over an encrypted connection, this records the
38739 name of the cipher suite that was used.
38740
38741 .vitem "&%-tls_peerdn%&&~<&'peer DN'&>"
38742 When the message was received over an encrypted connection, and a certificate
38743 was received from the client, this records the Distinguished Name from that
38744 certificate.
38745 .endlist
38746
38747 Following the options there is a list of those addresses to which the message
38748 is not to be delivered. This set of addresses is initialized from the command
38749 line when the &%-t%& option is used and &%extract_addresses_remove_arguments%&
38750 is set; otherwise it starts out empty. Whenever a successful delivery is made,
38751 the address is added to this set. The addresses are kept internally as a
38752 balanced binary tree, and it is a representation of that tree which is written
38753 to the spool file. If an address is expanded via an alias or forward file, the
38754 original address is added to the tree when deliveries to all its child
38755 addresses are complete.
38756
38757 If the tree is empty, there is a single line in the spool file containing just
38758 the text &"XX"&. Otherwise, each line consists of two letters, which are either
38759 Y or N, followed by an address. The address is the value for the node of the
38760 tree, and the letters indicate whether the node has a left branch and/or a
38761 right branch attached to it, respectively. If branches exist, they immediately
38762 follow. Here is an example of a three-node tree:
38763 .code
38764 YY darcy@austen.fict.example
38765 NN alice@wonderland.fict.example
38766 NN editor@thesaurus.ref.example
38767 .endd
38768 After the non-recipients tree, there is a list of the message's recipients.
38769 This is a simple list, preceded by a count. It includes all the original
38770 recipients of the message, including those to whom the message has already been
38771 delivered. In the simplest case, the list contains one address per line. For
38772 example:
38773 .code
38774 4
38775 editor@thesaurus.ref.example
38776 darcy@austen.fict.example
38777 rdo@foundation
38778 alice@wonderland.fict.example
38779 .endd
38780 However, when a child address has been added to the top-level addresses as a
38781 result of the use of the &%one_time%& option on a &(redirect)& router, each
38782 line is of the following form:
38783 .display
38784 <&'top-level address'&> <&'errors_to address'&> &&&
38785 <&'length'&>,<&'parent number'&>#<&'flag bits'&>
38786 .endd
38787 The 01 flag bit indicates the presence of the three other fields that follow
38788 the top-level address. Other bits may be used in future to support additional
38789 fields. The <&'parent number'&> is the offset in the recipients list of the
38790 original parent of the &"one time"& address. The first two fields are the
38791 envelope sender that is associated with this address and its length. If the
38792 length is zero, there is no special envelope sender (there are then two space
38793 characters in the line). A non-empty field can arise from a &(redirect)& router
38794 that has an &%errors_to%& setting.
38795
38796
38797 A blank line separates the envelope and status information from the headers
38798 which follow. A header may occupy several lines of the file, and to save effort
38799 when reading it in, each header is preceded by a number and an identifying
38800 character. The number is the number of characters in the header, including any
38801 embedded newlines and the terminating newline. The character is one of the
38802 following:
38803
38804 .table2 50pt
38805 .row <&'blank'&> "header in which Exim has no special interest"
38806 .row &`B`& "&'Bcc:'& header"
38807 .row &`C`& "&'Cc:'& header"
38808 .row &`F`& "&'From:'& header"
38809 .row &`I`& "&'Message-id:'& header"
38810 .row &`P`& "&'Received:'& header &-- P for &""postmark""&"
38811 .row &`R`& "&'Reply-To:'& header"
38812 .row &`S`& "&'Sender:'& header"
38813 .row &`T`& "&'To:'& header"
38814 .row &`*`& "replaced or deleted header"
38815 .endtable
38816
38817 Deleted or replaced (rewritten) headers remain in the spool file for debugging
38818 purposes. They are not transmitted when the message is delivered. Here is a
38819 typical set of headers:
38820 .code
38821 111P Received: by hobbit.fict.example with local (Exim 4.00)
38822 id 14y9EI-00026G-00; Fri, 11 May 2001 10:28:59 +0100
38823 049 Message-Id: <E14y9EI-00026G-00@hobbit.fict.example>
38824 038* X-rewrote-sender: bb@hobbit.fict.example
38825 042* From: Bilbo Baggins <bb@hobbit.fict.example>
38826 049F From: Bilbo Baggins <B.Baggins@hobbit.fict.example>
38827 099* To: alice@wonderland.fict.example, rdo@foundation,
38828 darcy@austen.fict.example, editor@thesaurus.ref.example
38829 104T To: alice@wonderland.fict.example, rdo@foundation.example,
38830 darcy@austen.fict.example, editor@thesaurus.ref.example
38831 038 Date: Fri, 11 May 2001 10:28:59 +0100
38832 .endd
38833 The asterisked headers indicate that the envelope sender, &'From:'& header, and
38834 &'To:'& header have been rewritten, the last one because routing expanded the
38835 unqualified domain &'foundation'&.
38836 .ecindex IIDforspo1
38837 .ecindex IIDforspo2
38838 .ecindex IIDforspo3
38839
38840 .section "Format of the -D file" "SECID282a"
38841 The data file is traditionally in Unix-standard format: lines are ended with
38842 an ASCII newline character.
38843 However, when the &%spool_wireformat%& main option is used some -D files
38844 can have an alternate format.
38845 This is flagged by a &%-spool_file_wireformat%& line in the corresponding -H file.
38846 The -D file lines (not including the first name-component line) are
38847 suitable for direct copying to the wire when transmitting using the
38848 ESMTP CHUNKING option, meaning lower processing overhead.
38849 Lines are terminated with an ASCII CRLF pair.
38850 There is no dot-stuffing (and no dot-termination).
38851
38852 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
38853 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
38854
38855 .chapter "DKIM and SPF" "CHAPdkim" &&&
38856 "DKIM and SPF Support"
38857 .cindex "DKIM"
38858
38859 .section "DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail)" SECDKIM
38860
38861 DKIM is a mechanism by which messages sent by some entity can be provably
38862 linked to a domain which that entity controls. It permits reputation to
38863 be tracked on a per-domain basis, rather than merely upon source IP address.
38864 DKIM is documented in RFC 6376.
38865
38866 As DKIM relies on the message being unchanged in transit, messages handled
38867 by a mailing-list (which traditionally adds to the message) will not match
38868 any original DKIM signature.
38869
38870 DKIM support is compiled into Exim by default if TLS support is present.
38871 It can be disabled by setting DISABLE_DKIM=yes in &_Local/Makefile_&.
38872
38873 Exim's DKIM implementation allows for
38874 .olist
38875 Signing outgoing messages: This function is implemented in the SMTP transport.
38876 It can co-exist with all other Exim features
38877 (including transport filters)
38878 except cutthrough delivery.
38879 .next
38880 Verifying signatures in incoming messages: This is implemented by an additional
38881 ACL (acl_smtp_dkim), which can be called several times per message, with
38882 different signature contexts.
38883 .endlist
38884
38885 In typical Exim style, the verification implementation does not include any
38886 default "policy". Instead it enables you to build your own policy using
38887 Exim's standard controls.
38888
38889 Please note that verification of DKIM signatures in incoming mail is turned
38890 on by default for logging (in the <= line) purposes.
38891
38892 Additional log detail can be enabled using the &%dkim_verbose%& log_selector.
38893 When set, for each signature in incoming email,
38894 exim will log a line displaying the most important signature details, and the
38895 signature status. Here is an example (with line-breaks added for clarity):
38896 .code
38897 2009-09-09 10:22:28 1MlIRf-0003LU-U3 DKIM:
38898 d=facebookmail.com s=q1-2009b
38899 c=relaxed/relaxed a=rsa-sha1
38900 i=@facebookmail.com t=1252484542 [verification succeeded]
38901 .endd
38902
38903 You might want to turn off DKIM verification processing entirely for internal
38904 or relay mail sources. To do that, set the &%dkim_disable_verify%& ACL
38905 control modifier. This should typically be done in the RCPT ACL, at points
38906 where you accept mail from relay sources (internal hosts or authenticated
38907 senders).
38908
38909
38910 .section "Signing outgoing messages" "SECDKIMSIGN"
38911 .cindex "DKIM" "signing"
38912
38913 For signing to be usable you must have published a DKIM record in DNS.
38914 Note that RFC 8301 says:
38915 .code
38916 rsa-sha1 MUST NOT be used for signing or verifying.
38917
38918 Signers MUST use RSA keys of at least 1024 bits for all keys.
38919 Signers SHOULD use RSA keys of at least 2048 bits.
38920 .endd
38921
38922 Note also that the key content (the 'p=' field)
38923 in the DNS record is different between RSA and EC keys;
38924 for the former it is the base64 of the ASN.1 for the RSA public key
38925 (equivalent to the private-key .pem with the header/trailer stripped)
38926 but for EC keys it is the base64 of the pure key; no ASN.1 wrapping.
38927
38928 Signing is enabled by setting private options on the SMTP transport.
38929 These options take (expandable) strings as arguments.
38930
38931 .option dkim_domain smtp string list&!! unset
38932 The domain(s) you want to sign with.
38933 After expansion, this can be a list.
38934 Each element in turn is put into the &%$dkim_domain%& expansion variable
38935 while expanding the remaining signing options.
38936 If it is empty after expansion, DKIM signing is not done,
38937 and no error will result even if &%dkim_strict%& is set.
38938
38939 .option dkim_selector smtp string list&!! unset
38940 This sets the key selector string.
38941 After expansion, which can use &$dkim_domain$&, this can be a list.
38942 Each element in turn is put in the expansion
38943 variable &%$dkim_selector%& which may be used in the &%dkim_private_key%&
38944 option along with &%$dkim_domain%&.
38945 If the option is empty after expansion, DKIM signing is not done for this domain,
38946 and no error will result even if &%dkim_strict%& is set.
38947
38948 .option dkim_private_key smtp string&!! unset
38949 This sets the private key to use.
38950 You can use the &%$dkim_domain%& and
38951 &%$dkim_selector%& expansion variables to determine the private key to use.
38952 The result can either
38953 .ilist
38954 be a valid RSA private key in ASCII armor (.pem file), including line breaks
38955 .next
38956 with GnuTLS 3.6.0 or OpenSSL 1.1.1 or later,
38957 be a valid Ed25519 private key (same format as above)
38958 .next
38959 start with a slash, in which case it is treated as a file that contains
38960 the private key
38961 .next
38962 be "0", "false" or the empty string, in which case the message will not
38963 be signed. This case will not result in an error, even if &%dkim_strict%&
38964 is set.
38965 .endlist
38966
38967 To generate keys under OpenSSL:
38968 .code
38969 openssl genrsa -out dkim_rsa.private 2048
38970 openssl rsa -in dkim_rsa.private -out /dev/stdout -pubout -outform PEM
38971 .endd
38972 Take the base-64 lines from the output of the second command, concatenated,
38973 for the DNS TXT record.
38974 See section 3.6 of RFC6376 for the record specification.
38975
38976 Under GnuTLS:
38977 .code
38978 certtool --generate-privkey --rsa --bits=2048 --password='' -8 --outfile=dkim_rsa.private
38979 certtool --load-privkey=dkim_rsa.private --pubkey-info
38980 .endd
38981
38982 Note that RFC 8301 says:
38983 .code
38984 Signers MUST use RSA keys of at least 1024 bits for all keys.
38985 Signers SHOULD use RSA keys of at least 2048 bits.
38986 .endd
38987
38988 Support for EC keys is being developed under
38989 &url(https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-dcrup-dkim-crypto/).
38990 They are considerably smaller than RSA keys for equivalent protection.
38991 As they are a recent development, users should consider dual-signing
38992 (by setting a list of selectors, and an expansion for this option)
38993 for some transition period.
38994 The "_CRYPTO_SIGN_ED25519" macro will be defined if support is present
38995 for EC keys.
38996
38997 OpenSSL 1.1.1 and GnuTLS 3.6.0 can create Ed25519 private keys:
38998 .code
38999 openssl genpkey -algorithm ed25519 -out dkim_ed25519.private
39000 certtool --generate-privkey --key-type=ed25519 --outfile=dkim_ed25519.private
39001 .endd
39002
39003 To produce the required public key value for a DNS record:
39004 .code
39005 openssl pkey -outform DER -pubout -in dkim_ed25519.private | tail -c +13 | base64
39006 certtool --load_privkey=dkim_ed25519.private --pubkey_info --outder | tail -c +13 | base64
39007 .endd
39008
39009 Note that the format
39010 of Ed25519 keys in DNS has not yet been decided; this release supports
39011 both of the leading candidates at this time, a future release will
39012 probably drop support for whichever proposal loses.
39013
39014 .option dkim_hash smtp string&!! sha256
39015 Can be set to any one of the supported hash methods, which are:
39016 .ilist
39017 &`sha1`& &-- should not be used, is old and insecure
39018 .next
39019 &`sha256`& &-- the default
39020 .next
39021 &`sha512`& &-- possibly more secure but less well supported
39022 .endlist
39023
39024 Note that RFC 8301 says:
39025 .code
39026 rsa-sha1 MUST NOT be used for signing or verifying.
39027 .endd
39028
39029 .option dkim_identity smtp string&!! unset
39030 If set after expansion, the value is used to set an "i=" tag in
39031 the signing header. The DKIM standards restrict the permissible
39032 syntax of this optional tag to a mail address, with possibly-empty
39033 local part, an @, and a domain identical to or subdomain of the "d="
39034 tag value. Note that Exim does not check the value.
39035
39036 .option dkim_canon smtp string&!! unset
39037 This option sets the canonicalization method used when signing a message.
39038 The DKIM RFC currently supports two methods: "simple" and "relaxed".
39039 The option defaults to "relaxed" when unset. Note: the current implementation
39040 only supports signing with the same canonicalization method for both headers and body.
39041
39042 .option dkim_strict smtp string&!! unset
39043 This option defines how Exim behaves when signing a message that
39044 should be signed fails for some reason. When the expansion evaluates to
39045 either "1" or "true", Exim will defer. Otherwise Exim will send the message
39046 unsigned. You can use the &%$dkim_domain%& and &%$dkim_selector%& expansion
39047 variables here.
39048
39049 .option dkim_sign_headers smtp string&!! "see below"
39050 If set, this option must expand to a colon-separated
39051 list of header names.
39052 Headers with these names, or the absence or such a header, will be included
39053 in the message signature.
39054 When unspecified, the header names listed in RFC4871 will be used,
39055 whether or not each header is present in the message.
39056 The default list is available for the expansion in the macro
39057 "_DKIM_SIGN_HEADERS".
39058
39059 If a name is repeated, multiple headers by that name (or the absence thereof)
39060 will be signed. The textually later headers in the headers part of the
39061 message are signed first, if there are multiples.
39062
39063 A name can be prefixed with either an '=' or a '+' character.
39064 If an '=' prefix is used, all headers that are present with this name
39065 will be signed.
39066 If a '+' prefix if used, all headers that are present with this name
39067 will be signed, and one signature added for a missing header with the
39068 name will be appended.
39069
39070
39071 .section "Verifying DKIM signatures in incoming mail" "SECDKIMVFY"
39072 .cindex "DKIM" "verification"
39073
39074 .new
39075 Verification of DKIM signatures in SMTP incoming email is done for all
39076 messages for which an ACL control &%dkim_disable_verify%& has not been set.
39077 .cindex authentication "expansion item"
39078 Performing verification sets up information used by the
39079 &$authresults$& expansion item.
39080 .wen
39081
39082 .new The results of that verification are then made available to the
39083 &%acl_smtp_dkim%& ACL, &new(which can examine and modify them).
39084 By default, this ACL is called once for each
39085 syntactically(!) correct signature in the incoming message.
39086 A missing ACL definition defaults to accept.
39087 If any ACL call does not accept, the message is not accepted.
39088 If a cutthrough delivery was in progress for the message, that is
39089 summarily dropped (having wasted the transmission effort).
39090
39091 To evaluate the &new(verification result) in the ACL
39092 a large number of expansion variables
39093 containing the signature status and its details are set up during the
39094 runtime of the ACL.
39095
39096 Calling the ACL only for existing signatures is not sufficient to build
39097 more advanced policies. For that reason, the global option
39098 &%dkim_verify_signers%&, and a global expansion variable
39099 &%$dkim_signers%& exist.
39100
39101 The global option &%dkim_verify_signers%& can be set to a colon-separated
39102 list of DKIM domains or identities for which the ACL &%acl_smtp_dkim%& is
39103 called. It is expanded when the message has been received. At this point,
39104 the expansion variable &%$dkim_signers%& already contains a colon-separated
39105 list of signer domains and identities for the message. When
39106 &%dkim_verify_signers%& is not specified in the main configuration,
39107 it defaults as:
39108 .code
39109 dkim_verify_signers = $dkim_signers
39110 .endd
39111 This leads to the default behaviour of calling &%acl_smtp_dkim%& for each
39112 DKIM signature in the message. Current DKIM verifiers may want to explicitly
39113 call the ACL for known domains or identities. This would be achieved as follows:
39114 .code
39115 dkim_verify_signers = paypal.com:ebay.com:$dkim_signers
39116 .endd
39117 This would result in &%acl_smtp_dkim%& always being called for "paypal.com"
39118 and "ebay.com", plus all domains and identities that have signatures in the message.
39119 You can also be more creative in constructing your policy. For example:
39120 .code
39121 dkim_verify_signers = $sender_address_domain:$dkim_signers
39122 .endd
39123
39124 If a domain or identity is listed several times in the (expanded) value of
39125 &%dkim_verify_signers%&, the ACL is only called once for that domain or identity.
39126
39127 If multiple signatures match a domain (or identity), the ACL is called once
39128 for each matching signature.
39129
39130
39131 Inside the &%acl_smtp_dkim%&, the following expansion variables are
39132 available (from most to least important):
39133
39134
39135 .vlist
39136 .vitem &%$dkim_cur_signer%&
39137 The signer that is being evaluated in this ACL run. This can be a domain or
39138 an identity. This is one of the list items from the expanded main option
39139 &%dkim_verify_signers%& (see above).
39140
39141 .vitem &%$dkim_verify_status%&
39142 Within the DKIM ACL,
39143 a string describing the general status of the signature. One of
39144 .ilist
39145 &%none%&: There is no signature in the message for the current domain or
39146 identity (as reflected by &%$dkim_cur_signer%&).
39147 .next
39148 &%invalid%&: The signature could not be verified due to a processing error.
39149 More detail is available in &%$dkim_verify_reason%&.
39150 .next
39151 &%fail%&: Verification of the signature failed. More detail is
39152 available in &%$dkim_verify_reason%&.
39153 .next
39154 &%pass%&: The signature passed verification. It is valid.
39155 .endlist
39156
39157 This variable can be overwritten using an ACL 'set' modifier.
39158 This might, for instance, be done to enforce a policy restriction on
39159 hash-method or key-size:
39160 .code
39161 warn condition = ${if eq {$dkim_verify_status}{pass}}
39162 condition = ${if eq {${length_3:$dkim_algo}}{rsa}}
39163 condition = ${if or {{eq {$dkim_algo}{rsa-sha1}} \
39164 {< {$dkim_key_length}{1024}}}}
39165 logwrite = NOTE: forcing DKIM verify fail (was pass)
39166 set dkim_verify_status = fail
39167 set dkim_verify_reason = hash too weak or key too short
39168 .endd
39169
39170 After all the DKIM ACL runs have completed, the value becomes a
39171 colon-separated list of the values after each run.
39172
39173 .vitem &%$dkim_verify_reason%&
39174 A string giving a little bit more detail when &%$dkim_verify_status%& is either
39175 "fail" or "invalid". One of
39176 .ilist
39177 &%pubkey_unavailable%& (when &%$dkim_verify_status%&="invalid"): The public
39178 key for the domain could not be retrieved. This may be a temporary problem.
39179 .next
39180 &%pubkey_syntax%& (when &%$dkim_verify_status%&="invalid"): The public key
39181 record for the domain is syntactically invalid.
39182 .next
39183 &%bodyhash_mismatch%& (when &%$dkim_verify_status%&="fail"): The calculated
39184 body hash does not match the one specified in the signature header. This
39185 means that the message body was modified in transit.
39186 .next
39187 &%signature_incorrect%& (when &%$dkim_verify_status%&="fail"): The signature
39188 could not be verified. This may mean that headers were modified,
39189 re-written or otherwise changed in a way which is incompatible with
39190 DKIM verification. It may of course also mean that the signature is forged.
39191 .endlist
39192
39193 This variable can be overwritten, with any value, using an ACL 'set' modifier.
39194
39195 .vitem &%$dkim_domain%&
39196 The signing domain. IMPORTANT: This variable is only populated if there is
39197 an actual signature in the message for the current domain or identity (as
39198 reflected by &%$dkim_cur_signer%&).
39199
39200 .vitem &%$dkim_identity%&
39201 The signing identity, if present. IMPORTANT: This variable is only populated
39202 if there is an actual signature in the message for the current domain or
39203 identity (as reflected by &%$dkim_cur_signer%&).
39204
39205 .vitem &%$dkim_selector%&
39206 The key record selector string.
39207
39208 .vitem &%$dkim_algo%&
39209 The algorithm used. One of 'rsa-sha1' or 'rsa-sha256'.
39210 If running under GnuTLS 3.6.0 or OpenSSL 1.1.1 or later,
39211 may also be 'ed25519-sha256'.
39212 The "_CRYPTO_SIGN_ED25519" macro will be defined if support is present
39213 for EC keys.
39214
39215 Note that RFC 8301 says:
39216 .code
39217 rsa-sha1 MUST NOT be used for signing or verifying.
39218
39219 DKIM signatures identified as having been signed with historic
39220 algorithms (currently, rsa-sha1) have permanently failed evaluation
39221 .endd
39222
39223 To enforce this you must have a DKIM ACL which checks this variable
39224 and overwrites the &$dkim_verify_status$& variable as discussed above.
39225
39226 .vitem &%$dkim_canon_body%&
39227 The body canonicalization method. One of 'relaxed' or 'simple'.
39228
39229 .vitem &%$dkim_canon_headers%&
39230 The header canonicalization method. One of 'relaxed' or 'simple'.
39231
39232 .vitem &%$dkim_copiedheaders%&
39233 A transcript of headers and their values which are included in the signature
39234 (copied from the 'z=' tag of the signature).
39235 Note that RFC6376 requires that verification fail if the From: header is
39236 not included in the signature. Exim does not enforce this; sites wishing
39237 strict enforcement should code the check explicitly.
39238
39239 .vitem &%$dkim_bodylength%&
39240 The number of signed body bytes. If zero ("0"), the body is unsigned. If no
39241 limit was set by the signer, "9999999999999" is returned. This makes sure
39242 that this variable always expands to an integer value.
39243
39244 .vitem &%$dkim_created%&
39245 UNIX timestamp reflecting the date and time when the signature was created.
39246 When this was not specified by the signer, "0" is returned.
39247
39248 .vitem &%$dkim_expires%&
39249 UNIX timestamp reflecting the date and time when the signer wants the
39250 signature to be treated as "expired". When this was not specified by the
39251 signer, "9999999999999" is returned. This makes it possible to do useful
39252 integer size comparisons against this value.
39253 Note that Exim does not check this value.
39254
39255 .vitem &%$dkim_headernames%&
39256 A colon-separated list of names of headers included in the signature.
39257
39258 .vitem &%$dkim_key_testing%&
39259 "1" if the key record has the "testing" flag set, "0" if not.
39260
39261 .vitem &%$dkim_key_nosubdomains%&
39262 "1" if the key record forbids subdomaining, "0" otherwise.
39263
39264 .vitem &%$dkim_key_srvtype%&
39265 Service type (tag s=) from the key record. Defaults to "*" if not specified
39266 in the key record.
39267
39268 .vitem &%$dkim_key_granularity%&
39269 Key granularity (tag g=) from the key record. Defaults to "*" if not specified
39270 in the key record.
39271
39272 .vitem &%$dkim_key_notes%&
39273 Notes from the key record (tag n=).
39274
39275 .vitem &%$dkim_key_length%&
39276 Number of bits in the key.
39277
39278 Note that RFC 8301 says:
39279 .code
39280 Verifiers MUST NOT consider signatures using RSA keys of
39281 less than 1024 bits as valid signatures.
39282 .endd
39283
39284 To enforce this you must have a DKIM ACL which checks this variable
39285 and overwrites the &$dkim_verify_status$& variable as discussed above.
39286 As EC keys are much smaller, the check should only do this for RSA keys.
39287
39288 .endlist
39289
39290 In addition, two ACL conditions are provided:
39291
39292 .vlist
39293 .vitem &%dkim_signers%&
39294 ACL condition that checks a colon-separated list of domains or identities
39295 for a match against the domain or identity that the ACL is currently verifying
39296 (reflected by &%$dkim_cur_signer%&). This is typically used to restrict an ACL
39297 verb to a group of domains or identities. For example:
39298
39299 .code
39300 # Warn when Mail purportedly from GMail has no gmail signature
39301 warn log_message = GMail sender without gmail.com DKIM signature
39302 sender_domains = gmail.com
39303 dkim_signers = gmail.com
39304 dkim_status = none
39305 .endd
39306
39307 Note that the above does not check for a total lack of DKIM signing;
39308 for that check for empty &$h_DKIM-Signature:$& in the data ACL.
39309
39310 .vitem &%dkim_status%&
39311 ACL condition that checks a colon-separated list of possible DKIM verification
39312 results against the actual result of verification. This is typically used
39313 to restrict an ACL verb to a list of verification outcomes, for example:
39314
39315 .code
39316 deny message = Mail from Paypal with invalid/missing signature
39317 sender_domains = paypal.com:paypal.de
39318 dkim_signers = paypal.com:paypal.de
39319 dkim_status = none:invalid:fail
39320 .endd
39321
39322 The possible status keywords are: 'none','invalid','fail' and 'pass'. Please
39323 see the documentation of the &%$dkim_verify_status%& expansion variable above
39324 for more information of what they mean.
39325 .endlist
39326
39327
39328
39329
39330 .section "SPF (Sender Policy Framework)" SECSPF
39331 .cindex SPF verification
39332
39333 SPF is a mechanism whereby a domain may assert which IP addresses may transmit
39334 messages with its domain in the envelope from, documented by RFC 7208.
39335 For more information on SPF see &url(http://www.openspf.org).
39336
39337 Messages sent by a system not authorised will fail checking of such assertions.
39338 This includes retransmissions done by traditional forwarders.
39339
39340 SPF verification support is built into Exim if SUPPORT_SPF=yes is set in
39341 &_Local/Makefile_&. The support uses the &_libspf2_& library
39342 &url(http://www.libspf2.org/).
39343 There is no Exim involvement in the transmission of messages;
39344 publishing certain DNS records is all that is required.
39345
39346 For verification, an ACL condition and an expansion lookup are provided.
39347 .cindex authentication "expansion item"
39348 Performing verification sets up information used by the
39349 &$authresults$& expansion item.
39350
39351
39352 .cindex SPF "ACL condition"
39353 .cindex ACL "spf condition"
39354 The ACL condition "spf" can be used at or after the MAIL ACL.
39355 It takes as an argument a list of strings giving the outcome of the SPF check,
39356 and will succeed for any matching outcome.
39357 Valid strings are:
39358 .vlist
39359 .vitem &%pass%&
39360 The SPF check passed, the sending host is positively verified by SPF.
39361
39362 .vitem &%fail%&
39363 The SPF check failed, the sending host is NOT allowed to send mail for the
39364 domain in the envelope-from address.
39365
39366 .vitem &%softfail%&
39367 The SPF check failed, but the queried domain can't absolutely confirm that this
39368 is a forgery.
39369
39370 .vitem &%none%&
39371 The queried domain does not publish SPF records.
39372
39373 .vitem &%neutral%&
39374 The SPF check returned a "neutral" state. This means the queried domain has
39375 published a SPF record, but wants to allow outside servers to send mail under
39376 its domain as well. This should be treated like "none".
39377
39378 .vitem &%permerror%&
39379 This indicates a syntax error in the SPF record of the queried domain.
39380 You may deny messages when this occurs.
39381
39382 .vitem &%temperror%&
39383 This indicates a temporary error during all processing, including Exim's
39384 SPF processing. You may defer messages when this occurs.
39385 .endlist
39386
39387 You can prefix each string with an exclamation mark to invert
39388 its meaning, for example "!fail" will match all results but
39389 "fail". The string list is evaluated left-to-right, in a
39390 short-circuit fashion.
39391
39392 Example:
39393 .code
39394 deny spf = fail
39395 message = $sender_host_address is not allowed to send mail from \
39396 ${if def:sender_address_domain \
39397 {$sender_address_domain}{$sender_helo_name}}. \
39398 Please see http://www.openspf.org/Why?scope=\
39399 ${if def:sender_address_domain {mfrom}{helo}};\
39400 identity=${if def:sender_address_domain \
39401 {$sender_address}{$sender_helo_name}};\
39402 ip=$sender_host_address
39403 .endd
39404
39405 When the spf condition has run, it sets up several expansion
39406 variables:
39407
39408 .cindex SPF "verification variables"
39409 .vlist
39410 .vitem &$spf_header_comment$&
39411 .vindex &$spf_header_comment$&
39412 This contains a human-readable string describing the outcome
39413 of the SPF check. You can add it to a custom header or use
39414 it for logging purposes.
39415
39416 .vitem &$spf_received$&
39417 .vindex &$spf_received$&
39418 This contains a complete Received-SPF: header that can be
39419 added to the message. Please note that according to the SPF
39420 draft, this header must be added at the top of the header
39421 list. Please see section 10 on how you can do this.
39422
39423 Note: in case of "Best-guess" (see below), the convention is
39424 to put this string in a header called X-SPF-Guess: instead.
39425
39426 .vitem &$spf_result$&
39427 .vindex &$spf_result$&
39428 This contains the outcome of the SPF check in string form,
39429 one of pass, fail, softfail, none, neutral, permerror or
39430 temperror.
39431
39432 .vitem &$spf_result_guessed$&
39433 .vindex &$spf_result_guessed$&
39434 This boolean is true only if a best-guess operation was used
39435 and required in order to obtain a result.
39436
39437 .vitem &$spf_smtp_comment$&
39438 .vindex &$spf_smtp_comment$&
39439 This contains a string that can be used in a SMTP response
39440 to the calling party. Useful for "fail".
39441 .endlist
39442
39443
39444 .cindex SPF "ACL condition"
39445 .cindex ACL "spf_guess condition"
39446 .cindex SPF "best guess"
39447 In addition to SPF, you can also perform checks for so-called
39448 "Best-guess". Strictly speaking, "Best-guess" is not standard
39449 SPF, but it is supported by the same framework that enables SPF
39450 capability.
39451 Refer to &url(http://www.openspf.org/FAQ/Best_guess_record)
39452 for a description of what it means.
39453
39454 To access this feature, simply use the spf_guess condition in place
39455 of the spf one. For example:
39456
39457 .code
39458 deny spf_guess = fail
39459 message = $sender_host_address doesn't look trustworthy to me
39460 .endd
39461
39462 In case you decide to reject messages based on this check, you
39463 should note that although it uses the same framework, "Best-guess"
39464 is not SPF, and therefore you should not mention SPF at all in your
39465 reject message.
39466
39467 When the spf_guess condition has run, it sets up the same expansion
39468 variables as when spf condition is run, described above.
39469
39470 Additionally, since Best-guess is not standardized, you may redefine
39471 what "Best-guess" means to you by redefining the main configuration
39472 &%spf_guess%& option.
39473 For example, the following:
39474
39475 .code
39476 spf_guess = v=spf1 a/16 mx/16 ptr ?all
39477 .endd
39478
39479 would relax host matching rules to a broader network range.
39480
39481
39482 .cindex SPF "lookup expansion"
39483 .cindex lookup spf
39484 A lookup expansion is also available. It takes an email
39485 address as the key and an IP address as the database:
39486
39487 .code
39488 ${lookup {username@domain} spf {ip.ip.ip.ip}}
39489 .endd
39490
39491 The lookup will return the same result strings as can appear in
39492 &$spf_result$& (pass,fail,softfail,neutral,none,err_perm,err_temp).
39493 Currently, only IPv4 addresses are supported.
39494
39495
39496
39497
39498 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39499 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39500
39501 .chapter "Proxies" "CHAPproxies" &&&
39502 "Proxy support"
39503 .cindex "proxy support"
39504 .cindex "proxy" "access via"
39505
39506 A proxy is an intermediate system through which communication is passed.
39507 Proxies may provide a security, availability or load-distribution function.
39508
39509
39510 .section "Inbound proxies" SECTproxyInbound
39511 .cindex proxy inbound
39512 .cindex proxy "server side"
39513 .cindex proxy "Proxy protocol"
39514 .cindex "Proxy protocol" proxy
39515
39516 Exim has support for receiving inbound SMTP connections via a proxy
39517 that uses &"Proxy Protocol"& to speak to it.
39518 To include this support, include &"SUPPORT_PROXY=yes"&
39519 in Local/Makefile.
39520
39521 It was built on specifications from:
39522 (&url(http://haproxy.1wt.eu/download/1.5/doc/proxy-protocol.txt)).
39523 That URL was revised in May 2014 to version 2 spec:
39524 (&url(http://git.1wt.eu/web?p=haproxy.git;a=commitdiff;h=afb768340c9d7e50d8e)).
39525
39526 The purpose of this facility is so that an application load balancer,
39527 such as HAProxy, can sit in front of several Exim servers
39528 to distribute load.
39529 Exim uses the local protocol communication with the proxy to obtain
39530 the remote SMTP system IP address and port information.
39531 There is no logging if a host passes or
39532 fails Proxy Protocol negotiation, but it can easily be determined and
39533 recorded in an ACL (example is below).
39534
39535 Use of a proxy is enabled by setting the &%hosts_proxy%&
39536 main configuration option to a hostlist; connections from these
39537 hosts will use Proxy Protocol.
39538 Exim supports both version 1 and version 2 of the Proxy Protocol and
39539 automatically determines which version is in use.
39540
39541 The Proxy Protocol header is the first data received on a TCP connection
39542 and is inserted before any TLS-on-connect handshake from the client; Exim
39543 negotiates TLS between Exim-as-server and the remote client, not between
39544 Exim and the proxy server.
39545
39546 The following expansion variables are usable
39547 (&"internal"& and &"external"& here refer to the interfaces
39548 of the proxy):
39549 .display
39550 &'proxy_external_address '& IP of host being proxied or IP of remote interface of proxy
39551 &'proxy_external_port '& Port of host being proxied or Port on remote interface of proxy
39552 &'proxy_local_address '& IP of proxy server inbound or IP of local interface of proxy
39553 &'proxy_local_port '& Port of proxy server inbound or Port on local interface of proxy
39554 &'proxy_session '& boolean: SMTP connection via proxy
39555 .endd
39556 If &$proxy_session$& is set but &$proxy_external_address$& is empty
39557 there was a protocol error.
39558
39559 Since the real connections are all coming from the proxy, and the
39560 per host connection tracking is done before Proxy Protocol is
39561 evaluated, &%smtp_accept_max_per_host%& must be set high enough to
39562 handle all of the parallel volume you expect per inbound proxy.
39563 With the option set so high, you lose the ability
39564 to protect your server from many connections from one IP.
39565 In order to prevent your server from overload, you
39566 need to add a per connection ratelimit to your connect ACL.
39567 A possible solution is:
39568 .display
39569 # Set max number of connections per host
39570 LIMIT = 5
39571 # Or do some kind of IP lookup in a flat file or database
39572 # LIMIT = ${lookup{$sender_host_address}iplsearch{/etc/exim/proxy_limits}}
39573
39574 defer message = Too many connections from this IP right now
39575 ratelimit = LIMIT / 5s / per_conn / strict
39576 .endd
39577
39578
39579
39580 .section "Outbound proxies" SECTproxySOCKS
39581 .cindex proxy outbound
39582 .cindex proxy "client side"
39583 .cindex proxy SOCKS
39584 .cindex SOCKS proxy
39585 Exim has support for sending outbound SMTP via a proxy
39586 using a protocol called SOCKS5 (defined by RFC1928).
39587 The support can be optionally included by defining SUPPORT_SOCKS=yes in
39588 Local/Makefile.
39589
39590 Use of a proxy is enabled by setting the &%socks_proxy%& option
39591 on an smtp transport.
39592 The option value is expanded and should then be a list
39593 (colon-separated by default) of proxy specifiers.
39594 Each proxy specifier is a list
39595 (space-separated by default) where the initial element
39596 is an IP address and any subsequent elements are options.
39597
39598 Options are a string <name>=<value>.
39599 The list of options is in the following table:
39600 .display
39601 &'auth '& authentication method
39602 &'name '& authentication username
39603 &'pass '& authentication password
39604 &'port '& tcp port
39605 &'tmo '& connection timeout
39606 &'pri '& priority
39607 &'weight '& selection bias
39608 .endd
39609
39610 More details on each of these options follows:
39611
39612 .ilist
39613 .cindex authentication "to proxy"
39614 .cindex proxy authentication
39615 &%auth%&: Either &"none"& (default) or &"name"&.
39616 Using &"name"& selects username/password authentication per RFC 1929
39617 for access to the proxy.
39618 Default is &"none"&.
39619 .next
39620 &%name%&: sets the username for the &"name"& authentication method.
39621 Default is empty.
39622 .next
39623 &%pass%&: sets the password for the &"name"& authentication method.
39624 Default is empty.
39625 .next
39626 &%port%&: the TCP port number to use for the connection to the proxy.
39627 Default is 1080.
39628 .next
39629 &%tmo%&: sets a connection timeout in seconds for this proxy.
39630 Default is 5.
39631 .next
39632 &%pri%&: specifies a priority for the proxy within the list,
39633 higher values being tried first.
39634 The default priority is 1.
39635 .next
39636 &%weight%&: specifies a selection bias.
39637 Within a priority set servers are queried in a random fashion,
39638 weighted by this value.
39639 The default value for selection bias is 1.
39640 .endlist
39641
39642 Proxies from the list are tried according to their priority
39643 and weight settings until one responds. The timeout for the
39644 overall connection applies to the set of proxied attempts.
39645
39646 .section Logging SECTproxyLog
39647 To log the (local) IP of a proxy in the incoming or delivery logline,
39648 add &"+proxy"& to the &%log_selector%& option.
39649 This will add a component tagged with &"PRX="& to the line.
39650
39651 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39652 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39653
39654 .chapter "Internationalisation" "CHAPi18n" &&&
39655 "Internationalisation""
39656 .cindex internationalisation "email address"
39657 .cindex EAI
39658 .cindex i18n
39659 .cindex utf8 "mail name handling"
39660
39661 Exim has support for Internationalised mail names.
39662 To include this it must be built with SUPPORT_I18N and the libidn library.
39663 Standards supported are RFCs 2060, 5890, 6530 and 6533.
39664
39665 If Exim is built with SUPPORT_I18N_2008 (in addition to SUPPORT_I18N, not
39666 instead of it) then IDNA2008 is supported; this adds an extra library
39667 requirement, upon libidn2.
39668
39669 .section "MTA operations" SECTi18nMTA
39670 .cindex SMTPUTF8 "ESMTP option"
39671 The main configuration option &%smtputf8_advertise_hosts%& specifies
39672 a host list. If this matches the sending host and
39673 accept_8bitmime is true (the default) then the ESMTP option
39674 SMTPUTF8 will be advertised.
39675
39676 If the sender specifies the SMTPUTF8 option on a MAIL command
39677 international handling for the message is enabled and
39678 the expansion variable &$message_smtputf8$& will have value TRUE.
39679
39680 The option &%allow_utf8_domains%& is set to true for this
39681 message. All DNS lookups are converted to a-label form
39682 whatever the setting of &%allow_utf8_domains%&
39683 when Exim is built with SUPPORT_I18N.
39684
39685 Both localparts and domain are maintained as the original
39686 UTF-8 form internally; any comparison or regular-expression use will
39687 require appropriate care. Filenames created, eg. by
39688 the appendfile transport, will have UTF-8 names.
39689
39690 HELO names sent by the smtp transport will have any UTF-8
39691 components expanded to a-label form,
39692 and any certificate name checks will be done using the a-label
39693 form of the name.
39694
39695 .cindex log protocol
39696 .cindex SMTPUTF8 logging
39697 .cindex i18n logging
39698 Log lines and Received-by: header lines will acquire a "utf8"
39699 prefix on the protocol element, eg. utf8esmtp.
39700
39701 The following expansion operators can be used:
39702 .code
39703 ${utf8_domain_to_alabel:str}
39704 ${utf8_domain_from_alabel:str}
39705 ${utf8_localpart_to_alabel:str}
39706 ${utf8_localpart_from_alabel:str}
39707 .endd
39708
39709 .cindex utf8 "address downconversion"
39710 .cindex i18n "utf8 address downconversion"
39711 The RCPT ACL
39712 may use the following modifier:
39713 .display
39714 control = utf8_downconvert
39715 control = utf8_downconvert/<value>
39716 .endd
39717 This sets a flag requiring that addresses are converted to
39718 a-label form before smtp delivery, for use in a
39719 Message Submission Agent context.
39720 If a value is appended it may be:
39721 .display
39722 &`1 `& (default) mandatory downconversion
39723 &`0 `& no downconversion
39724 &`-1 `& if SMTPUTF8 not supported by destination host
39725 .endd
39726
39727 If mua_wrapper is set, the utf8_downconvert control
39728 is initially set to -1.
39729
39730
39731 There is no explicit support for VRFY and EXPN.
39732 Configurations supporting these should inspect
39733 &$smtp_command_argument$& for an SMTPUTF8 argument.
39734
39735 There is no support for LMTP on Unix sockets.
39736 Using the "lmtp" protocol option on an smtp transport,
39737 for LMTP over TCP, should work as expected.
39738
39739 There is no support for DSN unitext handling,
39740 and no provision for converting logging from or to UTF-8.
39741
39742
39743
39744 .section "MDA operations" SECTi18nMDA
39745 To aid in constructing names suitable for IMAP folders
39746 the following expansion operator can be used:
39747 .code
39748 ${imapfolder {<string>} {<sep>} {<specials>}}
39749 .endd
39750
39751 The string is converted from the charset specified by
39752 the "headers charset" command (in a filter file)
39753 or &%headers_charset%& main configuration option (otherwise),
39754 to the
39755 modified UTF-7 encoding specified by RFC 2060,
39756 with the following exception: All occurrences of <sep>
39757 (which has to be a single character)
39758 are replaced with periods ("."), and all periods and slashes that are not
39759 <sep> and are not in the <specials> string are BASE64 encoded.
39760
39761 The third argument can be omitted, defaulting to an empty string.
39762 The second argument can be omitted, defaulting to "/".
39763
39764 This is the encoding used by Courier for Maildir names on disk, and followed
39765 by many other IMAP servers.
39766
39767 Examples:
39768 .display
39769 &`${imapfolder {Foo/Bar}} `& yields &`Foo.Bar`&
39770 &`${imapfolder {Foo/Bar}{.}{/}} `& yields &`Foo&&AC8-Bar`&
39771 &`${imapfolder {Räksmörgås}} `& yields &`R&&AOQ-ksm&&APY-rg&&AOU-s`&
39772 .endd
39773
39774 Note that the source charset setting is vital, and also that characters
39775 must be representable in UTF-16.
39776
39777
39778 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39779 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39780
39781 .chapter "Events" "CHAPevents" &&&
39782 "Events"
39783 .cindex events
39784
39785 The events mechanism in Exim can be used to intercept processing at a number
39786 of points. It was originally invented to give a way to do customised logging
39787 actions (for example, to a database) but can also be used to modify some
39788 processing actions.
39789
39790 Most installations will never need to use Events.
39791 The support can be left out of a build by defining DISABLE_EVENT=yes
39792 in &_Local/Makefile_&.
39793
39794 There are two major classes of events: main and transport.
39795 The main configuration option &%event_action%& controls reception events;
39796 a transport option &%event_action%& controls delivery events.
39797
39798 Both options are a string which is expanded when the event fires.
39799 An example might look like:
39800 .cindex logging custom
39801 .code
39802 event_action = ${if eq {msg:delivery}{$event_name} \
39803 {${lookup pgsql {SELECT * FROM record_Delivery( \
39804 '${quote_pgsql:$sender_address_domain}',\
39805 '${quote_pgsql:${lc:$sender_address_local_part}}', \
39806 '${quote_pgsql:$domain}', \
39807 '${quote_pgsql:${lc:$local_part}}', \
39808 '${quote_pgsql:$host_address}', \
39809 '${quote_pgsql:${lc:$host}}', \
39810 '${quote_pgsql:$message_exim_id}')}} \
39811 } {}}
39812 .endd
39813
39814 Events have names which correspond to the point in process at which they fire.
39815 The name is placed in the variable &$event_name$& and the event action
39816 expansion must check this, as it will be called for every possible event type.
39817
39818 The current list of events is:
39819 .display
39820 &`dane:fail after transport `& per connection
39821 &`msg:complete after main `& per message
39822 &`msg:delivery after transport `& per recipient
39823 &`msg:rcpt:host:defer after transport `& per recipient per host
39824 &`msg:rcpt:defer after transport `& per recipient
39825 &`msg:host:defer after transport `& per attempt
39826 &`msg:fail:delivery after transport `& per recipient
39827 &`msg:fail:internal after main `& per recipient
39828 &`tcp:connect before transport `& per connection
39829 &`tcp:close after transport `& per connection
39830 &`tls:cert before both `& per certificate in verification chain
39831 &`smtp:connect after transport `& per connection
39832 .endd
39833 New event types may be added in future.
39834
39835 The event name is a colon-separated list, defining the type of
39836 event in a tree of possibilities. It may be used as a list
39837 or just matched on as a whole. There will be no spaces in the name.
39838
39839 The second column in the table above describes whether the event fires
39840 before or after the action is associates with. Those which fire before
39841 can be used to affect that action (more on this below).
39842
39843 The third column in the table above says what section of the configuration
39844 should define the event action.
39845
39846 An additional variable, &$event_data$&, is filled with information varying
39847 with the event type:
39848 .display
39849 &`dane:fail `& failure reason
39850 &`msg:delivery `& smtp confirmation message
39851 &`msg:rcpt:host:defer `& error string
39852 &`msg:rcpt:defer `& error string
39853 &`msg:host:defer `& error string
39854 &`tls:cert `& verification chain depth
39855 &`smtp:connect `& smtp banner
39856 .endd
39857
39858 The :defer events populate one extra variable: &$event_defer_errno$&.
39859
39860 For complex operations an ACL expansion can be used in &%event_action%&
39861 however due to the multiple contexts that Exim operates in during
39862 the course of its processing:
39863 .ilist
39864 variables set in transport events will not be visible outside that
39865 transport call
39866 .next
39867 acl_m variables in a server context are lost on a new connection,
39868 and after smtp helo/ehlo/mail/starttls/rset commands
39869 .endlist
39870 Using an ACL expansion with the logwrite modifier can be
39871 a useful way of writing to the main log.
39872
39873 The expansion of the event_action option should normally
39874 return an empty string. Should it return anything else the
39875 following will be forced:
39876 .display
39877 &`tcp:connect `& do not connect
39878 &`tls:cert `& refuse verification
39879 &`smtp:connect `& close connection
39880 .endd
39881 All other message types ignore the result string, and
39882 no other use is made of it.
39883
39884 For a tcp:connect event, if the connection is being made to a proxy
39885 then the address and port variables will be that of the proxy and not
39886 the target system.
39887
39888 For tls:cert events, if GnuTLS is in use this will trigger only per
39889 chain element received on the connection.
39890 For OpenSSL it will trigger for every chain element including those
39891 loaded locally.
39892
39893 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39894 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39895
39896 .chapter "Adding new drivers or lookup types" "CHID13" &&&
39897 "Adding drivers or lookups"
39898 .cindex "adding drivers"
39899 .cindex "new drivers, adding"
39900 .cindex "drivers" "adding new"
39901 The following actions have to be taken in order to add a new router, transport,
39902 authenticator, or lookup type to Exim:
39903
39904 .olist
39905 Choose a name for the driver or lookup type that does not conflict with any
39906 existing name; I will use &"newdriver"& in what follows.
39907 .next
39908 Add to &_src/EDITME_& the line:
39909 .display
39910 <&'type'&>&`_NEWDRIVER=yes`&
39911 .endd
39912 where <&'type'&> is ROUTER, TRANSPORT, AUTH, or LOOKUP. If the
39913 code is not to be included in the binary by default, comment this line out. You
39914 should also add any relevant comments about the driver or lookup type.
39915 .next
39916 Add to &_src/config.h.defaults_& the line:
39917 .code
39918 #define <type>_NEWDRIVER
39919 .endd
39920 .next
39921 Edit &_src/drtables.c_&, adding conditional code to pull in the private header
39922 and create a table entry as is done for all the other drivers and lookup types.
39923 .next
39924 Edit &_scripts/lookups-Makefile_& if this is a new lookup; there is a for-loop
39925 near the bottom, ranging the &`name_mod`& variable over a list of all lookups.
39926 Add your &`NEWDRIVER`& to that list.
39927 As long as the dynamic module would be named &_newdriver.so_&, you can use the
39928 simple form that most lookups have.
39929 .next
39930 Edit &_Makefile_& in the appropriate sub-directory (&_src/routers_&,
39931 &_src/transports_&, &_src/auths_&, or &_src/lookups_&); add a line for the new
39932 driver or lookup type and add it to the definition of OBJ.
39933 .next
39934 Create &_newdriver.h_& and &_newdriver.c_& in the appropriate sub-directory of
39935 &_src_&.
39936 .next
39937 Edit &_scripts/MakeLinks_& and add commands to link the &_.h_& and &_.c_& files
39938 as for other drivers and lookups.
39939 .endlist
39940
39941 Then all you need to do is write the code! A good way to start is to make a
39942 proforma by copying an existing module of the same type, globally changing all
39943 occurrences of the name, and cutting out most of the code. Note that any
39944 options you create must be listed in alphabetical order, because the tables are
39945 searched using a binary chop procedure.
39946
39947 There is a &_README_& file in each of the sub-directories of &_src_& describing
39948 the interface that is expected.
39949
39950
39951
39952
39953 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39954 . ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39955
39956 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39957 . These lines are processing instructions for the Simple DocBook Processor that
39958 . Philip Hazel has developed as a less cumbersome way of making PostScript and
39959 . PDFs than using xmlto and fop. They will be ignored by all other XML
39960 . processors.
39961 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39962
39963 .literal xml
39964 <?sdop
39965 format="newpage"
39966 foot_right_recto="&chaptertitle;"
39967 foot_right_verso="&chaptertitle;"
39968 ?>
39969 .literal off
39970
39971 .makeindex "Options index" "option"
39972 .makeindex "Variables index" "variable"
39973 .makeindex "Concept index" "concept"
39974
39975
39976 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
39977 . /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////