More tls_sni support: outbound, logging.
[exim.git] / src / src / transports / smtp.c
1 /*************************************************
2 * Exim - an Internet mail transport agent *
3 *************************************************/
4
5 /* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2009 */
6 /* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */
7
8 #include "../exim.h"
9 #include "smtp.h"
10
11 #define PENDING 256
12 #define PENDING_DEFER (PENDING + DEFER)
13 #define PENDING_OK (PENDING + OK)
14
15
16 /* Options specific to the smtp transport. This transport also supports LMTP
17 over TCP/IP. The options must be in alphabetic order (note that "_" comes
18 before the lower case letters). Some live in the transport_instance block so as
19 to be publicly visible; these are flagged with opt_public. */
20
21 optionlist smtp_transport_options[] = {
22 { "address_retry_include_sender", opt_bool,
23 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, address_retry_include_sender) },
24 { "allow_localhost", opt_bool,
25 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, allow_localhost) },
26 { "authenticated_sender", opt_stringptr,
27 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, authenticated_sender) },
28 { "authenticated_sender_force", opt_bool,
29 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, authenticated_sender_force) },
30 { "command_timeout", opt_time,
31 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, command_timeout) },
32 { "connect_timeout", opt_time,
33 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, connect_timeout) },
34 { "connection_max_messages", opt_int | opt_public,
35 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, connection_max_messages) },
36 { "data_timeout", opt_time,
37 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, data_timeout) },
38 { "delay_after_cutoff", opt_bool,
39 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, delay_after_cutoff) },
40 #ifndef DISABLE_DKIM
41 { "dkim_canon", opt_stringptr,
42 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, dkim_canon) },
43 { "dkim_domain", opt_stringptr,
44 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, dkim_domain) },
45 { "dkim_private_key", opt_stringptr,
46 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, dkim_private_key) },
47 { "dkim_selector", opt_stringptr,
48 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, dkim_selector) },
49 { "dkim_sign_headers", opt_stringptr,
50 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, dkim_sign_headers) },
51 { "dkim_strict", opt_stringptr,
52 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, dkim_strict) },
53 #endif
54 { "dns_qualify_single", opt_bool,
55 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, dns_qualify_single) },
56 { "dns_search_parents", opt_bool,
57 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, dns_search_parents) },
58 { "fallback_hosts", opt_stringptr,
59 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, fallback_hosts) },
60 { "final_timeout", opt_time,
61 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, final_timeout) },
62 { "gethostbyname", opt_bool,
63 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, gethostbyname) },
64 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
65 { "gnutls_require_kx", opt_stringptr,
66 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, gnutls_require_kx) },
67 { "gnutls_require_mac", opt_stringptr,
68 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, gnutls_require_mac) },
69 { "gnutls_require_protocols", opt_stringptr,
70 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, gnutls_require_proto) },
71 #endif
72 { "helo_data", opt_stringptr,
73 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, helo_data) },
74 { "hosts", opt_stringptr,
75 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts) },
76 { "hosts_avoid_esmtp", opt_stringptr,
77 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts_avoid_esmtp) },
78 { "hosts_avoid_pipelining", opt_stringptr,
79 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts_avoid_pipelining) },
80 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
81 { "hosts_avoid_tls", opt_stringptr,
82 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts_avoid_tls) },
83 #endif
84 { "hosts_max_try", opt_int,
85 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts_max_try) },
86 { "hosts_max_try_hardlimit", opt_int,
87 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts_max_try_hardlimit) },
88 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
89 { "hosts_nopass_tls", opt_stringptr,
90 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts_nopass_tls) },
91 #endif
92 { "hosts_override", opt_bool,
93 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts_override) },
94 { "hosts_randomize", opt_bool,
95 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts_randomize) },
96 { "hosts_require_auth", opt_stringptr,
97 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts_require_auth) },
98 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
99 { "hosts_require_tls", opt_stringptr,
100 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts_require_tls) },
101 #endif
102 { "hosts_try_auth", opt_stringptr,
103 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, hosts_try_auth) },
104 { "interface", opt_stringptr,
105 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, interface) },
106 { "keepalive", opt_bool,
107 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, keepalive) },
108 { "lmtp_ignore_quota", opt_bool,
109 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, lmtp_ignore_quota) },
110 { "max_rcpt", opt_int | opt_public,
111 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, max_addresses) },
112 { "multi_domain", opt_bool | opt_public,
113 (void *)offsetof(transport_instance, multi_domain) },
114 { "port", opt_stringptr,
115 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, port) },
116 { "protocol", opt_stringptr,
117 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, protocol) },
118 { "retry_include_ip_address", opt_bool,
119 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, retry_include_ip_address) },
120 { "serialize_hosts", opt_stringptr,
121 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, serialize_hosts) },
122 { "size_addition", opt_int,
123 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, size_addition) }
124 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
125 ,{ "tls_certificate", opt_stringptr,
126 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, tls_certificate) },
127 { "tls_crl", opt_stringptr,
128 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, tls_crl) },
129 { "tls_privatekey", opt_stringptr,
130 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, tls_privatekey) },
131 { "tls_require_ciphers", opt_stringptr,
132 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, tls_require_ciphers) },
133 { "tls_sni", opt_stringptr,
134 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, tls_sni) },
135 { "tls_tempfail_tryclear", opt_bool,
136 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, tls_tempfail_tryclear) },
137 { "tls_verify_certificates", opt_stringptr,
138 (void *)offsetof(smtp_transport_options_block, tls_verify_certificates) }
139 #endif
140 };
141
142 /* Size of the options list. An extern variable has to be used so that its
143 address can appear in the tables drtables.c. */
144
145 int smtp_transport_options_count =
146 sizeof(smtp_transport_options)/sizeof(optionlist);
147
148 /* Default private options block for the smtp transport. */
149
150 smtp_transport_options_block smtp_transport_option_defaults = {
151 NULL, /* hosts */
152 NULL, /* fallback_hosts */
153 NULL, /* hostlist */
154 NULL, /* fallback_hostlist */
155 NULL, /* authenticated_sender */
156 US"$primary_hostname", /* helo_data */
157 NULL, /* interface */
158 NULL, /* port */
159 US"smtp", /* protocol */
160 NULL, /* serialize_hosts */
161 NULL, /* hosts_try_auth */
162 NULL, /* hosts_require_auth */
163 NULL, /* hosts_require_tls */
164 NULL, /* hosts_avoid_tls */
165 NULL, /* hosts_avoid_pipelining */
166 NULL, /* hosts_avoid_esmtp */
167 NULL, /* hosts_nopass_tls */
168 5*60, /* command_timeout */
169 5*60, /* connect_timeout; shorter system default overrides */
170 5*60, /* data timeout */
171 10*60, /* final timeout */
172 1024, /* size_addition */
173 5, /* hosts_max_try */
174 50, /* hosts_max_try_hardlimit */
175 TRUE, /* address_retry_include_sender */
176 FALSE, /* allow_localhost */
177 FALSE, /* authenticated_sender_force */
178 FALSE, /* gethostbyname */
179 TRUE, /* dns_qualify_single */
180 FALSE, /* dns_search_parents */
181 TRUE, /* delay_after_cutoff */
182 FALSE, /* hosts_override */
183 FALSE, /* hosts_randomize */
184 TRUE, /* keepalive */
185 FALSE, /* lmtp_ignore_quota */
186 TRUE /* retry_include_ip_address */
187 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
188 ,NULL, /* tls_certificate */
189 NULL, /* tls_crl */
190 NULL, /* tls_privatekey */
191 NULL, /* tls_require_ciphers */
192 NULL, /* gnutls_require_kx */
193 NULL, /* gnutls_require_mac */
194 NULL, /* gnutls_require_proto */
195 NULL, /* tls_verify_certificates */
196 TRUE, /* tls_tempfail_tryclear */
197 NULL /* tls_sni */
198 #endif
199 #ifndef DISABLE_DKIM
200 ,NULL, /* dkim_canon */
201 NULL, /* dkim_domain */
202 NULL, /* dkim_private_key */
203 NULL, /* dkim_selector */
204 NULL, /* dkim_sign_headers */
205 NULL /* dkim_strict */
206 #endif
207 };
208
209
210 /* Local statics */
211
212 static uschar *smtp_command; /* Points to last cmd for error messages */
213 static uschar *mail_command; /* Points to MAIL cmd for error messages */
214 static BOOL update_waiting; /* TRUE to update the "wait" database */
215
216
217 /*************************************************
218 * Setup entry point *
219 *************************************************/
220
221 /* This function is called when the transport is about to be used,
222 but before running it in a sub-process. It is used for two things:
223
224 (1) To set the fallback host list in addresses, when delivering.
225 (2) To pass back the interface, port, protocol, and other options, for use
226 during callout verification.
227
228 Arguments:
229 tblock pointer to the transport instance block
230 addrlist list of addresses about to be transported
231 tf if not NULL, pointer to block in which to return options
232 uid the uid that will be set (not used)
233 gid the gid that will be set (not used)
234 errmsg place for error message (not used)
235
236 Returns: OK always (FAIL, DEFER not used)
237 */
238
239 static int
240 smtp_transport_setup(transport_instance *tblock, address_item *addrlist,
241 transport_feedback *tf, uid_t uid, gid_t gid, uschar **errmsg)
242 {
243 smtp_transport_options_block *ob =
244 (smtp_transport_options_block *)(tblock->options_block);
245
246 errmsg = errmsg; /* Keep picky compilers happy */
247 uid = uid;
248 gid = gid;
249
250 /* Pass back options if required. This interface is getting very messy. */
251
252 if (tf != NULL)
253 {
254 tf->interface = ob->interface;
255 tf->port = ob->port;
256 tf->protocol = ob->protocol;
257 tf->hosts = ob->hosts;
258 tf->hosts_override = ob->hosts_override;
259 tf->hosts_randomize = ob->hosts_randomize;
260 tf->gethostbyname = ob->gethostbyname;
261 tf->qualify_single = ob->dns_qualify_single;
262 tf->search_parents = ob->dns_search_parents;
263 tf->helo_data = ob->helo_data;
264 }
265
266 /* Set the fallback host list for all the addresses that don't have fallback
267 host lists, provided that the local host wasn't present in the original host
268 list. */
269
270 if (!testflag(addrlist, af_local_host_removed))
271 {
272 for (; addrlist != NULL; addrlist = addrlist->next)
273 if (addrlist->fallback_hosts == NULL)
274 addrlist->fallback_hosts = ob->fallback_hostlist;
275 }
276
277 return OK;
278 }
279
280
281
282 /*************************************************
283 * Initialization entry point *
284 *************************************************/
285
286 /* Called for each instance, after its options have been read, to
287 enable consistency checks to be done, or anything else that needs
288 to be set up.
289
290 Argument: pointer to the transport instance block
291 Returns: nothing
292 */
293
294 void
295 smtp_transport_init(transport_instance *tblock)
296 {
297 smtp_transport_options_block *ob =
298 (smtp_transport_options_block *)(tblock->options_block);
299
300 /* Retry_use_local_part defaults FALSE if unset */
301
302 if (tblock->retry_use_local_part == TRUE_UNSET)
303 tblock->retry_use_local_part = FALSE;
304
305 /* Set the default port according to the protocol */
306
307 if (ob->port == NULL)
308 ob->port = (strcmpic(ob->protocol, US"lmtp") == 0)? US"lmtp" :
309 (strcmpic(ob->protocol, US"smtps") == 0)? US"smtps" : US"smtp";
310
311 /* Set up the setup entry point, to be called before subprocesses for this
312 transport. */
313
314 tblock->setup = smtp_transport_setup;
315
316 /* Complain if any of the timeouts are zero. */
317
318 if (ob->command_timeout <= 0 || ob->data_timeout <= 0 ||
319 ob->final_timeout <= 0)
320 log_write(0, LOG_PANIC_DIE|LOG_CONFIG,
321 "command, data, or final timeout value is zero for %s transport",
322 tblock->name);
323
324 /* If hosts_override is set and there are local hosts, set the global
325 flag that stops verify from showing router hosts. */
326
327 if (ob->hosts_override && ob->hosts != NULL) tblock->overrides_hosts = TRUE;
328
329 /* If there are any fallback hosts listed, build a chain of host items
330 for them, but do not do any lookups at this time. */
331
332 host_build_hostlist(&(ob->fallback_hostlist), ob->fallback_hosts, FALSE);
333 }
334
335
336
337
338
339 /*************************************************
340 * Set delivery info into all active addresses *
341 *************************************************/
342
343 /* Only addresses whose status is >= PENDING are relevant. A lesser
344 status means that an address is not currently being processed.
345
346 Arguments:
347 addrlist points to a chain of addresses
348 errno_value to put in each address's errno field
349 msg to put in each address's message field
350 rc to put in each address's transport_return field
351 pass_message if TRUE, set the "pass message" flag in the address
352
353 If errno_value has the special value ERRNO_CONNECTTIMEOUT, ETIMEDOUT is put in
354 the errno field, and RTEF_CTOUT is ORed into the more_errno field, to indicate
355 this particular type of timeout.
356
357 Returns: nothing
358 */
359
360 static void
361 set_errno(address_item *addrlist, int errno_value, uschar *msg, int rc,
362 BOOL pass_message)
363 {
364 address_item *addr;
365 int orvalue = 0;
366 if (errno_value == ERRNO_CONNECTTIMEOUT)
367 {
368 errno_value = ETIMEDOUT;
369 orvalue = RTEF_CTOUT;
370 }
371 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
372 {
373 if (addr->transport_return < PENDING) continue;
374 addr->basic_errno = errno_value;
375 addr->more_errno |= orvalue;
376 if (msg != NULL)
377 {
378 addr->message = msg;
379 if (pass_message) setflag(addr, af_pass_message);
380 }
381 addr->transport_return = rc;
382 }
383 }
384
385
386
387 /*************************************************
388 * Check an SMTP response *
389 *************************************************/
390
391 /* This function is given an errno code and the SMTP response buffer
392 to analyse, together with the host identification for generating messages. It
393 sets an appropriate message and puts the first digit of the response code into
394 the yield variable. If no response was actually read, a suitable digit is
395 chosen.
396
397 Arguments:
398 host the current host, to get its name for messages
399 errno_value pointer to the errno value
400 more_errno from the top address for use with ERRNO_FILTER_FAIL
401 buffer the SMTP response buffer
402 yield where to put a one-digit SMTP response code
403 message where to put an errror message
404 pass_message set TRUE if message is an SMTP response
405
406 Returns: TRUE if an SMTP "QUIT" command should be sent, else FALSE
407 */
408
409 static BOOL check_response(host_item *host, int *errno_value, int more_errno,
410 uschar *buffer, int *yield, uschar **message, BOOL *pass_message)
411 {
412 uschar *pl = US"";
413
414 if (smtp_use_pipelining &&
415 (Ustrcmp(smtp_command, "MAIL") == 0 ||
416 Ustrcmp(smtp_command, "RCPT") == 0 ||
417 Ustrcmp(smtp_command, "DATA") == 0))
418 pl = US"pipelined ";
419
420 *yield = '4'; /* Default setting is to give a temporary error */
421
422 /* Handle response timeout */
423
424 if (*errno_value == ETIMEDOUT)
425 {
426 *message = US string_sprintf("SMTP timeout while connected to %s [%s] "
427 "after %s%s", host->name, host->address, pl, smtp_command);
428 if (transport_count > 0)
429 *message = US string_sprintf("%s (%d bytes written)", *message,
430 transport_count);
431 return FALSE;
432 }
433
434 /* Handle malformed SMTP response */
435
436 if (*errno_value == ERRNO_SMTPFORMAT)
437 {
438 uschar *malfresp = string_printing(buffer);
439 while (isspace(*malfresp)) malfresp++;
440 if (*malfresp == 0)
441 *message = string_sprintf("Malformed SMTP reply (an empty line) from "
442 "%s [%s] in response to %s%s", host->name, host->address, pl,
443 smtp_command);
444 else
445 *message = string_sprintf("Malformed SMTP reply from %s [%s] in response "
446 "to %s%s: %s", host->name, host->address, pl, smtp_command, malfresp);
447 return FALSE;
448 }
449
450 /* Handle a failed filter process error; can't send QUIT as we mustn't
451 end the DATA. */
452
453 if (*errno_value == ERRNO_FILTER_FAIL)
454 {
455 *message = US string_sprintf("transport filter process failed (%d)%s",
456 more_errno,
457 (more_errno == EX_EXECFAILED)? ": unable to execute command" : "");
458 return FALSE;
459 }
460
461 /* Handle a failed add_headers expansion; can't send QUIT as we mustn't
462 end the DATA. */
463
464 if (*errno_value == ERRNO_CHHEADER_FAIL)
465 {
466 *message =
467 US string_sprintf("failed to expand headers_add or headers_remove: %s",
468 expand_string_message);
469 return FALSE;
470 }
471
472 /* Handle failure to write a complete data block */
473
474 if (*errno_value == ERRNO_WRITEINCOMPLETE)
475 {
476 *message = US string_sprintf("failed to write a data block");
477 return FALSE;
478 }
479
480 /* Handle error responses from the remote mailer. */
481
482 if (buffer[0] != 0)
483 {
484 uschar *s = string_printing(buffer);
485 *message = US string_sprintf("SMTP error from remote mail server after %s%s: "
486 "host %s [%s]: %s", pl, smtp_command, host->name, host->address, s);
487 *pass_message = TRUE;
488 *yield = buffer[0];
489 return TRUE;
490 }
491
492 /* No data was read. If there is no errno, this must be the EOF (i.e.
493 connection closed) case, which causes deferral. An explicit connection reset
494 error has the same effect. Otherwise, put the host's identity in the message,
495 leaving the errno value to be interpreted as well. In all cases, we have to
496 assume the connection is now dead. */
497
498 if (*errno_value == 0 || *errno_value == ECONNRESET)
499 {
500 *errno_value = ERRNO_SMTPCLOSED;
501 *message = US string_sprintf("Remote host %s [%s] closed connection "
502 "in response to %s%s", host->name, host->address, pl, smtp_command);
503 }
504 else *message = US string_sprintf("%s [%s]", host->name, host->address);
505
506 return FALSE;
507 }
508
509
510
511 /*************************************************
512 * Write error message to logs *
513 *************************************************/
514
515 /* This writes to the main log and to the message log.
516
517 Arguments:
518 addr the address item containing error information
519 host the current host
520
521 Returns: nothing
522 */
523
524 static void
525 write_logs(address_item *addr, host_item *host)
526 {
527 if (addr->message != NULL)
528 {
529 uschar *message = addr->message;
530 if (addr->basic_errno > 0)
531 message = string_sprintf("%s: %s", message, strerror(addr->basic_errno));
532 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s", message);
533 deliver_msglog("%s %s\n", tod_stamp(tod_log), message);
534 }
535 else
536 {
537 uschar *msg =
538 ((log_extra_selector & LX_outgoing_port) != 0)?
539 string_sprintf("%s [%s]:%d", host->name, host->address,
540 (host->port == PORT_NONE)? 25 : host->port)
541 :
542 string_sprintf("%s [%s]", host->name, host->address);
543 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s %s", msg, strerror(addr->basic_errno));
544 deliver_msglog("%s %s %s\n", tod_stamp(tod_log), msg,
545 strerror(addr->basic_errno));
546 }
547 }
548
549
550
551 /*************************************************
552 * Synchronize SMTP responses *
553 *************************************************/
554
555 /* This function is called from smtp_deliver() to receive SMTP responses from
556 the server, and match them up with the commands to which they relate. When
557 PIPELINING is not in use, this function is called after every command, and is
558 therefore somewhat over-engineered, but it is simpler to use a single scheme
559 that works both with and without PIPELINING instead of having two separate sets
560 of code.
561
562 The set of commands that are buffered up with pipelining may start with MAIL
563 and may end with DATA; in between are RCPT commands that correspond to the
564 addresses whose status is PENDING_DEFER. All other commands (STARTTLS, AUTH,
565 etc.) are never buffered.
566
567 Errors after MAIL or DATA abort the whole process leaving the response in the
568 buffer. After MAIL, pending responses are flushed, and the original command is
569 re-instated in big_buffer for error messages. For RCPT commands, the remote is
570 permitted to reject some recipient addresses while accepting others. However
571 certain errors clearly abort the whole process. Set the value in
572 transport_return to PENDING_OK if the address is accepted. If there is a
573 subsequent general error, it will get reset accordingly. If not, it will get
574 converted to OK at the end.
575
576 Arguments:
577 addrlist the complete address list
578 include_affixes TRUE if affixes include in RCPT
579 sync_addr ptr to the ptr of the one to start scanning at (updated)
580 host the host we are connected to
581 count the number of responses to read
582 address_retry_
583 include_sender true if 4xx retry is to include the sender it its key
584 pending_MAIL true if the first response is for MAIL
585 pending_DATA 0 if last command sent was not DATA
586 +1 if previously had a good recipient
587 -1 if not previously had a good recipient
588 inblock incoming SMTP block
589 timeout timeout value
590 buffer buffer for reading response
591 buffsize size of buffer
592
593 Returns: 3 if at least one address had 2xx and one had 5xx
594 2 if at least one address had 5xx but none had 2xx
595 1 if at least one host had a 2xx response, but none had 5xx
596 0 no address had 2xx or 5xx but no errors (all 4xx, or just DATA)
597 -1 timeout while reading RCPT response
598 -2 I/O or other non-response error for RCPT
599 -3 DATA or MAIL failed - errno and buffer set
600 */
601
602 static int
603 sync_responses(address_item *addrlist, BOOL include_affixes,
604 address_item **sync_addr, host_item *host, int count,
605 BOOL address_retry_include_sender, BOOL pending_MAIL,
606 int pending_DATA, smtp_inblock *inblock, int timeout, uschar *buffer,
607 int buffsize)
608 {
609 address_item *addr = *sync_addr;
610 int yield = 0;
611
612 /* Handle the response for a MAIL command. On error, reinstate the original
613 command in big_buffer for error message use, and flush any further pending
614 responses before returning, except after I/O errors and timeouts. */
615
616 if (pending_MAIL)
617 {
618 count--;
619 if (!smtp_read_response(inblock, buffer, buffsize, '2', timeout))
620 {
621 Ustrcpy(big_buffer, mail_command); /* Fits, because it came from there! */
622 if (errno == 0 && buffer[0] != 0)
623 {
624 uschar flushbuffer[4096];
625 int save_errno = 0;
626 if (buffer[0] == '4')
627 {
628 save_errno = ERRNO_MAIL4XX;
629 addr->more_errno |= ((buffer[1] - '0')*10 + buffer[2] - '0') << 8;
630 }
631 while (count-- > 0)
632 {
633 if (!smtp_read_response(inblock, flushbuffer, sizeof(flushbuffer),
634 '2', timeout)
635 && (errno != 0 || flushbuffer[0] == 0))
636 break;
637 }
638 errno = save_errno;
639 }
640 return -3;
641 }
642 }
643
644 if (pending_DATA) count--; /* Number of RCPT responses to come */
645
646 /* Read and handle the required number of RCPT responses, matching each one up
647 with an address by scanning for the next address whose status is PENDING_DEFER.
648 */
649
650 while (count-- > 0)
651 {
652 while (addr->transport_return != PENDING_DEFER) addr = addr->next;
653
654 /* The address was accepted */
655
656 if (smtp_read_response(inblock, buffer, buffsize, '2', timeout))
657 {
658 yield |= 1;
659 addr->transport_return = PENDING_OK;
660
661 /* If af_dr_retry_exists is set, there was a routing delay on this address;
662 ensure that any address-specific retry record is expunged. We do this both
663 for the basic key and for the version that also includes the sender. */
664
665 if (testflag(addr, af_dr_retry_exists))
666 {
667 uschar *altkey = string_sprintf("%s:<%s>", addr->address_retry_key,
668 sender_address);
669 retry_add_item(addr, altkey, rf_delete);
670 retry_add_item(addr, addr->address_retry_key, rf_delete);
671 }
672 }
673
674 /* Timeout while reading the response */
675
676 else if (errno == ETIMEDOUT)
677 {
678 int save_errno = errno;
679 uschar *message = string_sprintf("SMTP timeout while connected to %s [%s] "
680 "after RCPT TO:<%s>", host->name, host->address,
681 transport_rcpt_address(addr, include_affixes));
682 set_errno(addrlist, save_errno, message, DEFER, FALSE);
683 retry_add_item(addr, addr->address_retry_key, 0);
684 update_waiting = FALSE;
685 return -1;
686 }
687
688 /* Handle other errors in obtaining an SMTP response by returning -1. This
689 will cause all the addresses to be deferred. Restore the SMTP command in
690 big_buffer for which we are checking the response, so the error message
691 makes sense. */
692
693 else if (errno != 0 || buffer[0] == 0)
694 {
695 string_format(big_buffer, big_buffer_size, "RCPT TO:<%s>",
696 transport_rcpt_address(addr, include_affixes));
697 return -2;
698 }
699
700 /* Handle SMTP permanent and temporary response codes. */
701
702 else
703 {
704 addr->message =
705 string_sprintf("SMTP error from remote mail server after RCPT TO:<%s>: "
706 "host %s [%s]: %s", transport_rcpt_address(addr, include_affixes),
707 host->name, host->address, string_printing(buffer));
708 setflag(addr, af_pass_message);
709 deliver_msglog("%s %s\n", tod_stamp(tod_log), addr->message);
710
711 /* The response was 5xx */
712
713 if (buffer[0] == '5')
714 {
715 addr->transport_return = FAIL;
716 yield |= 2;
717 }
718
719 /* The response was 4xx */
720
721 else
722 {
723 addr->transport_return = DEFER;
724 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_RCPT4XX;
725 addr->more_errno |= ((buffer[1] - '0')*10 + buffer[2] - '0') << 8;
726
727 /* Log temporary errors if there are more hosts to be tried. */
728
729 if (host->next != NULL) log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s", addr->message);
730
731 /* Do not put this message on the list of those waiting for specific
732 hosts, as otherwise it is likely to be tried too often. */
733
734 update_waiting = FALSE;
735
736 /* Add a retry item for the address so that it doesn't get tried again
737 too soon. If address_retry_include_sender is true, add the sender address
738 to the retry key. */
739
740 if (address_retry_include_sender)
741 {
742 uschar *altkey = string_sprintf("%s:<%s>", addr->address_retry_key,
743 sender_address);
744 retry_add_item(addr, altkey, 0);
745 }
746 else retry_add_item(addr, addr->address_retry_key, 0);
747 }
748 }
749 } /* Loop for next RCPT response */
750
751 /* Update where to start at for the next block of responses, unless we
752 have already handled all the addresses. */
753
754 if (addr != NULL) *sync_addr = addr->next;
755
756 /* Handle a response to DATA. If we have not had any good recipients, either
757 previously or in this block, the response is ignored. */
758
759 if (pending_DATA != 0 &&
760 !smtp_read_response(inblock, buffer, buffsize, '3', timeout))
761 {
762 int code;
763 uschar *msg;
764 BOOL pass_message;
765 if (pending_DATA > 0 || (yield & 1) != 0)
766 {
767 if (errno == 0 && buffer[0] == '4')
768 {
769 errno = ERRNO_DATA4XX;
770 addrlist->more_errno |= ((buffer[1] - '0')*10 + buffer[2] - '0') << 8;
771 }
772 return -3;
773 }
774 (void)check_response(host, &errno, 0, buffer, &code, &msg, &pass_message);
775 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("%s\nerror for DATA ignored: pipelining "
776 "is in use and there were no good recipients\n", msg);
777 }
778
779 /* All responses read and handled; MAIL (if present) received 2xx and DATA (if
780 present) received 3xx. If any RCPTs were handled and yielded anything other
781 than 4xx, yield will be set non-zero. */
782
783 return yield;
784 }
785
786
787
788 /*************************************************
789 * Deliver address list to given host *
790 *************************************************/
791
792 /* If continue_hostname is not null, we get here only when continuing to
793 deliver down an existing channel. The channel was passed as the standard
794 input. TLS is never active on a passed channel; the previous process always
795 closes it down before passing the connection on.
796
797 Otherwise, we have to make a connection to the remote host, and do the
798 initial protocol exchange.
799
800 When running as an MUA wrapper, if the sender or any recipient is rejected,
801 temporarily or permanently, we force failure for all recipients.
802
803 Arguments:
804 addrlist chain of potential addresses to deliver; only those whose
805 transport_return field is set to PENDING_DEFER are currently
806 being processed; others should be skipped - they have either
807 been delivered to an earlier host or IP address, or been
808 failed by one of them.
809 host host to deliver to
810 host_af AF_INET or AF_INET6
811 port default TCP/IP port to use, in host byte order
812 interface interface to bind to, or NULL
813 tblock transport instance block
814 copy_host TRUE if host set in addr->host_used must be copied, because
815 it is specific to this call of the transport
816 message_defer set TRUE if yield is OK, but all addresses were deferred
817 because of a non-recipient, non-host failure, that is, a
818 4xx response to MAIL FROM, DATA, or ".". This is a defer
819 that is specific to the message.
820 suppress_tls if TRUE, don't attempt a TLS connection - this is set for
821 a second attempt after TLS initialization fails
822
823 Returns: OK - the connection was made and the delivery attempted;
824 the result for each address is in its data block.
825 DEFER - the connection could not be made, or something failed
826 while setting up the SMTP session, or there was a
827 non-message-specific error, such as a timeout.
828 ERROR - a filter command is specified for this transport,
829 and there was a problem setting it up; OR helo_data
830 or add_headers or authenticated_sender is specified
831 for this transport, and the string failed to expand
832 */
833
834 static int
835 smtp_deliver(address_item *addrlist, host_item *host, int host_af, int port,
836 uschar *interface, transport_instance *tblock, BOOL copy_host,
837 BOOL *message_defer, BOOL suppress_tls)
838 {
839 address_item *addr;
840 address_item *sync_addr;
841 address_item *first_addr = addrlist;
842 int yield = OK;
843 int address_count;
844 int save_errno;
845 int rc;
846 time_t start_delivery_time = time(NULL);
847 smtp_transport_options_block *ob =
848 (smtp_transport_options_block *)(tblock->options_block);
849 BOOL lmtp = strcmpic(ob->protocol, US"lmtp") == 0;
850 BOOL smtps = strcmpic(ob->protocol, US"smtps") == 0;
851 BOOL ok = FALSE;
852 BOOL send_rset = TRUE;
853 BOOL send_quit = TRUE;
854 BOOL setting_up = TRUE;
855 BOOL completed_address = FALSE;
856 BOOL esmtp = TRUE;
857 BOOL pending_MAIL;
858 BOOL pass_message = FALSE;
859 smtp_inblock inblock;
860 smtp_outblock outblock;
861 int max_rcpt = tblock->max_addresses;
862 uschar *igquotstr = US"";
863 uschar *local_authenticated_sender = authenticated_sender;
864 uschar *helo_data = NULL;
865 uschar *message = NULL;
866 uschar new_message_id[MESSAGE_ID_LENGTH + 1];
867 uschar *p;
868 uschar buffer[4096];
869 uschar inbuffer[4096];
870 uschar outbuffer[1024];
871
872 suppress_tls = suppress_tls; /* stop compiler warning when no TLS support */
873
874 *message_defer = FALSE;
875 smtp_command = US"initial connection";
876 if (max_rcpt == 0) max_rcpt = 999999;
877
878 /* Set up the buffer for reading SMTP response packets. */
879
880 inblock.buffer = inbuffer;
881 inblock.buffersize = sizeof(inbuffer);
882 inblock.ptr = inbuffer;
883 inblock.ptrend = inbuffer;
884
885 /* Set up the buffer for holding SMTP commands while pipelining */
886
887 outblock.buffer = outbuffer;
888 outblock.buffersize = sizeof(outbuffer);
889 outblock.ptr = outbuffer;
890 outblock.cmd_count = 0;
891 outblock.authenticating = FALSE;
892
893 /* Reset the parameters of a TLS session. */
894
895 tls_bits = 0;
896 tls_cipher = NULL;
897 tls_peerdn = NULL;
898 tls_sni = NULL;
899
900 /* If an authenticated_sender override has been specified for this transport
901 instance, expand it. If the expansion is forced to fail, and there was already
902 an authenticated_sender for this message, the original value will be used.
903 Other expansion failures are serious. An empty result is ignored, but there is
904 otherwise no check - this feature is expected to be used with LMTP and other
905 cases where non-standard addresses (e.g. without domains) might be required. */
906
907 if (ob->authenticated_sender != NULL)
908 {
909 uschar *new = expand_string(ob->authenticated_sender);
910 if (new == NULL)
911 {
912 if (!expand_string_forcedfail)
913 {
914 uschar *message = string_sprintf("failed to expand "
915 "authenticated_sender: %s", expand_string_message);
916 set_errno(addrlist, 0, message, DEFER, FALSE);
917 return ERROR;
918 }
919 }
920 else if (new[0] != 0) local_authenticated_sender = new;
921 }
922
923 #ifndef SUPPORT_TLS
924 if (smtps)
925 {
926 set_errno(addrlist, 0, US"TLS support not available", DEFER, FALSE);
927 return ERROR;
928 }
929 #endif
930
931 /* Make a connection to the host if this isn't a continued delivery, and handle
932 the initial interaction and HELO/EHLO/LHLO. Connect timeout errors are handled
933 specially so they can be identified for retries. */
934
935 if (continue_hostname == NULL)
936 {
937 inblock.sock = outblock.sock =
938 smtp_connect(host, host_af, port, interface, ob->connect_timeout,
939 ob->keepalive); /* This puts port into host->port */
940
941 if (inblock.sock < 0)
942 {
943 set_errno(addrlist, (errno == ETIMEDOUT)? ERRNO_CONNECTTIMEOUT : errno,
944 NULL, DEFER, FALSE);
945 return DEFER;
946 }
947
948 /* Expand the greeting message while waiting for the initial response. (Makes
949 sense if helo_data contains ${lookup dnsdb ...} stuff). The expansion is
950 delayed till here so that $sending_interface and $sending_port are set. */
951
952 helo_data = expand_string(ob->helo_data);
953
954 /* The first thing is to wait for an initial OK response. The dreaded "goto"
955 is nevertheless a reasonably clean way of programming this kind of logic,
956 where you want to escape on any error. */
957
958 if (!smtps)
959 {
960 if (!smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer, sizeof(buffer), '2',
961 ob->command_timeout)) goto RESPONSE_FAILED;
962
963 /* Now check if the helo_data expansion went well, and sign off cleanly if
964 it didn't. */
965
966 if (helo_data == NULL)
967 {
968 uschar *message = string_sprintf("failed to expand helo_data: %s",
969 expand_string_message);
970 set_errno(addrlist, 0, message, DEFER, FALSE);
971 yield = DEFER;
972 goto SEND_QUIT;
973 }
974 }
975
976 /** Debugging without sending a message
977 addrlist->transport_return = DEFER;
978 goto SEND_QUIT;
979 **/
980
981 /* Errors that occur after this point follow an SMTP command, which is
982 left in big_buffer by smtp_write_command() for use in error messages. */
983
984 smtp_command = big_buffer;
985
986 /* Tell the remote who we are...
987
988 February 1998: A convention has evolved that ESMTP-speaking MTAs include the
989 string "ESMTP" in their greeting lines, so make Exim send EHLO if the
990 greeting is of this form. The assumption was that the far end supports it
991 properly... but experience shows that there are some that give 5xx responses,
992 even though the banner includes "ESMTP" (there's a bloody-minded one that
993 says "ESMTP not spoken here"). Cope with that case.
994
995 September 2000: Time has passed, and it seems reasonable now to always send
996 EHLO at the start. It is also convenient to make the change while installing
997 the TLS stuff.
998
999 July 2003: Joachim Wieland met a broken server that advertises "PIPELINING"
1000 but times out after sending MAIL FROM, RCPT TO and DATA all together. There
1001 would be no way to send out the mails, so there is now a host list
1002 "hosts_avoid_esmtp" that disables ESMTP for special hosts and solves the
1003 PIPELINING problem as well. Maybe it can also be useful to cure other
1004 problems with broken servers.
1005
1006 Exim originally sent "Helo" at this point and ran for nearly a year that way.
1007 Then somebody tried it with a Microsoft mailer... It seems that all other
1008 mailers use upper case for some reason (the RFC is quite clear about case
1009 independence) so, for peace of mind, I gave in. */
1010
1011 esmtp = verify_check_this_host(&(ob->hosts_avoid_esmtp), NULL,
1012 host->name, host->address, NULL) != OK;
1013
1014 /* Alas; be careful, since this goto is not an error-out, so conceivably
1015 we might set data between here and the target which we assume to exist
1016 and be usable. I can see this coming back to bite us. */
1017 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
1018 if (smtps)
1019 {
1020 tls_offered = TRUE;
1021 suppress_tls = FALSE;
1022 ob->tls_tempfail_tryclear = FALSE;
1023 smtp_command = US"SSL-on-connect";
1024 goto TLS_NEGOTIATE;
1025 }
1026 #endif
1027
1028 if (esmtp)
1029 {
1030 if (smtp_write_command(&outblock, FALSE, "%s %s\r\n",
1031 lmtp? "LHLO" : "EHLO", helo_data) < 0)
1032 goto SEND_FAILED;
1033 if (!smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer, sizeof(buffer), '2',
1034 ob->command_timeout))
1035 {
1036 if (errno != 0 || buffer[0] == 0 || lmtp) goto RESPONSE_FAILED;
1037 esmtp = FALSE;
1038 }
1039 }
1040 else
1041 {
1042 DEBUG(D_transport)
1043 debug_printf("not sending EHLO (host matches hosts_avoid_esmtp)\n");
1044 }
1045
1046 if (!esmtp)
1047 {
1048 if (smtp_write_command(&outblock, FALSE, "HELO %s\r\n", helo_data) < 0)
1049 goto SEND_FAILED;
1050 if (!smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer, sizeof(buffer), '2',
1051 ob->command_timeout)) goto RESPONSE_FAILED;
1052 }
1053
1054 /* Set IGNOREQUOTA if the response to LHLO specifies support and the
1055 lmtp_ignore_quota option was set. */
1056
1057 igquotstr = (lmtp && ob->lmtp_ignore_quota &&
1058 pcre_exec(regex_IGNOREQUOTA, NULL, CS buffer, Ustrlen(CS buffer), 0,
1059 PCRE_EOPT, NULL, 0) >= 0)? US" IGNOREQUOTA" : US"";
1060
1061 /* Set tls_offered if the response to EHLO specifies support for STARTTLS. */
1062
1063 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
1064 tls_offered = esmtp &&
1065 pcre_exec(regex_STARTTLS, NULL, CS buffer, Ustrlen(buffer), 0,
1066 PCRE_EOPT, NULL, 0) >= 0;
1067 #endif
1068 }
1069
1070 /* For continuing deliveries down the same channel, the socket is the standard
1071 input, and we don't need to redo EHLO here (but may need to do so for TLS - see
1072 below). Set up the pointer to where subsequent commands will be left, for
1073 error messages. Note that smtp_use_size and smtp_use_pipelining will have been
1074 set from the command line if they were set in the process that passed the
1075 connection on. */
1076
1077 else
1078 {
1079 inblock.sock = outblock.sock = fileno(stdin);
1080 smtp_command = big_buffer;
1081 host->port = port; /* Record the port that was used */
1082 }
1083
1084 /* If TLS is available on this connection, whether continued or not, attempt to
1085 start up a TLS session, unless the host is in hosts_avoid_tls. If successful,
1086 send another EHLO - the server may give a different answer in secure mode. We
1087 use a separate buffer for reading the response to STARTTLS so that if it is
1088 negative, the original EHLO data is available for subsequent analysis, should
1089 the client not be required to use TLS. If the response is bad, copy the buffer
1090 for error analysis. */
1091
1092 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
1093 if (tls_offered && !suppress_tls &&
1094 verify_check_this_host(&(ob->hosts_avoid_tls), NULL, host->name,
1095 host->address, NULL) != OK)
1096 {
1097 uschar buffer2[4096];
1098 if (smtp_write_command(&outblock, FALSE, "STARTTLS\r\n") < 0)
1099 goto SEND_FAILED;
1100
1101 /* If there is an I/O error, transmission of this message is deferred. If
1102 there is a temporary rejection of STARRTLS and tls_tempfail_tryclear is
1103 false, we also defer. However, if there is a temporary rejection of STARTTLS
1104 and tls_tempfail_tryclear is true, or if there is an outright rejection of
1105 STARTTLS, we carry on. This means we will try to send the message in clear,
1106 unless the host is in hosts_require_tls (tested below). */
1107
1108 if (!smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer2, sizeof(buffer2), '2',
1109 ob->command_timeout))
1110 {
1111 if (errno != 0 || buffer2[0] == 0 ||
1112 (buffer2[0] == '4' && !ob->tls_tempfail_tryclear))
1113 {
1114 Ustrncpy(buffer, buffer2, sizeof(buffer));
1115 goto RESPONSE_FAILED;
1116 }
1117 }
1118
1119 /* STARTTLS accepted: try to negotiate a TLS session. */
1120
1121 else
1122 TLS_NEGOTIATE:
1123 {
1124 int rc = tls_client_start(inblock.sock,
1125 host,
1126 addrlist,
1127 NULL, /* No DH param */
1128 ob->tls_certificate,
1129 ob->tls_privatekey,
1130 ob->tls_sni,
1131 ob->tls_verify_certificates,
1132 ob->tls_crl,
1133 ob->tls_require_ciphers,
1134 ob->gnutls_require_mac,
1135 ob->gnutls_require_kx,
1136 ob->gnutls_require_proto,
1137 ob->command_timeout);
1138
1139 /* TLS negotiation failed; give an error. From outside, this function may
1140 be called again to try in clear on a new connection, if the options permit
1141 it for this host. */
1142
1143 if (rc != OK)
1144 {
1145 save_errno = ERRNO_TLSFAILURE;
1146 message = US"failure while setting up TLS session";
1147 send_quit = FALSE;
1148 goto TLS_FAILED;
1149 }
1150
1151 /* TLS session is set up */
1152
1153 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
1154 {
1155 if (addr->transport_return == PENDING_DEFER)
1156 {
1157 addr->cipher = tls_cipher;
1158 addr->peerdn = tls_peerdn;
1159 }
1160 }
1161 }
1162 }
1163
1164 /* if smtps, we'll have smtp_command set to something else; always safe to
1165 reset it here. */
1166 smtp_command = big_buffer;
1167
1168 /* If we started TLS, redo the EHLO/LHLO exchange over the secure channel. If
1169 helo_data is null, we are dealing with a connection that was passed from
1170 another process, and so we won't have expanded helo_data above. We have to
1171 expand it here. $sending_ip_address and $sending_port are set up right at the
1172 start of the Exim process (in exim.c). */
1173
1174 if (tls_active >= 0)
1175 {
1176 char *greeting_cmd;
1177 if (helo_data == NULL)
1178 {
1179 helo_data = expand_string(ob->helo_data);
1180 if (helo_data == NULL)
1181 {
1182 uschar *message = string_sprintf("failed to expand helo_data: %s",
1183 expand_string_message);
1184 set_errno(addrlist, 0, message, DEFER, FALSE);
1185 yield = DEFER;
1186 goto SEND_QUIT;
1187 }
1188 }
1189
1190 /* For SMTPS we need to wait for the initial OK response. */
1191 if (smtps)
1192 {
1193 if (!smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer, sizeof(buffer), '2',
1194 ob->command_timeout)) goto RESPONSE_FAILED;
1195 }
1196
1197 if (esmtp)
1198 greeting_cmd = "EHLO";
1199 else
1200 {
1201 greeting_cmd = "HELO";
1202 DEBUG(D_transport)
1203 debug_printf("not sending EHLO (host matches hosts_avoid_esmtp)\n");
1204 }
1205
1206 if (smtp_write_command(&outblock, FALSE, "%s %s\r\n",
1207 lmtp? "LHLO" : greeting_cmd, helo_data) < 0)
1208 goto SEND_FAILED;
1209 if (!smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer, sizeof(buffer), '2',
1210 ob->command_timeout))
1211 goto RESPONSE_FAILED;
1212 }
1213
1214 /* If the host is required to use a secure channel, ensure that we
1215 have one. */
1216
1217 else if (verify_check_this_host(&(ob->hosts_require_tls), NULL, host->name,
1218 host->address, NULL) == OK)
1219 {
1220 save_errno = ERRNO_TLSREQUIRED;
1221 message = string_sprintf("a TLS session is required for %s [%s], but %s",
1222 host->name, host->address,
1223 tls_offered? "an attempt to start TLS failed" :
1224 "the server did not offer TLS support");
1225 goto TLS_FAILED;
1226 }
1227 #endif
1228
1229 /* If TLS is active, we have just started it up and re-done the EHLO command,
1230 so its response needs to be analyzed. If TLS is not active and this is a
1231 continued session down a previously-used socket, we haven't just done EHLO, so
1232 we skip this. */
1233
1234 if (continue_hostname == NULL
1235 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
1236 || tls_active >= 0
1237 #endif
1238 )
1239 {
1240 int require_auth;
1241 uschar *fail_reason = US"server did not advertise AUTH support";
1242
1243 /* Set for IGNOREQUOTA if the response to LHLO specifies support and the
1244 lmtp_ignore_quota option was set. */
1245
1246 igquotstr = (lmtp && ob->lmtp_ignore_quota &&
1247 pcre_exec(regex_IGNOREQUOTA, NULL, CS buffer, Ustrlen(CS buffer), 0,
1248 PCRE_EOPT, NULL, 0) >= 0)? US" IGNOREQUOTA" : US"";
1249
1250 /* If the response to EHLO specified support for the SIZE parameter, note
1251 this, provided size_addition is non-negative. */
1252
1253 smtp_use_size = esmtp && ob->size_addition >= 0 &&
1254 pcre_exec(regex_SIZE, NULL, CS buffer, Ustrlen(CS buffer), 0,
1255 PCRE_EOPT, NULL, 0) >= 0;
1256
1257 /* Note whether the server supports PIPELINING. If hosts_avoid_esmtp matched
1258 the current host, esmtp will be false, so PIPELINING can never be used. If
1259 the current host matches hosts_avoid_pipelining, don't do it. */
1260
1261 smtp_use_pipelining = esmtp &&
1262 verify_check_this_host(&(ob->hosts_avoid_pipelining), NULL, host->name,
1263 host->address, NULL) != OK &&
1264 pcre_exec(regex_PIPELINING, NULL, CS buffer, Ustrlen(CS buffer), 0,
1265 PCRE_EOPT, NULL, 0) >= 0;
1266
1267 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("%susing PIPELINING\n",
1268 smtp_use_pipelining? "" : "not ");
1269
1270 /* Note if the response to EHLO specifies support for the AUTH extension.
1271 If it has, check that this host is one we want to authenticate to, and do
1272 the business. The host name and address must be available when the
1273 authenticator's client driver is running. */
1274
1275 smtp_authenticated = FALSE;
1276 require_auth = verify_check_this_host(&(ob->hosts_require_auth), NULL,
1277 host->name, host->address, NULL);
1278
1279 if (esmtp && regex_match_and_setup(regex_AUTH, buffer, 0, -1))
1280 {
1281 uschar *names = string_copyn(expand_nstring[1], expand_nlength[1]);
1282 expand_nmax = -1; /* reset */
1283
1284 /* Must not do this check until after we have saved the result of the
1285 regex match above. */
1286
1287 if (require_auth == OK ||
1288 verify_check_this_host(&(ob->hosts_try_auth), NULL, host->name,
1289 host->address, NULL) == OK)
1290 {
1291 auth_instance *au;
1292 fail_reason = US"no common mechanisms were found";
1293
1294 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("scanning authentication mechanisms\n");
1295
1296 /* Scan the configured authenticators looking for one which is configured
1297 for use as a client, which is not suppressed by client_condition, and
1298 whose name matches an authentication mechanism supported by the server.
1299 If one is found, attempt to authenticate by calling its client function.
1300 */
1301
1302 for (au = auths; !smtp_authenticated && au != NULL; au = au->next)
1303 {
1304 uschar *p = names;
1305 if (!au->client ||
1306 (au->client_condition != NULL &&
1307 !expand_check_condition(au->client_condition, au->name,
1308 US"client authenticator")))
1309 {
1310 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("skipping %s authenticator: %s\n",
1311 au->name,
1312 (au->client)? "client_condition is false" :
1313 "not configured as a client");
1314 continue;
1315 }
1316
1317 /* Loop to scan supported server mechanisms */
1318
1319 while (*p != 0)
1320 {
1321 int rc;
1322 int len = Ustrlen(au->public_name);
1323 while (isspace(*p)) p++;
1324
1325 if (strncmpic(au->public_name, p, len) != 0 ||
1326 (p[len] != 0 && !isspace(p[len])))
1327 {
1328 while (*p != 0 && !isspace(*p)) p++;
1329 continue;
1330 }
1331
1332 /* Found data for a listed mechanism. Call its client entry. Set
1333 a flag in the outblock so that data is overwritten after sending so
1334 that reflections don't show it. */
1335
1336 fail_reason = US"authentication attempt(s) failed";
1337 outblock.authenticating = TRUE;
1338 rc = (au->info->clientcode)(au, &inblock, &outblock,
1339 ob->command_timeout, buffer, sizeof(buffer));
1340 outblock.authenticating = FALSE;
1341 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("%s authenticator yielded %d\n",
1342 au->name, rc);
1343
1344 /* A temporary authentication failure must hold up delivery to
1345 this host. After a permanent authentication failure, we carry on
1346 to try other authentication methods. If all fail hard, try to
1347 deliver the message unauthenticated unless require_auth was set. */
1348
1349 switch(rc)
1350 {
1351 case OK:
1352 smtp_authenticated = TRUE; /* stops the outer loop */
1353 break;
1354
1355 /* Failure after writing a command */
1356
1357 case FAIL_SEND:
1358 goto SEND_FAILED;
1359
1360 /* Failure after reading a response */
1361
1362 case FAIL:
1363 if (errno != 0 || buffer[0] != '5') goto RESPONSE_FAILED;
1364 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s authenticator failed H=%s [%s] %s",
1365 au->name, host->name, host->address, buffer);
1366 break;
1367
1368 /* Failure by some other means. In effect, the authenticator
1369 decided it wasn't prepared to handle this case. Typically this
1370 is the result of "fail" in an expansion string. Do we need to
1371 log anything here? Feb 2006: a message is now put in the buffer
1372 if logging is required. */
1373
1374 case CANCELLED:
1375 if (*buffer != 0)
1376 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s authenticator cancelled "
1377 "authentication H=%s [%s] %s", au->name, host->name,
1378 host->address, buffer);
1379 break;
1380
1381 /* Internal problem, message in buffer. */
1382
1383 case ERROR:
1384 yield = ERROR;
1385 set_errno(addrlist, 0, string_copy(buffer), DEFER, FALSE);
1386 goto SEND_QUIT;
1387 }
1388
1389 break; /* If not authenticated, try next authenticator */
1390 } /* Loop for scanning supported server mechanisms */
1391 } /* Loop for further authenticators */
1392 }
1393 }
1394
1395 /* If we haven't authenticated, but are required to, give up. */
1396
1397 if (require_auth == OK && !smtp_authenticated)
1398 {
1399 yield = DEFER;
1400 set_errno(addrlist, ERRNO_AUTHFAIL,
1401 string_sprintf("authentication required but %s", fail_reason), DEFER,
1402 FALSE);
1403 goto SEND_QUIT;
1404 }
1405 }
1406
1407 /* The setting up of the SMTP call is now complete. Any subsequent errors are
1408 message-specific. */
1409
1410 setting_up = FALSE;
1411
1412 /* If there is a filter command specified for this transport, we can now
1413 set it up. This cannot be done until the identify of the host is known. */
1414
1415 if (tblock->filter_command != NULL)
1416 {
1417 BOOL rc;
1418 uschar buffer[64];
1419 sprintf(CS buffer, "%.50s transport", tblock->name);
1420 rc = transport_set_up_command(&transport_filter_argv, tblock->filter_command,
1421 TRUE, DEFER, addrlist, buffer, NULL);
1422 transport_filter_timeout = tblock->filter_timeout;
1423
1424 /* On failure, copy the error to all addresses, abandon the SMTP call, and
1425 yield ERROR. */
1426
1427 if (!rc)
1428 {
1429 set_errno(addrlist->next, addrlist->basic_errno, addrlist->message, DEFER,
1430 FALSE);
1431 yield = ERROR;
1432 goto SEND_QUIT;
1433 }
1434 }
1435
1436
1437 /* For messages that have more than the maximum number of envelope recipients,
1438 we want to send several transactions down the same SMTP connection. (See
1439 comments in deliver.c as to how this reconciles, heuristically, with
1440 remote_max_parallel.) This optimization was added to Exim after the following
1441 code was already working. The simplest way to put it in without disturbing the
1442 code was to use a goto to jump back to this point when there is another
1443 transaction to handle. */
1444
1445 SEND_MESSAGE:
1446 sync_addr = first_addr;
1447 address_count = 0;
1448 ok = FALSE;
1449 send_rset = TRUE;
1450 completed_address = FALSE;
1451
1452
1453 /* Initiate a message transfer. If we know the receiving MTA supports the SIZE
1454 qualification, send it, adding something to the message size to allow for
1455 imprecision and things that get added en route. Exim keeps the number of lines
1456 in a message, so we can give an accurate value for the original message, but we
1457 need some additional to handle added headers. (Double "." characters don't get
1458 included in the count.) */
1459
1460 p = buffer;
1461 *p = 0;
1462
1463 if (smtp_use_size)
1464 {
1465 sprintf(CS p, " SIZE=%d", message_size+message_linecount+ob->size_addition);
1466 while (*p) p++;
1467 }
1468
1469 /* Add the authenticated sender address if present */
1470
1471 if ((smtp_authenticated || ob->authenticated_sender_force) &&
1472 local_authenticated_sender != NULL)
1473 {
1474 string_format(p, sizeof(buffer) - (p-buffer), " AUTH=%s",
1475 auth_xtextencode(local_authenticated_sender,
1476 Ustrlen(local_authenticated_sender)));
1477 }
1478
1479 /* From here until we send the DATA command, we can make use of PIPELINING
1480 if the server host supports it. The code has to be able to check the responses
1481 at any point, for when the buffer fills up, so we write it totally generally.
1482 When PIPELINING is off, each command written reports that it has flushed the
1483 buffer. */
1484
1485 pending_MAIL = TRUE; /* The block starts with MAIL */
1486
1487 rc = smtp_write_command(&outblock, smtp_use_pipelining,
1488 "MAIL FROM:<%s>%s\r\n", return_path, buffer);
1489 mail_command = string_copy(big_buffer); /* Save for later error message */
1490
1491 switch(rc)
1492 {
1493 case -1: /* Transmission error */
1494 goto SEND_FAILED;
1495
1496 case +1: /* Block was sent */
1497 if (!smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer, sizeof(buffer), '2',
1498 ob->command_timeout))
1499 {
1500 if (errno == 0 && buffer[0] == '4')
1501 {
1502 errno = ERRNO_MAIL4XX;
1503 addrlist->more_errno |= ((buffer[1] - '0')*10 + buffer[2] - '0') << 8;
1504 }
1505 goto RESPONSE_FAILED;
1506 }
1507 pending_MAIL = FALSE;
1508 break;
1509 }
1510
1511 /* Pass over all the relevant recipient addresses for this host, which are the
1512 ones that have status PENDING_DEFER. If we are using PIPELINING, we can send
1513 several before we have to read the responses for those seen so far. This
1514 checking is done by a subroutine because it also needs to be done at the end.
1515 Send only up to max_rcpt addresses at a time, leaving first_addr pointing to
1516 the next one if not all are sent.
1517
1518 In the MUA wrapper situation, we want to flush the PIPELINING buffer for the
1519 last address because we want to abort if any recipients have any kind of
1520 problem, temporary or permanent. We know that all recipient addresses will have
1521 the PENDING_DEFER status, because only one attempt is ever made, and we know
1522 that max_rcpt will be large, so all addresses will be done at once. */
1523
1524 for (addr = first_addr;
1525 address_count < max_rcpt && addr != NULL;
1526 addr = addr->next)
1527 {
1528 int count;
1529 BOOL no_flush;
1530
1531 if (addr->transport_return != PENDING_DEFER) continue;
1532
1533 address_count++;
1534 no_flush = smtp_use_pipelining && (!mua_wrapper || addr->next != NULL);
1535
1536 /* Now send the RCPT command, and process outstanding responses when
1537 necessary. After a timeout on RCPT, we just end the function, leaving the
1538 yield as OK, because this error can often mean that there is a problem with
1539 just one address, so we don't want to delay the host. */
1540
1541 count = smtp_write_command(&outblock, no_flush, "RCPT TO:<%s>%s\r\n",
1542 transport_rcpt_address(addr, tblock->rcpt_include_affixes), igquotstr);
1543 if (count < 0) goto SEND_FAILED;
1544 if (count > 0)
1545 {
1546 switch(sync_responses(first_addr, tblock->rcpt_include_affixes,
1547 &sync_addr, host, count, ob->address_retry_include_sender,
1548 pending_MAIL, 0, &inblock, ob->command_timeout, buffer,
1549 sizeof(buffer)))
1550 {
1551 case 3: ok = TRUE; /* 2xx & 5xx => OK & progress made */
1552 case 2: completed_address = TRUE; /* 5xx (only) => progress made */
1553 break;
1554
1555 case 1: ok = TRUE; /* 2xx (only) => OK, but if LMTP, */
1556 if (!lmtp) completed_address = TRUE; /* can't tell about progress yet */
1557 case 0: /* No 2xx or 5xx, but no probs */
1558 break;
1559
1560 case -1: goto END_OFF; /* Timeout on RCPT */
1561 default: goto RESPONSE_FAILED; /* I/O error, or any MAIL error */
1562 }
1563 pending_MAIL = FALSE; /* Dealt with MAIL */
1564 }
1565 } /* Loop for next address */
1566
1567 /* If we are an MUA wrapper, abort if any RCPTs were rejected, either
1568 permanently or temporarily. We should have flushed and synced after the last
1569 RCPT. */
1570
1571 if (mua_wrapper)
1572 {
1573 address_item *badaddr;
1574 for (badaddr = first_addr; badaddr != NULL; badaddr = badaddr->next)
1575 {
1576 if (badaddr->transport_return != PENDING_OK) break;
1577 }
1578 if (badaddr != NULL)
1579 {
1580 set_errno(addrlist, 0, badaddr->message, FAIL,
1581 testflag(badaddr, af_pass_message));
1582 ok = FALSE;
1583 }
1584 }
1585
1586 /* If ok is TRUE, we know we have got at least one good recipient, and must now
1587 send DATA, but if it is FALSE (in the normal, non-wrapper case), we may still
1588 have a good recipient buffered up if we are pipelining. We don't want to waste
1589 time sending DATA needlessly, so we only send it if either ok is TRUE or if we
1590 are pipelining. The responses are all handled by sync_responses(). */
1591
1592 if (ok || (smtp_use_pipelining && !mua_wrapper))
1593 {
1594 int count = smtp_write_command(&outblock, FALSE, "DATA\r\n");
1595 if (count < 0) goto SEND_FAILED;
1596 switch(sync_responses(first_addr, tblock->rcpt_include_affixes, &sync_addr,
1597 host, count, ob->address_retry_include_sender, pending_MAIL,
1598 ok? +1 : -1, &inblock, ob->command_timeout, buffer, sizeof(buffer)))
1599 {
1600 case 3: ok = TRUE; /* 2xx & 5xx => OK & progress made */
1601 case 2: completed_address = TRUE; /* 5xx (only) => progress made */
1602 break;
1603
1604 case 1: ok = TRUE; /* 2xx (only) => OK, but if LMTP, */
1605 if (!lmtp) completed_address = TRUE; /* can't tell about progress yet */
1606 case 0: break; /* No 2xx or 5xx, but no probs */
1607
1608 case -1: goto END_OFF; /* Timeout on RCPT */
1609 default: goto RESPONSE_FAILED; /* I/O error, or any MAIL/DATA error */
1610 }
1611 }
1612
1613 /* Save the first address of the next batch. */
1614
1615 first_addr = addr;
1616
1617 /* If there were no good recipients (but otherwise there have been no
1618 problems), just set ok TRUE, since we have handled address-specific errors
1619 already. Otherwise, it's OK to send the message. Use the check/escape mechanism
1620 for handling the SMTP dot-handling protocol, flagging to apply to headers as
1621 well as body. Set the appropriate timeout value to be used for each chunk.
1622 (Haven't been able to make it work using select() for writing yet.) */
1623
1624 if (!ok) ok = TRUE; else
1625 {
1626 sigalrm_seen = FALSE;
1627 transport_write_timeout = ob->data_timeout;
1628 smtp_command = US"sending data block"; /* For error messages */
1629 DEBUG(D_transport|D_v)
1630 debug_printf(" SMTP>> writing message and terminating \".\"\n");
1631 transport_count = 0;
1632 #ifndef DISABLE_DKIM
1633 ok = dkim_transport_write_message(addrlist, inblock.sock,
1634 topt_use_crlf | topt_end_dot | topt_escape_headers |
1635 (tblock->body_only? topt_no_headers : 0) |
1636 (tblock->headers_only? topt_no_body : 0) |
1637 (tblock->return_path_add? topt_add_return_path : 0) |
1638 (tblock->delivery_date_add? topt_add_delivery_date : 0) |
1639 (tblock->envelope_to_add? topt_add_envelope_to : 0),
1640 0, /* No size limit */
1641 tblock->add_headers, tblock->remove_headers,
1642 US".", US"..", /* Escaping strings */
1643 tblock->rewrite_rules, tblock->rewrite_existflags,
1644 ob->dkim_private_key, ob->dkim_domain, ob->dkim_selector,
1645 ob->dkim_canon, ob->dkim_strict, ob->dkim_sign_headers
1646 );
1647 #else
1648 ok = transport_write_message(addrlist, inblock.sock,
1649 topt_use_crlf | topt_end_dot | topt_escape_headers |
1650 (tblock->body_only? topt_no_headers : 0) |
1651 (tblock->headers_only? topt_no_body : 0) |
1652 (tblock->return_path_add? topt_add_return_path : 0) |
1653 (tblock->delivery_date_add? topt_add_delivery_date : 0) |
1654 (tblock->envelope_to_add? topt_add_envelope_to : 0),
1655 0, /* No size limit */
1656 tblock->add_headers, tblock->remove_headers,
1657 US".", US"..", /* Escaping strings */
1658 tblock->rewrite_rules, tblock->rewrite_existflags);
1659 #endif
1660
1661 /* transport_write_message() uses write() because it is called from other
1662 places to write to non-sockets. This means that under some OS (e.g. Solaris)
1663 it can exit with "Broken pipe" as its error. This really means that the
1664 socket got closed at the far end. */
1665
1666 transport_write_timeout = 0; /* for subsequent transports */
1667
1668 /* Failure can either be some kind of I/O disaster (including timeout),
1669 or the failure of a transport filter or the expansion of added headers. */
1670
1671 if (!ok)
1672 {
1673 buffer[0] = 0; /* There hasn't been a response */
1674 goto RESPONSE_FAILED;
1675 }
1676
1677 /* We used to send the terminating "." explicitly here, but because of
1678 buffering effects at both ends of TCP/IP connections, you don't gain
1679 anything by keeping it separate, so it might as well go in the final
1680 data buffer for efficiency. This is now done by setting the topt_end_dot
1681 flag above. */
1682
1683 smtp_command = US"end of data";
1684
1685 /* For SMTP, we now read a single response that applies to the whole message.
1686 If it is OK, then all the addresses have been delivered. */
1687
1688 if (!lmtp)
1689 {
1690 ok = smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer, sizeof(buffer), '2',
1691 ob->final_timeout);
1692 if (!ok && errno == 0 && buffer[0] == '4')
1693 {
1694 errno = ERRNO_DATA4XX;
1695 addrlist->more_errno |= ((buffer[1] - '0')*10 + buffer[2] - '0') << 8;
1696 }
1697 }
1698
1699 /* For LMTP, we get back a response for every RCPT command that we sent;
1700 some may be accepted and some rejected. For those that get a response, their
1701 status is fixed; any that are accepted have been handed over, even if later
1702 responses crash - at least, that's how I read RFC 2033.
1703
1704 If all went well, mark the recipient addresses as completed, record which
1705 host/IPaddress they were delivered to, and cut out RSET when sending another
1706 message down the same channel. Write the completed addresses to the journal
1707 now so that they are recorded in case there is a crash of hardware or
1708 software before the spool gets updated. Also record the final SMTP
1709 confirmation if needed (for SMTP only). */
1710
1711 if (ok)
1712 {
1713 int flag = '=';
1714 int delivery_time = (int)(time(NULL) - start_delivery_time);
1715 int len;
1716 host_item *thost;
1717 uschar *conf = NULL;
1718 send_rset = FALSE;
1719
1720 /* Make a copy of the host if it is local to this invocation
1721 of the transport. */
1722
1723 if (copy_host)
1724 {
1725 thost = store_get(sizeof(host_item));
1726 *thost = *host;
1727 thost->name = string_copy(host->name);
1728 thost->address = string_copy(host->address);
1729 }
1730 else thost = host;
1731
1732 /* Set up confirmation if needed - applies only to SMTP */
1733
1734 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_smtp_confirmation) != 0 && !lmtp)
1735 {
1736 uschar *s = string_printing(buffer);
1737 conf = (s == buffer)? (uschar *)string_copy(s) : s;
1738 }
1739
1740 /* Process all transported addresses - for LMTP, read a status for
1741 each one. */
1742
1743 for (addr = addrlist; addr != first_addr; addr = addr->next)
1744 {
1745 if (addr->transport_return != PENDING_OK) continue;
1746
1747 /* LMTP - if the response fails badly (e.g. timeout), use it for all the
1748 remaining addresses. Otherwise, it's a return code for just the one
1749 address. For temporary errors, add a retry item for the address so that
1750 it doesn't get tried again too soon. */
1751
1752 if (lmtp)
1753 {
1754 if (!smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer, sizeof(buffer), '2',
1755 ob->final_timeout))
1756 {
1757 if (errno != 0 || buffer[0] == 0) goto RESPONSE_FAILED;
1758 addr->message = string_sprintf("LMTP error after %s: %s",
1759 big_buffer, string_printing(buffer));
1760 setflag(addr, af_pass_message); /* Allow message to go to user */
1761 if (buffer[0] == '5')
1762 addr->transport_return = FAIL;
1763 else
1764 {
1765 errno = ERRNO_DATA4XX;
1766 addr->more_errno |= ((buffer[1] - '0')*10 + buffer[2] - '0') << 8;
1767 addr->transport_return = DEFER;
1768 retry_add_item(addr, addr->address_retry_key, 0);
1769 }
1770 continue;
1771 }
1772 completed_address = TRUE; /* NOW we can set this flag */
1773 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_smtp_confirmation) != 0)
1774 {
1775 uschar *s = string_printing(buffer);
1776 conf = (s == buffer)? (uschar *)string_copy(s) : s;
1777 }
1778 }
1779
1780 /* SMTP, or success return from LMTP for this address. Pass back the
1781 actual host that was used. */
1782
1783 addr->transport_return = OK;
1784 addr->more_errno = delivery_time;
1785 addr->host_used = thost;
1786 addr->special_action = flag;
1787 addr->message = conf;
1788 flag = '-';
1789
1790 /* Update the journal. For homonymic addresses, use the base address plus
1791 the transport name. See lots of comments in deliver.c about the reasons
1792 for the complications when homonyms are involved. Just carry on after
1793 write error, as it may prove possible to update the spool file later. */
1794
1795 if (testflag(addr, af_homonym))
1796 sprintf(CS buffer, "%.500s/%s\n", addr->unique + 3, tblock->name);
1797 else
1798 sprintf(CS buffer, "%.500s\n", addr->unique);
1799
1800 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("journalling %s", buffer);
1801 len = Ustrlen(CS buffer);
1802 if (write(journal_fd, buffer, len) != len)
1803 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "failed to write journal for "
1804 "%s: %s", buffer, strerror(errno));
1805 }
1806
1807 /* Ensure the journal file is pushed out to disk. */
1808
1809 if (EXIMfsync(journal_fd) < 0)
1810 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "failed to fsync journal: %s",
1811 strerror(errno));
1812 }
1813 }
1814
1815
1816 /* Handle general (not specific to one address) failures here. The value of ok
1817 is used to skip over this code on the falling through case. A timeout causes a
1818 deferral. Other errors may defer or fail according to the response code, and
1819 may set up a special errno value, e.g. after connection chopped, which is
1820 assumed if errno == 0 and there is no text in the buffer. If control reaches
1821 here during the setting up phase (i.e. before MAIL FROM) then always defer, as
1822 the problem is not related to this specific message. */
1823
1824 if (!ok)
1825 {
1826 int code;
1827
1828 RESPONSE_FAILED:
1829 save_errno = errno;
1830 message = NULL;
1831 send_quit = check_response(host, &save_errno, addrlist->more_errno,
1832 buffer, &code, &message, &pass_message);
1833 goto FAILED;
1834
1835 SEND_FAILED:
1836 save_errno = errno;
1837 code = '4';
1838 message = US string_sprintf("send() to %s [%s] failed: %s",
1839 host->name, host->address, strerror(save_errno));
1840 send_quit = FALSE;
1841 goto FAILED;
1842
1843 /* This label is jumped to directly when a TLS negotiation has failed,
1844 or was not done for a host for which it is required. Values will be set
1845 in message and save_errno, and setting_up will always be true. Treat as
1846 a temporary error. */
1847
1848 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
1849 TLS_FAILED:
1850 code = '4';
1851 #endif
1852
1853 /* If the failure happened while setting up the call, see if the failure was
1854 a 5xx response (this will either be on connection, or following HELO - a 5xx
1855 after EHLO causes it to try HELO). If so, fail all addresses, as this host is
1856 never going to accept them. For other errors during setting up (timeouts or
1857 whatever), defer all addresses, and yield DEFER, so that the host is not
1858 tried again for a while. */
1859
1860 FAILED:
1861 ok = FALSE; /* For when reached by GOTO */
1862
1863 if (setting_up)
1864 {
1865 if (code == '5')
1866 {
1867 set_errno(addrlist, save_errno, message, FAIL, pass_message);
1868 }
1869 else
1870 {
1871 set_errno(addrlist, save_errno, message, DEFER, pass_message);
1872 yield = DEFER;
1873 }
1874 }
1875
1876 /* We want to handle timeouts after MAIL or "." and loss of connection after
1877 "." specially. They can indicate a problem with the sender address or with
1878 the contents of the message rather than a real error on the connection. These
1879 cases are treated in the same way as a 4xx response. This next bit of code
1880 does the classification. */
1881
1882 else
1883 {
1884 BOOL message_error;
1885
1886 switch(save_errno)
1887 {
1888 case 0:
1889 case ERRNO_MAIL4XX:
1890 case ERRNO_DATA4XX:
1891 message_error = TRUE;
1892 break;
1893
1894 case ETIMEDOUT:
1895 message_error = Ustrncmp(smtp_command,"MAIL",4) == 0 ||
1896 Ustrncmp(smtp_command,"end ",4) == 0;
1897 break;
1898
1899 case ERRNO_SMTPCLOSED:
1900 message_error = Ustrncmp(smtp_command,"end ",4) == 0;
1901 break;
1902
1903 default:
1904 message_error = FALSE;
1905 break;
1906 }
1907
1908 /* Handle the cases that are treated as message errors. These are:
1909
1910 (a) negative response or timeout after MAIL
1911 (b) negative response after DATA
1912 (c) negative response or timeout or dropped connection after "."
1913
1914 It won't be a negative response or timeout after RCPT, as that is dealt
1915 with separately above. The action in all cases is to set an appropriate
1916 error code for all the addresses, but to leave yield set to OK because the
1917 host itself has not failed. Of course, it might in practice have failed
1918 when we've had a timeout, but if so, we'll discover that at the next
1919 delivery attempt. For a temporary error, set the message_defer flag, and
1920 write to the logs for information if this is not the last host. The error
1921 for the last host will be logged as part of the address's log line. */
1922
1923 if (message_error)
1924 {
1925 if (mua_wrapper) code = '5'; /* Force hard failure in wrapper mode */
1926 set_errno(addrlist, save_errno, message, (code == '5')? FAIL : DEFER,
1927 pass_message);
1928
1929 /* If there's an errno, the message contains just the identity of
1930 the host. */
1931
1932 if (code != '5') /* Anything other than 5 is treated as temporary */
1933 {
1934 if (save_errno > 0)
1935 message = US string_sprintf("%s: %s", message, strerror(save_errno));
1936 if (host->next != NULL) log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s", message);
1937 deliver_msglog("%s %s\n", tod_stamp(tod_log), message);
1938 *message_defer = TRUE;
1939 }
1940 }
1941
1942 /* Otherwise, we have an I/O error or a timeout other than after MAIL or
1943 ".", or some other transportation error. We defer all addresses and yield
1944 DEFER, except for the case of failed add_headers expansion, or a transport
1945 filter failure, when the yield should be ERROR, to stop it trying other
1946 hosts. */
1947
1948 else
1949 {
1950 yield = (save_errno == ERRNO_CHHEADER_FAIL ||
1951 save_errno == ERRNO_FILTER_FAIL)? ERROR : DEFER;
1952 set_errno(addrlist, save_errno, message, DEFER, pass_message);
1953 }
1954 }
1955 }
1956
1957
1958 /* If all has gone well, send_quit will be set TRUE, implying we can end the
1959 SMTP session tidily. However, if there were too many addresses to send in one
1960 message (indicated by first_addr being non-NULL) we want to carry on with the
1961 rest of them. Also, it is desirable to send more than one message down the SMTP
1962 connection if there are several waiting, provided we haven't already sent so
1963 many as to hit the configured limit. The function transport_check_waiting looks
1964 for a waiting message and returns its id. Then transport_pass_socket tries to
1965 set up a continued delivery by passing the socket on to another process. The
1966 variable send_rset is FALSE if a message has just been successfully transfered.
1967
1968 If we are already sending down a continued channel, there may be further
1969 addresses not yet delivered that are aimed at the same host, but which have not
1970 been passed in this run of the transport. In this case, continue_more will be
1971 true, and all we should do is send RSET if necessary, and return, leaving the
1972 channel open.
1973
1974 However, if no address was disposed of, i.e. all addresses got 4xx errors, we
1975 do not want to continue with other messages down the same channel, because that
1976 can lead to looping between two or more messages, all with the same,
1977 temporarily failing address(es). [The retry information isn't updated yet, so
1978 new processes keep on trying.] We probably also don't want to try more of this
1979 message's addresses either.
1980
1981 If we have started a TLS session, we have to end it before passing the
1982 connection to a new process. However, not all servers can handle this (Exim
1983 can), so we do not pass such a connection on if the host matches
1984 hosts_nopass_tls. */
1985
1986 DEBUG(D_transport)
1987 debug_printf("ok=%d send_quit=%d send_rset=%d continue_more=%d "
1988 "yield=%d first_address is %sNULL\n", ok, send_quit, send_rset,
1989 continue_more, yield, (first_addr == NULL)? "":"not ");
1990
1991 if (completed_address && ok && send_quit)
1992 {
1993 BOOL more;
1994 if (first_addr != NULL || continue_more ||
1995 (
1996 (tls_active < 0 ||
1997 verify_check_this_host(&(ob->hosts_nopass_tls), NULL, host->name,
1998 host->address, NULL) != OK)
1999 &&
2000 transport_check_waiting(tblock->name, host->name,
2001 tblock->connection_max_messages, new_message_id, &more)
2002 ))
2003 {
2004 uschar *msg;
2005 BOOL pass_message;
2006
2007 if (send_rset)
2008 {
2009 if (! (ok = smtp_write_command(&outblock, FALSE, "RSET\r\n") >= 0))
2010 {
2011 msg = US string_sprintf("send() to %s [%s] failed: %s", host->name,
2012 host->address, strerror(save_errno));
2013 send_quit = FALSE;
2014 }
2015 else if (! (ok = smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer, sizeof(buffer), '2',
2016 ob->command_timeout)))
2017 {
2018 int code;
2019 send_quit = check_response(host, &errno, 0, buffer, &code, &msg,
2020 &pass_message);
2021 if (!send_quit)
2022 {
2023 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("%s\n", msg);
2024 }
2025 }
2026 }
2027
2028 /* Either RSET was not needed, or it succeeded */
2029
2030 if (ok)
2031 {
2032 if (first_addr != NULL) /* More addresses still to be sent */
2033 { /* in this run of the transport */
2034 continue_sequence++; /* Causes * in logging */
2035 goto SEND_MESSAGE;
2036 }
2037 if (continue_more) return yield; /* More addresses for another run */
2038
2039 /* Pass the socket to a new Exim process. Before doing so, we must shut
2040 down TLS. Not all MTAs allow for the continuation of the SMTP session
2041 when TLS is shut down. We test for this by sending a new EHLO. If we
2042 don't get a good response, we don't attempt to pass the socket on. */
2043
2044 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
2045 if (tls_active >= 0)
2046 {
2047 tls_close(TRUE);
2048 if (smtps)
2049 ok = FALSE;
2050 else
2051 ok = smtp_write_command(&outblock,FALSE,"EHLO %s\r\n",helo_data) >= 0 &&
2052 smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer, sizeof(buffer), '2',
2053 ob->command_timeout);
2054 }
2055 #endif
2056
2057 /* If the socket is successfully passed, we musn't send QUIT (or
2058 indeed anything!) from here. */
2059
2060 if (ok && transport_pass_socket(tblock->name, host->name, host->address,
2061 new_message_id, inblock.sock))
2062 {
2063 send_quit = FALSE;
2064 }
2065 }
2066
2067 /* If RSET failed and there are addresses left, they get deferred. */
2068
2069 else set_errno(first_addr, errno, msg, DEFER, FALSE);
2070 }
2071 }
2072
2073 /* End off tidily with QUIT unless the connection has died or the socket has
2074 been passed to another process. There has been discussion on the net about what
2075 to do after sending QUIT. The wording of the RFC suggests that it is necessary
2076 to wait for a response, but on the other hand, there isn't anything one can do
2077 with an error response, other than log it. Exim used to do that. However,
2078 further discussion suggested that it is positively advantageous not to wait for
2079 the response, but to close the session immediately. This is supposed to move
2080 the TCP/IP TIME_WAIT state from the server to the client, thereby removing some
2081 load from the server. (Hosts that are both servers and clients may not see much
2082 difference, of course.) Further discussion indicated that this was safe to do
2083 on Unix systems which have decent implementations of TCP/IP that leave the
2084 connection around for a while (TIME_WAIT) after the application has gone away.
2085 This enables the response sent by the server to be properly ACKed rather than
2086 timed out, as can happen on broken TCP/IP implementations on other OS.
2087
2088 This change is being made on 31-Jul-98. After over a year of trouble-free
2089 operation, the old commented-out code was removed on 17-Sep-99. */
2090
2091 SEND_QUIT:
2092 if (send_quit) (void)smtp_write_command(&outblock, FALSE, "QUIT\r\n");
2093
2094 END_OFF:
2095
2096 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
2097 tls_close(TRUE);
2098 #endif
2099
2100 /* Close the socket, and return the appropriate value, first setting
2101 continue_transport and continue_hostname NULL to prevent any other addresses
2102 that may include the host from trying to re-use a continuation socket. This
2103 works because the NULL setting is passed back to the calling process, and
2104 remote_max_parallel is forced to 1 when delivering over an existing connection,
2105
2106 If all went well and continue_more is set, we shouldn't actually get here if
2107 there are further addresses, as the return above will be taken. However,
2108 writing RSET might have failed, or there may be other addresses whose hosts are
2109 specified in the transports, and therefore not visible at top level, in which
2110 case continue_more won't get set. */
2111
2112 (void)close(inblock.sock);
2113 continue_transport = NULL;
2114 continue_hostname = NULL;
2115 return yield;
2116 }
2117
2118
2119
2120
2121 /*************************************************
2122 * Closedown entry point *
2123 *************************************************/
2124
2125 /* This function is called when exim is passed an open smtp channel
2126 from another incarnation, but the message which it has been asked
2127 to deliver no longer exists. The channel is on stdin.
2128
2129 We might do fancy things like looking for another message to send down
2130 the channel, but if the one we sought has gone, it has probably been
2131 delivered by some other process that itself will seek further messages,
2132 so just close down our connection.
2133
2134 Argument: pointer to the transport instance block
2135 Returns: nothing
2136 */
2137
2138 void
2139 smtp_transport_closedown(transport_instance *tblock)
2140 {
2141 smtp_transport_options_block *ob =
2142 (smtp_transport_options_block *)(tblock->options_block);
2143 smtp_inblock inblock;
2144 smtp_outblock outblock;
2145 uschar buffer[256];
2146 uschar inbuffer[4096];
2147 uschar outbuffer[16];
2148
2149 inblock.sock = fileno(stdin);
2150 inblock.buffer = inbuffer;
2151 inblock.buffersize = sizeof(inbuffer);
2152 inblock.ptr = inbuffer;
2153 inblock.ptrend = inbuffer;
2154
2155 outblock.sock = inblock.sock;
2156 outblock.buffersize = sizeof(outbuffer);
2157 outblock.buffer = outbuffer;
2158 outblock.ptr = outbuffer;
2159 outblock.cmd_count = 0;
2160 outblock.authenticating = FALSE;
2161
2162 (void)smtp_write_command(&outblock, FALSE, "QUIT\r\n");
2163 (void)smtp_read_response(&inblock, buffer, sizeof(buffer), '2',
2164 ob->command_timeout);
2165 (void)close(inblock.sock);
2166 }
2167
2168
2169
2170 /*************************************************
2171 * Prepare addresses for delivery *
2172 *************************************************/
2173
2174 /* This function is called to flush out error settings from previous delivery
2175 attempts to other hosts. It also records whether we got here via an MX record
2176 or not in the more_errno field of the address. We are interested only in
2177 addresses that are still marked DEFER - others may have got delivered to a
2178 previously considered IP address. Set their status to PENDING_DEFER to indicate
2179 which ones are relevant this time.
2180
2181 Arguments:
2182 addrlist the list of addresses
2183 host the host we are delivering to
2184
2185 Returns: the first address for this delivery
2186 */
2187
2188 static address_item *
2189 prepare_addresses(address_item *addrlist, host_item *host)
2190 {
2191 address_item *first_addr = NULL;
2192 address_item *addr;
2193 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
2194 {
2195 if (addr->transport_return != DEFER) continue;
2196 if (first_addr == NULL) first_addr = addr;
2197 addr->transport_return = PENDING_DEFER;
2198 addr->basic_errno = 0;
2199 addr->more_errno = (host->mx >= 0)? 'M' : 'A';
2200 addr->message = NULL;
2201 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
2202 addr->cipher = NULL;
2203 addr->peerdn = NULL;
2204 #endif
2205 }
2206 return first_addr;
2207 }
2208
2209
2210
2211 /*************************************************
2212 * Main entry point *
2213 *************************************************/
2214
2215 /* See local README for interface details. As this is a remote transport, it is
2216 given a chain of addresses to be delivered in one connection, if possible. It
2217 always returns TRUE, indicating that each address has its own independent
2218 status set, except if there is a setting up problem, in which case it returns
2219 FALSE. */
2220
2221 BOOL
2222 smtp_transport_entry(
2223 transport_instance *tblock, /* data for this instantiation */
2224 address_item *addrlist) /* addresses we are working on */
2225 {
2226 int cutoff_retry;
2227 int port;
2228 int hosts_defer = 0;
2229 int hosts_fail = 0;
2230 int hosts_looked_up = 0;
2231 int hosts_retry = 0;
2232 int hosts_serial = 0;
2233 int hosts_total = 0;
2234 int total_hosts_tried = 0;
2235 address_item *addr;
2236 BOOL expired = TRUE;
2237 BOOL continuing = continue_hostname != NULL;
2238 uschar *expanded_hosts = NULL;
2239 uschar *pistring;
2240 uschar *tid = string_sprintf("%s transport", tblock->name);
2241 smtp_transport_options_block *ob =
2242 (smtp_transport_options_block *)(tblock->options_block);
2243 host_item *hostlist = addrlist->host_list;
2244 host_item *host = NULL;
2245
2246 DEBUG(D_transport)
2247 {
2248 debug_printf("%s transport entered\n", tblock->name);
2249 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
2250 debug_printf(" %s\n", addr->address);
2251 if (continuing) debug_printf("already connected to %s [%s]\n",
2252 continue_hostname, continue_host_address);
2253 }
2254
2255 /* Set the flag requesting that these hosts be added to the waiting
2256 database if the delivery fails temporarily or if we are running with
2257 queue_smtp or a 2-stage queue run. This gets unset for certain
2258 kinds of error, typically those that are specific to the message. */
2259
2260 update_waiting = TRUE;
2261
2262 /* If a host list is not defined for the addresses - they must all have the
2263 same one in order to be passed to a single transport - or if the transport has
2264 a host list with hosts_override set, use the host list supplied with the
2265 transport. It is an error for this not to exist. */
2266
2267 if (hostlist == NULL || (ob->hosts_override && ob->hosts != NULL))
2268 {
2269 if (ob->hosts == NULL)
2270 {
2271 addrlist->message = string_sprintf("%s transport called with no hosts set",
2272 tblock->name);
2273 addrlist->transport_return = PANIC;
2274 return FALSE; /* Only top address has status */
2275 }
2276
2277 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("using the transport's hosts: %s\n",
2278 ob->hosts);
2279
2280 /* If the transport's host list contains no '$' characters, and we are not
2281 randomizing, it is fixed and therefore a chain of hosts can be built once
2282 and for all, and remembered for subsequent use by other calls to this
2283 transport. If, on the other hand, the host list does contain '$', or we are
2284 randomizing its order, we have to rebuild it each time. In the fixed case,
2285 as the hosts string will never be used again, it doesn't matter that we
2286 replace all the : characters with zeros. */
2287
2288 if (ob->hostlist == NULL)
2289 {
2290 uschar *s = ob->hosts;
2291
2292 if (Ustrchr(s, '$') != NULL)
2293 {
2294 expanded_hosts = expand_string(s);
2295 if (expanded_hosts == NULL)
2296 {
2297 addrlist->message = string_sprintf("failed to expand list of hosts "
2298 "\"%s\" in %s transport: %s", s, tblock->name, expand_string_message);
2299 addrlist->transport_return = search_find_defer? DEFER : PANIC;
2300 return FALSE; /* Only top address has status */
2301 }
2302 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("expanded list of hosts \"%s\" to "
2303 "\"%s\"\n", s, expanded_hosts);
2304 s = expanded_hosts;
2305 }
2306 else
2307 if (ob->hosts_randomize) s = expanded_hosts = string_copy(s);
2308
2309 host_build_hostlist(&hostlist, s, ob->hosts_randomize);
2310
2311 /* Check that the expansion yielded something useful. */
2312 if (hostlist == NULL)
2313 {
2314 addrlist->message =
2315 string_sprintf("%s transport has empty hosts setting", tblock->name);
2316 addrlist->transport_return = PANIC;
2317 return FALSE; /* Only top address has status */
2318 }
2319
2320 /* If there was no expansion of hosts, save the host list for
2321 next time. */
2322
2323 if (expanded_hosts == NULL) ob->hostlist = hostlist;
2324 }
2325
2326 /* This is not the first time this transport has been run in this delivery;
2327 the host list was built previously. */
2328
2329 else hostlist = ob->hostlist;
2330 }
2331
2332 /* The host list was supplied with the address. If hosts_randomize is set, we
2333 must sort it into a random order if it did not come from MX records and has not
2334 already been randomized (but don't bother if continuing down an existing
2335 connection). */
2336
2337 else if (ob->hosts_randomize && hostlist->mx == MX_NONE && !continuing)
2338 {
2339 host_item *newlist = NULL;
2340 while (hostlist != NULL)
2341 {
2342 host_item *h = hostlist;
2343 hostlist = hostlist->next;
2344
2345 h->sort_key = random_number(100);
2346
2347 if (newlist == NULL)
2348 {
2349 h->next = NULL;
2350 newlist = h;
2351 }
2352 else if (h->sort_key < newlist->sort_key)
2353 {
2354 h->next = newlist;
2355 newlist = h;
2356 }
2357 else
2358 {
2359 host_item *hh = newlist;
2360 while (hh->next != NULL)
2361 {
2362 if (h->sort_key < hh->next->sort_key) break;
2363 hh = hh->next;
2364 }
2365 h->next = hh->next;
2366 hh->next = h;
2367 }
2368 }
2369
2370 hostlist = addrlist->host_list = newlist;
2371 }
2372
2373
2374 /* Sort out the default port. */
2375
2376 if (!smtp_get_port(ob->port, addrlist, &port, tid)) return FALSE;
2377
2378
2379 /* For each host-plus-IP-address on the list:
2380
2381 . If this is a continued delivery and the host isn't the one with the
2382 current connection, skip.
2383
2384 . If the status is unusable (i.e. previously failed or retry checked), skip.
2385
2386 . If no IP address set, get the address, either by turning the name into
2387 an address, calling gethostbyname if gethostbyname is on, or by calling
2388 the DNS. The DNS may yield multiple addresses, in which case insert the
2389 extra ones into the list.
2390
2391 . Get the retry data if not previously obtained for this address and set the
2392 field which remembers the state of this address. Skip if the retry time is
2393 not reached. If not, remember whether retry data was found. The retry string
2394 contains both the name and the IP address.
2395
2396 . Scan the list of addresses and mark those whose status is DEFER as
2397 PENDING_DEFER. These are the only ones that will be processed in this cycle
2398 of the hosts loop.
2399
2400 . Make a delivery attempt - addresses marked PENDING_DEFER will be tried.
2401 Some addresses may be successfully delivered, others may fail, and yet
2402 others may get temporary errors and so get marked DEFER.
2403
2404 . The return from the delivery attempt is OK if a connection was made and a
2405 valid SMTP dialogue was completed. Otherwise it is DEFER.
2406
2407 . If OK, add a "remove" retry item for this host/IPaddress, if any.
2408
2409 . If fail to connect, or other defer state, add a retry item.
2410
2411 . If there are any addresses whose status is still DEFER, carry on to the
2412 next host/IPaddress, unless we have tried the number of hosts given
2413 by hosts_max_try or hosts_max_try_hardlimit; otherwise return. Note that
2414 there is some fancy logic for hosts_max_try that means its limit can be
2415 overstepped in some circumstances.
2416
2417 If we get to the end of the list, all hosts have deferred at least one address,
2418 or not reached their retry times. If delay_after_cutoff is unset, it requests a
2419 delivery attempt to those hosts whose last try was before the arrival time of
2420 the current message. To cope with this, we have to go round the loop a second
2421 time. After that, set the status and error data for any addresses that haven't
2422 had it set already. */
2423
2424 for (cutoff_retry = 0; expired &&
2425 cutoff_retry < ((ob->delay_after_cutoff)? 1 : 2);
2426 cutoff_retry++)
2427 {
2428 host_item *nexthost = NULL;
2429 int unexpired_hosts_tried = 0;
2430
2431 for (host = hostlist;
2432 host != NULL &&
2433 unexpired_hosts_tried < ob->hosts_max_try &&
2434 total_hosts_tried < ob->hosts_max_try_hardlimit;
2435 host = nexthost)
2436 {
2437 int rc;
2438 int host_af;
2439 uschar *rs;
2440 BOOL serialized = FALSE;
2441 BOOL host_is_expired = FALSE;
2442 BOOL message_defer = FALSE;
2443 BOOL ifchanges = FALSE;
2444 BOOL some_deferred = FALSE;
2445 address_item *first_addr = NULL;
2446 uschar *interface = NULL;
2447 uschar *retry_host_key = NULL;
2448 uschar *retry_message_key = NULL;
2449 uschar *serialize_key = NULL;
2450
2451 /* Default next host is next host. :-) But this can vary if the
2452 hosts_max_try limit is hit (see below). It may also be reset if a host
2453 address is looked up here (in case the host was multihomed). */
2454
2455 nexthost = host->next;
2456
2457 /* If the address hasn't yet been obtained from the host name, look it up
2458 now, unless the host is already marked as unusable. If it is marked as
2459 unusable, it means that the router was unable to find its IP address (in
2460 the DNS or wherever) OR we are in the 2nd time round the cutoff loop, and
2461 the lookup failed last time. We don't get this far if *all* MX records
2462 point to non-existent hosts; that is treated as a hard error.
2463
2464 We can just skip this host entirely. When the hosts came from the router,
2465 the address will timeout based on the other host(s); when the address is
2466 looked up below, there is an explicit retry record added.
2467
2468 Note that we mustn't skip unusable hosts if the address is not unset; they
2469 may be needed as expired hosts on the 2nd time round the cutoff loop. */
2470
2471 if (host->address == NULL)
2472 {
2473 int new_port, flags;
2474 host_item *hh;
2475 uschar *canonical_name;
2476
2477 if (host->status >= hstatus_unusable)
2478 {
2479 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("%s has no address and is unusable - skipping\n",
2480 host->name);
2481 continue;
2482 }
2483
2484 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("getting address for %s\n", host->name);
2485
2486 /* The host name is permitted to have an attached port. Find it, and
2487 strip it from the name. Just remember it for now. */
2488
2489 new_port = host_item_get_port(host);
2490
2491 /* Count hosts looked up */
2492
2493 hosts_looked_up++;
2494
2495 /* Find by name if so configured, or if it's an IP address. We don't
2496 just copy the IP address, because we need the test-for-local to happen. */
2497
2498 flags = HOST_FIND_BY_A;
2499 if (ob->dns_qualify_single) flags |= HOST_FIND_QUALIFY_SINGLE;
2500 if (ob->dns_search_parents) flags |= HOST_FIND_SEARCH_PARENTS;
2501
2502 if (ob->gethostbyname || string_is_ip_address(host->name, NULL) != 0)
2503 rc = host_find_byname(host, NULL, flags, &canonical_name, TRUE);
2504 else
2505 rc = host_find_bydns(host, NULL, flags, NULL, NULL, NULL,
2506 &canonical_name, NULL);
2507
2508 /* Update the host (and any additional blocks, resulting from
2509 multihoming) with a host-specific port, if any. */
2510
2511 for (hh = host; hh != nexthost; hh = hh->next) hh->port = new_port;
2512
2513 /* Failure to find the host at this time (usually DNS temporary failure)
2514 is really a kind of routing failure rather than a transport failure.
2515 Therefore we add a retry item of the routing kind, not to stop us trying
2516 to look this name up here again, but to ensure the address gets timed
2517 out if the failures go on long enough. A complete failure at this point
2518 commonly points to a configuration error, but the best action is still
2519 to carry on for the next host. */
2520
2521 if (rc == HOST_FIND_AGAIN || rc == HOST_FIND_FAILED)
2522 {
2523 retry_add_item(addrlist, string_sprintf("R:%s", host->name), 0);
2524 expired = FALSE;
2525 if (rc == HOST_FIND_AGAIN) hosts_defer++; else hosts_fail++;
2526 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("rc = %s for %s\n", (rc == HOST_FIND_AGAIN)?
2527 "HOST_FIND_AGAIN" : "HOST_FIND_FAILED", host->name);
2528 host->status = hstatus_unusable;
2529
2530 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
2531 {
2532 if (addr->transport_return != DEFER) continue;
2533 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_UNKNOWNHOST;
2534 addr->message =
2535 string_sprintf("failed to lookup IP address for %s", host->name);
2536 }
2537 continue;
2538 }
2539
2540 /* If the host is actually the local host, we may have a problem, or
2541 there may be some cunning configuration going on. In the problem case,
2542 log things and give up. The default transport status is already DEFER. */
2543
2544 if (rc == HOST_FOUND_LOCAL && !ob->allow_localhost)
2545 {
2546 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
2547 {
2548 addr->basic_errno = 0;
2549 addr->message = string_sprintf("%s transport found host %s to be "
2550 "local", tblock->name, host->name);
2551 }
2552 goto END_TRANSPORT;
2553 }
2554 } /* End of block for IP address lookup */
2555
2556 /* If this is a continued delivery, we are interested only in the host
2557 which matches the name of the existing open channel. The check is put
2558 here after the local host lookup, in case the name gets expanded as a
2559 result of the lookup. Set expired FALSE, to save the outer loop executing
2560 twice. */
2561
2562 if (continuing && (Ustrcmp(continue_hostname, host->name) != 0 ||
2563 Ustrcmp(continue_host_address, host->address) != 0))
2564 {
2565 expired = FALSE;
2566 continue; /* With next host */
2567 }
2568
2569 /* Reset the default next host in case a multihomed host whose addresses
2570 are not looked up till just above added to the host list. */
2571
2572 nexthost = host->next;
2573
2574 /* If queue_smtp is set (-odqs or the first part of a 2-stage run), or the
2575 domain is in queue_smtp_domains, we don't actually want to attempt any
2576 deliveries. When doing a queue run, queue_smtp_domains is always unset. If
2577 there is a lookup defer in queue_smtp_domains, proceed as if the domain
2578 were not in it. We don't want to hold up all SMTP deliveries! Except when
2579 doing a two-stage queue run, don't do this if forcing. */
2580
2581 if ((!deliver_force || queue_2stage) && (queue_smtp ||
2582 match_isinlist(addrlist->domain, &queue_smtp_domains, 0,
2583 &domainlist_anchor, NULL, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL) == OK))
2584 {
2585 expired = FALSE;
2586 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
2587 {
2588 if (addr->transport_return != DEFER) continue;
2589 addr->message = US"domain matches queue_smtp_domains, or -odqs set";
2590 }
2591 continue; /* With next host */
2592 }
2593
2594 /* Count hosts being considered - purely for an intelligent comment
2595 if none are usable. */
2596
2597 hosts_total++;
2598
2599 /* Set $host and $host address now in case they are needed for the
2600 interface expansion or the serialize_hosts check; they remain set if an
2601 actual delivery happens. */
2602
2603 deliver_host = host->name;
2604 deliver_host_address = host->address;
2605
2606 /* Set up a string for adding to the retry key if the port number is not
2607 the standard SMTP port. A host may have its own port setting that overrides
2608 the default. */
2609
2610 pistring = string_sprintf(":%d", (host->port == PORT_NONE)?
2611 port : host->port);
2612 if (Ustrcmp(pistring, ":25") == 0) pistring = US"";
2613
2614 /* Select IPv4 or IPv6, and choose an outgoing interface. If the interface
2615 string changes upon expansion, we must add it to the key that is used for
2616 retries, because connections to the same host from a different interface
2617 should be treated separately. */
2618
2619 host_af = (Ustrchr(host->address, ':') == NULL)? AF_INET : AF_INET6;
2620 if (!smtp_get_interface(ob->interface, host_af, addrlist, &ifchanges,
2621 &interface, tid))
2622 return FALSE;
2623 if (ifchanges) pistring = string_sprintf("%s/%s", pistring, interface);
2624
2625 /* The first time round the outer loop, check the status of the host by
2626 inspecting the retry data. The second time round, we are interested only
2627 in expired hosts that haven't been tried since this message arrived. */
2628
2629 if (cutoff_retry == 0)
2630 {
2631 /* Ensure the status of the address is set by checking retry data if
2632 necessary. There maybe host-specific retry data (applicable to all
2633 messages) and also data for retries of a specific message at this host.
2634 If either of these retry records are actually read, the keys used are
2635 returned to save recomputing them later. */
2636
2637 host_is_expired = retry_check_address(addrlist->domain, host, pistring,
2638 ob->retry_include_ip_address, &retry_host_key, &retry_message_key);
2639
2640 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("%s [%s]%s status = %s\n", host->name,
2641 (host->address == NULL)? US"" : host->address, pistring,
2642 (host->status == hstatus_usable)? "usable" :
2643 (host->status == hstatus_unusable)? "unusable" :
2644 (host->status == hstatus_unusable_expired)? "unusable (expired)" : "?");
2645
2646 /* Skip this address if not usable at this time, noting if it wasn't
2647 actually expired, both locally and in the address. */
2648
2649 switch (host->status)
2650 {
2651 case hstatus_unusable:
2652 expired = FALSE;
2653 setflag(addrlist, af_retry_skipped);
2654 /* Fall through */
2655
2656 case hstatus_unusable_expired:
2657 switch (host->why)
2658 {
2659 case hwhy_retry: hosts_retry++; break;
2660 case hwhy_failed: hosts_fail++; break;
2661 case hwhy_deferred: hosts_defer++; break;
2662 }
2663
2664 /* If there was a retry message key, implying that previously there
2665 was a message-specific defer, we don't want to update the list of
2666 messages waiting for these hosts. */
2667
2668 if (retry_message_key != NULL) update_waiting = FALSE;
2669 continue; /* With the next host or IP address */
2670 }
2671 }
2672
2673 /* Second time round the loop: if the address is set but expired, and
2674 the message is newer than the last try, let it through. */
2675
2676 else
2677 {
2678 if (host->address == NULL ||
2679 host->status != hstatus_unusable_expired ||
2680 host->last_try > received_time)
2681 continue;
2682 DEBUG(D_transport)
2683 debug_printf("trying expired host %s [%s]%s\n",
2684 host->name, host->address, pistring);
2685 host_is_expired = TRUE;
2686 }
2687
2688 /* Setting "expired=FALSE" doesn't actually mean not all hosts are expired;
2689 it remains TRUE only if all hosts are expired and none are actually tried.
2690 */
2691
2692 expired = FALSE;
2693
2694 /* If this host is listed as one to which access must be serialized,
2695 see if another Exim process has a connection to it, and if so, skip
2696 this host. If not, update the database to record our connection to it
2697 and remember this for later deletion. Do not do any of this if we are
2698 sending the message down a pre-existing connection. */
2699
2700 if (!continuing &&
2701 verify_check_this_host(&(ob->serialize_hosts), NULL, host->name,
2702 host->address, NULL) == OK)
2703 {
2704 serialize_key = string_sprintf("host-serialize-%s", host->name);
2705 if (!enq_start(serialize_key))
2706 {
2707 DEBUG(D_transport)
2708 debug_printf("skipping host %s because another Exim process "
2709 "is connected to it\n", host->name);
2710 hosts_serial++;
2711 continue;
2712 }
2713 serialized = TRUE;
2714 }
2715
2716 /* OK, we have an IP address that is not waiting for its retry time to
2717 arrive (it might be expired) OR (second time round the loop) we have an
2718 expired host that hasn't been tried since the message arrived. Have a go
2719 at delivering the message to it. First prepare the addresses by flushing
2720 out the result of previous attempts, and finding the first address that
2721 is still to be delivered. */
2722
2723 first_addr = prepare_addresses(addrlist, host);
2724
2725 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("delivering %s to %s [%s] (%s%s)\n",
2726 message_id, host->name, host->address, addrlist->address,
2727 (addrlist->next == NULL)? "" : ", ...");
2728
2729 set_process_info("delivering %s to %s [%s] (%s%s)",
2730 message_id, host->name, host->address, addrlist->address,
2731 (addrlist->next == NULL)? "" : ", ...");
2732
2733 /* This is not for real; don't do the delivery. If there are
2734 any remaining hosts, list them. */
2735
2736 if (dont_deliver)
2737 {
2738 host_item *host2;
2739 set_errno(addrlist, 0, NULL, OK, FALSE);
2740 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
2741 {
2742 addr->host_used = host;
2743 addr->special_action = '*';
2744 addr->message = US"delivery bypassed by -N option";
2745 }
2746 DEBUG(D_transport)
2747 {
2748 debug_printf("*** delivery by %s transport bypassed by -N option\n"
2749 "*** host and remaining hosts:\n", tblock->name);
2750 for (host2 = host; host2 != NULL; host2 = host2->next)
2751 debug_printf(" %s [%s]\n", host2->name,
2752 (host2->address == NULL)? US"unset" : host2->address);
2753 }
2754 rc = OK;
2755 }
2756
2757 /* This is for real. If the host is expired, we don't count it for
2758 hosts_max_retry. This ensures that all hosts must expire before an address
2759 is timed out, unless hosts_max_try_hardlimit (which protects against
2760 lunatic DNS configurations) is reached.
2761
2762 If the host is not expired and we are about to hit the hosts_max_retry
2763 limit, check to see if there is a subsequent hosts with a different MX
2764 value. If so, make that the next host, and don't count this one. This is a
2765 heuristic to make sure that different MXs do get tried. With a normal kind
2766 of retry rule, they would get tried anyway when the earlier hosts were
2767 delayed, but if the domain has a "retry every time" type of rule - as is
2768 often used for the the very large ISPs, that won't happen. */
2769
2770 else
2771 {
2772 if (!host_is_expired && ++unexpired_hosts_tried >= ob->hosts_max_try)
2773 {
2774 host_item *h;
2775 DEBUG(D_transport)
2776 debug_printf("hosts_max_try limit reached with this host\n");
2777 for (h = host; h != NULL; h = h->next)
2778 if (h->mx != host->mx) break;
2779 if (h != NULL)
2780 {
2781 nexthost = h;
2782 unexpired_hosts_tried--;
2783 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("however, a higher MX host exists "
2784 "and will be tried\n");
2785 }
2786 }
2787
2788 /* Attempt the delivery. */
2789
2790 total_hosts_tried++;
2791 rc = smtp_deliver(addrlist, host, host_af, port, interface, tblock,
2792 expanded_hosts != NULL, &message_defer, FALSE);
2793
2794 /* Yield is one of:
2795 OK => connection made, each address contains its result;
2796 message_defer is set for message-specific defers (when all
2797 recipients are marked defer)
2798 DEFER => there was a non-message-specific delivery problem;
2799 ERROR => there was a problem setting up the arguments for a filter,
2800 or there was a problem with expanding added headers
2801 */
2802
2803 /* If the result is not OK, there was a non-message-specific problem.
2804 If the result is DEFER, we need to write to the logs saying what happened
2805 for this particular host, except in the case of authentication and TLS
2806 failures, where the log has already been written. If all hosts defer a
2807 general message is written at the end. */
2808
2809 if (rc == DEFER && first_addr->basic_errno != ERRNO_AUTHFAIL &&
2810 first_addr->basic_errno != ERRNO_TLSFAILURE)
2811 write_logs(first_addr, host);
2812
2813 /* If STARTTLS was accepted, but there was a failure in setting up the
2814 TLS session (usually a certificate screwup), and the host is not in
2815 hosts_require_tls, and tls_tempfail_tryclear is true, try again, with
2816 TLS forcibly turned off. We have to start from scratch with a new SMTP
2817 connection. That's why the retry is done from here, not from within
2818 smtp_deliver(). [Rejections of STARTTLS itself don't screw up the
2819 session, so the in-clear transmission after those errors, if permitted,
2820 happens inside smtp_deliver().] */
2821
2822 #ifdef SUPPORT_TLS
2823 if (rc == DEFER && first_addr->basic_errno == ERRNO_TLSFAILURE &&
2824 ob->tls_tempfail_tryclear &&
2825 verify_check_this_host(&(ob->hosts_require_tls), NULL, host->name,
2826 host->address, NULL) != OK)
2827 {
2828 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "TLS session failure: delivering unencrypted "
2829 "to %s [%s] (not in hosts_require_tls)", host->name, host->address);
2830 first_addr = prepare_addresses(addrlist, host);
2831 rc = smtp_deliver(addrlist, host, host_af, port, interface, tblock,
2832 expanded_hosts != NULL, &message_defer, TRUE);
2833 if (rc == DEFER && first_addr->basic_errno != ERRNO_AUTHFAIL)
2834 write_logs(first_addr, host);
2835 }
2836 #endif
2837 }
2838
2839 /* Delivery attempt finished */
2840
2841 rs = (rc == OK)? US"OK" : (rc == DEFER)? US"DEFER" : (rc == ERROR)?
2842 US"ERROR" : US"?";
2843
2844 set_process_info("delivering %s: just tried %s [%s] for %s%s: result %s",
2845 message_id, host->name, host->address, addrlist->address,
2846 (addrlist->next == NULL)? "" : " (& others)", rs);
2847
2848 /* Release serialization if set up */
2849
2850 if (serialized) enq_end(serialize_key);
2851
2852 /* If the result is DEFER, or if a host retry record is known to exist, we
2853 need to add an item to the retry chain for updating the retry database
2854 at the end of delivery. We only need to add the item to the top address,
2855 of course. Also, if DEFER, we mark the IP address unusable so as to skip it
2856 for any other delivery attempts using the same address. (It is copied into
2857 the unusable tree at the outer level, so even if different address blocks
2858 contain the same address, it still won't get tried again.) */
2859
2860 if (rc == DEFER || retry_host_key != NULL)
2861 {
2862 int delete_flag = (rc != DEFER)? rf_delete : 0;
2863 if (retry_host_key == NULL)
2864 {
2865 retry_host_key = ob->retry_include_ip_address?
2866 string_sprintf("T:%S:%s%s", host->name, host->address, pistring) :
2867 string_sprintf("T:%S%s", host->name, pistring);
2868 }
2869
2870 /* If a delivery of another message over an existing SMTP connection
2871 yields DEFER, we do NOT set up retry data for the host. This covers the
2872 case when there are delays in routing the addresses in the second message
2873 that are so long that the server times out. This is alleviated by not
2874 routing addresses that previously had routing defers when handling an
2875 existing connection, but even so, this case may occur (e.g. if a
2876 previously happily routed address starts giving routing defers). If the
2877 host is genuinely down, another non-continued message delivery will
2878 notice it soon enough. */
2879
2880 if (delete_flag != 0 || !continuing)
2881 retry_add_item(first_addr, retry_host_key, rf_host | delete_flag);
2882
2883 /* We may have tried an expired host, if its retry time has come; ensure
2884 the status reflects the expiry for the benefit of any other addresses. */
2885
2886 if (rc == DEFER)
2887 {
2888 host->status = (host_is_expired)?
2889 hstatus_unusable_expired : hstatus_unusable;
2890 host->why = hwhy_deferred;
2891 }
2892 }
2893
2894 /* If message_defer is set (host was OK, but every recipient got deferred
2895 because of some message-specific problem), or if that had happened
2896 previously so that a message retry key exists, add an appropriate item
2897 to the retry chain. Note that if there was a message defer but now there is
2898 a host defer, the message defer record gets deleted. That seems perfectly
2899 reasonable. Also, stop the message from being remembered as waiting
2900 for specific hosts. */
2901
2902 if (message_defer || retry_message_key != NULL)
2903 {
2904 int delete_flag = message_defer? 0 : rf_delete;
2905 if (retry_message_key == NULL)
2906 {
2907 retry_message_key = ob->retry_include_ip_address?
2908 string_sprintf("T:%S:%s%s:%s", host->name, host->address, pistring,
2909 message_id) :
2910 string_sprintf("T:%S%s:%s", host->name, pistring, message_id);
2911 }
2912 retry_add_item(addrlist, retry_message_key,
2913 rf_message | rf_host | delete_flag);
2914 update_waiting = FALSE;
2915 }
2916
2917 /* Any return other than DEFER (that is, OK or ERROR) means that the
2918 addresses have got their final statuses filled in for this host. In the OK
2919 case, see if any of them are deferred. */
2920
2921 if (rc == OK)
2922 {
2923 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
2924 {
2925 if (addr->transport_return == DEFER)
2926 {
2927 some_deferred = TRUE;
2928 break;
2929 }
2930 }
2931 }
2932
2933 /* If no addresses deferred or the result was ERROR, return. We do this for
2934 ERROR because a failing filter set-up or add_headers expansion is likely to
2935 fail for any host we try. */
2936
2937 if (rc == ERROR || (rc == OK && !some_deferred))
2938 {
2939 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("Leaving %s transport\n", tblock->name);
2940 return TRUE; /* Each address has its status */
2941 }
2942
2943 /* If the result was DEFER or some individual addresses deferred, let
2944 the loop run to try other hosts with the deferred addresses, except for the
2945 case when we were trying to deliver down an existing channel and failed.
2946 Don't try any other hosts in this case. */
2947
2948 if (continuing) break;
2949
2950 /* If the whole delivery, or some individual addresses, were deferred and
2951 there are more hosts that could be tried, do not count this host towards
2952 the hosts_max_try limit if the age of the message is greater than the
2953 maximum retry time for this host. This means we may try try all hosts,
2954 ignoring the limit, when messages have been around for some time. This is
2955 important because if we don't try all hosts, the address will never time
2956 out. NOTE: this does not apply to hosts_max_try_hardlimit. */
2957
2958 if ((rc == DEFER || some_deferred) && nexthost != NULL)
2959 {
2960 BOOL timedout;
2961 retry_config *retry = retry_find_config(host->name, NULL, 0, 0);
2962
2963 if (retry != NULL && retry->rules != NULL)
2964 {
2965 retry_rule *last_rule;
2966 for (last_rule = retry->rules;
2967 last_rule->next != NULL;
2968 last_rule = last_rule->next);
2969 timedout = time(NULL) - received_time > last_rule->timeout;
2970 }
2971 else timedout = TRUE; /* No rule => timed out */
2972
2973 if (timedout)
2974 {
2975 unexpired_hosts_tried--;
2976 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("temporary delivery error(s) override "
2977 "hosts_max_try (message older than host's retry time)\n");
2978 }
2979 }
2980 } /* End of loop for trying multiple hosts. */
2981
2982 /* This is the end of the loop that repeats iff expired is TRUE and
2983 ob->delay_after_cutoff is FALSE. The second time round we will
2984 try those hosts that haven't been tried since the message arrived. */
2985
2986 DEBUG(D_transport)
2987 {
2988 debug_printf("all IP addresses skipped or deferred at least one address\n");
2989 if (expired && !ob->delay_after_cutoff && cutoff_retry == 0)
2990 debug_printf("retrying IP addresses not tried since message arrived\n");
2991 }
2992 }
2993
2994
2995 /* Get here if all IP addresses are skipped or defer at least one address. In
2996 MUA wrapper mode, this will happen only for connection or other non-message-
2997 specific failures. Force the delivery status for all addresses to FAIL. */
2998
2999 if (mua_wrapper)
3000 {
3001 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
3002 addr->transport_return = FAIL;
3003 goto END_TRANSPORT;
3004 }
3005
3006 /* In the normal, non-wrapper case, add a standard message to each deferred
3007 address if there hasn't been an error, that is, if it hasn't actually been
3008 tried this time. The variable "expired" will be FALSE if any deliveries were
3009 actually tried, or if there was at least one host that was not expired. That
3010 is, it is TRUE only if no deliveries were tried and all hosts were expired. If
3011 a delivery has been tried, an error code will be set, and the failing of the
3012 message is handled by the retry code later.
3013
3014 If queue_smtp is set, or this transport was called to send a subsequent message
3015 down an existing TCP/IP connection, and something caused the host not to be
3016 found, we end up here, but can detect these cases and handle them specially. */
3017
3018 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
3019 {
3020 /* If host is not NULL, it means that we stopped processing the host list
3021 because of hosts_max_try or hosts_max_try_hardlimit. In the former case, this
3022 means we need to behave as if some hosts were skipped because their retry
3023 time had not come. Specifically, this prevents the address from timing out.
3024 However, if we have hit hosts_max_try_hardlimit, we want to behave as if all
3025 hosts were tried. */
3026
3027 if (host != NULL)
3028 {
3029 if (total_hosts_tried >= ob->hosts_max_try_hardlimit)
3030 {
3031 DEBUG(D_transport)
3032 debug_printf("hosts_max_try_hardlimit reached: behave as if all "
3033 "hosts were tried\n");
3034 }
3035 else
3036 {
3037 DEBUG(D_transport)
3038 debug_printf("hosts_max_try limit caused some hosts to be skipped\n");
3039 setflag(addr, af_retry_skipped);
3040 }
3041 }
3042
3043 if (queue_smtp) /* no deliveries attempted */
3044 {
3045 addr->transport_return = DEFER;
3046 addr->basic_errno = 0;
3047 addr->message = US"SMTP delivery explicitly queued";
3048 }
3049
3050 else if (addr->transport_return == DEFER &&
3051 (addr->basic_errno == ERRNO_UNKNOWNERROR || addr->basic_errno == 0) &&
3052 addr->message == NULL)
3053 {
3054 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_HRETRY;
3055 if (continue_hostname != NULL)
3056 {
3057 addr->message = US"no host found for existing SMTP connection";
3058 }
3059 else if (expired)
3060 {
3061 setflag(addr, af_pass_message); /* This is not a security risk */
3062 addr->message = (ob->delay_after_cutoff)?
3063 US"retry time not reached for any host after a long failure period" :
3064 US"all hosts have been failing for a long time and were last tried "
3065 "after this message arrived";
3066
3067 /* If we are already using fallback hosts, or there are no fallback hosts
3068 defined, convert the result to FAIL to cause a bounce. */
3069
3070 if (addr->host_list == addr->fallback_hosts ||
3071 addr->fallback_hosts == NULL)
3072 addr->transport_return = FAIL;
3073 }
3074 else
3075 {
3076 if (hosts_retry == hosts_total)
3077 addr->message = US"retry time not reached for any host";
3078 else if (hosts_fail == hosts_total)
3079 addr->message = US"all host address lookups failed permanently";
3080 else if (hosts_defer == hosts_total)
3081 addr->message = US"all host address lookups failed temporarily";
3082 else if (hosts_serial == hosts_total)
3083 addr->message = US"connection limit reached for all hosts";
3084 else if (hosts_fail+hosts_defer == hosts_total)
3085 addr->message = US"all host address lookups failed";
3086 else addr->message = US"some host address lookups failed and retry time "
3087 "not reached for other hosts or connection limit reached";
3088 }
3089 }
3090 }
3091
3092 /* Update the database which keeps information about which messages are waiting
3093 for which hosts to become available. For some message-specific errors, the
3094 update_waiting flag is turned off because we don't want follow-on deliveries in
3095 those cases. */
3096
3097 if (update_waiting) transport_update_waiting(hostlist, tblock->name);
3098
3099 END_TRANSPORT:
3100
3101 DEBUG(D_transport) debug_printf("Leaving %s transport\n", tblock->name);
3102
3103 return TRUE; /* Each address has its status */
3104 }
3105
3106 /* End of transport/smtp.c */