$Cambridge: exim/doc/doc-txt/ChangeLog,v 1.1 2004/10/07 15:04:35 ph10 Exp $ Change log file for Exim from version 4.21 ------------------------------------------- Exim version 4.44 ----------------- 1. Minor wording change to the doc/README.SIEVE file. Exim version 4.43 ----------------- 1. Fixed a longstanding but relatively impotent bug: a long time ago, before PIPELINING, the function smtp_write_command() used to return TRUE or FALSE. Now it returns an integer. A number of calls were still expecting a T/F return. Fortuitously, in all cases, the tests worked in OK situations, which is the norm. However, things would have gone wrong on any write failures on the smtp file descriptor. This function is used when sending messages over SMTP and also when doing verify callouts. 2. When Exim is called to do synchronous delivery of a locally submitted message (the -odf or -odi options), it no longer closes stderr before doing the delivery. 3. Implemented the mua_wrapper option. 4. Implemented mx_fail_domains and srv_fail_domains for the dnslookup router. 5. Implemented the functions header_remove(), header_testname(), header_add_at_position(), and receive_remove_recipient(), and exported them to local_scan(). 6. If an ACL "warn" statement specified the addition of headers, Exim already inserted X-ACL-Warn: at the start if there was no header name. However, it was not making this test for the second and subsequent header lines if there were newlines in the string. This meant that an invalid header could be inserted if Exim was badly configured. 7. Allow an ACL "warn" statement to add header lines at the start or after all the Received: headers, as well as at the end. 8. Added the rcpt_4xx retry error code. 9. Added postmaster_mailfrom=xxx to callout verification option. 10. Added mailfrom=xxxx to the callout verification option, for verify= header_sender only. 11. ${substr_1_:xxxx} and ${substr__3:xxxx} are now diagnosed as syntax errors (they previously behaved as ${substr_1_0:xxxx} and ${substr:_0_3:xxxx}). 12. Inserted some casts to stop certain compilers warning when using pointer differences as field lengths or precisions in printf-type calls (mostly affecting debugging statements). 13. Added optional readline() support for -be (dynamically loaded). 14. Obscure bug fix: if a message error (e.g. 4xx to MAIL) happened within the same clock tick as a message's arrival, so that its received time was the same as the "first fail" time on the retry record, and that message remained on the queue past the ultimate address timeout, every queue runner would try a delivery (because it was past the ultimate address timeout) but after another failure, the ultimate address timeout, which should have then bounced the address, did not kick in. This was a "< instead of <=" error; in most cases the first failure would have been in the next clock tick after the received time, and all would be well. 15. The special items beginning with @ in domain lists (e.g. @mx_any) were not being recognized when the domain list was tested by the match_domain condition in an expansion string. 16. Added the ${str2b64: operator. 17. Exim was always calling setrlimit() to set a large limit for the number of processes, without checking whether the existing limit was already adequate. (It did check for the limit on file descriptors.) Furthermore, errors from getrlimit() and setrlimit() were being ignored. Now they are logged to the main and panic logs, but Exim does carry on, to try to do its job under whatever limits there are. 18. Imported PCRE 5.0. 19. Trivial typo in log message " temporarily refused connection" (the leading space). 20. If the log selector return_path_on_delivery was set and an address was redirected to /dev/null, the delivery process crashed because it assumed that a return path would always be set for a "successful" delivery. In this case, the whole delivery is bypassed as an optimization, and therefore no return path is set. 21. Internal re-arrangement: the function for sending a challenge and reading a response while authentication was assuming a zero-terminated challenge string. It's now changed to take a pointer and a length, to allow for binary data in such strings. 22. Added the cyrus_sasl authenticator (code supplied by MBM). 23. Exim was not respecting finduser_retries when seeking the login of the uid under which it was called; it was always trying 10 times. (The default setting of finduser_retries is zero.) Also, it was sleeping after the final failure, which is pointless. 24. Implemented tls_on_connect_ports. 25. Implemented acl_smtp_predata. 26. If the domain in control=submission is set empty, Exim assumes that the authenticated id is a complete email address when it generates From: or Sender: header lines. 27. Added "#define SOCKLEN_T int" to OS/os.h-SCO and OS/os.h-SCO_SV. Also added definitions to OS/Makefile-SCO and OS/Makefile-SCO_SV that put basename, chown and chgrp in /bin and hostname in /usr/bin. 28. Exim was keeping the "process log" file open after each use, just as it does for the main log. This opens the possibility of it remaining open for long periods when the USR1 signal hits a daemon. Occasional processlog errors were reported, that could have been caused by this. Anyway, it seems much more sensible not to leave this file open at all, so that is what now happens. 29. The long-running daemon process does not normally write to the log once it has entered its main loop, and it closes the log before doing so. This is so that log files can straightforwardly be renamed and moved. However, there are a couple of unusual error situations where the daemon does write log entries, and I had neglected to close the log afterwards. 30. The text of an SMTP error response that was received during a remote delivery was being truncated at 512 bytes. This is too short for some of the long messages that one sometimes sees. I've increased the limit to 1024. 31. It is now possible to make retry rules that apply only when a message has a specific sender, in particular, an empty sender. 32. Added "control = enforce_sync" and "control = no_enforce_sync". This makes it possible to be selective about when SMTP synchronization is enforced. 33. Added "control = caseful_local_part" and "control = "caselower_local_part". 32. Implemented hosts_connection_nolog. 33. Added an ACL for QUIT. 34. Setting "delay_warning=" to disable warnings was not working; it gave a syntax error. 35. Added mailbox_size and mailbox_filecount to appendfile. 36. Added control = no_multiline_responses to ACLs. 37. There was a bug in the logic of the code that waits for the clock to tick in the case where the clock went backwards by a substantial amount such that the microsecond fraction of "now" was more than the microsecond fraction of "then" (but the whole seconds number was less). 38. Added support for the libradius Radius client library this is found on FreeBSD (previously only the radiusclient library was supported). Exim version 4.42 ----------------- 1. When certain lookups returned multiple values in the form name=value, the quoting of the values was not always being done properly. Specifically: (a) If the value started with a double quote, but contained no whitespace, it was not quoted. (b) If the value contained whitespace other than a space character (i.e. tabs or newlines or carriage returns) it was not quoted. This fix has been applied to the mysql and pgsql lookups by writing a separate quoting function and calling it from the lookup code. The fix should probably also be applied to nisplus, ibase and oracle lookups, but since I cannot test any of those, I have not disturbed their existing code. 2. A hit in the callout cache for a specific address caused a log line with no reason for rejecting RCPT. Now it says "Previous (cached) callout verification failure". 3. There was an off-by-one bug in the queryprogram router. An over-long return line was truncated at 256 instead of 255 characters, thereby overflowing its buffer with the terminating zero. As well as fixing this, I have increased the buffer size to 1024 (and made a note to document this). 4. If an interrupt, such as the USR1 signal that is send by exiwhat, arrives when Exim is waiting for an SMTP response from a remote server, Exim restarts its select() call on the socket, thereby resetting its timeout. This is not a problem when such interrupts are rare. Somebody set up a cron job to run exiwhat every 2 minutes, which is less than the normal select() timeout (5 or 10 minutes). This meant that the select() timeout never kicked in because it was always reset. I have fixed this by comparing the time when an interrupt arrives with the time at the start of the first call to select(). If more time than the timeout has elapsed, the interrupt is treated as a timeout. 5. Some internal re-factoring in preparation for the addition of Sieve extensions (by MH). In particular, the "personal" test is moved to a separate function, and given an option for scanning Cc: and Bcc: (which is not set for Exim filters). 6. When Exim created an email address using the login of the caller as the local part (e.g. when creating a From: or Sender: header line), it was not quoting the local part when it contained special characters such as @. 7. Installed new OpenBSD configuration files. 8. Reworded some messages for syntax errors in "and" and "or" conditions to try to make them clearer. 9. Callout options, other than the timeout value, were being ignored when verifying sender addresses in header lines. For example, when using verify = header_sender/callout=no_cache the cache was (incorrectly) being used. 10. Added a missing instance of ${EXE} to the exim_install script; this affects only the Cygwin environment. 11. When return_path_on_delivery was set as a log selector, if different remote addresses in the same message used different return paths and parallel remote delivery occurred, the wrong values would sometimes be logged. (Whenever a remote delivery process finished, the return path value from the most recently started remote delivery process was logged.) 12. RFC 3848 specifies standard names for the "with" phrase in Received: header lines when AUTH and/or TLS are in use. This is the "received protocol" field. Exim used to use "asmtp" for authenticated SMTP, without any indication (in the protocol name) for TLS use. Now it follows the RFC and uses "esmtpa" if the connection is authenticated, "esmtps" if it is encrypted, and "esmtpsa" if it is both encrypted and authenticated. These names appear in log lines as well as in Received: header lines. 13. Installed MH's patches for Sieve to add the "copy" and "vacation" extensions, and comparison tests, and to fix some bugs. 14. Changes to the "personal" filter test: (1) The test was buggy in that it was just doing the equivalent of "contains" tests on header lines. For example, if a user's address was anne@some.where, the "personal" test would incorrectly be true for To: susanne@some.where This test is now done by extracting each address from the header in turn, and checking the entire address. Other tests that are part of "personal" are now done using regular expressions (for example, to check local parts of addresses in From: header lines). (2) The list of non-personal local parts in From: addresses has been extended to include "listserv", "majordomo", "*-request", and "owner-*", taken from the Sieve specification recommendations. (3) If the message contains any header line starting with "List-" it is treated as non-personal. (4) The test for "circular" in the Subject: header line has been removed because it now seems ill-conceived. 15. Minor typos in src/EDITME comments corrected. 16. Installed latest exipick from John Jetmore. 17. If headers_add on a router specified a text string that was too long for string_sprintf() - that is, longer than 8192 bytes - Exim panicked. The use of string_sprintf() is now avoided. 18. $message_body_size was not set (it was always zero) when running the DATA ACL and the local_scan() function. 19. For the "mail" command in an Exim filter, no default was being set for the once_repeat time, causing a random time value to be used if "once" was specified. (If the value happened to be <= 0, no repeat happened.) The default is now 0s, meaning "never repeat". The "vacation" command was OK (its default is 7d). It's somewhat surprising nobody ever noticed this bug (I found it when inspecting the code). 20. There is now an overall timeout for performing a callout verification. It defaults to 4 times the callout timeout, which applies to individual SMTP commands during the callout. The overall timeout applies when there is more than one host that can be tried. The timeout is checked before trying the next host. This prevents very long delays if there are a large number of hosts and all are timing out (e.g. when the network connections are timing out). The value of the overall timeout can be changed by specifying an additional sub-option for "callout", called "maxwait". For example: verify = sender/callout=5s,maxwait=20s 21. Add O_APPEND to the open() call for maildirsize files (Exim already seeks to the end before writing, but this should make it even safer). 22. Exim was forgetting that it had advertised PIPELINING for the second and subsequent messages on an SMTP connection. It was also not resetting its memory on STARTTLS and an internal HELO. 23. When Exim logs an SMTP synchronization error within a session, it now records whether PIPELINING has been advertised or not. 24. Added 3 instances of "(long int)" casts to time_t variables that were being formatted using %ld, because on OpenBSD (and perhaps others), time_t is int rather than long int. 25. Installed the latest Cygwin configuration files from the Cygwin maintainer. 26. Added the never_mail option to autoreply. Exim version 4.41 ----------------- 1. A reorganization of the code in order to implement 4.40/8 caused a daemon crash if the getsockname() call failed; this can happen if a connection is closed very soon after it is established. The problem was simply in the order in which certain operations were done, causing Exim to try to write to the SMTP stream before it had set up the file descriptor. The bug has been fixed by making things happen in the correct order. Exim version 4.40 ----------------- 1. If "drop" was used in a DATA ACL, the SMTP output buffer was not flushed before the connection was closed, thus losing the rejection response. 2. Commented out the definition of SOCKLEN_T in os.h-SunOS5. It is needed for some early Solaris releases, but causes trouble in current releases where socklen_t is defined. 3. When std{in,out,err} are closed, re-open them to /dev/null so that they always exist. 4. Minor refactoring of os.c-Linux to avoid compiler warning when IPv6 is not configured. 5. Refactoring in expand.c to improve memory usage. Pre-allocate a block so that releasing the top of it at the end releases what was used for sub- expansions (unless the block got too big). However, discard this block if the first thing is a variable or header, so that we can use its block when it is dynamic (useful for very large $message_headers, for example). 6. Lookups now cache *every* query, not just the most recent. A new, separate store pool is used for this. It can be recovered when all lookup caches are flushed. Lookups now release memory at the end of their result strings. This has involved some general refactoring of the lookup sources. 7. Some code has been added to the store_xxx() functions to reduce the amount of flapping under certain conditions. 8. log_incoming_interface used to affect only the <= reception log lines. Now it causes the local interface and port to be added to several more SMTP log lines, for example "SMTP connection from", and rejection lines. 9. The Sieve author supplied some patches for the doc/README.SIEVE file. 10. Added a conditional definition of _BSD_SOCKLEN_T to os.h-Darwin. 11. If $host_data was set by virtue of a hosts lookup in an ACL, its value could be overwritten at the end of the current message (or the start of a new message if it was set in a HELO ACL). The value is now preserved for the duration of the SMTP connection. 12. If a transport had a headers_rewrite setting, and a matching header line contained an unqualified address, that address was qualified, even if it did not match any rewriting rules. The underlying bug was that the values of the flags that permit the existence of unqualified sender and recipient addresses in header lines (set by {sender,recipient}_unqualified_hosts for non-local messages, and by -bnq for local messages) were not being preserved with the message after it was received. 13. When Exim was logging an SMTP synchronization error, it could sometimes log "next input=" as part of the text comprising the host identity instead of the correct text. The code was using the same buffer for two different strings. However, depending on which order the printing function evaluated its arguments, the bug did not always show up. Under Linux, for example, my test suite worked just fine. 14. Exigrep contained a use of Perl's "our" scoping after change 4.31/70. This doesn't work with some older versions of Perl. It has been changed to "my", which in any case is probably the better facility to use. 15. A really picky compiler found some instances of statements for creating error messages that either had too many or two few arguments for the format string. 16. The size of the buffer for calls to the DNS resolver has been increased from 1024 to 2048. A larger buffer is needed when performing PTR lookups for addresses that have a lot of PTR records. This alleviates a problem; it does not fully solve it. 17. A dnsdb lookup for PTR records that receives more data than will fit in the buffer now truncates the list and logs the incident, which is the same action as happens when Exim is looking up a host name and its aliases. Previously in this situation something unpredictable would happen; sometimes it was "internal error: store_reset failed". 18. If a server dropped the connection unexpectedly when an Exim client was using GnuTLS and trying to read a response, the client delivery process crashed while trying to generate an error log message. 19. If a "warn" verb in an ACL added multiple headers to a message in a single string, for example: warn message = H1: something\nH2: something the text was added as a single header line from Exim's point of view though it ended up OK in the delivered message. However, searching for the second and subsequent header lines using $h_h2: did not work. This has been fixed. Similarly, if a system filter added multiple headers in this way, the routers could not see them. 20. Expanded the error message when iplsearch is called with an invalid key to suggest using net-iplsearch in a host list. 21. When running tests using -bh, any delays imposed by "delay" modifiers in ACLs are no longer actually imposed (and a message to that effect is output). 22. If a "gecos" field in a passwd entry contained escaped characters, in particular, if it contained a \" sequence, Exim got it wrong when building a From: or a Sender: header from that name. A second bug also caused incorrect handling when an unquoted " was present following a character that needed quoting. 23. "{crypt}" as a password encryption mechanism for a "crypteq" expansion item was not being matched caselessly. 24. Arranged for all hyphens in the exim.8 source to be escaped with backslashes. 25. Change 16 of 4.32, which reversed 71 or 4.31 didn't quite do the job properly. Recipient callout cache records were still being keyed to include the sender, even when use_sender was set false. This led to far more callouts that were necessary. The sender is no longer included in the key when use_sender is false. 26. Added "control = submission" modifier to ACLs. 27. Added the ${base62d: operator to decode base 62 numbers. 28. dnsdb lookups can now access SRV records. 29. CONFIGURE_OWNER can be set at build time to define an alternative owner for the configuration file. 30. The debug message "delivering xxxxxx-xxxxxx-xx" is now output in verbose (-v) mode. This makes the output for a verbose queue run more intelligible. 31. Added a use_postmaster feature to recipient callouts. 32. Added the $body_zerocount variable, containing the number of binary zero bytes in the message body. 33. The time of last modification of the "new" subdirectory is now used as the "mailbox time last read" when there is a quota error for a maildir delivery. 34. Added string comparison operators lt, lti, le, lei, gt, gti, ge, gei. 35. Added +ignore_unknown as a special item in host lists. 36. Code for decoding IPv6 addresses in host lists is now included, even if IPv6 support is not being compiled. This fixes a bug in which an IPv6 address was recognized as an IP address, but was then not correctly decoded into binary, causing unexpected and incorrect effects when compared with another IP address. Exim version 4.34 ----------------- 1. Very minor rewording of debugging text in manualroute to say "list of hosts" instead of "hostlist". 2. If verify=header_syntax was set, and a header line with an unqualified address (no domain) and a large number of spaces between the end of the name and the colon was received, the reception process suffered a buffer overflow, and (when I tested it) crashed. This was caused by some obsolete code that should have been removed. The fix is to remove it! 3. When running in the test harness, delay a bit after writing a bounce message to get a bit more predictability in the log output. 4. Added a call to search_tidyup() just before forking a reception process. In theory, someone could use a lookup in the expansion of smtp_accept_max_ per_host which, without the tidyup, could leave open a database connection. 5. Added the variables $recipient_data and $sender_data which get set from a lookup success in an ACL "recipients" or "senders" condition, or a router "senders" option, similar to $domain_data and $local_part_data. 6. Moved the writing of debug_print from before to after the "senders" test for routers. 7. Change 4.31/66 (moving the time when the Received: is generated) caused problems for message scanning, either using a data ACL, or using local_scan() because the Received: header was not generated till after they were called (in order to set the time as the time of reception completion). I have revised the way this works. The header is now generated after the body is received, but before the ACL or local_scan() are called. After they are run, the timestamp in the header is updated. Exim version 4.33 ----------------- 1. Change 4.24/6 introduced a bug because the SIGALRM handler was disabled before starting a queue runner without re-exec. This happened only when deliver_drop_privilege was set or when the Exim user was set to root. The effect of the bug was that timeouts during subsequent deliveries caused crashes instead of being properly handled. The handler is now left at its default (and expected) setting. 2. The other case in which a daemon avoids a re-exec is to deliver an incoming message, again when deliver_drop_privilege is set or Exim is run as root. The bug described in (1) was not present in this case, but the tidying up of the other signals was missing. I have made the two cases consistent. 3. The ignore_target_hosts setting on a manualroute router was being ignored for hosts that were looked up using the /MX notation. 4. Added /ignore= feature to @mx_any, @mx_primary, and @mx_secondary in domain lists. 5. Change 4.31/55 was buggy, and broke when there was a rewriting rule that operated on the sender address. After changing the $sender_address to <> for the sender address verify, Exim was re-instated it as the original (before rewriting) address, but remembering that it had rewritten it, so it wasn't rewriting it again. This bug also had the effect of breaking the sender address verification caching when the sender address was rewritten. 6. The ignore_target_hosts option was being ignored by the ipliteral router. This has been changed so that if the ip literal address matches ignore_target_hosts, the router declines. 7. Added expansion conditions match_domain, match_address, and match_local_ part (NOT match_host). 8. The placeholder for the Received: header didn't have a length field set. 9. Added code to Exim itself and to exim_lock to test for a specific race condition that could lead to file corruption when using MBX delivery. The issue is with the lockfile that is created in /tmp. If this file is removed after a process has opened it but before that process has acquired a lock, there is the potential for a second process to recreate the file and also acquire a lock. This could lead to two Exim processes writing to the file at the same time. The added code performs the same test as UW imapd; it checks after acquiring the lock that its file descriptor still refers to the same named file. 10. The buffer for building added header lines was of fixed size, 8192 bytes. It is now parameterized by HEADER_ADD_BUFFER_SIZE and this can be adjusted when Exim is built. 11. Added the smtp_active_hostname option. If used, this will typically be made to depend on the incoming interface address. Because $interface_address is not set up until the daemon has forked a reception process, error responses that can happen earlier (such as "too many connections") no longer contain a host name. 12. If an expansion in a condition on a "warn" statement fails because a lookup defers, the "warn" statement is abandoned, and the next ACL statement is processed. Previously this caused the whole ACL to be aborted. 13. Added the iplsearch lookup type. 14. Added ident_timeout as a log selector. 15. Added tls_certificate_verified as a log selector. 16. Added a global option tls_require_ciphers (compare the smtp transport option of the same name). This controls incoming TLS connections. 17. I finally figured out how to make tls_require_ciphers do a similar thing in GNUtls to what it does in OpenSSL, that is, set up an appropriate list before starting the TLS session. 18. Tabs are now shown as \t in -bP output. 19. If the log selector return_path_on_delivery was set, Exim crashed when bouncing a message because it had too many Received: header lines. 20. If two routers both had headers_remove settings, and the first one included a superfluous trailing colon, the final name in the first list and the first name in the second list were incorrectly joined into one item (with a colon in the middle). Exim version 4.32 ----------------- 1. Added -C and -D options to the exinext utility, mainly to make it easier to include in the automated testing, but these could be helpful when multiple configurations are in use. 2. The exinext utility was not formatting the output nicely when there was an alternate port involved in the retry record key, nor when there was a message id as well (for retries that were specific to a specific message and a specific host). It was also confused by IPv6 addresses, because of the additional colons they contain. I have fixed the IPv4 problem, and patched it up to do a reasonable job for IPv6. 3. When there is an error after a MAIL, RCPT, or DATA SMTP command during delivery, the log line now contains "pipelined" if PIPELINING was used. 4. An SMTP transport process used to panic and die if the bind() call to set an explicit outgoing interface failed. This has been changed; it is now treated in the same way as a connect() failure. 5. A reference to $sender_host_name in the part of a conditional expansion that was being skipped was still causing a DNS lookup. This no longer occurs. 6. The def: expansion condition was not recognizing references to header lines that used bh_ and bheader_. 7. Added the _cache feature to named lists. 8. The code for checking quota_filecount in the appendfile transport was allowing one more file than it should have been. 9. For compatibility with Sendmail, the command line option -prval:sval is equivalent to -oMr rval -oMs sval and sets the incoming protocol and host name (for trusted callers). The host name and its colon can be omitted when only the protocol is to be set. Note the Exim already has two private options, -pd and -ps, that refer to embedded Perl. It is therefore impossible to set a protocol value of "d" or "s", but I don't think that's a major issue. 10. A number of refactoring changes to the code, none of which should affect Exim's behaviour: (a) The number of logging options was getting close to filling up the 32-bit word that was used as a bit map. I have split them into two classes: those that are passed in the argument to log_write(), and those that are only ever tested independently outside of that function. These are now in separate 32-bit words, so there is plenty of room for expansion again. There is no change in the user interface or the logging behaviour. (b) When building, for example, log lines, the code previously used a macro that called string_cat() twice, in order to add two strings. This is not really sufficiently general. Furthermore, there was one instance where it was actually wrong because one of the argument was used twice, and in one call a function was used. (As it happened, calling the function twice did not affect the overall behaviour.) The macro has been replaced by a function that can join an arbitrary number of extra strings onto a growing string. (c) The code for expansion conditions now uses a table and a binary chop instead of a serial search (which was left over from when there were very few conditions). Also, it now recognizes conditions like "pam" even when the relevant support is not compiled in: a suitably worded error message is given if an attempt is made to use such a condition. 11. Added ${time_interval:xxxxx}. 12. A bug was causing one of the ddress fields not to be passed back correctly from remote delivery subprocesses. The field in question was not being subsequently used, so this caused to problems in practice. 13. Added new log selectors queue_time and deliver_time. 14. Might have fixed a bug in maildirsizefile handling that threw up "unexpected character" debug warnings, and recalculated the data unnecessarily. In any case, I expanded the warning message to give more information. 15. Added the message "Restricted characters in address" to the statements in the default ACL that block characters like @ and % in local parts. 16. Change 71 for release 4.31 proved to be much less benign that I imagined. Three changes have been made: (a) There was a serious bug; a negative response to MAIL caused the whole recipient domain to be cached as invalid, thereby blocking all messages to all local parts at the same domain, from all senders. This bug has been fixed. The domain is no longer cached after a negative response to MAIL if the sender used is not empty. (b) The default behaviour of using MAIL FROM:<> for recipient callouts has been restored. (c) A new callout option, "use_sender" has been added for people who want the modified behaviour. Exim version 4.31 ----------------- 1. Removed "EXTRALIBS=-lwrap" from OS/Makefile-Unixware7 on the advice of Larry Rosenman. 2. Removed "LIBS = -lresolv" from OS/Makefile-Darwin as it is not needed, and indeed breaks things for older releases. 3. Added additional logging to the case where there is a problem reading data from a filter that is running in a subprocess using a pipe, in order to try to track down a specific problem. 4. Testing facility fudge: when running in the test harness and attempting to connect to 10.x.x.x (expecting a connection timeout) I'm now sometimes getting "No route to host". Convert this to a timeout. 5. Define ICONV_ARG2_TYPE as "char **" for Unixware7 to avoid compiler warning. 6. Some OS don't have socklen_t but use size_t instead. This affects the fifth argument of getsockopt() amongst other things. This is now configurable by a macro called SOCKLEN_T which defaults to socklen_t, but can be set for individual OS. I have set it for SunOS5, OSF1, and Unixware7. Current versions of SunOS5 (aka Solaris) do have socklen_t, but some earlier ones do not. 7. Change 4.30/15 was not doing the test caselessly. 8. The standard form for an IPv6 address literal was being rejected by address parsing in, for example, MAIL and RCPT commands. An example of this kind of address is [IPv6:2002:c1ed:8229:10:202:2dff:fe07:a42a]. Exim now accepts this, as well as the form without the "IPv6" on the front (but only when address literals are enabled, of course). 9. Added some casts to avoid compiler warnings in OS/os.c-Linux. 10. Exim crashed if a message with an empty sender address specified by -f encountered a router with an errors_to setting. This could be provoked only by a command such as exim -f "" ... where an empty string was supplied; "<>" did not hit this bug. 11. Installed PCRE release 4.5. 12. If EHLO/HELO was rejected by an ACL, the value of $sender_helo_name remained set. It is now erased. 13. exiqgrep wasn't working on MacOS X because it didn't correctly compute times from message ids (which are base 36 rather than the normal 62). 14. "Expected" SMTP protocol errors that can arise when PIPELINING is in use were being counted as actual protocol errors, and logged if the log selector +smtp_protocol_error was set. One cannot be perfect in this test, but now, if PIPELINING has been advertised, RCPT following a rejected MAIL, and DATA following a set of rejected RCPTs do not count as protocol errors. In other words, Exim assumes they were pipelined, though this may not actually be the case. Of course, in all cases the client gets an appropriate error code. 15. If a lookup fails in an ACL condition, a message about the failure may be available; it is used if testing the ACL cannot continue, because most such messages specify what the cause of the deferral is. However, some messages (e.g. "MYSQL: no data found") do not cause a defer. There was bug that caused an old message to be retained and used if a later statement caused a defer, replacing the real cause of the deferral. 16. If an IP address had so many PTR records that the DNS lookup buffer was not large enough to hold them, Exim could crash while trying to process the truncated data. It now detects and logs this case. 17. Further to 4.21/58, another change has been made: if (and only if) the first line of a message (the first header line) ends with CRLF, a bare LF in a subsequent header line has a space inserted after it, so as not to terminate the header. 18. Refactoring: tidied an ugly bit of code in appendfile that copied data unnecessarily, used atoi() instead of strtol(), and didn't check the termination when getting file sizes from file names by regex. 19. Completely re-implemented the support for maildirsize files, in the light of a number of problems with the previous contributed implementation (4.30/29). In particular: . If the quota is zero, the maildirsize file is maintained, but no quota is imposed. . If the maildir directory does not exist, it is created before any attempt to write a maildirsize file. . The quota value in the file is just a cache; if the quota is changed in the transport, the new value overrides. . A regular expression is available for excluding directories from the count. 20. The autoreply transport checks the characters in options that define the message's headers; it allows continued headers, but it was checking with isspace() after an embedded newline instead of explicitly looking for a space or a tab. 21. If all the "regular" hosts to which an address was routed had passed their expiry times, and had not reached their retry times, the address was bounced, even if fallback hosts were defined. Now Exim should go on to try the fallback hosts. 22. Increased buffer sizes in the callout code from 1024 to 4096 to match the equivalent code in the SMTP transport. Some hosts send humungous responses to HELO/EHLO, more than 1024 it seems. 23. Refactoring: code in filter.c used (void *) for "any old type" but this gives compiler warnings in some environments. I've now done it "properly", using a union. 24. The replacement for inet_ntoa() that is used with gcc on IRIX systems (because of problems with the built-in one) was declared to return uschar * instead of char *, causing compiler failure. 25. Fixed a file descriptor leak when processing alias/forward files. 26. Fixed a minor format string issue in dbfn.c. 27. Typo in exim.c: ("dmbnz" for "dbmnz"). 28. If a filter file refered to $h_xxx or $message_headers, and the headers contained RFC 2047 "words", Exim's memory could, under certain conditions, become corrupted. 29. When a sender address is verified, it is cached, to save repeating the test when there is more than one recipient in a message. However, when the verification involves a callout, it is possible for different callout options to be set for different recipients. It is too complicated to keep track of this in the cache, so now Exim always runs a verification when a callout is required, relying on the callout cache for the optimization. The overhead is duplication of the address routing, but this should not be too great. 30. Fixed a bug in callout caching. If a RCPT command caused the sender address to be verified with callout=postmaster, and the main callout worked but the postmaster check failed, the verification correctly failed. However, if a subsequent RCPT command asked for sender verification *without* the postmaster check, incorrect caching caused this verification also to fail, incorrectly. 31. Exim caches DNS lookup failures so as to avoid multiple timeouts; however, it was not caching the DNS options (qualify_single, search_parents) that were used when the lookup failed. A subsequent lookup with different options therefore always gave the same answer, though there were cases where it should not have. (Example: a "domains = !$mx_any" option on a dnslookup router: the "domains" option is always processed without any widening, but the router might have qualify_single set.) Now Exim uses the cached value only when the same options are set. 32. Added John Jetmore's "exipick" utility to the distribution. 33. GnuTLS: When an attempt to start a TLS session fails for any reason other than a timeout (e.g. a certificate is required, and is not provided), an Exim server now closes the connection immediately. Previously it waited for the client to close - but if the client is SSL, it seems that they each wait for each other, leading to a delay before one of them times out. 34: GnuTLS: Updated the code to use the new GnuTLS 1.0.0 API. I have not maintained 0.8.x compatibility because I don't think many are using it, and it is clearly obsolete. 35. Added TLS support for CRLs: a tls_crl global option and one for the smtp transport. 36. OpenSSL: $tls_certificate_verified was being set to 1 even if the client certificate was expired. A simple patch fixes this, though I don't understand the full logic of why the verify callback is called multiple times. 37. OpenSSL: a patch from Robert Roselius: "Enable client-bug workaround. Versions of OpenSSL as of 0.9.6d include a 'CBC countermeasure' feature, which causes problems with some clients (such as the Certicom SSL Plus library used by Eudora). This option, SSL_OP_DONT_INSERT_EMPTY_FRAGMENTS, disables the coutermeasure allowing Eudora to connect." 38. Exim was not checking that a write() to a log file succeeded. This could lead to Bad Things if a log got too big, in particular if it hit a file size limit. Exim now panics and dies if it cannot write to a log file, just as it does if it cannot open a log file. 39. Modified OS/Makefile-Linux so that it now contains CFLAGS=-O -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -D_LARGEFILE_SOURCE The two -D definitions ensure that Exim is compiled with large file support, which makes it possible to handle log files that are bigger than 2^31. 40. Fixed a subtle caching bug: if (in an ACL or a set of routers, for instance) a domain was checked against a named list that involved a lookup, causing $domain_data to be set, then another domain was checked against the same list, then the first domain was re-checked, the value of $domain_data after the final check could be wrong. In particular, if the second check failed, it could be set empty. This bug probably also applied to $localpart_data. 41. The strip_trailing_dot option was not being applied to the address given with the -f command-line option. 42. The code for reading a message's header from the spool was incrementing $received_count, but never initializing it. This meant that the value was incorrect (doubled) while delivering a message in the same process in which it was received. In the most common configuration of Exim, this never happens - a fresh exec is done - but it can happen when deliver_drop_privilege is set. 43. When Exim logs an SMTP synchronization error - client data sent too soon - it now includes up to 150 characters of the unexpected data in the log line. 44. The exim_dbmbuild utility uses fixed size buffers for reading input lines and building data strings. The size of both of these buffers was 10 000 bytes - far larger than anybody would *ever* want, thought I. Needless to say, somebody hit the limit. I have increased the maximum line length to 20 000 and the maximum data length of concatenated lines to 100 000. I have also fixed two bugs, because there was no checking on these buffers. Tsk, tsk. Now exim_dbmbuild gives a message and exits with an error code if a buffer is too small. 45. The exim_dbmbuild utility did not support quoted keys, as Exim does in lsearch lookups. Now it does. 46. When parsing a route_list item in a manualroute router, a fixed-length buffer was used for the list of hosts. I made this 1024 bytes long, thinking that nobody would ever have a list of hosts that long. Wrong. Somebody had a whole pile of complicated expansion conditions, and the string was silently truncated, leading to an expansion error. It turns out that it is easier to change to an unlimited length (owing to other changes that have happened since this code was originally written) than to build structure for giving a limitation error. The length of the item that expands into the list of hosts is now unlimited. 47. The lsearch lookup could not handle data where the length of text line was more than 4095 characters. Such lines were truncated, leading to shortened data being returned. It should now handle lines of any length. 48. Minor wording revision: "cannot test xxx in yyy ACL" becomes "cannot test xxx condition in yyy ACL" (e.g. "cannot test domains condition in DATA ACL"). 49. Cosmetic tidy to scripts like exicyclog that are generated by globally replacing strings such as BIN_DIRECTORY in a source file: the replacement no longer happens in comment lines. A list of replacements is now placed at the head of all of the source files, except those whose only change is to replace PERL_COMMAND in the very first #! line. 50. Replaced the slow insertion sort in queue.c, for sorting the list of messages on the queue, with a bottom-up merge sort, using code contributed by Michael Haardt. This should make operations like -bp somewhat faster on large queues. It won't affect queue runners, except when queue_run_in_order is set. 51. Installed eximstats 1.31 in the distribution. 52. Added support for SRV lookups to the dnslookup router. 53. If an ACL referred to $message_body or $message_body_end, the value was not reset for any messages that followed in the same SMTP session. 54. The store-handling optimization for building very long strings was not differentiating between the different store pools. I don't think this actually made any difference in practice, but I've tidied it. 55. While running the routers to verify a sender address, $sender_address was still set to the sender address. This is wrong, because when routing to send a bounce to the sender, it would be empty. Therefore, I have changed it so that, while verifying a sender address, $sender_address is set to <>. (There is no change to what happens when verifying a recipient address.) 56. After finding MX (or SRV) records, Exim was doing a DNS lookup for the target A or AAAA records (if not already returned) without resetting the qualify_single or search_parents options of the DNS resolver. These are inappropriate in this case because the targets of MX and SRV records must be FQDNs. A broken DNS record could cause trouble if it happened to have a target that, when qualified, matched something in the local domain. These two options are now turned off when doing these lookups. 57. It seems that at least some releases of Reiserfs (which does not have the concept of a fixed number of inodes) returns zero and not -1 for the number of available inodes. This interacted badly with check_spool_inodes, which assumed that -1 was the "no such thing" setting. What I have done is to check that the total number of inodes is greater than zero before doing the test of how many are available. 58. When a "warn" ACL statement has a log_message modifier, the message is remembered, and not repeated. This is to avoid a lot of repetition when a message has many recipients that cause the same warning to be written. Howewer, Exim was preserving the list of already written lines for an entire SMTP session, which doesn't seem right. The memory is now reset if a new message is started. 59. The "rewrite" debugging flag was not showing the result of rewriting in the debugging output unless log_rewrite was also set. 60. Avoid a compiler warning on 64-bit systems in dsearch.c by avoiding the use of (int)(handle) when we know that handle contains (void *)(-1). 61. The Exim daemon panic-logs an error return when it closes the incoming connection. However "connection reset by peer" seems to be common, and isn't really an error worthy of noting specially, so that particular error is no long logged. 62. When Exim is trying to find all the local interfaces, it used to panic and die if the ioctl to get the interface flags failed. However, it seems that on at least one OS (Solaris 9) it is possible to have an interface that is included in the list of interfaces, but for which you get a failure error for this call. This happens when the interface is not "plumbed" into a protocol (i.e. neither IPv4 nor IPv6). I've changed the code so that a failure of the "get flags" call assumes that the interface is down. 63. Added a ${eval10: operator, which assumes all numbers are decimal. This makes life easier for people who are doing arithmetic on fields extracted from dates, where you often get leading zeros that should not be interpreted as octal. 64. Added qualify_domain to the redirect router, to override the global setting. 65. If a pathologically long header line contained very many addresses (the report of this problem mentioned 10 000) and each of them was rewritten, Exim could use up a very large amount of memory. (It kept on making new copies of the header line as it rewrote, and never released the old ones.) At the expense of a bit more processing, the header rewriting function has been changed so that it no longer eats memory in this way. 66. The generation of the Received: header has been moved from the time that a message starts to be received, to the time that it finishes. The timestamp in the Received: header should now be very close to that of the <= log line. There are two side-effects of this change: (a) If a message is rejected by a DATA or non-SMTP ACL or local_scan(), the logged header lines no longer include the local Received: line, because it has not yet been created. The same applies to a copy of the message that is returned to a non-SMTP sender when a message is rejected. (b) When a filter file is tested using -bf, no additional Received: header is added to the test message. After some thought, I decided that this is a bug fix. This change does not affect the value of $received_for. It is still set after address rewriting, but before local_scan() is called. 67. Installed the latest Cygwin-specific files from the Cygwin maintainer. 68. GnuTLS: If an empty file is specified for tls_verify_certificates, GnuTLS gave an unhelpful panic error message, and a defer error. I have managed to change this behaviour so that it now rejects any supplied certificate, which seems right, as the list of acceptable certificates is empty. 69. OpenSSL: If an empty file is specified for tls_verify_certificates, OpenSSL gave an unhelpful defer error. I have not managed to make this reject any supplied certificates, but the error message it gives is "no certificate supplied", which is not helpful. 70. exigrep's output now also includes lines that are not associated with any message, but which match the given pattern. Implemented by a patch from Martin Sluka, which also tidied up the Perl a bit. 71. Recipient callout verification, like sender verification, was using <> in the MAIL FROM command. This isn't really the right thing, since the actual sender may affect whether the remote host accepts the recipient or not. I have changed it to use the actual sender in the callout; this means that the cache record is now keyed on a recipient/sender pair, not just the recipient address. There doesn't seem to be a real danger of callout loops, since a callout by the remote host to check the sender would use <>. [SEE ABOVE: changed after hitting problems.] 72. Exim treats illegal SMTP error codes that do not begin with 4 or 5 as temporary errors. However, in the case of such a code being given after the end of a data transmission (i.e. after ".") Exim was failing to write a retry record for the message. (Yes, there was some broken host that was actually sending 8xx at this point.) 73. An unknown lookup type in a host list could cause Exim to panic-die when the list was checked. (An example that provoked this was putting <; in the middle of a list instead of at the start.) If this happened during a DATA ACL check, a -D file could be left lying around. This kind of configuration error no longer causes Exim to die; instead it causes a defer errror. The incident is still logged to the main and panic logs. 74. Buglet left over from Exim 3 conversion. The message "too many messages in one connection" was written to the rejectlog but not the mainlog, except when address rewriting (yes!) was being logged. 75. Added write_rejectlog option. 76. When a system filter was run not as root (that is, when system_filter_user was set), the values of the $n variables were not being returned to the main process; thus, they were not subsequently available in the $sn variables. 77. Added +return_path_on_delivery log selector. 78. A connection timeout was being treated differently from recipients deferred when testing hosts_max_try with a message that was older than the host's retry timeout. (The host should not be counted, thus allowing all hosts to be tried at least once before bouncing.) This may have been the cause of an occasionally reported bug whereby a message would remain on the queue longer than the retry timeout, but would be bounced if a delivery was forced. I say "may" because I never totally pinned down the problem; setting up timeout/retry tests is difficult. See also the next item. 79. The ultimate address timeout was not being applied to errors that involved a combination of host plus message (for example, a timeout on a MAIL command). When an address resolved to a number of possible hosts, and they were not all tried for each delivery (e.g. because of hosts_max_try), a message could remain on the queue longer than the retry timeout. 80. Sieve bug: "stop" inside "elsif" was broken. Applied a patch from Michael Haardt. 81. Fixed an obscure SMTP outgoing bug which required at least the following conditions: (a) there was another message waiting for the same server; (b) the server returned 5xx to all RCPT commands in the first message so that the message was not completed; (c) the server dropped the connection or gave a negative response to the RSET that Exim sends to abort the transaction. The observed case was a dropped connection after DATA that had been sent in pipelining mode. That is, the server had advertised PIPELINING but was not implementing it correctly. The effect of the bug was incorrect behaviour, such as trying another host, and this could lead to a crash. Exim version 4.30 ----------------- 1. The 3rd arguments to getsockname(), getpeername(), and accept() in exim.c and daemon.c were passed as pointers to ints; they should have been pointers to socklen_t variables (which are typically unsigned ints). 2. Some signed/unsigned type warnings in the os.c file for Linux have been fixed. 3. Fixed a really odd bug that affected only the testing scheme; patching a certain fixed string in the binary changed the value of another string that happened to be identical to the end of the original first string. 4. When gethostbyname() (or equivalent) is passed an IP address as a "host name", it returns that address as the IP address. On some operating systems (e.g. Solaris), it also passes back the IP address string as the "host name". However, on others (e.g. Linux), it passes back an empty string. Exim wasn't checking for this, and was changing the host name to an empty string, assuming it had been canonicized. 5. Although rare, it is permitted to have more than one PTR record for a given IP address. I thought that gethostbyaddr() or getipnodebyaddr() always gave all the names associated with an address, because they do in Solaris. However, it seems that they do not in Linux for data that comes from the DNS. If an address in /etc/hosts has multiple names, they _are_ all given. I found this out when I moved to a new Linux workstation and tried to run the Exim test suite. To get round this problem I have changed the code so that it now does its own call to the DNS to look up PTR records when searching for a host name. If nothing can be found in the DNS, it tries gethostbyaddr(), so that addresses that are only in /etc/hosts are still found. This behaviour is, however, controlled by an option called host_lookup_ order, which defaults to "bydns:byaddr". If people want to use the other order, or indeed, just use one or the other means of lookup, they can specify it in this variable. 6. If a PTR record yields an empty name, Exim treats it as non-existent. In some operating systems, this comes back from gethostbyaddr() as an empty string, and this is what Exim used to test for. However, it seems that in other systems, "." is yielded. Exim now tests for this case too. 7. The values of check_spool_space and check_log_space are now held internally as a number of kilobytes instead of an absolute number of bytes. If a numbers is specified without 'K' or 'M', it is rounded up to the nearest kilobyte. This means that much larger values can be stored. 8. Exim monitor: an attempt to get the action menu when not actually pointing at a message produces an empty menu entitled "No message selected". This works on Solaris (OpenWindows). However, XFree86 does not like a menu with no entries in it ("Shell widget menu has zero width and/or height"). So I have added a single, blank menu entry in this case. 9. Added ${quote_local_part. 10. MIME decoding is now applied to the contents of Subject: header lines when they are logged. 11. Now that a reference to $sender_host_address automatically causes a reverse lookup to occur if necessary (4.13/18), there is no need to arrange for a host lookup before query-style lookups in lists that might use this variable. This has therefore been abolished, and the "net-" prefix is no longer necessary for query-style lookups. 12. The Makefile for SCO_SV contained a setting of LDFLAGS. This appears to have been a typo for LFLAGS, so it has been changed. 13. The install script calls Exim with "-C /dev/null" in order to find the version number. If ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX was set, this caused an error message to be output. Howeve, since Exim outputs its version number before the error, it didn't break the script. It just looked ugly. I fixed this by always allowing "-C /dev/null" if the caller is root. 14. Ignore overlarge ACL variable number when reading spool file - insurance against a later release with more variables having written the file. 15. The standard form for an IPv6 address literal was being rejected by EHLO. Example: [IPv6:2002:c1ed:8229:10:202:2dff:fe07:a42a]. Exim now accepts this, as well as the form without the "IPv6" on the front. 16. Added CHOWN_COMMAND=/usr/sbin/chown and LIBS=-lresolv to the OS/Makefile-Darwin file. 17. Fixed typo in lookups/ldap.c: D_LOOKUP should be D_lookup. This applied only to LDAP libraries that do not have LDAP_OPT_DEREF. 18. After change 4.21/52, "%ld" was used to format the contents of the $inode variable. However, some OS use ints for inodes. I've added cast to long int to get rid of the compiler warning. 19. I had forgotten to lock out "/../" in configuration file names when ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX was set. 20. Routers used for verification do not need to specify transports. However, if such a router generated a host list, and callout was configured, Exim crashed, because it could not find a port number from the (non-existent) transport. It now assumes port 25 in this circumstance. 21. Added the -t option to exigrep. 22. If LOOKUP_LSEARCH is defined, all three linear search methods (lsearch, wildlsearch, nwildlsearch) are compiled. LOOKUP_WILDLSEARCH and LOOKUP_ NWILDLSEARCH are now obsolete, but retained for compatibility. If either of them is set, LOOKUP_LSEARCH is forced. 23. "exim -bV" now outputs a list of lookups that are included in the binary. 24. Added sender and host information to the "rejected by local_scan()" log line; previously there was no indication of these. 25. Added .include_if_exists. 26. Change 3.952/11 added an explicit directory sync on top of a file sync for Linux. It turns out that not all file systems support this. Apparently some versions of NFS do not. (It's rare to put Exim's spool on NFS, but people do it.) To cope with this, the error EINVAL, which means that sync-ing is not supported on the file descriptor, is now ignored when Exim is trying to sync a directory. This applies only to Linux. 27. Added -DBIND_8_COMPAT to the CLFAGS setting for Darwin. 28. In Darwin (MacOS X), the PAM headers are in /usr/include/pam and not in /usr/include/security. There's now a flag in OS/os.h-Darwin to cope with this. 29. Added support for maildirsize files from supplied patch (modified a bit). 30. The use of :fail: followed by an empty string could lead Exim to respond to sender verification failures with (e.g.): 550 Verification failed for 550 Sender verify failed where the first response line was missing the '-' that indicates it is not the final line of the response. 31. The loop for finding the name of the user that called Exim had a hardwired limit of 10; it now uses the value of finduser_retries, which is used for all other user lookups. 32. Added $received_count variable, available in data and not_smtp ACLs, and at delivery time. 33. Exim was neglecting to zero errno before one call of strtol() when expanding a string and expecting an integer value. On some systems this resulted in spurious "integer overflow" errors. Also, it was casting the result into an int without checking. 34. Testing for a connection timeout using "timeout_connect" in the retry rules did not work. The code looks as if it has *never* worked, though it appears to have been documented since at least releast 1.62. I have made it work. 35. The "timeout_DNS" error in retry rules, also documented since at least 1.62, also never worked. As it isn't clear exactly what this means, and clearly it isn't a major issue, I have abolished the feature by treating it as "timeout", and writing a warning to the main and panic logs. 36. The display of retry rules for -brt wasn't always showing the error code correctly. 37. Added new error conditions to retry rules: timeout_A, timeout_MX, timeout_connect_A, timeout_connect_MX. 38. Rewriting the envelope sender at SMTP time did not allow it to be rewritten to the empty sender. 39. The daemon was not analysing the content of -oX till after it had closed stderr and disconnected from the controlling terminal. This meant that any syntax errors were only noted on the panic log, and the return code from the command was 0. By re-arranging the code a little, I've made the decoding happen first, so such errors now appear on stderr, and the return code is 1. However, the actual setting up of the sockets still happens in the disconnected process, so errors there are still only recorded on the panic log. 40. A daemon listener on a wildcard IPv6 socket that also accepts IPv4 connections (as happens on some IP stacks) was logged at start up time as just listening for IPv6. It now logs "IPv6 with IPv4". This differentiates it from "IPv6 and IPv4", which means that two separate sockets are being used. 41. The debug output for gethostbyname2() or getipnodebyname() failures now says whether AF_INET or AF_INET6 was passed as an argument. 42. Exiwhat output was messed up when time zones were included in log timestamps. 43. Exiwhat now gives more information about the daemon's listening ports, and whether -tls-on-connect was used. 44. The "port" option of the smtp transport is now expanded. 45. A "message" modifier in a "warn" statement in a non-message ACL was being silently ignored. Now an error message is written to the main and panic logs. 46. There's a new ACL modifier called "logwrite" which writes to a log file as soon as it is encountered. 47. Added $local_user_uid and $local_user_gid at routing time. 48. Exim crashed when trying to verify a sender address that was being rewritten to "<>". 49. Exim was recognizing only a space character after ".include". It now also recognizes a tab character. 50. Fixed several bugs in the Perl script that creates the exim.8 man page by extracting the relevant information from the specification. The man page no longer contains scrambled data for the -d option, and I've added a section at the front about calling Exim under different names. 51. Added "extra_headers" argument to the "mail" command in filter files. 52. Redirecting mail to an unqualified address in a Sieve filter caused Exim to crash. 53. Installed eximstats 1.29. 54. Added transport_filter_timeout as a generic transport option. 55. Exim no longer adds an empty Bcc: header to messages that have no To: or Cc: header lines. This was required by RFC 822, but it not required by RFC 2822. 56. Exim used to add From:, Date:, and Message-Id: header lines to any incoming messages that did not have them. Now it does so only if the message originates locally, that is, if there is no associated remote host address. When Resent- header lines are present, this applies to the Resent- lines rather than the non-Resent- lines. 57. Drop incoming SMTP connection after too many syntax or protocol errors. The limit is controlled by smtp_max_synprot_errors, defaulting to 3. 58. Messages for configuration errors now include the name of the main configuration file - useful now that there may be more than one file in a list (.included file names were always shown). 59. Change 4.21/82 (run initgroups() when starting the daemon) causes problems for those rare installations that do not start the daemon as root or run it setuid root. I've cut out the call to initgroups() if the daemon is not root at that time. 60. The Exim user and group can now be bound into the binary as text strings that are looked up at the start of Exim's processing. 61. Applied a small patch for the Interbase code, supplied by Ard Biesheuvel. 62. Added $mailstore_basename variable. 63. Installed patch to sieve.c from Michael Haardt. 64. When Exim failed to open the panic log after failing to open the main log, the original message it was trying to log was written to stderr and debug output, but if they were not available (the usual case in production), it was lost. Now it is written to syslog before the two lines that record the failures to open the logs. 65. Users' Exim filters run in subprocesses under the user's uid. It is possible for a "deliver" command or an alias in a "personal" command to provoke an address rewrite. If logging of address rewriting is configured, this fails because the process is not running as root or exim. There may be a better way of dealing with this, but for the moment (because 4.30 needs to be released), I have disabled address rewrite logging when running a filter in a non-root, non-exim process. Exim version 4.24 ----------------- 1. The buildconfig auxiliary program wasn't quoting the value set for HEADERS_CHARSET. This caused a compilation error complaining that 'ISO' was not defined. This bug was masked in 4.22 by the effect that was fixed in change 4.23/1. 2. Some messages that were rejected after a message id was allocated were shown as "incomplete" by exigrep. It no longer does this for messages that are rejected by local_scan() or the DATA or non-SMTP ACLs. 3. If a Message-ID: header used a domain literal in the ID, and Exim did not have allow_domain_literals set, the ID did not get logged in the <= line. Domain literals are now always recognized in Message-ID: header lines. 4. The first argument for a ${extract expansion item is the key name or field number. Leading and trailing spaces in this item were not being ignored, causing some misleading effects. 5. When deliver_drop_privilege was set, single queue runner processes started manually (i.e. by the command "exim -q") or by the daemon (which uses the same command in the process it spins off) were not dropping privilege. 6. When the daemon running as "exim" started a queue runner, it always re-executed Exim in the spun-off process. This is a waste of effort when deliver_drop_privilege is set. The new process now just calls the queue-runner function directly. Exim version 4.23 ----------------- 1. Typo in the src/EDITME file: it referred to HEADERS_DECODE_TO instead of HEADERS_CHARSET. 2. Change 4.21/73 introduced a bug. The pid file path set by -oP was being ignored. Though the use of -oP was forcing the writing of a pid file, it was always written to the default place. 3. If the message "no IP address found for host xxxx" is generated during incoming verification, it is now followed by identification of the incoming connection (so you can more easily find what provoked it). 4. Bug fix for Sieve filters: "stop" inside a block was not working properly. 5. Added some features to "harden" Exim a bit more against certain attacks: (a) There is now a build-time option called FIXED_NEVER_USERS that can be put in Local/Makefile. This is like the never_users runtime option, but it cannot be overridden. The default setting is "root". (b) If ALT_CONFIG_PREFIX is defined in Local/Makefile, it specifies a prefix string with which any file named in a -C command line option must start. (c) If ALT_CONFIG_ROOT_ONLY is defined in Local/Makefile, root privilege is retained for -C and -D only if the caller of Exim is root. Without it, the exim user may also use -C and -D and retain privilege. (d) If DISABLE_D_OPTION is defined in Local/Makefile, the use of the -D command line option is disabled. 6. Macro names set by the -D option must start with an upper case letter, just like macro names defined in the configuration file. 7. Added "dereference=" facility to LDAP. 8. Two instances of the typo "uknown" in the source files are fixed. 9. If a PERL_COMMAND setting in Local/Makefile was not at the start of a line, the Configure-Makefile script screwed up while processing it. 10. Incorporated PCRE 4.4. 11. The SMTP synchronization check was not operating right at the start of an SMTP session. For example, it could not catch a HELO sent before the client waited for the greeting. There is now a check for outstanding input at the point when the greeting is written. Because of the duplex, asynchronous nature of TCP/IP, it cannot be perfect - the incorrect input may be on its way, but not yet received, when the check is performed. 12. Added tcp_nodelay to make it possible to turn of the setting of TCP_NODELAY on TCP/IP sockets, because this apparently causes some broken clients to timeout. 13. Installed revised OS/Makefile-CYGWIN and OS/os.c-cygwin (the .h file was unchanged) from the Cygwin maintainer. 14. The code for -bV that shows what is in the binary showed "mbx" when maildir was supported instead of testing for mbx. Effectively a typo. 15. The spa authenticator server code was not checking that the input it received was valid base64. 16. The debug output line for the "set" modifier in ACLs was not showing the name of the variable that was being set. 17. Code tidy: the variable type "vtype_string" was never used. Removed it. 18. Previously, a reference to $sender_host_name did not cause a DNS reverse lookup on its own. Something else was needed to trigger the lookup. For example, a match in host_lookup or the need for a host name in a host list. Now, if $sender_host_name is referenced and the host name has not yet been looked up, a lookup is performed. If the lookup fails, the variable remains empty, and $host_lookup_failed is set to "1". 19. Added "eqi" as a case-independent comparison operator. 20. The saslauthd authentication condition could segfault if neither service nor realm was specified. 21. If an overflowing value such as "2048M" was set for message_size_limit, the error message that was logged was misleading, and incoming SMTP connections were dropped. The message is now more accurate, and temporary errors are given to SMTP connections. 22. In some error situations (such as 21 above) Exim rejects all SMTP commands (except RSET) with a 421 error, until QUIT is received. However, it was failing to send a response to QUIT. 23. The HELO ACL was being run before the code for helo_try_verify_hosts, which made it impossible to use "verify = helo" in the HELO ACL. The HELO ACL is now run after the helo_try_verify_hosts code. 24. "{MD5}" and "{SHA1}" are now recognized as equivalent to "{md5"} and "{sha1}" in the "crypteq" expansion condition (in fact the comparison is case-independent, so other case variants are also recognized). Apparently some systems use these upper case variants. 25. If more than two messages were waiting for the same host, and a transport filter was specified for the transport, Exim sent two messages over the same TCP/IP connection, and then failed with "socket operation on non- socket" when it tried to send the third. 26. Added Exim::debug_write and Exim::log_write for embedded Perl use. 27. The extern definition of crypt16() in expand.c was not being excluded when the OS had its own crypt16() function. 28. Added bounce_return_body as a new option, and bounce_return_size_limit as a preferred synonym for return_size_limit, both as an option and as an expansion variable. 29. Added LIBS=-liconv to OS/Makefile-OSF1. 30. Changed the default configuration ACL to relax the local part checking rule for addresses that are not in any local domains. For these addresses, slashes and pipe symbols are allowed within local parts, but the sequence /../ is explicitly forbidden. 31. SPA server authentication was not clearing the challenge buffer before using it. 32. log_message in a "warn" ACL statement was writing to the reject log as well as to the main log, which contradicts the documentation and doesn't seem right (because no rejection is happening). So I have stopped it. 33. Added Ard Biesheuvel's lookup code for accessing an Interbase database. However, I am unable to do any testing of this. 34. Fixed an infelicity in the appendfile transport. When checking directories for a mailbox, to see if any needed to be created, it was accidentally using path names with one or more superfluous leading slashes; tracing would show up entries such as stat("///home/ph10", 0xFFBEEA48). 35. If log_message is set on a "discard" verb in a MAIL or RCPT ACL, its contents are added to the log line that is written for every discarded recipient. (Previously a log_message setting was ignored.) 36. The ${quote: operator now quotes the string if it is empty. 37. The install script runs exim in order to find its version number. If for some reason other than non-existence or emptiness, which it checks, it could not run './exim', it was installing it with an empty version number, i.e. as "exim-". This error state is now caught, and the installation is aborted. 38. An argument was missing from the function that creates an error message when Exim fails to connect to the socket for saslauthd authentication. This could cause Exim to crash, or give a corrupted message. 39. Added isip, isip4, and isip6 to ${if conditions. 40. The ACL variables $acl_xx are now saved with the message, and can be accessed later in routers, transports, and filters. 41. The new lookup type nwildlsearch is like wildlsearch, except that the key strings in the file are not string-expanded. 42. If a MAIL command specified a SIZE value that was too large to fit into an int variable, the check against message_size_limit failed. Such values are now forced to INT_MAX, which is around 2Gb for a 32-bit variable. Maybe one day this will have to be increased, but I don't think I want to be around when emails are that large. Exim version 4.22 ----------------- 1. Removed HAVE_ICONV=yes from OS/Makefile-FreeBSD, since it seems that iconv() is not standard in FreeBSD. 2. Change 4.21/17 was buggy and could cause stack overwriting on a system with IPv6 enabled. The observed symptom was a segmentation fault on return from the function os_common_find_running_interfaces() in src/os.c. 3. In the check_special_case() function in daemon.c I had used "errno" as an argument name, which causes warnings on some systems. This was basically a typo, since it was named "eno" in the comments! 4. The code that waits for the clock to tick (at a resolution of some fraction of a second) so as to ensure message-id uniqueness was always waiting for at least one whole tick, when it could have waited for less. [This is almost certainly not relevant at current processor speeds, where it is unlikely to ever wait at all. But we try to future-proof.] 5. The function that sleeps for a time interval that includes fractions of a second contained a race. It did not block SIGALRM between setting the timer, and suspending (a couple of lines later). If the interval was short and the sigsuspend() was delayed until after it had expired, the suspension never ended. On busy systems this could lead to processes getting stuck for ever. 6. Some uncommon configurations may cause a lookup to happen in a queue runner process, before it forks any delivery processes. The open lookup caching mechanism meant that the open file or database connection was passed into the delivery process. The problem was that delivery processes always tidy up cached lookup data. This could cause a problem for the next delivery process started by the queue runner, because the external queue runner process does not know about the closure. So the next delivery process still has data in the lookup cache. In the case of a file lookup, there was no problem because closing a file descriptor in a subprocess doesn't affect the parent. However, if the lookup was caching a connection to a database, the connection was closed, and the second delivery process was likely to see errors such as "PGSQL: query failed: server closed the connection unexpectedly". The problem has been fixed by closing all cached lookups in a queue runner before running a delivery process. 7. Compiler warning on Linux for the second argument of iconv(), which doesn't seem to have the "const" qualifier which it has on other OS. I've parameterised it. 8. Change 4.21/2 was too strict. It is only if there are two authenticators *of the same type* (client or server) with the same public name that an error should be diagnosed. 9. When Exim looked up a host name for an IP address, but failed to find the original IP address when looking up the host name (a safety check), it output the message " does not match any IP for NULL", which was confusing, to say the least. The bug was that the host name should have appeared instead of "NULL". 10. Since release 3.03, if Exim is called by a uid other than root or the Exim user that is built into the binary, and the -C or -D options is used, root privilege is dropped before the configuration file is read. In addition, logging is switched to stderr instead of the normal log files. If the configuration then re-defines the Exim user, the unprivileged environment is probably not what is expected, so Exim logs a panic warning message (but proceeds). However, if deliver_drop_privilege is set, the unprivileged state may well be exactly what is intended, so the warning has been cut out in that case, and Exim is allowed to try to write to its normal log files. Exim version 4.21 ----------------- 1. smtp_return_error_details was not giving details for temporary sender or receiver verification errors. 2. Diagnose a configuration error if two authenticators have the same public name. 3. Exim used not to create the message log file for a message until the first delivery attempt. This could be confusing when incoming messages were held for policy or load reasons. The message log file is now created at the time the message is received, and an initial "Received" line is written to it. 4. The automatically generated man page for command line options had a minor bug that caused no ill effects; however, a more serious problem was that the procedure for building the man page automatically didn't always operate. Consequently, release 4.20 contains an out-of-date version. This shouldn't happen again. 5. When building Exim with embedded Perl support, the script that builds the Makefile was calling 'perl' to find its compile-time parameters, ignoring any setting of PERL_COMMAND in Local/Makefile. This is now fixed. 6. The freeze_tell option was not being used for messages that were frozen on arrival, either by an ACL or by local_scan(). 7. Added the smtp_incomplete_transaction log selector. 8. After STARTTLS, Exim was not forgetting that it had advertised AUTH, so it was accepting AUTH without a new EHLO. 9. Added tls_remember_esmtp to cope with YAEB. This allows AUTH and other ESMTP extensions after STARTTLS without a new EHLO, in contravention of the RFC. 10. Logging of TCP/IP connections (when configured) now happens in the main daemon process instead of the child process, so that the TCP/IP connection count is more accurate (but it can never be perfect). 11. The use of "drop" in a nested ACL was not being handled correctly in the outer ACL. Now, if condition failure induced by the nested "drop" causes the outer ACL verb to deny access ("accept" or "discard" after "endpass", or "require"), the connection is dropped. 12. Similarly, "discard" in a nested ACL wasn't being handled. A nested ACL that yield "discard" can now be used with an "accept" or a "discard" verb, but an error is generated for any others (because I can't see a useful way to define what should happen). 13. When an ACL is read dynamically from a file (or anywhere else), the lines are now processed in the same way as lines in the Exim configuration file. In particular, continuation lines are supported. 14. Added the "dnslists = a.b.c!=n.n.n.n" feature. 15. Added -ti meaning -t -i. 16. Check for letters, digits, hyphens, and dots in the names of dnslist domains, and warn by logging if others are found. 17. At least on BSD, alignment is not guarenteed for the array of ifreq's returned from GIFCONF when Exim is trying to find the list of interfaces on a host. The code in os.c has been modified to copy each ifreq to an aligned structure in all cases. Also, in some cases, the returned ifreq's were being copied to a 'struct ifreq' on the stack, which was subsequently passed to host_ntoa(). That means the last couple of bytes of an IPv6 address could be chopped if the ifreq contained only a normal sockaddr (14 bytes storage). 18. Named domain lists were not supported in the hosts_treat_as_local option. An entry such as +xxxx was not recognized, and was treated as a literal domain name. 19. Ensure that header lines added by a DATA ACL are included in the reject log if the ACL subsequently rejects the message. 20. Upgrade the cramtest.pl utility script to use Digest::MD5 instead of just MD5 (which is deprecated). 21. When testing a filter file using -bf, Exim was writing a message when it took the sender from a "From " line in the message, but it was not doing so when it took $return_path from a Return-Path: header line. It now does. 22. If the contents of a "message" modifier for a "warn" ACL verb do not begin with a valid header line field name (a series of printing characters terminated by a colon, Exim now inserts X-ACL-Warn: at the beginning. 23. Changed "disc" in the source to "disk" to conform to the documentation and the book and for uniformity. 24. Ignore Sendmail's -Ooption=value command line item. 25. When execve() failed while trying to run a command in a pipe transport, Exim was returning EX_UNAVAILBLE (69) from the subprocess. However, this could be confused with a return value of 69 from the command itself. This has been changed to 127, the value the shell returns if it is asked to run a non-existent command. The wording for the related log line suggests a non-existent command as the problem. 26. If received_header_text expands to an empty string, do not add a Received: header line to the message. (Well, it adds a token one on the spool, but marks it "old" so that it doesn't get used or transmitted.) 27. Installed eximstats 1.28 (addition of -nt option). 28. There was no check for failure on the call to getsockname() in the daemon code. This can fail if there is a shortage of resources on the system, with ENOMEM, for example. A temporary error is now given on failure. 29. Contrary to the C standard, it seems that in some environments, the equivalent of setlocale(LC_ALL, "C") is not obeyed at the start of a C program. Exim now does this explicitly; it affects the formatting of timestamps using strftime(). 30. If exiqsumm was given junk data, it threw up some uninitialized variable complaints. I've now initialized all the variables, to avoid this. 32. Header lines added by a system filter were not being "seen" during transport-time rewrites. 33. The info_callback() function passed to OpenSSL is set up with type void (*)(SSL *, int, int), as described somewhere. However, when calling the function (actually a macro) that sets it up, the type void(*)() is expected. I've put in a cast to prevent warnings from picky compilers. 34. If a DNS black list lookup found a CNAME record, but there were no A records associated with the domain it pointed at, Exim crashed. 35. If a DNS black list lookup returned more than one A record, Exim ignored all but the first. It now scans all returned addresses if a particular IP value is being sought. In this situation, the contents of the $dnslist_value variable are a list of all the addresses, separated by a comma and a space. 36. Tightened up the rules for host name lookups using reverse DNS. Exim used to accept a host name and all its aliases if the forward lookup for any of them yielded the IP address of the incoming connection. Now it accepts only those names whose forward lookup yields the correct IP address. Any other names are discarded. This closes a loophole whereby a rogue DNS administrator could create reverse DNS records to break through a wildcarded host restriction in an ACL. 37. If a user filter or a system filter that ran in a subprocess used any of the numerical variables ($1, $2 etc), or $thisaddress, in a pipe command, the wrong values were passed to the pipe command ($thisaddress had the value of $0, $0 had the value of $1, etc). This bug was introduced by change 4.11/101, and not discovered because I wrote an inadequate test. :-( 38. Improved the line breaking for long SMTP error messages from ACLs. Previously, if there was no break point between 40 and 75 characters, Exim left the rest of the message alone. Two changes have been made: (a) I've reduced the minimum length to 35 characters; (b) if it can't find a break point between 35 and 75 characters, it looks ahead and uses the first one that it finds. This may give the occasional overlong line, but at least the remaining text gets split now. 39. Change 82 of 4.11 was unimaginative. It assumed the limit on the number of file descriptors might be low, and that setting 1000 would always raise it. It turns out that in some environments, the limit is already over 1000 and that lowering it causes trouble. So now Exim takes care not to decrease it. 40. When delivering a message, the value of $return_path is set to $sender_ address at the start of routing (routers may change the value). By an oversight, this default was not being set up when an address was tested by -bt or -bv, which affected the outcome if any router or filter referred to $return_path. 41. The idea of the "warn" ACL verb is that it adds a header or writes to the log only when "message" or "log_message" are set. However, if one of the conditions was an address verification, or a call to a nested ACL, the messages generated by the underlying test were being passed through. This no longer happens. The underlying message is available in $acl_verify_ message for both "message" and "log_message" expansions, so it can be passed through if needed. 42. Added RFC 2047 interpretation of header lines for $h_ expansions, with a new expansion $bh_ to give the encoded byte string without charset translation. Translation happens only if iconv() is available; HAVE_ICONV indicates this at build time. HEADERS_CHARSET gives the charset to translate to; headers_charset can change it in the configuration, and "headers charset" can change it in an individual filter file. 43. Now that we have a default RFC 2047 charset (see above), the code in Exim that creates RFC 2047 encoded "words" labels them as that charset instead of always using iso-8859-1. The cases are (i) the explicit ${rfc2047: expansion operator; (ii) when Exim creates a From: line for a local message; (iii) when a header line is rewritten to include a "phrase" part. 44. Nasty bug in exiqsumm: the regex to skip already-delivered addresses was buggy, causing it to skip the first lines of messages whose message ID ended in 'D'. This would not have bitten before Exim release 4.14, because message IDs were unlikely to end in 'D' before then. The effect was to have incorrect size information for certain domains. 45. #include "config.h" was missing at the start of the crypt16.c module. This caused trouble on Tru64 (aka OSF1) systems, because HAVE_CRYPT16 was not noticed. 46. If there was a timeout during a "random" callout check, Exim treated it as a failure of the random address, and carried on sending RSET and the real address. If the delay was just some slowness somewhere, the response to the original RCPT would be taken as a response to RSET and so on, causing mayhem of various kinds. 47. Change 50 for 4.20 was a heap of junk. I don't know what I was thinking when I implemented it. It didn't allow for the fact that some option values may legitimatetly be negative (e.g. size_addition), and it didn't even do the right test for positive values. 48. Domain names in DNS records are case-independent. Exim always looks them up in lower case. Some resolvers return domain names in exactly the case they appear in the zone file, that is, they may contain uppercase letters. Not all resolvers do this - some return always lower case. Exim was treating a change of case by a resolver as a change of domain, similar to a widening of a domain abbreviation. This triggered its re-routing code and so it was trying to route what was effectively the same domain again. This normally caused routing to fail (because the router wouldn't handle the domain twice). Now Exim checks for this case specially, and just changes the casing of the domain that it ultimately uses when it transmits the message envelope. 49. Added Sieve (RFC 3028) support, courtesy of Michael Haardt's contributed module. 50. If a filter generated a file delivery with a non-absolute name (possible if no home directory exists for the router), the forbid_file option was not forbidding it. 51. Added '&' feature to dnslists, to provide bit mask matching in addition to the existing equality matching. 52. Exim was using ints instead of ino_t variables in some places where it was dealing with inode numbers. 53. If TMPDIR is defined in Local/Makefile (default in src/EDITME is TMPDIR="/tmp"), Exim checks for the presence of an environment variable called TMPDIR, and if it finds it is different, it changes its value. 54. The smtp_printf() function is now made available to local_scan() so additional output lines can be written before returning. There is also an smtp_fflush() function to enable the detection of a dropped connection. The variables smtp_input and smtp_batched_input are exported to local_scan(). 55. Changed the default runtime configuration: the message "Unknown user" has been removed from the ACL, and instead placed on the localuser router, using the cannot_route_message feature. This means that any verification failures that generate their own messages won't get overridden. Similarly, the "Unrouteable address" message that was in the ACL for unverifiable relay addresses has also been removed. 56. Added hosts_avoid_esmtp to the smtp transport. 57. The exicyclog script was not checking for the esoteric option CONFIGURE_FILE_USE_EUID in the Local/Makefile. It now does this, but it will work only if exicyclog is run under the appropriate euid. 58. Following a discussion on the list, the rules by which Exim recognises line endings on incoming messages have been changed. The -dropcr and drop_cr options are now no-ops, retained only for backwards compatibility. The following line terminators are recognized: LF CRLF CR. However, special processing applies to CR: (i) The sequence CR . CR does *not* terminate an incoming SMTP message, nor a local message in the state where . is a terminator. (ii) If a bare CR is encountered in a header line, an extra space is added after the line terminator so as not to end the header. The reasoning behind this is that bare CRs in header lines are most likely either to be mistakes, or people trying to play silly games. 59. The size of a message, as listed by "-bp" or in the Exim monitor window, was being incorrectly given as 18 bytes larger than it should have been. This is a VOB (very old bug). 60. This may never have affected anything current, but just in case it has: When the local host is found other than at the start of a list of hosts, the local host, those with the same MX, and any that follow, are discarded. When the list in question was part of a longer list of hosts, the following hosts (not currently being processed) were also being discarded. This no longer happens. I'm not sure if this situation could ever has previously arisen. 61. Added the "/MX" feature to lists of hosts in the manualroute and query program routers. 62. Whenever Exim generates a new message, it now adds an Auto-Submitted: header. This is something that is recommended in a new Internet Draft, and is something that is documented as being done by Sendmail. There are two possible values. For messages generated by the autoreply transport, Exim adds: Auto-Submitted: auto-replied whereas for all other generated messages (e.g. bounces) it adds Auto-Submitted: auto-generated 63. The "personal" condition in filters now includes a test for the Auto-Submitted: header. If it contains the string "auto-" the message it not considered personal. 64. Added rcpt_include_affixes as a generic transport option. 65. Added queue_only_override (default true). 66. Added the syslog_duplication option. 67. If what should have been the first header line of a message consisted of a space followed by a colon, Exim was mis-interpreting it as a header line. It isn't of course - it is syntactically invalid and should therefore be treated as the start of the message body. The misbehaviour could have caused a number of strange effects, including loss of data in subsequent header lines, and spool format errors. 68. Formerly, the AUTH parameter on a MAIL command was trusted only if the client host had authenticated. This control can now be exercised by an ACL for more flexibility. 69. By default, callouts do not happen when testing with -bh. There is now a variant, -bhc, which does actually run the callout code, including consulting and updating the callout cache. 70. Added support for saslauthd authentication, courtesy of Alexander Sabourenkov. 71. If statvfs() failed on the spool or log directories while checking their size for availability, Exim confusingly gave the error "space shortage". Furthermore, in debugging mode it crashed with a floating point exception. These checks are done if check_{spool,log}_{space,inodes} are set, and when an SMTP message arrives with SIZE= on the MAIL command. As this is a really serious problem, Exim now writes to the main and panic logs when this happens, with details of the failure. It then refuses to accept the incoming message, giving the message "spool directory problem" or "log directory problem" with a 421 code for SMTP messages. 72. When Exim is about to re-exec itself, it ensures that the file descriptors 0, 1, and 2 exist, because some OS complain for execs without them (see ChangeLog 4.05/30). If necessary, Exim opens /dev/null to use for these descriptors. However, the code omitted to check that the open succeeded, causing mysterious errors if for some reason the permissions on /dev/null got screwed. Now Exim writes a message to the main and panic logs, and bombs out if it can't open /dev/null. 73. Re-vamped the way daemon_smtp_port, local_interfaces, and -oX work and interact so that it is all more flexible. It is supposed to remain backwards compatible. Also added extra_local_interfaces. 74. Invalid data sent to a SPA (NTLM) server authenticator could cause the code to bomb out with an assertion failure - to the client this appears as a connection drop. This problem occurs in the part of the code that was taken from the Samba project. Fortunately, the assertion is in a very simple function, so I have fixed this by reproducing the function inline in the one place where it is called, and arranging for authentication to fail instead of killing the process with assert(). 75. The SPA client code was not working when the server requested OEM rather than Unicode encoding. 76. Added code to make require_files with a specific uid setting more usable in the case where statting the file as root fails - usually a non-root-mounted NFS file system. When this happens and the failure is EACCES, Exim now forks a subprocess and does the per-uid checking as the relevant uid. 77. Added process_log_path. 78. If log_file_path was not explicitly set, a setting of check_log_space or check_log_inodes was ignored. 79. If a space check for the spool or log partitions fails, the incident is now logged. Of course, in the latter case the data may get lost... 80. Added the %p formatting code to string_format() so that it can be used to print addresses in debug_print(). Adjusted all the address printing in the debugging in store.c to use %p rather than %d. 81. There was a concern that a line of code in smtp_in.c could overflow a buffer if a HELO/EHLO command was given followed by 500 or so spaces. As initially expressed, the concern was not well-founded, because trailing spaces are removed early. However, if the trailing spaces were followed by a NULL, they did not get removed, so the overflow was possible. Two fixes were applied: (a) I re-wrote the offending code in a cleaner fashion. (b) If an incoming SMTP command contains a NULL character, it is rejected as invalid. 82. When Exim changes uid/gid to the Exim user at daemon start time, it now runs initgroups(), so that if the Exim user is in any additional groups, they will be used during message reception. Exim version 4.20 ----------------- The change log for 4.20 and earlier releases has been archived. ****