From e0f3765aeecd3116bb4171bd0c5f9b609e7c0588 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Philip Hazel Date: Fri, 8 Oct 2004 10:50:49 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Start --- configs/ABOUT | 10 + configs/config.samples/C002 | 68 ++++ configs/config.samples/C006 | 39 +++ configs/config.samples/C022 | 28 ++ configs/config.samples/C022.tar | Bin 0 -> 20480 bytes configs/config.samples/C037 | 116 +++++++ configs/config.samples/C042 | 83 +++++ configs/config.samples/C043 | 551 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ configs/config.samples/C044 | 148 +++++++++ configs/config.samples/C045 | 48 +++ configs/config.samples/C046 | 35 ++ configs/config.samples/C047 | 89 ++++++ configs/config.samples/C049 | 44 +++ configs/config.samples/C050 | 124 +++++++ configs/config.samples/C051 | 324 +++++++++++++++++++ configs/config.samples/F001 | 35 ++ configs/config.samples/F002 | 98 ++++++ configs/config.samples/F003 | 97 ++++++ configs/config.samples/F004 | 71 ++++ configs/config.samples/L001 | 185 +++++++++++ configs/config.samples/S001 | 70 ++++ configs/config.samples/S002 | 150 +++++++++ 22 files changed, 2413 insertions(+) create mode 100644 configs/ABOUT create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C002 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C006 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C022 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C022.tar create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C037 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C042 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C043 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C044 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C045 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C046 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C047 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C049 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C050 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/C051 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/F001 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/F002 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/F003 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/F004 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/L001 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/S001 create mode 100644 configs/config.samples/S002 diff --git a/configs/ABOUT b/configs/ABOUT new file mode 100644 index 000000000..29b6ff1ec --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/ABOUT @@ -0,0 +1,10 @@ +$Cambridge: exim/configs/ABOUT,v 1.1 2004/10/08 10:50:49 ph10 Exp $ + +CVS directory exim/exim-conf +---------------------------- + +This directory contains sample configurations and similar files that have been +submitted by Exim users. The files are not locally modified, and so do not have +CVS version Ids. + +End diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C002 b/configs/config.samples/C002 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..af7b7381a --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C002 @@ -0,0 +1,68 @@ +Date: Wed, 14 Jan 1998 15:07:22 +0200 +From: Vladimir Litovka + +[Syntax converted for Exim 4 by PH, 06-Dec-2001. Unchecked.] + +Although exim not intended for use in UUCP environment (it doesn't know +anything about bang!path addresses), I'm successfully using it for delivering +mail to UUCP clients. For this purposes I'm using two rewrite rules: + +#--------------------- REWRITE CONFIGURATION ------------------------# + +# system!system.domain.net!user +\N^([^!]+)!((\w+)(\.\w+)+)!(.*)@your\.domain\N \ + "${if eq {$1}{$3}{$5@$2}{$2!$5@$1}}" Tbcrtq + +# system*!user +\N^([^!]+)!(.*)@your\.domain\N $2@$1 Tbcrtq + +#--------------------------------------------------------------------# + +The first rule check + if destination address in form: + uuname!system.some.domain!user + and + uuname == system + it rewrites address to user@system.some.domain + else it rewrites it to system.some.domain!user@uuname + and QUIT. + +The second rule check + if destination address in form: + uuname1!uuname2!FQDN!...!uunameN!user + it rewrites it to + uuname2!FQDN!...!uunameN!user@uuname1 + and QUIT. + +For successfully delivering mail to uucp domain you must create such +transport: + +#-------------------------------------------------------------------# +uux: + driver = pipe; + command = /usr/bin/uux - -r $host!rmail ($local_part@$domain) + path = /usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin + return_fail_output + user = uucp +#-------------------------------------------------------------------# + +and such router: + +#-------------------------------------------------------------------# +force_uucp: + driver = manualroute + route_data = partial-lsearch;/etc/exim/maps/force.uucp +#-------------------------------------------------------------------# + +and use something similar to this force.uucp: + +# Domain Relay Options +# ------ ----- ------- +system1 system1 uux +system1.domain system1 uux +# +system2 system2 uux +system2.domain system2 uux + +(!) Note, that you need unqualified names (system1, system2) because +second rewrite rule don't do qualification (it known nothing about this). diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C006 b/configs/config.samples/C006 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..eebc2bc40 --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C006 @@ -0,0 +1,39 @@ +From: Kind@edb.uib.no +Date: Sun, 2 Aug 1998 15:24:05 +0200 + +[Syntax converted for Exim 4 by PH, 06-Dec-2001. Unchecked.] + +This is how I have configured a PP-inspired vacationnote, there is (was?) +such a feature in PP. The user makes a file "tripnote" in his/her +homedirectory, the message is passed to the sender once with a short +leading text. + +############ +# TRANSPORT +vacation_reply: + driver = autoreply + file = $home/tripnote + file_expand + log = $home/tripnote.log + once = $home/tripnote.db + from = vacation@yourdomain.org + to = $sender_address + subject = "Re: $h_subject" + text = "\ + Dear $h_from:\n\n\ + This is an automatic reply. Feel free to send additional\n\ + mail, as only this one notice will be generated. The following\n\ + is a prerecorded message, sent for $local_part@yourdomain.org:\n\ + ====================================================\n\n\ + " + +# ROUTER +user_vacation: + driver = accept + check_local_user + require_files = $local_part:$home/tripnote + no_verify + senders = !^.*-request@.* : !^owner-.*@.* : !^postmaster@.* : \ + ! ^listmaster@.* : !^mailer-daemon@.* + transport = vacation_reply + unseen diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C022 b/configs/config.samples/C022 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..39708b75f --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C022 @@ -0,0 +1,28 @@ +Date: Tue, 14 Sep 1999 00:58:56 +0200 +Updated: Fri, 11 Jan 2002 05:13:57 +0200 +From: Vadim Vygonets + +This is the Exim configuration file of a machine which delivers mail to several +local domains, where the mail is delivered locally, several hairy domains, +handled as described below, and a half-virtual domain, which is first processed +by its special alias file, then processed as other local domains (including the +processing by the global alias file). + +This contribution consists of a number of files that are in the tar archive +C022.tar, which unpacks into a directory called "virtual". See the README file +therein for an explanation of the configuration. + +This is the updated virtual domain handling for Exim 4. The +main changes are: + +1. Now there's the alias file admin.raw for privileged aliases + (such as Postmaster). It is processed earlier than + domain-specific files. The domain is not preserved on + redirection. + +2. .rewrite.raw is gone, and .aliases.raw is + renamed to .raw. The functionality was put into + entries with keys ending with a '+', and the data are allowed + to have no domain (which made the rewrite rule slightly more + complicated). + diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C022.tar b/configs/config.samples/C022.tar new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..154d0980e732b59d06a9f514a2d5bd30674f4a08 GIT binary patch literal 20480 zcmeHPZBygOwVtomujmXUyo@c|VBoHkNdW`1p)$j40kbzBQboyD+g6YzuOwr9DgOI? zp3^N^HZYJK$W8W|q6S;)KHYuJ>GSgR>A4P)Z0v>gH?R1kT8+J(9rZ@>r?K$YK2&?H z=3aBBvD;`U)oko+?Y>bvuQ;cI^f=ADM5#AP9B0MD2R=OY{(&z436HL={LhXLjy@m1 z&WxLl#%`;%AopAkl-g--?f%K0H2kYXq64LI=%t1mP+Drrjt}n20?eA243WcT7hDyvRGMNbnF;a<)zBk zX*UTv+E*PN#uJPNx&@hZ5RXH?QloLEydG$CG{=w9FpjUrBimAS@VcXWv7Jpm4Lnd` z-1S0b$Hctr*IrWBm~P!ZtA|0FxrsMXL8?6Edzshqu(T}kFpQT4QD2rAc|)z@p2OwZ zrC73D9G^-z+e{vq5mYyhdO=_Hf>5VbCmn+|UfOmlmWqpJ?fi>V*>oR%?nN;MNla_| zg{>ca?tH}3JqT`orfF4;lHeK>>4W877+|5PTDMbDKgC`;^ir^S!FG$PblmF&H=2W8aOFX-rxP7@p@=%0Xiy_VvPn$E z&IVpaY8YGQU@4h76vMMaPFD4GrcyK>jlf`koY;-vB-#(46Il>rg4p6R$!ri~&y*Kt z*D*&DLUVE<`oY8(@YG@|?&EzQDQ4)6{aEy&jC>!6C6*;mEpvlI_=*a6pF=VZx zg4oT8mw}PkmHAYwO1pjN(ONH#*QyTx)H+_WCes&s)=n5MGiH!|FMO6xYMl$gOfVIv zGnL`U%Bj$-t!;3)Tm+dKM~UXNvB`WNT8(XnS}z`heWh)c=3k7e zrge}ctK(#9OfFV5Ndhn}8DkSp;^Zn-aTHEP28HB?Ue+B@Tx+$>wJJvHdQeNTTv!?9 zn&=@}Z-$Z1hMPgACQ#Ub(;Q-bSOCexXpKfO6_6AQ6~U4Yd{N~GhJJ^J&<>|;M`0l_ z5eO?5CC4Y~&vgKuy~eijAXBJqq_vovRE4^iIhYS5uWxkH4QQ8*u}!q+!x}oyOo!~` zM{$}4&N3KwW<{CRQ&^?jxkByObvC;88Je##ZIa)M%U7DevTXW!9Kw)1`*U8o{&M= zC`;>+p5*>E(VcM+`fx#zc!Y3*zy|J!Qr zE%X1^5XC*3i}KHNoqG+x6eRR#SaFw$mhd^%I3TbfNkbuAcBd>PZ(iKF1kPl_@zzNm`gqk zZ>+srL&`e}JtUffR5%MnBtb%IC($%AbDI)wx;EdIj6_lo=HW4O4+QUaciEY@9jEE4 zV;^bgeRPbDSCU=!WGVtFAdfLP)s*>xH%4-Ce-gPj0Gx#w zUm&t#XdCAvTN4zeT`_<64N^eV5m1*?Vfy6b;Bh*DX|O<=Yh zjUxMl#4z6Et<0Ws{0O-hlCu)h&{IspWF7*r`Ov!=%1M|PE7Uh#J<31_`jkU=`QUb) zR9Vj5sG-1P1$iPRHWScl4H>Ak2Td*mc)NVJzihke zY#f=?bREE)q|#(Bpy3)5V4I$9aNFI}S`gq_#g&{})EdoNv$;$>pX)pp{eKQMJh%UI z+CAm}o4Y%U{(o<4ZyEnThqvF`W(7wBuqybShnk!f*^;sot73ErZ&g)b3>)!xS|aRG z)6eWs2i=au5vaG~xpn$h^^$mKv3NR2o_}F95CA+2)Q>*=BR0LjM(A%GiACbYiVg`} z7N%63Y#T^i>{>e{z84k{o%yunkzpE+zI;A7IlcUN^6B^-)=j-vJh}wA0ML8{+$>i8 zAoS?hYaQ)fr-~Z z>V7P@36i&Bu?4u(${l%qTDGIZ%MYK94^AxsIFLlfGzi?3F$L|voe>Vbi2G@EaCCHe z{`KR>lfQAfhn32E<>FMpS;^^D-s7<$jd!cJ=Vu?z+vjz%ZMDw9>-{@tWkv>#rZ|Jh z89>iK+s_b;sQ4v7Qi1wZ2XJ6Ab)3%!e?7+fIC6cQCUx;8I5zE=bJV#`q*|-h;41~~ zRR{$L?+cJ=4p%yQ8jIJ1QjX#v%3OAE9M>%J_`F?Ny*)a-6BM`*Fc&4OD+?T}#0s%a zu25Q_Ne*#Q~Jz*n|O z8N}`!ryFW7Lhw{ehN_nI@)!6!qlRWi=XxwjKQ0*{kgSuqypfVPlMh|$2%i>CP8^^!;|f2z<7 zw&{C+VBLO-)67(mRLsxH3y{5MH6<`$P?P9i#yB8HiI6#wmlIMH4rFmR4y)?y;|KL$ zTU!oJgzc=_CabN@p6tt(Nb>|2V;y>F(6u=U5*$+_1D6JqjO6k2*YgYHK<1}9?pN^Yr6v!c(|@>C-!u&iy*T-@?jRn`5K~d z;s)L}LJWZ;(Ridy5d=rczbsDf3nrG7M3yhs@j6K1k>t;<x-ZosNxL#@;~>oOjn2+JMv)mk}Q4l<2LfQ{ASVrmk_`gTlQ1_zqysy|L*MW@+_d)YAyZ$i?RQk zgkZFbsx#~5CF`AKAYKPxT>*4TJyNL_4pk_C-sb9hR&0VQ6>aAz>t%~_4Ucimrf?0e zSxQ;h!~(+B(^laf32U0VW7PB1ScEi3C+}G+-p-S79qCLs+Du~pb)IcWshpG-1AG8B zL3f-2r7-n5IRI>)$0&4W5sZZ?n5tumowzrs0efIcB!iCf+6qp#(Kc^5w~X4KpMJhD zbJ8i6#dVwm!2mmOw7}$Wg757$F}-hRB+;aKbP{uoSv>TX%~7=I8_QAL_RT znh-E~Z%57B&00yp8nF=9Nj<^Z{mO&E)xo6R{>s?b1M@sD4J(ChJ^L42zKgt;@`&YZ%cKkP+OE6ry&Pp>yD(+>}&oohYl?{vy?U z>nwTQ5WZ1&=Tvf0kFyvg3=*bOa7lP%B!%;v%Ho@4H1SQN`)~9z_y6`r#H-Bg3IC6p zuSNWSYiqBu#Q$GK7z;#KSXB&zLHi@vHtlK-njf8<0pPrM;6~ecbZE_iL7WLT8{oMk zmJ=>@I)AgqmO#rfw^)38+ad)b@452CI)2rr?RKW8P3OV@j$rcII7m`DZ_lnAc!zN!YF6`a>gSL9N zFhxuP0od7>uNTK>=MsMbA~8p{oWpR4Py$EwU}kZ->E0xO`rA_+vx(u}d98}ay!UVN z$SF5YY1eokO7R#r3Cz_U5HUwDC~+4}z>$WziBv)WHdq0z>>_M?76#|b60D?+^IxAw zI|*c)2Sa>j?vCN%H^g#u$d)MPMzhshbBpV?R1BN&uroP1&;Nd7kP+Uj<%+Z_sazqX)kZ3QDtkRV&iAU4;SN&uCi zDK^)gO3f`j2BU^n0ce7w*Fikyn0bU}Vt!--3>>-9^SIGOvPK>AxRy*Ys{;ibFk%7M zUO1M56q$(JCBPw6*VGIZA*Epe7Db(x#V}!$wGnpE4W9+Om};3L8?}gqGcVaT$+HISXEX!`RelZJsnX|99HGXz(wq9t@6h? z>$O5;+uSBIx+vomhVenO$jf;5Ortf6^6oLycv+YnlcPMQWG`hZ?`hgIR1h)P!P)7_ z>5px77WhGT9AZPm<=bmZG%Av|Vk7r)@L&K1=5Z&H>UrG^RT#fQT{kZE$~CU`s+g3!k{8c! zcFlEKy~QcD{sn!Frse(aZtrea%_DqRe0g_Aul|ZoUm>Bt9P&tiA$I;Pe6@jFJ-^WP z8f$v?{hwxQdv^y|aB~Ya;miO3<27WlNOMvCvkQHTEr0!YmEY9?-`3NC<1mm5=<@42>(=v>=8p&?9aH{Oi`3iIpsn6Il~S2k%KmdD zUTQVKFLL7u8Iu$a9r9)<%b6B3$Jt%mw$t_RBMmGnV%_0y(enNiLRvOma$w1UB?p!q KSaRTnIq<)3J2!m* literal 0 HcmV?d00001 diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C037 b/configs/config.samples/C037 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a0c7bf744 --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C037 @@ -0,0 +1,116 @@ +Date: Wed, 22 Nov 2000 17:51:42 -0500 (EST) +From: Dave C. + +[Syntax converted for Exim 4 by PH, 06-Dec-2001. Unchecked.] + +Ok.. Ive come up with something which might be worth including in the +cookbook. Credit where it is due, the idea for this came from Nigel's +C014. + +I have a setup to support ETRN for a few small (ok, two) domains. +Currently it just leaves all the mail in the exim spool, and uses the +default exim etrn response to flush it out. + +I don't like that - I agree with the opinion expressed on the list that +mail should be delivered somewhere else, and then shoved down an SMTP +session by some other program. Ive searched far and wide for something +suitable to do that shoving, and finally hit upon the only program I +trust to do that, handling errors and rejections correctly - exim +itself. + +Nigel's solution for 'situation where a site I MX for has a known +outage', combined with a bit of bash scriptery, seems to form a neat +solution. (An intermittently connected host sort of falls under the +'known outage' category ;) + +Without any further fluff, here are the details. Additional comments +appear below.. + +Either the real (intermittently connected) destination host needs to be +listed as the lowest MX (with the exim server as a less preferred) , or +the exim server needs to be the lowest MX, but have a router before the +lookuphost router which uses route_list or something appropriate to +normally deliver mail to the dialup host. The former is probably better +for a host which is usually connected and is only occasionally +disconnected (since other hosts would be able to delivery directly most +of the time, skipping an extra relay), while the latter would probably +work better for the converse ;) This paragraph actually applies anytime +you are using ETRN.. + +In either case, the routers below must precede whatever router handles +the normal direct-to-dialup-destination.. + +-- + +smtp_etrn_command = /etc/exim/etrn_script $domain + +[- Content of /etc/exim/etrn_script: -] +#!/bin/sh + +# Where exim lives +EXIM=/usr/sbin/exim + +# Something appropriate to generate a temporary unique string +UNIQ=`head -c100 /dev/urandom | md5sum | cut -f 1 -d" "` + +arg=$1 +domain=`echo $arg | sed 's/^\#//g'` + +if ( test -f /var/spool/etrn/${domain} ); then + exim_lock -q /var/spool/etrn/${domain} "mv /var/spool/etrn/${domain} /tmp/etrn-bsmtp-${UNIQ}" + ( cat /tmp/etrn-bsmtp-${UNIQ} + echo "QUIT" ) | $EXIM -bS -oMr etrn_requeue + rm -f /tmp/etrn-bsmtp-${UNIQ} +fi + +$EXIM -R $domain + +[- end of etrn_script -] + +[- exim transport -] + +bsmtp_for_etrn: + driver=appendfile + file=/var/spool/etrn/$domain + user=exim + batch_max = 1000 + use_bsmtp + +[- routers -] +[- You probably would want to put the domains in a file or a dbm and +[- adjused the 'domains' setting appropriately for both of these.. + +# If any message has already been delivered to the bsmtp file, +# this will detect the existence of the file and all messages will +# go there, regardless of age. +etrn_already: + driver = accept + transport = bsmtp_for_etrn + require_files = /var/spool/etrn/$domain + domains = etrntest.somedomain.com + +# If a message has been on the queue for over the specified amount of +# time, this will catch it and drop it into the bsmtp file +etrn_delay: + driver = accept + transport = bsmtp_for_etrn + condition = ${if >{$message_age}{1800} {yes}{no}} + domains = etrntest.somedomain.com + +[- -] + +Basically, this setup lets exim try to deliver to the real host for up +to whatever time is specified in the \%etrn_delay%\ router. (1800 seconds = +30 minutes), and then delivers all waiting messages, and any further +messages, directly to a BSMTP file. This setup uses one big BSMTP +file per domain, it probably wouldnt be too complex to have it use separate +files. + +When the \^etrn_script^\ runs, it locks and renames the BSMTP file, and +reinjects the messages to Exim, which (presumably) will now be able to +deliver them. If it can't, then once they are too old they will again +be sent off to the BSMTP file.. (If for som reason this occurs over and +over without Exim being able to deliver them, eventually the messages +will be returned with \*too many Received headers*\; this is a good +thing, since their age will never get high enough for them to be +returned by any retry rules). diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C042 b/configs/config.samples/C042 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a927cd8d2 --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C042 @@ -0,0 +1,83 @@ +From: Kirill Miazine +Date: Tue, 2 Apr 2002 19:41:24 +0200 + +Hello, + +Since Exim 4 configuration needed to get Mailman work differs a little +bit from Exim 3 and since I still haven't seen a "recipe" for Mailman +with Exim 4, I'm providing my configuration (based heavily on +http://www.exim.org/howto/mailman.html). + +Following goes into main config settings: + +domainlist lists_domains = lists.krot.org +MAILMAN_HOME=/local/lists +MAILMAN_WRAP=MAILMAN_HOME/mail/wrapper +MAILMAN_UID=mailman +MAILMAN_GID=exim + + +Following routers are defined: + +list_owner: + driver = redirect + domains = +lists_domains + require_files = MAILMAN_HOME/lists/$local_part/config.db + local_part_suffix = -owner + data = ${lc:$local_part}-admin@$domain + +owner_list: + driver = redirect + domains = +lists_domains + require_files = MAILMAN_HOME/lists/$local_part/config.db + local_part_prefix = owner- + data = ${lc:$local_part}-admin@$domain + +list_admin: + driver = accept + domains = +lists_domains + require_files = MAILMAN_HOME/lists/$local_part/config.db + local_part_suffix = -admin + transport = list_admin + +list_request: + driver = accept + domains = +lists_domains + require_files = MAILMAN_HOME/lists/$local_part/config.db + local_part_suffix = -request + transport = list_request + +list: + driver = accept + domains = +lists_domains + require_files = MAILMAN_HOME/lists/$local_part/config.db + transport = list + + +And these transports are needed: + +list_admin: + driver = pipe + command = MAILMAN_WRAP mailowner ${lc:$local_part} + current_directory = MAILMAN_HOME + home_directory = MAILMAN_HOME + user = MAILMAN_UID + group = MAILMAN_GID + +list_request: + driver = pipe + command = MAILMAN_WRAP mailcmd ${lc:$local_part} + current_directory = MAILMAN_HOME + home_directory = MAILMAN_HOME + user = MAILMAN_UID + group = MAILMAN_GID + +list: + driver = pipe + command = MAILMAN_WRAP post ${lc:$local_part} + current_directory = MAILMAN_HOME + home_directory = MAILMAN_HOME + user = MAILMAN_UID + group = MAILMAN_GID + +Mailman was configured --with-mail-gid=exim. diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C043 b/configs/config.samples/C043 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2de6a61b8 --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C043 @@ -0,0 +1,551 @@ +# Below is an Exim 4 config file which is designed for an Exim server that +# is put in front of an Exchange 5.5 system but which verifies the valid +# addresses that are stored in Exchange via LDAP lookups against the Exchange +# server. The advantage being that I can do much more aggressive spam +# fighting, make my own set of policy decisions etc, using the flexibility of +# Exim while still supporting the Exchange system for final delivery (not my +# ideal situation but the company relies on it). In any case, I thought this +# was sufficiently useful and answers some semi-regular questions on the list, +# that it might be included in either the FAQ or the sample configs. + +# From: Tabor J. Wells +# Date: Wed, 21 Aug 2002 11:16:36 -0400 + + + + +###################################################################### +# Runtime configuration file for Exim # +###################################################################### + + +# This is a default configuration file which will operate correctly in +# uncomplicated installations. Please see the manual for a complete list +# of all the runtime configuration options that can be included in a +# configuration file. There are many more than are mentioned here. The +# manual is in the file doc/spec.txt in the Exim distribution as a plain +# ASCII file. Other formats (PostScript, Texinfo, HTML, PDF) are available +# from the Exim ftp sites. The manual is also online at the Exim web sites. + + +# This file is divided into several parts, all but the first of which are +# headed by a line starting with the word "begin". Only those parts that +# are required need to be present. Blank lines, and lines starting with # +# are ignored. + + +########### IMPORTANT ########## IMPORTANT ########### IMPORTANT ########### +# # +# Whenever you change Exim's configuration file, you *must* remember to # +# HUP the Exim daemon, because it will not pick up the new configuration # +# until you do. However, any other Exim processes that are started, for # +# example, a process started by an MUA in order to send a message, will # +# see the new configuration as soon as it is in place. # +# # +# You do not need to HUP the daemon for changes in auxiliary files that # +# are referenced from this file. They are read every time they are used. # +# # +# It is usually a good idea to test a new configuration for syntactic # +# correctness before installing it (for example, by running the command # +# "exim -C /config/file.new -bV"). # +# # +########### IMPORTANT ########## IMPORTANT ########### IMPORTANT ########### + + + +###################################################################### +# MAIN CONFIGURATION SETTINGS # +###################################################################### + +# Specify your host's canonical name here. This should normally be the fully +# qualified "official" name of your host. If this option is not set, the +# uname() function is called to obtain the name. In many cases this does +# the right thing and you need not set anything explicitly. + +# primary_hostname = + + +# The next three settings create two lists of domains and one list of hosts. +# These lists are referred to later in this configuration using the syntax +# +local_domains, +relay_to_domains, and +relay_from_hosts, respectively. They +# are all colon-separated lists: + +domainlist local_domains = @ : dbm;/etc/exim/db/localdomains.db +domainlist relay_to_domains = +hostlist relay_from_hosts = 127.0.0.1 : 192.168.1.0/24 + +# Most straightforward access control requirements can be obtained by +# appropriate settings of the above options. In more complicated situations, you +# may need to modify the Access Control List (ACL) which appears later in this +# file. + +# The first setting specifies your local domains, for example: +# +# domainlist local_domains = my.first.domain : my.second.domain +# +# You can use "@" to mean "the name of the local host", as in the default +# setting above. This is the name that is specified by primary_hostname, +# as specified above (or defaulted). If you do not want to do any local +# deliveries, remove the "@" from the setting above. If you want to accept mail +# addressed to your host's literal IP address, for example, mail addressed to +# "user@[192.168.23.44]", you can add "@[]" as an item in the local domains +# list. You also need to uncomment "allow_domain_literals" below. This is not +# recommended for today's Internet. + +# The second setting specifies domains for which your host is an incoming relay. +# If you are not doing any relaying, you should leave the list empty. However, +# if your host is an MX backup or gateway of some kind for some domains, you +# must set relay_to_domains to match those domains. For example: +# +# domainlist relay_to_domains = *.myco.com : my.friend.org +# +# This will allow any host to relay through your host to those domains. +# See the section of the manual entitled "Control of relaying" for more +# information. + +# The third setting specifies hosts that can use your host as an outgoing relay +# to any other host on the Internet. Such a setting commonly refers to a +# complete local network as well as the localhost. For example: +# +# hostlist relay_from_hosts = 127.0.0.1 : 192.168.0.0/16 +# +# The "/16" is a bit mask (CIDR notation), not a number of hosts. Note that you +# have to include 127.0.0.1 if you want to allow processes on your host to send +# SMTP mail by using the loopback address. A number of MUAs use this method of +# sending mail. + + +# All three of these lists may contain many different kinds of item, including +# wildcarded names, regular expressions, and file lookups. See the reference +# manual for details. The lists above are used in the access control list for +# incoming messages. The name of this ACL is defined here: + +acl_smtp_rcpt = acl_check_rcpt + +# You should not change that setting until you understand how ACLs work. + + +# Specify the domain you want to be added to all unqualified addresses +# here. An unqualified address is one that does not contain an "@" character +# followed by a domain. For example, "caesar@rome.example" is a fully qualified +# address, but the string "caesar" (i.e. just a login name) is an unqualified +# email address. Unqualified addresses are accepted only from local callers by +# default. See the recipient_unqualified_hosts option if you want to permit +# unqualified addresses from remote sources. If this option is not set, the +# primary_hostname value is used for qualification. + +# qualify_domain = + + +# If you want unqualified recipient addresses to be qualified with a different +# domain to unqualified sender addresses, specify the recipient domain here. +# If this option is not set, the qualify_domain value is used. + +# qualify_recipient = + + +# The following line must be uncommented if you want Exim to recognize +# addresses of the form "user@[10.11.12.13]" that is, with a "domain literal" +# (an IP address) instead of a named domain. The RFCs still require this form, +# but it makes little sense to permit mail to be sent to specific hosts by +# their IP address in the modern Internet. This ancient format has been used +# by those seeking to abuse hosts by using them for unwanted relaying. If you +# really do want to support domain literals, uncomment the following line, and +# see also the "domain_literal" router below. + +# allow_domain_literals + + +# No deliveries will ever be run under the uids of these users (a colon- +# separated list). An attempt to do so causes a panic error to be logged, and +# the delivery to be deferred. This is a paranoic safety catch. Note that the +# default setting means you cannot deliver mail addressed to root as if it +# were a normal user. This isn't usually a problem, as most sites have an alias +# for root that redirects such mail to a human administrator. + +never_users = root + + +# The setting below causes Exim to do a reverse DNS lookup on all incoming +# IP calls, in order to get the true host name. If you feel this is too +# expensive, you can specify the networks for which a lookup is done, or +# remove the setting entirely. + +host_lookup = * + + +# The settings below, which are actually the same as the defaults in the +# code, cause Exim to make RFC 1413 (ident) callbacks for all incoming SMTP +# calls. You can limit the hosts to which these calls are made, and/or change +# the timeout that is used. If you set the timeout to zero, all RFC 1413 calls +# are disabled. RFC 1413 calls are cheap and can provide useful information +# for tracing problem messages, but some hosts and firewalls have problems +# with them. This can result in a timeout instead of an immediate refused +# connection, leading to delays on starting up an SMTP session. + +rfc1413_hosts = * +rfc1413_query_timeout = 30s + + +# By default, Exim expects all envelope addresses to be fully qualified, that +# is, they must contain both a local part and a domain. If you want to accept +# unqualified addresses (just a local part) from certain hosts, you can specify +# these hosts by setting one or both of +# +# sender_unqualified_hosts = +# recipient_unqualified_hosts = +# +# to control sender and recipient addresses, respectively. When this is done, +# unqualified addresses are qualified using the settings of qualify_domain +# and/or qualify_recipient (see above). + + +# If you want Exim to support the "percent hack" for certain domains, +# uncomment the following line and provide a list of domains. The "percent +# hack" is the feature by which mail addressed to x%y@z (where z is one of +# the domains listed) is locally rerouted to x@y and sent on. If z is not one +# of the "percent hack" domains, x%y is treated as an ordinary local part. This +# hack is rarely needed nowadays; you should not enable it unless you are sure +# that you really need it. +# +# percent_hack_domains = +# +# As well as setting this option you will also need to remove the test +# for local parts containing % in the ACL definition below. + + +# When Exim can neither deliver a message nor return it to sender, it "freezes" +# the delivery error message (aka "bounce message"). There are also other +# circumstances in which messages get frozen. They will stay on the queue for +# ever unless one of the following options is set. + +# This option unfreezes frozen bounce messages after two days, tries +# once more to deliver them, and ignores any delivery failures. + +ignore_bounce_errors_after = 2d + +# This option cancels (removes) frozen messages that are older than a week. + +timeout_frozen_after = 7d + +# Defined LDAP default servers +ldap_default_servers = 192.168.1.101 + + + +###################################################################### +# ACL CONFIGURATION # +# Specifies access control lists for incoming SMTP mail # +###################################################################### + +begin acl + +# This access control list is used for every RCPT command in an incoming +# SMTP message. The tests are run in order until the address is either +# accepted or denied. + +acl_check_rcpt: + + # Accept if the source is local SMTP (i.e. not over TCP/IP). We do this by + # testing for an empty sending host field. + + accept hosts = : + + # Deny if the local part contains @ or % or / or | or !. These are rarely + # found in genuine local parts, but are often tried by people looking to + # circumvent relaying restrictions. + + # Also deny if the local part starts with a dot. Empty components aren't + # strictly legal in RFC 2822, but Exim allows them because this is common. + # However, actually starting with a dot may cause trouble if the local part + # is used as a file name (e.g. for a mailing list). + + deny local_parts = ^.*[@%!/|] : ^\\. + + # Accept mail to postmaster in any local domain, regardless of the source, + # and without verifying the sender. + + accept local_parts = postmaster + domains = +local_domains + + # Deny unless the sender address can be verified. + + require verify = sender + + ############################################################################# + # There are no checks on DNS "black" lists because the domains that contain + # these lists are changing all the time. However, here are two examples of + # how you could get Exim to perform a DNS black list lookup at this point. + # The first one denies, while the second just warns. + # + # deny message = rejected because $sender_host_address is in a black list at $dnslist_domain\n$dnslist_text + # dnslists = black.list.example + # + # warn message = X-Warning: $sender_host_address is in a black list at $dnslist_domain + # log_message = found in $dnslist_domain + # dnslists = black.list.example + ############################################################################# + + # Accept if the address is in a local domain, but only if the recipient can + # be verified. Otherwise deny. The "endpass" line is the border between + # passing on to the next ACL statement (if tests above it fail) or denying + # access (if tests below it fail). + + accept domains = +local_domains + endpass + message = unknown user + verify = recipient + + # Accept if the address is in a domain for which we are relaying, but again, + # only if the recipient can be verified. + + accept domains = +relay_to_domains + endpass + message = unrouteable address + verify = recipient + + # If control reaches this point, the domain is neither in +local_domains + # nor in +relay_to_domains. + + # Accept if the message comes from one of the hosts for which we are an + # outgoing relay. Recipient verification is omitted here, because in many + # cases the clients are dumb MUAs that don't cope well with SMTP error + # responses. If you are actually relaying out from MTAs, you should probably + # add recipient verification here. + + accept hosts = +relay_from_hosts + + # Accept if the message arrived over an authenticated connection, from + # any host. Again, these messages are usually from MUAs, so recipient + # verification is omitted. + + accept authenticated = * + + # Reaching the end of the ACL causes a "deny", but we might as well give + # an explicit message. + + deny message = relay not permitted + + + +###################################################################### +# ROUTERS CONFIGURATION # +# Specifies how addresses are handled # +###################################################################### +# THE ORDER IN WHICH THE ROUTERS ARE DEFINED IS IMPORTANT! # +# An address is passed to each router in turn until it is accepted. # +###################################################################### + +begin routers + +# This router routes to remote hosts over SMTP by explicit IP address, +# when an email address is given in "domain literal" form, for example, +# . The RFCs require this facility. However, it is +# little-known these days, and has been exploited by evil people seeking +# to abuse SMTP relays. Consequently it is commented out in the default +# configuration. If you uncomment this router, you also need to uncomment +# allow_domain_literals above, so that Exim can recognize the syntax of +# domain literal addresses. + +# domain_literal: +# driver = ipliteral +# domains = ! +local_domains +# transport = remote_smtp + + +# This router routes addresses that are not in local domains by doing a DNS +# lookup on the domain name. Any domain that resolves to 0.0.0.0 or to a +# loopback interface address (127.0.0.0/8) is treated as if it had no DNS +# entry. Note that 0.0.0.0 is the same as 0.0.0.0/32, which is commonly treated +# as the local host inside the network stack. It is not 0.0.0.0/0, the default +# route. If the DNS lookup fails, no further routers are tried because of +# the no_more setting, and consequently the address is unrouteable. + +dnslookup: + driver = dnslookup + domains = ! +local_domains + transport = remote_smtp + ignore_target_hosts = 0.0.0.0 : 127.0.0.0/8 : 10.0.0.0/8 : 172.16.0.0/12 + no_more + + +# The remaining routers handle addresses in the local domain(s). + + +# This router handles aliasing using a traditional /etc/aliases file. +# +##### NB You must ensure that /etc/aliases exists. It used to be the case +##### NB that every Unix had that file, because it was the Sendmail default. +##### NB These days, there are systems that don't have it. Your aliases +##### NB file should at least contain an alias for "postmaster". +# +# If any of your aliases expand to pipes or files, you will need to set +# up a user and a group for these deliveries to run under. You can do +# this by uncommenting the "user" option below (changing the user name +# as appropriate) and adding a "group" option if necessary. Alternatively, you +# can specify "user" on the transports that are used. Note that the transports +# listed below are the same as are used for .forward files; you might want +# to set up different ones for pipe and file deliveries from aliases. + +system_aliases: + driver = redirect + allow_fail + allow_defer + data = ${lookup{$local_part}lsearch{/etc/exim/txt/aliases.txt}} +# user = exim + file_transport = address_file + pipe_transport = address_pipe + +# This router matches local user mailboxes. +# Domains set to $primary_hostname so that I can route stuff locally as need +# be but prevent user@mylocaldomain.com from delivering locally when 'user' +# also matches the Exchange lookup below. + +localuser: + driver = accept + check_local_user + domains = $primary_hostname + transport = local_delivery + no_more + +# Routers for lookups in LDAP on Exchange if they exist there then punt + +# First if it exists as a otherMailbox=smtp$user@example.com (Exchange's +# format for aliases then substitute the canonical email address for this user +# as defined by mail= + +exchangeothermailboxlookup: + driver = redirect + data = ${lookup ldap {ldap:///?mail?sub?(otherMailbox=smtp\$${quote_ldap:$local_part}@${quote_ldap:$domain})}} + domains = dbm;/etc/exim/db/localdomains.db + verify_recipient + +# This lookup verifies the mail=user@example.com format and if it exists +# Pass to the the manualroute router which is used to punt to the internal +# Exchange server as defined by domain. + +exchangemaillookup: + driver = redirect + data = ${lookup ldap {ldap:///?mail?sub?(mail=${quote_ldap:$local_part}@${quote_ldap:$domain})}} + domains = dbm;/etc/exim/db/localdomains.db + verify_recipient + self = pass + pass_router = exchangeroute + no_more + +# localdomains.db contain entries that look like: +# example.com: 192.168.1.101 +# example.net: 192.168.1.102 +# etc. + +exchangeroute: + driver = manualroute + transport = remote_smtp + route_data = ${lookup{$domain}dbm{/etc/exim/db/localdomains.db}} + +###################################################################### +# TRANSPORTS CONFIGURATION # +###################################################################### +# ORDER DOES NOT MATTER # +# Only one appropriate transport is called for each delivery. # +###################################################################### + +# A transport is used only when referenced from a router that successfully +# handles an address. + +begin transports + + +# This transport is used for delivering messages over SMTP connections. + +remote_smtp: + driver = smtp + + +# This transport is used for local delivery to user mailboxes in traditional +# BSD mailbox format. By default it will be run under the uid and gid of the +# local user, and requires the sticky bit to be set on the /var/mail directory. +# Some systems use the alternative approach of running mail deliveries under a +# particular group instead of using the sticky bit. The commented options below +# show how this can be done. + +local_delivery: + driver = appendfile + file = /var/mail/$local_part + delivery_date_add + envelope_to_add + return_path_add +# group = mail +# mode = 0660 + + +# This transport is used for handling pipe deliveries generated by alias or +# .forward files. If the pipe generates any standard output, it is returned +# to the sender of the message as a delivery error. Set return_fail_output +# instead of return_output if you want this to happen only when the pipe fails +# to complete normally. You can set different transports for aliases and +# forwards if you want to - see the references to address_pipe in the routers +# section above. + +address_pipe: + driver = pipe + return_output + + +# This transport is used for handling deliveries directly to files that are +# generated by aliasing or forwarding. + +address_file: + driver = appendfile + delivery_date_add + envelope_to_add + return_path_add + + +# This transport is used for handling autoreplies generated by the filtering +# option of the userforward router. + +address_reply: + driver = autoreply + + + +###################################################################### +# RETRY CONFIGURATION # +###################################################################### + +begin retry + +# This single retry rule applies to all domains and all errors. It specifies +# retries every 15 minutes for 2 hours, then increasing retry intervals, +# starting at 1 hour and increasing each time by a factor of 1.5, up to 16 +# hours, then retries every 6 hours until 4 days have passed since the first +# failed delivery. + +# Domain Error Retries +# ------ ----- ------- + +* * F,2h,15m; G,16h,1h,1.5; F,4d,6h + + + +###################################################################### +# REWRITE CONFIGURATION # +###################################################################### + +# There are no rewriting specifications in this default configuration file. + +begin rewrite + + + +###################################################################### +# AUTHENTICATION CONFIGURATION # +###################################################################### + +# There are no authenticator specifications in this default configuration file. + +begin authenticators + + +# End of Exim configuration file diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C044 b/configs/config.samples/C044 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..17ec3f05b --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C044 @@ -0,0 +1,148 @@ +Date: Mon, 2 Dec 2002 10:35:06 +0000 +From: Mike Richardson + +Hiya, + +I thought I'd submit this as an example of an authenticated mail hub +configuration. Several people have asked for it so I thought it +might be of interest. + +Authenticated mail hubs using LDAP to authenticate against which simply +forward mail to central mailrouters. X headers are added for audit +trail purposes. + +Config: +######################################################################### + +acl_smtp_rcpt = acl_check_rcpt + +ignore_bounce_errors_after = 12h + +timeout_frozen_after = 3d + +# LDAP server: + +hide ldap_default_servers=ldap.your.site + +# SSL options. advertise TLS but don't insist on it. + +tls_advertise_hosts=* +tls_certificate=/var/cert/securemail.your.site.cert +tls_privatekey=/var/cert/securemail.your.site.key +tls_verify_hosts= * + +# Remove the queue runner logs and add logging of the interface, protocols +# and connections. Useful for debugging when users are having difficulty +# configuring and connecting. Many ISPs use Transparent Proxying + +log_selector= +incoming_interface -queue_run +smtp_protocol_error ++smtp_syntax_error +smtp_connection + +# SMTP input limits. Some connections are reserved for local users. + +smtp_accept_max=200 +smtp_accept_queue=150 +smtp_accept_reserve=10 +smtp_reserve_hosts=130.88.0.0/16 +smtp_connect_backlog=100 + +# Overloading + +queue_only_load=5 +deliver_queue_load_max=7 + +# Message size limits + +message_size_limit=10M +return_size_limit=65535 + +# Spool space check + +check_spool_space=100M + +# directory splitting + +split_spool_directory + +# Parallel remote deliver + +remote_max_parallel = 10 + +# My system filter is to create extra logging info for X-Mailer info. + +system_filter=/etc/systemfilter +system_filter_user=exim + +# Listen of multiple interfaces to defeat transparent proxying + +local_interfaces = 130.88.200.47.25 : 130.88.200.47.465 : 130.88.200.47.587 + +# Only accept local traffic and authenticated stuff. +# Error message points to useful web page. + +acl_check_rcpt: + + accept hosts = : + deny local_parts = ^.*[@%!/|] + require verify = sender + + accept authenticated = * + + deny message = Not authenticated, see http://www.useful.web.page/ + + + +###################################################################### +# ROUTERS CONFIGURATION # +# Specifies how addresses are handled # +###################################################################### + +begin routers + +# Manual route to force all traffic through our hubs which handle all +# the alias expansion, domain routing etc. +# I add an X header for audit trail purposes but no more information that +# would be expected from a legitimate email. Don't want to upset the DPA +# people + +smarthost: + driver = manualroute + headers_add =X-Authenticated-Sender: ${lookup ldap\ +{ldap:///o=ac,c=uk?cn?sub?(&(uid=$authenticated_id))}{$value}{no}} from \ +${sender_fullhost}\nX-Authenticated-From: ${lookup ldap\ +{ldap:///o=ac,c=uk?mail?sub?(&(uid=$authenticated_id))}{$value}{no}} + transport = remote_smtp + domains = ! +local_domains + route_list=* mailrouter.your.site + ignore_target_hosts = 0.0.0.0 : 127.0.0.0/8 + no_more + +# All other routes as per normal... + + +###################################################################### +# AUTHENTICATION CONFIGURATION # +###################################################################### + +# This only supports PLAIN and LOGIN due to the nature of our LDAP server. + +begin authenticators + +plain: + driver= plaintext + public_name = PLAIN + server_condition="${lookup ldap {user=\"${lookup \ +ldapdn{ldap:///o=ac,c=uk?sn?sub?(&(uid=$2))}{$value}{no}}\" pass=$3 \ +ldap:///o=ac,c=uk?sn?sub?(&(uid=$2))}{yes}{no}}" + server_set_id = $2 + +login: + driver = plaintext + public_name= LOGIN + server_prompts = "Username:: : Password::" + server_condition="${lookup ldap {user=\"${lookup \ +ldapdn{ldap:///o=ac,c=uk?sn?sub?(&(uid=$1))}{$value}{no}}\" pass=$2 \ +ldap:///o=ac,c=uk?sn?sub?(&(uid=$1))}{yes}{no}}" + server_set_id=$1 +# End of Exim configuration file +########################################################################## diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C045 b/configs/config.samples/C045 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a5628083d --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C045 @@ -0,0 +1,48 @@ +Date: Tue, 20 Aug 2002 07:33:36 -0700 +From: "Kevin P. Fleming" + +Here it is, for Exim 4.10 and Cyrus IMAPD 2.1.5 using db3/db4-format +mailbox database. This configuration delivers the messages to Cyrus +IMAPD using LMTP over a TCP/IP socket, so the cyrus.conf file needs to +start lmtpd as "lmtpd -a" so the connection will be pre-authenticated +(given that, it is also important that the cyrus.conf file restrict +lmtpd to listening on 127.0.0.1 _only_, otherwise random users could +submit messages directly to lmtpd). + + +routers: + +# look in the Cyrus IMAPD mailboxes.db file for local_domains local +# parts to be verified +local_user_verify: + driver = accept + domains = +local_domains + local_part_suffix = +* + local_part_suffix_optional + condition = ${lookup{user.${local_part}} dbmnz {/storage/imap/mailboxes.db} {yes}{no}} + verify_only + +# rewrite local_domains local parts to be all lowercase +lowercase_local: + driver = redirect + redirect_router = local_user + domains = +local_domains + data = ${lc:${local_part}} + +# deliver local_domains messages +local_user: + driver = accept + domains = +local_domains + transport = local_delivery + + +transport: + +# deliver messages to Cyrus IMAPD using LMTP over TCP/IP on the loopback +interface +local_delivery: + driver = smtp + protocol = lmtp + allow_localhost = yes + hosts = 127.0.0.1 + diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C046 b/configs/config.samples/C046 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5eee05034 --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C046 @@ -0,0 +1,35 @@ +Date: Wed, 18 Sep 2002 15:22:44 +0100 (BST) +From: Tony Finch + +I wanted to be able to preserve the envelope contents (except for the return +path when I'm feeling paranoid about error handling). + +Feel free to add this to the examples -- someone else might find it useful. I +also have a complete configuration which I have been recommending to other +people in Cambridge (although it could work elsewhere with tweaks) at +http://www-uxsup.csx.cam.ac.uk/~fanf2/conf4.satellite. + +# Deliver a duplicate of some proportion of all messages to a special +# machine specified in the file /MAIL_TAP_HOST, if it exists. The +# probability of sending a message is the reciprocal of the second +# number in the hash part of the condition. The address data is used +# to prevent redirected addresses from being tapped twice. The +# originating host and sender are recorded in extra headers. If the +# delivery fails the bounce goes to a rubbish bin (although this means +# that the traffic seen by the tap is not quite the same as the +# traffic seen here). + +traffic_tap: + unseen + no_expn + no_verify + transport = smtp + driver = manualroute + require_files = /MAIL_TAP_HOST + route_data = ${readfile{/MAIL_TAP_HOST}{:}} + address_data = ${if!def:address_data{tapped}fail} + condition = ${if!eq{a}{${hash_1_1:$message_headers$message_body}}{no}{yes}} + headers_add = ${if!def:sender_host_address{}{X-Orig-Remote-Host: $sender_host_address}}\n\ + X-Orig-Return-Path: $return_path + errors_to = YOUR_RUBBISH_BIN_ADDRESS_HERE + diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C047 b/configs/config.samples/C047 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5a1665aad --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C047 @@ -0,0 +1,89 @@ +From: Oliver Egginger +Date: 21 May 2003 10:11:16 +0200 + +Hi there, + +download the spamassassin package. See +http://au.spamassassin.org/downloads.html + +Define a router in your Exim configuration file. +For Exim 4 it could look like this: + +# Spam Assassin +spamcheck_router: + no_verify + check_local_user + # When to scan a message : + # - it isn't already flagged as spam + # - it isn't already scanned + # - comes from ABC.DEF.GHI.JKL or MNO.PQR.STU.VWX + # - .spamcheck exists for this user + condition = \ + "${if and { {!def:h_X-Spam-Flag:} \ + {!eq {$received_protocol}{spam-scanned}} \ + {or { {eq {$sender_host_address}{ABC.DEF.GHI.JKL}} \ + {eq {$sender_host_address}{MNO.PQR.STU.VWX}} \ + }\ + }\ + }\ + {1}{0}\ + }" + require_files = $home/.spamcheck + driver = accept + transport = spamcheck + + +This router has two advantages (for us): + +1. You can define the sender host addresses from which you will scan the spam. +In my example there are ABC.DEF.GHI.JKL and MNO.PQR.STU.VWX (you have to +substiute this by your real IP-Adresses). + +2. The spamcheck router only runs in dependency of the existence of the +.spamcheck file. So your users can decide whether or not they wont to use +Spamassassin. Thats important for protection of privacy in germany. + +If you don't need this you can simplify the router, for example: + +# Spam Assassin +spamcheck_router: + no_verify + check_local_user + # When to scan a message : + # - it isn't already flagged as spam + # - it isn't already scanned + condition = \ + "${if and { {!def:h_X-Spam-Flag:} \ + {!eq {$received_protocol}{spam-scanned}} \ + }\ + {1}{0}\ + }" + driver = accept + transport = spamcheck + + +In the end you will need a spamcheck transport. This one works well for us: + +# Spam Assassin +spamcheck: + driver = pipe + command = /usr/exim/bin/exim -oMr spam-scanned -bS + use_bsmtp = true + transport_filter = /usr/bin/spamc + home_directory = "/tmp" + current_directory = "/tmp" + # must use a privileged user to set $received_protocol on the way + # back in! + user = mail + group = mail + log_output = true + return_fail_output = true + return_path_add = false + message_prefix = + message_suffix = + + +Put the router and the transport on the right places in your exim conf and send +the daemon a HUP signal. Thats all. + +- oliver diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C049 b/configs/config.samples/C049 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6bbc3ebbd --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C049 @@ -0,0 +1,44 @@ +From: Suresh Ramasubramanian +Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2003 11:57:39 +0530 + +I've been seeing a whole bunch of IPs that send me spam / virus mail and +HELOing as one of my own IPs, or as HELO one.of.my.own.domains (or maybe +HELO primary_hostname) + +On the other hand, I have users relaying through my box with AUTH, using +mozilla, which HELO's as "HELO hserus.net" if a hserus.net user relays. + +Here's something to stop this stuff - in acl_check_rcpt: + +[snippet in exim configure file] + + accept hosts = : + + # Accept all authenticated senders + accept authenticated = * + + # Spam control + + # Be polite and say HELO. Reject anything from hosts that havn't given + # a valid HELO/EHLO to us. + deny condition = ${if \ + or{{!def:sender_helo_name}{eq{$sender_helo_name}{}}}{yes}{no}} + message = RFCs mandate HELO/EHLO before mail can be sent + + # Forged hostname - HELOs as my own hostname or domain + deny message = Forged hostname detected in HELO: $sender_helo_name + hosts = !+relay_from_hosts + log_message = Forged hostname detected in HELO: \ + $sender_helo_name + condition = ${lookup {$sender_helo_name} \ + lsearch{/usr/local/etc/exim/local_domains}{yes}{no}} + + # Forged hostname -HELOs as one of my own IPs + deny message = Forged IP detected in HELO: $sender_helo_name + hosts = !+relay_from_hosts + log_message = Forged IP detected in HELO: $sender_helo_name + condition = ${if \ + eq{$sender_helo_name}{$interface_address}{yes}{no}} + +[end snippet] + diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C050 b/configs/config.samples/C050 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..db3f6e9e8 --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C050 @@ -0,0 +1,124 @@ +From: David Woodhouse +Date: Thu, 18 Dec 2003 14:25:47 +0000 + +Given a domain in DNS of the form... + +$ORIGIN vdns.infradead.org.mailtarget. +fish 604800 IN TXT dwmw2@infradead.org + +(It doesn't _have_ to be in private namespace; you can put it anywhere but I +prefer to have it private) + +The following routers use it to implement a virtual domain. You could of course +omit the first and just make sure you have postmaster in all the zones you use +this way... + +Rather than hardcoding the DNS domain to use in the router, we can put it into +a flat file with the list of domains for which we should be doing this. + +We put this into /etc/exim/dns-virtual-domains: + + vdns.infradead.org: vdns.infradead.org.mailtarget + +In the main section of the configuration file we have: + +domainlist dns_virtual_domains = lsearch;CONFDIR/dns-virtual-domains + +The following routers handle unqualified addresses, multiple TXT records, and +entries of the form '@domain'. Also if we're not primary MX for the virtual +domain in question we'll fall back to forwarding to a higher-priority MX host +if the DNS isn't talking to us.... + +virtual_postmaster: + driver = redirect + domains = +dns_virtual_domains + local_parts = postmaster:root:abuse:mailer-daemon + data = postmaster@$primary_hostname + + # For virtual domains, look up the target in DNS and rewrite... + +dns_virtual_domains: + driver = redirect + domains = +dns_virtual_domains + check_ancestor + repeat_use + one_time + allow_defer + allow_fail + forbid_file + forbid_pipe + retry_use_local_part + qualify_preserve_domain + + # Stash the lookup domain root for use in the next router. + address_data = ${lookup{$domain}lsearch{CONFDIR/dns-virtual-domains}} + + # The lookup failure won't distinguish between absent record, absent + # domain, or other temporary failures. So we make this router just + # give up, and sort out the various failure modes later. + + # The ${sg...} bits turn multiple TXT records (which Exim gives us + # separated by \n) into a comma-separated list, and also rewrite + # any element of that list of the form '@domain' (i.e. without a + # local part) to $local_part@domain, using the original local part + # from the address being routed, at the newly-provided domain. + + # Addresses containing _only_ a localpart are qualified at the + # same domain as is being looked up, by qualify_preserve_domain + # above. + data = ${sg{\ + ${sg{\ + ${lookup dnsdb{txt=$local_part.$address_data}{$value}fail}\ + }{\n}{,}}\ + }{(,|^)[ ]*@}{\$1\$local_part@}} + +dns_virtual_failed: + driver = redirect + domains = +dns_virtual_domains + allow_fail + allow_defer + data = ${lookup dnsdb{ns=$address_data}\ + # If NS lookup succeeded, the domain exists and we can find it. + # Therefore, the above lookup failure meant that the user + # just doesn't exist. Fail appropriately: + {:fail:Unknown user at virtual domain}\ + # NS lookup failed. This means there's a DNS problem -- so we + # shouldn't fail the delivery; let the following routers handle + # it... Note "fail" not "{:fail:}". It means 'pass'. :) + fail} + + + # We have DNS problems. If we're actually _delivering_, then try to + # deliver to a higher-priority MX if one exists. Otherwise, we defer and + # let it stay on the queue until the problem is fixed. + # You may prefer to freeze or bounce in this situation; I don't. +dns_virtual_relay: + driver = dnslookup + domains = +dns_virtual_domains + transport = remote_smtp + self = defer + no_verify + no_more + + # On the other hand, if there's a DNS problem and we're only _verifying_, + # as we do when accepting incoming mail, then accept it for now and + # it'll get queued for when the DNS works again. +dns_virtual_verify_fallback: + driver = accept + domains = +dns_virtual_domains + verify_only + no_more + +> Now I just need to investigate DDNS and see if it'll let individual +> users update the TXT records for their own aliases in the DNS... :) + +This is remarkably simple to set up -- Google is your friend. I'm now +able to set up HMAC-MD5 keys to 'own' certain mail domains, and the +owners of those virtual mail domains can happily change the TXT records +to their hearts content, without bugging me to make changes and roll out +new alias files to all the MX hosts. + +A setuid app which is able to read the key file, and which will update +the alias only for the user it's invoked by, is also fairly trivial to +implement -- inspired by the 'cammail' alias system. + diff --git a/configs/config.samples/C051 b/configs/config.samples/C051 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6d01aee6e --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/C051 @@ -0,0 +1,324 @@ +From: Nathan Ollerenshaw + +## I've been working quite hard to come up with a config that reasonably +## matches the qmail-ldap setup, without the warts. I want to submit it +## for inclusion in your config.samples archive, in case anyone else needs +## to do the same as I. I hope its useful. +## +## A few notes; it supports catchalls but not dash extension addressing, +## as I couldn't be bothered, and I'm unsure as to how many people +## actually use the feature. Certainly nobody on my system. It supports +## autoreplies, but not an autoreply on a catchall, because this just +## kills your mailserver when someone does a dictionary spam attack +## against a domain set up this way. + + +###################################################################### +# Runtime configuration file for Exim # +###################################################################### + +#domainlist local_domains = @ : lsearch:/apps/conf/mail/locals +domainlist local_domains = lsearch;/apps/conf/mail/locals +domainlist relay_to_domains = + +# the pop-before-smtp package at http://popbsmtp.sourceforge.net/ +# creates the /etc/mail/popauth.db file for us. We have to use dbmnz +# lookup type here. + +hostlist relay_from_hosts = 127.0.0.1 : net-dbmnz;/etc/mail/popauth.db +primary_hostname = [[[SET THIS TO LOCAL HOST NAME]]] + +# LDAP settings + +# Set the following to your ldap server(s) +ldap_default_servers = ldap::389 +BASEDN = [[[SET THIS TO YOUR BASE DN IN LDAP]]] + +acl_smtp_rcpt = acl_check_rcpt +acl_smtp_data = acl_check_data + +exim_user = vmail +exim_group = vmail +trusted_users = vmail +never_users = root +host_lookup = * +rfc1413_hosts = * +rfc1413_query_timeout = 0s +ignore_bounce_errors_after = 2d +timeout_frozen_after = 7d +bounce_return_body = false +accept_8bitmime = true +allow_mx_to_ip = true +auto_thaw = 60m +smtp_accept_max = 0 +smtp_load_reserve = 20 +delay_warning = 4h:8h:24h +dns_again_means_nonexist = !+local_domains : !+relay_to_domains + +spamd_address = 127.0.0.1 783 +av_scanner = clamd:127.0.0.1 3310 + +# Spool settings + +split_spool_directory = true +check_spool_space = 100M +check_spool_inodes = 1000 + +# Logging - enable a bunch of extra useful stuff. Never know, could help +# one day, and at least its better than qmail! Har har! + +log_selector = +delivery_size +received_sender +received_recipients \ + +subject +sender_on_delivery + +# NOTE TO SELF: Lets use syslog and have all six mail servers log to a +# central location so its easier to do statistics gathering and fault +# analysis. + +# MACROS + +# Secret for all machines in the cluster. Change it to whatever you feel +# is best. + +SECRET = Ni2opNyw2pNM3cmWn21nOSbwdq + +GET_ADDRESS_DATA = ${lookup ldap {\ + ldap:///BASEDN??sub?(&(uid=${quote_ldap:$local_part}@${quote_ldap:$domain}))\ + }\ +} + +GET_CATCHALL_DATA = ${lookup ldap {\ + ldap:///BASEDN??sub?(&(uid=catchall@${quote_ldap:$domain}))\ + }\ +} + +MSGCOOKIE = ${hmac{md5}{SECRET}{$body_linecount}} + +###################################################################### +# ROUTERS CONFIGURATION # +# Specifies how addresses are handled # +###################################################################### + +begin routers + +dnslookup: + driver = dnslookup + domains = ! +local_domains + transport = remote_smtp + ignore_target_hosts = 0.0.0.0 : 127.0.0.0/8 + no_more + +system_aliases: + driver = redirect + condition = ${if eq {{$primary_hostname}{$domain} {1}{0}} } + allow_fail + allow_defer + data = ${lookup{$local_part}lsearch{/etc/aliases}} + file_transport = address_file + pipe_transport = address_pipe + +# the forward router does the initial LDAP lookup. It then caches this in +# $address_data for use by any of the other routers. Each router will fall +# through if they then don't meet their condition. + +lookup: + driver = redirect + address_data = GET_ADDRESS_DATA + # data is intentionally left blank so that the router will decline + # we just want this router to do a lookup so the results are availble + # for the other routers. + data = + +# OK, this is where we start supporting crazy qmail-ldap stuff. First, we +# check if the address has a deliveryMode of 'forwardonly'. forwardonly is +# a misnomer, because its possible for and address to be a forward, a mailbox +# and an autoreply. So, we make it do the forward, and check to see if it is +# also a reply or localdelivery, if so we set unseen to yes to make Exim +# copy the message and send it to the next router. + +forward: + driver = redirect + condition = ${if match {${extract{deliveryMode}{$address_data}}}{forwardonly} {1}{0}} + data = ${extract{mailForwardingAddress}{$address_data}} + unseen = ${if or {{match {${extract{deliveryMode}{$address_data}}}{reply}} \ + {match {${extract{deliveryMode}{$address_data}}}{localdelivery}}} \ + {yes}{no}} + +# Same deal, check if its a reply, if so we send it to the correct transport. +# After, we see if it needs to go to localdelivery as well. + +reply: + driver = accept + condition = ${if match {${extract{deliveryMode}{$address_data}}}{reply} {1}{0}} + transport = auto_reply + unseen = ${if match {${extract{deliveryMode}{$address_data}}}{localdelivery} {yes}{no}} + +localdelivery: + driver = accept + condition = ${if match {${extract{deliveryMode}{$address_data}}}{localdelivery} {1}{0}} + transport = local_delivery + +# If we've reached this point, the account doesn't exist, so we need to +# check to see if there is a catchall account, and if so do the usual for +# it too. NOTE: we do not support auto-reply in a catch-all. +# +# This could, of course, be abused by someone assigning an auto-reply to +# a forward_catchall. + +# NOTE TO SELF: See if reply router can be failed if an address comes from +# a catchall. + +lookup_catchall: + driver = redirect + address_data = GET_CATCHALL_DATA + # data is intentionally left blank so that the router will decline + # just want this router to do a lookup. + data = + # could probably do a no_more = true based on the result of that LDAP + # lookup to skip the next few routers, but there is no point as they are + # not doing anything heavy so I'll just let them fall through and fail. + +# The catchall routers are exactly the same as the above routers, except +# they make use of the GET_CATCHALL_DATA address_data to decide what to do +# with the mail. + +forward_catchall: + driver = redirect + condition = ${if match {${extract{deliveryMode}{$address_data}}}{forwardonly} {1}{0}} + data = ${extract{mailForwardingAddress}{$address_data}} + unseen = ${if match {${extract{deliveryMode}{$address_data}}}{localdelivery} {yes}{no}} + +localdelivery_catchall: + driver = accept + condition = ${if match {${extract{deliveryMode}{$address_data}}}{localdelivery} {1}{0}} + transport = local_delivery + +###################################################################### +# TRANSPORTS CONFIGURATION # +###################################################################### + +begin transports + +remote_smtp: + driver = smtp + +# Deliver to the mailbox specified in the LDAP directory. We make sure +# that quota is obeyed, and we try to send a messge to the user if it +# gets to over 85%. + +local_delivery: + driver = appendfile + maildir_format + directory = ${extract{mailMessageStore}{$address_data}}/Maildir + create_directory + directory_mode = 0700 + delivery_date_add + envelope_to_add + return_path_add + group = vmail + user = vmail + mode = 0600 + quota = ${eval:${sg{${extract{1}{,}{${extract{mailQuota}{$address_data}}}}}{S}{}}/1024}K + maildir_use_size_file = true + quota_warn_threshold = 85% + +# We set this to iso-2022-jp because we're in japan. Set it to whatever. + +auto_reply: + driver = autoreply + subject = "[Auto-Reply] $header_subject" + headers = "Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-2022-jp" + to = "$sender_address" + text = ${extract{mailReplyText}{$address_data}} + from = $local_part@$domain + + +###################################################################### +# ACL CONFIGURATION # +# Specifies access control lists for incoming SMTP mail # +###################################################################### + +begin acl + +# You should probably set up exiscan-acl's mime check here to scan for viruses +# and spam and reject at SMTP time. As I won't be doing that for a while, I've +# left it as an exercise for the reader. + +acl_check_rcpt: + accept hosts = : + deny message = Restricted characters in address + domains = +local_domains + local_parts = ^[.] : ^.*[@%!/|] + deny message = Restricted characters in address + domains = !+local_domains + local_parts = ^[./|] : ^.*[@%!] : ^.*/\\.\\./ + accept local_parts = postmaster + domains = +local_domains + require verify = sender + accept domains = +local_domains + endpass + verify = recipient + accept domains = +relay_to_domains + endpass + verify = recipient + accept hosts = +relay_from_hosts + accept authenticated = * + deny message = relay not permitted + +acl_check_data: + require verify = header_syntax + message = This message has malformed headers. + deny message = This message contains malformed MIME ($demime_reason). + demime = * + condition = ${if >{$demime_errorlevel}{2}{1}{0}} + deny message = We do not accept ".$found_extension" attachments here as \ + they are common file extensions for viruses. If you wish \ + to send such an attachment, please zip it first. + demime = bat:btm:cmd:com:cpl:dll:exe:lnk:msi:pif:prf:reg:scr:vbs:url + accept + +begin retry + +# Address or Domain Error Retries +# ----------------- ----- ------- + +* * F,2h,15m; G,16h,1h,1.5; F,4d,6h + +###################################################################### +# REWRITE CONFIGURATION # +###################################################################### + +# There are no rewriting specifications in this default configuration file. + +begin rewrite + +###################################################################### +# AUTHENTICATION CONFIGURATION # +###################################################################### + +# There are no authenticator specifications in this default configuration file. + +begin authenticators + +plain: + driver = plaintext + public_name = PLAIN + server_condition = ${if ldapauth {user="uid=${quote_ldap_dn:$2},BASEDN" \ + pass=${quote:$3} ldap:///}{yes}{no}} + server_set_id = $2 + + +login: + driver = plaintext + public_name = LOGIN + server_prompts = Username:: : Password:: + server_condition = ${if ldapauth {user="uid=${quote_ldap_dn:$1},BASEDN" \ + pass=${quote:$2} ldap:///}{yes}{no}} + server_set_id = $1 + +###################################################################### +# CONFIGURATION FOR local_scan() # +###################################################################### + +# begin local_scan + +# End of Exim configuration file diff --git a/configs/config.samples/F001 b/configs/config.samples/F001 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..fd219549f --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/F001 @@ -0,0 +1,35 @@ +From: Ephraim Silverberg +Date: Tue, 17 Feb 1998 12:55:55 +0200 + +We're using Exim 1.82 and have written a message filter to intercept spam +messages that RBL doesn't catch. Since we have met with reasonable success +since installing (and refining) the filter -- 566 genuine spam messages +intercepted during a time period where there were 67 RBL rejections -- I +thought that the rest of the list may be interested in reviewing our filter +as a starting point for their own system message filter. + +There are a number of caveats, however: + +1. The suspected spam is not automatically rejected as RBL hosts are, but + is saved to a folder that should be read/writable by the mail + administrators. The reason for this is that the filter catches also + some legitimate mail and these messages should be bounced to their + originally intended recipient(s) (ala X-Envelope-To:) and the filter + refined and/or the databases (described below) updated. + +2. My filter traps blank/non-existent To: lines as well as To: lines + contained in From: lines, but firsts exempts the following categories + from this check: mailing lists, local mail, mail originating in the + country (e.g. in our case *.il) and mail coming from autosupport servers. + +Beyond implicit checks, it uses four DBM databases: two that exempt the +message from any spam (beyond RBL) checks (software servers and strange mailing +lists need to be here) -- one based on $sender_address and the other on +$header_to: lines -- and, conversely, two databases for known spammers that +have valid mail headers that aren't caught by implicit checks. All entries +in these databases are lowercase so that we don't need two lines for +'friend@public.com' and 'Friend@Public.com'. + +The sample filter package is at ftp://ftp.cs.huji.ac.il/pub/exim/spam_filter/ + +Comments and suggestions are welcome. diff --git a/configs/config.samples/F002 b/configs/config.samples/F002 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..dc9735178 --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/F002 @@ -0,0 +1,98 @@ +Date: Tue, 03 Mar 1998 15:45:24 -0500 +From: Dan Birchall + +History: + +In early 1997, I wrote a little PERL program which refused +mail from unknown addresses until they mailed me promising +not to spam me. (This ran on my account as an end-user +solution.) It was very effective, but didn't scale well. + +Recently, I'd been thinking of adding some similar +functionality to my Exim filter file. Someone on another +list mentioned that they were going to work on doing the +same in their Sendmail config, and since I'd already +thought through how to do it in Exim, and knew it'd be +slightly easier than falling out of bed, I went ahead and +did it. I mentioned having done it, and Piete bugged me +to send it here too. :) + +Structure: + +There are two (optionally three) flat files involved, plus +a system-wide filter file and one (optionally two) shell +script(s). + +The first flat file contains a list of recipient e-mail +addresses handled by my server, with parameters stating +whether they do or do not wish to be afforded some degree +of protection from spam through various filters. An +excerpt: + +djb@16straight.com: spam=no +djb@mule.16straight.com: spam=no untrusted=no +djb@scream.org: spam=no relay=no untrusted=no + +Various filters in my filter file read this, and based +on the values of certain parameters, will take certain +measures to prevent spam from reaching an address. This +particular filter works on the "untrusted" parameter. + +The second flat file contains a list of IP addresses for +hosts that the server has been instructed to trust. (At +this point, this is a system-wide list; if a host is +trusted, it's trusted for all addresses. It should be +fairly similar to arrange for some sort of user-specific +list, but I haven't had the need.) An excerpt: + +206.214.98.16: good=yes +205.180.57.68: good=yes +204.249.49.75: good=yes + +The filter is as follows: + +if +${lookup{$recipients:untrusted}lsearch{/usr/exim/lists/shield}{$value}} +is "no" +and +${lookup{$sender_host_address:good}lsearch{/usr/exim/lists/good_hosts}{$value}} +is "" +then freeze endif + +Basically, if $recipients is found in the first file, with +an "untrusted=no" parameter, and the sending host's IP +address is *not* in the second file, or does not have a +"good=yes" parameter next to it, the message is frozen. + +I then come along as root and run this script, with the +Exim message ID as the only argument: + +echo -n `grep host_address /usr/exim/spool/input/$1-H |cut -f2 -d" "` >> +/usr/exim/lists/good_hosts +echo ": good=yes" >> /usr/exim/lists/good_hosts +sendmail -M $1 + +This adds the sending host's IP to the good_hosts file and +forces delivery of the message. + +Options: + +The other optional file is a blacklist; the other optional +script puts the sending host's IP in *that* file and deletes +the message. + +This is just yet another fun little way to play with spam. +(Looks like meat, tastes like play-doh... or is it the +other way around?) + +Bugs: + +Yes, there are weaknesses. Specifically: + +* multi-address $recipients will probably get by this +* scalability is always a concern +* large ISP's that generate lots of mail _and_ spam... + +This is near the top of my filter file, though, and +there are several other filters below it to catch any +stuff it might miss. diff --git a/configs/config.samples/F003 b/configs/config.samples/F003 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..b9f097a3b --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/F003 @@ -0,0 +1,97 @@ +Date: Sat, 4 Apr 1998 07:23:39 +0200 (GMT+0200) +From: "F. Jacot Guillarmod" + +Here's four checks installed in our system wide filter that knock out +a lot of otherwise hard to detect rubbish - and would handle the above +example. The most interesting one is the hotmail.com "validity check". + +# =========================================================================== +# authenticated sender, but not from pegasus +#------------------------------------------- +elif "$h_comments" contains "authenticated sender" and + "$h_x-mailer" does not contain "pegasus" then + + log "$tod_log $message_id SPAMAUTHS: sender=$sender_address \ + subject=$header_subject: recipients_count=$recipients_count \ + recipients=$recipients" + save /usr/local/lib/mail/spam + +# claims to be from hotmail.com +#------------------------------ +elif "$h_from" contains "hotmail.com" and + "${if !def:header_x-originating-ip {nospam}}" is nospam then + + log "$tod_log $message_id SPAMHOTMAIL: sender=$sender_address \ + subject=$header_subject: recipients_count=$recipients_count \ + recipients=$recipients" + save /usr/local/lib/mail/spam + +# claims to be from juno.com +#------------------------------ +elif "$h_from" contains "juno.com" and + "${if def:header_x-mailer {juno} {spam}}" is spam then + + log "$tod_log $message_id SPAMJUNO: sender=$sender_address \ + subject=$header_subject: recipients_count=$recipients_count \ + recipients=$recipients" + save /usr/local/lib/mail/spam + +# spam X-UIDL header found +# ------------------------ +elif "${if def:header_x-uidl {spam}}" is spam then + + log "$tod_log $message_id SPAM-X-UIDL: sender=$sender_address \ + subject=$header_subject: recipients_count=$recipients_count \ + recipients=$recipients" + save /usr/local/lib/mail/spam +# =========================================================================== + + +The following rule seems to work (but I don't use it): + +# either To: is contained in From: or there is no To: line +# -------------------------------------------------------- +elif $h_from contains $h_to then + + log "$tod_log $message_id SPAM-TOEQFRM: sender=$sender_address \ + subject=$header_subject: recipients_count=$recipients_count \ + recipients=$recipients" + save /usr/local/lib/mail/spam +# -------------------------------------------------------- + + + +Here's parts of my personal .forward file - I'm relying on the system wide exim +configs to zap spam, and only do the old fashioned stuff to whatever gets +through: + +#========================================================================== +# Exim filter <<== do not edit or remove this line + +if error_message then finish endif + +logfile $home/eximfilter.log + +# Mail from support system +if $header_subject contains "[Help #" +then + save $home/Mail/in.support + +# Mail from squid mailing list to local newsgroup +elif $header_subject contains "squid-users-digest" +then + deliver "" + +# Mail from exim-users mailing list to local newsgroup +elif $return_path contains "exim-users-request" +then + deliver "" + +# Stuff to be thrown away +if $header_subject contains "Warning From uucp" +then + seen finish +endif + +#========================================================================== + diff --git a/configs/config.samples/F004 b/configs/config.samples/F004 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..655df145f --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/F004 @@ -0,0 +1,71 @@ +Date: Tue, 23 Nov 1999 02:49:32 +0200 +From: Vadim Vygonets + +This is an Exim filter snippet to change locally-generated +Message-Id: and Resent-Message-Id: headers to world-unique values. + + +# Exim filter + +# Copyright (c) 1999 +# Hans Matzen , +# Vadim Vygonets . All rights reserved. + +################################################################# +# Change locally-generated Message-Id: and Resent-Message-Id: +# headers to world-unique values. + +# Notes: +# Change every occurence of "home.dom" to your home domain. +# Change every occurence of "uniqie.remote.dom" to some unique value. + +# Unique values, as Vadik explained in his message to exim-users, +# can be chosen in different ways: + +### The ideal way is to choose "hostnames" in existing domains whose +### admins you know, and you will be sure that no hostname ending +### with ".nonexistant.friendly.dom" will ever appear on this planet, +### not even on someone else's message IDs. + +### Another ideas include putting after your hostname things like: +### .972.2.6412694.phone +### .29.32.columbia.street.jerusalem.96583.israel.addr +### .1122.3576.3847.1446.visa.01.2002.expiration.date.vadim.vygonets.name.credit.card + +# This snippet provides to schemes to do such rewriting. The +# first scheme is to have mapping from local hostnames to unique +# "Message-Id domains". The second scheme is to use one unique +# "Message-Id domain", inserting the original "domain" into the +# "local-part" of the new Message-Id header. + +# Precaution +headers remove "X-Vygo-Net-Temporary-Message-Id" + +# Change Message-Id: +if "${if def:h_Message-Id: {yes}}" is yes and + ${lc:${domain:$h_Message-Id:}} is "home.dom" or + ${lc:${domain:$h_Message-Id:}} ends ".home.dom" then +# This is if you want to have a file mapping each hostname to a unique +# Message-Id domain part, or, if it fails, preserves the original domain part: +# headers add "X-Vygo-Net-Temporary-Message-Id: <${local_part:$h_Message-Id:}@${lookup{${domain:$h_Message-Id:}}lsearch{/var/exim/msgid-hosts}{$value}{${domain:$h_Message-Id:}}}>\n" +# This rewrites Message-Id as : + headers add "X-Vygo-Net-Temporary-Message-Id: <${local_part:$h_Message-Id:}.${domain:$h_Message-Id:}@unique.remote.dom>\n" + headers remove "Message-Id" + headers add "Message-Id: $h_X-Vygo-Net-Temporary-Message-Id:" + headers remove "X-Vygo-Net-Temporary-Message-Id" +endif + +# Change Resent-Message-Id: +if "${if def:h_Resent-Message-Id: {yes}}" is yes and + ${lc:${domain:$h_Resent-Message-Id:}} is "home.dom" or + ${lc:${domain:$h_Resent-Message-Id:}} ends ".home.dom" then +# This is if you want to have a file mapping each hostname to a unique +# Message-Id domain part, or, if it fails, preserves the original domain part: +# headers add "X-Vygo-Net-Temporary-Message-Id: <${local_part:$h_Resent-Message-Id:}@${lookup{${domain:$h_Resent-Message-Id:}}lsearch{/var/exim/msgid-hosts}{$value}{${domain:$h_Resent-Message-Id:}}}>\n" +# This rewrites Message-Id as : + headers add "X-Vygo-Net-Temporary-Message-Id: <${local_part:$h_Resent-Message-Id:}.${domain:$h_Resent-Message-Id:}@unique.remote.dom>\n" + headers remove "Resent-Message-Id" + headers add "Resent-Message-Id: $h_X-Vygo-Net-Temporary-Message-Id:" + headers remove "X-Vygo-Net-Temporary-Message-Id" +endif + diff --git a/configs/config.samples/L001 b/configs/config.samples/L001 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..247923cbb --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/L001 @@ -0,0 +1,185 @@ +/* + * uvscan local_scan() function for Exim (requires at least Exim v4.14) + * known to work with VirusScan for Linux v4.16.0 (Scan engine v4.2.40) + * but should be OK with other platforms + * + * this file is free software (license=GNU GPLv2) and comes with no + * guarantees--if it breaks, you get to keep the pieces (maybe not the mail)! + * + * by (ie patches / flames to): mb/local_scan@dcs.qmul.ac.uk, 2003-05-02 + * (original version on 2002-05-25) + */ + +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include "local_scan.h" + +/* + * remember to set LOCAL_SCAN_HAS_OPTIONS=yes in Local/Makefile + * otherwise you get stuck with the compile-time defaults + */ + +static uschar *uvscan_binary = US"/usr/local/uvscan/uvscan"; +static uschar *data_directory = US"/usr/local/uvscan"; + +optionlist local_scan_options[] = { /* alphabetical order */ + { "data_directory", opt_stringptr, &data_directory }, + { "uvscan_binary", opt_stringptr, &uvscan_binary } +}; + +int local_scan_options_count = sizeof(local_scan_options)/sizeof(optionlist); + +/* log headers in rejectlog or not? */ + +//#define VIRUS_IN_MAIL LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT +#define VIRUS_IN_MAIL LOCAL_SCAN_REJECT_NOLOGHDR + +/* + * buffer is used both for file copying and catching uvscan's output + * BUFSIZE = 1024 should always be fine + */ + +#define BUFSIZE 1024 + +/* some number which uvscan doesn't return */ +#define MAGIC 123 + +/* + * some macros to make the main function more obvious + * NB bailing out might leave tempfiles hanging around + * (and open fds, but no need to be worried about that) + */ + +#define BAIL(btext) { log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "UVSCAN ERROR: "btext); \ + *return_text = "local scanning problem: please try again later"; \ + return LOCAL_SCAN_TEMPREJECT; } + +#define DEBUG(dtext) if ((debug_selector & D_local_scan) != 0) \ + { debug_printf(dtext); sleep(1); } + /* sleep useful for running exim -d */ + +#define RESULT(rtext) header_add(32, \ + "X-uvscan-result: "rtext" (%s)\n", message_id); + +#define FREEZE(ftext) { header_add(32, \ + "X-uvscan-warning: frozen for manual attention (%s)\n", message_id); \ + RESULT(ftext); *return_text = ftext; return LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT_FREEZE; } + +/* OK, enough waffle. On with the show! */ + +int local_scan(int fd, uschar **return_text) +{ + char tf[] = "/tmp/local_scan.XXXXXX"; /* should this be tunable? */ + int tmpfd, bytesin, bytesout, pid, status, pipe_fd[2]; + fd_set fds; + static uschar buffer[BUFSIZE]; + + DEBUG("entered uvscan local_scan() function"); + + /* + * I set majordomo to resend using -oMr lsmtp + * (and yes, I know majordomo isn't actually using SMTP..) + * no point in scanning these beasties twice + */ + + if(!strcmp(received_protocol, "lsmtp")) + return LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT; + + /* create a file to copy the data into */ + + if ((tmpfd = mkstemp(tf)) == -1) + BAIL("mkstemp failed"); + + DEBUG("made tmp file"); + + /* copy said file BUFSIZE at a time */ + + while ((bytesin = read(fd, buffer, BUFSIZE)) > 0) { + bytesout = write(tmpfd, buffer, bytesin); + if (bytesout < 1) + BAIL("writing to tmp file"); + } + if (bytesin < 0) + BAIL("reading from spool file"); + + close(tmpfd); + + if(pipe(pipe_fd) == -1) + BAIL("making pipe"); + + /* fork and scan */ + + if((pid = fork()) == -1) + BAIL("couldn't fork"); + + if(pid == 0) { + close(1); /* close stdout */ + if(dup2(pipe_fd[1],1) == -1) /* duplicate write as stdout */ + BAIL("dup2 (stdout) failed"); + if(fcntl(1,F_SETFD,0) == -1) /* fd to NOT close on exec() */ + BAIL("fcntl (stdout) failed"); + + execl(uvscan_binary, uvscan_binary, "--mime", "--secure", + "-d", data_directory, tf, NULL); + DEBUG("execl failed"); + _exit(MAGIC); + } + + if(waitpid(pid, &status, 0) < 1) + BAIL("couldn't wait for child"); + + DEBUG("about to unlink"); + + if(unlink(tf) == -1) + FREEZE("couldn't unlink tmp file"); + + DEBUG("unlinked :)"); + + /* + * choose what to do based on the return code of uvscan + * RESULT() or FREEZE() according to personal taste + */ + + if(WIFEXITED(status) != 0) + switch(WEXITSTATUS(status)) { + case 0: RESULT("clean"); break; + case 2: RESULT("driver integrity check failed"); break; + case 6: FREEZE("general problem occurred"); break; + case 8: RESULT("could not find a driver"); break; + case 12: FREEZE("failed to clean file"); break; + case 13: + // RESULT("virus detected"); /* were we to accept */ + DEBUG("about to read from uvscan process"); + FD_ZERO(&fds); + FD_SET(pipe_fd[0], &fds); + if(select(pipe_fd[0]+1, &fds, NULL, NULL, NULL)) { + /* last NULL above means wait forever! */ + DEBUG("select returned non-zero"); + if((bytesin = read(pipe_fd[0], buffer, + BUFSIZE - 1)) > 0) { + buffer[bytesin] = (uschar)0; + *return_text = buffer + 22; + /* 22 was empirically found ;) */ + return VIRUS_IN_MAIL; + } else + BAIL("reading from uvscan process"); + } + break; + case 15: FREEZE("self-check failed"); break; + case 19: FREEZE("virus detected and cleaned"); break; + case MAGIC: RESULT("couldn't run uvscan"); break; + default: + RESULT("unknown error code"); + header_add(32, "X-uvscan-status: %d\n", + WEXITSTATUS(status)); + break; + } + else + BAIL("child exited abnormally"); + + return LOCAL_SCAN_ACCEPT; +} diff --git a/configs/config.samples/S001 b/configs/config.samples/S001 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f4710910d --- /dev/null +++ b/configs/config.samples/S001 @@ -0,0 +1,70 @@ +This script patches an Exim binary in order to change the compiled-in +configuration file name. See FAQ 0065 for a situation in which this might +be a useful thing to do. + +============================================================ +#!/usr/local/bin/perl +# +# Patch the config file location in exim so as to avoid using +# exim -C and thus having problems with vacation messages etc. +# +# Placed in the public domain. + +# This is the default in exim RPMS. +my $oldconf = "/etc/exim/exim4.conf"; + +die "Usage: $0 infile outfile configfile\n" unless (@ARGV == 3); +my ($in, $out, $newconf) = @ARGV; + +# We mustn't make our string longer than the original! +die "configfile location must be ".length($oldconf)." chars long or less\n" + if (length($newconf) > length($oldconf)); + +# Get original details. +my @stat = (stat($in)); +die "stat($in): $!\n" if (@stat == 0); + +# Get original binary. +open(F, "<$in") || die "Can't read $in\n"; +read(F, $exim, $stat[7]) || die "Can't read $in\n"; +die "Didn't read full data\n" unless (length($exim) == $stat[7]); +close(F); + +# Find the old config location. +my $pos = 0; +my @positions = (); +while (($pos = index($exim, $oldconf."\0", $pos)) >= 0) +{ + print "Config file name found at byte offset $pos\n"; + push(@positions, $pos); + $pos++; +} + +die "Old config location ($oldconf) not found\n" if (@positions == 0); + +# We could be clever here and try to isolate the correct instance, +# but for now I'm going to assume it's the only instance. +die "Too many possible config locations found\n" if (@positions > 1); + +# Patch in the new config location +substr($exim, $positions[0], length($newconf)+1) = $newconf."\0"; + +# Write out the patched version. +open(F, ">$out") || die "Can't write $out\n"; +print F $exim; +close(F); + +# Set permissions on new copy to match old. +chmod($stat[2] & 07777, $out); + +# Print the config file path. +$out = "./".$out unless ($out =~ m#/#); +print < +Date: Wed, 24 Sep 2003 13:12:58 -0500 (CDT) + +I'm sure that everyone who's interested in something like this has already +come up with their own way to do this, but here's my solution: + +When I moved from smail to exim I built a program that took individual +config pieces stripped all the comments and built a config file. As a +bonus, it also runs exim -C -bV on the new file and reports any +config errors before copying it over the old config. In addition to just +being familiar in general w/ all the files being broken up according to +their major categories, I also got the benfit of being able to have config +pieces that were easily updatable (just replace the whole file and rebuild +the configure file). + +The script has some site-specific stuff hard coded, but it's easily +fixable. Essentially in my exim configd I have a directory called +subconfigure, which can contain directories named \d\d.\w+. Mine +currently contains: +10.general/ 30.routers/ 50.retry/ 70.authenticators/ +20.acls/ 40.transports/ 60.rewrite/ 80.local_scan/ + +Each of these directories can contain files in the form \d\d.\w+. For +instance, my 30.routers contains: +00.begin 80.l_user_delivery_normal _50.l_mx +10.r_forcepaths _12.r_static_route_junk _60.l_psp +15.r_stalemail _17.r_internal_route _72.l_aliases_list +33.r_mailrtrd_router _20.r_conditionalforce _74.l_aliases_isp +40.r_standard _31.r_mailrtrd_bypass_spam _76.l_aliases_mer +70.l_aliases _39.r_smarthost _80.l_user_delivery_isp + +those files prefixed by "_" will not be used to build the live configure +file. They are "turned off". This allows me to keep a general list of +configure pieces that are easily updatable but not necessarily every rule +is used on every machine. Not every file contains a single router - for +instance 60.l_psp is our virtual hosting solution and contains 10 routers. +They're just grouped by logical role. + +All of these sub pieces are built in to the configure file w/ a shell +script called mkconfigure, inline below. Again, my assumption is that +anyone who wants a system like this built it for themselves, but it +would be kind of fun to flesh this script out to be more generic. +Maybe post it and some samples on a webpage. Or no one responds to this +and I shut up about it =). + +This system is way overkill for some people (for instance, my home machine +uses a single configure file because I don't do that much special with +it), but it's useful in a larger system role. + +--John + +mkconfigure: + +#!/bin/ksh + +# I have found that our custom set up of exim's configure file is overly +# confusing. To help alleviate this, I have broken the file out into its +# core pieces (general, tansports, directors, routers, retry, rewrite, and +# authentication), and then each of those into logical sub-pieces (SIS, +# for instance. This program is to take all of those sub pieces and put +# them back together into the file that exim understands. + +# No one should every touch the 'configure' file from now on, one should +# instead manipulate the files in the subconfigure directory and run this +# program + +# jetmore 20011119 + +EXIMD=$1 +CONFIGSUFF=$2 + +if [ "X$EXIMD" == "X" ] ; then + EXIMD=/local/exim +fi +if [ ! -d "$EXIMD" ] ; then + echo "$EXIMD is not a directory" >&2 + exit 1 +fi +ETCD=$EXIMD/etc +SUBCD=$ETCD/subconfigure$CONFIGSUFF +CONFIGF=$ETCD/configure$CONFIGSUFF + +if [ ! -d $SUBCD ] ; then + echo "$SUBCD is not a directory" >&2 + exit 1 +fi + +GREP=/bin/grep + +# initialize the temporary config file in case some trash got left around +cat /dev/null > $CONFIGF.t + +# print the banner to the temp config file +echo >> $CONFIGF.t +echo "#########################################################" >> $CONFIGF.t +echo "# DO NOT DIRECTLY MANIPULATE THIS FILE " >> $CONFIGF.t +echo "# " >> $CONFIGF.t +echo "# if you need to make configuration change, do so in " >> $CONFIGF.t +echo "# $SUBCD and run the mkconfigure" >> $CONFIGF.t +echo "# command. Changes made to this file will be lost " >> $CONFIGF.t +echo "# " >> $CONFIGF.t +echo "# See jetmore w/ questions " >> $CONFIGF.t +echo "#########################################################" >> $CONFIGF.t +echo >> $CONFIGF.t + +# get the major categories +for CAT in $SUBCD/[0-9]* +do + # print which category we're in + echo >> $CONFIGF.t + echo "## major category $CAT" >> $CONFIGF.t + echo >> $CONFIGF.t + + # get the subcategories + for SUBCAT in $CAT/[0-9]* + do + # print which sub category we're in + echo "## sub category $SUBCAT" >> $CONFIGF.t + echo >> $CONFIGF.t + + # place the contents of any non-comment line into the configure file + $GREP -v "^ *#" $SUBCAT >> $CONFIGF.t + echo >> $CONFIGF.t + done +done + +# check and make sure there aren't any typos in the new config file +$EXIMD/bin/exim -C $CONFIGF.t -bV > $CONFIGF.test 2>&1 +if [ "$?" -eq "1" ] ; then + #/bin/rm $CONFIGF.t + echo + echo "There is a problem with the configure file. " + echo "moving paniclog to paniclog.mkfail" + echo "$CONFIGF.test has details:" + echo + echo ##################################################################### + cat $CONFIGF.test + echo ##################################################################### + echo + echo "$CONFIGF not changed!" + /bin/mv -f /log/exim/paniclog /log/exim/paniclog.mkfail + exit 1 +fi +/bin/rm $CONFIGF.test + +/bin/mv $CONFIGF.t $CONFIGF +echo "$CONFIGF updated successfully." +echo "Don't forget to HUP the mail daemon" +exit 0 + -- 2.25.1