The rapid spread of the Internet has led to an increase of
mail abuses. Prior to V8.8 sendmail, detecting and rejecting
abusive email required that you write C language code for
use in the checkcompat() routine (see Section 20.1, "How checkcompat() Works"). Beginning with
V8.8 sendmail important and useful checking and rejecting
can be done from within four brand new rule sets:
check_mail
Validate the sender-envelope address given to
the SMTP MAIL command.
check_rcpt
Validate the recipient-envelope address given to
the SMTP RCPT command.
check_relay
Validate the host initiating the SMTP connection.
check_compat
Compare or contrast each envelope sender and envelope recipient
pair of addresses just before delivery, and validate
based on the result.
These routines are handled in the same manner. If the rule set
does not exist, the address is accepted. If the rule set returns
anything other than a #error
delivery agent,
the message is accepted. Otherwise, the message is rejected by
using the mechanism described under the #error
delivery agent
(see Section 30.5.2, "The error Delivery Agent").
The MAIL command in the SMTP dialog is used to specify the envelope-sender address:
MAIL From: <[email protected]>
If the check_mail
rule set exists, it is called immediately
after the MAIL command is read. The workspace passed to
check_mail
is the address following the colon in the
MAIL command. That envelope sender address may or may
not be surrounded by angle braces.
To illustrate one use for the check_mail
rule set, consider
the need to reject all incoming mail from the site named
spamming.org.
[6]
One method might look like this:
[6] Also see Section 22.4.1, "Accept/Reject Connections via libwrap.a" for a discussion of how to use the TCP wrapper library from within sendmail.
Scheck_mail R$* $: $>3 $1 focus on the host R$* <@ $+. > $* $1 <@ $2> $3 strip trailing dots R$* <@ $+ > $* $: $2 isolate the host R$* . $+ . $+ $: $2 . $3 strip subdomains Rspamming.org $#error $@ 5.7.1 $: "cannot accept mail from spamming.org"
Here, we force rule set 3 to preprocess the address so that any RFC822 comments will be thrown away and so that the host part of the address will be focused. We then strip any trailing dots from the hostname to prevent a trailing dot from wrongly effecting our validation. In the third line we throw away everything but the hostname. In the fourth line we throw away all but the rightmost two components of the hostname to eliminate the host part and any subdomain prefixes. What remains is just the domain name. We then compare that domain name to the hostname spamming.org. If they match, we reject the sender.
After this rule set is installed (and the sendmail daemon had been restarted), all mail from spamming.org will be rejected during the SMTP dialogue like this:
MAIL From: <[email protected]> 553 <[email protected]>... cannot accept mail from spamming.org
This is just one possible use of the check_mail
rule set. Other uses might be the following:
Rejecting mail from specific users at a given site.
Looking up user@host in a database and rejecting the sender if that lookup succeeds.
Insisting that the host part of the address be canonifiable with
the $[
and $]
operators.
If you need to base a decision to reject mail on both the sender and the recipient,
you may be able to use the check_compat
rule set
described below.
The RCPT command in the SMTP dialogue specifies an envelope recipient's address:
RCPT To: <[email protected]>
If the check_rcpt
rule set exists, it is called immediately
after the RCPT command is read. The workspace that is passed to
check_rcpt
is the address following the colon.
The envelope recipient address may or may
not be surrounded by angle brackets and may or may not have
other RFC822 comments associated with it.
To illustrate one use for the check_rcpt
rule set, consider
the need to reject all incoming mail destined for the
recipient named fax. One method might look like this:
R$* $: $>3 $1 focus on host R$* <@ $~w > $* $@ ok not @ourhost is okay R$* <@ $+ > $* $: $1 discard host Rfax $#error $@ 5.1.3 $: "cannot send mail to fax"
Here, we first call rule set 3 to focus on the host part of the address and normalize it. The second rule accepts anything that is addressed to any host but our own. That way, mail to [email protected] will work. The third rule discards the host (our local) part of the address. In the fourth line the remaining user part is compared to the name fax. Any mail to fax is thus rejected:
RCPT To: <fax@ourhost> 553 <fax@ourhost>... cannot send mail to fax
Other uses for this check_rcpt
rule set might include the following:
Protecting a user who has become the target of a mail attack. You could create a
new account for this user and block incoming mail to the old account.
In the #error
message you could print a phone number that others may
call to obtain the new email address.
Claiming that certain secret users are unknown. These might be the pseudo-users associated with autonomous processes.
Refusing to accept mail that is not addressed to a user who has an active account as represented by the passwd(5) file (see Section 33.8.20, user).
Looking up recipients in a database and accepting mail for them only if they are found in that database. This way, only selected users may be allowed, for example, through a firewall, though the firewall knows all about all users.
Looking up local-looking recipients in a database to see whether they have
moved to a new location. If so, advise the other site of the new
address with a rejection message. This is similar to the
redirect
FEATURE (see Section 19.6.21, FEATURE(redirect)), but
operates at the RCPT level instead of sending bounced mail.
Turning off unwanted "relaying" through your machine. Requires use of the
${client_name}
macro (see Section 31.10.8, ${client-name}).
V8.8 sendmail supports two mechanisms for screening incoming SMTP
connections. One is the libwrap.a mechanism (see Section 22.4.1);
the other is this check_relay
rule set. This rule set is
used to screen incoming network connections and
accept or reject them based on hostname, domain, or IP
number. It is called just before the libwrap.a code and can be used if
that code was omitted from your release of sendmail.
The check_relay
rule set is called with a workspace that looks like
this:
hostname $| IPnumber
The hostname and IP number are separated by the $|
operator. The hostname
is the fully qualified canonical
name of the connecting host. The IPnumber
is the IP
number of that host in dotted-quad form without surrounding square brackets.
One way to use check_relay
might be to list offensive
sites in a database and to reject any connections from those sites.
Consider a database that contains hostnames as its keys and descriptions
of each host's offense as its values:
hostA.edu Spamming site hostB.com Mail Bombing site 123.45.6 Offensive domain
Notice that the keys can be hostnames or IP addresses. Such a database might be declared in the configuration file like this:
Kbadhosts dbm -a <> /etc/badhosts
Now, each time a site connects to your running daemon, the following rule set will be called:
Scheck_relay R$* $| $* $: $(badhosts $1 $) $| $2 look up host name R$*<> $| $* $#error $@ 5.1.3 $: Sorry, $1 denied R$* $| $* $: $2 select the IP number R$-.$-.$-.$- $: $(badhosts $1.$2.$3 $) look up domain part R$*<> $#error $@ 5.1.3 $: Sorry, $1 denied R$* $@ ok otherwise okay
The second rule looks up the host part in the database. If it is found,
the value (reason for rejection) is returned and the two characters <>
are appended. The third rule looks for anything to the left of the $|
that ends in <>
and, if anything is found, issues the error:
[7]
[7] Actually, the message is not printed; instead, the SMTP daemon goes into a "reject everything" mode. This prevents some SMTP implementations from retrying the connection.
Sorry, reason for reject denied
Rejected connections are handled the same way as connections rejected by the libwrap.a technique (see Section 22.4.1).
The rest of the rules do the same thing, except that they check for the IP
number. If the check_relay
rule set returns anything other than
a #error
delivery agent, the address is accepted.
Note that the rules presented here are not nearly as complex or sophisticated as your site will likely need. It does not, for example, reject on the basis of the domain part of hostnames, nor does it reject on the basis of the individual host IP addresses.
Note that such rule sets cannot be tested in rule-testing mode, because
that mode interprets the expression $|
(when you enter it at the
>
prompt) wrongly as two separate text characters instead of
correctly as a single operator.
To test an address that contains an embedded $|
operator,
we suggest that you create a translation rule set something like this:
STranslate R$* $$| $* $: $1 $| $2 fake for -bt mode
This rule set changes a literal $
and |
into a $|
operator so that you can test rule sets such as check_relay
from rule-testing mode:
ADDRESS TEST MODE (ruleset 3 NOT automatically invoked) Enter <ruleset> <address> >Translate,check_relay bogus.host.domain $| 123.45.67.89
Here, the comma-separated list of rule sets begins with Translate
, which
changes the two-character text expression "$|
" into the
single operator $|
. The result, an address expression that is suitable
for the check_relay
rule set, can then be successfully tested.
[8]
[8] Don't be tempted to put this rule directly into the
check_relay
rule set. You may someday encounter an address that has the two adjacent characters "$
" and "|
" as a legal part of it. Also beware of such addresses being intentionally sent just to circumvent your checks.
Not all situations can be resolved by simply checking the recipient or sender address.
Sometimes you will need to make judgments based on pairs of addresses.
To handle this situation,
V8.8 introduced the check_compat
rule set.
Unlike check_mail
and check_rcpt
, check_compat
is called for all deliveries, not just SMTP transactions.
It is called just after the check for too large a size (as defined
by M=
; see Section 30.4.7, M=) and just before
the checkcompat() routine is called (see Section 20.1).
The check_compat
rule set is called with a workspace that
looks like this:
sender $| recipient
The sender and recipient address are separated by the $|
operator.
Each has undergone aliasing and ~/.forward file processing.
As one example of a way to use the check_compat
rule set, consider
the need to prevent a certain user (here operator) from sending
mail offsite:
SGet_domain R$* $: $>3 $1 focus on host R$* <@ $+. > $* $1 <@ $2> $3 strip trailing dots R$* <@ $+ > $* $: $2 isolate the host R$* . $+ . $+ $@ $2 . $3 strip host and subdomains SGet_user R$* $: $>3 $1 focus on host R$* <@ $+ > $* $@ $1 discard host Scheck_compat R$* $| $* $: $1 $| $>Get_domain $2 fetch recipient domain R$* $| $=w $@ ok local is okay R$* $| $m $@ ok local is okay R$* $| $* $: $>Get_user $1 fetch sender user Roperator $#error $@ 5.1.3 $: "operator may not mail offsite"
First we set up two subroutines patterned after the code in the previous two sections.
The first reduces its workspace to just the domain part of an address.
The second reduces an address to just the user part.
These two subroutines are called by check_compat
.
The first rule in check_compat
uses the Get_domain
subroutine to convert
the address on the right (the recipient) into just a domain name.
That right side is compared to the local hosts names ($=w
and
$m
). If the domain is a local one, delivery is allowed
(we return anything but #error
).
If the domain is an offsite one, we then call Get_user
to fetch the user part of the address to the left (the sender).
If that user is operator, delivery is denied and
the message bounces.
Other uses for the check_compat
rule set might be the following:
Creating a class of user who, possibly for security reasons, may send only mail inside the organization, but not outside it.
Screening a particular recipient to prevent that user from receiving objectionable mail from a specific source.
Screening mail based on hostname to prevent outsiders from using your host as a mail relay.
Note that such rule sets cannot be tested in rule-testing mode because
that mode interprets the expression $|
(when you enter it at the
>
prompt) wrongly as two separate text characters instead of
correctly as a single operator.
See Section 29.10.3, "The check_relay Rule Set" for one suggested solution to this problem.