Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Easy steps to preventing spam

Easy steps to preventing spam

The following 10 steps offer a very common sense (though often overlooked) approach to avoiding spam. If you follow these guidelines, you’ll notice a drastic decrease in the number of annoying messages that make it into your inbox…

01. Give your primary email address to friends and family only. Give a different address to others on the Internet. Although this second address will be more likely to receive unwanted emails, it is more disposable and can allow you to better control the emails you receive. Your ISP almost certainly offers multiple email addresses, and Yahoo, Microsoft and Google all offer free web based email accounts. These are great to use as disposable addresses.
02. Make sure your email address is difficult to guess. Don’t use just a common name or common word(s). Spammers use software programs to generate random email addresses based on common names and words in the dictionary.
It is NOT uncommon for a brand new email address to start receiving spam almost immediately after it has been created. This happens because even though the address is new, spammers will take a previously used user name (eg. jdoe@whatever.com) and apply it to a different domain (eg. jdoe@another_domain.com).
In addition, common email addresses may have been used previously and may still be on old mailing lists.
03. Do not post your primary email address in newsgroups, bulletin boards or chat rooms. Spammers use software programs, often referred to as spiders or bots, to search for and harvest email addresses from public forums. To prevent this, use a secondary email address or alter the primary address so that it is not deliverable in that format. For example, if your email address is jdoe@whatever.com, you could post it as jdoe@TAKE-THIS-OUT.whatever.com or “jdoe at whatever dot com”.
04. Do not post your primary email address on a Web site. Spiders also scan Web sites for email addresses. You can alter your email address to help protect it but remember that email harvesting software can read HTML code, so be sure to remove the “mailto:” tag.
05. Do not reply to unsolicited emails. If the email does not appear to be from a trustworthy or legitimate source, delete it without replying. A federal anti-spam law called The Can Spam Act, went into effect January 1, 2004, requiring a functioning “opt out” link or a legitimate “reply to unsubscribe” email address. Some unscrupulous spammers have ignored this law and continue to trick recipients into unwittingly responding to a fake “opt out” link, which actually verifies their email address as a valid one. Therefore, it is still strongly recommended that recipients of unsolicited email carefully consider whether an “opt out” or “reply to unsubscribe” seems legitimate and act accordingly.
06. Consider using an alternate email address when signing up for services, filling out forms or taking surveys on the Internet. Read the privacy policy of these sites. Keep in mind, if the service is “free” they often need to generate revenue in some manner and advertising is often used to do this.
07. When signing up for a mailing list, read the terms and policies. Signing up should result in wanted or solicited email, but the list provider should disclose whether signing up will result in the sale or trade of your email address to other parties.
08. Let friends and family know that you do not wish to have them share your email address.
09. Keep your PCs anti-virus software up-to-date and install a firewall. Unprotected high-speed Internet connections are vulnerable to infection by viruses that are programmed to open gateways, also known as proxies, to relay spam. By not keeping your PC secure, you may unwittingly be a courier for spam. There’s a good chance your ISP offers free or discounted security software - this article can help you figure out if yours does.
10. Check “sent mail” folders for suspicious messages. Take responsibility for your PC by checking your “sent mail” folder regularly to ensure that all sent mail is really being sent by you and not by a spammer using an open gateway (proxy) on your computer.
Anand Shah

Block IP how to in Windows IIS and Apache

Block IP How To

The following tutorial explainss how you can block IP addresses from viewing your website in Windows IIS and Linux/Unix Apache. Blocking IP addresses prevents users from seeing your website during construction, limits access to specific users, or to blocks users attempting to connect to your site maliciously.

Block IP how to in Windows IIS

To block an IP address from viewing your website, please follow these steps:
1. Login to your server through Terminal Services or Remote Desktop Connection. 2. Click Start, select Programs, and then click Administrative Tools. For IIS 5.0 click Internet Services Manager. For IIS 6.0 click Internet Information Services.3. In the left column you will see the Server Name. In IIS 5.0, expand the Server Name to find the domain name. In IIS 6.0, expand the Server Name and then Web Sites to find the domain name.4. Right-click on the domain name and select Properties.5. On the Directory Security Tab under IP Address and Domain Name Restrictions click Edit.You have two options, you can grant access to all computers and restrict individual IP's or you can deny access to all computers and grant access to specific IP's. By default, all users will be granted access to your site except the IP addresses you specify.To add an IP address to the restriction list, please follow these steps: 1. Click Add.2. Select the type: Single Computer - add a single IP Address. Group of Computers - add a block IP Address using the starting IP address of the block and the appropriate subnet mask. Domain Name - add a domain name (this method is not recommended). 3. Click Ok.


Block IP how to in Linux/Unix Apache


You can also block (or admit) users based on their incoming IP address: RewriteEngine on RewriteMap block dbm:/www/conf/my.block RewriteCond ${block:%{REMOTE_ADDR}OK} !^OK$ RewriteRule ^/.* http://%{REMOTE_ADDR}/ [L]
You create my.block.db from a file (named blocklist) that looks like this: xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx block
and piping it to./db_create my.block.db < blocklist
You can add additional entries on the fly: echo "xxx.xxx.xxx.xxy block" ./db_create



Anand Shah

Blocking Spam with Sendmail

Like a great many people on the net, I found myself increasingly annoyed by the rising tide of spam. By which I do not mean the delectible Hormel canned meat product (which the little lady especially likes fried in a fried egg sandwich), but the phenomenon of unsolicited commercial email.

Spam is unlike regular junk mail from the post office for several reasons:


Normal junk mail costs money to send. Spam does not. The cost is born by the recipients and by the servers in between. While normal junk mail is a revenue source for the post office and actually helps to pay for delivering regular mail, spam pays for nothing. Spam can hence be viewed as theft of services.

Spam has detrimental effects. Historically Internet mail servers have passed along email between third parties as a gesture of friendship and good will. Much like tossing your neighbor's paper over the fence if the paperboy misses his throw. This is happening less and less because spammers take advantage of it.

Spam reduces the utility of email. People become discouraged about checking their mailboxes if they are always cluttered with spam.

Enough ranting. I decided to do something. Being the sort who favors technical fixes over legal ones, I started doing some research on the web, ordered a copy of the Bat book, and spent some time reading my sendmail configuration and scratching my head. I present here the result.
First, if you're not using sendmail I can't help you. Second, you need the latest version of sendmail or these tricks won't work. And finally, we had several conditions that had to be met:


We wanted to be able to block spam by domain name, network number, or by specific address for maximum flexibility.

We needed to be able to allow spam to selected mailboxes for customers who do not want spam blocked. I may disagree with them, but they are paying for a service and it is, after all, their mail. Spam blocking had to be a value added service that could be turned off.

We host a number of "virtual domains" and needed to be able to route email for them to the proper mailboxes. We had already been doing that, but it was a factor that had to be considered in our antispam measures so that spam could be blocked or not as desired by the mailbox owners.

We wanted to stop "third party relay" going through our mail server while allowing for exceptions for customers with their own domains and mail servers or for roaming customers.

I think I have come up with a set of sendmail rules which accomplish this.
First, we need to add a few entries in the local configuration section:


LOCAL_CONFIG

Fw/etc/vdomain.cw
Kvdomain hash /etc/vdomain

# list of people who like spam
F{fools} /etc/WantSpam

# list of known spammers
Kjunk hash -a@JUNK /etc/spammers

# List of network addresses we will relay for
F{LocalIP} /etc/LocalIP

# List of domains we will relay to
F{RelayTo} /etc/RelayTo


Click on the filename of any of these files for an explanation of its purpose and contents.
Now we get to the rules themselves. First, an entry must be added to your local rule zero, like so:

LOCAL_RULE_0
R$* $: $>vmap $1

Not very interesting, is it? It just calls another rule set, named "vmap", which handles virtual domain address mapping. Note: I don't know what the "right way" is to do these things, but it works to just list all the rest of these rulesets right under LOCAL_RULE_0, so that's what I do. Here then is the "vmap" ruleset:
Svmap
R$+ < @ $+ . > $: $1 < @ $2 > .
R$+ < @ $+ > $* $: $(vdomain $1@$2 $: $1 < @ $2 > $3 $)
R$+ < @ $+ > $* $: $(vdomain $2 $: $1 < @ $2 > $3 $)
R$+ < @ $+ > . $: $1 < @ $2 . >

I made this a separate ruleset since I do it again in the rest of the rules, as you will see. I have obscure reasons for not just calling local rule zero as needed.
Next I define a "junk" ruleset to look up a domain name or email address in the /etc/spammers.db database:

Sjunk
R$* $: $(junk $1$) look for host in spammer list
R$+@JUNK $@ $1@JUNK return message if found
R@JUNK $@ Spam refused @JUNK generic message
R$-.$+ $: $1 . $>junk $2 retry skipping lead subdomain
R$-.$+@JUNK $@ $2@JUNK return message if found

Next, a "junkIP" ruleset to look up an IP address or network number in the /etc/spammers.db database:
SjunkIP
R$* $: $(junk $1$) look for host in spammer list
R$+@JUNK $@ $1@JUNK return message if found
R@JUNK $@ Spam refused @JUNK generic message
R$+.$- $: $2 . $>junkIP $1 retry without trailing number
R$-.$+@JUNK $@ $2@JUNK return message if found
R$-.$+ $@ $2.$1 fix order if not spammer

Now for the heart of it, the "check_rcpt" ruleset. Spam blocking is more often done in the "check_mail" ruleset, but we can't do it that way since we need to check the recipient to see if they want spam. Hence, this ruleset gets a bit long.
Scheck_rcpt
R$* $: $>vmap $>3 $1 normalize address

# Refuse to relay mail between nonlocal systems
R$* $: $(dequote "" $&{client_addr} $) $ $1
R0 $ $* $@ ok no client addr: directly invoked
R$={LocalIP}$* $ $* $@ ok from here
R$* $ $* $: $2 not from local, check recipient
R$*<@$=w.>$* $>3 $1 $3 remove our aliases, maybe repeatedly
R$*<@$*$={RelayTo}.>$* $>3 $1 $4 remove domains we relay to
# still something left?
R$*<@$+>$* $#error $@ 5.5.4 $: "554 we do not relay from " $&{client_name} " to " $1@$2$3

# Allow mail to fools who like spam, and otherwise block spammers
R$={fools} $@ ok recipient listed as wanting spam

# Block by host or domain name
R$* $: $(dequote "" $&{client_name} $)
R$* $: $>junk $1
R$*@JUNK $#error $@ 5.5.4 $: "554 " $1 ": " $&{client_name}

# Block by network or host IP address
R$* $: $(dequote "" $&{client_addr} $)
R$* $: $>junkIP $1
R$*@JUNK $#error $@ 5.5.4 $: "554 " $1 ": " $&{client_addr}

# Block by specific email address
R$* $: $(dequote "" $&f $)
R$* $: $>junk $1
R$*@JUNK $#error $@ 5.5.4 $: "554 " $1 ": " $&f
R$* @ $* $: $1 @ $>junk $2
R$* @ $*@JUNK $#error $@ 5.5.4 $: "554 " $2 ": " $&f

# Block mail from invalid addresses
R$* $: $>3 $1 make domain canonical
R$* < @ $+ .> $* $@ ok name resolved ok
# Killer case -- single token domain
R$* < @ $- > $* $#error $@ 5.5.1 $: "551 Invalid host name: " $2
# Delay case -- domain doesn't resolve
R$* < @ $+ > $* $#error $@ 4.5.1 $: "451 Unknown domain: " $2

And that's it. If you'd like, you can download a text version of this for easier editing.
Oh, one last thing. The rejection messages all get logged in /var/log/maillog (at least on our system). Here's a PERL script for maillog.scan that gives us a nightly report of spam blocks:

#!/usr/bin/perl

while($lt;$gt;) {
if(/rejection:.*\.\.\. ? ?(.*)/) {
$spam{$1} += 1;
}
}

print "\nSpam blocks:\n\n";

foreach $msg (sort keys %spam) {
printf "%5d %s\n", $spam{$msg}, $msg;
}

print "\n";



Anand Shah

Understanding QMAIL

README_SPAMCONTROL
Objective


SPAMCONTROL is an extension for qmail. It provides the following features:

Enhancements for qmail-smtpd:

ESMTP enhancements
Strict RFC 2821 conformance.
Reference 'Mail From:' parameter parser, supporting SIZE (RFC 1870) and AUTH options.
Customizable SMTP Authentication (RFC 2554) support for LOGIN, PLAIN, and CRAM-MD5.
Optional STARTTLS (RFC 2487) support in conjunction with sslserver. +)
Mail From Verification (MAV) allows relaying only of verified/authorized addresse. +)
SMTP envelope Anti-Spam-Tools
Wildmat Filters for the HELO/EHLO greeting and the 'Mail From: ' in Split-Horizon fashion.
DNS Lookup for the HELO/EHLO greeting (A/MX) and the domain part of the 'Mail From:' (MX).
Customizable HELO/EHLO greeting checks.
Tarpitting and Smart Rejection in case of too many invalid Recipients.
Enhanced badmailfrom support
Wildmat filter.
Additional 'badmailfromunknown' capabilities. #)
Anti-spoofing of own addresses. #)
Recipients extensions
badrcptto wildmat filter.
Restricting the number of allowed 'Rcpt To:' per SMTP session.
Whitelisting: Controlling the reception of mails not only on a rcpthosts base but rather on the complete with fast and extensible cdb-lookup, domain-wildlisting and VERP support.
Customizable 550 or 450 return messages. #)
Virus prevention
Reference badmimetypes implementation.
Additional badloadertypes filter.
Qmail High Performance Scanner Interface (QHPSI).
Customizable SMTP 554 Reply Message.
Logging
Extensible logging format.
Logging for failed and accepted SMTP sessions.
Enhancements for qmail-remote:

SMTP Authentication
Supported are Auth types LOGIN and PLAIN.
Additional authsenders control file.
Fast delivery
Delivery to any DNS listed MX for that domain instead just the primary.
Increased read buffer for delivery.
Enhancements for qmail-pop3d:

STARTTLS support
Enhancements for qmail-queue:

High speed virus scanner by means of QHPSI
Additional QMAILQUEUE usage
Optional BIGTODO support
Enhancements for qmail-send:

Bounce control
Restricting the size of bounces.
Doublebouncetrim.
Additional recognition of local IP addresses
moreipme
notipme
With SPAMCONTROL, qmail-smtpd can stand the two most common threats:

Lexical and/or dictionary Spam attacks in particular to none-existing and the subsequent generation of bounce messages to none-existing .
Virus Bombing and resource exhaustion due to Virus Scanners.
Additionally, qmail-smtpd allows

positive verification and indication of authorized use of the ("Mail From:") for Relayclients (MAV).


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


0. Conventions
0.1 Definitions
Sender = SMTP envelope sender (Mail From: )
Recipient = SMTP envelope recipient (Rcpt To: )
Nullsender Mail = E-Mail with empty Sender (Mail From: <>)
Full qualified SMTP E-Mail address: "user@domain.com" (for Sender/Recipient)
0.2 qmail-smtpd run Script
Throughout this document, I assume that qmail-smtpd is under control of supervise (out of the Daemontools package) and served by tcpserver (part of the UCSPI package) or a patched version of sslserver (part of the UCSPI-SSL package).

A typical - minimal - so called run script looks like follows:

#!/bin/sh
# qmail-smtpd startup
QMAILDUID=`id -u qmaild`
QMAILDGID=`id -g qmaild`
HOSTNAME=`hostname`
exec tcpserver -vR \
-u $QMAILDUID -g $QMAILDGID \
-l $HOSTNAME 0 smtp \
/var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd 2>&1
0.3 Environment Variables
Qmail - and SPAMCONTROL - relies on the concept of environment variables which are available for a task (sharing the same environment). qmail-smtpd may be fed by environment variables in three different fashions:

(Gobal) Exported variables in the run script; eg. export RELAYCLIENT="".
(Gobal) By means of the envdir facility as part of the Daemontools package.
(Gobal) Using a "profile" configuration file called in the run script by means of the "dot" syntax (. pofile).
(Individual) Setting the appropriate variable in the tcpserver cdb database.
While the first three cases define static and "global" environments variables, the last case makes the environment variables client-dependent and - by means of tcprules - dynamically changeable. Any mixture is possible, though only the "last" setting of an environment variable is effective!

0.4 tcpservers' cdb
As a convention, I will call the tcperver's cdb, which rules the behavior of qmail-smtpd, tcp.smtp. A typical tcp.smtp would look like

=mydomain.com:allow,RELAYCLIENT="",LOCALMFCHECK=""
1.2.3.4:allow,RELAYCLIENT="",LOCALMFCHECK="otherdomain.com"
5.6.7.8:allow,REQUIREAUTH=""
:allow,MFDNSCHECK="",BADMIMETYPE="",BADLOADERTYPE="M"
The cdb is constructed on the fly:

tcprules tcp.smtp.cdb tcp.smtp.tmp < tcp.smtp
Caution: For use with tcpserver, the value of the environment variable has to be included in quotes.

0.5 rcpthosts/morercpthosts.cdb
Though qmail can live happily without the knowledge of domains to be responsible for as provided by rcpthosts/morercpthosts.cdb, it is highly adviceable to include all domains to receive emails for (as per DNS MX Records) into those control files. Otherwise, qmail-smtpd may act as an Open Relay. Further, some LOCALMFCHECKs will fail, as discussed below.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


1. qmail-smtpd Protocol Extensions
1.1 Size Extension
qmail-smtpd's "Mail From:" parameter parser is used to detect and evaluate the SIZE parameter and to eventually reject messages which initially exceed the databytes limit.

Nevertheless, qmail-smtpd checks the size of the incoming message anyway.

For incoming E-Mails which exceed the message size values (in Bytes) defined in

control/databytes
or via the $DATABYTES environment variable.

1.2 SMTP Authentication
SMTP Authentication requires a Client to authenticate and a Server to honor the authentication procedure. In this version of SPAMCONTROL, Qmail acts as an Authentication Server for qmail-smtpd and as an Authentication Client for qmail-remote.

Usually, a MTA (such as Qmail) will accept transmissions of E-Mails anyway as long as the "Rcpt To: " is targeted to a local Recipient (according to control/rcpthosts). However, with SMTP Authentication you may allow an authenticated User to relay E-Mails. In this respect, SMTP Authentication copes with the deficiencies of the POP3/IMAP4 protocol and is applied as an alternative to SMTP-after-POP, which is ugly as well.

I have taken the SMTP-Auth Patch from Krzysztof Dabrowski and included this into SPAMCONTROL. However, SPAMCONTROL's implementation is compliant with the checkpassword API designed by Dan Bernstein (the Plugable Authentication Module PAM).

SPAMCONTROL provides the following features:

(E-)SMTP-Auth protocol extension for qmail-smtpd with the keywords AUTH PLAIN LOGIN CRAM-MD5.
"Mail From:" parameter parser/generator for the parameter AUTH (ie. AUTH=userid) as 'xtext'.
BASE64 en/decoding of the User-Id/Password/Digest.
checkpassword compatible call-API for an arbitrary PAM program.
For authenticated users, their Userid is treated as TCPREMOTEINFO and displayed in qmail-smtpd 'Received:' header.
Logging of successful and failed authentication attempts.
1.2.1 Pluggable Authentication Module PAM
While SASL is a generic concept, the information flow for authentication between e.g. qmail-smtpd and the PAM is defined by Dan Bernstein's checkpassword API. SPAMCONTROL provides the PAM on file descriptor 3 as an informational string composed of:

The BASE64-decoded Userid followed by a 0,
The BASE64-decoded Password (Login and Plain) or Digest (CRAM-MD5) followed by a 0, and
The plain Challenge followed by a trailing 0, thus the PAM can reconstruct and validate the Digest in the CRAM-MD5 case.
You are free to choose or even write your own PAM program, but in any case, the SASL Procedure of the client and the server has to match and the procedure has to be advertised. Compliant PAMs:

Dan Bernstein's checkpassword
Larry M. Smith's checkpassword.pl,
My cmd5checkpw version 0.30.
Vpopmail's (5.4) vchkpw
....
1.2.3 qmail-smtpd Setup for SMTP Authentication
qmail-smtpd including SMTP Authentication may be called by tcpserver/sslserver in a supervise run script. Here is an example (with some more features):

#!/bin/sh
# qmail-smtpd startup with SMTP Authentication
QMAILDUID=`id -u qmaild`
QMAILDGID=`id -g qmaild`
HOSTNAME=`hostname`
export SMTPAUTH=""
exec softlimit -m 2000000 \
tcpserver -vR -l $HOSTNAME \
-u $QMAILDUID -g $QMAILDGID 0 smtp \
/var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd /bin/cmd5checkpw true 2>&1
Beware! Unlike the original implementation, I omitted the inclusion of the Hostname as argument for qmail-smtpd.

Unlike the standard qmail-smtpd, now you have

define the environment variable SMTPAUTH to allow SMTP authentication and
to provide in addition a PAM program, here cmd5checkpw, which itself calls a shell named 'true' (/bin/true or /usr/bin/true) exiting simply with "0".
The environment variable SMTPAUTH may be left blank to allow Authentication types "PLAIN" and "LOGIN" or may be currently set to "cram..." (lower case) to enable CRAM-MD5 authentication in addition.

1.2.4 User Database for cmd5checkpw
For SMTP Authentication, a User Database has to be generated and maintained. The SMTP Authentication User may exist independently of any System Users, Qmail Users, or E-Mail Accounts. In case of the modified cmd5checkpw I decided to keep the User in the Qmail directory as

users/authuser
There exist other flavors, in particular the saslpasswd scheme or the Cyrus SASL Library you may want to use. Further, for users with POP3/IMAP4 Accounts on the system it is advisable to use a common User Database. For Vpopmail you may use vchkpw.

However, since you are free to use any other checkpassword compliant PAM, it's up to you whatever you apply. Please remember: In order to access the Unix /etc/passwd the respective program has to run as root.

1.2.5 Requiring SMTP Authentication
You can use the environment variable REQUIREAUTH to enforce authentication for particular clients. A typical run script to require SMTP Authentication for particular SMTP clients looks like:

12.34.56:allow,RELAYCLIENT="",SMTPAUTH="CRAM-MD5",REQUIREAUTH=""
:allow
1.2.6 SMTP Authentication and Vpopmail
SMTP Authentication works well with vpopmail, however, you have to use a checkpassword compatible PAM. Older versions of vchkpw have to be patched accordingly (see http://www.fehcom.de/qmail/smtpauth.html).

vchpkw offers a lot of authentication capabilities; it supports login, plain, and CRAM-MD5 and may authenticate the user against a mysql database and others. In start-up script for qmail-smtpd you have to make sure to access the user database with the correct user access rights:

#!/bin/sh
# qmail-smtpd startup with SMTP Authentication + vpopmail
QMAILDUID=`id -u vpopmail`
QMAILDGID=`id -g vpopmail`
HOSTNAME=`hostname`
export SMTPAUTH="crammd5"
exec softlimit -m 2000000 \
tcpserver -vR -l $HOSTNAME \
-u $QMAILDUID -g $QMAILDGID 0 smtp \
/var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd /home/vpopmail/bin/vchkpw true 2>&1
If you use Sqwebmail in addition, the user is free to set his/her own password.

1.3 STARTTLS support
SPAMCONROL's STARTTLS support for qmail-smtpd is aligned with Scott Gifford's approach and depends on the following:

Superscript's sslserver (0.70) instead of tcpserver
the enclosed patch against sslserver to allow STARTTLS in addition with standard TLS,
the availability of a valid X.509 cerificate, an appropiate key, and additionally a Diffi-Hellman parameter file,
the correct feeding (via environment variables) of those settings to sslserver to allow encryption.
My STARTTLS implemention conforms with RFC 3207.

1.3.1 STARTTLS implementation
Most current STARTTLS/TLS solutions depend on the existance and availability of the OpenSSL libraries -- so does SPAMCONROL. However, unlike other implementations, qmail-smtpd is insulated against OpenSSL by means of sslserver. In fact, all encryption and certificate verification is facilitated by sslserver. In this respect, Scott's and my STARTTLS implementation is very much OSI-like. The communication and presentation happens at a well defined environment, typically assigned to the user and group ssl. Any potential attacks or bugs are kept away from the application and don't harm.

The reading and response to client cerificates and the actual encryption happens in the assigned user spaces; which should never be root.

1.3.2 Prereqs
Install Superscript's ucspi-ssl (version 0.70). Apply the attached patch "ucspi-ssl-0.70-ucspitls-0.2.patch_" against the source, typically found at /package/host/superscript.com/net/ucspi-ssl-0.70/src and execute package/install base. This patch includes (delayed) STARTTLS support to sslserver and will allow to substitude tcpserver completely, even if no SSL/TLS communication is required.

Further, it is helpful to create a low privileged user and group ssl, which will be used by sslserver for SSL/TLS communication purposes. Please follow Scott Giffords' advices.

1.3.3 STARTTLS Settings
Substiute tcpserver with sslserver in the run script for qmail-smtpd. If you use softlimits, it might be necessary to raise those settings significantly due to the increased memory requirements. Here is my run script:

#!/bin/sh
QMAILDUID=`id -u qmaild`
QMAILDGID=`id -g qmaild`
HOSTNAME=`hostname`
export SMTPAUTH="crammd5"
export UCSPITLS=""
MAXCONCURRENCY=`cat /var/qmail/control/concurrencyincoming`
. /var/qmail/ssl/env
exec softlimit -m 180000000 \
sslserver -sevn -w 5 -R -l $HOSTNAME -c $MAXCONCURRENCY \
-x /var/qmail/etc/tcp.smtpd.cdb \
-u $QMAILDUID -g $QMAILDGID 0 smtp \
/var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd cmd5checkpw true 2>&1
It is absolutely necessary to use the "-n" flag for sslserver, since this will trigger the availability of encrypted communications channels between sslserver and qmail-smtpd.

The environment variables needed to feed sslserver are included in the "profile" /var/qmail/ssl/env. In my system, they have the following settings:

# Set
SSL_USER=ssl
SSL_GROUP=ssl
SSL_DIR="/var/qmail/ssl"
# Rest
SSL_CHROOT="$SSL_DIR"
CERTFILE="/var/qmail/ssl/cert"
KEYFILE="/var/qmail/ssl/key"
DHFILE="/var/qmail/ssl/dhparam"
SSL_UID=`id -u $SSL_USER`
if [ $? -ne 0 ] ; then echo "No such user '$SSL_USER'" >&2 ; exit; fi
SSL_GID=`id -g $SSL_USER`
if [ $? -ne 0 ] ; then echo "No such group '$SSL_GROUP'" >&2 ; exit; fi
export SSL_UID SSL_GID SSL_CHROOT
export CERTFILE KEYFILE DHFILE
Of course it is required, to have raised the directory /var/qmail/ssl before and generate via openssl the appropriate keys before.

Note: These settings are "global"; however, by means of sslserver and the settings in your tcp.smtpd file it is possible to use different certificates per connection.

Comment: Please read the documentation of UCSPI-SSL carefully w.r.t. the "mod-ssl" variables. It might in addition be necessary to define CAFILE, CADIR and other SSL options to your needs.

After you verified your stettings, restart qmail-smtpd. Whether qmail-smtpd will present "STARTTLS" in the EHLO dialogue, depends on the presence of the UCSPITLS environment variable. These can be set i.e. per IP in the tcp.smtpd control file.

In addition, you can enforce a TLS encrypted sessions defining REQUIRETLS="" for particular connections.

1.3.4 STARTTLS and SMTPAUTH
In case qmail-smtpd is instructed to use STARTTLS and SMTPAUTH, SMTP Authentication always takes place after the TLS session is active, but never reverse. Thus, all SMTP parameters like username and password are already encrypted. Of course, SMTP Authentication is still available for unencrypted SMTP connections, and STARTTLS does not require per se SMTP Authentication. However, STARTTLS and SMTP Authentication is a strong and powerful couple to secure the SMTP communication

1.3.5 STARTTLS Received Header Extensions
SPAMCONTROL displays the use of STARTTLS in the Received header (according to RFC 3207). The following information is added:

The TLS protocol in use.
The Cipher in use.
The presented encryption key length the and key length in place.
The client's "Subject" Destinguished Name (DN).
Here's a sample using Thunderbird als email client:

Received: (qmail 35450 invoked from network); 15 Mar 2006 20:22:09 -0000
Received: from dornroeschen.fehnet.de (HELO ?192.168.192.19?) (erwin@192.168.192.19)
encrypted via TLSv1: RC4-MD5 [128/128] DN=unknown
by orion.fehnet.de with ESMTPSA; 15 Mar 2006 20:22:09 -0000
1.4 MAV: "Mail From: Address Verification"
Mail From: Adress Verification (MAV) is a mean to enforce the use of the SMTP "Mail From:" address for particular Relayclients. Former versions of SPAMCONTROL used a "LOCALMF" check which allowed only a very limited granularity. However, with MAV you can control/enforce

the use of a particluar domain name (@example.com) per IP connection in the "Mail From:" - or -
the use of a particular "Mail From:" address (user@example.com) per Authenticated User.
MAV is in particluar very useful, if emails from your domains have to be undoubtly "officially" send.

1.4.1 Requiring MAV
Mail From: Address Verification is only be done if the flag 'relayclient' is set. This flag is set if

the environment variable RELAYCLIENT is provided through tcpserver/sslserver (i.e. by means of POP-before-SMTP) - or -
in case the user is verified by means of SMTP Authentication.
For these circumstances MAV can be enforced by means of the environment variable LOCALMFCHECK:

LOCALMFCHECK='"" means, the domain/host-part of the provided SMTP Originator address is checked against the contents of control/rcpthosts and control/morercpthost.cdb.
LOCALMFCHECK="example.com" requires that the domain/host-part of the Originator address matches the provided string (here: "example.com" - irrespectively of the case).
LOCALMFCHECK="!" checks the Originator address against the contents of the file control/mfrules.cdb.
1.4.2 Control files mfrules and mfrules.cdb
The file control/mfrules follows roughly the same syntax as the common file tcp.smtpd used for tcpserver/sslserver. It assigns either a complete SMTP address, a FQDN, an IP adress or a domain to a set of allowed Originator addresses. In practice control/mfrules allows

for relayclients qualified by SMTP authentication - to verify the used SMTP Originator address against the allowed/assigned address,
for relayclients identified by IP or domain - to verify the used Originator address against a list of assigned possible addresses,
for relayclients identified by IP or domain - to verify the used host/domain-part of the SMTP Originator address against the assigned domain-name.
Once you have populated control/mfrules run qmail-mfrules to derive control/mfrules.cdb from the input file. Additionally, define LOCALMFCHECK="!" either gobally or in the tcp.smtpd file.

1.4.2. Reply to the relayclients
Mail Clients may be setup wrongly or a user may want to use the relaying MTA to send emails for a different name. In case, MAV is in place and well configured, the particular user will not be allowed to send the mail over the gateway receiving the following SMTP reply:

553 sorry, invalid address specified (#5.7.1)
Since this might not be helpful for the (innocent) sender, you might use the environment variable REPLYMAV to add a qualification to that message.

1.4.3 MAV SMTP protocol extension
MAV puts the burden of SMTP Originator address verification ot the relaying MTA; that is the reverse scheme compared to SPF and others. Emails qualified through MAV are labeled with "ESMTPM" in the Received header, which is generated by qmail-smtpd.


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2. qmail-smtpd SMTP Envelope Filters
The SMTP Envelope consists of three parts:

The HELO/EHLO greeting from the SMTP Client.
The Originator: Mail From: .
The Recipient: Rcpt To: .
SPAMCONTROL allows to filter E-Mails according to the bad* criteria with a so-called wildmat search, which is a subset of the known Regualar Expressions (RegEx). The wildmat search works in order least significant to most significant and includes

a case-insensitive straight search - and -
a case-sensitive wildmat search
The following sets of wildmat control characters can be used:

Exclamation mark (!): The wildmat filter allows you to define exceptions for particular clients/addresses by simply putting an exclamation mark (!) as first character in the line.
Asterisk (*): General pattern matching character; one or more preceding.
Question Mark (?): Match zero or one preceding.
Backslash (\): Literal expression of following character, eg. \[.
Match one from a set ([...]): i.e. [Ff][Aa][Kk][Ee] matches FAKE, fake, FaKe, FAKe etc.
2.1 SMTP Envelope Addresses
Any E-Mail address, lets say consists of a

local part: user (left from the "@") and a
host part: host.domain.com (right hand side from the "@").

qmail-smtpd converts hostnames and domainnames taken from the tcp-env/tcpserver environment to lowercase (see man addresses).
qmail-smtpd reads the SMTP envelope address inside the recommended SMTP envelope brackets "<" and ">".
Originally, SMTP addresses without the brackets are accepted; and are terminated if a blank is seen " ",
however with SPAMCONROL (and RFC 2821) brackets are mandatory.
Double-quotes in SMTP addresses "forwarding path" are stripped.
E-Mail addresses for local accounts are considered case-insensitive and delivered irrespective of their case.

Lets say - if the local account is "admin" and the RCPT to: tells or the delivery will be successful.

2.2 Filtering HELO/EHLO Greetings (badhelo)
RFC 2821 says: "These commands (HELO/EHLO) are used to identify the SMTP client to the SMTP server. The argument field contains the fully-qualified domain name of the SMTP client if one is available. In situations in which the SMTP client system does not have a meaningful domain name (e.g., when its address is dynamically allocated and no reverse mapping record is available), the client SHOULD send an address literal (see section 4.1.3), optionally followed by information that will help to identify the client system. y The SMTP server identifies itself to the SMTP client in the connection greeting reply and in the response to this command."

Qmail records the HELO/EHLO greeting string for every received message in the E-Mail "Received:" header in case the provided HELO/EHLO string is different from the connecting hosts FQDN:

Received: from foo.bar.de (HELO foo) (192.168.192.11)
by heaven.bar.de with SMTP; 25 Apr 2003 15:01:42 -0000
The HELO/EHLO string is included as "(HELO foo)". The HELO/EHLO string is usually generated by the sending MTA without much control (MUAs often use their generic hostname).

SPAMCONTROL allows a flexible filtering of the clients HELO/EHLO greeting string, which depends on the setting of the environment variable HELOCHECK:

HELOCHECK="": evaluate contorl/badhelo control file
HELOCHECK="!": reject session, if no HELO/EHLO greeting is not provided/empty.
HELOCHECK=".": reject session, if no HELO/EHLO greeting is provided/empty and evaluate control/badhelo control file
HELOCHECK="=": require that the HELO/EHLO greeting corresponds to the FQDN (= TCPREMOTEHOST) of the host.
HELOCHECK="A": DNS A lookup for the HELO/EHLO greeting and evaluate control/badhelo.
HELOCHECK="M": DNS MX lookup for the HELO/EHLO greeting and evaluate control/badhelo.
The HELOCHECKs are only done, in case RELAYCLIENT is not set (split-horizon fashion). In my current setup, a useful setting is HELOCHECK="." and with the following input in control/badhelo

myIPAddress
myFQDN
localhost
localhost.localdomain
These settings exclude the spoofing of the MTA's own address, which is typical for spam senders, since they determine the EHLO/EHLO greeting from the initial IP/SMTP session parameter.

2.3 Filtering Mail From: SMTP Addresses (badmailfrom)
SPAMCONTROL allows four types of checks against the provided "Mail From:" SMTP envelope address (which I often call the "Originator"):

A DNS MX lookup whether the provided Domain (the part right from the "@", i.e. user@example.com) exists.
A wildmat check against the content of control/badhelo.
An anti-spoofing test, if the Originator addresses matches an entry in control/badhelo appended with a "+" (@mydomain.com+).
A badmailfromunknown test (in case TCPREMOTEINFO is "unknown", thus the IP address has no correspondance in the DNS) if the Originator address matches an entry in control/badmailfrom appended with a "-" (@yahoo.com-).
2.3.1 DNS MX Checks of the Envelope Sender
Invoking the environment variable MFDNSCHECK in the qmail-smtpd startup script enables globally the DNS check for the envelope's Sender.

Example:

#!/bin/sh
export MFDNSCHECK=""
.....
Additionally, the environment variable may be defined individually within a cdb of tcpserver/sslserver. Typically, this is done for "non-trusted" hosts within a tcpservers cdb:

127.0.01:allow,RELAYCLIENT=""
:allow,MFDNSCHECK=""
If environment variable MFDNSCHECK is not set, qmail-smtpd does not perform this DNS MX check.

Note: All DNS checks are either done by means of the libresolv library which comes with BIND, or my means of DJBDNS's routines, which can be included installing DJBDNS and using Nikola Vladov's enhancements for DJBDNS in addition with the modified Makefile.djbdns.

2.3.2 Standard badmailfrom Checks
control/badmailfrom was the only SMTP envelope filter Dan Bernstein originally implemented for qmail-smtpd. Here, only particular names or perhaps domains were listeted to be rejected in the SMTP dialogue. Since then, various flavours of badmailfrom have been brought out. However, the approach to reduce spam emails feeding control/badmailfrom with known spammer addresses is comparable trying to hit a moving target. Almost all Originator addresses spammer use today are fake and in this sense are meaningless.

2.3.3 badmailfromunknown Checks
There exist a special case, where you expect an email with a specific Originator address to be send via particular MTAs. For instance, if you see an email with Originator address "support@microsoft.com", it has to be send from a Microsoft MTA. qmail-smtpd has the knowledge of the sender's IP and FQDN (by means of the environment variables TCPREMOTEIP and TCPREMOTEHOST) in case you use tcp-env, tcpserver, or sslserver with the appropriate argument, i.e. tcpserver -h.

MTAs for which the FQDN can't be resolved are unqualified. In particular, emails from the large webmail providers (aol, hotmail, yahoo, gmx, t-online ...) have always to be send from qualified MTAs. Reversely, you can safely reject emails with those Originator hostparts, which can not be resolved tcpserver/sslserver records them as "unkonwn".

With SPAMCONTROL's badmailfrom implementation, you simply include the Originator addresses for which you enforce a qualified TCPREMOTEINFO into control/badmailfrom in the following way appending a dash ("-"):

@aol.com-
@hotmail.com-
@yahoo.com-
@gmx.de-
Note 1: Since tcp-env/tcpserver/sslserver relies on a qualified DNS lookup, it is certainly helpful to use DJBDNS' dnscache as frontend.
Note 2: Wildmat support is not provided; thus an entry "@*.yahoo.com-" won't work.

2.3.4 badmailfrom Anti-Spoofing
Another special case is given, rejecting none-Relayclient emails with Originator addreses spoofing your domain name or email addresses. Email can be rejected if the "responsible domains" are included with a trailing plus ("+") in the following way into control/badmailfrom:

god@mydomain1.com+
@mydomain2.net+
@mydomain3.org+
Note: Wildcard support is not provided in this case.

2.4 Controlling the Rcpt To: SMTP dialogue and Filtering the Recipient Address
Apart for the RECIPIENTS mechanism, which is detailed later, you can reject SMTP Recipient addresses (Rcpt To: ) by means of control/badrcptto. However, qmail-smtpd lets you effectively

reject emails included in control/badrcptto,
reversely accept only those recipients whitelisted in control/badrcptto,
control the number of accepted Recipients by means of the environment variable MAXRECIPIENTS,
enforcing TARPITTING if too many Rcpt To:'s have been encountered.
Note: The provided Rcpt To: information by the SMTP client is (apart from it's IP/FQDN) the only information which can not be faked, though these addresses are today often randomly generated by means of lexical/dictionary attacks by spammers or gathered by address harvesting. Standard qmail will accept any addresses which matches an entry in control/rcpthosts or control/morercpthosts.cdb and in case the Recipient does not exist tires to bounce the email to the Originator after control/qeueulifetime has exceeded (default one week).

2.4.1 badrcptto
By populating control/badrcptto you reject emails to Recipients listed there in already in the SMTP session. Wildcards are allowed. If you don't wont to receive emails for root (from the Internet) include in control/badrcptto:

root@*
2.4.2 badrcptto Whitelisteing
Alternatively to the Recipients mechanism, as a side-effect of the wildmat filtering, you can use the control/badrcptto file as an effective whitelisting mechanism. The trick is, to initially reject everything while later to allow specific Recipients:

*
!*@otherdomain.com
!user1@maydomain.com
!user2@mydoamain.con

Note: The evaluation of control/badrcptto is done independent from the setting of the RELAYCLIENT environment variable.

2.4.2 Restricting the number of Recipients
The environment variable

MAXRECIPIENTS
can be used to restrict the number of counted "Rcpt To: "s in the SMTP session. By default, no restriction is facilitated.

2.4.3 Tarpitting
I have included Chris Johnson's TARPITTING patch into SPAMCONTROL:

"What is tarpitting? It's the practice of inserting a small sleep in a SMTP session for each "Rcpt To:" after some set number of "Rcpt To:"s. The idea is to that spammers who would hand your SMTP server a single message with a long list of RCPT TOs. If a spammer were to attempt to use your server to relay a message, say, 10,000 Recipients, and you inserted a five-second delay for each Recipient after the fiftieth, the spammer would be 'tarpitted', and would most likely assume that the connection had stalled and give up."

Two additional control files can be employed:

control/tarpitcount
is the number of "Rcpt To:"s to accept before starting tarpitting and defaults to 0 (no tarpitting).

control/tarpitdelay
is the number of seconds of delay to introduce after each subsequent "Rcpt To:". Default is 5 seconds.

Instead, the environment variables TARPITCOUNT and TARPITDELAY can be used.

Note: In combination with the Recipients extension, the TARPITCOUNT is used to terminate the SMTP session if the number of invalid Recipients ("Rcpt to:") exceeds the TARPITCOUNT. Unlike the typical tarpitting mechanism, this is a hard limit (Smart Rejection).



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3. Recipients Extension
3.1 Scope
qmail-smtpd accepts messages if the SMTP domain part of Recipient address ("Rcpt to: ") matches an entry in control/rcpthosts or control/morercpthosts.cdb. The existence of a mailbox/maildir for the corresponding SMTP Recipient is checked later in the delivery chain. In case no Mailbox/Maildir exists, the message is bounced back to the SMTP Sender ("Mail From: ").

For normal SMTP mail traffic that's fine as long as the rate of undeliverable messages don't exceed 10% and the Sender is 'legitmate'; ie. exists. Today's situation is different: Spam and Virus attacks with forged/faked Sender addresses to a bunch of random Recipient addresses yield an undeliverable rate up to 90%. Worse, the generated bounces will never reach the Sender and a double-bounce is eventually send to the postmaster.

3.2 qmail-smtpd Recipients
The Recipients extension makes qmail-smtpd aware of acceptable Recipients and is employed in a none-RELAYCLIENT case only. The Recipients are kept in 'fastforward' compatible cdbs for a case-insensitive quick lookup during the SMTP session.

The Recipients mechanism supports Qmail's address extensions. If a Recipient address like 'foo@mydomain.com' is included in a cdb, all VERP addresses like 'foo-bar@mydomain.com' are accepted for SMTP reception.

Within the Recipients mechanism you can define domain-wide wildlisting. Simply include '!@domain' into one of the cdbs to allow all addresses for domain "domain" to be accepted. For performance reasons it is advisable to put those "wilddomains" at the beginning of the first cdb.

Unqualified Recipient addresses are always translated to full qualified, appending the domain part '@localhost' (eg. 'foo' -> 'foo@localhost').

3.3 Usage
The qmail-smtpd Recipients extension is available by means of the control file

control/recipients
Here, you include the path to fastforward compatible cdbs in which you keep the Recipient addresses (in lower case).

Build a list of local Recipients (with full qualified address).
Use qmail-pwd2recipients to build this list for local system users.
Use qmail-alias2recipients to build this list for qmail alias users (ie. postmaster, root).
Use qmail-users2recipients to build this list for qmail users (as per users/assign).

Verify that list to be found under users/recipients. If you have a different Qmail home directory, modify the above scripts.You may need to change "localhost" in the above scripts to the real hostname.
Run qmail-recipients to transform that list into a cdb: users/recipients.cdb.
Edit control/recipients and include users/recipients.cdb therein.
If you have fastforward cdbs (those which are generated by setforward) you have to place the output somewhere in a subdirectory under Qmail's home directory and include those into control/recipients.
At that time, your control/recipients file may look like:

control/wilddomains.cdb
users/recipients.cdb
etc/fastforward.cdb
You can add an arbitrary number of cdbs to control/recipients. Any change regarding control/recipients and/or the content of the cdbs is effective on the fly. If you use qmail-recipients to build up several cdbs, simply rename them afterwards.
If you run EZMLM, you have simply to set up a list of Recipient addresses for all your mailing lists.
3.4 Customization
The Recipients extension needs no customization except for the following circumstances:

Compile-time options:
Your Qmail address extension string is not '-'. This can be modified in recipients.c (#define AUTO_BREAK).
You dont want the Recipients extension to support Qmail's VERP mechanism. This is controlled via "verp=yes" in conf-spamcontrol instead the default 'no'.
Run-time options:
Since some MTAs (namely Exchange) interprete a SMTP 450 reply to try to deliver the email even more frequently, the default behavior of qmail-smtpd is now to issue a 550 SMTP reply resulting in a "550, sorry no mailbox by that name (#5.7.1)" message. The advantage is, that a potential Sender receives a quick bounce with the propper reason, instead a deferred one. The disadvantage is, that this might be used for address harvesting
However, setting the environment variable RECIEPITNS450 in case the Recipients check is negative, qmail-smtpd issues the error: "450 sorry, mailbox currently unavailable (#4.2.1)".
Optional scripts:
You may need to adjust the provided scripts qmail-pwd2recipients, qmail-users2recipients, and qmail-alias2recipient to your need; these are samples.
3.5 Results
With the Recipients extension qmail-smtpd will act for none-RELAYCLIENTs like follows

a) The domain part of the Recipient address is checked against rcpthosts/morercpthosts.cdb and accepted if either it matches or the domain is not provided.
b) the Recipient address is checked against all readable cdbs listed in control/recipients and accepted if
either the entire address matches,
a VERP-part of the address matches,
the domain part of address is wildcarded or,
for the unqualified address an entry exist in the form 'user@localhost'.
In any other case, a SMTP temporary failure protocol error is issued to the client saying:

"450 sorry, mailbox currently unavailable (#4.2.1)" unless
the environment variable RECIPIENTS550 is specified and qmails-smtpd issues the rejection message "550, sorry no mailbox by that name (#5.7.1)"

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4. Filtering E-Mails on behalf of the Message Content
Based on the "qmail-smtp-viruscan-1.1.patch" by Russell Nelson (and Charles Cazabon), SPAMCONTROL includes my WARLORD extension, which is a much robuster and efficient filter for BASE64 encoded MIME attachments and bundled with the Qmail High Performance Scanner Interface (QHPSI):

BASE64 encoded MIME attachments are detected and can be filtered accordingly to an easily extendable badmimetypes file.
Within the BASE64 encoded MIME attachments so-called specific loader assignments (ie. for Windows OS) can be detected and messages - containing these suspicious badloadertypes patterns - are rejected.
Additional and optional on-the-fly scanning of emails through the QHPSI.
Initial badmimetype or badloadertype flagged messages are not subject of the QHPSI.
Employing the environment variable BASE64, QHPSI is advised to by-pass virus scanning if no BASE64 encoded attachment is found.
In case a badmimetype or badloadertype filter condition is met or a virus is detected, qmail-smtpd sends a SMTP 554 reply to the sender "554 sorry, invalid message content (#5.3.2)". Populating the REPLY554 environment variable, allows to include additional information (typically an URL), which can be used to deal with potential false-positives.

4.1 The BADMIMETYPE-Filter
The badmimetype filter becomes active if

the environment variable BADMIMETYPE="" is set
and the control file badmimetypes is populated and readable by qmail-smtpd.
4.2 Control file badmimetypes and badmimetypes.cdb
The control file control/badmimetypes.cdb is populated by the additional program qmail-badmimetypes which takes the input of control/badmimetypes. New MIME signatures can be added/removed on-the-fly. Bad MIME Type signatures have to have the length of at least 9 significant characters.

The currently included MIME signatures are:

TVqQAAMAA
TVpQAAIAA
TVpAALQAc
TVpyAXkAX
TVrmAU4AA
TVrhARwAk
TVoFAQUAA
TVoAAAQAA
TVoIARMAA
TVouARsAA
TVrQAT8AA
# *.zip
# UEsDBAkAA
# *.z (gnu-zip)
# H4sIADWWb
# double Base 64 Windows Executable
VFZxUUFBT
# triple Base 64 Windows Executable
VkZaeFVVR
# Pif File
TVoAAAEAA
# Bagle Virus
ZGltIGZpb
Adding new badmimetypes is simple:

Send an E-Mail to a Unix account with corresponding attachment (i.e. *.zip).
Use an editor to view the E-Mail and spot the corresponding BASE64 encoded content-type.
Take the first nine significant characters (for type "zip" its "UEsDBAkAA") and include them into control/badmimetypes.
Run qmail-badmimetypes.
Comments (starting with "#") are allowed in badmimetypes; the length of the signature will be truncated to nine characters.

4.3 The BADLOADERTYPE-Filter
The badloadertype filter becomes active if

the environment variable BADLOADERTYPE="M" is set (see below)
and the control file badloadertypes is populated and readable by qmail-smtpd.
The BADLOADERTYPE mechanism deals in particular with "transport stealth" worms, ie. UPX encoded Windows executables.

4.4 Control file badloadertypes and badloadertypes.cdb
badloadertypes.cdb is populated by the additional program qmail-badloadertypes which takes the input of control/badloadertypes The badloadertype mechanism looks for five significant strings in the BASE64 encoded data-stream which is matched against an entry in control/badloadertypes.cdb. badloadertype signatures can be added/removed on-the-fly.

The currently included Windows OS badloadertype signatures are:

Mi5kb
MzIuZ
MyLmR
MyLkR
Comments (starting with "#") are allowed in badloadertypes; the length of the signature will be truncated to five characters.

Caution: Unlike the badmimetype, the badloadertype signatures are placed anywhere in the BASE64 encoded datastream and are difficult to find out. In order to make the search efficient, a common character has to be providen in the environment variable BADLOADERTYPE. The provided pattern look basically for a string like "32.dll" as a subpart of "Kernel32.dll" which is an indication for an executable for the Windows OS. However, there is a small chance for false positives. Some - lets say - Word document attached as BASE64 MIME part in the message containing the buzz words "kernel32.dll" might become flagged and finally rejected as well.

4.5 Employing an AV Scanner with QHPSI
Unlike all other AV Scanners currently in use for Qmail, with Qmail High Performance Scanner Interface (QHPSI) there is no need for any other umbrella program, neither qmail-scanner, AMAViS, qscanq or whatsoever. Further, no additional MIME analyzing program like reformime, metamail, or ripmime is required. Even better, no "staging" area for temporary files are needed, except the one, the AV Scanners requires for itself.

Today's AV Scanners - and in particular Clam AV - are able to read the BASE64 encoded message and eventually dig out the files in archives, ie. in zip format. In order to use an AV Scanner with QHPSI, the AV Scanner has to have the following qualifications:

Correct interpretation of the BASE64 and perhaps the uudecoded data in order to detect the virii/worms therein.
Results have to be made available on STDERR/STDOUT.
(And perhaps) Suppression of 'negative' scan results.
The QHPSI allows to use the following environment variables:

QHPSI="av_scanner" - this is the path to the involved AV Scanner.
QHPSIARG1, QHAPSIARG2, QHPSIARG3 - to call the AV Scanner with three arbitrary arguments.
QHPSIRC="RC" - if the AV Scanner does not return with RC=1 in case of a detected infection, you can specify one here.
QHPSIMINSIZE="size-in-bytes" - the minimum size of the message to scan.
QHPSIMAXSIZE="size-in-bytes" - the maximum size of the message to scan.
The AV Scanner is directly called in the start scripts of Qmail (i.e. the run script for qmail-smtpd) or by means of tcpserver's capabilities. Here is a typical example, how to customize QHPSI together with Clam AV (clamd/clamdscan) for a tcpserver tcp.smtpd file:

:allow,QHPSI='clamdscan',QHPSIARG1='--disable-summary'
Comments:

The path of clamdscan can be omitted, because it is in the standard path (/usr/local/bin).
The argument QHPSIARG1='--disable-summary' tells Clam AV to provide a single line output of the scan results.
In clamd's clamav.conf configuration file the "Mail support" has to be enabled, clamd has to run as root.
Note:

qmail-start does not pass environment variables to qmail-queue.
If you need to scan in addition outgoing emails, you have to write a wrapper for e.g. qmail-inject:
#!/bin/sh
export QHPSI='clamdscan'
export QHPSIARG1='--disable-summary'
exec /var/qmail/bin/qmail-queue
Results:

In case a client sends an infected email by means of SMTP, it receives the SMTP return code and error message: "554 mail server permanently rejected message (#5.3.0)"
In case the virus scanner can not be called properly or has an internal problem, the following SMTP message is given: "454 mail server temporarily rejected message (#4.3.0)"
Eventually, the scan results show up in the logs.
Here is a sample of Clam AV without and with the argument "--disable-summary":

@... tcpserver: pid 49943 from 192.168.192.11
@... tcpserver: ok 49943 qmailer.fehnet.de:192.168.192.2:25 arkon.fehnet.de:192.168.192.11::1074
@... /var/qmail/queue/mess/4/89439: Worm.Klez.H FOUND
@...
@... ----------- SCAN SUMMARY -----------
@... Infected files: 1
@... Time: 0.099 sec (0 m 0 s)
@ Reject::DATA::Virus_Infected: S:192.168.192.11:arkon.fehnet.de H:mail.fehnet.de F:me T:erwin 'clamdscan'
Note: Even in case no virus is detected, the "SCAN SUMMARY" is provided.

@... tcpserver: pid 49989 from 192.168.192.11
@... tcpserver: ok 49989 qmailer.fehnet.de:192.168.192.2:25 arkon.fehnet.de:192.168.192.11::1077
@... /var/qmail/queue/mess/4/89543: Worm.Klez.H FOUND
@ Reject::DATA::Virus_Infected: S:192.168.192.11:arkon.fehnet.de H:mail.fehnet.de F:me T:erwin 'clamdscan'
@... tcpserver: end 49989 status 256
Attention:

The virus scanner has to be able to read the messages in the Qmail queue:
# ls -ld /var/qmail/queue/mess/
drwxr-x--- 25 qmailq qmail 4096 Jun 13 00:19 /var/qmail/queue/mess/
If the virus scanner drops privileges during execution, it might be necessary to make the executable sticky (ie. clamscan).
Note: As with this writing, clamav 0.8x is broken, since it writes all logs to STDOUT instead of STDERR; thus no scanning messages will apear in the qmail-smtpd log.

4.6 QHPSI performance improvements for Virus Scanning
The badmimtypes and badloadertypes mechanism provides a wire-speed filtering of incoming emails. However, typically all not-filtered emails are subject of the AV Scannner as defined via the QHPSI. Almost all worms and virii are transported as BASE64 encoded attachments (except some trojans, encapsulated as HTML files). By means of the environment variable

BASE64=""
one can advice QHPSI to scan only those emails which contain a BASE64 encoded attachment.

4.7 Particular SMTP 554 Replies
qmail-smtpd will send a SMTP 554 Error Reply under the following conditions:

a badmimetype was encountered,
a badloadertype was encountered,
a Virus was found via an external AV Scanner,
the email exceeds the hop count.
The SMTP Reply code for the first three conditions is always "554 sorry, invalid message content (#5.3.2)". The rejection of email because of the message content is due to some internal policy. For those users, which a subject of this policy innocently (and did not send ie. a virus mail on purpose), it might be advisable to explain the company's email policy.

The environment variable

REPLY554
allows to include a particular SMTP 554 Reply. Typically, an URL is referenced: REPLY554="[ see: http://www.fehcom.de/emailpolicy.html ]" which allows to detail possible circumventions.

4.8 Qmail QUEUE_EXTRA
Bruce Guenter's Qmail QUEUE_EXTRA patch has almost the rank of a recommended patch, because it's used by many Qmail extensions like the Qmail-Scanner and qmail-qfilter.

The actual use is controlled via the content of environment variable "QMAILQUEUE", which usually set in a tcpserver's cdb ie. tcp.smtp or globally defined in the qmail-smtpd's run script. A typical use is:

12.34.56:allow,RELAYCLIENT=""
:allow,QMAILQUEUE="bin/qmail-qfilter"
which advices qmail-smtpd to use the executable qmail-qfilter as first stage queueing program instead of qmail-queue itself.

Note: The QUEUE_EXTRA patch is not applied against qmail-smtpd but rather against the module qmail.c itself, since it is just an extension to the general queue call-mechanism.

.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


5. qmail-remote Extensions
SPAMCONTROL modifies and extends the behavior of qmail-remote in the following ways:

Adding ESMTP support and in particular SMTP Authentication of types PLAIN and LOGIN.
Connection attempts to all MX-listed MTAs in case of a rejection and not just the primary.
Fast delivery by means of an increased reading buffer for the message.
5.1 qmail-remote Authentication
The qmail-remote (qmail-smtp-auth-send) authentication from Bjoern Kalkbrenner has been included in a modular and RFC-complient version. qmail-remote sessions can be SMTP authenticated with the types PLAIN and LOGIN on a per-sender (Reverse-Path) base. Thus for each sender you can advice qmail-remote to use SMTP authentication with a particular username and password connecting to relay at port.

The qmail-remote authentication follows in this respect the smtproutes mechanism. Authentication for outgoing SMTP sessions is faciliated, if the control file

control/authsenders
is populated accordingly. Sample:

mail@example.com|test|testpass
info@example.com:smtp.example.com:26|other|otherpw
:mailrelay.example.com|e=mc2|testpass
5.2 qmail-remote MX connectivity
Typically sites/domains on the Internet are reachable over serveral MTA listed and deployed in the DNS MX records (o.k. qmail.org is an exception). By theory, the MX with the smallest weight is the primary MX for that domain;though often sites have redundant MTA with equal weights:

10 mailc.microsoft.com
10 maila.microsoft.com
10 mailb.microsoft.com
In order to deliver emails, qmail-remote follows two strategies:

qmail-remote will deliver only one email per connection.
qmail-remote always connects to the MTA with the lowest weight coming first in the list.
In case this MTA is exhausted and rejects the connection during the EHELO/HELO greeting, qmail-remote exists and retries the very same MTA again with it's quadratic queue schedule mechanism.

Running EZMLM with many messages to the vary same domain but different Recipients, email delivery may become throttled, which particularly happens for t-online.de sites which don't allow too many connections from the same client MTA (a policy which is actually not covered by any SMTP RFC).

Back 10 years ago, when Dan was designing qmail he already was aware of that problem:

"If I successfully connect to an MX host but it temporarily refuses to accept the message, I give up and put the message back into the queue.
But several documents seem to suggest that I should try further MX records. What are they thinking? My approach deals properly with downed
hosts, hosts that are unreachable through a firewall, and load balancing; what else do people use multiple MX records for? " (THOUGHTS)
and included already the code base into qmail-remote which I simply activated. Thus, in case qmail-remote receives a rejection during the EHLO/HELO greeting it will simply try the next MTA for the DNS MX list.

5.2 Fast delivery for qmail-remote
qmail-remote incorporates two performance critical steps for the delivery:

"Currently qmail-remote sends data in 1024-byte buffers. Perhaps it should try to take account of the MTU. " (THOUGHTS)
qmail-remote processes the input data byte after byte which is costly in terms of CPU cylces.
Bruce Guenter recognized the last fact and patched qmail-remote accordingly ("fastremote"), thus qmail-remotes processes the input data in chunks of 4 Kbyte. This patch has been included into SPAMCONTROL.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

6. qmail-pop3d
6.1 STLS support
The STLS (Start TLS support) for qmail-popup follows the same scheme as for qmail-smtpd

Requirements:

Put the SSL variables into the environment (see 1.3.3).
Define UCSPITLS="" in qmail-pop3d's run script.
Actually, you use the same "env" file as for qmail-smtpd. In this case qmail-popup announces in the capability list "STLS" and the following POP3 dialogue is encrypted as is the transmission of the received emails as well.

6.2 qmail-pop3d run Script
In order to use SSL encryption for a POP3 connection, the following run script for qmail-pop3d is appropriate:

#!/bin/sh
HOSTNAME=`hostname`
export UCSPITLS=""
. /var/qmail/ssl/env
exec /usr/local/bin/sslserver -sevn -R -c100 0 pop3 \
/var/qmail/bin/qmail-popup $HOSTNAME /usr/local/bin/checkvpw \
/var/qmail/bin/qmail-pop3d Maildir 2>&1
Note: In this run script I use Bruce Guenter's checkvpw as PAM (for vmailmgr), which requires the additional presence of the "Maildir" argument after the call of qmail-pop3d.

The profile /var/qmail/ssl/env is the same as for qmail-smtpd. Defining the environment variable UCSPITLS directly in the run script instead of the profiles, allows a flexible use of the STARTTLS/STLS option for qmail-pop3d and qmail-smtpd without modifying the common profile.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

7. qmail-send. qmail-queue, and the qmail's sendmail
7.1 qmail-send: Bounces
Bounces have generally a Null-Sender address (Mail From: <>) and are out-of-band error-messages to indicate a failure in the delivery process. In fact, RFC 2821/821 requires that all notification E-Mails have to have a Null-Sender address!

For every undeliverable message, qmail-send generates a bounce to the Sender.While this is legitimate and necessary for normal operation, in case of SPAM attacks the bounces are meaningless:

The SPAMMER uses a lexical approach to generate random addresses, thus most of the E-Mails are undeliverable per se.
The SPAMMER's Sender address is forged or is only limited available (during the SPAM attack), thus the bounce fail; and eventually generate a double-bounce. One undeliverable SPAM message may result in two additional bounces.
Unless you use a 'whitelisting' of Recipient E-Mail addresses, there is not much to do about. However, SPAMCONTORL helps you in three cases:

7.1.1 Limiting the Size of Bounces
By definition, a bounce is a SMTP notification for a failure situation. It is common practice, to include the original message in the bounce. Qmail uses a specific format, introduced by Dan Bernstein and called "QSBMF" (qmail-send Bounce Message Format); other MTA encapsulate the original message as MIME attachment in rfc822/message format.

Anyway, for a legitimate bounce reaching the Sender the original message is usually of no interest, except for identification purposes. In order to save bandwidth, you can limit the size of bounces using the control file

control/bouncemaxbytes
Unlike the original patch (from Frank DENIS aka Jedi/Sector One ), the default value is '0' byte, meaning no limits. A useful limit would by 2000 (byte), which covers the header and some body part information. The average size of a SPAM E-Mail is 5 Kbyte.

The original message included in the bounce will be limited to the defined bouncemaxbytes and truncated, which is displayed in the bounce with "--- Rest of message truncated." at the end of the bounce.

7.2.1 Dumping Double Bounces
Double bounces are generated, if the bounce can not be delivered to the Sender.

Double bounces are usually delivered to the 'Postmaster' account. It is convenient that this account is local and eventual double bounces are stored in a mbox/Maildir for later inspection. However, Qmail allows you to forward double bounces to some other account defined in

control/doublebounceto
However, due to the forged Sender address in SPAM E-Mails, practically all bounces become double bounces eventually. In this case any storage and inspection is fruitless. Taken from Russell Nelson and Charles Cazabon, you can optionally dump all double bounces immediately. This is facilitated if doublebounceto contains a '@' in the first line.

Those dumped double bounces show up in the qmail-send log as: "double bounce: discarding".

7.3 qmail-send: IPME- and MOREIPME-Patch
Scott Gifford's "ipme.c" patch (or qmail-0.0.0.0-patch) is included by default. According to RFC 1122, Sec. 3.2.1.3 the IP address "0.0.0.0" is a special address which always refers to "this host, this network". You may wish to tell Qmail about arbitrary IP addresses employing the moreipme patch and include the following control files:

control/moreipme
control/notipme
See the enhanced man page qmail-smtpd and or consult the README.moreipme.

7.4 qmail-send Gadgets
As a further gadget, the qmail-send control files

control/concurrencylocal
control/concurrencyremote
are re-read by means of a HUP signal (eg. svc -h /service/qmail-send).

7.5 qmail-queue: BigToDo enhancement
The queue directories ./intd and ./todo may be splitted (as per conf-split) into subdirectories to allow a more efficient treatment of many incoming messages.

Caution: Make sure, that the directories ./queue/todo and ./queue/intd are empty before applying the patch; otherwise qmail-send will not be able to process those messages anymore!

Note: The shell script qmail-qstat and in addition some qmail-mrtg analyses are affected by this patch.

Hint: Consider raising the value in conf-split in the first place !

7.6 sendmail Fixes
The following fixes for Qmail's sendmail wrapper have been included for compatibility reasons:

The 'sendmail -f' patch by David Philips, thus sendmail sets the default for the username.
The 'sendmail -N dsn' patch by Matthias Andree, thus sendmail ignores the -N option.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

8. SMTP Protocol Return Codes
SMTP allows to reject Sessions based on some technical and/or political criteria, which are not well expressed in the RFCs (2821, 2554, 2505, 1122).

The SMTP protocol mechanism between the client and the server are defined as Commands and Replies. SMTP uses a three-letter Reply Code. The first digit tells whether a command was accepted and completed (2), transaction begin (3), or whether there was as transient (4) or permanent failure (5). In addition, an explanatory description may be given.

RFC 1893 introduces a concept of "Enhanced Mail System Status Codes" (EMSSC) which should provide easily parseable SMTP server conditions and transaction statuses, usually at the end of the SMTP reply and included in parenthesis, eg. (#5.5.1).

The SMTP Reply Codes and the EMSSC are detailed in the corresponding RFCs, but don't fit well to each other, thus either providing redundant information or almost no additional information at all. In short, the EMSSC is nowadays almost meaningless.

Here's a breakdown of SPAMCONTROL's SMTP Reply Codes, informational texts, and the used EMSSC.

Reply Informational text EMSSC
450 sorry, mailbox currently unavailable (#4.2.1)
451 DNS temporary failure (#4.3.0)
454 TLS not available due to temporary reason (#5.7.3)

501 auth exchange canceled (#5.0.0)
501 malformed auth input (#5.5.4)
503 you're already authenticated (#5.5.0)
503 no auth during mail transaction (#5.5.0)
503 sorry, SMTP Authentication not available (#5.7.3)
504 auth type unimplemented (#5.5.1)
535 authorization failed (#5.7.1)
535 authentication required (#5.7.1)
535 STARTTLS required (#5.7.1)

550 sorry, invalid HELO/EHLO greeting (#5.7.1)
550 sorry, your envelope recipient is in my badrcptto list (#5.7.1)
550 sorry, invalid sender address specified (#5.7.1)
550 sorry, too many recipients (#5.5.3)
550 sorry, bounce messages should have a single envelope recipient (#5.7.1)

552 sorry, that message size exceeds my databytes limit (#5.3.4)
553 sorry, your envelope sender is in my badmailfrom list (#5.7.1)
550 sorry, that domain isn't in my list of allowed rcpthosts (#5.7.1)
553 sorry, your envelope sender domain must exist (#5.7.1)

554 too many hops, this message is looping (#5.4.6)
554 sorry, invalid message content (optional text) (#5.3.2)



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
9. qmail-smtpd Logging
Normally, qmail-smtpd doesn't log anything.With SPAMCONTROL qmail-smtpd logs accepted and some (important) rejected SMTP session attempts. The logging is done at the end of the "Rcpt To:" and eventually at the end of the "Data" phase.

Format: "Action::Type::Condition: Information"
9.1 Extensible logging scheme
Action Type Condition Explanation
Reject SMTP Toomany_Hops Message Hop count exceeded
Reject SMTP Syntax_Error Malformed SMTP address (e.g. missing brackets)

Reject DATA Invalid_Size DATA exceeds sizelimit
Reject DATA Bad_MIME DATA includes BASE 64 MIME type listed in badmimetypes
Reject DATA Bad_Loader DATA includes BASE64 loader type listed in badmimetypes
Reject DATA Virus_Infected DATA includes virus infected message (QHPSI)

Reject SNDR Bad_Helo SNDR's HELO is in the badhelo
Reject SNDR DNS_HELO SNDR's HELO has no DNS A/MX RR
Reject SNDR Invalid_Relay SNDR's tries relaying; but not allowd
Reject SNDR Missing_TLS STARTTLS was required but not granted by client
Accept Accept Relay_Client SNDR was identfied as relay client
Accept Accept Start_TLS SNDR succesfully started TLS

Reject ORIG Bad_Mailfrom ORIG is in badmailfrom
Reject ORIG DNS_MF Domain part of ORIG has no DNS MX RR
Reject ORIG Failed_Auth ORIG tried SMTP Authentication; but failed
Reject ORIG Invalid_Sender ORIG not allowed to send
Reject ORIG Missing_Auth SMTP Authentication required, but not granted
Accept ORIG Valid_Auth ORIG was successful authenticated
Accept ORIG Local_Sender ORIG was identified as local sender address
Accept ORIG Relay_Mailfrom ORIG was accepted als Relaymailfrom

Reject RCPT Bad_Rcptto RCPT is in badrcptto
Reject RCPT Toomany_Rcptto Too many RCPTs
Reject RCPT Failed_Rcptto RCPT could not acceptd as per recipients/cdb.
Accept RCPT Recipients_Rcptto RCPT was accepted as per recipients/cdb.
Accept RCPT Recpients_VERP RCPT was accepted per VERP address in recipients/cdb.
Accept RCPT Recpients_Domain RCPT was accepted per Domain wildlisting in recipients/cdb.
Accept RCPT Rcpthosts_Rcptto RCPT was accepted as per rcpthosts/morercpthosts



SNDR corresponds to the sending MTA.
ORIG is the "MAIL From: ". (Sender)
RCPT is the "RCPT To: " (Recipient).
DATA is the Message.
The Information includes typically the following

PROTOCOL: SMTP/ESMTP/EMSTPA/ESMTPS/EMSTPM
SNDR: IP/FQDN (from tcpserver/sslserver)
HELO/EHLO: The provided greeting string
ORIG: The content of the Mail From: (if applicable).
RCPT. The intended Rcpt To:
This scheme is easy extensible to other successful/deferred SMTP sessions. Sample:

Accept::SNDR::Relay_Client: P:orion.fehnet.de S:81.173.229.48:xdsl-81-173-229-48.netcologne.de H:mail.fehcom.de F:feh@fehcom.de T:erwin@example.com
9.2 qmail-smtpd Start-Up Script Using tcpserver And splogger
A typical tcpserver start script applying standard splogger:

#!/bin/sh
QMAILDUID=`id -u qmaild`
QMAILDGID=`id -g qmaild`
/usr/local/bin/tcpserver -v -R -H -u $QMAILDUID -g $QMAILDGID QMAIL_IP_ADDRESS smtp \
/var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd /bin/cmd5checkpw true 2>&1 | \
/var/qmail/bin/splogger smtpd &
Since splogger is now facilitated, ACCUSTAMP time information is included.

9.3 qmail-smtpd Start-Up Script Using Daemontools, tcpserver, And multilog
A better choice would be multilog. multilog allows you to write separate filtered logs; to individual directories, and/or files, STDERR respectively.A typical Daemontools qmail-smtpd run script would look like:

#!/bin/sh
QMAILDUID=`id -u qmaild`
QMAILDGID=`id -g qmaild`
/usr/local/bin/tcpserver -R -u $QMAILDUID -g $QMAILDGID QMAIL_IP_ADDRESS smtp \
/var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd /bin/cmd5checkpw true 2>&1
Note: tcpserver's logging via the '-v' flag can be omitted to get mostly a full comprehensive and terse one-line logging of the SMTP session.

The corresponding multilog run script allows not only to filter the log information and write them to the file "current" in a specific directory but in addition to feed a file with specific information; here's a sample:

#!/bin/sh
exec setuidgid qmaill multilog t \
'-*tcpserver: status:*' /var/log/qmail-smtpd \
'-*' '+*Reject::*' =/var/log/qmail-smtpd/rejected \
'-*' '+*DNS*' =/var/log/qmail-smtpd/nodnsmx
In this case, multilog adds at first a TAI64 time stamp.

In a second step, the log information - except those line including the string "tcpserver: status" - are written into the log file /var/log/qmail-smtpd/current.
On the third line the filter "-*" removes any unwanted lines and "+*Reject::*" picks up from qmail-smtpd's log all rejected sessions and placing the last rejected condition in the file 'rejected'!
On the fourth line the last failing DNS MX lookups for Mail From:
is logged in a file named /var/log/qmail-smtpd/nodnsmx.
9. SPAMCONTROL compile Options
In this version of SPAMCONTROL I have substantially reduced the number of compile-time options:

In order to consistently change all relevant binaries, use the file conf-spamcontrol which is evaluated by the installation routine install_spamcontrol.sh and passes the changes to the Qmail c-files:

# Configuration for SPAMCONTROL (no tabs allowed)
#
# Additional RELAYING
#
relaymailfrom=no # might be dangerous - use SMTP Auth
#
# Additional CONTROLLING
#
reqbrackets=yes # qmail-smtpd requires brackets "
" in SMTP addresses
verp=yes # allow VERP addresses for RECIPIENTS
#
# LOADSHARING enhancements
#
moreipme=no # Scott Gifford's additional control files moreipme and notipme
#
# PERFORMCANCE enhancements
#
bigtodo=no # Bruce Guenter's BigToDo patch

10. Howto
In case your E-Mail environment complies to the assumption in PURPOSE do the following:

Stop your Qmail system (receive and send).
Remove SMTP/POP3 connection to be serviced by INETD/XINETD.
Employ tcpserver instead.
Follow the INSTALL.spamcontrol instructions.
Edit the files
./control/badhelo
./control/badmailfrom
./control/badrcptto
./control/tarpitcount
./control/tarpitdelay
./control/moreipme
./control/notipme
./control/bouncemaxbytes
./control/recipients
to your needs.

See above samples and check the included samples for ./badmailfrom and ./badrcptto.

Restart Qmail.
Check your configuration by means of qmail-showctl. It is a good idea to pipe the output of that command with timestamp information to a file.
Test your filters locally (see TESTING.spamcontrol).
If you are already blacklisted, inform those sites that you don't act as an OPEN RELAY anymore.
Watch the Qmail behavior by means of the log file information.
*) Not useful, if tcpserver in employed.

Good luck!

10.1 Tested Environment
LINUX KERNEL 2.4
FREEBSD 3.x, 4.x, 5.x, 6.x
SOLARIS 2.7, 2.8
HP-UX 11
Attention: For 64 bit OS'es you may need in addition the qmail-isoc patch from James Craig Burley (http://www.jcb-sc.com/qmail/patches/qmail-isoc.patch).

10.2 Incompatibilities
The SPAMCONTROL patch is incompatible with the Qmail LDAP patch. It should be applied against qmail-1.03 and not against netqmail-1.0x.

Actually, the Qmail LDAP enhancement is a super set of SPAMCONTROL. If you need to incorporate parts of SPAMCONTROL into the LDAP patch, look at the different pieces and pick 'em up from the sources.



THANKS !!!!!!!!


ANAND Shah

Friday, May 11, 2007

How to route your outgoing mail through your Internet Service Provider's mail servers

How to route your outgoing mail through your Internet Service Provider's mail servers





Sendmail

Add these lines to your sendmail.mc file:

define(`SMART_HOST',`mail.yourisp.net')dnl <--- Your ISP's mail server name goes here
MASQUERADE_AS(yourisp.net)dnl <--- Your ISP's domain name goes here
FEATURE(`allmasquerade')dnl
FEATURE(`masquerade_envelope')dnl

These instruct Sendmail to direct all outgoing mail through "mail.yourisp.net" or whatever you specify as your outgoing mail server.

The "masquerade_as" setting will change the sender envelope (MAIL FROM: contents, also known as the Envelope Sender) in case your ISP's outgoing server denies outbound mail with different domains in the MAIL FROM: or Envelope Sender line.

Suresh Ramasubramanian has more to say on Sendmail on dial-up lines:

There are a couple of other things if the server's on a dialup (like the ability to queue mail on the local box when offline). I've written a short howto at http://www.hserus.net/dlhowto.html which explains how to configure a linux box to be used on a dialup. The specific page dealing with sendmail config is at http://www.hserus.net/pop_smtp.html.

I'd be honored if this is included in your docs.

Glad to be of some use. Also, sorry for the delays and no, I'm not going to put your email address here just so it can be strip-mined by spammers. :-)




Qmail



Qmail takes explicit routes from the file /var/qmail/control/smtproutes. If your ISP's mail host is smtp.yourisp.net, put in it a line containing

:smtp.yourisp.net

(The part before the colon is the domain to route through that server, with nothing before the colon meaning to make it the default.)

You may also want to put your ISP's domain name into /var/qmail/control/defaulthost so that name appears as the domain part of From: and envelope "mail from" addresses. The defaulthost setting lets you work with mail servers that permit relay based on domain name. You can also control the outgoing domain with environment variables, see the man page for qmail-inject.


Postfix


Add these lines to your mail.cf file:

mydomain = yourisp.net
myorigin = $mydomain
relayhost = mail.yourisp.net

The myorigin parameter specifies the domain that appears in mail that is posted on this machine. The above setting forces it to be the domain name of your ISP instead of the full name of your system, and works with mail servers that permit relay based on domain name (much like Sendmail's Masquerade feature). The relayhost parameter routes all outgoing mail through the mailserver of your ISP.

Postfix has a FAQ which includes how to use it on dial-up connections, http://www.postfix.org/faq.html.




Microsoft Exchange Server

Much of this applies to Exchange Server 5.5 or later. You may need to upgrade older versions, especially to prevent relay theft by spammers.

The Exchange Server Administrator program has a Connections tab that lets you specify how to route mail for specific domains (Message Delivery). It also has a default route. Select "Forward all messages to host:" and type in the name of your Internet provider's outgoing mail server. You can override this rule for specific domains (such as your own).

For specifics see this Exchange Server how-to:
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=/support/Exchange/Content/HowTos/dialupims.asp.

Route an incoming message

What is the typical route an incoming message takes?

Here's the full pipeline of programs that get run between incoming remote SMTP connection and mail delivery on a "typical" toaster:

A) SMTP phase
1. softlimit (makes sure the connection doesn't use too much RAM)
2. tcpserver (handles the incoming TCP connection and applies local rules)
3. rblsmtpd (applies RBL and RWL rules to incoming connections)
4. qmail-smtpd (manages the conversation with the remote SMTP client)
5. simscan
a) clamav (run by simscan)
b) spamassassin (run by simscan)
6. qmail-queue (places non-rejected mail into local queue)
B) Local Delivery Phase
1. qmail-send (reads mail from local queue)
2. qmail-lspawn (decides whether to deliver the mail locally)
3. qmail-local (.qmail processing)
4. maildrop (runs the mailfilter script)
5. deliverquota
qmail-local reads the .qmail files and passes control of the message to programs specified there.

deliverquota is called by the mailfilter script to check quotas and deliver the message to the appropriate Maildir if the quota is okay.



How do I route outgoing mail through my ISP's SMTP server?

A: If your ISP's mailserver is mail.someisp.net, add

:mail.someisp.net
to the bottom of /var/qmail/control/smtproutes. This will only work if your ISP allows relaying from its entire dynamic IP range. This is usually the case.

Saturday, May 5, 2007

SARG How to

SQUID ANALYZER REPORT GENERATION



Download the Source from the given Link.

http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/sarg/sarg-2.2.3.1.tar.gz

If you use native squid log format, the elapsed time will be in reports (emulate_httpd_log off).

1. run ./configure

configure options: --enable-bindir=where sarg binary will be saved
default: /usr/bin

--enable-sysconfdir - where the configuration directory is
default: /usr/local/sarg

--enable-htmldir - where the www html root dir is
default: /var/www/html

--enable-mandir - where the sarg man page will be saved
default: /usr/local/man/man1


3. make

4. make install

5. Go to /usr/local/sarg (or file entered with --sysconfdir on configure)
and change sarg.conf as you need.

6. Notes about sarg:

Date/Time report:
Every minute that a request is logged your time is incremented by the smaller
of 1 minute or the total time for the requests.

Usage: sarg -h

Also Daily , weekly scripts are available on
http://sarg.sourceforge.net/sarg.php

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

How to use qmailmrtg7



REQUIREMENT :-

mrtg.xxx should be installed.


1) Install mrtg

2) Make qmailmrtg7 as root. It needs to be able to read
your /var/qmail/queue directories

# make

3) Install it
# make install
all this does is copy qmailmrg7 to /usr/local/bin

4) Create an mrtg working directory under your web servers
document root.

On default apache installations I do:
mkdir /var/www/html/qmailmrtg

5) setup qmail.mrtg.cfg and index.html

copy qmail.mrtg.cfg and index.html to the
directory you made in step 4.

edit qmail.mrtg.cfg and index.html

Change: FQDN to your hostname
FQDN = fully qualified domain name
Change: WorkDir to point to your http mrtg directory

Change the log file locations to where you store your qmail logs.
I put my qmail-send logs in /var/log/qmail
my pop3 longs in /var/log/pop3 and my smtp logs in /var/log/smtp

If you are not logging pop or smtp comment out the pop3 and smtp
sections with a # character at the beging of each line.

You can update the pop3 and smtp lines and set the
MaxBytes variable to match your -cX line in tcpserver.

You can also update the concurrency to match your
concurrencyremote or concurrencylocal values. The default
qmail values are 20 if those files do not exist in your
/var/qmail/control directory

NOTE:-
Now copy qmail.mrtg.cfg in /etc/mrtg/
which will create png images and also will be linked with mrtg.



6) Add a crontab line
On my machine I do the following:
crontab -e

*/5 * * * * /usr/local/bin/mrtg /etc/mrtg/qmail.mrtg.cfg 2>&1 > /dev/null


exit the crontab editor

7) run mrtg 3 times to get it setup. You will get warning messages
the first 3 times you run it. After that, you should not get more warnings
/usr/local/bin/mrtg /etc/mrtg/qmail.mrtg.cfg

8) wait 15 minutes for the logs to start showing things

9) Check out the graphs
http://your host name/qmailmrtg/

10) Read the FAQ file

Monday, April 23, 2007

Hi-Tech Phones ...........Yet to be in India

APPLE IPHONE



LG KE850 PRADA
SamSung ULTRA VIDEO SGH F500
Nokia 6110

SONY ERRICSON FOMA SO902iwp+



 



Phones We'd Like To See In India




 



SONY ERRICSON FOMA SO902iwp+


Now here's a phone that's right ready for a country like ours that tends to get flooded ever so often during the monsoons. The FOMA SO902… that's too long a name. But this is Sony Ericsson Japan's waterproof phone. So if you're ever caught in a sudden rain shower or for those overly popular people who need to talk even while taking one, this phone is right up your alley. It even runs on a Symbian OS so we're all used to that right (as long as the OS is not in Japanese).




Nokia 6110 Navigator




Not that people in this city need to find their way around or anything (the friendly neighborhood paan-walah is always around), but a GPS map in my mobile phone just might come in handy for people like my dad who tend to get a bit lost in some of those odd places in the city at night. Here's where the Navigator comes in with its voice guided 3D map guidance system. It's also equipped with a 2.0 megapixel camera and software that reads out your messages and emails, just like MOTOMING 's 'Talking Phone' software. The 6110 also runs on Symbian OS. It's also equipped with a media player with 3D sound and it even comes with 40MB of internal memory as well as support for micro SD cards up to 2GB. It's capable of video calling and has EDGE. So it's covered for everything.



SamSung ULTRA VIDEO SGH F500


The F500 is the first Divx certified mobile phone. It also AAC+, WMA music player, MPEG-4, H.263, and WMV video formats. Aside form that the phone itself is design marvel with a swivel screen (2.4-inch) for optimizing your viewing experience. This power packed phone is also A2DP compatible and has EDGE. Now if only you could watch TV on this... But as is, it’s Awesome.



LG KE850 PRADA


Touchscreen phones are not my thing but I have to say the KE850 does seem to intrigue me. It's completely black and so shiny, so it has a lot of bling factor to it. It has a nice large 3-inch display and is equipped with a 2 megapixel camera with an LED flash. It's also equipped with Bluetooth 2.0 connectivity. Its media player supports MPEG4, H.264 formats and the audio player supports MP3/ACC/ACC+/WMA/RA formats. It even has a document viewer. Now although the phone may never reach this country, it should. I mean c'mon we have plenty of people who can afford this and we have plenty of celebs here too with a Paris Hilton complex for shiny new things.



APPLE IPHONE


Hmmm… Now I know I said 5, but I just didn't want this to be left out. Of course we want to see the iPhone come to India as well. Don't we? It's cool as phones go right? So I just thought I'd mention it.

When we first heard about the phone in detail, it blew my mind. Imagine having a phone with just one button and being able to dial a number simply by pointing to the contacts name. What will they think of next? Maybe the next upgrade would be just looking at the contacts name and dialing.


So there you have it people, 5 hi-tech phones we want to see here and ASAP please. Since mobile phones aren’t just for communication anymore but have become tools of the business trade and for a country like ours, they're a must. These phones however may not necessarily be for business but they are phones that we'd love to see in our local stores soon. As soon as we find anymore that we get a bit greedy for, you'll be the first to know.





ANAND SHAH