From 89b7b67a13ebb7965cc7f13ad0595e2194a2d34c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jannis Hoffmann Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2024 15:48:04 +0200 Subject: add sqmail-4.2.29a --- doc/Postgrey.txt | 233 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 233 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/Postgrey.txt (limited to 'doc/Postgrey.txt') diff --git a/doc/Postgrey.txt b/doc/Postgrey.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dca92d3 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/Postgrey.txt @@ -0,0 +1,233 @@ +POSTGREY(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation POSTGREY(1) + + + + +NAME + postgrey - Postfix Greylisting Policy Server + +SYNOPSIS + postgrey [options...] + + -h, --help display this help and exit + --version output version information and exit + -v, --verbose increase verbosity level + --syslog-facility Syslog facility to use (default mail) + -q, --quiet decrease verbosity level + -u, --unix=PATH listen on unix socket PATH + --socketmode=MODE unix socket permission (default 0666) + -i, --inet=[HOST:]PORT listen on PORT, localhost if HOST is not specified + -d, --daemonize run in the background + --pidfile=PATH put daemon pid into this file + --user=USER run as USER (default: postgrey) + --group=GROUP run as group GROUP (default: nogroup) + --dbdir=PATH put db files in PATH (default: /var/spool/postfix/postgrey) + --delay=N greylist for N seconds (default: 300) + --max-age=N delete entries older than N days since the last time + that they have been seen (default: 35) + --retry-window=N allow only N days for the first retrial (default: 2) + append 'h' if you want to specify it in hours + --greylist-action=A if greylisted, return A to Postfix (default: DEFER_IF_PERMIT) + --greylist-text=TXT response when a mail is greylisted + (default: Greylisted + help url, see below) + --lookup-by-subnet strip the last N bits from IP addresses, determined by ipv4cidr and ipv6cidr (default) + --ipv4cidr=N What cidr to use for the subnet on IPv4 addresses when using lookup-by-subnet (default: 24) + --ipv6cidr=N What cidr to use for the subnet on IPv6 addresses when using lookup-by-subnet (default: 64) + --lookup-by-host do not strip the last 8 bits from IP addresses + --privacy store data using one-way hash functions + --hostname=NAME set the hostname (default: `hostname`) + --exim don't reuse a socket for more than one query (exim compatible) + --whitelist-clients=FILE default: /etc/postfix/postgrey_whitelist_clients + --whitelist-recipients=FILE default: /etc/postfix/postgrey_whitelist_recipients + --auto-whitelist-clients=N whitelist host after first successful delivery + N is the minimal count of mails before a client is + whitelisted (turned on by default with value 5) + specify N=0 to disable. + --listen-queue-size=N allow for N waiting connections to our socket + --x-greylist-header=TXT header when a mail was delayed by greylisting + default: X-Greylist: delayed seconds by postgrey- at ; + + Note that the --whitelist-x options can be specified multiple times, + and that per default /etc/postfix/postgrey_whitelist_clients.local is + also read, so that you can put there local entries. + +DESCRIPTION + Postgrey is a Postfix policy server implementing greylisting. + + When a request for delivery of a mail is received by Postfix via SMTP, + the triplet "CLIENT_IP" / "SENDER" / "RECIPIENT" is built. If it is the + first time that this triplet is seen, or if the triplet was first seen + less than delay seconds (300 is the default), then the mail gets + rejected with a temporary error. Hopefully spammers or viruses will not + try again later, as it is however required per RFC. + + Note that you shouldn't use the --lookup-by-host option unless you know + what you are doing: there are a lot of mail servers that use a pool of + addresses to send emails, so that they can change IP every time they + try again. That's why without this option postgrey will strip the last + byte of the IP address when doing lookups in the database. + + Installation + o Create a "postgrey" user and the directory where to put the + database dbdir (default: "/var/spool/postfix/postgrey") + + o Write an init script to start postgrey at boot and start it. Like + this for example: + + postgrey --inet=10023 -d + + contrib/postgrey.init in the postgrey source distribution includes + a LSB-compliant init script by Adrian von Bidder for the Debian + system. + + o Put something like this in /etc/main.cf: + + smtpd_recipient_restrictions = + permit_mynetworks + ... + reject_unauth_destination + check_policy_service inet:127.0.0.1:10023 + + o Install the provided postgrey_whitelist_clients and + postgrey_whitelist_recipients in /etc/postfix. + + o Put in /etc/postfix/postgrey_whitelist_recipients users that do not + want greylisting. + + Whitelists + Whitelists allow you to specify client addresses or recipient address, + for which no greylisting should be done. Per default postgrey will read + the following files: + + /etc/postfix/postgrey_whitelist_clients + /etc/postfix/postgrey_whitelist_clients.local + /etc/postfix/postgrey_whitelist_recipients + + You can specify alternative paths with the --whitelist-x options. + + Postgrey whitelists follow similar syntax rules as Postfix access + tables. The following can be specified for recipient addresses: + + domain.addr + "domain.addr" domain and subdomains. + + name@ "name@.*" and extended addresses "name+blabla@.*". + + name@domain.addr + "name@domain.addr" and extended addresses. + + /regexp/ anything that matches "regexp" (the full address is matched). + + The following can be specified for client addresses: + + domain.addr + "domain.addr" domain and subdomains. + + IP1.IP2.IP3.IP4 + IP address IP1.IP2.IP3.IP4. You can also leave off one + number, in which case only the first specified numbers will + be checked. + + IP1.IP2.IP3.IP4/MASK + CIDR-syle network. Example: 192.168.1.0/24 + + /regexp/ anything that matches "regexp" (the full address is matched). + + Auto-whitelisting clients + With the option --auto-whitelist-clients a client IP address will be + automatically whitelisted if the following conditions are met: + + o At least 5 successfull attempts of delivering a mail (after + greylisting was done). That number can be changed by specifying a + number after the --auto-whitelist-clients argument. Only one + attempt per hour counts. + + o The client was last seen before --max-age days (35 per default). + + Greylist Action + To set the action to be returned to postfix when a message fails + postgrey's tests and should be deferred, use the + --greylist-action=ACTION option. + + By default, postgrey returns DEFER_IF_PERMIT, which causes postfix to + check the rest of the restrictions and defer the message only if it + would otherwise be accepted. A delay action of 451 causes postfix to + always defer the message with an SMTP reply code of 451 (temp fail). + + See the postfix manual page access(5) for a discussion of the actions + allowed. + + Greylist Text + When a message is greylisted, an error message like this will be sent + at the SMTP-level: + + Greylisted, see http://postgrey.schweikert.ch/help/example.com.html + + Usually no user should see that error message and the idea of that URL + is to provide some help to system administrators seeing that message or + users of broken mail clients which try to send mails directly and get a + greylisting error. Note that the default help-URL contains the original + recipient domain (example.com), so that domain-specific help can be + presented to the user (on the default page it is said to contact + postmaster@example.com) + + You can change the text (and URL) with the --greylist-text parameter. + The following special variables will be replaced in the text: + + %s How many seconds left until the greylisting is over (300). + + %r Mail-domain of the recipient (example.com). + + Greylist Header + When a message is greylisted, an additional header can be prepended to + the header section of the mail: + + X-Greylist: delayed %t seconds by postgrey-%v at %h; %d + + You can change the text with the --x-greylist-header parameter. The + following special variables will be replaced in the text: + + %t How many seconds the mail has been delayed due to greylisting. + + %v The version of postgrey. + + %d The date. + + %h The host. + + + Privacy + The --privacy option enable the use of a SHA1 hash function to store + IPs and emails in the greylisting database. This will defeat straight + forward attempts to retrieve mail user behaviours. + + SEE ALSO + See for a description of what greylisting + is and for a + description of how Postfix policy servers work. + +COPYRIGHT + Copyright (c) 2004-2007 by ETH Zurich. All rights reserved. Copyright + (c) 2007 by Open Systems AG. All rights reserved. + +LICENSE + This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it + under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the + Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your + option) any later version. + + This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but + WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU + General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along + with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., + 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. + +AUTHOR + David Schweikert + + + +perl v5.32.0 2015-09-01 POSTGREY(1) -- cgit v1.2.3