qpsmtpd/plugins/queue/postfix-queue

199 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

=head1 NAME
postfix-queue
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This plugin passes mails on to the postfix cleanup daemon.
=head1 CONFIG
The first optional parameter is the location of the cleanup socket. If it does
not start with a ``/'', it is treated as a flag for cleanup (see below).
The 'postfix_queue' plugin can also contain a list of cleanup socket paths
and/or remote postfix cleanup service hosts specified in the form of
'address:port'. If set, the environment variable POSTFIXQUEUE overrides both
of these settings.
All other parameters are flags for cleanup, no flags are enabled by default.
See below in ``POSTFIX COMPATIBILITY'' for flags understood by your postfix
version. Supported by all postfix versions E<gt>= 2.1 are:
=over 4
=item FLAG_FILTER
Set the CLEANUP_FLAG_FILTER for cleanup. This enables the use of
I<header_filter>, I<body_filter> or I<content_filter> in postfix' main.cf.
=item FLAG_BCC_OK
Setting this flag enables (for example) the I<recipient_bcc_maps> parameter
=item FLAG_MAP_OK
This flag enables the use of other recipient mappings (e.g.
I<virtual_alias_maps>) in postfix' cleanup.
=item FLAG_MASK_EXTERNAL
This flag mask combines FLAG_FILTER, FLAG_MILTER (only in postfix >= 2.3)
FLAG_BCC_OK and FLAG_MAP_OK and is used by postfix for external messages.
This is probably what you want to use.
=back
For more flags see below in ``POSTFIX COMPATIBILITY'', your postfix version
(grep _FLAG_ src/global/cleanup_user.h) and/or lib/Qpsmtpd/Postfix/Constants.pm
=head1 POSTFIX COMPATIBILITY
The first version of this plugin was written for postfix 1.x.
The next step for Postfix 2.1 (and later) was to add the FLAG_FILTER,
FLAG_BCC_OK and FLAG_MAP_OK flags for submission to the cleanup deamon.
This version can use all flags found in Postfix 2.x (up to 2.4 currently).
Unknown flags are ignored by the cleanup daemon (just tested with postfix
2.1), so it should be safe to set flags just understood by later versions
of postfix/cleanup.
Even if all known flags can be set, some are not that useful when feeding
the message from qpsmtpd, e.g.
=head2 FLAG_NONE
no effect
=head2 FLAG_DISCARD
DON'T USE, use another plugin which hooks the I<hook_queue()> and returns
B<OK> just for the messages you want to drop. As long as this plugin does
not support setting queue flags on the fly from other modules, this flag
would drop ALL messages. Don't use!
=head2 FLAG_BOUNCE
Qpsmtpd should be configured not to accept bad messages...
=head2 FLAG_HOLD
Not useful in production setup, maybe in testing environment (untested, what
real effects this has).
=over 4
=item Flags known by postfix 1.1:
FLAG_NONE - No special features
FLAG_BOUNCE - Bounce bad messages
FLAG_FILTER - Enable content filter
=item Flags known by postfix 2.1, 2.2
all flags from postfix 1.1, plus the following:
FLAG_HOLD - Place message on hold
FLAG_DISCARD - Discard message silently
FLAG_BCC_OK - Ok to add auto-BCC addresses
FLAG_MAP_OK - Ok to map addresses
FLAG_MASK_INTERNAL - alias for FLAG_MAP_OK
FLAG_MASK_EXTERNAL - FILTER, BCC_OK and MAP_OK
=item Flags known by postfix 2.3
all flags from postfix 2.1, up to FLAG_MASK_INTERNAL. New or changed:
FLAG_MILTER - Enable Milter applications
FLAG_FILTER_ALL - FILTER and MILTER
FLAG_MASK_EXTERNAL - FILTER_ALL, BCC_OK, MAP_OK
=item Flags known by postfix 2.4
currently (postfix-2.4-20061019) the same as 2.3
=back
=head1 MAYBE IN FUTURE
Settings the (additional) queue flags from another plugin. Currently at the
beginning of I<hook_queue()> all flags are reset to the flags given as plugin
parameters.
=cut
use Qpsmtpd::Postfix;
use Qpsmtpd::Postfix::Constants;
sub register {
my ($self, $qp, @args) = @_;
$self->log(LOGDEBUG, "using constants generated from Postfix"
."v$postfix_version");
$self->{_queue_flags} = 0;
if (@args > 0) {
if ($args[0] =~ m#^(/.+)#) {
# untaint socket path
$self->{_queue_socket} = $1;
shift @args;
}
foreach (@args) {
if ($self->can("CLEANUP_".$_) and /^(FLAG_[A-Z0-9_]+)$/) {
$_ = $1;
$self->{_queue_flags} |= (eval "CLEANUP_$_;" || 0);
#print STDERR "queue flag: $_: ".$self->{_queue_flags}."\n";
}
else {
$self->log(LOGWARN, "Ignoring unkown cleanup flag $_");
}
}
}
else {
$self->{_queue_socket} = "/var/spool/postfix/public/cleanup";
}
$self->{_queue_socket_env} = $ENV{POSTFIXQUEUE} if $ENV{POSTFIXQUEUE};
}
sub hook_queue {
my ($self, $transaction) = @_;
$transaction->notes('postfix-queue-flags', $self->{_queue_flags});
my @queue;
@queue = ($self->{_queue_socket_env}) if $self->{_queue_socket_env};
@queue = $self->qp->config('cleanup_sockets') unless @queue;
@queue = ($self->{_queue_socket} // ()) unless @queue;
$transaction->notes('postfix-queue-sockets', \@queue) if @queue;
# $self->log(LOGDEBUG, "queue-flags=".$transaction->notes('postfix-queue-flags'));
my ($status, $qid, $reason) = Qpsmtpd::Postfix->inject_mail($transaction);
if ($status) {
# this split is needed, because if cleanup returns
# CLEANUP_STAT_MASK_INCOMPLETE we might return DENY (CLEANUP_STAT_SIZE)
# instead of DENYSOFT (CLEANUP_STAT_WRITE, CLEANUP_STAT_BAD,
# CLEANUP_STAT_DEFER) ... n.b. this is the behaviour of 667.
foreach my $key (keys %cleanup_soft) {
my $stat = eval $key # keys have the same names as the constants
or next;
if ($status & $stat) {
return (DENYSOFT, $reason || $cleanup_soft{$key});
}
}
foreach my $key (keys %cleanup_hard) {
my $stat = eval $key # keys have the same names as the constants
or next;
if ($status & $stat) {
return (DENY, $reason || $cleanup_hard{$key});
}
}
# we have no idea why we're here.
return (DECLINED, $reason || "Unable to queue message ($status, $reason)");
}
my $msg_id = $transaction->header->get('Message-Id') || '';
$msg_id =~ s/[\r\n].*//s; # don't allow newlines in the Message-Id here
return (OK, "Queued! $msg_id (Queue-Id: $qid)");
}
# vim: sw=2 ts=8 syn=perl