qpsmtpd/docs/config.md

6.3 KiB

Qpsmtpd configuration

The default way of setting config values is placing files with the name of the config variable in the config directory config/, like qmail's /var/qmail/control/ directory. NB: /var/qmail/control (or $ENV{QMAIL}/control) is used if a file does not exist in config/. The location of the config/ directory can be set via the QPSMTPD_CONFIG environment variable and defaults to the current working directory.

Any empty line or lines starting with # are ignored. You may use a plugin which hooks the config hook to store the settings in some other way. See "plugins.pod" in docs and "hooks.pod" in docs for more info on this. Some settings still have to go in files, because they are loaded before any plugin can return something via the config hook: me, logging, plugin_dirs and of course plugins.

Core settings

These settings are used by the qpsmtpd core. Any other setting is (hopefully) documented by the corresponding plugin. Some settings of important plugins are shown below in "Plugin settings".

  • plugins

    The main config file, where all used plugins and their arguments are listed.

  • me

    Sets the hostname which is used all over the place: in the greeting message, the _Received: _header, ... Default is whatever Sys::Hostname's hostname() returns.

  • plugin_dirs

    Where to search for plugins (one directory per line), defaults to ./plugins.

  • logging

    Sets the primary logging destination, see plugins/logging/*. Format is the same as it's used for the plugins config file. NOTE: only the first non empty line is used (lines starting with # are counted as empty).

  • loglevel

    This is not used anymore, only if no logging/ plugin is in use. Use a logging plugin.

  • databytes

    Maximum size a message may be. Without this setting, there is no limit on the size. Should be something less than the backend MTA has set as it's maximum message size (if there is one).

  • size_threshold

    When a message is greater than the size given in this config file, it will be spooled to disk. You probably want to enable spooling to disk for most virus scanner plugins and spamassassin.

  • smtpgreeting

    Override the default SMTP greeting with this string.

  • spool_dir

    Where temporary files are stored, defaults to ~/tmp/.

  • spool_perms

    Permissions of the spool_dir, default is 0700. You probably have to change the defaults for some scanners (e.g. the clamdscan plugin).

  • timeout

  • timeoutsmtpd

    Set the timeout for the clients, timeoutsmtpd is the qmail smtpd control file, timeout the qpsmtpd file. Default is 1200 seconds.

  • tls_before_auth

    If set to a true value, clients will have to initiate an SSL secured connection before any auth succeeds, defaults to 0.

Plugin settings files

  • rcpthosts, morercpthosts

    Plugin: rcpt_ok

    Domains listed in these files will be accepted as valid local domains, anything else is rejected with a Relaying denied message. If an entry in the rcpthosts file starts with a ., mails to anything ending with this string will be accepted, e.g.:

      example.com
      .example.com
    

    will accept mails for user@example.com and user@something.example.com. The morercpthosts file is just checked for exact (case insensitive) matches.

  • hosts_allow

    Plugin: hosts_allow.

    Don't use this config file. The plugin itself is required to set the maximum number of concurrent connections. This config setting should only be used for some extremly rude clients: if list is too big it will slow down accepting new connections.

  • relayclients

  • morerelayclients

    Plugin: check_relay

    Allow relaying for hosts listed in this file. The relayclients file accepts IPs and CIDR entries. The morercpthosts file accepts IPs and prefixes like 192.168.2. (note the trailing dot!). With the given example any host which IP starts with 192.168.2. may relay via us.

  • dnsbl_zones

    Plugin: dnsbl

    This file specifies the RBL zones list, used by the dnsbl plugin. Ihe IP address of each connecting host will be checked against each zone given. A few sample DNSBLs are listed in the sample config file, but you should evaluate the efficacy and listing policies of a DNSBL before using it.

    See also dnsbl_allow and dnsbl_rejectmsg in the documentation of the dnsbl plugin

  • resolvable_fromhost

    Plugin: resolvable_fromhost

    Reject sender addresses where the MX is unresolvable, i.e. a boolean value is the only value in this file. If the MX resolves to something, reject the sender address if it resolves to something listed in the invalid_resolvable_fromhost config file. The invalid_resolvable_fromhost expects IP addresses or CIDR (i.e. network/mask values) one per line, IPv4 only currenlty.

Plugin settings arguments

These are arguments that can be set on the config/plugins line, after the name of the plugin. These config options are available to all plugins.

  • loglevel

    Adjust the quantity of logging for the plugin. See docs/logging.pod

  • reject

      plugin reject [ 0 | 1 | naughty ]
    

    Should the plugin reject mail?

    The special 'naughty' case will mark the connection as a naughty. Most plugins skip processing naughty connections. Filtering plugins can learn from them. Naughty connections are terminated up by the naughty plugin.

    Plugins that use $self->get_reject() or $self->get_reject_type() will automatically honor this setting.

  • reject_type

      plugin reject_type [ perm | temp | disconnect | temp_disconnect ]
    

    Default: perm

    Values with temp in the name return a 4xx code and the others return a 5xx code.

    The reject_type argument and the corresponding get_reject_type() method provides a standard way for plugins to automatically return the selected rejection type, as chosen by the config setting, the plugin author, or the get_reject_type() method.

    Plugins that are updated to use the $self->get_reject() or $self->get_reject_type() methods will automatically honor this setting.