* Update data_post_headers documentation We cannot reject at this stage, which is only there to alter headers. Fix #258 * DMARC plugin: reject in data_post Followup of #258: we cannot reject a connection during data_post_headers. So add a new hook in data_post to do the real rejection
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SMTP hooks
This section covers the hooks, which are run in a normal SMTP connection. The order of these hooks is like you will (probably) see them, while a mail is received.
Every hook receives a Qpsmtpd::Plugin
object of the currently
running plugin as the first argument. A Qpsmtpd::Transaction
object is
the second argument of the current transaction in the most hooks, exceptions
are noted in the description of the hook. If you need examples how the
hook can be used, see the source of the plugins, which are given as
example plugins.
NOTE: for some hooks (post-fork, post-connection, disconnect, deny, ok) the
return values are ignored. This does not mean you can return anything you
want. It just means the return value is discarded and you can not disconnect
a client with DENY_DISCONNECT
. The rule to return DECLINED
to run the
next plugin for this hook (or return OK
/ DONE
to stop processing)
still applies.
hook_pre_connection
Called by a controlling process (e.g. forkserver or prefork) after accepting the remote server, but before beginning a new instance (or handing the connection to the worker process).
Useful for load-management and rereading large config files at some frequency less than once per session.
This hook is available in qpsmtpd-forkserver
and qpsmtpd-prefork
flavors.
NOTE: You should not use this hook to do major work and / or use lookup methods which (may) take some time, like DNS lookups. This will slow down all incoming connections, no other connection will be accepted while this hook is running!
Arguments this hook receives are:
my ($self,$transaction,%args) = @_;
# %args is:
# %args = ( remote_ip => inet_ntoa($iaddr),
# remote_port => $port,
# local_ip => inet_ntoa($laddr),
# local_port => $lport,
# max_conn_ip => $MAXCONNIP,
# child_addrs => [values %childstatus],
# );
NOTE: the $transaction
is of course undef
at this time.
Allowed return codes are
-
DENY / DENY_DISCONNECT
returns a 550 to the client and ends the connection
-
DENYSOFT / DENYSOFT_DISCONNECT
returns a 451 to the client and ends the connection
Anything else is ignored.
Example plugins are hosts_allow
and connection_time
.
hook_connect
It is called at the start of a connection before the greeting is sent to the connecting client.
Arguments for this hook are
my $self = shift;
NOTE: in fact you get passed two more arguments, which are undef
at this
early stage of the connection, so ignore them.
Allowed return codes are
-
OK
Stop processing plugins, give the default response
-
DECLINED
Process the next plugin
-
DONE
Stop processing plugins and dont give the default response, i.e. the plugin gave the response
-
DENY
Return hard failure code and disconnect
-
DENYSOFT
Return soft failure code and disconnect
Example plugin for this hook is the check_relay
plugin.
hook_helo / hook_ehlo
It is called after the client sent EHLO (hook_ehlo) or HELO (hook_helo) Allowed return codes are
-
DENY
Return a 550 code
-
DENYSOFT
Return a 450 code
-
DENY_DISCONNECT / DENYSOFT_DISCONNECT
as above but with disconnect
-
DONE
Qpsmtpd wont do anything, the plugin sent the message
-
DECLINED
Qpsmtpd will send the standard EHLO/HELO answer, of course only if all plugins hooking helo/ehlo return DECLINED.
Arguments of this hook are
my ($self, $transaction, $host) = @_;
# $host: the name the client sent in the
# (EH|HE)LO line
NOTE: $transaction
is undef
at this point.
hook_mail_pre
After the MAIL FROM:
line sent by the client is broken into
pieces by the hook_mail_parse()
, this hook recieves the results.
This hook may be used to pre-accept adresses without the surrounding
<>
(by adding them) or addresses like <user@example.com.>
or <user@example.com >
by
removing the trailing "." / " ".
Expected return values are OK
and an address which must be parseable
by Qpsmtpd::Address->parse()
on success or any other constant to
indicate failure.
Arguments are
my ($self, $transaction, $addr) = @_;
hook_mail
Called right after the envelope sender line is parsed (the MAIL FROM:
command). The plugin gets passed a Qpsmtpd::Address
object, which means
the parsing and verifying the syntax of the address (and just the syntax,
no other checks) is already done. Default is to allow the sender address.
The remaining arguments are the extensions defined in RFC 1869 (if sent by
the client).
NOTE: According to the SMTP protocol, you can not reject an invalid
sender until after the RCPT stage (except for protocol errors, i.e.
syntax errors in address). So store it in an $transaction->note()
and
process it later in an rcpt hook.
Allowed return codes are
-
OK
sender allowed
-
DENY
Return a hard failure code
-
DENYSOFT
Return a soft failure code
-
DENY_DISCONNECT / DENYSOFT_DISCONNECT
as above but with disconnect
-
DECLINED
next plugin (if any)
-
DONE
skip further processing, plugin sent response
Arguments for this hook are
my ($self,$transaction, $sender, %args) = @_;
# $sender: an Qpsmtpd::Address object for
# sender of the message
Example plugins for the hook_mail
are resolvable_fromhost
and badmailfrom
.
hook_rcpt_pre
See hook_mail_pre
, s/MAIL FROM:/RCPT TO:/.
hook_rcpt
This hook is called after the client sent an RCPT TO:
command (after
parsing the line). The given argument is parsed by Qpsmtpd::Address,
then this hook is called. Default is to deny the mail with a soft error
code. The remaining arguments are the extensions defined in RFC 1869
(if sent by the client).
Allowed return codes
-
OK
recipient allowed
-
DENY
Return a hard failure code, for example for an User does not exist here message.
-
DENYSOFT
Return a soft failure code, for example if the connect to a user lookup database failed
-
DENY_DISCONNECT / DENYSOFT_DISCONNECT
as above but with disconnect
-
DONE
skip further processing, plugin sent response
Arguments are
my ($self, $transaction, $recipient, %args) = @_;
# $rcpt = Qpsmtpd::Address object with
# the given recipient address
Example plugin is rcpt_ok
.
hook_data
After the client sent the DATA command, before any data of the message was sent, this hook is called.
NOTE: This hook, like EHLO, VRFY, QUIT, NOOP, is an
endpoint of a pipelined command group (see RFC 1854) and may be used to
detect ``early talkers''. Since svn revision 758 the earlytalker
plugin may be configured to check at this hook for ``early talkers''.
Allowed return codes are
-
DENY
Return a hard failure code
-
DENYSOFT
Return a soft failure code
-
DENY_DISCONNECT / DENYSOFT_DISCONNECT
as above but with disconnect
-
DONE
Plugin took care of receiving data and calling the queue (not recommended)
NOTE: The only real use for DONE is implementing other ways of receiving the message, than the default... for example the CHUNKING SMTP extension (RFC 1869, 1830/3030) ... a plugin for this exists at http://svn.perl.org/qpsmtpd/contrib/vetinari/experimental/chunking, but it was never tested ``in the wild''.
Arguments:
my ($self, $transaction) = @_;
Example plugin is greylisting
.
hook_received_line
If you wish to provide your own Received header line, do it here. You can use or discard any of the given arguments (see below).
Allowed return codes:
-
OK, $string
use this string for the Received header.
-
anything else
use the default Received header
Arguments are
my ($self, $transaction, $smtp, $auth, $sslinfo) = @_;
# $smtp - the SMTP type used (e.g. "SMTP" or "ESMTP").
# $auth - the Auth header additionals.
# $sslinfo - information about SSL for the header.
data_headers_end
This hook fires after all header lines of the message data has been received. Defaults to doing nothing, just continue processing. At this step, the sender is not waiting for a reply, but we can try and prevent him from sending the entire message by disconnecting immediately. (Although it is likely the packets are already in flight due to buffering and pipelining).
NOTE: BE CAREFUL! If you drop the connection legal MTAs will retry again and again, spammers will probably not. This is not RFC compliant and can lead to an unpredictable mess. Use with caution.
Why this hook may be useful for you, see http://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.qpsmtpd/2009/02/msg8502.html, ff.
Allowed return codes:
-
DENY_DISCONNECT
Return 554 Message denied and disconnect
-
DENYSOFT_DISCONNECT
Return 421 Message denied temporarily and disconnect
-
DECLINED
Do nothing
Arguments:
my ($self, $transaction) = @_;
FIXME: check arguments
hook_data_post_headers
The data_post_headers
hook is called after the client sends the final .\r\n of
a message and before the message is processed by data_post
. This hook is
used by plugins that insert new headers (ex: Received-SPF) and/or
modify headers such as appending to Authentication-Results (SPF, DKIM, DMARC).
When it is desirable to have these header modifications evaluated by filtering
software (spamassassin, dspam, etc.) running on data_post
, this hook should be
used instead of data_post
.
Note that you cannot reject in this hook, use the data_post hook instead
Allowed return codes are
-
DECLINED
Do nothing
hook_data_post
The data_post
hook is called after all headers has been added in
data_post_headers
above. This is meant for plugins that expect complete
messages, such as content analyzing spam filters. Plugins can still add
headers in this hook, however it is recommended only informational headers
are added here.
Allowed return codes are
-
DENY
Return a hard failure code
-
DENYSOFT
Return a soft failure code
-
DENY_DISCONNECT / DENYSOFT_DISCONNECT
as above but with disconnect
-
DONE
skip further processing (message will not be queued), plugin gave the response.
NOTE: just returning OK from a special queue plugin does (nearly) the same (i.e. dropping the mail to
/dev/null
) and you don't have to send the response on your own.If you want the mail to be queued, you have to queue it manually!
Arguments:
my ($self, $transaction) = @_;
Example plugins: spamassassin
, virus/clamdscan
, dspam
hook_queue_pre
This hook is run, just before the mail is queued to the ``backend''. You may modify the in-process transaction object (e.g. adding headers) or add something like a footer to the mail (the latter is not recommended).
Allowed return codes are
-
DONE
no queuing is done
-
OK / DECLINED
queue the mail
hook_queue
When all data_post
hooks accepted the message, this hook is called. It
is used to queue the message to the ``backend''.
Allowed return codes:
-
DONE
skip further processing (plugin gave response code)
-
OK
Return success message, i.e. tell the client the message was queued (this may be used to drop the message silently).
-
DENY
Return hard failure code
-
DENYSOFT
Return soft failure code, i.e. if disk full or other temporary queuing problems
Arguments:
my ($self, $transaction) = @_;
Example plugins: all queue/*
plugins
hook_queue_post
This hook is called always after hook_queue
. If the return code is
not OK, a message (all remaining return values) with level LOGERROR
is written to the log.
Arguments are
my $self = shift;
NOTE: $transaction
is not valid at this point, therefore not mentioned.
hook_reset_transaction
This hook will be called several times. At the beginning of a transaction (i.e. when the client sends a MAIL FROM: command the first time), after queueing the mail and every time a client sends a RSET command. Arguments are
my ($self, $transaction) = @_;
NOTE: don't rely on $transaction
being valid at this point.
hook_quit
After the client sent a QUIT command, this hook is called (before the
hook_disconnect
).
Allowed return codes
-
DONE
plugin sent response
-
DECLINED
next plugin and / or qpsmtpd sends response
Arguments: the only argument is $self
Expample plugin is the quit_fortune
plugin.
hook_disconnect
This hook will be called from several places: After a plugin returned
DENY(|SOFT)_DISCONNECT
, before connection is disconnected or after the
client sent the QUIT
command, AFTER the quit hook and ONLY if no plugin
hooking hook_quit
returned DONE
.
All return values are ignored, arguments are just $self
Example plugin is logging/file
hook_post_connection
This is the counter part of the pre-connection
hook, it is called
directly before the connection is finished, for example, just before the
qpsmtpd-forkserver instance exits or if the client drops the connection
without notice (without a QUIT). This hook is not called if the qpsmtpd
instance is killed.
The only argument is $self
and all return codes are ignored, it would
be too late anyway :-).
Example: connection_time
Parsing Hooks
Before the line from the client is parsed by
Qpsmtpd::Command->parse()
with the built in parser, these hooks
are called. They can be used to supply a parsing function for the line,
which will be used instead of the built in parser.
The hook must return two arguments, the first is (currently) ignored, the second argument must be a (CODE) reference to a sub routine. This sub routine receives three arguments:
-
$self
the plugin object
-
$cmd
the command (i.e. the first word of the line) sent by the client
-
$line
the line sent by the client without the first word
Expected return values from this sub are DENY and a reason which is
sent to the client or OK and the $line
broken into pieces according
to the syntax rules for the command.
NOTE: ignore the example from Qpsmtpd::Command
, the unrecognized_command_parse
hook was never implemented,...
hook_helo_parse
/ hook_ehlo_parse
The provided sub routine must return two or more values. The first is discarded, the second is the hostname (sent by the client as argument to the HELO / EHLO command). All other values are passed to the helo / ehlo hook. This hook may be used to change the hostname the client sent... not recommended, but if your local policy says only to accept HELO hosts with FQDNs and you have a legal client which can not be changed to send his FQDN, this is the right place.
hook_mail_parse / hook_rcpt_parse
The provided sub routine must return two or more values. The first is either OK to indicate that parsing of the line was successfull or anything else to bail out with 501 Syntax error in command. In case of failure the second argument is used as the error message for the client.
If parsing was successfull, the second argument is the sender's /
recipient's address (this may be without the surrounding < and
>, don't add them here, use the hook_mail_pre()
/
hook_rcpt_pre()
methods for this). All other arguments are
sent to the mail / rcpt
hook as MAIL / RCPT parameters (see
RFC 1869 SMTP Service Extensions for more info). Note that
the mail and rcpt hooks expect a list of key/value pairs as the
last arguments.
hook_auth_parse
FIXME...
Special hooks
Now some special hooks follow. Some of these hooks are some internal hooks, which may be used to alter the logging or retrieving config values from other sources (other than flat files) like SQL databases.
hook_logging
This hook is called when a log message is written, for example in a plugin
it fires if someone calls $self->log($level, $msg);
. Allowed
return codes are
-
DECLINED
next logging plugin
-
OK
(not DONE, as some might expect!) ok, plugin logged the message
Arguments are
my ($self, $transaction, $trace, $hook, $plugin, @log) = @_;
# $trace: level of message, for example
# LOGWARN, LOGDEBUG, ...
# $hook: the hook in/for which this logging
# was called
# $plugin: the plugin calling this hook
# @log: the log message
NOTE: $transaction
may be undef
, depending when / where this hook
is called. It's probably best not to try acessing it.
All logging/*
plugins can be used as example plugins.
hook_deny
This hook is called after a plugin returned DENY, DENYSOFT, DENY_DISCONNECT or DENYSOFT_DISCONNECT. All return codes are ignored, arguments are
my ($self, $transaction, $prev_plugin, $return, $return_text) = @_;
NOTE: $transaction
may be undef
, depending when / where this hook
is called. It's probably best not to try acessing it.
Example plugin for this hook is logging/adaptive
.
hook_ok
The counter part of hook_deny
, it is called after a plugin did not
return DENY, DENYSOFT, DENY_DISCONNECT or DENYSOFT_DISCONNECT.
All return codes are ignored, arguments are
my ( $self, $transaction, $prev_plugin, $return, $return_text ) = @_;
NOTE: $transaction
may be undef
, depending when / where this hook
is called. It's probably best not to try acessing it.
hook_config
Called when a config file is requested, for example in a plugin it fires
if someone calls my @cfg = $self->qp->config($cfg_name);
.
Allowed return codes are
-
DECLINED
plugin didn't find the requested value
-
OK, @values
requested values as
@list
, example:return (OK, @{$config{$key}}) if exists $config{$key}; return (DECLINED);
Arguments:
my ($self,$transaction,@keys) = @_;
# @keys: the requested config item(s)
NOTE: $transaction
may be undef
, depending when / where this hook
is called. It's probably best not to try acessing it.
Example plugin is http_config
from the qpsmtpd distribution.
hook_user_config
Called when a per-user configuration directive is requested, for example
if someone calls my @cfg = $rcpt->config($cfg_name);
.
Allowed return codes are
-
DECLINED
plugin didn't find the requested value
-
OK, @values
requested values as
@list
, example:return (OK, @{$config{$key}}) if exists $config{$key}; return (DECLINED);
Arguments:
my ($self,$transaction,$user,@keys) = @_;
# @keys: the requested config item(s)
Example plugin is user_config
from the qpsmtpd distribution.
hook_unrecognized_command
This is called if the client sent a command unknown to the core of qpsmtpd. This can be used to implement new SMTP commands or just count the number of unknown commands from the client, see below for examples. Allowed return codes:
-
DENY_DISCONNECT
Return 521 and disconnect the client
-
DENY
Return 500
-
DONE
Qpsmtpd wont do anything; the plugin responded, this is what you want to return, if you are implementing new commands
-
Anything else...
Return 500 Unrecognized command
Arguments:
my ($self, $transaction, $cmd, @args) = @_;
# $cmd = the first "word" of the line
# sent by the client
# @args = all the other "words" of the
# line sent by the client
# "word(s)": white space split() line
NOTE: $transaction
may be undef
, depending when / where this hook
is called. It's probably best not to try acessing it.
Example plugin is tls
.
hook_help
This hook triggers if a client sends the HELP command, allowed return codes are:
-
DONE
Plugin gave the answer.
-
DENY
The client will get a
syntax error
message, probably not what you want, better use$self->qp->respond(502, "Not implemented."); return DONE;
Anything else will be send as help answer.
Arguments are my ($self, $transaction, @args) = @_;
with @args
being the arguments from the client's command.
hook_vrfy
If the client sents the VRFY command, this hook is called. Default is to return a message telling the user to just try sending the message. Allowed return codes:
-
OK
Recipient Exists
-
DENY
Return a hard failure code
-
DONE
Return nothing and move on
-
Anything Else...
Return a 252
Arguments are:
my ($self) = shift;
hook_noop
If the client sents the NOOP command, this hook is called. Default is to
return 250 OK
.
Allowed return codes are:
-
DONE
Plugin gave the answer
-
DENY_DISCONNECT
Return error code and disconnect client
-
DENY
Return error code.
-
Anything Else...
Give the default answer of 250 OK.
Arguments are
my ($self,$transaction,@args) = @_;
Authentication hooks
See docs/authentication.pod
.