207 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
207 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
#
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# this file is best read with `perldoc README`
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#
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=head1 NAME
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Qpsmtpd - qmail perl simple mail transfer protocol daemon
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web:
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http://smtpd.develooper.com/
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mailinglist:
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qpsmtpd-subscribe@perl.org
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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What is Qpsmtpd?
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Qpsmtpd is an extensible smtp engine written in Perl. No, make that
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easily extensible! See plugins/quit_fortune for a very useful, er,
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cute example.
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=head2 License
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Qpsmtpd is licensed under the MIT License; see the LICENSE file for
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more information.
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=head2 What's new in this release?
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See the Changes file! :-)
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=head1 Installation
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=head2 Required Perl Modules
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The following Perl modules are required:
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Net::DNS
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MIME::Base64
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Mail::Header (part of the MailTools distribution)
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If you use a version of Perl older than 5.8.0 you will also need
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Data::Dumper
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File::Temp
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Time::HiRes
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The easiest way to install modules from CPAN is with the CPAN shell.
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Run it with
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perl -MCPAN -e shell
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=head2 qpsmtpd installation
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Make a new user and a directory where you'll install qpsmtpd. I
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usually use "smtpd" for the user and /home/smtpd/qpsmtpd/ for the
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directory.
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Put the files there. If you install from Subversion you can just do
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run the following command in the /home/smtpd/ directory.
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git clone git://github.com/abh/qpsmtpd.git
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Beware that the master branch might be unstable and unsuitable for anything
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but development, so you might want to get a specific release, for
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example (after running git clone):
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git checkout -b local_branch v0.40
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chmod o+t ~smtpd/qpsmtpd/ (or whatever directory you installed qpsmtpd
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in) to make supervise start the log process.
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Edit the file config/IP and put the ip address you want to use for
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qpsmtpd on the first line (or use 0 to bind to all interfaces).
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If you use the supervise tools, then you are practically done now!
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Just symlink /home/smtpd/qpsmtpd into your /services (or /var/services
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or /var/svscan or whatever) directory. Remember to shutdown
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qmail-smtpd if you are replacing it with qpsmtpd.
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If you don't use supervise, then you need to run the ./run script in
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some other way.
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The smtpd user needs write access to ~smtpd/qpsmtpd/tmp/ but should
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not need to write anywhere else. This directory can be configured
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with the "spool_dir" configuration and permissions can be set with
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"spool_perms".
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As per version 0.25 the distributed ./run script runs tcpserver with
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the -R flag to disable identd lookups. Remove the -R flag if that's
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not what you want.
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=head2 Configuration
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Configuration files can go into either /var/qmail/control or into the
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config subdirectory of the qpsmtpd installation. Configuration should
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be compatible with qmail-smtpd making qpsmtpd a drop-in replacement.
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If qmail is installed in a nonstandard location you should set the
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$QMAIL environment variable to that location in your "./run" file.
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If there is anything missing, then please send a patch (or just
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information about what's missing) to the mailinglist or to
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ask@develooper.com.
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=head1 Better Performance
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For better performance we recommend using "qpsmtpd-forkserver" or
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running qpsmtpd under Apache 2.x. If you need extremely high
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concurrency and all your plugins are compatible, you might want to try
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the "qpsmtpd-async" model.
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=head1 Plugins
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The qpsmtpd core only implements the SMTP protocol. No useful
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function can be done by qpsmtpd without loading plugins.
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Plugins are loaded on startup where each of them register their
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interest in various "hooks" provided by the qpsmtpd core engine.
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At least one plugin MUST allow or deny the RCPT command to enable
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receiving mail. The "check_relay" plugin is the standard plugin for
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this. Other plugins provides extra functionality related to this; for
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example the require_resolvable_fromhost plugin described above.
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=head1 Configuration files
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All the files used by qmail-smtpd should be supported; so see the man
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page for qmail-smtpd. Extra files used by qpsmtpd includes:
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=over 4
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=item plugins
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List of plugins, one per line, to be loaded in the order they
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appear in the file. Plugins are in the plugins directory (or in
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a subdirectory of there).
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=item rhsbl_zones
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Right hand side blocking lists, one per line. For example:
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dsn.rfc-ignorant.org does not accept bounces - http://www.rfc-ignorant.org/
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See http://www.rfc-ignorant.org/ for more examples.
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=item dnsbl_zones
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Normal ip based dns blocking lists ("RBLs"). For example:
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relays.ordb.org
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spamsources.fabel.dk
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=item require_resolvable_fromhost
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If this file contains anything but a 0 on the first line, envelope
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senders will be checked against DNS. If an A or a MX record can't be
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found the mail command will return a soft rejection (450).
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=item spool_dir
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If this file contains a directory, it will be the spool directory
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smtpd uses during the data transactions. If this file doesnt exist, it
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will default to use $ENV{HOME}/tmp/. This directory should be set with
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a mode of 700 and owned by the smtpd user.
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=item tls_before_auth
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If this file contains anything except a 0 on the first noncomment line, then
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AUTH will not be offered unless TLS/SSL are in place, either with STARTTLS,
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or SMTP-SSL on port 465.
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=item everything (?) that qmail-smtpd supports.
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In my test qpsmtpd installation I have a "config/me" file containing
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the hostname I use for testing qpsmtpd (so it doesn't introduce itself
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with the normal name of the server).
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=back
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=head1 Problems
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In case of problems always first check the logfile.
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As default it goes into log/main/current. Qpsmtpd can log a lot of
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debug information. You can get more or less by adjusting $TRACE_LEVEL
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in lib/Qpsmtpd.pm (sorry, no easy switch for that yet). Something
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between 1 and 3 should give you just a little bit. If you set it to
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10 or higher you will get lots of information in the logs.
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If the logfile doesn't give away the problem, then post to the
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mailinglist (subscription instructions above). If possibly then put
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the logfile on a webserver and include a reference to it in the mail.
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