d3cf60d2c8
Removes the comment from line 196, which enables the loading of plugins at startup again. Otherwise there would have been the need for a SIGHUP in order to load the plugins initially. Closes #308 and #288. |
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bin | ||
config.sample | ||
docs | ||
lib | ||
log | ||
packaging/rpm | ||
plugins | ||
t | ||
xt | ||
.gitignore | ||
.perltidyrc | ||
.travis.yml | ||
Changes | ||
CREDITS | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile.PL | ||
MANIFEST | ||
MANIFEST.SKIP | ||
META.yml | ||
qpsmtpd | ||
qpsmtpd-forkserver | ||
qpsmtpd-prefork | ||
README.md | ||
README.plugins.md | ||
run.forkserver | ||
run.tcpserver | ||
STATUS | ||
UPGRADING.md |
Qpsmtpd - qmail perl simple mail transfer protocol daemon
Qpsmtpd is an extensible SMTP engine written in Perl. See plugins/quit_fortune
for a cute example.
License
Qpsmtpd is licensed under the MIT License; see the LICENSE file for more information.
What's new?
See the Changes file! :-)
Installation
Required Perl Modules
* Net::DNS
* MIME::Base64
* Mail::Header (part of the MailTools distribution)
If your Perl is older than 5.8.0, you will also need
* Data::Dumper
* File::Temp
* Time::HiRes
The easiest way to install modules from CPAN is with the CPAN shell. Run it with
perl -MCPAN -e shell
qpsmtpd installation
Make a new user and a directory where you'll install qpsmtpd. I usually use "smtpd" for the user and /home/smtpd/qpsmtpd/ for the directory.
Put the files there. If you install from git you can just do run the following command in the /home/smtpd/ directory.
git clone git://github.com/smtpd/qpsmtpd.git
Beware that the master branch might be unstable and unsuitable for anything but development, so you might want to get a specific release, for example (after running git clone):
git checkout -b local_branch v0.93
chmod o+t ~smtpd/qpsmtpd/ (or whatever directory you installed qpsmtpd in) to make supervise start the log process.
Edit the file config/IP and put the ip address you want to use for qpsmtpd on the first line (or use 0 to bind to all interfaces).
If you use the supervise tools, then you are practically done! Just symlink /home/smtpd/qpsmtpd into your /services (or /var/services or /var/svscan or whatever) directory. Remember to shutdown qmail-smtpd if you are replacing it with qpsmtpd.
If you don't use supervise, then you need to run the ./run script in some other way.
The smtpd user needs write access to ~smtpd/qpsmtpd/tmp/ but should
not need to write anywhere else. This directory can be configured
with the spool_dir
configuration and permissions can be set with
spool_perms
.
As of version 0.25 the distributed ./run script runs tcpserver with the -R flag to disable identd lookups. Remove the -R flag if that's not what you want.
Configuration
Configuration files can go into either /var/qmail/control or into the config subdirectory of the qpsmtpd installation. Configuration should be compatible with qmail-smtpd making qpsmtpd a drop-in replacement.
If qmail is installed in a nonstandard location you should set the $QMAIL environment variable to that location in your "./run" file.
If there is anything missing, then please send a patch (or just information about what's missing) to the mailinglist or a PR to github.
Better Performance
For better performance we recommend using "qpsmtpd-forkserver" or running qpsmtpd under Apache 2.x. If you need extremely high concurrency use Haraka.
Plugins
The qpsmtpd core only implements the SMTP protocol. No useful function can be done by qpsmtpd without loading plugins.
Plugins are loaded on startup where each of them register their interest in various "hooks" provided by the qpsmtpd core engine.
At least one plugin MUST allow or deny the RCPT command to enable
receiving mail. The rcpt_ok
is one basic plugin that does
this. Other plugins provide extra functionality related to this; for
example the resolvable_fromhost
plugin described above.
Configuration files
All the files used by qmail-smtpd should be supported; so see the man page for qmail-smtpd. Extra files used by qpsmtpd include:
plugins
List of plugins, one per line, to be loaded in the order they appear in the file. Plugins are in the plugins directory (or in a subdirectory of there).
rhsbl_zones
Right hand side blocking lists, one per line. For example:
dsn.rfc-ignorant.org does not accept bounces - http://www.rfc-ignorant.org/
See http://www.rfc-ignorant.org/ for more examples.
dnsbl_zones
Normal ip based DNS blocking lists ("RBLs"). For example:
relays.ordb.org spamsources.fabel.dk
spool_dir
If this file contains a directory, it will be the spool directory smtpd uses during the data transactions. If this file doesn't exist, it will default to use $ENV{HOME}/tmp/. This directory should be set with a mode of 700 and owned by the smtpd user.
spool_perms
The default spool permissions are 0700. If you need some other value,
chmod the directory and set it's octal value in config/spool_perms
.
tls_before_auth
If this file contains anything except a 0 on the first noncomment line, then AUTH will not be offered unless TLS/SSL are in place, either with STARTTLS, or SMTP-SSL on port 465.
everything (?) that qmail-smtpd supports.
In my test qpsmtpd installation I have a "config/me" file containing the hostname I use for testing qpsmtpd (so it doesn't introduce itself with the normal name of the server).
Problems
In case of problems, always check the logfile first.
By default, qpsmtpd logs to log/main/current. Qpsmtpd can log a lot of debug information. You can get more or less by adjusting the number in config/loglevel. Between 1 and 3 should give you a little. Setting it to 10 or higher will get lots of information in the logs.
If the logfile doesn't give away the problem, then post to the mailinglist (subscription instructions above). If possible, put the logfile on a webserver and include a reference to it in the mail.