Jason Ostrom wrote:
|I'm a step closer to resolving this problem. With Exim, anything can
|be done. I know how to do the conditional check with SpamBouncer, but
|the main problem is after the procmail router/transport runs, how do I
|get the routing process to continue?
|
|procmail:
| driver = accept
| check_local_user
| require_files = ${home}/.procmailrc
| transport = procmail_pipe
| ### Need to continue to route the message so that userforward can be
| ### checked
|
|# run userforward only if SpamBuster marks SBClass OK; that is,
|# message does not contain spam
|userforward:
| condition = ${if eq {$header_X-SBClass:}{OK} {1}{0} }
| driver = redirect
| check_ancestor
| check_local_user
| no_expn
| file = $home/.forward
| file_transport = address_file
| pipe_transport = address_pipe
| reply_transport = address_reply
| no_verify
|
|# This director matches local user mailboxes.
|# Will have a condition here to check if the header_X-SBClass exists
|# If it has, no need to run localuser; If it hasn't user doesn't have
|# a .procmailrc, procmail has not delivered so it still needs to be
|# delivered
|localuser:
| driver = accept
| check_local_user
| transport = local_delivery
|
|
|#procmail
|procmail_pipe:
| driver = pipe
| delivery_date_add = true
| envelope_to_add = true
| return_path_add = true
| command = /usr/bin/procmail -f
| user = ${local_part}
| group = mail
|
|Jason Ostrom> Hello all,
|
|Jason Ostrom> I'm running Exim 4.12 with RH 7.2, trying to use SpamBouncer
|Jason Ostrom> (procmail) as a spam filter for ONLY users who have a
.procmailrc in
|Jason Ostrom> their home directory. I'm wondering the best way to do
this overall
|Jason Ostrom> and any implementation advice.
|
|Jason Ostrom> Here are the issues:
|Jason Ostrom> * I can configure procmail to run from .forward and use
the exim
|Jason Ostrom> redirect router. But I've decided not to do this, for
reasons below.
|
|Jason Ostrom> * There are some users who will put external forwarding email
|Jason Ostrom> addresses in their .forward, after the procmail line.
For these
|Jason Ostrom> users, mail will still get forwarded to a remote system.
I want
|Jason Ostrom> procmail/exim to stop the message from getting forwarded
on if it is
|Jason Ostrom> marked as spam.
|
|Jason Ostrom> * I could use procmail across the board for local mail
delivery, but
|Jason Ostrom> not everyone will be using .procmailrc. For users who do
|Jason Ostrom> not, I would like the localuser/local_delivery
router/transport to
|Jason Ostrom> deliver mail.
|
|Jason Ostrom> The best way I can think to do this is to run a procmail
pipe for all users
|Jason Ostrom> who have a .procmailrc, and run it before the userforward
router.
|Jason Ostrom> I've been able to do this, but once procmail delivers, it
doesn't hit
|Jason Ostrom> the userforward router after that, which might be
necessary for users
|Jason Ostrom> who want to use .forward to forward to external hosts.
|
|Jason Ostrom> I basically want exim to be able to filter and deliver
mail locally
|Jason Ostrom> for users who have a .procmailrc, and still forward the
mail on if the
|Jason Ostrom> user has a .forward in their home directory. But not run the
|Jason Ostrom> router/transport that will do $home/.forward if
SpamBouncer has marked
|Jason Ostrom> the header as containing spam. SpamBouncer
|Jason Ostrom> marks the header with "X-SBClass: OK" and other
classifications if the
|Jason Ostrom> mail has been marked for spam. Would there be a better
way, or should
|Jason Ostrom> I do a conditional check for spam before running the
.forward?
|
|Jason Ostrom> For users who don't have a .procmailrc, I would like
|Jason Ostrom> localusers/local_delivery to deliver mail.
|
|Jason Ostrom> Any help appreciated.
|
|Jason Ostrom> Here are my relevant routers/transports:
|
|Jason Ostrom> Routers:
|Jason Ostrom> procmail:
|Jason Ostrom> driver = accept
|Jason Ostrom> check_local_user
|Jason Ostrom> require_files = ${home}/.procmailrc
|Jason Ostrom> transport = procmail_pipe
|
|Jason Ostrom> userforward:
|Jason Ostrom> driver = redirect
|Jason Ostrom> check_ancestor
|Jason Ostrom> check_local_user
|Jason Ostrom> no_expn
|Jason Ostrom> file = $home/.forward
|Jason Ostrom> file_transport = address_file
|Jason Ostrom> pipe_transport = address_pipe
|Jason Ostrom> reply_transport = address_reply
|Jason Ostrom> no_verify
|Jason Ostrom> # filter
|
|Jason Ostrom> # This director matches local user mailboxes.
|Jason Ostrom> localuser:
|Jason Ostrom> driver = accept
|Jason Ostrom> check_local_user
|Jason Ostrom> transport = local_delivery
|
|Jason Ostrom> Transports:
|Jason Ostrom> local_delivery:
|Jason Ostrom> driver = appendfile
|Jason Ostrom> delivery_date_add
|Jason Ostrom> envelope_to_add
|Jason Ostrom> file = /var/mail/$local_part
|Jason Ostrom> group = mail
|Jason Ostrom> mode = 0660
|Jason Ostrom> return_path_add
|
|Jason Ostrom> #procmail
|Jason Ostrom> procmail_pipe:
|Jason Ostrom> driver = pipe
|Jason Ostrom> delivery_date_add = true
|Jason Ostrom> envelope_to_add = true
|Jason Ostrom> return_path_add = true
|Jason Ostrom> command = /usr/bin/procmail -f
|Jason Ostrom> user = ${local_part}
|Jason Ostrom> group = mail
|
|
|Jason Ostrom> --
|
|Jason Ostrom> ## List details at
http://www.exim.org/mailman/listinfo/exim-users Exim details at
http://www.exim.org/ ##
Ummm, you don't. If a router accepts a message, exim does not attempt
to pass it on to other routers. SpamBuster needs to re-insert the
message into the queue so that it can be processed again, and you need
to have a condition check in the spambuster router that will check for
this X_SBClass header and only accept the message if the line is not
present.
- --- Dan