On Wed, 2003-12-17 at 12:40 +0000, David Woodhouse wrote:
> A slight update...
And another, to make it handle unqualified addresses, multiple TXT
records, and entries of the form '@domain'. Also we no longer need the
wildcard :fail: record and if we're not primary MX for the virtual
domain in question we'll fall back to forwarding to a higher-priority MX
host if the DNS isn't talking to us....
This is the version I've actually rolled out...
domainlist dns_virtual_domains = lsearch;/etc/exim/dns-virtual-domains
<...>
virtual_postmaster:
driver = redirect
domains = +dns_virtual_domains
local_parts = postmaster:root:abuse:mailer-daemon
data = postmaster@$primary_hostname
dns_virtual_domains:
driver = redirect
domains = +dns_virtual_domains
check_ancestor
repeat_use
one_time
allow_defer
allow_fail
forbid_file
forbid_pipe
retry_use_local_part
qualify_preserve_domain
# Stash the lookup domain root for use in the next router.
address_data = ${lookup{$domain}lsearch{/etc/exim/dns-virtual-domains}}
# The lookup failure won't distinguish between absent record, absent
# domain, or other temporary failures. So we make this router just
# give up, and sort out the various failure modes later.
# The ${sg...} bits turn multiple TXT records (which Exim gives us
# separated by \n) into a comma-separated list, and also rewrite
# any element of that list of the form '@domain' (i.e. without a
# local part) to $local_part@domain, using the original local part
# from the address being routed, at the newly-provided domain.
# Addresses containing _only_ a localpart are qualified at the
# same domain as is being looked up, by qualify_preserve_domain
# above.
data = ${sg{\
${sg{\
${lookup dnsdb{txt=$local_part.$address_data}{$value}fail}\
}{\n}{,}}\
}{(,|^)[ ]*@}{\$1$local_part@}}
dns_virtual_failed:
driver = redirect
domains = +dns_virtual_domains
allow_fail
allow_defer
data = ${lookup dnsdb{ns=$address_data}\
# If NS lookup succeeded, the domain exists and we can find it.
# Therefore, the above lookup failure meant that the user
# just doesn't exist. Fail appropriately:
{:fail:Unknown user at virtual domain}\
# NS lookup failed. This means there's a DNS problem -- so we
# shouldn't fail the delivery; let the following routers handle
# it... Note "fail" not "{:fail:}". It means 'pass'. :)
fail}
# We have DNS problems. If we're actually _delivering_, then try to
# deliver to a higher-priority MX if one exists. Otherwise, we defer and
# let it stay on the queue until the problem is fixed.
# You may prefer to freeze or bounce in this situation; I don't.
dns_virtual_relay:
driver = dnslookup
domains = +dns_virtual_domains
transport = remote_smtp
self = defer
no_verify
no_more
# On the other hand, if there's a DNS problem and we're only _verifying_,
# as we do when accepting incoming mail, then accept it for now and
# it'll get queued for when the DNS works again.
dns_virtual_verify_fallback:
driver = accept
domains = +dns_virtual_domains
verify_only
no_more
> Now I just need to investigate DDNS and see if it'll let individual
> users update the TXT records for their own aliases in the DNS... :)
This is remarkably simple to set up -- Google is your friend. I'm now
able to set up HMAC-MD5 keys to 'own' certain mail domains, and the
owners of those virtual mail domains can happily change the TXT records
to their hearts content, without bugging me to make changes and roll out
new alias files to all the MX hosts.
A setuid app which is able to read the key file, and which will update
the alias only for the user it's invoked by, is also fairly trivial to
implement -- inspired by the 'cammail' alias system.
--
dwmw2