> On 19 Sep 2006, at 13:37, Patrik Jansson wrote:
>
>
>> Hi,
>> I need some help configuring exim. I want the following rules:
>>
>> SenderHost Sender Address Recipient Address
>> Local * * no authentication
>> * local domain * authentication required
>> * not in local domain local domain deliver
>> * not in local domain not in local domain deny
>>
>> Please let me know if you think I have forgot something important.
>>
>>
>
> I see no reply as yet, so I might as well nip in and reappear in this
> list.
>
Thanks!
> Since these rules have to be translated in some logical language
> (exim configuration)
> I think it is better to get rid of redundancy and put them in the
> right order
>
> 1) is fine (some, like me, would require authentication even in this
> case)
>
Yes, maybe that's better as long as customers don't need to authenticate when sending via scripts like perl or php. Will they still be able to do that?
> 3) better put it here (or you would require authentication for local
> users sending to local users)
> and should be rewritten:
>
> * * LOCAL DOMAIN accept
>
Doesn't this make it possible with forgery? Someone could pretend that they are a local user by using a local domain in MAIL FROM and as long as they send to a local address the message would be accepted. The machines have like 500 e-mail accounts each on different domains/customers.
> 2) moved after 3 and rewritten:
>
> * LOCAL DOMAIN * accept if authenticated
>
Agreed.
> 4) is actually not necessary as the default is to deny, but you can
> add it (you might even want
> to customise the message) in this form:
>
> * * * deny
>
> as the is no point in checking source/sender/destination at this point.
>
>> I think the following rules are interesting ( I have removed some
>> comments
>> ):
>>
>> begin acl
>> check_recipient:
>>
>> accept hosts = :
>> accept sender_domains = +whitelist_domains
>>
>
> as the specs say:
>
> "Warning: It is a bad idea to use this condition on its own as a
> control on relaying, because sender
> addresses are easily, and commonly, forged."
>
Yes, I found that this rule was actually the one that troubled me.
The domains in whitelist_domains are such domains that we, no-matter-what, accept incoming mails from as long as RCPT is local.
>> accept hosts = +whitelist_hosts
>> accept hosts = +whitelist_hosts_ip
>>
>
> I would not whitelist any hosts unless you have full control over
> them. Since authentication has to be used in some cases, it is better
> to use it in most cases...
>
I'm not quite sure which hosts are added into these whitelists. I want to point out that this configuration is a default one when installing the control panel Direct Admin. But as you see, I'm not that pleased with it.
>
>> accept senders = +whitelist_senders
>>
>
> bad almost as much as the one above.
>
OK!
> [... special local parts accept rule]
>
>> # accept if address is in a domain for which we relay as long as
>> recipient
>> # can be verified
>> accept domains = +relay_domains
>> endpass
>> verify=recipient
>>
>> accept hosts = +relay_hosts
>> accept hosts = +auth_relay_hosts
>> endpass
>> message = authentication required
>> authenticated = *
>> deny message = relay not permitted
>>
>>
>
> as you can see you are missing the local accept rule (in which you
> must also check the recipient).
>
And how would that rule look like? I'm not that good at exim configuration...yet! I have ordered Philip's official guide but it hasn't arrived yet.
I will give you the particular problem in more detail. Sometimes we get mail from people who complains that they cannot send mail to customers on our servers because they're blocked, by SORBS or CBL or whatever. We state that they have to talk to the administrator of their mail server to check why they're in those lists but we most often also add their domain in whitelist_domains so that they can continue with their mail conversation with customers on our server. As you understand we don't want unhappy customers, and customers who can't communicate with their friends / partners aren't happy. And in many cases they don't give a da** if the problem doesn't rely on OUR servers. Therefor the use of whitelist_domains.
Do you think this is a bad idea?
Well, we only want the whitelist_domains to affect mails which should be delivered locally but that isn't how the configuration is set up to work today.
-Patrik