[exim] Greylist memcached perl implementation

Inizio della pagina
Delete this message
Reply to this message
Autore: Todd Lyons
Data:  
To: Exim Mailing List
Oggetto: [exim] Greylist memcached perl implementation
This is an implementation of greylisting that uses memcached. Here
are what I perceive as advantages:

1. Uses distributed storage instead of local state files.
2. Memcached is *FAST*.
3. Only greylist if reverse IP does not exist for host that is connecting.
4. Uses existing perl module.
5. Two macros do everything.
6. Uses config file to set memcache servers.


First, add this to your exim.conf somewhere up near the top:
perl_startup = do '/etc/exim/mod_exim.pl'
perl_at_start
# Greylist duration, TTL for entry, adjust as desired
GREY_MINUTES = 5
GREY_TTL_DAYS = 7
# Arguments to perl subroutines, don't touch
GREYLIST_ARGS =
{$sender_host_address}{${quote:$sender_address}}{${quote:$local_part}}{${quote:$domain}}{GREY_MINUTES}{GREY_TTL_DAYS}

Second, add this to your rcpt acl.  I put it after RBL checks, and
it's after a whitelist ACL where I can whitelist specific IP addresses
(done separately in our internal RBL).
  defer   !senders       = :
          !authenticated = *
          !hosts         = +relay_from_hosts
          # $acl_c0 is set in my custom whitelist acl if host is whitelisted
          !condition     = ${if eq {$acl_c0}{$sender_host_address}}
          !condition     = ${lookup
dnsdb{defer_never,ptr=$sender_host_address}{yes}}
          set acl_c_grey_host = 1
          condition      = ${perl{check_greylist}GREYLIST_ARGS}
          set acl_c_grey_time = ${perl{greylist_time}GREYLIST_ARGS}
          log_message    = No reverse DNS for IP $sender_host_address,
greylist for $acl_c_grey_time minutes


  warn    condition      = ${if eq {$acl_c_grey_host}{1}}
          add_header     = X-Greylist: $sender_host_address passed
GREY_MINUTES minute greylist, was greylisted due to missing reverse
DNS



Third, create the perl script. (It's also attached because gmail
wraps long lines) :
#!/usr/bin/perl

use Cache::Memcached;
use strict;

my $memd = _create_memcached();

sub check_greylist {
  my $key = &_tuple(@_);
  my $now = time();
  my $timeout = ( $_[4] || 5 ) * 60;      # Minutes to seconds, default 5
  my $expire = ( $_[5] || 7 ) *24*60*60;  # Days to seconds, default 7
  my $val = $memd->get($key);
  if ( $val ) {
    # Update expiration
    $memd->replace($key, $val, $now + $expire);
    # Has exceeded the timeout, don't defer it
    if ( $now > $val + $timeout ) {
      Exim::log_write("PASS GREYLIST: '$key'");
      return(0);
    }
    #Exim::log_write("CONTINUE GREYLIST: '$key' still greylisted for "
. ($val + $timeout - $now) . " seconds");
    return(1);
  }
  else {
    $memd->set($key, $now ,$now + $expire);
    #Exim::log_write("SET GREYLIST: '$key'");
    return(1);
  }
}


sub greylist_time {
  my $key = &_tuple(@_);
  my $now = time();
  my $timeout = ( $_[4] || 5 ) * 60;      # Minutes to seconds, default 5
  if ( my $val = $memd->get($key) ) {
    my $left = $val + $timeout - $now;
    $left = sprintf("%0i:%02i", int($left/60), $left % 60);
    return( $left);
  }
  # Should never get here if because this sub should never
  # have been called if there is no greylist record, but
  # handle it by just printing default
  return( sprintf("%0i:%02i", int($timeout/60), $timeout % 60));
}


sub _tuple {
my ($ip,$from,$local_part,$domain) = @_;
return( $ip . ":" . $from . ":" . $local_part . '@' . $domain );
}

sub _create_memcached {
  my $config = "/etc/exim/memcached.conf";
  my $namespace = 'exim:';  # set default namespace
  my $servers;
  if ( -f $config ) {
    open(my $fh, "<", $config);
    while(<$fh>) {
      chomp($_);
      if ( my ($arg,$val) = split(/=/,$_) ) {
        next if ( $arg =~ /#/ );
        $arg =~ s/\s+//;
        $val =~ s/\s+//;
        if ( $arg =~ /\bserver\b/ ) {
          next if ( $val !~ /^[-\w\d\.]+:\d+$/ );
          push( @$servers, $val );
        }
        elsif ( $arg =~ /\bnamespace\b/ ) {
          next if ( $val !~ /^[-\w\d\.]+$/ );
          $namespace = $val . ":";
        }
      }
    }
    close $fh;
  }
  $servers ||= [ 'localhost:11211' ];  # Set a default if nothing specified
  my $m = Cache::Memcached->new( {
      'servers'            => $servers,
      'namespace'          => $namespace,
      'debug'              => 0,
      'compress_threshold' => 10_000
    } );
  return($m);
}


Fourth, create /etc/exim/memcached.conf file:
# Leading hash mark comments a line
# Can use short hostname, FQDN, or IP address
server = memcached1:11211
server = memcached2.domain.com:11211
server = 192.168.1.100:11211
# Prefixes key with this text, defaults to exim
namespace = exim


How it works:
When receiving an email from:
IP: 69.169.219.58
Sender: 3f9.4.90966988-48470119@???
Recipient: bld@???

It will store the key:
exim:69.169.219.58:"3f9.4.90966988-48470119@???":bld@???
The value stored will be the current timestamp in unix time format
(i.e. seconds since 1970), and an expiration set to 7 days in the
future. The quotes in there are due to the way I defined the macro,
but it doesn't hurt anything that I can see. It defers with the
message:
No reverse DNS for IP 69.169.219.58, greylist for 5:00 minutes

If the mail server were to retry it in less than 5 minutes, they would
still get deferred with the message:
No reverse DNS for IP 69.169.219.58, greylist for 1:42 minutes

When it finally retries after the 5 minute mark has timed-out, it
accepts the email.

The TTL (aka expiration) of a key is updated every time that IP
connects when sending to/from the same email address. Conversations
between customers and valid users of those DNS impaired mail servers
no longer get delayed after the first email as long as more than one
email is sent during the previous week (7 days is the default TTL of
the key) because the expiration is constantly being updated. The
catch here is that it must originate from the same IP. Some systems
have banks of mail servers all running the queue, and if it comes from
different source IP for each attempt, this will continue to defer that
sender/recipient combo. Note that if you run a cluster of mail
servers and you don't have reverse DNS, this doesn't bother me in the
least because the chances that my users want your mail is slimmer than
a coat of paint.

That's pretty much it.  Let me know if you use this or spot anything
wrong or unsafe.  I'd be particularly interested if anybody spots
anything wrong with my quoting.  It seems very unnecessary to me to
quote the sender address, but I'd rather be safe than exploited.
-- 
Regards...      Todd