Autor: m. allan noah Data: A: exim users Assumpte: Re: [exim] How to enforce valid From: header on local mail?
On Thu, Apr 22, 2010 at 10:47 AM, W B Hacker <wbh@???> wrote: > m. allan noah wrote:
>> Hello- have a question about header rewriting in Exim, which I have
>> spent a couple days trying to solve.
>>
>> I need to make sure that all locally generated email (from
>> /usr/sbin/sendmail or from localhost via smtp) has a proper From:
>> header. Basically trying to prevent outgoing spoofs from our
>> (relatively untrusted) users. I would prefer to use perl, since some
>> of the checks for validity (aliases, etc) are kinda complicated.
>>
>> So, I have tried adding headers_rewrite to a transport, or setting up
>> a rule in the global rewrite section of exim.conf. Something like:
>>
>> *@* ${perl{foo}{$1}{$2}{$sender_host_address}} f
>>
>> Where my function foo() returns a 'corrected' address for local hosts.
>> I think I can cover all the corner cases to make that work reasonably.
>> Unfortunately, it does not seem to work if there is no From header in
>> the mail.
>>
>> So, my question is this: How can I detect that no From header has been
>> sent, and add one? Or, is it possible to have a perl function receive
>> all the headers at once, and make this determination?
>>
>> Thanks for any help you can provide.
>>
>> allan
>
> - Exim has several built-in settings that deal with enforcement specific to
> 'local' sources of traffic. You can select what best fits your need, and ISTR
> there are header-specific tools among those options.
Thanks for the pointer. Section 44.11 of the current manual indicates
that local program invocations (submission mode) will have From:
header added if missing. Section 44.1 shows how to cause exim to treat
local smtp connections as if they were submission mode. I am not sure
how that will work, since smtp process is not running as the sender,
but I will test it.
> - Keep in mind that traffic presented by direct invocation of the binary does
> not entail an smtp session with an external subitter, ergo does not ordinarily
> traverse the 'standard' acl_smtp_xxx acl clauses *at all*. Have a look at
> 'acl_not_smtp' instead if you need to craft rules for such.
Thanks for that info. So far I have been using global rewrite rules,
not ACLs, so they apply to all mail.
> After perusing these several other tools, you will probably find a more durable
> solution - one that does not require you to create any perl code or even have to
> manually deal with headers.
Perhaps, though our concept of 'valid user' is a little hairy, and
I've been accused of thinking in perl, so i think it will be both
required and durable :)
>
> Finally - not specific to Exim, but to ANY MTA or even bare-bones smtp binary
> and 'on box' or web-interface users:
>
> It sidesteps a whole universe of potential problems and is not overly dificult
> to not even *allow* 'local' (shell account) users or daemons to make direct use
> of the MTA by means of invoking [ the | a ] smtp binary.
I agree in principle, but have thousands of users with existing cgi
scripts and such that call out to the on-disk binary. Extremely
difficult to change at this point.
Thanks for the input. I will continue to poke at it.