-SRS (Sender Rewriting Scheme) Support (using libsrs_alt)
---------------------------------------------------------------
-See also the main docs, for an alternative native support implementation.
-
-Exim can be built with SRS support using Miles Wilton's
-libsrs_alt library. The current version of the supported
-library is 0.5, there are reports of 1.0 working.
-
-In order to use SRS, you must get a copy of libsrs_alt from
-
-https://opsec.eu/src/srs/
-
-(not the original source, which has disappeared.)
-
-Unpack the tarball, then refer to MTAs/README.EXIM
-to proceed. You need to set
-
-EXPERIMENTAL_SRS_ALT=yes
-
-in your Local/Makefile.
-
-The built-in support, included by SUPPORT_SRS,
-shuold *not* be enabled if you wish to use the libsrs_alt
-version.
-
-The following main-section options become available:
- srs_config string
- srs_hashlength int
- srs_hashmin int
- srs_maxage int
- srs_secrets string
- srs_usehash bool
- srs_usetimestamp bool
-
-The redirect router gains these options (all of type string, unset by default):
- srs
- srs_alias
- srs_condition
- srs_dbinsert
- srs_dbselect
-
-The following variables become available:
- $srs_db_address
- $srs_db_key
- $srs_orig_recipient
- $srs_orig_sender
- $srs_recipient
- $srs_status
-
-The predefined feature-macro _HAVE_SRS will be present.
-Additional delivery log line elements, tagged with "SRS=" will show the srs sender.
-For configuration information see https://github.com/Exim/exim/wiki/SRS .
-
-
-
-
DCC Support
--------------------------------------------------------------
Distributed Checksum Clearinghouse; http://www.rhyolite.com/dcc/
Note that non-RFC-documented field names and data types are used.
-LMDB Lookup support
--------------------
-LMDB is an ultra-fast, ultra-compact, crash-proof key-value embedded data store.
-It is modeled loosely on the BerkeleyDB API. You should read about the feature
-set as well as operation modes at https://symas.com/products/lightning-memory-mapped-database/
-
-LMDB single key lookup support is provided by linking to the LMDB C library.
-The current implementation does not support writing to the LMDB database.
-
-Visit https://github.com/LMDB/lmdb to download the library or find it in your
-operating systems package repository.
-
-If building from source, this description assumes that headers will be in
-/usr/local/include, and that the libraries are in /usr/local/lib.
-
-1. In order to build exim with LMDB lookup support add or uncomment
-
-EXPERIMENTAL_LMDB=yes
-
-to your Local/Makefile. (Re-)build/install exim. exim -d should show
-Experimental_LMDB in the line "Support for:".
-
-EXPERIMENTAL_LMDB=yes
-LDFLAGS += -llmdb
-# CFLAGS += -I/usr/local/include
-# LDFLAGS += -L/usr/local/lib
-
-The first line sets the feature to include the correct code, and
-the second line says to link the LMDB libraries into the
-exim binary. The commented out lines should be uncommented if you
-built LMDB from source and installed in the default location.
-Adjust the paths if you installed them elsewhere, but you do not
-need to uncomment them if an rpm (or you) installed them in the
-package controlled locations (/usr/include and /usr/lib).
-
-2. Create your LMDB files, you can use the mdb_load utility which is
-part of the LMDB distribution our your favourite language bindings.
-
-3. Add the single key lookups to your exim.conf file, example lookups
-are below.
-
-${lookup{$sender_address_domain}lmdb{/var/lib/baruwa/data/db/relaydomains.mdb}{$value}}
-${lookup{$sender_address_domain}lmdb{/var/lib/baruwa/data/db/relaydomains.mdb}{$value}fail}
-${lookup{$sender_address_domain}lmdb{/var/lib/baruwa/data/db/relaydomains.mdb}}
-
-
Queuefile transport
-------------------
Queuefile is a pseudo transport which does not perform final delivery.
add_header = :at_start:${authresults {<admd-identifier>}}
Note that it would be wise to strip incoming messages of A-R headers
- that claim to be from our own <admd-identifier>.
+ that claim to be from our own <admd-identifier>. Eg:
+
+ remove_header = \N^(?i)Authentication-Results\s*::\s*example.org;\N
There are four new variables:
-
-TLS Session Resumption
-----------------------
-TLS Session Resumption for TLS 1.2 and TLS 1.3 connections can be used (defined
-in RFC 5077 for 1.2). The support for this can be included by building with
-EXPERIMENTAL_TLS_RESUME defined. This requires GnuTLS 3.6.3 or OpenSSL 1.1.1
-(or later).
-
-Session resumption (this is the "stateless" variant) involves the server sending
-a "session ticket" to the client on one connection, which can be stored by the
-client and used for a later session. The ticket contains sufficient state for
-the server to reconstruct the TLS session, avoiding some expensive crypto
-calculation and one full packet roundtrip time.
-
-Operational cost/benefit:
- The extra data being transmitted costs a minor amount, and the client has
- extra costs in storing and retrieving the data.
-
- In the Exim/Gnutls implementation the extra cost on an initial connection
- which is TLS1.2 over a loopback path is about 6ms on 2017-laptop class hardware.
- The saved cost on a subsequent connection is about 4ms; three or more
- connections become a net win. On longer network paths, two or more
- connections will have an average lower startup time thanks to the one
- saved packet roundtrip. TLS1.3 will save the crypto cpu costs but not any
- packet roundtrips.
-
- Since a new hints DB is used, the hints DB maintenance should be updated
- to additionally handle "tls".
-
-Security aspects:
- The session ticket is encrypted, but is obviously an additional security
- vulnarability surface. An attacker able to decrypt it would have access
- all connections using the resumed session.
- The session ticket encryption key is not committed to storage by the server
- and is rotated regularly (OpenSSL: 1hr, and one previous key is used for
- overlap; GnuTLS 6hr but does not specify any overlap).
- Tickets have limited lifetime (2hr, and new ones issued after 1hr under
- OpenSSL. GnuTLS 2hr, appears to not do overlap).
-
- There is a question-mark over the security of the Diffie-Helman parameters
- used for session negotiation. TBD. q-value; cf bug 1895
-
-Observability:
- New log_selector "tls_resumption", appends an asterisk to the tls_cipher "X="
- element.
-
- Variables $tls_{in,out}_resumption have bits 0-4 indicating respectively
- support built, client requested ticket, client offered session,
- server issued ticket, resume used. A suitable decode list is provided
- in the builtin macro _RESUME_DECODE for ${listextract {}{}}.
-
-Issues:
- In a resumed session:
- $tls_{in,out}_cipher will have values different to the original (under GnuTLS)
- $tls_{in,out}_ocsp will be "not requested" or "no response", and
- hosts_require_ocsp will fail
-
-
-
Dovecot authenticator via inet socket
-------------------------------------
+--------------------------------------------------------------
If Dovecot is configured similar to :-
service auth {
-Twophase queue run fast ramp
-----------------------------
-To include this feature, add to Local/Makefile:
- EXPERIMENTAL_QUEUE_RAMP=yes
-If the (added for this feature) main-section option "queue_fast_ramp" (boolean)
-is set, and a two-phase ("-qq") queue run finds, during the first phase, a
-suitably large number of message routed for a given host - then (subject to
-the usual queue-runner resource limits) delivery for that host is initiated
-immediately, overlapping with the remainder of the first phase.
+Logging protocol unusual states
+---------------------------------------------------------------
+An extra log_selector, "protocol_detail" has been added in the default build.
+The name may change in future, hence the Experimental status.
+
+Currrently the only effect is to enable logging, under TLS,
+of a TCP RST received directly after a QUIT (in server mode).
+
+Outlook is consistently doing this; not waiting for the SMTP response
+to its QUIT, not properly closing the TLS session and not properly closing
+the TCP connection. Previously this resulted is an error from SSL_write
+being logged.
+
+
+
+XCLIENT proxy support
+---------------------------------------------------------------
+Per https://www.postfix.org/XCLIENT_README.html
+
+XCLIENT is an ESMTP extension supporting an inbound proxy.
+The only client immplementation known is in Nginx
+(https://nginx.org/en/docs/mail/ngx_mail_proxy_module.html)
+
+If compiled with EXPERIMENTAL_XCLIENT=yes :-
+
+As a server, Exim will advertise XCLIENT support (conditional on a new option
+"hosts_xclient") and service XCLIENT commands with parameters
+ ADDR
+ NAME
+ PORT
+ LOGIN
+ DESTADDR
+ DESTPORT
+A fresh HELO/EHLO is required after a succesful XCLIENT, and the usual
+values are derived from that (making the HELO and PROTO paramemters redundant).
-This is incompatible with queue_run_in_order.
+An XCLIENT command must give both ADDR and PORT parameters if no previous
+XCLIENT has succeeded in the SMTP session.
-The result should be a faster startup of deliveries when a large queue is
-present and reasonable numbers of messages are routed to common hosts; this
-could be a smarthost case, or delivery onto the Internet where a large proportion
-of recipients hapen to be on a Gorilla-sized provider.
+After a success:
+ $proxy_session variable becomes "yes"
+ $proxy_local_address, $proxy_local_port have the proxy "inside" values
+ $proxy_external_address, $proxy_external_port have the proxy "outside" values
+ $sender_host_address, $sender_host_port have the remot client values
-As usual, the presence of a configuration option is associated with a
-predefined macro, making it possible to write portable configurations.
-For this one, the macro is _OPT_MAIN_QUEUE_FAST_RAMP.