1 /* $Cambridge: exim/src/src/deliver.c,v 1.32 2006/06/27 15:38:07 ph10 Exp $ */
3 /*************************************************
4 * Exim - an Internet mail transport agent *
5 *************************************************/
7 /* Copyright (c) University of Cambridge 1995 - 2006 */
8 /* See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. */
10 /* The main code for delivering a message. */
16 /* Data block for keeping track of subprocesses for parallel remote
19 typedef struct pardata {
20 address_item *addrlist; /* chain of addresses */
21 address_item *addr; /* next address data expected for */
22 pid_t pid; /* subprocess pid */
23 int fd; /* pipe fd for getting result from subprocess */
24 int transport_count; /* returned transport count value */
25 BOOL done; /* no more data needed */
26 uschar *msg; /* error message */
27 uschar *return_path; /* return_path for these addresses */
30 /* Values for the process_recipients variable */
32 enum { RECIP_ACCEPT, RECIP_IGNORE, RECIP_DEFER,
33 RECIP_FAIL, RECIP_FAIL_FILTER, RECIP_FAIL_TIMEOUT,
36 /* Mutually recursive functions for marking addresses done. */
38 static void child_done(address_item *, uschar *);
39 static void address_done(address_item *, uschar *);
41 /* Table for turning base-62 numbers into binary */
43 static uschar tab62[] =
44 {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,0,0,0,0,0,0, /* 0-9 */
45 0,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20, /* A-K */
46 21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32, /* L-W */
47 33,34,35, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* X-Z */
48 0,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46, /* a-k */
49 47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58, /* l-w */
53 /*************************************************
54 * Local static variables *
55 *************************************************/
57 /* addr_duplicate is global because it needs to be seen from the Envelope-To
60 static address_item *addr_defer = NULL;
61 static address_item *addr_failed = NULL;
62 static address_item *addr_fallback = NULL;
63 static address_item *addr_local = NULL;
64 static address_item *addr_new = NULL;
65 static address_item *addr_remote = NULL;
66 static address_item *addr_route = NULL;
67 static address_item *addr_succeed = NULL;
69 static FILE *message_log = NULL;
70 static BOOL update_spool;
71 static BOOL remove_journal;
72 static int parcount = 0;
73 static pardata *parlist = NULL;
74 static int return_count;
75 static uschar *frozen_info = US"";
76 static uschar *used_return_path = NULL;
78 static uschar spoolname[PATH_MAX];
82 /*************************************************
83 * Make a new address item *
84 *************************************************/
86 /* This function gets the store and initializes with default values. The
87 transport_return value defaults to DEFER, so that any unexpected failure to
88 deliver does not wipe out the message. The default unique string is set to a
89 copy of the address, so that its domain can be lowercased.
92 address the RFC822 address string
93 copy force a copy of the address
95 Returns: a pointer to an initialized address_item
99 deliver_make_addr(uschar *address, BOOL copy)
101 address_item *addr = store_get(sizeof(address_item));
102 *addr = address_defaults;
103 if (copy) address = string_copy(address);
104 addr->address = address;
105 addr->unique = string_copy(address);
112 /*************************************************
113 * Set expansion values for an address *
114 *************************************************/
116 /* Certain expansion variables are valid only when handling an address or
117 address list. This function sets them up or clears the values, according to its
121 addr the address in question, or NULL to clear values
126 deliver_set_expansions(address_item *addr)
130 uschar ***p = address_expansions;
131 while (*p != NULL) **p++ = NULL;
135 /* Exactly what gets set depends on whether there is one or more addresses, and
136 what they contain. These first ones are always set, taking their values from
137 the first address. */
139 if (addr->host_list == NULL)
141 deliver_host = deliver_host_address = US"";
145 deliver_host = addr->host_list->name;
146 deliver_host_address = addr->host_list->address;
149 deliver_recipients = addr;
150 deliver_address_data = addr->p.address_data;
151 deliver_domain_data = addr->p.domain_data;
152 deliver_localpart_data = addr->p.localpart_data;
154 /* These may be unset for multiple addresses */
156 deliver_domain = addr->domain;
157 self_hostname = addr->self_hostname;
159 #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_BRIGHTMAIL
160 bmi_deliver = 1; /* deliver by default */
161 bmi_alt_location = NULL;
162 bmi_base64_verdict = NULL;
163 bmi_base64_tracker_verdict = NULL;
166 /* If there's only one address we can set everything. */
168 if (addr->next == NULL)
170 address_item *addr_orig;
172 deliver_localpart = addr->local_part;
173 deliver_localpart_prefix = addr->prefix;
174 deliver_localpart_suffix = addr->suffix;
176 for (addr_orig = addr; addr_orig->parent != NULL;
177 addr_orig = addr_orig->parent);
178 deliver_domain_orig = addr_orig->domain;
180 /* Re-instate any prefix and suffix in the original local part. In all
181 normal cases, the address will have a router associated with it, and we can
182 choose the caseful or caseless version accordingly. However, when a system
183 filter sets up a pipe, file, or autoreply delivery, no router is involved.
184 In this case, though, there won't be any prefix or suffix to worry about. */
186 deliver_localpart_orig = (addr_orig->router == NULL)? addr_orig->local_part :
187 addr_orig->router->caseful_local_part?
188 addr_orig->cc_local_part : addr_orig->lc_local_part;
190 /* If there's a parent, make its domain and local part available, and if
191 delivering to a pipe or file, or sending an autoreply, get the local
192 part from the parent. For pipes and files, put the pipe or file string
193 into address_pipe and address_file. */
195 if (addr->parent != NULL)
197 deliver_domain_parent = addr->parent->domain;
198 deliver_localpart_parent = (addr->parent->router == NULL)?
199 addr->parent->local_part :
200 addr->parent->router->caseful_local_part?
201 addr->parent->cc_local_part : addr->parent->lc_local_part;
203 /* File deliveries have their own flag because they need to be picked out
204 as special more often. */
206 if (testflag(addr, af_pfr))
208 if (testflag(addr, af_file)) address_file = addr->local_part;
209 else if (deliver_localpart[0] == '|') address_pipe = addr->local_part;
210 deliver_localpart = addr->parent->local_part;
211 deliver_localpart_prefix = addr->parent->prefix;
212 deliver_localpart_suffix = addr->parent->suffix;
216 #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_BRIGHTMAIL
217 /* Set expansion variables related to Brightmail AntiSpam */
218 bmi_base64_verdict = bmi_get_base64_verdict(deliver_localpart_orig, deliver_domain_orig);
219 bmi_base64_tracker_verdict = bmi_get_base64_tracker_verdict(bmi_base64_verdict);
220 /* get message delivery status (0 - don't deliver | 1 - deliver) */
221 bmi_deliver = bmi_get_delivery_status(bmi_base64_verdict);
222 /* if message is to be delivered, get eventual alternate location */
223 if (bmi_deliver == 1) {
224 bmi_alt_location = bmi_get_alt_location(bmi_base64_verdict);
230 /* For multiple addresses, don't set local part, and leave the domain and
231 self_hostname set only if it is the same for all of them. It is possible to
232 have multiple pipe and file addresses, but only when all addresses have routed
233 to the same pipe or file. */
238 if (testflag(addr, af_pfr))
240 if (testflag(addr, af_file)) address_file = addr->local_part;
241 else if (addr->local_part[0] == '|') address_pipe = addr->local_part;
243 for (addr2 = addr->next; addr2 != NULL; addr2 = addr2->next)
245 if (deliver_domain != NULL &&
246 Ustrcmp(deliver_domain, addr2->domain) != 0)
247 deliver_domain = NULL;
248 if (self_hostname != NULL && (addr2->self_hostname == NULL ||
249 Ustrcmp(self_hostname, addr2->self_hostname) != 0))
250 self_hostname = NULL;
251 if (deliver_domain == NULL && self_hostname == NULL) break;
259 /*************************************************
260 * Open a msglog file *
261 *************************************************/
263 /* This function is used both for normal message logs, and for files in the
264 msglog directory that are used to catch output from pipes. Try to create the
265 directory if it does not exist. From release 4.21, normal message logs should
266 be created when the message is received.
269 filename the file name
270 mode the mode required
271 error used for saying what failed
273 Returns: a file descriptor, or -1 (with errno set)
277 open_msglog_file(uschar *filename, int mode, uschar **error)
279 int fd = Uopen(filename, O_WRONLY|O_APPEND|O_CREAT, mode);
281 if (fd < 0 && errno == ENOENT)
284 sprintf(CS temp, "msglog/%s", message_subdir);
285 if (message_subdir[0] == 0) temp[6] = 0;
286 (void)directory_make(spool_directory, temp, MSGLOG_DIRECTORY_MODE, TRUE);
287 fd = Uopen(filename, O_WRONLY|O_APPEND|O_CREAT, mode);
290 /* Set the close-on-exec flag and change the owner to the exim uid/gid (this
291 function is called as root). Double check the mode, because the group setting
292 doesn't always get set automatically. */
296 (void)fcntl(fd, F_SETFD, fcntl(fd, F_GETFD) | FD_CLOEXEC);
297 if (fchown(fd, exim_uid, exim_gid) < 0)
302 if (fchmod(fd, mode) < 0)
308 else *error = US"create";
316 /*************************************************
317 * Write to msglog if required *
318 *************************************************/
320 /* Write to the message log, if configured. This function may also be called
324 format a string format
330 deliver_msglog(const char *format, ...)
333 if (!message_logs) return;
334 va_start(ap, format);
335 vfprintf(message_log, format, ap);
343 /*************************************************
344 * Replicate status for batch *
345 *************************************************/
347 /* When a transport handles a batch of addresses, it may treat them
348 individually, or it may just put the status in the first one, and return FALSE,
349 requesting that the status be copied to all the others externally. This is the
350 replication function. As well as the status, it copies the transport pointer,
351 which may have changed if appendfile passed the addresses on to a different
354 Argument: pointer to the first address in a chain
359 replicate_status(address_item *addr)
362 for (addr2 = addr->next; addr2 != NULL; addr2 = addr2->next)
364 addr2->transport = addr->transport;
365 addr2->transport_return = addr->transport_return;
366 addr2->basic_errno = addr->basic_errno;
367 addr2->more_errno = addr->more_errno;
368 addr2->special_action = addr->special_action;
369 addr2->message = addr->message;
370 addr2->user_message = addr->user_message;
376 /*************************************************
377 * Compare lists of hosts *
378 *************************************************/
380 /* This function is given two pointers to chains of host items, and it yields
381 TRUE if the lists refer to the same hosts in the same order, except that
383 (1) Multiple hosts with the same non-negative MX values are permitted to appear
384 in different orders. Round-robinning nameservers can cause this to happen.
386 (2) Multiple hosts with the same negative MX values less than MX_NONE are also
387 permitted to appear in different orders. This is caused by randomizing
390 This enables Exim to use a single SMTP transaction for sending to two entirely
391 different domains that happen to end up pointing at the same hosts.
394 one points to the first host list
395 two points to the second host list
397 Returns: TRUE if the lists refer to the same host set
401 same_hosts(host_item *one, host_item *two)
403 while (one != NULL && two != NULL)
405 if (Ustrcmp(one->name, two->name) != 0)
408 host_item *end_one = one;
409 host_item *end_two = two;
411 /* Batch up only if there was no MX and the list was not randomized */
413 if (mx == MX_NONE) return FALSE;
415 /* Find the ends of the shortest sequence of identical MX values */
417 while (end_one->next != NULL && end_one->next->mx == mx &&
418 end_two->next != NULL && end_two->next->mx == mx)
420 end_one = end_one->next;
421 end_two = end_two->next;
424 /* If there aren't any duplicates, there's no match. */
426 if (end_one == one) return FALSE;
428 /* For each host in the 'one' sequence, check that it appears in the 'two'
429 sequence, returning FALSE if not. */
434 for (hi = two; hi != end_two->next; hi = hi->next)
435 if (Ustrcmp(one->name, hi->name) == 0) break;
436 if (hi == end_two->next) return FALSE;
437 if (one == end_one) break;
441 /* All the hosts in the 'one' sequence were found in the 'two' sequence.
442 Ensure both are pointing at the last host, and carry on as for equality. */
453 /* True if both are NULL */
460 /*************************************************
461 * Compare header lines *
462 *************************************************/
464 /* This function is given two pointers to chains of header items, and it yields
465 TRUE if they are the same header texts in the same order.
468 one points to the first header list
469 two points to the second header list
471 Returns: TRUE if the lists refer to the same header set
475 same_headers(header_line *one, header_line *two)
479 if (one == two) return TRUE; /* Includes the case where both NULL */
480 if (one == NULL || two == NULL) return FALSE;
481 if (Ustrcmp(one->text, two->text) != 0) return FALSE;
489 /*************************************************
490 * Compare string settings *
491 *************************************************/
493 /* This function is given two pointers to strings, and it returns
494 TRUE if they are the same pointer, or if the two strings are the same.
497 one points to the first string
498 two points to the second string
500 Returns: TRUE or FALSE
504 same_strings(uschar *one, uschar *two)
506 if (one == two) return TRUE; /* Includes the case where both NULL */
507 if (one == NULL || two == NULL) return FALSE;
508 return (Ustrcmp(one, two) == 0);
513 /*************************************************
514 * Compare uid/gid for addresses *
515 *************************************************/
517 /* This function is given a transport and two addresses. It yields TRUE if the
518 uid/gid/initgroups settings for the two addresses are going to be the same when
523 addr1 the first address
524 addr2 the second address
526 Returns: TRUE or FALSE
530 same_ugid(transport_instance *tp, address_item *addr1, address_item *addr2)
532 if (!tp->uid_set && tp->expand_uid == NULL && !tp->deliver_as_creator)
534 if (testflag(addr1, af_uid_set) != testflag(addr2, af_gid_set) ||
535 (testflag(addr1, af_uid_set) &&
536 (addr1->uid != addr2->uid ||
537 testflag(addr1, af_initgroups) != testflag(addr2, af_initgroups))))
541 if (!tp->gid_set && tp->expand_gid == NULL)
543 if (testflag(addr1, af_gid_set) != testflag(addr2, af_gid_set) ||
544 (testflag(addr1, af_gid_set) && addr1->gid != addr2->gid))
554 /*************************************************
555 * Record that an address is complete *
556 *************************************************/
558 /* This function records that an address is complete. This is straightforward
559 for most addresses, where the unique address is just the full address with the
560 domain lower cased. For homonyms (addresses that are the same as one of their
561 ancestors) their are complications. Their unique addresses have \x\ prepended
562 (where x = 0, 1, 2...), so that de-duplication works correctly for siblings and
565 Exim used to record the unique addresses of homonyms as "complete". This,
566 however, fails when the pattern of redirection varies over time (e.g. if taking
567 unseen copies at only some times of day) because the prepended numbers may vary
568 from one delivery run to the next. This problem is solved by never recording
569 prepended unique addresses as complete. Instead, when a homonymic address has
570 actually been delivered via a transport, we record its basic unique address
571 followed by the name of the transport. This is checked in subsequent delivery
572 runs whenever an address is routed to a transport.
574 If the completed address is a top-level one (has no parent, which means it
575 cannot be homonymic) we also add the original address to the non-recipients
576 tree, so that it gets recorded in the spool file and therefore appears as
577 "done" in any spool listings. The original address may differ from the unique
578 address in the case of the domain.
580 Finally, this function scans the list of duplicates, marks as done any that
581 match this address, and calls child_done() for their ancestors.
584 addr address item that has been completed
585 now current time as a string
591 address_done(address_item *addr, uschar *now)
595 update_spool = TRUE; /* Ensure spool gets updated */
597 /* Top-level address */
599 if (addr->parent == NULL)
601 tree_add_nonrecipient(addr->unique);
602 tree_add_nonrecipient(addr->address);
605 /* Homonymous child address */
607 else if (testflag(addr, af_homonym))
609 if (addr->transport != NULL)
611 tree_add_nonrecipient(
612 string_sprintf("%s/%s", addr->unique + 3, addr->transport->name));
616 /* Non-homonymous child address */
618 else tree_add_nonrecipient(addr->unique);
620 /* Check the list of duplicate addresses and ensure they are now marked
623 for (dup = addr_duplicate; dup != NULL; dup = dup->next)
625 if (Ustrcmp(addr->unique, dup->unique) == 0)
627 tree_add_nonrecipient(dup->address);
628 child_done(dup, now);
636 /*************************************************
637 * Decrease counts in parents and mark done *
638 *************************************************/
640 /* This function is called when an address is complete. If there is a parent
641 address, its count of children is decremented. If there are still other
642 children outstanding, the function exits. Otherwise, if the count has become
643 zero, address_done() is called to mark the parent and its duplicates complete.
644 Then loop for any earlier ancestors.
647 addr points to the completed address item
648 now the current time as a string, for writing to the message log
654 child_done(address_item *addr, uschar *now)
657 while (addr->parent != NULL)
660 if ((addr->child_count -= 1) > 0) return; /* Incomplete parent */
661 address_done(addr, now);
663 /* Log the completion of all descendents only when there is no ancestor with
664 the same original address. */
666 for (aa = addr->parent; aa != NULL; aa = aa->parent)
667 if (Ustrcmp(aa->address, addr->address) == 0) break;
668 if (aa != NULL) continue;
670 deliver_msglog("%s %s: children all complete\n", now, addr->address);
671 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("%s: children all complete\n", addr->address);
678 /*************************************************
679 * Actions at the end of handling an address *
680 *************************************************/
682 /* This is a function for processing a single address when all that can be done
683 with it has been done.
686 addr points to the address block
687 result the result of the delivery attempt
688 logflags flags for log_write() (LOG_MAIN and/or LOG_PANIC)
689 driver_type indicates which type of driver (transport, or router) was last
690 to process the address
691 logchar '=' or '-' for use when logging deliveries with => or ->
697 post_process_one(address_item *addr, int result, int logflags, int driver_type,
700 uschar *now = tod_stamp(tod_log);
701 uschar *driver_kind = NULL;
702 uschar *driver_name = NULL;
705 int size = 256; /* Used for a temporary, */
706 int ptr = 0; /* expanding buffer, for */
707 uschar *s; /* building log lines; */
708 void *reset_point; /* released afterwards. */
711 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("post-process %s (%d)\n", addr->address, result);
713 /* Set up driver kind and name for logging. Disable logging if the router or
714 transport has disabled it. */
716 if (driver_type == DTYPE_TRANSPORT)
718 if (addr->transport != NULL)
720 driver_name = addr->transport->name;
721 driver_kind = US" transport";
722 disable_logging = addr->transport->disable_logging;
724 else driver_kind = US"transporting";
726 else if (driver_type == DTYPE_ROUTER)
728 if (addr->router != NULL)
730 driver_name = addr->router->name;
731 driver_kind = US" router";
732 disable_logging = addr->router->disable_logging;
734 else driver_kind = US"routing";
737 /* If there's an error message set, ensure that it contains only printing
738 characters - it should, but occasionally things slip in and this at least
739 stops the log format from getting wrecked. We also scan the message for an LDAP
740 expansion item that has a password setting, and flatten the password. This is a
741 fudge, but I don't know a cleaner way of doing this. (If the item is badly
742 malformed, it won't ever have gone near LDAP.) */
744 if (addr->message != NULL)
746 addr->message = string_printing(addr->message);
747 if (Ustrstr(addr->message, "failed to expand") != NULL &&
748 (Ustrstr(addr->message, "ldap:") != NULL ||
749 Ustrstr(addr->message, "ldapdn:") != NULL ||
750 Ustrstr(addr->message, "ldapm:") != NULL))
752 uschar *p = Ustrstr(addr->message, "pass=");
756 while (*p != 0 && !isspace(*p)) *p++ = 'x';
761 /* If we used a transport that has one of the "return_output" options set, and
762 if it did in fact generate some output, then for return_output we treat the
763 message as failed if it was not already set that way, so that the output gets
764 returned to the sender, provided there is a sender to send it to. For
765 return_fail_output, do this only if the delivery failed. Otherwise we just
766 unlink the file, and remove the name so that if the delivery failed, we don't
767 try to send back an empty or unwanted file. The log_output options operate only
770 In any case, we close the message file, because we cannot afford to leave a
771 file-descriptor for one address while processing (maybe very many) others. */
773 if (addr->return_file >= 0 && addr->return_filename != NULL)
775 BOOL return_output = FALSE;
777 fsync(addr->return_file);
779 /* If there is no output, do nothing. */
781 if (fstat(addr->return_file, &statbuf) == 0 && statbuf.st_size > 0)
783 transport_instance *tb = addr->transport;
785 /* Handle logging options */
787 if (tb->log_output || (result == FAIL && tb->log_fail_output) ||
788 (result == DEFER && tb->log_defer_output))
791 FILE *f = Ufopen(addr->return_filename, "rb");
793 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "failed to open %s to log output "
794 "from %s transport: %s", addr->return_filename, tb->name,
798 s = US Ufgets(big_buffer, big_buffer_size, f);
801 uschar *p = big_buffer + Ustrlen(big_buffer);
802 while (p > big_buffer && isspace(p[-1])) p--;
804 s = string_printing(big_buffer);
805 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "<%s>: %s transport output: %s",
806 addr->address, tb->name, s);
812 /* Handle returning options, but only if there is an address to return
815 if (sender_address[0] != 0 || addr->p.errors_address != NULL)
817 if (tb->return_output)
819 addr->transport_return = result = FAIL;
820 if (addr->basic_errno == 0 && addr->message == NULL)
821 addr->message = US"return message generated";
822 return_output = TRUE;
825 if (tb->return_fail_output && result == FAIL) return_output = TRUE;
829 /* Get rid of the file unless it might be returned, but close it in
834 Uunlink(addr->return_filename);
835 addr->return_filename = NULL;
836 addr->return_file = -1;
839 (void)close(addr->return_file);
842 /* Create the address string for logging. Must not do this earlier, because
843 an OK result may be changed to FAIL when a pipe returns text. */
845 log_address = string_log_address(addr,
846 (log_write_selector & L_all_parents) != 0, result == OK);
848 /* The sucess case happens only after delivery by a transport. */
852 addr->next = addr_succeed;
855 /* Call address_done() to ensure that we don't deliver to this address again,
856 and write appropriate things to the message log. If it is a child address, we
857 call child_done() to scan the ancestors and mark them complete if this is the
858 last child to complete. */
860 address_done(addr, now);
861 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("%s delivered\n", addr->address);
863 if (addr->parent == NULL)
865 deliver_msglog("%s %s: %s%s succeeded\n", now, addr->address,
866 driver_name, driver_kind);
870 deliver_msglog("%s %s <%s>: %s%s succeeded\n", now, addr->address,
871 addr->parent->address, driver_name, driver_kind);
872 child_done(addr, now);
875 /* Log the delivery on the main log. We use an extensible string to build up
876 the log line, and reset the store afterwards. Remote deliveries should always
877 have a pointer to the host item that succeeded; local deliveries can have a
878 pointer to a single host item in their host list, for use by the transport. */
880 s = reset_point = store_get(size);
883 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US"> ", log_address);
885 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_sender_on_delivery) != 0)
886 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 3, US" F=<", sender_address, US">");
888 #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_SRS
889 if(addr->p.srs_sender)
890 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 3, US" SRS=<", addr->p.srs_sender, US">");
893 /* You might think that the return path must always be set for a successful
894 delivery; indeed, I did for some time, until this statement crashed. The case
895 when it is not set is for a delivery to /dev/null which is optimised by not
898 if (used_return_path != NULL &&
899 (log_extra_selector & LX_return_path_on_delivery) != 0)
900 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 3, US" P=<", used_return_path, US">");
902 /* For a delivery from a system filter, there may not be a router */
904 if (addr->router != NULL)
905 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" R=", addr->router->name);
907 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" T=", addr->transport->name);
909 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_delivery_size) != 0)
910 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" S=",
911 string_sprintf("%d", transport_count));
915 if (addr->transport->info->local)
917 if (addr->host_list != NULL)
918 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" H=", addr->host_list->name);
919 if (addr->shadow_message != NULL)
920 s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, addr->shadow_message,
921 Ustrlen(addr->shadow_message));
924 /* Remote delivery */
928 if (addr->host_used != NULL)
930 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 5, US" H=", addr->host_used->name,
931 US" [", addr->host_used->address, US"]");
932 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_outgoing_port) != 0)
933 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US":", string_sprintf("%d",
934 addr->host_used->port));
935 if (continue_sequence > 1)
936 s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, US"*", 1);
940 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_tls_cipher) != 0 && addr->cipher != NULL)
941 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" X=", addr->cipher);
942 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_tls_certificate_verified) != 0 &&
943 addr->cipher != NULL)
944 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" CV=",
945 testflag(addr, af_cert_verified)? "yes":"no");
946 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_tls_peerdn) != 0 && addr->peerdn != NULL)
947 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 3, US" DN=\"", addr->peerdn, US"\"");
950 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_smtp_confirmation) != 0 &&
951 addr->message != NULL)
954 uschar *p = big_buffer;
955 uschar *ss = addr->message;
957 for (i = 0; i < 100 && ss[i] != 0; i++)
959 if (ss[i] == '\"' || ss[i] == '\\') *p++ = '\\';
964 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" C=", big_buffer);
968 /* Time on queue and actual time taken to deliver */
970 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_queue_time) != 0)
972 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" QT=",
973 readconf_printtime(time(NULL) - received_time));
976 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_deliver_time) != 0)
978 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" DT=",
979 readconf_printtime(addr->more_errno));
982 /* string_cat() always leaves room for the terminator. Release the
983 store we used to build the line after writing it. */
986 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s", s);
987 store_reset(reset_point);
991 /* Soft failure, or local delivery process failed; freezing may be
994 else if (result == DEFER || result == PANIC)
996 if (result == PANIC) logflags |= LOG_PANIC;
998 /* This puts them on the chain in reverse order. Do not change this, because
999 the code for handling retries assumes that the one with the retry
1000 information is last. */
1002 addr->next = addr_defer;
1005 /* The only currently implemented special action is to freeze the
1006 message. Logging of this is done later, just before the -H file is
1009 if (addr->special_action == SPECIAL_FREEZE)
1011 deliver_freeze = TRUE;
1012 deliver_frozen_at = time(NULL);
1013 update_spool = TRUE;
1016 /* If doing a 2-stage queue run, we skip writing to either the message
1017 log or the main log for SMTP defers. */
1019 if (!queue_2stage || addr->basic_errno != 0)
1023 /* For errors of the type "retry time not reached" (also remotes skipped
1024 on queue run), logging is controlled by L_retry_defer. Note that this kind
1025 of error number is negative, and all the retry ones are less than any
1028 unsigned int use_log_selector = (addr->basic_errno <= ERRNO_RETRY_BASE)?
1031 /* Build up the line that is used for both the message log and the main
1034 s = reset_point = store_get(size);
1035 s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, log_address, Ustrlen(log_address));
1037 /* Either driver_name contains something and driver_kind contains
1038 " router" or " transport" (note the leading space), or driver_name is
1039 a null string and driver_kind contains "routing" without the leading
1040 space, if all routing has been deferred. When a domain has been held,
1041 so nothing has been done at all, both variables contain null strings. */
1043 if (driver_name == NULL)
1045 if (driver_kind != NULL)
1046 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" ", driver_kind);
1050 if (driver_kind[1] == 't' && addr->router != NULL)
1051 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" R=", addr->router->name);
1053 ss[1] = toupper(driver_kind[1]);
1054 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, ss, driver_name);
1057 sprintf(CS ss, " defer (%d)", addr->basic_errno);
1058 s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, ss, Ustrlen(ss));
1060 if (addr->basic_errno > 0)
1061 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US": ",
1062 US strerror(addr->basic_errno));
1064 if (addr->message != NULL)
1065 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US": ", addr->message);
1069 /* Log the deferment in the message log, but don't clutter it
1070 up with retry-time defers after the first delivery attempt. */
1072 if (deliver_firsttime || addr->basic_errno > ERRNO_RETRY_BASE)
1073 deliver_msglog("%s %s\n", now, s);
1075 /* Write the main log and reset the store */
1077 log_write(use_log_selector, logflags, "== %s", s);
1078 store_reset(reset_point);
1083 /* Hard failure. If there is an address to which an error message can be sent,
1084 put this address on the failed list. If not, put it on the deferred list and
1085 freeze the mail message for human attention. The latter action can also be
1086 explicitly requested by a router or transport. */
1090 /* If this is a delivery error, or a message for which no replies are
1091 wanted, and the message's age is greater than ignore_bounce_errors_after,
1092 force the af_ignore_error flag. This will cause the address to be discarded
1093 later (with a log entry). */
1095 if (sender_address[0] == 0 && message_age >= ignore_bounce_errors_after)
1096 setflag(addr, af_ignore_error);
1098 /* Freeze the message if requested, or if this is a bounce message (or other
1099 message with null sender) and this address does not have its own errors
1100 address. However, don't freeze if errors are being ignored. The actual code
1101 to ignore occurs later, instead of sending a message. Logging of freezing
1102 occurs later, just before writing the -H file. */
1104 if (!testflag(addr, af_ignore_error) &&
1105 (addr->special_action == SPECIAL_FREEZE ||
1106 (sender_address[0] == 0 && addr->p.errors_address == NULL)
1109 frozen_info = (addr->special_action == SPECIAL_FREEZE)? US"" :
1110 (sender_local && !local_error_message)?
1111 US" (message created with -f <>)" : US" (delivery error message)";
1112 deliver_freeze = TRUE;
1113 deliver_frozen_at = time(NULL);
1114 update_spool = TRUE;
1116 /* The address is put on the defer rather than the failed queue, because
1117 the message is being retained. */
1119 addr->next = addr_defer;
1123 /* Don't put the address on the nonrecipients tree yet; wait until an
1124 error message has been successfully sent. */
1128 addr->next = addr_failed;
1132 /* Build up the log line for the message and main logs */
1134 s = reset_point = store_get(size);
1135 s = string_cat(s, &size, &ptr, log_address, Ustrlen(log_address));
1137 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_sender_on_delivery) != 0)
1138 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 3, US" F=<", sender_address, US">");
1140 /* Return path may not be set if no delivery actually happened */
1142 if (used_return_path != NULL &&
1143 (log_extra_selector & LX_return_path_on_delivery) != 0)
1145 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 3, US" P=<", used_return_path, US">");
1148 if (addr->router != NULL)
1149 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" R=", addr->router->name);
1150 if (addr->transport != NULL)
1151 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US" T=", addr->transport->name);
1153 if (addr->host_used != NULL)
1154 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 5, US" H=", addr->host_used->name,
1155 US" [", addr->host_used->address, US"]");
1157 if (addr->basic_errno > 0)
1158 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US": ",
1159 US strerror(addr->basic_errno));
1161 if (addr->message != NULL)
1162 s = string_append(s, &size, &ptr, 2, US": ", addr->message);
1166 /* Do the logging. For the message log, "routing failed" for those cases,
1167 just to make it clearer. */
1169 if (driver_name == NULL)
1170 deliver_msglog("%s %s failed for %s\n", now, driver_kind, s);
1172 deliver_msglog("%s %s\n", now, s);
1174 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "** %s", s);
1175 store_reset(reset_point);
1178 /* Ensure logging is turned on again in all cases */
1180 disable_logging = FALSE;
1186 /*************************************************
1187 * Address-independent error *
1188 *************************************************/
1190 /* This function is called when there's an error that is not dependent on a
1191 particular address, such as an expansion string failure. It puts the error into
1192 all the addresses in a batch, logs the incident on the main and panic logs, and
1193 clears the expansions. It is mostly called from local_deliver(), but can be
1194 called for a remote delivery via findugid().
1197 logit TRUE if (MAIN+PANIC) logging required
1198 addr the first of the chain of addresses
1200 format format string for error message, or NULL if already set in addr
1201 ... arguments for the format
1207 common_error(BOOL logit, address_item *addr, int code, uschar *format, ...)
1209 address_item *addr2;
1210 addr->basic_errno = code;
1216 va_start(ap, format);
1217 if (!string_vformat(buffer, sizeof(buffer), CS format, ap))
1218 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE,
1219 "common_error expansion was longer than %d", sizeof(buffer));
1221 addr->message = string_copy(buffer);
1224 for (addr2 = addr->next; addr2 != NULL; addr2 = addr2->next)
1226 addr2->basic_errno = code;
1227 addr2->message = addr->message;
1230 if (logit) log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "%s", addr->message);
1231 deliver_set_expansions(NULL);
1237 /*************************************************
1238 * Check a "never users" list *
1239 *************************************************/
1241 /* This function is called to check whether a uid is on one of the two "never
1245 uid the uid to be checked
1246 nusers the list to be scanned; the first item in the list is the count
1248 Returns: TRUE if the uid is on the list
1252 check_never_users(uid_t uid, uid_t *nusers)
1255 if (nusers == NULL) return FALSE;
1256 for (i = 1; i <= (int)(nusers[0]); i++) if (nusers[i] == uid) return TRUE;
1262 /*************************************************
1263 * Find uid and gid for a transport *
1264 *************************************************/
1266 /* This function is called for both local and remote deliveries, to find the
1267 uid/gid under which to run the delivery. The values are taken preferentially
1268 from the transport (either explicit or deliver_as_creator), then from the
1269 address (i.e. the router), and if nothing is set, the exim uid/gid are used. If
1270 the resulting uid is on the "never_users" or the "fixed_never_users" list, a
1271 panic error is logged, and the function fails (which normally leads to delivery
1275 addr the address (possibly a chain)
1277 uidp pointer to uid field
1278 gidp pointer to gid field
1279 igfp pointer to the use_initgroups field
1281 Returns: FALSE if failed - error has been set in address(es)
1285 findugid(address_item *addr, transport_instance *tp, uid_t *uidp, gid_t *gidp,
1288 uschar *nuname = NULL;
1289 BOOL gid_set = FALSE;
1291 /* Default initgroups flag comes from the transport */
1293 *igfp = tp->initgroups;
1295 /* First see if there's a gid on the transport, either fixed or expandable.
1296 The expanding function always logs failure itself. */
1303 else if (tp->expand_gid != NULL)
1305 if (route_find_expanded_group(tp->expand_gid, tp->name, US"transport", gidp,
1306 &(addr->message))) gid_set = TRUE;
1309 common_error(FALSE, addr, ERRNO_GIDFAIL, NULL);
1314 /* If the transport did not set a group, see if the router did. */
1316 if (!gid_set && testflag(addr, af_gid_set))
1322 /* Pick up a uid from the transport if one is set. */
1324 if (tp->uid_set) *uidp = tp->uid;
1326 /* Otherwise, try for an expandable uid field. If it ends up as a numeric id,
1327 it does not provide a passwd value from which a gid can be taken. */
1329 else if (tp->expand_uid != NULL)
1332 if (!route_find_expanded_user(tp->expand_uid, tp->name, US"transport", &pw,
1333 uidp, &(addr->message)))
1335 common_error(FALSE, addr, ERRNO_UIDFAIL, NULL);
1338 if (!gid_set && pw != NULL)
1345 /* If the transport doesn't set the uid, test the deliver_as_creator flag. */
1347 else if (tp->deliver_as_creator)
1349 *uidp = originator_uid;
1352 *gidp = originator_gid;
1357 /* Otherwise see if the address specifies the uid and if so, take it and its
1360 else if (testflag(addr, af_uid_set))
1363 *igfp = testflag(addr, af_initgroups);
1366 /* Nothing has specified the uid - default to the Exim user, and group if the
1379 /* If no gid is set, it is a disaster. We default to the Exim gid only if
1380 defaulting to the Exim uid. In other words, if the configuration has specified
1381 a uid, it must also provide a gid. */
1385 common_error(TRUE, addr, ERRNO_GIDFAIL, US"User set without group for "
1386 "%s transport", tp->name);
1390 /* Check that the uid is not on the lists of banned uids that may not be used
1391 for delivery processes. */
1393 if (check_never_users(*uidp, never_users))
1394 nuname = US"never_users";
1395 else if (check_never_users(*uidp, fixed_never_users))
1396 nuname = US"fixed_never_users";
1400 common_error(TRUE, addr, ERRNO_UIDFAIL, US"User %ld set for %s transport "
1401 "is on the %s list", (long int)(*uidp), tp->name, nuname);
1413 /*************************************************
1414 * Check the size of a message for a transport *
1415 *************************************************/
1417 /* Checks that the message isn't too big for the selected transport.
1418 This is called only when it is known that the limit is set.
1422 addr the (first) address being delivered
1425 DEFER expansion failed or did not yield an integer
1426 FAIL message too big
1430 check_message_size(transport_instance *tp, address_item *addr)
1435 deliver_set_expansions(addr);
1436 size_limit = expand_string_integer(tp->message_size_limit);
1437 deliver_set_expansions(NULL);
1442 if (size_limit == -1)
1443 addr->message = string_sprintf("failed to expand message_size_limit "
1444 "in %s transport: %s", tp->name, expand_string_message);
1446 addr->message = string_sprintf("invalid message_size_limit "
1447 "in %s transport: %s", tp->name, expand_string_message);
1449 else if (size_limit > 0 && message_size > size_limit)
1453 string_sprintf("message is too big (transport limit = %d)",
1462 /*************************************************
1463 * Transport-time check for a previous delivery *
1464 *************************************************/
1466 /* Check that this base address hasn't previously been delivered to its routed
1467 transport. If it has been delivered, mark it done. The check is necessary at
1468 delivery time in order to handle homonymic addresses correctly in cases where
1469 the pattern of redirection changes between delivery attempts (so the unique
1470 fields change). Non-homonymic previous delivery is detected earlier, at routing
1471 time (which saves unnecessary routing).
1474 addr the address item
1475 testing TRUE if testing wanted only, without side effects
1477 Returns: TRUE if previously delivered by the transport
1481 previously_transported(address_item *addr, BOOL testing)
1483 (void)string_format(big_buffer, big_buffer_size, "%s/%s",
1484 addr->unique + (testflag(addr, af_homonym)? 3:0), addr->transport->name);
1486 if (tree_search(tree_nonrecipients, big_buffer) != 0)
1488 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route|D_transport)
1489 debug_printf("%s was previously delivered (%s transport): discarded\n",
1490 addr->address, addr->transport->name);
1491 if (!testing) child_done(addr, tod_stamp(tod_log));
1500 /******************************************************
1501 * Check for a given header in a header string *
1502 ******************************************************/
1504 /* This function is used when generating quota warnings. The configuration may
1505 specify any header lines it likes in quota_warn_message. If certain of them are
1506 missing, defaults are inserted, so we need to be able to test for the presence
1510 hdr the required header name
1511 hstring the header string
1513 Returns: TRUE the header is in the string
1514 FALSE the header is not in the string
1518 contains_header(uschar *hdr, uschar *hstring)
1520 int len = Ustrlen(hdr);
1521 uschar *p = hstring;
1524 if (strncmpic(p, hdr, len) == 0)
1527 while (*p == ' ' || *p == '\t') p++;
1528 if (*p == ':') return TRUE;
1530 while (*p != 0 && *p != '\n') p++;
1531 if (*p == '\n') p++;
1539 /*************************************************
1540 * Perform a local delivery *
1541 *************************************************/
1543 /* Each local delivery is performed in a separate process which sets its
1544 uid and gid as specified. This is a safer way than simply changing and
1545 restoring using seteuid(); there is a body of opinion that seteuid() cannot be
1546 used safely. From release 4, Exim no longer makes any use of it. Besides, not
1547 all systems have seteuid().
1549 If the uid/gid are specified in the transport_instance, they are used; the
1550 transport initialization must ensure that either both or neither are set.
1551 Otherwise, the values associated with the address are used. If neither are set,
1552 it is a configuration error.
1554 The transport or the address may specify a home directory (transport over-
1555 rides), and if they do, this is set as $home. If neither have set a working
1556 directory, this value is used for that as well. Otherwise $home is left unset
1557 and the cwd is set to "/" - a directory that should be accessible to all users.
1559 Using a separate process makes it more complicated to get error information
1560 back. We use a pipe to pass the return code and also an error code and error
1561 text string back to the parent process.
1564 addr points to an address block for this delivery; for "normal" local
1565 deliveries this is the only address to be delivered, but for
1566 pseudo-remote deliveries (e.g. by batch SMTP to a file or pipe)
1567 a number of addresses can be handled simultaneously, and in this
1568 case addr will point to a chain of addresses with the same
1571 shadowing TRUE if running a shadow transport; this causes output from pipes
1578 deliver_local(address_item *addr, BOOL shadowing)
1580 BOOL use_initgroups;
1583 int status, len, rc;
1586 uschar *working_directory;
1587 address_item *addr2;
1588 transport_instance *tp = addr->transport;
1590 /* Set up the return path from the errors or sender address. If the transport
1591 has its own return path setting, expand it and replace the existing value. */
1593 if(addr->p.errors_address != NULL)
1594 return_path = addr->p.errors_address;
1595 #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_SRS
1596 else if(addr->p.srs_sender != NULL)
1597 return_path = addr->p.srs_sender;
1600 return_path = sender_address;
1602 if (tp->return_path != NULL)
1604 uschar *new_return_path = expand_string(tp->return_path);
1605 if (new_return_path == NULL)
1607 if (!expand_string_forcedfail)
1609 common_error(TRUE, addr, ERRNO_EXPANDFAIL,
1610 US"Failed to expand return path \"%s\" in %s transport: %s",
1611 tp->return_path, tp->name, expand_string_message);
1615 else return_path = new_return_path;
1618 /* For local deliveries, one at a time, the value used for logging can just be
1619 set directly, once and for all. */
1621 used_return_path = return_path;
1623 /* Sort out the uid, gid, and initgroups flag. If an error occurs, the message
1624 gets put into the address(es), and the expansions are unset, so we can just
1627 if (!findugid(addr, tp, &uid, &gid, &use_initgroups)) return;
1629 /* See if either the transport or the address specifies a home directory. A
1630 home directory set in the address may already be expanded; a flag is set to
1631 indicate that. In other cases we must expand it. */
1633 if ((deliver_home = tp->home_dir) != NULL || /* Set in transport, or */
1634 ((deliver_home = addr->home_dir) != NULL && /* Set in address and */
1635 !testflag(addr, af_home_expanded))) /* not expanded */
1637 uschar *rawhome = deliver_home;
1638 deliver_home = NULL; /* in case it contains $home */
1639 deliver_home = expand_string(rawhome);
1640 if (deliver_home == NULL)
1642 common_error(TRUE, addr, ERRNO_EXPANDFAIL, US"home directory \"%s\" failed "
1643 "to expand for %s transport: %s", rawhome, tp->name,
1644 expand_string_message);
1647 if (*deliver_home != '/')
1649 common_error(TRUE, addr, ERRNO_NOTABSOLUTE, US"home directory path \"%s\" "
1650 "is not absolute for %s transport", deliver_home, tp->name);
1655 /* See if either the transport or the address specifies a current directory,
1656 and if so, expand it. If nothing is set, use the home directory, unless it is
1657 also unset in which case use "/", which is assumed to be a directory to which
1658 all users have access. It is necessary to be in a visible directory for some
1659 operating systems when running pipes, as some commands (e.g. "rm" under Solaris
1660 2.5) require this. */
1662 working_directory = (tp->current_dir != NULL)?
1663 tp->current_dir : addr->current_dir;
1665 if (working_directory != NULL)
1667 uschar *raw = working_directory;
1668 working_directory = expand_string(raw);
1669 if (working_directory == NULL)
1671 common_error(TRUE, addr, ERRNO_EXPANDFAIL, US"current directory \"%s\" "
1672 "failed to expand for %s transport: %s", raw, tp->name,
1673 expand_string_message);
1676 if (*working_directory != '/')
1678 common_error(TRUE, addr, ERRNO_NOTABSOLUTE, US"current directory path "
1679 "\"%s\" is not absolute for %s transport", working_directory, tp->name);
1683 else working_directory = (deliver_home == NULL)? US"/" : deliver_home;
1685 /* If one of the return_output flags is set on the transport, create and open a
1686 file in the message log directory for the transport to write its output onto.
1687 This is mainly used by pipe transports. The file needs to be unique to the
1688 address. This feature is not available for shadow transports. */
1690 if (!shadowing && (tp->return_output || tp->return_fail_output ||
1691 tp->log_output || tp->log_fail_output))
1694 addr->return_filename =
1695 string_sprintf("%s/msglog/%s/%s-%d-%d", spool_directory, message_subdir,
1696 message_id, getpid(), return_count++);
1697 addr->return_file = open_msglog_file(addr->return_filename, 0400, &error);
1698 if (addr->return_file < 0)
1700 common_error(TRUE, addr, errno, US"Unable to %s file for %s transport "
1701 "to return message: %s", error, tp->name, strerror(errno));
1706 /* Create the pipe for inter-process communication. */
1710 common_error(TRUE, addr, ERRNO_PIPEFAIL, US"Creation of pipe failed: %s",
1715 /* Now fork the process to do the real work in the subprocess, but first
1716 ensure that all cached resources are freed so that the subprocess starts with
1717 a clean slate and doesn't interfere with the parent process. */
1721 if ((pid = fork()) == 0)
1723 BOOL replicate = TRUE;
1725 /* Prevent core dumps, as we don't want them in users' home directories.
1726 HP-UX doesn't have RLIMIT_CORE; I don't know how to do this in that
1727 system. Some experimental/developing systems (e.g. GNU/Hurd) may define
1728 RLIMIT_CORE but not support it in setrlimit(). For such systems, do not
1729 complain if the error is "not supported". */
1735 if (setrlimit(RLIMIT_CORE, &rl) < 0)
1737 #ifdef SETRLIMIT_NOT_SUPPORTED
1738 if (errno != ENOSYS && errno != ENOTSUP)
1740 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "setrlimit(RLIMIT_CORE) failed: %s",
1745 /* Reset the random number generator, so different processes don't all
1746 have the same sequence. */
1750 /* If the transport has a setup entry, call this first, while still
1751 privileged. (Appendfile uses this to expand quota, for example, while
1752 able to read private files.) */
1754 if (addr->transport->setup != NULL)
1756 switch((addr->transport->setup)(addr->transport, addr, NULL, uid, gid,
1760 addr->transport_return = DEFER;
1764 addr->transport_return = PANIC;
1769 /* Ignore SIGINT and SIGTERM during delivery. Also ignore SIGUSR1, as
1770 when the process becomes unprivileged, it won't be able to write to the
1771 process log. SIGHUP is ignored throughout exim, except when it is being
1774 signal(SIGINT, SIG_IGN);
1775 signal(SIGTERM, SIG_IGN);
1776 signal(SIGUSR1, SIG_IGN);
1778 /* Close the unwanted half of the pipe, and set close-on-exec for the other
1779 half - for transports that exec things (e.g. pipe). Then set the required
1782 (void)close(pfd[pipe_read]);
1783 (void)fcntl(pfd[pipe_write], F_SETFD, fcntl(pfd[pipe_write], F_GETFD) |
1785 exim_setugid(uid, gid, use_initgroups,
1786 string_sprintf("local delivery to %s <%s> transport=%s", addr->local_part,
1787 addr->address, addr->transport->name));
1791 address_item *batched;
1792 debug_printf(" home=%s current=%s\n", deliver_home, working_directory);
1793 for (batched = addr->next; batched != NULL; batched = batched->next)
1794 debug_printf("additional batched address: %s\n", batched->address);
1797 /* Set an appropriate working directory. */
1799 if (Uchdir(working_directory) < 0)
1801 addr->transport_return = DEFER;
1802 addr->basic_errno = errno;
1803 addr->message = string_sprintf("failed to chdir to %s", working_directory);
1806 /* If successful, call the transport */
1811 set_process_info("delivering %s to %s using %s", message_id,
1812 addr->local_part, addr->transport->name);
1814 /* If a transport filter has been specified, set up its argument list.
1815 Any errors will get put into the address, and FALSE yielded. */
1817 if (addr->transport->filter_command != NULL)
1819 ok = transport_set_up_command(&transport_filter_argv,
1820 addr->transport->filter_command,
1821 TRUE, PANIC, addr, US"transport filter", NULL);
1822 transport_filter_timeout = addr->transport->filter_timeout;
1824 else transport_filter_argv = NULL;
1828 debug_print_string(addr->transport->debug_string);
1829 replicate = !(addr->transport->info->code)(addr->transport, addr);
1833 /* Pass the results back down the pipe. If necessary, first replicate the
1834 status in the top address to the others in the batch. The label is the
1835 subject of a goto when a call to the transport's setup function fails. We
1836 pass the pointer to the transport back in case it got changed as a result of
1837 file_format in appendfile. */
1841 if (replicate) replicate_status(addr);
1842 for (addr2 = addr; addr2 != NULL; addr2 = addr2->next)
1845 int local_part_length = Ustrlen(addr2->local_part);
1848 (void)write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&(addr2->transport_return), sizeof(int));
1849 (void)write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&transport_count, sizeof(transport_count));
1850 (void)write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&(addr2->flags), sizeof(addr2->flags));
1851 (void)write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&(addr2->basic_errno), sizeof(int));
1852 (void)write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&(addr2->more_errno), sizeof(int));
1853 (void)write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&(addr2->special_action), sizeof(int));
1854 (void)write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&(addr2->transport),
1855 sizeof(transport_instance *));
1857 /* For a file delivery, pass back the local part, in case the original
1858 was only part of the final delivery path. This gives more complete
1861 if (testflag(addr2, af_file))
1863 (void)write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&local_part_length, sizeof(int));
1864 (void)write(pfd[pipe_write], addr2->local_part, local_part_length);
1867 /* Now any messages */
1869 for (i = 0, s = addr2->message; i < 2; i++, s = addr2->user_message)
1871 int message_length = (s == NULL)? 0 : Ustrlen(s) + 1;
1872 (void)write(pfd[pipe_write], (void *)&message_length, sizeof(int));
1873 if (message_length > 0) (void)write(pfd[pipe_write], s, message_length);
1877 /* OK, this process is now done. Free any cached resources that it opened,
1878 and close the pipe we were writing down before exiting. */
1880 (void)close(pfd[pipe_write]);
1885 /* Back in the main process: panic if the fork did not succeed. This seems
1886 better than returning an error - if forking is failing it is probably best
1887 not to try other deliveries for this message. */
1890 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Fork failed for local delivery to %s",
1893 /* Read the pipe to get the delivery status codes and error messages. Our copy
1894 of the writing end must be closed first, as otherwise read() won't return zero
1895 on an empty pipe. We check that a status exists for each address before
1896 overwriting the address structure. If data is missing, the default DEFER status
1897 will remain. Afterwards, close the reading end. */
1899 (void)close(pfd[pipe_write]);
1901 for (addr2 = addr; addr2 != NULL; addr2 = addr2->next)
1903 len = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&status, sizeof(int));
1909 addr2->transport_return = status;
1910 len = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&transport_count,
1911 sizeof(transport_count));
1912 len = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&(addr2->flags), sizeof(addr2->flags));
1913 len = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&(addr2->basic_errno), sizeof(int));
1914 len = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&(addr2->more_errno), sizeof(int));
1915 len = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&(addr2->special_action), sizeof(int));
1916 len = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&(addr2->transport),
1917 sizeof(transport_instance *));
1919 if (testflag(addr2, af_file))
1921 int local_part_length;
1922 len = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&local_part_length, sizeof(int));
1923 len = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)big_buffer, local_part_length);
1924 big_buffer[local_part_length] = 0;
1925 addr2->local_part = string_copy(big_buffer);
1928 for (i = 0, sptr = &(addr2->message); i < 2;
1929 i++, sptr = &(addr2->user_message))
1932 len = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)&message_length, sizeof(int));
1933 if (message_length > 0)
1935 len = read(pfd[pipe_read], (void *)big_buffer, message_length);
1936 if (len > 0) *sptr = string_copy(big_buffer);
1943 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "failed to read delivery status for %s "
1944 "from delivery subprocess", addr2->unique);
1949 (void)close(pfd[pipe_read]);
1951 /* Unless shadowing, write all successful addresses immediately to the journal
1952 file, to ensure they are recorded asap. For homonymic addresses, use the base
1953 address plus the transport name. Failure to write the journal is panic-worthy,
1954 but don't stop, as it may prove possible subsequently to update the spool file
1955 in order to record the delivery. */
1959 for (addr2 = addr; addr2 != NULL; addr2 = addr2->next)
1961 if (addr2->transport_return != OK) continue;
1963 if (testflag(addr2, af_homonym))
1964 sprintf(CS big_buffer, "%.500s/%s\n", addr2->unique + 3, tp->name);
1966 sprintf(CS big_buffer, "%.500s\n", addr2->unique);
1968 /* In the test harness, wait just a bit to let the subprocess finish off
1969 any debug output etc first. */
1971 if (running_in_test_harness) millisleep(300);
1973 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("journalling %s", big_buffer);
1974 len = Ustrlen(big_buffer);
1975 if (write(journal_fd, big_buffer, len) != len)
1976 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "failed to update journal for %s: %s",
1977 big_buffer, strerror(errno));
1980 /* Ensure the journal file is pushed out to disk. */
1982 if (fsync(journal_fd) < 0)
1983 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "failed to fsync journal: %s",
1987 /* Wait for the process to finish. If it terminates with a non-zero code,
1988 freeze the message (except for SIGTERM, SIGKILL and SIGQUIT), but leave the
1989 status values of all the addresses as they are. Take care to handle the case
1990 when the subprocess doesn't seem to exist. This has been seen on one system
1991 when Exim was called from an MUA that set SIGCHLD to SIG_IGN. When that
1992 happens, wait() doesn't recognize the termination of child processes. Exim now
1993 resets SIGCHLD to SIG_DFL, but this code should still be robust. */
1995 while ((rc = wait(&status)) != pid)
1997 if (rc < 0 && errno == ECHILD) /* Process has vanished */
1999 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s transport process vanished unexpectedly",
2000 addr->transport->driver_name);
2006 if ((status & 0xffff) != 0)
2008 int msb = (status >> 8) & 255;
2009 int lsb = status & 255;
2010 int code = (msb == 0)? (lsb & 0x7f) : msb;
2011 if (msb != 0 || (code != SIGTERM && code != SIGKILL && code != SIGQUIT))
2012 addr->special_action = SPECIAL_FREEZE;
2013 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "%s transport process returned non-zero "
2014 "status 0x%04x: %s %d",
2015 addr->transport->driver_name,
2017 (msb == 0)? "terminated by signal" : "exit code",
2021 /* If SPECIAL_WARN is set in the top address, send a warning message. */
2023 if (addr->special_action == SPECIAL_WARN &&
2024 addr->transport->warn_message != NULL)
2027 uschar *warn_message;
2029 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("Warning message requested by transport\n");
2031 warn_message = expand_string(addr->transport->warn_message);
2032 if (warn_message == NULL)
2033 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Failed to expand \"%s\" (warning "
2034 "message for %s transport): %s", addr->transport->warn_message,
2035 addr->transport->name, expand_string_message);
2038 pid_t pid = child_open_exim(&fd);
2041 FILE *f = fdopen(fd, "wb");
2042 if (errors_reply_to != NULL &&
2043 !contains_header(US"Reply-To", warn_message))
2044 fprintf(f, "Reply-To: %s\n", errors_reply_to);
2045 fprintf(f, "Auto-Submitted: auto-replied\n");
2046 if (!contains_header(US"From", warn_message))
2047 fprintf(f, "From: Mail Delivery System <Mailer-Daemon@%s>\n",
2048 qualify_domain_sender);
2049 fprintf(f, "%s", CS warn_message);
2051 /* Close and wait for child process to complete, without a timeout. */
2054 (void)child_close(pid, 0);
2058 addr->special_action = SPECIAL_NONE;
2064 /*************************************************
2065 * Do local deliveries *
2066 *************************************************/
2068 /* This function processes the list of addresses in addr_local. True local
2069 deliveries are always done one address at a time. However, local deliveries can
2070 be batched up in some cases. Typically this is when writing batched SMTP output
2071 files for use by some external transport mechanism, or when running local
2072 deliveries over LMTP.
2079 do_local_deliveries(void)
2082 open_db *dbm_file = NULL;
2083 time_t now = time(NULL);
2085 /* Loop until we have exhausted the supply of local deliveries */
2087 while (addr_local != NULL)
2089 time_t delivery_start;
2091 address_item *addr2, *addr3, *nextaddr;
2092 int logflags = LOG_MAIN;
2093 int logchar = dont_deliver? '*' : '=';
2094 transport_instance *tp;
2096 /* Pick the first undelivered address off the chain */
2098 address_item *addr = addr_local;
2099 addr_local = addr->next;
2102 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_transport)
2103 debug_printf("--------> %s <--------\n", addr->address);
2105 /* An internal disaster if there is no transport. Should not occur! */
2107 if ((tp = addr->transport) == NULL)
2109 logflags |= LOG_PANIC;
2110 disable_logging = FALSE; /* Jic */
2112 (addr->router != NULL)?
2113 string_sprintf("No transport set by %s router", addr->router->name)
2115 string_sprintf("No transport set by system filter");
2116 post_process_one(addr, DEFER, logflags, DTYPE_TRANSPORT, 0);
2120 /* Check that this base address hasn't previously been delivered to this
2121 transport. The check is necessary at this point to handle homonymic addresses
2122 correctly in cases where the pattern of redirection changes between delivery
2123 attempts. Non-homonymic previous delivery is detected earlier, at routing
2126 if (previously_transported(addr, FALSE)) continue;
2128 /* There are weird cases where logging is disabled */
2130 disable_logging = tp->disable_logging;
2132 /* Check for batched addresses and possible amalgamation. Skip all the work
2133 if either batch_max <= 1 or there aren't any other addresses for local
2136 if (tp->batch_max > 1 && addr_local != NULL)
2138 int batch_count = 1;
2139 BOOL uses_dom = readconf_depends((driver_instance *)tp, US"domain");
2140 BOOL uses_lp = (testflag(addr, af_pfr) &&
2141 (testflag(addr, af_file) || addr->local_part[0] == '|')) ||
2142 readconf_depends((driver_instance *)tp, US"local_part");
2143 uschar *batch_id = NULL;
2144 address_item **anchor = &addr_local;
2145 address_item *last = addr;
2148 /* Expand the batch_id string for comparison with other addresses.
2149 Expansion failure suppresses batching. */
2151 if (tp->batch_id != NULL)
2153 deliver_set_expansions(addr);
2154 batch_id = expand_string(tp->batch_id);
2155 deliver_set_expansions(NULL);
2156 if (batch_id == NULL)
2158 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Failed to expand batch_id option "
2159 "in %s transport (%s): %s", tp->name, addr->address,
2160 expand_string_message);
2161 batch_count = tp->batch_max;
2165 /* Until we reach the batch_max limit, pick off addresses which have the
2166 same characteristics. These are:
2169 not previously delivered (see comment about 50 lines above)
2170 same local part if the transport's configuration contains $local_part
2171 or if this is a file or pipe delivery from a redirection
2172 same domain if the transport's configuration contains $domain
2174 same additional headers
2175 same headers to be removed
2176 same uid/gid for running the transport
2177 same first host if a host list is set
2180 while ((next = *anchor) != NULL && batch_count < tp->batch_max)
2183 tp == next->transport &&
2184 !previously_transported(next, TRUE) &&
2185 (addr->flags & (af_pfr|af_file)) == (next->flags & (af_pfr|af_file)) &&
2186 (!uses_lp || Ustrcmp(next->local_part, addr->local_part) == 0) &&
2187 (!uses_dom || Ustrcmp(next->domain, addr->domain) == 0) &&
2188 same_strings(next->p.errors_address, addr->p.errors_address) &&
2189 same_headers(next->p.extra_headers, addr->p.extra_headers) &&
2190 same_strings(next->p.remove_headers, addr->p.remove_headers) &&
2191 same_ugid(tp, addr, next) &&
2192 ((addr->host_list == NULL && next->host_list == NULL) ||
2193 (addr->host_list != NULL && next->host_list != NULL &&
2194 Ustrcmp(addr->host_list->name, next->host_list->name) == 0));
2196 /* If the transport has a batch_id setting, batch_id will be non-NULL
2197 from the expansion outside the loop. Expand for this address and compare.
2198 Expansion failure makes this address ineligible for batching. */
2200 if (ok && batch_id != NULL)
2203 address_item *save_nextnext = next->next;
2204 next->next = NULL; /* Expansion for a single address */
2205 deliver_set_expansions(next);
2206 next->next = save_nextnext;
2207 bid = expand_string(tp->batch_id);
2208 deliver_set_expansions(NULL);
2211 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Failed to expand batch_id option "
2212 "in %s transport (%s): %s", tp->name, next->address,
2213 expand_string_message);
2216 else ok = (Ustrcmp(batch_id, bid) == 0);
2219 /* Take address into batch if OK. */
2223 *anchor = next->next; /* Include the address */
2229 else anchor = &(next->next); /* Skip the address */
2233 /* We now have one or more addresses that can be delivered in a batch. Check
2234 whether the transport is prepared to accept a message of this size. If not,
2235 fail them all forthwith. If the expansion fails, or does not yield an
2236 integer, defer delivery. */
2238 if (tp->message_size_limit != NULL)
2240 int rc = check_message_size(tp, addr);
2243 replicate_status(addr);
2244 while (addr != NULL)
2247 post_process_one(addr, rc, logflags, DTYPE_TRANSPORT, 0);
2250 continue; /* With next batch of addresses */
2254 /* If we are not running the queue, or if forcing, all deliveries will be
2255 attempted. Otherwise, we must respect the retry times for each address. Even
2256 when not doing this, we need to set up the retry key string, and determine
2257 whether a retry record exists, because after a successful delivery, a delete
2258 retry item must be set up. Keep the retry database open only for the duration
2259 of these checks, rather than for all local deliveries, because some local
2260 deliveries (e.g. to pipes) can take a substantial time. */
2262 dbm_file = dbfn_open(US"retry", O_RDONLY, &dbblock, FALSE);
2263 if (dbm_file == NULL)
2265 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry|D_hints_lookup)
2266 debug_printf("no retry data available\n");
2271 while (addr2 != NULL)
2273 BOOL ok = TRUE; /* to deliver this address */
2276 /* Set up the retry key to include the domain or not, and change its
2277 leading character from "R" to "T". Must make a copy before doing this,
2278 because the old key may be pointed to from a "delete" retry item after
2281 retry_key = string_copy(
2282 (tp->retry_use_local_part)? addr2->address_retry_key :
2283 addr2->domain_retry_key);
2286 /* Inspect the retry data. If there is no hints file, delivery happens. */
2288 if (dbm_file != NULL)
2290 dbdata_retry *retry_record = dbfn_read(dbm_file, retry_key);
2292 /* If there is no retry record, delivery happens. If there is,
2293 remember it exists so it can be deleted after a successful delivery. */
2295 if (retry_record != NULL)
2297 setflag(addr2, af_lt_retry_exists);
2299 /* A retry record exists for this address. If queue running and not
2300 forcing, inspect its contents. If the record is too old, or if its
2301 retry time has come, or if it has passed its cutoff time, delivery
2306 debug_printf("retry record exists: age=%s ",
2307 readconf_printtime(now - retry_record->time_stamp));
2308 debug_printf("(max %s)\n", readconf_printtime(retry_data_expire));
2309 debug_printf(" time to retry = %s expired = %d\n",
2310 readconf_printtime(retry_record->next_try - now),
2311 retry_record->expired);
2314 if (queue_running && !deliver_force)
2316 ok = (now - retry_record->time_stamp > retry_data_expire) ||
2317 (now >= retry_record->next_try) ||
2318 retry_record->expired;
2320 /* If we haven't reached the retry time, there is one more check
2321 to do, which is for the ultimate address timeout. */
2325 retry_config *retry =
2326 retry_find_config(retry_key+2, addr2->domain,
2327 retry_record->basic_errno,
2328 retry_record->more_errno);
2330 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry)
2331 debug_printf("retry time not reached for %s: "
2332 "checking ultimate address timeout\n", addr2->address);
2334 if (retry != NULL && retry->rules != NULL)
2336 retry_rule *last_rule;
2337 for (last_rule = retry->rules;
2338 last_rule->next != NULL;
2339 last_rule = last_rule->next);
2340 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry)
2341 debug_printf("now=%d received_time=%d diff=%d timeout=%d\n",
2342 (int)now, received_time, (int)now - received_time,
2343 last_rule->timeout);
2344 if (now - received_time > last_rule->timeout) ok = TRUE;
2348 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry)
2349 debug_printf("no retry rule found: assume timed out\n");
2350 ok = TRUE; /* No rule => timed out */
2353 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry)
2355 if (ok) debug_printf("on queue longer than maximum retry for "
2356 "address - allowing delivery\n");
2361 else DEBUG(D_retry) debug_printf("no retry record exists\n");
2364 /* This address is to be delivered. Leave it on the chain. */
2369 addr2 = addr2->next;
2372 /* This address is to be deferred. Take it out of the chain, and
2373 post-process it as complete. Must take it out of the chain first,
2374 because post processing puts it on another chain. */
2378 address_item *this = addr2;
2379 this->message = US"Retry time not yet reached";
2380 this->basic_errno = ERRNO_LRETRY;
2381 if (addr3 == NULL) addr2 = addr = addr2->next;
2382 else addr2 = addr3->next = addr2->next;
2383 post_process_one(this, DEFER, logflags, DTYPE_TRANSPORT, 0);
2387 if (dbm_file != NULL) dbfn_close(dbm_file);
2389 /* If there are no addresses left on the chain, they all deferred. Loop
2390 for the next set of addresses. */
2392 if (addr == NULL) continue;
2394 /* So, finally, we do have some addresses that can be passed to the
2395 transport. Before doing so, set up variables that are relevant to a
2398 deliver_set_expansions(addr);
2399 delivery_start = time(NULL);
2400 deliver_local(addr, FALSE);
2401 deliver_time = (int)(time(NULL) - delivery_start);
2403 /* If a shadow transport (which must perforce be another local transport), is
2404 defined, and its condition is met, we must pass the message to the shadow
2405 too, but only those addresses that succeeded. We do this by making a new
2406 chain of addresses - also to keep the original chain uncontaminated. We must
2407 use a chain rather than doing it one by one, because the shadow transport may
2410 NOTE: if the condition fails because of a lookup defer, there is nothing we
2413 if (tp->shadow != NULL &&
2414 (tp->shadow_condition == NULL ||
2415 expand_check_condition(tp->shadow_condition, tp->name, US"transport")))
2417 transport_instance *stp;
2418 address_item *shadow_addr = NULL;
2419 address_item **last = &shadow_addr;
2421 for (stp = transports; stp != NULL; stp = stp->next)
2422 if (Ustrcmp(stp->name, tp->shadow) == 0) break;
2425 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "shadow transport \"%s\" not found ",
2428 /* Pick off the addresses that have succeeded, and make clones. Put into
2429 the shadow_message field a pointer to the shadow_message field of the real
2432 else for (addr2 = addr; addr2 != NULL; addr2 = addr2->next)
2434 if (addr2->transport_return != OK) continue;
2435 addr3 = store_get(sizeof(address_item));
2438 addr3->shadow_message = (uschar *)(&(addr2->shadow_message));
2439 addr3->transport = stp;
2440 addr3->transport_return = DEFER;
2441 addr3->return_filename = NULL;
2442 addr3->return_file = -1;
2444 last = &(addr3->next);
2447 /* If we found any addresses to shadow, run the delivery, and stick any
2448 message back into the shadow_message field in the original. */
2450 if (shadow_addr != NULL)
2452 int save_count = transport_count;
2454 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_transport)
2455 debug_printf(">>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Shadow delivery >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>\n");
2456 deliver_local(shadow_addr, TRUE);
2458 for(; shadow_addr != NULL; shadow_addr = shadow_addr->next)
2460 int sresult = shadow_addr->transport_return;
2461 *((uschar **)(shadow_addr->shadow_message)) = (sresult == OK)?
2462 string_sprintf(" ST=%s", stp->name) :
2463 string_sprintf(" ST=%s (%s%s%s)", stp->name,
2464 (shadow_addr->basic_errno <= 0)?
2465 US"" : US strerror(shadow_addr->basic_errno),
2466 (shadow_addr->basic_errno <= 0 || shadow_addr->message == NULL)?
2468 (shadow_addr->message != NULL)? shadow_addr->message :
2469 (shadow_addr->basic_errno <= 0)? US"unknown error" : US"");
2471 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_transport)
2472 debug_printf("%s shadow transport returned %s for %s\n",
2474 (sresult == OK)? "OK" :
2475 (sresult == DEFER)? "DEFER" :
2476 (sresult == FAIL)? "FAIL" :
2477 (sresult == PANIC)? "PANIC" : "?",
2478 shadow_addr->address);
2481 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_transport)
2482 debug_printf(">>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> End shadow delivery >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>\n");
2484 transport_count = save_count; /* Restore original transport count */
2488 /* Cancel the expansions that were set up for the delivery. */
2490 deliver_set_expansions(NULL);
2492 /* Now we can process the results of the real transport. We must take each
2493 address off the chain first, because post_process_one() puts it on another
2496 for (addr2 = addr; addr2 != NULL; addr2 = nextaddr)
2498 int result = addr2->transport_return;
2499 nextaddr = addr2->next;
2501 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_transport)
2502 debug_printf("%s transport returned %s for %s\n",
2504 (result == OK)? "OK" :
2505 (result == DEFER)? "DEFER" :
2506 (result == FAIL)? "FAIL" :
2507 (result == PANIC)? "PANIC" : "?",
2510 /* If there is a retry_record, or if delivery is deferred, build a retry
2511 item for setting a new retry time or deleting the old retry record from
2512 the database. These items are handled all together after all addresses
2513 have been handled (so the database is open just for a short time for
2516 if (result == DEFER || testflag(addr2, af_lt_retry_exists))
2518 int flags = (result == DEFER)? 0 : rf_delete;
2519 uschar *retry_key = string_copy((tp->retry_use_local_part)?
2520 addr2->address_retry_key : addr2->domain_retry_key);
2522 retry_add_item(addr2, retry_key, flags);
2525 /* Done with this address */
2527 if (result == OK) addr2->more_errno = deliver_time;
2528 post_process_one(addr2, result, logflags, DTYPE_TRANSPORT, logchar);
2530 /* If a pipe delivery generated text to be sent back, the result may be
2531 changed to FAIL, and we must copy this for subsequent addresses in the
2534 if (addr2->transport_return != result)
2536 for (addr3 = nextaddr; addr3 != NULL; addr3 = addr3->next)
2538 addr3->transport_return = addr2->transport_return;
2539 addr3->basic_errno = addr2->basic_errno;
2540 addr3->message = addr2->message;
2542 result = addr2->transport_return;
2545 /* Whether or not the result was changed to FAIL, we need to copy the
2546 return_file value from the first address into all the addresses of the
2547 batch, so they are all listed in the error message. */
2549 addr2->return_file = addr->return_file;
2551 /* Change log character for recording successful deliveries. */
2553 if (result == OK) logchar = '-';
2555 } /* Loop back for next batch of addresses */
2561 /*************************************************
2562 * Sort remote deliveries *
2563 *************************************************/
2565 /* This function is called if remote_sort_domains is set. It arranges that the
2566 chain of addresses for remote deliveries is ordered according to the strings
2567 specified. Try to make this shuffling reasonably efficient by handling
2568 sequences of addresses rather than just single ones.
2575 sort_remote_deliveries(void)
2578 address_item **aptr = &addr_remote;
2579 uschar *listptr = remote_sort_domains;
2583 while (*aptr != NULL &&
2584 (pattern = string_nextinlist(&listptr, &sep, patbuf, sizeof(patbuf)))
2587 address_item *moved = NULL;
2588 address_item **bptr = &moved;
2590 while (*aptr != NULL)
2592 address_item **next;
2593 deliver_domain = (*aptr)->domain; /* set $domain */
2594 if (match_isinlist(deliver_domain, &pattern, UCHAR_MAX+1,
2595 &domainlist_anchor, NULL, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL) == OK)
2597 aptr = &((*aptr)->next);
2601 next = &((*aptr)->next);
2602 while (*next != NULL &&
2603 (deliver_domain = (*next)->domain, /* Set $domain */
2604 match_isinlist(deliver_domain, &pattern, UCHAR_MAX+1,
2605 &domainlist_anchor, NULL, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL)) != OK)
2606 next = &((*next)->next);
2608 /* If the batch of non-matchers is at the end, add on any that were
2609 extracted further up the chain, and end this iteration. Otherwise,
2610 extract them from the chain and hang on the moved chain. */
2622 aptr = &((*aptr)->next);
2625 /* If the loop ended because the final address matched, *aptr will
2626 be NULL. Add on to the end any extracted non-matching addresses. If
2627 *aptr is not NULL, the loop ended via "break" when *next is null, that
2628 is, there was a string of non-matching addresses at the end. In this
2629 case the extracted addresses have already been added on the end. */
2631 if (*aptr == NULL) *aptr = moved;
2637 debug_printf("remote addresses after sorting:\n");
2638 for (addr = addr_remote; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
2639 debug_printf(" %s\n", addr->address);
2645 /*************************************************
2646 * Read from pipe for remote delivery subprocess *
2647 *************************************************/
2649 /* This function is called when the subprocess is complete, but can also be
2650 called before it is complete, in order to empty a pipe that is full (to prevent
2651 deadlock). It must therefore keep track of its progress in the parlist data
2654 We read the pipe to get the delivery status codes and a possible error message
2655 for each address, optionally preceded by unusability data for the hosts and
2656 also by optional retry data.
2658 Read in large chunks into the big buffer and then scan through, interpreting
2659 the data therein. In most cases, only a single read will be necessary. No
2660 individual item will ever be anywhere near 2500 bytes in length, so by ensuring
2661 that we read the next chunk when there is less than 2500 bytes left in the
2662 non-final chunk, we can assume each item is complete in the buffer before
2663 handling it. Each item is written using a single write(), which is atomic for
2664 small items (less than PIPE_BUF, which seems to be at least 512 in any Unix and
2665 often bigger) so even if we are reading while the subprocess is still going, we
2666 should never have only a partial item in the buffer.
2669 poffset the offset of the parlist item
2670 eop TRUE if the process has completed
2672 Returns: TRUE if the terminating 'Z' item has been read,
2673 or there has been a disaster (i.e. no more data needed);
2678 par_read_pipe(int poffset, BOOL eop)
2681 pardata *p = parlist + poffset;
2682 address_item *addrlist = p->addrlist;
2683 address_item *addr = p->addr;
2686 uschar *endptr = big_buffer;
2687 uschar *ptr = endptr;
2688 uschar *msg = p->msg;
2689 BOOL done = p->done;
2690 BOOL unfinished = TRUE;
2692 /* Loop through all items, reading from the pipe when necessary. The pipe
2693 is set up to be non-blocking, but there are two different Unix mechanisms in
2694 use. Exim uses O_NONBLOCK if it is defined. This returns 0 for end of file,
2695 and EAGAIN for no more data. If O_NONBLOCK is not defined, Exim uses O_NDELAY,
2696 which returns 0 for both end of file and no more data. We distinguish the
2697 two cases by taking 0 as end of file only when we know the process has
2700 Each separate item is written to the pipe in a single write(), and as they are
2701 all short items, the writes will all be atomic and we should never find
2702 ourselves in the position of having read an incomplete item. "Short" in this
2703 case can mean up to about 1K in the case when there is a long error message
2704 associated with an address. */
2706 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("reading pipe for subprocess %d (%s)\n",
2707 (int)p->pid, eop? "ended" : "not ended");
2711 retry_item *r, **rp;
2712 int remaining = endptr - ptr;
2714 /* Read (first time) or top up the chars in the buffer if necessary.
2715 There will be only one read if we get all the available data (i.e. don't
2716 fill the buffer completely). */
2718 if (remaining < 2500 && unfinished)
2721 int available = big_buffer_size - remaining;
2723 if (remaining > 0) memmove(big_buffer, ptr, remaining);
2726 endptr = big_buffer + remaining;
2727 len = read(fd, endptr, available);
2729 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("read() yielded %d\n", len);
2731 /* If the result is EAGAIN and the process is not complete, just
2732 stop reading any more and process what we have already. */
2736 if (!eop && errno == EAGAIN) len = 0; else
2738 msg = string_sprintf("failed to read pipe from transport process "
2739 "%d for transport %s: %s", pid, addr->transport->driver_name,
2745 /* If the length is zero (eof or no-more-data), just process what we
2746 already have. Note that if the process is still running and we have
2747 read all the data in the pipe (but less that "available") then we
2748 won't read any more, as "unfinished" will get set FALSE. */
2751 unfinished = len == available;
2754 /* If we are at the end of the available data, exit the loop. */
2756 if (ptr >= endptr) break;
2758 /* Handle each possible type of item, assuming the complete item is
2759 available in store. */
2763 /* Host items exist only if any hosts were marked unusable. Match
2764 up by checking the IP address. */
2767 for (h = addrlist->host_list; h != NULL; h = h->next)
2769 if (h->address == NULL || Ustrcmp(h->address, ptr+2) != 0) continue;
2777 /* Retry items are sent in a preceding R item for each address. This is
2778 kept separate to keep each message short enough to guarantee it won't
2779 be split in the pipe. Hopefully, in the majority of cases, there won't in
2780 fact be any retry items at all.
2782 The complete set of retry items might include an item to delete a
2783 routing retry if there was a previous routing delay. However, routing
2784 retries are also used when a remote transport identifies an address error.
2785 In that case, there may also be an "add" item for the same key. Arrange
2786 that a "delete" item is dropped in favour of an "add" item. */
2789 if (addr == NULL) goto ADDR_MISMATCH;
2791 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry)
2792 debug_printf("reading retry information for %s from subprocess\n",
2795 /* Cut out any "delete" items on the list. */
2797 for (rp = &(addr->retries); (r = *rp) != NULL; rp = &(r->next))
2799 if (Ustrcmp(r->key, ptr+1) == 0) /* Found item with same key */
2801 if ((r->flags & rf_delete) == 0) break; /* It was not "delete" */
2802 *rp = r->next; /* Excise a delete item */
2803 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry)
2804 debug_printf(" existing delete item dropped\n");
2808 /* We want to add a delete item only if there is no non-delete item;
2809 however we still have to step ptr through the data. */
2811 if (r == NULL || (*ptr & rf_delete) == 0)
2813 r = store_get(sizeof(retry_item));
2814 r->next = addr->retries;
2817 r->key = string_copy(ptr);
2819 memcpy(&(r->basic_errno), ptr, sizeof(r->basic_errno));
2820 ptr += sizeof(r->basic_errno);
2821 memcpy(&(r->more_errno), ptr, sizeof(r->more_errno));
2822 ptr += sizeof(r->more_errno);
2823 r->message = (*ptr)? string_copy(ptr) : NULL;
2824 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry)
2825 debug_printf(" added %s item\n",
2826 ((r->flags & rf_delete) == 0)? "retry" : "delete");
2831 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry)
2832 debug_printf(" delete item not added: non-delete item exists\n");
2835 ptr += sizeof(r->basic_errno) + sizeof(r->more_errno);
2841 /* Put the amount of data written into the parlist block */
2844 memcpy(&(p->transport_count), ptr, sizeof(transport_count));
2845 ptr += sizeof(transport_count);
2848 /* Address items are in the order of items on the address chain. We
2849 remember the current address value in case this function is called
2850 several times to empty the pipe in stages. Information about delivery
2851 over TLS is sent in a preceding X item for each address. We don't put
2852 it in with the other info, in order to keep each message short enough to
2853 guarantee it won't be split in the pipe. */
2857 if (addr == NULL) goto ADDR_MISMATCH; /* Below, in 'A' handler */
2858 addr->cipher = (*ptr)? string_copy(ptr) : NULL;
2860 addr->peerdn = (*ptr)? string_copy(ptr) : NULL;
2869 msg = string_sprintf("address count mismatch for data read from pipe "
2870 "for transport process %d for transport %s", pid,
2871 addrlist->transport->driver_name);
2876 addr->transport_return = *ptr++;
2877 addr->special_action = *ptr++;
2878 memcpy(&(addr->basic_errno), ptr, sizeof(addr->basic_errno));
2879 ptr += sizeof(addr->basic_errno);
2880 memcpy(&(addr->more_errno), ptr, sizeof(addr->more_errno));
2881 ptr += sizeof(addr->more_errno);
2882 memcpy(&(addr->flags), ptr, sizeof(addr->flags));
2883 ptr += sizeof(addr->flags);
2884 addr->message = (*ptr)? string_copy(ptr) : NULL;
2886 addr->user_message = (*ptr)? string_copy(ptr) : NULL;
2889 /* Always two strings for host information, followed by the port number */
2893 h = store_get(sizeof(host_item));
2894 h->name = string_copy(ptr);
2896 h->address = string_copy(ptr);
2898 memcpy(&(h->port), ptr, sizeof(h->port));
2899 ptr += sizeof(h->port);
2900 addr->host_used = h;
2904 /* Finished with this address */
2909 /* Z marks the logical end of the data. It is followed by '0' if
2910 continue_transport was NULL at the end of transporting, otherwise '1'.
2911 We need to know when it becomes NULL during a delivery down a passed SMTP
2912 channel so that we don't try to pass anything more down it. Of course, for
2913 most normal messages it will remain NULL all the time. */
2918 continue_transport = NULL;
2919 continue_hostname = NULL;
2922 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("Z%c item read\n", *ptr);
2925 /* Anything else is a disaster. */
2928 msg = string_sprintf("malformed data (%d) read from pipe for transport "
2929 "process %d for transport %s", ptr[-1], pid,
2930 addr->transport->driver_name);
2936 /* The done flag is inspected externally, to determine whether or not to
2937 call the function again when the process finishes. */
2941 /* If the process hadn't finished, and we haven't seen the end of the data
2942 or suffered a disaster, update the rest of the state, and return FALSE to
2943 indicate "not finished". */
2952 /* Close our end of the pipe, to prevent deadlock if the far end is still
2953 pushing stuff into it. */
2958 /* If we have finished without error, but haven't had data for every address,
2959 something is wrong. */
2961 if (msg == NULL && addr != NULL)
2962 msg = string_sprintf("insufficient address data read from pipe "
2963 "for transport process %d for transport %s", pid,
2964 addr->transport->driver_name);
2966 /* If an error message is set, something has gone wrong in getting back
2967 the delivery data. Put the message into each address and freeze it. */
2971 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
2973 addr->transport_return = DEFER;
2974 addr->special_action = SPECIAL_FREEZE;
2975 addr->message = msg;
2979 /* Return TRUE to indicate we have got all we need from this process, even
2980 if it hasn't actually finished yet. */
2987 /*************************************************
2988 * Post-process a set of remote addresses *
2989 *************************************************/
2991 /* Do what has to be done immediately after a remote delivery for each set of
2992 addresses, then re-write the spool if necessary. Note that post_process_one
2993 puts the address on an appropriate queue; hence we must fish off the next
2994 one first. This function is also called if there is a problem with setting
2995 up a subprocess to do a remote delivery in parallel. In this case, the final
2996 argument contains a message, and the action must be forced to DEFER.
2999 addr pointer to chain of address items
3000 logflags flags for logging
3001 msg NULL for normal cases; -> error message for unexpected problems
3002 fallback TRUE if processing fallback hosts
3008 remote_post_process(address_item *addr, int logflags, uschar *msg,
3013 /* If any host addresses were found to be unusable, add them to the unusable
3014 tree so that subsequent deliveries don't try them. */
3016 for (h = addr->host_list; h != NULL; h = h->next)
3018 if (h->address == NULL) continue;
3019 if (h->status >= hstatus_unusable) tree_add_unusable(h);
3022 /* Now handle each address on the chain. The transport has placed '=' or '-'
3023 into the special_action field for each successful delivery. */
3025 while (addr != NULL)
3027 address_item *next = addr->next;
3029 /* If msg == NULL (normal processing) and the result is DEFER and we are
3030 processing the main hosts and there are fallback hosts available, put the
3031 address on the list for fallback delivery. */
3033 if (addr->transport_return == DEFER &&
3034 addr->fallback_hosts != NULL &&
3038 addr->host_list = addr->fallback_hosts;
3039 addr->next = addr_fallback;
3040 addr_fallback = addr;
3041 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("%s queued for fallback host(s)\n", addr->address);
3044 /* If msg is set (=> unexpected problem), set it in the address before
3045 doing the ordinary post processing. */
3051 addr->message = msg;
3052 addr->transport_return = DEFER;
3054 (void)post_process_one(addr, addr->transport_return, logflags,
3055 DTYPE_TRANSPORT, addr->special_action);
3063 /* If we have just delivered down a passed SMTP channel, and that was
3064 the last address, the channel will have been closed down. Now that
3065 we have logged that delivery, set continue_sequence to 1 so that
3066 any subsequent deliveries don't get "*" incorrectly logged. */
3068 if (continue_transport == NULL) continue_sequence = 1;
3073 /*************************************************
3074 * Wait for one remote delivery subprocess *
3075 *************************************************/
3077 /* This function is called while doing remote deliveries when either the
3078 maximum number of processes exist and we need one to complete so that another
3079 can be created, or when waiting for the last ones to complete. It must wait for
3080 the completion of one subprocess, empty the control block slot, and return a
3081 pointer to the address chain.
3084 Returns: pointer to the chain of addresses handled by the process;
3085 NULL if no subprocess found - this is an unexpected error
3088 static address_item *
3091 int poffset, status;
3092 address_item *addr, *addrlist;
3095 set_process_info("delivering %s: waiting for a remote delivery subprocess "
3096 "to finish", message_id);
3098 /* Loop until either a subprocess completes, or there are no subprocesses in
3099 existence - in which case give an error return. We cannot proceed just by
3100 waiting for a completion, because a subprocess may have filled up its pipe, and
3101 be waiting for it to be emptied. Therefore, if no processes have finished, we
3102 wait for one of the pipes to acquire some data by calling select(), with a
3103 timeout just in case.
3105 The simple approach is just to iterate after reading data from a ready pipe.
3106 This leads to non-ideal behaviour when the subprocess has written its final Z
3107 item, closed the pipe, and is in the process of exiting (the common case). A
3108 call to waitpid() yields nothing completed, but select() shows the pipe ready -
3109 reading it yields EOF, so you end up with busy-waiting until the subprocess has
3112 To avoid this, if all the data that is needed has been read from a subprocess
3113 after select(), an explicit wait() for it is done. We know that all it is doing
3114 is writing to the pipe and then exiting, so the wait should not be long.
3116 The non-blocking waitpid() is to some extent just insurance; if we could
3117 reliably detect end-of-file on the pipe, we could always know when to do a
3118 blocking wait() for a completed process. However, because some systems use
3119 NDELAY, which doesn't distinguish between EOF and pipe empty, it is easier to
3120 use code that functions without the need to recognize EOF.
3122 There's a double loop here just in case we end up with a process that is not in
3123 the list of remote delivery processes. Something has obviously gone wrong if
3124 this is the case. (For example, a process that is incorrectly left over from
3125 routing or local deliveries might be found.) The damage can be minimized by
3126 looping back and looking for another process. If there aren't any, the error
3127 return will happen. */
3129 for (;;) /* Normally we do not repeat this loop */
3131 while ((pid = waitpid(-1, &status, WNOHANG)) <= 0)
3134 fd_set select_pipes;
3135 int maxpipe, readycount;
3137 /* A return value of -1 can mean several things. If errno != ECHILD, it
3138 either means invalid options (which we discount), or that this process was
3139 interrupted by a signal. Just loop to try the waitpid() again.
3141 If errno == ECHILD, waitpid() is telling us that there are no subprocesses
3142 in existence. This should never happen, and is an unexpected error.
3143 However, there is a nasty complication when running under Linux. If "strace
3144 -f" is being used under Linux to trace this process and its children,
3145 subprocesses are "stolen" from their parents and become the children of the
3146 tracing process. A general wait such as the one we've just obeyed returns
3147 as if there are no children while subprocesses are running. Once a
3148 subprocess completes, it is restored to the parent, and waitpid(-1) finds
3149 it. Thanks to Joachim Wieland for finding all this out and suggesting a
3152 This does not happen using "truss" on Solaris, nor (I think) with other
3153 tracing facilities on other OS. It seems to be specific to Linux.
3155 What we do to get round this is to use kill() to see if any of our
3156 subprocesses are still in existence. If kill() gives an OK return, we know
3157 it must be for one of our processes - it can't be for a re-use of the pid,
3158 because if our process had finished, waitpid() would have found it. If any
3159 of our subprocesses are in existence, we proceed to use select() as if
3160 waitpid() had returned zero. I think this is safe. */
3164 if (errno != ECHILD) continue; /* Repeats the waitpid() */
3167 debug_printf("waitpid() returned -1/ECHILD: checking explicitly "
3168 "for process existence\n");
3170 for (poffset = 0; poffset < remote_max_parallel; poffset++)
3172 if ((pid = parlist[poffset].pid) != 0 && kill(pid, 0) == 0)
3174 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("process %d still exists: assume "
3175 "stolen by strace\n", (int)pid);
3176 break; /* With poffset set */
3180 if (poffset >= remote_max_parallel)
3182 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("*** no delivery children found\n");
3183 return NULL; /* This is the error return */
3187 /* A pid value greater than 0 breaks the "while" loop. A negative value has
3188 been handled above. A return value of zero means that there is at least one
3189 subprocess, but there are no completed subprocesses. See if any pipes are
3190 ready with any data for reading. */
3192 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("selecting on subprocess pipes\n");
3195 FD_ZERO(&select_pipes);
3196 for (poffset = 0; poffset < remote_max_parallel; poffset++)
3198 if (parlist[poffset].pid != 0)
3200 int fd = parlist[poffset].fd;
3201 FD_SET(fd, &select_pipes);
3202 if (fd > maxpipe) maxpipe = fd;
3206 /* Stick in a 60-second timeout, just in case. */
3211 readycount = select(maxpipe + 1, (SELECT_ARG2_TYPE *)&select_pipes,
3214 /* Scan through the pipes and read any that are ready; use the count
3215 returned by select() to stop when there are no more. Select() can return
3216 with no processes (e.g. if interrupted). This shouldn't matter.
3218 If par_read_pipe() returns TRUE, it means that either the terminating Z was
3219 read, or there was a disaster. In either case, we are finished with this
3220 process. Do an explicit wait() for the process and break the main loop if
3223 It turns out that we have to deal with the case of an interrupted system
3224 call, which can happen on some operating systems if the signal handling is
3225 set up to do that by default. */
3228 readycount > 0 && poffset < remote_max_parallel;
3231 if ((pid = parlist[poffset].pid) != 0 &&
3232 FD_ISSET(parlist[poffset].fd, &select_pipes))
3235 if (par_read_pipe(poffset, FALSE)) /* Finished with this pipe */
3237 for (;;) /* Loop for signals */
3239 pid_t endedpid = waitpid(pid, &status, 0);
3240 if (endedpid == pid) goto PROCESS_DONE;
3241 if (endedpid != (pid_t)(-1) || errno != EINTR)
3242 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Unexpected error return "
3243 "%d (errno = %d) from waitpid() for process %d",
3244 (int)endedpid, errno, (int)pid);
3250 /* Now go back and look for a completed subprocess again. */
3253 /* A completed process was detected by the non-blocking waitpid(). Find the
3254 data block that corresponds to this subprocess. */
3256 for (poffset = 0; poffset < remote_max_parallel; poffset++)
3257 if (pid == parlist[poffset].pid) break;
3259 /* Found the data block; this is a known remote delivery process. We don't
3260 need to repeat the outer loop. This should be what normally happens. */
3262 if (poffset < remote_max_parallel) break;
3264 /* This situation is an error, but it's probably better to carry on looking
3265 for another process than to give up (as we used to do). */
3267 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Process %d finished: not found in remote "
3268 "transport process list", pid);
3269 } /* End of the "for" loop */
3271 /* Come here when all the data was completely read after a select(), and
3272 the process in pid has been wait()ed for. */
3279 debug_printf("remote delivery process %d ended\n", (int)pid);
3281 debug_printf("remote delivery process %d ended: status=%04x\n", (int)pid,
3285 set_process_info("delivering %s", message_id);
3287 /* Get the chain of processed addresses */
3289 addrlist = parlist[poffset].addrlist;
3291 /* If the process did not finish cleanly, record an error and freeze (except
3292 for SIGTERM, SIGKILL and SIGQUIT), and also ensure the journal is not removed,
3293 in case the delivery did actually happen. */
3295 if ((status & 0xffff) != 0)
3298 int msb = (status >> 8) & 255;
3299 int lsb = status & 255;
3300 int code = (msb == 0)? (lsb & 0x7f) : msb;
3302 msg = string_sprintf("%s transport process returned non-zero status 0x%04x: "
3304 addrlist->transport->driver_name,
3306 (msb == 0)? "terminated by signal" : "exit code",
3309 if (msb != 0 || (code != SIGTERM && code != SIGKILL && code != SIGQUIT))
3310 addrlist->special_action = SPECIAL_FREEZE;
3312 for (addr = addrlist; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
3314 addr->transport_return = DEFER;
3315 addr->message = msg;
3318 remove_journal = FALSE;
3321 /* Else complete reading the pipe to get the result of the delivery, if all
3322 the data has not yet been obtained. */
3324 else if (!parlist[poffset].done) (void)par_read_pipe(poffset, TRUE);
3326 /* Put the data count and return path into globals, mark the data slot unused,
3327 decrement the count of subprocesses, and return the address chain. */
3329 transport_count = parlist[poffset].transport_count;
3330 used_return_path = parlist[poffset].return_path;
3331 parlist[poffset].pid = 0;
3338 /*************************************************
3339 * Wait for subprocesses and post-process *
3340 *************************************************/
3342 /* This function waits for subprocesses until the number that are still running
3343 is below a given threshold. For each complete subprocess, the addresses are
3344 post-processed. If we can't find a running process, there is some shambles.
3345 Better not bomb out, as that might lead to multiple copies of the message. Just
3346 log and proceed as if all done.
3349 max maximum number of subprocesses to leave running
3350 fallback TRUE if processing fallback hosts
3356 par_reduce(int max, BOOL fallback)
3358 while (parcount > max)
3360 address_item *doneaddr = par_wait();
3361 if (doneaddr == NULL)
3363 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC,
3364 "remote delivery process count got out of step");
3367 else remote_post_process(doneaddr, LOG_MAIN, NULL, fallback);
3374 /*************************************************
3375 * Do remote deliveries *
3376 *************************************************/
3378 /* This function is called to process the addresses in addr_remote. We must
3379 pick off the queue all addresses that have the same transport, remote
3380 destination, and errors address, and hand them to the transport in one go,
3381 subject to some configured limitations. If this is a run to continue delivering
3382 to an existing delivery channel, skip all but those addresses that can go to
3383 that channel. The skipped addresses just get deferred.
3385 If mua_wrapper is set, all addresses must be able to be sent in a single
3386 transaction. If not, this function yields FALSE.
3388 In Exim 4, remote deliveries are always done in separate processes, even
3389 if remote_max_parallel = 1 or if there's only one delivery to do. The reason
3390 is so that the base process can retain privilege. This makes the
3391 implementation of fallback transports feasible (though not initially done.)
3393 We create up to the configured number of subprocesses, each of which passes
3394 back the delivery state via a pipe. (However, when sending down an existing
3395 connection, remote_max_parallel is forced to 1.)
3398 fallback TRUE if processing fallback hosts
3400 Returns: TRUE normally
3401 FALSE if mua_wrapper is set and the addresses cannot all be sent
3406 do_remote_deliveries(BOOL fallback)
3412 parcount = 0; /* Number of executing subprocesses */
3414 /* When sending down an existing channel, only do one delivery at a time.
3415 We use a local variable (parmax) to hold the maximum number of processes;
3416 this gets reduced from remote_max_parallel if we can't create enough pipes. */
3418 if (continue_transport != NULL) remote_max_parallel = 1;
3419 parmax = remote_max_parallel;
3421 /* If the data for keeping a list of processes hasn't yet been
3424 if (parlist == NULL)
3426 parlist = store_get(remote_max_parallel * sizeof(pardata));
3427 for (poffset = 0; poffset < remote_max_parallel; poffset++)
3428 parlist[poffset].pid = 0;
3431 /* Now loop for each remote delivery */
3433 for (delivery_count = 0; addr_remote != NULL; delivery_count++)
3439 int address_count = 1;
3440 int address_count_max;
3442 BOOL use_initgroups;
3443 BOOL pipe_done = FALSE;
3444 transport_instance *tp;
3445 address_item **anchor = &addr_remote;
3446 address_item *addr = addr_remote;
3447 address_item *last = addr;
3450 /* Pull the first address right off the list. */
3452 addr_remote = addr->next;
3455 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_transport)
3456 debug_printf("--------> %s <--------\n", addr->address);
3458 /* If no transport has been set, there has been a big screw-up somewhere. */
3460 if ((tp = addr->transport) == NULL)
3462 disable_logging = FALSE; /* Jic */
3463 remote_post_process(addr, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC,
3464 US"No transport set by router", fallback);
3468 /* Check that this base address hasn't previously been delivered to this
3469 transport. The check is necessary at this point to handle homonymic addresses
3470 correctly in cases where the pattern of redirection changes between delivery
3471 attempts. Non-homonymic previous delivery is detected earlier, at routing
3474 if (previously_transported(addr, FALSE)) continue;
3476 /* Force failure if the message is too big. */
3478 if (tp->message_size_limit != NULL)
3480 int rc = check_message_size(tp, addr);
3483 addr->transport_return = rc;
3484 remote_post_process(addr, LOG_MAIN, NULL, fallback);
3489 /* Get the flag which specifies whether the transport can handle different
3490 domains that nevertheless resolve to the same set of hosts. */
3492 multi_domain = tp->multi_domain;
3494 /* Get the maximum it can handle in one envelope, with zero meaning
3495 unlimited, which is forced for the MUA wrapper case. */
3497 address_count_max = tp->max_addresses;
3498 if (address_count_max == 0 || mua_wrapper) address_count_max = 999999;
3501 /************************************************************************/
3502 /***** This is slightly experimental code, but should be safe. *****/
3504 /* The address_count_max value is the maximum number of addresses that the
3505 transport can send in one envelope. However, the transport must be capable of
3506 dealing with any number of addresses. If the number it gets exceeds its
3507 envelope limitation, it must send multiple copies of the message. This can be
3508 done over a single connection for SMTP, so uses less resources than making
3509 multiple connections. On the other hand, if remote_max_parallel is greater
3510 than one, it is perhaps a good idea to use parallel processing to move the
3511 message faster, even if that results in multiple simultaneous connections to
3514 How can we come to some compromise between these two ideals? What we do is to
3515 limit the number of addresses passed to a single instance of a transport to
3516 the greater of (a) its address limit (rcpt_max for SMTP) and (b) the total
3517 number of addresses routed to remote transports divided by
3518 remote_max_parallel. For example, if the message has 100 remote recipients,
3519 remote max parallel is 2, and rcpt_max is 10, we'd never send more than 50 at
3520 once. But if rcpt_max is 100, we could send up to 100.
3522 Of course, not all the remotely addresses in a message are going to go to the
3523 same set of hosts (except in smarthost configurations), so this is just a
3524 heuristic way of dividing up the work.
3526 Furthermore (1), because this may not be wanted in some cases, and also to
3527 cope with really pathological cases, there is also a limit to the number of
3528 messages that are sent over one connection. This is the same limit that is
3529 used when sending several different messages over the same connection.
3530 Continue_sequence is set when in this situation, to the number sent so
3531 far, including this message.
3533 Furthermore (2), when somebody explicitly sets the maximum value to 1, it
3534 is probably because they are using VERP, in which case they want to pass only
3535 one address at a time to the transport, in order to be able to use
3536 $local_part and $domain in constructing a new return path. We could test for
3537 the use of these variables, but as it is so likely they will be used when the
3538 maximum is 1, we don't bother. Just leave the value alone. */
3540 if (address_count_max != 1 &&
3541 address_count_max < remote_delivery_count/remote_max_parallel)
3543 int new_max = remote_delivery_count/remote_max_parallel;
3544 int message_max = tp->connection_max_messages;
3545 if (connection_max_messages >= 0) message_max = connection_max_messages;
3546 message_max -= continue_sequence - 1;
3547 if (message_max > 0 && new_max > address_count_max * message_max)
3548 new_max = address_count_max * message_max;
3549 address_count_max = new_max;
3552 /************************************************************************/
3555 /* Pick off all addresses which have the same transport, errors address,
3556 destination, and extra headers. In some cases they point to the same host
3557 list, but we also need to check for identical host lists generated from
3558 entirely different domains. The host list pointers can be NULL in the case
3559 where the hosts are defined in the transport. There is also a configured
3560 maximum limit of addresses that can be handled at once (see comments above
3561 for how it is computed). */
3563 while ((next = *anchor) != NULL && address_count < address_count_max)
3565 if ((multi_domain || Ustrcmp(next->domain, addr->domain) == 0)
3567 tp == next->transport
3569 same_hosts(next->host_list, addr->host_list)
3571 same_strings(next->p.errors_address, addr->p.errors_address)
3573 same_headers(next->p.extra_headers, addr->p.extra_headers)
3575 same_ugid(tp, next, addr)
3577 (next->p.remove_headers == addr->p.remove_headers ||
3578 (next->p.remove_headers != NULL &&
3579 addr->p.remove_headers != NULL &&
3580 Ustrcmp(next->p.remove_headers, addr->p.remove_headers) == 0)))
3582 *anchor = next->next;
3584 next->first = addr; /* remember top one (for retry processing) */
3589 else anchor = &(next->next);
3592 /* If we are acting as an MUA wrapper, all addresses must go in a single
3593 transaction. If not, put them back on the chain and yield FALSE. */
3595 if (mua_wrapper && addr_remote != NULL)
3597 last->next = addr_remote;
3602 /* Set up the expansion variables for this set of addresses */
3604 deliver_set_expansions(addr);
3606 /* Compute the return path, expanding a new one if required. The old one
3607 must be set first, as it might be referred to in the expansion. */
3609 if(addr->p.errors_address != NULL)
3610 return_path = addr->p.errors_address;
3611 #ifdef EXPERIMENTAL_SRS
3612 else if(addr->p.srs_sender != NULL)
3613 return_path = addr->p.srs_sender;
3616 return_path = sender_address;
3618 if (tp->return_path != NULL)
3620 uschar *new_return_path = expand_string(tp->return_path);
3621 if (new_return_path == NULL)
3623 if (!expand_string_forcedfail)
3625 remote_post_process(addr, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC,
3626 string_sprintf("Failed to expand return path \"%s\": %s",
3627 tp->return_path, expand_string_message), fallback);
3631 else return_path = new_return_path;
3634 /* Find the uid, gid, and use_initgroups setting for this transport. Failure
3635 logs and sets up error messages, so we just post-process and continue with
3636 the next address. */
3638 if (!findugid(addr, tp, &uid, &gid, &use_initgroups))
3640 remote_post_process(addr, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, NULL, fallback);
3644 /* If this transport has a setup function, call it now so that it gets
3645 run in this process and not in any subprocess. That way, the results of
3646 any setup that are retained by the transport can be reusable. One of the
3647 things the setup does is to set the fallback host lists in the addresses.
3648 That is why it is called at this point, before the continue delivery
3649 processing, because that might use the fallback hosts. */
3651 if (tp->setup != NULL)
3652 (void)((tp->setup)(addr->transport, addr, NULL, uid, gid, NULL));
3654 /* If this is a run to continue delivery down an already-established
3655 channel, check that this set of addresses matches the transport and
3656 the channel. If it does not, defer the addresses. If a host list exists,
3657 we must check that the continue host is on the list. Otherwise, the
3658 host is set in the transport. */
3660 continue_more = FALSE; /* In case got set for the last lot */
3661 if (continue_transport != NULL)
3663 BOOL ok = Ustrcmp(continue_transport, tp->name) == 0;
3664 if (ok && addr->host_list != NULL)
3668 for (h = addr->host_list; h != NULL; h = h->next)
3670 if (Ustrcmp(h->name, continue_hostname) == 0)
3671 { ok = TRUE; break; }
3675 /* Addresses not suitable; defer or queue for fallback hosts (which
3676 might be the continue host) and skip to next address. */
3680 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("not suitable for continue_transport\n");
3683 if (addr->fallback_hosts != NULL && !fallback)
3687 next->host_list = next->fallback_hosts;
3688 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("%s queued for fallback host(s)\n", next->address);
3689 if (next->next == NULL) break;
3692 next->next = addr_fallback;
3693 addr_fallback = addr;
3698 while (next->next != NULL) next = next->next;
3699 next->next = addr_defer;
3706 /* Set a flag indicating whether there are further addresses that list
3707 the continued host. This tells the transport to leave the channel open,
3708 but not to pass it to another delivery process. */
3710 for (next = addr_remote; next != NULL; next = next->next)
3713 for (h = next->host_list; h != NULL; h = h->next)
3715 if (Ustrcmp(h->name, continue_hostname) == 0)
3716 { continue_more = TRUE; break; }
3721 /* The transports set up the process info themselves as they may connect
3722 to more than one remote machine. They also have to set up the filter
3723 arguments, if required, so that the host name and address are available
3726 transport_filter_argv = NULL;
3728 /* Create the pipe for inter-process communication. If pipe creation
3729 fails, it is probably because the value of remote_max_parallel is so
3730 large that too many file descriptors for pipes have been created. Arrange
3731 to wait for a process to finish, and then try again. If we still can't
3732 create a pipe when all processes have finished, break the retry loop. */
3736 if (pipe(pfd) == 0) pipe_done = TRUE;
3737 else if (parcount > 0) parmax = parcount;
3740 /* We need to make the reading end of the pipe non-blocking. There are
3741 two different options for this. Exim is cunningly (I hope!) coded so
3742 that it can use either of them, though it prefers O_NONBLOCK, which
3743 distinguishes between EOF and no-more-data. */
3746 (void)fcntl(pfd[pipe_read], F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK);
3748 (void)fcntl(pfd[pipe_read], F_SETFL, O_NDELAY);
3751 /* If the maximum number of subprocesses already exist, wait for a process
3752 to finish. If we ran out of file descriptors, parmax will have been reduced
3753 from its initial value of remote_max_parallel. */
3755 par_reduce(parmax - 1, fallback);
3758 /* If we failed to create a pipe and there were no processes to wait
3759 for, we have to give up on this one. Do this outside the above loop
3760 so that we can continue the main loop. */
3764 remote_post_process(addr, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC,
3765 string_sprintf("unable to create pipe: %s", strerror(errno)), fallback);
3769 /* Find a free slot in the pardata list. Must do this after the possible
3770 waiting for processes to finish, because a terminating process will free
3773 for (poffset = 0; poffset < remote_max_parallel; poffset++)
3774 if (parlist[poffset].pid == 0) break;
3776 /* If there isn't one, there has been a horrible disaster. */
3778 if (poffset >= remote_max_parallel)
3780 (void)close(pfd[pipe_write]);
3781 (void)close(pfd[pipe_read]);
3782 remote_post_process(addr, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC,
3783 US"Unexpectedly no free subprocess slot", fallback);
3787 /* Now fork a subprocess to do the remote delivery, but before doing so,
3788 ensure that any cached resourses are released so as not to interfere with
3789 what happens in the subprocess. */
3793 if ((pid = fork()) == 0)
3795 int fd = pfd[pipe_write];
3798 /* There are weird circumstances in which logging is disabled */
3800 disable_logging = tp->disable_logging;
3802 /* Show pids on debug output if parallelism possible */
3804 if (parmax > 1 && (parcount > 0 || addr_remote != NULL))
3806 DEBUG(D_any|D_v) debug_selector |= D_pid;
3807 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("Remote delivery process started\n");
3810 /* Reset the random number generator, so different processes don't all
3811 have the same sequence. In the test harness we want different, but
3812 predictable settings for each delivery process, so do something explicit
3813 here rather they rely on the fixed reset in the random number function. */
3815 random_seed = running_in_test_harness? 42 + 2*delivery_count : 0;
3817 /* Set close-on-exec on the pipe so that it doesn't get passed on to
3818 a new process that may be forked to do another delivery down the same
3821 (void)fcntl(fd, F_SETFD, fcntl(fd, F_GETFD) | FD_CLOEXEC);
3823 /* Close open file descriptors for the pipes of other processes
3824 that are running in parallel. */
3826 for (poffset = 0; poffset < remote_max_parallel; poffset++)
3827 if (parlist[poffset].pid != 0) (void)close(parlist[poffset].fd);
3829 /* This process has inherited a copy of the file descriptor
3830 for the data file, but its file pointer is shared with all the
3831 other processes running in parallel. Therefore, we have to re-open
3832 the file in order to get a new file descriptor with its own
3833 file pointer. We don't need to lock it, as the lock is held by
3834 the parent process. There doesn't seem to be any way of doing
3835 a dup-with-new-file-pointer. */
3837 (void)close(deliver_datafile);
3838 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/input/%s/%s-D", spool_directory, message_subdir,
3840 deliver_datafile = Uopen(spoolname, O_RDWR | O_APPEND, 0);
3842 if (deliver_datafile < 0)
3843 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Failed to reopen %s for remote "
3844 "parallel delivery: %s", spoolname, strerror(errno));
3846 /* Set the close-on-exec flag */
3848 (void)fcntl(deliver_datafile, F_SETFD, fcntl(deliver_datafile, F_GETFD) |
3851 /* Set the uid/gid of this process; bombs out on failure. */
3853 exim_setugid(uid, gid, use_initgroups,
3854 string_sprintf("remote delivery to %s with transport=%s",
3855 addr->address, tp->name));
3857 /* Close the unwanted half of this process' pipe, set the process state,
3858 and run the transport. Afterwards, transport_count will contain the number
3859 of bytes written. */
3861 (void)close(pfd[pipe_read]);
3862 set_process_info("delivering %s using %s", message_id, tp->name);
3863 debug_print_string(tp->debug_string);
3864 if (!(tp->info->code)(addr->transport, addr)) replicate_status(addr);
3866 set_process_info("delivering %s (just run %s for %s%s in subprocess)",
3867 message_id, tp->name, addr->address, (addr->next == NULL)? "" : ", ...");
3869 /* Ensure any cached resources that we used are now released */
3873 /* Pass the result back down the pipe. This is a lot more information
3874 than is needed for a local delivery. We have to send back the error
3875 status for each address, the usability status for each host that is
3876 flagged as unusable, and all the retry items. When TLS is in use, we
3877 send also the cipher and peerdn information. Each type of information
3878 is flagged by an identifying byte, and is then in a fixed format (with
3879 strings terminated by zeros), and there is a final terminator at the
3880 end. The host information and retry information is all attached to
3881 the first address, so that gets sent at the start. */
3883 /* Host unusability information: for most success cases this will
3886 for (h = addr->host_list; h != NULL; h = h->next)
3888 if (h->address == NULL || h->status < hstatus_unusable) continue;
3889 sprintf(CS big_buffer, "H%c%c%s", h->status, h->why, h->address);
3890 (void)write(fd, big_buffer, Ustrlen(big_buffer+3) + 4);
3893 /* The number of bytes written. This is the same for each address. Even
3894 if we sent several copies of the message down the same connection, the
3895 size of each one is the same, and it's that value we have got because
3896 transport_count gets reset before calling transport_write_message(). */
3898 big_buffer[0] = 'S';
3899 memcpy(big_buffer+1, &transport_count, sizeof(transport_count));
3900 (void)write(fd, big_buffer, sizeof(transport_count) + 1);
3902 /* Information about what happened to each address. Three item types are
3903 used: an optional 'X' item first, for TLS information, followed by 'R'
3904 items for any retry settings, and finally an 'A' item for the remaining
3907 for(; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
3912 /* The certificate verification status goes into the flags */
3914 if (tls_certificate_verified) setflag(addr, af_cert_verified);
3916 /* Use an X item only if there's something to send */
3919 if (addr->cipher != NULL)
3923 sprintf(CS ptr, "%.128s", addr->cipher);
3925 if (addr->peerdn == NULL) *ptr++ = 0; else
3927 sprintf(CS ptr, "%.512s", addr->peerdn);
3930 (void)write(fd, big_buffer, ptr - big_buffer);
3934 /* Retry information: for most success cases this will be null. */
3936 for (r = addr->retries; r != NULL; r = r->next)
3939 sprintf(CS big_buffer, "R%c%.500s", r->flags, r->key);
3940 ptr = big_buffer + Ustrlen(big_buffer+2) + 3;
3941 memcpy(ptr, &(r->basic_errno), sizeof(r->basic_errno));
3942 ptr += sizeof(r->basic_errno);
3943 memcpy(ptr, &(r->more_errno), sizeof(r->more_errno));
3944 ptr += sizeof(r->more_errno);
3945 if (r->message == NULL) *ptr++ = 0; else
3947 sprintf(CS ptr, "%.512s", r->message);
3950 (void)write(fd, big_buffer, ptr - big_buffer);
3953 /* The rest of the information goes in an 'A' item. */
3955 ptr = big_buffer + 3;
3956 sprintf(CS big_buffer, "A%c%c", addr->transport_return,
3957 addr->special_action);
3958 memcpy(ptr, &(addr->basic_errno), sizeof(addr->basic_errno));
3959 ptr += sizeof(addr->basic_errno);
3960 memcpy(ptr, &(addr->more_errno), sizeof(addr->more_errno));
3961 ptr += sizeof(addr->more_errno);
3962 memcpy(ptr, &(addr->flags), sizeof(addr->flags));
3963 ptr += sizeof(addr->flags);
3965 if (addr->message == NULL) *ptr++ = 0; else
3967 sprintf(CS ptr, "%.1024s", addr->message);
3971 if (addr->user_message == NULL) *ptr++ = 0; else
3973 sprintf(CS ptr, "%.1024s", addr->user_message);
3977 if (addr->host_used == NULL) *ptr++ = 0; else
3979 sprintf(CS ptr, "%.256s", addr->host_used->name);
3981 sprintf(CS ptr, "%.64s", addr->host_used->address);
3983 memcpy(ptr, &(addr->host_used->port), sizeof(addr->host_used->port));
3984 ptr += sizeof(addr->host_used->port);
3986 (void)write(fd, big_buffer, ptr - big_buffer);
3989 /* Add termination flag, close the pipe, and that's it. The character
3990 after 'Z' indicates whether continue_transport is now NULL or not.
3991 A change from non-NULL to NULL indicates a problem with a continuing
3994 big_buffer[0] = 'Z';
3995 big_buffer[1] = (continue_transport == NULL)? '0' : '1';
3996 (void)write(fd, big_buffer, 2);
4001 /* Back in the mainline: close the unwanted half of the pipe. */
4003 (void)close(pfd[pipe_write]);
4005 /* Fork failed; defer with error message */
4009 (void)close(pfd[pipe_read]);
4010 remote_post_process(addr, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC,
4011 string_sprintf("fork failed for remote delivery to %s: %s",
4012 addr->domain, strerror(errno)), fallback);
4016 /* Fork succeeded; increment the count, and remember relevant data for
4017 when the process finishes. */
4020 parlist[poffset].addrlist = parlist[poffset].addr = addr;
4021 parlist[poffset].pid = pid;
4022 parlist[poffset].fd = pfd[pipe_read];
4023 parlist[poffset].done = FALSE;
4024 parlist[poffset].msg = NULL;
4025 parlist[poffset].return_path = return_path;
4027 /* If the process we've just started is sending a message down an existing
4028 channel, wait for it now. This ensures that only one such process runs at
4029 once, whatever the value of remote_max parallel. Otherwise, we might try to
4030 send two or more messages simultaneously down the same channel. This could
4031 happen if there are different domains that include the same host in otherwise
4032 different host lists.
4034 Also, if the transport closes down the channel, this information gets back
4035 (continue_transport gets set to NULL) before we consider any other addresses
4038 if (continue_transport != NULL) par_reduce(0, fallback);
4040 /* Otherwise, if we are running in the test harness, wait a bit, to let the
4041 newly created process get going before we create another process. This should
4042 ensure repeatability in the tests. We only need to wait a tad. */
4044 else if (running_in_test_harness) millisleep(500);
4047 /* Reached the end of the list of addresses. Wait for all the subprocesses that
4048 are still running and post-process their addresses. */
4050 par_reduce(0, fallback);
4057 /*************************************************
4058 * Split an address into local part and domain *
4059 *************************************************/
4061 /* This function initializes an address for routing by splitting it up into a
4062 local part and a domain. The local part is set up twice - once in its original
4063 casing, and once in lower case, and it is dequoted. We also do the "percent
4064 hack" for configured domains. This may lead to a DEFER result if a lookup
4065 defers. When a percent-hacking takes place, we insert a copy of the original
4066 address as a new parent of this address, as if we have had a redirection.
4069 addr points to an addr_item block containing the address
4072 DEFER - could not determine if domain is %-hackable
4076 deliver_split_address(address_item *addr)
4078 uschar *address = addr->address;
4079 uschar *domain = Ustrrchr(address, '@');
4081 int len = domain - address;
4083 addr->domain = string_copylc(domain+1); /* Domains are always caseless */
4085 /* The implication in the RFCs (though I can't say I've seen it spelled out
4086 explicitly) is that quoting should be removed from local parts at the point
4087 where they are locally interpreted. [The new draft "821" is more explicit on
4088 this, Jan 1999.] We know the syntax is valid, so this can be done by simply
4089 removing quoting backslashes and any unquoted doublequotes. */
4091 t = addr->cc_local_part = store_get(len+1);
4094 register int c = *address++;
4095 if (c == '\"') continue;
4105 /* We do the percent hack only for those domains that are listed in
4106 percent_hack_domains. A loop is required, to copy with multiple %-hacks. */
4108 if (percent_hack_domains != NULL)
4111 uschar *new_address = NULL;
4112 uschar *local_part = addr->cc_local_part;
4114 deliver_domain = addr->domain; /* set $domain */
4116 while ((rc = match_isinlist(deliver_domain, &percent_hack_domains, 0,
4117 &domainlist_anchor, addr->domain_cache, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL))
4119 (t = Ustrrchr(local_part, '%')) != NULL)
4121 new_address = string_copy(local_part);
4122 new_address[t - local_part] = '@';
4123 deliver_domain = string_copylc(t+1);
4124 local_part = string_copyn(local_part, t - local_part);
4127 if (rc == DEFER) return DEFER; /* lookup deferred */
4129 /* If hackery happened, set up new parent and alter the current address. */
4131 if (new_address != NULL)
4133 address_item *new_parent = store_get(sizeof(address_item));
4134 *new_parent = *addr;
4135 addr->parent = new_parent;
4136 addr->address = new_address;
4137 addr->unique = string_copy(new_address);
4138 addr->domain = deliver_domain;
4139 addr->cc_local_part = local_part;
4140 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("%%-hack changed address to: %s\n",
4145 /* Create the lowercased version of the final local part, and make that the
4146 default one to be used. */
4148 addr->local_part = addr->lc_local_part = string_copylc(addr->cc_local_part);
4155 /*************************************************
4156 * Get next error message text *
4157 *************************************************/
4159 /* If f is not NULL, read the next "paragraph", from a customized error message
4160 text file, terminated by a line containing ****, and expand it.
4163 f NULL or a file to read from
4164 which string indicating which string (for errors)
4166 Returns: NULL or an expanded string
4170 next_emf(FILE *f, uschar *which)
4174 uschar *para, *yield;
4177 if (f == NULL) return NULL;
4179 if (Ufgets(buffer, sizeof(buffer), f) == NULL ||
4180 Ustrcmp(buffer, "****\n") == 0) return NULL;
4182 para = store_get(size);
4185 para = string_cat(para, &size, &ptr, buffer, Ustrlen(buffer));
4186 if (Ufgets(buffer, sizeof(buffer), f) == NULL ||
4187 Ustrcmp(buffer, "****\n") == 0) break;
4191 yield = expand_string(para);
4192 if (yield != NULL) return yield;
4194 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Failed to expand string from "
4195 "bounce_message_file or warn_message_file (%s): %s", which,
4196 expand_string_message);
4203 /*************************************************
4204 * Close down a passed transport channel *
4205 *************************************************/
4207 /* This function is called when a passed transport channel cannot be used.
4208 It attempts to close it down tidily. The yield is always DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED
4209 so that the function call can be the argument of a "return" statement.
4212 Returns: DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED
4216 continue_closedown(void)
4218 if (continue_transport != NULL)
4220 transport_instance *t;
4221 for (t = transports; t != NULL; t = t->next)
4223 if (Ustrcmp(t->name, continue_transport) == 0)
4225 if (t->info->closedown != NULL) (t->info->closedown)(t);
4230 return DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED;
4236 /*************************************************
4237 * Print address information *
4238 *************************************************/
4240 /* This function is called to output an address, or information about an
4241 address, for bounce or defer messages. If the hide_child flag is set, all we
4242 output is the original ancestor address.
4245 addr points to the address
4246 f the FILE to print to
4247 si an initial string
4248 sc a continuation string for before "generated"
4251 Returns: TRUE if the address is not hidden
4255 print_address_information(address_item *addr, FILE *f, uschar *si, uschar *sc,
4259 uschar *printed = US"";
4260 address_item *ancestor = addr;
4261 while (ancestor->parent != NULL) ancestor = ancestor->parent;
4263 fprintf(f, "%s", CS si);
4265 if (addr->parent != NULL && testflag(addr, af_hide_child))
4267 printed = US"an undisclosed address";
4270 else if (!testflag(addr, af_pfr) || addr->parent == NULL)
4271 printed = addr->address;
4275 uschar *s = addr->address;
4278 if (addr->address[0] == '>') { ss = US"mail"; s++; }
4279 else if (addr->address[0] == '|') ss = US"pipe";
4282 fprintf(f, "%s to %s%sgenerated by ", ss, s, sc);
4283 printed = addr->parent->address;
4286 fprintf(f, "%s", CS string_printing(printed));
4288 if (ancestor != addr)
4290 uschar *original = (ancestor->onetime_parent == NULL)?
4291 ancestor->address : ancestor->onetime_parent;
4292 if (strcmpic(original, printed) != 0)
4293 fprintf(f, "%s(%sgenerated from %s)", sc,
4294 (ancestor != addr->parent)? "ultimately " : "",
4295 string_printing(original));
4298 fprintf(f, "%s", CS se);
4306 /*************************************************
4307 * Print error for an address *
4308 *************************************************/
4310 /* This function is called to print the error information out of an address for
4311 a bounce or a warning message. It tries to format the message reasonably by
4312 introducing newlines. All lines are indented by 4; the initial printing
4313 position must be set before calling.
4315 This function used always to print the error. Nowadays we want to restrict it
4316 to cases such as LMTP/SMTP errors from a remote host, and errors from :fail:
4317 and filter "fail". We no longer pass other information willy-nilly in bounce
4318 and warning messages. Text in user_message is always output; text in message
4319 only if the af_pass_message flag is set.
4323 f the FILE to print on
4330 print_address_error(address_item *addr, FILE *f, uschar *t)
4332 int count = Ustrlen(t);
4333 uschar *s = testflag(addr, af_pass_message)? addr->message : NULL;
4337 if (addr->user_message != NULL) s = addr->user_message; else return;
4340 fprintf(f, "\n %s", t);
4344 if (*s == '\\' && s[1] == 'n')
4354 if (*s++ == ':' && isspace(*s) && count > 45)
4356 fprintf(f, "\n "); /* sic (because space follows) */
4368 /*************************************************
4369 * Check list of addresses for duplication *
4370 *************************************************/
4372 /* This function was introduced when the test for duplicate addresses that are
4373 not pipes, files, or autoreplies was moved from the middle of routing to when
4374 routing was complete. That was to fix obscure cases when the routing history
4375 affects the subsequent routing of identical addresses. If that change has to be
4376 reversed, this function is no longer needed. For a while, the old code that was
4377 affected by this change is commented with !!!OLD-DE-DUP!!! so it can be found
4380 This function is called after routing, to check that the final routed addresses
4381 are not duplicates. If we detect a duplicate, we remember what it is a
4382 duplicate of. Note that pipe, file, and autoreply de-duplication is handled
4383 during routing, so we must leave such "addresses" alone here, as otherwise they
4384 will incorrectly be discarded.
4386 Argument: address of list anchor
4391 do_duplicate_check(address_item **anchor)
4394 while ((addr = *anchor) != NULL)
4397 if (testflag(addr, af_pfr))
4399 anchor = &(addr->next);
4401 else if ((tnode = tree_search(tree_duplicates, addr->unique)) != NULL)
4403 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route)
4404 debug_printf("%s is a duplicate address: discarded\n", addr->unique);
4405 *anchor = addr->next;
4406 addr->dupof = tnode->data.ptr;
4407 addr->next = addr_duplicate;
4408 addr_duplicate = addr;
4412 tree_add_duplicate(addr->unique, addr);
4413 anchor = &(addr->next);
4421 /*************************************************
4422 * Deliver one message *
4423 *************************************************/
4425 /* This is the function which is called when a message is to be delivered. It
4426 is passed the id of the message. It is possible that the message no longer
4427 exists, if some other process has delivered it, and it is also possible that
4428 the message is being worked on by another process, in which case the data file
4431 If no delivery is attempted for any of the above reasons, the function returns
4432 DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED.
4434 If the give_up flag is set true, do not attempt any deliveries, but instead
4435 fail all outstanding addresses and return the message to the sender (or
4438 A delivery operation has a process all to itself; we never deliver more than
4439 one message in the same process. Therefore we needn't worry too much about
4443 id the id of the message to be delivered
4444 forced TRUE if delivery was forced by an administrator; this overrides
4445 retry delays and causes a delivery to be tried regardless
4446 give_up TRUE if an administrator has requested that delivery attempts
4449 Returns: When the global variable mua_wrapper is FALSE:
4450 DELIVER_ATTEMPTED_NORMAL if a delivery attempt was made
4451 DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED otherwise (see comment above)
4452 When the global variable mua_wrapper is TRUE:
4453 DELIVER_MUA_SUCCEEDED if delivery succeeded
4454 DELIVER_MUA_FAILED if delivery failed
4455 DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED if not attempted (should not occur)
4459 deliver_message(uschar *id, BOOL forced, BOOL give_up)
4462 int final_yield = DELIVER_ATTEMPTED_NORMAL;
4463 time_t now = time(NULL);
4464 address_item *addr_last = NULL;
4465 uschar *filter_message = NULL;
4467 int process_recipients = RECIP_ACCEPT;
4471 uschar *info = (queue_run_pid == (pid_t)0)?
4472 string_sprintf("delivering %s", id) :
4473 string_sprintf("delivering %s (queue run pid %d)", id, queue_run_pid);
4475 /* If the D_process_info bit is on, set_process_info() will output debugging
4476 information. If not, we want to show this initial information if D_deliver or
4477 D_queue_run is set or in verbose mode. */
4479 set_process_info("%s", info);
4481 if ((debug_selector & D_process_info) == 0 &&
4482 (debug_selector & (D_deliver|D_queue_run|D_v)) != 0)
4483 debug_printf("%s\n", info);
4485 /* Ensure that we catch any subprocesses that are created. Although Exim
4486 sets SIG_DFL as its initial default, some routes through the code end up
4487 here with it set to SIG_IGN - cases where a non-synchronous delivery process
4488 has been forked, but no re-exec has been done. We use sigaction rather than
4489 plain signal() on those OS where SA_NOCLDWAIT exists, because we want to be
4490 sure it is turned off. (There was a problem on AIX with this.) */
4494 struct sigaction act;
4495 act.sa_handler = SIG_DFL;
4496 sigemptyset(&(act.sa_mask));
4498 sigaction(SIGCHLD, &act, NULL);
4501 signal(SIGCHLD, SIG_DFL);
4504 /* Make the forcing flag available for routers and transports, set up the
4505 global message id field, and initialize the count for returned files and the
4506 message size. This use of strcpy() is OK because the length id is checked when
4507 it is obtained from a command line (the -M or -q options), and otherwise it is
4508 known to be a valid message id. */
4510 Ustrcpy(message_id, id);
4511 deliver_force = forced;
4515 /* Initialize some flags */
4517 update_spool = FALSE;
4518 remove_journal = TRUE;
4520 /* Reset the random number generator, so that if several delivery processes are
4521 started from a queue runner that has already used random numbers (for sorting),
4522 they don't all get the same sequence. */
4526 /* Open and lock the message's data file. Exim locks on this one because the
4527 header file may get replaced as it is re-written during the delivery process.
4528 Any failures cause messages to be written to the log, except for missing files
4529 while queue running - another process probably completed delivery. As part of
4530 opening the data file, message_subdir gets set. */
4532 if (!spool_open_datafile(id))
4533 return continue_closedown(); /* yields DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED */
4535 /* The value of message_size at this point has been set to the data length,
4536 plus one for the blank line that notionally precedes the data. */
4538 /* Now read the contents of the header file, which will set up the headers in
4539 store, and also the list of recipients and the tree of non-recipients and
4540 assorted flags. It updates message_size. If there is a reading or format error,
4541 give up; if the message has been around for sufficiently long, remove it. */
4543 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s-H", id);
4544 if ((rc = spool_read_header(spoolname, TRUE, TRUE)) != spool_read_OK)
4546 if (errno == ERRNO_SPOOLFORMAT)
4548 struct stat statbuf;
4549 sprintf(CS big_buffer, "%s/input/%s/%s", spool_directory, message_subdir,
4551 if (Ustat(big_buffer, &statbuf) == 0)
4552 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Format error in spool file %s: "
4553 "size=" OFF_T_FMT, spoolname, statbuf.st_size);
4554 else log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Format error in spool file %s", spoolname);
4557 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Error reading spool file %s: %s", spoolname,
4560 /* If we managed to read the envelope data, received_time contains the
4561 time the message was received. Otherwise, we can calculate it from the
4564 if (rc != spool_read_hdrerror)
4567 for (i = 0; i < 6; i++)
4568 received_time = received_time * BASE_62 + tab62[id[i] - '0'];
4571 /* If we've had this malformed message too long, sling it. */
4573 if (now - received_time > keep_malformed)
4575 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/msglog/%s/%s", spool_directory, message_subdir, id);
4577 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/input/%s/%s-D", spool_directory, message_subdir, id);
4579 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/input/%s/%s-H", spool_directory, message_subdir, id);
4581 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/input/%s/%s-J", spool_directory, message_subdir, id);
4583 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Message removed because older than %s",
4584 readconf_printtime(keep_malformed));
4587 (void)close(deliver_datafile);
4588 deliver_datafile = -1;
4589 return continue_closedown(); /* yields DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED */
4592 /* The spool header file has been read. Look to see if there is an existing
4593 journal file for this message. If there is, it means that a previous delivery
4594 attempt crashed (program or host) before it could update the spool header file.
4595 Read the list of delivered addresses from the journal and add them to the
4596 nonrecipients tree. Then update the spool file. We can leave the journal in
4597 existence, as it will get further successful deliveries added to it in this
4598 run, and it will be deleted if this function gets to its end successfully.
4599 Otherwise it might be needed again. */
4601 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/input/%s/%s-J", spool_directory, message_subdir, id);
4602 jread = Ufopen(spoolname, "rb");
4605 while (Ufgets(big_buffer, big_buffer_size, jread) != NULL)
4607 int n = Ustrlen(big_buffer);
4608 big_buffer[n-1] = 0;
4609 tree_add_nonrecipient(big_buffer);
4610 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("Previously delivered address %s taken from "
4611 "journal file\n", big_buffer);
4613 (void)fclose(jread);
4614 /* Panic-dies on error */
4615 (void)spool_write_header(message_id, SW_DELIVERING, NULL);
4617 else if (errno != ENOENT)
4619 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "attempt to open journal for reading gave: "
4620 "%s", strerror(errno));
4621 return continue_closedown(); /* yields DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED */
4624 /* A null recipients list indicates some kind of disaster. */
4626 if (recipients_list == NULL)
4628 (void)close(deliver_datafile);
4629 deliver_datafile = -1;
4630 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Spool error: no recipients for %s", spoolname);
4631 return continue_closedown(); /* yields DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED */
4635 /* Handle a message that is frozen. There are a number of different things that
4636 can happen, but in the default situation, unless forced, no delivery is
4641 #ifdef SUPPORT_MOVE_FROZEN_MESSAGES
4642 /* Moving to another directory removes the message from Exim's view. Other
4643 tools must be used to deal with it. Logging of this action happens in
4644 spool_move_message() and its subfunctions. */
4646 if (move_frozen_messages &&
4647 spool_move_message(id, message_subdir, US"", US"F"))
4648 return continue_closedown(); /* yields DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED */
4651 /* For all frozen messages (bounces or not), timeout_frozen_after sets the
4652 maximum time to keep messages that are frozen. Thaw if we reach it, with a
4653 flag causing all recipients to be failed. The time is the age of the
4654 message, not the time since freezing. */
4656 if (timeout_frozen_after > 0 && message_age >= timeout_frozen_after)
4658 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "cancelled by timeout_frozen_after");
4659 process_recipients = RECIP_FAIL_TIMEOUT;
4662 /* For bounce messages (and others with no sender), thaw if the error message
4663 ignore timer is exceeded. The message will be discarded if this delivery
4666 else if (sender_address[0] == 0 && message_age >= ignore_bounce_errors_after)
4668 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Unfrozen by errmsg timer");
4671 /* If this is a bounce message, or there's no auto thaw, or we haven't
4672 reached the auto thaw time yet, and this delivery is not forced by an admin
4673 user, do not attempt delivery of this message. Note that forced is set for
4674 continuing messages down the same channel, in order to skip load checking and
4675 ignore hold domains, but we don't want unfreezing in that case. */
4679 if ((sender_address[0] == 0 ||
4681 now <= deliver_frozen_at + auto_thaw
4684 (!forced || !deliver_force_thaw || !admin_user ||
4685 continue_hostname != NULL
4688 (void)close(deliver_datafile);
4689 deliver_datafile = -1;
4690 log_write(L_skip_delivery, LOG_MAIN, "Message is frozen");
4691 return continue_closedown(); /* yields DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED */
4694 /* If delivery was forced (by an admin user), assume a manual thaw.
4695 Otherwise it's an auto thaw. */
4699 deliver_manual_thaw = TRUE;
4700 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Unfrozen by forced delivery");
4702 else log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Unfrozen by auto-thaw");
4705 /* We get here if any of the rules for unfreezing have triggered. */
4707 deliver_freeze = FALSE;
4708 update_spool = TRUE;
4712 /* Open the message log file if we are using them. This records details of
4713 deliveries, deferments, and failures for the benefit of the mail administrator.
4714 The log is not used by exim itself to track the progress of a message; that is
4715 done by rewriting the header spool file. */
4722 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/msglog/%s/%s", spool_directory, message_subdir, id);
4723 fd = open_msglog_file(spoolname, SPOOL_MODE, &error);
4727 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Couldn't %s message log %s: %s", error,
4728 spoolname, strerror(errno));
4729 return continue_closedown(); /* yields DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED */
4732 /* Make a C stream out of it. */
4734 message_log = fdopen(fd, "a");
4735 if (message_log == NULL)
4737 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Couldn't fdopen message log %s: %s",
4738 spoolname, strerror(errno));
4739 return continue_closedown(); /* yields DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED */
4744 /* If asked to give up on a message, log who did it, and set the action for all
4749 struct passwd *pw = getpwuid(real_uid);
4750 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "cancelled by %s", (pw != NULL)?
4751 US pw->pw_name : string_sprintf("uid %ld", (long int)real_uid));
4752 process_recipients = RECIP_FAIL;
4755 /* Otherwise, if there are too many Received: headers, fail all recipients. */
4757 else if (received_count > received_headers_max)
4758 process_recipients = RECIP_FAIL_LOOP;
4760 /* Otherwise, if a system-wide, address-independent message filter is
4761 specified, run it now, except in the case when we are failing all recipients as
4762 a result of timeout_frozen_after. If the system filter yields "delivered", then
4763 ignore the true recipients of the message. Failure of the filter file is
4764 logged, and the delivery attempt fails. */
4766 else if (system_filter != NULL && process_recipients != RECIP_FAIL_TIMEOUT)
4771 redirect_block redirect;
4773 if (system_filter_uid_set)
4775 ugid.uid = system_filter_uid;
4776 ugid.gid = system_filter_gid;
4777 ugid.uid_set = ugid.gid_set = TRUE;
4781 ugid.uid_set = ugid.gid_set = FALSE;
4784 return_path = sender_address;
4785 enable_dollar_recipients = TRUE; /* Permit $recipients in system filter */
4786 system_filtering = TRUE;
4788 /* Any error in the filter file causes a delivery to be abandoned. */
4790 redirect.string = system_filter;
4791 redirect.isfile = TRUE;
4792 redirect.check_owner = redirect.check_group = FALSE;
4793 redirect.owners = NULL;
4794 redirect.owngroups = NULL;
4796 redirect.modemask = 0;
4798 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_filter) debug_printf("running system filter\n");
4801 &redirect, /* Where the data is */
4802 RDO_DEFER | /* Turn on all the enabling options */
4803 RDO_FAIL | /* Leave off all the disabling options */
4808 NULL, /* No :include: restriction (not used in filter) */
4809 NULL, /* No sieve vacation directory (not sieve!) */
4810 NULL, /* No sieve user address (not sieve!) */
4811 NULL, /* No sieve subaddress (not sieve!) */
4812 &ugid, /* uid/gid data */
4813 &addr_new, /* Where to hang generated addresses */
4814 &filter_message, /* Where to put error message */
4815 NULL, /* Don't skip syntax errors */
4816 &filtertype, /* Will always be set to FILTER_EXIM for this call */
4817 US"system filter"); /* For error messages */
4819 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_filter) debug_printf("system filter returned %d\n", rc);
4821 if (rc == FF_ERROR || rc == FF_NONEXIST)
4823 (void)close(deliver_datafile);
4824 deliver_datafile = -1;
4825 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Error in system filter: %s",
4826 string_printing(filter_message));
4827 return continue_closedown(); /* yields DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED */
4830 /* Reset things. If the filter message is an empty string, which can happen
4831 for a filter "fail" or "freeze" command with no text, reset it to NULL. */
4833 system_filtering = FALSE;
4834 enable_dollar_recipients = FALSE;
4835 if (filter_message != NULL && filter_message[0] == 0) filter_message = NULL;
4837 /* Save the values of the system filter variables so that user filters
4840 memcpy(filter_sn, filter_n, sizeof(filter_sn));
4842 /* The filter can request that delivery of the original addresses be
4847 process_recipients = RECIP_DEFER;
4848 deliver_msglog("Delivery deferred by system filter\n");
4849 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Delivery deferred by system filter");
4852 /* The filter can request that a message be frozen, but this does not
4853 take place if the message has been manually thawed. In that case, we must
4854 unset "delivered", which is forced by the "freeze" command to make -bF
4857 else if (rc == FF_FREEZE && !deliver_manual_thaw)
4859 deliver_freeze = TRUE;
4860 deliver_frozen_at = time(NULL);
4861 process_recipients = RECIP_DEFER;
4862 frozen_info = string_sprintf(" by the system filter%s%s",
4863 (filter_message == NULL)? US"" : US": ",
4864 (filter_message == NULL)? US"" : filter_message);
4867 /* The filter can request that a message be failed. The error message may be
4868 quite long - it is sent back to the sender in the bounce - but we don't want
4869 to fill up the log with repetitions of it. If it starts with << then the text
4870 between << and >> is written to the log, with the rest left for the bounce
4873 else if (rc == FF_FAIL)
4875 uschar *colon = US"";
4876 uschar *logmsg = US"";
4879 process_recipients = RECIP_FAIL_FILTER;
4881 if (filter_message != NULL)
4885 if (filter_message[0] == '<' && filter_message[1] == '<' &&
4886 (logend = Ustrstr(filter_message, ">>")) != NULL)
4888 logmsg = filter_message + 2;
4889 loglen = logend - logmsg;
4890 filter_message = logend + 2;
4891 if (filter_message[0] == 0) filter_message = NULL;
4895 logmsg = filter_message;
4896 loglen = Ustrlen(filter_message);
4900 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "cancelled by system filter%s%.*s", colon, loglen,
4904 /* Delivery can be restricted only to those recipients (if any) that the
4905 filter specified. */
4907 else if (rc == FF_DELIVERED)
4909 process_recipients = RECIP_IGNORE;
4910 if (addr_new == NULL)
4911 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "=> discarded (system filter)");
4913 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "original recipients ignored (system filter)");
4916 /* If any new addresses were created by the filter, fake up a "parent"
4917 for them. This is necessary for pipes, etc., which are expected to have
4918 parents, and it also gives some sensible logging for others. Allow
4919 pipes, files, and autoreplies, and run them as the filter uid if set,
4920 otherwise as the current uid. */
4922 if (addr_new != NULL)
4924 int uid = (system_filter_uid_set)? system_filter_uid : geteuid();
4925 int gid = (system_filter_gid_set)? system_filter_gid : getegid();
4927 /* The text "system-filter" is tested in transport_set_up_command() and in
4928 set_up_shell_command() in the pipe transport, to enable them to permit
4929 $recipients, so don't change it here without also changing it there. */
4931 address_item *p = addr_new;
4932 address_item *parent = deliver_make_addr(US"system-filter", FALSE);
4934 parent->domain = string_copylc(qualify_domain_recipient);
4935 parent->local_part = US"system-filter";
4937 /* As part of this loop, we arrange for addr_last to end up pointing
4938 at the final address. This is used if we go on to add addresses for the
4939 original recipients. */
4943 parent->child_count++;
4946 if (testflag(p, af_pfr))
4952 setflag(p, af_uid_set |
4958 /* Find the name of the system filter's appropriate pfr transport */
4960 if (p->address[0] == '|')
4963 tpname = system_filter_pipe_transport;
4964 address_pipe = p->address;
4966 else if (p->address[0] == '>')
4969 tpname = system_filter_reply_transport;
4973 if (p->address[Ustrlen(p->address)-1] == '/')
4975 type = US"directory";
4976 tpname = system_filter_directory_transport;
4981 tpname = system_filter_file_transport;
4983 address_file = p->address;
4986 /* Now find the actual transport, first expanding the name. We have
4987 set address_file or address_pipe above. */
4991 uschar *tmp = expand_string(tpname);
4992 address_file = address_pipe = NULL;
4994 p->message = string_sprintf("failed to expand \"%s\" as a "
4995 "system filter transport name", tpname);
5000 p->message = string_sprintf("system_filter_%s_transport is unset",
5006 transport_instance *tp;
5007 for (tp = transports; tp != NULL; tp = tp->next)
5009 if (Ustrcmp(tp->name, tpname) == 0)
5016 p->message = string_sprintf("failed to find \"%s\" transport "
5017 "for system filter delivery", tpname);
5020 /* If we couldn't set up a transport, defer the delivery, putting the
5021 error on the panic log as well as the main log. */
5023 if (p->transport == NULL)
5025 address_item *badp = p;
5027 if (addr_last == NULL) addr_new = p; else addr_last->next = p;
5028 badp->local_part = badp->address; /* Needed for log line */
5029 post_process_one(badp, DEFER, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5032 } /* End of pfr handling */
5034 /* Either a non-pfr delivery, or we found a transport */
5036 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_filter)
5037 debug_printf("system filter added %s\n", p->address);
5041 } /* Loop through all addr_new addresses */
5046 /* Scan the recipients list, and for every one that is not in the non-
5047 recipients tree, add an addr item to the chain of new addresses. If the pno
5048 value is non-negative, we must set the onetime parent from it. This which
5049 points to the relevant entry in the recipients list.
5051 This processing can be altered by the setting of the process_recipients
5052 variable, which is changed if recipients are to be ignored, failed, or
5053 deferred. This can happen as a result of system filter activity, or if the -Mg
5054 option is used to fail all of them.
5056 Duplicate addresses are handled later by a different tree structure; we can't
5057 just extend the non-recipients tree, because that will be re-written to the
5058 spool if the message is deferred, and in any case there are casing
5059 complications for local addresses. */
5061 if (process_recipients != RECIP_IGNORE)
5063 for (i = 0; i < recipients_count; i++)
5065 if (tree_search(tree_nonrecipients, recipients_list[i].address) == NULL)
5067 recipient_item *r = recipients_list + i;
5068 address_item *new = deliver_make_addr(r->address, FALSE);
5069 new->p.errors_address = r->errors_to;
5072 new->onetime_parent = recipients_list[r->pno].address;
5074 switch (process_recipients)
5076 /* RECIP_DEFER is set when a system filter freezes a message. */
5079 new->next = addr_defer;
5084 /* RECIP_FAIL_FILTER is set when a system filter has obeyed a "fail"
5087 case RECIP_FAIL_FILTER:
5089 (filter_message == NULL)? US"delivery cancelled" : filter_message;
5090 setflag(new, af_pass_message);
5091 goto RECIP_QUEUE_FAILED; /* below */
5094 /* RECIP_FAIL_TIMEOUT is set when a message is frozen, but is older
5095 than the value in timeout_frozen_after. Treat non-bounce messages
5096 similarly to -Mg; for bounce messages we just want to discard, so
5097 don't put the address on the failed list. The timeout has already
5100 case RECIP_FAIL_TIMEOUT:
5101 new->message = US"delivery cancelled; message timed out";
5102 goto RECIP_QUEUE_FAILED; /* below */
5105 /* RECIP_FAIL is set when -Mg has been used. */
5108 new->message = US"delivery cancelled by administrator";
5111 /* Common code for the failure cases above. If this is not a bounce
5112 message, put the address on the failed list so that it is used to
5113 create a bounce. Otherwise do nothing - this just discards the address.
5114 The incident has already been logged. */
5117 if (sender_address[0] != 0)
5119 new->next = addr_failed;
5125 /* RECIP_FAIL_LOOP is set when there are too many Received: headers
5126 in the message. Process each address as a routing failure; if this
5127 is a bounce message, it will get frozen. */
5129 case RECIP_FAIL_LOOP:
5130 new->message = US"Too many \"Received\" headers - suspected mail loop";
5131 post_process_one(new, FAIL, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5135 /* Value should be RECIP_ACCEPT; take this as the safe default. */
5138 if (addr_new == NULL) addr_new = new; else addr_last->next = new;
5148 address_item *p = addr_new;
5149 debug_printf("Delivery address list:\n");
5152 debug_printf(" %s %s\n", p->address, (p->onetime_parent == NULL)? US"" :
5158 /* Set up the buffers used for copying over the file when delivering. */
5160 deliver_in_buffer = store_malloc(DELIVER_IN_BUFFER_SIZE);
5161 deliver_out_buffer = store_malloc(DELIVER_OUT_BUFFER_SIZE);
5165 /* Until there are no more new addresses, handle each one as follows:
5167 . If this is a generated address (indicated by the presence of a parent
5168 pointer) then check to see whether it is a pipe, file, or autoreply, and
5169 if so, handle it directly here. The router that produced the address will
5170 have set the allow flags into the address, and also set the uid/gid required.
5171 Having the routers generate new addresses and then checking them here at
5172 the outer level is tidier than making each router do the checking, and
5173 means that routers don't need access to the failed address queue.
5175 . Break up the address into local part and domain, and make lowercased
5176 versions of these strings. We also make unquoted versions of the local part.
5178 . Handle the percent hack for those domains for which it is valid.
5180 . For child addresses, determine if any of the parents have the same address.
5181 If so, generate a different string for previous delivery checking. Without
5182 this code, if the address spqr generates spqr via a forward or alias file,
5183 delivery of the generated spqr stops further attempts at the top level spqr,
5184 which is not what is wanted - it may have generated other addresses.
5186 . Check on the retry database to see if routing was previously deferred, but
5187 only if in a queue run. Addresses that are to be routed are put on the
5188 addr_route chain. Addresses that are to be deferred are put on the
5189 addr_defer chain. We do all the checking first, so as not to keep the
5190 retry database open any longer than necessary.
5192 . Now we run the addresses through the routers. A router may put the address
5193 on either the addr_local or the addr_remote chain for local or remote
5194 delivery, respectively, or put it on the addr_failed chain if it is
5195 undeliveable, or it may generate child addresses and put them on the
5196 addr_new chain, or it may defer an address. All the chain anchors are
5197 passed as arguments so that the routers can be called for verification
5200 . If new addresses have been generated by the routers, da capo.
5203 header_rewritten = FALSE; /* No headers rewritten yet */
5204 while (addr_new != NULL) /* Loop until all addresses dealt with */
5206 address_item *addr, *parent;
5207 dbm_file = dbfn_open(US"retry", O_RDONLY, &dbblock, FALSE);
5209 /* Failure to open the retry database is treated the same as if it does
5210 not exist. In both cases, dbm_file is NULL. */
5212 if (dbm_file == NULL)
5214 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry|D_route|D_hints_lookup)
5215 debug_printf("no retry data available\n");
5218 /* Scan the current batch of new addresses, to handle pipes, files and
5219 autoreplies, and determine which others are ready for routing. */
5221 while (addr_new != NULL)
5226 dbdata_retry *domain_retry_record;
5227 dbdata_retry *address_retry_record;
5230 addr_new = addr->next;
5232 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry|D_route)
5234 debug_printf(">>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>\n");
5235 debug_printf("Considering: %s\n", addr->address);
5238 /* Handle generated address that is a pipe or a file or an autoreply. */
5240 if (testflag(addr, af_pfr))
5242 /* If an autoreply in a filter could not generate a syntactically valid
5243 address, give up forthwith. Set af_ignore_error so that we don't try to
5244 generate a bounce. */
5246 if (testflag(addr, af_bad_reply))
5248 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_BADADDRESS2;
5249 addr->local_part = addr->address;
5251 US"filter autoreply generated syntactically invalid recipient";
5252 setflag(addr, af_ignore_error);
5253 (void)post_process_one(addr, FAIL, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5254 continue; /* with the next new address */
5257 /* If two different users specify delivery to the same pipe or file or
5258 autoreply, there should be two different deliveries, so build a unique
5259 string that incorporates the original address, and use this for
5260 duplicate testing and recording delivery, and also for retrying. */
5263 string_sprintf("%s:%s", addr->address, addr->parent->unique +
5264 (testflag(addr->parent, af_homonym)? 3:0));
5266 addr->address_retry_key = addr->domain_retry_key =
5267 string_sprintf("T:%s", addr->unique);
5269 /* If a filter file specifies two deliveries to the same pipe or file,
5270 we want to de-duplicate, but this is probably not wanted for two mail
5271 commands to the same address, where probably both should be delivered.
5272 So, we have to invent a different unique string in that case. Just
5273 keep piling '>' characters on the front. */
5275 if (addr->address[0] == '>')
5277 while (tree_search(tree_duplicates, addr->unique) != NULL)
5278 addr->unique = string_sprintf(">%s", addr->unique);
5281 else if ((tnode = tree_search(tree_duplicates, addr->unique)) != NULL)
5283 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route)
5284 debug_printf("%s is a duplicate address: discarded\n", addr->address);
5285 addr->dupof = tnode->data.ptr;
5286 addr->next = addr_duplicate;
5287 addr_duplicate = addr;
5291 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route) debug_printf("unique = %s\n", addr->unique);
5293 /* Check for previous delivery */
5295 if (tree_search(tree_nonrecipients, addr->unique) != NULL)
5297 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route)
5298 debug_printf("%s was previously delivered: discarded\n", addr->address);
5299 child_done(addr, tod_stamp(tod_log));
5303 /* Save for checking future duplicates */
5305 tree_add_duplicate(addr->unique, addr);
5307 /* Set local part and domain */
5309 addr->local_part = addr->address;
5310 addr->domain = addr->parent->domain;
5312 /* Ensure that the delivery is permitted. */
5314 if (testflag(addr, af_file))
5316 if (!testflag(addr, af_allow_file))
5318 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_FORBIDFILE;
5319 addr->message = US"delivery to file forbidden";
5320 (void)post_process_one(addr, FAIL, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5321 continue; /* with the next new address */
5324 else if (addr->address[0] == '|')
5326 if (!testflag(addr, af_allow_pipe))
5328 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_FORBIDPIPE;
5329 addr->message = US"delivery to pipe forbidden";
5330 (void)post_process_one(addr, FAIL, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5331 continue; /* with the next new address */
5334 else if (!testflag(addr, af_allow_reply))
5336 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_FORBIDREPLY;
5337 addr->message = US"autoreply forbidden";
5338 (void)post_process_one(addr, FAIL, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5339 continue; /* with the next new address */
5342 /* If the errno field is already set to BADTRANSPORT, it indicates
5343 failure to expand a transport string, or find the associated transport,
5344 or an unset transport when one is required. Leave this test till now so
5345 that the forbid errors are given in preference. */
5347 if (addr->basic_errno == ERRNO_BADTRANSPORT)
5349 (void)post_process_one(addr, DEFER, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5353 /* Treat /dev/null as a special case and abandon the delivery. This
5354 avoids having to specify a uid on the transport just for this case.
5355 Arrange for the transport name to be logged as "**bypassed**". */
5357 if (Ustrcmp(addr->address, "/dev/null") == 0)
5359 uschar *save = addr->transport->name;
5360 addr->transport->name = US"**bypassed**";
5361 (void)post_process_one(addr, OK, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_TRANSPORT, '=');
5362 addr->transport->name = save;
5363 continue; /* with the next new address */
5366 /* Pipe, file, or autoreply delivery is to go ahead as a normal local
5369 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route)
5370 debug_printf("queued for %s transport\n", addr->transport->name);
5371 addr->next = addr_local;
5373 continue; /* with the next new address */
5376 /* Handle normal addresses. First, split up into local part and domain,
5377 handling the %-hack if necessary. There is the possibility of a defer from
5378 a lookup in percent_hack_domains. */
5380 if ((rc = deliver_split_address(addr)) == DEFER)
5382 addr->message = US"cannot check percent_hack_domains";
5383 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_LISTDEFER;
5384 (void)post_process_one(addr, DEFER, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_NONE, 0);
5388 /* Check to see if the domain is held. If so, proceed only if the
5389 delivery was forced by hand. */
5391 deliver_domain = addr->domain; /* set $domain */
5392 if (!forced && hold_domains != NULL &&
5393 (rc = match_isinlist(addr->domain, &hold_domains, 0,
5394 &domainlist_anchor, addr->domain_cache, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE,
5399 addr->message = US"hold_domains lookup deferred";
5400 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_LISTDEFER;
5404 addr->message = US"domain is held";
5405 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_HELD;
5407 (void)post_process_one(addr, DEFER, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_NONE, 0);
5411 /* Now we can check for duplicates and previously delivered addresses. In
5412 order to do this, we have to generate a "unique" value for each address,
5413 because there may be identical actual addresses in a line of descendents.
5414 The "unique" field is initialized to the same value as the "address" field,
5415 but gets changed here to cope with identically-named descendents. */
5417 for (parent = addr->parent; parent != NULL; parent = parent->parent)
5418 if (strcmpic(addr->address, parent->address) == 0) break;
5420 /* If there's an ancestor with the same name, set the homonym flag. This
5421 influences how deliveries are recorded. Then add a prefix on the front of
5422 the unique address. We use \n\ where n starts at 0 and increases each time.
5423 It is unlikely to pass 9, but if it does, it may look odd but will still
5424 work. This means that siblings or cousins with the same names are treated
5425 as duplicates, which is what we want. */
5429 setflag(addr, af_homonym);
5430 if (parent->unique[0] != '\\')
5431 addr->unique = string_sprintf("\\0\\%s", addr->address);
5433 addr->unique = string_sprintf("\\%c\\%s", parent->unique[1] + 1,
5437 /* Ensure that the domain in the unique field is lower cased, because
5438 domains are always handled caselessly. */
5440 p = Ustrrchr(addr->unique, '@');
5441 while (*p != 0) { *p = tolower(*p); p++; }
5443 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route) debug_printf("unique = %s\n", addr->unique);
5445 if (tree_search(tree_nonrecipients, addr->unique) != NULL)
5447 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route)
5448 debug_printf("%s was previously delivered: discarded\n", addr->unique);
5449 child_done(addr, tod_stamp(tod_log));
5454 /* !!!OLD-DE-DUP!!! We used to test for duplicates at this point, in order
5455 to save effort on routing duplicate addresses. However, facilities have
5456 been added to Exim so that now two identical addresses that are children of
5457 other addresses may be routed differently as a result of their previous
5458 routing history. For example, different redirect routers may have given
5459 them different redirect_router values, but there are other cases too.
5460 Therefore, tests for duplicates now take place when routing is complete.
5461 This is the old code, kept for a while for the record, and in case this
5462 radical change has to be backed out for some reason. */
5465 /* If it's a duplicate, remember what it's a duplicate of */
5467 if ((tnode = tree_search(tree_duplicates, addr->unique)) != NULL)
5469 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route)
5470 debug_printf("%s is a duplicate address: discarded\n", addr->unique);
5471 addr->dupof = tnode->data.ptr;
5472 addr->next = addr_duplicate;
5473 addr_duplicate = addr;
5477 /* Record this address, so subsequent duplicates get picked up. */
5479 tree_add_duplicate(addr->unique, addr);
5484 /* Get the routing retry status, saving the two retry keys (with and
5485 without the local part) for subsequent use. Ignore retry records that
5488 addr->domain_retry_key = string_sprintf("R:%s", addr->domain);
5489 addr->address_retry_key = string_sprintf("R:%s@%s", addr->local_part,
5492 if (dbm_file == NULL)
5493 domain_retry_record = address_retry_record = NULL;
5496 domain_retry_record = dbfn_read(dbm_file, addr->domain_retry_key);
5497 if (domain_retry_record != NULL &&
5498 now - domain_retry_record->time_stamp > retry_data_expire)
5499 domain_retry_record = NULL;
5501 address_retry_record = dbfn_read(dbm_file, addr->address_retry_key);
5502 if (address_retry_record != NULL &&
5503 now - address_retry_record->time_stamp > retry_data_expire)
5504 address_retry_record = NULL;
5507 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry)
5509 if (domain_retry_record == NULL)
5510 debug_printf("no domain retry record\n");
5511 if (address_retry_record == NULL)
5512 debug_printf("no address retry record\n");
5515 /* If we are sending a message down an existing SMTP connection, we must
5516 assume that the message which created the connection managed to route
5517 an address to that connection. We do not want to run the risk of taking
5518 a long time over routing here, because if we do, the server at the other
5519 end of the connection may time it out. This is especially true for messages
5520 with lots of addresses. For this kind of delivery, queue_running is not
5521 set, so we would normally route all addresses. We take a pragmatic approach
5522 and defer routing any addresses that have any kind of domain retry record.
5523 That is, we don't even look at their retry times. It doesn't matter if this
5524 doesn't work occasionally. This is all just an optimization, after all.
5526 The reason for not doing the same for address retries is that they normally
5527 arise from 4xx responses, not DNS timeouts. */
5529 if (continue_hostname != NULL && domain_retry_record != NULL)
5531 addr->message = US"reusing SMTP connection skips previous routing defer";
5532 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_RRETRY;
5533 (void)post_process_one(addr, DEFER, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5536 /* If queue_running, defer routing unless no retry data or we've
5537 passed the next retry time, or this message is forced. However,
5538 if the retry time has expired, allow the routing attempt.
5539 If it fails again, the address will be failed. This ensures that
5540 each address is routed at least once, even after long-term routing
5543 If there is an address retry, check that too; just wait for the next
5544 retry time. This helps with the case when the temporary error on the
5545 address was really message-specific rather than address specific, since
5546 it allows other messages through. */
5548 else if (!deliver_force && queue_running &&
5549 ((domain_retry_record != NULL &&
5550 now < domain_retry_record->next_try &&
5551 !domain_retry_record->expired)
5553 (address_retry_record != NULL &&
5554 now < address_retry_record->next_try))
5557 addr->message = US"retry time not reached";
5558 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_RRETRY;
5559 (void)post_process_one(addr, DEFER, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5562 /* The domain is OK for routing. Remember if retry data exists so it
5563 can be cleaned up after a successful delivery. */
5567 if (domain_retry_record != NULL || address_retry_record != NULL)
5568 setflag(addr, af_dr_retry_exists);
5569 addr->next = addr_route;
5571 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route)
5572 debug_printf("%s: queued for routing\n", addr->address);
5576 /* The database is closed while routing is actually happening. Requests to
5577 update it are put on a chain and all processed together at the end. */
5579 if (dbm_file != NULL) dbfn_close(dbm_file);
5581 /* If queue_domains is set, we don't even want to try routing addresses in
5582 those domains. During queue runs, queue_domains is forced to be unset.
5583 Optimize by skipping this pass through the addresses if nothing is set. */
5585 if (!deliver_force && queue_domains != NULL)
5587 address_item *okaddr = NULL;
5588 while (addr_route != NULL)
5590 address_item *addr = addr_route;
5591 addr_route = addr->next;
5593 deliver_domain = addr->domain; /* set $domain */
5594 if ((rc = match_isinlist(addr->domain, &queue_domains, 0,
5595 &domainlist_anchor, addr->domain_cache, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL))
5600 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_LISTDEFER;
5601 addr->message = US"queue_domains lookup deferred";
5602 (void)post_process_one(addr, DEFER, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5606 addr->next = okaddr;
5612 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_QUEUE_DOMAIN;
5613 addr->message = US"domain is in queue_domains";
5614 (void)post_process_one(addr, DEFER, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5618 addr_route = okaddr;
5621 /* Now route those addresses that are not deferred. */
5623 while (addr_route != NULL)
5626 address_item *addr = addr_route;
5627 uschar *old_domain = addr->domain;
5628 uschar *old_unique = addr->unique;
5629 addr_route = addr->next;
5632 /* Just in case some router parameter refers to it. */
5634 return_path = (addr->p.errors_address != NULL)?
5635 addr->p.errors_address : sender_address;
5637 /* If a router defers an address, add a retry item. Whether or not to
5638 use the local part in the key is a property of the router. */
5640 if ((rc = route_address(addr, &addr_local, &addr_remote, &addr_new,
5641 &addr_succeed, v_none)) == DEFER)
5642 retry_add_item(addr, (addr->router->retry_use_local_part)?
5643 string_sprintf("R:%s@%s", addr->local_part, addr->domain) :
5644 string_sprintf("R:%s", addr->domain), 0);
5646 /* Otherwise, if there is an existing retry record in the database, add
5647 retry items to delete both forms. Since the domain might have been
5648 rewritten (expanded to fully qualified) as a result of routing, ensure
5649 that the rewritten form is also deleted. */
5651 else if (testflag(addr, af_dr_retry_exists))
5653 retry_add_item(addr, addr->address_retry_key, rf_delete);
5654 retry_add_item(addr, addr->domain_retry_key, rf_delete);
5655 if (Ustrcmp(addr->domain, old_domain) != 0)
5656 retry_add_item(addr, string_sprintf("R:%s", old_domain), rf_delete);
5659 /* DISCARD is given for :blackhole: and "seen finish". The event has been
5660 logged, but we need to ensure the address (and maybe parents) is marked
5665 address_done(addr, tod_stamp(tod_log));
5666 continue; /* route next address */
5669 /* The address is finished with (failed or deferred). */
5673 (void)post_process_one(addr, rc, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_ROUTER, 0);
5674 continue; /* route next address */
5677 /* The address has been routed. If the router changed the domain, it will
5678 also have changed the unique address. We have to test whether this address
5679 has already been delivered, because it's the unique address that finally
5682 if (addr->unique != old_unique &&
5683 tree_search(tree_nonrecipients, addr->unique) != 0)
5685 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route) debug_printf("%s was previously delivered: "
5686 "discarded\n", addr->address);
5687 if (addr_remote == addr) addr_remote = addr->next;
5688 else if (addr_local == addr) addr_local = addr->next;
5691 /* If the router has same_domain_copy_routing set, we are permitted to copy
5692 the routing for any other addresses with the same domain. This is an
5693 optimisation to save repeated DNS lookups for "standard" remote domain
5694 routing. The option is settable only on routers that generate host lists.
5695 We play it very safe, and do the optimization only if the address is routed
5696 to a remote transport, there are no header changes, and the domain was not
5697 modified by the router. */
5699 if (addr_remote == addr &&
5700 addr->router->same_domain_copy_routing &&
5701 addr->p.extra_headers == NULL &&
5702 addr->p.remove_headers == NULL &&
5703 old_domain == addr->domain)
5705 address_item **chain = &addr_route;
5706 while (*chain != NULL)
5708 address_item *addr2 = *chain;
5709 if (Ustrcmp(addr2->domain, addr->domain) != 0)
5711 chain = &(addr2->next);
5715 /* Found a suitable address; take it off the routing list and add it to
5716 the remote delivery list. */
5718 *chain = addr2->next;
5719 addr2->next = addr_remote;
5720 addr_remote = addr2;
5722 /* Copy the routing data */
5724 addr2->domain = addr->domain;
5725 addr2->router = addr->router;
5726 addr2->transport = addr->transport;
5727 addr2->host_list = addr->host_list;
5728 addr2->fallback_hosts = addr->fallback_hosts;
5729 addr2->p.errors_address = addr->p.errors_address;
5730 copyflag(addr2, addr, af_hide_child | af_local_host_removed);
5732 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_route)
5734 debug_printf(">>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>\n"
5736 "Routing for %s copied from %s\n",
5737 addr2->address, addr2->address, addr->address);
5741 } /* Continue with routing the next address. */
5742 } /* Loop to process any child addresses that the routers created, and
5743 any rerouted addresses that got put back on the new chain. */
5746 /* Debugging: show the results of the routing */
5748 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_retry|D_route)
5750 address_item *p = addr_local;
5751 debug_printf(">>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>\n");
5752 debug_printf("After routing:\n Local deliveries:\n");
5755 debug_printf(" %s\n", p->address);
5760 debug_printf(" Remote deliveries:\n");
5763 debug_printf(" %s\n", p->address);
5768 debug_printf(" Failed addresses:\n");
5771 debug_printf(" %s\n", p->address);
5776 debug_printf(" Deferred addresses:\n");
5779 debug_printf(" %s\n", p->address);
5784 /* Free any resources that were cached during routing. */
5789 /* These two variables are set only during routing, after check_local_user.
5790 Ensure they are not set in transports. */
5792 local_user_gid = (gid_t)(-1);
5793 local_user_uid = (uid_t)(-1);
5796 /* !!!OLD-DE-DUP!!! The next two statement were introduced when checking for
5797 duplicates was moved from within routing to afterwards. If that change has to
5798 be backed out, they should be removed. */
5800 /* Check for any duplicate addresses. This check is delayed until after
5801 routing, because the flexibility of the routing configuration means that
5802 identical addresses with different parentage may end up being redirected to
5803 different addresses. Checking for duplicates too early (as we previously used
5804 to) makes this kind of thing not work. */
5806 do_duplicate_check(&addr_local);
5807 do_duplicate_check(&addr_remote);
5810 /* When acting as an MUA wrapper, we proceed only if all addresses route to a
5811 remote transport. The check that they all end up in one transaction happens in
5812 the do_remote_deliveries() function. */
5814 if (mua_wrapper && (addr_local != NULL || addr_failed != NULL ||
5815 addr_defer != NULL))
5818 uschar *which, *colon, *msg;
5820 if (addr_local != NULL)
5825 else if (addr_defer != NULL)
5828 which = US"deferred";
5836 while (addr->parent != NULL) addr = addr->parent;
5838 if (addr->message != NULL)
5841 msg = addr->message;
5843 else colon = msg = US"";
5845 /* We don't need to log here for a forced failure as it will already
5846 have been logged. Defer will also have been logged, but as a defer, so we do
5847 need to do the failure logging. */
5849 if (addr != addr_failed)
5850 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "** %s routing yielded a %s delivery",
5851 addr->address, which);
5853 /* Always write an error to the caller */
5855 fprintf(stderr, "routing %s yielded a %s delivery%s%s\n", addr->address,
5858 final_yield = DELIVER_MUA_FAILED;
5859 addr_failed = addr_defer = NULL; /* So that we remove the message */
5860 goto DELIVERY_TIDYUP;
5864 /* If this is a run to continue deliveries to an external channel that is
5865 already set up, defer any local deliveries. */
5867 if (continue_transport != NULL)
5869 if (addr_defer == NULL) addr_defer = addr_local; else
5871 address_item *addr = addr_defer;
5872 while (addr->next != NULL) addr = addr->next;
5873 addr->next = addr_local;
5879 /* Because address rewriting can happen in the routers, we should not really do
5880 ANY deliveries until all addresses have been routed, so that all recipients of
5881 the message get the same headers. However, this is in practice not always
5882 possible, since sometimes remote addresses give DNS timeouts for days on end.
5883 The pragmatic approach is to deliver what we can now, saving any rewritten
5884 headers so that at least the next lot of recipients benefit from the rewriting
5885 that has already been done.
5887 If any headers have been rewritten during routing, update the spool file to
5888 remember them for all subsequent deliveries. This can be delayed till later if
5889 there is only address to be delivered - if it succeeds the spool write need not
5892 if (header_rewritten &&
5893 ((addr_local != NULL &&
5894 (addr_local->next != NULL || addr_remote != NULL)) ||
5895 (addr_remote != NULL && addr_remote->next != NULL)))
5897 /* Panic-dies on error */
5898 (void)spool_write_header(message_id, SW_DELIVERING, NULL);
5899 header_rewritten = FALSE;
5903 /* If there are any deliveries to be done, open the journal file. This is used
5904 to record successful deliveries as soon as possible after each delivery is
5905 known to be complete. A file opened with O_APPEND is used so that several
5906 processes can run simultaneously.
5908 The journal is just insurance against crashes. When the spool file is
5909 ultimately updated at the end of processing, the journal is deleted. If a
5910 journal is found to exist at the start of delivery, the addresses listed
5911 therein are added to the non-recipients. */
5913 if (addr_local != NULL || addr_remote != NULL)
5915 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/input/%s/%s-J", spool_directory, message_subdir, id);
5916 journal_fd = Uopen(spoolname, O_WRONLY|O_APPEND|O_CREAT, SPOOL_MODE);
5920 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Couldn't open journal file %s: %s",
5921 spoolname, strerror(errno));
5922 return DELIVER_NOT_ATTEMPTED;
5925 /* Set the close-on-exec flag, make the file owned by Exim, and ensure
5926 that the mode is correct - the group setting doesn't always seem to get
5927 set automatically. */
5929 (void)fcntl(journal_fd, F_SETFD, fcntl(journal_fd, F_GETFD) | FD_CLOEXEC);
5930 (void)fchown(journal_fd, exim_uid, exim_gid);
5931 (void)fchmod(journal_fd, SPOOL_MODE);
5935 /* Now we can get down to the business of actually doing deliveries. Local
5936 deliveries are done first, then remote ones. If ever the problems of how to
5937 handle fallback transports are figured out, this section can be put into a loop
5938 for handling fallbacks, though the uid switching will have to be revised. */
5940 /* Precompile a regex that is used to recognize a parameter in response
5941 to an LHLO command, if is isn't already compiled. This may be used on both
5942 local and remote LMTP deliveries. */
5944 if (regex_IGNOREQUOTA == NULL) regex_IGNOREQUOTA =
5945 regex_must_compile(US"\\n250[\\s\\-]IGNOREQUOTA(\\s|\\n|$)", FALSE, TRUE);
5947 /* Handle local deliveries */
5949 if (addr_local != NULL)
5951 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_transport)
5952 debug_printf(">>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Local deliveries >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>\n");
5953 do_local_deliveries();
5954 disable_logging = FALSE;
5957 /* If queue_run_local is set, we do not want to attempt any remote deliveries,
5958 so just queue them all. */
5960 if (queue_run_local)
5962 while (addr_remote != NULL)
5964 address_item *addr = addr_remote;
5965 addr_remote = addr->next;
5967 addr->basic_errno = ERRNO_LOCAL_ONLY;
5968 addr->message = US"remote deliveries suppressed";
5969 (void)post_process_one(addr, DEFER, LOG_MAIN, DTYPE_TRANSPORT, 0);
5973 /* Handle remote deliveries */
5975 if (addr_remote != NULL)
5977 DEBUG(D_deliver|D_transport)
5978 debug_printf(">>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Remote deliveries >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>\n");
5980 /* Precompile some regex that are used to recognize parameters in response
5981 to an EHLO command, if they aren't already compiled. */
5983 if (regex_PIPELINING == NULL) regex_PIPELINING =
5984 regex_must_compile(US"\\n250[\\s\\-]PIPELINING(\\s|\\n|$)", FALSE, TRUE);
5986 if (regex_SIZE == NULL) regex_SIZE =
5987 regex_must_compile(US"\\n250[\\s\\-]SIZE(\\s|\\n|$)", FALSE, TRUE);
5989 if (regex_AUTH == NULL) regex_AUTH =
5990 regex_must_compile(US"\\n250[\\s\\-]AUTH\\s+([\\-\\w\\s]+)(?:\\n|$)",
5994 if (regex_STARTTLS == NULL) regex_STARTTLS =
5995 regex_must_compile(US"\\n250[\\s\\-]STARTTLS(\\s|\\n|$)", FALSE, TRUE);
5998 /* Now sort the addresses if required, and do the deliveries. The yield of
5999 do_remote_deliveries is FALSE when mua_wrapper is set and all addresses
6000 cannot be delivered in one transaction. */
6002 if (remote_sort_domains != NULL) sort_remote_deliveries();
6003 if (!do_remote_deliveries(FALSE))
6005 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "** mua_wrapper is set but recipients cannot all "
6006 "be delivered in one transaction");
6007 fprintf(stderr, "delivery to smarthost failed (configuration problem)\n");
6009 final_yield = DELIVER_MUA_FAILED;
6010 addr_failed = addr_defer = NULL; /* So that we remove the message */
6011 goto DELIVERY_TIDYUP;
6014 /* See if any of the addresses that failed got put on the queue for delivery
6015 to their fallback hosts. We do it this way because often the same fallback
6016 host is used for many domains, so all can be sent in a single transaction
6017 (if appropriately configured). */
6019 if (addr_fallback != NULL && !mua_wrapper)
6021 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("Delivering to fallback hosts\n");
6022 addr_remote = addr_fallback;
6023 addr_fallback = NULL;
6024 if (remote_sort_domains != NULL) sort_remote_deliveries();
6025 do_remote_deliveries(TRUE);
6027 disable_logging = FALSE;
6031 /* All deliveries are now complete. Ignore SIGTERM during this tidying up
6032 phase, to minimize cases of half-done things. */
6035 debug_printf(">>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> deliveries are done >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>\n");
6037 /* Root privilege is no longer needed */
6039 exim_setugid(exim_uid, exim_gid, FALSE, US"post-delivery tidying");
6041 set_process_info("tidying up after delivering %s", message_id);
6042 signal(SIGTERM, SIG_IGN);
6044 /* When we are acting as an MUA wrapper, the smtp transport will either have
6045 succeeded for all addresses, or failed them all in normal cases. However, there
6046 are some setup situations (e.g. when a named port does not exist) that cause an
6047 immediate exit with deferral of all addresses. Convert those into failures. We
6048 do not ever want to retry, nor do we want to send a bounce message. */
6052 if (addr_defer != NULL)
6054 address_item *addr, *nextaddr;
6055 for (addr = addr_defer; addr != NULL; addr = nextaddr)
6057 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "** %s mua_wrapper forced failure for deferred "
6058 "delivery", addr->address);
6059 nextaddr = addr->next;
6060 addr->next = addr_failed;
6066 /* Now all should either have succeeded or failed. */
6068 if (addr_failed == NULL) final_yield = DELIVER_MUA_SUCCEEDED; else
6070 uschar *s = (addr_failed->user_message != NULL)?
6071 addr_failed->user_message : addr_failed->message;
6073 fprintf(stderr, "Delivery failed: ");
6074 if (addr_failed->basic_errno > 0)
6076 fprintf(stderr, "%s", strerror(addr_failed->basic_errno));
6077 if (s != NULL) fprintf(stderr, ": ");
6081 if (addr_failed->basic_errno <= 0) fprintf(stderr, "unknown error");
6083 else fprintf(stderr, "%s", CS s);
6084 fprintf(stderr, "\n");
6086 final_yield = DELIVER_MUA_FAILED;
6091 /* In a normal configuration, we now update the retry database. This is done in
6092 one fell swoop at the end in order not to keep opening and closing (and
6093 locking) the database. The code for handling retries is hived off into a
6094 separate module for convenience. We pass it the addresses of the various
6095 chains, because deferred addresses can get moved onto the failed chain if the
6096 retry cutoff time has expired for all alternative destinations. Bypass the
6097 updating of the database if the -N flag is set, which is a debugging thing that
6098 prevents actual delivery. */
6100 else if (!dont_deliver) retry_update(&addr_defer, &addr_failed, &addr_succeed);
6102 /* If any addresses failed, we must send a message to somebody, unless
6103 af_ignore_error is set, in which case no action is taken. It is possible for
6104 several messages to get sent if there are addresses with different
6107 while (addr_failed != NULL)
6111 uschar *logtod = tod_stamp(tod_log);
6113 address_item *handled_addr = NULL;
6114 address_item **paddr;
6115 address_item *msgchain = NULL;
6116 address_item **pmsgchain = &msgchain;
6118 /* There are weird cases when logging is disabled in the transport. However,
6119 there may not be a transport (address failed by a router). */
6121 disable_logging = FALSE;
6122 if (addr_failed->transport != NULL)
6123 disable_logging = addr_failed->transport->disable_logging;
6126 debug_printf("processing failed address %s\n", addr_failed->address);
6128 /* There are only two ways an address in a bounce message can get here:
6130 (1) When delivery was initially deferred, but has now timed out (in the call
6131 to retry_update() above). We can detect this by testing for
6132 af_retry_timedout. If the address does not have its own errors address,
6133 we arrange to ignore the error.
6135 (2) If delivery failures for bounce messages are being ignored. We can detect
6136 this by testing for af_ignore_error. This will also be set if a bounce
6137 message has been autothawed and the ignore_bounce_errors_after time has
6138 passed. It might also be set if a router was explicitly configured to
6139 ignore errors (errors_to = "").
6141 If neither of these cases obtains, something has gone wrong. Log the
6142 incident, but then ignore the error. */
6144 if (sender_address[0] == 0 && addr_failed->p.errors_address == NULL)
6146 if (!testflag(addr_failed, af_retry_timedout) &&
6147 !testflag(addr_failed, af_ignore_error))
6149 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "internal error: bounce message "
6150 "failure is neither frozen nor ignored (it's been ignored)");
6152 setflag(addr_failed, af_ignore_error);
6155 /* If the first address on the list has af_ignore_error set, just remove
6156 it from the list, throw away any saved message file, log it, and
6157 mark the recipient done. */
6159 if (testflag(addr_failed, af_ignore_error))
6162 addr_failed = addr->next;
6163 if (addr->return_filename != NULL) Uunlink(addr->return_filename);
6165 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s%s%s%s: error ignored",
6167 (addr->parent == NULL)? US"" : US" <",
6168 (addr->parent == NULL)? US"" : addr->parent->address,
6169 (addr->parent == NULL)? US"" : US">");
6171 address_done(addr, logtod);
6172 child_done(addr, logtod);
6173 /* Panic-dies on error */
6174 (void)spool_write_header(message_id, SW_DELIVERING, NULL);
6177 /* Otherwise, handle the sending of a message. Find the error address for
6178 the first address, then send a message that includes all failed addresses
6179 that have the same error address. Note the bounce_recipient is a global so
6180 that it can be accesssed by $bounce_recipient while creating a customized
6185 bounce_recipient = (addr_failed->p.errors_address == NULL)?
6186 sender_address : addr_failed->p.errors_address;
6188 /* Make a subprocess to send a message */
6190 pid = child_open_exim(&fd);
6192 /* Creation of child failed */
6195 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "Process %d (parent %d) failed to "
6196 "create child process to send failure message: %s", getpid(),
6197 getppid(), strerror(errno));
6199 /* Creation of child succeeded */
6206 uschar *bcc, *emf_text;
6207 FILE *f = fdopen(fd, "wb");
6209 BOOL to_sender = strcmpic(sender_address, bounce_recipient) == 0;
6210 int max = (bounce_return_size_limit/DELIVER_IN_BUFFER_SIZE + 1) *
6211 DELIVER_IN_BUFFER_SIZE;
6214 debug_printf("sending error message to: %s\n", bounce_recipient);
6216 /* Scan the addresses for all that have the same errors address, removing
6217 them from the addr_failed chain, and putting them on msgchain. */
6219 paddr = &addr_failed;
6220 for (addr = addr_failed; addr != NULL; addr = *paddr)
6222 if (Ustrcmp(bounce_recipient, (addr->p.errors_address == NULL)?
6223 sender_address : addr->p.errors_address) != 0)
6225 paddr = &(addr->next); /* Not the same; skip */
6227 else /* The same - dechain */
6229 *paddr = addr->next;
6232 pmsgchain = &(addr->next);
6236 /* Include X-Failed-Recipients: for automatic interpretation, but do
6237 not let any one header line get too long. We do this by starting a
6238 new header every 50 recipients. Omit any addresses for which the
6239 "hide_child" flag is set. */
6241 for (addr = msgchain; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
6243 if (testflag(addr, af_hide_child)) continue;
6250 (rcount++ == 0)? "X-Failed-Recipients: " : ",\n ",
6251 (testflag(addr, af_pfr) && addr->parent != NULL)?
6252 string_printing(addr->parent->address) :
6253 string_printing(addr->address));
6255 if (rcount > 0) fprintf(f, "\n");
6257 /* Output the standard headers */
6259 if (errors_reply_to != NULL)
6260 fprintf(f, "Reply-To: %s\n", errors_reply_to);
6261 fprintf(f, "Auto-Submitted: auto-replied\n");
6262 fprintf(f, "From: Mail Delivery System <Mailer-Daemon@%s>\n",
6263 qualify_domain_sender);
6264 fprintf(f, "To: %s\n", bounce_recipient);
6266 /* Open a template file if one is provided. Log failure to open, but
6267 carry on - default texts will be used. */
6269 if (bounce_message_file != NULL)
6271 emf = Ufopen(bounce_message_file, "rb");
6273 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Failed to open %s for error "
6274 "message texts: %s", bounce_message_file, strerror(errno));
6277 /* Quietly copy to configured additional addresses if required. */
6279 bcc = moan_check_errorcopy(bounce_recipient);
6280 if (bcc != NULL) fprintf(f, "Bcc: %s\n", bcc);
6282 /* The texts for the message can be read from a template file; if there
6283 isn't one, or if it is too short, built-in texts are used. The first
6284 emf text is a Subject: and any other headers. */
6286 emf_text = next_emf(emf, US"header");
6287 if (emf_text != NULL) fprintf(f, "%s\n", emf_text); else
6289 fprintf(f, "Subject: Mail delivery failed%s\n\n",
6290 to_sender? ": returning message to sender" : "");
6293 emf_text = next_emf(emf, US"intro");
6294 if (emf_text != NULL) fprintf(f, "%s", CS emf_text); else
6297 /* This message has been reworded several times. It seems to be confusing to
6298 somebody, however it is worded. I have retreated to the original, simple
6300 "This message was created automatically by mail delivery software.\n");
6301 if (bounce_message_text != NULL) fprintf(f, "%s", CS bounce_message_text);
6305 "\nA message that you sent could not be delivered to one or more of its\n"
6306 "recipients. This is a permanent error. The following address(es) failed:\n");
6311 "\nA message sent by\n\n <%s>\n\n"
6312 "could not be delivered to one or more of its recipients. The following\n"
6313 "address(es) failed:\n", sender_address);
6318 /* Process the addresses, leaving them on the msgchain if they have a
6319 file name for a return message. (There has already been a check in
6320 post_process_one() for the existence of data in the message file.) A TRUE
6321 return from print_address_information() means that the address is not
6325 for (addr = msgchain; addr != NULL; addr = *paddr)
6327 if (print_address_information(addr, f, US" ", US"\n ", US""))
6328 print_address_error(addr, f, US"");
6330 /* End the final line for the address */
6334 /* Leave on msgchain if there's a return file. */
6336 if (addr->return_file >= 0)
6338 paddr = &(addr->next);
6342 /* Else save so that we can tick off the recipient when the
6347 *paddr = addr->next;
6348 addr->next = handled_addr;
6349 handled_addr = addr;
6355 /* Get the next text, whether we need it or not, so as to be
6356 positioned for the one after. */
6358 emf_text = next_emf(emf, US"generated text");
6360 /* If there were any file messages passed by the local transports,
6361 include them in the message. Then put the address on the handled chain.
6362 In the case of a batch of addresses that were all sent to the same
6363 transport, the return_file field in all of them will contain the same
6364 fd, and the return_filename field in the *last* one will be set (to the
6365 name of the file). */
6367 if (msgchain != NULL)
6369 address_item *nextaddr;
6371 if (emf_text != NULL) fprintf(f, "%s", CS emf_text); else
6373 "The following text was generated during the delivery "
6374 "attempt%s:\n", (filecount > 1)? "s" : "");
6376 for (addr = msgchain; addr != NULL; addr = nextaddr)
6379 address_item *topaddr = addr;
6381 /* List all the addresses that relate to this file */
6384 while(addr != NULL) /* Insurance */
6386 print_address_information(addr, f, US"------ ", US"\n ",
6388 if (addr->return_filename != NULL) break;
6393 /* Now copy the file */
6395 fm = Ufopen(addr->return_filename, "rb");
6398 fprintf(f, " +++ Exim error... failed to open text file: %s\n",
6402 while ((ch = fgetc(fm)) != EOF) fputc(ch, f);
6405 Uunlink(addr->return_filename);
6407 /* Can now add to handled chain, first fishing off the next
6408 address on the msgchain. */
6410 nextaddr = addr->next;
6411 addr->next = handled_addr;
6412 handled_addr = topaddr;
6417 /* Now copy the message, trying to give an intelligible comment if
6418 it is too long for it all to be copied. The limit isn't strictly
6419 applied because of the buffering. There is, however, an option
6420 to suppress copying altogether. */
6422 emf_text = next_emf(emf, US"copy");
6424 if (bounce_return_message)
6426 int topt = topt_add_return_path;
6427 if (!bounce_return_body) topt |= topt_no_body;
6429 if (emf_text != NULL) fprintf(f, "%s", CS emf_text); else
6431 if (bounce_return_body) fprintf(f,
6432 "------ This is a copy of the message, including all the headers. ------\n");
6434 "------ This is a copy of the message's headers. ------\n");
6437 /* While reading the "truncated" message, set return_size_limit to
6438 the actual max testing value, rounded. We need to read the message
6439 whether we are going to use it or not. */
6442 int temp = bounce_return_size_limit;
6443 bounce_return_size_limit = (max/1000)*1000;
6444 emf_text = next_emf(emf, US"truncated");
6445 bounce_return_size_limit = temp;
6448 if (bounce_return_body && bounce_return_size_limit > 0)
6450 struct stat statbuf;
6451 if (fstat(deliver_datafile, &statbuf) == 0 && statbuf.st_size > max)
6453 if (emf_text != NULL) fprintf(f, "%s", CS emf_text); else
6456 "------ The body of the message is " OFF_T_FMT " characters long; only the first\n"
6457 "------ %d or so are included here.\n", statbuf.st_size, max);
6464 transport_filter_argv = NULL; /* Just in case */
6465 return_path = sender_address; /* In case not previously set */
6466 transport_write_message(NULL, fileno(f), topt,
6467 bounce_return_size_limit, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, 0);
6470 /* Write final text and close the template file if one is open */
6474 emf_text = next_emf(emf, US"final");
6475 if (emf_text != NULL) fprintf(f, "%s", CS emf_text);
6479 /* Close the file, which should send an EOF to the child process
6480 that is receiving the message. Wait for it to finish. */
6483 rc = child_close(pid, 0); /* Waits for child to close, no timeout */
6485 /* In the test harness, let the child do it's thing first. */
6487 if (running_in_test_harness) millisleep(500);
6489 /* If the process failed, there was some disaster in setting up the
6490 error message. Unless the message is very old, ensure that addr_defer
6491 is non-null, which will have the effect of leaving the message on the
6492 spool. The failed addresses will get tried again next time. However, we
6493 don't really want this to happen too often, so freeze the message unless
6494 there are some genuine deferred addresses to try. To do this we have
6495 to call spool_write_header() here, because with no genuine deferred
6496 addresses the normal code below doesn't get run. */
6501 if (now - received_time < retry_maximum_timeout && addr_defer == NULL)
6503 addr_defer = (address_item *)(+1);
6504 deliver_freeze = TRUE;
6505 deliver_frozen_at = time(NULL);
6506 /* Panic-dies on error */
6507 (void)spool_write_header(message_id, SW_DELIVERING, NULL);
6510 deliver_msglog("Process failed (%d) when writing error message "
6511 "to %s%s", rc, bounce_recipient, s);
6512 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Process failed (%d) when writing error message "
6513 "to %s%s", rc, bounce_recipient, s);
6516 /* The message succeeded. Ensure that the recipients that failed are
6517 now marked finished with on the spool and their parents updated. */
6521 for (addr = handled_addr; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
6523 address_done(addr, logtod);
6524 child_done(addr, logtod);
6526 /* Panic-dies on error */
6527 (void)spool_write_header(message_id, SW_DELIVERING, NULL);
6533 disable_logging = FALSE; /* In case left set */
6535 /* Come here from the mua_wrapper case if routing goes wrong */
6539 /* If there are now no deferred addresses, we are done. Preserve the
6540 message log if so configured, and we are using them. Otherwise, sling it.
6541 Then delete the message itself. */
6543 if (addr_defer == NULL)
6547 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/msglog/%s/%s", spool_directory, message_subdir,
6549 if (preserve_message_logs)
6552 sprintf(CS big_buffer, "%s/msglog.OLD/%s", spool_directory, id);
6553 if ((rc = Urename(spoolname, big_buffer)) < 0)
6555 (void)directory_make(spool_directory, US"msglog.OLD",
6556 MSGLOG_DIRECTORY_MODE, TRUE);
6557 rc = Urename(spoolname, big_buffer);
6560 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "failed to move %s to the "
6561 "msglog.OLD directory", spoolname);
6565 if (Uunlink(spoolname) < 0)
6566 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "failed to unlink %s", spoolname);
6570 /* Remove the two message files. */
6572 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/input/%s/%s-D", spool_directory, message_subdir, id);
6573 if (Uunlink(spoolname) < 0)
6574 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "failed to unlink %s", spoolname);
6575 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/input/%s/%s-H", spool_directory, message_subdir, id);
6576 if (Uunlink(spoolname) < 0)
6577 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "failed to unlink %s", spoolname);
6579 /* Log the end of this message, with queue time if requested. */
6581 if ((log_extra_selector & LX_queue_time_overall) != 0)
6582 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Completed QT=%s",
6583 readconf_printtime(time(NULL) - received_time));
6585 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Completed");
6588 /* If there are deferred addresses, we are keeping this message because it is
6589 not yet completed. Lose any temporary files that were catching output from
6590 pipes for any of the deferred addresses, handle one-time aliases, and see if
6591 the message has been on the queue for so long that it is time to send a warning
6592 message to the sender, unless it is a mailer-daemon. If all deferred addresses
6593 have the same domain, we can set deliver_domain for the expansion of
6594 delay_warning_ condition - if any of them are pipes, files, or autoreplies, use
6595 the parent's domain.
6597 If all the deferred addresses have an error number that indicates "retry time
6598 not reached", skip sending the warning message, because it won't contain the
6599 reason for the delay. It will get sent at the next real delivery attempt.
6600 However, if at least one address has tried, we'd better include all of them in
6603 If we can't make a process to send the message, don't worry.
6605 For mailing list expansions we want to send the warning message to the
6606 mailing list manager. We can't do a perfect job here, as some addresses may
6607 have different errors addresses, but if we take the errors address from
6608 each deferred address it will probably be right in most cases.
6610 If addr_defer == +1, it means there was a problem sending an error message
6611 for failed addresses, and there were no "real" deferred addresses. The value
6612 was set just to keep the message on the spool, so there is nothing to do here.
6615 else if (addr_defer != (address_item *)(+1))
6618 uschar *recipients = US"";
6619 BOOL delivery_attempted = FALSE;
6621 deliver_domain = testflag(addr_defer, af_pfr)?
6622 addr_defer->parent->domain : addr_defer->domain;
6624 for (addr = addr_defer; addr != NULL; addr = addr->next)
6626 address_item *otaddr;
6628 if (addr->basic_errno > ERRNO_RETRY_BASE) delivery_attempted = TRUE;
6630 if (deliver_domain != NULL)
6632 uschar *d = (testflag(addr, af_pfr))? addr->parent->domain : addr->domain;
6634 /* The domain may be unset for an address that has never been routed
6635 because the system filter froze the message. */
6637 if (d == NULL || Ustrcmp(d, deliver_domain) != 0) deliver_domain = NULL;
6640 if (addr->return_filename != NULL) Uunlink(addr->return_filename);
6642 /* Handle the case of one-time aliases. If any address in the ancestry
6643 of this one is flagged, ensure it is in the recipients list, suitably
6644 flagged, and that its parent is marked delivered. */
6646 for (otaddr = addr; otaddr != NULL; otaddr = otaddr->parent)
6647 if (otaddr->onetime_parent != NULL) break;
6652 int t = recipients_count;
6654 for (i = 0; i < recipients_count; i++)
6656 uschar *r = recipients_list[i].address;
6657 if (Ustrcmp(otaddr->onetime_parent, r) == 0) t = i;
6658 if (Ustrcmp(otaddr->address, r) == 0) break;
6661 /* Didn't find the address already in the list, and did find the
6662 ultimate parent's address in the list. After adding the recipient,
6663 update the errors address in the recipients list. */
6665 if (i >= recipients_count && t < recipients_count)
6667 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("one_time: adding %s in place of %s\n",
6668 otaddr->address, otaddr->parent->address);
6669 receive_add_recipient(otaddr->address, t);
6670 recipients_list[recipients_count-1].errors_to = otaddr->p.errors_address;
6671 tree_add_nonrecipient(otaddr->parent->address);
6672 update_spool = TRUE;
6676 /* Except for error messages, ensure that either the errors address for
6677 this deferred address or, if there is none, the sender address, is on the
6678 list of recipients for a warning message. */
6680 if (sender_address[0] != 0)
6682 if (addr->p.errors_address == NULL)
6684 if (Ustrstr(recipients, sender_address) == NULL)
6685 recipients = string_sprintf("%s%s%s", recipients,
6686 (recipients[0] == 0)? "" : ",", sender_address);
6690 if (Ustrstr(recipients, addr->p.errors_address) == NULL)
6691 recipients = string_sprintf("%s%s%s", recipients,
6692 (recipients[0] == 0)? "" : ",", addr->p.errors_address);
6697 /* Send a warning message if the conditions are right. If the condition check
6698 fails because of a lookup defer, there is nothing we can do. The warning
6699 is not sent. Another attempt will be made at the next delivery attempt (if
6702 if (!queue_2stage && delivery_attempted &&
6703 delay_warning[1] > 0 && sender_address[0] != 0 &&
6704 (delay_warning_condition == NULL ||
6705 expand_check_condition(delay_warning_condition,
6706 US"delay_warning", US"option")))
6710 int queue_time = time(NULL) - received_time;
6712 /* When running in the test harness, there's an option that allows us to
6713 fudge this time so as to get repeatability of the tests. Take the first
6714 time off the list. In queue runs, the list pointer gets updated in the
6717 if (running_in_test_harness && fudged_queue_times[0] != 0)
6719 int qt = readconf_readtime(fudged_queue_times, '/', FALSE);
6722 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("fudged queue_times = %s\n",
6723 fudged_queue_times);
6728 /* See how many warnings we should have sent by now */
6730 for (count = 0; count < delay_warning[1]; count++)
6731 if (queue_time < delay_warning[count+2]) break;
6733 show_time = delay_warning[count+1];
6735 if (count >= delay_warning[1])
6738 int last_gap = show_time;
6739 if (count > 1) last_gap -= delay_warning[count];
6740 extra = (queue_time - delay_warning[count+1])/last_gap;
6741 show_time += last_gap * extra;
6747 debug_printf("time on queue = %s\n", readconf_printtime(queue_time));
6748 debug_printf("warning counts: required %d done %d\n", count,
6752 /* We have computed the number of warnings there should have been by now.
6753 If there haven't been enough, send one, and up the count to what it should
6756 if (warning_count < count)
6760 pid_t pid = child_open_exim(&fd);
6766 FILE *f = fdopen(fd, "wb");
6768 if (warn_message_file != NULL)
6770 wmf = Ufopen(warn_message_file, "rb");
6772 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC, "Failed to open %s for warning "
6773 "message texts: %s", warn_message_file, strerror(errno));
6776 warnmsg_recipients = recipients;
6777 warnmsg_delay = (queue_time < 120*60)?
6778 string_sprintf("%d minutes", show_time/60):
6779 string_sprintf("%d hours", show_time/3600);
6781 if (errors_reply_to != NULL)
6782 fprintf(f, "Reply-To: %s\n", errors_reply_to);
6783 fprintf(f, "Auto-Submitted: auto-replied\n");
6784 fprintf(f, "From: Mail Delivery System <Mailer-Daemon@%s>\n",
6785 qualify_domain_sender);
6786 fprintf(f, "To: %s\n", recipients);
6788 wmf_text = next_emf(wmf, US"header");
6789 if (wmf_text != NULL)
6790 fprintf(f, "%s\n", wmf_text);
6792 fprintf(f, "Subject: Warning: message %s delayed %s\n\n",
6793 message_id, warnmsg_delay);
6795 wmf_text = next_emf(wmf, US"intro");
6796 if (wmf_text != NULL) fprintf(f, "%s", CS wmf_text); else
6799 "This message was created automatically by mail delivery software.\n");
6801 if (Ustrcmp(recipients, sender_address) == 0)
6803 "A message that you sent has not yet been delivered to one or more of its\n"
6804 "recipients after more than ");
6807 "A message sent by\n\n <%s>\n\n"
6808 "has not yet been delivered to one or more of its recipients after more than \n",
6811 fprintf(f, "%s on the queue on %s.\n\n", warnmsg_delay,
6813 fprintf(f, "The message identifier is: %s\n", message_id);
6815 for (h = header_list; h != NULL; h = h->next)
6817 if (strncmpic(h->text, US"Subject:", 8) == 0)
6818 fprintf(f, "The subject of the message is: %s", h->text + 9);
6819 else if (strncmpic(h->text, US"Date:", 5) == 0)
6820 fprintf(f, "The date of the message is: %s", h->text + 6);
6824 fprintf(f, "The address%s to which the message has not yet been "
6826 (addr_defer->next == NULL)? "" : "es",
6827 (addr_defer->next == NULL)? "is": "are");
6830 /* List the addresses, with error information if allowed */
6833 while (addr_defer != NULL)
6835 address_item *addr = addr_defer;
6836 addr_defer = addr->next;
6837 if (print_address_information(addr, f, US" ", US"\n ", US""))
6838 print_address_error(addr, f, US"Delay reason: ");
6847 wmf_text = next_emf(wmf, US"final");
6848 if (wmf_text != NULL) fprintf(f, "%s", CS wmf_text);
6854 "No action is required on your part. Delivery attempts will continue for\n"
6855 "some time, and this warning may be repeated at intervals if the message\n"
6856 "remains undelivered. Eventually the mail delivery software will give up,\n"
6857 "and when that happens, the message will be returned to you.\n");
6860 /* Close and wait for child process to complete, without a timeout.
6861 If there's an error, don't update the count. */
6864 if (child_close(pid, 0) == 0)
6866 warning_count = count;
6867 update_spool = TRUE; /* Ensure spool rewritten */
6873 /* Clear deliver_domain */
6875 deliver_domain = NULL;
6877 /* If this was a first delivery attempt, unset the first time flag, and
6878 ensure that the spool gets updated. */
6880 if (deliver_firsttime)
6882 deliver_firsttime = FALSE;
6883 update_spool = TRUE;
6886 /* If delivery was frozen and freeze_tell is set, generate an appropriate
6887 message, unless the message is a local error message (to avoid loops). Then
6888 log the freezing. If the text in "frozen_info" came from a system filter,
6889 it has been escaped into printing characters so as not to mess up log lines.
6890 For the "tell" message, we turn \n back into newline. Also, insert a newline
6891 near the start instead of the ": " string. */
6895 if (freeze_tell != NULL && freeze_tell[0] != 0 && !local_error_message)
6897 uschar *s = string_copy(frozen_info);
6898 uschar *ss = Ustrstr(s, " by the system filter: ");
6909 if (*ss == '\\' && ss[1] == 'n')
6916 moan_tell_someone(freeze_tell, addr_defer, US"Message frozen",
6917 "Message %s has been frozen%s.\nThe sender is <%s>.\n", message_id,
6921 /* Log freezing just before we update the -H file, to minimize the chance
6922 of a race problem. */
6924 deliver_msglog("*** Frozen%s\n", frozen_info);
6925 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Frozen%s", frozen_info);
6928 /* If there have been any updates to the non-recipients list, or other things
6929 that get written to the spool, we must now update the spool header file so
6930 that it has the right information for the next delivery attempt. If there
6931 was more than one address being delivered, the header_change update is done
6932 earlier, in case one succeeds and then something crashes. */
6935 debug_printf("delivery deferred: update_spool=%d header_rewritten=%d\n",
6936 update_spool, header_rewritten);
6938 if (update_spool || header_rewritten)
6939 /* Panic-dies on error */
6940 (void)spool_write_header(message_id, SW_DELIVERING, NULL);
6943 /* Finished with the message log. If the message is complete, it will have
6944 been unlinked or renamed above. */
6946 if (message_logs) (void)fclose(message_log);
6948 /* Now we can close and remove the journal file. Its only purpose is to record
6949 successfully completed deliveries asap so that this information doesn't get
6950 lost if Exim (or the machine) crashes. Forgetting about a failed delivery is
6951 not serious, as trying it again is not harmful. The journal might not be open
6952 if all addresses were deferred at routing or directing. Nevertheless, we must
6953 remove it if it exists (may have been lying around from a crash during the
6954 previous delivery attempt). We don't remove the journal if a delivery
6955 subprocess failed to pass back delivery information; this is controlled by
6956 the remove_journal flag. When the journal is left, we also don't move the
6957 message off the main spool if frozen and the option is set. It should get moved
6958 at the next attempt, after the journal has been inspected. */
6960 if (journal_fd >= 0) (void)close(journal_fd);
6964 sprintf(CS spoolname, "%s/input/%s/%s-J", spool_directory, message_subdir, id);
6965 if (Uunlink(spoolname) < 0 && errno != ENOENT)
6966 log_write(0, LOG_MAIN|LOG_PANIC_DIE, "failed to unlink %s: %s", spoolname,
6969 /* Move the message off the spool if reqested */
6971 #ifdef SUPPORT_MOVE_FROZEN_MESSAGES
6972 if (deliver_freeze && move_frozen_messages)
6973 (void)spool_move_message(id, message_subdir, US"", US"F");
6977 /* Closing the data file frees the lock; if the file has been unlinked it
6978 will go away. Otherwise the message becomes available for another process
6981 (void)close(deliver_datafile);
6982 deliver_datafile = -1;
6983 DEBUG(D_deliver) debug_printf("end delivery of %s\n", id);
6985 /* It is unlikely that there will be any cached resources, since they are
6986 released after routing, and in the delivery subprocesses. However, it's
6987 possible for an expansion for something afterwards (for example,
6988 expand_check_condition) to do a lookup. We must therefore be sure everything is
6995 /* End of deliver.c */