NAME
maildrop - mail delivery filter/agentSYNOPSIS
maildrop
[option...] [-d user] [arg...]
maildrop
[option...] [ filename] [arg...]
DESCRIPTION
maildrop is a replacement local mail delivery agent that includes a mail filtering language. The system administrator can either replace the existing mail delivery agent with maildrop, or users may run maildrop using the 'forward to program' mechanism of the existing mail delivery agent. maildrop first reads the E-mail message on standard input. Trailing carriage return characters are automatically stripped. An E-mail message consists of header lines, followed by a blank line, followed by the contents of the message. maildrop does not accept an mbox-style From_ line before the first header line. maildrop does not accept leading empty lines before the first non-blank header line. If the message can possibly start with empty lines, and a From_ line, use reformail -f0 to remove any initial empty lines, and replace a From_ line with a proper “Return-Path:” header; then pipe it to maildrop. If the file /etc/maildroprc exists, mail delivery or mail filtering instructions are read from that file. maildrop's delivery/filtering instructions may direct maildrop to save the message in specific mailbox, discard it, return it to sender, or forward it to a different E-mail address. If /etc/maildroprc does not exist, or its mail delivery instructions do not completely dispose of this message, maildrop then reads the mail delivery instructions from $HOME/.mailfilter. If it doesn't exist, or its mail delivery instructions do not completely dispose of the message, maildrop then saves the E-mail message in the default mailbox. maildrop knows how to deliver mail to an standard mailbox files; it also knows how to deliver to maildirs. A maildir is a directory-based mail format used by the Courier[1] and Qmail[2] mail servers. Many other mail servers also know how to read maildirs. When delivering to mailbox files, maildrop will lock the mailbox for the duration of the delivery. This is the general mail delivery behavior. There are minor differences in behavior depending on maildrop delivery mode, which is determined based on how maildrop was started. maildrop uses three different primary operating modes: Manual modeA file containing filtering instructions -
filename is specified as an argument to the maildrop command.
maildrop reads this filename (after /etc/maildroprc) and follows
the instructions in it. Unless the message is explicitly forwarded, bounced,
deleted, or delivered to a specific mailbox, it will be delivered to the
user's system mailbox.
Delivery mode
maildrop is the mail server's mail
delivery agent. maildrop runs in delivery mode when no filename
is specified on the command line. maildrop changes the current
directory to the user's home directory, then reads /etc/maildroprc, then
$HOME/.mailfilter.
Embedded mode
maildrop functions as a part of another
application. The embedded mode is used by the Courier[1] mail server to
integrate mail filtering directly into the process of receiving mail from a
remote mail relay, thus rejecting unwanted mail before it is even accepted for
local mail delivery. Embedded mode is used when either the -m, or the -M,
option is specified, and is described below. See below for a more extensive
description of the embedded mode.
SECURITY
It is safe to install maildrop as a root setuid program. The Courier mail server[1] installs maildrop as a root setuid program by default, in order to be able to use maildrop in embedded mode. If root runs maildrop (or it is setuided to root) the -d option may be used to specify the message's recipient. maildrop immediately resets its userid to the one specified by the -d option. The user's $HOME/.mailfilter is read (if it exists), and the message is delivered to the indicated user. The system administrator can configure maildrop to restrict the -d option for everyone except the mail system itself. If in delivery mode the user's home directory has the sticky bit set, maildrop immediately terminates with an exit code of EX_TEMPFAIL, without doing anything. Mail servers interpret the EX_TEMPFAIL exit code as a request to reschedule the message for another delivery attempt later. Setting the sticky bit allows $HOME/.mailfilter to be edited while temporarily holding all incoming mail. maildrop also terminates with EX_TEMPFAIL if the user's home directory has world write permissions. maildrop immediately terminates with EX_TEMPFAIL if the filename is not owned by the user, or if it has any group or world permissions. This includes read permissions. The permissions on $HOME/.mailfilter may only include read and write privileges to the user. When using the special embedded mode (see below) maildrop immediately terminates with the exit code set to EX_TEMPFAIL if $HOME/.mailfilters is not owned by the user, or if it has any group or world permissions.TEMPORARY FILES
maildrop is heavily optimized and tries to use as little resources as possible. maildrop reads small messages into memory, then filters and/or delivers the message directly from memory. For larger messages, maildrop accesses the message directly from the file. If the standard input is not a file, maildrop writes the message to a temporary file, then accesses the message from the temporary file. The temporary file is automatically removed when the message is delivered.OPTIONS
-aMakes the Courier Authentication Library usage
mandatory, i.e. maildrop will throw a temporary error code if the call to the
authlib mechanism fails for some reason, such as authdaemon being
inaccessible.
Note
This setting may already be the default, depending on maildrop's configuration.
-A " Header: value"
Adds an additional header to the message.
Specifying -A "Foo: Bar" effectively adds this header to the
message being delivered.
The mail transport agent usually adds additional headers when delivering a
message to a local mailbox. The way it's usually done is by the mail transport
agent sending the message using a pipe to the local delivery agent - such as
maildrop - and adding some additional headers in the process. Because
maildrop receives the message from a pipe, maildrop must either
save the message in memory or write the message into a temporary file.
The -A option enables the file containing the message to be provided to
maildrop directly, as standard input, and the additional headers
specified on the command line. Because the standard input is a file,
maildrop will not need a temporary file. Multiple -A options may
be specified.
-d user
Run maildrop in delivery mode for this
user ID.
The system administrator may optionally restrict the -d option to be
available to the mail system only, so it may not be available to you. In all
cases, the -d option is allowed if user is the same user who is
running maildrop. Also, for the -d option to work at all,
maildrop must be executed by root, or maildrop must be a
root-owned program with the setuid bit set. Absence of a filename on
maildrop's command line implies the -d option for the user
running maildrop.
If -d is not specified, the first argument following all the options is a
name of the file containing filtering instructions. The remaining arguments,
if any, are assigned to the variables $1, $2, and so on (see
"Environment"[3] and "Variable
substitution"[4]).
-f address
Sets the FROM variable (message envelope
sender) to address. The system administrator may optionally disable the
-f option for users, so it may not be available to you.
-m
Run maildrop in embedded mode. It's
possible to use both the -m, and the -d options, but it doesn't
make much sense to do so. Even if you really wanted to run your message
through someone else's .mailfilter, that .mailfilter probably has at least one
instruction which is not allowed in the embedded mode.
The filename argument to maildrop should be specified. filename is a file
that includes filtering instructions to be processed in embedded mode. The -m
option is used for debugging filter files which are later placed in
$HOME/.mailfilters, and used with the -M option.
-M filterfile
Run maildrop in a special embedded
mode. The -d option is implied when -M is used, and if absent it
defaults to the userid running maildrop.
All the requirements for the -d option apply. maildrop must either
be executed by root, or the maildrop program must be owned by root with
the setuid bit set. maildrop immediately gives up root privileges by
changing its user ID to the one specified by -d, then reads
$HOME/.mailfilters/ filterfile. For security reasons the name of the
file may not begin with a slash or include periods. maildrop is very
paranoid: both $HOME/.mailfilters, and $HOME/.mailfilters/ filterfile
must be owned by the user, and may not have any group or world permissions.
The -M option allows for some friendly cooperation between the user
running the application, and the user who provides a filter for the embedded
mode. The user running the application can use someone else's canned filter
and be assured that the filter is not going to run amok and start sending mail
or create files all over the place. The user who provides the filter can be
assured that the environment variables are clean, and that there are no
surprises.
maildrop supports the concept of "default" filter files. If the
file specified by the -M option cannot be found in $HOME/.mailfilters,
maildrop will try to open $HOME/.mailfilters/
filterfileprefix-default. filterfileprefix is the initial part
of filterfile up until the last '-' character in filterfile.
If $HOME/.mailfilters/ filterfileprefix-default does not exist, and there
are any other dashes left in filterfileprefix, maildrop removes the
last dash and everything following it, then tries again.
As a last resort maildrop tries to open $HOME/.mailfilters/default.
For example, if the parameter to the -M option is
mailfilter-lists-maildrop, maildrop will try to open the
following files, in order:
Note that maildrop looks for -default files ONLY if -M is
used.
-D uuu/ggg
This option is reserved for use by the version
of maildrop that comes integrated with the Courier mail
server[1].
-V level
Initialize the VERBOSE variable to
level. Because maildrop parses the entire file before running
it, this option is used to produce debugging output in the parsing phase.
Otherwise, if filename has syntax errors, then no debugging output is possible
because the VERBOSE variable is not yet set.
-V is ignored when maildrop runs in delivery mode.
-w N
The -w N option places a warning
message into the maildir if the maildir has a quota setting, and after the
message was successfully delivered the maildir was at least N percent
full.
-W filename
Copy the warning message from filename,
or from /etc/quotawarnmsg if this option is not specified, with the addition
of the "Date:" and "Message-Id:" headers. The warning is
repeated every 24 hours (at least), until the maildir drops below N
percent full.
-t socket
This option is available if maildrop is
compiled with optional Dovecot authentication support. socket specifies
the location of Dovecot master authentication socket, for example
/var/run/dovecot/auth-master.
DELIVERY MODE
If a filename is not specified on the command line, or if the -d option is used, maildrop will run in delivery mode. In delivery mode, maildrop changes to the home directory of the user specified by the -d option (or the user who is running maildrop if the -d option was not given) and reads $HOME/.mailfilter for filtering instructions. $HOME/.mailfilter must be owned by the user, and have no group or global permissions ( maildrop terminates if it does). If $HOME/.mailfilter does not exist, maildrop will simply deliver the message to the user's mailbox. If the file /etc/maildroprc exists, maildrop reads filtering instructions from this file first, before reading $HOME/.mailfilter. This allows the system administrator to provide global filtering instructions for all users.VIRTUAL ACCOUNTS
The -d option can also specify a name of a virtual account or mailbox. See the makeuserdb(1) manual page in the Courier Authentication library's documentation for more information.EMBEDDED MODE
The embedded mode is used when maildrop's filtering abilities are desired, but no actual mail delivery is needed. In embedded mode maildrop is executed by another application, and is passed the ‐m or the ‐M option.[5] maildrop reads the message, then runs the filtering rules specified in filename. filename may contain any filtering instructions EXCEPT the following: ` ... `Text strings delimited by back-tick characters
(run shell command) are not allowed.
cc[6]
The cc command is not allowed in
embedded mode.
dotlock[7]
The dotlock command is not allowed in
embedded mode.
flock[8]
The flock command is not allowed in
embedded mode.
gdbmopen[9]
In embedded mode, GDBM databases may be opened
only for reading.
log[10]
The log command is not allowed in
embedded mode.
logfile[10]
The logfile command is not allowed in
embedded mode.
system[11]
The system command is not allowed in
embedded mode.
to[12]
The to command is not allowed in
embedded mode.
xfilter[13]
The xfilter command is not allowed in
embedded mode.
Normally when the filename does not explicitly delivers a message,
maildrop will deliver the message to the user's default mailbox. This
is also disabled in embedded mode.
The filename may communicate with the parent application by using the
echo[14] statement and the EXITCODE environment variable.
/etc/maildroprcs
If maildrop encounters an include[15] statement where the filename starts with /etc/maildroprcs/, the normal restrictions for the embedded mode are suspended while executing the filter file in the /etc/maildroprcs directory. The restrictions are also suspended for any additional filter files that are included from /etc/maildroprcs. The restrictions resume once maildrop finishes executing the file from /etc/maildroprcs. This allows the system administrator to have a controlled environment for running external commands (via the backticks, the system[11] or the xfilter[13] commands). The name of the file may not contain any periods (so that a creative individual can't write include "/etc/maildroprcs/../../home/user/recipe"). Before executing the commands in the /etc/maildroprcs file, maildrop automatically resets the following variables to their initial values: DEFAULT, HOME, LOCKEXT, LOCKSLEEP, LOCKTIMEOUT, LOCKREFRESH, LOGNAME, PATH, SENDMAIL, and SHELL. Please note that the previous values of these variables (if they were changed) will NOT be restored once maildrop finishes executing the commands from /etc/maildroprcs.WATCHDOG TIMER
maildrop has a watchdog timer that attempts to abort runaway filtering. If filtering is not complete within a predefined time interval (defined by the system administrator, usually five minutes), maildrop terminates.FILES
/etc/passwdSets user's home directory, and related
variables. If NIS/YP is install, that will be used as well.
/etc/maildroprc
Global filtering instructions for delivery
mode.
/var/mail
System mailbox (actual directory defined by
the system administrator).
/usr/sbin/sendmail
Program to forward mail (exact program defined
by the system administrator).
$HOME/.mailfilter
Filtering instructions in delivery mode.
$HOME/.mailfilters
Directory containing files used in special
embedded mode.
SEE ALSO
lockmail(1)[16], maildropfilter(7)[17], makedat(1)[18], maildropgdbm(7)[9], maildropex(7)[19], reformail(1)[20], makemime(1)[21], reformime(1)[22], egrep(1), grep(1), , courier(8)[23], sendmail(8), http://www.qmail.org.AUTHOR
Sam VarshavchikAuthor
NOTES
- 1.
- Courier
- 2.
- Qmail
- 3.
- "Environment"
- 4.
- "Variable substitution"
- 5.
- is passed the ‐m or the ‐M option.
- 6.
- cc
- 7.
- dotlock
- 8.
- flock
- 9.
- gdbmopen
- 10.
- log
- 11.
- system
- 12.
- to
- 13.
- xfilter
- 14.
- echo
- 15.
- include
- 16.
- lockmail(1)
- 18.
- makedat(1)
- 19.
- maildropex(7)
- 20.
- reformail(1)
- 21.
- makemime(1)
- 22.
- reformime(1)
- 23.
- courier(8)
07/24/2017 | Courier Mail Server |