NAME
OpenSMTPd::Filter - Easier filters for OpenSMTPd in perl
VERSION
version v0.0.3
SYNOPSIS
use OpenSMTPD::Filter;
use OpenBSD::Pledge;
pledge();
my $filter = OpenSMTPd::Filter->new(
on => {
report => \%report_callbacks,
filter => \%filter_callbacks,
},
);
$filter->ready; # Registers and starts listening for updates
DESCRIPTION
This module is a helper to make writing OpenSMTPd filters in perl easier.
It should support smtpd API protocol version 0.7 and earlier.
METHODS
new
my $filter = OpenSMTPd::Filter->new(
input => \*STDIN, # the default
output => \*STDOUT, # the default
debug => 0, # the default,
on => \%callbacks,
);
Instantiates a new filter ready to start handling events.
- on
-
my $filter = OpenSMTPd::Filter->new( ..., on => { report => { 'smtp-in' => { 'link-connect' => \&lookup_spf_async, } }, filter => { 'smtp-in' => { helo => \&check_spf, ehlo => \&check_spf, } }, }, );
A hashref of events to add callbacks for. The top level is the
stream
to listen on, eitherreport
orfilter
. The next level is thesubsystem
which must besmtp-in
. Finally theevent
orphase
to to handle.See "REPORT AND FILTER STREAMS" for details on writing callbacks.
- input
-
The filehandle used to receive messages from smtpd. Will be changed to
binmode(":raw")
.Defaults to
STDIN
. - output
-
The filehandle used to send messages to smtpd. Will be changed to
binmode(":raw")
.Defaults to
STDOUT
. - debug
-
Set to a true value to enable debugging. Primarily this means copying all lines from "input" and "output" to
STDERR
.
ready
$filter->ready;
Processes events on "input" until it hits eof
, which should only happen when smtpd exits.
REPORT AND FILTER STREAMS
my $callback = sub {
my ( $phase_or_event, $session, @extra ) = @_;
...;
};
Each stream triggers events and each event callback adds to a session state as well as a list of events that have been received in that session.
Each callback is called with the report event or filter phase that triggered the callback as the first argument and a session datastructure as the second argument. The subsystem can be found in $session->{state}->{subsystem}
. Some callbacks will get additional arguments as documented below.
The $session
hashref may contain up to three keys:
$session = {
state => \%state,
events => \@events,
messages => \@messages,
};
Nothing in this session hash is used by this module other than in each message, the data-line
arrayref is passed to the "data-lines" filter and the sent-dot
boolean is used to know whether to continue sending filter-dataline responses. This means your filters can munge the contents or add additional entries although care must be taken not to change the expected type of an entry, but adding additional keys or changing values will not cause issues.
- state
-
This is the state filled in by the fields for each received event. Any
tx
events go into "messages" instead of this state.A state might loook like this, however it only contains the fields recieved at each point in the connection and will contain any fields set by a "REPORT EVENT":
my $state = { version => '0.6', timestamp => '1613356167.075372', subsystem => 'smtp-in', event => 'timeout', phase => 'commit', session => '3647ceea74a815de', rdns => 'localhost', fcrdns => 'pass', src => '[::1]:37403', dest => '[::1]:25', hostname => 'mail.example.test', method => 'HELO', identity => 'mail.afresh1.test', command => '.', response => '250 2.0.0 5e170a6f Message accepted for delivery', message => $session->{messages}->[-1], };
See the rest of this section for which events fill in each field.
- events
-
This is an arrayref of hashrefs of the fields for each recieved message, each hashref contains all fields supplied by that report event or filter phase. In addition, the event includes a
request
field indicating whether the event was a report or a filter.my $event = { request => 'report', version => '0.5', timestamp => '1576146008.006099', subsystem => 'smtp-in', event => 'link-connect', session => '7641df9771b4ed00', rdns => 'mail.openbsd.org', fcrdns => 'pass', src => '199.185.178.25:33174', dest => '45.77.67.80:25', };
- messages
-
Message states collect the fields provided by each
tx-*
"REPORT EVENT" for eachmessage-id
in a session.my $message' = { 'message-id' => '48f59d87', 'envelope-id' => '48f59d87264c2287', 'mail-from', => 'andrew', 'rcpt-to', => ['afresh1'], 'data-line' => [ 'Received: from mail (localhost [::1])', ' by mail.example.test (OpenSMTPD) with SMTP id 48f59d87', ' for <afresh1@mail.afresh1.test>;', ' Sat, 27 Feb 2021 20:56:38 -0800 (PST)', 'From: andrew', 'To: afresh1', 'Subject: Hai!', '', 'Hello There', '.' ], 'result' => 'ok', 'sent-dot' => 1, };
The "tx-from" and "tx-rcpt" events are handled specially and go into the
mail-from
,rcpt-to
, andresult
fields. Thercpt-to
ends up in an arrayref as the message can be destined for multiple recipients. If a "data-lines" filter exists, thedata-line
field is also an arrayref of each line that has been recieved so far, with theCR
andLF
removed. Thesent-dot
field is a boolen indicating whether this message has sent the.
indicating it is complete.
REPORT EVENT
my $callback = sub {
my ( $event, $session ) = @_;
...;
return 'anything'; # ignored
};
All report events will provide these fields:
- version
- timestamp
- subsystem
- event
- session
- suffix
Events for the subsystem below may include additional fields.
MESSAGE REPORT EVENTS
my $callback = sub {
my ($event, $session) = @_
my $message = $session->{state}->{message};
...;
};
All filters that begin with tx-
include a message-id
field and possibly other fields. These events add to the last item in "messages", which is also added as the message
field in the session
"state".
Message events for the smtp-in
subsystem may include additional fields.
FILTER REQUEST
my $callback = sub {
my ( $phase, $session, @data_lines ) = @_;
...;
return $response, @params;
};
See "FILTER RESPONSE" for details about what can be returned.
The "data-line" and "data-lines" callbacks are special in that they also recieve the current data-line
or all lines recieved. They should also return a list of "dataline" responses instead of the normal decision response.
All filter events have these fields:
Specific filter events for each subsystem may include additional fields.
- smtp-in
- data-line
-
The
data-line
anddata-lines
callbacks are special in that they return a list of "dataline" responses and not a normal "FILTER RESPONSE".The returned lines are split on
\n
so you can return a single string that is the entire message and it will be split into individual "dataline" responses.You can return any number of lines from an individual
data-line
callback until you recieve the single.
indicating the end of the message. When you recieve the single.
as theline
you will need to finish processing the message and return any lines that are still pending.- line
- data-lines
-
This is a wrapper around the "data-line" callback to make it easier to process the entire message instead of dealing with it on a line-by-line basis and having to store it yourself.
See the "BUGS AND LIMITATIONS", although this seemed like a good idea, to better support
pledge
it might go away and leave implementing data-line storage to the filter author.- lines
-
The final argument is an arrayref of all lines in the message.
FILTER RESPONSE
The return value from a "FILTER REQUEST" callback determines what will be done with the message.
- dataline
-
This is the special response used by "data-line" filters. There is special processing that if the returned line contains newlines it will be split into multiple responses.
- line
- proceed
-
my $callback = sub { ...; return 'proceed'; };
This is the normal response, it means the message will continue to additional filters and if all filters return
proceed
the message will be accepted. - junk
-
my $callback = sub { ...; return 'junk'; };
Like "proceed" but will add an
X-Spam
header to the message. - reject
-
my $callback = sub { ...; return reject => "400 Not Sure"; };
You must provide a valid SMTP error message as the second argument to the return value including the status code, 5xx or 4xx.
A 421 status will "disconnect" the client.
- error
- disconnect
-
my $callback = sub { ...; return disconnect => "550 Go Away"; };
As with "reject" the return from this callback must include a valid SMTP error message including the status code. However, like a
421
"reject" status, all messages will disconnect the client.- error
- rewrite
-
my $callback = sub { my ($phase, $session) = @_; ...; if ( $phase eq 'tx-rcpt' ) { my $event = $session->{events}->[-1]; return rewrite => 'afresh1' if $event->{address} eq 'andrew'; } return 'proceed'; };
- parameter
- report
-
Generates a "filter-report" event with the
parameter
as the message that will be reported. I'm not entirely sure where they get reported to, I assume maybe any later filters.I believe you would do something like this, and that you could generate any supported event, but I haven't had good luck with it.
my $s = $_[1]->{state}; printf $output "%s|"%010.06f"|%s|%s|%s|%s\n"; 'report', Time::HiRes::time, $s->{subsystem}, 'filter-response', $s->{session}, $parameter );
This is not a result response.
- parameter
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
The received "data-line" are stored in a list in memory if a "data-lines" filter exists, which could easily be very large if the message is sizable. These should instead be stored in a temporary file.
There is currently no way to stop listening for specific report events, this module should provide a way to specify which events it should listen for and gather state from.
DEPENDENCIES
Perl 5.16 or higher.
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Andrew Hewus Fresh <andrew@afresh1.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is Copyright (c) 2021 by Andrew Hewus Fresh <andrew@afresh1.com>.
This is free software, licensed under:
The MIT (X11) License