NAME

Sendmail::PMilter - Perl binding of Sendmail Milter protocol

SYNOPSIS

use Sendmail::PMilter;

my $milter = new Sendmail::PMilter;

$milter->auto_setconn(NAME);
$milter->register(NAME, { CALLBACKS }, FLAGS);
$milter->main();

DESCRIPTION

Sendmail::PMilter is a mail filtering API implementing the Sendmail milter protocol in pure Perl. This allows Sendmail servers (and perhaps other MTAs implementing milter) to filter and modify mail in transit during the SMTP connection, all in Perl.

It should be noted that PMilter 0.90 and later is NOT compatible with scripts written for PMilter 0.5 and earlier. The API has been reworked significantly, and the enhanced APIs and rule logic provided by PMilter 0.5 and earlier has been factored out for inclusion in a separate package to be called Mail::Milter.

METHODS

    get_max_interpreters()

    Returns the maximum number of interpreters passed to main(). This is only useful when called from within the dispatcher, as it is not set before main() is called.

    get_max_requests()

    Returns the maximum number of requests per interpreter passed to main(). This is only useful when called from within the dispatcher, as it is not set before main() is called.

    main([MAXCHILDREN[, MAXREQ]])

    This is the last method called in the main block of a milter program. If successful, this call never returns; the protocol engine is launched and begins accepting connections.

    MAXCHILDREN (default 0, meaning unlimited) specifies the maximum number of connections that may be serviced simultaneously. If a connection arrives with the number of active connections above this limit, the milter will immediately return a temporary failure condition and close the connection.

    MAXREQ (default 0, meaning unlimited) is the maximum number of requests that a child may service before being recycled. It is not guaranteed that the interpreter will service this many requests, only that it will not go over the limit.

    Any callback which dies will have its output sent to warn, followed by a clean shutdown of the milter connection. To catch any warnings generated by the callbacks, and any error messages caused by a die, set $SIG{__WARN__} to a user-defined subroutine. (See perlvar.)

    register(NAME, CALLBACKS[, FLAGS])

    Sets up the main milter loop configuration.

    NAME is the name of the milter. For compatibility with the official Sendmail::Milter distribution, this should be the same name as passed to auto_getconn() or auto_setconn(), but this PMilter implementation does not enforce this.

    CALLBACKS is a hash reference containing one or more callback subroutines. If a callback is not named in this hashref, the caller's package will be searched for subroutines named "CALLBACK_callback", where CALLBACK is the name of the callback function.

    FLAGS, if specified, is a bitmask of message modification actions (a bitwise OR of the SMFIF_* constants, or SMFI_CURR_ACTS to ask for all capabilities) that are requested by the callback object for use during message processing. If any bit is not set in this mask, its corresponding action will not be allowed during message processing.

    register() must be called successfully exactly once. If called a second time, the previously registered callbacks will be erased.

    Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.

    setconn(DESC)

    Sets up the server socket with connection descriptor DESC. This is identical to the descriptor syntax used by the "X" milter configuration lines in sendmail.cf (if using Sendmail). This should be one of the following:

    local:PATH

    A local ("UNIX") socket on the filesystem, named PATH. This has some smarts that will auto-delete the pathname if it seems that the milter is not currently running (but this currently contains a race condition that may not be fixable; at worst, there could be two milters running with one never receiving connections).

    inet:PORT[@HOST]

    An IPv4 socket, bound to address HOST (default INADDR_ANY), on port PORT. It is not recommended to open milter engines to the world, so the @HOST part should be specified.

    inet6:PORT[@HOST]

    An IPv6 socket, bound to address HOST (default INADDR_ANY), on port PORT. This requires IPv6 support and the Perl INET6 package to be installed. It is not recommended to open milter engines to the world, so the @HOST part should be specified.

    Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.

    set_dispatcher(CODEREF)

    Sets the dispatcher used to accept socket connections and hand them off to the protocol engine. This allows pluggable resource allocation so that the milter script may use fork, threads, or any other such means of handling milter connections. See DISPATCHERS below for more information.

    The subroutine (code) reference will be called by main() when the listening socket object is prepared and ready to accept connections. It will be passed the arguments:

    MILTER, LSOCKET, HANDLER

    MILTER is the milter object currently running. LSOCKET is a listening socket (an instance of IO::Socket), upon which accept() should be called. HANDLER is a subroutine reference which should be called, passing the socket object returned by LSOCKET->accept().

    Note that the dispatcher may also be set from one of the off-the-shelf dispatchers noted in this document by setting the PMILTER_DISPATCHER environment variable. See DISPATCHERS, below.

    set_listen(BACKLOG)

    Set the socket listen backlog to BACKLOG. The default is 5 connections if not set explicitly by this method. Only useful before calling main().

    set_socket(SOCKET)

    Rather than calling setconn(), this method may be called explicitly to set the IO::Socket instance used to accept inbound connections.

SENDMAIL-SPECIFIC METHODS

The following methods are only useful if Sendmail is the MTA connecting to this milter. Other MTAs likely don't use Sendmail's configuration file, so these methods would not be useful with them.

    auto_getconn(NAME[, CONFIG])

    Returns the connection descriptor for milter NAME in Sendmail configuration file CONFIG (default /etc/mail/sendmail.cf or whatever was set by set_sendmail_cf()). This can then be passed to setconn(), below.

    Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.

    auto_setconn(NAME[, CONFIG])

    Creates the server connection socket for milter NAME in Sendmail configuration file CONFIG.

    Essentially, does:

    $milter->setconn($milter->auto_getconn(NAME, CONFIG))

    Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.

    get_sendmail_cf()

    Returns the pathname of the Sendmail configuration file set by set_sendmail_cf(), else the default of /etc/mail/sendmail.cf.

    get_sendmail_class(CLASS[, CONFIG])

    Returns a list containing all members of the Sendmail class CLASS, in Sendmail configuration file CONFIG (default /etc/mail/sendmail.cf or whatever is set by set_sendmail_cf()). Typically this is used to look up the entries in class "w", the local hostnames class.

    set_sendmail_cf(FILENAME)

    Set the default filename used by auto_getconn, auto_setconn, and sendmail_class to find Sendmail-specific configuration data. If not explicitly set by this method, it defaults to /etc/mail/sendmail.cf.

DISPATCHERS

Milter requests may be dispatched to the protocol handler in a pluggable manner (see the description for the set_dispatcher() method above). Sendmail::PMilter offers some off-the-shelf dispatchers that use different methods of resource allocation.

Each of these is referenced as a non-object function, and return a value that may be passed directly to set_dispatcher().

Sendmail::PMilter::ithread_dispatcher()
(environment) PMILTER_DISPATCHER=ithread

The ithread dispatcher spins up a new thread upon each connection to the milter socket. This provides a thread-based model that may be more resource efficient than the similar postfork dispatcher. This requires that the Perl interpreter be compiled with -Duseithreads, and uses the threads module (available on Perl 5.8 or later only).

Sendmail::PMilter::prefork_dispatcher([PARAMS])
(environment) PMILTER_DISPATCHER=prefork

The prefork dispatcher forks the main Perl process before accepting connections, and uses the main process to monitor the children. This should be appropriate for steady traffic flow sites. Note that if MAXINTERP is not set in the call to main() or in PARAMS, an internal default of 10 processes will be used; similarly, if MAXREQ is not set, 100 requests will be served per child.

Currently the child process pool is fixed-size: discarded children will be immediately replaced. This may change to use a dynamic sizing method in the future, more like the Apache webserver's fork-based model.

PARAMS, if specified, is a hash of key-value pairs defining parameters for the dispatcher. The available parameters that may be set are:

child_init

subroutine reference that will be called after each child process is forked. It will be passed the MILTER object.

child_exit

subroutine reference that will be called just before each child process terminates. It will be passed the MILTER object.

max_children

Maximum number of child processes active at any time. Equivalent to the MAXINTERP option to main() -- if not set in the main() call, this value will be used.

max_requests_per_child

Maximum number of requests a child process may service before being recycled. Equivalent to the MAXREQ option to main() -- if not set in the main() call, this value will be used.

Sendmail::PMilter::postfork_dispatcher()
(environment) PMILTER_DISPATCHER=postfork

In this release, this is the default dispatcher for PMilter if no explicit dispatcher is set.

The postfork dispatcher forks the main Perl process upon each connection to the milter socket. This is adequate for machines that get bursty but otherwise mostly idle mail traffic, as the idle-time resource consumption is very low.

Sendmail::PMilter::sequential_dispatcher()
(environment) PMILTER_DISPATCHER=sequential

The sequential dispatcher forces one request to be served at a time, making other requests wait on the socket for the next pass through the loop. This is not suitable for most production installations, but may be quite useful for milter debugging or other software development purposes.

Note that, because the default socket backlog is 5 connections, it may be wise to increase this backlog by calling set_listen() before entering main() if using this dispatcher.

EXPORTS

Each of these symbols may be imported explicitly, imported with tag :all, or referenced as part of the Sendmail::PMilter:: package.

Callback Return Values

Of these, SMFIS_CONTINUE will allow the milter to continue being called for the remainder of the message phases. All others will terminate processing of the current message and take the noted action.

As a special exception, SMFIS_REJECT and SMFIS_TEMPFAIL in the envrcpt callback will reject only the current recipient, otherwise continuing message processing as if SMFIS_CONTINUE were returned.

SMFIS_CONTINUE - continue processing the message
SMFIS_REJECT - reject the message with a 5xx error
SMFIS_DISCARD - accept, but discard the message
SMFIS_ACCEPT - accept the whole message as-is
SMFIS_TEMPFAIL - reject the message with a 4xx error
Milter Capability Request Flags

These values are bitmasks passed as the FLAGS argument to register(). Some MTAs may choose different methods of resource allocation, so keeping this list short may help the MTA's memory usage. If the needed capabilities are not known, however, SMFI_CURR_ACTS should be used.

SMFIF_ADDHDRS - allow $ctx->addheader()
SMFIF_CHGBODY - allow $ctx->replacebody()
SMFIF_MODBODY - (compatibility synonym for SMFIF_CHGBODY)
SMFIF_ADDRCPT - allow $ctx->addrcpt()
SMFIF_DELRCPT - allow $ctx->delrcpt()
SMFIF_CHGHDRS - allow $ctx->chgheader()

SMFIF_QUARANTINE - allow $ctx->quarantine()
  (requires Sendmail 8.13; not defined in Sendmail::Milter)

SMFIF_SETSENDER - allow $ctx->setsender()
  (requires special Sendmail patch; see below[*])

SMFI_V1_ACTS - SMFIF_ADDHDRS through SMFIF_DELRCPT
  (Sendmail 8.11 _FFR_MILTER capabilities)

SMFI_V2_ACTS - SMFIF_ADDHDRS through SMFIF_CHGHDRS
SMFI_CURR_ACTS - (compatibility synonym for SMFI_V2_ACTS)
  (Sendmail 8.12 capabilities)

(Currently no combined macro includes SMFIF_QUARANTINE or
SMFIF_SETSENDER.)

[*] NOTE: SMFIF_SETSENDER is not official as of Sendmail 8.13.x. To enable this flag, Sendmail must be patched with the diff available from:

C<http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/mlfi-setsender>

Additionally, the following statement must appear after the "use" statements in your milter program; otherwise, setsender() will always fail when called:

local $Sendmail::PMilter::enable_setsender = 1;

SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS

Running as root

Running Perl as root is dangerous. Running Sendmail::PMilter as root may well be system-assisted suicide at this point. So don't do that.

More specifically, though, it is possible to run a milter frontend as root, in order to gain access to network resources (such as a filesystem socket in /var/run), and then drop privileges before accepting connections. To do this, insert drop-privileges code between calls to setconn/auto_setconn and main; for instance:

$milter->auto_setconn('pmilter');
$> = 65534; # drop root privileges
$milter->main();

The semantics of properly dropping system administrator privileges in Perl are, unfortunately, somewhat OS-specific, so this process is not described in detail here.

AUTHOR

Todd Vierling, <tv@duh.org> <tv@pobox.com>

Maintenance

Since 0.96 Sendmail::Pmilter is no longer maintained on sourceforge.net, cpan:AVAR took it over in version 0.96 to fix a minor bug and currently owns the module in PAUSE.

However this module is effectively orphaned and looking for a new maintainer. The current maintainer doesn't use Sendmail and probably never will again. If this code is important to you and you find a bug in it or want something new implemented please:

SEE ALSO

Sendmail::PMilter::Context for a description of the arguments passed to each callback function

The project homepage: http://pmilter.sourceforge.net/

THANKS

rob.casey@bluebottle.com - for the prefork mechanism idea

4 POD Errors

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