table of contents
COURIERTCPD(1) | Double Precision, Inc. | COURIERTCPD(1) |
NAME¶
couriertcpd - the Courier mail server TCP server daemonSYNOPSIS¶
couriertcpd [-pid=pidfile] [option...]
{list} { program} {arg...}
couriertcpd {-pid=pidfile} {-stop}
couriertcpd {-pid=pidfile} {-restart}
DESCRIPTION¶
couriertcpd accepts incoming network connections, and runs program after establishing each network connection. The program's standard input and output are set to the network connection. list is a comma-separated list of TCP port numbers where incoming connections are created. program is the program to run. If program requires any arguments, they are specified on the command line, after program itself. Before running program, couriertcpd initializes several environment variables that describe the network connection. The environment inherited by program will be the environment inherited by couriertcpd, plus any additional environment variables initialized by couriertcpd. It is also possible to reject certain network connections. Several options are available to specify which network connections will be rejected.OPTIONS¶
-access= filenameSpecifies an optional access file. The access file lists
the IP addresses from which connections should be accepted or rejected. The
access file is also used to initialize environment variables based on the IP
address of the connection. filename is a GDBM or DB database file
that's usually created by a script from one or more text files. See
"ACCESS FILE" below for more information.
-accesslocal
Lookup the local interface IP and port in the access
file, in addition to looking up the remote IP. This gives a mechanism for
setting environment variables depending on which IP address and/or port the
client connected to. In the access file, "1.2.3.4.25" matches
connections to IP address 1.2.3.4 port 25; "1.2.3.4" matches
connections to IP address 1.2.3.4 on any port; and "*.25" matches
connections to port 25 on any IP address.
-address= n.n.n.n
Accept network connections only to IP address
n.n.n.n. If not specified, couriertcpd accepts connections to
any IP address that the system accepts connections on. If the system has
multiple network interfaces with separate IP addresses, this option makes
couriertcpd accept connections only to one specific IP address. Most
systems have multiple network interfaces: the loopback interface, plus the
local network interface, so that -address=127.0.0.1 accepts connections only
from the local system. When multiple port numbers are specified, it is also
possible to selectively bind different network addresses to each port number
when list specifies more than one port number. See " Multiple
port list[1]" below for more information.
-block= zone[,var[/n.n.n.n][,msg]] or
-allow=zone[, var[/n.n.n.n[,]]]
Initialize the environment variable var if both of
the following conditions are true: var is not already initialized; the
connecting IP address can be found in a DNS-based access list. See DNS ACCESS
LISTS, below. Multiple -block and -allow options can be
specified.
-block and -allow are very similar, differing only in minor
semantics. -block's semantics are more appropriate for using DNS access
list to block access, and -allow's semantics are more appropriate for
using DNS access list to whitelist IP addresses and exempt them even if they
appear in other -blocked zones.
-denymsg= text
Specifies an optional message to be returned to the
client if the -access option rejects them. The default is to drop the
TCP connection without sending back any messages.
-drop= var
If the environment variable var is set to a
nonempty value, terminate immediately. Do not run the program to handle
the connection. See DNS ACCESS LISTS, below, for more information. var
defaults to “BLOCK”, if not specified.
-group= group
Set couriertcpd's its group ID. group may
be specified numerically, or by its name. Only the superuser may use
-group.
-listen= n
Length of the queue which holds pending connections.
n is a number. If not specified, the system default is used.
-maxperc= n
Maximum number of connections accepted from the same C
network block. Using this option is recommended, because connection slots are
limited. Without this option, the same C network block can potentially use up
all available connection slots.
-maxperip= n
Maximum number of connections accepted from the same IP
address. Use both the -maxperc and -maxperip options to fine
tune connection limits. For example, when couriertcpd is listening on
the SMTP port it makes sense to set an upper limit on the number of
connections from the same C block. Domains that send a large amount of mail
often have multiple servers sending outbound mail from the same C block, so it
makes sense to set limits on individual C blocks. On the other hand, if
couriertcpd is listening on the POP3 port it makes more sense to set
limits on individual IP addresses. If a C block of addresses is assigned to a
dialup modem pool, it is certainly possible to have many IP addresses within
the same C block have connections to the POP3 server at the same time.
-maxprocs= n
Maximum number of connection slots, or the maximum number
of processes started. This effectively specifies the maximum number of
connections accepted at the same time. After the maximum number of connections
has been opened, couriertcpd waits for an existing connection to close,
before accepting any more connections.
-warn= n
Log a LOG_WARNING message to syslog when the
number of active processes exceeds n. The default is 90% of
maxprocs. couriertcpd logs a LOG_ALERT syslog message
when the number of active processes reaches the maximum.
-nodnslookup
Do not look up the hostname associated with connecting IP
address and the local addres, do not initialize the TCPREMOTEHOST or
TCPLOCALHOST environment variables (see below).
-noidentlookup
Do not perform an ident lookup, and do not
initialize the TCPREMOTEINFO environment variable.
-pid= filename
If given, couriertcpd puts itself into the
background and saves its process ID in this file, usually somewhere in
/var/run.
This option must also be present when using the -restart and -stop
options.
-restart
Send a SIGHUP to an existing couriertcpd process.
Specify the same -pid argument as the one that was used to start
couriertcpd. The process ID is read from the -pid file, and the
couriertcpd receives a SIGHUP signal.
-stderr=socket
Set program's standard error to the network
connection, just like its standard input and output.
-stderr= logfile
Set program's standard error to the specified
file, logfile. The file is created, if necessary, and is opened in append
mode.
-stderrlogger= logprogram
Set program's standard error to a pipe, which is
read by logprogram. Only one instance of logger is started,
which receives standard error from every instance of program. The
specified logger is executed with the output end of the stderr pipe
connected as standard input. logprogram is executed with one argument -
program's name.
-stderrloggername=name
Use name as the argument to logprogram,
instead of the program's name.
-stop
Stop (kill) an existing couriertcpd process.
Specify the same -pid argument as the one that was used to start
couriertcpd. The process ID is read from the -pid file, and the
couriertcpd process is killed. All child processes of
couriertcpd will receive a SIGTERM signal.
-user= user
Set couriertcpd's user ID. Also, the group ID is
set to the user's group ID. Using both -group and -user is not
necessary. Only the superuser can specify -user.
MULTIPLE PORT LIST¶
The list argument can be a comma-separated list of multiple port numbers. couriertcpd will create network connections on any listed port. Each port number can be optionally specified as "address.port", for example:couriertcpd -pid=/var/run/smtp.pid 127.0.0.1.25,999 program
couriertcpd -pid=/var/run/smtp.pid 127.0.0.1.25,127.0.0.1.999 program
couriertcpd -pid=/var/run/smtp.pid -address=127.0.0.1 25,999 program
ACCESS FILE¶
The access file lists IP addresses that couriertcpd will accept or reject connections from. An access file is optional. Without an access file couriertcpd accepts a connection from any IP address. Both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses can be specified, if IPv6 support is available. A non-standard syntax is currently used to specify IPv6 addresses. This is subject to change in the near future. IPv6 support is currently considered to be experimental. The access file is a binary database file that's usually created by a script, such as makesmtpaccess(8)[2], from one or more plain text files. Blank lines in the text file are ignored. Lines that start with the # character are also ignored.Rejecting and accepting connections by IP address¶
The following line instructs couriertcpd to reject all connections from an IP address range:netblock<tab>deny
192.68.0<tab>deny
192.68.0<tab>deny 192.68.0.10<tab>allow
*<tab>deny
IPv6 addresses¶
:hhhh:hhhh:hhhh:hhhh:hhhh:hhhh:hhhh:hhhh<tab> action
:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:f643:00a2:9354<tab>deny
:3ffe<tab>deny
:2002:c0a8<tab>deny
Setting environment variables¶
allow can be optionally followed by a list of environment variable assignments, separated by commas. The environment variables are set before executing program or checking access lists (see below). For example:192.68.0<tab>allow,RELAYCLIENT 192.68.0.10<tab>allow,RELAYCLIENT,SIZELIMIT=1000000
DNS ACCESS LISTS¶
An alternative to listing banned IP addresses in access files is to use an external DNS-based IP access list. There is no provision to support IPv6-based lists, because none yet exist. IPv6-based access list support will be added in the future. couriertcpd's default configuration does not automatically reject connections from banned IP address unless the -drop option is present. Instead, couriertcpd sets an environment variable if the connecting address has a hit in the DNS access list. The Courier mail server rejects all mail if the connection's environment has the environment variable BLOCK set to a non-empty string, and it just so happens that -block and -allow set the BLOCK environment variable by default.-allow=dnswl.example.com -block=dnsbl.example.com
-allow=dnswl.example.com,BLOCK2
-block=dnsbl.example.com/127.0.0.2
-block=dnsbl.example.com,BLOCK,Go away
-allow=dnswl.example.com,BLOCK,
-block=dnsbl.example.com,BLOCK/127.0.0.2,Go away
MULTIPLE DNS LISTS¶
Multiple -block and -allow options can be given. The connecting IP address gets looked up in multiple access lists. This is implemented as follows. couriertcpd processes all -block and -allow options in list order. If each option's environment variable ( BLOCK or something else) is already set, couriertcpd skips the DNS access list lookup. Therefore, when multiple options use the same environment variable, the first DNS access list it exists in will set the environment variable, and the remaining ones get ignored, but any remaining -blocks and -allows for different environment variables still get processed. It follows that, in general, -allow options should always be listed first, before any -blocks; but it's also possible to implement a complicated policy with some -allows, then some -blocks, then more -allows and -blocks.ADDITIONAL DNS ACCESS LIST VARIABLES¶
Three additional environment variables may get set in conjunction with a successful DNS access list lookup: BLOCK_IP
The contents of the A record in the DNS access list, if one exists (this is not
set for DNS access lists that use TXT record).
BLOCK_TXT
The contents of the TXT record in the DNS access list, if one exists. This will
generally be the same as BLOCK for -blocks, but will also
provide the contents of the TXT record for -allows (if it has a dummy
custom message portion) which always set BLOCK to an empty
string.
BLOCK_ZONE
The DNS zone of the succesfull access list lookup, like
“dnsbl.example.com”.
-block and -allow options that specify a custom environment
variable name follow the same naming convention, of appending
“_IP”, “_TXT”, and “_ZONE” suffix to
the name of the custom environment variable.
USING DNS WHITELISTS WITH SPF¶
Including “allowok” keyword in an SPF setting automatically passes the SPF check for senders whose IP address is found in an -allow-ed access list. See courier(8)[3].ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES¶
couriertcpd also initializes the following environment variables prior to running program: TCPLOCALHOSTThe name of the host on the local end of the network
connection, looked up in DNS. TCPLOCALHOST will not be set if the IP
address of the network connection's local end cannot be found in DNS, or if
-nodnslookup option is specified. TCPLOCALHOST will be set to
the string softdnserr if the DNS lookup fails with a temporary error
(so you cannot tell if the IP address has a valid host name associated with
it), or if the reverse and forward DNS lookups do not match.
TCPLOCALHOST will not be set if the reverse DNS lookup fails
completely.
TCPLOCALIP
The IP address of the local end of the network
connection.
TCPLOCALPORT
Rhe number of the port of the local end of the network
connection.
TCPREMOTEHOST
The hostname of the connecting host. Like
TCPLOCALHOST, but for the connecting IP address.
TCPREMOTEIP
Connecting IP address.
TCPREMOTEINFO
Identification string received from the IDENT server on
the remote IP address. Not set if the IDENT server returned an error, or if
the -noidentlookup option was specified.
TCPREMOTEPORT
TCP port of the remote end of the network
connection.
SEE ALSO¶
courier(8)[3].AUTHOR¶
Sam VarshavchikAuthor
NOTES¶
- 1.
- Multiple port list
[set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/#list
[set
$man.base.url.for.relative.links]/makesmtpaccess.html
- 3.
- courier(8)
[set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/courier.html
08/25/2013 | Courier Mail Server |