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9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
17Halbe
3b7fc5930c Introducing Postscreen (#799)
* Introduced Postscreen

cheaper, earlier and simpler blocking of zombies/spambots.
From http://postfix.cs.utah.edu/POSTSCREEN_README.html :
As a first layer, postscreen(8) blocks connections from zombies and other spambots that are responsible for about 90% of all spam. It is implemented as a single process to make this defense as cheap as possible.

Things we need to consider:

 - Do we need a whitelist/backlist file? (http://postfix.cs.utah.edu/postconf.5.html#postscreen_access_list)
   - Via introducing an optional config/postfix-access.cidr
   - The only permanent whitelisting I could imagine are monitoring services(which might (still?) behave weird/hastely) or blacklisting backup servers(since no traffic should be coming from them anyway)
 - Do we need deep inspections? They are desireable, but these tests are expensive: a good client must disconnect after it passes the test, before it can talk to a real Postfix SMTP server. Considered tests are:
   - postscreen_bare_newline_enable (http://postfix.cs.utah.edu/postconf.5.html#postscreen_bare_newline_action)
   - postscreen_non_smtp_command_enable (http://postfix.cs.utah.edu/postconf.5.html#postscreen_non_smtp_command_action)
   - postscreen_pipelining_enable (http://postfix.cs.utah.edu/postconf.5.html#postscreen_pipelining_action)
- Do we need to make the blacklisting via dnsblocking configurable? It's currently set and weighted as follows, where a score of 3 results in blocking, a score of -1 results in whitelisting:
   (*: adds the specified weight to the SMTP client's DNSBL score. Specify a negative number for whitelisting.)
   (http://postfix.cs.utah.edu/postconf.5.html#postscreen_dnsbl_sites)
   - zen.spamhaus.org*3
   - bl.mailspike.net
   - b.barracudacentral.org*2
   - bl.spameatingmonkey.net
   - bl.spamcop.net
   - dnsbl.sorbs.net
   - psbl.surriel.com
   - list.dnswl.org=127.0.[0..255].0*-2
   - list.dnswl.org=127.0.[0..255].1*-3
   - list.dnswl.org=127.0.[0..255].[2..3]*-4
- What to do when blacklisting? I currently set it to drop. We could
   - ignore: Ignore the failure of this test. Allow other tests to complete. Repeat this test the next time the client connects. This option is useful for testing and collecting statistics without blocking mail.
   - enforce: Allow other tests to complete. Reject attempts to deliver mail with a 550 SMTP reply, and log the helo/sender/recipient information. Repeat this test the next time the client connects.
   - drop: Drop the connection immediately with a 521 SMTP reply. Repeat this test the next time the client connects.

In the end I think we could drop postgrey support. Postscreen replaces postgrey in its entirety, while being more selective and not delaying mail. Especially if we consider using the deep inspection options of postscreen.

Hope that wasn't too much to read! ;)

* main.cf got misformatted..
Don't know how, should be ok now.

* fixed malformatted main.cf & repaired master.cf

* reenabled rbl stuff.. It's cached, therefore doesn't hurt

* fixed tests

* added tests, repaired tests, added info, introduced new Variable POSTSCREEN_ACTION, fixes
2018-02-04 21:31:08 +01:00
Johan Smits
4cb8f4d4ae Improve the privacy of the client by removing sensitive details 2017-09-07 19:29:50 +02:00
Johan Smits
0fe86e796b Listen also on the ssl port 465 for clients (#709) 2017-09-07 18:08:25 +02:00
Thomas VIAL
b2922935ff This should fix most of 2.3 issues reported in #545 & #586 (#612)
* Fixes most of 2.3 issues reported in #545 & 586
2017-05-22 09:28:32 +02:00
Daniel S. Reichenbach
62c20295f9 Fixes #451 - add incoming mail SPF policy checks (#543) 2017-03-14 17:21:17 +01:00
Kai Ren
9111a92b18 improve OpenDKIM and OpenDMARC milters integration (#361) 2016-10-25 08:57:08 +02:00
Kai Ren
a62062c382 make Postfix -> Dovecot delivery over LMTP (was LDA) (#305) (#360) 2016-10-24 15:03:08 +02:00
André Stein
2f9f6b1002 Implement basic sieve support using Dovecot.
The dovecot-sieve plugin is installed and configured to apply sieve
as soon as a .dovecot.sieve file is encountered in the virtual user's
home directory (that is /var/mail/${domain}/${username}/.dovecot.sieve).

Transport has been changed in the postfix configuration to use
Dovecot LDA (see http://wiki.dovecot.org/LDA/Postfix) to actually
enable sieve filtering.

Tests have been added.
2016-04-28 08:57:50 +02:00
Thomas VIAL
fc2e2ae591 Added folder target, simplified user configuration, few renames... Need to work on tests.... 2016-04-12 00:04:33 +02:00