Introduction ============ This is a very first implementation of Postfix content filtering. A Postfix content filter receives unfiltered mail from Postfix and does one of the following: - re-injects the mail back into Postfix, perhaps after changing content - rejects the mail (by sending a suitable status code back to Postfix) so that it is returned to sender. - sends the mail somewhere else This document describes two approaches to content filtering: simple and advanced. Both filter all the mail by default. At the end are examples that show how to filter only mail from users, about using different filters for different domains that you provide MX service for, and about selective filtering on the basis of message envelope and/or header/body patterns. Simple content filtering example ================================ The first example is simple to set up. It uses a shell script that receives unfiltered mail from the Postfix pipe delivery agent, and that feeds filtered mail back into the Postfix sendmail command. Only mail arriving via SMTP will be content filtered. .................................. : Postfix : Unfiltered mail----->smtpd \ /local---->Filtered mail : -cleanup->queue- : ---->pickup / \smtp----->Filtered mail ^ : | : | : \pipe-----+ | .................................. | | | | | +-Postfix sendmail<----filter script<--+ Mail is filtered by a /some/where/filter program. This can be a simple shell script like this: #!/bin/sh # Localize these. INSPECT_DIR=/var/spool/filter SENDMAIL="/usr/sbin/sendmail -i" # Exit codes from EX_TEMPFAIL=75 EX_UNAVAILABLE=69 # Clean up when done or when aborting. trap "rm -f in.$$" 0 1 2 3 15 # Start processing. cd $INSPECT_DIR || { echo $INSPECT_DIR does not exist; exit $EX_TEMPFAIL; } cat >in.$$ || { echo Cannot save mail to file; exit $EX_TEMPFAIL; } # filter smtpd \ /local----> : -cleanup->queue- : ---->pickup / ^ | \smtp-----> : | v : : smtpd smtp : : 10026 | : ......................|........... ^ | | v ....|............ : | 10025 : : filter : : : ................. To enable content filtering in this manner, specify in main.cf a new parameter: /etc/postfix/main.cf: content_filter = scan:localhost:10025 This causes Postfix to add one extra content filtering record to each incoming mail message, with content scan:localhost:10025. The content filtering records are added by the smtpd and pickup servers. When a queue file has content filtering information, the queue manager will deliver the mail to the specified content filter regardless of its final destination. In this example, "scan" is an instance of the Postfix SMTP client with slightly different configuration parameters. This is how one would set up the service in the Postfix master.cf file: /etc/postfix/master.cf: scan unix - - n - 10 smtp Instead of a limit of 10 concurrent processes, use whatever process limit is feasible for your machine. Content inspection software can gobble up a lot of system resources, so you don't want to have too much of it running at the same time. The content filter can be set up with the Postfix spawn service, which is the Postfix equivalent of inetd. For example, to instantiate up to 10 content filtering processes on demand: /etc/postfix/master.cf: localhost:10025 inet n n n - 10 spawn user=filter argv=/some/where/filter localhost 10026 "filter" is a dedicated local user account. The user will never log in, and can be given a "*" password and non-existent shell and home directory. This user handles all potentially dangerous mail content - that is why it should be a separate account. In the above example, Postfix listens on port localhost:10025. If you want to have your filter listening on port localhost:10025 instead of Postfix, then you must run your filter as a stand-alone program. Note: the localhost port 10025 SMTP server filter should announce itself as "220 localhost...". Postfix aborts delivery when it connects to an SMTP server that uses the same hostname as Postfix ("host greeted me with my own hostname"), because that normally means you have a mail delivery loop problem. The example here assumes that the /some/where/filter command is a PERL script. PERL has modules that make talking SMTP easy. The command-line specifies that mail should be sent back into Postfix via localhost port 10026. The simplest content filter just copies SMTP commands and data between its inputs and outputs. If it has a problem, all it has to do is to reply to an input of `.' with `550 content rejected', and to disconnect without sending `.' on the connection that injects mail back into Postfix. The job of the content filter is to either bounce mail with a suitable diagnostic, or to feed the mail back into Postfix through a dedicated listener on port localhost 10026: /etc/postfix/master.cf: localhost:10026 inet n - n - 10 smtpd -o content_filter= -o local_recipient_maps= -o relay_recipient_maps= -o myhostname=localhost.domain.tld -o smtpd_helo_restrictions= -o smtpd_client_restrictions= -o smtpd_sender_restrictions= -o smtpd_recipient_restrictions=permit_mynetworks,reject -o mynetworks=127.0.0.0/8 Warning for Postfix version 2 users: in this SMTP server after the content filter, do not override main.cf settings for virtual_alias_maps or virtual_alias_domains. That would cause mail to be rejected with "User unknown". This SMTP server has the same process limit as the "filter" master.cf entry. The "-o content_filter=" requests no content filtering for incoming mail. The "-o local_recipient_maps=" and "-o relay_recipient_maps=" avoid unnecessary table lookups. The "-o myhostname=localhost.domain.tld" avoids false alarms ("host greeted me with my own hostname") if your content filter is based on a proxy that simply relays SMTP commands. The "-o smtpd_xxx_restrictions" and "-o mynetworks=127.0.0.0/8" turn off UCE controls that would only waste time here. Squeezing out more performance ============================== Many refinements are possible, such as running a specially-configured smtp delivery agent for feeding mail into the content filter, and turning off address rewriting before content filtering. As the example below shows, things quickly become very complex, because a lot of main.cf like information gets listed in the master.cf file. This makes the system hard to understand. Even worse, details change as Postfix evolves and different configuration parameters are implemented by different programs. If you need to squeeze out more performance, it is probably simpler to run multiple Postfix instances, one before and one after the content filter. That way, each instance can have simple main.cf and master.cf files, each instance can have its own mail queue, and the system will be easier to understand. As before, we will set up a content filtering program that receives SMTP mail via localhost port 10025, and that submits SMTP mail back into Postfix via localhost port 10026. ....................................... : Postfix : ----->smtpd \ : : -pre-cleanup-\ /local----> ---->pickup / -queue- : : -cleanup-/ | \smtp-----> : bounces/ ^ v : : and locally | v : : forwarded smtpd scan : : messages 10026 | : ...........................|........... ^ | | v ....|............. : | 10025 : : filter : : : .................. To enable content filtering in this manner, specify in main.cf a new parameter: /etc/postfix/main.cf: content_filter = scan:localhost:10025 /etc/postfix/master.cf: # # These are the usual input "smtpd" and local "pickup" servers already # present in master.cf. We add an option to select a non-default # cleanup service (defined further below). # smtp inet n - n - - smtpd -o cleanup_service_name=pre-cleanup pickup fifo n - n 60 1 pickup -o cleanup_service_name=pre-cleanup # # ------------------------------------------------------------------ # # This is the cleanup daemon that handles messages in front of # the content filter. It does header_checks and body_checks (if # any), but does no virtual alias or canonical address mapping, # so that mail passes through your content filter with the original # recipient addresses mostly intact. # # Virtual alias or canonical address mapping happens in the second # cleanup phase after the content filter. This gives the content_filter # access to *largely* unmodified addresses for maximum flexibility. # # Some sites may specifically want to perform canonical or virtual # address mapping in front of the content_filter. In that case you # still have to enable address rewriting in the after-filter cleanup # instance, in order to correctly process forwarded mail or bounced # mail. # pre-cleanup unix n - n - 0 cleanup -o canonical_maps= -o sender_canonical_maps= -o recipient_canonical_maps= -o masquerade_domains= -o virtual_alias_maps= # # ------------------------------------------------------------------ # # This is the delivery agent that injects mail into the content # filter. It is tuned for low concurrency, because most content # filters burn CPU and use lots of memory. The process limit of 10 # re-enforces the effect of $default_destination_concurrency_limit. # Even without an explicit process limit, the concurrency is bounded # because all messages heading into the content filter have the same # destination. # scan unix - - n - 10 smtp # # ------------------------------------------------------------------ # # This is the SMTP listener that receives filtered messages from # the content filter. It *MUST* clear the content_filter # parameter to avoid loops, and use a different hostname to avoid # triggering the Postfix SMTP loop detection code. # # This "smtpd" uses the normal cleanup service which is also used # for bounces and for internally forwarded mail. # # The parameters from mynetworks onward disable all access # control other than insisting on connections from one of the IP # addresses of the host. This is typically overkill, but can # reduce resource usage, if the default restrictions use lots of # tables. # localhost:10026 inet n - n - - smtpd -o content_filter= -o myhostname=localhost.domain.tld -o local_recipient_maps= -o relay_recipient_maps= -o mynetworks=127.0.0.0/8 -o mynetworks_style=host -o smtpd_restriction_classes= -o smtpd_client_restrictions= -o smtpd_helo_restrictions= -o smtpd_sender_restrictions= -o smtpd_recipient_restrictions=permit_mynetworks,reject # # Do not override main.cf settings here for virtual_alias_maps or # virtual_mailbox_maps. This causes mail to be rejected with "User # unknown in virtual (alias|mailbox) recipient table". # # ------------------------------------------------------------------ # # This is the normal cleanup daemon for use after content filtering. # No header or body checks, because those have already been taken # care of by the pre-cleanup service before the content filter. # # The normal cleanup instance does all the virtual alias and canonical # address mapping that was disabled in the pre-cleanup instance before # the content filter. This rewriting must be done even when you didn't # disable address rewriting in the pre-cleanup instance, in order to # correctly process bounces and locally forwarded mail. # cleanup unix n - n - 0 cleanup -o header_checks= -o mime_header_checks= -o nested_header_checks= -o body_checks= # # ------------------------------------------------------------------ # # The normal "smtp" delivery agent for contrast with "scan". # smtp unix - - n - - smtp The above example causes Postfix to add one content filtering record to each incoming mail message, with content scan:localhost:10025. You can use the same syntax as in the right-hand side of a Postfix transport table. The content filtering records are added by the smtpd and pickup servers. The "scan" transport is a dedicated instance of the "smtp" delivery agent for injecting messages into the SMTP content filter. Using a dedicated "smtp" transport allows one to tune it for the specific task of delivering mail to a local content filter (low latency, low concurrency, throughput dependent on predictably low latency). See the previous example for setting up the content filter with the Postfix spawn service; you can of course use any server that can be run stand-alone outside the Postfix environment. Filtering mail from outside users only ====================================== The easiest approach is to configure ONE Postfix instance with TWO SMTP server addresses in master.cf: - One SMTP server address for inside users only that never invokes content filtering. - One SMTP server address for outside users that always invokes content filtering. /etc/postfix.master.cf: # SMTP service for internal users only, no content filtering. 1.2.3.4:smtp inet n - n - - smtpd -o smtpd_client_restrictions=permit_mynetworks,reject 127.0.0.1:smtp inet n - n - - smtpd -o smtpd_client_restrictions=permit_mynetworks,reject # SMTP service for external users, with content filtering. 1.2.3.5:smtp inet n - n - - smtpd -o content_filter=foo:bar Getting really nasty ==================== The above filtering configurations are static. Mail that follows a given path is either always filtered or it is never filtered. As of Postfix 2.0 you can also turn on content filtering on the fly. The Postfix UCE features allow you to specify a filtering action on the fly: FILTER foo:bar You can do this in smtpd access maps as well as the cleanup server's header/body_checks. This feature must be used with great care: you must disable all the UCE features in the after-filter smtpd and cleanup daemons or else you will have a content filtering loop. Limitations: - There can be only one content filter action per message. - FILTER actions from smtpd access maps and header/body_checks take precedence over filters specified with the main.cf content_filter parameter. - Only the last FILTER action from smtpd access maps or in header/body_checks takes effect. - The same content filter is applied to all the recipients of a given message.