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PPoossttffiixx BBeeffoorree--QQuueeuuee CCoonntteenntt FFiilltteerr

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

WWAARRNNIINNGG

The before-queue content filtering feature described in this document limits
the amount of mail that a site can handle. See the "Pros and Cons" section
below for details.

TThhee PPoossttffiixx bbeeffoorree--qquueeuuee ccoonntteenntt ffiilltteerr ffeeaattuurree

As of version 2.1, the Postfix SMTP server can forward all incoming mail to a
content filtering proxy server that inspects all mail BEFORE it is stored in
the Postfix mail queue. It is roughly equivalent in capabilities to the
approach described in MILTER_README, except that the latter uses a dedicated
protocol instead of SMTP.

The before-queue content filter is meant to be used as follows:

                Postfix    BBeeffoorree    Postfix    Postfix    Postfix     smtp
    Internet ->  SMTP   -> qquueeuuee  ->  SMTP   -> cleanup ->  queue  -<  local
                server     ffiilltteerr    server     server                virtual

The before-queue content filter is not to be confused with the approach
described in the FILTER_README document, where mail is filtered AFTER it is
stored in the Postfix mail queue.

This document describes the following topics:

  * Principles of operation
  * Pros and cons of before-queue content filtering
  * Configuring the Postfix SMTP pass-through proxy feature
  * Configuration parameters
  * How Postfix talks to the before-queue content filter

PPrriinncciipplleess ooff ooppeerraattiioonn

As shown in the diagram above, the before-queue filter sits between two Postfix
SMTP server processes.

  * The before-filter Postfix SMTP server accepts connections from the Internet
    and does the usual relay access control, SASL authentication, TLS
    negotiation, RBL lookups, rejecting non-existent sender or recipient
    addresses, etc.

  * The before-queue filter receives unfiltered mail content from Postfix and
    does one of the following:

     1. Re-inject the mail back into Postfix via SMTP, perhaps after changing
        its content and/or destination.

     2. Discard or quarantine the mail.

     3. Reject the mail by sending a suitable SMTP status code back to Postfix.
        Postfix passes the status back to the remote SMTP client. This way,
        Postfix does not have to send a bounce message.

  * The after-filter Postfix SMTP server receives mail from the content filter.
    From then on Postfix processes the mail as usual.

The before-queue content filter described here works just like the after-queue
content filter described in the FILTER_README document. In many cases you can
use the same software, within the limitations as discussed in the "Pros and
Cons" section below.

PPrrooss aanndd ccoonnss ooff bbeeffoorree--qquueeuuee ccoonntteenntt ffiilltteerriinngg

  * Pro: Postfix can reject mail before the incoming SMTP mail transfer
    completes, so that Postfix does not have to send rejected mail back to the
    sender (which is usually forged anyway). Mail that is not accepted remains
    the responsibility of the remote SMTP client.

  * Con: The remote SMTP client expects an SMTP reply within a deadline. As the
    system load increases, fewer and fewer CPU cycles remain available to
    answer within the deadline, and eventually you either have to stop
    accepting mail or you have to stop filtering mail. It is for this reason
    that the before-queue content filter limits the amount of mail that a site
    can handle.

  * Con: Content filtering software can use lots of memory resources. You have
    to reduce the number of simultaneous content filter processes so that a
    burst of mail will not drive your system into the ground.

      o With Postfix versions 2.7 and later, SMTP clients will experience an
        increase in the delay between the time the client sends "end-of-
        message" and the time the Postfix SMTP server replies (here, the number
        of before-filter SMTP server processes can be larger than the number of
        filter processes).

      o With Postfix versions before 2.7, SMTP clients will experience an
        increase in the delay before they can receive service (here, the number
        of before-filter SMTP server processes is always equal to the number of
        filter processes).

CCoonnffiigguurriinngg tthhee PPoossttffiixx SSMMTTPP ppaassss--tthhrroouugghh pprrooxxyy ffeeaattuurree

In the following example, the before-filter Postfix SMTP server gives mail to a
content filter that listens on localhost port 10025. The after-filter Postfix
SMTP server receives mail from the content filter via localhost port 10026.
From then on mail is processed as usual.

The content filter itself is not described here. You can use any filter that is
SMTP enabled. For non-SMTP capable content filtering software, Bennett Todd's
SMTP proxy implements a nice Perl-based framework. See: http://
bent.latency.net/smtpprox/ or https://github.com/jnorell/smtpprox.

                                               Postfix
                  Postfix      filter on     SMTP server    Postfix    Postfix
    Internet -> SMTP server -> localhost  ->     on      -> cleanup -> incoming
                on port 25     port 10025     localhost     server      queue
                                             port 10026

This is configured by editing the master.cf file:

    /etc/postfix/master.cf:
        # =============================================================
        # service type  private unpriv  chroot  wakeup  maxproc command
        #               (yes)   (yes)   (yes)   (never) (100)
        # =============================================================
        #
        # Before-filter SMTP server. Receive mail from the network and
        # pass it to the content filter on localhost port 10025.
        #
        smtp      inet  n       -       n       -       20      smtpd
            -o smtpd_proxy_filter=127.0.0.1:10025
            -o smtpd_client_connection_count_limit=10
            # Postfix 2.7 and later performance feature.
            # -o smtpd_proxy_options=speed_adjust
        #
        # After-filter SMTP server. Receive mail from the content filter
        # on localhost port 10026.
        #
        127.0.0.1:10026 inet n  -       n       -        -      smtpd
            -o smtpd_authorized_xforward_hosts=127.0.0.0/8
            -o smtpd_client_restrictions=
            -o smtpd_helo_restrictions=
            -o smtpd_sender_restrictions=
            # Postfix 2.10 and later: specify empty smtpd_relay_restrictions.
            -o smtpd_relay_restrictions=
            -o smtpd_recipient_restrictions=permit_mynetworks,reject
            -o smtpd_data_restrictions=
            -o mynetworks=127.0.0.0/8
            -o receive_override_options=no_unknown_recipient_checks

Note: do not specify spaces around the "=" or "," characters.

The before-filter SMTP server entry is a modified version of the default
Postfix SMTP server entry that is normally configured at the top of the
master.cf file:

  * The number of SMTP sessions is reduced from the default 100 to only 20.
    This prevents a burst of mail from running your system into the ground with
    too many content filter processes.

  * The "-o smtpd_client_connection_count_limit=10" prevents one SMTP client
    from using up all 20 SMTP server processes. This limit is not necessary if
    you receive all mail from a trusted relay host.

    Note: this setting is available in Postfix version 2.2 and later. Earlier
    Postfix versions will ignore it.

  * The "-o smtpd_proxy_filter=127.0.0.1:10025" tells the before-filter SMTP
    server that it should give incoming mail to the content filter that listens
    on localhost TCP port 10025.

  * The "-o smtpd_proxy_options=speed_adjust" tells the before-filter SMTP
    server that it should receive an entire email message before it connects to
    a content filter. This reduces the number of simultaneous filter processes.

    NOTE 1: When this option is turned on, a content filter must not
    selectively reject recipients of a multi-recipient message. Rejecting all
    recipients is OK, as is accepting all recipients.

    NOTE 2: This feature increases the minimum amount of free queue space by
    $message_size_limit. The extra space is needed to save the message to a
    temporary file.

  * Postfix >= 2.3 supports both TCP and UNIX-domain filters. The above filter
    could be specified as "inet:127.0.0.1:10025". To specify a UNIX-domain
    filter, specify "unix:pathname". A relative pathname is interpreted
    relative to the Postfix queue directory.

The after-filter SMTP server is a new master.cf entry:

  * The "127.0.0.1:10026" makes the after-filter SMTP server listen on the
    localhost address only, without exposing it to the network. NEVER expose
    the after-filter SMTP server to the Internet :-)

  * The "-o smtpd_authorized_xforward_hosts=127.0.0.0/8" allows the after-
    filter SMTP server to receive remote SMTP client information from the
    before-filter SMTP server, so that the after-filter Postfix daemons log the
    remote SMTP client information instead of logging localhost[127.0.0.1].

  * The other after-filter SMTP server settings avoid duplication of work that
    is already done in the "before filter" SMTP server.

By default, the filter has 100 seconds to do its work. If it takes longer then
Postfix gives up and reports an error to the remote SMTP client. You can
increase this time limit (see configuration parameter section below) but doing
so is pointless because you can't control when the remote SMTP client times
out.

CCoonnffiigguurraattiioonn ppaarraammeetteerrss

Parameters that control proxying:

  * smtpd_proxy_filter (syntax: host:port): The host and TCP port of the
    before-queue content filter. When no host or host: is specified here,
    localhost is assumed.

  * smtpd_proxy_timeout (default: 100s): Timeout for connecting to the before-
    queue content filter and for sending and receiving commands and data. All
    proxy errors are logged to the maillog file. For privacy reasons, all the
    remote SMTP client sees is "451 Error: queue file write error". It would
    not be right to disclose internal details to strangers.

  * smtpd_proxy_ehlo (default: $myhostname): The hostname to use when sending
    an EHLO command to the before-queue content filter.

HHooww PPoossttffiixx ttaallkkss ttoo tthhee bbeeffoorree--qquueeuuee ccoonntteenntt ffiilltteerr

The before-filter Postfix SMTP server connects to the content filter, delivers
one message, and disconnects. While sending mail into the content filter,
Postfix speaks ESMTP but uses no command pipelining. Postfix generates its own
EHLO, XFORWARD (for logging the remote client IP address instead of localhost
[127.0.0.1]), DATA and QUIT commands, and forwards unmodified copies of all the
MAIL FROM and RCPT TO commands that the before-filter Postfix SMTP server
didn't reject itself. Postfix sends no other SMTP commands.

The content filter should accept the same MAIL FROM and RCPT TO command syntax
as the before-filter Postfix SMTP server, and should forward the commands
without modification to the after-filter SMTP server. If the content filter or
after-filter SMTP server does not support all the ESMTP features that the
before-filter Postfix SMTP server supports, then the missing features must be
turned off in the before-filter Postfix SMTP server with the
smtpd_discard_ehlo_keywords parameter.

When the filter rejects content, it should send a negative SMTP response back
to the before-filter Postfix SMTP server, and it should abort the connection
with the after-filter Postfix SMTP server without completing the SMTP
conversation with the after-filter Postfix SMTP server.