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     15 <h1><img src="postfix-logo.jpg" width="203" height="98" ALT="">Postfix Postscreen Howto (Postfix 2.8 - 3.5)</h1>
     16 
     17 <hr>
     18 
     19 <h2> <a name="intro">Introduction</a> </h2>
     20 
     21 <p> This document describes features that are available in Postfix
     22 2.8 - 3.5. </p>
     23 
     24 <p> The Postfix postscreen(8) daemon provides additional protection
     25 against mail server overload. One postscreen(8) process handles
     26 multiple inbound SMTP connections, and decides which clients may
     27 talk to a Postfix SMTP server process.  By keeping spambots away,
     28 postscreen(8) leaves more SMTP server processes available for
     29 legitimate clients, and delays the onset of <a
     30 href="STRESS_README.html">server overload</a> conditions. </p>
     31 
     32 <p> postscreen(8) should not be used on SMTP ports that receive
     33 mail from end-user clients (MUAs). In a typical deployment,
     34 postscreen(8) handles the MX service on TCP port 25, while MUA
     35 clients submit mail via the submission service on TCP port 587 which
     36 requires client authentication. Alternatively, a site could set up
     37 a dedicated, non-postscreen, "port 25" server that provides submission
     38 service and client authentication, but no MX service.  </p>
     39 
     40 <p> postscreen(8) maintains a temporary allowlist for clients that
     41 pass its tests; by allowing allowlisted clients to skip tests,
     42 postscreen(8) minimizes its impact on legitimate email traffic.
     43 </p>
     44 
     45 <p> postscreen(8) is part of a multi-layer defense. <p>
     46 
     47 <ul>
     48 
     49 <li> <p> As the first layer, postscreen(8) blocks connections from
     50 zombies and other spambots that are responsible for about 90% of
     51 all spam.  It is implemented as a single process to make this defense
     52 as inexpensive as possible. </p>
     53 
     54 <li> <p> The second layer implements more complex SMTP-level access
     55 checks with <a href="SMTPD_ACCESS_README.html">Postfix SMTP servers</a>, 
     56 <a href="SMTPD_POLICY_README.html">policy daemons</a>, and 
     57 <a href="MILTER_README.html">Milter applications</a>. </p>
     58 
     59 <li> <p> The third layer performs light-weight content inspection
     60 with the Postfix built-in header_checks and body_checks. This can
     61 block unacceptable attachments such as executable programs, and
     62 worms or viruses with easy-to-recognize signatures. </p>
     63 
     64 <li> <p> The fourth layer provides heavy-weight content inspection
     65 with external content filters. Typical examples are <a
     66 href="http://www.ijs.si/software/amavisd/">Amavisd-new</a>, <a
     67 href="http://spamassassin.apache.org/">SpamAssassin</a>, and <a
     68 href="MILTER_README.html">Milter applications</a>. </p>
     69 
     70 </ul>
     71 
     72 <p> Each layer reduces the spam volume. The general strategy is to
     73 use the less expensive defenses first, and to use the more expensive
     74 defenses only for the spam that remains. </p>
     75 
     76 <p> Topics in this document: </p>
     77 
     78 <ul>
     79 
     80 <li> <a href="#intro">Introduction</a>
     81 
     82 <li> <a href="#basic">The basic idea behind postscreen(8)</a>
     83 
     84 <li> <a href="#general"> General operation </a>
     85 
     86 <li> <a href="#quick">Quick tests before everything else</a>
     87 
     88 <li> <a href="#before_220"> Tests before the 220 SMTP server greeting </a>
     89 
     90 <li> <a href="#after_220">Tests after the 220 SMTP server greeting</a>
     91 
     92 <li> <a href="#other_error">Other errors</a>
     93 
     94 <li> <a href="#victory">When all tests succeed</a>
     95 
     96 <li> <a href="#config"> Configuring the postscreen(8) service</a>
     97 
     98 <li> <a href="#historical"> Historical notes and credits </a>
     99 
    100 </ul>
    101 
    102 <h2> <a name="basic">The basic idea behind postscreen(8)</a> </h2>
    103 
    104 <p> Most email is spam, and most spam is sent out by zombies (malware
    105 on compromised end-user computers).  Wietse expects that the zombie
    106 problem will get worse before things improve, if ever. Without a
    107 tool like postscreen(8) that keeps the zombies away, Postfix would be
    108 spending most of its resources not receiving email. </p>
    109 
    110 <p> The main challenge for postscreen(8) is to make an is-a-zombie
    111 decision based on a single measurement. This is necessary because
    112 many zombies try to fly under the radar and avoid spamming the same
    113 site repeatedly.  Once postscreen(8) decides that a client is
    114 not-a-zombie, it allowlists the client temporarily to avoid further
    115 delays for legitimate mail. </p>
    116 
    117 <p> Zombies have challenges too: they have only a limited amount
    118 of time to deliver spam before their IP address becomes denylisted.
    119 To speed up spam deliveries, zombies make compromises in their SMTP
    120 protocol implementation.  For example, they speak before their turn,
    121 or they ignore responses from SMTP servers and continue sending
    122 mail even when the server tells them to go away. </p>
    123 
    124 <p> postscreen(8) uses a variety of measurements to recognize
    125 zombies.  First, postscreen(8) determines if the remote SMTP client
    126 IP address is denylisted.  Second, postscreen(8) looks for protocol
    127 compromises that are made to speed up delivery.  These are good
    128 indicators for making is-a-zombie decisions based on single
    129 measurements.  </p>
    130 
    131 <p> postscreen(8) does not inspect message content. Message content
    132 can vary from one delivery to the next, especially with clients
    133 that (also) send legitimate email.  Content is not a good indicator
    134 for making is-a-zombie decisions based on single measurements,
    135 and that is the problem that postscreen(8) is focused on.  </p>
    136 
    137 <h2> <a name="general"> General operation </a> </h2>
    138 
    139 <p> For each connection from an SMTP client, postscreen(8) performs
    140 a number of tests
    141 in the order as described below.  Some tests introduce a delay of
    142 a few seconds.  postscreen(8) maintains a temporary allowlist for
    143 clients that pass its tests; by allowing allowlisted clients to
    144 skip tests, postscreen(8) minimizes its impact on legitimate email
    145 traffic.  </p>
    146 
    147 <p> By default, postscreen(8) hands off all connections to a Postfix
    148 SMTP server process after logging its findings. This mode is useful
    149 for non-destructive testing. </p>
    150 
    151 <p> In a typical production setting, postscreen(8) is configured
    152 to reject mail from clients that fail one or more tests, after
    153 logging the helo, sender and recipient information. </p>
    154 
    155 <p> Note: postscreen(8) is not an SMTP proxy; this is intentional.
    156 The purpose is to keep zombies away from Postfix, with minimal
    157 overhead for legitimate clients. </p>
    158 
    159 <h2> <a name="quick">Quick tests before everything else</a> </h2>
    160 
    161 <p> Before engaging in SMTP-level tests. postscreen(8) queries a
    162 number of local deny and allowlists. These tests speed up the
    163 handling of known clients. </p>
    164 
    165 <ul>
    166 
    167 <li> <a href="#perm_white_black"> Permanent allow/denylist test </a>
    168 
    169 <li> <a href="#temp_white"> Temporary allowlist test </a>
    170 
    171 <li> <a href="#white_veto"> MX Policy test </a>
    172 
    173 </ul>
    174 
    175 <h3> <a name="perm_white_black"> Permanent allow/denylist test </a> </h3>
    176 
    177 <p> The postscreen_access_list parameter (default: permit_mynetworks)
    178 specifies a permanent access list for SMTP client IP addresses. Typically
    179 one would specify something that allowlists local networks, followed
    180 by a CIDR table for selective allow- and denylisting. </p>
    181 
    182 <p> Example: </p>
    183 
    184 <pre>
    185 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
    186     postscreen_access_list = permit_mynetworks,
    187         cidr:/etc/postfix/postscreen_access.cidr
    188 
    189 /etc/postfix/postscreen_access.cidr:
    190    # Rules are evaluated in the order as specified.
    191    # Denylist 192.168.* except 192.168.0.1.
    192    192.168.0.1          permit
    193    192.168.0.0/16       reject
    194 </pre>
    195 
    196 <p> See the postscreen_access_list manpage documentation for more
    197 details.  </p>
    198 
    199 <p> When the SMTP client address matches a "permit" action,
    200 postscreen(8) logs this with the client address and port number as:
    201 </p>
    202 
    203 <pre>
    204     <b>WHITELISTED</b> <i>[address]:port</i>
    205 </pre>
    206 
    207 <p> The allowlist action is not configurable: immediately hand off the
    208 connection to a Postfix SMTP server process. </p>
    209 
    210 <p> When the SMTP client address matches a "reject" action,
    211 postscreen(8) logs this with the client address and port number as:
    212 </p>
    213 
    214 <pre>
    215     <b>BLACKLISTED</b> <i>[address]:port</i>
    216 </pre>
    217 
    218 <p> The postscreen_blacklist_action parameter specifies the action
    219 that is taken next.  See "<a href="#fail_before_220">When tests
    220 fail before the 220 SMTP server greeting</a>" below. </p>
    221 
    222 <h3> <a name="temp_white"> Temporary allowlist test </a> </h3>
    223 
    224 <p> The postscreen(8) daemon maintains a <i>temporary</i>
    225 allowlist for SMTP client IP addresses that have passed all
    226 the tests described below. The postscreen_cache_map parameter
    227 specifies the location of the temporary allowlist.  The
    228 temporary allowlist is not used for SMTP client addresses
    229 that appear on the <i>permanent</i> access list. </p>
    230 
    231 <p> By default the temporary allowlist is not shared with other
    232 postscreen(8) daemons. See
    233 <a href="#temp_white_sharing"> Sharing
    234 the temporary allowlist </a> below for alternatives. </p>
    235 
    236 <p> When the SMTP client address appears on the temporary
    237 allowlist, postscreen(8) logs this with the client address and port
    238 number as: </p>
    239 
    240 <pre>
    241     <b>PASS OLD</b> <i>[address]:port</i>
    242 </pre>
    243 
    244 <p> The action is not configurable: immediately hand off the
    245 connection to a Postfix SMTP server process.  The client is
    246 excluded from further tests until its temporary allowlist
    247 entry expires, as controlled with the postscreen_*_ttl
    248 parameters.  Expired entries are silently renewed if possible. </p>
    249 
    250 <h3> <a name="white_veto"> MX Policy test </a> </h3>
    251 
    252 <p> When the remote SMTP client is not on the static access list
    253 or temporary allowlist, postscreen(8) can implement a number of
    254 allowlist tests, before it grants the client a temporary allowlist
    255 status that allows it to talk to a Postfix SMTP server process. </p>
    256 
    257 <p> When postscreen(8) is configured to monitor all primary and
    258 backup MX addresses, it can refuse to allowlist clients that connect
    259 to a backup MX address only (an old spammer trick to take advantage
    260 of backup MX hosts with weaker anti-spam policies than primary MX
    261 hosts). </p>
    262 
    263 <blockquote> <p> NOTE: The following solution is for small sites.
    264 Larger sites would have to share the postscreen(8) cache between
    265 primary and backup MTAs, which would introduce a common point of
    266 failure.  </p> </blockquote>
    267 
    268 <ul>
    269 
    270 <li> <p> First, configure the host to listen on both primary and
    271 backup MX addresses. Use the appropriate <tt>ifconfig</tt> or <tt>ip</tt>
    272 command for the local operating system, or update the appropriate
    273 configuration files and "refresh" the network protocol stack. </p>
    274 
    275 <p> <p> Second, configure Postfix to listen on the new IP address
    276 (this step is needed when you have specified inet_interfaces in
    277 main.cf). </p>
    278 
    279 <li> <p> Then, configure postscreen(8) to deny the temporary allowlist
    280 status on the backup MX address(es).  An example for Wietse's
    281 server is: </p>
    282 
    283 <pre>
    284 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
    285     postscreen_whitelist_interfaces = !168.100.189.8 static:all
    286 </pre>
    287 
    288 <p> Translation: allow clients to obtain the temporary allowlist
    289 status on all server IP addresses except 168.100.189.8, which is a
    290 backup MX address.  </p>
    291 
    292 </ul>
    293 
    294 <p> When a non-allowlisted client connects the backup MX address,
    295 postscreen(8) logs this with the client address and port number as:
    296 </p>
    297 
    298 <pre>
    299     <b>CONNECT from</b> <i>[address]:port</i> <b>to [168.100.189.8]:25</b>
    300     <b>WHITELIST VETO</b> <i>[address]:port</i>
    301 </pre>
    302 
    303 <p> Translation: the client at <i>[address]:port</i> connected to
    304 the backup MX address 168.100.189.8 while it was not allowlisted.
    305 The client will not be granted the temporary allowlist status, even
    306 if passes all the allowlist tests described below. </p>
    307 
    308 <h2> <a name="before_220"> Tests before the 220 SMTP server greeting </a> </h2>
    309 
    310 <p> The postscreen_greet_wait parameter specifies a short time
    311 interval before the "220 <i>text</i>..." server greeting, where
    312 postscreen(8) can run a number of tests in parallel. </p>
    313 
    314 <p> When a good client passes these tests, and no "<a
    315 href="#after_220">deep protocol tests</a>"
    316 are configured, postscreen(8)
    317 adds the client to the temporary allowlist and hands off the "live"
    318 connection to a Postfix SMTP server process.  The client can then
    319 continue as if postscreen(8) never even existed (except of course
    320 for the short postscreen_greet_wait delay).  </p>
    321 
    322 <ul>
    323 
    324 <li> <a href="#pregreet"> Pregreet test </a>
    325 
    326 <li> <a href="#dnsbl"> DNS Allow/denylist test </a>
    327 
    328 <li> <a href="#fail_before_220">When tests fail before the 220 SMTP server greeting</a>
    329 
    330 </ul>
    331 
    332 <h3> <a name="pregreet"> Pregreet test </a> </h3>
    333 
    334 <p> The SMTP protocol is a classic example of a protocol where the
    335 server speaks before the client. postscreen(8) detects zombies
    336 that are in a hurry and that speak before their turn. This test is
    337 enabled by default. </p>
    338 
    339 <p> The postscreen_greet_banner parameter specifies the <i>text</i>
    340 portion of a "220-<i>text</i>..." teaser banner (default: $smtpd_banner).
    341 Note that this becomes the first part of a multi-line server greeting.
    342 The postscreen(8) daemon sends this before the postscreen_greet_wait
    343 timer is started.  The purpose of the teaser banner is to confuse
    344 zombies so that they speak before their turn. It has no effect on
    345 SMTP clients that correctly implement the protocol.  </p>
    346 
    347 <p> To avoid problems with poorly-implemented SMTP engines in network
    348 appliances or network testing tools, either exclude them from all
    349 tests with the postscreen_access_list feature or else specify
    350 an empty teaser banner: </p>
    351 
    352 <pre>
    353 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
    354     # Exclude broken clients by allowlisting. Clients in mynetworks
    355     # should always be allowlisted.
    356     postscreen_access_list = permit_mynetworks, 
    357         cidr:/etc/postfix/postscreen_access.cidr
    358 
    359 /etc/postfix/postscreen_access.cidr:
    360     192.168.254.0/24 permit
    361 </pre>
    362 
    363 <pre>
    364 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
    365     # Disable the teaser banner (try allowlisting first if you can).
    366     postscreen_greet_banner =
    367 </pre>
    368 
    369 <p> When an SMTP client sends a command before the
    370 postscreen_greet_wait time has elapsed, postscreen(8) logs this as:
    371 </p>
    372 
    373 <pre>
    374     <b>PREGREET</b> <i>count</i> <b>after</b> <i>time</i> <b>from</b> <i>[address]:port text...</i>
    375 </pre>
    376 
    377 <p> Translation: the client at <i>[address]:port</i> sent <i>count</i>
    378 bytes before its turn to speak. This happened <i>time</i> seconds
    379 after the postscreen_greet_wait timer was started.  The <i>text</i>
    380 is what the client sent (truncated to 100 bytes, and with non-printable
    381 characters replaced with C-style escapes such as \r for carriage-return
    382 and \n for newline). </p>
    383 
    384 <p> The postscreen_greet_action parameter specifies the action that
    385 is taken next.  See "<a href="#fail_before_220">When tests fail
    386 before the 220 SMTP server greeting</a>" below. </p>
    387 
    388 <h3> <a name="dnsbl"> DNS Allow/denylist test </a> </h3>
    389 
    390 <p> The postscreen_dnsbl_sites parameter (default: empty) specifies
    391 a list of DNS blocklist servers with optional filters and weight
    392 factors (positive weights for denylisting, negative for allowlisting).
    393 These servers will be queried in parallel with the reverse client
    394 IP address.  This test is disabled by default. </p>
    395 
    396 <blockquote>
    397 <p>
    398 CAUTION: when postscreen rejects mail, its SMTP reply contains the
    399 DNSBL domain name. Use the postscreen_dnsbl_reply_map feature to
    400 hide "password" information in DNSBL domain names.
    401 </p>
    402 </blockquote>
    403 
    404 <p> When the postscreen_greet_wait time has elapsed, and the combined
    405 DNSBL score is equal to or greater than the postscreen_dnsbl_threshold
    406 parameter value, postscreen(8) logs this as: </p>
    407 
    408 <pre>
    409     <b>DNSBL rank</b> <i>count</i> <b>for</b> <i>[address]:port</i>
    410 </pre>
    411 
    412 <p> Translation: the SMTP client at <i>[address]:port</i> has a combined
    413 DNSBL score of <i>count</i>. </p>
    414 
    415 <p> The postscreen_dnsbl_action parameter specifies the action that
    416 is taken when the combined DNSBL score is equal to or greater than
    417 the threshold.  See "<a href="#fail_before_220">When tests fail
    418 before the 220 SMTP server greeting</a>" below. </p>
    419 
    420 <h3> <a name="fail_before_220">When tests fail before the 220 SMTP server greeting</a> </h3>
    421 
    422 <p> When the client address matches the permanent denylist, or
    423 when the client fails the pregreet or DNSBL tests, the action is
    424 specified with postscreen_blacklist_action, postscreen_greet_action,
    425 or postscreen_dnsbl_action, respectively. </p>
    426 
    427 <dl>
    428 
    429 <dt> <b>ignore</b> (default) </dt>
    430 
    431 <dd> Ignore the failure of this test. Allow other tests to complete.
    432 Repeat this test the next time the client connects.  This option
    433 is useful for testing and collecting statistics without blocking
    434 mail. </dd>
    435 
    436 <dt> <b>enforce</b> </dt>
    437 
    438 <dd> Allow other tests to complete.  Reject attempts to deliver mail
    439 with a 550 SMTP reply, and log the helo/sender/recipient information.
    440 Repeat this test the next time the client connects. </dd>
    441 
    442 <dt> <b>drop</b> </dt>
    443 
    444 <dd> Drop the connection immediately with a 521 SMTP reply.  Repeat
    445 this test the next time the client connects. </dd>
    446 
    447 </dl>
    448 
    449 <h2> <a name="after_220">Tests after the 220 SMTP server greeting</a> </h2>
    450 
    451 <p> In this phase of the protocol, postscreen(8) implements a
    452 number of "deep protocol" tests. These tests use an SMTP protocol
    453 engine that is built into the postscreen(8) server. </p>
    454 
    455 <p> Important note: these protocol tests are disabled by default.
    456 They are more intrusive than the pregreet and DNSBL tests, and they
    457 have limitations as discussed next. </p>
    458 
    459 <ul>
    460 
    461 <li> <p> The main limitation of "after 220 greeting" tests is that
    462 a new client must disconnect after passing these tests (reason:
    463 postscreen is not a proxy).  Then the client must reconnect from
    464 the same IP address before it can deliver mail.  The following
    465 measures may help to avoid email delays: </p>
    466 
    467 <ul>
    468 
    469 <li> <p> Allow "good" clients to skip tests with the
    470 postscreen_dnsbl_whitelist_threshold feature (Postfix 2.11 and
    471 later). This is especially effective for sites such as Google that
    472 never retry immediately from the same IP address. </p>
    473 
    474 <li> <p> Small sites: Configure postscreen(8) to listen on multiple
    475 IP addresses, published in DNS as different IP addresses for the
    476 same MX hostname or for different MX hostnames. This avoids mail
    477 delivery delays with clients that reconnect immediately from the
    478 same IP address.  </p>
    479 
    480 <li> <p> Large sites: Share the postscreen(8) cache between different
    481 Postfix MTAs with a large-enough memcache_table(5). Again, this
    482 avoids mail delivery delays with clients that reconnect immediately
    483 from the same IP address. </p>
    484 
    485 </ul>
    486 
    487 <li> <p> postscreen(8)'s built-in SMTP engine does not implement the
    488 AUTH, XCLIENT, and XFORWARD features. If you need to make these
    489 services available on port 25, then do not enable the tests after
    490 the 220 server greeting. </p>
    491 
    492 <li> <p> End-user clients should connect directly to the submission
    493 service, so that they never have to deal with postscreen(8)'s tests.
    494 </p>
    495 
    496 </ul>
    497 
    498 <p> The following "after 220 greeting" tests are available: </p>
    499 
    500 <ul>
    501 
    502 <li> <a href="#pipelining">Command pipelining test</a>
    503 
    504 <li> <a href="#non_smtp">Non-SMTP command test</a>
    505 
    506 <li> <a href="#barelf">Bare newline test</a>
    507 
    508 <li> <a href="#fail_after_220">When tests fail after the 220 SMTP server greeting</a>
    509 
    510 </ul>
    511 
    512 <h3> <a name="pipelining">Command pipelining test</a> </h3>
    513 
    514 <p> By default, SMTP is a half-duplex protocol: the sender and
    515 receiver send one command and one response at a time.  Unlike the
    516 Postfix SMTP server, postscreen(8) does not announce support
    517 for ESMTP command pipelining.  Therefore, clients are not allowed
    518 to send multiple commands. postscreen(8)'s
    519 <a href="#after_220">deep
    520 protocol test</a> for this is disabled by default. </p>
    521 
    522 <p> With "postscreen_pipelining_enable = yes", postscreen(8) detects
    523 zombies that send multiple commands, instead of sending one command
    524 and waiting for the server to reply.  </p>
    525 
    526 <p> This test is opportunistically enabled when postscreen(8) has
    527 to use the built-in SMTP engine anyway. This is to make postscreen(8)
    528 logging more informative. </p>
    529 
    530 <p> When a client sends multiple commands, postscreen(8) logs this
    531 as: </p>
    532 
    533 <pre>
    534     <b>COMMAND PIPELINING from</b> <i>[address]:port</i> <b>after</b> <i>command</i>: <i>text</i>
    535 </pre>
    536 
    537 <p> Translation: the SMTP client at <i>[address]:port</i> sent
    538 multiple SMTP commands, instead of sending one command and then
    539 waiting for the server to reply. This happened after the client
    540 sent <i>command</i>. The <i>text</i> shows part of the input that
    541 was sent too early; it is not logged with Postfix 2.8. </p>
    542 
    543 <p> The postscreen_pipelining_action parameter specifies the action
    544 that is taken next.  See "<a href="#fail_after_220">When tests fail
    545 after the 220 SMTP server greeting</a>" below. </p>
    546 
    547 <h3> <a name="non_smtp">Non-SMTP command test</a> </h3>
    548 
    549 <p> Some spambots send their mail through open proxies. A symptom
    550 of this is the usage of commands such as CONNECT and other non-SMTP
    551 commands. Just like the Postfix SMTP server's smtpd_forbidden_commands
    552 feature, postscreen(8) has an equivalent postscreen_forbidden_commands
    553 feature to block these clients. postscreen(8)'s
    554 <a href="#after_220">deep
    555 protocol test</a> for this is disabled by default.  </p>
    556 
    557 <p> With "postscreen_non_smtp_command_enable = yes", postscreen(8)
    558 detects zombies that send commands specified with the
    559 postscreen_forbidden_commands parameter. This also detects commands
    560 with the syntax of a message header label. The latter is a symptom
    561 that the client is sending message content after ignoring all the
    562 responses from postscreen(8) that reject mail. </p>
    563 
    564 <p> This test is opportunistically enabled when postscreen(8) has
    565 to use the built-in SMTP engine anyway. This is to make postscreen(8)
    566 logging more informative.  </p>
    567 
    568 <p> When a client sends non-SMTP commands, postscreen(8) logs this
    569 as: </p>
    570 
    571 <pre>
    572     <b>NON-SMTP COMMAND from</b> <i>[address]:port</i> <b>after</b> <i>command: text</i>
    573 </pre>
    574 
    575 <p> Translation: the SMTP client at <i>[address]:port</i> sent a
    576 command that matches the postscreen_forbidden_commands
    577 parameter, or that has the syntax of a message header label (text 
    578 followed by optional space and ":").
    579 The "<tt><b>after</b> <i>command</i></tt>" portion is logged with
    580 Postfix 2.10 and later. </p>
    581 
    582 <p> The postscreen_non_smtp_command_action parameter specifies
    583 the action that is taken next.  See "<a href="#fail_after_220">When
    584 tests fail after the 220 SMTP server greeting</a>" below. </p>
    585 
    586 <h3> <a name="barelf">Bare newline test</a> </h3>
    587 
    588 <p> SMTP is a line-oriented protocol: lines have a limited length,
    589 and are terminated with &lt;CR&gt;&lt;LF&gt;. Lines ending in a
    590 "bare" &lt;LF&gt;, that is newline not preceded by carriage return,
    591 are not allowed in SMTP.  postscreen(8)'s
    592 <a href="#after_220">deep
    593 protocol test</a> for this is disabled by default.  </p>
    594 
    595 <p> With "postscreen_bare_newline_enable = yes", postscreen(8)
    596 detects clients that send lines ending in bare newline characters.
    597 </p>
    598 
    599 <p> This test is opportunistically enabled when postscreen(8) has
    600 to use the built-in SMTP engine anyway. This is to make postscreen(8)
    601 logging more informative.  </p>
    602 
    603 <p> When a client sends bare newline characters, postscreen(8) logs
    604 this as:
    605 </p>
    606 
    607 <pre>
    608     <b>BARE NEWLINE from</b> <i>[address]:port</i> <b>after</b> <i>command</i>
    609 </pre>
    610 
    611 <p> Translation: the SMTP client at <i>[address]:port</i> sent a bare
    612 newline character, that is newline not preceded by carriage
    613 return.
    614 The "<tt><b>after</b> <i>command</i></tt>" portion is logged with
    615 Postfix 2.10 and later. </p>
    616 
    617 <p> The postscreen_bare_newline_action parameter specifies the
    618 action that is taken next.  See "<a href="#fail_after_220">When
    619 tests fail after the 220 SMTP server greeting</a>" below. </p>
    620 
    621 <h3> <a name="fail_after_220">When tests fail after the 220 SMTP server greeting</a> </h3>
    622 
    623 <p> When the client fails the pipelining, non-SMTP command or bare
    624 newline tests, the action is specified with postscreen_pipelining_action,
    625 postscreen_non_smtp_command_action or postscreen_bare_newline_action,
    626 respectively. </p>
    627 
    628 <dl>
    629 
    630 <dt> <b>ignore</b> (default for bare newline) </dt>
    631 
    632 <dd> Ignore the failure of this test. Allow other tests to complete.
    633 Do NOT repeat this test before the result from some other test
    634 expires.
    635 
    636 This option is useful for testing and collecting statistics without
    637 blocking mail permanently. </dd>
    638 
    639 <dt> <b>enforce</b> (default for pipelining) </dt>
    640 
    641 <dd> Allow other tests to complete.  Reject attempts to deliver
    642 mail with a 550 SMTP reply, and log the helo/sender/recipient
    643 information.  Repeat this test the next time the client connects.
    644 </dd>
    645 
    646 <dt> <b>drop</b> (default for non-SMTP commands) </dt>
    647 
    648 <dd> Drop the connection immediately with a 521 SMTP reply.  Repeat
    649 this test the next time the client connects.  This action is
    650 compatible with the Postfix SMTP server's smtpd_forbidden_commands
    651 feature. </dd>
    652 
    653 </dl>
    654 
    655 <h2> <a name="other_error">Other errors</a> </h2>
    656 
    657 <p> When an SMTP client hangs up unexpectedly, postscreen(8) logs
    658 this as: </p>
    659 
    660 <pre>
    661     <b>HANGUP after</b> <i>time</i> <b>from</b> <i>[address]:port</i> <b>in</b> <i>test name</i>
    662 </pre>
    663 
    664 <p> Translation: the SMTP client at <i>[address]:port</i> disconnected
    665 unexpectedly, <i>time</i> seconds after the start of the
    666 test named <i>test name</i>. </p>
    667 
    668 <p> There is no punishment for hanging up. A client that hangs up
    669 without sending the QUIT command can still pass all postscreen(8)
    670 tests. </p>
    671 
    672 <!--
    673 
    674 <p> While an unexpired penalty is in effect, an SMTP client is not
    675 allowed to pass any tests, and  postscreen(8) logs each connection
    676 with the remaining amount of penalty time as: </p>
    677 
    678 <pre>
    679     <b>PENALTY</b> <i>time</i> <b>for</b> <i>[address]:port</i>
    680 </pre>
    681 
    682 <p> During this time, all attempts by the client to deliver mail
    683 will be deferred with a 450 SMTP status.  </p>
    684 
    685 -->
    686 
    687 <p> The following errors are reported by the built-in SMTP engine.
    688 This engine never accepts mail, therefore it has per-session limits
    689 on the number of commands and on the session length. </p>
    690 
    691 <pre>
    692     <b>COMMAND TIME LIMIT</b> <b>from</b> <i>[address]:port</i> <b>after</b> <i>command</i>
    693 </pre>
    694 
    695 <p> Translation: the SMTP client at <i>[address]:port</i> reached the
    696 per-command time limit as specified with the postscreen_command_time_limit
    697 parameter.  The session is terminated immediately.
    698 The "<tt><b>after</b> <i>command</i></tt>" portion is logged with
    699 Postfix 2.10 and later. </p>
    700 
    701 <pre>
    702     <b>COMMAND COUNT LIMIT from</b> <i>[address]:port</i> <b>after</b> <i>command</i>
    703 </pre>
    704 
    705 <p> Translation: the SMTP client at <i>[address]:port</i> reached the
    706 per-session command count limit as specified with the
    707 postscreen_command_count_limit parameter.  The session is terminated
    708 immediately.
    709 The "<tt><b>after</b> <i>command</i></tt>" portion is logged with
    710 Postfix 2.10 and later. </p>
    711 
    712 <pre>
    713     <b>COMMAND LENGTH LIMIT from</b> <i>[address]:port</i> <b>after</b> <i>command</i>
    714 </pre>
    715 
    716 <p> Translation: the SMTP client at <i>[address]:port</i> reached the
    717 per-command length limit, as specified with the line_length_limit
    718 parameter.  The session is terminated immediately.
    719 The "<tt><b>after</b> <i>command</i></tt>" portion is logged with
    720 Postfix 2.10 and later. </p>
    721 
    722 <p> When an SMTP client makes too many connections at the same time,
    723 postscreen(8) rejects the connection with a 421 status code and logs: </p>
    724 
    725 <pre>
    726     <b>NOQUEUE: reject: CONNECT from</b> <i>[address]:port</i><b>: too many connections</b>
    727 </pre>
    728 
    729 <p> The postscreen_client_connection_count_limit parameter controls this limit. </p>
    730 
    731 <p> When an SMTP client connects after postscreen(8) has reached a
    732 connection count limit, postscreen(8) rejects the connection with
    733 a 421 status code and logs: </p>
    734 
    735 <pre>
    736     <b>NOQUEUE: reject: CONNECT from</b> <i>[address]:port</i><b>: all screening ports busy</b>
    737     <b>NOQUEUE: reject: CONNECT from</b> <i>[address]:port</i><b>: all server ports busy</b>
    738 </pre>
    739 
    740 <p> The postscreen_pre_queue_limit and postscreen_post_queue_limit
    741 parameters control these limits.  </p>
    742 
    743 <h2> <a name="victory">When all tests succeed</a> </h2>
    744 
    745 <p> When a new SMTP client passes all tests (i.e. it is not allowlisted
    746 via some mechanism), postscreen(8) logs this as: </p>
    747 
    748 <pre>
    749     <b>PASS NEW</b> <i>[address]:port</i>
    750 </pre>
    751 
    752 <p> Where <i>[address]:port</i> are the client IP address and port.
    753 Then, postscreen(8)
    754 creates a temporary allowlist entry that excludes the client IP
    755 address from further tests until the temporary allowlist entry
    756 expires, as controlled with the postscreen_*_ttl parameters. </p>
    757 
    758 <p> When no "<a href="#after_220">deep protocol tests</a>" are
    759 configured, postscreen(8) hands off the "live" connection to a Postfix
    760 SMTP server process.  The client can then continue as if postscreen(8)
    761 never even existed (except for the short postscreen_greet_wait delay).
    762 </p>
    763 
    764 <p> When any "<a href="#after_220">deep protocol tests</a>" are
    765 configured, postscreen(8) cannot hand off the "live" connection to
    766 a Postfix SMTP server process in the middle of the session.  Instead,
    767 postscreen(8) defers mail delivery attempts with a 4XX status, logs
    768 the helo/sender/recipient information, and waits for the client to
    769 disconnect.  The next time the client connects it will be allowed
    770 to talk to a Postfix SMTP server process to deliver its mail.
    771 postscreen(8) mitigates the impact of this limitation by giving
    772 <a href="#after_220">deep protocol tests</a> a long expiration
    773 time. </p>
    774 
    775 <h2> <a name="config"> Configuring the postscreen(8) service</a>
    776 </h2>
    777 
    778 <p> postscreen(8) has been tested on FreeBSD [4-8], Linux 2.[4-6]
    779 and Solaris 9 systems. </p>
    780 
    781 <ul>
    782 
    783 <li> <a href="#enable"> Turning on postscreen(8) without blocking
    784 mail</a>
    785 
    786 <li> <a href="#starttls"> postscreen(8) TLS configuration </a>
    787 
    788 <li> <a href="#blocking"> Blocking mail with postscreen(8) </a>
    789 
    790 <li> <a href="#turnoff"> Turning off postscreen(8) </a>
    791 
    792 <li> <a href="#temp_white_sharing"> Sharing the temporary allowlist
    793 </a>
    794 
    795 </ul>
    796 
    797 <h3> <a name="enable"> Turning on postscreen(8) without blocking mail</a> </h3>
    798 
    799 <p> To enable the postscreen(8) service and log client information
    800 without blocking mail: </p>
    801 
    802 <ol>
    803 
    804 <li> <p> Make sure that local clients and systems with non-standard
    805 SMTP implementations are excluded from any postscreen(8) tests. The
    806 default is to exclude all clients in mynetworks. To exclude additional
    807 clients, for example, third-party performance monitoring tools (these
    808 tend to have broken SMTP implementations): </p>
    809 
    810 <pre>
    811 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
    812     # Exclude broken clients by allowlisting. Clients in mynetworks
    813     # should always be allowlisted.
    814     postscreen_access_list = permit_mynetworks, 
    815         cidr:/etc/postfix/postscreen_access.cidr
    816 
    817 /etc/postfix/postscreen_access.cidr:
    818     192.168.254.0/24 permit
    819 </pre>
    820 
    821 <li> <p> Comment out the "<tt>smtp  inet ... smtpd</tt>" service
    822 in master.cf, including any "<tt>-o parameter=value</tt>" entries
    823 that follow.  </p>
    824 
    825 <pre>
    826 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
    827     #smtp      inet  n       -       n       -       -       smtpd
    828     #    -o parameter=value ...
    829 </pre>
    830 
    831 <li> <p> Uncomment the new "<tt>smtpd pass ... smtpd</tt>" service
    832 in master.cf, and duplicate any "<tt>-o parameter=value</tt>" entries
    833 from the smtpd service that was commented out in the previous step.
    834 </p>
    835 
    836 <pre>
    837 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
    838     smtpd     pass  -       -       n       -       -       smtpd
    839         -o parameter=value ...
    840 </pre>
    841 
    842 <li> <p> Uncomment the new "<tt>smtp inet ... postscreen</tt>"
    843 service in master.cf. </p>
    844 
    845 <pre>
    846 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
    847     smtp      inet  n       -       n       -       1       postscreen
    848 </pre>
    849 
    850 <li> <p> Uncomment the new "<tt>tlsproxy unix ... tlsproxy</tt>"
    851 service in master.cf.  This service implements STARTTLS support for
    852 postscreen(8). </p>
    853 
    854 <pre>
    855 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
    856     tlsproxy  unix  -       -       n       -       0       tlsproxy
    857 </pre>
    858 
    859 <li> <p> Uncomment the new "<tt>dnsblog  unix ... dnsblog</tt>"
    860 service in master.cf.  This service does DNSBL lookups for postscreen(8)
    861 and logs results. </p>
    862 
    863 <pre>
    864 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
    865     dnsblog   unix  -       -       n       -       0       dnsblog
    866 </pre>
    867 
    868 <li> <p> To enable DNSBL lookups, list some DNS blocklist sites in
    869 main.cf, separated by whitespace. Different sites can have different
    870 weights. For example:
    871 
    872 <pre>
    873 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
    874     postscreen_dnsbl_threshold = 2
    875     postscreen_dnsbl_sites = zen.spamhaus.org*2 
    876         bl.spamcop.net*1 b.barracudacentral.org*1
    877 </pre>
    878 
    879 <p> Note: if your DNSBL queries have a "secret" in the domain name,
    880 you must censor this information from the postscreen(8) SMTP replies.
    881 For example: </p>
    882 
    883 <pre>
    884 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
    885     postscreen_dnsbl_reply_map = texthash:/etc/postfix/dnsbl_reply
    886 </pre>
    887 
    888 <pre>
    889 /etc/postfix/dnsbl_reply:
    890     # Secret DNSBL name           Name in postscreen(8) replies
    891     secret.zen.dq.spamhaus.net    zen.spamhaus.org
    892 </pre>
    893 
    894 <p> The texthash: format is similar to hash: except that there is
    895 no need to run postmap(1) before the file can be used, and that it
    896 does not detect changes after the file is read. It is new with
    897 Postfix version 2.8. </p>
    898 
    899 <li> <p> Read the new configuration with "<tt>postfix reload</tt>".
    900 </p>
    901 
    902 </ol>
    903 
    904 <p> Notes: </p>
    905 
    906 <ul>
    907 
    908 <li> <p> Some postscreen(8) configuration parameters implement
    909 stress-dependent behavior. This is supported only when the default
    910 value is stress-dependent (that is, "postconf -d <i>parametername</i>"
    911 output shows
    912 "<i>parametername</i>&nbsp;=&nbsp;${stress?<i>something</i>}${stress:<i>something</i>}" or
    913 "<i>parametername</i>&nbsp;=&nbsp;${stress?{<i>something</i>}:{<i>something</i>}}").
    914 Other parameters always evaluate as if the stress value is the empty
    915 string. </p>
    916 
    917 <li> <p> See "<a href="#before_220">Tests before the 220 SMTP server
    918 greeting</a>" for details about the logging from these
    919 postscreen(8) tests. </p>
    920 
    921 <li> <p> If you run Postfix 2.6 or earlier you must stop and start
    922 the master daemon ("<tt>postfix stop; postfix start</tt>").  This
    923 is needed because the Postfix "pass" master service type did not
    924 work reliably on all systems. </p>
    925 
    926 </ul>
    927 
    928 <h3> <a name="starttls"> postscreen(8) TLS configuration </a> </h3>
    929 
    930 <p> postscreen(8) TLS support is available for remote SMTP clients
    931 that aren't allowlisted, including clients that need to renew their
    932 temporary allowlist status.  When a remote SMTP client requests TLS
    933 service, postscreen(8) invisibly hands off the connection to a
    934 tlsproxy(8) process. Then, tlsproxy(8) encrypts and decrypts the
    935 traffic between postscreen(8) and the remote SMTP client. One
    936 tlsproxy(8) process can handle multiple SMTP sessions. The number
    937 of tlsproxy(8) processes slowly increases with server load, but it
    938 should always be much smaller than the number of postscreen(8) TLS
    939 sessions.  </p>
    940 
    941 <p> TLS support for postscreen(8) and tlsproxy(8) uses the same
    942 parameters as with smtpd(8). We recommend that you keep the relevant
    943 configuration parameters in main.cf.  If you must specify "-o
    944 smtpd_mumble=value" parameter overrides in master.cf for a
    945 postscreen-protected smtpd(8) service, then you should specify those
    946 same parameter overrides for the postscreen(8) and tlsproxy(8)
    947 services. </p>
    948 
    949 <h3> <a name="blocking"> Blocking mail with postscreen(8) </a> </h3>
    950 
    951 <p> For compatibility with smtpd(8), postscreen(8) implements the
    952 soft_bounce safety feature. This causes Postfix to reject mail with
    953 a "try again" reply code. </p>
    954 
    955 <ul> 
    956 
    957 <li> <p> To turn this on for all of Postfix, specify "<tt>soft_bounce
    958 = yes</tt>" in main.cf. </p>
    959 
    960 <li> <p> To turn this on for postscreen(8) only, append "<tt>-o
    961 soft_bounce=yes</tt>" (note: NO SPACES around '=') to the postscreen
    962 entry in master.cf. <p>
    963 
    964 </ul>
    965 
    966 <p> Execute "<tt>postfix reload</tt>" to make the change effective. </p>
    967 
    968 <p> After testing, do not forget to remove the soft_bounce feature,
    969 otherwise senders won't receive their non-delivery notification
    970 until many days later.  </p>
    971 
    972 <p> To use the postscreen(8) service to block mail, edit main.cf and
    973 specify one or more of: </p>
    974 
    975 <ul>
    976 
    977 <li> <p> "<tt>postscreen_dnsbl_action = enforce</tt>", to reject
    978 clients that are on DNS blocklists, and to log the helo/sender/recipient
    979 information. With good DNSBLs this reduces the amount of load on
    980 Postfix SMTP servers dramatically.  </p>
    981 
    982 <li> <p> "<tt>postscreen_greet_action = enforce</tt>", to reject
    983 clients that talk before their turn, and to log the helo/sender/recipient
    984 information. This stops over half of all known-to-be illegitimate
    985 connections to Wietse's mail server. It is backup protection for
    986 zombies that haven't yet been denylisted. </p>
    987 
    988 <li> <p> You can also enable "<a href="#after_220">deep protocol
    989 tests</a>", but these are more intrusive than the pregreet or DNSBL
    990 tests. </p>
    991 
    992 <p> When a good client passes the "<a href="#after_220">deep
    993 protocol tests</a>",
    994 postscreen(8) adds the client to the temporary
    995 allowlist but it cannot hand off the "live" connection to a Postfix
    996 SMTP server process in the middle of the session. Instead, postscreen(8)
    997 defers mail delivery attempts with a 4XX status, logs the
    998 helo/sender/recipient information, and waits for the client to
    999 disconnect. </p>
   1000 
   1001 <p> When the good client comes back in a later session, it is allowed
   1002 to talk directly to a Postfix SMTP server.  See "<a href="#after_220">Tests
   1003 after the 220 SMTP server greeting</a>" above for limitations with
   1004 AUTH and other features that clients may need.  </p>
   1005 
   1006 <p> An unexpected benefit from "<a href="#after_220">deep protocol
   1007 tests</a>" is that some "good" clients don't return after the 4XX
   1008 reply; these clients were not so good after all. </p>
   1009 
   1010 <p> Unfortunately, some senders will retry requests from different
   1011 IP addresses, and may never get allowlisted.  For this reason,
   1012 Wietse stopped using "<a href="#after_220">deep protocol tests</a>"
   1013 on his own internet-facing mail server.  </p>
   1014 
   1015 <li> <p> There is also support for permanent denylisting and
   1016 allowlisting; see the description of the postscreen_access_list
   1017 parameter for details. </p>
   1018 
   1019 </ul>
   1020 
   1021 <h3> <a name="turnoff"> Turning off postscreen(8) </a> </h3>
   1022 
   1023 <p> To turn off postscreen(8) and handle mail directly with Postfix
   1024 SMTP server processes: </p>
   1025 
   1026 <ol>
   1027 
   1028 <li> <p> Comment out the "<tt>smtp inet ... postscreen</tt>" service
   1029 in master.cf, including any "<tt>-o parameter=value</tt>" entries
   1030 that follow. </p>
   1031 
   1032 <pre>
   1033 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
   1034     #smtp      inet  n       -       n       -       1       postscreen
   1035     #    -o parameter=value ...
   1036 </pre>
   1037 
   1038 <li> <p> Comment out the "<tt>dnsblog  unix ... dnsblog</tt>" service
   1039 in master.cf.  </p>
   1040 
   1041 <pre>
   1042 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
   1043     #dnsblog   unix  -       -       n       -       0       dnsblog
   1044 </pre>
   1045 
   1046 <li> <p> Comment out the "<tt>smtpd pass ... smtpd</tt>" service
   1047 in master.cf, including any "<tt>-o parameter=value</tt>" entries
   1048 that follow. </p>
   1049 
   1050 <pre>
   1051 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
   1052     #smtpd     pass  -       -       n       -       -       smtpd
   1053     #    -o parameter=value ...
   1054 </pre>
   1055 
   1056 <li> <p> Comment out the "<tt>tlsproxy unix ... tlsproxy</tt>"
   1057 service in master.cf, including any "<tt>-o parameter=value</tt>"
   1058 entries that follow. </p>
   1059 
   1060 <pre>
   1061 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
   1062     #tlsproxy  unix  -       -       n       -       0       tlsproxy
   1063     #    -o parameter=value ...
   1064 </pre>
   1065 
   1066 <li> <p> Uncomment the "<tt>smtp  inet ... smtpd</tt>" service in
   1067 master.cf, including any "<tt>-o parameter=value</tt>" entries that
   1068 may follow.  </p>
   1069 
   1070 <pre>
   1071 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
   1072     smtp       inet  n       -       n       -       -       smtpd
   1073         -o parameter=value ...
   1074 </pre>
   1075 
   1076 <li> <p> Read the new configuration with "<tt>postfix reload</tt>".
   1077 </p>
   1078 
   1079 </ol>
   1080 
   1081 <h3> <a name="temp_white_sharing"> Sharing the temporary allowlist </a> </h3>
   1082 
   1083 <p> By default, the temporary allowlist is not shared between
   1084 multiple postscreen(8) daemons.  To enable sharing, choose one
   1085 of the following options: </p>
   1086 
   1087 <ul>
   1088 
   1089 <li> <p> A non-persistent memcache: temporary allowlist can be shared
   1090     between postscreen(8) daemons on the same host or different
   1091     hosts.  Disable cache cleanup (postscreen_cache_cleanup_interval
   1092     = 0) in all postscreen(8) daemons because memcache: has no
   1093     first-next API (but see example 4 below for memcache: with
   1094     persistent backup). This requires Postfix 2.9 or later. </p>
   1095 
   1096     <pre>
   1097     # Example 1: non-persistent memcache: allowlist.
   1098     /etc/postfix/main.cf:
   1099 	postscreen_cache_map = memcache:/etc/postfix/postscreen_cache
   1100 	postscreen_cache_cleanup_interval = 0
   1101 
   1102     /etc/postfix/postscreen_cache:
   1103 	memcache = inet:127.0.0.1:11211
   1104 	key_format = postscreen:%s
   1105     </pre>
   1106 
   1107 <li> <p>
   1108     A persistent lmdb: temporary allowlist can be shared between
   1109     postscreen(8) daemons that run under the same master(8) daemon,
   1110     or under different master(8) daemons on the same host.  Disable
   1111     cache cleanup (postscreen_cache_cleanup_interval = 0) in all
   1112     postscreen(8) daemons except one that is responsible for cache
   1113     cleanup. This requires Postfix 2.11 or later. </p>
   1114 
   1115     <pre>
   1116     # Example 2: persistent lmdb: allowlist.
   1117     /etc/postfix/main.cf:
   1118 	postscreen_cache_map = lmdb:$data_directory/postscreen_cache
   1119 	# See note 1 below.
   1120 	# postscreen_cache_cleanup_interval = 0
   1121     </pre>
   1122 
   1123 <li> <p> Other kinds of persistent temporary allowlist can be shared
   1124     only between postscreen(8) daemons that run under the same
   1125     master(8) daemon. In this case, temporary allowlist access must
   1126     be shared through the proxymap(8) daemon. This requires Postfix
   1127     2.9 or later. </p>
   1128 
   1129     <pre> 
   1130     # Example 3: proxied btree: allowlist.
   1131     /etc/postfix/main.cf:
   1132 	postscreen_cache_map = 
   1133 	    proxy:btree:/var/lib/postfix/postscreen_cache
   1134 	# See note 1 below.
   1135 	# postscreen_cache_cleanup_interval = 0
   1136 
   1137     # Example 4: proxied btree: allowlist with memcache: accelerator.
   1138     /etc/postfix/main.cf:
   1139 	postscreen_cache_map = memcache:/etc/postfix/postscreen_cache
   1140 	proxy_write_maps = 
   1141 	    proxy:btree:/var/lib/postfix/postscreen_cache 
   1142 	    ... other proxied tables ...
   1143 	# See note 1 below.
   1144 	# postscreen_cache_cleanup_interval = 0
   1145 
   1146     /etc/postfix/postscreen_cache:
   1147 	# Note: the $data_directory macro is not defined in this context.
   1148 	memcache = inet:127.0.0.1:11211
   1149 	backup = proxy:btree:/var/lib/postfix/postscreen_cache
   1150 	key_format = postscreen:%s
   1151     </pre>
   1152 
   1153     <p> Note 1: disable cache cleanup (postscreen_cache_cleanup_interval
   1154     = 0) in all postscreen(8) daemons except one that is responsible
   1155     for cache cleanup. </p>
   1156 
   1157     <p> Note 2: postscreen(8) cache sharing via proxymap(8) requires Postfix
   1158     2.9 or later; earlier proxymap(8) implementations don't support
   1159     cache cleanup.  </p>
   1160 
   1161 </ul>
   1162 
   1163 <h2> <a name="historical"> Historical notes and credits </a> </h2>
   1164 
   1165 <p> Many ideas in postscreen(8) were explored in earlier work by
   1166 Michael Tokarev, in OpenBSD spamd, and in MailChannels Traffic
   1167 Control. </p>
   1168 
   1169 <p> Wietse threw together a crude prototype with pregreet and dnsbl
   1170 support in June 2009, because he needed something new for a Mailserver
   1171 conference presentation in July. Ralf Hildebrandt ran this code on
   1172 several servers to collect real-world statistics. This version used
   1173 the dnsblog(8) ad-hoc DNS client program. </p>
   1174 
   1175 <p> Wietse needed new material for a LISA conference presentation
   1176 in November 2010, so he added support for DNSBL weights and filters
   1177 in August, followed by a major code rewrite, deep protocol tests,
   1178 helo/sender/recipient logging, and stress-adaptive behavior in
   1179 September. Ralf Hildebrandt ran this code on several servers to
   1180 collect real-world statistics. This version still used the embarrassing
   1181 dnsblog(8) ad-hoc DNS client program.  </p>
   1182 
   1183 <p> Wietse added STARTTLS support in December 2010. This makes
   1184 postscreen(8) usable for sites that require TLS support.  The
   1185 implementation introduces the tlsproxy(8) event-driven TLS proxy
   1186 that decrypts/encrypts the sessions for multiple SMTP clients. </p>
   1187 
   1188 <p> The tlsproxy(8) implementation led to the discovery of a "new"
   1189 class of vulnerability (<a
   1190 href="http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2011-0411"
   1191 >CVE-2011-0411</a>) that affected multiple implementations of SMTP,
   1192 POP, IMAP, NNTP, and FTP over TLS. </p>
   1193 
   1194 <p> postscreen(8) was officially released as part of the Postfix
   1195 2.8 stable release in January 2011.</p>
   1196 
   1197 </body>
   1198 
   1199 </html>
   1200