static int sort_errors_and_headers(router_instance *rblock, address_item *addr, int verify, address_item_propagated *addr_prop) { int frc = rf_get_errors_address(addr, rblock, verify, &addr_prop->errors_address); if (frc != OK) return frc; addr->prop.errors_address = addr_prop->errors_address; return rf_get_munge_headers(addr, rblock, &addr_prop->extra_headers, &addr_prop->remove_headers); }
int manualroute_router_entry( router_instance *rblock, /* data for this instantiation */ address_item *addr, /* address we are working on */ struct passwd *pw, /* passwd entry after check_local_user */ int verify, /* v_none/v_recipient/v_sender/v_expn */ address_item **addr_local, /* add it to this if it's local */ address_item **addr_remote, /* add it to this if it's remote */ address_item **addr_new, /* put new addresses on here */ address_item **addr_succeed) /* put old address here on success */ { int rc, lookup_type; uschar *route_item = NULL; const uschar *options = NULL; const uschar *hostlist = NULL; const uschar *domain; uschar *newhostlist; const uschar *listptr; manualroute_router_options_block *ob = (manualroute_router_options_block *)(rblock->options_block); transport_instance *transport = NULL; BOOL individual_transport_set = FALSE; BOOL randomize = ob->hosts_randomize; addr_new = addr_new; /* Keep picky compilers happy */ addr_succeed = addr_succeed; DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("%s router called for %s\n domain = %s\n", rblock->name, addr->address, addr->domain); /* The initialization check ensures that either route_list or route_data is set. */ if (ob->route_list != NULL) { int sep = -(';'); /* Default is semicolon */ listptr = ob->route_list; while ((route_item = string_nextinlist(&listptr, &sep, NULL, 0)) != NULL) { int rc; DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("route_item = %s\n", route_item); if (!parse_route_item(route_item, &domain, &hostlist, &options)) continue; /* Ignore blank items */ /* Check the current domain; if it matches, break the loop */ if ((rc = match_isinlist(addr->domain, &domain, UCHAR_MAX+1, &domainlist_anchor, NULL, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, CUSS &lookup_value)) == OK) break; /* If there was a problem doing the check, defer */ if (rc == DEFER) { addr->message = US"lookup defer in route_list"; return DEFER; } } if (route_item == NULL) return DECLINE; /* No pattern in the list matched */ } /* Handle a single routing item in route_data. If it expands to an empty string, decline. */ else { route_item = rf_expand_data(addr, ob->route_data, &rc); if (route_item == NULL) return rc; (void) parse_route_item(route_item, NULL, &hostlist, &options); if (hostlist[0] == 0) return DECLINE; } /* Expand the hostlist item. It may then pointing to an empty string, or to a single host or a list of hosts; options is pointing to the rest of the routelist item, which is either empty or contains various option words. */ DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("original list of hosts = \"%s\" options = %s\n", hostlist, options); newhostlist = expand_string_copy(hostlist); lookup_value = NULL; /* Finished with */ expand_nmax = -1; /* If the expansion was forced to fail, just decline. Otherwise there is a configuration problem. */ if (newhostlist == NULL) { if (expand_string_forcedfail) return DECLINE; addr->message = string_sprintf("%s router: failed to expand \"%s\": %s", rblock->name, hostlist, expand_string_message); return DEFER; } else hostlist = newhostlist; DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("expanded list of hosts = \"%s\" options = %s\n", hostlist, options); /* Set default lookup type and scan the options */ lookup_type = lk_default; while (*options != 0) { unsigned n; const uschar *s = options; while (*options != 0 && !isspace(*options)) options++; n = options-s; if (Ustrncmp(s, "randomize", n) == 0) randomize = TRUE; else if (Ustrncmp(s, "no_randomize", n) == 0) randomize = FALSE; else if (Ustrncmp(s, "byname", n) == 0) lookup_type = lk_byname; else if (Ustrncmp(s, "bydns", n) == 0) lookup_type = lk_bydns; else { transport_instance *t; for (t = transports; t != NULL; t = t->next) if (Ustrcmp(t->name, s) == 0) { transport = t; individual_transport_set = TRUE; break; } if (t == NULL) { s = string_sprintf("unknown routing option or transport name \"%s\"", s); log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Error in %s router: %s", rblock->name, s); addr->message = string_sprintf("error in router: %s", s); return DEFER; } } if (*options) { options++; while (*options != 0 && isspace(*options)) options++; } } /* Set up the errors address, if any. */ rc = rf_get_errors_address(addr, rblock, verify, &addr->prop.errors_address); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* Set up the additional and removeable headers for this address. */ rc = rf_get_munge_headers(addr, rblock, &addr->prop.extra_headers, &addr->prop.remove_headers); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* If an individual transport is not set, get the transport for this router, if any. It might be expanded, or it might be unset if this router has verify_only set. */ if (!individual_transport_set) { if (!rf_get_transport(rblock->transport_name, &(rblock->transport), addr, rblock->name, NULL)) return DEFER; transport = rblock->transport; } /* Deal with the case of a local transport. The host list is passed over as a single text string that ends up in $host. */ if (transport != NULL && transport->info->local) { if (hostlist[0] != 0) { host_item *h; addr->host_list = h = store_get(sizeof(host_item)); h->name = string_copy(hostlist); h->address = NULL; h->port = PORT_NONE; h->mx = MX_NONE; h->status = hstatus_unknown; h->why = hwhy_unknown; h->last_try = 0; h->next = NULL; } /* There is nothing more to do other than to queue the address for the local transport, filling in any uid/gid. This can be done by the common rf_queue_add() function. */ addr->transport = transport; return rf_queue_add(addr, addr_local, addr_remote, rblock, pw)? OK : DEFER; } /* There is either no transport (verify_only) or a remote transport. A host list is mandatory in either case, except when verifying, in which case the address is just accepted. */ if (hostlist[0] == 0) { if (verify != v_none) goto ROUTED; addr->message = string_sprintf("error in %s router: no host(s) specified " "for domain %s", rblock->name, domain); log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "%s", addr->message); return DEFER; } /* Otherwise we finish the routing here by building a chain of host items for the list of configured hosts, and then finding their addresses. */ host_build_hostlist(&(addr->host_list), hostlist, randomize); rc = rf_lookup_hostlist(rblock, addr, rblock->ignore_target_hosts, lookup_type, ob->hff_code, addr_new); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* If host_find_failed is set to "ignore", it is possible for all the hosts to be ignored, in which case we will end up with an empty host list. What happens is controlled by host_all_ignored. */ if (addr->host_list == NULL) { int i; DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("host_find_failed ignored every host\n"); if (ob->hai_code == hff_decline) return DECLINE; if (ob->hai_code == hff_pass) return PASS; for (i = 0; i < hff_count; i++) if (ob->hai_code == hff_codes[i]) break; addr->message = string_sprintf("lookup failed for all hosts in %s router: " "host_find_failed=ignore host_all_ignored=%s", rblock->name, hff_names[i]); if (ob->hai_code == hff_defer) return DEFER; if (ob->hai_code == hff_fail) return FAIL; addr->special_action = SPECIAL_FREEZE; return DEFER; } /* Finally, since we have done all the routing here, there must be a transport defined for these hosts. It will be a remote one, as a local transport is dealt with above. However, we don't need one if verifying only. */ if (transport == NULL && verify == v_none) { log_write(0, LOG_MAIN, "Error in %s router: no transport defined", rblock->name); addr->message = US"error in router: transport missing"; return DEFER; } /* Fill in the transport, queue for remote delivery. The yield of rf_queue_add() is always TRUE for a remote transport. */ ROUTED: addr->transport = transport; (void)rf_queue_add(addr, addr_local, addr_remote, rblock, NULL); return OK; }
int dnslookup_router_entry( router_instance *rblock, /* data for this instantiation */ address_item *addr, /* address we are working on */ struct passwd *pw, /* passwd entry after check_local_user */ int verify, /* v_none/v_recipient/v_sender/v_expn */ address_item **addr_local, /* add it to this if it's local */ address_item **addr_remote, /* add it to this if it's remote */ address_item **addr_new, /* put new addresses on here */ address_item **addr_succeed) /* put old address here on success */ { host_item h; int rc; int widen_sep = 0; int whichrrs = HOST_FIND_BY_MX | HOST_FIND_BY_A; dnslookup_router_options_block *ob = (dnslookup_router_options_block *)(rblock->options_block); uschar *srv_service = NULL; uschar *widen = NULL; uschar *pre_widen = addr->domain; uschar *post_widen = NULL; uschar *fully_qualified_name; uschar *listptr; uschar widen_buffer[256]; addr_new = addr_new; /* Keep picky compilers happy */ addr_succeed = addr_succeed; DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("%s router called for %s\n domain = %s\n", rblock->name, addr->address, addr->domain); /* If an SRV check is required, expand the service name */ if (ob->check_srv != NULL) { srv_service = expand_string(ob->check_srv); if (srv_service == NULL && !expand_string_forcedfail) { addr->message = string_sprintf("%s router: failed to expand \"%s\": %s", rblock->name, ob->check_srv, expand_string_message); return DEFER; } else whichrrs |= HOST_FIND_BY_SRV; } /* Set up the first of any widening domains. The code further down copes with either pre- or post-widening, but at present there is no way to turn on pre-widening, as actually doing so seems like a rather bad idea, and nobody has requested it. Pre-widening would cause local abbreviated names to take precedence over global names. For example, if the domain is "xxx.ch" it might be something in the "ch" toplevel domain, but it also might be xxx.ch.xyz.com. The choice of pre- or post-widening affects which takes precedence. If ever somebody comes up with some kind of requirement for pre-widening, presumably with some conditions under which it is done, it can be selected here. The rewrite_headers option works only when routing an address at transport time, because the alterations to the headers are not persistent so must be worked out immediately before they are used. Sender addresses are routed for verification purposes, but never at transport time, so any header changes that you might expect as a result of sender domain widening do not occur. Therefore we do not perform widening when verifying sender addresses; however, widening sender addresses is OK if we do not have to rewrite the headers. A corollary of this is that if the current address is not the original address, then it does not appear in the message header so it is also OK to widen. The suppression of widening for sender addresses is silent because it is the normal desirable behaviour. */ if (ob->widen_domains != NULL && (verify != v_sender || !ob->rewrite_headers || addr->parent != NULL)) { listptr = ob->widen_domains; widen = string_nextinlist(&listptr, &widen_sep, widen_buffer, sizeof(widen_buffer)); /**** if (some condition requiring pre-widening) { post_widen = pre_widen; pre_widen = NULL; } ****/ } /* Loop to cope with explicit widening of domains as configured. This code copes with widening that may happen before or after the original name. The decision as to which is taken above. */ for (;;) { int flags = whichrrs; BOOL removed = FALSE; if (pre_widen != NULL) { h.name = pre_widen; pre_widen = NULL; } else if (widen != NULL) { h.name = string_sprintf("%s.%s", addr->domain, widen); widen = string_nextinlist(&listptr, &widen_sep, widen_buffer, sizeof(widen_buffer)); DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("%s router widened %s to %s\n", rblock->name, addr->domain, h.name); } else if (post_widen != NULL) { h.name = post_widen; post_widen = NULL; DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("%s router trying %s after widening failed\n", rblock->name, h.name); } else return DECLINE; /* Set up the rest of the initial host item. Others may get chained on if there is more than one IP address. We set it up here instead of outside the loop so as to re-initialize if a previous try succeeded but was rejected because of not having an MX record. */ h.next = NULL; h.address = NULL; h.port = PORT_NONE; h.mx = MX_NONE; h.status = hstatus_unknown; h.why = hwhy_unknown; h.last_try = 0; /* Unfortunately, we cannot set the mx_only option in advance, because the DNS lookup may extend an unqualified name. Therefore, we must do the test subsequently. We use the same logic as that for widen_domains above to avoid requesting a header rewrite that cannot work. */ if (verify != v_sender || !ob->rewrite_headers || addr->parent != NULL) { if (ob->qualify_single) flags |= HOST_FIND_QUALIFY_SINGLE; if (ob->search_parents) flags |= HOST_FIND_SEARCH_PARENTS; } rc = host_find_bydns(&h, rblock->ignore_target_hosts, flags, srv_service, ob->srv_fail_domains, ob->mx_fail_domains, &fully_qualified_name, &removed); if (removed) setflag(addr, af_local_host_removed); /* If host found with only address records, test for the domain's being in the mx_domains list. Note that this applies also to SRV records; the name of the option is historical. */ if ((rc == HOST_FOUND || rc == HOST_FOUND_LOCAL) && h.mx < 0 && ob->mx_domains != NULL) { switch(match_isinlist(fully_qualified_name, &(ob->mx_domains), 0, &domainlist_anchor, addr->domain_cache, MCL_DOMAIN, TRUE, NULL)) { case DEFER: addr->message = US"lookup defer for mx_domains"; return DEFER; case OK: DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("%s router rejected %s: no MX record(s)\n", rblock->name, fully_qualified_name); continue; } } /* Deferral returns forthwith, and anything other than failure breaks the loop. */ if (rc == HOST_FIND_AGAIN) { if (rblock->pass_on_timeout) { DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("%s router timed out, and pass_on_timeout is set\n", rblock->name); return PASS; } addr->message = US"host lookup did not complete"; return DEFER; } if (rc != HOST_FIND_FAILED) break; /* Check to see if the failure is the result of MX records pointing to non-existent domains, and if so, set an appropriate error message; the case of an MX or SRV record pointing to "." is another special case that we can detect. Otherwise "unknown mail domain" is used, which is confusing. Also, in this case don't do the widening. We need check only the first host to see if its MX has been filled in, but there is no address, because if there were any usable addresses returned, we would not have had HOST_FIND_FAILED. As a common cause of this problem is MX records with IP addresses on the RHS, give a special message in this case. */ if (h.mx >= 0 && h.address == NULL) { setflag(addr, af_pass_message); /* This is not a security risk */ if (h.name[0] == 0) addr->message = US"an MX or SRV record indicated no SMTP service"; else { addr->message = US"all relevant MX records point to non-existent hosts"; if (!allow_mx_to_ip && string_is_ip_address(h.name, NULL) != 0) { addr->user_message = string_sprintf("It appears that the DNS operator for %s\n" "has installed an invalid MX record with an IP address\n" "instead of a domain name on the right hand side.", addr->domain); addr->message = string_sprintf("%s or (invalidly) to IP addresses", addr->message); } } return DECLINE; } /* If there's a syntax error, do not continue with any widening, and note the error. */ if (host_find_failed_syntax) { addr->message = string_sprintf("mail domain \"%s\" is syntactically " "invalid", h.name); return DECLINE; } } /* If the original domain name has been changed as a result of the host lookup, set up a child address for rerouting and request header rewrites if so configured. Then yield REROUTED. However, if the only change is a change of case in the domain name, which some resolvers yield (others don't), just change the domain name in the original address so that the official version is used in RCPT commands. */ if (Ustrcmp(addr->domain, fully_qualified_name) != 0) { if (strcmpic(addr->domain, fully_qualified_name) == 0) { uschar *at = Ustrrchr(addr->address, '@'); memcpy(at+1, fully_qualified_name, Ustrlen(at+1)); } else { rf_change_domain(addr, fully_qualified_name, ob->rewrite_headers, addr_new); return REROUTED; } } /* If the yield is HOST_FOUND_LOCAL, the remote domain name either found MX records with the lowest numbered one pointing to a host with an IP address that is set on one of the interfaces of this machine, or found A records or got addresses from gethostbyname() that contain one for this machine. This can happen quite legitimately if the original name was a shortened form of a domain, but we will have picked that up already via the name change test above. Otherwise, the action to be taken can be configured by the self option, the handling of which is in a separate function, as it is also required for other routers. */ if (rc == HOST_FOUND_LOCAL) { rc = rf_self_action(addr, &h, rblock->self_code, rblock->self_rewrite, rblock->self, addr_new); if (rc != OK) return rc; } /* Otherwise, insist on being a secondary MX if so configured */ else if (ob->check_secondary_mx && !testflag(addr, af_local_host_removed)) { DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("check_secondary_mx set and local host not secondary\n"); return DECLINE; } /* Set up the errors address, if any. */ rc = rf_get_errors_address(addr, rblock, verify, &(addr->p.errors_address)); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* Set up the additional and removeable headers for this address. */ rc = rf_get_munge_headers(addr, rblock, &(addr->p.extra_headers), &(addr->p.remove_headers)); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* Get store in which to preserve the original host item, chained on to the address. */ addr->host_list = store_get(sizeof(host_item)); addr->host_list[0] = h; /* Fill in the transport and queue the address for delivery. */ if (!rf_get_transport(rblock->transport_name, &(rblock->transport), addr, rblock->name, NULL)) return DEFER; addr->transport = rblock->transport; return rf_queue_add(addr, addr_local, addr_remote, rblock, pw)? OK : DEFER; }
int ipliteral_router_entry( router_instance *rblock, /* data for this instantiation */ address_item *addr, /* address we are working on */ struct passwd *pw, /* passwd entry after check_local_user */ int verify, /* v_none/v_recipient/v_sender/v_expn */ address_item **addr_local, /* add it to this if it's local */ address_item **addr_remote, /* add it to this if it's remote */ address_item **addr_new, /* put new addresses on here */ address_item **addr_succeed) /* put old address here on success */ { /* ipliteral_router_options_block *ob = (ipliteral_router_options_block *)(rblock->options_block); */ host_item *h; const uschar *domain = addr->domain; const uschar *ip; int len = Ustrlen(domain); int rc, ipv; addr_new = addr_new; /* Keep picky compilers happy */ addr_succeed = addr_succeed; DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("%s router called for %s: domain = %s\n", rblock->name, addr->address, addr->domain); /* Check that the domain is an IP address enclosed in square brackets. Remember to allow for the "official" form of IPv6 addresses. If not, the router declines. Otherwise route to the single IP address, setting the host name to "(unnamed)". */ if (domain[0] != '[' || domain[len-1] != ']') return DECLINE; ip = string_copyn(domain+1, len-2); if (strncmpic(ip, US"IPV6:", 5) == 0 || strncmpic(ip, US"IPV4:", 5) == 0) ip += 5; ipv = string_is_ip_address(ip, NULL); if (ipv == 0 || (disable_ipv6 && ipv == 6)) return DECLINE; /* It seems unlikely that ignore_target_hosts will be used with this router, but if it is set, it should probably work. */ if (verify_check_this_host(CUSS&rblock->ignore_target_hosts, NULL, domain, ip, NULL) == OK) { DEBUG(D_route) debug_printf("%s is in ignore_target_hosts\n", ip); addr->message = US"IP literal host explicitly ignored"; return DECLINE; } /* Set up a host item */ h = store_get(sizeof(host_item)); h->next = NULL; h->address = string_copy(ip); h->port = PORT_NONE; h->name = domain; h->mx = MX_NONE; h->status = hstatus_unknown; h->why = hwhy_unknown; h->last_try = 0; /* Determine whether the host is the local host, and if so, take action according to the configuration. */ if (host_scan_for_local_hosts(h, &h, NULL) == HOST_FOUND_LOCAL) { int rc = rf_self_action(addr, h, rblock->self_code, rblock->self_rewrite, rblock->self, addr_new); if (rc != OK) return rc; } /* Address is routed to this host */ addr->host_list = h; /* Set up the errors address, if any. */ rc = rf_get_errors_address(addr, rblock, verify, &addr->prop.errors_address); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* Set up the additional and removable headers for this address. */ rc = rf_get_munge_headers(addr, rblock, &addr->prop.extra_headers, &addr->prop.remove_headers); if (rc != OK) return rc; /* Fill in the transport, queue the address for local or remote delivery, and yield success. For local delivery, of course, the IP address won't be used. If just verifying, there need not be a transport, in which case it doesn't matter which queue we put the address on. This is all now handled by the route_queue() function. */ if (!rf_get_transport(rblock->transport_name, &(rblock->transport), addr, rblock->name, NULL)) return DEFER; addr->transport = rblock->transport; return rf_queue_add(addr, addr_local, addr_remote, rblock, pw)? OK : DEFER; }