You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
Timo Röhling 35ec3e10a8 Initial commit 12 years ago
.gitignore Initial commit 12 years ago
CMakeLists.txt Initial commit 12 years ago
LICENSE Initial commit 12 years ago
README.md Initial commit 12 years ago
main.cf.ex Initial commit 12 years ago
makefile Initial commit 12 years ago
postinstall.cmake.in Initial commit 12 years ago
postsrsd.c Initial commit 12 years ago
postsrsd.default Initial commit 12 years ago
postsrsd.init.in Initial commit 12 years ago
sha1.c Initial commit 12 years ago
srs2.c Initial commit 12 years ago
srs2.h Initial commit 12 years ago

README.md

About

PostSRSd provides the Sender Rewriting Scheme (SRS) via TCP-based lookup tables for Postfix. SRS is needed if your mail server acts as forwarder.

Imagine your server receives a mail from alice@example.com that is to be forwarded. If example.com uses the Sender Policy Framework to indicate that all legit mails originate from their server, your forwarded mail might be bounced, because you have no permission to send on behalf of example.com. The solution is that you map the address to your own domain, e.g. SRS0+xxxx=yy=example.com=alice@yourdomain.org (forward SRS). If the mail is bounced later and a notification arrives, you can extract the original address from the rewritten one (revere SRS) and return the notification to the sender. You might notice that the reverse SRS can be abused to turn your server into an open relay. For this reason, xxxx and yy are a cryptographic signature and a time stamp. If the signature does not match, the address is forged and the mail can be discarded.

Building

PostSRSd requires a POSIX compatible system and CMake to build. Optionally, help2man is used to create a manual page.

For convenience, a Makefile fragment is provided which calls CMake with the recommended command line options. Just run make.

Installing

Run make install as root to install the daemon and the configuration files.

Configuration

The configuration is located in /etc/default/postsrsd. You must store a secret key in /etc/postsrsd.secret. The installer tries to generate one from /dev/urandom. Be careful that no one can guess your secret, because anyone who knows it can use your mail server as open relay!

PostSRSd exposes its functionality via two TCP lookup tables. The recommended Postfix configuration is to add the following fragment to your main.cf:

sender_canonical_maps = tcp:127.0.0.1:10001
sender_canonical_classes = envelope_sender
recipient_canonical_maps = tcp:127.0.0.1:10002
recipient_canonical_maps = envelope_recipient

This will transparently rewrite incoming and outgoing envelope addresses. Run service postsrsd start and postfix reload as root, or reboot.