1 2 SENDMAIL RELEASE 8 3 4This directory has the latest sendmail(TM) software from Sendmail, Inc. 5 6Report any bugs to sendmail-bugs@sendmail.ORG 7 8There is a web site at http://WWW.Sendmail.ORG/ -- see that site for 9the latest updates. 10 11+--------------+ 12| INTRODUCTION | 13+--------------+ 14 150. The vast majority of queries to <sendmail-questions@sendmail.org> 16 are answered in the README files noted below. 17 181. Read this README file, especially this introduction, and the DIRECTORY 19 PERMISSIONS sections. 20 212. Read the INSTALL file in this directory. 22 233. Read sendmail/README, especially: 24 a. the introduction 25 b. the BUILDING SENDMAIL section 26 c. the relevant part(s) of the OPERATING SYSTEM AND COMPILE QUIRKS section 27 28 You may also find these useful: 29 30 d. sendmail/SECURITY 31 e. devtools/README 32 f. devtools/Site/README 33 g. libmilter/README 34 h. mail.local/README 35 i. smrsh/README 36 374. Read cf/README. 38 39Sendmail is a trademark of Sendmail, Inc. 40 41+-----------------------+ 42| DIRECTORY PERMISSIONS | 43+-----------------------+ 44 45Sendmail often gets blamed for many problems that are actually the 46result of other problems, such as overly permissive modes on directories. 47For this reason, sendmail checks the modes on system directories and 48files to determine if they can be trusted. For sendmail to run without 49complaining, you MUST execute the following command: 50 51 chmod go-w / /etc /etc/mail /usr /var /var/spool /var/spool/mqueue 52 chown root / /etc /etc/mail /usr /var /var/spool /var/spool/mqueue 53 54You will probably have to tweak this for your environment (for example, 55some systems put the spool directory into /usr/spool instead of 56/var/spool). If you set the RunAsUser option in your sendmail.cf, the 57/var/spool/mqueue directory will have to be owned by the RunAsUser user. 58As a general rule, after you have compiled sendmail, run the command 59 60 sendmail -v -bi 61 62to initialize the alias database. If it gives messages such as 63 64 WARNING: writable directory /etc 65 WARNING: writable directory /var/spool/mqueue 66 67then the directories listed have inappropriate write permissions and 68should be secured to avoid various possible security attacks. 69 70Beginning with sendmail 8.9, these checks have become more strict to 71prevent users from being able to access files they would normally not 72be able to read. In particular, .forward and :include: files in unsafe 73directory paths (directory paths which are group or world writable) will 74no longer be allowed. This would mean that if user joe's home directory 75was writable by group staff, sendmail would not use his .forward file. 76This behavior can be altered, at the expense of system security, by 77setting the DontBlameSendmail option. For example, to allow .forward 78files in group writable directories: 79 80 O DontBlameSendmail=forwardfileingroupwritabledirpath 81 82Or to allow them in both group and world writable directories: 83 84 O DontBlameSendmail=forwardfileinunsafedirpath 85 86Items from these unsafe .forward and :include: files will be marked 87as unsafe addresses -- the items can not be deliveries to files or 88programs. This behavior can also be altered via DontBlameSendmail: 89 90 O DontBlameSendmail=forwardfileinunsafedirpath, 91 forwardfileinunsafedirpathsafe 92 93The first flag allows the .forward file to be read, the second allows 94the items in the file to be marked as safe for file and program 95delivery. 96 97Other files affected by this strengthened security include class 98files (i.e., Fw /etc/mail/local-host-names), persistent host status files, 99and the files specified by the ErrorHeader and HelpFile options. Similar 100DontBlameSendmail flags are available for the class, ErrorHeader, and 101HelpFile files. 102 103If you have an unsafe configuration of .forward and :include: 104files, you can make it safe by finding all such files, and doing 105a "chmod go-w $FILE" on each. Also, do a "chmod go-w $DIR" for 106each directory in the file's path. 107 108 109+--------------------------+ 110| FILE AND MAP PERMISSIONS | 111+--------------------------+ 112 113Any application which uses either flock() or fcntl() style locking or 114other APIs that use one of these locking methods (such as open() with 115O_EXLOCK and O_SHLOCK) on files readable by other local untrusted users 116may be susceptible to local denial of service attacks. 117 118File locking is used throughout sendmail for a variety of files 119including aliases, maps, statistics, and the pid file. Any user who 120can open one of these files can prevent sendmail or it's associated 121utilities, e.g., makemap or newaliases, from operating properly. This 122can also affect sendmail's ability to update status files such as 123statistics files. For system which use flock() for file locking, a 124user's ability to obtain an exclusive lock prevents other sendmail 125processes from reading certain files such as alias or map databases. 126 127A workaround for this problem is to protect all sendmail files such 128that they can't be opened by untrusted users. As long as users can 129not open a file, they can not lock it. Since queue files should 130already have restricted permissions, the only files that need 131adjustment are alias, map, statistics, and pid files. These files 132should be owned by root or the trusted user specified in the 133TrustedUser option. Changing the permissions to be only readable and 134writable by that user is sufficient to avoid the denial of service. 135For example, depending on the paths you use, these commands would be 136used: 137 138 chmod 0640 /etc/mail/aliases /etc/mail/aliases.{db,pag,dir} 139 chmod 0640 /etc/mail/*.{db,pag,dir} 140 chmod 0640 /etc/mail/statistics /var/log/sendmail.st 141 chmod 0600 /var/run/sendmail.pid /etc/mail/sendmail.pid 142 143If the permissions 0640 are used, be sure that only trusted users belong 144to the group assigned to those files. Otherwise, files should not even 145be group readable. As of sendmail 8.12.4, the permissions shown above 146are the default permissions for newly created files. 147 148Note that the denial of service on the plain text aliases file 149(/etc/mail/aliases) only prevents newaliases from rebuilding the 150aliases file. The same is true for the database files on systems which 151use fcntl() style locking. Since it does not interfere with normal 152operations, sites may chose to leave these files readable. Also, it is 153not necessary to protect the text files associated with map databases 154as makemap does not lock those files. 155 156 157+-----------------------+ 158| RELATED DOCUMENTATION | 159+-----------------------+ 160 161There are other files you should read. Rooted in this directory are: 162 163 FAQ 164 The FAQ (frequently answered questions) is no longer maintained 165 with the sendmail release. It is available at 166 http://www.sendmail.org/faq/ . The file FAQ is a reminder of 167 this and a pointer to the web page. 168 INSTALL 169 Installation instructions for building and installing sendmail. 170 KNOWNBUGS 171 Known bugs in the current release. 172 RELEASE_NOTES 173 A detailed description of the changes in each version. This 174 is quite long, but informative. 175 sendmail/README 176 Details on compiling and installing sendmail. 177 cf/README 178 Details on configuring sendmail. 179 doc/op/op.me 180 The sendmail Installation & Operations Guide. In addition 181 to the shipped PostScript version, plain text and PDF versions 182 can be generating using (assuming the required conversion software 183 is installed on your system, see doc/op/Makefile): 184 185 cd doc/op && make op.txt op.pdf 186 187 Be warned: on some systems calling make in doc/op/ will cause 188 errors due to nroff/groff problems. Known problems are: 189 - running this off on systems with an old version of -me, you 190 need to add the following macro to the macros: 191 192 .de sm 193 \s-1\\$1\\s0\\$2 194 .. 195 196 This sets a word in a smaller pointsize. 197 198 - with new groff versions (1.18 seems affected) 199 200 GROFF_NO_SGR=1 201 202 needs to be set, e.g., in doc/op/Makefile: 203 204 ROFF_CMD= GROFF_NO_SGR=1 groff 205 206 207+--------------+ 208| RELATED RFCS | 209+--------------+ 210 211There are several related RFCs that you may wish to read -- they are 212available via anonymous FTP to several sites. For a list of the 213primary repositories see: 214 215 http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc-retrieval.txt 216 217They are also online at: 218 219 http://www.ietf.org/ 220 221They can also be retrieved via electronic mail by sending 222email to one of: 223 224 mail-server@nisc.sri.com 225 Put "send rfcNNN" in message body 226 nis-info@nis.nsf.net 227 Put "send RFCnnn.TXT-1" in message body 228 sendrfc@jvnc.net 229 Put "RFCnnn" as Subject: line 230 231For further instructions see: 232 233 http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc-editor/rfc-info 234 235Important RFCs for electronic mail are: 236 237 RFC821 SMTP protocol 238 RFC822 Mail header format 239 RFC974 MX routing 240 RFC976 UUCP mail format 241 RFC1123 Host requirements (modifies 821, 822, and 974) 242 RFC1344 Implications of MIME for Internet Mail Gateways 243 RFC1413 Identification server 244 RFC1428 Transition of Internet Mail from Just-Send-8 to 245 8-bit SMTP/MIME 246 RFC1652 SMTP Service Extension for 8bit-MIMEtransport 247 RFC1869 SMTP Service Extensions (ESMTP spec) 248 RFC1870 SMTP Service Extension for Message Size Declaration 249 RFC1891 SMTP Service Extension for Delivery Status Notifications 250 RFC1892 Multipart/Report Content Type for the Reporting of 251 Mail System Administrative Messages 252 RFC1893 Enhanced Mail System Status Codes 253 RFC1894 An Extensible Message Format for Delivery Status 254 Notifications 255 RFC1985 SMTP Service Extension for Remote Message Queue Starting 256 RFC2033 Local Mail Transfer Protocol (LMTP) 257 RFC2034 SMTP Service Extension for Returning Enhanced Error Codes 258 RFC2045 Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: 259 Format of Internet Message Bodies 260 RFC2476 Message Submission 261 RFC2487 SMTP Service Extension for Secure SMTP over TLS 262 RFC2554 SMTP Service Extension for Authentication 263 RFC2821 Simple Mail Transfer Protocol 264 RFC2822 Internet Message Format 265 RFC2852 Deliver By SMTP Service Extension 266 RFC2920 SMTP Service Extension for Command Pipelining 267 268Other standards that may be of interest (but which are less directly 269relevant to sendmail) are: 270 271 RFC987 Mapping between RFC822 and X.400 272 RFC1049 Content-Type header field (extension to RFC822) 273 274Warning to AIX users: this version of sendmail does not implement 275MB, MR, or MG DNS resource records, as defined (as experiments) in 276RFC1035. 277 278 279+---------+ 280| WARNING | 281+---------+ 282 283Since sendmail 8.11 and later includes hooks to cryptography, the 284following information from OpenSSL applies to sendmail as well. 285 286PLEASE REMEMBER THAT EXPORT/IMPORT AND/OR USE OF STRONG CRYPTOGRAPHY 287SOFTWARE, PROVIDING CRYPTOGRAPHY HOOKS OR EVEN JUST COMMUNICATING 288TECHNICAL DETAILS ABOUT CRYPTOGRAPHY SOFTWARE IS ILLEGAL IN SOME 289PARTS OF THE WORLD. SO, WHEN YOU IMPORT THIS PACKAGE TO YOUR 290COUNTRY, RE-DISTRIBUTE IT FROM THERE OR EVEN JUST EMAIL TECHNICAL 291SUGGESTIONS OR EVEN SOURCE PATCHES TO THE AUTHOR OR OTHER PEOPLE 292YOU ARE STRONGLY ADVISED TO PAY CLOSE ATTENTION TO ANY EXPORT/IMPORT 293AND/OR USE LAWS WHICH APPLY TO YOU. THE AUTHORS ARE NOT LIABLE FOR 294ANY VIOLATIONS YOU MAKE HERE. SO BE CAREFUL, IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY. 295 296If you use OpenSSL then make sure you read their README file which 297contains information about patents etc. 298 299 300+-------------------+ 301| DATABASE ROUTINES | 302+-------------------+ 303 304IF YOU WANT TO RUN THE NEW BERKELEY DB SOFTWARE: **** DO NOT **** 305use the version that was on the Net2 tape -- it has a number of 306nefarious bugs that were bad enough when I got them; you shouldn't have 307to go through the same thing. Instead, get a new version via the web at 308http://www.sleepycat.com/. This software is highly recommended; it gets 309rid of several stupid limits, it's much faster, and the interface is 310nicer to animals and plants. If the Berkeley DB include files 311are installed in a location other than those which your compiler searches, 312you will need to provide that directory when building: 313 314 Build -I/path/to/include/directory 315 316If you are using Berkeley DB versions 1.85 or 1.86, you are *strongly* 317urged to upgrade to DB version 2 or later, available from 318http://www.sleepycat.com/. Berkeley DB versions 1.85 and 1.86 are known to 319be broken in various nasty ways (see http://www.sleepycat.com/db.185.html), 320and can cause sendmail to dump core. In addition, the newest versions of 321gcc and the Solaris compilers perform optimizations in those versions that 322may cause fairly random core dumps. 323 324If you have no choice but to use Berkeley DB 1.85 or 1.86, and you are 325using both Berkeley DB and files in the UNIX ndbm format, remove ndbm.h 326and ndbm.o from the DB library after building it. You should also apply 327all of the patches for DB 1.85 and 1.86 found at the Sleepycat web site 328(see http://www.sleepycat.com/db.185.html), as they fix some of the known 329problems. 330 331If you are using a version of Berkeley DB 2 previous to 2.3.15, and you 332are using both Berkeley DB and files in the UNIX ndbm format, remove dbm.o 333from the DB library after building it. No other changes are necessary. 334 335If you are using Berkeley DB version 2.3.15 or greater, no changes are 336necessary. 337 338The underlying database file formats changed between Berkeley DB versions 3391.85 and 1.86, again between DB 1.86 and version 2.0, and finally between 340DB 2.X and 3.X. If you are upgrading from one of those versions, you must 341recreate your database file(s). Do this by rebuilding all maps with 342makemap and rebuilding the alias file with newaliases. 343 344 345+--------------------+ 346| HOST NAME SERVICES | 347+--------------------+ 348 349If you are using NIS or /etc/hosts, it is critical that you 350list the long (fully qualified) name somewhere (preferably first) in 351the /etc/hosts file used to build the NIS database. For example, the 352line should read 353 354 128.32.149.68 mastodon.CS.Berkeley.EDU mastodon 355 356**** NOT **** 357 358 128.32.149.68 mastodon 359 360If you do not include the long name, sendmail will complain loudly 361about ``unable to qualify my own domain name (mastodon) -- using 362short name'' and conclude that your canonical name is the short 363version and use that in messages. The name "mastodon" doesn't mean 364much outside of Berkeley, and so this creates incorrect and unreplyable 365messages. 366 367 368+-------------+ 369| USE WITH MH | 370+-------------+ 371 372This version of sendmail notices and reports certain kinds of SMTP 373protocol violations that were ignored by older versions. If you 374are running MH you may wish to install the patch in contrib/mh.patch 375that will prevent these warning reports. This patch also works 376with the old version of sendmail, so it's safe to go ahead and 377install it. 378 379 380+----------------+ 381| USE WITH IDENT | 382+----------------+ 383 384Sendmail 8 supports the IDENT protocol, as defined by RFC 1413. 385Note that the RFC states a client should wait at least 30 seconds 386for a response. As of 8.10.0, the default Timeout.ident is 5 seconds 387as many sites have adopted the practice of dropping IDENT queries. 388This has lead to delays processing mail. 389 390No ident server is included with this distribution. It is available 391from: 392 393 ftp://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/ident/servers/ 394 http://sf.www.lysator.liu.se/~pen/pidentd/ 395 396+-------------------------+ 397| INTEROPERATION PROBLEMS | 398+-------------------------+ 399 400Microsoft Exchange Server 5.0 401 We have had a report that ``about 7% of messages from Sendmail 402 to Exchange were not being delivered with status messages of 403 "connection reset" and "I/O error".'' Upgrading Exchange from 404 Version 5.0 to Version 5.5 Service Pack 2 solved this problem. 405 406CommuniGate Pro 407 CommuniGate Pro 3.2.4 does not accept the AUTH= -parameter on 408 the MAIL FROM command if the client is not authenticated. Use 409 410 define(`confAUTH_OPTIONS', `A') 411 412 in .mc file if you have compiled sendmail with Cyrus SASL 413 and you communicate with CommuniGate Pro servers. 414 415+---------------------+ 416| DIRECTORY STRUCTURE | 417+---------------------+ 418 419The structure of this directory tree is: 420 421cf Source for sendmail configuration files. These are 422 different than what you've seen before. They are a 423 fairly dramatic rewrite, requiring the new sendmail 424 (since they use new features). 425contrib Some contributed tools to help with sendmail. THESE 426 ARE NOT SUPPORTED by sendmail -- contact the original 427 authors if you have problems. (This directory is not 428 on the 4.4BSD tape.) 429devtools Build environment. See devtools/README. 430doc Documentation. If you are getting source, read 431 op.me -- it's long, but worth it. 432editmap A program to edit and query maps that have been created 433 with makemap, e.g., adding and deleting entries. 434include Include files used by multiple programs in the distribution. 435libsmdb sendmail database library with support for Berkeley DB 1.X, 436 Berkeley DB 2.X, Berkeley DB 3.X, and NDBM. 437libsmutil sendmail utility library with functions used by different 438 programs. 439mail.local The source for the local delivery agent used for 4.4BSD. 440 THIS IS NOT PART OF SENDMAIL! and may not compile 441 everywhere, since it depends on some 4.4-isms. Warning: 442 it does mailbox locking differently than other systems. 443mailstats Statistics printing program. 444makemap A program that creates the keyed maps used by the $( ... $) 445 construct in sendmail. It is primitive but effective. 446 It takes a very simple input format, so you will probably 447 expect to preprocess must human-convenient formats 448 using sed scripts before this program will like them. 449 But it should be functionally complete. 450praliases A program to print the DBM or NEWDB version of the 451 aliases file. 452rmail Source for rmail(8). This is used as a delivery 453 agent for for UUCP, and could presumably be used by 454 other non-socket oriented mailers. Older versions of 455 rmail are probably deficient. RMAIL IS NOT PART OF 456 SENDMAIL!!! The 4.4BSD source is included for you to 457 look at or try to port to your system. There is no 458 guarantee it will even compile on your operating system. 459smrsh The "sendmail restricted shell", which can be used as 460 a replacement for /bin/sh in the prog mailer to provide 461 increased security control. NOT PART OF SENDMAIL! 462sendmail Source for the sendmail program itself. 463test Some test scripts (currently only for compilation aids). 464vacation Source for the vacation program. NOT PART OF SENDMAIL! 465 466$Revision: 8.90.2.1 $, Last updated $Date: 2002/11/09 23:32:28 $ 467