Delay ACL header edits until transport time.
[exim-config] / spam.m4
1 ### -*-m4-*-
2 ###
3 ### Spam filtering for distorted.org.uk Exim configuration
4 ###
5 ### (c) 2012 Mark Wooding
6 ###
7
8 ###----- Licensing notice ---------------------------------------------------
9 ###
10 ### This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
11 ### it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
12 ### the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
13 ### (at your option) any later version.
14 ###
15 ### This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
16 ### but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
17 ### MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
18 ### GNU General Public License for more details.
19 ###
20 ### You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
21 ### along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
22 ### Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
23
24 DIVERT(null)
25 ###--------------------------------------------------------------------------
26 ### Spam filtering.
27
28 ## The Exim documentation tells lies.
29 ##
30 ## : *${run{*<_command_>* *<_args_>*}{*<_string1_>*}{*<_string2_>*}}*
31 ## : The command and its arguments are first expanded separately, [...]
32 ##
33 ## They aren't. The whole command-and-args are expanded together, and then
34 ## split at unquoted spaces. This unpleasant hack sorts out the mess.
35 m4_define(<:SHQUOTE:>, <:"${rxquote:$1}":>)
36
37 ## Utilities for collecting spam limits.
38 m4_define(<:SPAMLIMIT_CHECK:>,
39 <:${if match{$1}{\N^-?[0-9]+$\N} {spam_limit=$1} {}}:>)
40
41 m4_define(<:SPAMLIMIT_ROUTER:>,
42 <:$1:
43 driver = redirect
44 data = :unknown:
45 verify_only = true
46 condition = ${if !eq{$acl_c_mode}{submission}}
47 condition = ${extract{spam_limit}{$address_data}{false}{true}}:>)
48
49 m4_define(<:SPAMLIMIT_SET:>,
50 <:address_data = \
51 ${if def:address_data {$address_data}{}} \
52 $1:>)
53
54 m4_define(<:SPAMLIMIT_LOOKUP:>,
55 <:condition = ${if exists{$1}}
56 SPAMLIMIT_SET(<:${lookup {$2$3$4@$5/$6} nwildlsearch {$1} \
57 {SPAMLIMIT_CHECK($value)}}:>):>)
58
59 m4_define(<:SPAMLIMIT_USERV:>,
60 <:SPAMLIMIT_SET(<:${run {/usr/bin/timeout 5s \
61 userv CONF_userv_opts \
62 SHQUOTE($1) exim-spam-limit \
63 SHQUOTE($6) SHQUOTE($2) SHQUOTE($3) \
64 SHQUOTE($4) SHQUOTE(@$5)} \
65 {SPAMLIMIT_CHECK($value)}}:>):>)
66
67 SECTION(global, policy)m4_dnl
68 spamd_address = CONF_spamd_address CONF_spamd_port
69
70 SECTION(acl, rcpt-hooks)m4_dnl
71 ## Do per-recipient spam-filter processing.
72 require acl = rcpt_spam
73
74 SECTION(acl, misc)m4_dnl
75 skip_spam_check:
76
77 ## If the client is trusted, or this is a new submission, don't
78 ## bother with any of this. We will have verified the sender
79 ## fairly aggressively before granting this level of trust.
80 accept hosts = +trusted
81 accept condition = ${if eq{$acl_c_mode}{submission}}
82
83 ## If all domains have disabled spam checking then don't check.
84 accept !condition = $acl_c_spam_check_domain
85
86 ## Otherwise we should check.
87 deny
88
89 rcpt_spam:
90
91 ## If this is a virtual domain, and it says `spam-check=no', then we
92 ## shouldn't check spam. But we can't check domains at DATA time, so
93 ## instead we must track whether all recipients have disabled
94 ## checking.
95 warn !domains = ${if exists{CONF_sysconf_dir/domains.conf} \
96 {partial0-lsearch; CONF_sysconf_dir/domains.conf} \
97 {}}
98 set acl_c_spam_check_domain = true
99 warn !condition = $acl_c_spam_check_domain
100 condition = DOMKV(spam-check, {${expand:$value}}{true})
101 set acl_c_spam_check_domain = true
102
103 ## See if we should do this check.
104 accept acl = skip_spam_check
105
106 ## Always accept mail to `postmaster'. Currently this is not
107 ## negotiable; maybe a tweak can be added to `domains.conf' if
108 ## necessary.
109 accept local_parts = postmaster
110
111 ## Collect the user's spam threshold from the `address_data'
112 ## variable, where it was left by the `fetch_spam_limit' router
113 ## during recipient verification. (This just saves duplicating this
114 ## enormous expression.)
115 warn set acl_m_this_spam_limit = \
116 ${sg {${extract {spam_limit} \
117 {${if def:address_data \
118 {$address_data}{}}} \
119 {$value}{nil}}} \
120 {^(|.*\\D.*)\$}{CONF_spam_max}}
121
122 ## If there's a spam limit already established, and it's different
123 ## from this user's limit, then the sender will have to try this user
124 ## again later.
125 defer !hosts = +trusted
126 message = "You'd better try this one later"
127 condition = ${if def:acl_m_spam_limit {true}{false}}
128 condition = ${if ={$acl_m_spam_limit} \
129 {$acl_m_this_spam_limit} \
130 {false}{true}}
131
132 ## There's no limit set yet, or the user's limit is the same as the
133 ## existing one, or the client's local and we're not checking for
134 ## spam anyway. Whichever way, it's safe to set it now.
135 warn set acl_m_spam_limit = $acl_m_this_spam_limit
136
137 ## All done.
138 accept
139
140 SECTION(acl, data-spam)m4_dnl
141 ## Do spam checking.
142 require acl = data_spam
143
144 SECTION(acl, misc)m4_dnl
145 data_spam:
146
147 ## See if we should do this check.
148 accept acl = skip_spam_check
149
150 ## Check header validity.
151 require verify = header_syntax
152
153 ## Check the message for spam, comparing to the configured limit.
154 deny spam = exim:true
155 message = Tinned meat product detected ($spam_score)
156 condition = ${if >{$spam_score_int}{$acl_m_spam_limit} \
157 {true}{false}}
158
159 ## Insert headers from the spam check now that we've decided to
160 ## accept the message.
161 warn
162
163 ## Convert the limit (currently 10x fixed point) into a
164 ## decimal for presentation.
165 set acl_m_spam_limit_presentation = \
166 ${sg{$acl_m_spam_limit}{\N(\d)$\N}{.\$1}}
167
168 ## Convert the report into something less obnoxious. Plain
169 ## old SpamAssassin has an `X-Spam-Status' header which
170 ## lists the matched rules and provides some other basic
171 ## information. Try to extract something similar from the
172 ## report.
173 ##
174 ## This is rather fiddly.
175
176 ## Firstly, escape angle brackets, because we'll be using
177 ## them for our own purposes.
178 set acl_m_spam_tests = ${sg{$spam_report}{([!<>])}{!\$1}}
179
180 ## Trim off the blurb paragraph and the preview. The rest
181 ## should be fairly well behaved. Wrap double angle-
182 ## brackets around the remainder; these can't appear in the
183 ## body because we escaped them all earlier.
184 set acl_m_spam_tests = \
185 ${sg{$acl_m_spam_tests} \
186 {\N^(?s).*\n Content analysis details:(.*)$\N} \
187 {<<\$1>>}}
188
189 ## Extract the information about the matching rules and
190 ## their scores. Leave `<<...>>' around everything else.
191 set acl_m_spam_tests = \
192 ${sg{$acl_m_spam_tests} \
193 {\N(?s)\n\s*(-?[\d.]+)\s+([-\w]+)\s\N} \
194 {>>\$2:\$1,<<}}
195
196 ## Strip everything still in `<<...>>' pairs, including any
197 ## escaped characters inside.
198 set acl_m_spam_tests = \
199 ${sg{$acl_m_spam_tests}{\N(?s)<<([^!>]+|!.)*>>\N}{}}
200
201 ## Trim off a trailing comma.
202 set acl_m_spam_tests = ${sg{$acl_m_spam_tests}{,\s*\$}{}}
203
204 ## Undo the escaping.
205 set acl_m_spam_tests = ${sg{$acl_m_spam_tests}{!(.)}{\$1}}
206
207 ## Insert the headers.
208 ADD_HEADER(<:X-CONF_header_token-SpamAssassin-Score: \
209 $spam_score/$acl_m_spam_limit_presentation \
210 ($spam_bar):>)
211 ADD_HEADER(<:X-CONF_header_token-SpamAssassin-Status: \
212 score=$spam_score, \
213 limit=$acl_m_spam_limit_presentation, \n\t\
214 tests=$acl_m_spam_tests:>)
215
216 ## We're good.
217 accept
218
219 DIVERT(null)
220 ###----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------