Godshell Toaster Wiki Open

I’m pleased to announce that the Godshell Toaster Wiki is now open for editing.

This wiki is intended to be a complete source of information for the qmail toaster I put together several years ago. This particular toaster uses Pawel Foremski’s excellent qmail-spp patch to allow on-the-fly modifications of the qmail server. With this toaster, a server administrator can write small shell scripts to alter the behavior of the server with minimal programming knowledge.

I have spent a considerable amount of time compiling the information that currently exists in the wiki and will continue to add and edit data in the future. Please feel free to take a look at the site and contribute!

Qmail SPP 0.42

Pawel Foremski is preparing to release the latest version (0.42) of his qmail-spp patch for qmail. This incredibly useful patch allows you to modify the behaviour of qmail, on the fly, through use of external scripts. These external scripts can be written in any programming language that allows STDIN and STDOUT. I have found this to be incredibly useful and it has haled tremendously when targeted by spammers and virii.

 

There was some initial concern about the overhead involved with calling an external program for processing, but my fears have been calmed since then. I’ve seen this patch in production on machines processing over 250,000 emails per day. That’s a LOT of email.

 

The patch allows you to inject special processing during specific portions of the smtpd process. These areas include
HELO/EHLO, MAIL, RCPT, DATA and (if supported) AUTH. There is also another hook available when the client connects, before any data is transferred between the client and server. These 6 areas allow for a massive amount of power. For instance, you can interrupt the process right after the HELO/EHLO and run an spf plugin. Or, you can check the from address during the RCPT portion and determine if the user is relaying, and if they’re allowed. Basically, a chkusr function. Tarpitting is fairly simple at the RCPT level as well. The initial connection point is a great time to check for blacklists. In fact, you can set different SPP config files for use depending on where the connection originates. Thus, you can add additional RBL lists depending on the source. So, you can skip RBL altogether for known local connections, and use a wider range of blocklists for external connections. All in all, the flexibility is incredible.

 

I highly recommend the use of this patch for any qmail installation intended for normal mail use. Obviously if you’re never going to allow mail delivery, there’s no real point, but if you need a strong, secure mail server, this is definitely a step in the right direction. In fact, I worked with Pawel to create a patch that will work with the SMTP AUTH/TLS patch that Bill Shupp put together. Bill has a nice page with a complete qmail toaster on it. His toaster was the basis for my own foray into the qmail scene, and I owe a lot to the work he’s done. I’ve built my own toaster based loosely on his, but using the qmail-spp patch, and some of my own experience. You can find my toaster by either clicking here, or on the link to the right.