silencing svn-buildpackage nagging.
+++ /dev/null
-Package: amavisd-cn
-Version: 2:20030616p10-11
-Section:
-Architecture: all
-Provides: amavisd-new-cn
-Depends: amavisd-new (>= 20030616p10-5), postfix | amavisd-new-milter (>= 20030616p10-5), postfix | sendmail (>= 8.13.1-20), clamav-cn (>= 0.80-7), spamassassin (>= 2.64), debianutils (>= 1.13.1), carnet-tools-cn (>= 2.1), procps, patch, host
-Pre-Depends: amavisd-new
-Recommends: sweep-cn, libsavi-perl
-Conflicts: libsavi-perl (<< 0.15), bunch-perl-modules-cn, sweep-cn (<< 1.8-2)
-Suggests:
-Installed-Size: 284
-Maintainer: Zoran Dzelajlija <zoran.dzelajlija@carnet.hr>
-Description: Interface between MTA and virus scanner/content filters
- AMaViSd-new is a script that interfaces a mail transport agent (MTA) with
- zero or more virus scanners, and spamassassin (optional).
- .
- CARNet configuration comes with clamav and spamassassin, providing
- virus and spam scanning for postfix, or for sendmail via
- amavisd-new-milter.
src/postfix.sh usr/share/amavisd-cn
src/variables.sh usr/share/amavisd-cn
src/functions.sh usr/share/amavisd-cn
-templates/* usr/share/amavisd-cn
+templates usr/share/amavisd-cn
# amavisd.conf
if [ -f "$ACONFOLD" ]; then
cp_echo "CN: Amavisd configuration is now in $ACONF."
- cp_echo " Previous location was $ACONFOLD."
- cp_backup_conffile "$ACONFOLD"
+ noisy_backup "$ACONFOLD"
rm -f "$ACONFOLD"
- cp_echo " Old file renamed to $ACONFMOVED."
- fi
cp_echo ""
cp_echo "CN: Please read /usr/share/doc/amavisd-cn/README.CARNet."
elif [ -f "$ACONFOLD.disabled" ]; then
- cp_backup_conffile "$ACONFOLD.disabled" "$(basename $ACONFOLD)"
+ noisy_backup "$ACONFOLD.disabled" "$(basename $ACONFOLD)"
rm -f "$ACONFOLD.disabled"
- cp_echo "CN: Removed $ACONFOLD.disabled."
- cp_echo " Please read /usr/share/doc/amavisd-cn/README.CARNet."
+ cp_echo "CN: Please read /usr/share/doc/amavisd-cn/README.CARNet."
fi
if [ -f $ACONF ]; then
# dh_installchangelogs -k
dh_installdocs
# dh_installexamples
- dh_install
+ dh_install -X/.svn
# dh_installmenu
# dh_installdebconf
# dh_installlogrotate
update_postfix() {
# set up master.cf
if [ -f /etc/postfix/master.cf ] && \
- \( ! grep -q smtp-amavis /etc/postfix/master.cf || \
- dpkg --compare-versions "$2" lt $MASTTMPLVERSION \); then
+ ( ! grep -q smtp-amavis /etc/postfix/master.cf || \
+ dpkg --compare-versions "$2" lt $MASTTMPLVERSION ); then
noisy_backup /etc/postfix/master.cf
cp-update $PKG /etc/postfix/master.cf < $MASTTMPL
fi
CRONTAB=/etc/cron.d/$PKG
ACONF=/etc/amavis/conf.d/40-carnet
ACONFTMPL=/usr/share/$PKG/templates/40-carnet
+MASTTMPL=/usr/share/$PKG/templates/master.cf
BLIST=$AHOME/blacklist_sender
WLIST=$AHOME/whitelist_sender
# domain is set in postinst
+++ /dev/null
-use strict;
-
-# Configuration file for amavisd-new
-# Defaults modified for the Debian amavisd-new package
-# $Id: amavisd.conf,v 1.27.2.2 2004/11/18 23:27:55 hmh Exp $
-#
-# This software is licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL).
-# See comments at the start of amavisd-new for the whole license text.
-
-#Sections:
-# Section I - Essential daemon and MTA settings
-# Section II - MTA specific
-# Section III - Logging
-# Section IV - Notifications/DSN, BOUNCE/REJECT/DROP/PASS destiny, quarantine
-# Section V - Per-recipient and per-sender handling, whitelisting, etc.
-# Section VI - Resource limits
-# Section VII - External programs, virus scanners, SpamAssassin
-# Section VIII - Debugging
-
-#GENERAL NOTES:
-# This file is a normal Perl code, interpreted by Perl itself.
-# - make sure this file (or directory where it resides) is NOT WRITABLE
-# by mere mortals (not even vscan/amavis; best to make it owned by root),
-# otherwise it represents a severe security risk!
-# - for values which are interpreted as booleans, it is recommended
-# to use 1 for true, undef for false.
-# THIS IS DIFFERENT FROM OLD AMAVIS VERSIONS where "no" also meant false,
-# now it means true, like any nonempty string does!
-# - Perl syntax applies. Most notably: strings in "" may include variables
-# (which start with $ or @); to include characters @ and $ in double
-# quoted strings, precede them by a backslash; in single-quoted strings
-# the $ and @ lose their special meaning, so it is usually easier to use
-# single quoted strings (or qw operator) for e-mail addresses.
-# Still, in both cases a backslash needs to be doubled.
-# - variables with names starting with a '@' are lists, the values assigned
-# to them should be lists as well, e.g. ('one@foo', $mydomain, "three");
-# note the comma-separation and parenthesis. If strings in the list
-# do not contain spaces nor variables, a Perl operator qw() may be used
-# as a shorthand to split its argument on whitespace and produce a list
-# of strings, e.g. qw( one@foo example.com three ); Note that the argument
-# to qw is quoted implicitly and no variable interpretation is done within
-# (no '$' variable evaluations). The #-initiated comments can NOT be used
-# within a string. In other words, $ and # lose their special meaning
-# within a qw argument, just like within '...' strings.
-# - all e-mail addresses in this file and as used internally by the daemon
-# are in their raw (rfc2821-unquoted and non-bracketed) form, i.e.
-# Bob "Funny" Dude@example.com, not: "Bob \"Funny\" Dude"@example.com
-# and not <"Bob \"Funny\" Dude"@example.com>; also: '' and not '<>'.
-# - the term 'default value' in examples below refers to the value of a
-# variable pre-assigned to it by the program; any explicit assignment
-# to a variable in this configuration file overrides the default value;
-
-
-#
-# Section I - Essential daemon and MTA settings
-#
-
-# $MYHOME serves as a quick default for some other configuration settings.
-# More refined control is available with each individual setting further down.
-# $MYHOME is not used directly by the program. No trailing slash!
-$MYHOME = '/var/lib/amavis'; # (default is '/var/amavis')
-
-# $mydomain serves as a quick default for some other configuration settings.
-# More refined control is available with each individual setting further down.
-# $mydomain is never used directly by the program.
-$mydomain = '_CN_DOMAIN_'; # (no useful default)
-
-# $myhostname = 'host.example.com'; # fqdn of this host, default by uname(3)
-
-# Set the user and group to which the daemon will change if started as root
-# (otherwise just keeps the UID unchanged, and these settings have no effect):
-$daemon_user = 'amavis'; # (no default (undef))
-$daemon_group = 'amavis'; # (no default (undef))
-
-# Runtime working directory (cwd), and a place where
-# temporary directories for unpacking mail are created.
-# if you change this, you might want to modify the cleanup()
-# function in /etc/init.d/amavisd-new
-# (no trailing slash, may be a scratch file system)
-$TEMPBASE = $MYHOME; # (must be set if other config vars use is)
-#$TEMPBASE = "$MYHOME/tmp"; # prefer to keep home dir /var/amavis clean?
-
-# $helpers_home sets environment variable HOME, and is passed as option
-# 'home_dir_for_helpers' to Mail::SpamAssassin::new. It should be a directory
-# on a normal persistent file system, not a scratch or temporary file system
-#$helpers_home = $MYHOME; # (defaults to $MYHOME)
-
-# Run the daemon in the specified chroot jail if nonempty:
-#$daemon_chroot_dir = $MYHOME; # (default is undef, meaning: do not chroot)
-
-$pid_file = "/var/run/amavis/amavisd.pid"; # (default: "$MYHOME/amavisd.pid")
-$lock_file = "/var/run/amavis/amavisd.lock"; # (default: "$MYHOME/amavisd.lock")
-
-# set environment variables if you want (no defaults):
-$ENV{TMPDIR} = $TEMPBASE; # wise to set TMPDIR, but not obligatory
-#...
-
-
-# MTA SETTINGS, UNCOMMENT AS APPROPRIATE,
-# both $forward_method and $notify_method default to 'smtp:127.0.0.1:10025'
-
-# POSTFIX, or SENDMAIL in dual-MTA setup, or EXIM V4
-# (set host and port number as required; host can be specified
-# as IP address or DNS name (A or CNAME, but MX is ignored)
-$forward_method = 'smtp:127.0.0.1:10025'; # where to forward checked mail
-$notify_method = $forward_method; # where to submit notifications
-
-# NOTE: The defaults (above) are good for Postfix or dual-sendmail. You MUST
-# uncomment the appropriate settings below if using other setups!
-
-# SENDMAIL MILTER, using amavis-milter.c helper program:
-# SEE amavisd-new-milter package docs FOR DEBIAN INSTRUCTIONS
-#$forward_method = undef; # no explicit forwarding, sendmail does it by itself
-# milter; option -odd is needed to avoid deadlocks
-#$notify_method = 'pipe:flags=q argv=/usr/sbin/sendmail -Ac -i -odd -f ${sender} -- ${recipient}';
-# just a thought: can we use use -Am instead of -odd ?
-
-# SENDMAIL (old non-milter setup, as relay):
-#$forward_method = 'pipe:flags=q argv=/usr/sbin/sendmail -C/etc/sendmail.orig.cf -i -f ${sender} -- ${recipient}';
-#$notify_method = $forward_method;
-
-# SENDMAIL (old non-milter setup, amavis.c calls local delivery agent):
-#$forward_method = undef; # no explicit forwarding, amavis.c will call LDA
-#$notify_method = 'pipe:flags=q argv=/usr/sbin/sendmail -Ac -i -f ${sender} -- ${recipient}';
-
-# EXIM v3 (not recommended with v4 or later, which can use SMTP setup instead):
-#$forward_method = 'pipe:flags=q argv=/usr/sbin/exim -oMr scanned-ok -i -f ${sender} -- ${recipient}';
-#$notify_method = $forward_method;
-
-# prefer to collect mail for forwarding as BSMTP files?
-#$forward_method = "bsmtp:$MYHOME/out-%i-%n.bsmtp";
-#$notify_method = $forward_method;
-
-
-# Net::Server pre-forking settings
-# You may want $max_servers to match the width of your MTA pipe
-# feeding amavisd, e.g. with Postfix the 'Max procs' field in the
-# master.cf file, like the '2' in the: smtp-amavis unix - - n - 2 smtp
-#
-$max_servers = 2; # number of pre-forked children (default 2)
-$max_requests = 10; # retire a child after that many accepts (default 10)
-
-$child_timeout=5*60; # abort child if it does not complete each task in n sec
- # (default: 8*60 seconds)
-
-# Check also the settings of @av_scanners at the end if you want to use
-# virus scanners. If not, you may want to delete the whole long assignment
-# to the variable @av_scanners, which will also remove the virus checking
-# code (e.g. if you only want to do spam scanning).
-
-# Here is a QUICK WAY to completely DISABLE some sections of code
-# that WE DO NOT WANT (it won't even be compiled-in).
-# For more refined controls leave the following two lines commented out,
-# and see further down what these two lookup lists really mean.
-#
-# @bypass_virus_checks_acl = qw( . ); # uncomment to DISABLE anti-virus code
-# @bypass_spam_checks_acl = qw( . ); # uncomment to DISABLE anti-spam code
-#
-# Any setting can be changed with a new assignment, so make sure
-# you do not unintentionally override these settings further down!
-
-# Lookup list of local domains (see README.lookups for syntax details)
-#
-# NOTE:
-# For backwards compatibility the variable names @local_domains (old) and
-# @local_domains_acl (new) are synonyms. For consistency with other lookups
-# the name @local_domains_acl is now preferred. It also makes it more
-# obviously distinct from the new %local_domains hash lookup table.
-#
-# local_domains* lookup tables are used in deciding whether a recipient
-# is local or not, or in other words, if the message is outgoing or not.
-# This affects inserting spam-related headers for local recipients,
-# limiting recipient virus notifications (if enabled) to local recipients,
-# in deciding if address extension may be appended, and in SQL lookups
-# for non-fqdn addresses. Set it up correctly if you need features
-# that rely on this setting (or just leave empty otherwise).
-#
-# With Postfix (2.0) a quick reminder on what local domains normally are:
-# a union of domains specified in: $mydestination, $virtual_alias_domains,
-# $virtual_mailbox_domains, and $relay_domains.
-#
-#@local_domains_acl = ( ".$mydomain" ); # $mydomain and its subdomains
-# @local_domains_acl = ( ".$mydomain", "my.other.domain" );
-# @local_domains_acl = qw(); # default is empty, no recipient treated as local
-# @local_domains_acl = qw( .example.com );
-# @local_domains_acl = qw( .example.com !host.sub.example.net .sub.example.net );
-@local_domains_acl = ( "$mydomain", ".$mydomain" );
-
-# or alternatively(A), using a Perl hash lookup table, which may be assigned
-# directly, or read from a file, one domain per line; comments and empty lines
-# are ignored, a dot before a domain name implies its subdomains:
-#
-#read_hash(\%local_domains, '/etc/amavis/local_domains');
-
-#or alternatively(B), using a list of regular expressions:
-# $local_domains_re = new_RE( qr'[@.]example\.com$'i );
-#
-# see README.lookups for syntax and semantics
-
-
-#
-# Section II - MTA specific (defaults should be ok)
-#
-
-# if $relayhost_is_client is true, the IP address in $notify_method and
-# $forward_method is dynamically overridden with SMTP client peer address
-# (if available), which makes it possible for several hosts to share one
-# daemon. The static port number is also overridden, and is dynamically
-# calculated as being one above the incoming SMTP/LMTP session port number.
-#
-# These are logged at level 3, so enable logging until you know you got it
-# right.
-$relayhost_is_client = 0; # (defaults to false)
-
-$insert_received_line = 1; # behave like MTA: insert 'Received:' header
- # (does not apply to sendmail/milter)
- # (default is true (1) )
-
-# AMAVIS-CLIENT PROTOCOL INPUT SETTINGS (e.g. with sendmail milter)
-# (used with amavis helper clients like amavis-milter.c and amavis.c,
-# NOT needed for Postfix and Exim or dual-sendmail - keep it undefined.)
-$unix_socketname = "/var/lib/amavis/amavisd.sock"; # amavis helper protocol socket
-#$unix_socketname = undef; # disable listening on a unix socket
- # (default is undef, i.e. disabled)
-
-# Do we receive quoted or raw addresses from the helper program?
-# (does not apply to SMTP; defaults to true)
-#$gets_addr_in_quoted_form = 1; # "Bob \"Funny\" Dude"@example.com
-#$gets_addr_in_quoted_form = 0; # Bob "Funny" Dude@example.com
-
-
-
-# SMTP SERVER (INPUT) PROTOCOL SETTINGS (e.g. with Postfix, Exim v4, ...)
-# (used when MTA is configured to pass mail to amavisd via SMTP or LMTP)
-$inet_socket_port = 10024; # accept SMTP on this local TCP port
- # (default is undef, i.e. disabled)
-# multiple ports may be provided: $inet_socket_port = [10024, 10026, 10028];
-
-# SMTP SERVER (INPUT) access control
-# - do not allow free access to the amavisd SMTP port !!!
-#
-# when MTA is at the same host, use the following (one or the other or both):
-$inet_socket_bind = '127.0.0.1'; # limit socket bind to loopback interface
- # (default is '127.0.0.1')
-#@inet_acl = qw( 127.0.0.1 ); # allow SMTP access only from localhost IP
- # (default is qw( 127.0.0.1 ) )
-
-# when MTA (one or more) is on a different host, use the following:
-# @inet_acl = qw(127/8 10.1.0.1 10.1.0.2); # adjust the list as appropriate
-# $inet_socket_bind = undef; # bind to all IP interfaces if undef
-#
-# Example1:
-# @inet_acl = qw( 127/8 10/8 172.16/12 192.168/16 );
-# permit only SMTP access from loopback and rfc1918 private address space
-#
-# Example2:
-# @inet_acl = qw( !192.168.1.12 172.16.3.3 !172.16.3/255.255.255.0
-# 127.0.0.1 10/8 172.16/12 192.168/16 );
-# matches loopback and rfc1918 private address space except host 192.168.1.12
-# and net 172.16.3/24 (but host 172.16.3.3 within 172.16.3/24 still matches)
-#
-# Example3:
-# @inet_acl = qw( 127/8
-# !172.16.3.0 !172.16.3.127 172.16.3.0/25
-# !172.16.3.128 !172.16.3.255 172.16.3.128/25 );
-# matches loopback and both halves of the 172.16.3/24 C-class,
-# split into two subnets, except all four broadcast addresses
-# for these subnets
-#
-# See README.lookups for details on specifying access control lists.
-
-
-#
-# Section III - Logging
-#
-
-# true (e.g. 1) => syslog; false (e.g. 0) => logging to file
-$DO_SYSLOG = 1; # (defaults to false)
-#$SYSLOG_LEVEL = 'user.info'; # (facility.priority, default 'mail.info')
-
-# Log file (if not using syslog)
-$LOGFILE = "/var/log/amavis.log"; # (defaults to empty, no log)
-
-#NOTE: levels are not strictly observed and are somewhat arbitrary
-# 0: startup/exit/failure messages, viruses detected
-# 1: args passed from client, some more interesting messages
-# 2: virus scanner output, timing
-# 3: server, client
-# 4: decompose parts
-# 5: more debug details
-#$log_level = 2; # (defaults to 0)
-
-# Customizable template for the most interesting log file entry (e.g. with
-# $log_level=0) (take care to properly quote Perl special characters like '\')
-# For a list of available macros see README.customize .
-
-# only log infected messages (useful with log level 0):
-# $log_templ = '[? %#V |[? %#F ||banned filename ([%F|,])]|infected ([%V|,])]#
-# [? %#V |[? %#F ||, from=[?%o|(?)|<%o>], to=[<%R>|,][? %i ||, quarantine %i]]#
-# |, from=[?%o|(?)|<%o>], to=[<%R>|,][? %i ||, quarantine %i]]';
-
-# log both infected and noninfected messages (default):
-$log_templ = '[? %#V |[? %#F |[?%#D|Not-Delivered|Passed]|BANNED name/type (%F)]|INFECTED (%V)], #
-[?%o|(?)|<%o>] -> [<%R>|,][? %i ||, quarantine %i], Message-ID: %m, Hits: %c';
-
-
-#
-# Section IV - Notifications/DSN, BOUNCE/REJECT/DROP/PASS destiny, quarantine
-#
-
-# Select notifications text encoding when Unicode-aware Perl is converting
-# text from internal character representation to external encoding (charset
-# in MIME terminology). Used as argument to Perl Encode::encode subroutine.
-#
-# to be used in RFC 2047-encoded header field bodies, e.g. in Subject:
-#$hdr_encoding = 'iso-8859-1'; # (default: 'iso-8859-1')
-#
-# to be used in notification body text: its encoding and Content-type.charset
-#$bdy_encoding = 'iso-8859-1'; # (default: 'iso-8859-1')
-
-# Default template texts for notifications may be overruled by directly
-# assigning new text to template variables, or by reading template text
-# from files. A second argument may be specified in a call to read_text(),
-# specifying character encoding layer to be used when reading from the
-# external file, e.g. 'utf8', 'iso-8859-1', or often just $bdy_encoding.
-# Text will be converted to internal character representation by Perl 5.8.0
-# or later; second argument is ignored otherwise. See PerlIO::encoding,
-# Encode::PerlIO and perluniintro man pages.
-#
-# $notify_sender_templ = read_text('/var/amavis/notify_sender.txt');
-# $notify_virus_sender_templ= read_text('/var/amavis/notify_virus_sender.txt');
-# $notify_virus_admin_templ = read_text('/var/amavis/notify_virus_admin.txt');
-# $notify_virus_recips_templ= read_text('/var/amavis/notify_virus_recips.txt');
-# $notify_spam_sender_templ = read_text('/var/amavis/notify_spam_sender.txt');
-# $notify_spam_admin_templ = read_text('/var/amavis/notify_spam_admin.txt');
-
-# If notification template files are collectively available in some directory,
-# use read_l10n_templates which calls read_text for each known template.
-#
-# read_l10n_templates('/etc/amavis/en_US');
-#
-# Debian available locales: en_US, pt_BR, de_DE, it_IT
-read_l10n_templates('en_US', '/etc/amavis');
-
-
-# Here is an overall picture (sequence of events) of how pieces fit together
-# (only virus controls are shown, spam controls work the same way):
-#
-# bypass_virus_checks? ==> PASS
-# no viruses? ==> PASS
-# log virus if $log_templ is nonempty
-# quarantine if $virus_quarantine_to is nonempty
-# notify admin if $virus_admin (lookup) nonempty
-# notify recips if $warnvirusrecip and (recipient is local or $warn_offsite)
-# add address extensions if adding extensions is enabled and virus will pass
-# send (non-)delivery notifications
-# to sender if DSN needed (BOUNCE or ($warn_virus_sender and D_PASS))
-# virus_lovers or final_destiny==D_PASS ==> PASS
-# DISCARD (2xx) or REJECT (5xx) (depending on final_*_destiny)
-#
-# Equivalent flow diagram applies for spam checks.
-# If a virus is detected, spam checking is skipped entirely.
-
-# The following symbolic constants can be used in *destiny settings:
-#
-# D_PASS mail will pass to recipients, regardless of bad contents;
-#
-# D_DISCARD mail will not be delivered to its recipients, sender will NOT be
-# notified. Effectively we lose mail (but will be quarantined
-# unless disabled). Losing mail is not decent for a mailer,
-# but might be desired.
-#
-# D_BOUNCE mail will not be delivered to its recipients, a non-delivery
-# notification (bounce) will be sent to the sender by amavisd-new;
-# Exception: bounce (DSN) will not be sent if a virus name matches
-# $viruses_that_fake_sender_re, or to messages from mailing lists
-# (Precedence: bulk|list|junk);
-#
-# D_REJECT mail will not be delivered to its recipients, sender should
-# preferably get a reject, e.g. SMTP permanent reject response
-# (e.g. with milter), or non-delivery notification from MTA
-# (e.g. Postfix). If this is not possible (e.g. different recipients
-# have different tolerances to bad mail contents and not using LMTP)
-# amavisd-new sends a bounce by itself (same as D_BOUNCE).
-#
-# Notes:
-# D_REJECT and D_BOUNCE are similar, the difference is in who is responsible
-# for informing the sender about non-delivery, and how informative
-# the notification can be (amavisd-new knows more than MTA);
-# With D_REJECT, MTA may reject original SMTP, or send DSN (delivery status
-# notification, colloquially called 'bounce') - depending on MTA;
-# Best suited for sendmail milter, especially for spam.
-# With D_BOUNCE, amavisd-new (not MTA) sends DSN (can better explain the
-# reason for mail non-delivery, but unable to reject the original
-# SMTP session). Best suited to reporting viruses, and for Postfix
-# and other dual-MTA setups, which can't reject original client SMTP
-# session, as the mail has already been enqueued.
-
-$final_virus_destiny = D_DISCARD; # (defaults to D_BOUNCE)
-$final_banned_destiny = D_REJECT; # (defaults to D_BOUNCE)
-$final_spam_destiny = D_REJECT; # (defaults to D_REJECT)
-$final_bad_header_destiny = D_PASS; # (defaults to D_PASS), D_BOUNCE suggested
-
-# Alternatives to consider for spam:
-# - use D_PASS if clients will do filtering based on inserted mail headers;
-# - use D_DISCARD, if kill_level is set safely high;
-# - use D_BOUNCE instead of D_REJECT if not using milter;
-#
-# D_BOUNCE is preferred for viruses, but consider:
-# - use D_DISCARD to avoid bothering the rest of the network, it is hopeless
-# to try to keep up with the viruses that faker the envelope sender anyway,
-# and bouncing only increases the network cost of viruses for everyone
-# - use D_PASS (or virus_lovers) and $warnvirussender=1 to deliver viruses;
-# - use D_REJECT instead of D_BOUNCE if using milter and under heavy
-# virus storm;
-#
-# Don't bother to set both D_DISCARD and $warn*sender=1, it will get mapped
-# to D_BOUNCE.
-#
-# The separation of *_destiny values into D_BOUNCE, D_REJECT, D_DISCARD
-# and D_PASS made settings $warnvirussender and $warnspamsender only still
-# useful with D_PASS.
-
-# The following $warn*sender settings are ONLY used when mail is
-# actually passed to recipients ($final_*_destiny=D_PASS, or *_lovers*).
-# Bounces or rejects produce non-delivery status notification anyway.
-
-# Notify virus sender?
-#$warnvirussender = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-
-# Notify spam sender?
-#$warnspamsender = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-
-# Notify sender of banned files?
-#$warnbannedsender = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-
-# Notify sender of syntactically invalid header containing non-ASCII characters?
-#$warnbadhsender = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-
-# Notify virus (or banned files) RECIPIENT?
-# (not very useful, but some policies demand it)
-#$warnvirusrecip = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-#$warnbannedrecip = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-
-# Notify also non-local virus/banned recipients if $warn*recip is true?
-# (including those not matching local_domains*)
-#$warn_offsite = 1; # (defaults to false (undef), i.e. only notify locals)
-
-
-# Treat envelope sender address as unreliable and don't send sender
-# notification / bounces if name(s) of detected virus(es) match the list.
-# Note that virus names are supplied by external virus scanner(s) and are
-# not standardized, so virus names may need to be adjusted.
-# See README.lookups for syntax, check also README.policy-on-notifications
-#
-$viruses_that_fake_sender_re = new_RE(
- qr'nimda|hybris|klez|bugbear|yaha|braid|sobig|fizzer|palyh|peido|holar'i,
- qr'tanatos|lentin|bridex|mimail|trojan\.dropper|dumaru|parite|spaces'i,
- qr'dloader|galil|gibe|swen|netwatch|bics|sbrowse|sober|rox|val(hal)?la'i,
- qr'frethem|sircam|be?agle|tanx|mydoom|novarg|shimg|netsky|somefool|moodown'i,
- qr'@mm|@MM', # mass mailing viruses as labeled by f-prot and uvscan
- qr'Worm'i, # worms as labeled by ClamAV, Kaspersky, etc
- [qr'^(EICAR|Joke\.|Junk\.)'i => 0],
- [qr'^(WM97|OF97|W95/CIH-|JS/Fort)'i => 0],
- [qr/.*/ => 1], # true by default (remove or comment-out if undesired)
-);
-
-# where to send ADMIN VIRUS NOTIFICATIONS (should be a fully qualified address)
-# - the administrator address may be a simple fixed e-mail address (a scalar),
-# or may depend on the SENDER address (e.g. its domain), in which case
-# a ref to a hash table can be specified (specify lower-cased keys,
-# dot is a catchall, see README.lookups).
-#
-# Empty or undef lookup disables virus admin notifications.
-
-# $virus_admin = undef; # do not send virus admin notifications (default)
-# $virus_admin = {'not.example.com' => '', '.' => 'virusalert@example.com'};
-# $virus_admin = 'virus-admin@example.com';
-#$virus_admin = "postmaster\@$mydomain"; # due to D_DISCARD default
-$virus_admin = "virusalert\@$mydomain"; # due to D_DISCARD default
-
-# equivalent to $virus_admin, but for spam admin notifications:
-# $spam_admin = "spamalert\@$mydomain";
-# $spam_admin = undef; # do not send spam admin notifications (default)
-# $spam_admin = {'not.example.com' => '', '.' => 'spamalert@example.com'};
-
-#advanced example, using a hash lookup table:
-#$virus_admin = {
-# 'baduser@sub1.example.com' => 'HisBoss@sub1.example.com',
-# '.sub1.example.com' => 'virusalert@sub1.example.com',
-# '.sub2.example.com' => '', # don't send admin notifications
-# 'a.sub3.example.com' => 'abuse@sub3.example.com',
-# '.sub3.example.com' => 'virusalert@sub3.example.com',
-# '.example.com' => 'noc@example.com', # catchall for our virus senders
-# '.' => 'virusalert@hq.example.com', # catchall for the rest
-#};
-
-
-# whom notification reports are sent from (ENVELOPE SENDER);
-# may be a null reverse path, or a fully qualified address:
-# (admin and recip sender addresses default to $mailfrom
-# for compatibility, which in turn defaults to undef (empty) )
-# If using strings in double quotes, don't forget to quote @, i.e. \@
-#
-$mailfrom_notify_admin = "virusalert\@$mydomain";
-$mailfrom_notify_recip = "virusalert\@$mydomain";
-$mailfrom_notify_spamadmin = "spamalert\@$mydomain";
-
-# 'From' HEADER FIELD for sender and admin notifications.
-# This should be a replyable address, see rfc1894. Not to be confused
-# with $mailfrom_notify_sender, which is the envelope return address
-# and should be empty (null reverse path) according to rfc2821.
-#
-# The syntax of the 'From' header field is specified in rfc2822, section
-# '3.4. Address Specification'. Note in particular that display-name must be
-# a quoted-string if it contains any special characters like spaces and dots.
-#
-# $hdrfrom_notify_sender = "amavisd-new <postmaster\@$mydomain>";
-# $hdrfrom_notify_sender = 'amavisd-new <postmaster@example.com>';
-# $hdrfrom_notify_sender = '"Content-Filter Master" <postmaster@example.com>';
-# (defaults to: "amavisd-new <postmaster\@$myhostname>")
-# $hdrfrom_notify_admin = $mailfrom_notify_admin;
-# (defaults to: $mailfrom_notify_admin)
-# $hdrfrom_notify_spamadmin = $mailfrom_notify_spamadmin;
-# (defaults to: $mailfrom_notify_spamadmin)
-
-# whom quarantined messages appear to be sent from (envelope sender);
-# keeps original sender if undef, or set it explicitly, default is undef
-$mailfrom_to_quarantine = ''; # override sender address with null return path
-
-
-# Location to put infected mail into: (applies to 'local:' quarantine method)
-# empty for not quarantining, may be a file (mailbox),
-# or a directory (no trailing slash)
-# (the default value is undef, meaning no quarantine)
-#
-$QUARANTINEDIR = '/var/lib/amavis/virusmails';
-
-#$virus_quarantine_method = "local:virus-%i-%n"; # default
-#$spam_quarantine_method = "local:spam-%b-%i-%n"; # default
-#
-#use the new 'bsmtp:' method as an alternative to the default 'local:'
-#$virus_quarantine_method = "bsmtp:$QUARANTINEDIR/virus-%i-%n.bsmtp";
-#$spam_quarantine_method = "bsmtp:$QUARANTINEDIR/spam-%b-%i-%n.bsmtp";
-
-# When using the 'local:' quarantine method (default), the following applies:
-#
-# A finer control of quarantining is available through variable
-# $virus_quarantine_to/$spam_quarantine_to. It may be a simple scalar string,
-# or a ref to a hash lookup table, or a regexp lookup table object,
-# which makes possible to set up per-recipient quarantine addresses.
-#
-# The value of scalar $virus_quarantine_to/$spam_quarantine_to (or a
-# per-recipient lookup result from the hash table %$virus_quarantine_to)
-# is/are interpreted as follows:
-#
-# VARIANT 1:
-# empty or undef disables quarantine;
-#
-# VARIANT 2:
-# a string NOT containing an '@';
-# amavisd will behave as a local delivery agent (LDA) and will quarantine
-# viruses to local files according to hash %local_delivery_aliases (pseudo
-# aliases map) - see subroutine mail_to_local_mailbox() for details.
-# Some of the predefined aliases are 'virus-quarantine' and 'spam-quarantine'.
-# Setting $virus_quarantine_to ($spam_quarantine_to) to this string will:
-#
-# * if $QUARANTINEDIR is a directory, each quarantined virus will go
-# to a separate file in the $QUARANTINEDIR directory (traditional
-# amavis style, similar to maildir mailbox format);
-#
-# * otherwise $QUARANTINEDIR is treated as a file name of a Unix-style
-# mailbox. All quarantined messages will be appended to this file.
-# Amavisd child process must obtain an exclusive lock on the file during
-# delivery, so this may be less efficient than using individual files
-# or forwarding to MTA, and it may not work across NFS or other non-local
-# file systems (but may be handy for pickup of quarantined files via IMAP
-# for example);
-#
-# VARIANT 3:
-# any email address (must contain '@').
-# The e-mail messages to be quarantined will be handed to MTA
-# for delivery to the specified address. If a recipient address local to MTA
-# is desired, you may leave the domain part empty, e.g. 'infected@', but the
-# '@' character must nevertheless be included to distinguish it from variant 2.
-#
-# This method enables more refined delivery control made available by MTA
-# (e.g. its aliases file, other local delivery agents, dealing with
-# privileges and file locking when delivering to user's mailbox, nonlocal
-# delivery and forwarding, fan-out lists). Make sure the mail-to-be-quarantined
-# will not be handed back to amavisd for checking, as this will cause a loop
-# (hopefully broken at some stage)! If this can be assured, notifications
-# will benefit too from not being unnecessarily virus-scanned.
-#
-# By default this is safe to do with Postfix and Exim v4 and dual-sendmail
-# setup, but probably not safe with sendmail milter interface without
-# precaution.
-
-# (the default value is undef, meaning no quarantine)
-
-$virus_quarantine_to = 'virus-quarantine'; # traditional local quarantine
-#$virus_quarantine_to = 'infected@'; # forward to MTA for delivery
-#$virus_quarantine_to = "virus-quarantine\@$mydomain"; # similar
-#$virus_quarantine_to = 'virus-quarantine@example.com'; # similar
-#$virus_quarantine_to = undef; # no quarantine
-#
-#$virus_quarantine_to = new_RE( # per-recip multiple quarantines
-# [qr'^user@example\.com$'i => 'infected@'],
-# [qr'^(.*)@example\.com$'i => 'virus-${1}@example.com'],
-# [qr'^(.*)(@[^@])?$'i => 'virus-${1}${2}'],
-# [qr/.*/ => 'virus-quarantine'] );
-
-# similar for spam
-# (the default value is undef, meaning no quarantine)
-#
-$spam_quarantine_to = 'spam-quarantine';
-#$spam_quarantine_to = "spam-quarantine\@$mydomain";
-#$spam_quarantine_to = new_RE( # per-recip multiple quarantines
-# [qr'^(.*)@example\.com$'i => 'spam-${1}@example.com'],
-# [qr/.*/ => 'spam-quarantine'] );
-
-# In addition to per-recip quarantine, a by-sender lookup is possible. It is
-# similar to $spam_quarantine_to, but the lookup key is the sender address:
-#$spam_quarantine_bysender_to = undef; # dflt: no by-sender spam quarantine
-
-
-# Add X-Virus-Scanned header field to mail?
-$X_HEADER_TAG = 'X-Virus-Scanned'; # (default: undef)
-# Leave empty to add no header # (default: undef)
-$X_HEADER_LINE = "by $myversion (Debian) at $mydomain";
-
-# a string to prepend to Subject (for local recipients only) if mail could
-# not be decoded or checked entirely, e.g. due to password-protected archives
-$undecipherable_subject_tag = '***UNCHECKED*** '; # undef disables it
-
-$remove_existing_x_scanned_headers = 0; # leave existing X-Virus-Scanned alone
-#$remove_existing_x_scanned_headers= 1; # remove existing headers
- # (defaults to false)
-#$remove_existing_spam_headers = 0; # leave existing X-Spam* headers alone
-$remove_existing_spam_headers = 1; # remove existing spam headers if
- # spam scanning is enabled (default)
-
-# set $bypass_decode_parts to true if you only do spam scanning, or if you
-# have a good virus scanner that can deal with compression and recursively
-# unpacking archives by itself, and save amavisd the trouble.
-# Disabling decoding also causes banned_files checking to only see
-# MIME names and MIME content types, not the content classification types
-# as provided by the file(1) utility.
-# It is a double-edged sword, make sure you know what you are doing!
-#
-#$bypass_decode_parts = 1; # (defaults to false)
-
-# don't trust this file type or corresponding unpacker for this file type,
-# keep both the original and the unpacked file for a virus checker to see
-# (lookup key is what file(1) utility returned):
-#
-$keep_decoded_original_re = new_RE(
-# qr'^MAIL$', # retain full original message for virus checking (can be slow)
- qr'^MAIL-UNDECIPHERABLE$', # retain full mail if it contains undecipherables
- qr'^(ASCII(?! cpio)|text|uuencoded|xxencoded|binhex)'i,
-# qr'^Zip archive data',
-);
-
-# Checking for banned MIME types and names. If any mail part matches,
-# the whole mail is rejected, much like the way viruses are handled.
-# A list in object $banned_filename_re can be defined to provide a list
-# of Perl regular expressions to be matched against each part's:
-#
-# * Content-Type value (both declared and effective mime-type),
-# including the possible security risk content types
-# message/partial and message/external-body, as specified by rfc2046;
-#
-# * declared (i.e. recommended) file names as specified by MIME subfields
-# Content-Disposition.filename and Content-Type.name, both in their
-# raw (encoded) form and in rfc2047-decoded form if applicable;
-#
-# * file content type as guessed by 'file' utility, both the raw
-# result from 'file', as well as short type name, classified
-# into names such as .asc, .txt, .html, .doc, .jpg, .pdf,
-# .zip, .exe, ... - see subroutine determine_file_types().
-# This step is done only if $bypass_decode_parts is not true.
-#
-# * leave $banned_filename_re undefined to disable these checks
-# (giving an empty list to new_RE() will also always return false)
-
-$banned_filename_re = new_RE(
-# qr'^UNDECIPHERABLE$', # is or contains any undecipherable components
- qr'\.[^.]*\.(exe|vbs|pif|scr|bat|cmd|com|dll)$'i, # some double extensions
- qr'[{}]', # curly braces in names (serve as Class ID extensions - CLSID)
-# qr'.\.(exe|vbs|pif|scr|bat|cmd|com)$'i, # banned extension - basic
-# qr'.\.(ade|adp|bas|bat|chm|cmd|com|cpl|crt|exe|hlp|hta|inf|ins|isp|js|
-# jse|lnk|mdb|mde|msc|msi|msp|mst|pcd|pif|reg|scr|sct|shs|shb|vb|
-# vbe|vbs|wsc|wsf|wsh)$'ix, # banned extension - long
-# qr'.\.(mim|b64|bhx|hqx|xxe|uu|uue)$'i, # banned extension - WinZip vulnerab.
-# qr'^\.(zip|lha|tnef|cab)$'i, # banned file(1) types
-# qr'^\.exe$'i, # banned file(1) types
-# qr'^application/x-msdownload$'i, # banned MIME types
-# qr'^application/x-msdos-program$'i,
- qr'^message/partial$'i, # rfc2046. this one is deadly for Outcrook
-# qr'^message/external-body$'i, # block rfc2046
-);
-# See http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;EN-US;q262631
-# and http://www.cknow.com/vtutor/vtextensions.htm
-
-# A little trick: a pattern qr'\.exe$' matches both a short type name '.exe',
-# as well as any file name which happens to end with .exe. If only matching
-# a file name is desired, but not the short name, a pattern qr'.\.exe$'i
-# or similar may be used, which requires that at least one character precedes
-# the '.exe', and so it will never match short file types, which always start
-# with a dot.
-
-
-#
-# Section V - Per-recipient and per-sender handling, whitelisting, etc.
-#
-
-# %virus_lovers, @virus_lovers_acl and $virus_lovers_re lookup tables:
-# (these should be considered policy options, they do not disable checks,
-# see bypass*checks for that!)
-#
-# Exclude certain RECIPIENTS from virus filtering by adding their lower-cased
-# envelope e-mail address (or domain only) to the hash %virus_lovers, or to
-# the access list @virus_lovers_acl - see README.lookups and examples.
-# Make sure the appropriate form (e.g. external/internal) of address
-# is used in case of virtual domains, or when mapping external to internal
-# addresses, etc. - this is MTA-specific.
-#
-# Notifications would still be generated however (see the overall
-# picture above), and infected mail (if passed) gets additional header:
-# X-AMaViS-Alert: INFECTED, message contains virus: ...
-# (header not inserted with milter interface!)
-#
-# NOTE (milter interface only): in case of multiple recipients,
-# it is only possible to drop or accept the message in its entirety - for all
-# recipients. If all of them are virus lovers, we'll accept mail, but if
-# at least one recipient is not a virus lover, we'll discard the message.
-
-
-# %bypass_virus_checks, @bypass_virus_checks_acl and $bypass_virus_checks_re
-# lookup tables:
-# (this is mainly a time-saving option, unlike virus_lovers* !)
-#
-# Similar in concept to %virus_lovers, a hash %bypass_virus_checks,
-# access list @bypass_virus_checks_acl and regexp list $bypass_virus_checks_re
-# are used to skip entirely the decoding, unpacking and virus checking,
-# but only if ALL recipients match the lookup.
-#
-# %bypass_virus_checks/@bypass_virus_checks_acl/$bypass_virus_checks_re
-# do NOT GUARANTEE the message will NOT be checked for viruses - this may
-# still happen when there is more than one recipient for a message, and
-# not all of them match these lookup tables. To guarantee virus delivery,
-# a recipient must also match %virus_lovers/@virus_lovers_acl lookups
-# (but see milter limitations above),
-
-# NOTE: it would not be clever to base virus checks on SENDER address,
-# since there are no guarantees that it is genuine. Many viruses
-# and spam messages fake sender address. To achieve selective filtering
-# based on the source of the mail (e.g. IP address, MTA port number, ...),
-# use mechanisms provided by MTA if available.
-
-
-# Similar to lookup tables controlling virus checking, there exist
-# spam scanning, banned names/types, and headers_checks control counterparts:
-# %spam_lovers, @spam_lovers_acl, $spam_lovers_re
-# %banned_files_lovers, @banned_files_lovers_acl, $banned_files_lovers_re
-# %bad_header_lovers, @bad_header_lovers_acl, $bad_header_lovers_re
-# and:
-# %bypass_spam_checks/@bypass_spam_checks_acl/$bypass_spam_checks_re
-# %bypass_banned_checks/@bypass_banned_checks_acl/$bypass_banned_checks_re
-# %bypass_header_checks/@bypass_header_checks_acl/$bypass_header_checks_re
-# See README.lookups for details about the syntax.
-
-# The following example disables spam checking altogether,
-# since it matches any recipient e-mail address (any address
-# is a subdomain of the top-level root DNS domain):
-# @bypass_spam_checks_acl = qw( . );
-
-# @bypass_header_checks_acl = qw( user@example.com );
-# @bad_header_lovers_acl = qw( user@example.com );
-
-
-# See README.lookups for further detail, and examples below.
-
-# $virus_lovers{lc("postmaster\@$mydomain")} = 1;
-# $virus_lovers{lc('postmaster@example.com')} = 1;
-# $virus_lovers{lc('abuse@example.com')} = 1;
-# $virus_lovers{lc('some.user@')} = 1; # this recipient, regardless of domain
-# $virus_lovers{lc('boss@example.com')} = 0; # never, even if domain matches
-# $virus_lovers{lc('example.com')} = 1; # this domain, but not its subdomains
-# $virus_lovers{lc('.example.com')}= 1; # this domain, including its subdomains
-#or:
-# @virus_lovers_acl = qw( me@lab.xxx.com !lab.xxx.com .xxx.com yyy.org );
-#
-# $bypass_virus_checks{lc('some.user2@butnot.example.com')} = 1;
-# @bypass_virus_checks_acl = qw( some.ddd !butnot.example.com .example.com );
-
-# @virus_lovers_acl = qw( postmaster@example.com );
-# $virus_lovers_re = new_RE( qr'^(helpdesk|postmaster)@example\.com$'i );
-
-# $spam_lovers{lc("postmaster\@$mydomain")} = 1;
-# $spam_lovers{lc('postmaster@example.com')} = 1;
-# $spam_lovers{lc('abuse@example.com')} = 1;
-# @spam_lovers_acl = qw( !.example.com );
-# $spam_lovers_re = new_RE( qr'^user@example\.com$'i );
-
-# don't run spam check for these RECIPIENT domains:
-# @bypass_spam_checks_acl = qw( d1.com .d2.com a.d3.com );
-# or the other way around (bypass check for all BUT these):
-# @bypass_spam_checks_acl = qw( !d1.com !.d2.com !a.d3.com . );
-# a practical application: don't check outgoing mail for spam:
-# @bypass_spam_checks_acl = ( "!.$mydomain", "." );
-# (a downside of which is that such mail will not count as ham in SA bayes db)
-
-
-# Where to find SQL server(s) and database to support SQL lookups?
-# A list of triples: (dsn,user,passw). (dsn = data source name)
-# More than one entry may be specified for multiple (backup) SQL servers.
-# See 'man DBI', 'man DBD::mysql', 'man DBD::Pg', ... for details.
-# When chroot-ed, accessing SQL server over inet socket may be more convenient.
-#
-# @lookup_sql_dsn =
-# ( ['DBI:mysql:database=mail;host=127.0.0.1;port=3306', 'user1', 'passwd1'],
-# ['DBI:mysql:database=mail;host=host2', 'username2', 'password2'] );
-#
-# ('mail' in the example is the database name, choose what you like)
-# With PostgreSQL the dsn (first element of the triple) may look like:
-# 'DBI:Pg:host=host1;dbname=mail'
-
-# The SQL select clause to fetch per-recipient policy settings.
-# The %k will be replaced by a comma-separated list of query addresses
-# (e.g. full address, domain only, catchall). Use ORDER, if there
-# is a chance that multiple records will match - the first match wins.
-# If field names are not unique (e.g. 'id'), the later field overwrites the
-# earlier in a hash returned by lookup, which is why we use '*,users.id'.
-# $sql_select_policy = 'SELECT *,users.id FROM users,policy'.
-# ' WHERE (users.policy_id=policy.id) AND (users.email IN (%k))'.
-# ' ORDER BY users.priority DESC';
-#
-# The SQL select clause to check sender in per-recipient whitelist/blacklist
-# The first SELECT argument '?' will be users.id from recipient SQL lookup,
-# the %k will be sender addresses (e.g. full address, domain only, catchall).
-# $sql_select_white_black_list = 'SELECT wb FROM wblist,mailaddr'.
-# ' WHERE (wblist.rid=?) AND (wblist.sid=mailaddr.id)'.
-# ' AND (mailaddr.email IN (%k))'.
-# ' ORDER BY mailaddr.priority DESC';
-
-$sql_select_white_black_list = undef; # undef disables SQL white/blacklisting
-
-
-# If you decide to pass viruses (or spam) to certain recipients using the
-# above lookup tables or using $final_virus_destiny=D_PASS, you can set
-# the variable $addr_extension_virus ($addr_extension_spam) to some
-# string, and the recipient address will have this string appended
-# as an address extension to the local-part of the address. This extension
-# can be used by final local delivery agent to place such mail in different
-# folders. Leave these two variables undefined or empty strings to prevent
-# appending address extensions. Setting has no effect on recipient which will
-# not be receiving viruses/spam. Recipients who do not match lookup tables
-# local_domains* are not affected.
-#
-# LDAs usually default to stripping away address extension if no special
-# handling is specified, so having this option enabled normally does no harm,
-# provided the $recipients_delimiter matches the setting on the final
-# MTA's LDA.
-
-# $addr_extension_virus = 'virus'; # (default is undef, same as empty)
-# $addr_extension_spam = 'spam'; # (default is undef, same as empty)
-# $addr_extension_banned = 'banned'; # (default is undef, same as empty)
-
-
-# Delimiter between local part of the recipient address and address extension
-# (which can optionally be added, see variables $addr_extension_virus and
-# $addr_extension_spam). E.g. recipient address <user@example.com> gets changed
-# to <user+virus@example.com>.
-#
-# Delimiter should match equivalent (final) MTA delimiter setting.
-# (e.g. for Postfix add 'recipient_delimiter = +' to main.cf)
-# Setting it to an empty string or to undef disables this feature
-# regardless of $addr_extension_virus and $addr_extension_spam settings.
-
-$recipient_delimiter = '+'; # (default is '+')
-
-# true: replace extension; false: append extension
-$replace_existing_extension = 1; # (default is false)
-
-# Affects matching of localpart of e-mail addresses (left of '@')
-# in lookups: true = case sensitive, false = case insensitive
-$localpart_is_case_sensitive = 0; # (default is false)
-
-
-# ENVELOPE SENDER WHITELISTING / BLACKLISTING - GLOBAL (RECIPIENT-INDEPENDENT)
-# (affects spam checking only, has no effect on virus and other checks)
-
-# WHITELISTING: use ENVELOPE SENDER lookups to ENSURE DELIVERY from whitelisted
-# senders even if the message would be recognized as spam. Effectively, for
-# the specified senders, message recipients temporarily become 'spam_lovers'.
-# To avoid surprises, whitelisted sender also suppresses inserting/editing
-# the tag2-level header fields (X-Spam-*, Subject), appending spam address
-# extension, and quarantining.
-
-# BLACKLISTING: messages from specified SENDERS are DECLARED SPAM.
-# Effectively, for messages from blacklisted senders, spam level
-# is artificially pushed high, and the normal spam processing applies,
-# resulting in 'X-Spam-Flag: YES', high 'X-Spam-Level' bar and other usual
-# reactions to spam, including possible rejection. If the message nevertheless
-# still passes (e.g. for spam loving recipients), it is tagged as BLACKLISTED
-# in the 'X-Spam-Status' header field, but the reported spam value and
-# set of tests in this report header field (if available from SpamAssassin,
-# which may have not been called) is not adjusted.
-#
-# A sender may be both white- and blacklisted at the same time, settings
-# are independent. For example, being both white- and blacklisted, message
-# is delivered to recipients, but is not tagged as spam (X-Spam-Flag: No;
-# X-Spam-Status: No, ...), but the reported spam level (if computed) may
-# still indicate high spam score.
-#
-# If ALL recipients of the message either white- or blacklist the sender,
-# spam scanning (calling the SpamAssassin) is bypassed, saving on time.
-#
-# The following variables (lookup tables) are available, with the semantics
-# and syntax as specified in README.lookups:
-#
-# %whitelist_sender, @whitelist_sender_acl, $whitelist_sender_re
-# %blacklist_sender, @blacklist_sender_acl, $blacklist_sender_re
-
-# SOME EXAMPLES:
-#
-#ACL:
-# @whitelist_sender_acl = qw( .example.com );
-#
-# @whitelist_sender_acl = ( ".$mydomain" ); # $mydomain and its subdomains
-# NOTE: This is not a reliable way of turning off spam checks for
-# locally-originating mail, as sender address can easily be faked.
-# To reliably avoid spam-scanning outgoing mail,
-# use @bypass_spam_checks_acl .
-
-#RE:
-# $whitelist_sender_re = new_RE(
-# qr'^postmaster@.*\bexample\.com$'i,
-# qr'owner-[^@]*@'i, qr'-request@'i,
-# qr'\.example\.com$'i );
-#
-$blacklist_sender_re = new_RE(
- qr'^(bulkmail|offers|cheapbenefits|earnmoney|foryou|greatcasino)@'i,
- qr'^(investments|lose_weight_today|market\.alert|money2you|MyGreenCard)@'i,
- qr'^(new\.tld\.registry|opt-out|opt-in|optin|saveonl|smoking2002k)@'i,
- qr'^(specialoffer|specialoffers|stockalert|stopsnoring|wantsome)@'i,
- qr'^(workathome|yesitsfree|your_friend|greatoffers)@'i,
- qr'^(inkjetplanet|marketopt|MakeMoney)\d*@'i,
-);
-
-#HASH lookup variant:
-# NOTE: Perl operator qw splits its argument string by whitespace
-# and produces a list. This means that addresses can not contain
-# whitespace, and there is no provision for comments within the string.
-# You can use the normal Perl list syntax if you have special requirements,
-# e.g. map {...} ('one user@bla', '.second.com'), or use read_hash to read
-# addresses from a file.
-#
-
-# a hash lookup table can be read from a file,
-# one address per line, comments and empty lines are permitted:
-#
-# read_hash(\%whitelist_sender, '/var/amavis/whitelist_sender');
-read_hash(\%whitelist_sender, "$MYHOME/whitelist_sender");
-read_hash(\%blacklist_sender, "$MYHOME/blacklist_sender");
-
-# ... or set directly:
-map { $whitelist_sender{lc($_)}=1 } (qw(
- nobody@cert.org
- owner-alert@iss.net
- slashdot@slashdot.org
- bugtraq@securityfocus.com
- NTBUGTRAQ@LISTSERV.NTBUGTRAQ.COM
- security-alerts@linuxsecurity.com
- amavis-user-admin@lists.sourceforge.net
- razor-users-admin@lists.sourceforge.net
- notification-return@lists.sophos.com
- mailman-announce-admin@python.org
- zope-announce-admin@zope.org
- owner-postfix-users@postfix.org
- owner-postfix-announce@postfix.org
- owner-sendmail-announce@lists.sendmail.org
- sendmail-announce-request@lists.sendmail.org
- ca+envelope@sendmail.org
- owner-technews@postel.ACM.ORG
- lvs-users-admin@LinuxVirtualServer.org
- ietf-123-owner@loki.ietf.org
- cvs-commits-list-admin@gnome.org
- rt-users-admin@lists.fsck.com
- owner-announce@mnogosearch.org
- owner-hackers@ntp.org
- owner-bugs@ntp.org
- clp-request@comp.nus.edu.sg
- surveys-errors@lists.nua.ie
- emailNews@genomeweb.com
- owner-textbreakingnews@CNNIMAIL12.CNN.COM
- yahoo-dev-null@yahoo-inc.com
-));
-
-
-# ENVELOPE SENDER WHITELISTING / BLACKLISTING - PER-RECIPIENT
-
-# The same semantics as for global white/blacklisting applies, but this
-# time each recipient (or its domain, or subdomain, ...) can be given
-# an individual lookup table for matching senders. The per-recipient lookups
-# override the global lookups, which serve as a fallback default.
-
-# Specify a two-level lookup table: the key for the outer table is recipient,
-# and the result should be an inner lookup table (hash or ACL or RE),
-# where the key used will be the sender.
-#
-#$per_recip_blacklist_sender_lookup_tables = {
-# 'user1@my.example.com'=>new_RE(qr'^(inkjetplanet|marketopt|MakeMoney)\d*@'i),
-# 'user2@my.example.com'=>[qw( spammer@d1.example,org .d2.example,org )],
-#};
-#$per_recip_whitelist_sender_lookup_tables = {
-# 'user@my.example.com' => [qw( friend@example.org .other.example.org )],
-# '.my1.example.com' => [qw( !foe.other.example,org .other.example,org )],
-# '.my2.example.com' => read_hash('/var/amavis/my2-wl.dat'),
-# 'abuse@' => { 'postmaster@'=>1,
-# 'cert-advisory-owner@cert.org'=>1, 'owner-alert@iss.net'=>1 },
-#};
-
-
-#
-# Section VI - Resource limits
-#
-
-# Sanity limit to the number of allowed recipients per SMTP transaction
-# $smtpd_recipient_limit = 1000; # (default is 1000)
-
-
-# Resource limits to protect unpackers, decompressors and virus scanners
-# against mail bombs (e.g. 42.zip)
-
-# Maximum recursion level for extraction/decoding (0 or undef disables limit)
-$MAXLEVELS = 14; # (default is undef, no limit)
-
-# Maximum number of extracted files (0 or undef disables the limit)
-$MAXFILES = 1500; # (default is undef, no limit)
-
-# For the cumulative total of all decoded mail parts we set max storage size
-# to defend against mail bombs. Even though parts may be deleted (replaced
-# by decoded text) during decoding, the size they occupied is _not_ returned
-# to the quota pool.
-#
-# Parameters to storage quota formula for unpacking/decoding/decompressing
-# Formula:
-# quota = max($MIN_EXPANSION_QUOTA,
-# $mail_size*$MIN_EXPANSION_FACTOR,
-# min($MAX_EXPANSION_QUOTA, $mail_size*$MAX_EXPANSION_FACTOR))
-# In plain words (later condition overrules previous ones):
-# allow MAX_EXPANSION_FACTOR times initial mail size,
-# but not more than MAX_EXPANSION_QUOTA,
-# but not less than MIN_EXPANSION_FACTOR times initial mail size,
-# but never less than MIN_EXPANSION_QUOTA
-#
-$MIN_EXPANSION_QUOTA = 100*1024; # bytes (default undef, not enforced)
-$MAX_EXPANSION_QUOTA = 300*1024*1024; # bytes (default undef, not enforced)
-$MIN_EXPANSION_FACTOR = 5; # times original mail size (must be specified)
-$MAX_EXPANSION_FACTOR = 500; # times original mail size (must be specified)
-
-
-#
-# Section VII - External programs, virus scanners
-#
-
-# Specify a path string, which is a colon-separated string of directories
-# (no trailing slashes!) to be assigned to the environment variable PATH
-# and to serve for locating external programs below.
-
-# NOTE: if $daemon_chroot_dir is nonempty, the directories will be
-# relative to the chroot directory specified;
-
-$path = '/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/bin';
-
-# Specify one string or a search list of strings (first match wins).
-# The string (or: each string in a list) may be an absolute path,
-# or just a program name, to be located via $path;
-# Empty string or undef (=default) disables the use of that external program.
-# Optionally command arguments may be specified - only the first substring
-# up to the whitespace is used for file searching.
-
-$file = 'file'; # file(1) utility; use 3.41 or later to avoid vulnerability
-
-$gzip = 'gzip';
-$bzip2 = 'bzip2';
-$lzop = 'lzop';
-$uncompress = ['uncompress', 'gzip -d', 'zcat'];
-$unfreeze = ['unfreeze', 'freeze -d', 'melt', 'fcat'];
-$arc = ['nomarch', 'arc'];
-$unarj = ['arj', 'unarj']; # both can extract, arj is recommended
-$unrar = ['rar', 'unrar']; # both can extract, same options
-$zoo = 'zoo';
-$lha = 'lha';
-$cpio = 'cpio'; # comment out if cpio does not support GNU options
-
-
-# SpamAssassin settings
-
-# $sa_local_tests_only is passed to Mail::SpamAssassin::new as a value
-# of the option local_tests_only. See Mail::SpamAssassin man page.
-# If set to 1, SA tests are restricted to local tests only, i.e. no tests
-# that require internet access will be performed.
-#
-#$sa_local_tests_only = 1; # (default: false)
-$sa_auto_whitelist = 1; # turn on AWL (default: false)
-
-# Timout for SpamAssassin. This is only used if spamassassin does NOT
-# override it (which it often does if sa_local_tests_only is not true)
-$sa_timeout = 30; # timeout in seconds for a call to SpamAssassin
- # (default is 30 seconds, undef disables it)
-
-# AWL (auto whitelisting), requires spamassassin 2.44 or better
-# $sa_auto_whitelist = 1; # defaults to undef
-
-$sa_mail_body_size_limit = 150*1024; # don't waste time on SA is mail is larger
- # (less than 1% of spam is > 64k)
- # default: undef, no limitations
-
-# default values, can be overridden by more specific lookups, e.g. SQL
-$sa_tag_level_deflt = 3.0; # add spam info headers if at, or above that level
-$sa_tag2_level_deflt = 6.3; # add 'spam detected' headers at that level
-$sa_kill_level_deflt = $sa_tag2_level_deflt; # triggers spam evasive actions
- # at or above that level: bounce/reject/drop,
- # quarantine, and adding mail address extension
-
-$sa_dsn_cutoff_level = 10; # spam level beyond which a DSN is not sent,
- # effectively turning D_BOUNCE into D_DISCARD;
- # undef disables this feature and is a default;
-
-#
-# The $sa_tag_level_deflt, $sa_tag2_level_deflt and $sa_kill_level_deflt
-# may also be hashrefs to hash lookup tables, to make static per-recipient
-# settings possible without having to resort to SQL or LDAP lookups.
-
-# a quick reference:
-# tag_level controls adding the X-Spam-Status and X-Spam-Level headers,
-# tag2_level controls adding 'X-Spam-Flag: YES', and editing Subject,
-# kill_level controls 'evasive actions' (reject, quarantine, extensions);
-# it only makes sense to maintain the relationship:
-# tag_level <= tag2_level <= kill_level < $sa_dsn_cutoff_level
-
-# string to prepend to Subject header field when message exceeds tag2 level
-$sa_spam_subject_tag = '***SPAM*** '; # (defaults to undef, disabled)
- # (only seen when spam is not to be rejected
- # and recipient is in local_domains*)
-
-#$sa_spam_modifies_subj = 1; # may be a ref to a lookup table, default is true
-# Example: modify Subject for all local recipients except user@example.com
-#$sa_spam_modifies_subj = [qw( !user@example.com . )];
-
-# stop anti-virus scanning when the first scanner detects a virus?
-$first_infected_stops_scan = 1; # default is false, all scanners are called
-
-# @av_scanners is a list of n-tuples, where fields semantics is:
-# 1. av scanner plain name, to be used in log and reports;
-# 2. scanner program name; this string will be submitted to subroutine
-# find_external_programs(), which will try to find the full program
-# path name; if program is not found, this scanner is disabled.
-# Besides a simple string (full program path name or just the basename
-# to be looked for in PATH), this may be an array ref of alternative
-# program names or full paths - the first match in the list will be used;
-# As a special case for more complex scanners, this field may be
-# a subroutine reference, and the whole n-tuple is passed to it as args.
-# 3. command arguments to be given to the scanner program;
-# a substring {} will be replaced by the directory name to be scanned,
-# i.e. "$tempdir/parts", a "*" will be replaced by file names of parts;
-# 4. an array ref of av scanner exit status values, or a regexp (to be
-# matched against scanner output), indicating NO VIRUSES found;
-# 5. an array ref of av scanner exit status values, or a regexp (to be
-# matched against scanner output), indicating VIRUSES WERE FOUND;
-# Note: the virus match prevails over a 'not found' match, so it is safe
-# even if the no. 4. matches for viruses too;
-# 6. a regexp (to be matched against scanner output), returning a list
-# of virus names found.
-# 7. and 8.: (optional) subroutines to be executed before and after scanner
-# (e.g. to set environment or current directory);
-# see examples for these at KasperskyLab AVP and Sophos sweep.
-
-# NOTES:
-#
-# - NOT DEFINING @av_scanners (e.g. setting it to empty list, or deleting the
-# whole assignment) TURNS OFF LOADING AND COMPILING OF THE ANTIVIRUS CODE
-# (which can be handy if all you want to do is spam scanning);
-#
-# - the order matters: although _all_ available entries from the list are
-# always tried regardless of their verdict, scanners are run in the order
-# specified: the report from the first one detecting a virus will be used
-# (providing virus names and scanner output); REARRANGE THE ORDER TO WILL;
-#
-# - it doesn't hurt to keep an unused command line scanner entry in the list
-# if the program can not be found; the path search is only performed once
-# during the program startup;
-#
-# COROLLARY: to disable a scanner that _does_ exist on your system,
-# comment out its entry or use undef or '' as its program name/path
-# (second parameter). An example where this is almost a must: disable
-# Sophos 'sweep' if you have its daemonized version Sophie or SAVI-Perl
-# (same for Trophie/vscan, and clamd/clamscan), or if another unrelated
-# program happens to have a name matching one of the entries ('sweep'
-# again comes to mind);
-#
-# - it DOES HURT to keep unwanted entries which use INTERNAL SUBROUTINES
-# for interfacing (where the second parameter starts with \&).
-# Keeping such entry and not having a corresponding virus scanner daemon
-# causes an unnecessary connection attempt (which eventually times out,
-# but it wastes precious time). For this reason the daemonized entries
-# are commented in the distribution - just remove the '#' where needed.
-#
-# CERT list of av resources: http://www.cert.org/other_sources/viruses.html
-
-@av_scanners = (
-
-# ### http://www.vanja.com/tools/sophie/
-# ['Sophie',
-# \&ask_daemon, ["{}/\n", '/var/run/sophie'],
-# qr/(?x)^ 0+ ( : | [\000\r\n]* $)/, qr/(?x)^ 1 ( : | [\000\r\n]* $)/,
-# qr/(?x)^ [-+]? \d+ : (.*?) [\000\r\n]* $/ ],
-
-# ### http://www.csupomona.edu/~henson/www/projects/SAVI-Perl/
-['Sophos SAVI', \&sophos_savi ],
-
-### http://www.clamav.net/
-['Clam Antivirus-clamd',
- \&ask_daemon, ["CONTSCAN {}\n", "/var/run/clamav/clamd.ctl"],
- qr/\bOK$/, qr/\bFOUND$/,
- qr/^.*?: (?!Infected Archive)(.*) FOUND$/ ],
-# NOTE: run clamd under the same user as amavisd; match the socket
-# name (LocalSocket) in clamav.conf to the socket name in this entry
-# When running chrooted one may prefer: ["CONTSCAN {}\n","$MYHOME/clamd"],
-
-# ### http://www.openantivirus.org/
-# ['OpenAntiVirus ScannerDaemon (OAV)',
-# \&ask_daemon, ["SCAN {}\n", '127.0.0.1:8127'],
-# qr/^OK/, qr/^FOUND: /, qr/^FOUND: (.+)/ ],
-
-# ### http://www.vanja.com/tools/trophie/
-# ['Trophie',
-# \&ask_daemon, ["{}/\n", '/var/run/trophie'],
-# qr/(?x)^ 0+ ( : | [\000\r\n]* $)/, qr/(?x)^ 1 ( : | [\000\r\n]* $)/,
-# qr/(?x)^ [-+]? \d+ : (.*?) [\000\r\n]* $/ ],
-
-# ### http://www.grisoft.com/
-# ['AVG Anti-Virus',
-# \&ask_daemon, ["SCAN {}\n", '127.0.0.1:55555'],
-# qr/^200/, qr/^403/, qr/^403 .*?: (.+)/ ],
-
-# ### http://www.f-prot.com/
-# ['FRISK F-Prot Daemon',
-# \&ask_daemon,
-# ["GET {}/*?-dumb%20-archive%20-packed HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n",
-# ['127.0.0.1:10200','127.0.0.1:10201','127.0.0.1:10202',
-# '127.0.0.1:10203','127.0.0.1:10204'] ],
-# qr/(?i)<summary[^>]*>clean<\/summary>/,
-# qr/(?i)<summary[^>]*>infected<\/summary>/,
-# qr/(?i)<name>(.+)<\/name>/ ],
-
- ['KasperskyLab AVP - aveclient',
- ['/usr/local/kav/bin/aveclient','/usr/local/share/kav/bin/aveclient',
- '/opt/kav/bin/aveclient','aveclient'],
- '-p /var/run/aveserver -s {}/*', [0,3,6,8], qr/\b(INFECTED|SUSPICION)\b/,
- qr/(?:INFECTED|SUSPICION) (.+)/,
- ],
-
- ['KasperskyLab AntiViral Toolkit Pro (AVP)', ['avp'],
- '-* -P -B -Y -O- {}', [0,8,16,24], [2,3,4,5,6, 18,19,20,21,22],
- qr/infected: (.+)/,
- sub {chdir('/opt/AVP') or die "Can't chdir to AVP: $!"},
- sub {chdir($TEMPBASE) or die "Can't chdir back to $TEMPBASE $!"},
- ],
-
- ### The kavdaemon and AVPDaemonClient have been removed from Kasperky
- ### products and replaced by aveserver and aveclient
- ['KasperskyLab AVPDaemonClient',
- [ '/opt/AVP/kavdaemon', 'kavdaemon',
- '/opt/AVP/AvpDaemonClient', 'AvpDaemonClient',
- '/opt/AVP/AvpTeamDream', 'AvpTeamDream',
- '/opt/AVP/avpdc', 'avpdc' ],
- "-f=$TEMPBASE {}", [0,8,16,24], [2,3,4,5,6, 18,19,20,21,22],
- qr/infected: ([^\r\n]+)/ ],
- # change the startup-script in /etc/init.d/kavd to:
- # DPARMS="-* -Y -dl -f=/var/amavis /var/amavis"
- # (or perhaps: DPARMS="-I0 -Y -* /var/amavis" )
- # adjusting /var/amavis above to match your $TEMPBASE.
- # The '-f=/var/amavis' is needed if not running it as root, so it
- # can find, read, and write its pid file, etc., see 'man kavdaemon'.
- # defUnix.prf: there must be an entry "*/var/amavis" (or whatever
- # directory $TEMPBASE specifies) in the 'Names=' section.
- # cd /opt/AVP/DaemonClients; configure; cd Sample; make
- # cp AvpDaemonClient /opt/AVP/
- # su - vscan -c "${PREFIX}/kavdaemon ${DPARMS}"
-
- ### http://www.hbedv.com/ or http://www.centralcommand.com/
- ['H+BEDV AntiVir or CentralCommand Vexira Antivirus',
- ['antivir','vexira'],
- '--allfiles -noboot -nombr -rs -s -z {}', [0], qr/ALERT:|VIRUS:/,
- qr/(?x)^\s* (?: ALERT: \s* (?: \[ | [^']* ' ) |
- (?i) VIRUS:\ .*?\ virus\ '?) ( [^\]\s']+ )/ ],
- # NOTE: if you only have a demo version, remove -z and add 214, as in:
- # '--allfiles -noboot -nombr -rs -s {}', [0,214], qr/ALERT:|VIRUS:/,
-
- ### http://www.commandsoftware.com/
- ['Command AntiVirus for Linux', 'csav',
- '-all -archive -packed {}', [50], [51,52,53],
- qr/Infection: (.+)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.symantec.com/
- ['Symantec CarrierScan via Symantec CommandLineScanner',
- 'cscmdline', '-a scan -i 1 -v -s 127.0.0.1:7777 {}',
- qr/^Files Infected:\s+0$/, qr/^Infected\b/,
- qr/^(?:Info|Virus Name):\s+(.+)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.symantec.com/
- ['Symantec AntiVirus Scan Engine',
- 'savsecls', '-server 127.0.0.1:7777 -mode scanrepair -details -verbose {}',
- [0], qr/^Infected\b/,
- qr/^(?:Info|Virus Name):\s+(.+)/ ],
- # NOTE: check options and patterns to see which entry better applies
-
- ### http://www.sald.com/, http://drweb.imshop.de/
- ['drweb - DrWeb Antivirus',
- ['/usr/local/drweb/drweb', '/opt/drweb/drweb', 'drweb'],
- '-path={} -al -go -ot -cn -upn -ok-',
- [0,32], [1,33], qr' infected (?:with|by)(?: virus)? (.*)$'],
-
-# ### http://www.sald.com/, http://www.dials.ru/english/, http://www.drweb.ru/
-# ['DrWebD', \&ask_daemon, # DrWebD 4.31 or later
-# [pack('N',1). # DRWEBD_SCAN_CMD
-# pack('N',0x00280001). # DONT_CHANGEMAIL, IS_MAIL, RETURN_VIRUSES
-# pack('N', # path length
-# length("$TEMPBASE/amavis-yyyymmddTHHMMSS-xxxxx/parts/part-xxxxx")).
-# '{}/*'. # path
-# pack('N',0). # content size
-# pack('N',0),
-# '/var/drweb/run/drwebd.sock',
-# # '/var/amavis/var/run/drwebd.sock', # suitable for chroot
-# # '/usr/local/drweb/run/drwebd.sock', # FreeBSD drweb ports default
-# # '127.0.0.1:3000', # or over an inet socket
-# ],
-# qr/\A\x00(\x10|\x11)\x00\x00/s, # IS_CLEAN, EVAL_KEY
-# qr/\A\x00(\x00|\x01)\x00(\x20|\x40|\x80)/s, # KNOWN_V, UNKNOWN_V, V._MODIF
-# qr/\A.{12}(?:infected with )?([^\x00]+)\x00/s,
-# ],
-# # NOTE: If you are using amavis-milter, change length to:
-# # length("$TEMPBASE/amavis-milter-xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/parts/part-xxxxx").
-
- ### http://www.f-secure.com/products/anti-virus/
- ['F-Secure Antivirus', 'fsav',
- '--dumb --mime --archive {}', [0], [3,8],
- qr/(?:infection|Infected|Suspected): (.+)/ ],
-
- ['CAI InoculateIT', 'inocucmd',
- '-sec -nex {}', [0], [100],
- qr/was infected by virus (.+)/ ],
-
- ['MkS_Vir for Linux (beta)', ['mks32','mks'],
- '-s {}/*', [0], [1,2], # any use for options: -a -c ?
- qr/--[ \t]*(.+)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.nod32.com/
- ['ESET Software NOD32', 'nod32',
- '-all -subdir+ {}', [0], [1,2],
- qr/^.+? - (.+?)\s*(?:backdoor|joke|trojan|virus|worm)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.nod32.com/
- ['ESET Software NOD32 - Client/Server Version', 'nod32cli',
- '-a -r -d recurse --heur standard {}', [0], [10,11],
- qr/^\S+\s+infected:\s+(.+)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.norman.com/products_nvc.shtml
- ['Norman Virus Control v5 / Linux', 'nvcc',
- '-c -l:0 -s -u {}', [0], [1],
- qr/(?i).* virus in .* -> \'(.+)\'/ ],
-
- ### http://www.pandasoftware.com/
- ['Panda Antivirus for Linux', ['pavcl'],
- '-aut -aex -heu -cmp -nbr -nor -nso -eng {}',
- qr/Number of files infected[ .]*: 0(?!\d)/,
- qr/Number of files infected[ .]*: 0*[1-9]/,
- qr/Found virus :\s*(\S+)/ ],
-
-# GeCAD AV technology is acquired by Microsoft; RAV has been discontinued.
-# Check your RAV license terms before fiddling with the following two lines!
-# ['GeCAD RAV AntiVirus 8', 'ravav',
-# '--all --archive --mail {}', [1], [2,3,4,5], qr/Infected: (.+)/ ],
-# # NOTE: the command line switches changed with scan engine 8.5 !
-# # (btw, assigning stdin to /dev/null causes RAV to fail)
-
- ### http://www.nai.com/
- ['NAI McAfee AntiVirus (uvscan)', 'uvscan',
- '--secure -rv --mime --summary --noboot - {}', [0], [13],
- qr/(?x) Found (?:
- \ the\ (.+)\ (?:virus|trojan) |
- \ (?:virus|trojan)\ or\ variant\ ([^ ]+) |
- :\ (.+)\ NOT\ a\ virus)/,
- # sub {$ENV{LD_PRELOAD}='/lib/libc.so.6'},
- # sub {delete $ENV{LD_PRELOAD}},
- ],
- # NOTE1: with RH9: force the dynamic linker to look at /lib/libc.so.6 before
- # anything else by setting environment variable LD_PRELOAD=/lib/libc.so.6
- # and then clear it when finished to avoid confusing anything else.
- # NOTE2: to treat encrypted files as viruses replace the [13] with:
- # qr/^\s{5,}(Found|is password-protected|.*(virus|trojan))/
-
- ### http://www.virusbuster.hu/en/
- ['VirusBuster', ['vbuster', 'vbengcl'],
- # VirusBuster Ltd. does not support the daemon version for the workstation
- # engine (vbuster-eng-1.12-linux-i386-libc6.tgz) any longer. The names of
- # binaries, some parameters AND return codes (from 3 to 1) changed.
- "{} -ss -i '*' -log=$MYHOME/vbuster.log", [0], [1],
- qr/: '(.*)' - Virus/ ],
-
-# ### http://www.virusbuster.hu/en/
-# ['VirusBuster (Client + Daemon)', 'vbengd',
-# # HINT: for an infected file it returns always 3,
-# # although the man-page tells a different story
-# '-f -log scandir {}', [0], [3],
-# qr/Virus found = (.*);/ ],
-
- ### http://www.cyber.com/
- ['CyberSoft VFind', 'vfind',
- '--vexit {}/*', [0], [23], qr/##==>>>> VIRUS ID: CVDL (.+)/,
- # sub {$ENV{VSTK_HOME}='/usr/lib/vstk'},
- ],
-
- ### http://www.ikarus-software.com/
- ['Ikarus AntiVirus for Linux', 'ikarus',
- '{}', [0], [40], qr/Signature (.+) found/ ],
-
- ### http://www.bitdefender.com/
- ['BitDefender', 'bdc',
- '--all --arc --mail {}', qr/^Infected files *:0(?!\d)/,
- qr/^(?:Infected files|Identified viruses|Suspect files) *:0*[1-9]/,
- qr/(?:suspected|infected): (.*)(?:\033|$)/ ],
-);
-
-# If no virus scanners from the @av_scanners list produce 'clean' nor
-# 'infected' status (e.g. they all fail to run or the list is empty),
-# then _all_ scanners from the @av_scanners_backup list are tried.
-# When there are both daemonized and command-line scanners available,
-# it is customary to place slower command-line scanners in the
-# @av_scanners_backup list. The default choice is somewhat arbitrary,
-# move entries from one list to another as desired.
-
-@av_scanners_backup = (
-
- ### http://www.clamav.net/
- ['Clam Antivirus - clamscan', 'clamscan',
- "--stdout --no-summary -r --tempdir=$TEMPBASE {}", [0], [1],
- qr/^.*?: (?!Infected Archive)(.*) FOUND$/ ],
-
- ### http://www.f-prot.com/
- ['FRISK F-Prot Antivirus', ['f-prot','f-prot.sh'],
- '-dumb -archive -packed {}', [0,8], [3,6],
- qr/Infection: (.+)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.trendmicro.com/
- ['Trend Micro FileScanner', ['/etc/iscan/vscan','vscan'],
- '-za -a {}', [0], qr/Found virus/, qr/Found virus (.+) in/ ],
-
- ['KasperskyLab kavscanner', ['/opt/kav/bin/kavscanner','kavscanner'],
- '-i1 -xp {}', [0,10,15], [5,20,21,25],
- qr/(?:CURED|INFECTED|CUREFAILED|WARNING|SUSPICION) (.*)/ ,
- sub {chdir('/opt/kav/bin') or die "Can't chdir to kav: $!"},
- sub {chdir($TEMPBASE) or die "Can't chdir back to $TEMPBASE $!"},
- ],
-
-# Commented out because the name 'sweep' clashes with the Debian package of
-# the same name. Make sure the correct sweep is found in the path when enabling
-#
-# ### http://www.sophos.com/
-# ['Sophos Anti Virus (sweep)', 'sweep',
-# '-nb -f -all -rec -ss -sc -archive -cab -tnef --no-reset-atime {}',
-# [0,2], qr/Virus .*? found/,
-# qr/^>>> Virus(?: fragment)? '?(.*?)'? found/,
-# ],
-# # other options to consider: -mime -oe -idedir=/usr/local/sav
-
-# always succeeds (uncomment to consider mail clean if all other scanners fail)
-['always-clean', sub {0}],
-
-);
-
-
-#
-# Section VIII - Debugging
-#
-
-# The most useful debugging tool is to run amavisd-new non-detached
-# from a terminal window:
-# amavisd debug
-
-# Some more refined approaches:
-
-# If sender matches ACL, turn log level fully up, just for this one message,
-# and preserve temporary directory
-#@debug_sender_acl = ( "test-sender\@$mydomain" );
-#@debug_sender_acl = qw( debug@example.com );
-
-# May be useful along with @debug_sender_acl:
-# Prevent all decoded originals being deleted (replaced by decoded part)
-#$keep_decoded_original_re = new_RE( qr/.*/ );
-
-# Turn on SpamAssassin debugging (output to STDERR, use with 'amavisd debug')
-#$sa_debug = 1; # defaults to false
-
-#-------------
-1; # insure a defined return
+++ /dev/null
-use strict;
-
-# Configuration file for amavisd-new
-# Defaults modified for the Debian amavisd-new package
-# $Id: amavisd.conf,v 1.27.2.2 2004/11/18 23:27:55 hmh Exp $
-#
-# This software is licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL).
-# See comments at the start of amavisd-new for the whole license text.
-
-#Sections:
-# Section I - Essential daemon and MTA settings
-# Section II - MTA specific
-# Section III - Logging
-# Section IV - Notifications/DSN, BOUNCE/REJECT/DROP/PASS destiny, quarantine
-# Section V - Per-recipient and per-sender handling, whitelisting, etc.
-# Section VI - Resource limits
-# Section VII - External programs, virus scanners, SpamAssassin
-# Section VIII - Debugging
-
-#GENERAL NOTES:
-# This file is a normal Perl code, interpreted by Perl itself.
-# - make sure this file (or directory where it resides) is NOT WRITABLE
-# by mere mortals (not even vscan/amavis; best to make it owned by root),
-# otherwise it represents a severe security risk!
-# - for values which are interpreted as booleans, it is recommended
-# to use 1 for true, undef for false.
-# THIS IS DIFFERENT FROM OLD AMAVIS VERSIONS where "no" also meant false,
-# now it means true, like any nonempty string does!
-# - Perl syntax applies. Most notably: strings in "" may include variables
-# (which start with $ or @); to include characters @ and $ in double
-# quoted strings, precede them by a backslash; in single-quoted strings
-# the $ and @ lose their special meaning, so it is usually easier to use
-# single quoted strings (or qw operator) for e-mail addresses.
-# Still, in both cases a backslash needs to be doubled.
-# - variables with names starting with a '@' are lists, the values assigned
-# to them should be lists as well, e.g. ('one@foo', $mydomain, "three");
-# note the comma-separation and parenthesis. If strings in the list
-# do not contain spaces nor variables, a Perl operator qw() may be used
-# as a shorthand to split its argument on whitespace and produce a list
-# of strings, e.g. qw( one@foo example.com three ); Note that the argument
-# to qw is quoted implicitly and no variable interpretation is done within
-# (no '$' variable evaluations). The #-initiated comments can NOT be used
-# within a string. In other words, $ and # lose their special meaning
-# within a qw argument, just like within '...' strings.
-# - all e-mail addresses in this file and as used internally by the daemon
-# are in their raw (rfc2821-unquoted and non-bracketed) form, i.e.
-# Bob "Funny" Dude@example.com, not: "Bob \"Funny\" Dude"@example.com
-# and not <"Bob \"Funny\" Dude"@example.com>; also: '' and not '<>'.
-# - the term 'default value' in examples below refers to the value of a
-# variable pre-assigned to it by the program; any explicit assignment
-# to a variable in this configuration file overrides the default value;
-
-
-#
-# Section I - Essential daemon and MTA settings
-#
-
-# $MYHOME serves as a quick default for some other configuration settings.
-# More refined control is available with each individual setting further down.
-# $MYHOME is not used directly by the program. No trailing slash!
-$MYHOME = '/var/lib/amavis'; # (default is '/var/amavis')
-
-# $mydomain serves as a quick default for some other configuration settings.
-# More refined control is available with each individual setting further down.
-# $mydomain is never used directly by the program.
-$mydomain = '_CN_DOMAIN_'; # (no useful default)
-
-# $myhostname = 'host.example.com'; # fqdn of this host, default by uname(3)
-
-# Set the user and group to which the daemon will change if started as root
-# (otherwise just keeps the UID unchanged, and these settings have no effect):
-$daemon_user = 'amavis'; # (no default (undef))
-$daemon_group = 'amavis'; # (no default (undef))
-
-# Runtime working directory (cwd), and a place where
-# temporary directories for unpacking mail are created.
-# if you change this, you might want to modify the cleanup()
-# function in /etc/init.d/amavisd-new
-# (no trailing slash, may be a scratch file system)
-$TEMPBASE = $MYHOME; # (must be set if other config vars use is)
-#$TEMPBASE = "$MYHOME/tmp"; # prefer to keep home dir /var/amavis clean?
-
-# $helpers_home sets environment variable HOME, and is passed as option
-# 'home_dir_for_helpers' to Mail::SpamAssassin::new. It should be a directory
-# on a normal persistent file system, not a scratch or temporary file system
-#$helpers_home = $MYHOME; # (defaults to $MYHOME)
-
-# Run the daemon in the specified chroot jail if nonempty:
-#$daemon_chroot_dir = $MYHOME; # (default is undef, meaning: do not chroot)
-
-$pid_file = "/var/run/amavis/amavisd.pid"; # (default: "$MYHOME/amavisd.pid")
-$lock_file = "/var/run/amavis/amavisd.lock"; # (default: "$MYHOME/amavisd.lock")
-
-# set environment variables if you want (no defaults):
-$ENV{TMPDIR} = $TEMPBASE; # wise to set TMPDIR, but not obligatory
-#...
-
-
-# MTA SETTINGS, UNCOMMENT AS APPROPRIATE,
-# both $forward_method and $notify_method default to 'smtp:127.0.0.1:10025'
-
-# POSTFIX, or SENDMAIL in dual-MTA setup, or EXIM V4
-# (set host and port number as required; host can be specified
-# as IP address or DNS name (A or CNAME, but MX is ignored)
-#$forward_method = 'smtp:127.0.0.1:10025'; # where to forward checked mail
-#$notify_method = $forward_method; # where to submit notifications
-
-# NOTE: The defaults (above) are good for Postfix or dual-sendmail. You MUST
-# uncomment the appropriate settings below if using other setups!
-
-# SENDMAIL MILTER, using amavis-milter.c helper program:
-# SEE amavisd-new-milter package docs FOR DEBIAN INSTRUCTIONS
-$forward_method = undef; # no explicit forwarding, sendmail does it by itself
-# milter; option -odd is needed to avoid deadlocks
-$notify_method = 'pipe:flags=q argv=/usr/sbin/sendmail -Ac -i -odd -f ${sender} -- ${recipient}';
-# just a thought: can we use use -Am instead of -odd ?
-
-# SENDMAIL (old non-milter setup, as relay):
-#$forward_method = 'pipe:flags=q argv=/usr/sbin/sendmail -C/etc/sendmail.orig.cf -i -f ${sender} -- ${recipient}';
-#$notify_method = $forward_method;
-
-# SENDMAIL (old non-milter setup, amavis.c calls local delivery agent):
-#$forward_method = undef; # no explicit forwarding, amavis.c will call LDA
-#$notify_method = 'pipe:flags=q argv=/usr/sbin/sendmail -Ac -i -f ${sender} -- ${recipient}';
-
-# EXIM v3 (not recommended with v4 or later, which can use SMTP setup instead):
-#$forward_method = 'pipe:flags=q argv=/usr/sbin/exim -oMr scanned-ok -i -f ${sender} -- ${recipient}';
-#$notify_method = $forward_method;
-
-# prefer to collect mail for forwarding as BSMTP files?
-#$forward_method = "bsmtp:$MYHOME/out-%i-%n.bsmtp";
-#$notify_method = $forward_method;
-
-
-# Net::Server pre-forking settings
-# You may want $max_servers to match the width of your MTA pipe
-# feeding amavisd, e.g. with Postfix the 'Max procs' field in the
-# master.cf file, like the '2' in the: smtp-amavis unix - - n - 2 smtp
-#
-$max_servers = 2; # number of pre-forked children (default 2)
-$max_requests = 10; # retire a child after that many accepts (default 10)
-
-$child_timeout=5*60; # abort child if it does not complete each task in n sec
- # (default: 8*60 seconds)
-
-# Check also the settings of @av_scanners at the end if you want to use
-# virus scanners. If not, you may want to delete the whole long assignment
-# to the variable @av_scanners, which will also remove the virus checking
-# code (e.g. if you only want to do spam scanning).
-
-# Here is a QUICK WAY to completely DISABLE some sections of code
-# that WE DO NOT WANT (it won't even be compiled-in).
-# For more refined controls leave the following two lines commented out,
-# and see further down what these two lookup lists really mean.
-#
-# @bypass_virus_checks_acl = qw( . ); # uncomment to DISABLE anti-virus code
-# @bypass_spam_checks_acl = qw( . ); # uncomment to DISABLE anti-spam code
-#
-# Any setting can be changed with a new assignment, so make sure
-# you do not unintentionally override these settings further down!
-
-# Lookup list of local domains (see README.lookups for syntax details)
-#
-# NOTE:
-# For backwards compatibility the variable names @local_domains (old) and
-# @local_domains_acl (new) are synonyms. For consistency with other lookups
-# the name @local_domains_acl is now preferred. It also makes it more
-# obviously distinct from the new %local_domains hash lookup table.
-#
-# local_domains* lookup tables are used in deciding whether a recipient
-# is local or not, or in other words, if the message is outgoing or not.
-# This affects inserting spam-related headers for local recipients,
-# limiting recipient virus notifications (if enabled) to local recipients,
-# in deciding if address extension may be appended, and in SQL lookups
-# for non-fqdn addresses. Set it up correctly if you need features
-# that rely on this setting (or just leave empty otherwise).
-#
-# With Postfix (2.0) a quick reminder on what local domains normally are:
-# a union of domains specified in: $mydestination, $virtual_alias_domains,
-# $virtual_mailbox_domains, and $relay_domains.
-#
-#@local_domains_acl = ( ".$mydomain" ); # $mydomain and its subdomains
-# @local_domains_acl = ( ".$mydomain", "my.other.domain" );
-# @local_domains_acl = qw(); # default is empty, no recipient treated as local
-# @local_domains_acl = qw( .example.com );
-# @local_domains_acl = qw( .example.com !host.sub.example.net .sub.example.net );
-@local_domains_acl = ( "$mydomain", ".$mydomain" );
-
-# or alternatively(A), using a Perl hash lookup table, which may be assigned
-# directly, or read from a file, one domain per line; comments and empty lines
-# are ignored, a dot before a domain name implies its subdomains:
-#
-#read_hash(\%local_domains, '/etc/amavis/local_domains');
-
-#or alternatively(B), using a list of regular expressions:
-# $local_domains_re = new_RE( qr'[@.]example\.com$'i );
-#
-# see README.lookups for syntax and semantics
-
-
-#
-# Section II - MTA specific (defaults should be ok)
-#
-
-# if $relayhost_is_client is true, the IP address in $notify_method and
-# $forward_method is dynamically overridden with SMTP client peer address
-# (if available), which makes it possible for several hosts to share one
-# daemon. The static port number is also overridden, and is dynamically
-# calculated as being one above the incoming SMTP/LMTP session port number.
-#
-# These are logged at level 3, so enable logging until you know you got it
-# right.
-$relayhost_is_client = 0; # (defaults to false)
-
-$insert_received_line = 1; # behave like MTA: insert 'Received:' header
- # (does not apply to sendmail/milter)
- # (default is true (1) )
-
-# AMAVIS-CLIENT PROTOCOL INPUT SETTINGS (e.g. with sendmail milter)
-# (used with amavis helper clients like amavis-milter.c and amavis.c,
-# NOT needed for Postfix and Exim or dual-sendmail - keep it undefined.)
-$unix_socketname = "/var/lib/amavis/amavisd.sock"; # amavis helper protocol socket
-#$unix_socketname = undef; # disable listening on a unix socket
- # (default is undef, i.e. disabled)
-
-# Do we receive quoted or raw addresses from the helper program?
-# (does not apply to SMTP; defaults to true)
-#$gets_addr_in_quoted_form = 1; # "Bob \"Funny\" Dude"@example.com
-#$gets_addr_in_quoted_form = 0; # Bob "Funny" Dude@example.com
-
-
-
-# SMTP SERVER (INPUT) PROTOCOL SETTINGS (e.g. with Postfix, Exim v4, ...)
-# (used when MTA is configured to pass mail to amavisd via SMTP or LMTP)
-#$inet_socket_port = 10024; # accept SMTP on this local TCP port
- # (default is undef, i.e. disabled)
-# multiple ports may be provided: $inet_socket_port = [10024, 10026, 10028];
-
-# SMTP SERVER (INPUT) access control
-# - do not allow free access to the amavisd SMTP port !!!
-#
-# when MTA is at the same host, use the following (one or the other or both):
-#$inet_socket_bind = '127.0.0.1'; # limit socket bind to loopback interface
- # (default is '127.0.0.1')
-#@inet_acl = qw( 127.0.0.1 ); # allow SMTP access only from localhost IP
- # (default is qw( 127.0.0.1 ) )
-
-# when MTA (one or more) is on a different host, use the following:
-# @inet_acl = qw(127/8 10.1.0.1 10.1.0.2); # adjust the list as appropriate
-# $inet_socket_bind = undef; # bind to all IP interfaces if undef
-#
-# Example1:
-# @inet_acl = qw( 127/8 10/8 172.16/12 192.168/16 );
-# permit only SMTP access from loopback and rfc1918 private address space
-#
-# Example2:
-# @inet_acl = qw( !192.168.1.12 172.16.3.3 !172.16.3/255.255.255.0
-# 127.0.0.1 10/8 172.16/12 192.168/16 );
-# matches loopback and rfc1918 private address space except host 192.168.1.12
-# and net 172.16.3/24 (but host 172.16.3.3 within 172.16.3/24 still matches)
-#
-# Example3:
-# @inet_acl = qw( 127/8
-# !172.16.3.0 !172.16.3.127 172.16.3.0/25
-# !172.16.3.128 !172.16.3.255 172.16.3.128/25 );
-# matches loopback and both halves of the 172.16.3/24 C-class,
-# split into two subnets, except all four broadcast addresses
-# for these subnets
-#
-# See README.lookups for details on specifying access control lists.
-
-
-#
-# Section III - Logging
-#
-
-# true (e.g. 1) => syslog; false (e.g. 0) => logging to file
-$DO_SYSLOG = 1; # (defaults to false)
-#$SYSLOG_LEVEL = 'user.info'; # (facility.priority, default 'mail.info')
-
-# Log file (if not using syslog)
-$LOGFILE = "/var/log/amavis.log"; # (defaults to empty, no log)
-
-#NOTE: levels are not strictly observed and are somewhat arbitrary
-# 0: startup/exit/failure messages, viruses detected
-# 1: args passed from client, some more interesting messages
-# 2: virus scanner output, timing
-# 3: server, client
-# 4: decompose parts
-# 5: more debug details
-#$log_level = 2; # (defaults to 0)
-
-# Customizable template for the most interesting log file entry (e.g. with
-# $log_level=0) (take care to properly quote Perl special characters like '\')
-# For a list of available macros see README.customize .
-
-# only log infected messages (useful with log level 0):
-# $log_templ = '[? %#V |[? %#F ||banned filename ([%F|,])]|infected ([%V|,])]#
-# [? %#V |[? %#F ||, from=[?%o|(?)|<%o>], to=[<%R>|,][? %i ||, quarantine %i]]#
-# |, from=[?%o|(?)|<%o>], to=[<%R>|,][? %i ||, quarantine %i]]';
-
-# log both infected and noninfected messages (default):
-$log_templ = '[? %#V |[? %#F |[?%#D|Not-Delivered|Passed]|BANNED name/type (%F)]|INFECTED (%V)], #
-[?%o|(?)|<%o>] -> [<%R>|,][? %i ||, quarantine %i], Message-ID: %m, Hits: %c';
-
-
-#
-# Section IV - Notifications/DSN, BOUNCE/REJECT/DROP/PASS destiny, quarantine
-#
-
-# Select notifications text encoding when Unicode-aware Perl is converting
-# text from internal character representation to external encoding (charset
-# in MIME terminology). Used as argument to Perl Encode::encode subroutine.
-#
-# to be used in RFC 2047-encoded header field bodies, e.g. in Subject:
-#$hdr_encoding = 'iso-8859-1'; # (default: 'iso-8859-1')
-#
-# to be used in notification body text: its encoding and Content-type.charset
-#$bdy_encoding = 'iso-8859-1'; # (default: 'iso-8859-1')
-
-# Default template texts for notifications may be overruled by directly
-# assigning new text to template variables, or by reading template text
-# from files. A second argument may be specified in a call to read_text(),
-# specifying character encoding layer to be used when reading from the
-# external file, e.g. 'utf8', 'iso-8859-1', or often just $bdy_encoding.
-# Text will be converted to internal character representation by Perl 5.8.0
-# or later; second argument is ignored otherwise. See PerlIO::encoding,
-# Encode::PerlIO and perluniintro man pages.
-#
-# $notify_sender_templ = read_text('/var/amavis/notify_sender.txt');
-# $notify_virus_sender_templ= read_text('/var/amavis/notify_virus_sender.txt');
-# $notify_virus_admin_templ = read_text('/var/amavis/notify_virus_admin.txt');
-# $notify_virus_recips_templ= read_text('/var/amavis/notify_virus_recips.txt');
-# $notify_spam_sender_templ = read_text('/var/amavis/notify_spam_sender.txt');
-# $notify_spam_admin_templ = read_text('/var/amavis/notify_spam_admin.txt');
-
-# If notification template files are collectively available in some directory,
-# use read_l10n_templates which calls read_text for each known template.
-#
-# read_l10n_templates('/etc/amavis/en_US');
-#
-# Debian available locales: en_US, pt_BR, de_DE, it_IT
-read_l10n_templates('en_US', '/etc/amavis');
-
-
-# Here is an overall picture (sequence of events) of how pieces fit together
-# (only virus controls are shown, spam controls work the same way):
-#
-# bypass_virus_checks? ==> PASS
-# no viruses? ==> PASS
-# log virus if $log_templ is nonempty
-# quarantine if $virus_quarantine_to is nonempty
-# notify admin if $virus_admin (lookup) nonempty
-# notify recips if $warnvirusrecip and (recipient is local or $warn_offsite)
-# add address extensions if adding extensions is enabled and virus will pass
-# send (non-)delivery notifications
-# to sender if DSN needed (BOUNCE or ($warn_virus_sender and D_PASS))
-# virus_lovers or final_destiny==D_PASS ==> PASS
-# DISCARD (2xx) or REJECT (5xx) (depending on final_*_destiny)
-#
-# Equivalent flow diagram applies for spam checks.
-# If a virus is detected, spam checking is skipped entirely.
-
-# The following symbolic constants can be used in *destiny settings:
-#
-# D_PASS mail will pass to recipients, regardless of bad contents;
-#
-# D_DISCARD mail will not be delivered to its recipients, sender will NOT be
-# notified. Effectively we lose mail (but will be quarantined
-# unless disabled). Losing mail is not decent for a mailer,
-# but might be desired.
-#
-# D_BOUNCE mail will not be delivered to its recipients, a non-delivery
-# notification (bounce) will be sent to the sender by amavisd-new;
-# Exception: bounce (DSN) will not be sent if a virus name matches
-# $viruses_that_fake_sender_re, or to messages from mailing lists
-# (Precedence: bulk|list|junk);
-#
-# D_REJECT mail will not be delivered to its recipients, sender should
-# preferably get a reject, e.g. SMTP permanent reject response
-# (e.g. with milter), or non-delivery notification from MTA
-# (e.g. Postfix). If this is not possible (e.g. different recipients
-# have different tolerances to bad mail contents and not using LMTP)
-# amavisd-new sends a bounce by itself (same as D_BOUNCE).
-#
-# Notes:
-# D_REJECT and D_BOUNCE are similar, the difference is in who is responsible
-# for informing the sender about non-delivery, and how informative
-# the notification can be (amavisd-new knows more than MTA);
-# With D_REJECT, MTA may reject original SMTP, or send DSN (delivery status
-# notification, colloquially called 'bounce') - depending on MTA;
-# Best suited for sendmail milter, especially for spam.
-# With D_BOUNCE, amavisd-new (not MTA) sends DSN (can better explain the
-# reason for mail non-delivery, but unable to reject the original
-# SMTP session). Best suited to reporting viruses, and for Postfix
-# and other dual-MTA setups, which can't reject original client SMTP
-# session, as the mail has already been enqueued.
-
-$final_virus_destiny = D_DISCARD; # (defaults to D_BOUNCE)
-$final_banned_destiny = D_REJECT; # (defaults to D_BOUNCE)
-$final_spam_destiny = D_REJECT; # (defaults to D_REJECT)
-$final_bad_header_destiny = D_PASS; # (defaults to D_PASS), D_BOUNCE suggested
-
-# Alternatives to consider for spam:
-# - use D_PASS if clients will do filtering based on inserted mail headers;
-# - use D_DISCARD, if kill_level is set safely high;
-# - use D_BOUNCE instead of D_REJECT if not using milter;
-#
-# D_BOUNCE is preferred for viruses, but consider:
-# - use D_DISCARD to avoid bothering the rest of the network, it is hopeless
-# to try to keep up with the viruses that faker the envelope sender anyway,
-# and bouncing only increases the network cost of viruses for everyone
-# - use D_PASS (or virus_lovers) and $warnvirussender=1 to deliver viruses;
-# - use D_REJECT instead of D_BOUNCE if using milter and under heavy
-# virus storm;
-#
-# Don't bother to set both D_DISCARD and $warn*sender=1, it will get mapped
-# to D_BOUNCE.
-#
-# The separation of *_destiny values into D_BOUNCE, D_REJECT, D_DISCARD
-# and D_PASS made settings $warnvirussender and $warnspamsender only still
-# useful with D_PASS.
-
-# The following $warn*sender settings are ONLY used when mail is
-# actually passed to recipients ($final_*_destiny=D_PASS, or *_lovers*).
-# Bounces or rejects produce non-delivery status notification anyway.
-
-# Notify virus sender?
-#$warnvirussender = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-
-# Notify spam sender?
-#$warnspamsender = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-
-# Notify sender of banned files?
-#$warnbannedsender = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-
-# Notify sender of syntactically invalid header containing non-ASCII characters?
-#$warnbadhsender = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-
-# Notify virus (or banned files) RECIPIENT?
-# (not very useful, but some policies demand it)
-#$warnvirusrecip = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-#$warnbannedrecip = 1; # (defaults to false (undef))
-
-# Notify also non-local virus/banned recipients if $warn*recip is true?
-# (including those not matching local_domains*)
-#$warn_offsite = 1; # (defaults to false (undef), i.e. only notify locals)
-
-
-# Treat envelope sender address as unreliable and don't send sender
-# notification / bounces if name(s) of detected virus(es) match the list.
-# Note that virus names are supplied by external virus scanner(s) and are
-# not standardized, so virus names may need to be adjusted.
-# See README.lookups for syntax, check also README.policy-on-notifications
-#
-$viruses_that_fake_sender_re = new_RE(
- qr'nimda|hybris|klez|bugbear|yaha|braid|sobig|fizzer|palyh|peido|holar'i,
- qr'tanatos|lentin|bridex|mimail|trojan\.dropper|dumaru|parite|spaces'i,
- qr'dloader|galil|gibe|swen|netwatch|bics|sbrowse|sober|rox|val(hal)?la'i,
- qr'frethem|sircam|be?agle|tanx|mydoom|novarg|shimg|netsky|somefool|moodown'i,
- qr'@mm|@MM', # mass mailing viruses as labeled by f-prot and uvscan
- qr'Worm'i, # worms as labeled by ClamAV, Kaspersky, etc
- [qr'^(EICAR|Joke\.|Junk\.)'i => 0],
- [qr'^(WM97|OF97|W95/CIH-|JS/Fort)'i => 0],
- [qr/.*/ => 1], # true by default (remove or comment-out if undesired)
-);
-
-# where to send ADMIN VIRUS NOTIFICATIONS (should be a fully qualified address)
-# - the administrator address may be a simple fixed e-mail address (a scalar),
-# or may depend on the SENDER address (e.g. its domain), in which case
-# a ref to a hash table can be specified (specify lower-cased keys,
-# dot is a catchall, see README.lookups).
-#
-# Empty or undef lookup disables virus admin notifications.
-
-# $virus_admin = undef; # do not send virus admin notifications (default)
-# $virus_admin = {'not.example.com' => '', '.' => 'virusalert@example.com'};
-# $virus_admin = 'virus-admin@example.com';
-#$virus_admin = "postmaster\@$mydomain"; # due to D_DISCARD default
-$virus_admin = "virusalert\@$mydomain"; # due to D_DISCARD default
-
-# equivalent to $virus_admin, but for spam admin notifications:
-# $spam_admin = "spamalert\@$mydomain";
-# $spam_admin = undef; # do not send spam admin notifications (default)
-# $spam_admin = {'not.example.com' => '', '.' => 'spamalert@example.com'};
-
-#advanced example, using a hash lookup table:
-#$virus_admin = {
-# 'baduser@sub1.example.com' => 'HisBoss@sub1.example.com',
-# '.sub1.example.com' => 'virusalert@sub1.example.com',
-# '.sub2.example.com' => '', # don't send admin notifications
-# 'a.sub3.example.com' => 'abuse@sub3.example.com',
-# '.sub3.example.com' => 'virusalert@sub3.example.com',
-# '.example.com' => 'noc@example.com', # catchall for our virus senders
-# '.' => 'virusalert@hq.example.com', # catchall for the rest
-#};
-
-
-# whom notification reports are sent from (ENVELOPE SENDER);
-# may be a null reverse path, or a fully qualified address:
-# (admin and recip sender addresses default to $mailfrom
-# for compatibility, which in turn defaults to undef (empty) )
-# If using strings in double quotes, don't forget to quote @, i.e. \@
-#
-$mailfrom_notify_admin = "virusalert\@$mydomain";
-$mailfrom_notify_recip = "virusalert\@$mydomain";
-$mailfrom_notify_spamadmin = "spamalert\@$mydomain";
-
-# 'From' HEADER FIELD for sender and admin notifications.
-# This should be a replyable address, see rfc1894. Not to be confused
-# with $mailfrom_notify_sender, which is the envelope return address
-# and should be empty (null reverse path) according to rfc2821.
-#
-# The syntax of the 'From' header field is specified in rfc2822, section
-# '3.4. Address Specification'. Note in particular that display-name must be
-# a quoted-string if it contains any special characters like spaces and dots.
-#
-# $hdrfrom_notify_sender = "amavisd-new <postmaster\@$mydomain>";
-# $hdrfrom_notify_sender = 'amavisd-new <postmaster@example.com>';
-# $hdrfrom_notify_sender = '"Content-Filter Master" <postmaster@example.com>';
-# (defaults to: "amavisd-new <postmaster\@$myhostname>")
-# $hdrfrom_notify_admin = $mailfrom_notify_admin;
-# (defaults to: $mailfrom_notify_admin)
-# $hdrfrom_notify_spamadmin = $mailfrom_notify_spamadmin;
-# (defaults to: $mailfrom_notify_spamadmin)
-
-# whom quarantined messages appear to be sent from (envelope sender);
-# keeps original sender if undef, or set it explicitly, default is undef
-$mailfrom_to_quarantine = ''; # override sender address with null return path
-
-
-# Location to put infected mail into: (applies to 'local:' quarantine method)
-# empty for not quarantining, may be a file (mailbox),
-# or a directory (no trailing slash)
-# (the default value is undef, meaning no quarantine)
-#
-$QUARANTINEDIR = '/var/lib/amavis/virusmails';
-
-#$virus_quarantine_method = "local:virus-%i-%n"; # default
-#$spam_quarantine_method = "local:spam-%b-%i-%n"; # default
-#
-#use the new 'bsmtp:' method as an alternative to the default 'local:'
-#$virus_quarantine_method = "bsmtp:$QUARANTINEDIR/virus-%i-%n.bsmtp";
-#$spam_quarantine_method = "bsmtp:$QUARANTINEDIR/spam-%b-%i-%n.bsmtp";
-
-# When using the 'local:' quarantine method (default), the following applies:
-#
-# A finer control of quarantining is available through variable
-# $virus_quarantine_to/$spam_quarantine_to. It may be a simple scalar string,
-# or a ref to a hash lookup table, or a regexp lookup table object,
-# which makes possible to set up per-recipient quarantine addresses.
-#
-# The value of scalar $virus_quarantine_to/$spam_quarantine_to (or a
-# per-recipient lookup result from the hash table %$virus_quarantine_to)
-# is/are interpreted as follows:
-#
-# VARIANT 1:
-# empty or undef disables quarantine;
-#
-# VARIANT 2:
-# a string NOT containing an '@';
-# amavisd will behave as a local delivery agent (LDA) and will quarantine
-# viruses to local files according to hash %local_delivery_aliases (pseudo
-# aliases map) - see subroutine mail_to_local_mailbox() for details.
-# Some of the predefined aliases are 'virus-quarantine' and 'spam-quarantine'.
-# Setting $virus_quarantine_to ($spam_quarantine_to) to this string will:
-#
-# * if $QUARANTINEDIR is a directory, each quarantined virus will go
-# to a separate file in the $QUARANTINEDIR directory (traditional
-# amavis style, similar to maildir mailbox format);
-#
-# * otherwise $QUARANTINEDIR is treated as a file name of a Unix-style
-# mailbox. All quarantined messages will be appended to this file.
-# Amavisd child process must obtain an exclusive lock on the file during
-# delivery, so this may be less efficient than using individual files
-# or forwarding to MTA, and it may not work across NFS or other non-local
-# file systems (but may be handy for pickup of quarantined files via IMAP
-# for example);
-#
-# VARIANT 3:
-# any email address (must contain '@').
-# The e-mail messages to be quarantined will be handed to MTA
-# for delivery to the specified address. If a recipient address local to MTA
-# is desired, you may leave the domain part empty, e.g. 'infected@', but the
-# '@' character must nevertheless be included to distinguish it from variant 2.
-#
-# This method enables more refined delivery control made available by MTA
-# (e.g. its aliases file, other local delivery agents, dealing with
-# privileges and file locking when delivering to user's mailbox, nonlocal
-# delivery and forwarding, fan-out lists). Make sure the mail-to-be-quarantined
-# will not be handed back to amavisd for checking, as this will cause a loop
-# (hopefully broken at some stage)! If this can be assured, notifications
-# will benefit too from not being unnecessarily virus-scanned.
-#
-# By default this is safe to do with Postfix and Exim v4 and dual-sendmail
-# setup, but probably not safe with sendmail milter interface without
-# precaution.
-
-# (the default value is undef, meaning no quarantine)
-
-$virus_quarantine_to = 'virus-quarantine'; # traditional local quarantine
-#$virus_quarantine_to = 'infected@'; # forward to MTA for delivery
-#$virus_quarantine_to = "virus-quarantine\@$mydomain"; # similar
-#$virus_quarantine_to = 'virus-quarantine@example.com'; # similar
-#$virus_quarantine_to = undef; # no quarantine
-#
-#$virus_quarantine_to = new_RE( # per-recip multiple quarantines
-# [qr'^user@example\.com$'i => 'infected@'],
-# [qr'^(.*)@example\.com$'i => 'virus-${1}@example.com'],
-# [qr'^(.*)(@[^@])?$'i => 'virus-${1}${2}'],
-# [qr/.*/ => 'virus-quarantine'] );
-
-# similar for spam
-# (the default value is undef, meaning no quarantine)
-#
-$spam_quarantine_to = 'spam-quarantine';
-#$spam_quarantine_to = "spam-quarantine\@$mydomain";
-#$spam_quarantine_to = new_RE( # per-recip multiple quarantines
-# [qr'^(.*)@example\.com$'i => 'spam-${1}@example.com'],
-# [qr/.*/ => 'spam-quarantine'] );
-
-# In addition to per-recip quarantine, a by-sender lookup is possible. It is
-# similar to $spam_quarantine_to, but the lookup key is the sender address:
-#$spam_quarantine_bysender_to = undef; # dflt: no by-sender spam quarantine
-
-
-# Add X-Virus-Scanned header field to mail?
-$X_HEADER_TAG = 'X-Virus-Scanned'; # (default: undef)
-# Leave empty to add no header # (default: undef)
-$X_HEADER_LINE = "by $myversion (Debian) at $mydomain";
-
-# a string to prepend to Subject (for local recipients only) if mail could
-# not be decoded or checked entirely, e.g. due to password-protected archives
-$undecipherable_subject_tag = '***UNCHECKED*** '; # undef disables it
-
-$remove_existing_x_scanned_headers = 0; # leave existing X-Virus-Scanned alone
-#$remove_existing_x_scanned_headers= 1; # remove existing headers
- # (defaults to false)
-#$remove_existing_spam_headers = 0; # leave existing X-Spam* headers alone
-$remove_existing_spam_headers = 1; # remove existing spam headers if
- # spam scanning is enabled (default)
-
-# set $bypass_decode_parts to true if you only do spam scanning, or if you
-# have a good virus scanner that can deal with compression and recursively
-# unpacking archives by itself, and save amavisd the trouble.
-# Disabling decoding also causes banned_files checking to only see
-# MIME names and MIME content types, not the content classification types
-# as provided by the file(1) utility.
-# It is a double-edged sword, make sure you know what you are doing!
-#
-#$bypass_decode_parts = 1; # (defaults to false)
-
-# don't trust this file type or corresponding unpacker for this file type,
-# keep both the original and the unpacked file for a virus checker to see
-# (lookup key is what file(1) utility returned):
-#
-$keep_decoded_original_re = new_RE(
-# qr'^MAIL$', # retain full original message for virus checking (can be slow)
- qr'^MAIL-UNDECIPHERABLE$', # retain full mail if it contains undecipherables
- qr'^(ASCII(?! cpio)|text|uuencoded|xxencoded|binhex)'i,
-# qr'^Zip archive data',
-);
-
-# Checking for banned MIME types and names. If any mail part matches,
-# the whole mail is rejected, much like the way viruses are handled.
-# A list in object $banned_filename_re can be defined to provide a list
-# of Perl regular expressions to be matched against each part's:
-#
-# * Content-Type value (both declared and effective mime-type),
-# including the possible security risk content types
-# message/partial and message/external-body, as specified by rfc2046;
-#
-# * declared (i.e. recommended) file names as specified by MIME subfields
-# Content-Disposition.filename and Content-Type.name, both in their
-# raw (encoded) form and in rfc2047-decoded form if applicable;
-#
-# * file content type as guessed by 'file' utility, both the raw
-# result from 'file', as well as short type name, classified
-# into names such as .asc, .txt, .html, .doc, .jpg, .pdf,
-# .zip, .exe, ... - see subroutine determine_file_types().
-# This step is done only if $bypass_decode_parts is not true.
-#
-# * leave $banned_filename_re undefined to disable these checks
-# (giving an empty list to new_RE() will also always return false)
-
-$banned_filename_re = new_RE(
-# qr'^UNDECIPHERABLE$', # is or contains any undecipherable components
- qr'\.[^.]*\.(exe|vbs|pif|scr|bat|cmd|com|dll)$'i, # some double extensions
- qr'[{}]', # curly braces in names (serve as Class ID extensions - CLSID)
-# qr'.\.(exe|vbs|pif|scr|bat|cmd|com)$'i, # banned extension - basic
-# qr'.\.(ade|adp|bas|bat|chm|cmd|com|cpl|crt|exe|hlp|hta|inf|ins|isp|js|
-# jse|lnk|mdb|mde|msc|msi|msp|mst|pcd|pif|reg|scr|sct|shs|shb|vb|
-# vbe|vbs|wsc|wsf|wsh)$'ix, # banned extension - long
-# qr'.\.(mim|b64|bhx|hqx|xxe|uu|uue)$'i, # banned extension - WinZip vulnerab.
-# qr'^\.(zip|lha|tnef|cab)$'i, # banned file(1) types
-# qr'^\.exe$'i, # banned file(1) types
-# qr'^application/x-msdownload$'i, # banned MIME types
-# qr'^application/x-msdos-program$'i,
- qr'^message/partial$'i, # rfc2046. this one is deadly for Outcrook
-# qr'^message/external-body$'i, # block rfc2046
-);
-# See http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;EN-US;q262631
-# and http://www.cknow.com/vtutor/vtextensions.htm
-
-# A little trick: a pattern qr'\.exe$' matches both a short type name '.exe',
-# as well as any file name which happens to end with .exe. If only matching
-# a file name is desired, but not the short name, a pattern qr'.\.exe$'i
-# or similar may be used, which requires that at least one character precedes
-# the '.exe', and so it will never match short file types, which always start
-# with a dot.
-
-
-#
-# Section V - Per-recipient and per-sender handling, whitelisting, etc.
-#
-
-# %virus_lovers, @virus_lovers_acl and $virus_lovers_re lookup tables:
-# (these should be considered policy options, they do not disable checks,
-# see bypass*checks for that!)
-#
-# Exclude certain RECIPIENTS from virus filtering by adding their lower-cased
-# envelope e-mail address (or domain only) to the hash %virus_lovers, or to
-# the access list @virus_lovers_acl - see README.lookups and examples.
-# Make sure the appropriate form (e.g. external/internal) of address
-# is used in case of virtual domains, or when mapping external to internal
-# addresses, etc. - this is MTA-specific.
-#
-# Notifications would still be generated however (see the overall
-# picture above), and infected mail (if passed) gets additional header:
-# X-AMaViS-Alert: INFECTED, message contains virus: ...
-# (header not inserted with milter interface!)
-#
-# NOTE (milter interface only): in case of multiple recipients,
-# it is only possible to drop or accept the message in its entirety - for all
-# recipients. If all of them are virus lovers, we'll accept mail, but if
-# at least one recipient is not a virus lover, we'll discard the message.
-
-
-# %bypass_virus_checks, @bypass_virus_checks_acl and $bypass_virus_checks_re
-# lookup tables:
-# (this is mainly a time-saving option, unlike virus_lovers* !)
-#
-# Similar in concept to %virus_lovers, a hash %bypass_virus_checks,
-# access list @bypass_virus_checks_acl and regexp list $bypass_virus_checks_re
-# are used to skip entirely the decoding, unpacking and virus checking,
-# but only if ALL recipients match the lookup.
-#
-# %bypass_virus_checks/@bypass_virus_checks_acl/$bypass_virus_checks_re
-# do NOT GUARANTEE the message will NOT be checked for viruses - this may
-# still happen when there is more than one recipient for a message, and
-# not all of them match these lookup tables. To guarantee virus delivery,
-# a recipient must also match %virus_lovers/@virus_lovers_acl lookups
-# (but see milter limitations above),
-
-# NOTE: it would not be clever to base virus checks on SENDER address,
-# since there are no guarantees that it is genuine. Many viruses
-# and spam messages fake sender address. To achieve selective filtering
-# based on the source of the mail (e.g. IP address, MTA port number, ...),
-# use mechanisms provided by MTA if available.
-
-
-# Similar to lookup tables controlling virus checking, there exist
-# spam scanning, banned names/types, and headers_checks control counterparts:
-# %spam_lovers, @spam_lovers_acl, $spam_lovers_re
-# %banned_files_lovers, @banned_files_lovers_acl, $banned_files_lovers_re
-# %bad_header_lovers, @bad_header_lovers_acl, $bad_header_lovers_re
-# and:
-# %bypass_spam_checks/@bypass_spam_checks_acl/$bypass_spam_checks_re
-# %bypass_banned_checks/@bypass_banned_checks_acl/$bypass_banned_checks_re
-# %bypass_header_checks/@bypass_header_checks_acl/$bypass_header_checks_re
-# See README.lookups for details about the syntax.
-
-# The following example disables spam checking altogether,
-# since it matches any recipient e-mail address (any address
-# is a subdomain of the top-level root DNS domain):
-# @bypass_spam_checks_acl = qw( . );
-
-# @bypass_header_checks_acl = qw( user@example.com );
-# @bad_header_lovers_acl = qw( user@example.com );
-
-
-# See README.lookups for further detail, and examples below.
-
-# $virus_lovers{lc("postmaster\@$mydomain")} = 1;
-# $virus_lovers{lc('postmaster@example.com')} = 1;
-# $virus_lovers{lc('abuse@example.com')} = 1;
-# $virus_lovers{lc('some.user@')} = 1; # this recipient, regardless of domain
-# $virus_lovers{lc('boss@example.com')} = 0; # never, even if domain matches
-# $virus_lovers{lc('example.com')} = 1; # this domain, but not its subdomains
-# $virus_lovers{lc('.example.com')}= 1; # this domain, including its subdomains
-#or:
-# @virus_lovers_acl = qw( me@lab.xxx.com !lab.xxx.com .xxx.com yyy.org );
-#
-# $bypass_virus_checks{lc('some.user2@butnot.example.com')} = 1;
-# @bypass_virus_checks_acl = qw( some.ddd !butnot.example.com .example.com );
-
-# @virus_lovers_acl = qw( postmaster@example.com );
-# $virus_lovers_re = new_RE( qr'^(helpdesk|postmaster)@example\.com$'i );
-
-# $spam_lovers{lc("postmaster\@$mydomain")} = 1;
-# $spam_lovers{lc('postmaster@example.com')} = 1;
-# $spam_lovers{lc('abuse@example.com')} = 1;
-# @spam_lovers_acl = qw( !.example.com );
-# $spam_lovers_re = new_RE( qr'^user@example\.com$'i );
-
-# don't run spam check for these RECIPIENT domains:
-# @bypass_spam_checks_acl = qw( d1.com .d2.com a.d3.com );
-# or the other way around (bypass check for all BUT these):
-# @bypass_spam_checks_acl = qw( !d1.com !.d2.com !a.d3.com . );
-# a practical application: don't check outgoing mail for spam:
-# @bypass_spam_checks_acl = ( "!.$mydomain", "." );
-# (a downside of which is that such mail will not count as ham in SA bayes db)
-
-
-# Where to find SQL server(s) and database to support SQL lookups?
-# A list of triples: (dsn,user,passw). (dsn = data source name)
-# More than one entry may be specified for multiple (backup) SQL servers.
-# See 'man DBI', 'man DBD::mysql', 'man DBD::Pg', ... for details.
-# When chroot-ed, accessing SQL server over inet socket may be more convenient.
-#
-# @lookup_sql_dsn =
-# ( ['DBI:mysql:database=mail;host=127.0.0.1;port=3306', 'user1', 'passwd1'],
-# ['DBI:mysql:database=mail;host=host2', 'username2', 'password2'] );
-#
-# ('mail' in the example is the database name, choose what you like)
-# With PostgreSQL the dsn (first element of the triple) may look like:
-# 'DBI:Pg:host=host1;dbname=mail'
-
-# The SQL select clause to fetch per-recipient policy settings.
-# The %k will be replaced by a comma-separated list of query addresses
-# (e.g. full address, domain only, catchall). Use ORDER, if there
-# is a chance that multiple records will match - the first match wins.
-# If field names are not unique (e.g. 'id'), the later field overwrites the
-# earlier in a hash returned by lookup, which is why we use '*,users.id'.
-# $sql_select_policy = 'SELECT *,users.id FROM users,policy'.
-# ' WHERE (users.policy_id=policy.id) AND (users.email IN (%k))'.
-# ' ORDER BY users.priority DESC';
-#
-# The SQL select clause to check sender in per-recipient whitelist/blacklist
-# The first SELECT argument '?' will be users.id from recipient SQL lookup,
-# the %k will be sender addresses (e.g. full address, domain only, catchall).
-# $sql_select_white_black_list = 'SELECT wb FROM wblist,mailaddr'.
-# ' WHERE (wblist.rid=?) AND (wblist.sid=mailaddr.id)'.
-# ' AND (mailaddr.email IN (%k))'.
-# ' ORDER BY mailaddr.priority DESC';
-
-$sql_select_white_black_list = undef; # undef disables SQL white/blacklisting
-
-
-# If you decide to pass viruses (or spam) to certain recipients using the
-# above lookup tables or using $final_virus_destiny=D_PASS, you can set
-# the variable $addr_extension_virus ($addr_extension_spam) to some
-# string, and the recipient address will have this string appended
-# as an address extension to the local-part of the address. This extension
-# can be used by final local delivery agent to place such mail in different
-# folders. Leave these two variables undefined or empty strings to prevent
-# appending address extensions. Setting has no effect on recipient which will
-# not be receiving viruses/spam. Recipients who do not match lookup tables
-# local_domains* are not affected.
-#
-# LDAs usually default to stripping away address extension if no special
-# handling is specified, so having this option enabled normally does no harm,
-# provided the $recipients_delimiter matches the setting on the final
-# MTA's LDA.
-
-# $addr_extension_virus = 'virus'; # (default is undef, same as empty)
-# $addr_extension_spam = 'spam'; # (default is undef, same as empty)
-# $addr_extension_banned = 'banned'; # (default is undef, same as empty)
-
-
-# Delimiter between local part of the recipient address and address extension
-# (which can optionally be added, see variables $addr_extension_virus and
-# $addr_extension_spam). E.g. recipient address <user@example.com> gets changed
-# to <user+virus@example.com>.
-#
-# Delimiter should match equivalent (final) MTA delimiter setting.
-# (e.g. for Postfix add 'recipient_delimiter = +' to main.cf)
-# Setting it to an empty string or to undef disables this feature
-# regardless of $addr_extension_virus and $addr_extension_spam settings.
-
-$recipient_delimiter = '+'; # (default is '+')
-
-# true: replace extension; false: append extension
-$replace_existing_extension = 1; # (default is false)
-
-# Affects matching of localpart of e-mail addresses (left of '@')
-# in lookups: true = case sensitive, false = case insensitive
-$localpart_is_case_sensitive = 0; # (default is false)
-
-
-# ENVELOPE SENDER WHITELISTING / BLACKLISTING - GLOBAL (RECIPIENT-INDEPENDENT)
-# (affects spam checking only, has no effect on virus and other checks)
-
-# WHITELISTING: use ENVELOPE SENDER lookups to ENSURE DELIVERY from whitelisted
-# senders even if the message would be recognized as spam. Effectively, for
-# the specified senders, message recipients temporarily become 'spam_lovers'.
-# To avoid surprises, whitelisted sender also suppresses inserting/editing
-# the tag2-level header fields (X-Spam-*, Subject), appending spam address
-# extension, and quarantining.
-
-# BLACKLISTING: messages from specified SENDERS are DECLARED SPAM.
-# Effectively, for messages from blacklisted senders, spam level
-# is artificially pushed high, and the normal spam processing applies,
-# resulting in 'X-Spam-Flag: YES', high 'X-Spam-Level' bar and other usual
-# reactions to spam, including possible rejection. If the message nevertheless
-# still passes (e.g. for spam loving recipients), it is tagged as BLACKLISTED
-# in the 'X-Spam-Status' header field, but the reported spam value and
-# set of tests in this report header field (if available from SpamAssassin,
-# which may have not been called) is not adjusted.
-#
-# A sender may be both white- and blacklisted at the same time, settings
-# are independent. For example, being both white- and blacklisted, message
-# is delivered to recipients, but is not tagged as spam (X-Spam-Flag: No;
-# X-Spam-Status: No, ...), but the reported spam level (if computed) may
-# still indicate high spam score.
-#
-# If ALL recipients of the message either white- or blacklist the sender,
-# spam scanning (calling the SpamAssassin) is bypassed, saving on time.
-#
-# The following variables (lookup tables) are available, with the semantics
-# and syntax as specified in README.lookups:
-#
-# %whitelist_sender, @whitelist_sender_acl, $whitelist_sender_re
-# %blacklist_sender, @blacklist_sender_acl, $blacklist_sender_re
-
-# SOME EXAMPLES:
-#
-#ACL:
-# @whitelist_sender_acl = qw( .example.com );
-#
-# @whitelist_sender_acl = ( ".$mydomain" ); # $mydomain and its subdomains
-# NOTE: This is not a reliable way of turning off spam checks for
-# locally-originating mail, as sender address can easily be faked.
-# To reliably avoid spam-scanning outgoing mail,
-# use @bypass_spam_checks_acl .
-
-#RE:
-# $whitelist_sender_re = new_RE(
-# qr'^postmaster@.*\bexample\.com$'i,
-# qr'owner-[^@]*@'i, qr'-request@'i,
-# qr'\.example\.com$'i );
-#
-$blacklist_sender_re = new_RE(
- qr'^(bulkmail|offers|cheapbenefits|earnmoney|foryou|greatcasino)@'i,
- qr'^(investments|lose_weight_today|market\.alert|money2you|MyGreenCard)@'i,
- qr'^(new\.tld\.registry|opt-out|opt-in|optin|saveonl|smoking2002k)@'i,
- qr'^(specialoffer|specialoffers|stockalert|stopsnoring|wantsome)@'i,
- qr'^(workathome|yesitsfree|your_friend|greatoffers)@'i,
- qr'^(inkjetplanet|marketopt|MakeMoney)\d*@'i,
-);
-
-#HASH lookup variant:
-# NOTE: Perl operator qw splits its argument string by whitespace
-# and produces a list. This means that addresses can not contain
-# whitespace, and there is no provision for comments within the string.
-# You can use the normal Perl list syntax if you have special requirements,
-# e.g. map {...} ('one user@bla', '.second.com'), or use read_hash to read
-# addresses from a file.
-#
-
-# a hash lookup table can be read from a file,
-# one address per line, comments and empty lines are permitted:
-#
-# read_hash(\%whitelist_sender, '/var/amavis/whitelist_sender');
-read_hash(\%whitelist_sender, "$MYHOME/whitelist_sender");
-read_hash(\%blacklist_sender, "$MYHOME/blacklist_sender");
-
-# ... or set directly:
-map { $whitelist_sender{lc($_)}=1 } (qw(
- nobody@cert.org
- owner-alert@iss.net
- slashdot@slashdot.org
- bugtraq@securityfocus.com
- NTBUGTRAQ@LISTSERV.NTBUGTRAQ.COM
- security-alerts@linuxsecurity.com
- amavis-user-admin@lists.sourceforge.net
- razor-users-admin@lists.sourceforge.net
- notification-return@lists.sophos.com
- mailman-announce-admin@python.org
- zope-announce-admin@zope.org
- owner-postfix-users@postfix.org
- owner-postfix-announce@postfix.org
- owner-sendmail-announce@lists.sendmail.org
- sendmail-announce-request@lists.sendmail.org
- ca+envelope@sendmail.org
- owner-technews@postel.ACM.ORG
- lvs-users-admin@LinuxVirtualServer.org
- ietf-123-owner@loki.ietf.org
- cvs-commits-list-admin@gnome.org
- rt-users-admin@lists.fsck.com
- owner-announce@mnogosearch.org
- owner-hackers@ntp.org
- owner-bugs@ntp.org
- clp-request@comp.nus.edu.sg
- surveys-errors@lists.nua.ie
- emailNews@genomeweb.com
- owner-textbreakingnews@CNNIMAIL12.CNN.COM
- yahoo-dev-null@yahoo-inc.com
-));
-
-
-# ENVELOPE SENDER WHITELISTING / BLACKLISTING - PER-RECIPIENT
-
-# The same semantics as for global white/blacklisting applies, but this
-# time each recipient (or its domain, or subdomain, ...) can be given
-# an individual lookup table for matching senders. The per-recipient lookups
-# override the global lookups, which serve as a fallback default.
-
-# Specify a two-level lookup table: the key for the outer table is recipient,
-# and the result should be an inner lookup table (hash or ACL or RE),
-# where the key used will be the sender.
-#
-#$per_recip_blacklist_sender_lookup_tables = {
-# 'user1@my.example.com'=>new_RE(qr'^(inkjetplanet|marketopt|MakeMoney)\d*@'i),
-# 'user2@my.example.com'=>[qw( spammer@d1.example,org .d2.example,org )],
-#};
-#$per_recip_whitelist_sender_lookup_tables = {
-# 'user@my.example.com' => [qw( friend@example.org .other.example.org )],
-# '.my1.example.com' => [qw( !foe.other.example,org .other.example,org )],
-# '.my2.example.com' => read_hash('/var/amavis/my2-wl.dat'),
-# 'abuse@' => { 'postmaster@'=>1,
-# 'cert-advisory-owner@cert.org'=>1, 'owner-alert@iss.net'=>1 },
-#};
-
-
-#
-# Section VI - Resource limits
-#
-
-# Sanity limit to the number of allowed recipients per SMTP transaction
-# $smtpd_recipient_limit = 1000; # (default is 1000)
-
-
-# Resource limits to protect unpackers, decompressors and virus scanners
-# against mail bombs (e.g. 42.zip)
-
-# Maximum recursion level for extraction/decoding (0 or undef disables limit)
-$MAXLEVELS = 14; # (default is undef, no limit)
-
-# Maximum number of extracted files (0 or undef disables the limit)
-$MAXFILES = 1500; # (default is undef, no limit)
-
-# For the cumulative total of all decoded mail parts we set max storage size
-# to defend against mail bombs. Even though parts may be deleted (replaced
-# by decoded text) during decoding, the size they occupied is _not_ returned
-# to the quota pool.
-#
-# Parameters to storage quota formula for unpacking/decoding/decompressing
-# Formula:
-# quota = max($MIN_EXPANSION_QUOTA,
-# $mail_size*$MIN_EXPANSION_FACTOR,
-# min($MAX_EXPANSION_QUOTA, $mail_size*$MAX_EXPANSION_FACTOR))
-# In plain words (later condition overrules previous ones):
-# allow MAX_EXPANSION_FACTOR times initial mail size,
-# but not more than MAX_EXPANSION_QUOTA,
-# but not less than MIN_EXPANSION_FACTOR times initial mail size,
-# but never less than MIN_EXPANSION_QUOTA
-#
-$MIN_EXPANSION_QUOTA = 100*1024; # bytes (default undef, not enforced)
-$MAX_EXPANSION_QUOTA = 300*1024*1024; # bytes (default undef, not enforced)
-$MIN_EXPANSION_FACTOR = 5; # times original mail size (must be specified)
-$MAX_EXPANSION_FACTOR = 500; # times original mail size (must be specified)
-
-
-#
-# Section VII - External programs, virus scanners
-#
-
-# Specify a path string, which is a colon-separated string of directories
-# (no trailing slashes!) to be assigned to the environment variable PATH
-# and to serve for locating external programs below.
-
-# NOTE: if $daemon_chroot_dir is nonempty, the directories will be
-# relative to the chroot directory specified;
-
-$path = '/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/bin';
-
-# Specify one string or a search list of strings (first match wins).
-# The string (or: each string in a list) may be an absolute path,
-# or just a program name, to be located via $path;
-# Empty string or undef (=default) disables the use of that external program.
-# Optionally command arguments may be specified - only the first substring
-# up to the whitespace is used for file searching.
-
-$file = 'file'; # file(1) utility; use 3.41 or later to avoid vulnerability
-
-$gzip = 'gzip';
-$bzip2 = 'bzip2';
-$lzop = 'lzop';
-$uncompress = ['uncompress', 'gzip -d', 'zcat'];
-$unfreeze = ['unfreeze', 'freeze -d', 'melt', 'fcat'];
-$arc = ['nomarch', 'arc'];
-$unarj = ['arj', 'unarj']; # both can extract, arj is recommended
-$unrar = ['rar', 'unrar']; # both can extract, same options
-$zoo = 'zoo';
-$lha = 'lha';
-$cpio = 'cpio'; # comment out if cpio does not support GNU options
-
-
-# SpamAssassin settings
-
-# $sa_local_tests_only is passed to Mail::SpamAssassin::new as a value
-# of the option local_tests_only. See Mail::SpamAssassin man page.
-# If set to 1, SA tests are restricted to local tests only, i.e. no tests
-# that require internet access will be performed.
-#
-#$sa_local_tests_only = 1; # (default: false)
-$sa_auto_whitelist = 1; # turn on AWL (default: false)
-
-# Timout for SpamAssassin. This is only used if spamassassin does NOT
-# override it (which it often does if sa_local_tests_only is not true)
-$sa_timeout = 30; # timeout in seconds for a call to SpamAssassin
- # (default is 30 seconds, undef disables it)
-
-# AWL (auto whitelisting), requires spamassassin 2.44 or better
-# $sa_auto_whitelist = 1; # defaults to undef
-
-$sa_mail_body_size_limit = 150*1024; # don't waste time on SA is mail is larger
- # (less than 1% of spam is > 64k)
- # default: undef, no limitations
-
-# default values, can be overridden by more specific lookups, e.g. SQL
-$sa_tag_level_deflt = 3.0; # add spam info headers if at, or above that level
-$sa_tag2_level_deflt = 6.3; # add 'spam detected' headers at that level
-$sa_kill_level_deflt = $sa_tag2_level_deflt; # triggers spam evasive actions
- # at or above that level: bounce/reject/drop,
- # quarantine, and adding mail address extension
-
-$sa_dsn_cutoff_level = 10; # spam level beyond which a DSN is not sent,
- # effectively turning D_BOUNCE into D_DISCARD;
- # undef disables this feature and is a default;
-
-#
-# The $sa_tag_level_deflt, $sa_tag2_level_deflt and $sa_kill_level_deflt
-# may also be hashrefs to hash lookup tables, to make static per-recipient
-# settings possible without having to resort to SQL or LDAP lookups.
-
-# a quick reference:
-# tag_level controls adding the X-Spam-Status and X-Spam-Level headers,
-# tag2_level controls adding 'X-Spam-Flag: YES', and editing Subject,
-# kill_level controls 'evasive actions' (reject, quarantine, extensions);
-# it only makes sense to maintain the relationship:
-# tag_level <= tag2_level <= kill_level < $sa_dsn_cutoff_level
-
-# string to prepend to Subject header field when message exceeds tag2 level
-$sa_spam_subject_tag = '***SPAM*** '; # (defaults to undef, disabled)
- # (only seen when spam is not to be rejected
- # and recipient is in local_domains*)
-
-#$sa_spam_modifies_subj = 1; # may be a ref to a lookup table, default is true
-# Example: modify Subject for all local recipients except user@example.com
-#$sa_spam_modifies_subj = [qw( !user@example.com . )];
-
-# stop anti-virus scanning when the first scanner detects a virus?
-$first_infected_stops_scan = 1; # default is false, all scanners are called
-
-# @av_scanners is a list of n-tuples, where fields semantics is:
-# 1. av scanner plain name, to be used in log and reports;
-# 2. scanner program name; this string will be submitted to subroutine
-# find_external_programs(), which will try to find the full program
-# path name; if program is not found, this scanner is disabled.
-# Besides a simple string (full program path name or just the basename
-# to be looked for in PATH), this may be an array ref of alternative
-# program names or full paths - the first match in the list will be used;
-# As a special case for more complex scanners, this field may be
-# a subroutine reference, and the whole n-tuple is passed to it as args.
-# 3. command arguments to be given to the scanner program;
-# a substring {} will be replaced by the directory name to be scanned,
-# i.e. "$tempdir/parts", a "*" will be replaced by file names of parts;
-# 4. an array ref of av scanner exit status values, or a regexp (to be
-# matched against scanner output), indicating NO VIRUSES found;
-# 5. an array ref of av scanner exit status values, or a regexp (to be
-# matched against scanner output), indicating VIRUSES WERE FOUND;
-# Note: the virus match prevails over a 'not found' match, so it is safe
-# even if the no. 4. matches for viruses too;
-# 6. a regexp (to be matched against scanner output), returning a list
-# of virus names found.
-# 7. and 8.: (optional) subroutines to be executed before and after scanner
-# (e.g. to set environment or current directory);
-# see examples for these at KasperskyLab AVP and Sophos sweep.
-
-# NOTES:
-#
-# - NOT DEFINING @av_scanners (e.g. setting it to empty list, or deleting the
-# whole assignment) TURNS OFF LOADING AND COMPILING OF THE ANTIVIRUS CODE
-# (which can be handy if all you want to do is spam scanning);
-#
-# - the order matters: although _all_ available entries from the list are
-# always tried regardless of their verdict, scanners are run in the order
-# specified: the report from the first one detecting a virus will be used
-# (providing virus names and scanner output); REARRANGE THE ORDER TO WILL;
-#
-# - it doesn't hurt to keep an unused command line scanner entry in the list
-# if the program can not be found; the path search is only performed once
-# during the program startup;
-#
-# COROLLARY: to disable a scanner that _does_ exist on your system,
-# comment out its entry or use undef or '' as its program name/path
-# (second parameter). An example where this is almost a must: disable
-# Sophos 'sweep' if you have its daemonized version Sophie or SAVI-Perl
-# (same for Trophie/vscan, and clamd/clamscan), or if another unrelated
-# program happens to have a name matching one of the entries ('sweep'
-# again comes to mind);
-#
-# - it DOES HURT to keep unwanted entries which use INTERNAL SUBROUTINES
-# for interfacing (where the second parameter starts with \&).
-# Keeping such entry and not having a corresponding virus scanner daemon
-# causes an unnecessary connection attempt (which eventually times out,
-# but it wastes precious time). For this reason the daemonized entries
-# are commented in the distribution - just remove the '#' where needed.
-#
-# CERT list of av resources: http://www.cert.org/other_sources/viruses.html
-
-@av_scanners = (
-
-# ### http://www.vanja.com/tools/sophie/
-# ['Sophie',
-# \&ask_daemon, ["{}/\n", '/var/run/sophie'],
-# qr/(?x)^ 0+ ( : | [\000\r\n]* $)/, qr/(?x)^ 1 ( : | [\000\r\n]* $)/,
-# qr/(?x)^ [-+]? \d+ : (.*?) [\000\r\n]* $/ ],
-
-# ### http://www.csupomona.edu/~henson/www/projects/SAVI-Perl/
-['Sophos SAVI', \&sophos_savi ],
-
-### http://www.clamav.net/
-['Clam Antivirus-clamd',
- \&ask_daemon, ["CONTSCAN {}\n", "/var/run/clamav/clamd.ctl"],
- qr/\bOK$/, qr/\bFOUND$/,
- qr/^.*?: (?!Infected Archive)(.*) FOUND$/ ],
-# NOTE: run clamd under the same user as amavisd; match the socket
-# name (LocalSocket) in clamav.conf to the socket name in this entry
-# When running chrooted one may prefer: ["CONTSCAN {}\n","$MYHOME/clamd"],
-
-# ### http://www.openantivirus.org/
-# ['OpenAntiVirus ScannerDaemon (OAV)',
-# \&ask_daemon, ["SCAN {}\n", '127.0.0.1:8127'],
-# qr/^OK/, qr/^FOUND: /, qr/^FOUND: (.+)/ ],
-
-# ### http://www.vanja.com/tools/trophie/
-# ['Trophie',
-# \&ask_daemon, ["{}/\n", '/var/run/trophie'],
-# qr/(?x)^ 0+ ( : | [\000\r\n]* $)/, qr/(?x)^ 1 ( : | [\000\r\n]* $)/,
-# qr/(?x)^ [-+]? \d+ : (.*?) [\000\r\n]* $/ ],
-
-# ### http://www.grisoft.com/
-# ['AVG Anti-Virus',
-# \&ask_daemon, ["SCAN {}\n", '127.0.0.1:55555'],
-# qr/^200/, qr/^403/, qr/^403 .*?: (.+)/ ],
-
-# ### http://www.f-prot.com/
-# ['FRISK F-Prot Daemon',
-# \&ask_daemon,
-# ["GET {}/*?-dumb%20-archive%20-packed HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n",
-# ['127.0.0.1:10200','127.0.0.1:10201','127.0.0.1:10202',
-# '127.0.0.1:10203','127.0.0.1:10204'] ],
-# qr/(?i)<summary[^>]*>clean<\/summary>/,
-# qr/(?i)<summary[^>]*>infected<\/summary>/,
-# qr/(?i)<name>(.+)<\/name>/ ],
-
- ['KasperskyLab AVP - aveclient',
- ['/usr/local/kav/bin/aveclient','/usr/local/share/kav/bin/aveclient',
- '/opt/kav/bin/aveclient','aveclient'],
- '-p /var/run/aveserver -s {}/*', [0,3,6,8], qr/\b(INFECTED|SUSPICION)\b/,
- qr/(?:INFECTED|SUSPICION) (.+)/,
- ],
-
- ['KasperskyLab AntiViral Toolkit Pro (AVP)', ['avp'],
- '-* -P -B -Y -O- {}', [0,8,16,24], [2,3,4,5,6, 18,19,20,21,22],
- qr/infected: (.+)/,
- sub {chdir('/opt/AVP') or die "Can't chdir to AVP: $!"},
- sub {chdir($TEMPBASE) or die "Can't chdir back to $TEMPBASE $!"},
- ],
-
- ### The kavdaemon and AVPDaemonClient have been removed from Kasperky
- ### products and replaced by aveserver and aveclient
- ['KasperskyLab AVPDaemonClient',
- [ '/opt/AVP/kavdaemon', 'kavdaemon',
- '/opt/AVP/AvpDaemonClient', 'AvpDaemonClient',
- '/opt/AVP/AvpTeamDream', 'AvpTeamDream',
- '/opt/AVP/avpdc', 'avpdc' ],
- "-f=$TEMPBASE {}", [0,8,16,24], [2,3,4,5,6, 18,19,20,21,22],
- qr/infected: ([^\r\n]+)/ ],
- # change the startup-script in /etc/init.d/kavd to:
- # DPARMS="-* -Y -dl -f=/var/amavis /var/amavis"
- # (or perhaps: DPARMS="-I0 -Y -* /var/amavis" )
- # adjusting /var/amavis above to match your $TEMPBASE.
- # The '-f=/var/amavis' is needed if not running it as root, so it
- # can find, read, and write its pid file, etc., see 'man kavdaemon'.
- # defUnix.prf: there must be an entry "*/var/amavis" (or whatever
- # directory $TEMPBASE specifies) in the 'Names=' section.
- # cd /opt/AVP/DaemonClients; configure; cd Sample; make
- # cp AvpDaemonClient /opt/AVP/
- # su - vscan -c "${PREFIX}/kavdaemon ${DPARMS}"
-
- ### http://www.hbedv.com/ or http://www.centralcommand.com/
- ['H+BEDV AntiVir or CentralCommand Vexira Antivirus',
- ['antivir','vexira'],
- '--allfiles -noboot -nombr -rs -s -z {}', [0], qr/ALERT:|VIRUS:/,
- qr/(?x)^\s* (?: ALERT: \s* (?: \[ | [^']* ' ) |
- (?i) VIRUS:\ .*?\ virus\ '?) ( [^\]\s']+ )/ ],
- # NOTE: if you only have a demo version, remove -z and add 214, as in:
- # '--allfiles -noboot -nombr -rs -s {}', [0,214], qr/ALERT:|VIRUS:/,
-
- ### http://www.commandsoftware.com/
- ['Command AntiVirus for Linux', 'csav',
- '-all -archive -packed {}', [50], [51,52,53],
- qr/Infection: (.+)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.symantec.com/
- ['Symantec CarrierScan via Symantec CommandLineScanner',
- 'cscmdline', '-a scan -i 1 -v -s 127.0.0.1:7777 {}',
- qr/^Files Infected:\s+0$/, qr/^Infected\b/,
- qr/^(?:Info|Virus Name):\s+(.+)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.symantec.com/
- ['Symantec AntiVirus Scan Engine',
- 'savsecls', '-server 127.0.0.1:7777 -mode scanrepair -details -verbose {}',
- [0], qr/^Infected\b/,
- qr/^(?:Info|Virus Name):\s+(.+)/ ],
- # NOTE: check options and patterns to see which entry better applies
-
- ### http://www.sald.com/, http://drweb.imshop.de/
- ['drweb - DrWeb Antivirus',
- ['/usr/local/drweb/drweb', '/opt/drweb/drweb', 'drweb'],
- '-path={} -al -go -ot -cn -upn -ok-',
- [0,32], [1,33], qr' infected (?:with|by)(?: virus)? (.*)$'],
-
-# ### http://www.sald.com/, http://www.dials.ru/english/, http://www.drweb.ru/
-# ['DrWebD', \&ask_daemon, # DrWebD 4.31 or later
-# [pack('N',1). # DRWEBD_SCAN_CMD
-# pack('N',0x00280001). # DONT_CHANGEMAIL, IS_MAIL, RETURN_VIRUSES
-# pack('N', # path length
-# length("$TEMPBASE/amavis-yyyymmddTHHMMSS-xxxxx/parts/part-xxxxx")).
-# '{}/*'. # path
-# pack('N',0). # content size
-# pack('N',0),
-# '/var/drweb/run/drwebd.sock',
-# # '/var/amavis/var/run/drwebd.sock', # suitable for chroot
-# # '/usr/local/drweb/run/drwebd.sock', # FreeBSD drweb ports default
-# # '127.0.0.1:3000', # or over an inet socket
-# ],
-# qr/\A\x00(\x10|\x11)\x00\x00/s, # IS_CLEAN, EVAL_KEY
-# qr/\A\x00(\x00|\x01)\x00(\x20|\x40|\x80)/s, # KNOWN_V, UNKNOWN_V, V._MODIF
-# qr/\A.{12}(?:infected with )?([^\x00]+)\x00/s,
-# ],
-# # NOTE: If you are using amavis-milter, change length to:
-# # length("$TEMPBASE/amavis-milter-xxxxxxxxxxxxxx/parts/part-xxxxx").
-
- ### http://www.f-secure.com/products/anti-virus/
- ['F-Secure Antivirus', 'fsav',
- '--dumb --mime --archive {}', [0], [3,8],
- qr/(?:infection|Infected|Suspected): (.+)/ ],
-
- ['CAI InoculateIT', 'inocucmd',
- '-sec -nex {}', [0], [100],
- qr/was infected by virus (.+)/ ],
-
- ['MkS_Vir for Linux (beta)', ['mks32','mks'],
- '-s {}/*', [0], [1,2], # any use for options: -a -c ?
- qr/--[ \t]*(.+)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.nod32.com/
- ['ESET Software NOD32', 'nod32',
- '-all -subdir+ {}', [0], [1,2],
- qr/^.+? - (.+?)\s*(?:backdoor|joke|trojan|virus|worm)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.nod32.com/
- ['ESET Software NOD32 - Client/Server Version', 'nod32cli',
- '-a -r -d recurse --heur standard {}', [0], [10,11],
- qr/^\S+\s+infected:\s+(.+)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.norman.com/products_nvc.shtml
- ['Norman Virus Control v5 / Linux', 'nvcc',
- '-c -l:0 -s -u {}', [0], [1],
- qr/(?i).* virus in .* -> \'(.+)\'/ ],
-
- ### http://www.pandasoftware.com/
- ['Panda Antivirus for Linux', ['pavcl'],
- '-aut -aex -heu -cmp -nbr -nor -nso -eng {}',
- qr/Number of files infected[ .]*: 0(?!\d)/,
- qr/Number of files infected[ .]*: 0*[1-9]/,
- qr/Found virus :\s*(\S+)/ ],
-
-# GeCAD AV technology is acquired by Microsoft; RAV has been discontinued.
-# Check your RAV license terms before fiddling with the following two lines!
-# ['GeCAD RAV AntiVirus 8', 'ravav',
-# '--all --archive --mail {}', [1], [2,3,4,5], qr/Infected: (.+)/ ],
-# # NOTE: the command line switches changed with scan engine 8.5 !
-# # (btw, assigning stdin to /dev/null causes RAV to fail)
-
- ### http://www.nai.com/
- ['NAI McAfee AntiVirus (uvscan)', 'uvscan',
- '--secure -rv --mime --summary --noboot - {}', [0], [13],
- qr/(?x) Found (?:
- \ the\ (.+)\ (?:virus|trojan) |
- \ (?:virus|trojan)\ or\ variant\ ([^ ]+) |
- :\ (.+)\ NOT\ a\ virus)/,
- # sub {$ENV{LD_PRELOAD}='/lib/libc.so.6'},
- # sub {delete $ENV{LD_PRELOAD}},
- ],
- # NOTE1: with RH9: force the dynamic linker to look at /lib/libc.so.6 before
- # anything else by setting environment variable LD_PRELOAD=/lib/libc.so.6
- # and then clear it when finished to avoid confusing anything else.
- # NOTE2: to treat encrypted files as viruses replace the [13] with:
- # qr/^\s{5,}(Found|is password-protected|.*(virus|trojan))/
-
- ### http://www.virusbuster.hu/en/
- ['VirusBuster', ['vbuster', 'vbengcl'],
- # VirusBuster Ltd. does not support the daemon version for the workstation
- # engine (vbuster-eng-1.12-linux-i386-libc6.tgz) any longer. The names of
- # binaries, some parameters AND return codes (from 3 to 1) changed.
- "{} -ss -i '*' -log=$MYHOME/vbuster.log", [0], [1],
- qr/: '(.*)' - Virus/ ],
-
-# ### http://www.virusbuster.hu/en/
-# ['VirusBuster (Client + Daemon)', 'vbengd',
-# # HINT: for an infected file it returns always 3,
-# # although the man-page tells a different story
-# '-f -log scandir {}', [0], [3],
-# qr/Virus found = (.*);/ ],
-
- ### http://www.cyber.com/
- ['CyberSoft VFind', 'vfind',
- '--vexit {}/*', [0], [23], qr/##==>>>> VIRUS ID: CVDL (.+)/,
- # sub {$ENV{VSTK_HOME}='/usr/lib/vstk'},
- ],
-
- ### http://www.ikarus-software.com/
- ['Ikarus AntiVirus for Linux', 'ikarus',
- '{}', [0], [40], qr/Signature (.+) found/ ],
-
- ### http://www.bitdefender.com/
- ['BitDefender', 'bdc',
- '--all --arc --mail {}', qr/^Infected files *:0(?!\d)/,
- qr/^(?:Infected files|Identified viruses|Suspect files) *:0*[1-9]/,
- qr/(?:suspected|infected): (.*)(?:\033|$)/ ],
-);
-
-# If no virus scanners from the @av_scanners list produce 'clean' nor
-# 'infected' status (e.g. they all fail to run or the list is empty),
-# then _all_ scanners from the @av_scanners_backup list are tried.
-# When there are both daemonized and command-line scanners available,
-# it is customary to place slower command-line scanners in the
-# @av_scanners_backup list. The default choice is somewhat arbitrary,
-# move entries from one list to another as desired.
-
-@av_scanners_backup = (
-
- ### http://www.clamav.net/
- ['Clam Antivirus - clamscan', 'clamscan',
- "--stdout --no-summary -r --tempdir=$TEMPBASE {}", [0], [1],
- qr/^.*?: (?!Infected Archive)(.*) FOUND$/ ],
-
- ### http://www.f-prot.com/
- ['FRISK F-Prot Antivirus', ['f-prot','f-prot.sh'],
- '-dumb -archive -packed {}', [0,8], [3,6],
- qr/Infection: (.+)/ ],
-
- ### http://www.trendmicro.com/
- ['Trend Micro FileScanner', ['/etc/iscan/vscan','vscan'],
- '-za -a {}', [0], qr/Found virus/, qr/Found virus (.+) in/ ],
-
- ['KasperskyLab kavscanner', ['/opt/kav/bin/kavscanner','kavscanner'],
- '-i1 -xp {}', [0,10,15], [5,20,21,25],
- qr/(?:CURED|INFECTED|CUREFAILED|WARNING|SUSPICION) (.*)/ ,
- sub {chdir('/opt/kav/bin') or die "Can't chdir to kav: $!"},
- sub {chdir($TEMPBASE) or die "Can't chdir back to $TEMPBASE $!"},
- ],
-
-# Commented out because the name 'sweep' clashes with the Debian package of
-# the same name. Make sure the correct sweep is found in the path when enabling
-#
-# ### http://www.sophos.com/
-# ['Sophos Anti Virus (sweep)', 'sweep',
-# '-nb -f -all -rec -ss -sc -archive -cab -tnef --no-reset-atime {}',
-# [0,2], qr/Virus .*? found/,
-# qr/^>>> Virus(?: fragment)? '?(.*?)'? found/,
-# ],
-# # other options to consider: -mime -oe -idedir=/usr/local/sav
-
-# always succeeds (uncomment to consider mail clean if all other scanners fail)
-['always-clean', sub {0}],
-
-);
-
-
-#
-# Section VIII - Debugging
-#
-
-# The most useful debugging tool is to run amavisd-new non-detached
-# from a terminal window:
-# amavisd debug
-
-# Some more refined approaches:
-
-# If sender matches ACL, turn log level fully up, just for this one message,
-# and preserve temporary directory
-#@debug_sender_acl = ( "test-sender\@$mydomain" );
-#@debug_sender_acl = qw( debug@example.com );
-
-# May be useful along with @debug_sender_acl:
-# Prevent all decoded originals being deleted (replaced by decoded part)
-#$keep_decoded_original_re = new_RE( qr/.*/ );
-
-# Turn on SpamAssassin debugging (output to STDERR, use with 'amavisd debug')
-#$sa_debug = 1; # defaults to false
-
-#-------------
-1; # insure a defined return
+++ /dev/null
---- amavisd.conf.sendmail-template 2006-06-30 10:53:18.000000000 +0200
-+++ amavisd.conf.postfix-template 2006-06-30 13:07:57.000000000 +0200
-@@ -102,17 +102,17 @@
- # POSTFIX, or SENDMAIL in dual-MTA setup, or EXIM V4
- # (set host and port number as required; host can be specified
- # as IP address or DNS name (A or CNAME, but MX is ignored)
--#$forward_method = 'smtp:127.0.0.1:10025'; # where to forward checked mail
--#$notify_method = $forward_method; # where to submit notifications
-+$forward_method = 'smtp:127.0.0.1:10025'; # where to forward checked mail
-+$notify_method = $forward_method; # where to submit notifications
-
- # NOTE: The defaults (above) are good for Postfix or dual-sendmail. You MUST
- # uncomment the appropriate settings below if using other setups!
-
- # SENDMAIL MILTER, using amavis-milter.c helper program:
- # SEE amavisd-new-milter package docs FOR DEBIAN INSTRUCTIONS
--$forward_method = undef; # no explicit forwarding, sendmail does it by itself
-+#$forward_method = undef; # no explicit forwarding, sendmail does it by itself
- # milter; option -odd is needed to avoid deadlocks
--$notify_method = 'pipe:flags=q argv=/usr/sbin/sendmail -Ac -i -odd -f ${sender} -- ${recipient}';
-+#$notify_method = 'pipe:flags=q argv=/usr/sbin/sendmail -Ac -i -odd -f ${sender} -- ${recipient}';
- # just a thought: can we use use -Am instead of -odd ?
-
- # SENDMAIL (old non-milter setup, as relay):
-@@ -232,7 +232,7 @@
-
- # SMTP SERVER (INPUT) PROTOCOL SETTINGS (e.g. with Postfix, Exim v4, ...)
- # (used when MTA is configured to pass mail to amavisd via SMTP or LMTP)
--#$inet_socket_port = 10024; # accept SMTP on this local TCP port
-+$inet_socket_port = 10024; # accept SMTP on this local TCP port
- # (default is undef, i.e. disabled)
- # multiple ports may be provided: $inet_socket_port = [10024, 10026, 10028];
-
-@@ -240,7 +240,7 @@
- # - do not allow free access to the amavisd SMTP port !!!
- #
- # when MTA is at the same host, use the following (one or the other or both):
--#$inet_socket_bind = '127.0.0.1'; # limit socket bind to loopback interface
-+$inet_socket_bind = '127.0.0.1'; # limit socket bind to loopback interface
- # (default is '127.0.0.1')
- #@inet_acl = qw( 127.0.0.1 ); # allow SMTP access only from localhost IP
- # (default is qw( 127.0.0.1 ) )