Provided by: courier-base_0.78.0-2ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       couriertcpd - the Courier mail server TCP server daemon

SYNOPSIS

       couriertcpd [-pid=pidfile] [option...] {list} {program} {arg...}

       couriertcpd {-pid=pidfile} {-stop}

       couriertcpd {-pid=pidfile} {-restart}

DESCRIPTION

       couriertcpd accepts incoming network connections, and runs program after establishing each
       network connection. The program's standard input and output are set to the network
       connection.

       list is a comma-separated list of TCP port numbers where incoming connections are created.
       program is the program to run. If program requires any arguments, they are specified on
       the command line, after program itself.

       Before running program, couriertcpd initializes several environment variables that
       describe the network connection. The environment inherited by program will be the
       environment inherited by couriertcpd, plus any additional environment variables
       initialized by couriertcpd. It is also possible to reject certain network connections.
       Several options are available to specify which network connections will be rejected.

OPTIONS

       -access=filename
           Specifies an optional access file. The access file lists the IP addresses from which
           connections should be accepted or rejected. The access file is also used to initialize
           environment variables based on the IP address of the connection.  filename is a GDBM
           or DB database file that's usually created by a script from one or more text files.
           See "ACCESS FILE" below for more information.

       -accesslocal
           Lookup the local interface IP and port in the access file, in addition to looking up
           the remote IP. This gives a mechanism for setting environment variables depending on
           which IP address and/or port the client connected to. In the access file, "1.2.3.4.25"
           matches connections to IP address 1.2.3.4 port 25; "1.2.3.4" matches connections to IP
           address 1.2.3.4 on any port; and "*.25" matches connections to port 25 on any IP
           address.

       -address=n.n.n.n
           Accept network connections only to IP address n.n.n.n. If not specified, couriertcpd
           accepts connections to any IP address that the system accepts connections on. If the
           system has multiple network interfaces with separate IP addresses, this option makes
           couriertcpd accept connections only to one specific IP address. Most systems have
           multiple network interfaces: the loopback interface, plus the local network interface,
           so that -address=127.0.0.1 accepts connections only from the local system. When
           multiple port numbers are specified, it is also possible to selectively bind different
           network addresses to each port number when list specifies more than one port number.
           See "Multiple port list[1]" below for more information.

       -block=zone[,var[/n.n.n.n][,msg]] or -allow=zone[,var[/n.n.n.n[,]]]
           Initialize the environment variable var if both of the following conditions are true:
           var is not already initialized; the connecting IP address can be found in a DNS-based
           access list. See DNS ACCESS LISTS, below. Multiple -block and -allow options can be
           specified.

           -block and -allow are very similar, differing only in minor semantics.  -block's
           semantics are more appropriate for using DNS access list to block access, and -allow's
           semantics are more appropriate for using DNS access list to whitelist IP addresses and
           exempt them even if they appear in other -blocked zones.

       -denymsg=text
           Specifies an optional message to be returned to the client if the -access option
           rejects them. The default is to drop the TCP connection without sending back any
           messages.

       -drop=var
           If the environment variable var is set to a nonempty value, terminate immediately. Do
           not run the program to handle the connection. See DNS ACCESS LISTS, below, for more
           information.  var defaults to “BLOCK”, if not specified.

       -group=group
           Set couriertcpd's its group ID.  group may be specified numerically, or by its name.
           Only the superuser may use -group.

       -listen=n
           Length of the queue which holds pending connections.  n is a number. If not specified,
           the system default is used.

       -maxperc=n
           Maximum number of connections accepted from the same C network block. Using this
           option is recommended, because connection slots are limited. Without this option, the
           same C network block can potentially use up all available connection slots.

       -maxperip=n
           Maximum number of connections accepted from the same IP address. Use both the -maxperc
           and -maxperip options to fine tune connection limits. For example, when couriertcpd is
           listening on the SMTP port it makes sense to set an upper limit on the number of
           connections from the same C block. Domains that send a large amount of mail often have
           multiple servers sending outbound mail from the same C block, so it makes sense to set
           limits on individual C blocks. On the other hand, if couriertcpd is listening on the
           POP3 port it makes more sense to set limits on individual IP addresses. If a C block
           of addresses is assigned to a dialup modem pool, it is certainly possible to have many
           IP addresses within the same C block have connections to the POP3 server at the same
           time.

           The -maxperip option can be overridden for a given IP address by setting the MAXCPERIP
           environment variable, see “Setting environment variables” for more information.

       -maxprocs=n
           Maximum number of connection slots, or the maximum number of processes started. This
           effectively specifies the maximum number of connections accepted at the same time.
           After the maximum number of connections has been opened, couriertcpd waits for an
           existing connection to close, before accepting any more connections.

       -warn=n
           Log a LOG_WARNING message to syslog when the number of active processes exceeds n. The
           default is 90% of maxprocs.  couriertcpd logs a LOG_ALERT syslog message when the
           number of active processes reaches the maximum.

       -nodnslookup
           Do not look up the hostname associated with connecting IP address and the local
           addres, do not initialize the TCPREMOTEHOST or TCPLOCALHOST environment variables (see
           below).

       -noidentlookup
           Do not perform an ident lookup, and do not initialize the TCPREMOTEINFO environment
           variable.

       -pid=filename
           If given, couriertcpd puts itself into the background and saves its process ID in this
           file, usually somewhere in /var/run.

           This option must also be present when using the -restart and -stop options.

       -restart
           Send a SIGHUP to an existing couriertcpd process. Specify the same -pid argument as
           the one that was used to start couriertcpd. The process ID is read from the -pid file,
           and the couriertcpd receives a SIGHUP signal.

       -stderr=socket
           Set program's standard error to the network connection, just like its standard input
           and output.

       -stderr=logfile
           Set program's standard error to the specified file, logfile. The file is created, if
           necessary, and is opened in append mode.

       -stderrlogger=logprogram
           Set program's standard error to a pipe, which is read by logprogram. Only one instance
           of logger is started, which receives standard error from every instance of program.
           The specified logger is executed with the output end of the stderr pipe connected as
           standard input.  logprogram is executed with one argument - program's name.

       -stderrloggername=name
           Use name as the argument to logprogram, instead of the program's name.

       -stop
           Stop (kill) an existing couriertcpd process. Specify the same -pid argument as the one
           that was used to start couriertcpd. The process ID is read from the -pid file, and the
           couriertcpd process is killed. All child processes of couriertcpd will receive a
           SIGTERM signal.

       -user=user
           Set couriertcpd's user ID. Also, the group ID is set to the user's group ID. Using
           both -group and -user is not necessary. Only the superuser can specify -user.

MULTIPLE PORT LIST

       The list argument can be a comma-separated list of multiple port numbers.  couriertcpd
       will create network connections on any listed port. Each port number can be optionally
       specified as "address.port", for example:

           couriertcpd -pid=/var/run/smtp.pid 127.0.0.1.25,999 program

       This instance accepts network connections to either port 25 or port 999, however
       connections on port 25 are created only on the IP address 127.0.0.1, the loopback
       interface.

       Whenever an IP address is not specified, network connections are accepted to any IP
       address (called "wildcarding"). On IPv6-capable systems, couriertcpd will attempt to
       create two incoming network connection ports, if an IP address is not specified. After
       creating the first port as an IPv6 wildcard port, couriertcpd will then attept to create
       an IPv4 wildcard port, with the same port number. Some BSD-derived systems must use
       separate IPv6 and IPv4 wildcard ports to create incoming network connections. Most other
       systems only need an IPv6 port to create both IPv6 and IPv4 incoming network connections.
       couriertcpd quietly ignores a failure to create an IPv4 wildcard port, as long as an IPv6
       wildcard was succesfully created.

       The -address option can be used to default a specific IP address for every listed port
       number. For example:

           couriertcpd -pid=/var/run/smtp.pid 127.0.0.1.25,127.0.0.1.999 program

       and

           couriertcpd -pid=/var/run/smtp.pid -address=127.0.0.1 25,999 program

       will create network connections on ports 25 and 999 of the IP address 127.0.0.1.

ACCESS FILE

       The access file lists IP addresses that couriertcpd will accept or reject connections
       from. An access file is optional. Without an access file couriertcpd accepts a connection
       from any IP address.

       Both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses can be specified, if IPv6 support is available. A
       non-standard syntax is currently used to specify IPv6 addresses. This is subject to change
       in the near future. IPv6 support is currently considered to be experimental.

       The access file is a binary database file that's usually created by a script, such as
       makesmtpaccess(8)[2], or makeimapaccess(8)[3], from one or more plain text files. Blank
       lines in the text file are ignored. Lines that start with the # character are also
       ignored.

   Rejecting and accepting connections by IP address
       The following line instructs couriertcpd to reject all connections from an IP address
       range:

           netblock<tab>deny

       netblock is an IP address, such as 192.68.0.2.  <tab> is the ASCII tab character. There
       MUST be exactly one tab character after the IP address and the word "deny".

       You can also block connections from an entire network C block:

           192.68.0<tab>deny

       This blocks connections from IP addresses 192.68.0.0 through 192.68.0.255. Blocking
       connections from an entire B or A network block works the same way.

       Use the word "allow" instead of "deny" to explicitly allow connections from that IP
       address or netblock. For example:

           192.68.0<tab>deny
           192.68.0.10<tab>allow

       This blocks all connections from 192.68.0.0 to 192.68.0.255 except for 192.68.0.10. These
       two lines can occur in any order.  couriertcpd always uses the line with the most specific
       IP address.

       If the IP address of the connection is not found in the access file the connection is
       accepted by default. The following line causes unlisted connections to be rejected:

           *<tab>deny

   IPv6 addresses
           Note
           IPv6 support in the access file is experimental, and is subject to change in a future
           release. The following syntax is subject to change at any time.

       The access file can also specify IPv6 addresses, if IPv6 support is available. The
       existing IPv4 address format is used for IPv6-mapped IPv4 addresses, and no changes are
       required. For all other IPv6 addresses use the following format:

           :hhhh:hhhh:hhhh:hhhh:hhhh:hhhh:hhhh:hhhh<tab>action

       The IPv6 address must begin with :. The initial : character is not really a part of the
       IPv6 address, it is only used to designate this record as an IPv6 address, allowing an
       access file to contain a mixture of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. The IPv6 address follows the
       initial : character, and it must be spelled out using zero-padded lowercase hexadecimal
       digits. For example:

           :0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:f643:00a2:9354<tab>deny

       Netblocks must be specified using even-word boundaries only:

           :3ffe<tab>deny

       This will deny entire 3ffe::/16 (6bone network, which is phased out).

           :2002:c0a8<tab>deny

       This will deny 2002:c0a8::/32 (6to4 addresses derived from private address space).

   Setting environment variables
       allow can be optionally followed by a list of environment variable assignments, separated
       by commas. The environment variables are set before executing program or checking access
       lists (see below). For example:

           192.68.0<tab>allow,RELAYCLIENT
           192.68.0.10<tab>allow,RELAYCLIENT,SIZELIMIT=1000000

       This sets RELAYCLIENT environment variable for connections from the 192.68.0 block. In
       addition to that, the SIZELIMIT environment variable is set to 1000000 if the connection
       comes from the IP address 192.68.0.10.

       Note that RELAYCLIENT must be explicitly specified for the IP address 192.68.0.10. The
       first line is NOT used for connections from this IP address.  couriertcpd only reads one
       entry from the access file, the entry for the most specific IP address.

           192.68.0.10<tab>allow,MAXCPERIP=100

       couriertcpd itself implements the MAXCPERIP environment variable setting in the access
       file, as an override to the -maxperip parameter, which specifies the maximum number of
       connections from the same IP address. If specified in the access file for an IP address,
       or an IP address range, the value given by MAXCPERIP overrides it.

   DNS ACCESS LISTS
       An alternative to listing banned IP addresses in access files is to use an external
       DNS-based IP access list.

       couriertcpd's default configuration does not automatically reject connections from banned
       IP address unless the -drop option is present. Instead, couriertcpd sets an environment
       variable if the connecting address has a hit in the DNS access list. The Courier mail
       server rejects all mail if the connection's environment has the environment variable BLOCK
       set to a non-empty string, and it just so happens that -block and -allow set the BLOCK
       environment variable by default.

           -allow=dnswl.example.com -block=dnsbl.example.com

       -allow and -block's parameter gives the DNS zone where the access list query gets
       performed. In this example, couriertcpd makes a DNS query for “d.c.b.a.dnswl.example.com”,
       then, if necessary, for “d.c.b.a.dnsbl.example.com”, for a connection from the IPv4
       address a.b.c.d.

       For IPv6 addresses, the DNS query consists of individual hexadecimal nybbles (in reverse
       order, like the IPv4 query).

       If the DNS query succeeds (more details below), -allow sets the environment variable to an
       empty string, and -block sets the environment variable from the TXT record in the DNS
       response, if one was requested (see below), or to a default message for regular DNS
       queries for A records. It should be possible to use couriertcpd with DNS access lists that
       use either A or TXT records.

       The DNS zone parameter to -allow and -block has up to three additional components, which
       must be given in the following order, if more than one optional component gets specified:

           -allow=dnswl.example.com,BLOCK2

       The environment variable that gets set by the DNS access list query can be changed from
       the default of BLOCK to something else, BLOCK2 in this example. The Courier mail server
       pays attention only to BLOCK, this is for the benefit of local or custom hacks, which want
       to leverage couriertcpd's DNS access list lookup facilities, but want it for other
       purposes.

           -block=dnsbl.example.com/127.0.0.2

       couriertcpd's DNS access list lookup normally ignores the contents of the actual A record
       in the DNS access list, however some DNS access lists may use different A record to
       indicate different kinds of records. Given an explicit IP address to couriertcpd results
       in the environment variable getting set only if the lookup returned the matching A record.
       An A record must exist in the DNS access list, in addition to any TXT record. If an
       explicit IP address is not given, any A or TXT record sets -allow and -block's environment
       variable.

           -block=dnsbl.example.com,BLOCK,Go away

       The last component specifies a custom message that overrides the default rejection
       message. Note that this is a single parameter to couriertcpd, so the parameter must be
       quoted if it contains any spaces or special shell metacharacters. A message that's
       specified as “*” results in a TXT query to the DNS access list instead of the regular A
       query. This is for DNS access lists that provide TXT records, that gets copied into the
       BLOCK variable (or the custom variable). The “*” must also be quoted, since it's also a
       shell metacharacter, and it cannot be used together with an explicit A address query,
       described above.

       The custom message parameter gets specified for the -block, option.  -allow also allows
       takes this parameter, but it has a different meaning. If its set, even if it's an empty
       string, couriertcpd looks for TXT records in the DNS access list that's used as a
       whitelist, in addition to the A records (using the “any” query):

           -allow=dnswl.example.com,BLOCK,

       Without this parameter couriertcpd queries for A records only.

       Finally, a literal IP address, if given, must always follow the variable name:

           -block=dnsbl.example.com,BLOCK/127.0.0.2,Go away

       -block normally searches the DNS access list for either A or TXT records using the “any”
       DNS query. Sometimes this can cause problems, or not work at all, with older DNS servers.
       Specifying a custom message results in -block executing an ordinary A DNS query.  -allow
       always uses an A query.

   MULTIPLE DNS LISTS
       Multiple -block and -allow options can be given. The connecting IP address gets looked up
       in multiple access lists. This is implemented as follows.

       couriertcpd processes all -block and -allow options in list order. If each option's
       environment variable (BLOCK or something else) is already set, couriertcpd skips the DNS
       access list lookup. Therefore, when multiple options use the same environment variable,
       the first DNS access list it exists in will set the environment variable, and the
       remaining ones get ignored, but any remaining -blocks and -allows for different
       environment variables still get processed.

       It follows that, in general, -allow options should always be listed first, before any
       -blocks; but it's also possible to implement a complicated policy with some -allows, then
       some -blocks, then more -allows and -blocks.

   ADDITIONAL DNS ACCESS LIST VARIABLES
       Three additional environment variables may get set in conjunction with a successful DNS
       access list lookup:

       BLOCK_IP

           The contents of the A record in the DNS access list, if one exists (this is not set
           for DNS access lists that use TXT record).

       BLOCK_TXT

           The contents of the TXT record in the DNS access list, if one exists. This will
           generally be the same as BLOCK for -blocks, but will also provide the contents of the
           TXT record for -allows (if it has a dummy custom message portion) which always set
           BLOCK to an empty string.

       BLOCK_ZONE

           The DNS zone of the succesfull access list lookup, like “dnsbl.example.com”.

       -block and -allow options that specify a custom environment variable name follow the same
       naming convention, of appending “_IP”, “_TXT”, and “_ZONE” suffix to the name of the
       custom environment variable.

   USING DNS WHITELISTS WITH SPF
       Including “allowok” keyword in an SPF setting automatically passes the SPF check for
       senders whose IP address is found in an -allow-ed access list. See courier(8)[4].

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       couriertcpd also initializes the following environment variables prior to running program:

       TCPLOCALHOST
           The name of the host on the local end of the network connection, looked up in DNS.
           TCPLOCALHOST will not be set if the IP address of the network connection's local end
           cannot be found in DNS, or if -nodnslookup option is specified.  TCPLOCALHOST will be
           set to the string softdnserr if the DNS lookup fails with a temporary error (so you
           cannot tell if the IP address has a valid host name associated with it), or if the
           reverse and forward DNS lookups do not match.  TCPLOCALHOST will not be set if the
           reverse DNS lookup fails completely.

       TCPLOCALIP
           The IP address of the local end of the network connection.

       TCPLOCALPORT
           Rhe number of the port of the local end of the network connection.

       TCPREMOTEHOST
           The hostname of the connecting host. Like TCPLOCALHOST, but for the connecting IP
           address.

       TCPREMOTEIP
           Connecting IP address.

       TCPREMOTEINFO
           Identification string received from the IDENT server on the remote IP address. Not set
           if the IDENT server returned an error, or if the -noidentlookup option was specified.

       TCPREMOTEPORT
           TCP port of the remote end of the network connection.

SEE ALSO

       courier(8)[4].

AUTHOR

       Sam Varshavchik
           Author

NOTES

        1. Multiple port list
           [set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/#list

        2. makesmtpaccess(8)
           [set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/makesmtpaccess.html

        3. makeimapaccess(8)
           [set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/makeimapaccess.html

        4. courier(8)
           [set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/courier.html