Provided by: opensmtpd_7.5.0p0-1_amd64 bug

NAME

     smtpd.conf — SMTP daemon configuration file

DESCRIPTION

     smtpd.conf is the configuration file for the mail daemon smtpd(8).

     When mail arrives, each “RCPT TO:” command generates a mail envelope.  If an envelope matches any of a pre-
     designated set of criteria (using the match directive), the message is accepted for delivery.  A copy of
     the message, as well as its associated envelopes, is saved in the mail queue and later dispatched according
     to an associated set of actions (using the action directive).  If an envelope does not match any options,
     it is rejected.  The match rules are evaluated sequentially, with the first match winning.

     The format of the configuration file is fairly flexible.  The current line can be extended over multiple
     lines using a backslash (‘\’).  Comments can be put anywhere in the file using a hash mark (‘#’), and
     extend to the end of the current line.  Care should be taken when commenting out multi-line text: the
     comment is effective until the end of the entire block.  Argument names not beginning with a letter, digit,
     or underscore, as well as reserved words (such as listen, match, and port), must be quoted.  Arguments
     containing whitespace should be surrounded by double quotes (").

     Macros can be defined that are later expanded in context.  Macro names must start with a letter, digit, or
     underscore, and may contain any of those characters, but may not be reserved words.  Macros are not
     expanded inside quotes.  For example:

           lan_addr = "192.168.0.1"
           listen on $lan_addr
           listen on $lan_addr tls auth

     The syntax of smtpd.conf is described below.

     action name method [options]
             When the queue runner processes an envelope from the mail queue, it carries out the action name,
             selected by the match ... action directive when the message was received.  The action directive
             provides configuration data for delivery attempts.  Required lookups are performed at the time of
             each delivery attempt.  Consequently, changing an action directive or the files it references and
             restarting the smtpd(8) daemon causes the changes to take effect for subsequent delivery attempts
             for the respective dispatcher name, even for messages that were already stuck in the queue prior to
             the configuration changes.

             The delivery method parameter may be one of the following:

             expand-only
                     Only accept the message if a delivery method was specified in an aliases or .forward file.

             forward-only
                     Only accept the message if the recipient results in a remote address after the processing
                     of aliases or forward file.

             lmtp destination [rcpt-to]
                     Deliver the message to an LMTP server at destination.  The location may be expressed as
                     host:port or as a UNIX socket.

                     Optionally, rcpt-to might be specified to use the recipient email address (after expansion)
                     instead of the local user in the LMTP session as RCPT TO.

             maildir [pathname] [junk]
                     Deliver the message to the maildir in pathname if specified, or by default to ~/Maildir.

                     The pathname may contain format specifiers that are expanded before use (see FORMAT
                     SPECIFIERS).

                     If the junk argument is provided, the message will be moved to the ‘Junk’ folder if it
                     contains a positive ‘X-Spam’ header.  This folder will be created under pathname if it does
                     not yet exist.

             mbox    Deliver the message to the user's mbox with mail.local(8).

             mda command
                     Delegate the delivery to a command that receives the message on its standard input.

                     The command may contain format specifiers that are expanded before use (see FORMAT
                     SPECIFIERS).

             relay   Relay the message to another SMTP server.

             The local delivery methods support additional options:

             alias <table>
                     Use the mapping table for aliases(5) expansion.

             ttl n{s|m|h|d}
                     Specify how long a message may remain in the queue.

             user username
                     Specify the username for performing the delivery, to be looked up with getpwnam(3).

                     This is used for virtual hosting where a single username is in charge of handling delivery
                     for all virtual users.

                     This option is not usable with the mbox delivery method.

                     Only the delivery user's .forward file will be processed.

             userbase <table>
                     Use the mapping table for user lookups instead of the getpwnam(3) function.

                     The userbase does not apply to the user option.

             virtual <table>
                     Use the mapping table for virtual expansion.  The aliasing table format is described in
                     table(5).

             wrapper name
                     Use the wrapper specified in mda wrapper.

             The relay delivery methods also support additional options:

             backup  Operate as a backup mail exchanger delivering messages to any mail exchanger with higher
                     priority.

             backup mx name
                     Operate as a backup mail exchanger delivering messages to any mail exchanger with higher
                     priority than mail exchanger identified as name.

             helo heloname
                     Advertise heloname as the hostname to other mail exchangers during the HELO phase.

             helo-src <table>
                     Use the mapping table to look up a hostname matching the source address, to advertise
                     during the HELO phase.

             domain <domains>
                     Do not perform MX lookups but look up destination domain in domains and use matching relay
                     url as relay host.

             host relay-url
                     Do not perform MX lookups but relay messages to the relay host described by relay-url.  The
                     format for relay-url is [proto://[label@]]host[:port].  The following protocols are
                     available:

                     smtp        Normal SMTP session with opportunistic STARTTLS (the default).
                     smtp+tls    Normal SMTP session with mandatory STARTTLS.
                     smtp+notls  Plain text SMTP session without TLS.
                     lmtp        LMTP session.  port is required.
                     smtps       SMTP session with forced TLS on connection.  The default port is 465.

                     Unless noted, port defaults to 25.

                     The label corresponds to an entry in a credentials table, as documented in table(5).  It is
                     used with the “smtp+tls” and “smtps” protocols for authentication.  Server certificates for
                     those protocols are verified by default.

             pki pkiname
                     For secure connections, use the certificate associated with pkiname (declared in a pki
                     directive) to prove the client's identity to the remote mail server.

             srs     When relaying a mail resulting from a forward, use the Sender Rewriting Scheme to rewrite
                     sender address.

             tls [no-verify]
                     Require TLS to be used when relaying, using mandatory STARTTLS by default.  When used with
                     a smarthost, the protocol must not be “smtp+notls://”.  If no-verify is specified, do not
                     require a valid certificate.

             protocols protostr
                     Define the protocol versions to be used for TLS sessions.  Refer to the
                     tls_config_parse_protocols(3) manpage for the format of protostr.

             ciphers cipherstr
                     Define the list of ciphers that may be used for TLS sessions.  Refer to the
                     tls_config_set_ciphers(3) manpage for the format of cipherstr.

             auth <table>
                     Use the mapping table for connecting to relay-url using credentials.  This option is usable
                     only with host option.  The credential table format is described in table(5).

             mail-from mailaddr
                     Use mailaddr as the MAIL FROM address within the SMTP transaction.

             src sourceaddr | <sourceaddr>
                     Use the string or list table sourceaddr for the source IP address, which is useful on
                     machines with multiple interfaces.  If the list contains more than one address, all of them
                     are used in such a way that traffic is routed as efficiently as possible.

     admd authservid
             The Administrative Management Domain this mail server belongs to.  The authservid will be forwarded
             to filters using it to identify or mark authentication-results headers.  If omitted, it defaults to
             the server name.

     bounce warn-interval delay [, delay ...]
             Send warning messages to the envelope sender when temporary delivery failures cause a message to
             remain in the queue for longer than delay.  Each delay parameter consists of a positive decimal
             integer and a unit s, m, h, or d.  At most four delay parameters can be specified.  The default is
             "bounce warn-interval 4h", sending a single warning after four hours.

     ca caname cert cafile
             Associate the Certificate Authority (CA) certificate file cafile with ca entry caname.  The ca
             entry can be referenced in listener rules and relay actions.

     filter chain-name chain {filter-name [, ...]}
             Register a chain of filters chain-name, consisting of the filters listed in filter-name.  Filters
             in a filter chain are executed in order of declaration for each phase that they are registered for.
             A filter chain may be used in place of a filter for any directive except filter chains themselves.

     filter filter-name phase phase-name match conditions decision
             Register a filter filter-name.  A decision about what to do with the mail is taken at phase
             phase-name when matching conditions.  Phases, matching conditions, and decisions are described in
             MAIL FILTERING, below.

     filter filter-name proc proc-name
             Register "proc" filter filter-name backed by the proc-name process.

     filter filter-name proc-exec command
             Register and execute "proc" filter filter-name from command, conformant with the smtpd-filters(7)
             API.  If command starts with a slash it is executed with an absolute path, otherwise it will be run
             from “/usr/libexec/opensmtpd”.

     include "pathname"
             Replace this directive with the content of the additional configuration file at the absolute
             pathname.

     listen on interface [family] [options]
             Listen on the interface for incoming connections, using the same syntax as ifconfig(8).  The
             interface parameter may also be an interface group, an IP address, or a domain name.  Listening can
             optionally be restricted to a specific address family, which can be either inet4 or inet6.

             The options are as follows:

             auth [<authtable>]
                     Support SMTPAUTH: clients may only start SMTP transactions after successful authentication.
                     Users are authenticated against either their own normal login credentials or a credentials
                     table authtable, the format of which is described in table(5).

             auth-optional [<authtable>]
                     Support SMTPAUTH optionally: clients need not authenticate, but may do so.  This allows a
                     listen on directive to both accept incoming mail from untrusted senders and permit outgoing
                     mail from authenticated users (using match auth).  It can be used in situations where it is
                     not possible to listen on a separate port (usually the submission port, 587) for users to
                     authenticate.

             ca caname
                     For secure connections, use the CA certificate associated with caname (declared in a ca
                     directive) as the CA certificate when verifying client certificates.

             filter name
                     Apply filter name on connections handled by this listener.

             hostname hostname
                     Use hostname in the greeting banner instead of the default server name.

             hostnames <names>
                     Override the server name for specific addresses.  The names table contains a mapping of IP
                     addresses to hostnames.  If the address on which the connection arrives appears in the
                     mapping, the associated hostname is used.

             mask-src
                     Omit the from part when prepending “Received” headers.

             no-dsn  Disable the DSN (Delivery Status Notification) extension.

             pki pkiname
                     For secure connections, use the certificate associated with pkiname (declared in a pki
                     directive) to prove a mail server's identity.  This option can be used multiple times to
                     provide alternate certificates for SNI.

             port [port]
                     Listen on the given port instead of the default port 25.

             proxy-v2
                     Support the PROXYv2 protocol, appropriately rewriting the source address received from
                     proxy.

             received-auth
                     In “Received” headers, report whether the session was authenticated and by which local
                     user.

             senders <users> [masquerade]
                     Look up the authenticated user in the users mapping table to find the email addresses that
                     user is allowed to submit mail as.  In addition, if the masquerade option is provided, the
                     From header is rewritten to match the sender provided in the SMTP session.

             smtps   Support SMTPS, by default on port 465.  Mutually exclusive with tls.

             tag tag
                     Clients connecting to the listener are tagged with the given tag.

             tls     Support STARTTLS, by default on port 25.  Mutually exclusive with smtps.

             tls-require [verify]
                     Like tls, but force clients to establish a secure connection before being allowed to start
                     an SMTP transaction.  With the verify option, clients must also provide a valid certificate
                     to establish an SMTP session.

             protocols protostr
                     Define the protocol versions to be used for TLS sessions.  Refer to the
                     tls_config_parse_protocols(3) manpage for the format of protostr.

             ciphers cipherstr
                     Define the list of ciphers that may be used for TLS sessions.  Refer to the
                     tls_config_set_ciphers(3) manpage for the format of cipherstr.

     listen on socket [options]
             Listen for incoming SMTP connections on the Unix domain socket /var/run/smtpd.sock.  This is done
             by default, even if the directive is absent.

             The options are as follows:

             filter name
                     Apply filter name on connections handled by this listener.

             mask-src
                     Omit the from part when prepending “Received” headers.

             no-dsn  Disable the DSN (Delivery Status Notification) extension.

             tag tag
                     Clients connecting to the listener are tagged with the given tag.

     match options action name
             If at least one mail envelope matches the options of one match action directive, receive the
             incoming message, put a copy into each matching envelope, and atomically save the envelopes to the
             mail spool for later processing by the respective dispatcher name.

             The following matching options are supported and can all be negated:

             [!] for any
                     Specify that session may address any destination.

             [!] for local
                     Specify that session may address any local domain.  This is the default, and may be
                     omitted.

             [!] for domain domain | <domain>
                     Specify that session may address the string or list table domain.

             [!] for domain regex domain | <domain>
                     Specify that session may address the regex or regex table domain.

             [!] for rcpt-to recipient | <recipient>
                     Specify that session may address the string or list table recipient.

             [!] for rcpt-to regex recipient | <recipient>
                     Specify that session may address the regex or regex table recipient.

             [!] from any
                     Specify that session may originate from any source.

             [!] from auth
                     Specify that session may originate from any authenticated user, no matter the source IP
                     address.

             [!] from auth user | <user>
                     Specify that session may originate from authenticated user or user list user, no matter the
                     source IP address.

             [!] from auth regex user | <user>
                     Specify that session may originate from authenticated regex or regex list user, no matter
                     the source IP address.

             [!] from local
                     Specify that session may only originate from a local IP address, or from the local
                     enqueuer.  This is the default, and may be omitted.

             [!] from mail-from sender | <sender>
                     Specify that session may originate from sender or sender list sender, no matter the source
                     IP address.

             [!] from mail-from regex sender | <sender>
                     Specify that session may originate from regex or regex list sender, no matter the source IP
                     address.

             [!] from rdns
                     Specify that session may only originate from an IP address that resolves to a reverse DNS.

             [!] from rdns hostname | <hostname>
                     Specify that session may only originate from an IP address that resolves to a reverse DNS
                     matching string or list string hostname.

             [!] from rdns regex hostname | <hostname>
                     Specify that session may only originate from an IP address that resolves to a reverse DNS
                     matching regex or list regex hostname.

             [!] from socket
                     Specify that session may only originate from the local enqueuer.

             [!] from src address | <address>
                     Specify that session may only originate from string or list table address which can be a
                     specific address or a subnet expressed in CIDR-notation.

             [!] from src regex address | <address>
                     Specify that session may only originate from regex or regex table address which can be a
                     specific address or a subnet expressed in CIDR-notation.

             In addition, the following transaction options may be matched:

             [!] auth
                     Matches transactions which have been authenticated.

             [!] auth username | <username>
                     Matches transactions which have been authenticated for user or user list username.

             [!] auth regex username | <username>
                     Matches transactions which have been authenticated for regex or regex list username.

             [!] helo helo-name | <helo-name>
                     Specify that session's HELO / EHLO should match the string or list table helo-name.

             [!] helo regex helo-name | <helo-name>
                     Specify that session's HELO / EHLO should match the regex or regex table helo-name.

             [!] mail-from sender | <sender>
                     Specify that transaction's MAIL FROM should match the string or list table sender.

             [!] mail-from regex sender | <sender>
                     Specify that transaction's MAIL FROM should match the regex or regex table sender.

             [!] rcpt-to recipient | <recipient>
                     Specify that transaction's RCPT TO should match the string or list table recipient.

             [!] rcpt-to regex recipient | <recipient>
                     Specify that transaction's RCPT TO should match the regex or regex table recipient.

             [!] tag tag
                     Matches transactions tagged with the given tag.

             [!] tag regex tag
                     Matches transactions tagged with the given tag regex.

             [!] tls
                     Specify that transaction should take place in a TLS channel.

     match options reject
             Reject the incoming message during the SMTP dialogue.  The same options are supported as for the
             match action directive.

     mda wrapper name command
             Associate command with the mail delivery agent wrapper named name.  When a local delivery specifies
             a wrapper, the command associated with the wrapper will be executed instead.  The command may
             contain format specifiers (see FORMAT SPECIFIERS).

     mta max-deferred number
             When delivery to a given host is suspended due to temporary failures, cache at most number
             envelopes for that host such that they can be delivered as soon as another delivery succeeds to
             that host.  The default is 100.

     pki pkiname cert certfile
             Associate certificate file certfile with pki entry pkiname.  The pki entry defines a keypair
             configuration that can be referenced in listener rules and relay actions.

             A certificate chain may be created by appending one or many certificates, including a Certificate
             Authority certificate, to certfile.  The creation of certificates is documented in starttls(8).

     pki pkiname key keyfile
             Associate the key located in keyfile with pki entry pkiname.

     pki pkiname dhe params
             Specify the DHE parameters to use for DHE cipher suites with pki entry pkiname.  Valid parameter
             values are none, legacy, and auto.  For legacy, a fixed key length of 1024 bits is used, whereas
             for auto, the key length is determined automatically.  The default is none, which disables DHE
             cipher suites.

     proc proc-name command
             Register an external process named proc-name from command, conformant with the smtpd-filters(7)
             API.  Such processes may be used to share the same instance between multiple filters.  If command
             starts with a slash it is executed with an absolute path, otherwise it will be run from
             “/usr/libexec/opensmtpd”.

     queue compression
             Store queue files in a compressed format.  This may be useful to save disk space.

     queue encryption [key]
             Encrypt queue files with EVP_aes_256_gcm(3).  If no key is specified, it is read with getpass(3).
             If the string stdin or a single dash (‘-’) is given instead of a key, the key is read from the
             standard input.

     queue ttl delay
             Set the default expiration time for temporarily undeliverable messages, given as a positive decimal
             integer followed by a unit s, m, h, or d.  The default is four days (4d).

     smtp ciphers control
             Set the control string for SSL_CTX_set_cipher_list(3).  The default is "HIGH:!aNULL:!MD5".

     smtp limit max-mails count
             Limit the number of messages to count for each session.  The default is 100.

     smtp limit max-rcpt count
             Limit the number of recipients to count for each transaction.  The default is 1000.

     smtp max-message-size size
             Reject messages larger than size, given as a positive number of bytes or as a string to be parsed
             with scan_scaled(3).  The default is "35M".

     smtp sub-addr-delim character
             When resolving the local part of a local email address, ignore the ASCII character and all
             characters following it.  The default is ‘+’.

     srs key secret
             Set the secret key to use for SRS, the Sender Rewriting Scheme.

     srs key backup secret
             Set a backup secret key to use as a fallback for SRS.  This can be used to implement SRS key
             rotation.

     srs ttl delay
             Set the time-to-live delay for SRS envelopes.  After this delay, a bounce reply to the SRS address
             will be discarded to limit risks of forged addresses.  The default is four days (4d).

     table name [type:]pathname
             Tables provide additional configuration information for smtpd(8) in the form of lists or key-value
             mappings.  The format of the entries depends on what the table is used for.  Refer to table(5) for
             the exhaustive documentation.

             Each table is identified by an arbitrary, unique name.

             If the type is db, information is stored in a file created with makemap(8); if it is file or
             omitted, information is stored in a plain text file using the format described in table(5).  The
             pathname to the file must be absolute.

     table name {value [, ...]}
             Instead of using a separate file, declare a list table containing the given static values.  The
             table must contain at least one value and may declare multiple values as a comma-separated
             (whitespace optional) list.

     table name {key=value [, ...]}
             Instead of using a separate file, declare a mapping table containing the given static key-value
             pairs.  The table must contain at least one key-value pair and may declare multiple pairs as a
             comma-separated (whitespace optional) list.

   MAIL FILTERING
     In a regular workflow, smtpd(8) may accept or reject a message based only on the content of envelopes.  Its
     decisions are about the handling of the message, not about the handling of an active session.

     Filtering extends the decision making process by allowing smtpd(8) to stop at each phase of an SMTP
     session, check that conditions are met, then decide if a session is allowed to move forward.

     With filtering, a session may be interrupted at any phase before an envelope is complete.  A message may
     also be rejected after being submitted, regardless of whether the envelope was accepted or not.

     The following phases are currently supported:

           connect      upon connection, before a banner is displayed
           helo         after HELO command is submitted
           ehlo         after EHLO command is submitted
           mail-from    after MAIL FROM command is submitted
           rcpt-to      after RCPT TO command is submitted
           data         after DATA command is submitted
           commit       after message is fully is submitted

     At each phase, various conditions may be matched.  The fcrdns, rdns, and src data are available in all
     phases, but other data must have been already submitted before they are available.

           fcrdns                   forward-confirmed reverse DNS is valid
           rdns                     session has a reverse DNS
           rdns <table>             session has a reverse DNS in table
           src <table>              source address is in table
           helo <table>             helo name is in table
           auth                     session is authenticated
           auth <table>             session username is in table
           mail-from <table>        sender address is in table
           rcpt-to <table>          recipient address is in table

     These conditions may all be negated by prefixing them with an exclamation mark:

           !fcrdns                  forward-confirmed reverse DNS is invalid

     Any conditions using a table may indicate that the table contains regular expressions by prefixing the
     table name with the keyword regex.

           helo regex <table>       helo name matches a regex in table

     Finally, a number of decisions may be taken:

           bypass                   the session or transaction bypasses filters
           disconnect message       the session is disconnected with message
           junk                     the session or transaction is junked, i.e., an ‘X-Spam: yes’ header is added
                                    to any messages
           reject message           the command is rejected with message
           rewrite value            the command parameter is rewritten with value

     Decisions that involve a message require that the message be RFC valid, meaning that they should either
     start with a 4xx or 5xx status code.  Decisions can be taken at any phase, though junking can only happen
     before a message is committed.

   FORMAT SPECIFIERS
     Some configuration directives support expansion of their parameters at runtime.  Such directives (for
     example action maildir, action mda) may use format specifiers which are expanded before delivery or
     relaying.  The following formats are currently supported:

           %{sender}            sender email address, may be empty string
           %{sender.user}       user part of the sender email address, may be empty
           %{sender.domain}     domain part of the sender email address, may be empty
           %{rcpt}              recipient email address
           %{rcpt.user}         user part of the recipient email address
           %{rcpt.domain}       domain part of the recipient email address
           %{dest}              recipient email address after expansion
           %{dest.user}         user part after expansion
           %{dest.domain}       domain part after expansion
           %{user.username}     local user
           %{user.directory}    home directory of the local user
           %{mbox.from}         name used in mbox From separator lines
           %{mda}               mda command, only available for mda wrappers

     Expansion formats also support partial expansion using the optional bracket notations with substring
     offset.  For example, with recipient domain “example.org”:

           %{rcpt.domain[0]}       expands to “e”
           %{rcpt.domain[1]}       expands to “x”
           %{rcpt.domain[8:]}      expands to “org”
           %{rcpt.domain[-3:]}     expands to “org”
           %{rcpt.domain[0:6]}     expands to “example”
           %{rcpt.domain[0:-4]}    expands to “example”

     In addition, modifiers may be applied to the token.  For example, with recipient “User+Tag@Example.org”:

           %{rcpt:lowercase}          expands to “user+tag@example.org”
           %{rcpt:uppercase}          expands to “USER+TAG@EXAMPLE.ORG”
           %{rcpt:strip}              expands to “User@Example.org”
           %{rcpt:lowercase|strip}    expands to “user@example.org”

     For security concerns, expanded values are sanitized and potentially dangerous characters are replaced with
     ‘:’.  In situations where they are desirable, the “raw” modifier may be applied.  For example, with
     recipient “user+t?g@example.org”:

           %{rcpt}        expands to “user+t:g@example.org”
           %{rcpt:raw}    expands to “user+t?g@example.org

FILES

     /etc/smtpd.conf     Default smtpd(8) configuration file.
     /etc/mailname       If this file exists, the first line is used as the server name.  Otherwise, the server
                         name is derived from the local hostname returned by gethostname(3), either directly if
                         it is a fully qualified domain name, or by retrieving the associated canonical name
                         through getaddrinfo(3).
     /var/run/smtpd.sock
                         Unix domain socket for incoming SMTP connections.
     /var/spool/smtpd/   Spool directories for mail during processing.

EXAMPLES

     The default smtpd.conf file which ships with OpenBSD listens on the loopback network interface (lo0) and
     allows for mail from users and daemons on the local machine, as well as permitting email to remote servers.
     Some more complex configurations are given below.

     This first example is similar to the default configuration, but all outgoing mail is forwarded to a remote
     SMTP server.  A secrets file is needed to specify a username and password:

           # touch /etc/secrets
           # chmod 640 /etc/secrets
           # chown root:_smtpd /etc/secrets
           # echo "bob username:password" > /etc/secrets

     smtpd.conf would look like this:

           table aliases file:/etc/aliases
           table secrets file:/etc/secrets

           listen on lo0

           action "local_mail" mbox alias <aliases>
           action "outbound" relay host smtp+tls://bob@smtp.example.com \
                   auth <secrets>

           match from local for local action "local_mail"
           match from local for any action "outbound"

     In this second example, the aim is to permit mail delivery and relaying only for users that can
     authenticate (using their normal login credentials).  An RSA certificate must be provided to prove the
     server's identity.  The mail server listens on all interfaces the default routes point to.  Mail with a
     local destination is sent to an external MDA.  First, the RSA certificate is created:

           # openssl genrsa -out /etc/ssl/private/mail.example.com.key 4096
           # openssl req -new -x509 -key /etc/ssl/private/mail.example.com.key \
                   -out /etc/ssl/mail.example.com.crt -days 365
           # chmod 600 /etc/ssl/mail.example.com.crt
           # chmod 600 /etc/ssl/private/mail.example.com.key

     In the example above, a certificate valid for one year was created.  The configuration file would look like
     this:

           pki mail.example.com cert "/etc/ssl/mail.example.com.crt"
           pki mail.example.com key "/etc/ssl/private/mail.example.com.key"

           table aliases file:/etc/aliases

           listen on lo0
           listen on egress tls pki mail.example.com auth

           action mda_with_aliases mda "/path/to/mda -f -" alias <aliases>
           action mda_without_aliases mda "/path/to/mda -f -"
           action "outbound" relay

           match for local action mda_with_aliases
           match from any for domain example.com action mda_without_aliases
           match for any action "outbound"
           match auth from any for any action "outbound"

     For sites that wish to sign messages using DKIM, the following example uses opensmtpd-filter-dkimsign for
     DKIM signing:

           table aliases file:/etc/aliases

           filter "dkimsign" proc-exec "filter-dkimsign -d <domain> -s <selector> \
                   -k /etc/dkim/private.key" user _dkimsign group _dkimsign

           listen on socket filter "dkimsign"
           listen on lo0 filter "dkimsign"

           action "local_mail" mbox alias <aliases>
           action "outbound" relay

           match for local action "local_mail"
           match for any action "outbound"

     Alternatively, the opensmtpd-filter-rspamd package may be used to provide integration with rspamd, a third-
     party daemon which provides multiple antispam features as well as DKIM signing.  As well as configuring
     rspamd itself, it requires use of the proc-exec keyword:

           filter "rspamd" proc-exec "filter-rspamd"

     Sites that accept non-local messages may be able to cut down on the volume of spam received by rejecting
     forged messages that claim to be from the local domain.  The following example uses a list table
     other-relays to specify the IP addresses of relays that may legitimately originate mail with the owner's
     domain as the sender.

           table aliases file:/etc/aliases
           table other-relays file:/etc/other-relays

           listen on lo0
           listen on egress

           action "local_mail" mbox alias <aliases>
           action "outbound" relay

           match for local action "local_mail"
           match for any action "outbound"
           match !from src <other-relays> mail-from "@example.com" for any \
                 reject
           match from any for domain example.com action "local_mail"

SEE ALSO

     mailer.conf(5), table(5), smtpd-filters(7), makemap(8), smtpd(8)

HISTORY

     smtpd(8) first appeared in OpenBSD 4.6.