opendkim - DKIM signing and verifying filter for MTAs
opendkim [-A] [-b modes] [-c canon] [-d domain[,...]] [-D]
[-e name] [-f] [-F time] [-k keyfile] [-l] [-L min] [-n] [-o hdrlist] [-p
socketspec] [-P pidfile] [-Q] [-r] [-s selector] [-S signalg] [-t testfiles]
[-T secs] [-u userid[:group]] [-v] [-V] [-W] [-x configfile] [-X]
opendkim implements the DKIM standard for signing
and verifying e-mail messages on a per-domain basis.
opendkim uses the milter interface, originally
distributed as part of version 8.11 of sendmail(8), to provide DKIM
signing and/or verifying service for mail transiting a milter-aware MTA.
Most, if not all, of the command line options listed below can
also be set using a configuration file. See the -x option for
details.
Many of the command line and configuration file parameters will
refer to a "dataset" as their values. This refers to a string that
either contains the list of desirable values, or to a file that contains
them, or (if enabled at compile time) a database containing the data.
Some data sets require that the value contain more than one entry.
How this is done depends on which data set type is used.
Which type is used depends on the format of the specification
string. Note that not all of these are necessarily supported for all
installations; most of them depend on the availability of a particular
third-party library at compile time.
In particular:
- a)
- If the string begins with "file:", then the remainder of the
string is presumed to refer to a flat file that contains elements of the
data set, one per line. If a line contains whitespace-separated values,
then the line is presumed to define a key and its corresponding value.
Blank lines are ignored, and the hash ("#") character denotes
the start of a comment. If a value contains multiple entries, the entries
should be separated by colons.
- b)
- If the string begins with "refile:", then the remainder of the
string is presumed to specify a file that contains a set of patterns, one
per line, and their associated values. The pattern is taken as the start
of the line to the first whitespace, and the portion after that whitespace
is taken as the value to be used when that pattern is matched. Patterns
are simple wildcard patterns, matching all text except that the asterisk
("*") character is considered a wildcard. If a value contains
multiple entries, the entries should be separated by colons.
- c)
- If the string begins with "db:" and the program was compiled
with Sleepycat DB support, then the remainder of the string is presumed to
identify a Sleepycat database containing keys and corresponding values.
These may be used only to test for membership in the data set, or for
storing keys and corresponding values. If a value contains multiple
entries, the entries should be separated by colons.
- d)
- If the string begins with "dsn:" and the OpenDKIM library was
compiled to support that database type, then the remainder of the string
is a Data Store Name describing the type, location parameters and access
credentials for an ODBC or SQL database. The DSN is of the form:
backend://[user[:pwd]@][port+]host/dbase[/key=value[?...]]
where backend is the name of a supported backend
database mechanism (e.g. "mysql"), user and
password are optional login credentials for the database,
port and host describe the destination of a TCP connection
to connect to that database, dbase is the name of the database to
be accessed, and the key=value pairs must specify at least
"table", "keycol" and "datacol" values
specifying the name of the table, the name of the column to consider as
the key, and the name(s) of the column(s) to be considered as the values
(separated by commas). For example (all in one line):
mysql:://dbuser:dbpass@3306+dbhost/odkim/table=macros
?keycol=host?datacol=v1,v2
defines a MySQL database listening at port 3306 on host
"dbhost"; the userid "dbuser" and password
"dbpass" should be used to access the database; the database
name is "odkim", and the data are in columns "host"
(the keys) and "v1" and "v2" (the values) inside
table "macros". This example would thus return two values when
a match is found.
The key may also include a "filter" value which will
be included in all generated SQL as an AND clause after the WHERE clause
that declares the search criteria. For example, given the above DSN
specification with an additional "filter" value of "ID
> 1000", the generated SQL for a query for "foo" would
look like so:
SELECT v1,v2 FROM macros WHERE host = 'foo' AND ID >
1000
No value within the DSN may contain any of the six punctuation
characters (":", "/", "@", "+",
"?" and "=") used to delimit portions of the DSN. To
include such characters within a value, encode them in quoted-printable
style (e.g., "=20" will be translated into a single space
character). Encoding of spaces is also advised.
- e)
- If the string begins with "ldap:", "ldaps:" or
"ldapi:", it is presumed to be a space-separated set of one or
more LDAP URLs that identify a set of servers to be queried. The first one
should be a full RFC4516 LDAP URL indicating a base DN template and
optional scope, filter and attribute names to use in queries. When
constructing a DN template or filter, the special tokens "$d"
and "$D" are replaced with the key being queried and the key
broken into components, separated at "." characters, each
component preceded by "dc=" and followed by "," (so
"example.com" would become "dc=example,dc=com"). If a
data set requires multiple values to be returned, the appropriate
attribute names should be given in the correct order to satisfy such
requests.
- f)
- If the string begins with "lua:", it is presumed to refer to a
file that contains a Lua script to be executed whenever a query is
performed. The key for the query is placed in a global variable called
"query", which the called script can then access. The script may
return any number of values as required for the type of query being
performed.
- g)
- If the string begins with "memcache:", it is presumed to refer
to a memory cache database provided by memcached. The remainder of
the string is a comma-separated list of hosts to which query attempts
should be made, each optionally followed by ":" and a port
number; that list must be followed by a slash ("/") character
and a string that will be used to prefix queries send to the cache. For
example:
memcache:localhost,otherhost/keyname
This would use either "localhost" or
"otherhost" to conduct queries, and all strings sent to the
dataset will be prefixed with "keyname:".
- h)
- If the string contains none of these prefixes but ends with
".db", it is presumed to be a Sleepycat DB as described above
(if support for same is compiled in).
- i)
- If the string contains none of these prefixes but starts with a slash
("/") character, it is presumed to be a flat file as described
above.
- j)
- If the string begins with "csl:", the string is treated as a
comma-separated list as described in m) below.
- k)
- If the string begins with "erlang:", it is presumed to refer to
a function called to be made to the specified distributed Erlang node(s).
The specification is of the form
erlang:node@host[,...]:cookie:module:function
where node[,...] is a list of comma-separated erlang
nodes, cookie is the cookie for the known nodes of the
distributed Erlang setup, module is the name of the Erlang module
where the function to be called resides, function is the name of
the Erlang function to be called. For example, (all in one line):
erlang:mynode@myhost,myothernode@myotherhost:
chocolate:dkim:lookup
will join the distributed Erlang setup connecting to either
"mynode@myhost" or "myothernode@myotherhost"
(connections to nodes are tried in order) using "chocolate" as
the cookie, and use the function "dkim:lookup/1" for
lookups.
- l)
- If the string begins with "mdb:", it refers to a directory that
contains a memory database, as provided by libmdb from OpenLDAP.
- m)
- In any other case, the string is presumed to be a comma-separated list.
Elements in the list are either simple data elements that are part of the
set or, in the case of an entry of the form "x=y", are stored as
key-value pairs as described above.
- -A
- Automatically re-start on failures. Use with caution; if the filter fails
instantly after it starts, this can cause a tight fork(2) loop.
This can be mitigated using some values in the configuration file to limit
restarting. See opendkim.conf(5).
- -b modes
- Selects operating modes. modes is a concatenation of characters
that indicate which mode(s) of operation are desired. Valid modes are
s (signer) and v (verifier). The default is sv except
in test mode (see -t below) in which case the default is
v.
- -c canon
- Selects the canonicalization method(s) to be used when signing messages.
When verifying, the message's DKIM-Signature: header specifies the
canonicalization method. The recognized values are relaxed and
simple as defined by the DKIM specification. The default is
simple. The value may include two different canonicalizations
separated by a slash ("/") character, in which case the first
will be applied to the headers and the second to the body.
- -d dataset
- A set of domains whose mail should be signed by this filter. Mail from
other domains will be verified rather than being signed.
- -D
- Sign subdomains of those listed by the -d option as well as the
actual domains.
- -e name
- Extracts the value of name from the configuration file (if
any).
- -f
- Normally opendkim forks and exits immediately, leaving the service
running in the background. This flag suppresses that behaviour so that it
runs in the foreground.
- -F time
- Specifies a fixed time to use when generating signatures. Ignored unless
also used in conjunction with -t (see below). The time must be
expressed in the usual UNIX time_t (seconds since epoch)
format.
- -k keyfile
- Gives the location of a PEM-formatted private key to be used for signing
all messages. Ignored if a configuration file is referenced that defines a
KeyTable.
- -l
- Log via calls to syslog(3) any interesting activity.
- -L min[%+]
- Instructs the verification code to fail messages for which a partial
signature was received. There are three possible formats: min
indicating at least min bytes of the message must be signed (or if
the message is smaller than min then all of it must be signed);
min% requiring that at least min percent of the received
message must be signed; and min+ meaning there may be no more than
min bytes of unsigned data appended to the message for it to be
considered valid.
- -n
- Parse the configuration file and command line arguments, reporting any
errors found, and then exit. The exit value will be 0 if the filter would
start up without complaint, or non-zero otherwise.
- -o dataset
- Specifies a list of headers that should be omitted when generating
signatures. If an entry in the list names any header which is mandated by
the DKIM specification, the entry is ignored. A set of headers is listed
in the DKIM specification as "SHOULD NOT" be signed; the default
list for this parameter contains those headers (Return-Path, Received,
Comments, Keywords, Bcc, Resent-Bcc and DKIM-Signature). To omit no
headers, simply use the string "-" (or any string that will
match no headers).
- -p socketspec
- Specifies the socket that should be established by the filter to receive
connections from sendmail(8) in order to provide service.
socketspec is in one of two forms: local:path which creates
a UNIX domain socket at the specified path, or
inet:port[@host] or inet6:port[@host] which creates a TCP
socket on the specified port using the requested protocol family.
If the host is not given as either a hostname or an IP address, the
socket will be listening on all interfaces. A literal IP address must be
enclosed in square brackets. If neither socket type is specified,
local is assumed, meaning the parameter is interpreted as a path at
which the socket should be created. This parameter is mandatory either
here or in the configuration file.
- -P pidfile
- Specifies a file into which the filter should write its process ID at
startup.
- -Q
- Query test mode. The filter will read two lines from standard input, one
containing a database description to be opened and one containing a string
of the form "q/n" where "q" is the query to be
performed and "n" is the number of fields to be retrieved.
- -r
- Checks all messages for compliance with RFC5322 header count requirements.
Non-compliant messages are rejected.
- -s selector
- Defines the name of the selector to be used when signing messages. See the
DKIM specification for details.
- -S signalg
- Selects the signing algorithm to use when generating signatures. Use
'opendkim -V' to see the list of supported algorithms. The default is
rsa-sha256 if it is available, otherwise it will be
rsa-sha1.
- -t testfiles
- Evaluates (verifies) one or more RFC5322-formatted message found in
testfiles and exits. The value of testfiles should be a
comma-separated list of one or more filenames, one of which may be
"-" if the message should be read from standard input.
- -T secs
- Sets the DNS timeout in seconds. A value of 0 causes an infinite wait. The
default is 5. Ignored if not using an asynchronous resolver package. See
also the NOTES section below.
- -u userid[:group]
- Attempts to be come the specified userid before starting
operations. The process will be assigned all of the groups and primary
group ID of the named userid unless an alternate group is
specified. See the FILE PERMISSIONS section for more information.
- -v
- Increase verbose output during test mode (see -t above). May be
specified more than once to request increasing amounts of output.
- -V
- Print the version number and supported canonicalization and signature
algorithms, and then exit without doing anything else.
- -W
- If logging is enabled (see -l above), issues very detailed logging
about the logic behind the filter's decision to either sign a message or
verify it. The "W" stands for "Why?!" since the logic
behind the decision is non-trivial and can be confusing to administrators
not familiar with its operation. A description of how the decision is made
can be found in the OPERATION section of this document. This causes a
large increase in the amount of log data generated for each message, so it
should be limited to debugging use and not enabled for general
operation.
- -x configfile
- Read the named configuration file. See the opendkim.conf(5) man
page for details. Values in the configuration file are overridden when
their equivalents are provided on the command line until a configuration
reload occurs. The OPERATION section describes how reloads are triggered.
The default is to read a configuration file from /etc/opendkim.conf
if one exists, or otherwise to apply defaults to all values.
- -X
- Tolerates configuration file items that have been internally marked as
"deprecated". Normally when a configuration file item is removed
from the package, it is flagged in this way for at least one full release
cycle. The presence of a deprecated configuration file item typically
causes the filter to return an error and refuse to start. Setting this
flag will allow the filter to start and a warning is logged. In some
future release when the item is removed completely, a different error
results, and it will not be possible to start the filter. Use of this flag
is NOT RECOMMENDED; it could effectively hide a major configuration change
with serious security implications.
A message will be verified unless it conforms to the signing
criteria, which are: (1) the domain on the From: address (if present) must
be listed by the -d command line switch or the Domain
configuration file setting, and (2) (a) the client connecting to the MTA
must have authenticated, or (b) the client connecting to the MTA must be
listed in the file referenced by the InternalHosts configuration file
setting (or be in the default list for that option), or (c) the client must
be connected to a daemon port named by the MTAs configuration file
setting, or (d) the MTA must have set one or more macros matching the
criteria set by the MacroList configuration file setting.
For (a) above, the test is whether or not the MTA macro
"{auth_type}" is set and contains any non-empty value. This means
the MTA must pass the value of that macro to the filter before or during the
end-of-header (EOH) phase in order for its value to be tested. Check your
MTA's configuration documentation for details.
For (1) above, other header fields may be selected using the
SenderHeaders configuration file setting. See opendkim.conf(5) for
more information.
When signing a message, a DKIM-Signature: header will be
prepended to the message. The signature is computed using the private key
provided. You must be running a version of sendmail(8) recent enough
to be able to do header prepend operations (8.13.0 or later).
When verifying a message, an Authentication-Results: header
will be prepended to indicate the presence of a signature and whether or not
it could be validated against the body of the message using the public key
advertised by the sender's nameserver. The value of this header can be used
by mail user agents to sort or discard messages that were not signed or
could not be verified.
Upon receiving SIGUSR1, if the filter was started with a
configuration file, it will be re-read and the new values used. Note that
any command line overrides provided at startup time will be lost when this
is done. Also, the following configuration file values (and their
corresponding command line items, if any) are not reloaded through this
process: AutoRestart (-A), AutoRestartCount, AutoRestartRate, Background,
MilterDebug, PidFile (-P), POPDBFile, Quarantine (-q), QueryCache, Socket
(-p), StrictTestMode, TestPublicKeys, UMask, UserID (-u). The filter does
not automatically check the configuration file for changes and reload.
opendkim makes use of three MTA-provided macros, plus any
demanded by configuration. The basic three are: "i" (the envelope
ID, also known as the job ID or the queue ID), which is used for logging;
"daemon_name" (the symbolic name given to the MTA instance that
accepted the connection), which is used when performing tests against any
"MTAs" setting used; and "auth_type", which is used to
determine whether or not the SMTP client authenticated to the MTA. If the
MTA does not provide them to opendkim then it is not able to apply
their corresponding tests or do useful logging. Consult your MTA
documentation to determine how to adjust your its configuration if some or
all of these are not available.
When the filter is started as the superuser and the UserID (-u)
setting is used, the filter gives up its root privileges by changing to the
specified user after the following steps are taken: (1) the configuration
file (if any) is loaded; (2) if the KeyFile (-k) setting is used, that key
is loaded into memory; (3) all data sets in the configuration file are
opened, and those that are based on flat files are also read into memory;
and (4) if ChangeRootDirectory is set, the process root is changed to that
directory. This means on configuration reload, the filter will not be
accessing these files or the configuration file as the superuser (and
possibly from a different root), and any key files referenced by the
KeyTable will also be accessed by the new user.
Thus, keys referenced by the KeyTable must always be accessible
for read by the unprivileged user. Also, run-time reloads are not possible
if any of the other files will not be readable by the unprivileged user.
The following environment variable(s) can be used to adjust the
behaviour of this filter:
- DKIM_TMPDIR
- The directory to use when creating temporary files. The default is
/tmp.
When using DNS timeouts (see the -T option above), be sure
not to use a timeout that is larger than the timeout being used for
interaction between sendmail and the filter. Otherwise, the MTA could
abort a message while waiting for a reply from the filter, which in turn is
still waiting for a DNS reply.
The POP authentication database is expected to be a Sleepycat DB
file (formerly known as a Berkeley DB) in hash format with keys containing
the IP address in text form without a terminating NULL. The values of these
records are not checked; only the existence of such records is of interest.
The filter will attempt to establish a shared lock on the database before
reading from it, so any programs which write to the database should keep
their lock use to a minimum or else this filter will appear to hang while
waiting for the lock operation to complete.
Features that involve specification of IPv4 addresses or CIDR
blocks will use the inet_addr(3) function to parse that information.
Users should be familiar with the way that function handles the non-trivial
cases (for example, "192.0.2/24" and "192.0.2.0/24" are
not the same thing).
Filter exit status codes are selected according to
sysexits(3).
DKIM is an amalgam of Yahoo!'s DomainKeys proposal, and
Cisco's Internet Identified Mail (IIM) proposal.
This man page covers version 2.11.0 of opendkim.
Copyright (c) 2005-2008, Sendmail, Inc. and its suppliers. All
rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 2009-2013, 2015, The Trusted Domain Project. All
rights reserved.
opendkim.conf(5), sendmail(8)
Sendmail Operations Guide
RFC5321 - Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
RFC5322 - Internet Messages
RFC5451 - Message Header Field for Indicating Message
Authentication Status
RFC6008 - Authentication-Results Registration for Differentiating
among Cryptographic Results
RFC6376 - DomainKeys Identified Mail