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milter-greylist(8)					    milter-greylist(8)

NAME
       milter-greylist - grey listing filter for sendmail

SYNOPSIS
       milter-greylist	[-A]  [-a autowhite_delay] [-c]	[-D] [-d dumpfile] [-f
       configfile] [-h]	[-l] [-q] [-r]	[-S]  [-T]  [-u	 username[:groupname]]
       [-v]  [-w  greylist_delay] [-L cidrmask]	[-M prefixlen] [-P pidfile] -p
       socket

DESCRIPTION
       milter-greylist is a mail filter	 for  sendmail	that  implements  grey
       listing,	a spam filtering technique proposed by Evan Harris.

       Grey  listing works by assuming that contrarily to legitimate MTA, spam
       engines will not	retry sending their junk mail on  a  temporary	error.
       The  filter will	always temporarily reject mail on a first attempt, and
       accept it after some time has elapsed.

       If spammers ever	try to resend rejected messages, we  can  assume  they
       will  not stay idle between the two sends. Odds are good	that the spam-
       mer will	send a mail to an honey	pot address and	get blacklisted	 in  a
       distributed black list before the second	attempt.

       Of  course,  the	 filter	can be configured to not apply grey listing to
       some hosts or networks. You can whitelist friendly  SMTP	 servers,  and
       you should whitelist your own network, otherwise	your SMTP clients will
       have  real  trouble  to	send  e-mail. Whitelisting localhost is	also a
       must.

       milter-greylist works with two files.  greylist.conf is the  configura-
       tion  file.  It	holds  the whitelist of	addresses that will not	suffer
       grey list filtering.  It	is read	 once  upon  milter-greylist  startup,
       then  it	 will be automatically reloaded	whenever a new message gets in
       and if it had been modified. You	should not send	milter-greylist	a kill
       -1 as it	will just terminate it (libmilter works	that way).

       See greylist.conf(5) for	documentation on the file's format.

       The second file is greylist.db.	milter-greylist	 will  regularly  dump
       its  grey list database into this file, which is	used on	startup	to re-
       store the previous grey list state. If the file does not	 exist	or  is
       unreadable, milter-greylist will	start with an empty grey list.

       The default location for	the grey list database and the socket for com-
       municating with sendmail	is /var/milter-greylist/.  That	directory must
       be owned	and writeable by the user id under which milter-greylist runs.

       The  following  options	are available; if present, they	override their
       equivalents specified in	the configuration file:

       -A     Normally,	milter-greylist	does not greylist  senders  that  suc-
	      ceeded  SMTP  AUTH. This option disables that feature and	causes
	      authentication to	be ignored.  Equivalent	to the	noauth	option
	      in the configuration file.

       -a autowhite_delay
	      Configure	auto-whitelisting. After a tuple (sender IP, sender e-
	      mail,  recipient	e-mail)	has been accepted, other identical tu-
	      ples will	get accepted for autowhite_delay.  The default is  one
	      day.  Use	 zero  to  disable auto-whitelisting.  A suffix	can be
	      added to specify seconds (s), minutes (m), hours (h),  days  (d)
	      or weeks (w). Without any	suffix,	values are treated as seconds.
	      Equivalent to the	autowhite option in the	configuration file.

       -c     Only check the configuration file	and exit. Return value is 0 if
	      the  configuration  is  valid, or	an error code from <sysexit.h>
	      otherwise.

       -D     Do not fork; run in the foreground instead. Without  this	 flag,
	      milter-greylist  will  become a daemon.  Equivalent to the node-
	      tach option in the configuration file.

       -d dumpfile
	      Location	 of   the   dump   file.   Default   is	  /var/milter-
	      greylist/greylist.db.   Equivalent to the	dumpfile option	in the
	      configuration file.

       -f configfile
	      Location of the config file. Default is /etc/mail/greylist.conf.

       -h     Show usage information.

       -L cidrmask
	      Use cidrmask as a	matching mask when checking IPv4 addresses en-
	      tries in the greylist. This is aimed as  a  workaround  to  mail
	      farms that re-emit messages from different IP addresses. With -L
	      24, the matching mask is 255.255.255.0, and all addresses	within
	      the  same	class C	network	are considered the same. Default is -L
	      32, which	corresponds to all addresses considered	different.

       -M prefixlen
	      Use prefixlen as a matching mask when  checking  IPv6  addresses
	      entries  in  the greylist. This is aimed as a workaround to mail
	      farms that re-emit messages from different IP addresses. With -M
	      64, the matching mask  is	 ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff::,	 and  all  ad-
	      dresses  within the same subnet are considered the same. Default
	      is -M 128, which corresponds to all  IPv6	 addresses  considered
	      different.

       -l     Enable debug output in the access-list management	code.

       -P pidfile
	      write  the  daemon's  PID	to pidfile.  Equivalent	to the pidfile
	      option in	the configuration file.

       -p socket
	      Use socket as the	socket used by sendmail(8) to communicate with
	      milter-greylist.

       -q     Quiet mode.  milter-greylist will	not tell SMTP clients how much
	      time they	have to	wait before  the  message  will	 be  accepted.
	      Equivalent to the	quiet option in	the configuration file.

       -r     Display  milter-greylist	version	 and  build  environment, then
	      exit.

       -S     If milter-greylist was built with	SPF support, then  SPF-compli-
	      ant senders bypass greylisting.  This flag causes	messages to be
	      greylisted  regardless of	whether	they are SPF-compliant or not.
	      Equivalent to the	nospf option in	the configuration file.

       -T     Enable test mode.	This alters  the  meaning  of  rcpt  lines  in
	      greylist.conf, so	that only messages sent	to recipient addresses
	      listed  there  are selected for greylisting. This	option and the
	      rcpt lines have been deprecated in favor of ACL, so do  not  use
	      it.

       -u username[:groupname]
	      Drop  root  privileges  and  switch  to username (and optionally
	      groupname) credentials. Make sure	 this  user  (and  group)  has
	      write  access  to	greylist.db.  Equivalent to the	user option in
	      the configuration	file.

       -v     Enable debug output.  milter-greylist will  send	messages  (and
	      debug  output if it is given the -v flag)	to syslogd(8) with fa-
	      cility LOG_MAIL.	Equivalent to the verbose option in  the  con-
	      figuration file.

       -w greylist_delay
	      sets  the	 minimum  delay	between	the first attempt and the time
	      the message can be accepted. Default is 30  minutes.   A	suffix
	      can  be  added  to  specify seconds (s), minutes (m), hours (h),
	      days (d) or weeks	(w). Without any suffix, values	are treated as
	      seconds.	Equivalent to the greylist option in the configuration
	      file.

GREYLIST MX SYNC
       milter-greylist is now able to sync the greylist	between	 multiple  MX.
       In  order  to  enable  this  feature,  you need to list the peer	MXs in
       greylist.conf(5)	like this:

	 peer 192.0.2.17
	 peer 192.0.2.18

       When peers are configured, milter-greylist will listen on the port  de-
       fined for the mxglsync service in /etc/services (defaults to 5252), and
       it  will	 connect to peers at this port.	Each time an entry is added or
       deleted on one MX, it will be propagated	to the others.

       The protocol is quite simple, just telnet to your MX at port 5252,  and
       type  help  to see how it works.	Note that connections will only	be ac-
       cepted from peer	MXs, even localhost will be rejected (and  don't  ever
       add  localhost  as  a peer for MX sync, as you will cause each entry in
       the greylist to be added	twice).

       If an MX	is down, changes to the	greylist will be queued	until it  gets
       back  up	 again.	The queue length is limited (default is	1024 entries),
       and if it overflows, newer entries will be discarded.

AUTHORS
       Emmanuel	Dreyfus	<manu@netbsd.org>

       milter-greylist received	many contributions from	(in  alphabetical  or-
       der):  Adrian Dabrowski,	Aida Shinra, Adam Katz,	Alexander Lobodzinski,
       Alexandre Cherif, Alexey	Popov, Andrew McGill, Attila Bruncsak,	Benoit
       Branciard, Bernhard Schneider, Bob Smith, Constantine A.	Murenin, Chris
       Bennett,	Christian Pelissier, Cyril Guibourg, Dan Hollis, David Binder-
       man,  Denis  Solovyov,  Elrond,	Enrico	Scholz,	Eugene Crosser,	Fabien
       Tassin, Fredrik Pettai, Gary Aitken, Georg  Horn,  Gert	Doering,  Greg
       Troxel,	Guido Kerkewitz, Hajimu	Umemoto, Hideki	ONO, Ivan F. Martinez,
       Jacques Beigbeder, Jean	Benoit,	 Jean-Jacques  Puig,  Jeff  Rife,  Jim
       Klimov,	Jobst  Schmalenbach,  Joe  Pruett,  Joel  Bertrand,  Johann E.
       Klasek, Johann  Klasek,	John  Thiltges,	 John  Wood,  Jorgen  Lundman,
       Kazuyuki	 Yoshida, Klas Heggemann, Kouhei Sutou,	Laurence Moindrot, Lev
       Walkin, Manuel Badzong, Markus Wennrich,	Mart Pirita, Martin Paul, Matt
       Kettler,	Mattheu	 Herrb,	 Matthias  Scheler,  Matthieu  Herrb,  Michael
       Fromme, Moritz Both, Nerijus Baliunas, Ole Hansen, Pavel	Cahyna,	Pascal
       Lalonde,	 Per  Holm,  Petar  Bogdanovic,	Petr Kristof, Piotr Wadas, R P
       Herrold,	Ralf S.	Engelschall, Ranko Zivojnovic, Remy Card, Rick	Adams,
       Rogier  Maas, Romain Kang, Rudy Eschauzier, Stephane Lentz, Steven His-
       cocks, Thomas Scheunemann, Tim Mooney, Vincent Dufresne,	Wolfgang  Sol-
       frank, and Yaroslav Boychuk.

       Thanks  to  Helmut  Messerer  and Thomas	Pfau for their feedback	on the
       first releases of this software.

SEE ALSO
       greylist.conf(5), sendmail(8), syslogd(8).

       Evan Harris's paper:
	      http://projects.puremagic.com/greylisting/

       milter-greylist's web site:
	      http://hcpnet.free.fr/milter-greylist/

				 May 10, 2005		    milter-greylist(8)

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