xref: /freebsd/contrib/sendmail/src/SECURITY (revision d39bd2c1)
1# Copyright (c) 2000-2002 Proofpoint, Inc. and its suppliers.
2#	All rights reserved.
3#
4# By using this file, you agree to the terms and conditions set
5# forth in the LICENSE file which can be found at the top level of
6# the sendmail distribution.
7#
8#	$Id: SECURITY,v 1.52 2013-11-22 20:51:54 ca Exp $
9#
10
11This file gives some hints how to configure and run sendmail for
12people who are very security conscious (you should be...).
13
14Even though sendmail goes through great lengths to assure that it
15can't be compromised even if the system it is running on is
16incorrectly or insecurely configured, it can't work around everything.
17This has been demonstrated by OS problems which have subsequently
18been used to compromise the root account using sendmail as a vector.
19One way to minimize the possibility of such problems is to install
20sendmail without set-user-ID root, which avoids local exploits.
21This configuration, which is the default starting with 8.12, is
22described in the first section of this security guide.
23
24
25*****************************************************
26** sendmail configuration without set-user-ID root **
27*****************************************************
28
29sendmail needs to run as root for several purposes:
30
31- bind to port 25
32- call the local delivery agent (LDA) as root (or other user) if the LDA
33  isn't set-user-ID root (unless some other method of storing e-mail in
34  local mailboxes is used).
35- read .forward files
36- write e-mail submitted via the command line to the queue directory.
37
38Only the last item requires a set-user-ID/set-group-ID program to
39avoid problems with a world-writable directory.  It is however
40sufficient to have a set-group-ID program and a group-writable
41queue directory.  The other requirements listed above can be
42fulfilled by a sendmail daemon that is started by root.  Hence this
43section explains how to use two sendmail configurations to accomplish
44the goal to have a sendmail binary that is not set-user-ID root,
45and hence is not open to system configuration/OS problems or at
46least less problematic in presence of those.
47
48The default configuration starting with sendmail 8.12 uses one
49sendmail binary which acts differently based on operation mode and
50supplied options.
51
52sendmail must be a set-group-ID (default group: smmsp, recommended
53gid: 25) program to allow for queueing mail in a group-writable
54directory.  Two .cf files are required:  sendmail.cf for the daemon
55and submit.cf for the submission program.  The following permissions
56should be used:
57
58-r-xr-sr-x	root   smmsp	... /PATH/TO/sendmail
59drwxrwx---	smmsp  smmsp	... /var/spool/clientmqueue
60drwx------	root   wheel	... /var/spool/mqueue
61-r--r--r--	root   wheel	... /etc/mail/sendmail.cf
62-r--r--r--	root   wheel	... /etc/mail/submit.cf
63
64[Notice: On some OS "wheel" is not used but "bin" or "root" instead,
65however, this is not important here.]
66
67That is, the owner of sendmail is root, the group is smmsp, and
68the binary is set-group-ID.  The client mail queue is owned by
69smmsp with group smmsp and is group writable.  The client mail
70queue directory must be writable by smmsp, but it must not be
71accessible for others. That is, do not use world read or execute
72permissions.  In submit.cf the option UseMSP must be set, and
73QueueFileMode must be set to 0660.  submit.cf is available in
74cf/cf/, which has been built from cf/cf/submit.mc.  The file can
75be used as-is, if you want to add more options, use cf/cf/submit.mc
76as starting point and read cf/README:  MESSAGE SUBMISSION PROGRAM
77carefully.
78
79The .cf file is chosen based on the operation mode.  For -bm (default),
80-bs, and -t it is submit.cf (if it exists) for all others it is
81sendmail.cf.  This selection can be changed by -Ac or -Am (alternative
82.cf file: client or mta).
83
84The daemon must be started by root as usual, e.g.,
85
86/PATH/TO/sendmail -L sm-mta -bd -q1h
87
88(replace /PATH/TO with the right path for your OS, e.g.,
89/usr/sbin or /usr/lib).
90
91Notice: if you run sendmail from inetd (which in general is not a
92good idea), you must specify -Am in addition to -bs.
93
94Mail will end up in the client queue if the daemon doesn't accept
95connections or if an address is temporarily not resolvable.  The
96latter problem can be minimized by using
97
98	FEATURE(`nocanonify', `canonify_hosts')
99	define(`confDIRECT_SUBMISSION_MODIFIERS', `C')
100
101which, however, may have undesired side effects.  See cf/README for
102a discussion.  In general it is necessary to clean the queue either
103via a cronjob or by running a daemon, e.g.,
104
105/PATH/TO/sendmail -L sm-msp-queue -Ac -q30m
106
107If the option UseMSP is not set, sendmail will complain during
108queue runs about bogus file permission.  If you want a queue runner
109for the client queue, you probably have to change OS specific
110scripts to accomplish this (check the man pages of your OS for more
111information.)  You can start this program as root, it will change
112its user id to RunAsUser (smmsp by default, recommended uid: 25).
113This way smmsp does not need a valid shell.
114
115
116Summary
117-------
118
119This is a brief summary how the two configuration files are used:
120
121sendmail.cf	For the MTA (mail transmission agent)
122	The MTA is started by root as daemon:
123
124		/PATH/TO/sendmail -L sm-mta -bd -q1h
125
126	it accepts SMTP connections (on ports 25 and 587 by default);
127	it runs the main queue (/var/spool/mqueue by default).
128
129submit.cf	For the MSP (mail submission program)
130	The MSP is used to submit e-mails, hence it is invoked
131	by programs (and maybe users); it does not run as SMTP
132	daemon; it uses /var/spool/clientmqueue by default; it
133	can be started to run that queue periodically:
134
135		/PATH/TO/sendmail -L sm-msp-queue -Ac -q30m
136
137
138Hints and Troubleshooting
139-------------------------
140
141RunAsUser: FEATURE(`msp') sets the option RunAsUser to smmsp.
142This user must have the group smmsp, i.e., the same group as the
143clientmqueue directory.  If you specify a user whose primary group
144is not the same as that of the clientmqueue directory, then you
145should explicitly set the group, e.g.,
146
147	FEATURE(`msp')
148	define(`confRUN_AS_USER', `mailmsp:smmsp')
149
150STARTTLS: If sendmail is compiled with STARTTLS support on a platform
151that does not have HASURANDOMDEV defined, you either need to specify
152the RandFile option (as for the MTA), or you have to turn off
153STARTTLS in the MSP, e.g.,
154
155	DAEMON_OPTIONS(`Name=NoMTA, Addr=127.0.0.1, M=S')
156	FEATURE(`msp')
157	CLIENT_OPTIONS(`Family=inet, Address=0.0.0.0, M=S')
158
159The first option is used to turn off STARTTLS when the MSP is
160invoked with -bs as some MUAs do.
161
162
163What doesn't work anymore
164-------------------------
165
166Normal users can't use mailq anymore to see the MTA mail queue.
167There are several ways around it, e.g., changing QueueFileMode
168or giving users access via a program like sudo.
169
170sendmail -bv may give misleading output for normal users since it
171may not be able to access certain files, e.g., .forward files of
172other users.
173
174
175Alternative
176-----------
177
178Instead of having one set-group-ID binary, it is possible to use
179two with different permissions: one for message submission
180(set-group-ID), one acting as daemon etc, which is only executable
181by root.  In that case it is possible to remove features from
182the message submission program to have a smaller binary.
183You can use
184
185	sh ./Build install-sm-mta
186
187to install a sendmail program to act as daemon etc under the name
188sm-mta.
189
190
191Set-User-Id
192-----------
193
194If you really have to install sendmail set-user-ID root, first build
195the sendmail package normally using
196
197	sh ./Build
198
199Then you can use
200
201	sh ./Build install-set-user-id
202
203to install the package in the old (pre-8.12) way.  Make sure that
204no submit.cf file is installed.  See devtools/README about
205confSETUSERID_INSTALL which you need to define.
206