Postfwd is written in perl to combine complex postfix restrictions in a ruleset similar to those of the most firewalls. The program uses the postfix policy delegation protocol to control access to the mail system before a message has been accepted (please visit http://www.postfix.org/SMTPD_POLICY_README.html for more information). It allows you to choose an action (e.g. reject, dunno) for a combination of several smtp parameters (like sender and recipient address, size or the client's TLS fingerprint).
Important: Documentation, Quickstart guide and Examples are located at official postfwd web page postfwd.org.
If you are interested in postfwd, please subscribe to mailing list.
Popular Linux distributions like Debian and Ubuntu have postfwd 1.35 included in their package repository, so only thing you need to do is run apt-get install postfwd.
After that you can run or stop postfwd using systemd, init or script /etc/init.d/postfwd.
To change default arguments with which postfwd is run, edit file /etc/default/postfwd.
Clone this repository and copy postfwd2 from directory ./sbin to your PATH environment (eg. /usr/sbin/).
There are several perl module dependencies needed to run postfwd. These are mentioned at postfwd home page. For postfwd2 it is:
- Net::Server::Daemonize
- Net::Server::Multiplex
- Net::Server::PreFork
- Net::DNS
- IO::Multiplex
You can install them using cpan.
perl -MCPAN -e shell
install Net::Server::Daemonize \
Net::Server::Multiplex \
Net::Server::PreFork \
Net::DNS \
IO::MultiplexNote: Before installing with cpan make sure that you have installed gcc, gcc-devel and make or build-essential to build perl modules.
Postfwd can be run in a docker container. Please see postfwd.org/docker for more information.
By default postfwd listens on port 10040 and configuration file is located in /etc/postfix/postfwd.cf, but this can be overriden with postfwd arguments. To show postfwd argument list, simply run postfwd2 --help.
Simple postfix setup to use postfwd can be configured using following options. After you change the configuration, you need to reload postfix:
127.0.0.1:10040_time_limit = 3600
smtpd_recipient_restrictions = permit_mynetworks
reject_unauth_destination
check_policy_service inet:127.0.0.1:10040Note: If you do not run postfwd on same server where postfix is run, replace IP address 127.0.0.1 to IP address where your postfwd instance is located.
For more instructions to setup postfwd with postfix refer to Postfwd Integration.
Sample postfwd configuration file can be found in file ./etc/postfwd.cf.sample located in this repository.
To make your own rule set, refer to documentation and examples.
To check if your ruleset has correct syntax, use command postfwd -f <PATH-TO-CONFIG> -C.
To run postfwd in daemon mode as user postfwd and group postfwd using configuration file /etc/postfix/postfwd.cf, use this command:
postfwd --daemon -f /etc/postfwd.cf -u postfwd -g postfwdPostfwd functionality can be extended by creating plugins. Sample plugin can be found in plugins/postfwd.plugins.sample in this repository.
If you are interested in plugin development, use plugin development documentation as reference.
List of public plugins:
- Geographical based anti-spam plugin: https://github.com/Vnet-as/postfwd-anti-geoip-spam-plugin