Postfix SMTP authenticated can send as anyone
The server correctly accepts/rejects the logins though dovecot's authentication mechanism, but after that I can pretend to be anyone when sending emails.
smtpd_sender_login_maps = texthash:/etc/postfix/permmap
append_at_myorigin=no
smtpd_helo_restrictions =
permit_mynetworks,
reject_non_fqdn_helo_hostname,
reject_invalid_helo_hostname,
#reject_unknown_helo_hostname,
permit
smtpd_sender_restrictions =
permit_sasl_authenticated,
permit_mynetworks,
reject_sender_login_mismatch,
# reject_non_fqdn_sender,
reject_unknown_sender_domain,
permit
smtpd_client_restrictions =
permit_mynetworks,
permit_sasl_authenticated,
reject_unauth_pipelining,
reject_rbl_client bl.spamcop.net,
reject_rbl_client zen.spamhaus.org,
permit
I use this site for testing, because it's convenient and with --verbose shows me the whole communication, except the message body.
This is the communication log, obviously with identifying stuff and password censored
> EHLO localhost
[250] 'example.com'
[250] 'PIPELINING'
[250] 'SIZE 104857600'
[250] 'ETRN'
[250] 'AUTH PLAIN LOGIN'
[250] 'ENHANCEDSTATUSCODES'
[250] '8BITMIME'
[250] 'DSN'
AUTH method (PLAIN LOGIN): using LOGIN
> AUTH LOGIN
[334] 'VXNlcm5hbWU6'
> dXNlckFAdmlydHVhbGRvbWFpbkE=
[334] 'UGFzc3dvcmQ6'
> dGhlcGFzc3dvcmQ=
[235] '2.7.0 Authentication successful'
Authentication of userA@[email protected] succeeded
> MAIL FROM: <[email protected]>
[250] '2.1.0 Ok'
> RCPT TO: <[email protected]>
[250] '2.1.5 Ok'
> DATA
[354] 'End data with <CR><LF>.<CR><LF>'
[250] '2.0.0 Ok: queued as 73519140287'
> QUIT
[221] '2.0.0 Bye'
The email was indeed sent as if I was [email protected]
The second probable problem we see there, is that it appends it's real domain to the virtual one, even though append_at_myorigin
should disable it.
The docs weren't much help. They don't even suggest what the lookup-table should resemble. I had to learn that from elsewhere.
As I can see, your expectation is user can't send behalf other user because you put reject_sender_login_mismatch in smtpd_sender_restrictions
. Yes, that should work.
Unfortunately, you put reject_sender_login_mismatch after permit_sasl_authenticated. Based on postfix logic, if your client successfully login via SASL, it won't checked against reject_sender_login_mismatch because the it successfully pass the restriction permit_sasl_authenticated.
The solution is reorder the restrictions according to the Postfix official documentation.
smtpd_sender_restrictions =
...other restriction...
reject_sender_login_mismatch,
permit_sasl_authenticated,
...other restriction...