NAME POE::Component::Server::SimpleSMTP - A simple to use POE SMTP Server. VERSION version 1.50 SYNOPSIS # A simple SMTP Server use strict; use POE; use POE::Component::Server::SimpleSMTP; my $hostname = 'mymailserver.local'; my $relay; # specify a smart 'relay' server if required POE::Component::Server::SimpleSMTP->spawn( hostname => $hostname, relay => $relay, ); $poe_kernel->run(); exit 0; DESCRIPTION POE::Component::Server::SimpleSMTP is a POE component that provides an ease to use, but fully extensible SMTP mail server, that is reasonably compliant with RFC 2821 . In its simplest form it provides SMTP services, accepting mail from clients and either relaying the mail to a smart host for further delivery or delivering the mail itself by querying DNS MX records. One may also disable simple functionality and implement one's own SMTP handling and mail queuing. This can be done via a POE state interface or via POE::Component::Pluggable plugins. CONSTRUCTOR spawn Takes a number of optional arguments: 'alias', set an alias on the component; 'address', bind the listening socket to a particular address; 'port', listen on a particular port, default is 25; 'options', a hashref of POE::Session options; 'hostname', the name that the server will identify as in 'EHLO'; 'version', change the version string reported in 220 responses; 'relay', specify a 'smart host' to send received mail to, default is to deliver direct after determining MX records; 'relay_auth', ESMTP Authentication to use, currently only PLAIN is supported, which is the default; 'relay_user', the username required for authenticated relay; 'relay_pass', the password required for authenticated relay; 'time_out', alter the timeout period when sending emails, default 300 seconds; 'maxrelay', maximum number of concurrent outgoing emails, defaults to 5; 'domains', an arrayref of domain/hostnames that we will accept mail for; 'origin', set to a true value to enable the stripping of Received headers; These optional arguments can be used to enable your own SMTP handling: 'simple', set this to a false value and the component will no longer handle SMTP processing; 'handle_connects', set this to a false value to stop the component sending 220 responses on client connections; In simple mode one may also specify recipient handlers. These are regular expressions that are applied to each recipient of a recieved email. If a recipient matches the handler, it is removed from the process queue and dispatched instead to indicated session/event combo. 'handlers', an arrayref containing hashrefs. Each hashref should contain the keys: 'match', a regexp to apply; 'session', The session to send the email to; 'event', The event to trigger; You may also enable DNSBL lookups of connecting clients with the following options: 'dnsbl_enable', set to a true value to enable DNSBL support; 'dnsbl', set to a DNSBL to query, default is zen.spamhaus.org; DNSBL support uses POE::Component::Client::DNSBL to make blacklist queries for each connecting client. If a client is found in the blacklist, any further interaction with the client is denied. You may also enable sender verification, this does a simple "MX" DNS lookup on the domain of the email sender. If there is no "MX" domain record (ie. an "NXDOMAIN") then a 550 is issued. In the case of a "SERVFAIL", a 451 is issued. In both cases the email transaction is cancelled. 'sender_verify', set to a true value to enable sender verification; See OUTPUT EVENTS below for information on what a handler event contains. Returns a POE::Component::Server::SimpleSMTP object. METHODS "session_id" Returns the POE::Session ID of the component. "shutdown" Terminates the component. Shuts down the listener and disconnects connected clients. "send_event" Sends an event through the component's event handling system. "send_to_client" Send some output to a connected client. First parameter must be a valid client id. Second parameter is a string of text to send. "data_mode" Takes one argument a valid client ID. Switches the client connection to data mode for receiving an mail message. This should be done in response to a valid DATA command from a client if you are doing your own SMTP handling. You will receive an 'smtpd_data' event when the client has finished sending data. See below. Optionally, you may supply a filehandle as a second argument. Any data received from the client will be written to the filehandle. You will receive an 'smtpd_data_fh' event when the client has finished sending data. "getsockname" Access to the POE::Wheel::SocketFactory method of the underlying listening socket. "get_handlers" Returns an arrayref of the current handlers. "set_handlers" Accepts an arrayref of handler hashrefs ( see spawn() for details ). "mail_queue" Returns a list of hashrefs relating to items in the current mail queue ( when in "simple" mode ). "pause_queue" Pauses the processing of the mail queue. Any currently processing emails will be allowed to finish. "resume_queue" Resumes the processing of the mail queue. "paused" Indicates whether the mail queue is paused or not. "cancel_message" Takes one mandatory parameter a msg_id to remove from the mail queue. "start_listener" Takes no arguments, start the socket listener if it has stopped for any reason. Will fail if the listener is already erm listening. "enqueue" Takes one argument, a "hashref" with the following keys and values. Enqueues the item and requests that the mail queue be processed. Returns undef on failure or 1 on success. 'from', the email address of the sender (required); 'rcpt', an arrayref of the email recipients (required); 'msg', string representation of the email headers and body (required); 'ts', the unix time representation of the time the email was received (default is now); 'uid', the Message-ID (default is to generate one for you); INPUT EVENTS These are events that the component will accept: "register" Takes N arguments: a list of event names that your session wants to listen for, minus the 'smtpd_' prefix, ( this is similar to POE::Component::IRC ). Registering for 'all' will cause it to send all SMTPD-related events to you; this is the easiest way to handle it. "unregister" Takes N arguments: a list of event names which you don't want to receive. If you've previously done a 'register' for a particular event which you no longer care about, this event will tell the SMTPD to stop sending them to you. (If you haven't, it just ignores you. No big deal). "shutdown" Terminates the component. Shuts down the listener and disconnects connected clients. "send_event" Sends an event through the component's event handling system. "send_to_client" Send some output to a connected client. First parameter must be a valid client ID. Second parameter is a string of text to send. "start_listener" Takes no arguments, start the socket listener if it has stopped for any reason. Will fail if the listener is already erm listening. OUTPUT EVENTS The component sends the following events to registered sessions: "smtpd_registered" This event is sent to a registering session. ARG0 is POE::Component::Server::SimpleSMTP object. "smtpd_listener_failed" Generated if the component cannot either start a listener or there is a problem accepting client connections. ARG0 contains the name of the operation that failed. ARG1 and ARG2 hold numeric and string values for $!, respectively. "smtpd_connection" Generated whenever a client connects to the component. ARG0 is the client ID, ARG1 is the client's IP address, ARG2 is the client's TCP port. ARG3 is our IP address and ARG4 is our socket port. If 'handle_connects' is true ( which is the default ), the component will automatically send a 220 SMTP response to the client. "smtpd_disconnected" Generated whenever a client disconnects. ARG0 is the client ID. "smtpd_cmd_*" Generated for each SMTP command that a connected client sends to us. ARG0 is the client ID. ARG1 .. ARGn are any parameters that are sent with the command. Check the RFC for details. If "simple" is true ( which is the default ), the component deals with client commands itself. "smtpd_data" Generated when a client sends an email. ARG0 will be the client ID; ARG1 an arrayref of lines sent by the client, stripped of CRLF line endings; If "simple" is true ( which is the default ), the component will deal with receiving data from the client itself. "smtpd_data_fh" Generated when a client sends an email and a filehandle has been provided. ARG0 will be the client ID; If "simple" is true ( which is the default ), the component will deal with receiving data from the client itself. "smtpd_dnsbl" Generated when a DNSBL lookup is completed, in "simple" mode. ARG0 will be the client ID; ARG1 will be the response sent to the client, either a 220 or 554; ARG2 will be a hashref with the following keys: 'response', the status returned by the DNSBL, it will be NXDOMAIN if the address given was okay; 'reason', if an address is blacklisted, this may contain the reason; 'error', if something goes wrong with the DNS lookup the error string will be contained here; 'dnsbl', the DNSBL that was used for this request; "smtpd_fverify" Generated when a sender verification fails, in "simple" mode. ARG0 will be the client ID; ARG1 will be the response sent to the client; ARG2 will be the DNS error reason; In "simple" mode these events will be generated: "smtpd_message_queued" Generated whenever a mail message is queued. ARG0 is the client ID; ARG1 is the mail from address; ARG2 is an arrayref of recipients; ARG3 is the email unique idenitifer; ARG4 is the number of lines of the message; ARG5 is the subject line of the message, if applicable "smtpd_send_success" Generated whenever a mail message is successfully delivered. ARG0 is the email unique identifier; "smtpd_send_failed" Generated whenever a mail message is unsuccessfully delivered. This can be for a variety of reasons. The poco will attempt to resend the message on non-fatal errors ( such as an explicit denial of delivery by the SMTP peer ), for up to 4 days. ARG0 is the email unique identifier; ARG1 is a hashref as returned by POE::Component::Client::SMTP via 'SMTP_Failure' Handler events are generated whenever a recipient matches a given regexp. ARG0 will contain a hashref representing the email item with the following keys: 'uid', the Message-ID; 'from', the email address of the sender; 'rcpt', an arrayref of the email recipients; 'msg', string representation of the email headers and body; 'ts', the unix time representation of the time the email was received; PLUGINS POE::Component::Server::SimpleSMTP utilises POE::Component::Pluggable to enable a POE::Component::IRC type plugin system. PLUGIN HANDLER TYPES There are two types of handlers that can registered for by plugins, these are "SMTPD" These are the 'smtpd_' prefixed events that are generated. In a handler arguments are passed as scalar refs so that you may mangle the values if required. "SMTPC" These are generated whenever a response is sent to a client. Again, any arguments passed are scalar refs for manglement. There is really on one type of this handler generated 'SMTPC_response' PLUGIN EXIT CODES Plugin handlers should return a particular value depending on what action they wish to happen to the event. These values are available as constants which you can use with the following line: use POE::Component::Server::SimpleSMTP::Constants qw(:ALL); The return values have the following significance: "SMTPD_EAT_NONE" This means the event will continue to be processed by remaining plugins and finally, sent to interested sessions that registered for it. "SMTP_EAT_CLIENT" This means the event will continue to be processed by remaining plugins but it will not be sent to any sessions that registered for it. This means nothing will be sent out on the wire if it was an SMTPC event, beware! "SMTPD_EAT_PLUGIN" This means the event will not be processed by remaining plugins, it will go straight to interested sessions. "SMTPD_EAT_ALL" This means the event will be completely discarded, no plugin or session will see it. This means nothing will be sent out on the wire if it was an SMTPC event, beware! PLUGIN METHODS The following methods are available: "pipeline" Returns the POE::Component::Pluggable::Pipeline object. "plugin_add" Accepts two arguments: The alias for the plugin The actual plugin object The alias is there for the user to refer to it, as it is possible to have multiple plugins of the same kind active in one POE::Component::Server::SimpleSMTP object. This method goes through the pipeline's push() method. This method will call $plugin->plugin_register( $nntpd ) Returns the number of plugins now in the pipeline if plugin was initialized, undef if not. "plugin_del" Accepts one argument: The alias for the plugin or the plugin object itself This method goes through the pipeline's remove() method. This method will call $plugin->plugin_unregister( $nntpd ) Returns the plugin object if the plugin was removed, undef if not. "plugin_get" Accepts one argument: The alias for the plugin This method goes through the pipeline's get() method. Returns the plugin object if it was found, undef if not. "plugin_list" Has no arguments. Returns a hashref of plugin objects, keyed on alias, or an empty list if there are no plugins loaded. "plugin_order" Has no arguments. Returns an arrayref of plugin objects, in the order which they are encountered in the pipeline. "plugin_register" Accepts the following arguments: The plugin object The type of the hook, SMTPD or SMTPC The event name(s) to watch The event names can be as many as possible, or an arrayref. They correspond to the prefixed events and naturally, arbitrary events too. You do not need to supply events with the prefix in front of them, just the names. It is possible to register for all events by specifying 'all' as an event. Returns 1 if everything checked out fine, undef if something's seriously wrong "plugin_unregister" Accepts the following arguments: The plugin object The type of the hook, SMTPD or SMTPC The event name(s) to unwatch The event names can be as many as possible, or an arrayref. They correspond to the prefixed events and naturally, arbitrary events too. You do not need to supply events with the prefix in front of them, just the names. It is possible to register for all events by specifying 'all' as an event. Returns 1 if all the event name(s) was unregistered, undef if some was not found. PLUGIN TEMPLATE The basic anatomy of a plugin is: package Plugin; # Import the constants, of course you could provide your own # constants as long as they map correctly. use POE::Component::Server::SimpleSMTP::Constants qw( :ALL ); # Our constructor sub new { ... } # Required entry point for plugins sub plugin_register { my( $self, $smtpd ) = @_; # Register events we are interested in $smtpd->plugin_register( $self, 'SMTPD', qw(all) ); # Return success return 1; } # Required exit point for pluggable sub plugin_unregister { my( $self, $smtpd ) = @_; # Pluggable will automatically unregister events for the plugin # Do some cleanup... # Return success return 1; } sub _default { my( $self, $smtpd, $event ) = splice @_, 0, 3; print "Default called for $event\n"; # Return an exit code return SMTPD_EAT_NONE; } CAVEATS This module shouldn't be used "as is", as a production SMTP server, as the message queue is implemented in memory. *ouch* TODO Design a better message queue so that messages are stored on disk. KUDOS George Nistoric for POE::Component::Client::SMTP and POE::Filter::Transparent::SMTP. Rocco Caputo for POE::Component::Client::DNS SEE ALSO POE::Component::Pluggable POE::Component::Client::DNS POE::Component::Client::SMTP RFC 2821 AUTHOR Chris Williams COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2010 by Chris Williams. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.