File: params.h

package info (click to toggle)
popa3d 1.0.2-3
  • links: PTS
  • area: main
  • in suites: etch, etch-m68k
  • size: 304 kB
  • ctags: 275
  • sloc: ansic: 2,234; sh: 103; makefile: 92
file content (265 lines) | stat: -rw-r--r-- 7,079 bytes parent folder | download | duplicates (7)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
/*
 * Global POP daemon parameters.
 */

#ifndef _POP_PARAMS_H
#define _POP_PARAMS_H

/*
 * Our name to use when talking to various interfaces.
 */
#define POP_SERVER			"popa3d"

/*
 * Are we going to be a standalone server or start via an inetd clone?
 */
#define POP_STANDALONE			1

#if POP_STANDALONE

/*
 * Should the command line options be supported?
 * If enabled, popa3d will default to inetd mode and will require a -D
 * to actually enable the standalone mode.
 */
#define POP_OPTIONS			1

/*
 * The address and port to listen on.
 */
#define DAEMON_ADDR			"0.0.0.0"	/* INADDR_ANY */
#define DAEMON_PORT			110

/*
 * Should libwrap be used?
 *
 * This may make things slower and also adds to code running as root,
 * so it is recommended that you use a packet filter instead.  This
 * option is provided primarily as a way to meet conventions of certain
 * systems where all services obey libwrap access controls.
 */
#define DAEMON_LIBWRAP			0

#if DAEMON_LIBWRAP
/*
 * How do we talk to libwrap?
 */
#define DAEMON_LIBWRAP_IDENT		POP_SERVER
#endif

/*
 * Limit the number of POP sessions we can handle at a time to reduce
 * the impact of connection flood DoS attacks.
 *
 * The defaults are rather large.  It is recommended that you decrease
 * MAX_SESSIONS and MAX_SESSIONS_PER_SOURCE to 100 and 10, respectively,
 * if that would be sufficient for your users.
 */
#define MAX_SESSIONS			500
#define MAX_SESSIONS_PER_SOURCE		50
#define MAX_BACKLOG			5
#define MIN_DELAY			10

#endif

/*
 * Do we want to support virtual domains?
 */
#define POP_VIRTUAL			0

#if POP_VIRTUAL

/*
 * VIRTUAL_HOME_PATH is where the virtual domain root directories live.
 */
#define VIRTUAL_HOME_PATH		"/vhome"

/*
 * Subdirectories within each virtual domain root for the authentication
 * information and mailboxes, respectively.  These defaults correspond to
 * full pathnames of the form "/vhome/IP/{auth,mail}/username".
 */
#define VIRTUAL_AUTH_PATH		"auth"
#define VIRTUAL_SPOOL_PATH		"mail"

/*
 * Do we want to support virtual domains only?  Normally, if the connected
 * IP address doesn't correspond to a directory in VIRTUAL_HOME_PATH, the
 * authentication will be done globally.
 */
#define VIRTUAL_ONLY			0

#else

/*
 * We don't support virtual domains (!POP_VIRTUAL), so we're definitely
 * not virtual-only.  Don't edit this.
 */
#define VIRTUAL_ONLY			0

#endif

/*
 * A pseudo-user to run as before authentication.  The user and its UID
 * must not be used for any other purpose.
 */
#define POP_USER			POP_SERVER

/*
 * An empty directory to chroot to before authentication.  The directory
 * and its parent directories must not be writable by anyone but root.
 */
#define POP_CHROOT			"/var/lib/popa3d"

/*
 * Sessions will be closed if idle for longer than POP_TIMEOUT seconds.
 * RFC 1939 says that "such a timer MUST be of at least 10 minutes'
 * duration", so I've made 10 minutes the default.  In practice, you
 * may want to reduce this to, say, 2 minutes.
 */
#define POP_TIMEOUT			(10 * 60)

/*
 * Do we want to support the obsolete LAST command, as defined in RFC
 * 1460?  It has been removed from the protocol in 1994 by RFC 1725,
 * and isn't even mentioned in RFC 1939.  Still, some software doesn't
 * work without it.
 */
#define POP_SUPPORT_LAST		1

/*
 * Introduce some sane limits on the mailbox size in order to prevent
 * a single huge mailbox from stopping the entire POP service.
 *
 * The defaults are rather large (2 GB filled with messages as small as
 * 1 KB each).  It is recommended that you decrease MAX_MAILBOX_MESSAGES,
 * MAX_MAILBOX_OPEN_BYTES, and MAX_MAILBOX_WORK_BYTES to, say, 100000,
 * 100000000 (100 MB), and 150000000 (150 MB), respectively, if that
 * would be sufficient for your users.
 */
#define MAX_MAILBOX_MESSAGES		2097152
#define MAX_MAILBOX_OPEN_BYTES		2147483647
#define MAX_MAILBOX_WORK_BYTES		2147483647

#if !VIRTUAL_ONLY

/*
 * Choose the password authentication method your system uses:
 *
 * AUTH_PASSWD		Use getpwnam(3) only, for *BSD or readable passwd;
 * AUTH_SHADOW		Use shadow passwords directly (not via PAM);
 * AUTH_PAM		Use PAM in the old-fashioned way;
 * AUTH_PAM_USERPASS	Talk to pam_userpass via Linux-PAM binary prompts
 * USE_LIBPAM_USERPASS	...and use libpam_userpass.
 *
 * Note that there's no built-in password aging support.
 */
#define AUTH_PASSWD			0
#define AUTH_SHADOW			0
#define AUTH_PAM			1
#define AUTH_PAM_USERPASS		0
#define USE_LIBPAM_USERPASS		0

#if AUTH_PAM || AUTH_PAM_USERPASS
#define AUTH_PAM_SERVICE		POP_SERVER
#endif

#endif

#if POP_VIRTUAL || AUTH_PASSWD || AUTH_SHADOW

/*
 * A salt used to waste some CPU time on dummy crypt(3) calls and make
 * it harder (but still far from impossible, on most systems) to check
 * for valid usernames.  Adjust it for your crypt(3).
 */
#define AUTH_DUMMY_SALT			"xx"

#endif

/*
 * Message to return to the client when authentication fails.  You can
 * #undef this for no message.
 */
#define AUTH_FAILED_MESSAGE		"Authentication failed (bad password?)"

#if !VIRTUAL_ONLY

/*
 * Your mail spool directory.  Note: only local (non-NFS) mode 775 mail
 * spools are currently supported.
 *
 * #undef this for qmail-style $HOME/Mailbox mailboxes.
 */
#define MAIL_SPOOL_PATH			"/var/mail"

#ifndef MAIL_SPOOL_PATH
/*
 * The mailbox file name relative to the user's home directory.
 */
#define HOME_MAILBOX_NAME		"Mailbox"
#endif

#endif

/*
 * Locking method your system uses for user mailboxes.  It is important
 * that you set this correctly.
 *
 * *BSDs use flock(2), others typically use fcntl(2).
 */
#define LOCK_FCNTL			1
#define LOCK_FLOCK			0

/*
 * How do we talk to syslogd?  These should be fine for most systems.
 */
#define SYSLOG_IDENT			POP_SERVER
#define SYSLOG_OPTIONS			LOG_PID
#define SYSLOG_FACILITY			LOG_DAEMON
#define SYSLOG_PRI_LO			LOG_INFO
#define SYSLOG_PRI_HI			LOG_NOTICE
#define SYSLOG_PRI_ERROR		LOG_CRIT

/*
 * There's probably no reason to touch anything below this comment.
 */

/*
 * According to RFC 1939: "Keywords and arguments are each separated by
 * a single SPACE character.  Keywords are three or four characters long.
 * Each argument may be up to 40 characters long."  We're only processing
 * up to two arguments, so it is safe to truncate after this length.
 */
#define POP_BUFFER_SIZE			0x80

/*
 * There's no reason to change this one either.  Making this larger would
 * waste memory, and smaller values could make the authentication fail.
 */
#define AUTH_BUFFER_SIZE		(2 * POP_BUFFER_SIZE)

#if POP_VIRTUAL

/*
 * Buffer size for reading entire per-user authentication files.
 */
#define VIRTUAL_AUTH_SIZE		0x100

#endif

/*
 * File buffer sizes to use while parsing the mailbox and retrieving a
 * message, respectively.  Can be changed.
 */
#define FILE_BUFFER_SIZE		0x10000
#define RETR_BUFFER_SIZE		0x8000

/*
 * The mailbox parsing code isn't allowed to truncate lines earlier than
 * this length.  Keep this at least as large as the longest header field
 * name we need to check for, but not too large for performance reasons.
 */
#define LINE_BUFFER_SIZE		0x20

#endif