Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::URIDNSBL(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::URIDNSBL(3)

URIDNSBL - look up URLs against DNS blocklists

loadplugin    Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::URIDNSBL
uridnsbl      URIBL_SBLXBL    sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org.   TXT

This works by analysing message text and HTML for URLs, extracting host names from those, then querying various DNS blocklists for either: IP addresses of these hosts (uridnsbl,a) or their nameservers (uridnsbl,ns), or domain names of these hosts (urirhsbl), or domain names of their nameservers (urinsrhsbl, urifullnsrhsbl).

Turning on the skip_uribl_checks setting will disable the URIDNSBL plugin.

By default, SpamAssassin will run URI DNSBL checks. Individual URI blocklists may be disabled selectively by setting a score of a corresponding rule to 0 or through the uridnsbl_skip_domain parameter.

See also a related configuration parameter skip_rbl_checks, which controls the DNSEval plugin (documented in the Conf man page).

Specify a domain, or a number of domains, which should be skipped for the URIBL checks. This is very useful to specify very common domains which are not going to be listed in URIBLs.

In addition to trimmed domain, the full hostname is also checked from the list.

If no argument is given, then clears the entire list of domains declared by uridnsbl_skip_domain configuration directives so far. Any subsequent uridnsbl_skip_domain directives will start creating a new list of skip domains.

When given a list of domains as arguments, only the specified domains are removed from the list of skipped domains.

Specify a lookup. "NAME_OF_RULE" is the name of the rule to be used, "dnsbl_zone" is the zone to look up IPs in, and "lookuptype" is the type of lookup (TXT or A). Note that you must also define a body-eval rule calling check_uridnsbl() to use this.

This works by collecting domain names from URLs and querying DNS blocklists with an IP address of host names found in URLs or with IP addresses of their name servers, according to tflags as follows.

If the corresponding body rule has a tflag 'a', the DNS blocklist will be queried with an IP address of a host found in URLs.

If the corresponding body rule has a tflag 'ns', DNS will be queried for name servers (NS records) of a domain name found in URLs, then these name server names will be resolved to their IP addresses, which in turn will be sent to DNS blocklist.

Tflags directive may specify either 'a' or 'ns' or both flags. In absence of any of these two flags, a default is a 'ns', which is compatible with pre-3.4 versions of SpamAssassin.

The choice of tflags must correspond to the policy and expected use of each DNS blocklist and is normally not a local decision. As an example, a blocklist expecting queries resulting from an 'a' tflag is a "black_a.txt" ( http://www.uribl.com/datasets.shtml ).

Example:

uridnsbl        URIBL_SBLXBL    sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org.   TXT
body            URIBL_SBLXBL    eval:check_uridnsbl('URIBL_SBLXBL')
describe        URIBL_SBLXBL    Contains a URL listed in the SBL/XBL blocklist
tflags          URIBL_SBLXBL    net ns
Specify a DNSBL-style domain lookup with a sub-test. "NAME_OF_RULE" is the name of the rule to be used, "dnsbl_zone" is the zone to look up IPs in, and "lookuptype" is the type of lookup (TXT or A).

Tflags 'ns' and 'a' on a corresponding body rule are recognized and have the same meaning as in the uridnsbl directive.

"subtest" is a sub-test to run against the returned data. The sub-test may be in one of the following forms: m, n1-n2, or n/m, where n,n1,n2,m can be any of: decimal digits, 0x followed by up to 8 hexadecimal digits, or an IPv4 address in quad-dot form. The 'A' records (IPv4 dotted address) as returned by DNSBLs lookups are converted into a numerical form (r) and checked against the specified sub-test as follows: for a range n1-n2 the following must be true: (r >= n1 && r <= n3); for a n/m form the following must be true: (r & m) == (n & m); for a single value in quad-dot form the following must be true: r == n; for a single decimal or hex form the following must be true:
((r & n) != 0) && ((r & 0xff000000) == 0x7f000000), i.e. within 127.0.0.0/8

Some typical examples of a sub-test are: 127.0.1.2, 127.0.1.20-127.0.1.39, 127.0.1.0/255.255.255.0, 0.0.0.16/0.0.0.16, 0x10/0x10, 16, 0x10 .

Note that, as with "uridnsbl", you must also define a body-eval rule calling check_uridnsbl() to use this.

Example:

uridnssub   URIBL_DNSBL_4    dnsbl.example.org.   A    127.0.0.4
uridnssub   URIBL_DNSBL_8    dnsbl.example.org.   A    8
Specify a RHSBL-style domain lookup. "NAME_OF_RULE" is the name of the rule to be used, "rhsbl_zone" is the zone to look up domain names in, and "lookuptype" is the type of lookup (TXT or A). Note that you must also define a body-eval rule calling check_uridnsbl() to use this.

An RHSBL zone is one where the domain name is looked up, as a string; e.g. a URI using the domain "foo.com" will cause a lookup of "foo.com.uriblzone.net". Note that hostnames are trimmed to the domain portion in the URIBL lookup, so the domain "foo.bar.com" will look up "bar.com.uriblzone.net", and "foo.bar.co.uk" will look up "bar.co.uk.uriblzone.net". Using tflag "notrim" will force full hostname lookup, but the specific uribl must support this method.

If an URI consists of an IP address instead of a hostname, the IP address is looked up (using the standard reversed quads method) in each "rhsbl_zone".

Example:

urirhsbl        URIBL_RHSBL    rhsbl.example.org.   TXT
Specify a RHSBL-style domain lookup with a sub-test. "NAME_OF_RULE" is the name of the rule to be used, "rhsbl_zone" is the zone to look up domain names in, and "lookuptype" is the type of lookup (TXT or A).

"subtest" is a sub-test to run against the returned data. The sub-test may be in one of the following forms: m, n1-n2, or n/m, where n,n1,n2,m can be any of: decimal digits, 0x followed by up to 8 hexadecimal digits, or an IPv4 address in quad-dot form. The 'A' records (IPv4 dotted address) as returned by DNSBLs lookups are converted into a numerical form (r) and checked against the specified sub-test as follows: for a range n1-n2 the following must be true: (r >= n1 && r <= n2); for a n/m form the following must be true: (r & m) == (n & m); for a single value in quad-dot form the following must be true: r == n; for a single decimal or hex form the following must be true:
((r & n) != 0) && ((r & 0xff000000) == 0x7f000000), i.e. within 127.0.0.0/8

Some typical examples of a sub-test are: 127.0.1.2, 127.0.1.20-127.0.1.39, 127.2.3.0/255.255.255.0, 0.0.0.16/0.0.0.16, 0x10/0x10, 16, 0x10 .

Note that, as with "urirhsbl", you must also define a body-eval rule calling check_uridnsbl() to use this. Hostname to domain trimming is also done similarly.

Example:

urirhssub   URIBL_RHSBL_4    rhsbl.example.org.   A    127.0.0.4
urirhssub   URIBL_RHSBL_8    rhsbl.example.org.   A    8
Perform a RHSBL-style domain lookup against the contents of the NS records for each URI. In other words, a URI using the domain "foo.com" will cause an NS lookup to take place; assuming that domain has an NS of "ns0.bar.com", that will cause a lookup of "bar.com.uriblzone.net". Note that hostnames are stripped from both the domain used in the URI, and the domain in the lookup.

"NAME_OF_RULE" is the name of the rule to be used, "rhsbl_zone" is the zone to look up domain names in, and "lookuptype" is the type of lookup (TXT or A).

Note that, as with "urirhsbl", you must also define a body-eval rule calling check_uridnsbl() to use this.

Specify a RHSBL-style domain-NS lookup, as above, with a sub-test. "NAME_OF_RULE" is the name of the rule to be used, "rhsbl_zone" is the zone to look up domain names in, and "lookuptype" is the type of lookup (TXT or A). "subtest" is the sub-test to run against the returned data; see "urirhssub".

Note that, as with "urirhsbl", you must also define a body-eval rule calling check_uridnsbl() to use this.

Perform a RHSBL-style domain lookup against the contents of the NS records for each URI. In other words, a URI using the domain "foo.com" will cause an NS lookup to take place; assuming that domain has an NS of "ns0.bar.com", that will cause a lookup of "ns0.bar.com.uriblzone.net".

"NAME_OF_RULE" is the name of the rule to be used, "rhsbl_zone" is the zone to look up domain names in, and "lookuptype" is the type of lookup (TXT or A).

Note that, as with "urirhsbl", you must also define a body-eval rule calling check_uridnsbl() to use this.

Specify a RHSBL-style domain-NS lookup, as above, with a sub-test. "NAME_OF_RULE" is the name of the rule to be used, "rhsbl_zone" is the zone to look up domain names in, and "lookuptype" is the type of lookup (TXT or A). "subtest" is the sub-test to run against the returned data; see "urirhssub".

Note that, as with "urirhsbl", you must also define a body-eval rule calling check_uridnsbl() to use this.

Only URIs containing IP addresses as the "host" component will be matched against the named "urirhsbl"/"urirhssub" rule.
Only URIs containing a non-IP-address "host" component will be matched against the named "urirhsbl"/"urirhssub" rule.
The 'ns' flag may be applied to rules corresponding to uridnsbl and uridnssub directives. Host names from URLs will be mapped to their name server IP addresses (a NS lookup followed by an A lookup), which in turn will be sent to blocklists. This is a default when neither 'a' nor 'ns' flags are specified.
The 'a' flag may be applied to rules corresponding to uridnsbl and uridnssub directives. Host names from URLs will be mapped to their IP addresses, which will be sent to blocklists. When both 'ns' and 'a' flags are specified, both queries will be performed.
The full hostname component will be matched against the named "urirhsbl"/"urirhssub" rule, instead of using the trimmed domain. This works better, but the specific uribl must support this method.

The maximum number of domains to look up.
Include DKIM uris in lookups. This option is documented in Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf.
Skip mailto links on uris lookups.

The "uridnsbl_timeout" option has been obsoleted by the "rbl_timeout" option. See the "Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf" POD for details on "rbl_timeout".

2024-09-01 perl v5.40.0