rewrite headers in outgoing mail for forwarded mail - centos7

System
I'm using Centos7 with Plesk Obsidian with Postfix
What do I want to achieve;
When a mail is send from x#domain1.com to y#domain2.com it is forwarded to z#domain3.com
The sender is x#domain1.com when it is send.
I need the sender to be y#domain2.com when it arrives a z#domain3.com
For security reasons the mail needs to come from confirmed addresses, that's why I always need the sender to be the address from which the mail is forwarded.
What I tried is adjusting the mail.cf file without any succes.

Related

Can I restrict cfmail to only send mail from a given domain using cf admin

We have had issues with our server being used to send spam via cfmail to our remote SMTP server. I cannot see where it is occurring, but the emails are sent from a domain that is not one on our server.
Is there a way using ColdFusion administrator to specify that only emails showing as from someone#mydomain.com are sent to the SMTP host via the spool?
Thanks in advance,
Paul
It sounds to me like the <cfmail> side of things here is a red herring and you have got an open relay on your mail server. You seriously need to disable that immediately! If your SMTP server has to relay email for your CFML app then make sure it's not configured to relay everything, instead just for the IP address of the CF server, or for the credentials the CF server uses to connect to it.
If you don't know how to configure the relaying settings for your SMTP server, raise another question on serverfault.com asking how. Provide the exact details of your SMTP server, as well as the requirement to still allow relaying for the CF server.

How to determine if an email is successfully delivered instantly

An app is designed to be installed on a user's computer, hence, an email function from the app would very much depends on the user's ISP service. Port 25 may be open or may be blocked.
When I use standard code for mail ua including port 25, it seems to deliver the email, however, for some user whose ISP blocks port 25 email does not go through. I'd like to have a reliable way to determine if port 25 fails to deliver email Instantly and then try to use another port to send email. In other words, I'd like to leverage two ports, if port X fails then automatically switch to port Y. Doable?
Btw, the web server side scripting language I'm using is Adobe ColdFusion's sibling, Railo, and the specific tag is CFMAIL. As mentioned above, wrapping CFTRY around CFMAIL does not help for this purpose.
Thanks.
There are multiple factors in determining if your message gets delivered.
1) When you send your message with CFMAIL, you can either specify a mail server in the cfmail tag, or use the server default. When the tag is executed, coldfusion/railo will try to access that server. If the server is unavailable or blocked, your message will go to the coldfusion/railo undeliverable folder. The only way to check that is to write a script to monitor the undeliverable folder and its content.
2) IF coldfusion/railo successfully connect to the SMTP server and attempts to hand off the email, your notifications would come from the SMTP server rather than coldfusion/railo. The message would be sent from the SMTP server to the failto="" path, or the from="" if not specified. That email would be notified for "mailbox does not exist", "relay not allowed", "user over their mailbox limit", etc....
If you need to monitor those bounces, you could create a separate email account for the failto="" and use CFPOP to monitor the email account for bounces.
Also, if you use a company like sendgrid for your outgoing SMTP server, they will provide an API to monitor bounces, opt outs, spam complaints, etc...

Sending SMTP mail using POCO C++ through http proxy

I don't have too much experience programming in C++, but I need to build a basic application for sending state emails from a computer using windows or linux, and I've found that POCO C++ suppoorts both platforms, but I have a proxy http provider behind to filter unauthorized connections, so, how could I do it?.
You can't send SMTP e-mail through a HTTP proxy.
But you can make a HTTP connection to a website you control. And you can write a web-to-email script and put that on your website. E.g. your script can take a status message as a POST parameter and then send it out as e-mail.
Spammers often try to hack web-to-email scripts to send spam, so please make sure your script has a hard-coded destination e-mail address. That way the spammer can only send mail to you, not everyone else on the Internet. Whatever you do, don't pass the destination e-mail address as a parameter.
regarding web to email scripts - make sure you strip newlines from anything that ends up in email headers! (to prevent spammers from injecting headers)

C++ - Mail Sender

I would like to create a mail sender on C++ (not Mail Client for eg. GMail). In this mailer I want to be able to change the headers also.
I have already downloaded and installed the POCO libraries, that might help (I found it on a similar anwser).
For example, what I would like is a command like below:
e-mailsend(to,headers,subject,message);
// Or something like:
email.send(to,headers,subject,message);
However, If possible, I would like to use a C++ Mail function not a system function (like mail-utils in unix).
If you need any more explanation please comment...
In your comments you asked for an option without an SMTP server.
SMTP requires an SMTP Server. The choice is that could send emails directly (e.g. to joe at yahoo.com on port 25) or to a SMTP server that will relay the message.
Ideally, you will want your own SMTP server locally (so your application is simpler and your SMTP server sends the messages in the background, handles retries, bounces and connection errors) and use a reputable SMTP service or an existing email account.
If you want to send spam, I'd strongly advise against it.
If you want to send a small number of messages that will be opened by people expecting those messages, use a normal account (Yahoo, GMail, Google Apps, etc) and if you find your application not responsive enough, install Postfix, Sendmail or whatever local SMTP server you like.
If you want to send a large volume of emails and you are sure those message won't get you targeted as a spammer, use an SMTP service, like SendGrid (note: they also have a web API that you might find easier to use than SMTP).
Depending on which of the above you need, I'm sure answering your original question with a recommendation for SMTP C++ clients (like POCO) with become simpler.

Sending emails without using SMTP Server

I want that my program could send email without using Microsoft Outlook or other programs or SMTP server. Is that possible? Can I send email without connecting to SMTP server?
You can't by definition, since email gets through the recipient at least passing through the SMTP server of his/her domain.
You may send it directly to the recipient's SMTP server instead of going through the ISP's server getting its data through DNS (which is basically re-implementing a local SMTP server on your own), but it's not a good idea, since many target servers will refuse to accept your mails due to spam concerns (your connection will probably come through graylisted "residential" IP addresses, it won't have a rDNS record, ...).