10.2 The Environment

As a general rule, programs should never trust their environment. Such trust can lead to exploitation that has grave security consequences. To illustrate , consider the often misused SunOS LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable. Programs that use shared libraries look at this variable to determine which shared library routines they should use and in what order they should load them. One form of attack against non- set- user -id programs (such as some delivery agents ) is to modify the LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable (as in a user's ~/.forward file) to introduce Trojan horse library routines in place of the real system's library routines. Certainly, sendmail should not pass such variables to its delivery agents.

To improve security, early versions of V8 sendmail began deleting variables from its environment before passing them to its delivery agents. It removed the IFS variable to protect Bourne shell-script agents and all variables beginning with "LD _ " to protect all delivery agents from shared library attacks.

Beginning with V8.7, sendmail now takes the opposite approach. Instead of trying to second-guess attackers , it instead constructs the delivery agent environment from scratch. In this scheme it defines the AGENT variable as sendmail , and the TZ variable as is appropriate (see the TimeZoneSpec option, TimeZoneSpec). Also, in support of operating systems that require them, it passes the ISP and SYSTYPE variables from its own environment to the delivery agent's environment.

10.2.1 The E Configuration Command

When sendmail executes (runs) a delivery agent (Section 20.6.2), it passes to that delivery agent an environment that includes only the items described earlier. Some delivery agents, however, might require additional environment variables to function properly. For those special cases, sendmail offers the E configuration command to set individual environment variables that will be passed to all delivery agents:

 E  var=value  

The var is the environment variable that will be either defined or redefined. It is immediately followed (with no intervening space) by an equal sign and then (again with no intervening space) by the value that will be assigned to it.

If the = value is missing, sendmail looks up the variable var in its environment and, if it is found, uses that value. If the = is present but the value is absent, the var is assigned an empty string (a single zero byte). If the var is missing, a variable name that is an empty string is used.

The var is looked up to see whether it is already a part of the delivery agent's environment. If it is, it is redefined to be the new value. If it is not, it is added to that list of variables. If that addition will cause the list to exceed MAXUSERENVIRON variables (as defined in conf.h , MAX...), the definition is silently ignored.

Whether or not the var was added to, or updated in, the delivery agent's environment, it is always added or updated to sendmail 's environment with putenv (2). If this call fails, sendmail logs and prints the following message:

 setuserenv: putenv(  var=value)  failed 

Only one var can be defined per E command. Additional environment variables require multiple E commands. Each E command affects all delivery agents. There is no way to tune the environment on a per-delivery-agent basis.



Sendmail
sendmail, 4th Edition
ISBN: 0596510292
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2002
Pages: 1174

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