system-config/doc/source/lists.rst
Monty Taylor d500651367 Rename cgit_file to git_file
In sphinx, we have a :cgit_file: directive that makes links to files.
Thing is - we're not using cgit anymore. So just rename it to git_file.

Change-Id: I80aca5fb3cc84281e29843944fea33e6f4d9fe6f
2019-04-22 11:47:11 +00:00

103 lines
2.9 KiB
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:title: Mailing Lists
.. _lists:
Mailing Lists
#############
`Mailman <http://www.gnu.org/software/mailman/>`_ is installed on
lists.openstack.org to run OpenStack related mailing lists, as well as
host list archives.
At a Glance
===========
:Hosts:
* http://lists.openstack.org
:Puppet:
* https://opendev.org/opendev/puppet-mailman
* :git_file:`modules/openstack_project/manifests/lists.pp`
:Projects:
* http://www.gnu.org/software/mailman/
:Bugs:
* https://storyboard.openstack.org/#!/project/748
* https://bugs.launchpad.net/mailman
:Resources:
* `Mailman Documentation <http://www.gnu.org/software/mailman/docs.html>`_
Adding a List
=============
A list may be added by adding it to the ``openstack-infra/system-config``
repository in ``modules/openstack_project/manifests/lists.pp``. For
example:
.. code-block:: ruby
mailman_list { 'openstack-foo@openstack':
require => Mailman::Site['openstack'],
ensure => present,
admin => 'admin@example.com',
password => $listpassword,
description => 'Discussion of OpenStack Foo',
}
Scripted Changes to Lists
=========================
This may only be performed with root access to the list server.
Mailman supports running a python code snippet in the context of
individual lists or every list on the system. The following example
adds an address to the list of banned addresses for every list. This
has proved useful in the case of attackers abusing the HTTP
subscription interface to subscribe a target's address to multiple
mailing lists.
Banning an Address from All Lists
---------------------------------
Create the file `/usr/lib/mailman/bin/ban.py` with the following
content:
.. code-block:: python
def ban(m, address):
try:
m.Lock()
if address not in m.ban_list:
m.ban_list.append(address)
m.Save()
finally:
m.Unlock()
And then run the withlist script as:
.. code-block:: bash
sudo -u list /usr/lib/mailman/bin/withlist -a -r ban "<address to ban>"
Because the script itself handles locking, do not use the `-l`
argument to withlist. To run the same script on a single list, use:
.. code-block:: bash
sudo -u list /usr/lib/mailman/bin/withlist -r ban listname "<address to ban>"
Note that the ban list accepts regular expressions, so to ban an
address and all suffixes, use '^address.*@example.com' as the "address
to ban".
Lock Files
----------
If a list stops handling traffic for some time, it may be due to a
stale lock file. Mailman locks are in /srv/mailman/openstack/locks.
If a lock is held for a list, then ``listname.lock`` will exist. The
contents of the file will be the name of the lock sequence file which
was used to obtain the lock. That file is in the form
``listname.lock.hostname.pid.sequence``. If the process id in that
string no longer exists, it's safe to assume the process died without
cleaning up the lock. It should generally be safe to remove the
lockfile in that case.