ISP Mail Server HowTo: Difference between revisions
Line 320: | Line 320: | ||
== Install Dovecot == | == Install Dovecot == | ||
Dovecot is the POP3/IMAP server to retrieve mail. | |||
As before, we install dovecot: | |||
apk add acf-dovecot dovecot-pgsql | |||
edit /etc/dovecot.conf | |||
# Select only the protocols you wish to support - all are listed in the next line | |||
protocols = imap imaps pop pop3s | |||
log_path = /var/log/dovecot.log | |||
info_log_path = /var/log/dovecot-info.log | |||
disable_plaintext_auth = no | |||
# Authenticated IMAP | |||
ssl = yes | |||
ssl_cert_file = /etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem | |||
ssl_key_file = /etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem | |||
auth_verbose = yes | |||
auth_debug = no | |||
mail_location = maildir:/var/mail/domains/%d/%n | |||
auth default { | |||
mechanisms = plain | |||
passdb sql { | |||
args = /etc/dovecot/dovecot-sql.conf | |||
} | |||
userdb static { | |||
args = uid=1006 gid=1006 home=/var/mail/domains/%d/%n | |||
} | |||
We need a certificate for SSL/TLS authentication, so in the example above, we use the lighttpd cert. That way when the cert is renewed/replaced, Dovecot will have access to the new cert as well. | |||
Create the /etc/dovecot/dovecot-sql.conf file: | |||
driver = pgsql | |||
connect = host=localhost dbname=postfix user=postfix password=******** | |||
password_query = select username,password from mailbox where local_part = '%n' and domain = '%d' | |||
default_pass_scheme = MD5-CRYPT | |||
Again, change the password above to your postfix user password, and protect the file from prying eyes: | |||
chown root:root /etc/dovecot/dovecot-sql.conf | |||
chmod 600 /etc/dovecot/dovecot-sql.conf | |||
Start dovecot | |||
/etc/init.d/dovecot start | |||
rc-update add dovecot | |||
== Testing == | |||
Make sure your firewall allows in ports 25(SMTP) 110 (POP3), 995 (POP3S), 143(IMAP), 993(IMAPS), or whatever subset you support. | |||
At this point, you should be able to: | |||
* Create a new domain and add users with PostfixAdmin | |||
* Send mail to those users via SMTP to port 25 | |||
* Retrieve mail using the user's full email and password (e.g. username: user@example.com password: ChangeM | |||
== Value Add Stuff == | |||
=== Spam Filtering === | |||
Add the following line to /etc/postfix/main.cf | |||
#content_filter = scan:[127.0.0.1]:10025 | |||
=== Relay for Authenticated Users === | |||
# TLS Stuff -- since we allow SASL with tls *only*, we have to set up TLS first | |||
smtpd_tls_cert_file = /etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem | |||
smtpd_tls_key_file = /etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem | |||
smtpd_tls_CAfile = /etc/lighttpd/ca-crt.pem | |||
smtpd_tls_security_level = may | |||
# Log info about the negotiated encryption levels | |||
smtpd_tls_received_header = yes | |||
smtpd_tls_loglevel = 1 | |||
# SASL - this allows senders to authenticiate themselves | |||
# This along with "premit_sasl_authenticated" in smtpd_recipient_restrictions above allows relaying | |||
smtpd_sasl_type = dovecot | |||
smtpd_sasl_path = private/dovecot-auth.sock | |||
smtpd_sasl_auth_enable = yes | |||
smtpd_sasl_authenticated_header = yes | |||
smtpd_tls_auth_only = yes | |||
/etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf | |||
# this is for postfix SASL (authenticated users can relay through us) | |||
socket listen { | |||
client { | |||
path = /var/spool/postfix/private/dovecot-auth.sock | |||
mode = 0660 | |||
user = postfix | |||
group = postfix | |||
} | |||
} | |||
} | |||
== log rotation == |
Revision as of 01:58, 18 January 2010
A Full Service Mail Server
The goal of this document is to describe how to set up postfix, dovecot, clamav, dspam, roundecube, and postfixadmin for a full-featured "ISP" level mail server.
The server must provide:
- multiple virtual domains
- admins for each domain (to add/remove virtual accounts)
- Quota support per domain / account
- downloading email via IMAP / IMAPS / POP3 / POP3S
- relaying email for authenticated users with TLS or SSL (Submission / SMTPS protocol)
- Standard filters (virus/spam/rbl/etc)
- Web mail client
- Value Add services
Set up Lighttpd + PHP
PostfixAdmin needs php pgpsql and imap modules, so we do it in this step.
apk add lighttpd php php-pgsql php-imap
Stop and remove mini_httpd, and move ACF to lighttpd; We are setting this up to be a mult-domain virtual web server:
mkdir -p /var/www/domains/host.example.com mv /usr/share/acf/* /var/www/domains/host.example.com
Edit /etc/lighttpd/mod_cgi.conf to serve haserl files by adding a "" => "" cgi handler
$HTTP["url"] =~ "^/cgi-bin/" { # disable directory listings dir-listing.activate = "disable" # only allow cgi's in this directory cgi.assign = ( ".pl" => "/usr/bin/perl", ".cgi" => "/usr/bin/perl", "" => "" ) }
Edit /etc/lighttpd/mod_fastcgi.conf to serve php scripts
server.modules += ("mod_fastcgi") fastcgi.server = ( ".php" => (( "socket" => "/var/run/lighttpd/lighttpd-fastcgi-php-" + PID + ".socket" "bin-path" => "/usr/bin/php-cgi" )) )
Add these lines to /etc/lighttpd/lighttpd.conf to point to the new document root, and set it up to listen on port 443:
simple-vhost.server-root = "/var/www/domains/" simple-vhost.default-host = "/" simple-vhost.document-root = "www/
$SERVER["socket"] == "[ip_address_of_server]" { ssl.engine = "enable" ssl.pemfile = "/etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem" ssl.ca-file = "/etc/lighttpd/ca-crt.pem" }
Get a web certificate, and install it. If you want to use a self-signed cert, you can use Generating SSL certs with ACF or Generating SSL certs with ACF 1.9. If you create a certificate with ACF, you can create the "server-bundle.pem" and the "ca-crt.pem" file with these commands:
openssl x509 -nocerts -nokeys -cacert -in certificate.pfx -out /etc/lighttpd/ca-crt.pem openssl x509 -nodes -in certifcate.pfx -out /etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem chown root:root /etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem chmod 400 /etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem
Note: The server certifcate and key are in the server-bundle.pem file, so it is critical that the file be read-only by user "root".
Stop and remove mini_httpd; start lighttpd, test
/etc/init.d/mini_httpd stop rc-update del mini_httpd apk del mini_httpd rc-update add lighttpd /etc/init.d/lighttpd start
At this point you should be able to see ACF being served with lighttpd: https://host.example.com/
Install Postgresql
Add get and configure postgresql
apk add acf-postgresql postgresql-client /etc/init.d/postgresql setup /etc/init.d/postgresql start rc-update add postgresql
At this point any user can connect to the sql server with "trust" mechanism. If you want to enforce password authentication (you probably do) edit /var/lib/postgresql/8.4/data/pg_hba.conf
Editme: What should we recommend?
Create the postfix database:
psql -U postgres create user postfix with password '******'; create database postfix owner postfix; \c postfix create language plpgsql; \q
(Of course, use your selected password where ******* is shown above.)
Install PostfixAdmin
We are going to install the postfix admin web front-end before we install the mail server. This just creates an interface to populate the SQL tables that postfix and dovecot will use.
Download PostfixAdmin from Sourceforge. When these instructions were written, 2.3 was the current release, so:
wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/postfixadmin/postfixadmin/postfixadmin_2.3.tar.gz tar zxvf postfixadmin_2.3.tar.gz mkdir /var/www/domains/host.example.com/postfixadmin mv postfixadmin-2.3/* /var/www/domains/host.example.com/postfixadmin rm -rf postfixadmin*
Edit /var/www/domains/host.example.com/postfixadmin/config.inc.php and modify at least these lines:
$CONF['configured'] = true; $CONF['setup_password'] = ; << Don't change this yet $CONF['database_type'] = 'pgsql'; $CONF['database_host'] = 'localhost'; $CONF['database_user'] = 'postfix'; $CONF['database_password'] = '*****'; << The password you chose above $CONF['database_name'] = 'postfix'; $CONF['database_prefix'] = ; $CONF['database_prefix'] = ; $CONF['database_tables'] = array ( $CONF['admin_email'] = 'you@some.email.com'; << Your email address $CONF['encrypt'] = 'md5crypt'; $CONF['authlib_default_flavor'] = 'md5raw'; $CONF['dovecotpw'] = "/usr/sbin/dovecotpw"; $CONF['domain_path'] = 'YES'; $CONF['domain_in_mailbox'] = 'NO'; $CONF['aliases'] = '10'; $CONF['mailboxes'] = '10'; $CONF['maxquota'] = '10'; $CONF['quota'] = 'YES'; $CONF['quota_multiplier'] = '1024000'; $CONF['alias_control'] = 'YES'; $CONF['alias_control_admin'] = 'YES'; $CONF['special_alias_control'] = 'YES'; $CONF['fetchmail'] = 'NO'; $CONF['user_footer_link'] = "http://host.example.com"; $CONF['footer_link'] = 'http://host.example.com/postfixadmin/main.php'; $CONF['create_mailbox_subdirs_prefix']='INBOX.'; $CONF['used_quotas'] = 'YES'; $CONF['new_quota_table'] = 'YES';
Go to http://host.example.com/postfixadmin/setup.php
Create the password hash, add it to the config.inc.php file
Go back to http://host.example.com/postfixadmin/setup.php
Create superadmin, create a mail domain or other, as desired.
Install Postfix
Create a user for the virtual mail delivery, and get its uid/gid (you'll need the numeric uid/gid for postfix)
adduser vmail -H -D -s /bin/false grep vmail /etc/passwd
(In examples below, we use 1006/1006 for the uid/gid)
Create the mail directory, and assign vmail as the owner
mkdir -p /var/mail/domains chown -R vmail:vmail /var/mail/domains
Install postfix
apk add acf-postfix postfix-pgsql
Edit the /etc/postfix/main.cf file Here's an example:
myhostname=host.example.com mydomain=example.com mydestination = localhost.$mydomains, localhost mynetworks_style = subnet mynetworks = 127.0.0.0/8 virtual_mailbox_domains = proxy:pgsql:/etc/postfix/sql/pgsql_virtual_domains_maps.cf virtual_alias_maps = proxy:pgsql:/etc/postfix/sql/pgsql_virtual_alias_maps.cf, proxy:pgsql:/etc/postfix/sql/pgsql_virtual_alias_domain_maps.cf, proxy:pgsql:/etc/postfix/sql/pgsql_virtual_alias_domain_catchall_maps.cf virtual_mailbox_maps = proxy:pgsql:/etc/postfix/sql/pgsql_virtual_mailbox_maps.cf, proxy:pgsql:/etc/postfix/sql/pgsql_virtual_alias_domain_mailbox_maps.cf virtual_mailbox_base = /var/mail/domains/ virtual_gid_maps = static:1006 virtual_uid_maps = static:1006 virtual_minimum_uid = 100 virtual_transport = virtual # This next command means you must create a virtual # domain for the host itself - ALL mail goes through # The virtual transport mailbox_transport = virtual local_transport = virtual local_transport_maps = $virtual_mailbox_maps smtpd_helo_required = yes disable_vrfy_command = yes message_size_limit = 10240000 queue_minfree = 51200000 smtpd_sender_restrictions = permit_mynetworks, reject_non_fqdn_sender, reject_unknown_sender_domain smtpd_recipient_restrictions = reject_non_fqdn_recipient, reject_unknown_recipient_domain, permit_mynetworks, permit_sasl_authenticated, reject_unauth_destination, reject_rbl_client dnsbl.sorbs.net, reject_rbl_client zen.spamhaus.org, reject_rbl_client bl.spamcop.net smtpd_data_restrictions = reject_unauth_pipelining # we will use this later - This prevents cleartext authentication # for relaying smtpd_tls_auth_only = yes
Now we need to create a *bunch* of files so that postfix can get the delivery information out of sql. Here's a shell script to create the scripts. Change PGPW to the password for the postfix user of the postfix SQL database.
cd /etc/postfix mkdir sql PGPW="ChangeMe" cat - <<EOF >sql/pgsql_virtual_alias_domain_catchall_maps.cf user=postfix password = $PGPW hosts = localhost dbname = postfix query = Select goto From alias,alias_domain where alias_domain.alias_domain = '%d' and alias.address = '@' || alias_domain.target_domain and alias.active = true and alias_domain.active= true EOF cat - <<EOF >sql/pgsql_virtual_alias_domain_mailbox_maps.cf user=postfix password = $PGPW hosts = localhost dbname = postfix query = Select maildir from mailbox,alias_domain where alias_domain.alias_domain = '%d' and mailbox.username = '%u' || '@' || alias_domain.target_domain and mailbox.active = true and alias_domain.active EOF cat - <<EOF >sql/pgsql_virtual_alias_domain_maps.cf user=postfix password = $PGPW hosts = localhost dbname = postfix query = select goto from alias,alias_domain where alias_domain.alias_domain='%d' and alias.address = '%u' || '@' || alias_domain.target_domain and alias.active= true and alias_domain.active= true EOF cat - <<EOF >sql/pgsql_virtual_alias_maps.cf user=postfix password = $PGPW hosts = localhost dbname = postfix query = Select goto From alias Where address='%s' and active ='1' EOF cat - <<EOF >sql/pgsql_virtual_domains_maps.cf user=postfix password = $PGPW hosts = localhost dbname = postfix query = Select domain from domain where domain='%s' and active='1' EOF cat - <<EOF >sql/pgsql_virtual_mailbox_maps.cf user=postfix password = $PGPW hosts = localhost dbname = postfix query = Select maildir from mailbox where username='%s' and active=true EOF
chown -R postfix:postfix sql chmod 640 sql/*
At this point you should be able to start up postfix
newaliases # so postfix is happy... /etc/init.d/postfix start rc-service add postfix
Create a domain in PostfixAdmin and test
create a domain for the local box (e.g. example.com) Create the alias accounts
From the machine, send a test message:
sendmail -t root@example.com subject: test . ^d
In /var/log/mail.log (or /var/log/messages, if you still have busybox syslogd running) you should see the message queued. The message should be in /var/mail/domains/example.com/root/new
Install Dovecot
Dovecot is the POP3/IMAP server to retrieve mail.
As before, we install dovecot:
apk add acf-dovecot dovecot-pgsql
edit /etc/dovecot.conf
# Select only the protocols you wish to support - all are listed in the next line protocols = imap imaps pop pop3s log_path = /var/log/dovecot.log info_log_path = /var/log/dovecot-info.log disable_plaintext_auth = no
# Authenticated IMAP ssl = yes ssl_cert_file = /etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem ssl_key_file = /etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem auth_verbose = yes auth_debug = no mail_location = maildir:/var/mail/domains/%d/%n auth default { mechanisms = plain passdb sql { args = /etc/dovecot/dovecot-sql.conf } userdb static { args = uid=1006 gid=1006 home=/var/mail/domains/%d/%n }
We need a certificate for SSL/TLS authentication, so in the example above, we use the lighttpd cert. That way when the cert is renewed/replaced, Dovecot will have access to the new cert as well.
Create the /etc/dovecot/dovecot-sql.conf file:
driver = pgsql connect = host=localhost dbname=postfix user=postfix password=******** password_query = select username,password from mailbox where local_part = '%n' and domain = '%d' default_pass_scheme = MD5-CRYPT
Again, change the password above to your postfix user password, and protect the file from prying eyes:
chown root:root /etc/dovecot/dovecot-sql.conf chmod 600 /etc/dovecot/dovecot-sql.conf
Start dovecot
/etc/init.d/dovecot start rc-update add dovecot
Testing
Make sure your firewall allows in ports 25(SMTP) 110 (POP3), 995 (POP3S), 143(IMAP), 993(IMAPS), or whatever subset you support.
At this point, you should be able to:
* Create a new domain and add users with PostfixAdmin * Send mail to those users via SMTP to port 25 * Retrieve mail using the user's full email and password (e.g. username: user@example.com password: ChangeM
Value Add Stuff
Spam Filtering
Add the following line to /etc/postfix/main.cf
#content_filter = scan:[127.0.0.1]:10025
Relay for Authenticated Users
# TLS Stuff -- since we allow SASL with tls *only*, we have to set up TLS first
smtpd_tls_cert_file = /etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem smtpd_tls_key_file = /etc/lighttpd/server-bundle.pem smtpd_tls_CAfile = /etc/lighttpd/ca-crt.pem smtpd_tls_security_level = may # Log info about the negotiated encryption levels smtpd_tls_received_header = yes smtpd_tls_loglevel = 1 # SASL - this allows senders to authenticiate themselves # This along with "premit_sasl_authenticated" in smtpd_recipient_restrictions above allows relaying smtpd_sasl_type = dovecot smtpd_sasl_path = private/dovecot-auth.sock smtpd_sasl_auth_enable = yes smtpd_sasl_authenticated_header = yes smtpd_tls_auth_only = yes
/etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf
# this is for postfix SASL (authenticated users can relay through us) socket listen { client { path = /var/spool/postfix/private/dovecot-auth.sock mode = 0660 user = postfix group = postfix } }
}
== log rotation ==