mox/testdata/web/domains.conf

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improve webserver, add domain redirects (aliases), add tests and admin page ui to manage the config - make builtin http handlers serve on specific domains, such as for mta-sts, so e.g. /.well-known/mta-sts.txt isn't served on all domains. - add logging of a few more fields in access logging. - small tweaks/bug fixes in webserver request handling. - add config option for redirecting entire domains to another (common enough). - split httpserver metric into two: one for duration until writing header (i.e. performance of server), another for duration until full response is sent to client (i.e. performance as perceived by users). - add admin ui, a new page for managing the configs. after making changes and hitting "save", the changes take effect immediately. the page itself doesn't look very well-designed (many input fields, makes it look messy). i have an idea to improve it (explained in admin.html as todo) by making the layout look just like the config file. not urgent though. i've already changed my websites/webapps over. the idea of adding a webserver is to take away a (the) reason for folks to want to complicate their mox setup by running an other webserver on the same machine. i think the current webserver implementation can already serve most common use cases. with a few more tweaks (feedback needed!) we should be able to get to 95% of the use cases. the reverse proxy can take care of the remaining 5%. nevertheless, a next step is still to change the quickstart to make it easier for folks to run with an existing webserver, with existing tls certs/keys. that's how this relates to issue #5.
2023-03-02 20:15:54 +03:00
Domains:
mox.example:
LocalpartCaseSensitive: false
improve http request handling for internal services and multiple domains per listener, you could enable the admin/account/webmail/webapi handlers. but that would serve those services on their configured paths (/admin/, /, /webmail/, /webapi/) on all domains mox would be webserving, including any non-mail domains. so your www.example/admin/ would be serving the admin web interface, with no way to disabled that. with this change, the admin interface is only served on requests to (based on Host header): - ip addresses - the listener host name (explicitly configured in the listener, with fallback to global hostname) - "localhost" (for ssh tunnel/forwarding scenario's) the account/webmail/webapi interfaces are served on the same domains as the admin interface, and additionally: - the client settings domains, as optionally configured in each Domain in domains.conf. typically "mail.<yourdomain>". this means the internal services are no longer served on other domains configured in the webserver, e.g. www.example.org/admin/ will not be handled specially. the order of evaluation of routes/services is also changed: before this change, the internal handlers would always be evaluated first. with this change, only the system handlers for MTA-STS/autoconfig/ACME-validation will be evaluated first. then the webserver handlers. and finally the internal services (admin/account/webmail/webapi). this allows an admin to configure overrides for some of the domains (per hostname-matching rules explained above) that would normally serve these services. webserver handlers can now be configured that pass the request to an internal service: in addition to the existing static/redirect/forward config options, there is now an "internal" config option, naming the service (admin/account/webmail/webapi) for handling the request. this allows enabling the internal services on custom domains. for issue #160 by TragicLifeHu, thanks for reporting!
2024-05-11 12:13:14 +03:00
ClientSettingsDomain: mail.mox.example
MTASTS:
PolicyID: 1
Mode: enforce
MaxAge: 24h
other.example: nil
improve webserver, add domain redirects (aliases), add tests and admin page ui to manage the config - make builtin http handlers serve on specific domains, such as for mta-sts, so e.g. /.well-known/mta-sts.txt isn't served on all domains. - add logging of a few more fields in access logging. - small tweaks/bug fixes in webserver request handling. - add config option for redirecting entire domains to another (common enough). - split httpserver metric into two: one for duration until writing header (i.e. performance of server), another for duration until full response is sent to client (i.e. performance as perceived by users). - add admin ui, a new page for managing the configs. after making changes and hitting "save", the changes take effect immediately. the page itself doesn't look very well-designed (many input fields, makes it look messy). i have an idea to improve it (explained in admin.html as todo) by making the layout look just like the config file. not urgent though. i've already changed my websites/webapps over. the idea of adding a webserver is to take away a (the) reason for folks to want to complicate their mox setup by running an other webserver on the same machine. i think the current webserver implementation can already serve most common use cases. with a few more tweaks (feedback needed!) we should be able to get to 95% of the use cases. the reverse proxy can take care of the remaining 5%. nevertheless, a next step is still to change the quickstart to make it easier for folks to run with an existing webserver, with existing tls certs/keys. that's how this relates to issue #5.
2023-03-02 20:15:54 +03:00
Accounts:
mjl:
Domain: mox.example
Destinations:
mjl@mox.example: nil
improve webserver, add domain redirects (aliases), add tests and admin page ui to manage the config - make builtin http handlers serve on specific domains, such as for mta-sts, so e.g. /.well-known/mta-sts.txt isn't served on all domains. - add logging of a few more fields in access logging. - small tweaks/bug fixes in webserver request handling. - add config option for redirecting entire domains to another (common enough). - split httpserver metric into two: one for duration until writing header (i.e. performance of server), another for duration until full response is sent to client (i.e. performance as perceived by users). - add admin ui, a new page for managing the configs. after making changes and hitting "save", the changes take effect immediately. the page itself doesn't look very well-designed (many input fields, makes it look messy). i have an idea to improve it (explained in admin.html as todo) by making the layout look just like the config file. not urgent though. i've already changed my websites/webapps over. the idea of adding a webserver is to take away a (the) reason for folks to want to complicate their mox setup by running an other webserver on the same machine. i think the current webserver implementation can already serve most common use cases. with a few more tweaks (feedback needed!) we should be able to get to 95% of the use cases. the reverse proxy can take care of the remaining 5%. nevertheless, a next step is still to change the quickstart to make it easier for folks to run with an existing webserver, with existing tls certs/keys. that's how this relates to issue #5.
2023-03-02 20:15:54 +03:00
WebDomainRedirects:
redir.mox.example: mox.example
WebHandlers:
-
LogName: static
Domain: mox.example
PathRegexp: ^/static/
DontRedirectPlainHTTP: true
WebStatic:
StripPrefix: /static/
# This is run from the http package.
Root: ../testdata/web/static
ListFiles: true
ResponseHeaders:
X-Test: mox
improve http request handling for internal services and multiple domains per listener, you could enable the admin/account/webmail/webapi handlers. but that would serve those services on their configured paths (/admin/, /, /webmail/, /webapi/) on all domains mox would be webserving, including any non-mail domains. so your www.example/admin/ would be serving the admin web interface, with no way to disabled that. with this change, the admin interface is only served on requests to (based on Host header): - ip addresses - the listener host name (explicitly configured in the listener, with fallback to global hostname) - "localhost" (for ssh tunnel/forwarding scenario's) the account/webmail/webapi interfaces are served on the same domains as the admin interface, and additionally: - the client settings domains, as optionally configured in each Domain in domains.conf. typically "mail.<yourdomain>". this means the internal services are no longer served on other domains configured in the webserver, e.g. www.example.org/admin/ will not be handled specially. the order of evaluation of routes/services is also changed: before this change, the internal handlers would always be evaluated first. with this change, only the system handlers for MTA-STS/autoconfig/ACME-validation will be evaluated first. then the webserver handlers. and finally the internal services (admin/account/webmail/webapi). this allows an admin to configure overrides for some of the domains (per hostname-matching rules explained above) that would normally serve these services. webserver handlers can now be configured that pass the request to an internal service: in addition to the existing static/redirect/forward config options, there is now an "internal" config option, naming the service (admin/account/webmail/webapi) for handling the request. this allows enabling the internal services on custom domains. for issue #160 by TragicLifeHu, thanks for reporting!
2024-05-11 12:13:14 +03:00
-
LogName: adminoverride
Domain: mox.example
PathRegexp: ^/admin/
DontRedirectPlainHTTP: true
WebRedirect:
BaseURL: http://redirect.example