in the Dockerfile, allow running on privileged ports and expose those ports.
add a docker-compose.yml with instructions for the quickstart.
fix running imaptest somewhat. after a short while it will hit the rate limiter.
in quickstart, recognize we are running under docker, and print slightly
different commands to set permissions, and skip generating the systemd service
file. als fix cleaning up the right paths during failure in quickstart.
for issue #3
so users can easily take their email out of somewhere else, and import it into mox.
this goes a little way to give feedback as the import progresses: upload
progress is shown (surprisingly, browsers aren't doing this...), imported
mailboxes/messages are counted (batched) and import issues/warnings are
displayed, all sent over an SSE connection. an import token is stored in
sessionstorage. if you reload the page (e.g. after a connection error), the
browser will reconnect to the running import and show its progress again. and
you can just abort the import before it is finished and committed, and nothing
will have changed.
this also imports flags/keywords from mbox files.
similar to greylisting, but not quite the same: with greylisting you would
always reject the first delivery attempt with a temporary failure. with the
hope that spammers won't retry their deliveries. the spams i've been receiving
seem to be quite consistent though. and we would keep rejecting them anyway.
we slow down the spammy connections to waste some of the resources of a
spammer. this may slow their campaigns down a bit, leaving a bit more time to
take measures.
we do the same with connections that have their 3rd authentication failure,
typically password guess attempts.
when we accept a message by a first-time sender, we sleep for 15 seconds before
actually delivering them. known-good senders don't have to wait. if the message
turns out to be a spammer, at least we've consumed one of their connections,
and they cannot deliver at too high a rate to us because of the max open
connection limit.
- make the example commands in the readme more likely to succeed, especially
for people who are not familiar with go and its toolchain.
- improve probability that the correct configuration is generated, especially
the hostname. previously, if the quickstart email address was "some.domain",
and the machine where you ran the quickstart was "myhost", the hostname used
for the configuration was assumed to be "myhost.some.domain". but this is often
not correct, especially when configuring mox to serve mail on a subdomain of an
existing domain. mox will now try to determine the host name by a reverse
lookup of the public ips it found. and it will warn if there are no/multiple
candidates.
based on feedback from erik dubbelboer, thanks!