Commit graph

61 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mechiel Lukkien
c66fa64b8b
wrap long dkim dns records at 100 characters instead of 255 for better display (no line-wrap) 2023-11-22 14:02:24 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
51e314f65a
for external domains (for which we only accept external dmarc reports), don't try to fetch tls certificates at startup for autoconfig host 2023-11-14 00:26:18 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
1d02760f66
fix incoming deliveries to the host-tlsrpt address
it was returning "550 not accepting mail for this domain" due to a missing
check in the address/account lookup function.
2023-11-12 11:37:15 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
2073db194b
when checking domain settings, check that dmarc & tls reporting addresses are present if there is a record 2023-11-10 20:25:06 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
893a6f8911
implement outgoing tls reports
we were already accepting, processing and displaying incoming tls reports. now
we start tracking TLS connection and security-policy-related errors for
outgoing message deliveries as well. we send reports once a day, to the
reporting addresses specified in TLSRPT records (rua) of a policy domain. these
reports are about MTA-STS policies and/or DANE policies, and about
STARTTLS-related failures.

sending reports is enabled by default, but can be disabled through setting
NoOutgoingTLSReports in mox.conf.

only at the end of the implementation process came the realization that the
TLSRPT policy domain for DANE (MX) hosts are separate from the TLSRPT policy
for the recipient domain, and that MTA-STS and DANE TLS/policy results are
typically delivered in separate reports. so MX hosts need their own TLSRPT
policies.

config for the per-host TLSRPT policy should be added to mox.conf for existing
installs, in field HostTLSRPT. it is automatically configured by quickstart for
new installs. with a HostTLSRPT config, the "dns records" and "dns check" admin
pages now suggest the per-host TLSRPT record. by creating that record, you're
requesting TLS reports about your MX host.

gathering all the TLS/policy results is somewhat tricky. the tentacles go
throughout the code. the positive result is that the TLS/policy-related code
had to be cleaned up a bit. for example, the smtpclient TLS modes now reflect
reality better, with independent settings about whether PKIX and/or DANE
verification has to be done, and/or whether verification errors have to be
ignored (e.g. for tls-required: no header). also, cached mtasts policies of
mode "none" are now cleaned up once the MTA-STS DNS record goes away.
2023-11-09 19:47:26 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
2535f351ed
fix bug with concurrent math/rand.Rand.Read
firstly by using crypto/rand in those cases. and secondly by putting a lock
around the Read (though it isn't used at the moment).

found while working while implementing sending tls reports.
2023-11-09 17:17:26 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
28fae96a9b
make mox compile on windows, without "mox serve" but with working "mox localserve"
getting mox to compile required changing code in only a few places where
package "syscall" was used: for accessing file access times and for umask
handling. an open problem is how to start a process as an unprivileged user on
windows.  that's why "mox serve" isn't implemented yet. and just finding a way
to implement it now may not be good enough in the near future: we may want to
starting using a more complete privilege separation approach, with a process
handling sensitive tasks (handling private keys, authentication), where we may
want to pass file descriptors between processes. how would that work on
windows?

anyway, getting mox to compile for windows doesn't mean it works properly on
windows. the largest issue: mox would normally open a file, rename or remove
it, and finally close it. this happens during message delivery. that doesn't
work on windows, the rename/remove would fail because the file is still open.
so this commit swaps many "remove" and "close" calls. renames are a longer
story: message delivery had two ways to deliver: with "consuming" the
(temporary) message file (which would rename it to its final destination), and
without consuming (by hardlinking the file, falling back to copying). the last
delivery to a recipient of a message (and the only one in the common case of a
single recipient) would consume the message, and the earlier recipients would
not.  during delivery, the already open message file was used, to parse the
message.  we still want to use that open message file, and the caller now stays
responsible for closing it, but we no longer try to rename (consume) the file.
we always hardlink (or copy) during delivery (this works on windows), and the
caller is responsible for closing and removing (in that order) the original
temporary file. this does cost one syscall more. but it makes the delivery code
(responsibilities) a bit simpler.

there is one more obvious issue: the file system path separator. mox already
used the "filepath" package to join paths in many places, but not everywhere.
and it still used strings with slashes for local file access. with this commit,
the code now uses filepath.FromSlash for path strings with slashes, uses
"filepath" in a few more places where it previously didn't. also switches from
"filepath" to regular "path" package when handling mailbox names in a few
places, because those always use forward slashes, regardless of local file
system conventions.  windows can handle forward slashes when opening files, so
test code that passes path strings with forward slashes straight to go stdlib
file i/o functions are left unchanged to reduce code churn. the regular
non-test code, or test code that uses path strings in places other than
standard i/o functions, does have the paths converted for consistent paths
(otherwise we would end up with paths with mixed forward/backward slashes in
log messages).

windows cannot dup a listening socket. for "mox localserve", it isn't
important, and we can work around the issue. the current approach for "mox
serve" (forking a process and passing file descriptors of listening sockets on
"privileged" ports) won't work on windows. perhaps it isn't needed on windows,
and any user can listen on "privileged" ports? that would be welcome.

on windows, os.Open cannot open a directory, so we cannot call Sync on it after
message delivery. a cursory internet search indicates that directories cannot
be synced on windows. the story is probably much more nuanced than that, with
long deep technical details/discussions/disagreement/confusion, like on unix.
for "mox localserve" we can get away with making syncdir a no-op.
2023-10-14 10:54:07 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
14d09bb308
format long multi-string dkim txt records for rsa 2048 as a mult-line record, enclosed in ()'s
more easily readable, though still long
2023-10-13 09:14:42 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
40040542f6
for generated dkim keys, use clearer file names
with ".rsa2048.privatekey.pkcs8.pem", instead of "rsakey.pkcs8.pem". "rsakey"
doesn't say if it is a public or private key.
2023-10-13 08:59:35 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
67fe88f431
change the autodiscover SRV record to point to the mail server hostname directly, not to a cname
srv targest shouldn't be cname's. bind was warning about it.
2023-10-13 08:51:02 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
850f4444d4
when suggesting DNS records, leave "IN" out
people will either paste the records in their zone file. in that case, the
records will inherit "IN" from earlier records, and there will always be one
record. if anyone uses a different class, their smart enough to know they need
to add IN manually.

plenty of people will add their records through some clunky web interface of
their dns operator. they probably won't even have the choice to set the class,
it'll always be IN.
2023-10-13 08:25:35 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
daa908e9f4
implement dnssec-awareness throughout code, and dane for incoming/outgoing mail delivery
the vendored dns resolver code is a copy of the go stdlib dns resolver, with
awareness of the "authentic data" (i.e. dnssec secure) added, as well as support
for enhanced dns errors, and looking up tlsa records (for dane). ideally it
would be upstreamed, but the chances seem slim.

dnssec-awareness is added to all packages, e.g. spf, dkim, dmarc, iprev. their
dnssec status is added to the Received message headers for incoming email.

but the main reason to add dnssec was for implementing dane. with dane, the
verification of tls certificates can be done through certificates/public keys
published in dns (in the tlsa records). this only makes sense (is trustworthy)
if those dns records can be verified to be authentic.

mox now applies dane to delivering messages over smtp. mox already implemented
mta-sts for webpki/pkix-verification of certificates against the (large) pool
of CA's, and still enforces those policies when present. but it now also checks
for dane records, and will verify those if present. if dane and mta-sts are
both absent, the regular opportunistic tls with starttls is still done. and the
fallback to plaintext is also still done.

mox also makes it easy to setup dane for incoming deliveries, so other servers
can deliver with dane tls certificate verification. the quickstart now
generates private keys that are used when requesting certificates with acme.
the private keys are pre-generated because they must be static and known during
setup, because their public keys must be published in tlsa records in dns.
autocert would generate private keys on its own, so had to be forked to add the
option to provide the private key when requesting a new certificate. hopefully
upstream will accept the change and we can drop the fork.

with this change, using the quickstart to setup a new mox instance, the checks
at internet.nl result in a 100% score, provided the domain is dnssec-signed and
the network doesn't have any issues.
2023-10-10 12:09:35 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
2b97c21f99
make setting up apple mail clients easier by providing .mobileconfig device management profiles
including showing a qr code to easily get the file on iphones.
the profile is currently in the "account" page.

idea by x8x in issue #65
2023-09-23 12:08:35 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
f4c20673ff
don't generate duplicate spf record if hostname is equal to domain name, e.g. postmaster@mail.domain.
the assumption has been that the hostname is something like mail.<domain>, when
setting up mox with the quickstart for user@<domain>. but users can use the
quickstart for postmaster@mail.<domain> as well.

for issue #46 by x8x, thanks for reporting!
2023-08-25 14:32:28 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
aebfd78a9f
implement accepting dmarc & tls reports for other domains
to accept reports for another domain, first add that domain to the config,
leaving all options empty except DMARC/TLSRPT in which you configure a Domain.

the suggested DNS DMARC/TLSRPT records will show the email address with
configured domain. for DMARC, the dnscheck functionality will verify that the
destination domain has opted in to receiving reports.

there is a new command-line subcommand "mox dmarc checkreportaddrs" that
verifies if dmarc reporting destination addresses have opted in to received
reports.

this also changes the suggested dns records (in quickstart, and through admin
pages and cli subcommand) to take into account whether DMARC and TLSRPT is
configured, and with which localpart/domain (previously it always printed
records as if reporting was enabled for the domain). and when generating the
suggested DNS records, the dmarc.Record and tlsrpt.Record code is used, with
proper uri-escaping.
2023-08-23 14:27:21 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
55d05c6bea
replace listener config option IPsNATed with NATIPs, and let autotls check NATIPs
NATIPs lists the public IPs, so we can still do the DNS checks on them. with
IPsNATed, we disabled the checks.

based on feedback by kikoreis in issue #52
2023-08-11 10:13:17 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
01bcd98a42
add flag to ruleset that indicates a message is forwarded, slightly modifying how junk analysis is done
part of PR #50 by bobobo1618
2023-08-09 22:31:37 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
9c31789c56
add option to ruleset to accept incoming spammy messages to a configured mailbox
this is based on @bobobo1618's PR #50. bobobo1618 had the right idea, i tried
including an "is forwarded email" configuration option but that indeed became
too tightly coupled. the "is forwarded" option is still planned, but it is
separate from the "accept rejects to mailbox" config option, because one could
still want to push back on forwarded spam messages.

we do an actual accept, delivering to a configured mailbox, instead of storing
to the rejects mailbox where messages can automatically be removed from.  one
of the goals of mox is not pretend to accept email while actually junking it.
users can still configure delivery to a junk folder (as was already possible),
but aren't deleted automatically. there is still an X-Mox-Reason header in the
message, and a log line about accepting the reject, but otherwise it is
registered and treated as an (smtp) accept.

the ruleset mailbox is still required to keep that explicit. users can specify
Inbox again.

hope this is good enough for PR #50, otherwise we'll change it.
2023-08-09 22:25:10 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
34ede1075d
remove last remnants of treating a mailbox named "Sent" specially, in favor of special-use mailbox flags
a few places still looked at the name "Sent". but since we have special-use
flags, we should always look at those. this also changes the config so admins
can specify different names for the special-use mailboxes to create for new
accounts, e.g. in a different language. the old config option is still
understood, just deprecated.
2023-08-09 09:31:23 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
849b4ec9e9
add webmail
it was far down on the roadmap, but implemented earlier, because it's
interesting, and to help prepare for a jmap implementation. for jmap we need to
implement more client-like functionality than with just imap. internal data
structures need to change. jmap has lots of other requirements, so it's already
a big project. by implementing a webmail now, some of the required data
structure changes become clear and can be made now, so the later jmap
implementation can do things similarly to the webmail code. the webmail
frontend and webmail are written together, making their interface/api much
smaller and simpler than jmap.

one of the internal changes is that we now keep track of per-mailbox
total/unread/unseen/deleted message counts and mailbox sizes.  keeping this
data consistent after any change to the stored messages (through the code base)
is tricky, so mox now has a consistency check that verifies the counts are
correct, which runs only during tests, each time an internal account reference
is closed. we have a few more internal "changes" that are propagated for the
webmail frontend (that imap doesn't have a way to propagate on a connection),
like changes to the special-use flags on mailboxes, and used keywords in a
mailbox. more changes that will be required have revealed themselves while
implementing the webmail, and will be implemented next.

the webmail user interface is modeled after the mail clients i use or have
used: thunderbird, macos mail, mutt; and webmails i normally only use for
testing: gmail, proton, yahoo, outlook. a somewhat technical user is assumed,
but still the goal is to make this webmail client easy to use for everyone. the
user interface looks like most other mail clients: a list of mailboxes, a
search bar, a message list view, and message details. there is a top/bottom and
a left/right layout for the list/message view, default is automatic based on
screen size. the panes can be resized by the user. buttons for actions are just
text, not icons. clicking a button briefly shows the shortcut for the action in
the bottom right, helping with learning to operate quickly. any text that is
underdotted has a title attribute that causes more information to be displayed,
e.g. what a button does or a field is about. to highlight potential phishing
attempts, any text (anywhere in the webclient) that switches unicode "blocks"
(a rough approximation to (language) scripts) within a word is underlined
orange. multiple messages can be selected with familiar ui interaction:
clicking while holding control and/or shift keys.  keyboard navigation works
with arrows/page up/down and home/end keys, and also with a few basic vi-like
keys for list/message navigation. we prefer showing the text instead of
html (with inlined images only) version of a message. html messages are shown
in an iframe served from an endpoint with CSP headers to prevent dangerous
resources (scripts, external images) from being loaded. the html is also
sanitized, with javascript removed. a user can choose to load external
resources (e.g. images for tracking purposes).

the frontend is just (strict) typescript, no external frameworks. all
incoming/outgoing data is typechecked, both the api request parameters and
response types, and the data coming in over SSE. the types and checking code
are generated with sherpats, which uses the api definitions generated by
sherpadoc based on the Go code. so types from the backend are automatically
propagated to the frontend.  since there is no framework to automatically
propagate properties and rerender components, changes coming in over the SSE
connection are propagated explicitly with regular function calls.  the ui is
separated into "views", each with a "root" dom element that is added to the
visible document. these views have additional functions for getting changes
propagated, often resulting in the view updating its (internal) ui state (dom).
we keep the frontend compilation simple, it's just a few typescript files that
get compiled (combined and types stripped) into a single js file, no additional
runtime code needed or complicated build processes used.  the webmail is served
is served from a compressed, cachable html file that includes style and the
javascript, currently just over 225kb uncompressed, under 60kb compressed (not
minified, including comments). we include the generated js files in the
repository, to keep Go's easily buildable self-contained binaries.

authentication is basic http, as with the account and admin pages. most data
comes in over one long-term SSE connection to the backend. api requests signal
which mailbox/search/messages are requested over the SSE connection. fetching
individual messages, and making changes, are done through api calls. the
operations are similar to imap, so some code has been moved from package
imapserver to package store. the future jmap implementation will benefit from
these changes too. more functionality will probably be moved to the store
package in the future.

the quickstart enables webmail on the internal listener by default (for new
installs). users can enable it on the public listener if they want to. mox
localserve enables it too. to enable webmail on existing installs, add settings
like the following to the listeners in mox.conf, similar to AccountHTTP(S):

	WebmailHTTP:
		Enabled: true
	WebmailHTTPS:
		Enabled: true

special thanks to liesbeth, gerben, andrii for early user feedback.

there is plenty still to do, see the list at the top of webmail/webmail.ts.
feedback welcome as always.
2023-08-07 21:57:03 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
785a38c8b0
improve deprecation warning about localpart-only destinations a bit
it's still not great. better to automatically change domains.conf. but that
would currently rewrite the whole file, which may not be what admins that
manually edit expect, it would remove their comments. we need better
config-update code.

for issue #40
2023-07-03 09:48:50 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
03c3f56a59
add basic tests for the ctl subcommands, and fix two small bugs
this doesn't really test the output of the ctl commands, just that they succeed
without error. better than nothing...

testing found two small bugs, that are not an issue in practice:

1. we were ack'ing streamed data from the other side of the ctl connection
before having read it. when there is no buffer space on the connection (always
the case for net.Pipe) that would cause a deadlock. only actually happened
during the new tests.

2. the generated dkim keys are relatively to the directory of the dynamic
config file. mox looked it up relative to the directory of the _static_ config
file at startup. this directory is typicaly the same. users would have noticed
if they had triggered this.
2023-07-02 14:18:50 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
5baeea4746
tweak to error message when loading configuration file
instead of saying "parsing config/mox.conf: :93: unknown key ...",
make it "parsing config/mox.conf:93: unknown key ..."
2023-06-24 10:12:25 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
8096441f67
new feature: when delivering messages from the queue, make it possible to use a "transport"
the default transport is still just "direct delivery", where we connect to the
destination domain's MX servers.

other transports are:

- regular smtp without authentication, this is relaying to a smarthost.
- submission with authentication, e.g. to a third party email sending service.
- direct delivery, but with with connections going through a socks proxy. this
  can be helpful if your ip is blocked, you need to get email out, and you have
  another IP that isn't blocked.

keep in mind that for all of the above, appropriate SPF/DKIM settings have to
be configured. the "dnscheck" for a domain does a check for any SOCKS IP in the
SPF record. SPF for smtp/submission (ranges? includes?) and any DKIM
requirements cannot really be checked.

which transport is used can be configured through routes. routes can be set on
an account, a domain, or globally. the routes are evaluated in that order, with
the first match selecting the transport. these routes are evaluated for each
delivery attempt. common selection criteria are recipient domain and sender
domain, but also which delivery attempt this is. you could configured mox to
attempt sending through a 3rd party from the 4th attempt onwards.

routes and transports are optional. if no route matches, or an empty/zero
transport is selected, normal direct delivery is done.

we could already "submit" emails with 3rd party accounts with "sendmail". but
we now support more SASL authentication mechanisms with SMTP (not only PLAIN,
but also SCRAM-SHA-256, SCRAM-SHA-1 and CRAM-MD5), which sendmail now also
supports. sendmail will use the most secure mechanism supported by the server,
or the explicitly configured mechanism.

for issue #36 by dmikushin. also based on earlier discussion on hackernews.
2023-06-16 18:57:05 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
2eecf38842
unbreak the subcommands that talk to the mox instance of the ctl socket
broken on may 31st with the "open tls keys as root" change, 70d07c5459, so
broken in v0.0.4, not in v0.0.3
2023-06-16 13:27:27 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
70d07c5459
open tls keys/certificate as root, pass fd's to the unprivileged child process
makes it easier to use tls keys/certs managed by other tools, with or without
acme. the root process has access to open such files. the child process reads
the key from the file descriptor, then closes the file.

for issue #30 by inigoserna, thanks!
2023-05-31 14:09:53 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
e81930ba20
update to latest bstore (with support for an index on a []string: Message.DKIMDomains), and cyclic data types (to be used for Message.Part soon); also adds a context.Context to database operations. 2023-05-22 14:40:36 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
c1753b369d
in smtpserver, accept delivery to postmaster@<hostname>, and also postmaster@ addresses for domains that don't have a postmaster address configured. 2023-04-24 12:04:46 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
b571dd4b28
implement a catchall address for a domain
by specifying a "destination" in an account that is just "@" followed by the
domain, e.g. "@example.org". messages are only delivered to the catchall
address when no regular destination matches (taking the per-domain
catchall-separator and case-sensisitivity into account).

for issue #18
2023-03-29 21:11:43 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
51ad345dbb
refuse to add an address when its localpart contains the domains catchall separator, or when its canonicalized address (e.g. lower cased when case-insensitive) is already present, and check at startup as well
such configurations are certainly errors, but were silently accepted and highly
likely not doing what you may have hoped. i suspect no one has configured mox
this way.
2023-03-29 20:58:50 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
9b57c69c1c
implement limits on outgoing messages for an account
by default 1000 messages per day, and to max 200 first-time receivers.
i don't think a person would reach those limits. a compromised account abused
by spammers could easily reach that limit. this prevents further damage.

the error message you will get is quite clear, pointing to the configuration
parameter that should be changed.
2023-03-29 09:36:06 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
317dc78397
add pedantic mode (used by localserve) that refuses some behaviour that is invalid according to specifications and that we normally accept for compatibility 2023-03-12 15:16:01 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
10daf3cb81
make http(s) path for serving the account and admin pages configurable
so you can use the host (domain) name of the mail server for serving other
resources too. the default is is still that account is served on /, and so
takes all incoming requests before giving webhandlers a chance.

mox localserve now serves the account pages on /account/
2023-03-12 11:52:15 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
0099197d00
add "mox localserve" subcommand, for running mox locally for email-related testing/developing
localserve creates a config for listening on localhost for
imap/smtp/submission/http, on port numbers 1000 + the common service port
numbers. all incoming email is accepted (if checks pass), and a few pattern in
localparts are recognized and result in delivery errors.
2023-03-12 11:40:00 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
f60ad1452f
use configured tls ca config for all tls connections, so https as well
and add documentation for developers for setting up certificates with manual
local CA (with cfssl) or local ACME CA (with pebble).
2023-03-10 16:25:18 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
2c07645ab4
deprecate having only localparts in an Account's Destinations, it should always be a full email address
current behaviour isn't intuitive. it's not great to have to attempt parsing
the strings as both localpart and email address. so we deprecate the
localpart-only behaviour. when we load the config file, and it has
localpart-only Destinations keys, we'll change them to full addresses in
memory. when an admin causes a write of domains.conf, it'll automatically be
fixed. we log an error with a deprecated notice for each localpart-only
destinations key.

sometime in the future, we can remove the old localpart-only destination
support. will be in the release notes then.

also start keeping track of update notes that need to make it in the release
notes of the next release.

for issue #18
2023-03-09 22:13:56 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
5742ed1537
when logging email addresses with IDNA domain and/or special characters or utf8 in localpart, log both native utf8 form and form with escape localpart and ascii-only domain
the idea is to make it clear from the logging if non-ascii characters are used.

this is implemented by making mlog recognize if a field value that will be
logged has a LogString method. if so, that value is logged. dns.Domain,
smtp.Address, smtp.Localpart, smtp.Path now have a LogString method.

some explicit calls to String have been replaced to LogString, and some %q
formatting have been replaced with %s, because the escaped localpart would
already have double quotes, and double doublequotes aren't easy to read.
2023-03-09 20:18:34 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
e6df84a8de
add config field "IPsNATed" to listener, indicating the IPs are not the actual public IPs but are NATed, to skip a few DNS checks
the dns check was returning errors that could not be fixed with that setup,
which makes the checks much less useful.

for issue #17
2023-03-09 15:24:06 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
b2e6c29849
only check the autotls hostnames once when serving
not twice: for root process and for child process
2023-03-05 23:56:02 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
dedc90f455
at startup, with acme, if the config has explicitly configured public ips (the default with the quickstart), lookup the host names allowed for acme validation and warn about ips that mox is not configured to listen on
i've seen this cause acme validation failures 3 times now, so give a hint in
the logs to new users. also for issue #13.
2023-03-05 16:22:23 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
15e262b043
make it easier to run with existing webserver
- make it easier to run with an existing webserver. the quickstart now has a new option for that, it generates a different mox.conf, and further instructions such as configuring the tls keys/certs and reverse proxy urls. and changes to make autoconfig work in that case too.
- when starting up, request a tls cert for the hostname and for the autoconfig endpoint. the first will be requested soon anyway, and the autoconfig cert is needed early so the first autoconfig request doesn't time out (without helpful message to the user by at least thunderbird). and don't request the certificate before the servers are online. the root process was now requesting the certs, before the child process was serving on the tls port.
- add examples of configs generated by the quickstart.
- enable debug logging in config from quickstart, to give user more info.

for issue #5
2023-03-04 00:49:02 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
6abee87aa3
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 18:15:54 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
6706c5c84a
add basic webserver that can do most of what i need
- serve static files, serving index.html or optionally listings for directories
- redirects
- reverse-proxy, forwarding requests to a backend

these are configurable through the config file. a domain and path regexp have to
be configured. path prefixes can be stripped.  configured domains are added to
the autotls allowlist, so acme automatically fetches certificates for them.

all webserver requests now have (access) logging, metrics, rate limiting.
on http errors, the error message prints an encrypted cid for relating with log files.

this also adds a new mechanism for example config files.
2023-02-28 22:19:24 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
d670e68745
make error message about listeners with a missing tls config more helpful for users
by pointing out which section is causing the need for a tls config.
2023-02-27 21:42:27 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
e2e2c71212
minor tweaks to suggested dns records 2023-02-27 15:04:32 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
92e018e463
change mox to start as root, bind to network sockets, then drop to regular unprivileged mox user
makes it easier to run on bsd's, where you cannot (easily?) let non-root users
bind to ports <1024. starting as root also paves the way for future improvements
with privilege separation.

unfortunately, this requires changes to how you start mox. though mox will help
by automatically fix up dir/file permissions/ownership.

if you start mox from the systemd unit file, you should update it so it starts
as root and adds a few additional capabilities:

        # first update the mox binary, then, as root:
        ./mox config printservice >mox.service
        systemctl daemon-reload
        systemctl restart mox
        journalctl -f -u mox &
        # you should see mox start up, with messages about fixing permissions on dirs/files.

if you used the recommended config/ and data/ directory, in a directory just for
mox, and with the mox user called "mox", this should be enough.

if you don't want mox to modify dir/file permissions, set "NoFixPermissions:
true" in mox.conf.

if you named the mox user something else than mox, e.g. "_mox", add "User: _mox"
to mox.conf.

if you created a shared service user as originally suggested, you may want to
get rid of that as it is no longer useful and may get in the way. e.g. if you
had /home/service/mox with a "service" user, that service user can no longer
access any files: only mox and root can.

this also adds scripts for building mox docker images for alpine-supported
platforms.

the "restart" subcommand has been removed. it wasn't all that useful and got in
the way.

and another change: when adding a domain while mtasts isn't enabled, don't add
the per-domain mtasts config, as it would cause failure to add the domain.

based on report from setting up mox on openbsd from mteege.
and based on issue #3. thanks for the feedback!
2023-02-27 12:19:55 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
0ede7f78c1
add option to handle autoconfig and mta-sts requests without TLS, for when it is reverse proxied
for #5 with hints from belst & idnovic
2023-02-25 11:28:15 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
8affa12c39
prevent panic when starting with a mox.conf that references an ACME provider that isn't configured
the error handling code attempts to collect all error messages it encounters,
to print them all at the end, so you can fix them all before trying again. so
we try to continue preparing the config after an error. in this case, we
continued as if acme.Manager was properly set and nil-dereferenced it.

for issue #2, from hismailbulut
2023-02-21 23:06:11 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
5c33640aea
consistently use log.Check for logging errors that "should not happen", don't influence application flow
sooner or later, someone will notice one of these messages, which will lead us
to a bug.
2023-02-16 13:22:00 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
5336032088
add funtionality to import zip/tgz with maildirs/mboxes to account page
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.
2023-02-16 09:57:27 +01:00