Commit graph

81 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mechiel Lukkien
6c0439cf7b
webmail: when moving a single message out of/to the inbox, ask if user wants to create a rule to automatically do that server-side for future deliveries
if the message has a list-id header, we assume this is a (mailing) list
message, and we require a dkim/spf-verified domain (we prefer the shortest that
is a suffix of the list-id value). the rule we would add will mark such
messages as from a mailing list, changing filtering rules on incoming messages
(not enforcing dmarc policies). messages will be matched on list-id header and
will only match if they have the same dkim/spf-verified domain.

if the message doesn't have a list-id header, we'll ask to match based on
"message from" address.

we don't ask the user in several cases:
- if the destination/source mailbox is a special-use mailbox (e.g.
  trash,archive,sent,junk; inbox isn't included)
- if the rule already exist (no point in adding it again).
- if the user said "no, not for this list-id/from-address" in the past.
- if the user said "no, not for messages moved to this mailbox" in the past.

we'll add the rule if the message was moved out of the inbox.
if the message was moved to the inbox, we check if there is a matching rule
that we can remove.

we now remember the "no" answers (for list-id, msg-from-addr and mailbox) in
the account database.

to implement the msgfrom rules, this adds support to rulesets for matching on
message "from" address. before, we could match on smtp from address (and other
fields). rulesets now also have a field for comments. webmail adds a note that
it created the rule, with the date.

manual editing of the rulesets is still in the webaccount page. this webmail
functionality is just a convenient way to add/remove common rules.
2024-04-21 17:14:08 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
0f735a1710
webmail: remember per from-address whether we should show the text/html/html-with-external-resources version of a message 2024-04-20 21:25:52 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
70adf353ee
webmail: add server-side stored settings, for signature, top/bottom reply and showing the security indications below address input fields
should solve #102
2024-04-19 18:02:24 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
c9451d4d06
in webmail & webapisrv, store bcc header in sent messages
when sending a message with bcc's, prepend the bcc header to the message we
store in the sent folder. still not in the message we send to the recipients.
2024-04-16 17:57:46 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
abd098e8c0
in more tests, after closing accounts, check the last reference is indeed gone 2024-04-16 17:33:54 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
09fcc49223
add a webapi and webhooks for a simple http/json-based api
for applications to compose/send messages, receive delivery feedback, and
maintain suppression lists.

this is an alternative to applications using a library to compose messages,
submitting those messages using smtp, and monitoring a mailbox with imap for
DSNs, which can be processed into the equivalent of suppression lists. but you
need to know about all these standards/protocols and find libraries. by using
the webapi & webhooks, you just need a http & json library.

unfortunately, there is no standard for these kinds of api, so mox has made up
yet another one...

matching incoming DSNs about deliveries to original outgoing messages requires
keeping history of "retired" messages (delivered from the queue, either
successfully or failed). this can be enabled per account. history is also
useful for debugging deliveries. we now also keep history of each delivery
attempt, accessible while still in the queue, and kept when a message is
retired. the queue webadmin pages now also have pagination, to show potentially
large history.

a queue of webhook calls is now managed too. failures are retried similar to
message deliveries. webhooks can also be saved to the retired list after
completing. also configurable per account.

messages can be sent with a "unique smtp mail from" address. this can only be
used if the domain is configured with a localpart catchall separator such as
"+". when enabled, a queued message gets assigned a random "fromid", which is
added after the separator when sending. when DSNs are returned, they can be
related to previously sent messages based on this fromid. in the future, we can
implement matching on the "envid" used in the smtp dsn extension, or on the
"message-id" of the message. using a fromid can be triggered by authenticating
with a login email address that is configured as enabling fromid.

suppression lists are automatically managed per account. if a delivery attempt
results in certain smtp errors, the destination address is added to the
suppression list. future messages queued for that recipient will immediately
fail without a delivery attempt. suppression lists protect your mail server
reputation.

submitted messages can carry "extra" data through the queue and webhooks for
outgoing deliveries. through webapi as a json object, through smtp submission
as message headers of the form "x-mox-extra-<key>: value".

to make it easy to test webapi/webhooks locally, the "localserve" mode actually
puts messages in the queue. when it's time to deliver, it still won't do a full
delivery attempt, but just delivers to the sender account. unless the recipient
address has a special form, simulating a failure to deliver.

admins now have more control over the queue. "hold rules" can be added to mark
newly queued messages as "on hold", pausing delivery. rules can be about
certain sender or recipient domains/addresses, or apply to all messages pausing
the entire queue. also useful for (local) testing.

new config options have been introduced. they are editable through the admin
and/or account web interfaces.

the webapi http endpoints are enabled for newly generated configs with the
quickstart, and in localserve. existing configurations must explicitly enable
the webapi in mox.conf.

gopherwatch.org was created to dogfood this code. it initially used just the
compose/smtpclient/imapclient mox packages to send messages and process
delivery feedback. it will get a config option to use the mox webapi/webhooks
instead. the gopherwatch code to use webapi/webhook is smaller and simpler, and
developing that shaped development of the mox webapi/webhooks.

for issue #31 by cuu508
2024-04-15 21:49:02 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
d74610c345
bugfix: missing account close in queue direct send
found while writing new tests for upcoming functionality.
the test had an embarrassing workaround for the symptoms...
2024-04-08 20:22:52 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
ecf6163409
improve previous about using mtime from imported maildir message files
don't treat just any number from filename as timestamp. require it has 2 dots.
prevents filenames with just a number as being seen as a timestamp, like when
you import files from a mox accounts msgs directory.
2024-04-02 20:04:09 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
6d38a1e9a4
when reading maildirs for imports, use the file mtime as fallback for "received" time
more useful than the time.Time zero file in case the maildir filename isn't
properly formed with a timestamp. this is not too uncommon when people
reconstruct maildirs from other sources of message files to then import the
maildir.

based on message from abdul h
2024-04-02 19:43:45 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
c57aeac7f0
prevent unicode-confusion in password by applying PRECIS, and username/email address by applying unicode NFC normalization
an é (e with accent) can also be written as e+\u0301. the first form is NFC,
the second NFD. when logging in, we transform usernames (email addresses) to
NFC. so both forms will be accepted. if a client is using NFD, they can log
in too.

for passwords, we apply the PRECIS "opaquestring", which (despite the name)
transforms the value too: unicode spaces are replaced with ascii spaces. the
string is also normalized to NFC. PRECIS may reject confusing passwords when
you set a password.
2024-03-09 09:20:29 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
8e6fe7459b
normalize localparts with unicode nfc when parsing
both when parsing our configs, and for incoming on smtp or in messages.
so we properly compare things like é and e+accent as equal, and accept the
different encodings of that same address.
2024-03-08 21:08:40 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
13923e4b7b
better thread matching for dsns
keep track of whether a message is a dsn, and match dsn's against their sent
message by ignoring the message subject.
2024-03-04 16:40:27 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
d1b87cdb0d
replace packages slog and slices from golang.org/x/exp with stdlib
since we are now at go1.21 as minimum.
2024-02-08 14:49:01 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
aea8740e65
quota: fix handling negative max size when configured for an account, and clarify value is in bytes in config file
for #115 by pmarini-nc
2024-01-12 15:02:16 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
0f8bf2f220
replace http basic auth for web interfaces with session cookie & csrf-based auth
the http basic auth we had was very simple to reason about, and to implement.
but it has a major downside:

there is no way to logout, browsers keep sending credentials. ideally, browsers
themselves would show a button to stop sending credentials.

a related downside: the http auth mechanism doesn't indicate for which server
paths the credentials are.

another downside: the original password is sent to the server with each
request. though sending original passwords to web servers seems to be
considered normal.

our new approach uses session cookies, along with csrf values when we can. the
sessions are server-side managed, automatically extended on each use. this
makes it easy to invalidate sessions and keeps the frontend simpler (than with
long- vs short-term sessions and refreshing). the cookies are httponly,
samesite=strict, scoped to the path of the web interface. cookies are set
"secure" when set over https. the cookie is set by a successful call to Login.
a call to Logout invalidates a session. changing a password invalidates all
sessions for a user, but keeps the session with which the password was changed
alive. the csrf value is also random, and associated with the session cookie.
the csrf must be sent as header for api calls, or as parameter for direct form
posts (where we cannot set a custom header). rest-like calls made directly by
the browser, e.g. for images, don't have a csrf protection. the csrf value is
returned by the Login api call and stored in localstorage.

api calls without credentials return code "user:noAuth", and with bad
credentials return "user:badAuth". the api client recognizes this and triggers
a login. after a login, all auth-failed api calls are automatically retried.
only for "user:badAuth" is an error message displayed in the login form (e.g.
session expired).

in an ideal world, browsers would take care of most session management. a
server would indicate authentication is needed (like http basic auth), and the
browsers uses trusted ui to request credentials for the server & path. the
browser could use safer mechanism than sending original passwords to the
server, such as scram, along with a standard way to create sessions.  for now,
web developers have to do authentication themselves: from showing the login
prompt, ensuring the right session/csrf cookies/localstorage/headers/etc are
sent with each request.

webauthn is a newer way to do authentication, perhaps we'll implement it in the
future. though hardware tokens aren't an attractive option for many users, and
it may be overkill as long as we still do old-fashioned authentication in smtp
& imap where passwords can be sent to the server.

for issue #58
2024-01-05 10:48:42 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
c930a400be
remove leftover debug print 2024-01-03 10:35:54 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
d84c96eca5
imapserver: allow creating mailboxes with characters &#*%, and encode mailbox names in imap with imaputf7 when needed
the imapserver started with imap4rev2-only and utf8=only.  to prevent potential
issues with imaputf7, which makes "&" special, we refused any mailbox with an
"&" in the name. we already tried decoding utf7, falling back to using a
mailbox name verbatim. that behaviour wasn't great. we now treat the enabled
extensions IMAP4rev2 and/or UTF8=ACCEPT as indication whether mailbox names are
in imaputf7. if they are, the encoding must be correct.

we now also send mailbox names in imaputf7 when imap4rev2/utf8=accept isn't
enabled.

and we now allow "*" and "%" (wildcard characters for matching) in mailbox
names. not ideal for IMAP LIST with patterns, but not enough reason to refuse
them in mailbox names. people that migrate may run into this, possibly as
blocker.

we also allow "#" in mailbox names, but not as first character, to prevent
potential clashes with IMAP namespaces in the future.

based on report from Damian Poddebniak using
https://github.com/duesee/imap-flow and issue #110, thanks for reporting!
2024-01-01 13:27:29 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
d73bda7511
add per-account quota for total message size disk usage
so a single user cannot fill up the disk.
by default, there is (still) no limit. a default can be set in the config file
for all accounts, and a per-account max size can be set that would override any
global setting.

this does not take into account disk usage of the index database. and also not
of any file system overhead.
2023-12-20 20:54:12 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
72ac1fde29
expose fewer internals in packages, for easier software reuse
- prometheus is now behind an interface, they aren't dependencies for the
  reusable components anymore.
- some dependencies have been inverted: instead of packages importing a main
  package to get configuration, the main package now sets configuration in
  these packages. that means fewer internals are pulled in.
- some functions now have new parameters for values that were retrieved from
  package "mox-".
2023-12-14 15:39:36 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
fcaa504878
wrap long lines with many logging parameters to multiple lines
for improved readability
2023-12-14 13:45:52 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
5b20cba50a
switch to slog.Logger for logging, for easier reuse of packages by external software
we don't want external software to include internal details like mlog.
slog.Logger is/will be the standard.

we still have mlog for its helper functions, and its handler that logs in
concise logfmt used by mox.

packages that are not meant for reuse still pass around mlog.Log for
convenience.

we use golang.org/x/exp/slog because we also support the previous Go toolchain
version. with the next Go release, we'll switch to the builtin slog.
2023-12-14 13:45:52 +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
0200e539a9
when message is delivered, save whether it is from a mailing list; in webmail, show if message was a forward or mailing list, and don't enable requiretls when sending to a list. 2023-11-02 20:03:47 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
9896639ff9
for incoming smtp deliveries, track whether tls and requiretls was used, and display this in the webmail
we store the tls version used, and cipher suite. we don't currently show that
in the webmail.
2023-11-02 09:12:47 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
ef50f4abf0
refactor common pattern of close & remove temporary file into calling the new store.CloseRemoveTempFile 2023-11-02 09:12:46 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
e7699708ef
implement outgoing dmarc aggregate reporting
in smtpserver, we store dmarc evaluations (under the right conditions).
in dmarcdb, we periodically (hourly) send dmarc reports if there are
evaluations. for failed deliveries, we deliver the dsn quietly to a submailbox
of the postmaster mailbox.

this is on by default, but can be disabled in mox.conf.
2023-11-02 09:12:30 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
8a866a60dc
when expunging a message, keep its threadid
we will need it for jmap, which needs history for threads
2023-10-24 13:16:00 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
2f5d6069bf
implement "requiretls", rfc 8689
with requiretls, the tls verification mode/rules for email deliveries can be
changed by the sender/submitter. in two ways:

1. "requiretls" smtp extension to always enforce verified tls (with mta-sts or
dnssec+dane), along the entire delivery path until delivery into the final
destination mailbox (so entire transport is verified-tls-protected).

2. "tls-required: no" message header, to ignore any tls and tls verification
errors even if the recipient domain has a policy that requires tls verification
(mta-sts and/or dnssec+dane), allowing delivery of non-sensitive messages in
case of misconfiguration/interoperability issues (at least useful for sending
tls reports).

we enable requiretls by default (only when tls is active), for smtp and
submission. it can be disabled through the config.

for each delivery attempt, we now store (per recipient domain, in the account
of the sender) whether the smtp server supports starttls and requiretls. this
support is shown (after having sent a first message) in the webmail when
sending a message (the previous 3 bars under the address input field are now 5
bars, the first for starttls support, the last for requiretls support). when
all recipient domains for a message are known to implement requiretls,
requiretls is automatically selected for sending (instead of "default" tls
behaviour). users can also select the "fallback to insecure" to add the
"tls-required: no" header.

new metrics are added for insight into requiretls errors and (some, not yet
all) cases where tls-required-no ignored a tls/verification error.

the admin can change the requiretls status for messages in the queue. so with
default delivery attempts, when verified tls is required by failing, an admin
could potentially change the field to "tls-required: no"-behaviour.

messages received (over smtp) with the requiretls option, get a comment added
to their Received header line, just before "id", after "with".
2023-10-24 10:10:46 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
3e53343d21
remove message during delivery when we encounter an error after having placed the message in the destination path
before, we would leave the file, but rollback the delivery. future deliveries
would attempt to deliver to the same path, but would fail because a file
already exists.

encountered during testing on windows, not during actual operation. though it
could in theory have happened.
2023-10-14 11:16:39 +02:00
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
91140da3a7
when logging about threading operations, include info about account
in verifydata, when warning about missing threading, print the db file.
otherwise it isn't clear which account this is about

when upgrading account thread storage, pass the logger that has the account
name.
2023-09-24 13:36:55 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
89c543f662
if there is special-use junk flag on mailbox, don't also look at AutomaticJunkFlags option
the special-use flag should take precedence.
2023-09-22 10:51:42 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
2e16d8025d
when moving message to mailbox with special-use flag "Junk", mark the message as junk too, for retraining
i had been using the AutomaticJunkFlags option, so hadn't noticed the special use flag wasn't used.
2023-09-21 15:20:24 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
ca5ef645f3
rename Account.Deliver to Account.DeliverDestination
the name was too generic compared with the other Deliver functions
2023-09-15 17:51:28 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
3620d6f05e
initialize metric mox_panic_total with 0, so the alerting rule also catches the first panic for a label
increase() and rate() don't seem to assume a previous value of 0 when a vector
gets a first value for a label. you would think that an increase() on a
first-value mox_panic_total{"..."}=1 would return 1, and similar for rate(), but
that doesn't appear to be the behaviour. so we just explicitly initialize the
count to 0 for each possible label value. mox has more vector metrics, but
panics feels like the most important, and it's too much code to initialize them
all, for all combinations of label values. there is probably a better way that
fixes this for all cases...
2023-09-15 16:47:17 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
3fb41ff073
implement message threading in backend and webmail
we match messages to their parents based on the "references" and "in-reply-to"
headers (requiring the same base subject), and in absense of those headers we
also by only base subject (against messages received max 4 weeks ago).

we store a threadid with messages. all messages in a thread have the same
threadid.  messages also have a "thread parent ids", which holds all id's of
parent messages up to the thread root.  then there is "thread missing link",
which is set when a referenced immediate parent wasn't found (but possibly
earlier ancestors can still be found and will be in thread parent ids".

threads can be muted: newly delivered messages are automatically marked as
read/seen.  threads can be marked as collapsed: if set, the webmail collapses
the thread to a single item in the basic threading view (default is to expand
threads).  the muted and collapsed fields are copied from their parent on
message delivery.

the threading is implemented in the webmail. the non-threading mode still works
as before. the new default threading mode "unread" automatically expands only
the threads with at least one unread (not seen) meessage. the basic threading
mode "on" expands all threads except when explicitly collapsed (as saved in the
thread collapsed field). new shortcuts for navigation/interaction threads have
been added, e.g. go to previous/next thread root, toggle collapse/expand of
thread (or double click), toggle mute of thread. some previous shortcuts have
changed, see the help for details.

the message threading are added with an explicit account upgrade step,
automatically started when an account is opened. the upgrade is done in the
background because it will take too long for large mailboxes to block account
operations. the upgrade takes two steps: 1. updating all message records in the
database to add a normalized message-id and thread base subject (with "re:",
"fwd:" and several other schemes stripped). 2. going through all messages in
the database again, reading the "references" and "in-reply-to" headers from
disk, and matching against their parents. this second step is also done at the
end of each import of mbox/maildir mailboxes. new deliveries are matched
immediately against other existing messages, currently no attempt is made to
rematch previously delivered messages (which could be useful for related
messages being delivered out of order).

the threading is not yet exposed over imap.
2023-09-13 15:44:57 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
1ccc5d0177
fix message size in a message in gentestdata
and work around the message in test-upgrade.sh.
and add subcommand to open an account, triggering data upgrades.
2023-08-16 14:36:17 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
34c2dcd49d
add strict mode when parsing messages, typically enabled for incoming special-use messages like tls/dmarc reports, subjectpass emails
and pass a logger to the message parser, so problems with message parsing get
the cid logged.
2023-08-15 08:25:56 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
48eb530b1f
improve message parsing: allow bare carriage return (unless in pedantic mode), allow empty header, and no longer treat a message with only headers as a message with only a body 2023-08-11 14:07:49 +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
383fe4f53a
explicitly store in a Message whether it was delivered to the rejects mailbox
soon, we can have multiple rejects mailboxes.  and checking against the
configured rejects mailbox name wasn't foolproof to begin with, because it may
have changed between delivery to the rejects mailbox and the message being
moved.

after upgrading, messages currently in rejects mailboxes don't have IsReject
set, so they don't get the special rejecs treatment when being moved. they are
removed from the rejects mailbox after some time though, and newly added
rejects will be treated correctly. so this means some existing messages wrongly
delivered to the rejects mailbox, and moved out, aren't used (for a positive
signal) for future deliveries.  saves a bit of complexity in the
implementation.  i think the tradeoff is worth it.

related to discussion in issue #50
2023-08-09 16:52:24 +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
8c3c12d96a
add message size consistency check
the bulk of a message is stored on disk. a message prefix is stored in the
database (for prefixed headers like "Received:"). this adds a check to ensure
Size = prefix length + on-disk file size.

verifydata also checks for this now.

and one older and one new (since yesterday) bug was found. the first when
appending a message without a header/body section (uncommon). the second when
sending messages from webmail with localserve (uncommon).
2023-08-08 22:10:53 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
49cf16d3f2
fix race in test setup/teardown
not easily triggered, but it happened just now on a build server.
2023-08-07 23:14:31 +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
141637df43
when creating a mailbox subscription, don't just try to insert a record into the database and handle bstore.ErrUnique, the transaction will have been marked as botched
behaviour around failing DB calls that change data (insert/update) was changed
in bstore quite some time ago. the tx state in bstore would become inconsistent
when one or more (possibly unique) indexes had been modified, but then an
ErrUnique would occur for the next index. bstore doesn't know how to roll back
the partial changes during a transaction, so it marks the tx as botched and
refuses further operations. so, we cannot just try to insert, wait for a
possible ErrUnique, but then still try to continue with the transaction.
instead, we check if the record exists and only insert it if we couldn't find
it.

found while working on webmail.
2023-08-01 10:14:02 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
01adad62b2
implement decoding charsets (other than ascii and utf-8) while reading textual message parts, and improve search
message.Part now has a ReaderUTF8OrBinary() along with the existing Reader().
the new function returns a reader of decoded content. we now use it in a few
places, including search. we only support the charsets in
golang.org/x/text/encoding/ianaindex.

search has also been changed to not read the entire message in memory. instead,
we make one 8k buffer for reading and search in that, and we keep the buffer
around for all messages. saves quite some allocations when searching large
mailboxes.
2023-07-28 22:15:23 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
5be4e91979
new items on roadmap, mention delivered-to rfc, fix wording in comments 2023-07-26 19:23:20 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
7f1b7198a8
add condstore & qresync imap extensions
for conditional storing and quick resynchronisation (not sure if mail clients are actually using it that).

each message now has a "modseq". it is increased for each change. with
condstore, imap clients can request changes since a certain modseq. that
already allows quickly finding changes since a previous connection. condstore
also allows storing (e.g. setting new message flags) only when the modseq of a
message hasn't changed.

qresync should make it fast for clients to get a full list of changed messages
for a mailbox, including removals.

we now also keep basic metadata of messages that have been removed (expunged).
just enough (uid, modseq) to tell client that the messages have been removed.
this does mean we have to be careful when querying messages from the database.
we must now often filter the expunged messages out.

we also keep "createseq", the modseq when a message was created. this will be
useful for the jmap implementation.
2023-07-24 21:25:50 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
2e5376d7eb
when moving/copying messages in imapserve, also ensure the message keywords make it into the destination mailbox keywords list 2023-07-24 08:49:19 +02:00