Commit graph

5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mechiel Lukkien
b43529a2e9
sendmail: bugfix: set remote hostname to verify for tls connections
due to logic bug we weren't setting it, and tls connections would fail with a
warning that either the remote hostname must be set or insecurityskipverify
must be set.
2023-08-20 18:26:20 +02:00
Mechiel Lukkien
bca33c0364
don't recurse into error checking function xcheckf when sendmail fails
found when wanting to get rid of the only non-err "shadowing" warning.
2023-07-24 14:08:27 +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
c5fdb7309f
document that mox sendmail -t does not treat cc and bcc headers specially 2023-03-20 13:25:38 +01:00
Mechiel Lukkien
5535515fcb
move sendmail to separate file 2023-03-12 15:22:23 +01:00