mox/config/doc.go

1104 lines
42 KiB
Go

/*
Package config holds the configuration file definitions for mox.conf (Static)
and domains.conf (Dynamic).
These config files are in "sconf" format. Summarized: Indent with tabs, "#" as
first non-whitespace character makes the line a comment (you cannot have a line
with both a value and a comment), strings are not quoted/escaped and can never
span multiple lines. See https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/mjl-/sconf for details.
Annotated empty/default configuration files you could use as a starting point
for your mox.conf and domains.conf, as generated by "mox config
describe-static" and "mox config describe-domains":
# mox.conf
# Directory where all data is stored, e.g. queue, accounts and messages, ACME TLS
# certs/keys. If this is a relative path, it is relative to the directory of
# mox.conf.
DataDir:
# Default log level, one of: error, info, debug, trace, traceauth, tracedata.
# Trace logs SMTP and IMAP protocol transcripts, with traceauth also messages with
# passwords, and tracedata on top of that also the full data exchanges (full
# messages), which can be a large amount of data.
LogLevel:
# Overrides of log level per package (e.g. queue, smtpclient, smtpserver,
# imapserver, spf, dkim, dmarc, dmarcdb, autotls, junk, mtasts, tlsrpt).
# (optional)
PackageLogLevels:
x:
# User to switch to after binding to all sockets as root. Default: mox. If the
# value is not a known user, it is parsed as integer and used as uid and gid.
# (optional)
User:
# If true, do not automatically fix file permissions when starting up. By default,
# mox will ensure reasonable owner/permissions on the working, data and config
# directories (and files), and mox binary (if present). (optional)
NoFixPermissions: false
# Full hostname of system, e.g. mail.<domain>
Hostname:
# If enabled, a single DNS TXT lookup of _updates.xmox.nl is done every 24h to
# check for a new release. Each time a new release is found, a changelog is
# fetched from https://updates.xmox.nl and delivered to the postmaster mailbox.
# (optional)
CheckUpdates: false
# In pedantic mode protocol violations (that happen in the wild) for SMTP/IMAP/etc
# result in errors instead of accepting such behaviour. (optional)
Pedantic: false
# Global TLS configuration, e.g. for additional Certificate Authorities. Used for
# outgoing SMTP connections, HTTPS requests. (optional)
TLS:
# (optional)
CA:
# (optional)
AdditionalToSystem: false
# (optional)
CertFiles:
-
# Automatic TLS configuration with ACME, e.g. through Let's Encrypt. The key is a
# name referenced in TLS configs, e.g. letsencrypt. (optional)
ACME:
x:
# For letsencrypt, use https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory.
DirectoryURL:
# How long before expiration to renew the certificate. Default is 30 days.
# (optional)
RenewBefore: 0s
# Email address to register at ACME provider. The provider can email you when
# certificates are about to expire. If you configure an address for which email is
# delivered by this server, keep in mind that TLS misconfigurations could result
# in such notification emails not arriving.
ContactEmail:
# TLS port for ACME validation, 443 by default. You should only override this if
# you cannot listen on port 443 directly. ACME will make requests to port 443, so
# you'll have to add an external mechanism to get the connection here, e.g. by
# configuring port forwarding. (optional)
Port: 0
# File containing hash of admin password, for authentication in the web admin
# pages (if enabled). (optional)
AdminPasswordFile:
# Listeners are groups of IP addresses and services enabled on those IP addresses,
# such as SMTP/IMAP or internal endpoints for administration or Prometheus
# metrics. All listeners with SMTP/IMAP services enabled will serve all configured
# domains. If the listener is named 'public', it will get a few helpful additional
# configuration checks, for acme automatic tls certificates and monitoring of ips
# in dnsbls if those are configured.
Listeners:
x:
# Use 0.0.0.0 to listen on all IPv4 and/or :: to listen on all IPv6 addresses, but
# it is better to explicitly specify the IPs you want to use for email, as mox
# will make sure outgoing connections will only be made from one of those IPs.
IPs:
-
# Set this if the specified IPs are not the public IPs, but are NATed. This makes
# the DNS check skip a few checks related to IPs, such as for iprev, mx, spf,
# autoconfig, autodiscover. (optional)
IPsNATed: false
# If empty, the config global Hostname is used. (optional)
Hostname:
# For SMTP/IMAP STARTTLS, direct TLS and HTTPS connections. (optional)
TLS:
# Name of provider from top-level configuration to use for ACME, e.g. letsencrypt.
# (optional)
ACME:
# Key and certificate files are opened by the privileged root process and passed
# to the unprivileged mox process, so no special permissions are required.
# (optional)
KeyCerts:
-
# Certificate including intermediate CA certificates, in PEM format.
CertFile:
# Private key for certificate, in PEM format. PKCS8 is recommended, but PKCS1 and
# EC private keys are recognized as well.
KeyFile:
# Minimum TLS version. Default: TLSv1.2. (optional)
MinVersion:
# Maximum size in bytes for incoming and outgoing messages. Default is 100MB.
# (optional)
SMTPMaxMessageSize: 0
# (optional)
SMTP:
Enabled: false
# Default 25. (optional)
Port: 0
# Do not offer STARTTLS to secure the connection. Not recommended. (optional)
NoSTARTTLS: false
# Do not accept incoming messages if STARTTLS is not active. Can be used in
# combination with a strict MTA-STS policy. A remote SMTP server may not support
# TLS and may not be able to deliver messages. (optional)
RequireSTARTTLS: false
# Addresses of DNS block lists for incoming messages. Block lists are only
# consulted for connections/messages without enough reputation to make an
# accept/reject decision. This prevents sending IPs of all communications to the
# block list provider. If any of the listed DNSBLs contains a requested IP
# address, the message is rejected as spam. The DNSBLs are checked for healthiness
# before use, at most once per 4 hours. Example DNSBLs: sbl.spamhaus.org,
# bl.spamcop.net (optional)
DNSBLs:
-
# Delay before accepting a message from a first-time sender for the destination
# account. Default: 15s. (optional)
FirstTimeSenderDelay: 0s
# SMTP for submitting email, e.g. by email applications. Starts out in plain text,
# can be upgraded to TLS with the STARTTLS command. Prefer using Submissions which
# is always a TLS connection. (optional)
Submission:
Enabled: false
# Default 587. (optional)
Port: 0
# Do not require STARTTLS. Since users must login, this means password may be sent
# without encryption. Not recommended. (optional)
NoRequireSTARTTLS: false
# SMTP over TLS for submitting email, by email applications. Requires a TLS
# config. (optional)
Submissions:
Enabled: false
# Default 465. (optional)
Port: 0
# IMAP for reading email, by email applications. Starts out in plain text, can be
# upgraded to TLS with the STARTTLS command. Prefer using IMAPS instead which is
# always a TLS connection. (optional)
IMAP:
Enabled: false
# Default 143. (optional)
Port: 0
# Enable this only when the connection is otherwise encrypted (e.g. through a
# VPN). (optional)
NoRequireSTARTTLS: false
# IMAP over TLS for reading email, by email applications. Requires a TLS config.
# (optional)
IMAPS:
Enabled: false
# Default 993. (optional)
Port: 0
# Account web interface, for email users wanting to change their accounts, e.g.
# set new password, set new delivery rulesets. Served at /. (optional)
AccountHTTP:
Enabled: false
# Default 80. (optional)
Port: 0
# Path to serve account requests on, e.g. /mox/. Useful if domain serves other
# resources. Default is /. (optional)
Path:
# Account web interface listener for HTTPS. Requires a TLS config. (optional)
AccountHTTPS:
Enabled: false
# Default 80. (optional)
Port: 0
# Path to serve account requests on, e.g. /mox/. Useful if domain serves other
# resources. Default is /. (optional)
Path:
# Admin web interface, for managing domains, accounts, etc. Served at /admin/.
# Preferably only enable on non-public IPs. Hint: use 'ssh -L 8080:localhost:80
# you@yourmachine' and open http://localhost:8080/admin/, or set up a tunnel (e.g.
# WireGuard) and add its IP to the mox 'internal' listener. (optional)
AdminHTTP:
Enabled: false
# Default 80. (optional)
Port: 0
# Path to serve admin requests on, e.g. /moxadmin/. Useful if domain serves other
# resources. Default is /admin/. (optional)
Path:
# Admin web interface listener for HTTPS. Requires a TLS config. Preferably only
# enable on non-public IPs. (optional)
AdminHTTPS:
Enabled: false
# Default 443. (optional)
Port: 0
# Path to serve admin requests on, e.g. /moxadmin/. Useful if domain serves other
# resources. Default is /admin/. (optional)
Path:
# Webmail client, for reading email. (optional)
WebmailHTTP:
Enabled: false
# Default 80. (optional)
Port: 0
# Path to serve account requests on. Useful if domain serves other resources.
# Default is /webmail/. (optional)
Path:
# Webmail client, for reading email. (optional)
WebmailHTTPS:
Enabled: false
# Default 443. (optional)
Port: 0
# Path to serve account requests on. Useful if domain serves other resources.
# Default is /webmail/. (optional)
Path:
# Serve prometheus metrics, for monitoring. You should not enable this on a public
# IP. (optional)
MetricsHTTP:
Enabled: false
# Default 8010. (optional)
Port: 0
# Serve /debug/pprof/ for profiling a running mox instance. Do not enable this on
# a public IP! (optional)
PprofHTTP:
Enabled: false
# Default 8011. (optional)
Port: 0
# Serve autoconfiguration/autodiscovery to simplify configuring email
# applications, will use port 443. Requires a TLS config. (optional)
AutoconfigHTTPS:
Enabled: false
# TLS port, 443 by default. You should only override this if you cannot listen on
# port 443 directly. Autoconfig requests will be made to port 443, so you'll have
# to add an external mechanism to get the connection here, e.g. by configuring
# port forwarding. (optional)
Port: 0
# If set, plain HTTP instead of HTTPS is spoken on the configured port. Can be
# useful when the autoconfig domain is reverse proxied. (optional)
NonTLS: false
# Serve MTA-STS policies describing SMTP TLS requirements. Requires a TLS config.
# (optional)
MTASTSHTTPS:
Enabled: false
# TLS port, 443 by default. You should only override this if you cannot listen on
# port 443 directly. MTA-STS requests will be made to port 443, so you'll have to
# add an external mechanism to get the connection here, e.g. by configuring port
# forwarding. (optional)
Port: 0
# If set, plain HTTP instead of HTTPS is spoken on the configured port. Can be
# useful when the mta-sts domain is reverse proxied. (optional)
NonTLS: false
# All configured WebHandlers will serve on an enabled listener. (optional)
WebserverHTTP:
Enabled: false
# Port for plain HTTP (non-TLS) webserver. (optional)
Port: 0
# All configured WebHandlers will serve on an enabled listener. Either ACME must
# be configured, or for each WebHandler domain a TLS certificate must be
# configured. (optional)
WebserverHTTPS:
Enabled: false
# Port for HTTPS webserver. (optional)
Port: 0
# Destination for emails delivered to postmaster addresses: a plain 'postmaster'
# without domain, 'postmaster@<hostname>' (also for each listener with SMTP
# enabled), and as fallback for each domain without explicitly configured
# postmaster destination.
Postmaster:
Account:
# E.g. Postmaster or Inbox.
Mailbox:
# Mailboxes to create for new accounts. Inbox is always created. Mailboxes can be
# given a 'special-use' role, which are understood by most mail clients. If
# absent/empty, the following mailboxes are created: Sent, Archive, Trash, Drafts
# and Junk. (optional)
InitialMailboxes:
# Special-use roles to mailbox to create. (optional)
SpecialUse:
# (optional)
Sent:
# (optional)
Archive:
# (optional)
Trash:
# (optional)
Draft:
# (optional)
Junk:
# Regular, non-special-use mailboxes to create. (optional)
Regular:
-
# Deprecated in favor of InitialMailboxes. Mailboxes to create when adding an
# account. Inbox is always created. If no mailboxes are specified, the following
# are automatically created: Sent, Archive, Trash, Drafts and Junk. (optional)
DefaultMailboxes:
-
# Transport are mechanisms for delivering messages. Transports can be referenced
# from Routes in accounts, domains and the global configuration. There is always
# an implicit/fallback delivery transport doing direct delivery with SMTP from the
# outgoing message queue. Transports are typically only configured when using
# smarthosts, i.e. when delivering through another SMTP server. Zero or one
# transport methods must be set in a transport, never multiple. When using an
# external party to send email for a domain, keep in mind you may have to add
# their IP address to your domain's SPF record, and possibly additional DKIM
# records. (optional)
Transports:
x:
# Submission SMTP over a TLS connection to submit email to a remote queue.
# (optional)
Submissions:
# Host name to connect to and for verifying its TLS certificate.
Host:
# If unset or 0, the default port for submission(s)/smtp is used: 25 for SMTP, 465
# for submissions (with TLS), 587 for submission (possibly with STARTTLS).
# (optional)
Port: 0
# If set an unverifiable remote TLS certificate during STARTTLS is accepted.
# (optional)
STARTTLSInsecureSkipVerify: false
# If set for submission or smtp transport, do not attempt STARTTLS on the
# connection. Authentication credentials and messages will be transferred in clear
# text. (optional)
NoSTARTTLS: false
# If set, authentication credentials for the remote server. (optional)
Auth:
Username:
Password:
# Allowed authentication mechanisms. Defaults to SCRAM-SHA-256, SCRAM-SHA-1,
# CRAM-MD5. Not included by default: PLAIN. (optional)
Mechanisms:
-
# Submission SMTP over a plain TCP connection (possibly with STARTTLS) to submit
# email to a remote queue. (optional)
Submission:
# Host name to connect to and for verifying its TLS certificate.
Host:
# If unset or 0, the default port for submission(s)/smtp is used: 25 for SMTP, 465
# for submissions (with TLS), 587 for submission (possibly with STARTTLS).
# (optional)
Port: 0
# If set an unverifiable remote TLS certificate during STARTTLS is accepted.
# (optional)
STARTTLSInsecureSkipVerify: false
# If set for submission or smtp transport, do not attempt STARTTLS on the
# connection. Authentication credentials and messages will be transferred in clear
# text. (optional)
NoSTARTTLS: false
# If set, authentication credentials for the remote server. (optional)
Auth:
Username:
Password:
# Allowed authentication mechanisms. Defaults to SCRAM-SHA-256, SCRAM-SHA-1,
# CRAM-MD5. Not included by default: PLAIN. (optional)
Mechanisms:
-
# SMTP over a plain connection (possibly with STARTTLS), typically for
# old-fashioned unauthenticated relaying to a remote queue. (optional)
SMTP:
# Host name to connect to and for verifying its TLS certificate.
Host:
# If unset or 0, the default port for submission(s)/smtp is used: 25 for SMTP, 465
# for submissions (with TLS), 587 for submission (possibly with STARTTLS).
# (optional)
Port: 0
# If set an unverifiable remote TLS certificate during STARTTLS is accepted.
# (optional)
STARTTLSInsecureSkipVerify: false
# If set for submission or smtp transport, do not attempt STARTTLS on the
# connection. Authentication credentials and messages will be transferred in clear
# text. (optional)
NoSTARTTLS: false
# If set, authentication credentials for the remote server. (optional)
Auth:
Username:
Password:
# Allowed authentication mechanisms. Defaults to SCRAM-SHA-256, SCRAM-SHA-1,
# CRAM-MD5. Not included by default: PLAIN. (optional)
Mechanisms:
-
# Like regular direct delivery, but makes outgoing connections through a SOCKS
# proxy. (optional)
Socks:
# Address of SOCKS proxy, of the form host:port or ip:port.
Address:
# IP addresses connections from the SOCKS server will originate from. This IP
# addresses should be configured in the SPF record (keep in mind DNS record time
# to live (TTL) when adding a SOCKS proxy). Reverse DNS should be set up for these
# address, resolving to RemoteHostname. These are typically the IPv4 and IPv6
# address for the host in the Address field.
RemoteIPs:
-
# Hostname belonging to RemoteIPs. This name is used during in SMTP EHLO. This is
# typically the hostname of the host in the Address field.
RemoteHostname:
# domains.conf
# Domains for which email is accepted. For internationalized domains, use their
# IDNA names in UTF-8.
Domains:
x:
# Free-form description of domain. (optional)
Description:
# If not empty, only the string before the separator is used to for email delivery
# decisions. For example, if set to "+", you+anything@example.com will be
# delivered to you@example.com. (optional)
LocalpartCatchallSeparator:
# If set, upper/lower case is relevant for email delivery. (optional)
LocalpartCaseSensitive: false
# With DKIM signing, a domain is taking responsibility for (content of) emails it
# sends, letting receiving mail servers build up a (hopefully positive) reputation
# of the domain, which can help with mail delivery. (optional)
DKIM:
# Emails can be DKIM signed. Config parameters are per selector. A DNS record must
# be created for each selector. Add the name to Sign to use the selector for
# signing messages.
Selectors:
x:
# sha256 (default) or (older, not recommended) sha1 (optional)
Hash:
# (optional)
Canonicalization:
# If set, some modifications to the headers (mostly whitespace) are allowed.
HeaderRelaxed: false
# If set, some whitespace modifications to the message body are allowed.
BodyRelaxed: false
# Headers to sign with DKIM. If empty, a reasonable default set of headers is
# selected. (optional)
Headers:
-
# If set, don't prevent duplicate headers from being added. Not recommended.
# (optional)
DontSealHeaders: false
# Period a signature is valid after signing, as duration, e.g. 72h. The period
# should be enough for delivery at the final destination, potentially with several
# hops/relays. In the order of days at least. (optional)
Expiration:
# Either an RSA or ed25519 private key file in PKCS8 PEM form.
PrivateKeyFile:
# List of selectors that emails will be signed with. (optional)
Sign:
-
# With DMARC, a domain publishes, in DNS, a policy on how other mail servers
# should handle incoming messages with the From-header matching this domain and/or
# subdomain (depending on the configured alignment). Receiving mail servers use
# this to build up a reputation of this domain, which can help with mail delivery.
# A domain can also publish an email address to which reports about DMARC
# verification results can be sent by verifying mail servers, useful for
# monitoring. Incoming DMARC reports are automatically parsed, validated, added to
# metrics and stored in the reporting database for later display in the admin web
# pages. (optional)
DMARC:
# Address-part before the @ that accepts DMARC reports. Must be
# non-internationalized. Recommended value: dmarc-reports.
Localpart:
# Account to deliver to.
Account:
# Mailbox to deliver to, e.g. DMARC.
Mailbox:
# With MTA-STS a domain publishes, in DNS, presence of a policy for
# using/requiring TLS for SMTP connections. The policy is served over HTTPS.
# (optional)
MTASTS:
# Policies are versioned. The version must be specified in the DNS record. If you
# change a policy, first change it in mox, then update the DNS record.
PolicyID:
# testing, enforce or none. If set to enforce, a remote SMTP server will not
# deliver email to us if it cannot make a TLS connection.
Mode:
# How long a remote mail server is allowed to cache a policy. Typically 1 or
# several weeks.
MaxAge: 0s
# List of server names allowed for SMTP. If empty, the configured hostname is set.
# Host names can contain a wildcard (*) as a leading label (matching a single
# label, e.g. *.example matches host.example, not sub.host.example). (optional)
MX:
-
# With TLSRPT a domain specifies in DNS where reports about encountered SMTP TLS
# behaviour should be sent. Useful for monitoring. Incoming TLS reports are
# automatically parsed, validated, added to metrics and stored in the reporting
# database for later display in the admin web pages. (optional)
TLSRPT:
# Address-part before the @ that accepts TLSRPT reports. Recommended value:
# tls-reports.
Localpart:
# Account to deliver to.
Account:
# Mailbox to deliver to, e.g. TLSRPT.
Mailbox:
# Routes for delivering outgoing messages through the queue. Each delivery attempt
# evaluates account routes, these domain routes and finally global routes. The
# transport of the first matching route is used in the delivery attempt. If no
# routes match, which is the default with no configured routes, messages are
# delivered directly from the queue. (optional)
Routes:
-
# Matches if the envelope from domain matches one of the configured domains, or if
# the list is empty. If a domain starts with a dot, prefixes of the domain also
# match. (optional)
FromDomain:
-
# Like FromDomain, but matching against the envelope to domain. (optional)
ToDomain:
-
# Matches if at least this many deliveries have already been attempted. This can
# be used to attempt sending through a smarthost when direct delivery has failed
# for several times. (optional)
MinimumAttempts: 0
Transport:
# Accounts to which email can be delivered. An account can accept email for
# multiple domains, for multiple localparts, and deliver to multiple mailboxes.
Accounts:
x:
# Default domain for account. Deprecated behaviour: If a destination is not a full
# address but only a localpart, this domain is added to form a full address.
Domain:
# Free form description, e.g. full name or alternative contact info. (optional)
Description:
# Full name, to use in message From header when composing messages in webmail. Can
# be overridden per destination. (optional)
FullName:
# Destinations, keys are email addresses (with IDNA domains). If the address is of
# the form '@domain', i.e. with localpart missing, it serves as a catchall for the
# domain, matching all messages that are not explicitly configured. Deprecated
# behaviour: If the address is not a full address but a localpart, it is combined
# with Domain to form a full address.
Destinations:
x:
# Mailbox to deliver to if none of Rulesets match. Default: Inbox. (optional)
Mailbox:
# Delivery rules based on message and SMTP transaction. You may want to match each
# mailing list by SMTP MailFrom address, VerifiedDomain and/or List-ID header
# (typically <listname.example.org> if the list address is listname@example.org),
# delivering them to their own mailbox. (optional)
Rulesets:
-
# Matches if this regular expression matches (a substring of) the SMTP MAIL FROM
# address (not the message From-header). E.g. '^user@example\.org$'. (optional)
SMTPMailFromRegexp:
# Matches if this domain matches an SPF- and/or DKIM-verified (sub)domain.
# (optional)
VerifiedDomain:
# Matches if these header field/value regular expressions all match (substrings
# of) the message headers. Header fields and valuees are converted to lower case
# before matching. Whitespace is trimmed from the value before matching. A header
# field can occur multiple times in a message, only one instance has to match. For
# mailing lists, you could match on ^list-id$ with the value typically the mailing
# list address in angled brackets with @ replaced with a dot, e.g.
# <name\.lists\.example\.org>. (optional)
HeadersRegexp:
x:
# Influences spam filtering only, this option does not change whether a message
# matches this ruleset. Can only be used together with SMTPMailFromRegexp and
# VerifiedDomain. SMTPMailFromRegexp must be set to the address used to deliver
# the forwarded message, e.g. '^user(|\+.*)@forward\.example$'. Changes to junk
# analysis: 1. Messages are not rejects for failing a DMARC policy, because a
# legitimate forwarded message without valid/intact/aligned DKIM signature would
# be rejected because any verified SPF domain will be 'unaligned', of the
# forwarding mail server. 2. The sending mail server IP address, and sending EHLO
# and MAIL FROM domains and matching DKIM domain aren't used in future
# reputation-based spam classifications (but other verified DKIM domains are)
# because the forwarding server is not a useful spam signal for future messages.
# (optional)
IsForward: false
# Influences spam filtering only, this option does not change whether a message
# matches this ruleset. If this domain matches an SPF- and/or DKIM-verified
# (sub)domain, the message is accepted without further spam checks, such as a junk
# filter or DMARC reject evaluation. DMARC rejects should not apply for mailing
# lists that are not configured to rewrite the From-header of messages that don't
# have a passing DKIM signature of the From-domain. Otherwise, by rejecting
# messages, you may be automatically unsubscribed from the mailing list. The
# assumption is that mailing lists do their own spam filtering/moderation.
# (optional)
ListAllowDomain:
# Influences spam filtering only, this option does not change whether a message
# matches this ruleset. If a message is classified as spam, it isn't rejected
# during the SMTP transaction (the normal behaviour), but accepted during the SMTP
# transaction and delivered to the specified mailbox. The specified mailbox is not
# automatically cleaned up like the account global Rejects mailbox, unless set to
# that Rejects mailbox. (optional)
AcceptRejectsToMailbox:
# Mailbox to deliver to if this ruleset matches.
Mailbox:
# Full name to use in message From header when composing messages coming from this
# address with webmail. (optional)
FullName:
# If configured, messages classified as weakly spam are rejected with instructions
# to retry delivery, but this time with a signed token added to the subject.
# During the next delivery attempt, the signed token will bypass the spam filter.
# Messages with a clear spam signal, such as a known bad reputation, are
# rejected/delayed without a signed token. (optional)
SubjectPass:
# How long unique values are accepted after generating, e.g. 12h.
Period: 0s
# Mail that looks like spam will be rejected, but a copy can be stored temporarily
# in a mailbox, e.g. Rejects. If mail isn't coming in when you expect, you can
# look there. The mail still isn't accepted, so the remote mail server may retry
# (hopefully, if legitimate), or give up (hopefully, if indeed a spammer).
# Messages are automatically removed from this mailbox, so do not set it to a
# mailbox that has messages you want to keep. (optional)
RejectsMailbox:
# Don't automatically delete mail in the RejectsMailbox listed above. This can be
# useful, e.g. for future spam training. (optional)
KeepRejects: false
# Automatically set $Junk and $NotJunk flags based on mailbox messages are
# delivered/moved/copied to. Email clients typically have too limited
# functionality to conveniently set these flags, especially $NonJunk, but they can
# all move messages to a different mailbox, so this helps them. (optional)
AutomaticJunkFlags:
# If enabled, flags will be set automatically if they match a regular expression
# below. When two of the three mailbox regular expressions are set, the remaining
# one will match all unmatched messages. Messages are matched in the order
# specified and the search stops on the first match. Mailboxes are lowercased
# before matching.
Enabled: false
# Example: ^(junk|spam). (optional)
JunkMailboxRegexp:
# Example: ^(inbox|neutral|postmaster|dmarc|tlsrpt|rejects), and you may wish to
# add trash depending on how you use it, or leave this empty. (optional)
NeutralMailboxRegexp:
# Example: .* or an empty string. (optional)
NotJunkMailboxRegexp:
# Content-based filtering, using the junk-status of individual messages to rank
# words in such messages as spam or ham. It is recommended you always set the
# applicable (non)-junk status on messages, and that you do not empty your Trash
# because those messages contain valuable ham/spam training information.
# (optional)
JunkFilter:
# Approximate spaminess score between 0 and 1 above which emails are rejected as
# spam. Each delivery attempt adds a little noise to make it slightly harder for
# spammers to identify words that strongly indicate non-spaminess and use it to
# bypass the filter. E.g. 0.95.
Threshold: 0.000000
Params:
# Track ham/spam ranking for single words. (optional)
Onegrams: false
# Track ham/spam ranking for each two consecutive words. (optional)
Twograms: false
# Track ham/spam ranking for each three consecutive words. (optional)
Threegrams: false
# Maximum power a word (combination) can have. If spaminess is 0.99, and max power
# is 0.1, spaminess of the word will be set to 0.9. Similar for ham words.
MaxPower: 0.000000
# Number of most spammy/hammy words to use for calculating probability. E.g. 10.
TopWords: 0
# Ignore words that are this much away from 0.5 haminess/spaminess. E.g. 0.1,
# causing word (combinations) of 0.4 to 0.6 to be ignored. (optional)
IgnoreWords: 0.000000
# Occurrences in word database until a word is considered rare and its influence
# in calculating probability reduced. E.g. 1 or 2. (optional)
RareWords: 0
# Maximum number of outgoing messages for this account in a 24 hour window. This
# limits the damage to recipients and the reputation of this mail server in case
# of account compromise. Default 1000. (optional)
MaxOutgoingMessagesPerDay: 0
# Maximum number of first-time recipients in outgoing messages for this account in
# a 24 hour window. This limits the damage to recipients and the reputation of
# this mail server in case of account compromise. Default 200. (optional)
MaxFirstTimeRecipientsPerDay: 0
# Routes for delivering outgoing messages through the queue. Each delivery attempt
# evaluates these account routes, domain routes and finally global routes. The
# transport of the first matching route is used in the delivery attempt. If no
# routes match, which is the default with no configured routes, messages are
# delivered directly from the queue. (optional)
Routes:
-
# Matches if the envelope from domain matches one of the configured domains, or if
# the list is empty. If a domain starts with a dot, prefixes of the domain also
# match. (optional)
FromDomain:
-
# Like FromDomain, but matching against the envelope to domain. (optional)
ToDomain:
-
# Matches if at least this many deliveries have already been attempted. This can
# be used to attempt sending through a smarthost when direct delivery has failed
# for several times. (optional)
MinimumAttempts: 0
Transport:
# Redirect all requests from domain (key) to domain (value). Always redirects to
# HTTPS. For plain HTTP redirects, use a WebHandler with a WebRedirect. (optional)
WebDomainRedirects:
x:
# Handle webserver requests by serving static files, redirecting or
# reverse-proxying HTTP(s). The first matching WebHandler will handle the request.
# Built-in handlers, e.g. for account, admin, autoconfig and mta-sts always run
# first. If no handler matches, the response status code is file not found (404).
# If functionality you need is missng, simply forward the requests to an
# application that can provide the needed functionality. (optional)
WebHandlers:
-
# Name to use in logging and metrics. (optional)
LogName:
# Both Domain and PathRegexp must match for this WebHandler to match a request.
# Exactly one of WebStatic, WebRedirect, WebForward must be set.
Domain:
# Regular expression matched against request path, must always start with ^ to
# ensure matching from the start of the path. The matching prefix can optionally
# be stripped by WebForward. The regular expression does not have to end with $.
PathRegexp:
# If set, plain HTTP requests are not automatically permanently redirected (308)
# to HTTPS. If you don't have a HTTPS webserver configured, set this to true.
# (optional)
DontRedirectPlainHTTP: false
# Serve static files. (optional)
WebStatic:
# Path to strip from the request URL before evaluating to a local path. If the
# requested URL path does not start with this prefix and ContinueNotFound it is
# considered non-matching and next WebHandlers are tried. If ContinueNotFound is
# not set, a file not found (404) is returned in that case. (optional)
StripPrefix:
# Directory to serve files from for this handler. Keep in mind that relative paths
# are relative to the working directory of mox.
Root:
# If set, and a directory is requested, and no index.html is present that can be
# served, a file listing is returned. Results in 403 if ListFiles is not set. If a
# directory is requested and the URL does not end with a slash, the response is a
# redirect to the path with trailing slash. (optional)
ListFiles: false
# If a requested URL does not exist, don't return a file not found (404) response,
# but consider this handler non-matching and continue attempts to serve with later
# WebHandlers, which may be a reverse proxy generating dynamic content, possibly
# even writing a static file for a next request to serve statically. If
# ContinueNotFound is set, HTTP requests other than GET and HEAD do not match.
# This mechanism can be used to implement the equivalent of 'try_files' in other
# webservers. (optional)
ContinueNotFound: false
# Headers to add to the response. Useful for cache-control, content-type, etc. By
# default, Content-Type headers are automatically added for recognized file types,
# unless added explicitly through this setting. For directory listings, a
# content-type header is skipped. (optional)
ResponseHeaders:
x:
# Redirect requests to configured URL. (optional)
WebRedirect:
# Base URL to redirect to. The path must be empty and will be replaced, either by
# the request URL path, or by OrigPathRegexp/ReplacePath. Scheme, host, port and
# fragment stay intact, and query strings are combined. If empty, the response
# redirects to a different path through OrigPathRegexp and ReplacePath, which must
# then be set. Use a URL without scheme to redirect without changing the protocol,
# e.g. //newdomain/. If a redirect would send a request to a URL with the same
# scheme, host and path, the WebRedirect does not match so a next WebHandler can
# be tried. This can be used to redirect all plain http traffic to https.
# (optional)
BaseURL:
# Regular expression for matching path. If set and path does not match, a 404 is
# returned. The HTTP path used for matching always starts with a slash. (optional)
OrigPathRegexp:
# Replacement path for destination URL based on OrigPathRegexp. Implemented with
# Go's Regexp.ReplaceAllString: $1 is replaced with the text of the first
# submatch, etc. If both OrigPathRegexp and ReplacePath are empty, BaseURL must be
# set and all paths are redirected unaltered. (optional)
ReplacePath:
# Status code to use in redirect, e.g. 307. By default, a permanent redirect (308)
# is returned. (optional)
StatusCode: 0
# Forward requests to another webserver, i.e. reverse proxy. (optional)
WebForward:
# Strip the matching WebHandler path from the WebHandler before forwarding the
# request. (optional)
StripPath: false
# URL to forward HTTP requests to, e.g. http://127.0.0.1:8123/base. If StripPath
# is false the full request path is added to the URL. Host headers are sent
# unmodified. New X-Forwarded-{For,Host,Proto} headers are set. Any query string
# in the URL is ignored. Requests are made using Go's net/http.DefaultTransport
# that takes environment variables HTTP_PROXY and HTTPS_PROXY into account.
# Websocket connections are forwarded and data is copied between client and
# backend without looking at the framing. The websocket 'version' and
# 'key'/'accept' headers are verified during the handshake, but other websocket
# headers, including 'origin', 'protocol' and 'extensions' headers, are not
# inspected and the backend is responsible for verifying/interpreting them.
URL:
# Headers to add to the response. Useful for adding security- and cache-related
# headers. (optional)
ResponseHeaders:
x:
# Routes for delivering outgoing messages through the queue. Each delivery attempt
# evaluates account routes, domain routes and finally these global routes. The
# transport of the first matching route is used in the delivery attempt. If no
# routes match, which is the default with no configured routes, messages are
# delivered directly from the queue. (optional)
Routes:
-
# Matches if the envelope from domain matches one of the configured domains, or if
# the list is empty. If a domain starts with a dot, prefixes of the domain also
# match. (optional)
FromDomain:
-
# Like FromDomain, but matching against the envelope to domain. (optional)
ToDomain:
-
# Matches if at least this many deliveries have already been attempted. This can
# be used to attempt sending through a smarthost when direct delivery has failed
# for several times. (optional)
MinimumAttempts: 0
Transport:
# Examples
Mox includes configuration files to illustrate common setups. You can see these
examples with "mox example", and print a specific example with "mox example
<name>". Below are all examples included in mox.
# Example webhandlers
# Snippet of domains.conf to configure WebDomainRedirects and WebHandlers.
# Redirect all requests for mox.example to https://www.mox.example.
WebDomainRedirects:
mox.example: www.mox.example
# Each request is matched against these handlers until one matches and serves it.
WebHandlers:
-
# Redirect all plain http requests to https, leaving path, query strings, etc
# intact. When the request is already to https, the destination URL would have the
# same scheme, host and path, causing this redirect handler to not match the
# request (and not cause a redirect loop) and the webserver to serve the request
# with a later handler.
LogName: redirhttps
Domain: www.mox.example
PathRegexp: ^/
# Could leave DontRedirectPlainHTTP at false if it wasn't for this being an
# example for doing this redirect.
DontRedirectPlainHTTP: true
WebRedirect:
BaseURL: https://www.mox.example
-
# The name of the handler, used in logging and metrics.
LogName: staticmjl
# With ACME configured, each configured domain will automatically get a TLS
# certificate on first request.
Domain: www.mox.example
PathRegexp: ^/who/mjl/
WebStatic:
StripPrefix: /who/mjl
# Requested path /who/mjl/inferno/ resolves to local web/mjl/inferno.
# If a directory contains an index.html, it is served when a directory is requested.
Root: web/mjl
# With ListFiles true, if a directory does not contain an index.html, the contents are listed.
ListFiles: true
ResponseHeaders:
X-Mox: hi
-
LogName: redir
Domain: www.mox.example
PathRegexp: ^/redir/a/b/c
# Don't redirect from plain HTTP to HTTPS.
DontRedirectPlainHTTP: true
WebRedirect:
# Just change the domain and add query string set fragment. No change to scheme.
# Path will start with /redir/a/b/c (and whathever came after) because no
# OrigPathRegexp+ReplacePath is set.
BaseURL: //moxest.example?q=1#frag
# Default redirection is 308 - Permanent Redirect.
StatusCode: 307
-
LogName: oldnew
Domain: www.mox.example
PathRegexp: ^/old/
WebRedirect:
# Replace path, leaving rest of URL intact.
OrigPathRegexp: ^/old/(.*)
ReplacePath: /new/$1
-
LogName: app
Domain: www.mox.example
PathRegexp: ^/app/
WebForward:
# Strip the path matched by PathRegexp before forwarding the request. So original
# request /app/api become just /api.
StripPath: true
# URL of backend, where requests are forwarded to. The path in the URL is kept,
# so for incoming request URL /app/api, the outgoing request URL has path /app-v2/api.
# Requests are made with Go's net/http DefaultTransporter, including using
# HTTP_PROXY and HTTPS_PROXY environment variables.
URL: http://127.0.0.1:8900/app-v2/
# Add headers to response.
ResponseHeaders:
X-Frame-Options: deny
X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff
*/
package config
// NOTE: DO NOT EDIT, this file is generated by ../gendoc.sh.