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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.
777 lines
27 KiB
Go
777 lines
27 KiB
Go
/*
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Command mox is a modern full-featured open source secure mail server for
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low-maintenance self-hosted email.
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- Quick and easy to set up with quickstart and automatic TLS with ACME and
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Let's Encrypt.
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- IMAP4 with extensions for accessing email.
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- SMTP with SPF, DKIM, DMARC, DNSBL, MTA-STS, TLSRPT for exchanging email.
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- Reputation-based and content-based spam filtering.
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- Internationalized email.
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- Admin web interface.
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# Commands
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mox [-config config/mox.conf] [-pedantic] ...
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mox serve
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mox quickstart [-existing-webserver] [-hostname host] user@domain [user | uid]
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mox stop
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mox setaccountpassword address
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mox setadminpassword
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mox loglevels [level [pkg]]
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mox queue list
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mox queue kick [-id id] [-todomain domain] [-recipient address] [-transport transport]
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mox queue drop [-id id] [-todomain domain] [-recipient address]
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mox queue dump id
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mox import maildir accountname mailboxname maildir
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mox import mbox accountname mailboxname mbox
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mox export maildir dst-dir account-path [mailbox]
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mox export mbox dst-dir account-path [mailbox]
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mox localserve
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mox help [command ...]
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mox backup dest-dir
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mox verifydata data-dir
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mox config test
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mox config dnscheck domain
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mox config dnsrecords domain
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mox config describe-domains >domains.conf
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mox config describe-static >mox.conf
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mox config account add account address
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mox config account rm account
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mox config address add address account
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mox config address rm address
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mox config domain add domain account [localpart]
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mox config domain rm domain
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mox config describe-sendmail >/etc/moxsubmit.conf
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mox config printservice >mox.service
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mox example [name]
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mox checkupdate
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mox cid cid
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mox clientconfig domain
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mox dkim gened25519 >$selector._domainkey.$domain.ed25519key.pkcs8.pem
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mox dkim genrsa >$selector._domainkey.$domain.rsakey.pkcs8.pem
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mox dkim lookup selector domain
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mox dkim txt <$selector._domainkey.$domain.key.pkcs8.pem
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mox dkim verify message
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mox dkim sign message
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mox dmarc lookup domain
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mox dmarc parsereportmsg message ...
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mox dmarc verify remoteip mailfromaddress helodomain < message
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mox dnsbl check zone ip
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mox dnsbl checkhealth zone
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mox mtasts lookup domain
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mox retrain accountname
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mox sendmail [-Fname] [ignoredflags] [-t] [<message]
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mox spf check domain ip
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mox spf lookup domain
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mox spf parse txtrecord
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mox tlsrpt lookup domain
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mox tlsrpt parsereportmsg message ...
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mox version
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Many commands talk to a running mox instance, through the ctl file in the data
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directory. Specify the configuration file (that holds the path to the data
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directory) through the -config flag or MOXCONF environment variable.
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# mox serve
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Start mox, serving SMTP/IMAP/HTTPS.
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Incoming email is accepted over SMTP. Email can be retrieved by users using
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IMAP. HTTP listeners are started for the admin/account web interfaces, and for
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automated TLS configuration. Missing essential TLS certificates are immediately
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requested, other TLS certificates are requested on demand.
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usage: mox serve
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# mox quickstart
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Quickstart generates configuration files and prints instructions to quickly set up a mox instance.
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Quickstart writes configuration files, prints initial admin and account
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passwords, DNS records you should create. If you run it on Linux it writes a
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systemd service file and prints commands to enable and start mox as service.
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The user or uid is optional, defaults to "mox", and is the user or uid/gid mox
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will run as after initialization.
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Quickstart assumes mox will run on the machine you run quickstart on and uses
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its host name and public IPs. On many systems the hostname is not a fully
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qualified domain name, but only the first dns "label", e.g. "mail" in case of
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"mail.example.org". If so, quickstart does a reverse DNS lookup to find the
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hostname, and as fallback uses the label plus the domain of the email address
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you specified. Use flag -hostname to explicitly specify the hostname mox will
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run on.
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Mox is by far easiest to operate if you let it listen on port 443 (HTTPS) and
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80 (HTTP). TLS will be fully automatic with ACME with Let's Encrypt.
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You can run mox along with an existing webserver, but because of MTA-STS and
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autoconfig, you'll need to forward HTTPS traffic for two domains to mox. Run
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"mox quickstart -existing-webserver ..." to generate configuration files and
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instructions for configuring mox along with an existing webserver.
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But please first consider configuring mox on port 443. It can itself serve
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domains with HTTP/HTTPS, including with automatic TLS with ACME, is easily
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configured through both configuration files and admin web interface, and can act
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as a reverse proxy (and static file server for that matter), so you can forward
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traffic to your existing backend applications. Look for "WebHandlers:" in the
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output of "mox config describe-domains" and see the output of "mox example
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webhandlers".
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usage: mox quickstart [-existing-webserver] [-hostname host] user@domain [user | uid]
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-existing-webserver
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use if a webserver is already running, so mox won't listen on port 80 and 443; you'll have to provide tls certificates/keys, and configure the existing webserver as reverse proxy, forwarding requests to mox.
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-hostname string
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hostname mox will run on, by default the hostname of the machine quickstart runs on; if specified, the IPs for the hostname are configured for the public listener
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# mox stop
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Shut mox down, giving connections maximum 3 seconds to stop before closing them.
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While shutting down, new IMAP and SMTP connections will get a status response
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indicating temporary unavailability. Existing connections will get a 3 second
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period to finish their transaction and shut down. Under normal circumstances,
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only IMAP has long-living connections, with the IDLE command to get notified of
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new mail deliveries.
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usage: mox stop
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# mox setaccountpassword
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Set new password an account.
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The password is read from stdin. Secrets derived from the password, but not the
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password itself, are stored in the account database. The stored secrets are for
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authentication with: scram-sha-256, scram-sha-1, cram-md5, plain text (bcrypt
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hash).
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Any email address configured for the account can be used.
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usage: mox setaccountpassword address
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# mox setadminpassword
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Set a new admin password, for the web interface.
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The password is read from stdin. Its bcrypt hash is stored in a file named
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"adminpasswd" in the configuration directory.
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usage: mox setadminpassword
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# mox loglevels
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Print the log levels, or set a new default log level, or a level for the given package.
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By default, a single log level applies to all logging in mox. But for each
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"pkg", an overriding log level can be configured. Examples of packages:
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smtpserver, smtpclient, queue, imapserver, spf, dkim, dmarc, junk, message,
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etc.
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Specify a pkg and an empty level to clear the configured level for a package.
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Valid labels: error, info, debug, trace, traceauth, tracedata.
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usage: mox loglevels [level [pkg]]
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# mox queue list
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List messages in the delivery queue.
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This prints the message with its ID, last and next delivery attempts, last
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error.
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usage: mox queue list
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# mox queue kick
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Schedule matching messages in the queue for immediate delivery.
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Messages deliveries are normally attempted with exponential backoff. The first
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retry after 7.5 minutes, and doubling each time. Kicking messages sets their
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next scheduled attempt to now, it can cause delivery to fail earlier than
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without rescheduling.
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With the -transport flag, future delivery attempts are done using the specified
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transport. Transports can be configured in mox.conf, e.g. to submit to a remote
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queue over SMTP.
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usage: mox queue kick [-id id] [-todomain domain] [-recipient address] [-transport transport]
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-id int
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id of message in queue
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-recipient string
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recipient email address
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-todomain string
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destination domain of messages
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-transport string
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transport to use for the next delivery
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# mox queue drop
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Remove matching messages from the queue.
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Dangerous operation, this completely removes the message. If you want to store
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the message, use "queue dump" before removing.
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usage: mox queue drop [-id id] [-todomain domain] [-recipient address]
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-id int
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id of message in queue
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-recipient string
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recipient email address
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-todomain string
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destination domain of messages
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# mox queue dump
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Dump a message from the queue.
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The message is printed to stdout and is in standard internet mail format.
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usage: mox queue dump id
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# mox import maildir
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Import a maildir into an account.
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By default, messages will train the junk filter based on their flags and, if
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"automatic junk flags" configuration is set, based on mailbox naming.
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If the destination mailbox is "Sent", the recipients of the messages are added
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to the message metadata, causing later incoming messages from these recipients
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to be accepted, unless other reputation signals prevent that.
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Users can also import mailboxes/messages through the account web page by
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uploading a zip or tgz file with mbox and/or maildirs.
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Mailbox flags, like "seen", "answered", will be imported. An optional
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dovecot-keywords file can specify additional flags, like Forwarded/Junk/NotJunk.
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The maildir files/directories are read by the mox process, so make sure it has
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access to the maildir directories/files.
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usage: mox import maildir accountname mailboxname maildir
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# mox import mbox
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Import an mbox into an account.
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Using mbox is not recommended, maildir is a better defined format.
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By default, messages will train the junk filter based on their flags and, if
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"automatic junk flags" configuration is set, based on mailbox naming.
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If the destination mailbox is "Sent", the recipients of the messages are added
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to the message metadata, causing later incoming messages from these recipients
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to be accepted, unless other reputation signals prevent that.
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Users can also import mailboxes/messages through the account web page by
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uploading a zip or tgz file with mbox and/or maildirs.
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The mailbox is read by the mox process, so make sure it has access to the
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maildir directories/files.
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usage: mox import mbox accountname mailboxname mbox
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# mox export maildir
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Export one or all mailboxes from an account in maildir format.
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Export bypasses a running mox instance. It opens the account mailbox/message
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database file directly. This may block if a running mox instance also has the
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database open, e.g. for IMAP connections. To export from a running instance, use
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the accounts web page.
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usage: mox export maildir dst-dir account-path [mailbox]
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# mox export mbox
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Export messages from one or all mailboxes in an account in mbox format.
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Using mbox is not recommended. Maildir is a better format.
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Export bypasses a running mox instance. It opens the account mailbox/message
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database file directly. This may block if a running mox instance also has the
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database open, e.g. for IMAP connections. To export from a running instance, use
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the accounts web page.
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For mbox export, "mboxrd" is used where message lines starting with the magic
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"From " string are escaped by prepending a >. All ">*From " are escaped,
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otherwise reconstructing the original could lose a ">".
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usage: mox export mbox dst-dir account-path [mailbox]
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# mox localserve
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Start a local SMTP/IMAP server that accepts all messages, useful when testing/developing software that sends email.
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Localserve starts mox with a configuration suitable for local email-related
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software development/testing. It listens for SMTP/Submission(s), IMAP(s) and
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HTTP(s), on the regular port numbers + 1000.
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Data is stored in the system user's configuration directory under
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"mox-localserve", e.g. $HOME/.config/mox-localserve/ on linux, but can be
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overridden with the -dir flag. If the directory does not yet exist, it is
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automatically initialized with configuration files, an account with email
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address mox@localhost and password moxmoxmox, and a newly generated self-signed
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TLS certificate.
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All incoming email to any address is accepted (if checks pass), unless the
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recipient localpart ends with:
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- "temperror": fail with a temporary error code
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- "permerror": fail with a permanent error code
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- [45][0-9][0-9]: fail with the specific error code
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- "timeout": no response (for an hour)
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If the localpart begins with "mailfrom" or "rcptto", the error is returned
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during those commands instead of during "data".
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usage: mox localserve
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-dir string
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configuration storage directory (default "$userconfigdir/mox-localserve")
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# mox help
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Prints help about matching commands.
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If multiple commands match, they are listed along with the first line of their help text.
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If a single command matches, its usage and full help text is printed.
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usage: mox help [command ...]
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# mox backup
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Creates a backup of the data directory.
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Backup creates consistent snapshots of the databases and message files and
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copies other files in the data directory. Empty directories are not copied.
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These files can then be stored elsewhere for long-term storage, or used to fall
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back to should an upgrade fail. Simply copying files in the data directory
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while mox is running can result in unusable database files.
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Message files never change (they are read-only, though can be removed) and are
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hardlinked so they don't consume additional space. If hardlinking fails, for
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example when the backup destination directory is on a different file system, a
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regular copy is made. Using a destination directory like "data/tmp/backup"
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increases the odds hardlinking succeeds: the default systemd service file
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specifically mounts the data directory, causing attempts to hardlink outside it
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to fail with an error about cross-device linking.
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All files in the data directory that aren't recognized (i.e. other than known
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database files, message files, an acme directory, the "tmp" directory, etc),
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are stored, but with a warning.
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A clean successful backup does not print any output by default. Use the
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-verbose flag for details, including timing.
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To restore a backup, first shut down mox, move away the old data directory and
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move an earlier backed up directory in its place, run "mox verifydata",
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possibly with the "-fix" option, and restart mox. After the restore, you may
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also want to run "mox bumpuidvalidity" for each account for which messages in a
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mailbox changed, to force IMAP clients to synchronize mailbox state.
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Before upgrading, to check if the upgrade will likely succeed, first make a
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backup, then use the new mox binary to run "mox verifydata" on the backup. This
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can change the backup files (e.g. upgrade database files, move away
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unrecognized message files), so you should make a new backup before actually
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upgrading.
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usage: mox backup dest-dir
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-verbose
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print progress
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# mox verifydata
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Verify the contents of a data directory, typically of a backup.
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Verifydata checks all database files to see if they are valid BoltDB/bstore
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databases. It checks that all messages in the database have a corresponding
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on-disk message file and there are no unrecognized files. If option -fix is
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specified, unrecognized message files are moved away. This may be needed after
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a restore, because messages enqueued or delivered in the future may get those
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message sequence numbers assigned and writing the message file would fail.
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Because verifydata opens the database files, schema upgrades may automatically
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be applied. This can happen if you use a new mox release. It is useful to run
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"mox verifydata" with a new binary before attempting an upgrade, but only on a
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copy of the database files, as made with "mox backup". Before upgrading, make a
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new backup again since "mox verifydata" may have upgraded the database files,
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possibly making them potentially no longer readable by the previous version.
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usage: mox verifydata data-dir
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-fix
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fix fixable problems, such as moving away message files not referenced by their database
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# mox config test
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Parses and validates the configuration files.
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If valid, the command exits with status 0. If not valid, all errors encountered
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are printed.
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usage: mox config test
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# mox config dnscheck
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Check the DNS records with the configuration for the domain, and print any errors/warnings.
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usage: mox config dnscheck domain
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# mox config dnsrecords
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Prints annotated DNS records as zone file that should be created for the domain.
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The zone file can be imported into existing DNS software. You should review the
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DNS records, especially if your domain previously/currently has email
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configured.
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usage: mox config dnsrecords domain
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# mox config describe-domains
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Prints an annotated empty configuration for use as domains.conf.
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The domains configuration file contains the domains and their configuration,
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and accounts and their configuration. This includes the configured email
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addresses. The mox admin web interface, and the mox command line interface, can
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make changes to this file. Mox automatically reloads this file when it changes.
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Like the static configuration, the example domains.conf printed by this command
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needs modifications to make it valid.
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usage: mox config describe-domains >domains.conf
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# mox config describe-static
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Prints an annotated empty configuration for use as mox.conf.
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The static configuration file cannot be reloaded while mox is running. Mox has
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to be restarted for changes to the static configuration file to take effect.
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This configuration file needs modifications to make it valid. For example, it
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may contain unfinished list items.
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usage: mox config describe-static >mox.conf
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# mox config account add
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Add an account with an email address and reload the configuration.
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Email can be delivered to this address/account. A password has to be configured
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explicitly, see the setaccountpassword command.
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usage: mox config account add account address
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# mox config account rm
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Remove an account and reload the configuration.
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Email addresses for this account will also be removed, and incoming email for
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these addresses will be rejected.
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usage: mox config account rm account
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# mox config address add
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Adds an address to an account and reloads the configuration.
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If address starts with a @ (i.e. a missing localpart), this is a catchall
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address for the domain.
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usage: mox config address add address account
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# mox config address rm
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|
|
|
Remove an address and reload the configuration.
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|
|
|
Incoming email for this address will be rejected after removing an address.
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|
|
|
usage: mox config address rm address
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|
|
|
# mox config domain add
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|
|
|
Adds a new domain to the configuration and reloads the configuration.
|
|
|
|
The account is used for the postmaster mailboxes the domain, including as DMARC and
|
|
TLS reporting. Localpart is the "username" at the domain for this account. If
|
|
must be set if and only if account does not yet exist.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox config domain add domain account [localpart]
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|
|
|
# mox config domain rm
|
|
|
|
Remove a domain from the configuration and reload the configuration.
|
|
|
|
This is a dangerous operation. Incoming email delivery for this domain will be
|
|
rejected.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox config domain rm domain
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|
|
|
# mox config describe-sendmail
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|
|
|
Describe configuration for mox when invoked as sendmail.
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|
|
|
usage: mox config describe-sendmail >/etc/moxsubmit.conf
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|
|
|
# mox config printservice
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|
|
|
Prints a systemd unit service file for mox.
|
|
|
|
This is the same file as generated using quickstart. If the systemd service file
|
|
has changed with a newer version of mox, use this command to generate an up to
|
|
date version.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox config printservice >mox.service
|
|
|
|
# mox example
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|
|
|
List available examples, or print a specific example.
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|
|
|
usage: mox example [name]
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|
|
|
# mox checkupdate
|
|
|
|
Check if a newer version of mox is available.
|
|
|
|
A single DNS TXT lookup to _updates.xmox.nl tells if a new version is
|
|
available. If so, a changelog is fetched from https://updates.xmox.nl, and the
|
|
individual entries validated with a builtin public key. The changelog is
|
|
printed.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox checkupdate
|
|
|
|
# mox cid
|
|
|
|
Turn an ID from a Received header into a cid, for looking up in logs.
|
|
|
|
A cid is essentially a connection counter initialized when mox starts. Each log
|
|
line contains a cid. Received headers added by mox contain a unique ID that can
|
|
be decrypted to a cid by admin of a mox instance only.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox cid cid
|
|
|
|
# mox clientconfig
|
|
|
|
Print the configuration for email clients for a domain.
|
|
|
|
Sending email is typically not done on the SMTP port 25, but on submission
|
|
ports 465 (with TLS) and 587 (without initial TLS, but usually added to the
|
|
connection with STARTTLS). For IMAP, the port with TLS is 993 and without is
|
|
143.
|
|
|
|
Without TLS/STARTTLS, passwords are sent in clear text, which should only be
|
|
configured over otherwise secured connections, like a VPN.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox clientconfig domain
|
|
|
|
# mox dkim gened25519
|
|
|
|
Generate a new ed25519 key for use with DKIM.
|
|
|
|
Ed25519 keys are much smaller than RSA keys of comparable cryptographic
|
|
strength. This is convenient because of maximum DNS message sizes. At the time
|
|
of writing, not many mail servers appear to support ed25519 DKIM keys though,
|
|
so it is recommended to sign messages with both RSA and ed25519 keys.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox dkim gened25519 >$selector._domainkey.$domain.ed25519key.pkcs8.pem
|
|
|
|
# mox dkim genrsa
|
|
|
|
Generate a new 2048 bit RSA private key for use with DKIM.
|
|
|
|
The generated file is in PEM format, and has a comment it is generated for use
|
|
with DKIM, by mox.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox dkim genrsa >$selector._domainkey.$domain.rsakey.pkcs8.pem
|
|
|
|
# mox dkim lookup
|
|
|
|
Lookup and print the DKIM record for the selector at the domain.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox dkim lookup selector domain
|
|
|
|
# mox dkim txt
|
|
|
|
Print a DKIM DNS TXT record with the public key derived from the private key read from stdin.
|
|
|
|
The DNS should be configured as a TXT record at $selector._domainkey.$domain.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox dkim txt <$selector._domainkey.$domain.key.pkcs8.pem
|
|
|
|
# mox dkim verify
|
|
|
|
Verify the DKIM signatures in a message and print the results.
|
|
|
|
The message is parsed, and the DKIM-Signature headers are validated. Validation
|
|
of older messages may fail because the DNS records have been removed or changed
|
|
by now, or because the signature header may have specified an expiration time
|
|
that was passed.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox dkim verify message
|
|
|
|
# mox dkim sign
|
|
|
|
Sign a message, adding DKIM-Signature headers based on the domain in the From header.
|
|
|
|
The message is parsed, the domain looked up in the configuration files, and
|
|
DKIM-Signature headers generated. The message is printed with the DKIM-Signature
|
|
headers prepended.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox dkim sign message
|
|
|
|
# mox dmarc lookup
|
|
|
|
Lookup dmarc policy for domain, a DNS TXT record at _dmarc.<domain>, validate and print it.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox dmarc lookup domain
|
|
|
|
# mox dmarc parsereportmsg
|
|
|
|
Parse a DMARC report from an email message, and print its extracted details.
|
|
|
|
DMARC reports are periodically mailed, if requested in the DMARC DNS record of
|
|
a domain. Reports are sent by mail servers that received messages with our
|
|
domain in a From header. This may or may not be legatimate email. DMARC reports
|
|
contain summaries of evaluations of DMARC and DKIM/SPF, which can help
|
|
understand email deliverability problems.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox dmarc parsereportmsg message ...
|
|
|
|
# mox dmarc verify
|
|
|
|
Parse an email message and evaluate it against the DMARC policy of the domain in the From-header.
|
|
|
|
mailfromaddress and helodomain are used for SPF validation. If both are empty,
|
|
SPF validation is skipped.
|
|
|
|
mailfromaddress should be the address used as MAIL FROM in the SMTP session.
|
|
For DSN messages, that address may be empty. The helo domain was specified at
|
|
the beginning of the SMTP transaction that delivered the message. These values
|
|
can be found in message headers.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox dmarc verify remoteip mailfromaddress helodomain < message
|
|
|
|
# mox dnsbl check
|
|
|
|
Test if IP is in the DNS blocklist of the zone, e.g. bl.spamcop.net.
|
|
|
|
If the IP is in the blocklist, an explanation is printed. This is typically a
|
|
URL with more information.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox dnsbl check zone ip
|
|
|
|
# mox dnsbl checkhealth
|
|
|
|
Check the health of the DNS blocklist represented by zone, e.g. bl.spamcop.net.
|
|
|
|
The health of a DNS blocklist can be checked by querying for 127.0.0.1 and
|
|
127.0.0.2. The second must and the first must not be present.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox dnsbl checkhealth zone
|
|
|
|
# mox mtasts lookup
|
|
|
|
Lookup the MTASTS record and policy for the domain.
|
|
|
|
MTA-STS is a mechanism for a domain to specify if it requires TLS connections
|
|
for delivering email. If a domain has a valid MTA-STS DNS TXT record at
|
|
_mta-sts.<domain> it signals it implements MTA-STS. A policy can then be
|
|
fetched at https://mta-sts.<domain>/.well-known/mta-sts.txt. The policy
|
|
specifies the mode (enforce, testing, none), which MX servers support TLS and
|
|
should be used, and how long the policy can be cached.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox mtasts lookup domain
|
|
|
|
# mox retrain
|
|
|
|
Recreate and retrain the junk filter for the account.
|
|
|
|
Useful after having made changes to the junk filter configuration, or if the
|
|
implementation has changed.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox retrain accountname
|
|
|
|
# mox sendmail
|
|
|
|
Sendmail is a drop-in replacement for /usr/sbin/sendmail to deliver emails sent by unix processes like cron.
|
|
|
|
If invoked as "sendmail", it will act as sendmail for sending messages. Its
|
|
intention is to let processes like cron send emails. Messages are submitted to
|
|
an actual mail server over SMTP. The destination mail server and credentials are
|
|
configured in /etc/moxsubmit.conf, see mox config describe-sendmail. The From
|
|
message header is rewritten to the configured address. When the addressee
|
|
appears to be a local user, because without @, the message is sent to the
|
|
configured default address.
|
|
|
|
If submitting an email fails, it is added to a directory moxsubmit.failures in
|
|
the user's home directory.
|
|
|
|
Most flags are ignored to fake compatibility with other sendmail
|
|
implementations. A single recipient or the -t flag with a To-header is required.
|
|
With the -t flag, Cc and Bcc headers are not handled specially, so Bcc is not
|
|
removed and the addresses do not receive the email.
|
|
|
|
/etc/moxsubmit.conf should be group-readable and not readable by others and this
|
|
binary should be setgid that group:
|
|
|
|
groupadd moxsubmit
|
|
install -m 2755 -o root -g moxsubmit mox /usr/sbin/sendmail
|
|
touch /etc/moxsubmit.conf
|
|
chown root:moxsubmit /etc/moxsubmit.conf
|
|
chmod 640 /etc/moxsubmit.conf
|
|
# edit /etc/moxsubmit.conf
|
|
|
|
|
|
usage: mox sendmail [-Fname] [ignoredflags] [-t] [<message]
|
|
|
|
# mox spf check
|
|
|
|
Check the status of IP for the policy published in DNS for the domain.
|
|
|
|
IPs may be allowed to send for a domain, or disallowed, and several shades in
|
|
between. If not allowed, an explanation may be provided by the policy. If so,
|
|
the explanation is printed. The SPF mechanism that matched (if any) is also
|
|
printed.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox spf check domain ip
|
|
|
|
# mox spf lookup
|
|
|
|
Lookup the SPF record for the domain and print it.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox spf lookup domain
|
|
|
|
# mox spf parse
|
|
|
|
Parse the record as SPF record. If valid, nothing is printed.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox spf parse txtrecord
|
|
|
|
# mox tlsrpt lookup
|
|
|
|
Lookup the TLSRPT record for the domain.
|
|
|
|
A TLSRPT record typically contains an email address where reports about TLS
|
|
connectivity should be sent. Mail servers attempting delivery to our domain
|
|
should attempt to use TLS. TLSRPT lets them report how many connection
|
|
successfully used TLS, and how what kind of errors occurred otherwise.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox tlsrpt lookup domain
|
|
|
|
# mox tlsrpt parsereportmsg
|
|
|
|
Parse and print the TLSRPT in the message.
|
|
|
|
The report is printed in formatted JSON.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox tlsrpt parsereportmsg message ...
|
|
|
|
# mox version
|
|
|
|
Prints this mox version.
|
|
|
|
usage: mox version
|
|
*/
|
|
package main
|
|
|
|
// NOTE: DO NOT EDIT, this file is generated by gendoc.sh.
|