use editconf.py to mangle /etc/postfix/master.cf

* using it to enable the Postfix submission service
* per @mkropat's suggestion in #69, set an option to distinguish submission from regular smpd in syslog by giving submission a new name (doing this here to test that editconf is working right on master.cf)
This commit is contained in:
Joshua Tauberer 2014-06-08 17:23:06 -04:00
parent 5b72e5419d
commit 2c4212fa36
2 changed files with 84 additions and 32 deletions

View File

@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
#!/bin/bash
# SMTP/IMAP: Postfix and Dovecot
################################
@ -25,8 +26,11 @@ mkdir -p $STORAGE_ROOT/mail
# POSTFIX
#########
# Enable the 'submission' port 587 listener.
sed -i "s/#submission/submission/" /etc/postfix/master.cf
# Enable the 'submission' port 587 smtpd server, and give it a different
# name in syslog to distinguish it from the port 25 smtpd server.
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/master.cf -s -w \
"submission=inet n - - - - smtpd
-o syslog_name=postfix/submission"
# Enable TLS and require it for all user authentication.
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/main.cf \

View File

@ -1,10 +1,30 @@
#!/usr/bin/python3
#
# This is a helper tool for editing configuration files during the setup
# process. The tool is given new values for settings as command-line
# arguments. It comments-out existing setting values in the configuration
# file and adds new values either after their former location or at the
# end.
#
# The configuration file has settings that look like:
#
# NAME=VALUE
#
# If the -s option is given, then space becomes the delimiter, i.e.:
#
# NAME VALUE
#
# If the -w option is given, then setting lines continue onto following
# lines while the lines start with whitespace, e.g.:
#
# NAME VAL
# UE
import sys, re
# sanity check
if len(sys.argv) < 3:
print("usage: python3 editconf.py /etc/file.conf [-s] NAME=VAL [NAME=VAL ...]")
print("usage: python3 editconf.py /etc/file.conf [-s] [-w] [-t] NAME=VAL [NAME=VAL ...]")
sys.exit(1)
# parse command line arguments
@ -13,27 +33,52 @@ settings = sys.argv[2:]
delimiter = "="
delimiter_re = r"\s*=\s*"
if settings[0] == "-s":
settings.pop(0)
folded_lines = False
testing = False
while settings[0][0] == "-" and settings[0] != "--":
opt = settings.pop(0)
if opt == "-s":
# Space is the delimiter
delimiter = " "
delimiter_re = r"\s+"
elif opt == "-w":
folded_lines = True
elif opt == "-t":
testing = True
else:
print("Invalid option.")
sys.exit(1)
# create the new config file in memory
found = set()
buf = ""
for line in open(filename):
input_lines = list(open(filename))
while len(input_lines) > 0:
line = input_lines.pop(0)
# If this configuration file uses folded lines, append any folded lines
# into our input buffer.
if folded_lines and line[0] not in ("#", " ", ""):
while len(input_lines) > 0 and input_lines[0][0] in " \t":
line += input_lines.pop(0)
# See if this line is for any settings passed on the command line.
for i in range(len(settings)):
# Check that this line contain this setting from the command-line arguments.
name, val = settings[i].split("=", 1)
m = re.match("\s*" + re.escape(name) + delimiter_re + "(.*?)\s*$", line)
if m:
m = re.match("\s*" + re.escape(name) + delimiter_re + "(.*?)\s*$", line, re.S)
if not m: continue
# If this is already the setting, do nothing.
if m.group(1) == val:
buf += line
found.add(i)
break
# comment-out the existing line
buf += "#" + line
# comment-out the existing line (also comment any folded lines)
buf += "#" + line.rstrip().replace("\n", "\n#") + "\n"
# if this option oddly appears more than once, don't add the setting again
if i in found:
@ -56,7 +101,10 @@ for i in range(len(settings)):
name, val = settings[i].split("=", 1)
buf += name + delimiter + val + "\n"
if not testing:
# Write out the new file.
with open(filename, "w") as f:
f.write(buf)
else:
# Just print the new file to stdout.
print(buf)