--------------------------
Setup:
* When upgrading from versions before v0.40, setup will now warn that ownCloud/Nextcloud data cannot be migrated rather than failing the installation.
Mail:
* An MTA-STS policy for incoming mail is now published (in DNS and over HTTPS) when the primary hostname and email address domain both have a signed TLS certificate installed, allowing senders to know that an encrypted connection should be enforced.
* The per-IP connection limit to the IMAP server has been doubled to allow more devices to connect at once, especially with multiple users behind a NAT.
DNS:
* autoconfig and autodiscover subdomains and CalDAV/CardDAV SRV records are no longer generated for domains that don't have user accounts since they are unnecessary.
* IPv6 addresses can now be specified for secondary DNS nameservers in the control panel.
TLS:
* TLS certificates are now provisioned in groups by parent domain to limit easy domain enumeration and make provisioning more resilient to errors for particular domains.
Control Panel:
* The control panel API is now fully documented at https://mailinabox.email/api-docs.html.
* User passwords can now have spaces.
* Status checks for automatic subdomains have been moved into the section for the parent domain.
* Typo fixed.
Web:
* The default web page served on fresh installations now adds the `noindex` meta tag.
* The HSTS header is revised to also be sent on non-success responses.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
iQFDBAABCgAtFiEEX0wOcxPM10RpOyrquSBB9MEL3YEFAl9t2AgPHGp0QG9jY2Ft
cy5pbmZvAAoJELkgQfTBC92BZNkH/1jIGoWTz0xlS+e+TeXpHoCp/7zYAvQq/a/y
vj9t1N1+bBg6Ywbd8UxyvOHwuL/UQU/5LTq6hk3gD+2ARfJUvDRbb047Xzlisg3N
LhNoVhVbsxqKP1X2ZjeIBq9DgzMavuB64Bwd5UNdceM0Addi8KuCDOMF+FNY2t8k
xytGjYdBi1/BG6SLBX+FAm5yrJghmkUJs2FnJjebSyyeV2HP3L1iBrk2N8UBd6PU
fVjde534lgygFZK/8yXJpY2olfLMYJv7CaOMxvaW6RpbMI8VeLwDLfRt5LcrQZqq
YXkuEnUI0eygbQYkeK/Vr1Vey6uQAWzIfbImEglHfvOXsZSYFXs=
=SJNM
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
gpgsig -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
iQIzBAABCAAdFiEEAKK/toPAcMkE+dinLzJ3OKPArjoFAl9vB/0ACgkQLzJ3OKPA
rjpXTg/+L2W6LXtqJcDdPiLb7uRJ1a+R7DAPPLhZOXT8alFt6g2nAJHHI3NxKWVM
KsrSGlL+XSw744tfEzw21WsDuoME2F536/q4V4iprQx0LSJ61EQtqFYABbHT7lSc
EyJellcIBxvK9ZTrHhJy3jVJL5eEkrHr4YpaRd68CZGneziMbxZusrlD23OfOn+U
Pi6O39+Xh9lB4nxMfzkjYwCPEyNsTaCieKforPE+7TYh6d5NFHp22e2/yNEwYHhv
90txul+/ByeT6UNFsVQ+QXCpMr/m06W9zbCDgrArol12MlgeAg4bL2trgDUV2D9j
Dpfo1SYo/VUYetlT98adxW7BK2JuGe3SsFDrgjNPDyMBZRoybLY/l1X5TF5d7dq/
bhgDcHXSJ6iBmhZ8nGDuBWhiEld9orn/9vfj/nHmleurXxgDwMcGKn0eINDuX8Xd
NauJdhyOiZLfy8+Rha9ltLlFC/sX8nq0o6iM1Xr+4UOTFVVxlVadkPTMOxuRIQfD
+JaMRCoXLfbAknoGdKfAcxEAzzyylO6z4Ztj/fVp9SHjQgby1paLpJMHEVUaQzEZ
VYqdOzmz7vrV1H5OHOIy6mthQrTw+Mg4KubJs7w99e3pZKJBpvp55+DLvA0JhKLD
dVXqr7rBTkLk/tg4u2SWlj3aZOnkzMz0Iwiu5X+hx3kLl0f3Zgk=
=VgsY
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Merge v0.50 from upstream
This will make it so that the HSTS header is sent regardless of the request status code (until this point it would only be sent if "the response code equals 200, 201, 206, 301, 302, 303, 307, or 308." - according to thttp://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_headers_module.html#add_header)
These subdomains/records are for automatic configuration of mail clients, but if there are no user accounts on a domain, there is no need to publish a DNS record, provision a TLS certificate, or create an nginx server config block.
with this nginx will keep on proxying requests and serve static content
instead of passing this responsibility to proxied server
Without this the one needs to run an additional server to server static
content on the proxied url
* The Mozilla recommendations must have been updated in the last few years.
* The HSTS header must have >=6 months to get an A+ at ssllabs.com/ssltest.
For HTTPS for the non-primary domains, instead of selecting an SSL certificate by expecting it to be in a directory named after the domain name (with special-case lookups
for www domains, and reusing the server certificate where possible), now scan all of the certificates that have been installed and just pick the best to use for each domain.
If no certificate is available, don't create a self-signed certificate anymore. This wasn't ever really necessary. Instead just use the server certificate.
* Use `cryptography` instead of parsing openssl's output.
* When checking if we can reuse the primary domain certificate or a www-parent-domain certificate for a domain, avoid shelling out to openssl entirely.
* Split the nginx templates again so we have just the part needed to make a domain do a redirect separate from the rest.
* Add server blocks to the nginx config for these domains.
* List these domains in the SSL certificate install admin panel.
* Generate default 'www' records just for domains we provide default redirects for.
Fixes#321.
The OVH VPS provider creates systems without /dev/stdout. I have never seen that before. But fine. We were passing it as a command line option to `openssl req`, but outputting to stdout is the default so it's not necessary to specify /dev/stdout.
Fixes#277. Also https://discourse.mailinabox.email/t/500-internal-server-error/475/10.
I changed my mind. In 1bf8f1991f I allowed Unicode domain names to go into the database. I thought that was nice because it's what the user *means*. But it's not how the web works. Web and DNS were working, but mail wasn't. Postfix (as shipped with Ubuntu 14.04 without support for SMTPUTF8) exists in an ASCII-only world. When it goes to the users/aliases table, it queries in ASCII (IDNA) only and had no hope of delivering mail if the domain was in full Unicode in the database. I was thinking ahead to SMTPUTF8, where we *could* put Unicode in the database (though that would prevent IDNA-encoded addressing from being deliverable) not realizing it isn't well supported yet anyway.
It's IDNA that goes on the wire in most places anyway (SMTP without SMTPUTF8 (and therefore how Postfix queries our users/aliases tables), DNS zone files, nginx config, CSR 'CN' field, X509 Common Name and Subject Alternative Names fields), so we should really be talking in terms of IDNA (i.e. ASCII).
This partially reverts commit 1bf8f1991f, where I added a lot of Unicode=>IDNA conversions when writing configuration files. Instead I'm doing Unicode=>IDNA before email addresses get into the users/aliases table. Now we assume the database uses IDNA-encoded ASCII domain names. When adding/removing aliases, addresses are converted to ASCII (w/ IDNA). User accounts must be ASCII-only anyway because of Dovecot's auth limitations, so we don't do any IDNA conversion (don't want to change the user's login info behind their back!). The aliases control panel page converts domains back to Unicode for display to be nice. The status checks converts the domains to Unicode just for the output headings.
A migration is added to convert existing aliases with Unicode domains into IDNA. Any custom DNS or web settings with Unicode may need to be changed.
Future support for SMTPUTF8 will probably need to add columns in the users/aliases table so that it lists both IDNA and Unicode forms.