#!/bin/bash
#
# Postfix (SMTP)
# --------------
#
# Postfix handles the transmission of email between servers
# using the SMTP protocol. It is a Mail Transfer Agent (MTA).
#
# Postfix listens on port 25 (SMTP) for incoming mail from
# other servers on the Internet. It is responsible for very
# basic email filtering such as by IP address and greylisting,
# it checks that the destination address is valid, rewrites
# destinations according to aliases, and passses email on to
# another service for local mail delivery.
#
# The first hop in local mail delivery is to Spamassassin via
# LMTP. Spamassassin then passes mail over to Dovecot for
# storage in the user's mailbox.
#
# Postfix also listens on port 587 (SMTP+STARTLS) for
# connections from users who can authenticate and then sends
# their email out to the outside world. Postfix queries Dovecot
# to authenticate users.
#
# Address validation, alias rewriting, and user authentication
# is configured in a separate setup script mail-users.sh
# because of the overlap of this part with the Dovecot
# configuration.

source setup/functions.sh # load our functions
source /etc/mailinabox.conf # load global vars

# ### Install packages.

# Install postfix's packages.
#
# * `postfix`: The SMTP server.
# * `postfix-pcre`: Enables header filtering.
# * `postgrey`: A mail policy service that soft-rejects mail the first time
#   it is received. Spammers don't usually try agian. Legitimate mail
#   always will.
# * `ca-certificates`: A trust store used to squelch postfix warnings about
#   untrusted opportunistically-encrypted connections.
echo "Installing Postfix (SMTP server)..."
apt_install postfix postfix-sqlite postfix-pcre postgrey ca-certificates postfix-ldap postfix-policyd-spf-python

# ### Basic Settings

# Set some basic settings...
#
# * Have postfix listen on all network interfaces.
# * Make outgoing connections on a particular interface (if multihomed) so that SPF passes on the receiving side.
# * Set our name (the Debian default seems to be "localhost" but make it our hostname).
# * Set the name of the local machine to localhost, which means xxx@localhost is delivered locally, although we don't use it.
# * Set the SMTP banner (which must have the hostname first, then anything).
# * Extend the SPF time limit to avoid timeouts chasing SPF records
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/main.cf \
	inet_interfaces=all \
	smtp_bind_address=$PRIVATE_IP \
	smtp_bind_address6=$PRIVATE_IPV6 \
	myhostname=$PRIMARY_HOSTNAME\
	smtpd_banner="\$myhostname ESMTP Hi, I'm a Mail-in-a-Box (Ubuntu/Postfix; see https://mailinabox.email/)" \
	mydestination=localhost
    
# Tweak some queue settings:
# * Inform users when their e-mail delivery is delayed more than 3 hours (default is not to warn).
# * Stop trying to send an undeliverable e-mail after 2 days (instead of 5), and for bounce messages just try for 1 day.
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/main.cf \
	delay_warning_time=3h \
	maximal_queue_lifetime=2d \
	bounce_queue_lifetime=1d \
	policy-spf_time_limit=3600

# ### Outgoing Mail

# Enable the 'submission' port 587 smtpd server and tweak its settings.
#
# * Enable authentication. It's disabled globally so that it is disabled on port 25,
#   so we need to explicitly enable it here.
# * Do not add the OpenDMAC Authentication-Results header. That should only be added
#   on incoming mail. Omit the OpenDMARC milter by re-setting smtpd_milters to the
#   OpenDKIM milter only. See dkim.sh.
# * Even though we dont allow auth over non-TLS connections (smtpd_tls_auth_only below, and without auth the client cant
#   send outbound mail), don't allow non-TLS mail submission on this port anyway to prevent accidental misconfiguration.
#   Setting smtpd_tls_security_level=encrypt also triggers the use of the 'mandatory' settings below.
# * Give it a different name in syslog to distinguish it from the port 25 smtpd server.
# * Add a new cleanup service specific to the submission service ('authclean')
#   that filters out privacy-sensitive headers on mail being sent out by
#   authenticated users.  By default Postfix also applies this to attached
#   emails but we turn this off by setting nested_header_checks empty.
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/master.cf -s -w \
	"submission=inet n       -       -       -       -       smtpd
	  -o smtpd_sasl_auth_enable=yes
	  -o syslog_name=postfix/submission
	  -o smtpd_milters=inet:127.0.0.1:8891
	  -o smtpd_tls_security_level=encrypt
	  -o cleanup_service_name=authclean" \
	"authclean=unix  n       -       -       -       0       cleanup
	  -o header_checks=pcre:/etc/postfix/outgoing_mail_header_filters
	  -o nested_header_checks="

# enable the SPF service
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/master.cf -s -w \
		"policy-spf=unix  y       n       n       -       0       spawn user=policyd-spf argv=/usr/bin/policyd-spf"

# configure policyd-spf configuration
# * reject SPF softfail (eg ~all) for some domains that are configured
#   not to reject
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix-policyd-spf-python/policyd-spf.conf \
	"Reject_Not_Pass_Domains=gmail.com,google.com"

# Install the `outgoing_mail_header_filters` file required by the new 'authclean' service.
cp conf/postfix_outgoing_mail_header_filters /etc/postfix/outgoing_mail_header_filters

# Modify the `outgoing_mail_header_filters` file to use the local machine name and ip 
# on the first received header line.  This may help reduce the spam score of email by
# removing the 127.0.0.1 reference.
sed -i "s/PRIMARY_HOSTNAME/$PRIMARY_HOSTNAME/" /etc/postfix/outgoing_mail_header_filters
sed -i "s/PUBLIC_IP/$PUBLIC_IP/" /etc/postfix/outgoing_mail_header_filters

# Enable TLS on incoming connections. It is not required on port 25, allowing for opportunistic
# encryption. On port 587 it is mandatory (see above). Shared and non-shared settings are
# given here. Shared settings include:
# * Require TLS before a user is allowed to authenticate.
# * Set the path to the server TLS certificate and 2048-bit DH parameters for old DH ciphers.
# For port 25 only:
# * Disable extremely old versions of TLS and extremely unsafe ciphers, but some mail servers out in
#   the world are very far behind and if we disable too much, they may not be able to use TLS and
#   won't fall back to cleartext. So we don't disable too much. smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers applies to
#   both port 25 and port 587, but because we override the cipher list for both, it probably isn't used.
#   Use Mozilla's "Old" recommendations at https://ssl-config.mozilla.org/#server=postfix&server-version=3.3.0&config=old&openssl-version=1.1.1
# For port 587 (via the 'mandatory' settings):
# * Use Mozilla's "Intermediate" TLS recommendations from https://ssl-config.mozilla.org/#server=postfix&server-version=3.3.0&config=intermediate&openssl-version=1.1.1
#   using and overriding the "high" cipher list so we don't conflict with the more permissive settings for port 25.
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/main.cf \
	smtpd_tls_security_level=may\
	smtpd_tls_auth_only=yes \
	smtpd_tls_cert_file=$STORAGE_ROOT/ssl/ssl_certificate.pem \
	smtpd_tls_key_file=$STORAGE_ROOT/ssl/ssl_private_key.pem \
	smtpd_tls_dh1024_param_file=$STORAGE_ROOT/ssl/dh2048.pem \
	smtpd_tls_protocols="!SSLv2,!SSLv3" \
	smtpd_tls_ciphers=medium \
	tls_medium_cipherlist=ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:ECDHE-RSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:DHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:DHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:DHE-RSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-SHA256:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-SHA256:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-SHA:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-SHA:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-SHA384:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-SHA:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA:DHE-RSA-AES128-SHA256:DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA256:AES128-GCM-SHA256:AES256-GCM-SHA384:AES128-SHA256:AES256-SHA256:AES128-SHA:AES256-SHA:DES-CBC3-SHA \
	smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers=aNULL,RC4 \
	smtpd_tls_mandatory_protocols="!SSLv2,!SSLv3,!TLSv1,!TLSv1.1" \
	smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers=high \
	tls_high_cipherlist=ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:ECDHE-RSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:DHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:DHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 \
	smtpd_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers=aNULL,DES,3DES,MD5,DES+MD5,RC4 \
	tls_preempt_cipherlist=no \
	smtpd_tls_received_header=yes

# Prevent non-authenticated users from sending mail that requires being
# relayed elsewhere. We don't want to be an "open relay". On outbound
# mail, require one of:
#
# * `permit_sasl_authenticated`: Authenticated users (i.e. on port 587).
# * `permit_mynetworks`: Mail that originates locally.
# * `reject_unauth_destination`: No one else. (Permits mail whose destination is local and rejects other mail.)
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/main.cf \
	smtpd_relay_restrictions=permit_sasl_authenticated,permit_mynetworks,reject_unauth_destination


# ### DANE

# When connecting to remote SMTP servers, prefer TLS and use DANE if available.
#
# Prefering ("opportunistic") TLS means Postfix will use TLS if the remote end
# offers it, otherwise it will transmit the message in the clear. Postfix will
# accept whatever SSL certificate the remote end provides. Opportunistic TLS
# protects against passive easvesdropping (but not man-in-the-middle attacks).
# Since we'd rather have poor encryption than none at all, we use Mozilla's
# "Old" recommendations at https://ssl-config.mozilla.org/#server=postfix&server-version=3.3.0&config=old&openssl-version=1.1.1
# for opportunistic encryption but "Intermediate" recommendations when DANE
# is used (see next and above). The cipher lists are set above.

# DANE takes this a step further:
# Postfix queries DNS for the TLSA record on the destination MX host. If no TLSA records are found,
# then opportunistic TLS is used. Otherwise the server certificate must match the TLSA records
# or else the mail bounces. TLSA also requires DNSSEC on the MX host. Postfix doesn't do DNSSEC
# itself but assumes the system's nameserver does and reports DNSSEC status. Thus this also
# relies on our local DNS server (see system.sh) and `smtp_dns_support_level=dnssec`.
#
# The `smtp_tls_CAfile` is superflous, but it eliminates warnings in the logs about untrusted certs,
# which we don't care about seeing because Postfix is doing opportunistic TLS anyway. Better to encrypt,
# even if we don't know if it's to the right party, than to not encrypt at all. Instead we'll
# now see notices about trusted certs. The CA file is provided by the package `ca-certificates`.
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/main.cf \
	smtp_tls_protocols=\!SSLv2,\!SSLv3 \
	smtp_tls_ciphers=medium \
	smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers=aNULL,RC4 \
	smtp_tls_security_level=dane \
	smtp_dns_support_level=dnssec \
	smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols="!SSLv2,!SSLv3,!TLSv1,!TLSv1.1" \
	smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers=high \
	smtp_tls_CAfile=/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt \
	smtp_tls_loglevel=2

# ### Incoming Mail

# Pass any incoming mail over to a local delivery agent. Spamassassin
# will act as the LDA agent at first. It is listening on port 10025
# with LMTP. Spamassassin will pass the mail over to Dovecot after.
#
# In a basic setup we would pass mail directly to Dovecot by setting
# virtual_transport to `lmtp:unix:private/dovecot-lmtp`.
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/main.cf virtual_transport=lmtp:[127.0.0.1]:10025
# Because of a spampd bug, limit the number of recipients in each connection.
# See https://github.com/mail-in-a-box/mailinabox/issues/1523.
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/main.cf lmtp_destination_recipient_limit=1


# Who can send mail to us? Some basic filters.
#
# * `reject_non_fqdn_sender`: Reject not-nice-looking return paths.
# * `reject_unknown_sender_domain`: Reject return paths with invalid domains.
# * `reject_authenticated_sender_login_mismatch`: Reject if mail FROM address does not match the client SASL login
# * `reject_rhsbl_sender`: Reject return paths that use blacklisted domains.
# * `permit_sasl_authenticated`: Authenticated users (i.e. on port 587) can skip further checks.
# * `permit_mynetworks`: Mail that originates locally can skip further checks.
# * `reject_rbl_client`: Reject connections from IP addresses blacklisted in zen.spamhaus.org
# * `reject_unlisted_recipient`: Although Postfix will reject mail to unknown recipients, it's nicer to reject such mail ahead of greylisting rather than after.
# * `check_policy_service`: Apply greylisting using postgrey.
#
# Notes: #NODOC
# permit_dnswl_client can pass through mail from whitelisted IP addresses, which would be good to put before greylisting #NODOC
# so these IPs get mail delivered quickly. But when an IP is not listed in the permit_dnswl_client list (i.e. it is not #NODOC
# whitelisted) then postfix does a DEFER_IF_REJECT, which results in all "unknown user" sorts of messages turning into #NODOC
# "450 4.7.1 Client host rejected: Service unavailable". This is a retry code, so the mail doesn't properly bounce. #NODOC
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/main.cf \
	smtpd_sender_restrictions="reject_non_fqdn_sender,reject_unknown_sender_domain,reject_authenticated_sender_login_mismatch,reject_rhsbl_sender dbl.spamhaus.org" \
	smtpd_recipient_restrictions=permit_sasl_authenticated,permit_mynetworks,"reject_rbl_client zen.spamhaus.org",reject_unlisted_recipient,"check_policy_service unix:private/policy-spf","check_policy_service inet:127.0.0.1:10023"

# Postfix connects to Postgrey on the 127.0.0.1 interface specifically. Ensure that
# Postgrey listens on the same interface (and not IPv6, for instance).
# A lot of legit mail servers try to resend before 300 seconds.
# As a matter of fact RFC is not strict about retry timer so postfix and
# other MTA have their own intervals. To fix the problem of receiving
# e-mails really latter, delay of greylisting has been set to
# 180 seconds (default is 300 seconds).
tools/editconf.py /etc/default/postgrey \
	POSTGREY_OPTS=\"'--inet=127.0.0.1:10023 --delay=180'\"


# We are going to setup a newer whitelist for postgrey, the version included in the distribution is old
cat > /etc/cron.daily/mailinabox-postgrey-whitelist << EOF;
#!/bin/bash

# Mail-in-a-Box

# check we have a postgrey_whitelist_clients file and that it is not older than 28 days
if [ ! -f /etc/postgrey/whitelist_clients ] || find /etc/postgrey/whitelist_clients -mtime +28 | grep -q '.' ; then
    # ok we need to update the file, so lets try to fetch it
    if curl https://postgrey.schweikert.ch/pub/postgrey_whitelist_clients --output /tmp/postgrey_whitelist_clients -sS --fail > /dev/null 2>&1 ; then
        # if fetching hasn't failed yet then check it is a plain text file
        # curl manual states that --fail sometimes still produces output
        # this final check will at least check the output is not html
        # before moving it into place
        if [ "\$(file -b --mime-type /tmp/postgrey_whitelist_clients)" == "text/plain" ]; then
            mv /tmp/postgrey_whitelist_clients /etc/postgrey/whitelist_clients
            service postgrey restart
	else
            rm /tmp/postgrey_whitelist_clients
        fi
    fi
fi
EOF
chmod +x /etc/cron.daily/mailinabox-postgrey-whitelist
/etc/cron.daily/mailinabox-postgrey-whitelist

# Increase the message size limit from 10MB to 128MB.
# The same limit is specified in nginx.conf for mail submitted via webmail and Z-Push.
tools/editconf.py /etc/postfix/main.cf \
	message_size_limit=134217728

# Allow the two SMTP ports in the firewall.

ufw_allow smtp
ufw_allow submission

# Restart services

restart_service postfix
restart_service postgrey