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mailinabox/setup/mail-dovecot.sh
2015-04-11 15:24:15 -04:00

179 lines
7.2 KiB
Bash
Executable File

#!/bin/bash
#
# Dovecot (IMAP/POP and LDA)
# ----------------------
#
# Dovecot is *both* the IMAP/POP server (the protocol that email applications
# use to query a mailbox) as well as the local delivery agent (LDA),
# meaning it is responsible for writing emails to mailbox storage on disk.
# You could imagine why these things would be bundled together.
#
# As part of local mail delivery, Dovecot executes actions on incoming
# mail as defined in a "sieve" script.
#
# Dovecot's LDA role comes after spam filtering. Postfix hands mail off
# to Spamassassin which in turn hands it off to Dovecot. This all happens
# using the LMTP protocol.
source setup/functions.sh # load our functions
source /etc/mailinabox.conf # load global vars
# Install packages...
apt_install \
dovecot-core dovecot-imapd dovecot-pop3d dovecot-lmtpd dovecot-sqlite sqlite3 \
dovecot-sieve dovecot-managesieved
# The `dovecot-imapd`, `dovecot-pop3d`, and `dovecot-lmtpd` packages automatically
# enable IMAP, POP and LMTP protocols.
# Set basic daemon options.
# The `default_process_limit` is 100, which constrains the total number
# of active IMAP connections (at, say, 5 open connections per user that
# would be 20 users). Set it to 250 times the number of cores this
# machine has, so on a two-core machine that's 500 processes/100 users).
tools/editconf.py /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-master.conf \
default_process_limit=$(echo "`nproc` * 250" | bc)
# The inotify `max_user_instances` default is 128, which constrains
# the total number of watched (IMAP IDLE push) folders by open connections.
# See http://www.dovecot.org/pipermail/dovecot/2013-March/088834.html.
# A reboot is required for this to take effect (which we don't do as
# as a part of setup). Test with `cat /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_instances`.
tools/editconf.py /etc/sysctl.conf \
fs.inotify.max_user_instances=1024
# Set the location where we'll store user mailboxes. '%d' is the domain name and '%n' is the
# username part of the user's email address. We'll ensure that no bad domains or email addresses
# are created within the management daemon.
tools/editconf.py /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-mail.conf \
mail_location=maildir:$STORAGE_ROOT/mail/mailboxes/%d/%n \
mail_privileged_group=mail \
first_valid_uid=0
# ### IMAP/POP
# Require that passwords are sent over SSL only, and allow the usual IMAP authentication mechanisms.
# The LOGIN mechanism is supposedly for Microsoft products like Outlook to do SMTP login (I guess
# since we're using Dovecot to handle SMTP authentication?).
tools/editconf.py /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-auth.conf \
disable_plaintext_auth=yes \
"auth_mechanisms=plain login"
# Enable SSL, specify the location of the SSL certificate and private key files.
# Disable obsolete SSL protocols and allow only good ciphers per http://baldric.net/2013/12/07/tls-ciphers-in-postfix-and-dovecot/.
tools/editconf.py /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-ssl.conf \
ssl=required \
"ssl_cert=<$STORAGE_ROOT/ssl/ssl_certificate.pem" \
"ssl_key=<$STORAGE_ROOT/ssl/ssl_private_key.pem" \
"ssl_protocols=!SSLv3 !SSLv2" \
"ssl_cipher_list=TLSv1+HIGH !SSLv2 !RC4 !aNULL !eNULL !3DES @STRENGTH"
# Disable in-the-clear IMAP/POP because there is no reason for a user to transmit
# login credentials outside of an encrypted connection. Only the over-TLS versions
# are made available (IMAPS on port 993; POP3S on port 995).
sed -i "s/#port = 143/port = 0/" /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-master.conf
sed -i "s/#port = 110/port = 0/" /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-master.conf
# Make IMAP IDLE slightly more efficient. By default, Dovecot says "still here"
# every two minutes. With K-9 mail, the bandwidth and battery usage due to
# this are minimal. But for good measure, let's go to 4 minutes to halve the
# bandwidth and number of times the device's networking might be woken up.
# The risk is that if the connection is silent for too long it might be reset
# by a peer. See #129 and http://razor.occams.info/blog/2014/08/09/how-bad-is-imap-idle/.
tools/editconf.py /etc/dovecot/conf.d/20-imap.conf \
imap_idle_notify_interval="4 mins"
# Set POP3 UIDL
# UIDLs are used by POP3 clients to keep track of what messages they've downloaded.
# For new POP3 servers, the easiest way to set up UIDLs is to use IMAP's UIDVALIDITY
# and UID values, the default in Dovecot.
tools/editconf.py /etc/dovecot/conf.d/20-pop3.conf \
pop3_uidl_format="%08Xu%08Xv"
# ### LDA (LMTP)
# Enable Dovecot's LDA service with the LMTP protocol. It will listen
# on port 10026, and Spamassassin will be configured to pass mail there.
#
# The disabled unix socket listener is normally how Postfix and Dovecot
# would communicate (see the Postfix setup script for the corresponding
# setting also commented out).
#
# Also increase the number of allowed IMAP connections per mailbox because
# we all have so many devices lately.
cat > /etc/dovecot/conf.d/99-local.conf << EOF;
service lmtp {
#unix_listener /var/spool/postfix/private/dovecot-lmtp {
# user = postfix
# group = postfix
#}
inet_listener lmtp {
address = 127.0.0.1
port = 10026
}
}
protocol imap {
mail_max_userip_connections = 20
}
EOF
# Setting a `postmaster_address` is required or LMTP won't start. An alias
# will be created automatically by our management daemon.
tools/editconf.py /etc/dovecot/conf.d/15-lda.conf \
postmaster_address=postmaster@$PRIMARY_HOSTNAME
# ### Sieve
# Enable the Dovecot sieve plugin which let's users run scripts that process
# mail as it comes in.
sed -i "s/#mail_plugins = .*/mail_plugins = \$mail_plugins sieve/" /etc/dovecot/conf.d/20-lmtp.conf
# Configure sieve. We'll create a global script that moves mail marked
# as spam by Spamassassin into the user's Spam folder.
#
# * `sieve_before`: The path to our global sieve which handles moving spam to the Spam folder.
#
# * `sieve`: The path to the user's main active script. ManageSieve will create a symbolic
# link here to the actual sieve script. It should not be in the mailbox directory
# (because then it might appear as a folder) and it should not be in the sieve_dir
# (because then I suppose it might appear to the user as one of their scripts).
# * `sieve_dir`: Directory for :personal include scripts for the include extension. This
# is also where the ManageSieve service stores the user's scripts.
cat > /etc/dovecot/conf.d/99-local-sieve.conf << EOF;
plugin {
sieve_before = /etc/dovecot/sieve-spam.sieve
sieve = $STORAGE_ROOT/mail/sieve/%d/%n.sieve
sieve_dir = $STORAGE_ROOT/mail/sieve/%d/%n
}
EOF
# Copy the global sieve script into where we've told Dovecot to look for it. Then
# compile it. Global scripts must be compiled now because Dovecot won't have
# permission later.
cp conf/sieve-spam.txt /etc/dovecot/sieve-spam.sieve
sievec /etc/dovecot/sieve-spam.sieve
# PERMISSIONS
# Ensure configuration files are owned by dovecot and not world readable.
chown -R mail:dovecot /etc/dovecot
chmod -R o-rwx /etc/dovecot
# Ensure mailbox files have a directory that exists and are owned by the mail user.
mkdir -p $STORAGE_ROOT/mail/mailboxes
chown -R mail.mail $STORAGE_ROOT/mail/mailboxes
# Same for the sieve scripts.
mkdir -p $STORAGE_ROOT/mail/sieve
chown -R mail.mail $STORAGE_ROOT/mail/sieve
# Allow the IMAP/POP ports in the firewall.
ufw_allow imaps
ufw_allow pop3s
# Restart services.
restart_service dovecot