| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files |
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‘noreply@’ aliases can be added by routing them to
‘@discard.fripost.org’.
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(Hence delete the 'webmail' Postfix instance.) This shortens the delay
caused by the recipient verification probes.
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This is specially useful for mailing lists and the webmail, since it
prevents our outgoing gateway from accepting mails known to be bouncing.
However the downside is that it adds a delay of up to 6s after the
RCPT TO command.
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In particular, since Postfix is now able to perform LDAP lookups using
SASL, previous hacks with simble binds on cn=postfix,ou=services,… can
now be removed.
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The default for rsyslog v7, but not for rsyslog v5.
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As they contain user information, we keep it in /var/log/mail.log only.
These logs are kept for 3 days "only", as per our policy.
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See http://www.postfix.org/POSTSCREEN_README.html and
http://rob0.nodns4.us/postscreen.html
It's infortunate that smtpd(8) cannot be chrooted any longer, which
means that we have to un-chroot cleanup(8) as well. Indeed, currently
smtpd(8) uses $virtual_alias_maps for recipient validation; later
cleanup(8) uses it again for rewriting. So these processes need to be
both chrooted, or both not.
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It turns out that in a policy bank, a *_by_ccat doesn't replace the
default but is merely merged into the default (if the keys overlap,
those in the bank take precedence of course). Hence it's pointless to
use CC_CATCHALL in a bank unless all the other keys have been
overridden, for instance.
Also, treat unchecked (eg, encrypted) mails as clean in the OUTGOING
Policy Bank.
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Namely, "DIGEST-MD5 common mech free". See also bug #631932.
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SMTP client connection caching was introduced in 2.6.0: the SMTP session is
held for the next task (in adaptative mode, only when there was a delay of only
5s between the two previous mails), but Postfix will terminate it if the next
mail doesn't come soon enough, or if amavis does't terminate it itself (usually
after 15s).
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For DKIM signing and virus checking.
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For some reason giraff doesn't like IPSec. App-level TLS sessions are
less efficient, but thanks to ansible it still scales well.
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In fact we want to only rewrite the envelope sender:
:/etc/postfix/main.cf
# Overwrite local FQDN envelope sender addresses
sender_canonical_classes = envelope_sender
propagate_unmatched_extensions =
sender_canonical_maps = cdb:$config_directory/sender_canonical
:/etc/postfix/sender_canonical
@elefant.fripost.org admin@fripost.org
However, when canonical(5) processes a mail sent vias sendmail(1), it
rewrites the envelope sender which seems to *later* be use as From:
header.
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Most notably pipelining=True and sysctl_set=yes.
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We introduce a limitation on the domain-aliases: they can't have
children (e.g., lists or users) any longer.
The whole alias resolution, including catch-alls and domain aliases, is
now done in 'virtual_alias_maps'. We stop the resolution by returning a
dummy alias A -> A for mailboxes, before trying the catch-all maps.
We're still using transport_maps for lists. If it turns out to be a
bottleneck due to the high-latency coming from LDAP maps, (and the fact
that there is a single qmgr(8) daemon), we could rewrite lists to a
dummy subdomain and use a static transport_maps instead:
virtual_alias_maps:
mylist@example.org -> mylist#example.org@mlmmj.localhost.localdomain
transport_maps:
mlmmj.localhost.localdomain mlmmj:
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Right now the list server cannot be hosted with a MX, due to bug 51:
http://mlmmj.org/bugs/bug.php?id=51
Web archive can be compiled with MHonArc, but the web server
configuration is not there yet.
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