From: Ken <ken@kickasskungfu.com>
To: gentoo-dev@gentoo.org
Cc: gentoo-doc@gentoo.org
Subject: [gentoo-dev] new virtual mailhosting howto submission
Date: Thu, 9 Jan 2003 23:46:19 -0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20030110074619.GA9564@kickasskungfu.com> (raw)
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Hello all,
I'm a recent subcriber to the lists, and a gentoo user for the past year. I've set up two virtual mailhosting
systems, based on gentoo, in the last two months. When I started the second one I decided I'd make a gentoo howto
for it. That document is finally ready.
I'll attach the howto itself in guide-xml format. You may also view the html version at
http://kickasskungfu.com/~ken/virt-mail-howto.html
If you have any questions, concerns, don't hesitate to email me. I look forward to your feedback.
Ken
ircnick - antifa
ken@kickasskungfu.com
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<?xml version='1.0' encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?xml-stylesheet href="xsl/guide-main.xsl" type="text/xsl"?>
<!DOCTYPE guide SYSTEM "dtd/guide.dtd">
<guide link =" /doc/en/virtual-mailhost-howto.xml">
<title>Virtual Mailhosting System Guide</title>
<author title="Author"><mail link="ken@kickasskungfu.com">Ken Nowack</mail></author>
<author title="Author"><mail link="ezra@kickasskungfu.com">Ezra Gorman</mail></author>
<abstract>This document details how to create a virtual mailhosting system based upon postfix, mysql, courier-imap, and cyrus-sasl. </abstract>
<version>1.0</version>
<date>07 Jan 2003</date>
<!--
Contents
I. Introduction
II. Postfix Basics
III. Courier-imap
IV. Cyrus-sasl
V. SSL Certificates for Postfix and Apache
VI. Adding SSL and SASL support to Postfix
VII. MySQL
VIII. Apache and phpMyAdmin
IX. The vmail user
X. Configuring MySQL Authentication and vhosts
XI. Squirrelmail
XII. Mailman
XIII. Wrap Up
XIV. Troubleshooting
-->
<chapter>
<title>Introduction</title>
<body>
<p>For most gentoo users, a simple mail client and fetchmail will do. However, if you're hosting a domain with your system, you'll need a full blown MTA (Mail Transfer Agent). And if you're hosting multiple domains, then you'll definitely need something more robust to handle all of the email for your users. This system was designed to be an elegant solution to that problem.</p>
<p>A virtual mail system needs to be able to handle email for numerous domains with multiple users over a variety of interfaces. This presents some issues that must be dealt with. For instance, what if you have two users on different domains that want the same user name? If you are providing imap access and smtp-auth, how do combine the various authentication daemons into a single system? How do you provide security for the numerous components that comprise the system? How do you manage it all?</p>
<p>This howto will show you how to set up with a mail system capable of handling mail for as many domains as your hardware can handle, supports virtual mail users that don't require shell accounts, has domain specific user names, can authenticate web, imap, smtp, and pop3 clients against a single database, utilizes ssl for transport layer security, has a web interface, can handle mailing lists for any domain on the machine, and is controlled by a nice, central and easy mysql database. </p>
<p>There are quite a variety of ways to go about setting up a virtual mailhosting system. With so may options, another may be the best choice for your specific needs. Consider investigating <uri>http://www.qmail.org</uri> and <uri>http://www.exim.org</uri> to explore your options. </p>
<p>The following packages are used in this setup:
apache, courier-imap, pam_mysql, postfix, mod_php, mod_ssl, phpmyadmin, squirrelmail, cyrus-sasl, mysql, php, and mailman.</p>
<p>Make sure to turn on the following USE variables in <path>/etc/make.conf</path> before compiling the packages: <c>USE="mysql imap libwww maildir sasl ssl"</c>. Otherwise you will most likely have to recompile things to get the support you need for all the protocols. Further, it's a good idea to turn off any other mail and network variables, like ipv6.</p>
<impo>You need a domain name to run a public mail server, or at least an MX record for a domain. Ideally you would have control of at least two domains to take advantage of your new virtual domain functionality.</impo>
<impo>Make sure <path>/etc/hostname</path> is set to the right hostname for your mail server. Verify your hostname is set correctly with <c>hostname</c>. Also verify that there are no conflicting entries in <path>/etc/hosts</path>.</impo>
<note>It is recommended that you read this entire document and familiarize yourself with all the steps before attempting the install. If you run into problems with any of the steps, check the troubleshooting guide at the end of this document. Also, not all the referenced packages are necessary, this set up is very flexible. For instance, if you do not desire a web interface, feel free to skip the squirrelmail section.</note>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Postfix Basics</title>
<body>
<pre caption="Install postfix"># <i>emerge postfix</i></pre>
<warn>Verify that you have not installed any other MTA, such as ssmtp, exim, or qmail, or you will surely have BIG problems.</warn>
<p>After postfix is installed, it's time to configure it. Change the following options in <path>/etc/postfix/main.cf</path>:</p>
<pre caption="/etc/postfix/main.cf">
myhostname = $host.domain.name
mydomain = $domain.name
myorigin = $mydomain
inet_interfaces = all
mydestination = $myhostname, localhost.$mydomain $mydomain
relay_domains = $mydestination
mynetworks = my.ip.net.work/24, 127.0.0.0/8
local_destination_concurrency_limit = 2
default_destination_concurrency_limit = 10 </pre>
<p>Next change the following in <path>/etc/postfix/master.cf</path>. This will turn on verbose output for debugging:</p>
<pre caption="/etc/postfix/master.cf">
# service type private unpriv chroot wakeup maxproc command + args
# (yes) (yes) (yes) (never) (50)
#
==========================================================================
smtp inet n - n - - smtpd -v
<codenote>Just add the <c>-v</c> after the smtpd in the above line</codenote>
</pre>
<p>Next, edit <path>/etc/mail/aliases</path> to add your local aliases. There should at least be an alias for root like: <c>root: your@email.address</c>.</p>
<pre caption="Starting postfix for the first time">
# <i>/usr/bin/newaliases</i>
<codenote>This will install the new aliases. You only need to do this </codenote>
<codenote>when you update or install aliases.</codenote>
# <i>/etc/init.d/postfix start</i>
</pre>
<p>Now that postfix is running, fire up your favorite console mail client and send yourself an email. I use <c>mutt</c> for all my console mail. Verify that postfix is delivering mail to local users, once that's done, we're on to the next step.</p>
<note>I strongly recommend that you verify this basic postfix setup is functioning before you progress to the next step of the howto. </note>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Courier-imap</title>
<body>
<pre caption="Install courier-imap"># <i>emerge courier-imap</i></pre>
<pre caption="Courier-imap configuration">
# <i>cd /etc/courier-imap</i>
<codenote>If you want to use the ssl capabilities of courier-imap or pop3, </codenote>
<codenote>you'll need to create certs for this purpose.</codenote>
<codenote>This step is recommended. If you do not want to use ssl, skip this step.</codenote>
# <i>nano pop3d.cnf</i>
# <i>nano imapd.cnf</i>
<codenote>Change the C, ST, L, CN, and email parameters to match your server.</codenote>
# <i>mkpop3dcert</i>
# <i>mkimapdcert</i>
</pre>
<pre caption="Start the courier services you need.">
# <i>courier-imapd start</i>
# <i>courier-imapd-ssl start</i>
# <i>courier-pop3d start</i>
# <i>courier-pop3d-ssl start</i>
</pre>
<p>Start up your favorite mail client and verify that all connections you've started work for receiving and sending mail. Now that the basics work, we're going to do a whole bunch of stuff at once to get the rest of the system running. Again, please verify that what we've installed already works before progressing.</p>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Cyrus-sasl</title>
<body>
<p>Next we're going to install cyrus-sasl. Sasl is going to play the role of actually passing your auth variables to pam, which will in turn pass that information to mysql for authentication of smtp users. For this howto, we'll not even try to verify that sasl is working until mysql is set up and contains a test user. Which is fine since we'll be authenticating against mysql in the end anyway.</p>
<note>Now for some reason, sasl will not play nicely with pam against the shadow file. I banged my head against this problem for, well, a long time. If anyone knows why sasl will not auth against the shadow file in its current gentoo incarnation, please <mail link="ken@kickasskungfu.com">email me</mail> as I'd love to hear a solution to this.</note>
<p>Just to get sasl installed is going to require a bit of hacking. Open up the ebuild file and change the configure flags to disable digest and cram. Here's why: mail clients will try to authenticate against the <e>first</e> method presented to it, usually cram-md5. Since we're not going to set that up, cram authentication will fail and most clients will not by default try another method. This is mostly due to the way mail clients are currently put together. So we're going to disable auth methods we're not using in order to not confuse the clients out there.</p>
<pre caption="Configuring and installing the cyrus-sasl ebuild">
# <i>cd /usr/portage/dev-libs/cyrus-sasl</i>
# <i>nano cyrus-sasl.$currentversion.ebuild</i>
<codenote>Disable digest and cram as show below.</codenote>
econf \
--with-saslauthd=/var/lib/sasl2 \
--with-pwcheck=/var/lib/sasl2 \
--with-configdir=/etc/sasl2 \
--with-openssl \
--with-plugindir=/usr/lib/sasl2 \
--with-dbpath=/etc/sasl2/sasldb2 \
--with-des \
--with-rc4 \
--disable-krb4 \
--with-gnu-ld \
--enable-shared \
--disable-sample \
--enable-login \
--disable-cram \
--disable-digest \
${myconf} || die "bad ./configure"
# <i>USE='-ldap -mysql' emerge cyrus-sasl</i>
<codenote>We don't have ldap and we're not using sasl's mysql capabilities </codenote>
<codenote>so we need to turn them off for this build.</codenote>
</pre>
<p>Now check that the directory <path>/var/lib/sasl2</path> exists. If it wasn't installed you need to create it. If it's there, go ahead and start sasl.</p>
<pre caption="Starting sasl">
# <i>mkdir /var/lib/sasl2 </i>
<codenote>If saslauthd can't find the dir it will spew errors at you and refuse to start.</codenote>
# <i>/etc/init.d/saslauthd start</i>
</pre>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>SSL Certs for Postfix and Apache</title>
<body>
<p>Next we're going to make a set of ssl certificates for postfix and apache.</p>
<pre>
# <i>cd /usr/lib/ssl/</i>
# <i>nano openssl.cnf</i>
<codenote>Change the following default values for your domain:</codenote>
countryName_default
stateOrProvinceName_default
localityName_default
0.organizationName_default
commonName_default
emailAddress_default.
<codenote>If the variables are not already present, just add them in a sensible place.</codenote>
# <i>cd misc</i>
# <i>nano CA.pl</i>
<codenote>We need to add -nodes to the # create a certificate and</codenote>
<codenote>#create a certificate request code in order to let our new ssl</codenote>
<codenote>certs be loaded without a password. Otherwise when you</codenote>
<codenote>reboot your ssl certs will not be available.</codenote>
# create a certificate
system ("$REQ -new -nodes -x509 -keyout newreq.pem -out newreq.pem $DAYS");
# create a certificate request
system ("$REQ -new -nodes -keyout newreq.pem -out newreq.pem $DAYS");
# <i>./CA.pl -newcert</i>
# <i>./CA.pl -newreq</i>
# <i>./CA.pl -sign</i>
# <i>cp newcert.pem /etc/postfix</i>
# <i>cp newreq.pem /etc/postfix</i>
# <i>cp demoCA/cacert.pem /etc/postfix</i>
<codenote>Now we do the same thing for apache</codenote>
# <i>openssl req -new > new.cert.csr</i>
# <i>openssl rsa -in privkey.pem -out new.cert.key</i>
# <i>openssl x509 -in new.cert.csr -out new.cert.cert -req -signkey new.cert.key -days 365</i>
<codenote>Just leave the resulting certificates here for now.</codenote>
<codenote>We'll install them after Apache is installed.</codenote>
</pre>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Adding SSL and SASL support to Postfix</title>
<body>
<p>Now edit the postfix config's to make it aware of your new sasl and ssl capabilities. Add the following parameters to the end of the file where they will be easy to find.</p>
<pre caption="/etc/postfix/main.cf">
# <i>nano /etc/postfix/main.cf</i>
smtpd_sasl_auth_enable = yes
smtpd_sasl2_auth_enable = yes
smtpd_sasl_security_options = noanonymous
broken_sasl_auth_clients = yes
<codenote>The broken_sasl_auth_clients option and the login auth method </codenote>
<codenote>are for outlook and outlook express only and are undocumented.</codenote>
<codenote>Isn't having to hack software for stupid, broken, M$ BS great?</codenote>
smtpd_recipient_restrictions =
permit_sasl_authenticated,
permit_mynetworks,
check_relay_domains,
permit
smtpd_use_tls = yes
#smtpd_tls_auth_only = yes
smtpd_tls_key_file = /etc/postfix/newreq.pem
smtpd_tls_cert_file = /etc/postfix/newcert.pem
smtpd_tls_CAfile = /etc/postfix/cacert.pem
smtpd_tls_loglevel = 3
smtpd_tls_received_header = yes
smtpd_tls_session_cache_timeout = 3600s
tls_random_source = dev:/dev/urandom
<codenote>smtpd_tls_auth_only is commented out to ease testing the system. </codenote>
<codenote>You can turn this on later if you desire.</codenote>
# <i>postfix reload</i>
</pre>
<p>Now we're going to verify that the config's we added were picked up by postfix.</p>
<pre caption="Verifying sasl and tls support">
# <i>telnet localhost 25</i>
Trying 127.0.0.1...
Connected to localhost.
Escape character is '^]'.
220 mail.domain.com ESMTP Postfix
<i>EHLO domain.com</i>
250-mail.domain.com
250-PIPELINING
250-SIZE 10240000
250-VRFY
250-ETRN
250-STARTTLS
250-AUTH LOGIN PLAIN OTP
250-AUTH=LOGIN PLAIN OTP
250-XVERP
250 8BITMIME
<i>^]</i>
telnet> <i>quit</i>
</pre>
<p>Verify that the above AUTH and STARTTLS lines now appear in your postfix install. As I said before, as it stands now AUTH will not work. that's because sasl will try to auth against it's sasldb, instead of the shadow file for some unknown reason, which we have not set up. So we're going to just plow through and set up mysql to hold all of our auth and virtual domain information.
</p>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>MySQL</title>
<body>
<p>Next we're going to install and configure MySQL. You'll need the <uri link="http://kickasskungfu.com/~ken/genericmailsql.sql">genericmailsql.sql</uri> dumpfile for this step.</p>
<pre caption="Installing and configuring MySQL">
# <i>emerge mysql</i>
# <i>/usr/sbin/mysql_install_db</i>
<codenote>After this command runs follow the onscreen directions</codenote>
<codenote>for adding a root password with mysql,</codenote>
<codenote>not mysqladmin, otherwise your db will be wide open.</codenote>
# <i>/etc/init.d/mysql start</i>
# <i>mysqladmin -u root -p create mailsql</i>
# <i>mysql -u root -p --opt mailsql < genericmailsql.sql</i>
# <i>mysql -u root -p mysql</i>
mysql> <i>GRANT SELECT,INSERT,UPDATE,DELETE</i>
-> <i>ON mailsql.*</i>
-> <i>TO mailsql@localhost</i>
-> <i>IDENTIFIED BY '$password';</i>
-> <i>quit</i>
<codenote>Verify that the new mailsql user can connect to the mysql server.</codenote>
# <i>mysql -u mailsql -p mailsql</i>
</pre>
<p>Your new database has default values and tables set up for two domains. The following tables are included:
<ul>
<li>alias - local email alias and mailman alias information.</li>
<li>relocated - relocated user email address maps</li>
<li>transport - default mail transport information for all domains you are hosting</li>
<li>users - all user account information</li>
<li>virtual - virtual domain email alias maps</li>
</ul>
</p>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Apache and phpMyAdmin</title>
<body>
<p>Next we'll set up apache and add an interface to interact with the database more easily. </p>
<pre caption="Setting up apache and phpmyadmin">
# <i>emerge apache php mod_php mod_ssl phpmyadmin</i>
</pre>
<p>There are plenty of guides out there about how to set up apache with php. Like this one: <uri>http://www.linuxguruz.org/z.php?id=31</uri>. There are also numerous posts on <uri>http://forums.gentoo.org</uri> detailing how to solve problems with the installation (search for 'apache php'). So, that said, I'm not going to cover it here. Set up the apache and php installs, then continue with this howto. Now, a word for the wise: .htaccess the directory that you put phpmyadmin in. If you do not do this, search engine spiders will come along and index the page which in turn will mean that anyone will be able to find your phpmyadmin page via google and in turn be able to come change your database however they want which is <e>BAD!</e> There are many howtos on this including: <uri>http://docs.csoft.net/micro/black-htaccess.html</uri>.</p>
<p>Now we're going to install the Apache certificates we made previously. The Apache-SSL directives that you need to use the resulting cert are:
<ul>
<li>SSLCertificateFile /path/to/certs/new.cert.cert</li>
<li>SSLCertificateKeyFile /path/to/certs/new.cert.key</li>
</ul></p>
<pre caption="Install Apache SSL certificates">
# <i>cp /usr/lib/ssl/misc/new.cert.cert /etc/apache/conf/ssl/</i>
# <i>cp /usr/lib/ssl/misc/new.cert.key /etc/apache/conf/ssl/</i>
# <i>nano /etc/apache/conf/vhosts/ssl.default-vhost.conf</i>
<codenote>Change the following parameters</codenote>
ServerName host.domain.name
ServerAdmin your@email.address
SSLCertificateFile /etc/apache/conf/ssl/new.cert.cert
SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/apache/conf/ssl/new.cert.key
</pre>
<p>Next, configure phpMyAdmin.</p>
<pre caption="Configuring phpMyAdmin">
# <i>nano /home/httpd/htdocs/phpmyadmin/config.inc.php</i>
<codenote>Change the following parameters</codenote>
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['host'] = 'localhost'; // MySQL hostname
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['controluser'] = 'mailsql'; // MySQL control user settings
// (this user must have read-only
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['controlpass'] = '$password'; // access to the "mysql/user"
// and "mysql/db" tables)
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['user'] = 'mailsql'; // MySQL user
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['password'] = '$password'; // MySQL password
</pre>
<p>Now enter the phpmyadmin page and browse the tables. You'll want to add in your local aliases, edit your user table to add a test user, and change your transport table to add information about your domains. The default values supplied with the dumpfile should be a sufficient guide to what values need to go where. Make sure that if you put information in the database that it is accurate. For instance, make sure the local users home dir exists and that the correct uid/gid values are in place. The maildirs should be created automatically by postfix when the user receives their first email. So, in general, it's a good idea to send a "Welcome" mail to a new user after you setup their account to make sure the .maildir gets created. </p>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>The vmail user</title>
<body>
<p>At this point you may be wondering what user and directory to use for virtual mail users, and rightly so. Let's set that up.</p>
<pre caption="Adding the vmail user">
# <i>adduser -d /home/vmail -s /bin/false vmail</i>
# <i>uid=`cat /etc/passwd | grep vmail | cut -f 3 -d :`</i>
# <i>groupadd -g $uid vmail</i>
# <i>mkdir /home/vmail</i>
# <i>chown vmail. /home/vmail</i>
</pre>
<p>So now when you're setting up vmail accounts, use the vmail uid, gid, and homedir. When you're setting up local accounts, use that users uid, gid, and homedir. We've been meaning to create a php admin page for this setup but haven't gotten around to it yet, as phpmyadmin generally works fine for us.</p>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Configuring MySQL Authentication and vhosts</title>
<body>
<p>Next we'll reconfigure our authentication to use the mailsql database in courier-imap and postfix. In all of the following examples, replace $password with the password you set for the mailsql mysql user.</p>
<pre>
# <i>emerge /usr/portage/sys-libs/pam_mysql/pam_mysql-$currentversion.ebuild</i>
<codenote>This package is currently masked so you'll have to give it an explicit path </codenote>
<codenote>or unmask the package. This is subject to change when the package is unmasked</codenote>
<codenote>in the portage tree.</codenote>
# <i>nano /etc/pam.d/imap</i>
<codenote>Comment out the existing auth lines and add the following as shown.</codenote>
#auth required pam_nologin.so
#auth required pam_stack.so service=system-auth
#account required pam_stack.so service=system-auth
#session required pam_stack.so service=system-auth
auth optional pam_mysql.so server=localhost db=mailsql user=mailsql \
passwd=$password table=users usercolumn=email passwdcolumn=clear crypt=n
account required pam_mysql.so server=localhost db=mailsql user=mailsql \
passwd=$password table=users usercolumn=email passwdcolumn=clear crypt=n
# <i>nano /etc/pam.d/pop3</i>
# <i>nano /etc/pam.d/smtp</i>
<codenote>Make the same changes to the pop3 and smtp files</codenote>
</pre>
<p>Next, we need to edit courier's authentication config's.</p>
<pre>
# <i>nano /etc/courier-imap/authdaemonrc</i>
authmodulelist="authmysql authpam"
# <i>nano /etc/courier-imap/authdaemond.conf</i>
AUTHDAEMOND="authdaemond.mysql"
# <i>nano /etc/courier-imap/authmysqlrc</i>
MYSQL_SERVER localhost
MYSQL_USERNAME mailsql
MYSQL_PASSWORD $password
MYSQL_DATABASE mailsql
MYSQL_USER_TABLE users
#MYSQL_CRYPT_PWFIELD crypt (make sure this is commented out since we're storing plaintext)
MYSQL_CLEAR_PWFIELD clear
MYSQL_UID_FIELD uid
MYSQL_GID_FIELD gid
MYSQL_LOGIN_FIELD email
MYSQL_HOME_FIELD homedir
MYSQL_NAME_FIELD name
MYSQL_MAILDIR_FIELD maildir
# <i>/etc/init.d/authdaemond restart</i>
# <i>/etc/init.d/saslauthd restart</i>
</pre>
<p>We're almost there I promise! Next, set up the rest of the necessary config's for postfix to interract with the database for all it's other transport needs.</p>
<pre caption="/etc/postfix/mysql-aliases.cf">
# <i>nano /etc/postfix/mysql-aliases.cf</i>
# mysql-aliases.cf
user = mailsql
password = $password
dbname = mailsql
table = alias
select_field = destination
where_field = alias
hosts = 127.0.0.1
</pre>
<pre caption="/etc/postfix/mysql-relocated.cf">
# <i>nano /etc/postfix/mysql-relocated.cf</i>
# mysql-relocated.cf
user = mailsql
password = $password
dbname = mailsql
table = relocated
select_field = destination
where_field = email
hosts = 127.0.0.1
</pre>
<pre caption="/etc/postfix/mysql-transport.cf">
# <i>nano /etc/postfix/mysql-transport.cf</i>
# mysql-transport.cf
user = mailsql
password = $password
dbname = mailsql
table = transport
select_field = destination
where_field = domain
hosts = 127.0.0.1
</pre>
<pre caption="/etc/postfix/mysql-virtual-gid.cf">
# <i>nano /etc/postfix/mysql-virtual-gid.cf</i>
#myql-virtual-gid.cf
user = mailsql
password = $password
dbname = mailsql
table = users
select_field = gid
where_field = email
additional_conditions = and postfix = 'y'
hosts = 127.0.0.1
</pre>
<pre caption="/etc/postfix/mysql-virtual-maps.cf">
# <i>nano /etc/postfix/mysql-virtual-maps.cf</i>
#myql-virtual-maps.cf
user = mailsql
password = $password
dbname = mailsql
table = users
select_field = maildir
where_field = email
additional_conditions = and postfix = 'y'
hosts = 127.0.0.1
</pre>
<pre caption="/etc/postfix/mysql-virtual-uid.cf">
# <i>nano /etc/postfix/mysql-virtual-uid.cf</i>
# mysql-virtual-uid.cf
user = mailsql
password = $password
dbname = mailsql
table = users
select_field = uid
where_field = email
additional_conditions = and postfix = 'y'
hosts = 127.0.0.1
</pre>
<pre caption="/etc/postfix/mysql-virtual.cf">
# <i>nano /etc/postfix/mysql-virtual.cf</i>
# mysql-virtual.cf
user = mailsql
password = $password
dbname = mailsql
table = virtual
select_field = destination
where_field = email
hosts = 127.0.0.1
</pre>
<p>Lastly, edit <path>/etc/postfix/main.cf</path> one more time.</p>
<pre caption="/etc/postfix/main.cf">
# <i>nano /etc/postfix/main.cf</i>
alias_maps = mysql:/etc/postfix/mysql-aliases.cf
relocated_maps = mysql:/etc/postfix/mysql-relocated.cf
transport_maps = mysql:/etc/postfix/mysql-transport.cf
virtual_gid_maps = mysql:/etc/postfix/mysql-virtual-gid.cf
virtual_mailbox_maps = mysql:/etc/postfix/mysql-virtual-maps.cf
virtual_maps = mysql:/etc/postfix/mysql-virtual.cf
virtual_uid_maps = mysql:/etc/postfix/mysql-virtual-uid.cf
</pre>
<p>Shew! Alright now, let's restart postfix and see how all that went.</p>
<pre># <i>postfix reload</i></pre>
<p>Now, if all went well, you should have a functioning mailhost. Users should be able to authenticate against the sql database, using their full email address, for pop3, imap, and smtp. I would highly suggest that you verify that everything is working at this point. If you run into problems (with as many things as this setup has going on, it's likely that you will) check the troubleshooting section of this howto.</p>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Squirrelmail</title>
<body>
<pre>
# <i>emerge squirrelmail</i>
<codenote>I like to add a link to the htdocs space for a shorter url.</codenote>
# <i>ln -s /home/httpd/htdocs/squirrelmail/ /home/httpd/htdocs/mail</i>
# <i>cd /home/httpd/htdocs/mail/conf</i>
# <i>./conf.pl</i>
<codenote>Change your Organization, Server, and Folder settings for squirrelmail.</codenote>
<codenote>Now you should be able to login to squirrelmail, again - with your full email address,</codenote>
<codenote>and use your new webmail setup.</codenote>
</pre>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Mailman</title>
<body>
<p>Last step: mailman. The new version of mailman has very nice virtual domain support, which is why I use it, not to mention it's really a great package.</p>
<pre>
# <i>emerge mailman</i>
<codenote>This package is currently masked as well, so you'll need to unmask it or give </codenote>
<codenote>emerge an explicit path to the ebuild. Once it's installed, follow the directions</codenote>
<codenote>in the README.gentoo</codenote>
# <i>nano /usr/share/doc/mailman-$ver/README.gentoo</i>
<codenote>Follow the rest of the install instructions in the README.</codenote>
<codenote>Once that's finished, add your first list.</codenote>
# <i>su mailman</i>
# <i>cd ~</i>
# <i>bin/newlist</i>
</pre>
<p>That script should spit out some aliases at you for postfix. Add those aliases to the alias table in mailsql. You'll be tempted to add colons to the alias names in mailsql (because that's how the script gives them to you) DON'T DO IT! It won't work if you do. You should now be able to setup mailing lists for any domain on your box. When you log in to the mailman admin page for your new list, at the bottom of the general options page there is a space to declare what domain the list belongs to. With that selection you can add lists for any virtual domain you are hosting. Last note on this, make sure you run all mailman commands as the user mailman (<c>su mailman</c>) or else the permissions will be wrong and you'll have to fix them.</p>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Wrap Up</title>
<body>
<p>Ok, you're all set, edit <path>/etc/postfix/master.cf</path> and turn off verbose mode for production use. You'll probably also want to add the services to your startup routine to make sure everything comes back up on a reboot. Make sure to add all the services you're using - apache, mysql, saslauthd, postfix, courier-imapd, courier-imapd-ssl, courier-pop3d, and courier-pop3d-ssl are all up to your decision on what access you want to provide. I generally have all the services enabled.</p>
<pre caption="Wrap up">
# <i>postfix reload</i>
# <i>rc-update add $service default</i>
</pre>
<p><e>Have fun!</e></p>
</body>
</chapter>
<chapter>
<title>Troubleshooting</title>
<section>
<title>Introduction</title>
<body>
<p>Troubleshooting: This is a short troubleshooting guide for the set up we've detailed how to install here. It is not exhaustive, but meant as a place to get you started in figuring out problems. With a complicated setup such as this, it's imperative that you narrow down the problem to the particular component that is malfunctioning. In general I do that by following a few steps. Start from the base of the system and work your way up, ruling out components that work along the way until you discover which component is having the problem.</p>
</body>
</section>
<section>
<title>Step 1: Check your config files.</title>
<body>
<p>Typos are killers, especially when dealing with authentication systems. Scan your config's and mailsql database for typo's. You can debug all you want, but if you're not passing the right information back and forth to your mail system, it's not going to work. If you make a change to a config file for a service, make sure you restart that service so that the config change gets picked up.</p>
<pre>
# <i>/etc/init.d/service restart</i>
</pre>
</body>
</section>
<section>
<title>Step 2: Are all the necessary services actually running?</title>
<body>
<p>If it's not running, start it up. It's awful hard to debug a service that isn't running. Sometimes a service will act like it's started but still not function. Sometimes, when a bad config is used, or a bad transmission comes into a mail component, the service will hang and keep the port from being used by another process. Sometimes you can detect this with netstat. Or, if you've been at it awhile, just take a break and reboot your box in the meantime. That will clear out any hung services. Then you can come back fresh and try it again.</p>
<pre>
# <i>/etc/init.d/$service status</i>
# <i>netstat -a | grep $service (or $port)</i>
</pre>
</body>
</section>
<section>
<title>Step 3: Are all the service using the current config's?</title>
<body>
<p>If you've recently made a change to a config file, restart that service to make sure it's using the current version. Some of the components will dump their current config's to you, like postfix.</p>
<pre>
# <i>apachectl fullstatus</i> (needs lynx installed)
# <i>apachectl configtest</i> (checks config sanity)
# <i>postconf</i> (will tell you exactly what param's postfix is using)
# <i>/etc/init.d/$service restart</i>
</pre>
</body>
</section>
<section>
<title>Step 4: Check the logs.</title>
<body>
<p>Repeat after me, logs are my friend. My next troubleshooting stop is always the logs. Sometimes it's helpful to try a failed operation again then check the logs so that the error message is right at the bottom (or top depending on your logger) instead of buried in there somewhere. See if there is any information in your log that can help you diagnose the problem, or at the very least, figure out which component is having the problem.</p>
<pre>
# <i>kill -USR1 `ps -C metalog -o pid=`</i>(to turn off metalog buffering)
# <i>nano /var/log/everything/current</i>
# <i>cat /var/log/mysql/mysql.log</i>
# <i>tail /var/log/apache/error_log</i>
</pre>
</body>
</section>
<section>
<title>Step 5: Talk to the service itself.</title>
<body>
<p>SMTP, IMAP, and POP3 all respond to telnet sessions. As we've seen earlier when we verified postfix's config. Sometimes it's helpful to open a telnet session to the service itself and see what's happening.</p>
<pre>
# <i>telnet localhost $port</i>
<codenote>SMTP is 25, IMAP is 143, POP3 is 110. You should receive at least an OK string,</codenote>
<codenote>letting you know that the service is running and ready to respond to requests.</codenote>
Trying 127.0.0.1...
Connected to localhost.
Escape character is '^]'.
* OK Courier-IMAP ready. Copyright 1998-2002 Double Precision, Inc. See COPYING for distribution information.
</pre>
</body>
</section>
<section>
<title>Step 6: Sometimes only the big guns will give you the information you need: strace.</title>
<body>
<p>You should have this installed anyway. This is an invaluable tool for debugging software. You can start commands from the command line with strace and watch all the system calls as they happen. It often dumps a huge amount of information, so you'll either need to watch it realtime as you retry a failed transaction with the mail system, or dump the output to a file for review.</p>
<pre>
# <i>emerge strace</i>
# <i>strace $command</i>
# <i>strace -p `ps -C $service -o pid=`</i>
</pre>
</body>
</section>
<section>
<title>Step 7: Research</title>
<body>
<p>Once you have the information, if you can diagnose and fix the problem, great! If not, you'll probably need to go digging on the net for information that will help you fix it. Here's a list of sites you can check to see if your error has already been resolved. There's also a really good howto on setting up smtp-auth which contains some great debugging ideas.</p>
<p>
<ul>
<li><uri>http://forums.gentoo.org/</uri> - Great forums for gentoo users</li>
<li><uri>http://bugs.gentoo.org/</uri> - Bugs database for gentoo - great place to look for specific errors</li>
<li><uri>http://postfix.state-of-mind.de/</uri> - smtp-auth howto</li>
<li><uri>http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=postfix-users</uri> - Postfix mailing lists - searchable</li>
<li><uri>http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum_id=6705</uri> - Courier-imap mailing list archives - not searchable</li>
<li><uri>http://www.google.com/</uri> - If all else fails, there's always google, which has never failed me</li>
<li>I also spend a lot of time on irc.freenode.net #gentoo. Irc is a great place to go for help.</li>
</ul>
</p>
</body>
</section>
</chapter>
</guide>
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next reply other threads:[~2003-01-10 7:49 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2003-01-10 7:46 Ken [this message]
2003-01-10 18:21 ` [gentoo-dev] new virtual mailhosting howto submission Terje Kvernes
2003-01-10 21:10 ` Ian Truelsen
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