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Email-icon-vector.jpg Project Mailserver with Debian, Exim, spamassassin, greylistd, DKIM, SRS, SPF, DMARC, forwarding, LDAP, dovecot, LMTP, disk crypto Name Mailserver with Debian, Exim, spamassassin, greylistd, DKIM, SRS, SPF, DMARC, forwarding, LDAP, dovecot, LMTP, disk crypto Start 2015/03/01 End Contact WilcoBaanHofman Website Information This page describes how we set up our mail system and how other people can set up their own full blown modern mail servers. Status Production This page will talk about how to set up a mail server, and also how to comply with Google mail / gmail's bizarre, idiotic IPv6 spam policies.

You will need an SPF policy, DKIM and a valid forward/reverse DNS which matches the EHLO your mailserver sends. You will need spam filtering, virus filtering and a valid TLS connection.

Contents

1 TODO 2 Prerequisites 3 Determine your setup 3.1 Single mailserver 3.2 MTA + Encrypted mail store 3.3 High-availability 4 Install the packages 5 Configuring exim4 5.1 Testing Exim4 6 TLS 7 Testing STARTTLS 7.1 Testing TLS 8 SASL Authenticated relay 8.1 Enabling other ports than 25 8.2 SASL authentication 8.3 Testing 8.4 DNS block lists 8.5 More information exim4 configuration 9 Spamassassin 9.1 Spamassassin configuration 9.2 Exim spamd integration 9.3 Testing spam blocking 9.4 More information on spamassassin 10 Antivirus 10.1 Setting up ClamAV 10.2 Exim clamd integration 10.3 Testing 10.4 More information on ClamAV 11 Setting up DKIM 11.1 Configuring exim for DKIM 11.2 Configuring DNS for DKIM 11.3 Testing 11.4 More information on DKIM 12 SPF 12.1 Adding SPF to your domain 12.2 Adding Sending Rewriting Scheme (SRS) 12.2.1 Installing srsd 12.2.2 Implement srsd integration into exim4 12.2.3 Testing the SRS forwarding 12.3 Enable SPF checking 12.4 Testing SPF checking 12.5 More information on SPF and SRS 13 Greylisting 13.1 Set up exim 13.2 Testing 13.3 More information on Greylisting 14 DMARC 14.1 Set up a mailbox 14.2 Publish a DMARC policy 14.3 Doing something useful with the reports 14.4 More information on DMARC 15 LDAP integration 15.1 Schema 15.2 Exim LDAP integration 15.3 Testing Exim LDAP integration 15.4 Saslauthd LDAP integration 15.5 Testing saslauthd LDAP integration 15.6 More information on LDAP integration 16 LMTP delivery 16.1 Local delivery 16.2 For remote delivery with 3 week hold function via LMTP 16.3 Testing LMTP delivery 16.4 More information on LMTP 17 Mailman 17.1 Getting a certificate 17.2 Setting up Mailman 17.3 Configuring Exim for mailman 17.4 Configuring apache for mailman 17.5 Setting up mailing lists 17.6 Testing Mailman 17.7 More information about mailman 18 Dovecot 18.1 Getting a certificate 18.2 Setting up dovecot 18.3 Integrating LDAP into dovecot 18.4 Testing 18.5 ACL and Shared mailboxs (allowing delegated mailboxes) 19 Hardening 19.1 Exim4 rate limiting 19.2 Testing the banner delay 19.3 Rate limiting hosts with iptables 19.4 More information on hardening 20 Troubleshooting 20.1 Forgetting to add the clamav user to the exim group 20.2 Not using wheezy-updates or jessie-updates repository 20.3 Forgetting to add the exim to sasl group 20.4 auth-ldap and dovecot-ldap.conf files missing 20.5 Forgetting to install dovecot-lmtpd 20.6 Spamassassin hits rule URIBL_BLOCKED on every mail message 20.7 You keep getting 550 relay not permitted for local email addresses 20.8 Unable to verify the first certificate 20.9 TLS not available and Error while reading file message in exim4.log 20.10 Keep getting 421 Unexpected failure after RCPT TO 20.11 DKIM signatures are not added TODO

Running an external (partial) LDAP slave Prerequisites

A (virtual) machine running Debian wheezy or jessie with public IPv4 and IPv6 internet connectivity Possibility to set up reverse DNS for your IPv4 and IPv6 addresses Ability to have a CA sign your certificates (can be done for free at StartSSL). Determine your setup

What kind of setup are you going to run?

Single mailserver MTA + Encrypted mail store High-availability setup Single mailserver

In this case, install all packages on the same machine, do not use disk encryption, because your mail server will be unreachable after a power failure.

MTA + Encrypted mail store

This is the best scenario for small setups and requires two (virtual) machines, one MTA that handles accepting of emails and spam/virus filtering and one machine that is encrypted. This guide covers this setup. To prepare for this setup, simple install one machine without disk crypto and one with. The MTA will hold mail for up to 3 weeks if you haven't typed your disk crypto password on boot yet (See the lmtp section).

The setup will look like this:

Encrypted-mailstore.png

High-availability

Running MTAs in high availability is easy, just duplicate the MTA setup and add two MX records to your domains. (Of course, your bayesian spam filters may train differently..). Running dovecot in high-availability is a different story..

The safest way to run dovecot in high-availibility mode is to run the mail store on top of a high-performance redundant NAS. This can be a proprietary NAS or some open source HA NFS setup. You will need shared NFS storage. The best performing mailbox format is mdbox, but this is also the easiest store to corrupt the indexes of if two nodes write to it in parallel. Locking may cause performance degradation and has to work reliably on your NFS backend, otherwise the indexes get corrupted. To prevent index corruption and locking overhead, there is the director component, which will pin a user to a node as long as that node is up. The dovecot part of this setup is *not* included in this guide (yet).

This setup will look like this:

Mailserver-HA.png

Install the packages

Step 1: Install the required packages

~# apt-get install exim4-daemon-heavy spamassassin clamav-daemon greylistd spf-tools-perl sasl2-bin srs pyzor razor If you want to run a mailing list server as well, also install mailman and apache2.

~# apt-get install mailman apache2 If dovecot is going to run on this same host (you're not doing high-availability or full disk crypto mail store), also install dovecot-imapd, dovecot-ldap and dovecot-lmtpd on the mta. Otherwise, do this on the host(s) where you want to run your dovecot.

~# apt-get install dovecot-imapd dovecot-ldap dovecot-lmtpd dovecot-sieve dovecot-managesieved

Verify that no interfering packages are installed (like postfix, sendmail, amavis)

~$ dpkg -l |egrep '(postfix|sendmail|amavis)' This command should give no output, if it does and starts with ii, remove that package.

Configuring exim4

~# dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config Choose internet site, set the host name to the value you will set the reverse DNS to, specify all domains you want to receive mail for and choose split files (unless you want to replace every exim4 file name here with exim4.conf.template in this manual).

Testing Exim4

Now try to see if simple address resolution works. This will only test against local system users. It's good to test this, even if you're going to add LDAP later. Substitute the IP and mail addresses for your own stuff. For now, you can test any local system user @ one of the domains you accepted.

Any line not starting with a number is something you have to type yourself to test this.

~$ telnet 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d 25 Trying 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d… Connected to 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d. Escape character is '^]'. 220 mail.bitlair.nl ESMTP Exim 4.80 Sun, 15 Mar 2015 12:37:27 -0400 EHLO mail.bitlair.nl 250-mail.bitlair.nl Hello mail.bitlair.nl [2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d] 250-SIZE 52428800 250-8BITMIME 250-PIPELINING 250-STARTTLS 250 HELP MAIL FROM: wilco@bitlair.nl 250 OK RCPT TO: wilco@bitlair.nl 250 Accepted RCPT TO: aoeu@bitlair.nl 550 Unrouteable address QUIT TLS

Hint: StartCom signs certificates for free. Class 2 certification allows you do much more, though. In order to qualify for level 2 verification, do a personal validation once a year for $59 and you can issue an unlimited number of certificates for personal use. For business use, it requires an additional $59 for organisation verification on top of the personal validation. Your account will be converted to a business account, so no more personal certificates on that account.

To generate the key and certificate signing request (replace mail.bitlair.nl with your Fully Qualified Domain Name):

~# openssl req -sha256 -days 3650 -nodes -new -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout /etc/ssl/private/mail.bitlair.nl-key.pem -out /etc/ssl/mail.bitlair.nl-csr.pem Input your location and contact information. At the Common Name field, input your mail hostname (mail.bitlair.nl in my case). Do not enter a challenge password.

Copy the certificate signing request to a CA for signing. Allow the CA to sign it, then you'll receive a certificate from the CA. Place the received certificate in /etc/ssl/mail.your.domain-cert.pem

Put MAIN_TLS_ENABLE=yes near the top in /etc/exim4/conf.d/main/03_exim4-config_tlsoptions and set the following keys:

MAIN_TLS_CERTIFICATE = /etc/ssl/mail.bitlair.nl-cert.pem MAIN_TLS_PRIVATEKEY = /etc/ssl/private/mail.bitlair.nl-key.pem Create the ssl-cert group, allow this group to read in /etc/ssl/private and add the exim user to the ssl-cert group to make sure exim can read the private key:

~# groupadd –system ssl-cert ~# chgrp ssl-cert /etc/ssl/private ~# chmod 750 /etc/ssl/private ~# usermod -a -G ssl-cert Debian-exim Download your chain file from your CA. If you have a startcom class 1 certificate, find the startcom sha256 class1 server ca pem file online. The file is called sub.class1.server.sha1.ca.pem and can be found at [1]. Store the chain file in /etc/ssl/.

Now append its content to /etc/ssl/your-domain-cert.pem. I have a class 2 certificate, so I used this command:

~# cat /etc/ssl/sub.class2.server.sha2.ca.pem » /etc/ssl/mail.bitlair.nl-cert.pem Regenerate the configuration and restart exim:

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart Testing STARTTLS

~$ telnet 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d 25 Trying 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d… Connected to 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d. Escape character is '^]'. 220 mail.bitlair.nl ESMTP Exim 4.80 Sun, 15 Mar 2015 12:37:10 -0400 EHLO mail.bitlair.nl 250-mail.bitlair.nl Hello mail.bitlair.nl [2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d] 250-SIZE 52428800 250-8BITMIME 250-PIPELINING 250-STARTTLS 250 HELP STARTTLS 220 TLS go ahead STARTTLS should be listed and give a 220 status code.

Testing TLS

Unfortunately, openssl s_client does not support IPv6, but this the tests the legacy IP listener as well as TLS:

~$ openssl s_client -connect mail.bitlair.nl:25 -starttls smtp -verify 5 -CAfile /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt

New, TLSv1/SSLv3, Cipher is DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA256 Server public key is 1024 bit Secure Renegotiation IS supported Compression: NONE Expansion: NONE SSL-Session:

  Protocol  : TLSv1.2
  Cipher    : DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA256
  Session-ID: 82CBCEC7833853A674F6399694A03052566C494E1F6DDC8DE2CD4B3A9F8ED528
  Session-ID-ctx: 
  Master-Key: BAE67F5D50E5C1C95FBDF355C1BDE18C6251E13F5B8686977292A54657498EFECFF518290211F24F01C40E39929981C4
  Key-Arg   : None
  PSK identity: None
  PSK identity hint: None
  SRP username: None
  Start Time: 1426438799
  Timeout   : 300 (sec)
  Verify return code: 0 (ok)

This should give Verify return code 0 at all times. Anything else is wrong.. see the troubleshooting section.

SASL Authenticated relay

To enable relaying of messages after authentication, for SPF or just for laptops that are on different connections all the time, SASL authentication needs to be enabled.

Enabling other ports than 25

Port 25 is usually blocked by firewalls, for good reason. An alternative authenticated-only submission port exists on port 587 and a legacy TLS on connect port on 465 also exists.

To enable these, set the following in /etc/default/exim4:

SMTPLISTENEROPTIONS='-oX 25:465:587 -oP /var/run/exim4/exim.pid' And in /etc/exim4/conf.d/main/03_exim4-config_tlsoptions add the following near the top:

tls_on_connect_ports=465 Regenerate the configuration and restart exim:

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart SASL authentication

Set the following to /etc/default/saslauthd, this is the default these days

START=yes Start saslauthd.

~# service saslauthd start In /etc/exim4/conf.d/auth/30_exim4-config_examples, uncomment the section:

plain_saslauthd_server:

driver = plaintext
public_name = PLAIN
server_condition = ${if saslauthd{{$auth2}{$auth3}}{1}{0}}
server_set_id = $auth2
server_prompts = :
.ifndef AUTH_SERVER_ALLOW_NOTLS_PASSWORDS
server_advertise_condition = ${if eq{$tls_cipher}{}{}{*}}
.endif

login_saslauthd_server:

driver = plaintext
public_name = LOGIN
server_prompts = "Username:: : Password::"
# don't send system passwords over unencrypted connections
server_condition = ${if saslauthd{{$auth1}{$auth2}}{1}{0}}
server_set_id = $auth1
.ifndef AUTH_SERVER_ALLOW_NOTLS_PASSWORDS
server_advertise_condition = ${if eq{$tls_cipher}{}{}{*}}
.endif

Add the Debian-exim user to the sasl group.

~# usermod -a -G sasl Debian-exim Regenerate the configuration and restart exim:

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart Testing

~$ swaks -a -tls -q AUTH -s 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d -au username Password: enter_your_password === Trying 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d:25… === Connected to 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d. ← 220 mail.bitlair.nl ESMTP Exim 4.80 Sun, 15 Mar 2015 16:04:35 -0400 → EHLO mail.bitlair.nl ← 250-mail.bitlair.nl Hello mail.bitlair.nl [2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d] ← 250-SIZE 52428800 ← 250-8BITMIME ← 250-PIPELINING ← 250-STARTTLS ← 250 HELP → STARTTLS ← 220 TLS go ahead === TLS started w/ cipher DHE-RSA-AES256-SHA256 === TLS peer subject DN=“/C=NL/ST=Utrecht/L=Amersfoort/O=Stichting Bitlair/CN=mail.bitlair.nl” ~> EHLO mail.bitlair.nl <~ 250-mail.bitlair.nl Hello mail.bitlair.nl [2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d] <~ 250-SIZE 52428800 <~ 250-8BITMIME <~ 250-PIPELINING <~ 250-AUTH PLAIN LOGIN <~ 250 HELP ~> AUTH LOGIN <~ 334 VXNlcm5hbWU6 ~> d2lsY28= <~ 334 UGFzc3dvcmQ6 ~> YmxpZXA= <~ 235 Authentication succeeded ~> QUIT <~ 221 mail.bitlair.nl closing connection Connection closed with remote host. Authentication succeeded is what you want!

DNS block lists

Add CHECK_RCPT_IP_DNSBLS to the top of /etc/exim4/conf.d/acl/30_exim4-config_check_rcpt, like my list of DNSBLs:

CHECK_RCPT_IP_DNSBLS=cbl.abuseat.org:sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org:psbl.surriel.com:b.barracudacentral.org:dul.dnsbl.sorbs.net:spamsources.fabel.dk Remove the whole ifdef CHECK_RCPT_IP_DNSBLS section from /etc/exim4/conf.d/acl/30_exim4-config_check_rcpt and place the following section just before the accept rule with relay_to_domains

accept
  domains      = +local_domains : +relay_to_domains
  dnslists      = list.dnswl.org
  logwrite      = $sender_host_address is whitelisted
deny
  message = ${sender_host_address} is listed at ${dnslist_domain}; See ${dnslist_text}
  !hosts = +relay_from_hosts
  !authenticated = *
  dnslists = CHECK_RCPT_IP_DNSBLS

Regenerate the configuration and restart exim:

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart More information exim4 configuration

http://www.exim.org/exim-html-current/doc/html/spec_html/ch-string_expansions.html http://www.exim.org/exim-html-current/doc/html/spec_html/ Spamassassin

Spamassassin configuration

To enable spamd from spamassassin, set the following in /etc/default/spamassassin (these may already be the default):

ENABLED=1 And add “-u debian-spamd” to the options, you will get something like:

OPTIONS=“–create-prefs –max-children 5 –helper-home-dir -u debian-spamd” And also enable the cron rules updates by setting

CRON=1 You will probably want more terse spam reporting, because it will be in the email headers, to get this, add the following to /etc/spamassassin/local.cf:

clear_report_template report _YESNO_, score=_SCORE_ required=_REQD_ autolearn=_AUTOLEARN_ report tests=_TESTSSCORES While you're there, you may want to enable the bayesian classifier, and set up razor and pyzor, and fix RFC-ignorant rules.

# Use Bayesian classifier (default: 1) # use_bayes 1

# Bayesian classifier auto-learning (default: 1) # bayes_auto_learn 1 bayes_auto_learn_threshold_nonspam -0.001 bayes_auto_learn_threshold_spam 8.0

# Use razor and pyzor use_razor2 1 use_pyzor 1

# Disable stupid RFC-incompatible spamassassin SPF_NEUTRAL check. Do not add points for SPF_NEUTRAL, as it should be treated the same as having no SPF record. score SPF_NEUTRAL 0 Now, set up razor and pyzor:

~# razor-admin -home=/etc/mail/spamassassin/.razor -create ~# razor-admin -home=/etc/mail/spamassassin/.razor -register ~# razor-admin -home=/etc/mail/spamassassin/.razor -discover ~# pyzor –homedir /etc/mail/spamassassin discover Restart spamassassin.

~# service spamassassin restart Exim spamd integration

Uncomment the following line in /etc/exim4/conf.d/main/02_exim4-config_options:

spamd_address = 127.0.0.1 783 In /etc/exim4/conf.d/acl/40_exim4-config_check_data, uncomment the following section:

# warn # spam = Debian-exim:true # add_header = X-Spam_score: $spam_score\n\ # X-Spam_score_int: $spam_score_int\n\ # X-Spam_bar: $spam_bar\n\ # X-Spam_report: $spam_report Also replace Debian-exim with debian-spamd (case sensitive), change _report to -Status and dash/upper case the rest (See section below for result). To bounce messages, also add this directly below:

deny
  message = This message scored $spam_score spam points.
  spam = debian-spamd
  condition = ${if >{$spam_score_int}{76}{1}{0}}

You'll get something like this:

warn
  spam = debian-spamd:true
  add_header = X-Spam-Score: $spam_score\n\
            X-Spam-Score-Int: $spam_score_int\n\
            X-Spam-Bar: $spam_bar\n\
            X-Spam-Status: $spam_report
deny
  message = This message scored $spam_score spam points.
  spam = debian-spamd
  condition = ${if >{$spam_score_int}{76}{1}{0}}

Regenerate the configuration and restart exim:

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart Testing spam blocking

$ telnet 127.0.0.1 25 Trying 127.0.0.1… Connected to 127.0.0.1. Escape character is '^]'. 220 mail.bitlair.nl ESMTP Exim 4.80 Sun, 15 Mar 2015 13:53:46 -0400 EHLO mail.bitlair.nl 250-mail.bitlair.nl Hello localhost.localdomain [127.0.0.1] 250-SIZE 52428800 250-8BITMIME 250-PIPELINING 250-STARTTLS 250 HELP MAIL FROM: wilco@bitlair.nl 250 OK RCPT TO: wilco@bitlair.nl 250 Accepted DATA 354 Enter message, ending with “.” on a line by itself Subject: test

XJS*C4JDBQADN1.NSBN3*2IDNEN*GTUBE-STANDARD-ANTI-UBE-TEST-EMAIL*C.34X

. 550 This message scored 1002.6 spam points. You should get error 550 here.

More information on spamassassin

http://michaelfranzl.com/2013/09/07/setting-up-exim4-mail-transfer-agent-with-spam-filtering-greylisting-and-anti-virus/ https://spamassassin.apache.org/ Antivirus

Setting up ClamAV

Update the antivirus database:

~# freshclam ClamAV update process started at Sun Mar 15 13:57:01 2015 main.cvd is up to date (version: 55, sigs: 2424225, f-level: 60, builder: neo) daily.cvd is up to date (version: 20194, sigs: 1348078, f-level: 63, builder: dgoddard) bytecode.cvd is up to date (version: 247, sigs: 41, f-level: 63, builder: dgoddard) You will get a message about outdated ClamAV if you do not have the latest version from stable-updates. Make sure you have it in your sources list and preferably in the unattended-upgrades list. Also see the troubleshooting section.

If you get a message about freshclam.log being locked, this means the clamav database is already up to date, check the freshclam.log for any warnings, like “your version is OUTDATED”.

Add clamav to the Debian-exim group, so that clamav-daemon can read the message to scan.

~# usermod -a -G Debian-exim clamav In /etc/clamav/clamd.conf set clamav to use the supplementary group (it may be already enabled by default):

AllowSupplementaryGroups true Restart clamav-daemon

~# service clamav-daemon restart Exim clamd integration

In /etc/exim4/conf.d/main/02_exim4-config_options, uncomment the following line:

av_scanner = clamd:/var/run/clamav/clamd.ctl In /etc/exim4/conf.d/acl/40_exim4-config_check_data, uncomment the following section

deny
  malware = *
  message = This message was detected as possible malware ($malware_name).

Regenerate the exim4 config and restart exim.

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart Testing

~$ telnet 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d 25 Trying 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d… Connected to 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d. Escape character is '^]'. 220 mail.bitlair.nl ESMTP Exim 4.80 Sun, 15 Mar 2015 14:10:10 -0400 EHLO mail.bitlair.nl 250-mail.bitlair.nl Hello mail.bitlair.nl [2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d] 250-SIZE 52428800 250-8BITMIME 250-PIPELINING 250-STARTTLS 250 HELP MAIL FROM: wilco@bitlair.nl 250 OK RCPT TO: wilco@bitlair.nl 250 Accepted DATA 354 Enter message, ending with “.” on a line by itself Subject: test

X5O!P%@AP[4\PZX54(P^)7CC)7}$EICAR-STANDARD-ANTIVIRUS-TEST-FILE!$H+H* . 550 This message was detected as possible malware (Eicar-Test-Signature). You should get error 550 here. This is good.

More information on ClamAV

http://michaelfranzl.com/2013/09/07/setting-up-exim4-mail-transfer-agent-with-spam-filtering-greylisting-and-anti-virus/ http://www.exim.org/exim-html-current/doc/html/spec_html/ch-content_scanning_at_acl_time.html http://www.clamav.net/index.html Setting up DKIM

Contrary to SPF and DMARC, DKIM is actually a good idea. This does not break the internet, I advise everyone to implement DKIM.

Configuring exim for DKIM

The first step to getting DKIM working, is generating an RSA key for DKIM. You will be tempted to use a large key here, but given that you have to add the public key to DNS, do not use more than 1024-bit keys. If you want to use stronger cryptography for this in the future, please consider contributing to the support of ECC crypto in DKIM.

~# mkdir -m 0750 /etc/exim4/dkim_keys ~# chown root:Debian-exim /etc/exim4/dkim_keys To generate the RSA key pair (repeat per domain):

~# openssl genrsa -out /etc/exim4/dkim_keys/bitlair.nl.private.pem 1024 ~# openssl rsa -in /etc/exim4/dkim_keys/bitlair.nl.private.pem -out /etc/exim4/dkim_keys/bitlair.nl.public.pem -pubout -outform PEM Add the following to the top of /etc/exim4/conf.d/transport/30_exim4-config_remote_smtp:

DKIM_DOMAIN = ${domain:$return_path} DKIM_SELECTOR = exim DKIM_FILE = /etc/exim4/dkim_keys/${lc:${domain:$return_path}}.private.pem DKIM_PRIVATE_KEY = ${if exists{DKIM_FILE}{DKIM_FILE}{0}} DKIM_CANON = relaxed DKIM_STRICT = true Configuring DNS for DKIM

Update your DNS zones to have the following records:

exim._domainkey IN TXT v=DKIM1; k=rsa; p=MIGfMA… ← your base64-encoded public key here _domainkey IN TXT o=~; Regenerate the configuration and restart exim:

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart Testing

Send an email to yourself from your MTA, you should see DKIM headers added to your message, to verify if it really checks out, send an email to check-auth@verifier.port25.com from your MTA.

It should respond with something like:

DKIM check: pass More information on DKIM

http://michaelfranzl.com/2013/09/07/setting-up-exim4-mail-transfer-agent-with-spam-filtering-greylisting-and-anti-virus/ http://www.iodigitalsec.com/exim-dkim-and-debian-configuration/ http://mikepultz.com/2010/02/using-dkim-in-exim/ https://www.debian-administration.org/users/lee/weblog/41 http://www.dkim.org/ SPF

Please note, before you add SPF: SPF is very broken. It assumes that people do not forward e-mail. It breaks .forward files, procmail forwards, etc. There is a remedy, called Sender Rewriting Scheme, but people are generally not aware of this. If you want to forward to gmail.com, which is known broken, because it mandates SPF records.

Adding SPF to your domain

You can set limits on who can send on behalf of your domain using DNS. However, extremely few mail forwards have implemented SRS. As stated on wikipedia: “Publishers of SPF FAIL policies must accept the risk that their legitimate emails are being rejected or bounced. They should test (e.g., with a SOFTFAIL policy) until they are satisfied with the results.”.

Unfortunately, adding SPF to your domain adds to the legitimacy of your domain, and will decrease your chances of getting into a spam box. So it would be wise to set an SPF policy of allowing your mailservers and hosts under your domain, but leave the rest neutral with ?all. -all is guaranteed to break plain mail forwarding. ~all will make sure your mail reaches the spam box.

To have an SPF policy, I advise to not use any fails on your domain, but configure a record like:

@ IN TXT “v=spf1 a mx ?all” This will ensure that hosts under your domain can pass SPF, as can your mailservers, but it is neutral for other, potentially forwarding hosts.

Adding Sending Rewriting Scheme (SRS)

Be careful with mail forwards, make sure your spam rules are set strictly enough, because your mail server reputation with gmail depends on forwarding mostly non-spam. If you want to do mail forwards to gmail, you need to implement SRS, because gmail on IPv6 is a known broken SPF mail system.

Installing srsd

Create /etc/init.d/srsd with content:

#! /bin/sh

### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: srsd # Required-Start: # Required-Stop: # Should-Start: # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5 # Default-Stop: 0 1 6 # Short-Description: SRS daemon # Description: SRS daemon ### END INIT INFO

set -e

# /etc/init.d/srsd: start and stop the srsd daemon

DAEMON=/usr/bin/srsd USER=Debian-exim SECRETFILE=/etc/srsd.secret PIDFILE=/var/run/srsd.pid SOCKETFILE=/tmp/srsd SRSD_OPTS=“–secretfile ${SECRETFILE}”

test -x $DAEMON || exit 0

. /lib/lsb/init-functions

srsd_start() {

  if start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --background \
      --chuid $USER \
      --pidfile $PIDFILE --make-pidfile \
      --exec $DAEMON \
      -- $SRSD_OPTS
  then
      rc=0
      sleep 1
      if ! kill -0 $(cat $PIDFILE) >/dev/null 2>&1; then
          log_failure_msg "srsd daemon failed to start"
          rc=1
      fi
  else
      rc=1
  fi
  if [ $rc -eq 0 ]; then
      log_end_msg 0
  else
      log_end_msg 1
      rm -f $PIDFILE
  fi

} # srsd_start

case “$1” in

start)
  log_daemon_msg "Starting srsd daemon" "srsd"
  if [ -s $PIDFILE ] && kill -0 $(cat $PIDFILE) >/dev/null 2>&1; then
      log_progress_msg "apparently already running"
      log_end_msg 0
      exit 0
  fi
      srsd_start
  ;;
stop)
  log_daemon_msg "Stopping srsd daemon" "srsd"
  start-stop-daemon --stop --quiet --oknodo --pidfile $PIDFILE
  log_end_msg $?
  rm -f $PIDFILE
  rm -f $SOCKETFILE
  ;;
restart)
  set +e
  log_daemon_msg "Restarting srsd daemon" "srsd"
  if [ -s $PIDFILE ] && kill -0 $(cat $PIDFILE) >/dev/null 2>&1; then
      start-stop-daemon --stop --quiet --oknodo --pidfile $PIDFILE || true
      sleep 1
  else
      log_warning_msg "srsd daemon not running, attempting to start."
          rm -f $PIDFILE
  fi
      srsd_start
  ;;
status)
  status_of_proc -p $PIDFILE "$DAEMON" srsd
  exit $?    # notreached due to set -e
  ;;
*)
  echo "Usage: /etc/init.d/srsd {start|stop|restart|status}"
  exit 1

esac

exit 0 Now make it executable and run at boot time.

~# chmod 755 /etc/init.d/srsd ~# update-rc.d srsd defaults Generate a new random secret:

~# touch /etc/srsd.secret ~# chown Debian-exim /etc/srsd.secret ~# chmod 600 /etc/srsd.secret ~# openssl rand -base64 12 > /etc/srsd.secret Start srsd:

~# service srsd start Implement srsd integration into exim4

Create a file in /etc/exim4/conf.d/router/175_exim4-config_srs with the following content, replace spf-must-die.org to your own SRS rewriting domain:

srs_bounce:

debug_print = "R: srs_bounce for $local_part@$domain"
driver = redirect
allow_fail
allow_defer
domains = spf-must-die.org
local_part_prefix = srs0+ : srs0- : srs0= : srs1+ : srs1- : srs1=
caseful_local_part
address_data = ${readsocket{/tmp/srsd}{REVERSE $local_part_prefix$local_part@$domain}{5s}{\n}{:defer: SRS daemon failure}}
data = ${if match{$address_data}{^ERROR}{:fail: Invalid SRS address}{$address_data}}

srs_forward:

debug_print = "R: srs_forward for $local_part@$domain"
no_verify
senders = ! : ! *@+local_domains
address_data = ${readsocket{/tmp/srsd}\
              {FORWARD $sender_address_local_part@$sender_address_domain spf-must-die.org\n}\
                                      {5s}{\n}{:defer: SRS daemon failure}}
errors_to = ${quote_local_part:${local_part:$address_data}}@${domain:$address_data}
headers_add = "X-SRS: Sender address rewritten from <$sender_address> to <${quote_local_part:${local_part:$address_data}}@${domain:$address_data}> by $primary_hostname."
driver = redirect
repeat_use = false
allow_defer
data = ${quote_local_part:$local_part}@$domain

Regenerate the configuration and restart exim:

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart Testing the SRS forwarding

Create an alias in /etc/aliases to your own mailbox, like this:

user: your@email.address run newaliases to regenerate the hash table

~# newaliases Now try to send email to user@your-mail-server.

You should get it in your mailbox.. look at the message source, you will see the following headers if DKIM and SRS are working (note the d=rewriting domain):

Return-Path: SRS0=eCT+=EL=baanhofman.nl=wilco@spf-must-die.org DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; q=dns/txt; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=spf-must-die.org; s=exim;

      h=Content-Type:Subject:To:MIME-Version:From:Date:Message-ID; bh=Nh/X++v9YcgLCxTBH1lYXZg22kWTVrM8UJ+92lkoOFQ=;
      b=eC+zN8okGJYoNUgllB9TUb9XDmHVIWYwFiIC+m2gcji5zlM+LIDYEz0Z6tAdZt1vUhugefB7DCLos6aiKwP/jShm2Cn4XTY4U+i0WG1wxf3L9wp8bs1bfo1oJLaI8iyNuSGnUDbQspWwJj1toXp2J1nGkV2MeagggaGr7+GLXro=;

X-SRS: Sender address rewritten from wilco@baanhofman.nl to SRS0=eCT+=EL=baanhofman.nl=wilco@spf-must-die.org by mail.bitlair.nl. Enable SPF checking

Enabling SPF checking will break mail forwarding to your domain without SRS on domains that have a fail configured. This will likely block much legitimate e-mail, but if you want to forward to the big players, it's nearly mandatory to do..

To enable inbound SPF checking, add the following to the top of /etc/exim4/conf.d/acl/30_exim4-config_check_rcpt:

CHECK_RCPT_SPF=yes Be careful if you have servers relaying e-mail for you (for instance because your mail server is IPv6 only and want to receive e-mail on IPv4 or as a fallback mailserver). You need to add all addresses of those servers to /etc/exim4/host_local_deny_exceptions.

Testing SPF checking

~$ telnet 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d 25 Trying 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d… Connected to 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d. Escape character is '^]'. 220 mail.bitlair.nl ESMTP Exim 4.80 Sun, 29 Mar 2015 14:37:47 +0200 EHLO mail.bitlair.nl 250-mail.bitlair.nl Hello mail.bitlair.nl [2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d] 250-SIZE 52428800 250-8BITMIME 250-PIPELINING 250-STARTTLS 250 HELP MAIL FROM: spf-test@openspf.net 250 OK RCPT TO: wilco@bitlair.nl 550-[SPF] 2001:41d0:52:300::107c is not allowed to send mail from openspf.net. 550 Please see http://www.openspf.org/Why?scope=mfrom;identity=spf-test@openspf.net;ip=2001:41d0:52:300::107c You should see a 550 reject here when there is an SPF FAIL.

More information on SPF and SRS

https://www.assembla.com/wiki/show/file_sender/Configuring_SRS_with_Exim_(Debian_and_Ubuntu) https://github.com/Exim/exim/wiki/SRS http://www.openspf.org/SPF_Record_Syntax Greylisting

Greylisting is bouncing all email from new senders with a temporary failure code. Implementing this helps a good deal against spammers, at the cost of having to wait for an email from a new sender.

Set up exim

To set up configuration, simply do

~# greylistd-setup-exim4 add ~# service greylistd restart Now, if you want to skip greylisting on dnswl listed hosts, which I recommend: add the following line to the defer and deny sections about greylisting in /etc/exim4/conf.d/acl/30_exim4-config_check_rcpt:

  !dnslists = list.dnswl.org

This will override your local greylistd blacklist and override greylisting for known good senders.

And regenerate the configuration and restart exim4

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart Testing

~$ telnet 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d 25 Trying 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d… Connected to 2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d. Escape character is '^]'. 220 mail.bitlair.nl ESMTP Exim 4.80 Sun, 15 Mar 2015 15:27:34 -0400 EHLO mail.bitlair.nl 250-mail.bitlair.nl Hello mail.bitlair.nl [2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d] 250-SIZE 52428800 250-8BITMIME 250-PIPELINING 250-STARTTLS 250 HELP MAIL FROM: wilco@bitlair.nl 250 OK RCPT TO: wilco@bitlair.nl 451-2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d is not yet authorized to deliver mail from 451 wilco@bitlair.nl to wilco@bitlair.nl. Please try later. 451 is the temporary failure error, this is the desired behaviour.

More information on Greylisting

http://michaelfranzl.com/2013/09/07/setting-up-exim4-mail-transfer-agent-with-spam-filtering-greylisting-and-anti-virus/ DMARC

Be careful with DMARC, as DMARC with p=reject breaks your outbound e-mail even further than SPF. With p=reject, you will no longer be able to use mailing lists or mail forwarders, even those with SRS enabled. DMARC checks the 'From:' header, instead of the envelope sender of the mail, so setting DMARC policies will break all of your forwarding, and will make sure that your mail does not reach its destination. I also recommend that you reject all mail with a DMARC policy set on your mailing lists, because the bounces will cause your members to bounce off the mailing list.

Enable this if the risk of impersonation/identity fraud is greater than the risk of your outgoing emails not arriving at their destination. So, if you are paypal, a bank, linkedin, twitter or facebook.. or using this for internal mail only or to signal that nobody should be sending mail on behalf of a domain. If you do not have full control over your users

It does have useful features, like reporting, so setting a p=none can add at least some value to your mail setup.

Set up a mailbox

Create a user in whatever system you're using. If you're not using LDAP or MySQL or something, this should do:

~# useradd dmarc ~# passwd dmarc Enter new UNIX password: Retype new UNIX password: passwd: password updated successfully When running a remote mailstore without LDAP/MySQL backend, this procedure has to be repeated on the mail store.

Publish a DMARC policy

You can add the following DMARC policy to your domain. p=none is important!

_dmarc IN TXT “v=DMARC1; p=none; rua=dmarc@bitlair.nl; ruf=dmarc@bitlair.nl”

Doing something useful with the reports

This section is TODO. I haven't found a good tool yet.

More information on DMARC

http://lists.dmarc.org/pipermail/dmarc-discuss/2014-April/002445.html http://dmarc.org/overview/ LDAP integration

This assumes you already have an LDAP running. To set one up, please see the spacefed guide.

Schema

Load the qmail LDAP schema:

~# ldapadd -H ldapi:/ -Y EXTERNAL « EOF dn: cn=qmail,cn=schema,cn=config objectClass: olcSchemaConfig cn: {4}qmail olcAttributeTypes: {0}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.1 NAME 'qmailUID' DESC 'UID of the user on the mailsystem' EQUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115 .121.1.27 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {1}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.2 NAME 'qmailGID' DESC 'GID of the user on the mailsystem' EQUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115 .121.1.27 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {2}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.3 NAME 'mailMessageStore' DESC 'Path to the maildir/mbox on the mail system' EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match SUBS TR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26{256} SIN GLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {3}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.4 NAME 'mailAlternateAddress' D ESC 'Secondary (alias) mailaddresses for the same user' EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA 5Match SUBSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1. 26{256} ) olcAttributeTypes: {4}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.5 NAME 'mailQuota' DESC 'The am ount of space the user can use until all further messages get bounced.' SYNTA X 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.44 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {5}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.6 NAME 'mailHost' DESC 'On whic h qmail server the messagestore of this user is located.' EQUALITY caseIgnore IA5Match SUBSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121. 1.26{256} SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {6}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.7 NAME 'mailForwardingAddress' DESC 'Address(es) to forward all incoming messages to.' EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA 5Match SUBSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1. 26{256} ) olcAttributeTypes: {7}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.8 NAME 'deliveryProgramPath' DE SC 'Program to execute for all incoming mails.' EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match SU BSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26{256} ) olcAttributeTypes: {8}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.9 NAME 'qmailDotMode' DESC 'Int erpretation of .qmail files: both, dotonly, ldaponly, ldapwithprog' EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26{32} SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {9}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.10 NAME 'deliveryMode' DESC 'mu lti field entries of: nolocal, noforward, noprogram, reply' EQUALITY caseIgno reIA5Match SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26{32} ) olcAttributeTypes: {10}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.11 NAME 'mailReplyText' DESC ' A reply text for every incoming message' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch SUBSTR case IgnoreSubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{4096} SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {11}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.12 NAME 'accountStatus' DESC ' The status of a user account: active, noaccess, disabled, deleted' EQUALITY c aseIgnoreIA5Match SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {12}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.14 NAME 'qmailAccountPurge' DE SC 'The earliest date when a mailMessageStore will be purged' EQUALITY numeri cStringMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.36 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {13}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.15 NAME 'mailQuotaSize' DESC ' The size of space the user can have until further messages get bounced.' EQUA LITY integerMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {14}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.16 NAME 'mailQuotaCount' DESC 'The number of messages the user can have until further messages get bounced. ' EQUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {15}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.1.17 NAME 'mailSizeMax' DESC 'Th e maximum size of a single messages the user accepts.' EQUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {16}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.1 NAME 'dnmember' DESC 'Group member specified as distinguished name.' EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatch SYNT AX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12 ) olcAttributeTypes: {17}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.2 NAME 'rfc822member' DESC 'Gr oup member specified as normal rf822 email address.' EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Ma tch SUBSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26{ 256} ) olcAttributeTypes: {18}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.3 NAME 'filtermember' DESC 'Gr oup member specified as ldap search filter.' EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match SUBS TR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26{512} ) olcAttributeTypes: {19}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.4 NAME 'senderconfirm' DESC 'S ender to Group has to answer confirmation email.' EQUALITY booleanMatch SYNTA X 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.7 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {20}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.5 NAME 'membersonly' DESC 'Sen der to Group must be group member itself.' EQUALITY booleanMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6 .1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.7 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {21}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.6 NAME 'confirmtext' DESC 'Tex t that will be sent with sender confirmation email.' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{4096} SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {22}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.7 NAME 'dnmoderator' DESC 'Gro up moderator specified as Distinguished name.' EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatc h SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12 ) olcAttributeTypes: {23}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.8 NAME 'rfc822moderator' DESC 'Group moderator specified as normal rfc822 email address.' EQUALITY caseIgno reIA5Match SUBSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.12 1.1.26{256} ) olcAttributeTypes: {24}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.9 NAME 'moderatortext' DESC 'T ext that will be sent with request for moderation email.' EQUALITY caseIgnore Match SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{4 096} SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {25}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.10 NAME 'dnsender' DESC 'Allow ed sender specified as distinguished name.' EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatch S YNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12 ) olcAttributeTypes: {26}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.11 NAME 'rfc822sender' DESC 'A llowed sender specified as normal rf822 email address.' EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA 5Match SUBSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1. 26{256} ) olcAttributeTypes: {27}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.1.12 NAME 'filtersender' DESC 'A llowed sender specified as ldap search filter.' EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match S UBSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26{512} ) olcAttributeTypes: {28}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.4.1.1 NAME 'qladnmanager' DESC EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12 ) olcAttributeTypes: {29}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.4.1.2 NAME 'qlaDomainList' DESC EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match SUBSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6 .1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26{256} ) olcAttributeTypes: {30}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.4.1.3 NAME 'qlaUidPrefix' DESC EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match SUBSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6. 1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26{256} SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {31}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.4.1.4 NAME 'qlaQmailUid' DESC E QUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {32}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.4.1.5 NAME 'qlaQmailGid' DESC E QUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {33}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.4.1.6 NAME 'qlaMailMStorePrefix' D ESC EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match SUBSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26{256} SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {34}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.4.1.7 NAME 'qlaMailQuotaSize' DESC EQUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {35}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.4.1.8 NAME 'qlaMailQuotaCount' DES C EQUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {36}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.4.1.9 NAME 'qlaMailSizeMax' DESC ' ' EQUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 SINGLE-VALUE ) olcAttributeTypes: {37}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.4.1.10 NAME 'qlaMailHostList' DESC '' EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match SUBSTR caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch SYNTAX 1. 3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26{256} ) olcObjectClasses: {0}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.2.2.1 NAME 'qmailUser' DESC 'QMail-L DAP User' SUP top AUXILIARY MUST mail MAY ( uid $ mailMessageStore $ homeDire ctory $ userPassword $ mailAlternateAddress $ qmailUID $ qmailGID $ mailHost $ mailForwardingAddress $ deliveryProgramPath $ qmailDotMode $ deliveryMode $ mailReplyText $ accountStatus $ qmailAccountPurge $ mailQuotaSize $ mailQuot aCount $ mailSizeMax ) ) olcObjectClasses: {1}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.3.2.1 NAME 'qmailGroup' DESC 'QMail- LDAP Group' SUP top AUXILIARY MUST ( mail $ mailAlternateAddress $ mailMessag eStore ) MAY ( dnmember $ rfc822member $ filtermember $ senderconfirm $ membe rsonly $ confirmtext $ dnmoderator $ rfc822moderator $ moderatortext $ dnsend er $ rfc822sender $ filtersender ) ) olcObjectClasses: {2}( 1.3.6.1.4.1.7914.1.4.2.1 NAME 'qldapAdmin' DESC 'QMail- LDAP Subtree Admin' SUP top AUXILIARY MUST ( qlaDnManager $ qlaDomainList $ q laMailMStorePrefix $ qlaMailHostList ) MAY ( qlaUidPrefix $ qlaQmailUid $ qla QmailGid $ qlaMailQuotaSize $ qlaMailQuotaCount $ qlaMailSizeMax ) ) EOF Exim LDAP integration Add the following two routers: /etc/exim4/conf.d/router/450_exim4-config_ldap_aliases: ldap_aliases: driver = redirect allow_fail allow_defer data = ${lookup ldapm{ \ user=cn=exim,ou=System,dc=bitlair,dc=nl \ pass=That would be dumb \ ldaps:ldap.bitlair.nl/dc=bitlair,dc=nl?mailForwardingAddress?sub?\

                (&\
                    (objectclass=qmailUser)\
                    (|\
                        (mail=${quote_ldap:$local_part}@${quote_ldap:$domain})\
                        (mailAlternateAddress=${quote_ldap:$local_part}@${quote_ldap:$domain})\
                    )\
                )} {$value} fail }
file_transport = address_file
pipe_transport = address_pipe

/etc/exim4/conf.d/router/451_exim4-config_ldap_users:

ldap_users:

driver = redirect
allow_fail
allow_defer
data = ${lookup ldapm{ \
                user=cn=exim,ou=System,dc=bitlair,dc=nl \
                pass=Still not that dumb \
                ldaps://ldap.bitlair.nl/dc=bitlair,dc=nl?uid?sub?\
                (&\
                     (objectclass=posixAccount)\
                     (|\
                         (mail=${quote_ldap:$local_part}@${quote_ldap:$domain})\
                         (mailAlternateAddress=${quote_ldap:$local_part}@${quote_ldap:$domain})\
                     )\
                )} {$value} fail }
file_transport = address_file
pipe_transport = address_pipe

/etc/exim4/conf.d/router/454_exim4-config_ldap_accept:

ldap_accept:

driver = accept
condition = ${lookup ldapm{ \
                user=cn=exim,ou=System,dc=bitlair,dc=nl \
                pass=!!Not this stupid!! \
                ldaps://ldap.bitlair.nl/dc=bitlair,dc=nl?uid?sub?\
                (&\
                     (objectclass=posixAccount)\
                     (|\
                         (uid=${quote_ldap:$local_part})\
                     )\
                )} {$value} fail }
transport = lmtp

If you want wildcard domain matching for your domain add the following (Note: to use wildcards in LDAP set the attribute mail or mailAlternateAddress to @domain.tld):

/etc/exim4/conf.d/router/452_exim4-config_ldap_wildcard_aliases:

ldap_wildcard_aliases:

driver = redirect
allow_fail
allow_defer
data = ${lookup ldapm{ \
                user=cn=exim,ou=System,dc=bitlair,dc=nl \
                pass=!!Not this stupid!! \
                ldaps://ldap.bitlair.nl/dc=bitlair,dc=nl?uid?sub?\
                (&\
                    (objectclass=qmailUser)\
                    (|\
                        (mail=@${quote_ldap:$domain})\
                        (mailAlternateAddress=@${quote_ldap:$domain})\
                    )\
                )} {$value} fail }
file_transport = address_file
pipe_transport = address_pipe

/etc/exim4/conf.d/router/453_exim4-config_ldap_wildcard_users:

ldap_wildcard_users:

driver = redirect
allow_fail
allow_defer
data = ${lookup ldapm{ \
                user=cn=exim,ou=System,dc=bitlair,dc=nl \
                pass=!!Not this stupid!! \
                ldaps://ldap.bitlair.nl/dc=bitlair,dc=nl?uid?sub?\
                (&\
                     (objectclass=posixAccount)\
                     (|\
                         (mail=@${quote_ldap:$domain})\
                         (mailAlternateAddress=@${quote_ldap:$domain})\
                     )\
                )} {$value} fail }
file_transport = address_file
pipe_transport = address_pipe

Testing Exim LDAP integration

To run a lookup:

~# exim -bt -d+lookup wilco@bitlair.nl To assemble to proper query:

~# exim -be

${lookup ldapm{ user=bla pass=bla ldaps:your.ldap.server/dc=your,dc=basedn?mail?sub?mail=wilco@bitlair.nl}} wilco@bitlair.nl Should give you back your email address. Saslauthd LDAP integration Change the mechanisms to ldap in /etc/default/saslauthd MECHANISMS=“ldap” Write up a configuration file like this in /etc/saslauthd.conf (use your own LDAP settings): ldap_bind_dn: cn=exim,ou=System,dc=bitlair,dc=nl ldap_bind_pw: Your password ldap_servers: ldaps:ldap.bitlair.nl/

ldap_search_base: dc=bitlair,dc=nl ldap_filter: (&(objectclass=posixAccount)(uid=%u)) Restart saslauthd.

~# service saslauthd restart Testing saslauthd LDAP integration

~# testsaslauthd -u johndoe -p secret Should give back something like:

0: OK “Success.” Next up is testing SASL exim, see the SASL integration section for exim, above here.

More information on LDAP integration

https://spacefed.net/wiki/index.php/Howto/Spacenet/Setup_LDAP http://blog.toxa.de/archives/493 http://www.slideshare.net/jpmens/exim-and-ldap-1829032 LMTP delivery

If you want to deliver your e-mail via LMTP, just set dc_localdelivery='lmtp' in update-exim4.conf.conf. Then follow either the local or remote delivery section of this guide. Using the remote delivery section has the advantage of allowing full disk crypto on the mail store. You cannot do this on the MTA, because it needs to power on automatically to accept new emails instantly.

Local delivery

For local delivery to dovecot, add this section in /etc/exim4/conf.d/transport/40-exim4_config-lmtp (create it if it does not exist):

lmtp:

      driver = lmtp
      socket = /var/run/dovecot/lmtp
      #maximum number of deliveries per batch, default 1
      batch_max = 200

For remote delivery with 3 week hold function via LMTP

Setting up remote delivery via LMTP makes sense, because you can have your mail store encrypted and still receive new emails, because the MTA will keep accepting mails. To set this up, update exim's retry policy for ::1, so that the MTA will hold on to temporarily failed e-mail deliveries for 3 weeks and will retry every 5 minutes.

Add the following in /etc/exim4/conf.d/retry/30_exim4-config:

::::1 * F,3w,5m In transport/40-exim4-config-lmtp, add/modify the lmtp section to match this (create the file if it does not exist):

lmtp:

driver = smtp
protocol = lmtp
port = 24
hosts = ::::1
allow_localhost
return_path_add

This will deliver to localhost on port 24. If you want to use a mail store with full disk crypto seperate from your Mail Transfer Agent, configure a secure tunnel from local port 24 to the LDA. That's because LMTP with crypto is not supported properly by dovecot.. and exim4 does not support delivery to TLS-on-connect secure tunnels.. so.. we will configure a pair of stunnels.

Regenerate the configuration and restart exim:

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart Dovecot doesn't support TLS for LMTP, so install stunnel4 using apt-get install stunnel4 on both the mailstore and the MTA machine. To properly do this, first set up a CA on the mail store with a client cert for all of your MTAs.

The easiest way to set up a CA (use a descriptive name as common name, e.g. My LMTP client CA):

~$ mkdir CA ~$ cd CA ~$ /usr/lib/ssl/misc/CA.pl -newca ~$ /usr/lib/ssl/misc/CA.pl -newreq-nodes ~$ /usr/lib/ssl/misc/CA.pl -signreq This will result in a newcert.pem and newkey.pem which need to be transferred to the MTA in /etc/ssl/lmtpcert.pem and /etc/ssl/private/lmtpkey.pem, and in demoCA/cacert.pem is the CA you just created, copy that to /etc/ssl/lmtpca.pem.

On the MTA, create a /etc/stunnel/lmtp.conf, with the following contents:

setuid = stunnel4 setgid = stunnel4 pid = /var/run/stunnel4/lmtp.pid debug = 7 output = /var/log/stunnel4/stunnel.log verify = 2 CAfile = /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt cert = /etc/ssl/lmtpcert.pem key = /etc/ssl/private/lmtpkey.pem

options = SINGLE_ECDH_USE options = SINGLE_DH_USE

[lmtp] client = yes accept = ::1:24 connect = imap.bitlair.nl:24

; vim:ft=dosini The other end (in this case dovecot), should have a similar stunnel4 setup. Note that the IMAP certificate is generated in the dovecot section (further down).

Create a /etc/stunnel/lmtp.conf, with the following contents:

setuid = stunnel4 setgid = stunnel4 pid = /var/run/stunnel4/lmtp.pid debug = 7 output = /var/log/stunnel4/stunnel.log

cert = /etc/ssl/imap.bitlair.nl-cert.pem key = /etc/ssl/private/imap.bitlair.nl-key.pem CAfile = /etc/ssl/lmtpca.pem verify = 2

options = SINGLE_ECDH_USE options = SINGLE_DH_USE

[lmtp] accept = :::24 connect = /var/run/dovecot/lmtp

; vim:ft=dosini Now on both the MTA and the mail store, start the stunnel services.

~# service stunnel4 start Testing LMTP delivery

To test if LMTP works, you need to have dovecot set up already. Send yourself an e-mail, see if it arrives.

More information on LMTP

http://www.exim.org/exim-html-current/doc/html/spec_html/ch-the_lmtp_transport.html http://wiki2.dovecot.org/LMTP https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2033.txt Mailman

Mailman is a mailing list server. Setting this up will enable you to run both public and private, archived mailing lists, compatible with DKIM and SPF. Note that DMARC policies interfere with mailing lists, so either reject mail from DMARC p=reject domains or Munge the from address in the mails..

You will need a mailing list subdomain, for example list.bitlair.nl. This way, Exim will route messages through a pipe if it's destined for a mailing list.

Getting a certificate

Generate a certificate for list.your.domain and get it signed at a CA.

~# openssl req -sha256 -days 3650 -nodes -new -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout /etc/ssl/private/list.bitlair.nl-key.pem -out /etc/ssl/list.bitlair.nl-csr.pem Input your location and contact information. At the CN field, input your mail hostname (list.bitlair.nl in my case). Do not enter a challenge password.

Submit the -csr.pem file to a CA, store the certificate you get signed from the CA in /etc/ssl/list.your.domain-cert.pem.

Setting up Mailman

First thing is to create a mailman mailing list.

~# newlist mailman Enter the email of the person running the list: your@email.address Initial mailman password: Set the URL and mailing list domain in /etc/mailman/mm_cfg.py:

#————————————————————- # Default domain for email addresses of newly created MLs DEFAULT_EMAIL_HOST = 'list.bitlair.nl' #————————————————————- # Default host for web interface of newly created MLs DEFAULT_URL_HOST = 'list.bitlair.nl' Add the following lines near the end in /etc/mailman/mm_cfg.py to streamline message sending.

# Max recipients for each message SMTP_MAX_RCPTS = 1000 # Max messages sent in each SMTP connection SMTP_MAX_SESSIONS_PER_CONNECTION = 1 Configuring Exim for mailman

Unfortunately, mailman 2.1 does not support LMTP yet. It requires a bit more configuration to get the mailman transport going. Mailman 2.2 (development branch now deprecated in favour of 3.0) does have it, so once mailman 3 arrives, upgrade to a more simple configuration set-up than this.

Configure the mailman exim settings in /etc/exim4/conf.d/main/05_exim4-config_mailman_options:

# Mailman macro definitions

# Home dir for the Mailman installation MM_HOME=/var/lib/mailman

# User and group for Mailman MM_UID=list MM_GID=list

# # Domains that your lists are in - colon separated list # you may wish to add these into local_domains as well domainlist mm_domains=list.bitlair.nl

# The path of the Mailman mail wrapper script MM_WRAP=MM_HOME/mail/mailman # # The path of the list config file (used as a required file when # verifying list addresses) MM_LISTCHK=MM_HOME/lists/${lc::$local_part}/config.pck Configure the mailman router in /etc/exim4/conf.d/router/449_exim4-config_mailman_router:

mailman_router:

driver = accept
domains = +mm_domains
require_files = MM_LISTCHK
local_part_suffix_optional
local_part_suffix = -admin : \
  -bounces   : -bounces+*  : \
  -confirm   : -confirm+*  : \
  -join      : -leave      : \
  -owner     : -request    : \
  -subscribe : -unsubscribe
transport = mailman_transport

Configure the mailman transport in /etc/exim4/conf.d/transport/40_exim4-config_mailman_pipe:

mailman_transport:

driver  = pipe
command = MM_WRAP \
        '${if def:local_part_suffix \
              {${sg{$local_part_suffix}{-(\\w+)(\\+.*)?}{\$1}}} \
              {post}}' \
        $local_part
current_directory = MM_HOME
home_directory    = MM_HOME
user              = MM_UID
group             = MM_GID

Configure exim to accept mail for list.yourdomain.tld in /etc/exim4/update-exim4.conf.conf, by adding it to the dc_other_hostnames list. This is a semicolon-separated list.

dc_other_hostnames='bitlair.nl;spf-must-die.org;list.bitlair.nl' Configuring apache for mailman

Create a site configuration in /etc/apache2/sites-available/list.bitlair.nl:

<VirtualHost *:443>

      ServerName list.bitlair.nl
      ServerAdmin your@email.address
      DocumentRoot /var/www/
SSLEngine on
SSLCertificateFile    /etc/ssl/list.bitlair.nl-cert.pem
SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/ssl/private/list.bitlair.nl-key.pem
      SSLCertificateChainFile /etc/ssl/sub.class2.server.sha2.ca.pem
      SSLProtocol all -SSLv2 -SSLv3
      SSLHonorCipherOrder on
      SSLCipherSuite "EECDH+ECDSA+AESGCM EECDH+aRSA+AESGCM EECDH+ECDSA+SHA384 \
            EECDH+ECDSA+SHA256 EECDH+aRSA+SHA384 EECDH+aRSA+SHA256 \
            EECDH !aNULL !eNULL !LOW !3DES !MD5 !EXP !PSK !SRP !DSS"
      
      <Directory /var/www/>
              Options Indexes FollowSymLinks MultiViews
              AllowOverride None
              Order allow,deny
              allow from all
              # This directive allows us to have apache2's default start page
              # in /apache2-default/, but still have / go to the right place
              RedirectMatch ^/$ /cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo
      </Directory>
      ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /usr/lib/cgi-bin/
      <Directory "/usr/lib/cgi-bin">
              AllowOverride None
              Options +ExecCGI -MultiViews +SymLinksIfOwnerMatch
              Order allow,deny
              Allow from all
      </Directory>
Alias /pipermail /var/lib/mailman/archives/public
Alias /images/mailman /usr/share/images/mailman
<Directory /var/lib/mailman/archives/public>
    DirectoryIndex index.html
</Directory>

</VirtualHost> Of course, replace list.bitlair.nl with your own list subdomain.

Give permission to the web user to modify list data by adding www-data to the group list.

~# usermod -a -G list www-data Enable the site and ssl module

~# a2enmod ssl ~# a2ensite list.bitlair.nl Reload apache's configuration gracefully

~# apache2ctl graceful Setting up mailing lists

TODO, guided tour:

Set DMARC-policies! Testing Mailman

Browse to your list url, e.g. https://list.bitlair.nl. Create a mailing list and subscribe yourself and a test mail address. Play around with the settings until you're comfortable with it.

To verify your SSL-setup on your URL:

~# openssl s_client -connect list.bitlair.nl:443 -verify 5 -CAfile /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt … >snip< …

  Verify return code: 0 (ok)

Should give you the Verify return code 0 (ok) again, any other status code means there is something wrong with your certificate.

More information about mailman

http://wiki.list.org/DEV/DMARC http://www.exim.org/howto/mailman21.html https://www.debian-administration.org/article/617/Mailman_and_Exim4 https://www.gnu.org/software/mailman/ Dovecot

Getting a certificate

Generate a certificate for imap.your.domain and get it signed at a CA.

~# openssl req -sha256 -days 3650 -nodes -new -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout /etc/ssl/private/imap.bitlair.nl-key.pem -out /etc/ssl/imap.bitlair.nl-csr.pem Input your location and contact information. At the CN field, input your mail hostname (imap.bitlair.nl in my case). Do not enter a challenge password.

Submit the -csr.pem file to a CA, store the certificate you get signed from the CA in /etc/ssl/imap.your.domain-cert.pem.

Setting up dovecot

Configuring dovecot should be pretty straightforward. The first step is to disable plain IMAP.

In /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-master.conf set port = 0 for both imap and pop3 and enable imaps. Only use the TLS-protected ports.

inet_listener imap {
        port = 0
}
inet_listener imaps {
  port = 993
  ssl = yes
}

In /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-ssl.conf, disable SSLv3, mandate TLS and configure your certificates:

ssl = required ssl_cert = </etc/ssl/imap.bitlair.nl-cert.pem ssl_key = </etc/dovecot/private/imap.bitlair.nl-key.pem ssl_protocols = !SSLv2 !SSLv3 Set the mail location where you want your mail delivered in /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-mail.conf

mail_location = mdbox:/srv/mail/%n If you want mailbox sharing between users, dovecot needs to setuid all mailboxes with the same user, so set this in /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-mail.conf

mail_uid = vmail mail_gid = vmail Enable the lmtp service in /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-master.conf and override the user, so LMTP doesn't run as root.

service lmtp {

user = vmail
unix_listener lmtp {
}

} Set the auth_username_format to %n in /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-auth.conf, to make sure mail sent to username@domain via LMTP is delivered to the lower case username.

auth_username_format = %Ln Set the autocreate setting properly for the Local Delivery Agent in /etc/dovecot/conf.d/15-lda.conf:

lda_mailbox_autocreate = yes Create the vmail user and create the mail store

~# useradd –system vmail ~# mkdir -m 0700 /srv/mail ~# chown vmail: /srv/mail To set up sieve filters, uncomment the listen section in /etc/dovecot/conf.d/20-managesieve.conf:

service managesieve-login {

inet_listener sieve {
  port = 4190
}

}

Now we are going to change a few things in order to get sieve working properly.

First open and comment out the following in “/etc/dovecot/conf.d/90-sieve.conf”:

# sieve = ~/.dovecot.sieve # sieve_dir = ~/sieve

the reason we need to comment out the above entries is because a users home directory for mail is “/srv/mail/%n” (%n = Username)and what the default actually says is check “/home/%n” for the sieve script which will fail due to the fact the vmail user cannot access that directory so we are going to move sieve configs to the users mailbox directory.

Now in the same file “/etc/dovecot/conf.d/90-sieve.conf” add the following just under “plugin {”:

  sieve = /srv/mail/%n/.dovecot.sieve
  sieve_global_path = /etc/dovecot/sieve/default.sieve
  sieve_dir = /srv/mail/%n
  sieve_global_dir = /etc/dovecot/sieve/global/

We need to create the default directories next which will give us global rules for all users.

mkdir -p /etc/dovecot/sieve/global chown vmail:vmail -R /etc/dovecot/sieve

Now we have the directories for global rules for all users.

Now we are going to restart dovecot using the following command to update the configuration of dovecot:

## service dovecot restart

In order to test this lets add a test global rule by editing “/etc/dovecot/sieve/default.sieve” and adding the following:

require [“fileinto”]; # rule:[SPAM] if header :contains “X-Spam-Flag” “YES” {

      fileinto "Junk";

} # rule:[SPAM2] elsif header :matches “Subject” [“*money*”,“*Viagra*”,“Cialis”] {

      fileinto "Junk";

}

now to test it send yourself a mail with money in the subject and see if it gets filed into Junk. If it does not work try sending it from an external mailserver and see if it works then.

Now if you want to add a rule that applies only to a single user then make add the same rule to the file “/srv/mail/username/.dovecot.sieve” and make sure the file is owned and writeable by the vmail user.

that's everything you need to know about sieve if an error occurs /var/log/mail.log will tell you and a log file will be created in the same directory as the sieve rule when an issue with the rule occurs.

If you are not using LDAP then the following applies to you:

And also, if you're not going to use LDAP, set the following overrides in /etc/dovecot/conf.d/auth-system.conf.ext

userdb {

# <doc/wiki/AuthDatabase.Passwd.txt>
driver = passwd
# [blocking=no]
#args =
# Override fields from passwd
override_fields = uid=vmail gid=vmail

}

Now you're basically done. If you want LDAP integration, continue with the next section.

~# service dovecot restart Integrating LDAP into dovecot

Make sure dovecot-ldap is installed. Change /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-auth.conf to include auth-ldap.conf.ext and not include auth-system.conf.ext

Open /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-auth.conf and change your overrides in the userdb section:

userdb {

driver = ldap
args = /etc/dovecot/dovecot-ldap.conf.ext
# Default fields can be used to specify defaults that LDAP may override
#default_fields = home=/home/virtual/%u
# Override fields that are always set to this value, regardless of what LDAP returns
override_fields = uid=vmail gid=vmail

}

Now open /etc/dovecot/dovecot-ldap.conf.ext, configure your exim search user, base dn and search filter.

You should be done now.

~# service dovecot restart Testing

Testing logins:

~$ openssl s_client -connect localhost:993 * OK [CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 LITERAL+ SASL-IR LOGIN-REFERRALS ID ENABLE IDLE AUTH=PLAIN] Dovecot ready. 1 LOGIN username password 1 OK [CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 LITERAL+ SASL-IR LOGIN-REFERRALS ID ENABLE IDLE SORT SORT=DISPLAY THREAD=REFERENCES THREAD=REFS MULTIAPPEND UNSELECT CHILDREN NAMESPACE UIDPLUS LIST-EXTENDED I18NLEVEL=1 CONDSTORE QRESYNC ESEARCH ESORT SEARCHRES WITHIN CONTEXT=SEARCH LIST-STATUS SPECIAL-USE] Logged in 2 LOGOUT * BYE Logging out 2 OK Logout completed. Testing your TLS configuration:

~$ openssl s_client -connect localhost:993 -CAfile /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt -verify 5

… →snip certificate stuff← …

  Verify return code: 0 (ok)

— * OK [CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 LITERAL+ SASL-IR LOGIN-REFERRALS ID ENABLE IDLE AUTH=PLAIN] Dovecot ready. You should see return code: 0 (ok), any other return code is bad.

ACL and Shared mailboxs (allowing delegated mailboxes)

To allow users to share mailboxes with each other add the following configuration changes.

Open /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-mail.conf and uncomment the following:

namespace inbox {

type = private
separator = / 
#prefix = 
#location =
inbox = yes
#hidden = no
#list = yes
#subscriptions = yes

} Make sure that following option is set in the /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-mail.conf

protocol imap {

# Space separated list of plugins to load for all services. Plugins specific to # IMAP, LDA, etc. are added to this list in their own .conf files. mail_plugins = acl

} And add the following to the end of the same file (/etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-mail.conf):

namespace {

type = shared
separator = /
prefix = shared/%%n/
location = mdbox:/srv/mail/%%n
subscriptions = yes
list = children

}

In the file /etc/dovecot/conf.d/20-imap.conf make sure the following changes are made:

protocol imap {

# Space separated list of plugins to load (default is global mail_plugins).
mail_plugins = $mail_plugins imap_acl
# Maximum number of IMAP connections allowed for a user from each IP address.
# NOTE: The username is compared case-sensitively.
#mail_max_userip_connections = 10

} And finally add the following to the /etc/dovecot/conf.d/90-acl.conf:

plugin {

 #acl = vfile:/etc/dovecot/global-acls:cache_secs=300
 acl = vfile
 #acl_shared_dict = file:/etc/dovecot/shared-mailboxes.db

}

# To let users LIST mailboxes shared by other users, Dovecot needs a # shared mailbox dictionary. For example: plugin {

#acl_shared_dict = file:/var/lib/dovecot/shared-mailboxes
acl_shared_dict = file:/srv/mail/shared-mailboxes.db

} Hardening

Exim4 rate limiting

First, we need to make sure only 1 message is sent per connection, we also want to limit the number of simultaneous connections. For most small mail providers, allowing 20 simulataneous connections should be plenty.

Create a file in /etc/exim4/conf.d/main/04_ratelimiting with contents:

smtp_accept_max_per_connection = 1 smtp_accept_max_per_host = 1 smtp_accept_max = 20 acl_smtp_connect = acl_check_connect And create the ACL file /etc/exim4/conf.d/acl/50_exim4-connectdelay with contents:

acl_check_connect:

accept
  delay = 3s

And regenerate the configuration and restart exim4

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart Testing the banner delay

~$ telnet ::1 25 Trying ::1… Connected to ::1. Escape character is '^]'. EHLO boe 554 SMTP synchronization error Connection closed by foreign host. The SMTP banner should only appear after 3 seconds of not giving any inputs.

Rate limiting hosts with iptables

Make sure you input something like this into your firewall. The mask here implies throttling new connections for entire /64s:

ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 25 -m state –state NEW -m recent –set –name smtpthrottle –mask ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 25 -m state –state NEW -m recent –update –name smtpthrottle –seconds 60 –hitcount 6 –mask ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: -j DROP For legacy IP:

iptables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 25 -m state –state NEW -m recent –set –name smtpthrottle iptables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 25 -m state –state NEW -m recent –update –name smtpthrottle –seconds 60 –hitcount 6 -j DROP This makes sure that nobody can connect more than 6 times per minute to your SMTP server. I also have a port scan wrapper which auto-blacklists bad people, so my firewall looks like this in my executable /etc/network/if-pre-up.d/ip6tables:

#!/bin/bash (ip6tables -F ip6tables -X ipset flush local6 ipset destroy local6 )&>/dev/null

ipset create local6 hash:net hashsize 1024 family inet6 ipset add local6 2001:470:7b66::/48 ipset add local6 fe80::/16 ipset add local6 ::1/128

ip6tables -A INPUT -m state –state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT ip6tables -A INPUT -m set –match-set local6 src -j ACCEPT ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp -m state –state NEW -m recent –rcheck –name badpeople –seconds 3600 –hitcount 5 –mask ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: -j DROP ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 25 -m state –state NEW -m recent –set –name smtpthrottle –mask ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 25 -m state –state NEW -m recent –update –name smtpthrottle –seconds 60 –hitcount 6 –mask ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: -j DROP ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 22 -m state –state NEW -m recent –set –name sshthrottle –mask ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 22 -m state –state NEW -m recent –update –name sshthrottle –seconds 3600 –hitcount 5 –mask ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: -j DROP ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 22 -j ACCEPT ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 25 -j ACCEPT ip6tables -A INPUT -p icmpv6 \! –icmpv6-type redirect -j ACCEPT ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 1:21 -m state –state NEW -m recent –set –name badpeople –mask ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 1:21 -m state –state NEW -m recent –update –name badpeople –seconds 3600 –hitcount 5 –mask ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: -j DROP ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 26:1023 -m state –state NEW -m recent –set –name badpeople –mask ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: ip6tables -A INPUT -p tcp –dport 26:1023 -m state –state NEW -m recent –update –name badpeople –seconds 3600 –hitcount 5 –mask ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:: -j DROP ip6tables -A INPUT -j DROP More information on hardening

http://michaelfranzl.com/2013/09/07/setting-up-exim4-mail-transfer-agent-with-spam-filtering-greylisting-and-anti-virus/ http://techsadmin.blogspot.nl/2012/11/exim-hardening-practices.html Troubleshooting

In general, look at the log files /var/log/exim4/mainlog and /var/log/exim4/paniclog. For Clamav, look at /var/log/clamav/clamav.log. For spamd, check out the main syslog in /var/log/syslog.

Most issues are caused by forgetting to regenerate the configuration, try regenerating and restarting exim4 to see if your problem persists.

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart Forgetting to add the clamav user to the exim group

2015-03-15 14:13:46 1YXD2f-0000D2-BL malware acl condition: clamd: ClamAV

 returned: /var/spool/exim4/scan/1YXD2f-0000D2-BL/1YXD2f-0000D2-BL.eml: lstat() failed: Permission denied. ERROR

Can be fixed with:

~# usermod -a -G Debian-exim clamav Not using wheezy-updates or jessie-updates repository

WARNING: Your ClamAV installation is OUTDATED! WARNING: Local version: 0.98.5 Recommended version: 0.98.6 DON'T PANIC! Read http://www.clamav.net/support/faq Can be fixed by adding the -updates repository to /etc/apt/sources.list, for wheezy:

deb http://ftp.debian.org/debian wheezy-updates main For Debian jessie:

deb http://ftp.debian.org/debian jessie-updates main Forgetting to add the exim to sasl group

You'll see something like this in the mainlog:

2015-03-15 16:01:54 plain_saslauthd_server authenticator failed for (mail.bitlair.nl) [2a02:2ca0:aaa::a843:657d]:

  435 Unable to authenticate at present (set_id=wilco): cannot connect to saslauthd daemon at /var/run/saslauthd/mux: Permission denied

And swaks will tell you:

<~* 435 Unable to authenticate at present Running the following will fix it:

~# usermod -a -G sasl Debian-exim ~# service exim4 restart auth-ldap and dovecot-ldap.conf files missing

You cannot find the auth-ldap files in the /etc/dovecot/conf.d or the dovecot-ldap file in /etc/dovecot.

Can be fixed with:

~# apt-get install dovecot-ldap Forgetting to install dovecot-lmtpd

You've enabled the lmtp service, but when starting dovecot, the UNIX socket /var/run/dovecot/lmtp is not created.

Exim will give messages like:

2015-03-31 09:43:57 1Ycqq4-0004Q8-NP == wilco@bitlair.nl root@bitlair.nl R=ldap_users T=lmtp defer (-1):

  Failed to connect to socket /var/run/dovecot/lmtp for lmtp transport: No such file or directory

Can be fixed with:

~# apt-get install dovecot-lmtpd Spamassassin hits rule URIBL_BLOCKED on every mail message

You keep getting spamassassin URIBL_BLOCKED on every message.. this is likely caused by using large caching DNS servers.

Set up your own DNS server on your box to fix it.

~# apt-get install bind9 Test it with:

~$ host www.google.nl ::1 If it works, change your resolv.conf

~# echo nameserver ::1 > /etc/resolv.conf You keep getting 550 relay not permitted for local email addresses

You most likely forgot to include your domain as a local domain.

You can change this in /etc/exim4/update-exim4.conf.conf. There is a semicolon-separated list of dc_other_hostnames. These are the hostnames to accept mail for.

After adding your domains to this file, run

~# update-exim4.conf ~# service exim4 restart Unable to verify the first certificate

Verify return code: 21 (unable to verify the first certificate) This means you forgot to append the chain file to the certificate. See the TLS section on appending the certificate chain and check the certificate chain you see in the s_client output.

Verify that there are two certificates in /etc/ssl/your-mailserver-cert.pem. The first one should be your mail certificate and the second one should be the chain file.

TLS not available and Error while reading file message in exim4.log

You will get output from s_client like:

139736697235088:error:140770FC:SSL routines:SSL23_GET_SERVER_HELLO:unknown protocol:s23_clnt.c:774: Or “TLS is currently unavailable” when issueing the STARTTLS command in SMTP.

You'll see this message in the log:

2015-04-12 18:31:50 TLS error on connection from localhost (openssl.client.net) [127.0.0.1] (cert/key setup: cert=/etc/ssl/mail.bitlair.nl-cert.pem key=/etc/ssl/private/mail.bitlair.nl-key.pem): Error while reading file. This can be fixed by setting the access rights appropriately (see the TLS section). Don't forget to restart exim4! The problem may also be caused by not restarting exim4 adding Debian-exim to the ssl-cert group. It may also be caused by the certificates being missing or a typo in the location in the configuration file. After editing, regenerate the configuration file!

Keep getting 421 Unexpected failure after RCPT TO

Check your exim4 mainlog, it may say something like “no host name found for IP address xxxx:xxx:xxx::xxx. Your mail server will only accept mail if you have a valid reverse DNS entry.

DKIM signatures are not added

Add some debugging output to your mainlog by setting this debug_print in /etc/exim4/conf.d/transport/30_exim4-config_remote_smtp:

remote_smtp:

debug_print = "T: remote_smtp for $local_part@$domain, DKIM domain DKIM_DOMAIN DKIM_FILE"

Now, stop exim4:

~# service exim4 stop Now, start exim4 in transport debugging mode in a new terminal:

~# exim -bd -d+transport Now you can send yourself another email and you should see messages about which DKIM domain and key it is going to use in the debugging output

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