Simple postfix relay host ("postfix null client") for your Docker containers. Based on Alpine Linux.
- Table of contents
- Description
- TL;DR
- Updates
- Architectures
- Configuration options
- General options
- Postfix-specific options
- RELAYHOST, RELAYHOST_USERNAME and RELAYHOST_PASSWORD
- POSTFIX_smtp_tls_security_level
- XOAUTH2_CLIENT_ID, XOAUTH2_SECRET, XOAUTH2_INITIAL_ACCESS_TOKEN, XOAUTH2_INITIAL_REFRESH_TOKEN and XOAUTH2_TOKEN_ENDPOINT
- MASQUERADED_DOMAINS
- SMTP_HEADER_CHECKS
- POSTFIX_myhostname
- POSTFIX_mynetworks
- POSTFIX_message_size_limit
- Overriding specific postfix settings
- ANONYMIZE_EMAILS
- SKIP_ROOT_SPOOL_CHOWN
- DKIM / DomainKeys
- Docker Secrets
- Helm chart
- Extending the image
- Security
- Quick how-tos
- Similar projects
- License check
This image allows you to run POSTFIX internally inside your docker cloud/swarm installation to centralise outgoing email sending. The embedded postfix enables you to either send messages directly or relay them to your company's main server.
This is a server side POSTFIX image, geared towards emails that need to be sent from your applications. That's why this postfix configuration does not support username / password login or similar client-side security features.
IF YOU WANT TO SET UP AND MANAGE A POSTFIX INSTALLATION FOR END USERS, THIS IMAGE IS NOT FOR YOU. If you need it to manage your application's outgoing queue, read on.
To run the container, do the following:
docker run --rm --name postfix -e "ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS=example.com" -p 1587:587 boky/postfix
or
helm repo add bokysan https://bokysan.github.io/docker-postfix/
helm upgrade --install --set persistence.enabled=false --set config.general.ALLOW_EMPTY_SENDER_DOMAINS=1 mail bokysan/mail
You can also find this image at ArtifactHub.
You can now send emails by using localhost:1587
(on Docker) as your SMTP server address. Note that if you haven't configured your domain
to allow sending from this IP/server/nameblock, your emails will most likely be regarded as spam.
All standard caveats of configuring the SMTP server apply:
- MAKE SURE YOUR OUTGOING PORT 25 IS NOT BLOCKED.
- You'll most likely need to at least set up SPF records (see also openspf) and/or DKIM.
- If using DKIM (below), make sure to add DKIM keys to your domain's DNS entries.
- You'll most likely need to set up PTR records as well to prevent your mails going to spam.
If you don't know what any of the above means, get some help. Google is your friend. It's also worth noting that it's pretty difficult to host a SMTP server on a dynamic IP address.
Please note that the image uses the submission (587) port by default. Port 25 is not exposed on purpose, as it's regularly blocked by ISPs, already occupied by other services, and in general should only be used for server-to-server communication.
There's a potentially breaking change introduced now in v3.0.0
: Oracle has changed the license of BerkleyDB to AGPL-3.0, making it
unsuitable to link to packages with GPL-incompatible licenses. As a result Alpine (on which this image is based)
has deprecated BerkleyDB throughout the image:
Support for Postfix
hash
andbtree
databases has been removed.lmdb
is the recommended replacement. Before upgrading, all tables in/etc/postfix/main.cf
usinghash
andbtree
must be changed to a supported alternative. See the Postfix lookup table documentation for more information.
While this should not affect most of the users (/etc/postfix/main.cf
is managed by this image), there might be use cases where
people have their own configuration which relies on hash
and btree
databases. To avoid braking live systems, the version of this
image has been updated to v3.0.0
.
Available for all your favourite architectures. Run in your server cluster. Run it on your Raspberry Pi 4. Run it on your acient Pentium or an old Beaglebone. The following architectures are supported: linux/386
, linux/amd64
, linux/arm/v6
, linux/arm/v7
, linux/arm64
and linux/ppc64le
.
TZ
= The timezone for the image, e.g.Europe/Amsterdam
FORCE_COLOR
= Set to1
to force color output (otherwise auto-detected)INBOUND_DEBUGGING
= Set to1
to enable detailed debugging in the logsALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS
= domains which are allowed to send email via this serverALLOW_EMPTY_SENDER_DOMAINS
= if value is set (i.e:true
),ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS
can be unsetLOG_FORMAT
= Set your log format (JSON or plain)
Enable additional debugging for any connection coming from POSTFIX_mynetworks
. Set to a non-empty string (usually 1
or yes
) to enable debugging.
Due to in-built spam protection in Postfix you will need to specify sender domains -- the domains you are using to send your emails from, otherwise Postfix will refuse to start.
Example:
docker run --rm --name postfix -e "ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS=example.com example.org" -p 1587:587 boky/postfix
If you want to set the restrictions on the recipient and not on the sender (anyone can send mails but just to a single domain
for instance), set ALLOW_EMPTY_SENDER_DOMAINS
to a non-empty value (e.g. true
) and ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS
to an empty
string. Then extend this image through custom scripts to configure Postfix further.
The image will by default output logs in human-readable (plain
) format. If you are deploying the image to Kubernetes, it might
be worth chaging the output format to json
as it's more easily parsable by tools such as Prometheus.
To change the log format, set the (unsurprisingly named) variable LOG_FORMAT=json
.
RELAYHOST
= Host that relays your messagesSASL_RELAYHOST
= (optional) Relay Host referenced in thesasl_passwd
file. Defaults to the value ofRELAYHOST
RELAYHOST_USERNAME
= An (optional) username for the relay serverRELAYHOST_PASSWORD
= An (optional) login password for the relay serverRELAYHOST_PASSWORD_FILE
= An (optional) file containing the login password for the relay server. Mutually exclusive with the previous option.POSTFIX_smtp_tls_security_level
= Relay host TLS connection levelXOAUTH2_CLIENT_ID
= OAuth2 client id used when configured as a relayhost.XOAUTH2_SECRET
= OAuth2 secret used when configured as a relayhost.XOAUTH2_INITIAL_ACCESS_TOKEN
= Initial OAuth2 access token.XOAUTH2_INITIAL_REFRESH_TOKEN
= Initial OAuth2 refresh token.XOAUTH2_TOKEN_ENDPOINT
= Token endpoint provided four your XOAUTH App , GMail use : https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/tokenSMTPD_SASL_USERS
= Users allow to send mail (ex: user1:pass1,user2:pass2,...)MASQUERADED_DOMAINS
= domains where you want to masquerade internal hostsSMTP_HEADER_CHECKS
= Set to1
to enable header checks of to a location of the file for header checksPOSTFIX_myhostname
= Set the name of this postfix serverPOSTFIX_mynetworks
= Allow sending mails only from specific networks ( default127.0.0.0/8,10.0.0.0/8,172.16.0.0/12,192.168.0.0/16
)POSTFIX_message_size_limit
= The maximum size of the messsage, in bytes, by default it's unlimitedPOSTFIX_<any_postfix_setting>
= provide any additional postfix setting
Postfix will try to deliver emails directly to the target server. If you are behind a firewall, or inside a corporation you will most likely have a dedicated outgoing mail server. By setting this option, you will instruct postfix to relay (hence the name) all incoming emails to the target server for actual delivery.
Example:
docker run --rm --name postfix -e RELAYHOST=192.168.115.215 -p 1587:587 boky/postfix
You may optionally specifiy a relay port, e.g.:
docker run --rm --name postfix -e RELAYHOST=192.168.115.215:587 -p 1587:587 boky/postfix
Or an IPv6 address, e.g.:
docker run --rm --name postfix -e 'RELAYHOST=[2001:db8::1]:587' -p 1587:587 boky/postfix
If your end server requires you to authenticate with username/password, add them also:
docker run --rm --name postfix -e RELAYHOST=mail.google.com -e RELAYHOST_USERNAME=hello@gmail.com -e RELAYHOST_PASSWORD=world -p 1587:587 boky/postfix
Define relay host TLS connection level. See smtp_tls_security_level for details. By default, the permissive level ("may") is used, which basically means "use TLS if available" and should be a sane default in most cases.
This level defines how the postfix will connect to your upstream server.
XOAUTH2_CLIENT_ID
, XOAUTH2_SECRET
, XOAUTH2_INITIAL_ACCESS_TOKEN
, XOAUTH2_INITIAL_REFRESH_TOKEN
and XOAUTH2_TOKEN_ENDPOINT
Note: These parameters are used when
RELAYHOST
andRELAYHOST_USERNAME
are provided.
These parameters allow you to configure a relayhost that requires (or recommends) the XOAuth2 authentication method (e.g. GMail).
XOAUTH2_CLIENT_ID
andXOAUTH2_SECRET
are the OAuth2 client credentials.XOAUTH2_INITIAL_ACCESS_TOKEN
andXOAUTH2_INITIAL_REFRESH_TOKEN
are the initial access token and refresh tokens.XOAUTH2_TOKEN_ENDPOINT
is mandatory for Microsoft 365 use, sasl-xoauth2 will use Gmail URL if it is not provided. These values are only required to initialize the token file/var/spool/postfix/xoauth2-tokens/$RELAYHOST_USERNAME
.
Example:
docker run --rm --name pruebas-postfix \
-e RELAYHOST="[smtp.gmail.com]:587" \
-e RELAYHOST_USERNAME="<put.your.account>@gmail.com" \
-e POSTFIX_smtp_tls_security_level="encrypt" \
-e XOAUTH2_CLIENT_ID="<put_your_oauth2_client_id>" \
-e XOAUTH2_SECRET="<put_your_oauth2_secret>" \
-e ALLOW_EMPTY_SENDER_DOMAINS="true" \
-e XOAUTH2_INITIAL_ACCESS_TOKEN="<put_your_acess_token>" \
-e XOAUTH2_INITIAL_REFRESH_TOKEN="<put_your_refresh_token>" \
boky/postfix
Next sections describe how to obtain these values.
Visit the Google API Console to obtain OAuth 2 credentials (a client ID and client secret) for an "Installed application" application type.
Save the client ID and secret and use them to initialize XOAUTH2_CLIENT_ID
and XOAUTH2_SECRET
respectively.
We'll also need these credentials in the next step.
Use the Gmail OAuth2 developer tools to obtain an OAuth token by following the Creating and Authorizing an OAuth Token instructions.
Save the resulting tokens and use them to initialize XOAUTH2_INITIAL_ACCESS_TOKEN
and XOAUTH2_INITIAL_REFRESH_TOKEN
.
If you have XOAuth2 authentication issues you can enable XOAuth2 debug message setting XOAUTH2_SYSLOG_ON_FAILURE
to "yes"
(default: "no"
). If you need a more detailed
log trace about XOAuth2 you can set XOAUTH2_FULL_TRACE
to "yes"
(default: "no"
).
If you don't want outbound mails to expose hostnames, you can use this variable to enable Postfix's
address masquerading. This can be used to do things
like rewrite lorem@ipsum.example.com
to lorem@example.com
.
Example:
docker run --rm --name postfix -e "ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS=example.com example.org" -e "MASQUERADED_DOMAINS=example.com" -p 1587:587 boky/postfix
This image allows you to execute Postfix header checks. Header checks allow you to execute a certain action when a certain MIME header is found. For example, header checks can be used prevent attaching executable files to emails.
Header checks work by comparing each message header line to a pre-configured list of patterns. When a match is found the
corresponding action is executed. The default patterns that come with this image can be found in the smtp_header_checks
file. Feel free to override this file in any derived images or, alternately, provide your own in another directory.
Set SMTP_HEADER_CHECKS
to type and location of the file to enable this feature. The sample file is uploaded into
/etc/postfix/smtp_header_checks
in the image. As a convenience, setting SMTP_HEADER_CHECKS=1
will set this to
regexp:/etc/postfix/smtp_header_checks
.
Example:
docker run --rm --name postfix -e "SMTP_HEADER_CHECKS="regexp:/etc/postfix/smtp_header_checks" -e "ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS=example.com example.org" -p 1587:587 boky/postfix
You may configure a specific hostname that the SMTP server will use to identify itself. If you don't do it,
the default Docker host name will be used. A lot of times, this will be just the container id (e.g. f73792d540a5
)
which may make it difficult to track your emails in the log files. If you care about tracking at all,
I suggest you set this variable, e.g.:
docker run --rm --name postfix -e "POSTFIX_myhostname=postfix-docker" -p 1587:587 boky/postfix
This implementation is meant for private installations -- so that when you configure your services using docker compose you can just plug it in. Precisely because of this reason and the prevent any issues with this postfix being inadvertently exposed on the internet and then used for sending spam, the default networks are reserved for private IPv4 IPs only.
Most likely you won't need to change this. However, if you need to support IPv6 or strenghten the access further, you can override this setting.
Example:
docker run --rm --name postfix -e "POSTFIX_mynetworks=10.1.2.0/24" -p 1587:587 boky/postfix
Define the maximum size of the message, in bytes. See more in Postfix documentation.
By default, this limit is set to 0 (zero), which means unlimited. Why would you want to set this? Well, this is
especially useful in relation with RELAYHOST
setting. If your relay host has a message limit (and usually it does),
set it also here. This will help you "fail fast" -- your message will be rejected at the time of sending instead having
it stuck in the outbound queue indefinitely.
Any Postfix configuration option can be overriden using POSTFIX_<name>
environment variables, e.g. POSTFIX_allow_mail_to_commands=alias,forward,include
. Specifying no content (empty
variable) will remove that variable from postfix config.
Setting this to 1
will skip reowing in /var/spool/postfix/
and /var/spool/postfix/pid
. You generally do not
want to set this option unless you're running into specific issues (e.g. #97).
If unsure, leave it as is.
Anonymize email in Postfix logs. It mask the email content by putting *
in the middle of the name and the domain.
For example: from=<a*****************s@a***********.com>
Syntax: <masker-name>[?option=value&option=value&....]
NOTICE: Options are URL-encoded.
The following filters are provided with this implementation:
Enable the filter by setting ANONYMIZE_EMAILS=smart
.
The is enabled by setting the value to on
, true
, 1
, default
or smart
. The filter will take an educated guess at how to best mask the emails, specifically:
- It will leave the first and the last letter of the local part (if the local part is one letter long it gets repeated atht beggining and the end)
- If the local part is in quotes, it will remove the quotes (Warning: if the email starts with a space, this might look weird in logs)
- It will replace all the letters inbetween with ONE asterisk, even if there are none
- It will replace everything but a TLD with a star
- Address-style domains will see the number replaced with stars
E.g.:
demo@example.org
->d*o@*******.org
john.doe@example.solutions
->j*e@*******.solutions
sa@localhost
->s*a@*********
s@[192.168.8.10]
->s*s@[*.*.*.*]
"multi....dot"@[IPv6:2001:db8:85a3:8d3:1319:8a2e:370:7348]
->"m*t"@[IPv6:***********]
Configuration parameters:
Property | Default value | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
mask_symbol |
* |
no | Mask symbol to use instead of replaced characters |
The paranoid filter works similar to smart filter but will:
- Replace the local part with ONE asterisk
- Replace the domain part (sans TLD) with ONE asterisk
E.g.:
demo@example.org
->*@*.org
john.doe@example.solutions
->*@*.solutions
sa@localhost
->*@*
s@[192.168.8.10]
->*@[*]
"multi....dot"@[IPv6:2001:db8:85a3:8d3:1319:8a2e:370:7348]
->*@[IPv6:*]
Configuration parameters:
Property | Default value | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
mask_symbol |
* |
no | Mask symbol to use instead of replaced characters |
This filter will replace the email with the salted (HMAC - SHA256) hash. While it makes the logs much less readable, it has one specific benefit: it allows you to search through the logs if you know the email address you're looking for. You are able to calculate the hash yourself and then grep through the logs for this specific email address.
E.g.:
prettyandsimple@example.com
-><3052a860ddfde8b50e39843d8f1c9f591bec442823d97948b811d38779e2c757>
for (ANONYMIZE_EMAILS=hash?salt=hello%20world
)prettyandsimple@example.com
->c58731d3@8bd7a35c
for (ANONYMIZE_EMAILS=hash?salt=hello%20world&split=true&short_sha=t&prefix=&suffix=
)
Filter will not work without configuration. You will need to provide (at least) the salt, e.g.: ANONYMIZE_EMAILS=hash?salt=demo
Configuration parameters:
Property | Default value | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
salt |
none | yes | HMAC key (salt) used for calculating the checksum |
prefix |
`` | no | Prefix of emails in the log (for easier grepping) |
suffix |
`` | no | Suffix of emails in the log (for easier grepping) |
split |
false |
no | Set to 1 , t or true to hash separately the local and the domain part |
short_sha |
false |
no | Set to 1 , t or true to return just the first 8 characters of the hash |
case_sensitive |
true |
no | Set to 0 , f or false to convert email to lowercase before hashing |
This filter doesn't do anything. It's used for testing purposes only.
It's easy enough to write your own filters. The simplest way would be to take the email-anonymizer.py
file in this
image, write your own and then attach it to the container image under /scripts
. If you're feeling adentorous, you can
also install your own Python package -- the script will automatically pick up the class name.
This image is equipped with support for DKIM. If you want to use DKIM you will need to generate DKIM keys. These can be either generated automatically, or you can supply them yourself.
The DKIM supports the following options:
DKIM_SELECTOR
= Override the default DKIM selector (by default "mail").DKIM_AUTOGENERATE
= Set to non-empty value (e.g.true
or1
) to have the server auto-generate domain keys.OPENDKIM_<any_dkim_setting>
= Provide any additional OpenDKIM setting.
If you want to use your own DKIM keys, you'll need to create a folder for every domain you want to send through. You
will need to generate they key(s) with the opendkim-genkey
command, e.g.
mkdir -p /host/keys; cd /host/keys
for DOMAIN in example.com example.org; do
# Generate a key with selector "mail"
opendkim-genkey -b 2048 -h rsa-sha256 -r -v --subdomains -s mail -d $DOMAIN
# Fixes https://github.com/linode/docs/pull/620
sed -i 's/h=rsa-sha256/h=sha256/' mail.txt
# Move to proper file
mv mail.private $DOMAIN.private
mv mail.txt $DOMAIN.txt
done
...
opendkim-genkey
is usually in your favourite distribution provided by installing opendkim-tools
or opendkim-utils
.
Add the created <domain>.txt
files to your DNS records. Afterwards, just mount /etc/opendkim/keys
into your image
and DKIM will be used automatically, e.g.:
docker run --rm --name postfix -e "ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS=example.com example.org" -v /host/keys:/etc/opendkim/keys -p 1587:587 boky/postfix
If you set the environment variable DKIM_AUTOGENERATE
to a non-empty value (e.g. true
or 1
) the image will
automatically generate the keys.
Be careful when using this option. If you don't bind /etc/opendkim/keys
to a persistent volume, you will get new
keys every single time. You will need to take the generated public part of the key (the one in the .txt
file) and
copy it over to your DNS server manually.
mail
is the default DKIM selector and should be sufficient for most usages. If you wish to override the selector,
set the environment variable DKIM_SELECTOR
, e.g. ... -e DKIM_SELECTOR=postfix
. Note that the same DKIM selector will
be applied to all found domains. To override a selector for a specific domain use the syntax
[<domain>=<selector>,...]
, e.g.:
DKIM_SELECTOR=foo,example.org=postfix,example.com=blah
This means:
- use
postfix
forexample.org
domain - use
blah
forexample.com
domain - use
foo
if no domain matches
Any OpenDKIM configuration option can be overriden using OPENDKIM_<name>
environment variables, e.g. OPENDKIM_RequireSafeKeys=yes
. Specifying no content (empty variable) will remove that
variable from OpenDKIM config.
I strongly suggest using a service such as dkimvalidator to make sure your keys are set up properly and your DNS server is serving them with the correct records.
As an alternative to passing sensitive information via environment variables, _FILE
may be appended to some environment variables (see below), causing the initialization script to load the values for those variables from files present in the container. In particular, this can be used to load passwords from Docker secrets stored in /run/secrets/<secret_name>
files. For example:
docker run --rm --name pruebas-postfix \
-e RELAYHOST="[smtp.gmail.com]:587" \
-e RELAYHOST_USERNAME="<put.your.account>@gmail.com" \
-e POSTFIX_smtp_tls_security_level="encrypt" \
-e XOAUTH2_CLIENT_ID_FILE="/run/secrets/xoauth2-client-id" \
-e XOAUTH2_SECRET_FILE="/run/secrets/xoauth2-secret" \
-e ALLOW_EMPTY_SENDER_DOMAINS="true" \
-e XOAUTH2_INITIAL_ACCESS_TOKEN_FILE="/run/secrets/xoauth2-access-token" \
-e XOAUTH2_INITIAL_REFRESH_TOKEN_FILE="/run/secrets/xoauth2-refresh-token" \
boky/postfix
Currently, this is only supported for RELAYHOST_PASSWORD
, XOAUTH2_CLIENT_ID
, XOAUTH2_SECRET
, XOAUTH2_INITIAL_ACCESS_TOKEN
and XOAUTH2_INITIAL_REFRESH_TOKEN
.
This image comes with its own helm chart. The chart versions are aligned with the releases of the image. Charts are hosted through this repository.
To install the image, simply do the following:
helm repo add bokysan https://bokysan.github.io/docker-postfix/
helm upgrade --install --set persistence.enabled=false --set config.general.ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS=example.com mail bokysan/mail
Chart configuration is as follows:
Property | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|
replicaCount |
1 |
How many replicas to start |
image.repository |
boky/postfix |
This docker image repository |
image.tag |
empty | Docker image tag, by default uses Chart's AppVersion |
image.pullPolicy |
IfNotPresent |
Pull policy for the image |
imagePullSecrets |
[] |
Pull secrets, if neccessary |
nameOverride |
"" |
Override the helm chart name |
fullnameOverride |
"" |
Override the helm full deployment name |
serviceAccount.create |
true |
Specifies whether a service account should be created |
serviceAccount.annotations |
{} |
Annotations to add to the service account |
serviceAccount.name |
"" |
The name of the service account to use. If not set and create is true, a name is generated using the fullname template |
service.type |
ClusterIP |
How is the server exposed |
service.port |
587 |
SMTP submission port |
service.labels |
{} |
Additional service labels |
service.annotations |
{} |
Additional service annotations |
service.spec |
{} |
Additional service specifications |
service.nodePort |
empty | Use a specific nodePort |
service.nodeIP |
empty | Use a specific nodeIP |
resources |
{} |
Pod resources |
autoscaling.enabled |
false |
Set to true to enable Horisontal Pod Autoscaler |
autoscaling.minReplicas |
1 |
Minimum number of replicas |
autoscaling.maxReplicas |
100 |
Maximum number of replicas |
autoscaling.targetCPUUtilizationPercentage |
80 |
When to scale up |
autoscaling.targetMemoryUtilizationPercentage |
"" |
When to scale up |
autoscaling.labels |
{} |
Additional HPA labels |
autoscaling.annotations |
{} |
Additional HPA annotations |
nodeSelector |
{} |
Standard Kubernetes stuff |
tolerations |
[] |
Standard Kubernetes stuff |
affinity |
{} |
Standard Kubernetes stuff |
certs.create |
{} |
Auto generate TLS certificates for Postfix |
extraVolumes |
[] |
Append any extra volumes to the pod |
extraVolumeMounts |
[] |
Append any extra volume mounts to the postfix container |
extraInitContainers |
[] |
Execute any extra init containers on startup |
extraEnv |
[] |
Add any extra environment variables to the container |
extraContainers |
[] |
Add extra containers |
deployment.labels |
{} |
Additional labels for the statefulset |
deployment.annotations |
{} |
Additional annotations for the statefulset |
pod.securityContext |
{} |
Pods's security context |
pod.labels |
{} |
Additional labels for the pod |
pod.annotations |
{} |
Additional annotations for the pod |
container.postfixsecurityContext |
{} |
Containers's security context |
config.general |
{} |
Key-value list of general configuration options, e.g. TZ: "Europe/London" |
config.postfix |
{} |
Key-value list of general postfix options, e.g. myhostname: "demo" |
config.opendkim |
{} |
Key-value list of general OpenDKIM options, e.g. RequireSafeKeys: "yes" |
secret |
{} |
Key-value list of environment variables to be shared with Postfix / OpenDKIM as secrets |
existingSecret |
"" |
A reference to an existing opaque secret. Secret is mounted and exposed as environment variables in the pod |
mountSecret.enabled |
false |
Create a folder with contents of the secret in the pod's container |
mountSecret.path |
/var/lib/secret |
Where to mount secret data |
mountSecret.data |
{} |
Key-value list of files to be mount into the container |
persistence.enabled |
true |
Persist Postfix's queue on disk |
persistence.accessModes |
[ 'ReadWriteOnce' ] |
Access mode |
persistence.existingClaim |
"" |
Provide an existing PersistentVolumeClaim , the value is evaluated as a template. |
persistence.size |
1Gi |
Storage size |
persistence.storageClass |
"" |
Storage class |
recreateOnRedeploy |
true |
Restart Pods on every helm deployment, to prevent issues with stale configuration(s). |
If you need to add custom configuration to postfix or have it do something outside of the scope of this configuration,
simply add your scripts to /docker-init.db/
: All files with the .sh
extension will be executed automatically at the
end of the startup script.
E.g.: create a custom Dockerfile
like this:
FROM boky/postfix
LABEL maintainer="Jack Sparrow <jack.sparrow@theblackpearl.example.com>"
ADD Dockerfiles/additional-config.sh /docker-init.db/
Build it with docker, and your script will be automatically executed before Postfix starts.
Or -- alternately -- bind this folder in your docker config and put your scripts there. Useful if you need to add a config to your postfix server or override configs created by the script.
For example, your script could contain something like this:
#!/bin/sh
postconf -e "address_verify_negative_cache=yes"
Postfix will run the master proces as root
, because that's how it's designed. Subprocesses will run under the postfix
account which will use UID:GID
of 100:101
. opendkim
will run under account 102:103
.
Please note that Gmail does not support using your password with non-OAuth2 clients. You will need to either enable Less secure apps in your account and assign an "app password", or configure postfix support for XOAuth2 authentication. You'll also need to use (only) your email as the sender address.
If you follow the less than secure route, your configuration would be as follows:
RELAYHOST=smtp.gmail.com:587
RELAYHOST_USERNAME=you@gmail.com
RELAYHOST_PASSWORD=your-gmail-app-password
ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS=gmail.com
There's no need to configure DKIM or SPF, as Gmail will add these headers automatically.
Google Apps allows third-party services to use Google's SMTP servers without much hassle. If you have a static IP, you can configure Gmail to accept your messages. You can then send email from any address within your domain.
You need to enable the SMTP relay service:
- Go to Google Admin /Apps / G Suite / Gmail /Advanced settings.
- Find the Routing / SMTP relay service
- Click Add another button that pops up when you hover over the line
- Enter the name and your server's external IP as shown in the picture below:
- Allowed senders: Only registered Apps users in my domains
- Select Only accept mail from specified IP Addresses
- Click Add IP RANGE and add your external IP
- Make sure Require SMTP Authentication is NOT selected
- You may select Require TLS encryption
Your configuration would be as follows:
RELAYHOST=smtp-relay.gmail.com:587
ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS=<your-domain>
There's no need to configure DKIM or SPF, as Gmail will add these headers automatically.
If your application runs in Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2), you can use Amazon SES to send up to 62,000 emails
every month at no additional charge. You'll need an AWS account and SMTP credentials. The SMTP settings are available
on the SES page. For example, for eu-central-1
:
Make sure you write the user credentials down, as you will only see them once.
By default, messages that you send through Amazon SES use a subdomain of amazonses.com
as the MAIL FROM
domain. See
Amazon's documentation on how the domain can
be configured.
Your configuration would be as follows (example data):
RELAYHOST=email-smtp.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com:587
RELAYHOST_USERNAME=AKIAGHEVSQTOOSQBCSWQ
RELAYHOST_PASSWORD=BK+kjsdfliWELIhEFnlkjf/jwlfkEFN/kDj89Ufj/AAc
ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS=<your-domain>
You will need to configure DKIM and SPF for your domain as well.
If you're sending messages directly, you'll need to:
- have a fixed IP address;
- configure a reverse PTR record;
- configure SPF and/or DKIM as explained in this document;
- it's also highly advisable to have your own IP block.
Your configuration would be as follows:
ALLOWED_SENDER_DOMAINS=<your-domain>
Getting all of this to work properly is not a small feat:
- Hosting providers will regularly block outgoing connections to port 25. On AWS, for example you can fill out a form and request for port 25 to be unblocked.
- You'll most likely need to at least set up SPF records or DKIM.
- You'll need to set up PTR records to prevent your emails going to spam.
- Microsoft is especially notorious for trashing emails from new IPs directly into spam. If you're having trouble
delivering emails to
outlook.com
domains, you will need to enroll in their Smart Network Data Service programme. And to do this you will need to be the owner of the netblock you're sending the emails from.
There are may other project offering similar functionality. The aim of this project, however, is:
- to make it as simple as possible to run the relay, without going too much into postfix configuration details
- to make the image as small as possible (hence basing on Alpine linux)
- to make the image and the corresponding code testable
The other projects are, in completely random order: