4 The Administration GUI allows you to do common tasks
5 such as updating software packages, managing quarantine, viewing service
6 status, and managing mail queues. It also provides server statistics in
7 order to verify server health.
16 [thumbnail="pmg-gui-server-status.png", big=1]
18 This page shows server statistics about CPU, memory, disk and network
19 usage. You can select the displayed time span on the upper right.
21 Administrators can open a terminal window using the 'Console'
22 button. It is also possible to trigger a server 'Restart' or
29 [thumbnail="pmg-gui-service-status.png", big=1]
31 This panel lists all major services used for mail processing and
32 cluster synchronization. If necessary, you can start, stop or restart
33 them. The 'Syslog' button shows the system log filtered for the
36 Please note that {pmg} uses {systemd} to manage services, so you can
37 also use the standard `systemctl` command line tool to manage or view
38 service status, for example:
41 systemctl status postfix
48 [thumbnail="pmg-gui-updates.png", big=1]
50 We release software updates on a regular basis, and it is recommended
51 to always run the latest available version. This page shows the
52 available updates, and administrators can run an upgrade by pressing
55 See section xref:pmg_package_repositories[Package Repositories] for
56 details abaout available package repositories.
62 [thumbnail="pmg-gui-syslog.png", big=1]
64 The syslog page gives you a quick real-time log view. You can use the
65 xref:pmg_tracking_center[Tracking Center] to search the logs.
74 [thumbnail="pmg-gui-spam-quarantine.png", big=1]
76 This panel lets you inspect the mail quarantine. Emails can be safely
77 previewed and if desired, delivered to the original user.
79 The email preview on the web interface is very secure as malicious
80 code (attacking your operating system or email client) is removed by
87 Allows administrators to inspect quarantined virus mails.
93 Allows administrators to inspect quarantined mails and download their
94 attachments or deliver/delete them.
96 NOTE: Use the options of the 'Remove attachment' action to control the Attachment Quarantine.
99 [[pmg_userblackwhitelist]]
100 User White- and Blacklist
101 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
103 This is mostly useful to debug or verify white- and blacklist user
104 settings. The administrator should not change these values because
105 users can manage this themselves.
108 [[pmg_tracking_center]]
112 [thumbnail="pmg-gui-tracking-center.png", big=1]
114 Email processing is a complex task and involves several service
115 daemons. Each daemon logs information to the syslog service. The
116 problem is that a server analyzes many emails in parallel, so it is
117 usually very hard to find all logs corresponding to a specific mail.
119 The Tracking Center simplifies the search for
120 emails dramatically. We use highly optimized and safe Rust footnote:[A language
121 empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software.
122 https://www.rust-lang.org/] code to search the available syslog data. This is
123 very fast and powerful, and works for sites processing several million emails
126 The result is a list of received mails, including the following data:
130 |Time | Timestamp of first found syslog entry.
131 |From | Envelope 'From' address (the sender).
132 |To | The email receiver address.
133 |Status | Delivery status.
134 |Syslog | The corresponding syslog entries are shown if you double click such
135 entry, or if you press the '+' button on the left.
138 You can specify filters, and most importantly you can set
139 a 'Start' and 'End' time. By default the start time is set to one hour
140 ago. If you still get too many entries, you can try to restrict
141 the search to a specific sender or receiver address, or search for a
142 specific text in the logs ('Filter' entry).
144 NOTE: Search is faster if you use a shorter time interval.
146 The 'Status' field summarizes what happened with an email. {pmg} is a
147 mail proxy, meaning that the proxy receives mails from outside,
148 processes them and finally sends the result to the receiver.
150 The first phase is receiving the mail. The proxy may reject the mail
151 early, or instead accepts the mail and feeds it into the filter. The filter
152 rules can block or accept the mail.
154 In the second phase, accepted mails need to be delivered to the
155 receiver. This action may also fail or succeed. 'Status'
156 combines the result from the first and second phase.
158 When before-queue filtering is enabled, we don't have the same delivery information as
159 with after-queue filtering. In this case, if the mail is accepted by the filter,
160 the status is shown as 'queued/accepted' instead of 'accepted/<status>'.
162 [options="header",cols="2s,1d,5d"]
164 |Status |Phase |Description
165 |rejected |1 | Email rejected (e.g. sender IP is listed on a IP blacklist)
166 |greylisted |1 | Email temporarily rejected by greylisting
167 |queued/deferred |1 | Internal Email was queued, still trying to deliver
168 |queued/bounced |1 | Internal Email was queued but not accepted by the target email server (for example user unknown)
169 |queued/accepted |1 | Email was accepted, no delivery information available (before-queue only, replaces accepted/<status>)
170 |quarantine |1 | Email was moved to quarantine
171 |blocked |1 | Email was blocked by filter rules
172 |accepted/deferred |2 | Email accepted, still trying to deliver
173 |accepted/bounced |2 | Email accepted but not accepted by the target email server (for example user unknown)
174 |accepted/delivered |2 | Email accepted and delivered
178 Postfix Queue Administration
179 ----------------------------
182 Mail-queues are one of the central concepts of the SMTP protocol. Once a
183 mailserver accepts a mail for further processing it saves it to a queue.
184 After the mail is either relayed to another system, stored locally
185 or discarded it is deleted from the local mail-queue.
187 If immediate processing is not possible, for example because a downstream
188 mailserver is not reachable, the mail remains on the queue for later
191 The Queue Administration view provides a succinct overview, as generated by
192 the 'qshape (1)' utility, about the current state of the postfix mail-queue.
194 It shows mails for which domains were not delivered, and how long they have
197 The three Action Buttons on top provide the most common queue operations:
201 Attempt to deliver all currently queued mail, for example if a downstream
202 server has become available again.
204 'Delete All Messages'::
206 Delete all currently queued mail, for example if the queue contains only spam.
207 Attempt to deliver all currently queued mail.
209 'Discard address verification database'::
211 Clear the recipient verification cache.
214 In the 'Deferred Mail' tab you can filter and examine deferred mail in more
215 detail by looking at the headers.