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1 [[chapter_pmgconfig]]
2 ifdef::manvolnum[]
3 pmgconfig(1)
4 ============
5 :pmg-toplevel:
6
7 NAME
8 ----
9
10 pmgconfig - Proxmox Mail Gateway Configuration Management Toolkit
11
12
13 SYNOPSIS
14 --------
15
16 include::pmgconfig.1-synopsis.adoc[]
17
18
19 DESCRIPTION
20 -----------
21 endif::manvolnum[]
22 ifndef::manvolnum[]
23 Configuration Management
24 ========================
25 :pmg-toplevel:
26 endif::manvolnum[]
27
28 {pmg} is usually configured using the web-based Graphical User
29 Interface (GUI), but it is also possible to directly edit the
30 configuration files, use the REST API over 'https'
31 or the command line tool `pmgsh`.
32
33 The command line tool `pmgconfig` is used to simplify some common
34 configuration tasks, i.e. to generate cerificates and to rewrite
35 service configuration files.
36
37 NOTE: We use a Postgres database to store mail filter rules and
38 statistic data. See chapter xref:chapter_pmgdb[Database Management]
39 for more information.
40
41
42 Configuration files overview
43 ----------------------------
44
45 `/etc/network/interfaces`::
46
47 Network setup. We never modify this files directly. Instead, we write
48 changes to `/etc/network/interfaces.new`. When you reboot, we rename
49 the file to `/etc/network/interfaces`, so any changes gets activated
50 on the next reboot.
51
52 `/etc/resolv.conf`::
53
54 DNS search domain and nameserver setup.
55
56 `/etc/hostname`::
57
58 The system's host name.
59
60 `/etc/hosts`::
61
62 Static table lookup for hostnames.
63
64 `/etc/pmg/pmg.conf`::
65
66 Stores common administration options, i.e. the spam and mail proxy setup.
67
68 `/etc/pmg/cluster.conf`::
69
70 The cluster setup.
71
72 `/etc/pmg/domains`::
73
74 The list of relay domains.
75
76 `/etc/pmg/fetchmailrc`::
77
78 Fetchmail configuration (POP3 and IMAP setup).
79
80 `/etc/pmg/ldap.conf`::
81
82 LDAP configuration.
83
84 `/etc/pmg/mynetworks`::
85
86 List of local (trusted) networks.
87
88 `/etc/pmg/subscription`::
89
90 Stores your subscription key and status.
91
92 `/etc/pmg/tls_policy`::
93
94 TLS policy for outbound connections.
95
96 `/etc/pmg/transports`::
97
98 Message delivery transport setup.
99
100 `/etc/pmg/user.conf`::
101
102 GUI user configuration.
103
104 `/etc/mail/spamassassin/custom.cf`::
105
106 Custom {spamassassin} setup.
107
108
109 Keys and Certificates
110 ---------------------
111
112 `/etc/pmg/pmg-api.pem`::
113
114 Key and certificate (combined) used be the HTTPs server (API).
115
116 `/etc/pmg/pmg-authkey.key`::
117
118 Privat key use to generate authentication tickets.
119
120 `/etc/pmg/pmg-authkey.pub`::
121
122 Public key use to verify authentication tickets.
123
124 `/etc/pmg/pmg-csrf.key`::
125
126 Internally used to generate CSRF tokens.
127
128 `/etc/pmg/pmg-tls.pem`::
129
130 Key and certificate (combined) to encrypt mail traffic (TLS).
131
132
133 Service Configuration Templates
134 -------------------------------
135
136 {pmg} uses various services to implement mail filtering, for example
137 the {postfix} Mail Transport Agent (MTA), the {clamav} antivirus
138 engine and the Apache {spamassassin} project. Those services use
139 separate configuration files, so we need to rewrite those files when
140 configuration is changed.
141
142 We use a template based approach to generate those files. The {tts} is
143 a well known, fast and flexible template processing system. You can
144 find the default templates in `/var/lib/pmg/templates/`. Please do not
145 modify them directly, because your modification would get lost on the
146 next update. Instead, copy them to `/etc/pmg/templates/`, then apply
147 your changes there.
148
149 Templates can access any configuration setting, and you can use the
150 `pmgconfig dump` command to get a list of all variable names:
151
152 ----
153 # pmgconfig dump
154 ...
155 dns.domain = yourdomain.tld
156 dns.hostname = pmg
157 ipconfig.int_ip = 192.168.2.127
158 pmg.admin.advfilter = 1
159 ...
160 ----
161
162 The same tool is used to force regeneration of all template based
163 configuration files. You need to run that after modifying a template,
164 or when you directly edit configuration files
165
166 ----
167 # pmgconfig sync --restart 1
168 ----
169
170 Above commands also restarts services if underlying configuration
171 files are changed. Please note that this is automatically done when
172 you change the configuration using the GUI or API.
173
174 NOTE: Modified templates from `/etc/pmg/templates/` are automatically
175 synced from the master node to all cluster members.
176
177
178 [[pmgconfig_systemconfig]]
179 System Configuration
180 --------------------
181
182 Network and Time
183 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
184
185 ifndef::manvolnum[]
186 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-network-config.png[]
187 endif::manvolnum[]
188
189 Normally the network and time is already configured when you visit the
190 GUI. The installer asks for those setting and sets up the correct
191 values.
192
193 The default setup uses a single Ethernet adapter and static IP
194 assignment. The configuration is stored at '/etc/network/interfaces',
195 and the actual network setup is done the standard Debian way using
196 package 'ifupdown'.
197
198 .Example network setup '/etc/network/interfaces'
199 ----
200 source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
201
202 auto lo
203 iface lo inet loopback
204
205 auto ens18
206 iface ens18 inet static
207 address 192.168.2.127
208 netmask 255.255.240.0
209 gateway 192.168.2.1
210 ----
211
212 .DNS recommendations
213
214 Many tests to detect SPAM mails use DNS queries, so it is important to
215 have a fast and reliable DNS server. We also query some public
216 available DNS Blacklists. Most of them apply rate limits for clients,
217 so they simply will not work if you use a public DNS server (because
218 they are usually blocked). We recommend to use your own DNS server,
219 which need to be configured in 'recursive' mode.
220
221
222 Options
223 ~~~~~~~
224
225 ifndef::manvolnum[]
226 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-system-options.png[]
227 endif::manvolnum[]
228
229
230 Those settings are saved to subsection 'admin' in `/etc/pmg/pmg.conf`,
231 using the following configuration keys:
232
233 include::pmg.admin-conf-opts.adoc[]
234
235
236 Mail Proxy Configuration
237 ------------------------
238
239 [[pmgconfig_mailproxy_relaying]]
240 Relaying
241 ~~~~~~~~
242
243 ifndef::manvolnum[]
244 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-mailproxy-relaying.png[]
245 endif::manvolnum[]
246
247 Those settings are saved to subsection 'mail' in `/etc/pmg/pmg.conf`,
248 using the following configuration keys:
249
250 include::pmg.mail-relaying-conf-opts.adoc[]
251
252 [[pmgconfig_mailproxy_relay_domains]]
253 Relay Domains
254 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
255
256 ifndef::manvolnum[]
257 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-mailproxy-relaydomains.png[]
258 endif::manvolnum[]
259
260 List of relayed mail domains, i.e. what destination domains this
261 system will relay mail to. The system will reject incoming mails to
262 other domains.
263
264
265 [[pmgconfig_mailproxy_ports]]
266 Ports
267 ~~~~~
268
269 ifndef::manvolnum[]
270 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-mailproxy-ports.png[]
271 endif::manvolnum[]
272
273 Those settings are saved to subsection 'mail' in `/etc/pmg/pmg.conf`,
274 using the following configuration keys:
275
276 include::pmg.mail-ports-conf-opts.adoc[]
277
278
279 [[pmgconfig_mailproxy_options]]
280 Options
281 ~~~~~~~
282
283 ifndef::manvolnum[]
284 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-mailproxy-options.png[]
285 endif::manvolnum[]
286
287 Those settings are saved to subsection 'mail' in `/etc/pmg/pmg.conf`,
288 using the following configuration keys:
289
290 include::pmg.mail-options-conf-opts.adoc[]
291
292
293 [[pmgconfig_mailproxy_transports]]
294 Transports
295 ~~~~~~~~~~
296
297 ifndef::manvolnum[]
298 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-mailproxy-transports.png[]
299 endif::manvolnum[]
300
301 You can use {pmg} to send e-mails to different internal
302 e-mail servers. For example you can send e-mails addressed to
303 domain.com to your first e-mail server, and e-mails addressed to
304 subdomain.domain.com to a second one.
305
306 You can add the IP addresses, hostname and SMTP ports and mail domains (or
307 just single email addresses) of your additional e-mail servers.
308
309
310 [[pmgconfig_mailproxy_networks]]
311 Networks
312 ~~~~~~~~
313
314 ifndef::manvolnum[]
315 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-mailproxy-networks.png[]
316 endif::manvolnum[]
317
318 You can add additional internal (trusted) IP networks or hosts.
319 All hosts in this list are allowed to relay.
320
321 NOTE: Hosts in the same subnet with Proxmox can relay by default and
322 it’s not needed to add them in this list.
323
324
325 [[pmgconfig_mailproxy_tls]]
326 TLS
327 ~~~
328
329 ifndef::manvolnum[]
330 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-mailproxy-tls.png[]
331 endif::manvolnum[]
332
333 Transport Layer Security (TLS) provides certificate-based
334 authentication and encrypted sessions. An encrypted session protects
335 the information that is transmitted with SMTP mail. When you activate
336 TLS, {pmg} automatically generates a new self signed
337 certificate for you (`/etc/pmg/pmg-tls.pem`).
338
339 {pmg} uses opportunistic TLS encryption by default. The SMTP transaction is
340 encrypted if the 'STARTTLS' ESMTP feature is supported by the remote
341 server. Otherwise, messages are sent in the clear.
342 You can set a different TLS policy per desitination domain, should you for
343 example need to prevent e-mail delivery without encryption, or to work around
344 a broken 'STARTTLS' ESMTP implementation. See {postfix_tls_readme} for details
345 on the supported policies.
346
347 Enable TLS logging::
348
349 To get additional information about SMTP TLS activity you can enable
350 TLS logging. That way information about TLS sessions and used
351 certificate’s is logged via syslog.
352
353 Add TLS received header::
354
355 Set this option to include information about the protocol and cipher
356 used as well as the client and issuer CommonName into the "Received:"
357 message header.
358
359 Those settings are saved to subsection 'mail' in `/etc/pmg/pmg.conf`,
360 using the following configuration keys:
361
362 include::pmg.mail-tls-conf-opts.adoc[]
363
364
365 Whitelist
366 ~~~~~~~~~
367
368 ifndef::manvolnum[]
369 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-mailproxy-whitelist.png[]
370 endif::manvolnum[]
371
372 All SMTP checks are disabled for those entries (e. g. Greylisting,
373 SPF, RBL, ...)
374
375 NOTE: If you use a backup MX server (e.g. your ISP offers this service
376 for you) you should always add those servers here.
377
378
379 [[pmgconfig_spamdetector]]
380 Spam Detector Configuration
381 ---------------------------
382
383 Options
384 ~~~~~~~
385
386 ifndef::manvolnum[]
387 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-spam-options.png[]
388 endif::manvolnum[]
389
390 {pmg} uses a wide variety of local and network tests to identify spam
391 signatures. This makes it harder for spammers to identify one aspect
392 which they can craft their messages to work around the spam filter.
393
394 Every single e-mail will be analyzed and gets a spam score
395 assigned. The system attempts to optimize the efficiency of the rules
396 that are run in terms of minimizing the number of false positives and
397 false negatives.
398
399 include::pmg.spam-conf-opts.adoc[]
400
401
402 [[pmgconfig_spamdetector_quarantine]]
403 Quarantine
404 ~~~~~~~~~~
405
406 ifndef::manvolnum[]
407 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-spamquar-options.png[]
408 endif::manvolnum[]
409
410 Proxmox analyses all incoming e-mail messages and decides for each
411 e-mail if its ham or spam (or virus). Good e-mails are delivered to
412 the inbox and spam messages can be moved into the spam quarantine.
413
414 The system can be configured to send daily reports to inform users
415 about the personal spam messages received the last day. That report is
416 only sent if there are new messages in the quarantine.
417
418 Some options are only available in the config file `/etc/pmg/pmg.conf`,
419 and not in the webinterface.
420
421 include::pmg.spamquar-conf-opts.adoc[]
422
423
424 [[pmgconfig_clamav]]
425 Virus Detector Configuration
426 ----------------------------
427
428 [[pmgconfig_clamav_options]]
429 Options
430 ~~~~~~~
431
432 ifndef::manvolnum[]
433 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-virus-options.png[]
434 endif::manvolnum[]
435
436 All mails are automatically passed to the included virus detector
437 ({clamav}). The default setting are considered safe, so it is usually
438 not required to change them.
439
440 {clamav} related settings are saved to subsection 'clamav' in `/etc/pmg/pmg.conf`,
441 using the following configuration keys:
442
443 include::pmg.clamav-conf-opts.adoc[]
444
445 ifndef::manvolnum[]
446 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-clamav-database.png[]
447 endif::manvolnum[]
448
449 Please note that the virus signature database it automatically
450 updated. But you can see the database status on the GUI, and you can
451 trigger manual updates there.
452
453
454 [[pmgconfig_clamav_quarantine]]
455 Quarantine
456 ~~~~~~~~~~
457
458 ifndef::manvolnum[]
459 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-virusquar-options.png[]
460 endif::manvolnum[]
461
462 Indentified virus mails are automatically moved to the virus
463 quarantine. The administartor can view those mails using the GUI, or
464 deliver them in case of false positives. {pmg} does not notify
465 individual users about received virus mails.
466
467 Virus quarantine related settings are saved to subsection 'virusquar'
468 in `/etc/pmg/pmg.conf`, using the following configuration keys:
469
470 include::pmg.virusquar-conf-opts.adoc[]
471
472
473 Custom SpamAssassin configuration
474 ---------------------------------
475
476 This is only for advanced users. To add or change the Proxmox
477 {spamassassin} configuration please login to the console via SSH. Go
478 to directory `/etc/mail/spamassasin/`. In this directory there are several
479 files (`init.pre`, `local.cf`, ...) – do not change them.
480
481 To add your special configuration, you have to create a new file and
482 name it `custom.cf` (in this directory), then add your
483 configuration there. Be aware to use the {spamassassin}
484 syntax, and test with
485
486 ----
487 # spamassassin -D --lint
488 ----
489
490 If you run a cluster, the `custom.cf` file is synchronized from the
491 master node to all cluster members.
492
493
494 User Management
495 ---------------
496
497 User management in {pmg} consists of three types of users/accounts:
498
499
500 [[pmgconfig_localuser]]
501 Local Users
502 ~~~~~~~~~~~
503
504 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-local-user-config.png[]
505
506 Local users are used to manage and audit {pmg}. Those users can login on the
507 management web interface.
508
509 There are three roles:
510
511 * Administrator
512 +
513 Is allowed to manage settings of {pmg}, except some tasks like
514 network configuration and upgrading.
515
516 * Quarantine manager
517 +
518 Is allowed to manage quarantines, blacklists and whitelists, but not other
519 settings. Has no right to view any other data.
520
521 * Auditor
522 +
523 With this role, the user is only allowed to view data and configuration, but
524 not to edit it.
525
526 In addition there is always the 'root' user, which is used to perform special
527 system administrator tasks, such as updgrading a host or changing the
528 network configuration.
529
530 NOTE: Only pam users are able to login via the webconsole and ssh, which the
531 users created with the web interface are not. Those users are created for
532 {pmg} administration only.
533
534 Local user related settings are saved in `/etc/pmg/user.conf`.
535
536 For details of the fields see xref:pmg_user_configuration_file[user.conf]
537
538 [[pmgconfig_ldap]]
539 LDAP/Active Directory
540 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
541
542 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-ldap-user-config.png[]
543
544 You can specify multiple LDAP/Active Directory profiles, so that you can
545 create rules matching those users and groups.
546
547 Creating a profile requires (at least) the following:
548
549 * profile name
550 * protocol (LDAP or LDAPS; LDAPS is recommended)
551 * at least one server
552 * a user and password (if your server does not support anonymous binds)
553
554 All other fields should work with the defaults for most setups, but can be
555 used to customize the queries.
556
557 The settings are saved to `/etc/pmg/ldap.conf`. Details for the options
558 can be found here: xref:pmg_ldap_configuration_file[ldap.conf]
559
560 Bind user
561 ^^^^^^^^^
562
563 It is highly recommended that the user which you use for connecting to the
564 LDAP server only has the permission to query the server. For LDAP servers
565 (for example OpenLDAP or FreeIPA), the username has to be of a format like
566 'uid=username,cn=users,cn=accounts,dc=domain' , where the specific fields are
567 depending on your setup. For Active Directory servers, the format should be
568 like 'username@domain' or 'domain\username'.
569
570 Sync
571 ^^^^
572
573 {pmg} synchronizes the relevant user and group info periodically, so that
574 that information is available in a fast manner, even when the LDAP/AD server
575 is temporarily not accessible.
576
577 After a successfull sync, the groups and users should be visible on the web
578 interface. After that, you can create rules targeting LDAP users and groups.
579
580
581 [[pmgconfig_fetchmail]]
582 Fetchmail
583 ~~~~~~~~~
584
585 image::images/screenshot/pmg-gui-fetchmail-config.png[]
586
587 Fetchmail is utility for polling and forwarding e-mails. You can define
588 e-mail accounts, which will then be fetched and forwarded to the e-mail
589 address you defined.
590
591 You have to add an entry for each account/target combination you want to
592 fetch and forward. Those will then be regularly polled and forwarded,
593 according to your configuration.
594
595 The API and web interface offer following configuration options:
596
597 include::fetchmail.conf.5-opts.adoc[]
598
599
600 ifdef::manvolnum[]
601 include::pmg-copyright.adoc[]
602 endif::manvolnum[]
603