TABLE_MYSQL(5) | File Formats Manual | TABLE_MYSQL(5) |
NAME
table_mysql
—
format description for smtpd MySQL or MariaDB
tables
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents the file format of MySQL or MariaDB tables used by the smtpd(8) mail daemon.
The format described here applies to tables as defined in smtpd.conf(5).
MYSQL TABLE
A mysql table allows the storing of usernames, passwords, aliases, and domains in a format that is shareable across various machines that support mysql(1).
The table is used by smtpd(8) when authenticating a user, when user information such as user-id and/or home directory is required for a delivery, when a domain lookup may be required, and/or when looking for an alias.
A MySQL table consists of one or more mysql(1) databases with one or more tables.
If the table is used for authentication, the password should be encrypted using the crypt(3) function. Such passwords can be generated using the encrypt(1) utility or smtpctl(8) encrypt command.
MYSQL TABLE CONFIG FILE
The following configuration options are available:
host
hostname- This is the host running MySQL or MariaDB. For example:
host db.example.com
username
username- The username required to talk to the MySQL or MariaDB database. For
example:
username maildba
password
password- The password required to talk to the MySQL or MariaDB database. For
example:
password OpenSMTPDRules!
database
databse- The name of the MySQL or MariaDB database. For example:
databse opensmtpdb
query_alias
SQL statement- This is used to provide a query to look up aliases. The question mark is replaced with the appropriate data. For alias it is the left hand side of the SMTP address. This expects one VARCHAR to be returned with the user name the alias resolves to.
query_credentials
SQL statement- This is used to provide a query for looking up user credentials. The question mark is replaced with the appropriate data. For credentials it is the left hand side of the SMTP address. The query expects that there are two VARCHARS returned, one with a user name and one with a password in crypt(3) format.
query_domain
SQL statement- This is used to provide a query for looking up a domain. The question mark is replaced with the appropriate data. For the domain it would be the right hand side of the SMTP address. This expects one VARCHAR to be returned with a matching domain name.
query_mailaddrmap
SQL statement- This is used to provide a query to look up senders. The question mark is replaced with the appropriate data. This expects one VARCHAR to be returned with the address the sender is allowed to send mails from.
A generic SQL statement would be something like:
query_ SELECT value FROM table WHERE key=?;
EXAMPLES
GENERIC EXAMPLE
Example based on the OpenSMTPD FAQ: Building a Mail Server The filtering part is excluded in this example.
The configuration below is for a medium-size mail server which handles multiple domains with multiple virtual users and is based on several assumptions. One is that a single system user named vmail is used for all virtual users. This user needs to be created:
# useradd -g =uid -c "Virtual Mail" -d /var/vmail -s /sbin/nologin vmail # mkdir /var/vmail # chown vmail:vmail /var/vmail
MySQL schema
CREATE TABLE domains ( id INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, domain VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL DEFAULT '' ); CREATE TABLE virtuals ( id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, email VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL DEFAULT '', destination VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL DEFAULT '' ); CREATE TABLE credentials ( id INT AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY, email VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL DEFAULT '', password VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL DEFAULT '' ); INSERT INTO domains VALUES (1, "example.com"); INSERT INTO domains VALUES (2, "example.net"); INSERT INTO domains VALUES (3, "example.org"); INSERT INTO virtuals VALUES (1, "abuse@example.com", "bob@example.com"); INSERT INTO virtuals VALUES (2, "postmaster@example.com", "bob@example.com"); INSERT INTO virtuals VALUES (3, "webmaster@example.com", "bob@example.com"); INSERT INTO virtuals VALUES (4, "bob@example.com", "vmail"); INSERT INTO virtuals VALUES (5, "abuse@example.net", "alice@example.net"); INSERT INTO virtuals VALUES (6, "postmaster@example.net", "alice@example.net"); INSERT INTO virtuals VALUES (7, "webmaster@example.net", "alice@example.net"); INSERT INTO virtuals VALUES (8, "alice@example.net", "vmail"); INSERT INTO credentials VALUES (1, "bob@example.com", "$2b$08$ANGFKBL.BnDLL0bUl7I6aumTCLRJSQluSQLuueWRG.xceworWrUIu"); INSERT INTO credentials VALUES (2, "alice@example.net", "$2b$08$AkHdB37kaj2NEoTcISHSYOCEBA5vyW1RcD8H1HG.XX0P/G1KIYwii");
/etc/mail/mysql.conf
host db.example.com username maildba password OpenSMTPDRules! database opensmtpdb query_alias SELECT destination FROM virtuals WHERE email=?; query_credentials SELECT email, password FROM credentials WHERE email=?; query_domain SELECT domain FROM domains WHERE domain=?;
/etc/mail/smtpd.conf
table domains mysql:/etc/mail/mysql.conf table virtuals mysql:/etc/mail/mysql.conf table credentials mysql:/etc/mail/mysql.conf listen on egress port 25 tls pki mail.example.com listen on egress port 587 tls-require pki mail.example.com auth <credentials> accept from any for domain <domains> virtual <virtuals> deliver to mbox
MOVING FROM POSTFIX (& POSTFIXADMIN)
/etc/mail/mysql.conf
host db.example.com username postfix password PostfixOutOpenSMTPDin database postfix query_alias SELECT destination FROM alias WHERE email=?; query_credentials SELECT username, password FROM mailbox WHERE username=?; query_domain SELECT domain FROM domain WHERE domain=?;
FILES
- /etc/mail/mysql.conf
- Default table-mysql(8) configuration file.
TODO
Documenting the following query options:
query_netaddr
query_userinfo
query_source
query_mailaddr
query_addrname
SEE ALSO
July 4, 2016 | Linux 6.12.3-arch1-1 |