The new function can
1. update/append
2. update/prepend
3. initialize if non-existent
options in `/etc/postfix/main.cf` in a safe and secure manner. When the
container is improperly restarted, the option is not applied twice.
---
Co-authored-by: Casper <casperklein@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Brennan Kinney <5098581+polarathene@users.noreply.github.com>
For an upcoming PR, these changes are required, because the script that
is using the helpers uses `set -eE`. This leads to situations where
errors are not properly handled in our helpers (yet; I plan on changing
that in the future).
* added checks whether OpenDKIM/OpenDMARC/policyd-spf are enabled
* added functions to check if VAR is 0/0 or an int
and also added tests.
I also adjusted the test file to not run in a container, because there
is no need. This also decreases test time, which, in turn, increases
maintainers' happiness.
* added more checks to Rspamd setup
I added the helpers from the previous commit to the Rspamd setup to make
the whole setup more robust, and indicate to the user that an ENV
variable's value is incorrect.
While we did not issues for this in the past, I believe it to be
worthwhile for the future.
* added canonical directory for users to place files in
This dir is canonical with DMS's optional configuration dirs, as it
lives in well-known volume mounts. Hence, users will not need to adjust
`/etc/rspamd/override.d` manually anymore, or mount a volume to this
place.
The docs explain this now, but the DKIM page needs a slight update on
this too I guess. I will follow-up here.
* misc minor improvements
* use variables for common directories
* fix: Workaround `postconf` write settle logic
After updating `main.cf`, to avoid an enforced delay from reading the config by postfix tools, we can ensure the modified time is at least 2 seconds in the past as a workaround. This should be ok with our usage AFAIK.
Shaves off 2+ seconds roughly off each container startup, reduces roughly 2+ minutes off tests.
* chore: Only modify `mtime` if less than 2 seconds ago
- Slight improvement by avoiding unnecessary writes with a conditional check on the util method.
- Can more comfortably call this during `postfix reload` in the change detection cycle now.
- Identified other tests that'd benefit from this, created a helper method to call instead of copy/paste.
- The `setup email restrict` command also did a modification and reload. Added util method here too.
* tests(fix): `mail_smtponly.bats` should wait for Postfix
- `postfix reload` fails if the service is not ready yet.
- `service postfix reload` and `/etc/init.d/postfix reload` presumably wait until it is ready? (as these work regardless)
* chore: Review feedback - Move reload method into utilities
* chore(`aliases.sh`): Filepath to local var `DATABASE_VIRTUAL`
* chore(`accounts.sh`): Filepath to local var `DATABASE_ACCOUNTS`
* chore(`accounts.sh`): Filepath to local var `DATABASE_VIRTUAL`
* chore(`accounts.sh`): Filepath to local var `DATABASE_DOVECOT_MASTERS`
* chore(`bin/open-dkim`): Filepaths to local vars (accounts,virtual,vhost)
* chore(`relay.sh`): Filepath to local var `DATABASE_SASL_PASSWD`
* chore: Rename method
Prior PR feedback suggested a better helper method name.
* chore: Normalize filtering config lines as input for iterating
* chore: Remove `_is_comment` helper method
No longer serving a purpose with more appropriate filter method for pre-processing the entire config file.
* fix(listmailuser): Don't parse comments
Avoids passing comments to `dovecot_quota_to_hr()` which fails to handle it and would throws errors.
* chore: Move config filter method to `helpers/utils.sh`
This PR does two small things:
1. The log level, in case it is unset, will now be "calculated" from
`/etc/dms-settings` and not always default to `info`. This way, we
can ensure that more often than not, the log level the user chose
when starting DMS is used everywhere.
2. I noticed that the way I obtained the log level could be used to
obtain any env variable's log level. I therefore added a function to
`utils.sh` in case we use it in the future.