* outsourced linting tests into its own file
* trigger rebuild
* added SCRIPT variable to setup.sh
* trigger rebuild again
* major test rewrite
* outsourced `hadolint` too
* rewrote some parts of the linting logic due to a logic bug
* adjusted TravisCI
* corrected .bats test line
* corrected logging in linting tests
* updated `hadolint`
Previously, only postfix-relaymap.cf and postfix-accounts.cf would be
used to populate the relayhost_map file.
Now, also use postfix-virtual.cf when present. To me, there is nothing
absurd about sending mail "From:" a virtual account (or more
specifically its domain) so it makes sense that when a $RELAY_HOST is
defined it should be used for virtual accounts as well.
check-for-changes.sh did not have a special case to handle lines in
postfix-relaymap.cf consisting of only a domain (indicating that said
domain should never be relayed). This case is handled by
start-mailserver.sh so when such a line existed, things would work well
until a config file update was detected by check-for-changes.sh. After
that, the generated relayhost_map file would be corrupted.
Fixed by factoring a 'populate_relayhost_map' function out of
start-mailserver.sh and into helper_functions.sh and reusing it in
check-for-changes.sh.
Note: There are certainly quite a few more pieces of code that could be
refactored in a similar fashion.
Note2: check-for-changes.sh would previously never update the
relayhost_map file when $ENABLE_LDAP was set to 1. I don't think this
was intended —there is after all no such condition in
start-mailserver.sh— and so this condition no longer applies.
If a change to one of the tracked files happened soon after (<1 second?)
a previously detected change, it could end up going undetected. In
particular, this could cause integration tests to fail (see next
commits).
Fixed by computing the new checksum file _before_ checking for changes.
Will extract certificates from acme.json as written by traefik for usage in dovecot and postfix.
Also watches acme.json for changes. For this to work the file has to be mounted/present at `/etc/letsencrypt/acme.json`
on hosts that belong to wildcard domains pop3.example.com might
actually resolve to pop3.example.com.[mydomain.com] and give a valid ip
the return code of fetchmail then no longer is 11 (dns failure) but
something else (2 for socket error in our case)
to make sure we always get return code 11 we use the domain name
pop3.example.com. that is not allowed to be resolved to a subdomain.