SSL/TLS
There are multiple options to enable SSL:
- Using letsencrypt (recommended)
- Using Caddy
- Using Traefik
- Using self-signed certificates with the provided tool
- Using your own certificates
After installation, you can test your setup with:
Let's Encrypt (Recommended)
To enable Let's Encrypt on your mail server, you have to:
- Get your certificate using letsencrypt client
- Add an environment variable
SSL_TYPE
with valueletsencrypt
(seedocker-compose.yml
) - Mount your whole
letsencrypt
folder to/etc/letsencrypt
-
The certs folder name located in
letsencrypt/live/
must be thefqdn
of your container responding to thehostname
command. Thefqdn
(full qualified domain name) inside the docker container is built combining thehostname
anddomainname
values of thedocker-compose
file, eg:services: mailserver: hostname: mail domainname: myserver.tld fqdn: mail.myserver.tld
You don't have anything else to do. Enjoy.
Example using Docker for Let's Encrypt
-
Make a directory to store your letsencrypt logs and configs. In my case:
mkdir -p /home/ubuntu/docker/letsencrypt cd /home/ubuntu/docker/letsencrypt
-
Now get the certificate (modify
mail.myserver.tld
) and following the certbot instructions. -
This will need access to port 80 from the internet, adjust your firewall if needed:
docker run --rm -it \ -v $PWD/log/:/var/log/letsencrypt/ \ -v $PWD/etc/:/etc/letsencrypt/ \ -p 80:80 \ certbot/certbot certonly --standalone -d mail.myserver.tld
-
You can now mount
/home/ubuntu/docker/letsencrypt/etc/
in/etc/letsencrypt
ofdocker-mailserver
.To renew your certificate just run (this will need access to port 443 from the internet, adjust your firewall if needed):
docker run --rm -it \ -v $PWD/log/:/var/log/letsencrypt/ \ -v $PWD/etc/:/etc/letsencrypt/ \ -p 80:80 \ -p 443:443 \ certbot/certbot renew
Example using Docker, nginx-proxy
and letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion
If you are running a web server already, it is non-trivial to generate a Let's Encrypt certificate for your mail server using certbot
, because port 80 is already occupied. In the following example, we show how docker-mailserver
can be run alongside the docker containers nginx-proxy
and letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion
.
There are several ways to start nginx-proxy
and letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion
. Any method should be suitable here.
For example start nginx-proxy
as in the letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion
documentation:
docker run --detach \
--name nginx-proxy \
--restart always \
--publish 80:80 \
--publish 443:443 \
--volume /server/letsencrypt/etc:/etc/nginx/certs:ro \
--volume /etc/nginx/vhost.d \
--volume /usr/share/nginx/html \
--volume /var/run/docker.sock:/tmp/docker.sock:ro \
jwilder/nginx-proxy
Then start nginx-proxy-letsencrypt
:
docker run --detach \
--name nginx-proxy-letsencrypt \
--restart always \
--volume /server/letsencrypt/etc:/etc/nginx/certs:rw \
--volumes-from nginx-proxy \
--volume /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro \
jrcs/letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion
Start the rest of your web server containers as usual.
Start another container for your mail.myserver.tld
. This will generate a Let's Encrypt certificate for your domain, which can be used by docker-mailserver
. It will also run a web server on port 80 at that address:
docker run -d \
--name webmail \
-e "VIRTUAL_HOST=mail.myserver.tld" \
-e "LETSENCRYPT_HOST=mail.myserver.tld" \
-e "LETSENCRYPT_EMAIL=foo@bar.com" \
library/nginx
You may want to add -e LETSENCRYPT_TEST=true
to the above while testing to avoid the Let's Encrypt certificate generation rate limits.
Finally, start the mailserver with the docker-compose.yml
. Make sure your mount path to the letsencrypt certificates is correct.
Inside your /path/to/mailserver/docker-compose.yml
(for the mailserver from this repo) make sure volumes look like below example:
volumes:
- maildata:/var/mail
- mailstate:/var/mail-state
- ./config/:/tmp/docker-mailserver/
- /server/letsencrypt/etc:/etc/letsencrypt/live
Then: /path/to/mailserver/docker-compose up -d mail
Example using Docker, nginx-proxy
and letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion
with docker-compose
The following docker-compose.yml
is the basic setup you need for using letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion
. It is mainly derived from its own wiki/documenation.
Example Code
version: "2"
services:
nginx:
image: nginx
container_name: nginx
ports:
- 80:80
- 443:443
volumes:
- /mnt/data/nginx/htpasswd:/etc/nginx/htpasswd
- /mnt/data/nginx/conf.d:/etc/nginx/conf.d
- /mnt/data/nginx/vhost.d:/etc/nginx/vhost.d
- /mnt/data/nginx/html:/usr/share/nginx/html
- /mnt/data/nginx/certs:/etc/nginx/certs:ro
networks:
- proxy-tier
restart: always
nginx-gen:
image: jwilder/docker-gen
container_name: nginx-gen
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/tmp/docker.sock:ro
- /mnt/data/nginx/templates/nginx.tmpl:/etc/docker-gen/templates/nginx.tmpl:ro
volumes_from:
- nginx
entrypoint: /usr/local/bin/docker-gen -notify-sighup nginx -watch -wait 5s:30s /etc/docker-gen/templates/nginx.tmpl /etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf
restart: always
letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion:
image: jrcs/letsencrypt-nginx-proxy-companion
container_name: letsencrypt-companion
volumes_from:
- nginx
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro
- /mnt/data/nginx/certs:/etc/nginx/certs:rw
environment:
- NGINX_DOCKER_GEN_CONTAINER=nginx-gen
- DEBUG=false
restart: always
networks:
proxy-tier:
external:
name: nginx-proxy
The second part of the setup is the actual mail container. So, in another folder, create another docker-compose.yml
with the following content (Removed all ENV variables for this example):
Example Code
version: '2'
services:
mailserver:
image: mailserver/docker-mailserver:latest
hostname: <HOSTNAME> # <-- change this
domainname: <DOMAINNAME> # <-- change this
container_name: mailserver
ports:
- "25:25"
- "143:143"
- "465:465"
- "587:587"
- "993:993"
volumes:
- ./mail:/var/mail
- ./mail-state:/var/mail-state
- ./config/:/tmp/docker-mailserver/
- /mnt/data/nginx/certs/:/etc/letsencrypt/live/:ro
cap_add:
- NET_ADMIN
- SYS_PTRACE
restart: always
cert-companion:
image: nginx
environment:
- "VIRTUAL_HOST="
- "VIRTUAL_NETWORK=nginx-proxy"
- "LETSENCRYPT_HOST="
- "LETSENCRYPT_EMAIL="
networks:
- proxy-tier
restart: always
networks:
proxy-tier:
external:
name: nginx-proxy
The mail container needs to have the letsencrypt certificate folder mounted as a volume. No further changes are needed. The second container is a dummy-sidecar we need, because the mail-container do not expose any web-ports. Set your ENV variables as you need. (VIRTUAL_HOST
and LETSENCRYPT_HOST
are mandandory, see documentation)
Example using the Let's Encrypt Certificates on a Synology NAS
Version 6.2 and later of the Synology NAS DSM OS now come with an interface to generate and renew letencrypt certificates. Navigation into your DSM control panel and go to Security, then click on the tab Certificate to generate and manage letsencrypt certificates.
Amongst other things, you can use these to secure your mail server. DSM locates the generated certificates in a folder below /usr/syno/etc/certificate/_archive/
.
Navigate to that folder and note the 6 character random folder name of the certificate you'd like to use. Then, add the following to your docker-compose.yml
declaration file:
volumes:
- /usr/syno/etc/certificate/_archive/<your-folder>/:/tmp/ssl
environment:
- SSL_TYPE=manual
- SSL_CERT_PATH=/tmp/ssl/fullchain.pem
- SSL_KEY_PATH=/tmp/ssl/privkey.pem
DSM-generated letsencrypt certificates get auto-renewed every three months.
Caddy
If you are using Caddy to renew your certificates, please note that only RSA certificates work. Read #1440 for details. In short for Caddy v1 the Caddyfile
should look something like:
https://mail.domain.com {
tls yourcurrentemail@gmail.com {
key_type rsa2048
}
}
For Caddy v2 you can specify the key_type
in your server's global settings, which would end up looking something like this if you're using a Caddyfile
:
{
debug
admin localhost:2019
http_port 80
https_port 443
default_sni mywebserver.com
key_type rsa4096
}
If you are instead using a json config for Caddy v2, you can set it in your site's TLS automation policies:
Example Code
{
"apps": {
"http": {
"servers": {
"srv0": {
"listen": [
":443"
],
"routes": [
{
"match": [
{
"host": [
"mail.domain.com",
]
}
],
"handle": [
{
"handler": "subroute",
"routes": [
{
"handle": [
{
"body": "",
"handler": "static_response"
}
]
}
]
}
],
"terminal": true
},
]
}
}
},
"tls": {
"automation": {
"policies": [
{
"subjects": [
"mail.domain.com",
],
"key_type": "rsa2048",
"issuer": {
"email": "email@email.com",
"module": "acme"
}
},
{
"issuer": {
"email": "email@email.com",
"module": "acme"
}
}
]
}
}
}
}
The generated certificates can be mounted:
volumes:
- ${CADDY_DATA_DIR}/certificates/acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org-directory/mail.domain.com/mail.domain.com.crt:/etc/letsencrypt/live/mail.domain.com/fullchain.pem
- ${CADDY_DATA_DIR}/certificates/acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org-directory/mail.domain.com/mail.domain.com.key:/etc/letsencrypt/live/mail.domain.com/privkey.pem
EC certificates fail in the TLS handshake:
CONNECTED(00000003)
140342221178112:error:14094410:SSL routines:ssl3_read_bytes:sslv3 alert handshake failure:ssl/record/rec_layer_s3.c:1543:SSL alert number 40
no peer certificate available
No client certificate CA names sent
Traefik v2
Traefik is an open-source application proxy using the ACME protocol. Traefik can request certificates for domains and subdomains, and it will take care of renewals, challenge negotiations, etc. We strongly recommend to use Traefik's major version 2.
Traefik's storage format is natively supported if the acme.json
store is mounted into the container at /etc/letsencrypt/acme.json
. The file is also monitored for changes and will trigger a reload of the mail services. Wild card certificates issued for *.domain.tld
are supported. You will then want to use SSL_DOMAIN=domain.tld
. Lookup of the certificate domain happens in the following order:
${SSL_DOMAIN}
${HOSTNAME}
${DOMAINNAME}
This setup only comes with one caveat: The domain has to be configured on another service for Traefik to actually request it from Let'sEncrypt, i.e. Traefik will not issue a certificate without a service / router demanding it.
Example Code
Here is an example setup for docker-compose
:
version: '3.8'
services:
mailserver:
image: docker.io/mailserver/docker-mailserver:latest
container_name: mailserver
hostname: mail
domainname: domain.tld
volumes:
- /traefik/acme.json:/etc/letsencrypt/acme.json:ro
environment:
SSL_TYPE: letsencrypt
SSL_DOMAIN: mail.example.com"
# for a wildcard certificate, use
# SSL_DOMAIN: example.com
traefik:
image: docker.io/traefik:v2.4.8
ports:
- "80:80"
- "443:443"
command:
- --providers.docker
- --entrypoints.http.address=:80
- --entrypoints.http.http.redirections.entryPoint.to=https
- --entrypoints.http.http.redirections.entryPoint.scheme=https
- --entrypoints.https.address=:443
- --entrypoints.https.http.tls.certResolver=letsencrypt
- --certificatesresolvers.letsencrypt.acme.email=admin@domain.tld
- --certificatesresolvers.letsencrypt.acme.storage=/acme.json
- --certificatesresolvers.letsencrypt.acme.httpchallenge.entrypoint=http
volumes:
- /traefik/acme.json:/acme.json
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro
whoami:
image: docker.io/traefik/whoami:latest
labels:
- "traefik.http.routers.whoami.rule=Host(`mail.domain.tld`)"
Self-Signed Certificates
Warning
Use self-signed certificates only for testing purposes!
This feature requires you to provide the following files into your config/ssl/
directory (internal location: /tmp/docker-mailserver/ssl/
):
${HOSTNAME}-key.pem
${HOSTNAME}-cert.pem
demoCA/cacert.pem
Where ${HOSTNAME}
is the mailserver FQDN (hostname
(mail) + domainname
(example.com), eg: mail.example.com
).
To use the certificate:
- Add
SSL_TYPE=self-signed
to your container environment variables. - If a matching certificate (files listed above) is found in
config/ssl
, it will be automatically setup in postfix and dovecot. You just have to place them inconfig/ssl
folder.
Generating a self-signed certificate
Note
Since v10, support in setup.sh
for generating a self-signed SSL certificate internally was removed.
It is now similar to SSL_TYPE=manual
(except manual
does not support verification for a custom CA), but does not require additional ENV vars for providing the location of cert files.
One way to generate self-signed certificates is with Smallstep's step
CLI. This is exactly what docker-mailserver
does for creating test certificates.
For example with the FQDN mail.example.test
, you can generate the required files by running:
#! /bin/sh
mkdir -p demoCA
step certificate create "Smallstep Root CA" "demoCA/cacert.pem" "demoCA/cakey.pem" \
--no-password --insecure \
--profile root-ca \
--not-before "2021-01-01T00:00:00+00:00" \
--not-after "2031-01-01T00:00:00+00:00" \
--san "example.test" \
--san "mail.example.test" \
--kty RSA --size 2048
step certificate create "Smallstep Leaf" mail.example.test-cert.pem mail.example.test-key.pem \
--no-password --insecure \
--profile leaf \
--ca "demoCA/cacert.pem" \
--ca-key "demoCA/cakey.pem" \
--not-before "2021-01-01T00:00:00+00:00" \
--not-after "2031-01-01T00:00:00+00:00" \
--san "example.test" \
--san "mail.example.test" \
--kty RSA --size 2048
If you'd rather not install the CLI tool locally to run the step
commands above; you can save the script above to a file such as generate-certs.sh
(and make it executable chmod +x generate-certs.sh
) in a directory that you want the certs to be placed, then run that script with docker:
# --user to keep ownership of the files to your user and group ID
docker run --rm -it \
--user "$(id -u):$(id -g)" \
--volume "${PWD}:/tmp" \
--workdir "/tmp" \
--entrypoint "/tmp/generate-certs.sh" \
smallstep/step-ca
Custom Certificate Files
You can also provide your own certificate files. Add these entries to your docker-compose.yml
:
volumes:
- /etc/ssl:/tmp/ssl:ro
environment:
- SSL_TYPE=manual
- SSL_CERT_PATH=/tmp/ssl/cert/public.crt
- SSL_KEY_PATH=/tmp/ssl/private/private.key
This will mount the path where your ssl certificates reside as read-only under /tmp/ssl
. Then all you have to do is to specify the location of your private key and the certificate.
Info
You may have to restart your mailserver once the certificates change.
Testing a Certificate is Valid
-
From your host:
docker exec mail openssl s_client \ -connect 0.0.0.0:25 \ -starttls smtp \ -CApath /etc/ssl/certs/
-
Or:
docker exec mail openssl s_client \ -connect 0.0.0.0:143 \ -starttls imap \ -CApath /etc/ssl/certs/
And you should see the certificate chain, the server certificate and: Verify return code: 0 (ok)
In addition, to verify certificate dates:
docker exec mail openssl s_client \
-connect 0.0.0.0:25 \
-starttls smtp \
-CApath /etc/ssl/certs/ \
2>/dev/null | openssl x509 -noout -dates
Plain-Text Access
Warning
Not recommended for purposes other than testing.
Add this to config/dovecot.cf
:
ssl = yes
disable_plaintext_auth=no
These options in conjunction mean:
- SSL/TLS is offered to the client, but the client isn't required to use it.
- The client is allowed to login with plaintext authentication even when SSL/TLS isn't enabled on the connection.
- This is insecure, because the plaintext password is exposed to the internet.
Importing Certificates Obtained via Another Source
If you have another source for SSL/TLS certificates you can import them into the server via an external script. The external script can be found here: external certificate import script.
The steps to follow are these:
- Transport the new certificates to
./config/ssl
(/tmp/ssl
in the container) - You should provide
fullchain.key
andprivkey.pem
- Place the script in
./config/
(or/tmp/docker-mailserver/
inside the container) - Make the script executable (
chmod +x tomav-renew-certs.sh
) - Run the script:
docker exec mail /tmp/docker-mailserver/tomav-renew-certs.sh
If an error occurs the script will inform you. If not you will see both postfix and dovecot restart.
After the certificates have been loaded you can check the certificate:
openssl s_client \
-servername mail.mydomain.net \
-connect 192.168.0.72:465 \
2>/dev/null | openssl x509
# or
openssl s_client \
-servername mail.mydomain.net \
-connect mail.mydomain.net:465 \
2>/dev/null | openssl x509
Or you can check how long the new certificate is valid with commands like:
export SITE_URL="mail.mydomain.net"
export SITE_IP_URL="192.168.0.72" # can also be `mail.mydomain.net`
export SITE_SSL_PORT="993" # imap port dovecot
##works: check if certificate will expire in two weeks
#2 weeks is 1209600 seconds
#3 weeks is 1814400
#12 weeks is 7257600
#15 weeks is 9072000
certcheck_2weeks=`openssl s_client -connect ${SITE_IP_URL}:${SITE_SSL_PORT} \
-servername ${SITE_URL} 2> /dev/null | openssl x509 -noout -checkend 1209600`
####################################
#notes: output can be
#Certificate will not expire
#Certificate will expire
####################
What does the script that imports the certificates do:
- Check if there are new certs in the
/tmp/ssl
folder. - Check with the ssl cert fingerprint if they differ from the current certificates.
- If so it will copy the certs to the right places.
- And restart postfix and dovecot.
You can of course run the script by cron once a week or something. In that way you could automate cert renewal. If you do so it is probably wise to run an automated check on certificate expiry as well. Such a check could look something like this:
## code below will alert if certificate expires in less than two weeks
## please adjust varables!
## make sure the mail -s command works! Test!
export SITE_URL="mail.mydomain.net"
export SITE_IP_URL="192.168.2.72" # can also be `mail.mydomain.net`
export SITE_SSL_PORT="993" # imap port dovecot
export ALERT_EMAIL_ADDR="bill@gates321boom.com"
certcheck_2weeks=`openssl s_client -connect ${SITE_IP_URL}:${SITE_SSL_PORT} \
-servername ${SITE_URL} 2> /dev/null | openssl x509 -noout -checkend 1209600`
####################################
#notes: output can be
#Certificate will not expire
#Certificate will expire
####################
#echo "certcheck 2 weeks gives $certcheck_2weeks"
##automated check you might run by cron or something
## does tls/ssl certificate expire within two weeks?
if [ "$certcheck_2weeks" = "Certificate will not expire" ]; then
echo "all is well, certwatch 2 weeks says $certcheck_2weeks"
else
echo "Cert seems to be expiring pretty soon, within two weeks: $certcheck_2weeks"
echo "we will send an alert email and log as well"
logger Certwatch: cert $SITE_URL will expire in two weeks
echo "Certwatch: cert $SITE_URL will expire in two weeks" | mail -s "cert $SITE_URL expires in two weeks " $ALERT_EMAIL_ADDR
fi