wader / postfix-relay

Postfix SMTP relay docker image
https://hub.docker.com/r/mwader/postfix-relay/
MIT License
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dkim docker-image postfix relay smtp-server spf

postfix-relay

Postfix SMTP relay docker image. Useful for sending email without using an external SMTP server.

Default configuration is an open relay that relies on docker networking for protection. So be careful to not expose it publicly.

Usage

docker pull mwader/postfix-relay or clone/build it yourself. Docker hub image is built for amd64, arm/v7 and arm64.

Postfix variables

Postfix configuration options can be set using POSTFIX_<name> environment variables. See Dockerfile for default configuration. You probably want to set POSTFIX_myhostname (the FQDN used by 220/HELO).

Note that POSTFIX_myhostname will change the postfix option myhostname.

You can modify master.cf using postconf with POSTFIXMASTER_ variables. All double __ symbols will be replaced with /. For example

Postfix master.cf variables

- POSTFIXMASTER_submission__inet=submission inet n - y - - smtpd

will produce

postconf -Me submission/inet="submission inet n - y - - smtpd"

Postfix lookup tables

You can also create multiline tables using POSTMAP_<filename> like this example:

environment:
  - POSTFIX_transport_maps=hash:/etc/postfix/transport
  - |
    POSTMAP_transport=gmail.com smtp
    mydomain.com relay:[relay1.mydomain.com]:587
    * relay:[relay2.mydomain.com]:587

which will generate file /etc/postfix/transport

gmail.com smtp
mydomain.com relay:[relay1.mydomain.com]:587
* relay:[relay2.mydomain.com]:587

and run postmap /etc/postfix/transport.

Relay Client Authentication

The container includes Postfix SASL authentication options that are disabled by default.

Example Basic Client PAM Auth

First, create a passwd file.

echo "myuser:"`docker run --rm mwader/postfix-relay mkpasswd -m sha-512 "mypassword"` >> passwd_file

Then mount the passwd file and add the following postfix configs via enviromental variable.

volumes:
  - /path/to/passwd_file:/etc/postfix/sasl/sasl_passwds
environment:
  - SASL_Passwds=/etc/postfix/sasl/sasl_passwds
  - POSTFIX_smtpd_sasl_auth_enable=yes
  - POSTFIX_cyrus_sasl_config_path=/etc/postfix/sasl
  - POSTFIX_smtpd_sasl_security_options=noanonymous
  - POSTFIX_smtpd_relay_restrictions=permit_sasl_authenticated,reject

OpenDKIM variables

OpenDKIM configuration options can be set using OPENDKIM_<name> environment variables. See Dockerfile for default configuration. For example OPENDKIM_Canonicalization=relaxed/simple.

Using docker run

docker run -e POSTFIX_myhostname=smtp.domain.tld mwader/postfix-relay

Using docker-compose

app:
  # use hostname "smtp" as SMTP server

smtp:
  image: mwader/postfix-relay
  restart: always
  environment:
    - POSTFIX_myhostname=smtp.domain.tld
    - OPENDKIM_DOMAINS=smtp.domain.tld

Logging

By default container only logs to stdout. If you also wish to log mail.* messages to file on persistent volume, you can do something like:

environment:
  ...
  - RSYSLOG_LOG_TO_FILE=yes
  - RSYSLOG_TIMESTAMP=yes
volumes:
  - /your_local_path:/var/log/

You can also forward log output to remote syslog server if you define RSYSLOG_REMOTE_HOST variable. It always uses UDP protocol and port 514 as default value, port number can be changed to different one with RSYSLOG_REMOTE_PORT. Default format of forwarded messages is defined by Rsyslog template RSYSLOG_ForwardFormat, you can change it to another template (section Reserved Template Names) if you wish with RSYSLOG_REMOTE_TEMPLATE variable.

environment:
  ...
  - RSYSLOG_REMOTE_HOST=my.remote-syslog-server.com
  - RSYSLOG_REMOTE_PORT=514
  - RSYSLOG_REMOTE_TEMPLATE=RSYSLOG_ForwardFormat

Advanced logging configuration

If configuration via environment variables is not flexible enough it's possible to configure rsyslog directly: .conf files in the /etc/rsyslog.d directory will be sorted alphabetically and included into the primary configuration.

Timezone

Wrong timestamps in log can be fixed by setting proper timezone. This parameter is handled by Debian base image.

environment:
  ...
  - TZ=Europe/Prague

Known issues

I see key data is not secure: /etc/opendkim/keys can be read or written by other users error messages.

Some Docker distributions like Docker for Windows and RancherOS seems to handle volume permission in way that does not work with OpenDKIM default behavior of ensuring safe permissions on private keys.

A workaround is to disable the check using a OPENDKIM_RequireSafeKeys=no environment variable.

SPF

When sending email using your own SMTP server it is probably a good idea to setup SPF for the domain you're sending from.

DKIM

To enable DKIM, specify a whitespace-separated list of domains in the environment variable OPENDKIM_DOMAINS. The default DKIM selector is "mail", but can be changed to "<selector>" using the syntax OPENDKIM_DOMAINS=<domain>=<selector>.

At container start, RSA key pairs will be generated for each domain unless the file /etc/opendkim/keys/<domain>/<selector>.private exists. If you want the keys to persist indefinitely, make sure to mount a volume for /etc/opendkim/keys, otherwise they will be destroyed when the container is removed.

DNS records to configure can be found in the container log or by running docker exec <container> sh -c 'cat /etc/opendkim/keys/*/*.txt you should see something like this:

$ docker exec 7996454b5fca sh -c 'cat /etc/opendkim/keys/*/*.txt'

mail._domainkey.smtp.domain.tld. IN TXT ( "v=DKIM1; h=sha256; k=rsa; "
      "p=MIIBIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIIBCgKCAQEA0Dx7wLGPFVaxVQ4TGym/eF89aQ8oMxS9v5BCc26Hij91t2Ci8Fl12DHNVqZoIPGm+9tTIoDVDFEFrlPhMOZl8i4jU9pcFjjaIISaV2+qTa8uV1j3MyByogG8pu4o5Ill7zaySYFsYB++cHJ9pjbFSC42dddCYMfuVgrBsLNrvEi3dLDMjJF5l92Uu8YeswFe26PuHX3Avr261n"
      "j5joTnYwat4387VEUyGUnZ0aZxCERi+ndXv2/wMJ0tizq+a9+EgqIb+7lkUc2XciQPNuTujM25GhrQBEKznvHyPA6fHsFheymOuB763QpkmnQQLCxyLygAY9mE/5RY+5Q6J9oDOQIDAQAB" )  ; ----- DKIM key mail for smtp.domain.tld

License

postfix-relay is licensed under the MIT license. See LICENSE for the full license text.