Chapter 8. Deploying and configuring a Postfix SMTP server
You can configure your email infrastructure by using the Postfix mail transport agent (MTA) to transport email messages between hosts by using the SMTP protocol. Postfix is a server-side application for routing and delivering mail.
You can use Postfix to set up a local mail server, create a null-client mail relay, use a Postfix server as a destination for multiple domains, or choose an LDAP directory instead of files for lookups.
The postfix package provides multiple configuration files in the /etc/postfix/ directory.
To configure your email infrastructure, use the following configuration files:
-
main.cf- contains the global configuration of Postfix. -
master.cf- specifies Postfix interaction with various processes to accomplish mail delivery. -
access- specifies access rules, for example hosts that are allowed to connect to Postfix. -
transport- maps email addresses to relay hosts. -
aliases- contains a configurable list required by the mail protocol that describes user ID aliases. Note that you can find this file in the/etc/directory.
The key features of Postfix:
- Security features to protect against common email related threats
- Customization options, including support for virtual domains and aliases
8.1. Installing and configuring a Postfix SMTP server Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
You can configure your Postfix SMTP server to receive, store, and deliver email messages. If you do not select the mail server package during the system installation, Postfix will not be available by default.
Prerequisites
Procedure
Remove the Sendmail utility:
# yum remove sendmailInstall Postfix:
# yum install postfixTo configure Postfix, edit the
/etc/postfix/main.cffile and make the following changes:By default, Postfix receives emails only on the
loopbackinterface. To configure Postfix to listen on specific interfaces, update theinet_interfacesparameter to the IP addresses of these interfaces:inet_interfaces = 127.0.0.1/32, [::1]/128, 192.0.2.1, [2001:db8:1::1]To configure Postfix to listen on all interfaces, set:
inet_interfaces = allIf you want that Postfix uses a different hostname than the fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) that is returned by the
gethostname()function, add themyhostnameparameter:myhostname = smtp.example.comFor example, Postfix adds this hostname to the header of emails it processes.
If the domain name differs from the one in the
myhostnameparameter, add themydomainparameter:mydomain = example.comAdd the
myoriginparameter and set it to the value ofmydomain:myorigin = $mydomainWith this setting, Postfix uses the domain name as origin for locally posted mails instead of the hostname.
Add the
mynetworksparameter, and define the IP ranges of trusted networks that are allowed to send mails:mynetworks = 127.0.0.1/32, [::1]/128, 192.0.2.1/24, [2001:db8:1::1]/64If clients from non-trustworthy networks, such as the internet, should be able to send mails through this server, you must configure relay restrictions in a later step.
Verify if the Postfix configuration in the
main.cffile is correct:# postfix checkEnable the
postfixservice to start at boot and start it:# systemctl enable --now postfixAllow the smtp traffic through firewall and reload the firewall rules:
# firewall-cmd --permanent --add-service smtp # firewall-cmd --reload
Verification
Verify that the
postfixservice is running:# systemctl status postfixOptional: Restart the
postfixservice, if the output is stopped, waiting, or the service is not running:# systemctl restart postfixOptional: Reload the
postfixservice after changing any options in the configuration files in the/etc/postfix/directory to apply those changes:# systemctl reload postfix
Verify the email communication between local users on your system:
# echo "This is a test message" | mail -s <subject> <user@mydomain.com>To verify that your mail server does not relay emails from external IP ranges to foreign domains, follow the below mentioned procedure:
-
Log in to a client which is not within the subnets that you defined in
mynetworks. - Configure the client to use your mail server.
-
Try to send an email to an email address that is not under the domain you specified in mydomain on your mail server. For example, try to send an email to
non-existing-user@redhat.com. Check the
/var/log/maillogfile:554 Relay access denied - the server is not going to relay. 250 OK or similar - the server is going to relay.
-
Log in to a client which is not within the subnets that you defined in
Troubleshooting
-
In case of errors, check the
/var/log/maillogfile.
8.2. Customizing TLS settings of a Postfix server Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
With Transport Layer Security (TLS), you can encrypt email traffic to increase the security. For example, you can customize TLS settings and use a certificate from a trusted certificate authority (CA) instead of the self-signed certificate.
In RHEL 8, the TLS encryption protocol is enabled in the Postfix server by default. The basic Postfix TLS configuration contains self-signed certificates for inbound SMTP and the opportunistic TLS for outbound SMTP.
Prerequisites
-
You have the
postfixpackage installed on your server. - You have a certificate signed by a trusted certificate authority (CA) and a private key.
You have copied the following files to the Postfix server:
-
The server certificate:
/etc/pki/tls/certs/postfix.pem -
The private key:
/etc/pki/tls/private/postfix.key
-
The server certificate:
Procedure
Set the path to the certificate and private key files on the server where Postfix is running by adding the following lines to the
/etc/postfix/main.cffile:smtpd_tls_cert_file = /etc/pki/tls/certs/postfix.pem smtpd_tls_key_file = /etc/pki/tls/private/postfix.keyRestrict the incoming SMTP connections to authenticated users only by editing the
/etc/postfix/main.cffile:smtpd_tls_auth_only = yesReload the
postfixservice to apply the changes:# systemctl reload postfix
Verification
Configure your client to use TLS encryption and send an email.
NoteTo get additional information about Postfix client TLS activity, increase the log level from
0to1by changing the following line in the/etc/postfix/main.cf:smtp_tls_loglevel = 1
8.3. Configuring Postfix to forward all emails to a mail relay Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
If you want to forward all email to a mail relay, you can configure Postfix server as a null client. In this configuration Postfix only forwards mail to a different mail server and is not capable of receiving mail.
Prerequisites
-
You have the
postfixpackage installed on your server. - You have the IP address or hostname of the relay host to which you want to forward emails.
Procedure
To prevent Postfix from accepting any local email delivery and making it a null client, edit the
/etc/postfix/main.cffile and make the following changes:Configure Postfix to forward all email by setting the
mydestinationparameter equal to an empty value:mydestination =In this configuration the Postfix server is not a destination for any email and acts as a null client.
Specify the mail relay server that receives the email from your null client:
relayhost = [<ip_address_or_hostname>]The relay host is responsible for the mail delivery. Enclose
<ip_address_or_hostname>in square brackets.Configure the Postfix mail server to listen only on the loopback interface for emails to deliver:
inet_interfaces = loopback-onlyIf you want Postfix to rewrite the sender domain of all outgoing emails to the company domain of your relay mail server, set:
myorigin = relay.example.comTo disable the local mail delivery, add the following directive at the end of the configuration file:
local_transport = error: local delivery disabledAdd the
mynetworksparameter so that Postfix forwards email from the local system originating from the 127.0.0.0/8 IPv4 network and the [::1]/128 IPv6 network to the mail relay server:mynetworks = 127.0.0.0/8, [::1]/128
Verify if the Postfix configuration in the
main.cffile is correct:# postfix checkRestart the
postfixservice to apply the changes:# systemctl restart postfix
Verification
Verify that the email communication is forwarded to the mail relay:
# echo "This is a test message" | mail -s <subject> <user@example.com>
Troubleshooting
-
In case of errors, check the
/var/log/maillogfile.
8.4. Configuring Postfix as a destination for multiple domains Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
You can configure Postfix as a mail server that can receive emails for multiple domains. In this configuration, Postfix acts as the final destination for emails sent to addresses within the specified domains.
You can configure the following scenarios:
- Set up multiple email addresses that point to the same email destination
- Route incoming email for multiple domains to the same Postfix server
Prerequisites
- You have configured a Postfix server.
Procedure
In the
/etc/postfix/virtualvirtual alias file, specify the email addresses for each domain. Add each email address on a new line:<info@example.com> <user22@example.net> <sales@example.com> <user11@example.org>In this example, Postfix redirects all emails sent to info@example.com to user22@example.net and email sent to sales@example.com to user11@example.org.
Create a hash file for the virtual alias map:
# postmap /etc/postfix/virtualThis command creates the
/etc/postfix/virtual.dbfile. Note that you must always re-run this command after you update the/etc/postfix/virtualfile.In the Postfix
/etc/postfix/main.cfconfiguration file, add thevirtual_alias_mapsparameter and point it to the hash file:virtual_alias_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/virtualReload the
postfixservice to apply the changes:# systemctl reload postfix
Verification
- Test the configuration by sending an email to one of the virtual email addresses.
Troubleshooting
-
In case of errors, check the
/var/log/maillogfile.
8.5. Using an LDAP directory as a lookup table Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
If you use a Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) server to store accounts, domains or aliases, you can configure Postfix to use the LDAP server as a lookup table. Using LDAP instead of files for lookups enables you to have a central database.
Prerequisites
-
You have the
postfixpackage installed on your server. - You have an LDAP server with the required schema and user credentials.
-
You have the
postfix-ldapplugin installed on the server running Postfix.
Procedure
Configure the LDAP lookup parameters by creating a
/etc/postfix/ldap-aliases.cffile with the following content:Specify the hostname of the LDAP server:
server_host = ldap.example.comSpecify the base domain name for the LDAP search:
search_base = dc=example,dc=com-
Optional: Customize the LDAP search filter and attributes based on your requirements. The filter for searching the directory defaults to
query_filter = mailacceptinggeneralid=%s.
Enable the LDAP source as a lookup table in the
/etc/postfix/main.cfconfiguration file by adding the following content:virtual_alias_maps = ldap:/etc/postfix/ldap-aliases.cfFor further details, see the
/usr/share/doc/postfix/README_FILES/LDAP_READMEand/usr/share/doc/postfix/README_FILES/DATABASE_READMEfiles.Verify the LDAP configuration by running the
postmapcommand, which checks for any syntax errors or connectivity issues:# postmap -q @example.com ldap:/etc/postfix/ldap-aliases.cfReload the
postfixservice to apply the changes:# systemctl reload postfix
Verification
-
Send a test email to verify that the LDAP lookup works correctly. Check the mail logs in
/var/log/maillogfor any errors.
8.6. Configuring Postfix as an outgoing mail server to relay for authenticated users Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
You can configure Postfix to relay mail for authenticated users. In this scenario, you allow users to authenticate themselves and use their email address to send mail through your SMTP server by configuring Postfix as an outgoing mail server.
Prerequisites
- You have configured a Postfix server.
Procedure
To configure Postfix as an outgoing mail server, edit the
/etc/postfix/main.cffile and add the following:Enable SMTP authentication:
smtpd_sasl_auth_enable = yes broken_sasl_auth_clients = yesDisable access without TLS:
smtpd_tls_auth_only = yesAllow mail relaying only for authenticated users:
smtpd_relay_restrictions = permit_mynetworks permit_sasl_authenticated defer_unauth_destinationOptional: Restrict users to use their own email address only as a sender:
smtpd_sender_restrictions = reject_sender_login_mismatch
Reload the
postfixservice to apply the changes:# systemctl reload postfix
Verification
- Authenticate in your SMTP client that supports TLS and SASL. Send a test email to verify that the SMTP authentication works correctly.
8.7. Delivering email from Postfix to Dovecot running on the same host Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
You can configure Postfix to deliver incoming mail to Dovecot on the same host using LMTP over a UNIX socket. This socket enables direct communication between Postfix and Dovecot on the local machine.
Prerequisites
- You have configured a Postfix server.
- You have configured a Dovecot server, see Configuring and maintaining a Dovecot IMAP and POP3 server.
- You have configured the LMTP socket on your Dovecot server, see Configuring an LMTP socket and LMTPS listener.
Procedure
Configure Postfix to use the LMTP protocol and the UNIX domain socket for delivering mail to Dovecot in the
/etc/postfix/main.cffile:If you want to use virtual mailboxes, add the following content:
virtual_transport = lmtp:unix:/var/run/dovecot/lmtpIf you want to use non-virtual mailboxes, add the following content:
mailbox_transport = lmtp:unix:/var/run/dovecot/lmtp
Reload
postfixto apply the changes:# systemctl reload postfix
Verification
-
Send a test email to verify that the LMTP socket works correctly. Check the mail logs in
/var/log/maillogfor any errors.
8.8. Delivering email from Postfix to Dovecot running on a different host Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
You can establish a secure connection between Postfix mail server and the Dovecot delivery agent over the network. To do so, configure the LMTP service to use a network socket for delivering mail between mail servers.
By default, the LMTP protocol is not encrypted. However, if you configured TLS encryption, Dovecot uses the same settings automatically for the LMTP service. SMTP servers can then connect to it by using the STARTTLS command over LMTP.
Prerequisites
- You have configured a Postfix server.
- You have configured a Dovecot server, see Configuring and maintaining a Dovecot IMAP and POP3 server.
- You have configured the LMTP service on your Dovecot server, see Configuring an LMTP socket and LMTPS listener.
Procedure
Configure Postfix to use the LMTP protocol and the INET domain socket for delivering mail to Dovecot in the
/etc/postfix/main.cffile by adding the following content:mailbox_transport = lmtp:inet:<dovecot_host>:<port>Replace
<dovecot_host>with the IP address or hostname of the Dovecot server and<port>with the port number of the LMTP service.Reload the
postfixservice to apply the changes:# systemctl reload postfix
Verification
- Send a test email to an address hosted by the remote Dovecot server and check the Dovecot logs to ensure that the mail was successfully delivered.
8.9. Securing the Postfix service Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
Secure the Postfix mail transfer agent by configuring it to use encryption and applying settings that mitigate risks from various attacks. This involves configuring SMTP Authentication (AUTH) using SASL and setting limits to reduce vulnerability to denial-of-service (DoS) attacks.
Postfix is a mail transfer agent (MTA) that uses the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) to deliver electronic messages between other MTAs and to email clients or delivery agents. Although MTAs can encrypt traffic between one another, they might not do so by default.
8.9.2. Postfix configuration options for limiting DoS attacks Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
You can limit denial-of-service (DoS) attacks by configuring certain Postfix options. This involves setting strict rate and message-size limits to protect the server from being flooded with traffic.
An attacker can flood the server with traffic or send information that triggers a crash, causing a denial of service (DoS) attack. You can configure your system to reduce the risk of such attacks by setting limits in the /etc/postfix/main.cf file. You can change the value of the existing directives, or you can add new directives with custom values in the <directive> = <value> format.
Use the following list of directives for limiting DoS attacks:
smtpd_client_connection_rate_limit-
Limits the maximum number of connection attempts any client can make to this service per time unit. The default value is
0, which means a client can make as many connections per time unit as Postfix can accept. By default, the directive excludes clients in trusted networks. anvil_rate_time_unit-
Defines a time unit to calculate the rate limit. The default value is
60seconds. smtpd_client_event_limit_exceptions- Excludes clients from the connection and rate limit commands. By default, the directive excludes clients in trusted networks.
smtpd_client_message_rate_limit- Defines the maximum number of message deliveries from client to request per time unit (regardless of whether or not Postfix actually accepts those messages).
default_process_limit-
Defines the default maximum number of Postfix child processes that provide a given service. You can ignore this rule for specific services in the
master.cffile. By default, the value is100. queue_minfree-
Defines the minimum amount of free space required to receive mail in the queue file system. The directive is currently used by the Postfix SMTP server to decide if it accepts any mail at all. By default, the Postfix SMTP server rejects
MAIL FROMcommands when the amount of free space is less than 1.5 times themessage_size_limit. To specify a higher minimum free space limit, specify aqueue_minfreevalue that is at least 1.5 times themessage_size_limit. By default, thequeue_minfreevalue is0. header_size_limit-
Defines the maximum amount of memory in bytes for storing a message header. If a header is large, it discards the excess header. By default, the value is
102400bytes. message_size_limit-
Defines the maximum size of a message, including the envelope information, in bytes. By default, the value is
10240000bytes.
8.9.3. Configuring Postfix to use SASL Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
You can configure the Postfix mail transfer agent to use Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL). This strengthens authentication when sending and receiving electronic messages.
Postfix supports SASL-based SMTP Authentication (AUTH). SMTP AUTH is an extension of the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol. Currently, the Postfix SMTP server supports the SASL implementations in the following ways:
- Dovecot SASL
- The Postfix SMTP server can communicate with the Dovecot SASL implementation by using either a UNIX-domain socket or a TCP socket. Use this method if Postfix and Dovecot applications are running on separate machines.
- Cyrus SASL
- When enabled, SMTP clients must authenticate with the SMTP server by using an authentication method supported and accepted by both the server and the client.
Prerequisites
-
The
dovecotpackage is installed on the system
Procedure
Set up Dovecot:
Include the following lines in the
/etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-master.conffile:service auth { unix_listener /var/spool/postfix/private/auth { mode = 0660 user = postfix group = postfix } }The previous example uses UNIX-domain sockets for communication between Postfix and Dovecot. The example also assumes default Postfix SMTP server settings, which include the mail queue located in the
/var/spool/postfix/directory, and the application running under thepostfixuser and group.Optional: Set up Dovecot to listen for Postfix authentication requests through TCP:
service auth { inet_listener { port = <port-number> } }Specify the method that the email client uses to authenticate with Dovecot by editing the
auth_mechanismsparameter in/etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-auth.conffile:auth_mechanisms = plain loginThe
auth_mechanismsparameter supports different plaintext and non-plaintext authentication methods.
Set up Postfix by modifying the
/etc/postfix/main.cffile:Enable SMTP Authentication on the Postfix SMTP server:
smtpd_sasl_auth_enable = yesEnable the use of Dovecot SASL implementation for SMTP Authentication:
smtpd_sasl_type = dovecotProvide the authentication path relative to the Postfix queue directory. Note that the use of a relative path ensures that the configuration works regardless of whether the Postfix server runs in
chrootor not:smtpd_sasl_path = private/authThis step uses UNIX-domain sockets for communication between Postfix and Dovecot.
To configure Postfix to look for Dovecot on a different machine in case you use TCP sockets for communication, use configuration values similar to the following:
smtpd_sasl_path = inet: <IP_address> : <port_number>In the previous example, replace the ip-address with the IP address of the Dovecot machine and port-number with the port number specified in Dovecot’s
/etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-master.conffile.Specify SASL mechanisms that the Postfix SMTP server makes available to clients. Note that you can specify different mechanisms for encrypted and unencrypted sessions.
smtpd_sasl_security_options = noanonymous, noplaintext smtpd_sasl_tls_security_options = noanonymousThe previous directives specify that during unencrypted sessions, no anonymous authentication is allowed and no mechanisms that transmit unencrypted user names or passwords are allowed. For encrypted sessions that use TLS, only non-anonymous authentication mechanisms are allowed.