Your Best Friend setup.sh
setup.sh
is an administration script that helps with the most common tasks, including initial configuration. It is intended to be run from the host machine, not from inside your running container.
The latest version of the script is included in the docker-mailserver
repository. You may retrieve it at any time by running this command in your console:
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/docker-mailserver/docker-mailserver/master/setup.sh
chmod a+x ./setup.sh
setup.sh
for docker-mailserver
version v10.1.x
and below
If you're using docker-mailserver
version v10.1.x
or below, you will need to get setup.sh
with a specific version. Substitute <VERSION>
with the tagged release version that you're using:
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/docker-mailserver/docker-mailserver/<VERSION>/setup.sh
.
Usage
Run ./setup.sh help
and you'll get all you have ever wanted some usage information:
SETUP(1)
NAME
setup.sh - docker-mailserver administration script
SYNOPSIS
./setup.sh [ OPTIONS... ] COMMAND [ help | ARGUMENTS... ]
COMMAND := { email | alias | quota | config | relay | debug } SUBCOMMAND
DESCRIPTION
This is the main administration script that you use for all your interactions with
'docker-mailserver'. Setup, configuration and much more is done with this script.
Please note that the script executes most of the commands inside the container itself.
If the image was not found, this script will pull the ':latest' tag of
'mailserver/docker-mailserver'. This tag refers to the latest release,
see the tagging convention in the README under
https://github.com/docker-mailserver/docker-mailserver/blob/master/README.md
You will be able to see detailed information about the script you're invoking and
its arguments by appending help after your command. Currently, this
does not work with all scripts.
[SUB]COMMANDS
COMMAND email :=
./setup.sh email add <EMAIL ADDRESS> [<PASSWORD>]
./setup.sh email update <EMAIL ADDRESS> [<PASSWORD>]
./setup.sh email del [ OPTIONS... ] <EMAIL ADDRESS> [ <EMAIL ADDRESS>... ]
./setup.sh email restrict <add|del|list> <send|receive> [<EMAIL ADDRESS>]
./setup.sh email list
COMMAND alias :=
./setup.sh alias add <EMAIL ADDRESS> <RECIPIENT>
./setup.sh alias del <EMAIL ADDRESS> <RECIPIENT>
./setup.sh alias list
COMMAND quota :=
./setup.sh quota set <EMAIL ADDRESS> [<QUOTA>]
./setup.sh quota del <EMAIL ADDRESS>
COMMAND config :=
./setup.sh config dkim [ ARGUMENTS... ]
COMMAND relay :=
./setup.sh relay add-auth <DOMAIN> <USERNAME> [<PASSWORD>]
./setup.sh relay add-domain <DOMAIN> <HOST> [<PORT>]
./setup.sh relay exclude-domain <DOMAIN>
COMMAND fail2ban =
./setup.sh fail2ban
./setup.sh fail2ban ban <IP>
./setup.sh fail2ban unban <IP>
COMMAND debug :=
./setup.sh debug fetchmail
./setup.sh debug login <COMMANDS>
./setup.sh debug show-mail-logs
EXAMPLES
./setup.sh email add test@example.com [password]
Add the email account test@example.com. You will be prompted
to input a password afterwards if no password was supplied.
When supplying `[password]`, it should be in plaintext.
./setup.sh config dkim keysize 2048 domain 'example.com,not-example.com'
Creates keys of length 2048 but in an LDAP setup where domains are not known to
Postfix by default, so you need to provide them yourself in a comma-separated list.
./setup.sh config dkim help
This will provide you with a detailed explanation on how to use the
config dkim command, showing what arguments can be passed and what they do.
OPTIONS
Config path, container or image adjustments
-i IMAGE_NAME
Provides the name of the 'docker-mailserver' image. The default value is
'docker.io/mailserver/docker-mailserver:latest'
-c CONTAINER_NAME
Provides the name of the running container.
-p PATH
Provides the config folder path to the temporary container
(does not work if a 'docker-mailserver' container already exists).
SELinux
-z
Allows container access to the bind mount content that is shared among
multiple containers on a SELinux-enabled host.
-Z
Allows container access to the bind mount content that is private and
unshared with other containers on a SELinux-enabled host.
EXIT STATUS
Exit status is 0 if the command was successful. If there was an unexpected error, an error
message is shown describing the error. In case of an error, the script will exit with exit
status 1.