A production-ready fullstack but simple mail server (SMTP, IMAP, LDAP, Antispam, Antivirus, etc.). Only configuration files, no SQL database. Keep it simple and versioned. Easy to deploy and upgrade. Documentation via MkDocs. Why this image was created.
If you have issues, read the full README
and the documentation for your version (default is edge
) first before opening an issue. The issue tracker is for issues, not for personal support.
- Included Services
- Issues and Contributing
- Requirements
- Usage
- Examples
- Environment Variables
- Documentation
- Release Notes
- Postfix with SMTP or LDAP auth
- Dovecot for SASL, IMAP (or POP3), with LDAP Auth, Sieve and quotas
- Amavis
- SpamAssassin supporting custom rules
- ClamAV with automatic updates
- OpenDKIM
- OpenDMARC
- Fail2ban
- Fetchmail
- Postscreen
- Postgrey
- LetsEncrypt and self-signed certificates
- Setup script to easily configure and maintain your mail-server
- Basic Sieve support using dovecot
- SASLauthd with LDAP auth
- Persistent data and state
- CI/CD
- Extension Delimiters (
you+extension@example.com
go toyou@example.com
)
Recommended:
- 1 Core
- 2GB RAM
- Swap enabled for the container
Minimum:
- 1 vCore
- 512MB RAM
Note: You'll need to deactivate some services like ClamAV to be able to run on a host with 512MB of RAM. Even with 1G RAM you may run into problems without swap, see FAQ.
CI/CD will automatically build, test and push new images to container registries. Currently, the following registries are supported:
All workflows are using the tagging convention listed below. It is subsequently applied to all images.
Event | Ref | Image Tags |
---|---|---|
push |
refs/heads/master |
edge |
push tag |
refs/tags/[v]1.2.3 |
1.2.3 , 1.2 , 1 , latest |
Since Docker Mailserver v10.2.0
, setup.sh
functionality is included within the Docker image. The external convenience script is no longer required if you prefer using docker exec <CONTAINER NAME> setup <COMMAND>
instead.
Note: If you're using Docker or Docker Compose and are new to docker-mailserver
, it is recommended to use the script setup.sh
for convenience.
DMS_GITHUB_URL='https://raw.githubusercontent.com/docker-mailserver/docker-mailserver/master'
wget "${DMS_GITHUB_URL}/docker-compose.yml"
wget "${DMS_GITHUB_URL}/mailserver.env"
wget "${DMS_GITHUB_URL}/setup.sh"
chmod a+x ./setup.sh
./setup.sh help
If no docker-mailserver
container is running, any ./setup.sh
command will check online for the :latest
image tag (the current stable release), performing a pull
if necessary followed by running the command in a temporary container.
If you're using docker-mailserver
version v10.1.x
or below, you will need to get setup.sh
with a specific version. Substitute <VERSION>
with the docker-mailserver
release version you're using: wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/docker-mailserver/docker-mailserver/<VERSION>/setup.sh
.
- Install the latest docker-compose
- Edit
docker-compose.yml
to your liking- substitute
mail
(hostname) andexample.com
(domainname) according to your FQDN - if you want to use SELinux for the
./docker-data/dms/config/:/tmp/docker-mailserver/
mount, append-z
or-Z
- substitute
- Configure the mailserver container to your liking by editing
mailserver.env
(Documentation), but keep in mind this.env
file:- only basic
VAR=VAL
is supported (do not quote your values!) - variable substitution is not supported (e.g. 🚫
OVERRIDE_HOSTNAME=$HOSTNAME.$DOMAINNAME
🚫)
- only basic
Use docker-compose up / down
, not docker-compose start / stop
. Otherwise, the container is not properly destroyed and you may experience problems during startup because of inconsistent state.
You are able to get a full overview of how the configuration works by either running:
./setup.sh help
which includes the options ofsetup.sh
.docker run --rm docker.io/mailserver/docker-mailserver:latest setup help
which provides you with all the information on configuration provided "inside" the container itself.
On first start, you will likely see an error stating that there are no mail accounts and the container will exit. You must now do one of two things:
- Use
setup.sh
to help you:./setup.sh email add <user@domain> <password>
. You may need the-c
option to provide the local path for persisting configuration (a directory that mounts to/tmp/docker-mailserver
inside the container). This will spin up a new container, mount your configuration volume, and create your first account. - Execute the complete command yourself:
docker run --rm -v "${PWD}/docker-data/dms/config/:/tmp/docker-mailserver/" docker.io/mailserver/docker-mailserver setup email add <user@domain> <password>
. Make sure to mount the correct configuration directory.
You can then proceed by creating the postmaster alias and by creating DKIM keys.
docker-compose up -d mailserver
# you may add some more users
# for SELinux, use -Z
./setup.sh [-Z] email add <user@domain> [<password>]
# and configure aliases, DKIM and more
./setup.sh [-Z] alias add postmaster@<domain> <user@domain>
./setup.sh [-Z] config dkim
In case you're using LDAP, the setup looks a bit different as you do not add user accounts directly. Postfix doesn't know your domain(s) and you need to provide it when configuring DKIM:
./setup.sh config dkim domain '<domain.tld>[,<domain2.tld>]'
If you want to see detailed usage information, run ./setup.sh config dkim help
.
When keys are generated, you can configure your DNS server by just pasting the content of config/opendkim/keys/domain.tld/mail.txt
to set up DKIM. See the documentation for more details.
If you'd like to change, patch or alter files or behavior of docker-mailserver
, you can use a script. See the documentation for a detailed explanation.
Make sure to read the CHANGELOG before updating to new versions, to be prepared for possible breaking changes.
docker-compose pull
docker-compose down
docker-compose up -d mailserver
You should see the new version number on startup, for example: [ TASKLOG ] Welcome to docker-mailserver 10.1.2
.
You're done! And don't forget to have a look at the remaining functions of the setup.sh
script with ./setup.sh help
.
We are currently providing support for Linux. Windows is not supported and is known to cause problems. Similarly, macOS is not officially supported - but you may get it to work there. In the end, Linux should be your preferred operating system for this image, especially when using this mail-server in production.
If you want to use a bare domain (hostname
== domainname
), see FAQ.
docker-mailserver
supports multiple domains out of the box, so you can do this:
./setup.sh email add user1@docker.example.com
./setup.sh email add user1@mail.example.de
./setup.sh email add user1@server.example.org
If you got any problems with SPF and/or forwarding mails, give SRS a try. You enable SRS by setting ENABLE_SRS=1
. See the variable description for further information.
See the documentation for further details and best practice advice, especially regarding security concerns.
INBOX
is setup by default with the special IMAP folders Drafts
, Sent
, Junk
and Trash
. You can learn how to modify or add your own folders (including additional special folders like Archive
) by visiting our docs page Customizing IMAP Folders for more information.
This example provides you only with a basic example of what a minimal setup could look like. We strongly recommend that you go through the configuration file yourself and adjust everything to your needs. The default docker-compose.yml can be used for the purpose out-of-the-box, see the usage section.
version: '3.8'
services:
mailserver:
image: docker.io/mailserver/docker-mailserver:latest
container_name: mailserver
hostname: mail
domainname: example.com
ports:
- "25:25"
- "143:143"
- "587:587"
- "993:993"
volumes:
- ./docker-data/dms/mail-data/:/var/mail/
- ./docker-data/dms/mail-state/:/var/mail-state/
- ./docker-data/dms/mail-logs/:/var/log/mail/
- ./docker-data/dms/config/:/tmp/docker-mailserver/
- /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
environment:
- ENABLE_SPAMASSASSIN=1
- SPAMASSASSIN_SPAM_TO_INBOX=1
- ENABLE_CLAMAV=1
- ENABLE_FAIL2BAN=1
- ENABLE_POSTGREY=1
- ENABLE_SASLAUTHD=0
- ONE_DIR=1
- DMS_DEBUG=0
cap_add:
- NET_ADMIN
- SYS_PTRACE
restart: always
version: '3.8'
services:
mailserver:
image: docker.io/mailserver/docker-mailserver:latest
container_name: mailserver
hostname: mail
domainname: example.com
ports:
- "25:25"
- "143:143"
- "587:587"
- "993:993"
volumes:
- ./docker-data/dms/mail-data/:/var/mail/
- ./docker-data/dms/mail-state/:/var/mail-state/
- ./docker-data/dms/mail-logs/:/var/log/mail/
- ./docker-data/dms/config/:/tmp/docker-mailserver/
- /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
environment:
- ENABLE_SPAMASSASSIN=1
- SPAMASSASSIN_SPAM_TO_INBOX=1
- ENABLE_CLAMAV=1
- ENABLE_FAIL2BAN=1
- ENABLE_POSTGREY=1
- ONE_DIR=1
- DMS_DEBUG=0
- ENABLE_LDAP=1
- LDAP_SERVER_HOST=ldap # your ldap container/IP/ServerName
- LDAP_SEARCH_BASE=ou=people,dc=localhost,dc=localdomain
- LDAP_BIND_DN=cn=admin,dc=localhost,dc=localdomain
- LDAP_BIND_PW=admin
- LDAP_QUERY_FILTER_USER=(&(mail=%s)(mailEnabled=TRUE))
- LDAP_QUERY_FILTER_GROUP=(&(mailGroupMember=%s)(mailEnabled=TRUE))
- LDAP_QUERY_FILTER_ALIAS=(|(&(mailAlias=%s)(objectClass=PostfixBookMailForward))(&(mailAlias=%s)(objectClass=PostfixBookMailAccount)(mailEnabled=TRUE)))
- LDAP_QUERY_FILTER_DOMAIN=(|(&(mail=*@%s)(objectClass=PostfixBookMailAccount)(mailEnabled=TRUE))(&(mailGroupMember=*@%s)(objectClass=PostfixBookMailAccount)(mailEnabled=TRUE))(&(mailalias=*@%s)(objectClass=PostfixBookMailForward)))
- DOVECOT_PASS_FILTER=(&(objectClass=PostfixBookMailAccount)(uniqueIdentifier=%n))
- DOVECOT_USER_FILTER=(&(objectClass=PostfixBookMailAccount)(uniqueIdentifier=%n))
- ENABLE_SASLAUTHD=1
- SASLAUTHD_MECHANISMS=ldap
- SASLAUTHD_LDAP_SERVER=ldap
- SASLAUTHD_LDAP_BIND_DN=cn=admin,dc=localhost,dc=localdomain
- SASLAUTHD_LDAP_PASSWORD=admin
- SASLAUTHD_LDAP_SEARCH_BASE=ou=people,dc=localhost,dc=localdomain
- SASLAUTHD_LDAP_FILTER=(&(objectClass=PostfixBookMailAccount)(uniqueIdentifier=%U))
- POSTMASTER_ADDRESS=postmaster@localhost.localdomain
- POSTFIX_MESSAGE_SIZE_LIMIT=100000000
cap_add:
- NET_ADMIN
- SYS_PTRACE
restart: always