This patch adds support for TLS-wrapped submission connections.
Instead of clients establishing a connection over plain text and then
using STARTTLS to switch over a TLS connection, this new mode allows the
clients to connect directly over TLS, like it's done in HTTPS.
This is not an official standard yet, but it's reasonably common in
practice, and provides some advantages over the traditional submission
port.
The default port is 465, commonly used for this; chasquid defaults to
systemd file descriptor passing as for the other protocols (for now).
glog works fine and has great features, but it does not play along well
with systemd or standard log rotators (as it does the rotation itself).
So this patch replaces glog with a new logging module "log", which by
default logs to stderr, in a systemd-friendly manner.
Logging to files or syslog is still supported.
The default INFO logs are more oriented towards debugging and can be
a bit too verbose when looking for high-level information.
This patch introduces a new "maillog" package, used to log messages of
particular relevance to mail transmission at a higher level.
This patch implements some measures against email loops, such as keeping
a limit on the lenght of an address, and rejecting email that has too
many Received headers.
It's not perfect (a server could be actively removing Received headers),
but it should cover the normal accidents and misconfigurations.
Having the certificates inside the domain directory may cause some confusion,
as it's possible they're not for the same name (they should be for the MX we
serve as, not the domain itself).
So it's not a problem if we have domains with no certificates (we could be
their MX with another name), and we could have more than one certificate per
"domain" (if we act as MXs with different names).
So this patch moves the certificates out of the domains into a new certs/
directory, where we do a one-level deep lookup for the files.
While at it, change the names of the files to "fullchain.pem" and
"privkey.pem", which match the names generated by the letsencrypt client, to
make it easier to set up. There's no general convention for these names
anyway.
This patch tidies up the Procmail courier:
- Move the configuration options to the courier instance, instead of using
global variables.
- Implement more useful string replacement options.
- Use exec.CommandContext for running the command with a timeout.
As a consequence of the first item, the queue now takes the couriers via its
constructor.