This patch updates the URL for the Arch binary packages, which has moved. Thanks to foxcpp for maintaining them and letting me know about the change.
3.8 KiB
Installing and configuring chasquid
Installation
Debian/Ubuntu
If you're using Debian or Ubuntu, chasquid can be installed by running:
sudo apt install chasquid
Arch
If you're using Arch, there is a chasquid AUR package you can use. See the official Arch documentation for how to install it. If you use the pacaur helper, you can just run:
pacaur -S chasquid
Binary packages are also available, courtesy of foxcpp.
From source
To get, build and install from source, you will need a working Go environment.
# Get the code and build the binaries.
git clone https://blitiri.com.ar/repos/chasquid
cd chasquid
make
# Install the binaries to /usr/local/bin.
sudo make install-binaries
# Copy the example configuration to /etc/chasquid and /etc/systemd, and create
# the /var/lib/chasquid directory.
sudo make install-config-skeleton
Configuration
The configuration is in /etc/chasquid/ by default, and has the following
structure:
- chasquid.conf Main config file.
- domains/ Domains' data.
- example.com/
- users User and password database for the domain.
- aliases Aliases for the domain.
...
- certs/ Certificates to use, one dir per pair.
- mx.example.com/
- fullchain.pem Certificate (full chain).
- privkey.pem Private key.
...
Certificates
The certs/ directory layout matches the one from certbot, letsencrypt's default client, to make it easier to integrate.
A convenient way to set this up is:
- Obtain TLS certificates using
certbotas needed. - Symlink chasquid's
certs/to/etc/letsencrypt/live:
sudo ln -s /etc/letsencrypt/live/ /etc/chasquid/certs - Give chasquid permissions to read the certificates:
sudo setfacl -R -m u:chasquid:rX /etc/letsencrypt/{live,archive} - Set up automatic renewal to restart chasquid when certificates are renewed.
Please see the how-to guide for more detailed examples.
Adding users
You can add users with:
chasquid-util user-add user@domain
This will also create the corresponding domain directory if it doesn't exist.
Checking your configuration
Run chasquid-util print-config to parse your configuration and display the
resulting values.
Checking your setup
Run smtp-check yourdomain.com, it will check:
- MX DNS records.
- SPF DNS records (will just warn if not present).
- TLS certificates.
It needs to access port 25, which is often blocked by ISPs, so it's likely that you need to run it from your server.
Greylisting, anti-spam and anti-virus
chasquid supports running a post-DATA hook, which can be used to perform greylisting, and run anti-spam and anti-virus filters.
The hook should be at /etc/chasquid/hooks/post-data.
The one installed by default is a bash script supporting:
- greylisting using greylistd.
- anti-spam using spamassassin or rspamd.
- anti-virus using clamav.
To use them, they just need to be available in your system.
For example, in Debian you can run the following to install all three:
apt install greylistd spamc clamdscan
usermod -a -G greylist mail
Note that the default hook may not work in all cases, it is provided as a practical example but you should adjust it to your particular system if needed.