This patch updates the installation guide to try to make the installation section more readable. It also assumes a modern Go environment is installed, which simplifies the process of building from source.
2.7 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
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.
...
Note the certs/ directory layout matches the one from certbot,
letsencrypt's
default client, so you can just symlink certs/ to /etc/letsencrypt/live.
Make sure the user you use to run chasquid under ("mail" in the example config) can access the certificates and private keys.
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.