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The (gnu services mail)
module provides Guix service definitions
for email services: IMAP, POP3, and LMTP servers, as well as mail
transport agents (MTAs). Lots of acronyms! These services are detailed
in the subsections below.
Return a service that runs the Dovecot IMAP/POP3/LMTP mail server.
By default, Dovecot does not need much configuration; the default
configuration object created by (dovecot-configuration)
will
suffice if your mail is delivered to ~/Maildir
. A self-signed
certificate will be generated for TLS-protected connections, though
Dovecot will also listen on cleartext ports by default. There are a
number of options, though, which mail administrators might need to change,
and as is the case with other services, Guix allows the system
administrator to specify these parameters via a uniform Scheme interface.
For example, to specify that mail is located at maildir~/.mail
,
one would instantiate the Dovecot service like this:
(dovecot-service #:config
(dovecot-configuration
(mail-location "maildir:~/.mail")))
The available configuration parameters follow. Each parameter
definition is preceded by its type; for example, ‘string-list foo’
indicates that the foo
parameter should be specified as a list of
strings. There is also a way to specify the configuration as a string,
if you have an old dovecot.conf
file that you want to port over
from some other system; see the end for more details.
Available dovecot-configuration
fields are:
dovecot-configuration
parameter: package dovecot ¶The dovecot package.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: comma-separated-string-list listen ¶A list of IPs or hosts where to listen for connections. ‘*’ listens on all IPv4 interfaces, ‘::’ listens on all IPv6 interfaces. If you want to specify non-default ports or anything more complex, customize the address and port fields of the ‘inet-listener’ of the specific services you are interested in.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: protocol-configuration-list protocols ¶List of protocols we want to serve. Available protocols include ‘imap’, ‘pop3’, and ‘lmtp’.
Available protocol-configuration
fields are:
protocol-configuration
parameter: string name ¶The name of the protocol.
protocol-configuration
parameter: string auth-socket-path ¶UNIX socket path to the master authentication server to find users. This is used by imap (for shared users) and lda. It defaults to ‘"/var/run/dovecot/auth-userdb"’.
protocol-configuration
parameter: boolean imap-metadata? ¶Whether to enable the IMAP METADATA
extension as defined in
RFC 5464, which provides
a means for clients to set and retrieve per-mailbox, per-user metadata
and annotations over IMAP.
If this is ‘#t’, you must also specify a dictionary via the
mail-attribute-dict
setting.
Defaults to ‘#f’.
protocol-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list managesieve-notify-capabilities ¶Which NOTIFY capabilities to report to clients that first connect to the ManageSieve service, before authentication. These may differ from the capabilities offered to authenticated users. If this field is left empty, report what the Sieve interpreter supports by default.
Defaults to ‘()’.
protocol-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list managesieve-sieve-capability ¶Which SIEVE capabilities to report to clients that first connect to the ManageSieve service, before authentication. These may differ from the capabilities offered to authenticated users. If this field is left empty, report what the Sieve interpreter supports by default.
Defaults to ‘()’.
protocol-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list mail-plugins ¶Space separated list of plugins to load.
protocol-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer mail-max-userip-connections ¶Maximum number of IMAP connections allowed for a user from each IP address. NOTE: The username is compared case-sensitively. Defaults to ‘10’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: service-configuration-list services ¶List of services to enable. Available services include ‘imap’, ‘imap-login’, ‘pop3’, ‘pop3-login’, ‘auth’, and ‘lmtp’.
Available service-configuration
fields are:
service-configuration
parameter: string kind ¶The service kind. Valid values include director
,
imap-login
, pop3-login
, lmtp
, imap
,
pop3
, auth
, auth-worker
, dict
,
tcpwrap
, quota-warning
, or anything else.
service-configuration
parameter: listener-configuration-list listeners ¶Listeners for the service. A listener is either a
unix-listener-configuration
, a fifo-listener-configuration
, or
an inet-listener-configuration
.
Defaults to ‘()’.
Available unix-listener-configuration
fields are:
unix-listener-configuration
parameter: string path ¶Path to the file, relative to base-dir
field. This is also used as
the section name.
unix-listener-configuration
parameter: string mode ¶The access mode for the socket. Defaults to ‘"0600"’.
unix-listener-configuration
parameter: string user ¶The user to own the socket. Defaults to ‘""’.
unix-listener-configuration
parameter: string group ¶The group to own the socket. Defaults to ‘""’.
Available fifo-listener-configuration
fields are:
fifo-listener-configuration
parameter: string path ¶Path to the file, relative to base-dir
field. This is also used as
the section name.
fifo-listener-configuration
parameter: string mode ¶The access mode for the socket. Defaults to ‘"0600"’.
fifo-listener-configuration
parameter: string user ¶The user to own the socket. Defaults to ‘""’.
fifo-listener-configuration
parameter: string group ¶The group to own the socket. Defaults to ‘""’.
Available inet-listener-configuration
fields are:
inet-listener-configuration
parameter: string protocol ¶The protocol to listen for.
inet-listener-configuration
parameter: string address ¶The address on which to listen, or empty for all addresses. Defaults to ‘""’.
inet-listener-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer port ¶The port on which to listen.
inet-listener-configuration
parameter: boolean ssl? ¶Whether to use SSL for this service; ‘yes’, ‘no’, or ‘required’. Defaults to ‘#t’.
service-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer client-limit ¶Maximum number of simultaneous client connections per process. Once
this number of connections is received, the next incoming connection
will prompt Dovecot to spawn another process. If set to 0,
default-client-limit
is used instead.
Defaults to ‘0’.
service-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer service-count ¶Number of connections to handle before starting a new process. Typically the only useful values are 0 (unlimited) or 1. 1 is more secure, but 0 is faster. <doc/wiki/LoginProcess.txt>. Defaults to ‘1’.
service-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer process-limit ¶Maximum number of processes that can exist for this service. If set to
0, default-process-limit
is used instead.
Defaults to ‘0’.
service-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer process-min-avail ¶Number of processes to always keep waiting for more connections. Defaults to ‘0’.
service-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer vsz-limit ¶If you set ‘service-count 0’, you probably need to grow this. Defaults to ‘256000000’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: dict-configuration dict ¶Dict configuration, as created by the dict-configuration
constructor.
Available dict-configuration
fields are:
dict-configuration
parameter: free-form-fields entries ¶A list of key-value pairs that this dict should hold. Defaults to ‘()’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: passdb-configuration-list passdbs ¶A list of passdb configurations, each one created by the
passdb-configuration
constructor.
Available passdb-configuration
fields are:
passdb-configuration
parameter: string driver ¶The driver that the passdb should use. Valid values include ‘pam’, ‘passwd’, ‘shadow’, ‘bsdauth’, and ‘static’. Defaults to ‘"pam"’.
passdb-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list args ¶Space separated list of arguments to the passdb driver. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: userdb-configuration-list userdbs ¶List of userdb configurations, each one created by the
userdb-configuration
constructor.
Available userdb-configuration
fields are:
userdb-configuration
parameter: string driver ¶The driver that the userdb should use. Valid values include ‘passwd’ and ‘static’. Defaults to ‘"passwd"’.
userdb-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list args ¶Space separated list of arguments to the userdb driver. Defaults to ‘""’.
userdb-configuration
parameter: free-form-args override-fields ¶Override fields from passwd. Defaults to ‘()’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: plugin-configuration plugin-configuration ¶Plug-in configuration, created by the plugin-configuration
constructor.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: list-of-namespace-configuration namespaces ¶List of namespaces. Each item in the list is created by the
namespace-configuration
constructor.
Available namespace-configuration
fields are:
namespace-configuration
parameter: string name ¶Name for this namespace.
namespace-configuration
parameter: string type ¶Namespace type: ‘private’, ‘shared’ or ‘public’. Defaults to ‘"private"’.
namespace-configuration
parameter: string separator ¶Hierarchy separator to use. You should use the same separator for all namespaces or some clients get confused. ‘/’ is usually a good one. The default however depends on the underlying mail storage format. Defaults to ‘""’.
namespace-configuration
parameter: string prefix ¶Prefix required to access this namespace. This needs to be different for all namespaces. For example ‘Public/’. Defaults to ‘""’.
namespace-configuration
parameter: string location ¶Physical location of the mailbox. This is in the same format as mail_location, which is also the default for it. Defaults to ‘""’.
namespace-configuration
parameter: boolean inbox? ¶There can be only one INBOX, and this setting defines which namespace has it. Defaults to ‘#f’.
If namespace is hidden, it’s not advertised to clients via NAMESPACE extension. You’ll most likely also want to set ‘list? #f’. This is mostly useful when converting from another server with different namespaces which you want to deprecate but still keep working. For example you can create hidden namespaces with prefixes ‘~/mail/’, ‘~%u/mail/’ and ‘mail/’. Defaults to ‘#f’.
namespace-configuration
parameter: boolean list? ¶Show the mailboxes under this namespace with the LIST command. This
makes the namespace visible for clients that do not support the NAMESPACE
extension. The special children
value lists child mailboxes, but
hides the namespace prefix.
Defaults to ‘#t’.
namespace-configuration
parameter: boolean subscriptions? ¶Namespace handles its own subscriptions. If set to #f
, the
parent namespace handles them. The empty prefix should always have this
as #t
).
Defaults to ‘#t’.
namespace-configuration
parameter: mailbox-configuration-list mailboxes ¶List of predefined mailboxes in this namespace. Defaults to ‘()’.
Available mailbox-configuration
fields are:
mailbox-configuration
parameter: string name ¶Name for this mailbox.
mailbox-configuration
parameter: string auto ¶‘create’ will automatically create this mailbox. ‘subscribe’ will both create and subscribe to the mailbox. Defaults to ‘"no"’.
mailbox-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list special-use ¶List of IMAP SPECIAL-USE
attributes as specified by RFC 6154.
Valid values are \All
, \Archive
, \Drafts
,
\Flagged
, \Junk
, \Sent
, and \Trash
.
Defaults to ‘()’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: file-name base-dir ¶Base directory where to store runtime data. Defaults to ‘"/var/run/dovecot/"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string login-greeting ¶Greeting message for clients. Defaults to ‘"Dovecot ready."’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list login-trusted-networks ¶List of trusted network ranges. Connections from these IPs are allowed to override their IP addresses and ports (for logging and for authentication checks). ‘disable-plaintext-auth’ is also ignored for these networks. Typically you would specify your IMAP proxy servers here. Defaults to ‘()’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list login-access-sockets ¶List of login access check sockets (e.g. tcpwrap). Defaults to ‘()’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean verbose-proctitle? ¶Show more verbose process titles (in ps). Currently shows user name and IP address. Useful for seeing who is actually using the IMAP processes (e.g. shared mailboxes or if the same uid is used for multiple accounts). Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean shutdown-clients? ¶Should all processes be killed when Dovecot master process shuts down.
Setting this to #f
means that Dovecot can be upgraded without
forcing existing client connections to close (although that could also
be a problem if the upgrade is e.g. due to a security fix).
Defaults to ‘#t’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer doveadm-worker-count ¶If non-zero, run mail commands via this many connections to doveadm server, instead of running them directly in the same process. Defaults to ‘0’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string doveadm-socket-path ¶UNIX socket or host:port used for connecting to doveadm server. Defaults to ‘"doveadm-server"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list import-environment ¶List of environment variables that are preserved on Dovecot startup and passed down to all of its child processes. You can also give key=value pairs to always set specific settings.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean disable-plaintext-auth? ¶Disable LOGIN command and all other plaintext authentications unless SSL/TLS is used (LOGINDISABLED capability). Note that if the remote IP matches the local IP (i.e. you’re connecting from the same computer), the connection is considered secure and plaintext authentication is allowed. See also ssl=required setting. Defaults to ‘#t’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer auth-cache-size ¶Authentication cache size (e.g. ‘#e10e6’). 0 means it’s disabled. Note that bsdauth, PAM and vpopmail require ‘cache-key’ to be set for caching to be used. Defaults to ‘0’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-cache-ttl ¶Time to live for cached data. After TTL expires the cached record is no longer used, *except* if the main database lookup returns internal failure. We also try to handle password changes automatically: If user’s previous authentication was successful, but this one wasn’t, the cache isn’t used. For now this works only with plaintext authentication. Defaults to ‘"1 hour"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-cache-negative-ttl ¶TTL for negative hits (user not found, password mismatch). 0 disables caching them completely. Defaults to ‘"1 hour"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list auth-realms ¶List of realms for SASL authentication mechanisms that need them. You can leave it empty if you don’t want to support multiple realms. Many clients simply use the first one listed here, so keep the default realm first. Defaults to ‘()’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-default-realm ¶Default realm/domain to use if none was specified. This is used for both SASL realms and appending @domain to username in plaintext logins. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-username-chars ¶List of allowed characters in username. If the user-given username contains a character not listed in here, the login automatically fails. This is just an extra check to make sure user can’t exploit any potential quote escaping vulnerabilities with SQL/LDAP databases. If you want to allow all characters, set this value to empty. Defaults to ‘"abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ01234567890.-_@"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-username-translation ¶Username character translations before it’s looked up from databases. The value contains series of from -> to characters. For example ‘#@/@’ means that ‘#’ and ‘/’ characters are translated to ‘@’. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-username-format ¶Username formatting before it’s looked up from databases. You can use the standard variables here, e.g. %Lu would lowercase the username, %n would drop away the domain if it was given, or ‘%n-AT-%d’ would change the ‘@’ into ‘-AT-’. This translation is done after ‘auth-username-translation’ changes. Defaults to ‘"%Lu"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-master-user-separator ¶If you want to allow master users to log in by specifying the master username within the normal username string (i.e. not using SASL mechanism’s support for it), you can specify the separator character here. The format is then <username><separator><master username>. UW-IMAP uses ‘*’ as the separator, so that could be a good choice. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-anonymous-username ¶Username to use for users logging in with ANONYMOUS SASL mechanism. Defaults to ‘"anonymous"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer auth-worker-max-count ¶Maximum number of dovecot-auth worker processes. They’re used to execute blocking passdb and userdb queries (e.g. MySQL and PAM). They’re automatically created and destroyed as needed. Defaults to ‘30’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-gssapi-hostname ¶Host name to use in GSSAPI principal names. The default is to use the name returned by gethostname(). Use ‘$ALL’ (with quotes) to allow all keytab entries. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-krb5-keytab ¶Kerberos keytab to use for the GSSAPI mechanism. Will use the system default (usually /etc/krb5.keytab) if not specified. You may need to change the auth service to run as root to be able to read this file. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean auth-use-winbind? ¶Do NTLM and GSS-SPNEGO authentication using Samba’s winbind daemon and ‘ntlm-auth’ helper. <doc/wiki/Authentication/Mechanisms/Winbind.txt>. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: file-name auth-winbind-helper-path ¶Path for Samba’s ‘ntlm-auth’ helper binary. Defaults to ‘"/usr/bin/ntlm_auth"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-failure-delay ¶Time to delay before replying to failed authentications. Defaults to ‘"2 secs"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean auth-ssl-require-client-cert? ¶Require a valid SSL client certificate or the authentication fails. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean auth-ssl-username-from-cert? ¶Take the username from client’s SSL certificate, using
X509_NAME_get_text_by_NID()
which returns the subject’s DN’s
CommonName.
Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list auth-mechanisms ¶List of wanted authentication mechanisms. Supported mechanisms are: ‘plain’, ‘login’, ‘digest-md5’, ‘cram-md5’, ‘ntlm’, ‘rpa’, ‘apop’, ‘anonymous’, ‘gssapi’, ‘otp’, ‘skey’, and ‘gss-spnego’. NOTE: See also ‘disable-plaintext-auth’ setting.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list director-servers ¶List of IPs or hostnames to all director servers, including ourself. Ports can be specified as ip:port. The default port is the same as what director service’s ‘inet-listener’ is using. Defaults to ‘()’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list director-mail-servers ¶List of IPs or hostnames to all backend mail servers. Ranges are allowed too, like 10.0.0.10-10.0.0.30. Defaults to ‘()’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string director-user-expire ¶How long to redirect users to a specific server after it no longer has any connections. Defaults to ‘"15 min"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string director-username-hash ¶How the username is translated before being hashed. Useful values include %Ln if user can log in with or without @domain, %Ld if mailboxes are shared within domain. Defaults to ‘"%Lu"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string log-path ¶Log file to use for error messages. ‘syslog’ logs to syslog, ‘/dev/stderr’ logs to stderr. Defaults to ‘"syslog"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string info-log-path ¶Log file to use for informational messages. Defaults to ‘log-path’. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string debug-log-path ¶Log file to use for debug messages. Defaults to ‘info-log-path’. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string syslog-facility ¶Syslog facility to use if you’re logging to syslog. Usually if you don’t want to use ‘mail’, you’ll use local0..local7. Also other standard facilities are supported. Defaults to ‘"mail"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean auth-verbose? ¶Log unsuccessful authentication attempts and the reasons why they failed. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string auth-verbose-passwords ¶In case of password mismatches, log the attempted password. Valid values are no, plain and sha1. sha1 can be useful for detecting brute force password attempts vs. user simply trying the same password over and over again. You can also truncate the value to n chars by appending ":n" (e.g. sha1:6). Defaults to ‘"no"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean auth-debug? ¶Even more verbose logging for debugging purposes. Shows for example SQL queries. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean auth-debug-passwords? ¶In case of password mismatches, log the passwords and used scheme so the problem can be debugged. Enabling this also enables ‘auth-debug’. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean mail-debug? ¶Enable mail process debugging. This can help you figure out why Dovecot isn’t finding your mails. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean verbose-ssl? ¶Show protocol level SSL errors. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string log-timestamp ¶Prefix for each line written to log file. % codes are in strftime(3) format. Defaults to ‘"\"%b %d %H:%M:%S \""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list login-log-format-elements ¶List of elements we want to log. The elements which have a non-empty variable value are joined together to form a comma-separated string.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string login-log-format ¶Login log format. %s contains ‘login-log-format-elements’ string, %$ contains the data we want to log. Defaults to ‘"%$: %s"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-log-prefix ¶Log prefix for mail processes. See doc/wiki/Variables.txt for list of possible variables you can use. Defaults to ‘"\"%s(%u)<%{pid}><%{session}>: \""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string deliver-log-format ¶Format to use for logging mail deliveries. You can use variables:
%$
Delivery status message (e.g. ‘saved to INBOX’)
%m
Message-ID
%s
Subject
%f
From address
%p
Physical size
%w
Virtual size.
Defaults to ‘"msgid=%m: %$"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-location ¶Location for users’ mailboxes. The default is empty, which means that Dovecot tries to find the mailboxes automatically. This won’t work if the user doesn’t yet have any mail, so you should explicitly tell Dovecot the full location.
If you’re using mbox, giving a path to the INBOX file (e.g. /var/mail/%u) isn’t enough. You’ll also need to tell Dovecot where the other mailboxes are kept. This is called the root mail directory, and it must be the first path given in the ‘mail-location’ setting.
There are a few special variables you can use, e.g.:
username
user part in user@domain, same as %u if there’s no domain
domain part in user@domain, empty if there’s no domain
home director
See doc/wiki/Variables.txt for full list. Some examples:
Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-uid ¶System user and group used to access mails. If you use multiple, userdb can override these by returning uid or gid fields. You can use either numbers or names. <doc/wiki/UserIds.txt>. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-gid ¶Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-privileged-group ¶Group to enable temporarily for privileged operations. Currently this is used only with INBOX when either its initial creation or dotlocking fails. Typically this is set to ‘"mail"’ to give access to /var/mail. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-access-groups ¶Grant access to these supplementary groups for mail processes.
Typically these are used to set up access to shared mailboxes. Note
that it may be dangerous to set these if users can create symlinks
(e.g. if ‘mail’ group is set here, ln -s /var/mail ~/mail/var
could allow a user to delete others’ mailboxes, or ln -s
/secret/shared/box ~/mail/mybox
would allow reading it). Defaults to
‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-attribute-dict ¶The location of a dictionary used to store IMAP METADATA
as defined by RFC 5464.
The IMAP METADATA commands are available only if the “imap”
protocol configuration’s imap-metadata?
field is ‘#t’.
Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean mail-full-filesystem-access? ¶Allow full file system access to clients. There’s no access checks other than what the operating system does for the active UID/GID. It works with both maildir and mboxes, allowing you to prefix mailboxes names with e.g. /path/ or ~user/. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean mmap-disable? ¶Don’t use mmap()
at all. This is required if you store indexes to
shared file systems (NFS or clustered file system).
Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean dotlock-use-excl? ¶Rely on ‘O_EXCL’ to work when creating dotlock files. NFS supports ‘O_EXCL’ since version 3, so this should be safe to use nowadays by default. Defaults to ‘#t’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-fsync ¶When to use fsync() or fdatasync() calls:
optimized
Whenever necessary to avoid losing important data
always
Useful with e.g. NFS when write()
s are delayed
never
Never use it (best performance, but crashes can lose data).
Defaults to ‘"optimized"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean mail-nfs-storage? ¶Mail storage exists in NFS. Set this to yes to make Dovecot flush NFS caches whenever needed. If you’re using only a single mail server this isn’t needed. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean mail-nfs-index? ¶Mail index files also exist in NFS. Setting this to yes requires ‘mmap-disable? #t’ and ‘fsync-disable? #f’. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string lock-method ¶Locking method for index files. Alternatives are fcntl, flock and dotlock. Dotlocking uses some tricks which may create more disk I/O than other locking methods. NFS users: flock doesn’t work, remember to change ‘mmap-disable’. Defaults to ‘"fcntl"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: file-name mail-temp-dir ¶Directory in which LDA/LMTP temporarily stores incoming mails >128 kB. Defaults to ‘"/tmp"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer first-valid-uid ¶Valid UID range for users. This is mostly to make sure that users can’t log in as daemons or other system users. Note that denying root logins is hardcoded to dovecot binary and can’t be done even if ‘first-valid-uid’ is set to 0. Defaults to ‘500’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer last-valid-uid ¶Defaults to ‘0’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer first-valid-gid ¶Valid GID range for users. Users having non-valid GID as primary group ID aren’t allowed to log in. If user belongs to supplementary groups with non-valid GIDs, those groups are not set. Defaults to ‘1’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer last-valid-gid ¶Defaults to ‘0’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer mail-max-keyword-length ¶Maximum allowed length for mail keyword name. It’s only forced when trying to create new keywords. Defaults to ‘50’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: colon-separated-file-name-list valid-chroot-dirs ¶List of directories under which chrooting is allowed for mail processes (i.e. /var/mail will allow chrooting to /var/mail/foo/bar too). This setting doesn’t affect ‘login-chroot’ ‘mail-chroot’ or auth chroot settings. If this setting is empty, ‘/./’ in home dirs are ignored. WARNING: Never add directories here which local users can modify, that may lead to root exploit. Usually this should be done only if you don’t allow shell access for users. <doc/wiki/Chrooting.txt>. Defaults to ‘()’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-chroot ¶Default chroot directory for mail processes. This can be overridden for specific users in user database by giving ‘/./’ in user’s home directory (e.g. ‘/home/./user’ chroots into /home). Note that usually there is no real need to do chrooting, Dovecot doesn’t allow users to access files outside their mail directory anyway. If your home directories are prefixed with the chroot directory, append ‘/.’ to ‘mail-chroot’. <doc/wiki/Chrooting.txt>. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: file-name auth-socket-path ¶UNIX socket path to master authentication server to find users. This is used by imap (for shared users) and lda. Defaults to ‘"/var/run/dovecot/auth-userdb"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: file-name mail-plugin-dir ¶Directory where to look up mail plugins. Defaults to ‘"/usr/lib/dovecot"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list mail-plugins ¶List of plugins to load for all services. Plugins specific to IMAP, LDA, etc. are added to this list in their own .conf files. Defaults to ‘()’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer mail-cache-min-mail-count ¶The minimum number of mails in a mailbox before updates are done to cache file. This allows optimizing Dovecot’s behavior to do less disk writes at the cost of more disk reads. Defaults to ‘0’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mailbox-idle-check-interval ¶When IDLE command is running, mailbox is checked once in a while to see if there are any new mails or other changes. This setting defines the minimum time to wait between those checks. Dovecot can also use dnotify, inotify and kqueue to find out immediately when changes occur. Defaults to ‘"30 secs"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean mail-save-crlf? ¶Save mails with CR+LF instead of plain LF. This makes sending those mails take less CPU, especially with sendfile() syscall with Linux and FreeBSD. But it also creates a bit more disk I/O which may just make it slower. Also note that if other software reads the mboxes/maildirs, they may handle the extra CRs wrong and cause problems. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean maildir-stat-dirs? ¶By default LIST command returns all entries in maildir beginning with a dot. Enabling this option makes Dovecot return only entries which are directories. This is done by stat()ing each entry, so it causes more disk I/O. (For systems setting struct ‘dirent->d_type’ this check is free and it’s done always regardless of this setting). Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean maildir-copy-with-hardlinks? ¶When copying a message, do it with hard links whenever possible. This makes the performance much better, and it’s unlikely to have any side effects. Defaults to ‘#t’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean maildir-very-dirty-syncs? ¶Assume Dovecot is the only MUA accessing Maildir: Scan cur/ directory only when its mtime changes unexpectedly or when we can’t find the mail otherwise. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list mbox-read-locks ¶Which locking methods to use for locking mbox. There are four available:
dotlock
Create <mailbox>.lock file. This is the oldest and most NFS-safe solution. If you want to use /var/mail/ like directory, the users will need write access to that directory.
dotlock-try
Same as dotlock, but if it fails because of permissions or because there isn’t enough disk space, just skip it.
fcntl
Use this if possible. Works with NFS too if lockd is used.
flock
May not exist in all systems. Doesn’t work with NFS.
lockf
May not exist in all systems. Doesn’t work with NFS.
You can use multiple locking methods; if you do the order they’re declared in is important to avoid deadlocks if other MTAs/MUAs are using multiple locking methods as well. Some operating systems don’t allow using some of them simultaneously.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list mbox-write-locks ¶dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mbox-lock-timeout ¶Maximum time to wait for lock (all of them) before aborting. Defaults to ‘"5 mins"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mbox-dotlock-change-timeout ¶If dotlock exists but the mailbox isn’t modified in any way, override the lock file after this much time. Defaults to ‘"2 mins"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean mbox-dirty-syncs? ¶When mbox changes unexpectedly we have to fully read it to find out what changed. If the mbox is large this can take a long time. Since the change is usually just a newly appended mail, it’d be faster to simply read the new mails. If this setting is enabled, Dovecot does this but still safely fallbacks to re-reading the whole mbox file whenever something in mbox isn’t how it’s expected to be. The only real downside to this setting is that if some other MUA changes message flags, Dovecot doesn’t notice it immediately. Note that a full sync is done with SELECT, EXAMINE, EXPUNGE and CHECK commands. Defaults to ‘#t’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean mbox-very-dirty-syncs? ¶Like ‘mbox-dirty-syncs’, but don’t do full syncs even with SELECT, EXAMINE, EXPUNGE or CHECK commands. If this is set, ‘mbox-dirty-syncs’ is ignored. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean mbox-lazy-writes? ¶Delay writing mbox headers until doing a full write sync (EXPUNGE and CHECK commands and when closing the mailbox). This is especially useful for POP3 where clients often delete all mails. The downside is that our changes aren’t immediately visible to other MUAs. Defaults to ‘#t’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer mbox-min-index-size ¶If mbox size is smaller than this (e.g. 100k), don’t write index files. If an index file already exists it’s still read, just not updated. Defaults to ‘0’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer mdbox-rotate-size ¶Maximum dbox file size until it’s rotated. Defaults to ‘10000000’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mdbox-rotate-interval ¶Maximum dbox file age until it’s rotated. Typically in days. Day begins from midnight, so 1d = today, 2d = yesterday, etc. 0 = check disabled. Defaults to ‘"1d"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean mdbox-preallocate-space? ¶When creating new mdbox files, immediately preallocate their size to ‘mdbox-rotate-size’. This setting currently works only in Linux with some file systems (ext4, xfs). Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-attachment-dir ¶sdbox and mdbox support saving mail attachments to external files, which also allows single instance storage for them. Other backends don’t support this for now.
WARNING: This feature hasn’t been tested much yet. Use at your own risk.
Directory root where to store mail attachments. Disabled, if empty. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer mail-attachment-min-size ¶Attachments smaller than this aren’t saved externally. It’s also possible to write a plugin to disable saving specific attachments externally. Defaults to ‘128000’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-attachment-fs ¶File system backend to use for saving attachments:
posix
No SiS done by Dovecot (but this might help FS’s own deduplication)
sis posix
SiS with immediate byte-by-byte comparison during saving
sis-queue posix
SiS with delayed comparison and deduplication.
Defaults to ‘"sis posix"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string mail-attachment-hash ¶Hash format to use in attachment filenames. You can add any text and
variables: %{md4}
, %{md5}
, %{sha1}
,
%{sha256}
, %{sha512}
, %{size}
. Variables can be
truncated, e.g. %{sha256:80}
returns only first 80 bits.
Defaults to ‘"%{sha1}"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer default-process-limit ¶Defaults to ‘100’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer default-client-limit ¶Defaults to ‘1000’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer default-vsz-limit ¶Default VSZ (virtual memory size) limit for service processes. This is mainly intended to catch and kill processes that leak memory before they eat up everything. Defaults to ‘256000000’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string default-login-user ¶Login user is internally used by login processes. This is the most untrusted user in Dovecot system. It shouldn’t have access to anything at all. Defaults to ‘"dovenull"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string default-internal-user ¶Internal user is used by unprivileged processes. It should be separate from login user, so that login processes can’t disturb other processes. Defaults to ‘"dovecot"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string ssl? ¶SSL/TLS support: yes, no, required. <doc/wiki/SSL.txt>. Defaults to ‘"required"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string ssl-cert ¶PEM encoded X.509 SSL/TLS certificate (public key). Defaults to ‘"</etc/dovecot/default.pem"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string ssl-key ¶PEM encoded SSL/TLS private key. The key is opened before dropping root privileges, so keep the key file unreadable by anyone but root. Defaults to ‘"</etc/dovecot/private/default.pem"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string ssl-key-password ¶If key file is password protected, give the password here. Alternatively give it when starting dovecot with -p parameter. Since this file is often world-readable, you may want to place this setting instead to a different. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string ssl-ca ¶PEM encoded trusted certificate authority. Set this only if you intend to use ‘ssl-verify-client-cert? #t’. The file should contain the CA certificate(s) followed by the matching CRL(s). (e.g. ‘ssl-ca </etc/ssl/certs/ca.pem’). Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean ssl-require-crl? ¶Require that CRL check succeeds for client certificates. Defaults to ‘#t’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean ssl-verify-client-cert? ¶Request client to send a certificate. If you also want to require it, set ‘auth-ssl-require-client-cert? #t’ in auth section. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string ssl-cert-username-field ¶Which field from certificate to use for username. commonName and x500UniqueIdentifier are the usual choices. You’ll also need to set ‘auth-ssl-username-from-cert? #t’. Defaults to ‘"commonName"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string ssl-min-protocol ¶Minimum SSL protocol version to accept. Defaults to ‘"TLSv1"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string ssl-cipher-list ¶SSL ciphers to use. Defaults to ‘"ALL:!kRSA:!SRP:!kDHd:!DSS:!aNULL:!eNULL:!EXPORT:!DES:!3DES:!MD5:!PSK:!RC4:!ADH:!LOW@STRENGTH"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string ssl-crypto-device ¶SSL crypto device to use, for valid values run "openssl engine". Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string postmaster-address ¶Address to use when sending rejection mails. %d expands to recipient domain. Defaults to ‘"postmaster@%d"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string hostname ¶Hostname to use in various parts of sent mails (e.g. in Message-Id) and in LMTP replies. Default is the system’s real hostname@domain. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean quota-full-tempfail? ¶If user is over quota, return with temporary failure instead of bouncing the mail. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: file-name sendmail-path ¶Binary to use for sending mails. Defaults to ‘"/usr/sbin/sendmail"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string submission-host ¶If non-empty, send mails via this SMTP host[:port] instead of sendmail. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string rejection-subject ¶Subject: header to use for rejection mails. You can use the same variables as for ‘rejection-reason’ below. Defaults to ‘"Rejected: %s"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string rejection-reason ¶Human readable error message for rejection mails. You can use variables:
%n
CRLF
%r
reason
%s
original subject
%t
recipient
Defaults to ‘"Your message to <%t> was automatically rejected:%n%r"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string recipient-delimiter ¶Delimiter character between local-part and detail in email address. Defaults to ‘"+"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string lda-original-recipient-header ¶Header where the original recipient address (SMTP’s RCPT TO: address) is taken from if not available elsewhere. With dovecot-lda -a parameter overrides this. A commonly used header for this is X-Original-To. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean lda-mailbox-autocreate? ¶Should saving a mail to a nonexistent mailbox automatically create it?. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: boolean lda-mailbox-autosubscribe? ¶Should automatically created mailboxes be also automatically subscribed?. Defaults to ‘#f’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer imap-max-line-length ¶Maximum IMAP command line length. Some clients generate very long command lines with huge mailboxes, so you may need to raise this if you get "Too long argument" or "IMAP command line too large" errors often. Defaults to ‘64000’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string imap-logout-format ¶IMAP logout format string:
%i
total number of bytes read from client
%o
total number of bytes sent to client.
See doc/wiki/Variables.txt for a list of all the variables you can use. Defaults to ‘"in=%i out=%o deleted=%{deleted} expunged=%{expunged} trashed=%{trashed} hdr_count=%{fetch_hdr_count} hdr_bytes=%{fetch_hdr_bytes} body_count=%{fetch_body_count} body_bytes=%{fetch_body_bytes}"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string imap-capability ¶Override the IMAP CAPABILITY response. If the value begins with ’+’, add the given capabilities on top of the defaults (e.g. +XFOO XBAR). Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string imap-idle-notify-interval ¶How long to wait between "OK Still here" notifications when client is IDLEing. Defaults to ‘"2 mins"’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string imap-id-send ¶ID field names and values to send to clients. Using * as the value makes Dovecot use the default value. The following fields have default values currently: name, version, os, os-version, support-url, support-email. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string imap-id-log ¶ID fields sent by client to log. * means everything. Defaults to ‘""’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: space-separated-string-list imap-client-workarounds ¶Workarounds for various client bugs:
delay-newmail
Send EXISTS/RECENT new mail notifications only when replying to NOOP and CHECK commands. Some clients ignore them otherwise, for example OSX Mail (<v2.1). Outlook Express breaks more badly though, without this it may show user "Message no longer in server" errors. Note that OE6 still breaks even with this workaround if synchronization is set to "Headers Only".
tb-extra-mailbox-sep
Thunderbird gets somehow confused with LAYOUT=fs (mbox and dbox) and adds extra ‘/’ suffixes to mailbox names. This option causes Dovecot to ignore the extra ‘/’ instead of treating it as invalid mailbox name.
tb-lsub-flags
Show \Noselect flags for LSUB replies with LAYOUT=fs (e.g. mbox). This makes Thunderbird realize they aren’t selectable and show them greyed out, instead of only later giving "not selectable" popup error.
Defaults to ‘()’.
dovecot-configuration
parameter: string imap-urlauth-host ¶Host allowed in URLAUTH URLs sent by client. "*" allows all. Defaults to ‘""’.
Whew! Lots of configuration options. The nice thing about it though is that Guix has a complete interface to Dovecot’s configuration language. This allows not only a nice way to declare configurations, but also offers reflective capabilities as well: users can write code to inspect and transform configurations from within Scheme.
However, it could be that you just want to get a dovecot.conf
up
and running. In that case, you can pass an
opaque-dovecot-configuration
as the #:config
parameter to
dovecot-service
. As its name indicates, an opaque configuration
does not have easy reflective capabilities.
Available opaque-dovecot-configuration
fields are:
opaque-dovecot-configuration
parameter: package dovecot ¶The dovecot package.
opaque-dovecot-configuration
parameter: string string ¶The contents of the dovecot.conf
, as a string.
For example, if your dovecot.conf
is just the empty string, you
could instantiate a dovecot service like this:
(dovecot-service #:config
(opaque-dovecot-configuration
(string "")))
This is the type of the OpenSMTPD
service, whose value should be an opensmtpd-configuration
object
as in this example:
(service opensmtpd-service-type
(opensmtpd-configuration
(config-file (local-file "./my-smtpd.conf"))))
Data type representing the configuration of opensmtpd.
package
(default: opensmtpd)Package object of the OpenSMTPD SMTP server.
config-file
(default: %default-opensmtpd-config-file
)File-like object of the OpenSMTPD configuration file to use. By default
it listens on the loopback network interface, and allows for mail from
users and daemons on the local machine, as well as permitting email to
remote servers. Run man smtpd.conf
for more information.
setgid-commands?
(default: #t
)Make the following commands setgid to smtpq
so they can be
executed: smtpctl
, sendmail
, send-mail
,
makemap
, mailq
, and newaliases
.
See Setuid Programs, for more information on setgid programs.
This is the type of the Exim mail transfer
agent (MTA), whose value should be an exim-configuration
object
as in this example:
(service exim-service-type
(exim-configuration
(config-file (local-file "./my-exim.conf"))))
In order to use an exim-service-type
service you must also have a
mail-aliases-service-type
service present in your
operating-system
(even if it has no aliases).
Data type representing the configuration of exim.
package
(default: exim)Package object of the Exim server.
config-file
(default: #f
)File-like object of the Exim configuration file to use. If its value is
#f
then use the default configuration file from the package
provided in package
. The resulting configuration file is loaded
after setting the exim_user
and exim_group
configuration
variables.
This is the type of the Getmail
mail retriever, whose value should be an getmail-configuration
.
Available getmail-configuration
fields are:
getmail-configuration
parameter: symbol name ¶A symbol to identify the getmail service.
Defaults to ‘"unset"’.
getmail-configuration
parameter: package package ¶The getmail package to use.
getmail-configuration
parameter: string user ¶The user to run getmail as.
Defaults to ‘"getmail"’.
getmail-configuration
parameter: string group ¶The group to run getmail as.
Defaults to ‘"getmail"’.
getmail-configuration
parameter: string directory ¶The getmail directory to use.
Defaults to ‘"/var/lib/getmail/default"’.
getmail-configuration
parameter: getmail-configuration-file rcfile ¶The getmail configuration file to use.
Available getmail-configuration-file
fields are:
getmail-configuration-file
parameter: getmail-retriever-configuration retriever ¶What mail account to retrieve mail from, and how to access that account.
Available getmail-retriever-configuration
fields are:
getmail-retriever-configuration
parameter: string type ¶The type of mail retriever to use. Valid values include ‘passwd’ and ‘static’.
Defaults to ‘"SimpleIMAPSSLRetriever"’.
getmail-retriever-configuration
parameter: string server ¶Username to login to the mail server with.
Defaults to ‘unset’.
getmail-retriever-configuration
parameter: string username ¶Username to login to the mail server with.
Defaults to ‘unset’.
getmail-retriever-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer port ¶Port number to connect to.
Defaults to ‘#f’.
getmail-retriever-configuration
parameter: string password ¶Override fields from passwd.
Defaults to ‘""’.
getmail-retriever-configuration
parameter: list password-command ¶Override fields from passwd.
Defaults to ‘()’.
getmail-retriever-configuration
parameter: string keyfile ¶PEM-formatted key file to use for the TLS negotiation.
Defaults to ‘""’.
getmail-retriever-configuration
parameter: string certfile ¶PEM-formatted certificate file to use for the TLS negotiation.
Defaults to ‘""’.
getmail-retriever-configuration
parameter: string ca-certs ¶CA certificates to use.
Defaults to ‘""’.
getmail-retriever-configuration
parameter: parameter-alist extra-parameters ¶Extra retriever parameters.
Defaults to ‘()’.
getmail-configuration-file
parameter: getmail-destination-configuration destination ¶What to do with retrieved messages.
Available getmail-destination-configuration
fields are:
getmail-destination-configuration
parameter: string type ¶The type of mail destination. Valid values include ‘Maildir’, ‘Mboxrd’ and ‘MDA_external’.
Defaults to ‘unset’.
getmail-destination-configuration
parameter: string-or-filelike path ¶The path option for the mail destination. The behaviour depends on the chosen type.
Defaults to ‘""’.
getmail-destination-configuration
parameter: parameter-alist extra-parameters ¶Extra destination parameters
Defaults to ‘()’.
getmail-configuration-file
parameter: getmail-options-configuration options ¶Configure getmail.
Available getmail-options-configuration
fields are:
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer verbose ¶If set to ‘0’, getmail will only print warnings and errors. A value of ‘1’ means that messages will be printed about retrieving and deleting messages. If set to ‘2’, getmail will print messages about each of its actions.
Defaults to ‘1’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: boolean read-all ¶If true, getmail will retrieve all available messages. Otherwise it will only retrieve messages it hasn’t seen previously.
Defaults to ‘#t’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: boolean delete ¶If set to true, messages will be deleted from the server after retrieving and successfully delivering them. Otherwise, messages will be left on the server.
Defaults to ‘#f’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer delete-after ¶Getmail will delete messages this number of days after seeing them, if they have been delivered. This means messages will be left on the server this number of days after delivering them. A value of ‘0’ disabled this feature.
Defaults to ‘0’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer delete-bigger-than ¶Delete messages larger than this of bytes after retrieving them, even if the delete and delete-after options are disabled. A value of ‘0’ disables this feature.
Defaults to ‘0’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer max-bytes-per-session ¶Retrieve messages totalling up to this number of bytes before closing the session with the server. A value of ‘0’ disables this feature.
Defaults to ‘0’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: non-negative-integer max-message-size ¶Don’t retrieve messages larger than this number of bytes. A value of ‘0’ disables this feature.
Defaults to ‘0’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: boolean delivered-to ¶If true, getmail will add a Delivered-To header to messages.
Defaults to ‘#t’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: boolean received ¶If set, getmail adds a Received header to the messages.
Defaults to ‘#t’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: string message-log ¶Getmail will record a log of its actions to the named file. A value of ‘""’ disables this feature.
Defaults to ‘""’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: boolean message-log-syslog ¶If true, getmail will record a log of its actions using the system logger.
Defaults to ‘#f’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: boolean message-log-verbose ¶If true, getmail will log information about messages not retrieved and the reason for not retrieving them, as well as starting and ending information lines.
Defaults to ‘#f’.
getmail-options-configuration
parameter: parameter-alist extra-parameters ¶Extra options to include.
Defaults to ‘()’.
getmail-configuration
parameter: list idle ¶A list of mailboxes that getmail should wait on the server for new mail notifications. This depends on the server supporting the IDLE extension.
Defaults to ‘()’.
getmail-configuration
parameter: list environment-variables ¶Environment variables to set for getmail.
Defaults to ‘()’.
This is the type of the service which provides /etc/aliases
,
specifying how to deliver mail to users on this system.
(service mail-aliases-service-type
'(("postmaster" "bob")
("bob" "bob@example.com" "bob@example2.com")))
The configuration for a mail-aliases-service-type
service is an
association list denoting how to deliver mail that comes to this
system. Each entry is of the form (alias addresses ...)
, with
alias
specifying the local alias and addresses
specifying
where to deliver this user’s mail.
The aliases aren’t required to exist as users on the local system. In
the above example, there doesn’t need to be a postmaster
entry in
the operating-system
’s user-accounts
in order to deliver
the postmaster
mail to bob
(which subsequently would
deliver mail to bob@example.com
and bob@example2.com
).
This is the type of the GNU Mailutils IMAP4 Daemon (see imap4d in GNU Mailutils Manual), whose value should be an
imap4d-configuration
object as in this example:
(service imap4d-service-type
(imap4d-configuration
(config-file (local-file "imap4d.conf"))))
Data type representing the configuration of imap4d
.
package
(default: mailutils
)The package that provides imap4d
.
config-file
(default: %default-imap4d-config-file
)File-like object of the configuration file to use, by default it will listen
on TCP port 143 of localhost
. See Conf-imap4d in GNU
Mailutils Manual, for details.
This is the type of the Radicale CalDAV/CardDAV
server whose value should be a radicale-configuration
.
Data type representing the configuration of radicale
.
package
(default: radicale
)The package that provides radicale
.
config-file
(default: %default-radicale-config-file
)File-like object of the configuration file to use, by default it will listen
on TCP port 5232 of localhost
and use the htpasswd
file at
/var/lib/radicale/users with no (plain
) encryption.
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