Before you run **mailcow: dockerized**, there are a few requirements that you should check: !!! warning Do not try to install mailcow on a Synology/QNAP device (any NAS), OpenVZ, LXC or other container platforms. KVM, ESX, Hyper-V and other full virtualization platforms are supported. !!! info - mailcow: dockerized requires [some ports](#default-ports) to be open for incoming connections, so make sure that your firewall is not blocking these. - Make sure that no other application is interfering with mailcow's configuration, such as another mail service - A correct DNS setup is crucial to every good mailserver setup, so please make sure you got at least the [basics](../prerequisite-dns#the-minimal-dns-configuration) covered before you begin! - Make sure that your system has a correct date and [time setup](#date-and-time). This is crucial for various components like two factor TOTP authentication. ## Minimum System Resources **Do not** use OpenVZ or LXC as guests for mailcow. Please make sure that your system has at least the following resources: | Resource | mailcow: dockerized | | ----------------------- | -------------------------------------------- | | CPU | 1 GHz | | RAM                     | 3 GiB + Swap (better: 4 GiB and more + Swap) | | Disk | 15 GiB (without emails) | | System Type | x86_64 | As of today (29th Dec 2019), we recommend using any distribution listed as supported by Docker CE (check https://docs.docker.com/install/). We test on CentOS 7, Debian 9/10 and Ubuntu 18.04. ClamAV and Solr are greedy RAM munchers. You can disable them in `mailcow.conf` by settings SKIP_CLAMD=y and SKIP_SOLR=y. ## Firewall & Ports Please check if any of mailcow's standard ports are open and not in use by other applications: ``` ss -tlpn | grep -E -w '25|80|110|143|443|465|587|993|995|4190' # or: netstat -tulpn | grep -E -w '25|80|110|143|443|465|587|993|995|4190' ``` !!! warning There are several problems with running mailcow on a firewalld/ufw enabled system. You should disable it (if possible) and move your ruleset to the DOCKER-USER chain, which is not cleared by a Docker service restart, instead. See [this blog post](https://blog.donnex.net/docker-and-iptables-filtering/) for information about how to use iptables-persistent with the DOCKER-USER chain. As mailcow runs dockerized, INPUT rules have no effect on restricting access to mailcow. Use the FORWARD chain instead. ** If this command returns any results please remove or stop the application running on that port. You may also adjust mailcows ports via the `mailcow.conf` configuration file. ### Default Ports If you have a firewall in front of mailcow, please make sure that these ports are open for incoming connections: | Service | Protocol | Port | Container | Variable | | --------------------|:--------:|:-------|:----------------|----------------------------------| | Postfix SMTP | TCP | 25 | postfix-mailcow | `${SMTP_PORT}` | | Postfix SMTPS | TCP | 465 | postfix-mailcow | `${SMTPS_PORT}` | | Postfix Submission | TCP | 587 | postfix-mailcow | `${SUBMISSION_PORT}` | | Dovecot IMAP | TCP | 143 | dovecot-mailcow | `${IMAP_PORT}` | | Dovecot IMAPS | TCP | 993 | dovecot-mailcow | `${IMAPS_PORT}` | | Dovecot POP3 | TCP | 110 | dovecot-mailcow | `${POP_PORT}` | | Dovecot POP3S | TCP | 995 | dovecot-mailcow | `${POPS_PORT}` | | Dovecot ManageSieve | TCP | 4190 | dovecot-mailcow | `${SIEVE_PORT}` | | HTTP(S) | TCP | 80/443 | nginx-mailcow | `${HTTP_PORT}` / `${HTTPS_PORT}` | To bind a service to an IP address, you can prepend the IP like this: `SMTP_PORT=1.2.3.4:25` **Important**: You cannot use IP:PORT bindings in HTTP_PORT and HTTPS_PORT. Please use `HTTP_PORT=1234` and `HTTP_BIND=1.2.3.4` instead. ## Date and Time To ensure that you have the correct date and time setup on your system, please check the output of `timedatectl status`: ``` $ timedatectl status Local time: Sat 2017-05-06 02:12:33 CEST Universal time: Sat 2017-05-06 00:12:33 UTC RTC time: Sat 2017-05-06 00:12:32 Time zone: Europe/Berlin (CEST, +0200) NTP enabled: yes NTP synchronized: yes RTC in local TZ: no DST active: yes Last DST change: DST began at Sun 2017-03-26 01:59:59 CET Sun 2017-03-26 03:00:00 CEST Next DST change: DST ends (the clock jumps one hour backwards) at Sun 2017-10-29 02:59:59 CEST Sun 2017-10-29 02:00:00 CET ``` The lines `NTP enabled: yes` and `NTP synchronized: yes` indicate whether you have NTP enabled and if it's synchronized. To enable NTP you need to run the command `timedatectl set-ntp true`. You also need to edit your `/etc/systemd/timesyncd.conf`: ``` # vim /etc/systemd/timesyncd.conf [Time] Servers=0.pool.ntp.org 1.pool.ntp.org 2.pool.ntp.org 3.pool.ntp.org ``` ## Hetzner Cloud (and probably others) Check `/etc/network/interfaces.d/50-cloud-init.cfg` and change the IPv6 interface from eth0:0 to eth0: ``` # Wrong: auto eth0:0 iface eth0:0 inet6 static # Right: auto eth0 iface eth0 inet6 static ``` Reboot or restart the interface. You may want to [disable cloud-init network changes.](https://wiki.hetzner.de/index.php/Cloud_IP_static/en#disable_cloud-init_network_changes) ## MTU Especially relevant for OpenStack users: Check your MTU and set it accordingly in docker-compose.yml. See **4.1** in [our installation docs](https://mailcow.github.io/mailcow-dockerized-docs/i_u_m_install/).