## Let's Encrypt (out-of-the-box) The newly introduced "acme-mailcow" container (21st of June) will try to obtain a valid LE certificate for you. !!! warning mailcow ***must** be available on port 80 for the acme-client to work. By default, which means **0 domains** are added to mailcow, it will try to obtain a certificate for ${MAILCOW_HOSTNAME}. For each domain you add, it will try to resolve autodiscover.ADDED_MAIL_DOMAIN and autoconfig.ADDED_MAIL_DOMAIN to your servers IPv4 address. If it succeeds, these names will be added as SANs to the certificate request. You can skip the IP verification by adding SKIP_IP_CHECK=y to mailcow.conf (no quotes). Be warned that a misconfiguration will get you ratelimited by Let's Encrypt! This is primarily useful for multi-IP setups where the IP check would return the incorrect source IP. Due to using dynamic IPs for acme-mailcow, source NAT is not consistent over restarts. You could add an A record for "autodiscover" but omit "autoconfig", the client will only validate "autodiscover" and skip "autoconfig" then. For every domain you remove, the certificate will be moved and a new certificate will be requested. It is not possible to keep domains in a certificate, when we are not able validate the challenge for those. ### Additional domain names Edit "mailcow.conf" and add a parameter "ADDITIONAL_SAN" like this: !!! info Make sure you are using acme-mailcow:1.5 or above in docker-compose.yml - if not, update mailcow first! Do not use quotes (`"`)! ``` ADDITIONAL_SAN=cert1.example.org,cert1.example.com,cert2.example.org,cert3.example.org ``` Each name will be validated against its IPv4 address. **Skip Let's Encrypt function** Add `SKIP_LETS_ENCRYPT=y` to mailcow.conf and restart the stack by running `docker-compose down && docker-compose up -d`. ## Use own certificates To use your own certificates, just save the combined certificate (containing the certificate and intermediate CA/CA if any) to `data/assets/ssl/cert.pem` and the corresponding key to `data/assets/ssl/key.pem`. Restart the mailcow stack by running `docker-compose down && docker-compose up -d`. ## Check your configuration Run `docker-compose logs acme-mailcow` to find out why a validation fails. To check if nginx serves the correct certificate, simply use a browser of your choice and check the displayed certificate. To check the certificate served by dovecot or postfix we will use `openssl`: ``` # Connect via SMTP (25) openssl s_client -starttls smtp -crlf -connect mx.mailcow.email:25 # Connect via SMTPS (465) openssl s_client -showcerts -connect mx.mailcow.email:465 # Connect via SUBMISSION (587) openssl s_client -starttls smtp -crlf -connect mx.mailcow.email:587 ```