9,1 KiB
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 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 covered before you begin! - Make sure that your system has a correct date and time setup. This is crucial for various components like two factor TOTP authentication.
Minimum System Resources
!!! failure "Not supported" OpenVZ, Virtuozzo and LXC
Please make sure that your system has at least the following resources:
Resource | mailcow: dockerized |
---|---|
CPU | 1 GHz |
RAM | Minimum 6 GiB + 1 GiB swap (default config) |
Disk | 20 GiB (without emails) |
System Type | x86_64 |
ClamAV and Solr can be greedy with RAM. You may disable them in mailcow.conf
by settings SKIP_CLAMD=y
and SKIP_SOLR=y
.
!!! info We are aware that a pure MTA can run on 128 MiB RAM. mailcow is a full-grown and ready-to-use groupware with many extras making life easier. mailcow comes with a webserver, webmailer, ActiveSync (MS), antivirus, antispam, indexing (Solr), document scanner (Oletools), SQL (MariaDB), Cache (Redis), MDA, MTA, various web services etc.
A single SOGo worker can acquire ~350 MiB RAM before it gets purged. The more ActiveSync connections you plan to use, the more RAM you will need. A default configuration spawns 20 workers.
RAM usage examples
A company with 15 phones (EAS enabled) and about 50 concurrent IMAP connections should plan 16 GiB RAM.
6 GiB RAM + 1 GiB swap are fine for most private installations while 8 GiB RAM are recommended for ~5 to 10 users.
We can help to correctly plan your setup as part of our support.
Supported OS
Basically, mailcow can be used on any distribution that is supported by Docker CE (see https://docs.docker.com/install/). However, in some cases there may be incompatibilities between the operating systems and the mailcow components.
The following table contains all operating systems officially supported and tested by us (as of April 2022):
OS | Compatibility |
---|---|
Alpine 3.17+ and older | ⚠️ |
Centos 7 | âś… |
Debian 10, 11 | âś… |
Ubuntu 18.04, 20.04, 22.04 | âś… |
Alma Linux 8 | âś… |
Rocky Linux 9 | âś… |
!!! info "Legend"
âś… = Works out of the box using the instructions.
⚠️ = Requires some manual adjustments otherwise usable.
❌ = In general NOT Compatible.
âť” = Pending.
!!! warning Note: All other operating systems (not mentioned) may also work, but have not been officially tested.
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'
!!! danger
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.donnex.net) or this (unrouted.io) guide 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.
Important for Hetzner firewalls
Quoting https://github.com/chermsen via https://github.com/mailcow/mailcow-dockerized/issues/497#issuecomment-469847380 (THANK YOU!):
For all who are struggling with the Hetzner firewall:
Port 53 unimportant for the firewall configuration in this case. According to the documentation unbound uses the port range 1024-65535 for outgoing requests. Since the Hetzner Robot Firewall is a static firewall (each incoming packet is checked isolated) - the following rules must be applied:
For TCP
SRC-IP: ---
DST IP: ---
SRC Port: ---
DST Port: 1024-65535
Protocol: tcp
TCP flags: ack
Action: Accept
For UDP
SRC-IP: ---
DST IP: ---
SRC Port: ---
DST Port: 1024-65535
Protocol: udp
Action: Accept
If you want to apply a more restrictive port range you have to change the config of unbound first (after installation):
{mailcow-dockerized}/data/conf/unbound/unbound.conf:
outgoing-port-avoid: 0-32767
Now the firewall rules can be adjusted as follows:
[...]
DST Port: 32768-65535
[...]
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]
NTP=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.
MTU
Especially relevant for OpenStack users: Check your MTU and set it accordingly in docker-compose.yml. See Troubleshooting in our Installation guide.