9e9be1879e
you are always welcome to revise the following description to whatever you think that's appropriate
2,1 KiB
2,1 KiB
Attaching a Container to your Shell
To attach a container to your shell you can simply run
docker-compose exec $Service_Name /bin/bash
Connecting to Services
If you want to connect to a service / application directly it is always a good idea to source mailcow.conf
to get all relevant variables into your environment.
MySQL
source mailcow.conf
docker-compose exec mysql-mailcow mysql -u${DBUSER} -p${DBPASS} ${DBNAME}
Redis
docker-compose exec redis-mailcow redis-cli
Service Descriptions
Here is a brief overview of what container / service does what:
Service Name | Service Descriptions |
---|---|
unbound-mailcow | Local (DNSSEC) DNS Resolver |
mysql-mailcow | Stores SOGo's and most of mailcow's settings |
postfix-mailcow | Receives and sends mails |
dovecot-mailcow | User logins and sieve filter |
redis-mailcow | Storage back-end for DKIM keys and Rspamd |
rspamd-mailcow | Mail filtering system. Used for av handling, dkim signing, spam handling |
clamd-mailcow | Scans attachments for viruses |
sogo-mailcow | Webmail client that handles Microsoft ActiveSync and Cal- / CardDav |
nginx-mailcow | Nginx remote proxy that handles all mailcow related HTTP / HTTPS requests |
acme-mailcow | Automates HTTPS (SSL/TLS) certificate deployment |
memcached-mailcow | Internal caching system for mailcow services |
watchdog-mailcow | Allows the monitoring of docker containers / services |
php-fpm-mailcow | Powers the mailcow web UI |
netfilter-mailcow | Fail2Ban like integration |