Mailu command line
==================
Managing users and aliases can be done from CLI using commands:
* alias
* alias-delete
* domain
* password
* user
* user-import
* user-delete
* config-dump
* config-update
alias
-----
.. code-block :: bash
docker-compose exec admin flask mailu alias foo example.net "mail1@example.com,mail2@example.com"
alias-delete
------------
.. code-block :: bash
docker-compose exec admin flask mailu alias-delete foo@example.net
domain
------
.. code-block :: bash
docker-compose exec admin flask mailu domain example.net
password
--------
.. code-block :: bash
docker-compose exec admin flask mailu password myuser example.net 'password123'
user
----
.. code-block :: bash
docker-compose exec admin flask mailu user myuser example.net 'password123'
user-import
-----------
primary difference with simple `user` command is that password is being imported as a hash - very useful when migrating users from other systems where only hash is known.
.. code-block :: bash
docker-compose run --rm admin flask mailu user-import myuser example.net '$6$51ebe0cb9f1dab48effa2a0ad8660cb489b445936b9ffd812a0b8f46bca66dd549fea530ce' 'SHA512-CRYPT'
user-delete
-----------
.. code-block :: bash
docker-compose exec admin flask mailu user-delete foo@example.net
config-dump
-----------
The purpose of this command is to dump domain-, relay-, alias- and user-configuration to a YAML template.
If you want to export non-hashed secrets you have to add the `` --secrets `` option.
Only non-default options are dumped. If you want to dump all options use `` --full `` .
.. code-block :: bash
docker-compose exec admin flask mailu config-dump > mail-config.yml
config-update
-------------
The purpose of this command is for importing domain-, relay-, alias- and user-configuration in bulk and synchronizing DB entries with an external YAML template.
.. code-block :: bash
docker exec -i $(docker-compose ps -q admin) flask mailu config-update -nvd < mail-config.yml
*(The current version of docker-compose exec does not pass stdin correctly, so you have to user docker exec)*
mail-config.yml looks like:
.. code-block :: yaml
domains:
- name: example.com
alternatives:
- alternative.example.com
users:
- email: foo@example.com
password_hash: klkjhumnzxcjkajahsdqweqqwr
hash_scheme: MD5-CRYPT
aliases:
- email: alias1@example.com
destination: "user1@example.com,user2@example.com"
relays:
- name: relay.example.com
comment: test
smtp: mx.example.com
You can use `` --dry-run `` to test your YAML without omitting any changes to the database.
With `` --verbose `` config-update will show exactly what it changes in the database.
Without `` --delete-object `` option config-update will only add/update new values but will *not* remove any entries missing in provided YAML input.
This is a complete YAML template with all additional parameters that could be defined:
.. code-block :: yaml
aliases:
- email: email@example.com
comment: ''
destination:
- address@example.com
wildcard: false
domains:
- name: example.com
alternatives:
- alternative.tld
comment: ''
dkim_key: ''
max_aliases: -1
max_quota_bytes: 0
max_users: -1
signup_enabled: false
relays:
- name: relay.example.com
comment: ''
smtp: mx.example.com
users:
- email: postmaster@example.com
comment: ''
displayed_name: 'Postmaster'
enable_imap: true
enable_pop: false
enabled: true
fetches:
- id: 1
comment: 'test fetch'
username: fetch-user
host: other.example.com
password: 'secret'
port: 993
protocol: imap
tls: true
keep: true
forward_destination:
- address@remote.example.com
forward_enabled: true
forward_keep: true
global_admin: true
manager_of:
- example.com
password: '{BLF-CRYPT}$2b$12$...'
quota_bytes: 1000000000
reply_body: ''
reply_enabled: false
reply_enddate: 2999-12-31
reply_startdate: 1900-01-01
reply_subject: ''
spam_enabled: true
spam_threshold: 80
tokens:
- id: 1
comment: email-client
ip: 192.168.1.1
password: '$5$rounds=1000$...'