As discussed with hoellen on matrix, since postfix indeed supports including
the recipient delimiter character in a verbatim alias, we should support so too
— and handle its precedence correctly. The clearer and simpler formulation of
the precedence-clauses are credit to @hoellen. Thanks!
This fixes delivery to an alias minus recipient delimiter in cases where a
wildcard alias would also match. For example,
* foo@xxx.tld
* %@xxx.tld
Sending to foo+spam@xxx.tld would get eaten by the catchall before this fix.
Now, the order of alias resolution is made clearer.
closes#813
In the process we found that the previous way of tenacity syntax caused it not to honor any args.
In this commit we've refactored to use the @decorator syntax, in which tenacity seems to behave better.
CVE-2017-18342
Vulnerable versions: < 4.2b1
Patched version: 4.2b1
In PyYAML before 4.1, the yaml.load() API could execute arbitrary code. In other words, yaml.safe_load is not used.
Since postfix now asks us for the complete email over podop, which
includes the recipient-delimiter-and-what-follows not stripped, we need
to attempt to find both the verbatim localpart, as well as the localpart
stripped of the delimited part ….
Fixes#755
The init script was pushing an application context, which maked
flask.g global and persisted across requests. This was evaluated
to have a minimal security impact.
This explains/fixes #738: flask_wtf caches the csrf token in the
application context to have a single token per request, and only
sets the session attribute after the first generation.
In case of TLS_FLAVOR=[mail,cert], the user supplies their own certificates.
However, since nginx is not aware of changes to these files, it cannot
reload itself e.g. when the certs get renewed.
To solve this, let’s add a small daemon in the place of
`letsencrypt.py`, which uses a flexible file-watching framework and
reloads nginx in the case the certificates change ….