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# MailAutoConf - a simple, configurable autodiscover service for distributed and self-hosted groupware services.
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# MailAutoConf - a simple, configurable autodiscover/autoconfig service for distributed and self-hosted services.
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## What is MailAutoConf?
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## What is MailAutoConf?
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MailAutoConf is a self-hosted service which provides IMAP, SMTP, CalDAV, CardDav, etc
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MailAutoConf is autodiscover/autoconfig web server for self-hosted mail services
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URLs to authenticated clients for ease in set up on mobile devices and also desktop/laptop computers.
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which do not have their own autodiscover service.
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## What ~~does~~ will MailAutoConf do?
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## What does MailAutoConf do?
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MailAutoConf is currently in _very_early stages, but it does generate valid
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autoconfig XML files (/mail/config-v1.1.xml) compatible with many mail clients
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i.e. Thunderbird, Evolution, etc.
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Theoretically, anything that can read the standard autoconfig XML file -
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https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird:Autoconfiguration:ConfigFileFormat, should
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be able to auto-configure using this service.
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## Installation
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The container file includes set up for an apache webserver to run the application.
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You will need to supply a volume for the configuration file and port forwarding.
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```
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podman run -dt \
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--name mailautoconf \
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-v ./config:/var/www/html/config \
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-p 8010:80 \
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pswilde/automailconf
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```
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You will need a reverse proxy server to publish to the outside world and handle SSL encryption.
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For example, in nginx:
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```
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server {
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listen 443 ssl;
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server_name autoconfig.example.com;
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ssl_certificate /path/to/certificate.file;
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ssl_certificate_key /path/to/certificate.key
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location / {
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proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Host $host:$server_port;
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proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Server $host;
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proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
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proxy_pass http://localhost:8010/;
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proxy_redirect http://localhsot:8010/ /;
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proxy_read_timeout 60s;
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}
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}
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```
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First run will create sample.ini files in the config directory. Copy these to config.ini and services.ini and configure them to your needs.
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MailAutoConf will handle all the URLs it's able to deal with, i.e. /mail/config-v1.1.xml, /Autodiscover/Autodiscover.xml automatically.
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## DNS config
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You will need to configure DNS records for your domain.
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I would recommend setting up an A record for autoconfig.your.domain to point
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directly to your MailAutoConf's instance which will work for Thunderbird and
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Evolution clients.
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Then, if Outlook Autodiscover is required (currently not implemented), configure
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a SRV record to redirect to the autoconfig.your.domain A record. i.e.
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```
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Type TTL P M Port Target
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SRV _autodiscover._tcp.your.domain 3600 10 10 443 autoconfig.your.domain
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```
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## Future plans
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MailAutoConf is currently in _very_ early stages, with a _very_ limited set of features.
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MailAutoConf is currently in _very_ early stages, with a _very_ limited set of features.
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My hope for MailAutoConf is to mimic the AutoDiscover service found in Microsoft Exchange services,
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My hope for MailAutoConf is to run as an autoconfig service which provides Calendar and AddressBook locations as well.
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but with the intent of providing a set of URLS for each service which may be self-hosted and/or distributed,
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Calendar and AddressBook is in the autoconfig XML documentation, but currently not implemented. MailAutoConf can generate the correct information for Calendar and AddressBook into the autoconfig XML file, though no clients currently use it.
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primary IMAP, SMTP, CalDAV and CardDAV URLS, but hopefully more services can be added in the future.
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__For example:__
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## TODO:
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Company X may have many services that are selfhosted i.e. Dovecot for email (IMAP/SMTP) and Nextcloud for Calendar and Contacts.
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Getting a set up like this configured on a mobile device is fairly involved for a standard user and tiresome if the company has many employees.
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There are many points where set up configuration mistakes can happen, leading to service outage for a user, and the difficult job of
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the IT consultant trying to talk the user through setting the device up over the phone.
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MailAutoConf intends to patch this problem by providing the URLs and information (Port numbers, SSL/TLS type, domain name, etc.) for each service
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- [x] /mail/config-v1.1.xml file for Thunderbird and Evolution mail clients.
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in JSON format allowing for the connecting device to automatically set up this information on the device.
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- [ ] Add more code commenting, it's pretty terrible right now.
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- [ ] Refactor the autoconfig and autodiscover XML files, they've been copied and bodged together and could look so much better.
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- [ ] Autodiscover.xml for Outlook clients - currently does generate, but untested.
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- [ ] Autodiscover.json for more modern Outlook clients - this is currently undocumented. I have implemented some features of it but it is currently not working.
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- [ ] Calendars and Address Book - does generate into mail/config-v1.1.xml, but no actual clients support it yet.
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- [ ] Additional, custom services. For example, Nextcloud - instead of having to type in your Nextcloud instance URL, you can just enter your email address associated with you Nextcloud account and it looks up the URL from autoconfig - wouldn't that be nice?
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- [ ] Probably loads of stuff I haven't thought of yet.
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## What problems do I expect?
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OK, the most glaringly obvious problem is that the JSON response information is no good if the device itself doesn't know what to do with it.
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I hope to develop a mobile app with mail, contact and calendar features in it, but we're in _very_ early stages of the base service at the moment.
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Once the basic JSON response service is operational, I'll look into the mobile app which will then be when things will start to become useful.
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In the perfect world, this service starts to look so fantastic that mobile device Operating System and/or mail app developers start implementing the option
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in their own code as an Account Type (i.e. ActiveSync, Office365, iCloud, IMAP, etc. are all already there), but I'm not sure if I see that happening just yet.
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### Another problem is authentication.
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I'd like all clients to authenticate to the MailAutoConf service, but where do we get that authentication from?
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We could have local accounts on the MailAutoConf server obviously, but I don't think this feels "fluent" enough. Maybe, using the primary IMAP server address, we could do an authentication request and if that succeeds the login is accepted and MailAutoConf information is sent.
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### More problems regarding authentication.
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As we're intended to be used for self-hosted, distributed services, each service may have different usernames and passwords.
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This means there will have to be some sort of manual credential entry for each service.
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I am less concerned with this issue as it currently isn't really in the scope of MailAutoConf to handle this - the goal is to provide the core information (URL, Ports, etc.) not the credentials to log in. I of course want to make the experience as helpful as possible though, so I'll deal with any features surrounding this when I can.
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## When will it be ready for production?
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## When will it be ready for production?
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Well, not yet.
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Well, not yet. Though it does sort of work already.
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I'm working on this ultimately for my own use for my own small business. I'm hoping once it's good enough I could deploy the set up to customers
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I'm working on this ultimately for my own use for my own small business. I'm hoping once it's good enough I could deploy the set up to my businesses customers and ultimately get them away from a Microsoft Exchange based environment. There's a long way to go for that right now though.
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and ultimately get them away from a Microsoft Exchange based environment. There's a long way to go for that right now though.
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If you feel you may be able to help, or ideas on features and their implementation, notice any bugs, or just want to say hi. Please do so and submit a pull request if required.
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If you feel you may be able to help, or ideas on features and their implementation, notice any bugs, or just want to say hi. Please do so and submit a pull request if required.
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