diff --git a/admin_configfiles.php b/admin_configfiles.php index 0283ba1d..222f96cc 100644 --- a/admin_configfiles.php +++ b/admin_configfiles.php @@ -74,7 +74,7 @@ if ($userinfo['change_serversettings'] == '1') { foreach ($daemons as $di => $dd) { $title = $dd->title; if ($dd->default) { - $title = $title." ".$lng['panel']['default']; + $title = $title." (".strtolower($lng['panel']['default']).")"; } $daemons_select .= makeoption($title, $di); } diff --git a/lib/configfiles/wheezy.xml b/lib/configfiles/wheezy.xml index 6136a207..e659ac74 100644 --- a/lib/configfiles/wheezy.xml +++ b/lib/configfiles/wheezy.xml @@ -2459,12 +2459,15 @@ sql_select: SELECT password FROM mail_users WHERE username='%u@%r' OR email='%u@ - - - - - + + + + + + + - - - - + + + - - - - + + + - - - - + + + to select which instance is used (an alternative +# to -c ). The instance name is also added to Dovecot processes +# in ps output. +#instance_name = dovecot + +# Greeting message for clients. +#login_greeting = Dovecot ready. + +# Space separated list of trusted network ranges. Connections from these +# IPs are allowed to override their IP addresses and ports (for logging and +# for authentication checks). disable_plaintext_auth is also ignored for +# these networks. Typically you'd specify your IMAP proxy servers here. +#login_trusted_networks = + +# Sepace separated list of login access check sockets (e.g. tcpwrap) +#login_access_sockets = + +# With proxy_maybe=yes if proxy destination matches any of these IPs, don't do +# proxying. This isn't necessary normally, but may be useful if the destination +# IP is e.g. a load balancer's IP. +#auth_proxy_self = + +# Show more verbose process titles (in ps). Currently shows user name and +# IP address. Useful for seeing who are actually using the IMAP processes +# (eg. shared mailboxes or if same uid is used for multiple accounts). +#verbose_proctitle = no + +# Should all processes be killed when Dovecot master process shuts down. +# Setting this to "no" means that Dovecot can be upgraded without +# forcing existing client connections to close (although that could also be +# a problem if the upgrade is e.g. because of a security fix). +#shutdown_clients = yes + +# If non-zero, run mail commands via this many connections to doveadm server, +# instead of running them directly in the same process. +#doveadm_worker_count = 0 +# UNIX socket or host:port used for connecting to doveadm server +#doveadm_socket_path = doveadm-server + +# Space separated list of environment variables that are preserved on Dovecot +# startup and passed down to all of its child processes. You can also give +# key=value pairs to always set specific settings. +#import_environment = TZ + +## +## Dictionary server settings +## + +# Dictionary can be used to store key=value lists. This is used by several +# plugins. The dictionary can be accessed either directly or though a +# dictionary server. The following dict block maps dictionary names to URIs +# when the server is used. These can then be referenced using URIs in format +# "proxy::". + +dict { + #quota = mysql:/etc/dovecot/dovecot-dict-sql.conf.ext + #expire = sqlite:/etc/dovecot/dovecot-dict-sql.conf.ext +} + +# Most of the actual configuration gets included below. The filenames are +# first sorted by their ASCII value and parsed in that order. The 00-prefixes +# in filenames are intended to make it easier to understand the ordering. +!include conf.d/*.conf + +# A config file can also tried to be included without giving an error if +# it's not found: +!include_try local.conf +]]> + + + + dbname= user= password= + +# Default password scheme. +# +# List of supported schemes is in +# http://wiki2.dovecot.org/Authentication/PasswordSchemes +# +default_pass_scheme = CRYPT + +# passdb query to retrieve the password. It can return fields: +# password - The user's password. This field must be returned. +# user - user@domain from the database. Needed with case-insensitive lookups. +# username and domain - An alternative way to represent the "user" field. +# +# The "user" field is often necessary with case-insensitive lookups to avoid +# e.g. "name" and "nAme" logins creating two different mail directories. If +# your user and domain names are in separate fields, you can return "username" +# and "domain" fields instead of "user". +# +# The query can also return other fields which have a special meaning, see +# http://wiki2.dovecot.org/PasswordDatabase/ExtraFields +# +# Commonly used available substitutions (see http://wiki2.dovecot.org/Variables +# for full list): +# %u = entire user@domain +# %n = user part of user@domain +# %d = domain part of user@domain +# +# Note that these can be used only as input to SQL query. If the query outputs +# any of these substitutions, they're not touched. Otherwise it would be +# difficult to have eg. usernames containing '%' characters. +# +# Example: +# password_query = SELECT userid AS user, pw AS password \ +# FROM users WHERE userid = '%u' AND active = 'Y' +# +#password_query = \ +# SELECT username, domain, password \ +# FROM users WHERE username = '%n' AND domain = '%d' + +# userdb query to retrieve the user information. It can return fields: +# uid - System UID (overrides mail_uid setting) +# gid - System GID (overrides mail_gid setting) +# home - Home directory +# mail - Mail location (overrides mail_location setting) +# +# None of these are strictly required. If you use a single UID and GID, and +# home or mail directory fits to a template string, you could use userdb static +# instead. For a list of all fields that can be returned, see +# http://wiki2.dovecot.org/UserDatabase/ExtraFields +# +# Examples: +# user_query = SELECT home, uid, gid FROM users WHERE userid = '%u' +# user_query = SELECT dir AS home, user AS uid, group AS gid FROM users where userid = '%u' +# user_query = SELECT home, 501 AS uid, 501 AS gid FROM users WHERE userid = '%u' +# +#user_query = \ +# SELECT home, uid, gid \ +# FROM users WHERE username = '%n' AND domain = '%d' +user_query = SELECT CONCAT(homedir, maildir) AS home, CONCAT('maildir:', homedir, maildir) AS mail, uid, gid, CONCAT('*:storage=', (quota*1024)) as quota_rule FROM mail_users WHERE (username = '%u' OR email = '%u') + +# If you wish to avoid two SQL lookups (passdb + userdb), you can use +# userdb prefetch instead of userdb sql in dovecot.conf. In that case you'll +# also have to return userdb fields in password_query prefixed with "userdb_" +# string. For example: +#password_query = \ +# SELECT userid AS user, password, \ +# home AS userdb_home, uid AS userdb_uid, gid AS userdb_gid \ +# FROM users WHERE userid = '%u' +password_query = SELECT username AS user, password_enc AS password, CONCAT(homedir, maildir) AS userdb_home, uid AS userdb_uid, gid AS userdb_gid, CONCAT('maildir:', homedir, maildir) AS userdb_mail, CONCAT('maildir:storage=', (quota*1024)) as userdb_quota FROM mail_users WHERE (username = '%u' OR email = '%u') AND ((imap = 1 AND '%Ls' = 'imap') OR (pop3 = 1 AND '%Ls' = 'pop3') OR '%Ls' = 'smtp' OR '%Ls' = 'sieve') + +# Query to get a list of all usernames. +#iterate_query = SELECT username AS user FROM users +]]> + + + + to characters. For example "#@/@" means +# that '#' and '/' characters are translated to '@'. +#auth_username_translation = + +# Username formatting before it's looked up from databases. You can use +# the standard variables here, eg. %Lu would lowercase the username, %n would +# drop away the domain if it was given, or "%n-AT-%d" would change the '@' into +# "-AT-". This translation is done after auth_username_translation changes. +#auth_username_format = %Lu + +# If you want to allow master users to log in by specifying the master +# username within the normal username string (ie. not using SASL mechanism's +# support for it), you can specify the separator character here. The format +# is then . UW-IMAP uses "*" as the +# separator, so that could be a good choice. +#auth_master_user_separator = + +# Username to use for users logging in with ANONYMOUS SASL mechanism +#auth_anonymous_username = anonymous + +# Maximum number of dovecot-auth worker processes. They're used to execute +# blocking passdb and userdb queries (eg. MySQL and PAM). They're +# automatically created and destroyed as needed. +#auth_worker_max_count = 30 + +# Host name to use in GSSAPI principal names. The default is to use the +# name returned by gethostname(). Use "$ALL" (with quotes) to allow all keytab +# entries. +#auth_gssapi_hostname = + +# Kerberos keytab to use for the GSSAPI mechanism. Will use the system +# default (usually /etc/krb5.keytab) if not specified. You may need to change +# the auth service to run as root to be able to read this file. +#auth_krb5_keytab = + +# Do NTLM and GSS-SPNEGO authentication using Samba's winbind daemon and +# ntlm_auth helper. +#auth_use_winbind = no + +# Path for Samba's ntlm_auth helper binary. +#auth_winbind_helper_path = /usr/bin/ntlm_auth + +# Time to delay before replying to failed authentications. +#auth_failure_delay = 2 secs + +# Require a valid SSL client certificate or the authentication fails. +#auth_ssl_require_client_cert = no + +# Take the username from client's SSL certificate, using +# X509_NAME_get_text_by_NID() which returns the subject's DN's +# CommonName. +#auth_ssl_username_from_cert = no + +# Space separated list of wanted authentication mechanisms: +# plain login digest-md5 cram-md5 ntlm rpa apop anonymous gssapi otp skey +# gss-spnego +# NOTE: See also disable_plaintext_auth setting. +auth_mechanisms = plain login + +## +## Password and user databases +## + +# +# Password database is used to verify user's password (and nothing more). +# You can have multiple passdbs and userdbs. This is useful if you want to +# allow both system users (/etc/passwd) and virtual users to login without +# duplicating the system users into virtual database. +# +# +# +# User database specifies where mails are located and what user/group IDs +# own them. For single-UID configuration use "static" userdb. +# +# + +#!include auth-deny.conf.ext +#!include auth-master.conf.ext + +#!include auth-system.conf.ext +!include auth-sql.conf.ext +#!include auth-ldap.conf.ext +#!include auth-passwdfile.conf.ext +#!include auth-checkpassword.conf.ext +#!include auth-vpopmail.conf.ext +#!include auth-static.conf.ext +]]> + + + + + + + + . +postmaster_address = postmaster@ + +# Hostname to use in various parts of sent mails, eg. in Message-Id. +# Default is the system's real hostname. +#hostname = + +# If user is over quota, return with temporary failure instead of +# bouncing the mail. +#quota_full_tempfail = no + +# Binary to use for sending mails. +#sendmail_path = /usr/sbin/sendmail + +# If non-empty, send mails via this SMTP host[:port] instead of sendmail. +#submission_host = + +# Subject: header to use for rejection mails. You can use the same variables +# as for rejection_reason below. +#rejection_subject = Rejected: %s + +# Human readable error message for rejection mails. You can use variables: +# %n = CRLF, %r = reason, %s = original subject, %t = recipient +#rejection_reason = Your message to <%t> was automatically rejected:%n%r + +# Delimiter character between local-part and detail in email address. +#recipient_delimiter = + + +# Header where the original recipient address (SMTP's RCPT TO: address) is taken +# from if not available elsewhere. With dovecot-lda -a parameter overrides this. +# A commonly used header for this is X-Original-To. +#lda_original_recipient_header = + +# Should saving a mail to a nonexistent mailbox automatically create it? +#lda_mailbox_autocreate = no + +# Should automatically created mailboxes be also automatically subscribed? +#lda_mailbox_autosubscribe = no + +protocol lda { + # Space separated list of plugins to load (default is global mail_plugins). + mail_plugins = $mail_plugins quota sieve +} +]]> + + + + + + + + + #service_count = 1 + + # Number of processes to always keep waiting for more connections. + #process_min_avail = 0 + + # If you set service_count=0, you probably need to grow this. + #vsz_limit = 64M +} + +service managesieve { + # Max. number of ManageSieve processes (connections) + #process_limit = 1024 +} + +# Service configuration + +protocol sieve { + # Maximum ManageSieve command line length in bytes. ManageSieve usually does + # not involve overly long command lines, so this setting will not normally + # need adjustment + #managesieve_max_line_length = 65536 + + # Maximum number of ManageSieve connections allowed for a user from each IP + # address. + # NOTE: The username is compared case-sensitively. + #mail_max_userip_connections = 10 + + # Space separated list of plugins to load (none known to be useful so far). + # Do NOT try to load IMAP plugins here. + #mail_plugins = + + # MANAGESIEVE logout format string: + # %i - total number of bytes read from client + # %o - total number of bytes sent to client + #managesieve_logout_format = bytes=%i/%o + + # To fool ManageSieve clients that are focused on CMU's timesieved you can + # specify the IMPLEMENTATION capability that Dovecot reports to clients. + # For example: 'Cyrus timsieved v2.2.13' + #managesieve_implementation_string = Dovecot Pigeonhole + + # Explicitly specify the SIEVE and NOTIFY capability reported by the server + # before login. If left unassigned these will be reported dynamically + # according to what the Sieve interpreter supports by default (after login + # this may differ depending on the user). + #managesieve_sieve_capability = + #managesieve_notify_capability = + + # The maximum number of compile errors that are returned to the client upon + # script upload or script verification. + #managesieve_max_compile_errors = 5 + + # Refer to 90-sieve.conf for script quota configuration and configuration of + # Sieve execution limits. +} +]]> + + + + = 2.1.4) : %v.%u + # Dovecot v0.99.x : %v.%u + # tpop3d : %Mf + # + # Note that Outlook 2003 seems to have problems with %v.%u format which was + # Dovecot's default, so if you're building a new server it would be a good + # idea to change this. %08Xu%08Xv should be pretty fail-safe. + # + #pop3_uidl_format = %08Xu%08Xv + + # Permanently save UIDLs sent to POP3 clients, so pop3_uidl_format changes + # won't change those UIDLs. Currently this works only with Maildir. + #pop3_save_uidl = no + + # What to do about duplicate UIDLs if they exist? + # allow: Show duplicates to clients. + # rename: Append a temporary -2, -3, etc. counter after the UIDL. + #pop3_uidl_duplicates = allow + + # POP3 logout format string: + # %i - total number of bytes read from client + # %o - total number of bytes sent to client + # %t - number of TOP commands + # %p - number of bytes sent to client as a result of TOP command + # %r - number of RETR commands + # %b - number of bytes sent to client as a result of RETR command + # %d - number of deleted messages + # %m - number of messages (before deletion) + # %s - mailbox size in bytes (before deletion) + # %u - old/new UIDL hash. may help finding out if UIDLs changed unexpectedly + pop3_logout_format = in=%i out=%o top=%t/%p retr=%r/%b del=%d/%m size=%s + + # Maximum number of POP3 connections allowed for a user from each IP address. + # NOTE: The username is compared case-sensitively. + #mail_max_userip_connections = 10 + + # Space separated list of plugins to load (default is global mail_plugins). + mail_plugins = $mail_plugins quota + + # Workarounds for various client bugs: + # outlook-no-nuls: + # Outlook and Outlook Express hang if mails contain NUL characters. + # This setting replaces them with 0x80 character. + # oe-ns-eoh: + # Outlook Express and Netscape Mail breaks if end of headers-line is + # missing. This option simply sends it if it's missing. + # The list is space-separated. + #pop3_client_workarounds = +} +]]> + + + + See sieve_before fore executing scripts before the user's personal + # script. + #sieve_default = /var/lib/dovecot/sieve/default.sieve + + # Directory for :personal include scripts for the include extension. This + # is also where the ManageSieve service stores the user's scripts. + sieve_dir = ~/sieve + + # Directory for :global include scripts for the include extension. + #sieve_global_dir = + + # Path to a script file or a directory containing script files that need to be + # executed before the user's script. If the path points to a directory, all + # the Sieve scripts contained therein (with the proper .sieve extension) are + # executed. The order of execution within a directory is determined by the + # file names, using a normal 8bit per-character comparison. Multiple script + # file or directory paths can be specified by appending an increasing number. + #sieve_before = + #sieve_before2 = + #sieve_before3 = (etc...) + + # Identical to sieve_before, only the specified scripts are executed after the + # user's script (only when keep is still in effect!). Multiple script file or + # directory paths can be specified by appending an increasing number. + #sieve_after = + #sieve_after2 = + #sieve_after2 = (etc...) + + # Which Sieve language extensions are available to users. By default, all + # supported extensions are available, except for deprecated extensions or + # those that are still under development. Some system administrators may want + # to disable certain Sieve extensions or enable those that are not available + # by default. This setting can use '+' and '-' to specify differences relative + # to the default. For example `sieve_extensions = +imapflags' will enable the + # deprecated imapflags extension in addition to all extensions were already + # enabled by default. + #sieve_extensions = +notify +imapflags + + # Which Sieve language extensions are ONLY available in global scripts. This + # can be used to restrict the use of certain Sieve extensions to administrator + # control, for instance when these extensions can cause security concerns. + # This setting has higher precedence than the `sieve_extensions' setting + # (above), meaning that the extensions enabled with this setting are never + # available to the user's personal script no matter what is specified for the + # `sieve_extensions' setting. The syntax of this setting is similar to the + # `sieve_extensions' setting, with the difference that extensions are + # enabled or disabled for exclusive use in global scripts. Currently, no + # extensions are marked as such by default. + #sieve_global_extensions = + + # The Pigeonhole Sieve interpreter can have plugins of its own. Using this + # setting, the used plugins can be specified. Check the Dovecot wiki + # (wiki2.dovecot.org) or the pigeonhole website + # (http://pigeonhole.dovecot.org) for available plugins. + #sieve_plugins = + + # The separator that is expected between the :user and :detail + # address parts introduced by the subaddress extension. This may + # also be a sequence of characters (e.g. '--'). The current + # implementation looks for the separator from the left of the + # localpart and uses the first one encountered. The :user part is + # left of the separator and the :detail part is right. This setting + # is also used by Dovecot's LMTP service. + #recipient_delimiter = + + + # The maximum size of a Sieve script. The compiler will refuse to compile any + # script larger than this limit. If set to 0, no limit on the script size is + # enforced. + #sieve_max_script_size = 1M + + # The maximum number of actions that can be performed during a single script + # execution. If set to 0, no limit on the total number of actions is enforced. + #sieve_max_actions = 32 + + # The maximum number of redirect actions that can be performed during a single + # script execution. If set to 0, no redirect actions are allowed. + #sieve_max_redirects = 4 + + # The maximum number of personal Sieve scripts a single user can have. If set + # to 0, no limit on the number of scripts is enforced. + # (Currently only relevant for ManageSieve) + #sieve_quota_max_scripts = 0 + + # The maximum amount of disk storage a single user's scripts may occupy. If + # set to 0, no limit on the used amount of disk storage is enforced. + # (Currently only relevant for ManageSieve) + #sieve_quota_max_storage = 0 +} +]]> + + + + + + + + + + //service[@type='mail']/general/installs[@index=1] + + //service[@type='mail']/general/files[@index=1] + + + + #service_count = 1 + + # Number of processes to always keep waiting for more connections. + #process_min_avail = 0 + + # If you set service_count=0, you probably need to grow this. + #vsz_limit = $default_vsz_limit +} + +service pop3-login { + inet_listener pop3 { + #port = 110 + } + inet_listener pop3s { + #port = 995 + #ssl = yes + } +} + +service lmtp { + unix_listener lmtp { + #mode = 0666 + } + + # Create inet listener only if you can't use the above UNIX socket + #inet_listener lmtp { + # Avoid making LMTP visible for the entire internet + #address = + #port = + #} +} + +service imap { + # Most of the memory goes to mmap()ing files. You may need to increase this + # limit if you have huge mailboxes. + #vsz_limit = $default_vsz_limit + + # Max. number of IMAP processes (connections) + #process_limit = 1024 +} + +service pop3 { + # Max. number of POP3 processes (connections) + #process_limit = 1024 +} + +service auth { + # auth_socket_path points to this userdb socket by default. It's typically + # used by dovecot-lda, doveadm, possibly imap process, etc. Users that have + # full permissions to this socket are able to get a list of all usernames and + # get the results of everyone's userdb lookups. + # + # The default 0666 mode allows anyone to connect to the socket, but the + # userdb lookups will succeed only if the userdb returns an "uid" field that + # matches the caller process's UID. Also if caller's uid or gid matches the + # socket's uid or gid the lookup succeeds. Anything else causes a failure. + # + # To give the caller full permissions to lookup all users, set the mode to + # something else than 0666 and Dovecot lets the kernel enforce the + # permissions (e.g. 0777 allows everyone full permissions). + unix_listener auth-userdb { + #mode = 0666 + #user = + #group = + } + + # Postfix smtp-auth + unix_listener /var/spool/postfix/private/auth { + mode = 0660 + user = postfix + group = postfix + } + # Exim4 smtp-auth + unix_listener auth-client { + mode = 0660 + user = mail + } + + # Auth process is run as this user. + #user = $default_internal_user +} + +service auth-worker { + # Auth worker process is run as root by default, so that it can access + # /etc/shadow. If this isn't necessary, the user should be changed to + # $default_internal_user. + #user = root +} + +service dict { + # If dict proxy is used, mail processes should have access to its socket. + # For example: mode=0660, group=vmail and global mail_access_groups=vmail + unix_listener dict { + #mode = 0600 + #user = + #group = + } +} ]]> + //service[@type='mail']/general/commands[@index=1] + + + + + //service[@type='mail']/general/installs[@index=1] + + //service[@type='mail']/general/files[@index=1] + - - . -postmaster_address = postmaster@ - -# Hostname to use in various parts of sent mails, eg. in Message-Id. -# Default is the system's real hostname. -#hostname = - -# If user is over quota, return with temporary failure instead of -# bouncing the mail. -#quota_full_tempfail = no - -# Binary to use for sending mails. -#sendmail_path = /usr/sbin/sendmail - -# If non-empty, send mails via this SMTP host[:port] instead of sendmail. -#submission_host = - -# Subject: header to use for rejection mails. You can use the same variables -# as for rejection_reason below. -#rejection_subject = Rejected: %s - -# Human readable error message for rejection mails. You can use variables: -# %n = CRLF, %r = reason, %s = original subject, %t = recipient -#rejection_reason = Your message to <%t> was automatically rejected:%n%r - -# Delimiter character between local-part and detail in email address. -#recipient_delimiter = + - -# Header where the original recipient address (SMTP's RCPT TO: address) is taken -# from if not available elsewhere. With dovecot-lda -a parameter overrides this. -# A commonly used header for this is X-Original-To. -#lda_original_recipient_header = - -# Should saving a mail to a nonexistent mailbox automatically create it? -#lda_mailbox_autocreate = no - -# Should automatically created mailboxes be also automatically subscribed? -#lda_mailbox_autosubscribe = no - -protocol lda { - # Space separated list of plugins to load (default is global mail_plugins). - mail_plugins = $mail_plugins quota sieve -} -]]> - - - - - - - - - #service_count = 1 - - # Number of processes to always keep waiting for more connections. - #process_min_avail = 0 - - # If you set service_count=0, you probably need to grow this. - #vsz_limit = 64M -} - -service managesieve { - # Max. number of ManageSieve processes (connections) - #process_limit = 1024 -} - -# Service configuration - -protocol sieve { - # Maximum ManageSieve command line length in bytes. ManageSieve usually does - # not involve overly long command lines, so this setting will not normally - # need adjustment - #managesieve_max_line_length = 65536 - - # Maximum number of ManageSieve connections allowed for a user from each IP - # address. - # NOTE: The username is compared case-sensitively. - #mail_max_userip_connections = 10 - - # Space separated list of plugins to load (none known to be useful so far). - # Do NOT try to load IMAP plugins here. - #mail_plugins = - - # MANAGESIEVE logout format string: - # %i - total number of bytes read from client - # %o - total number of bytes sent to client - #managesieve_logout_format = bytes=%i/%o - - # To fool ManageSieve clients that are focused on CMU's timesieved you can - # specify the IMPLEMENTATION capability that Dovecot reports to clients. - # For example: 'Cyrus timsieved v2.2.13' - #managesieve_implementation_string = Dovecot Pigeonhole - - # Explicitly specify the SIEVE and NOTIFY capability reported by the server - # before login. If left unassigned these will be reported dynamically - # according to what the Sieve interpreter supports by default (after login - # this may differ depending on the user). - #managesieve_sieve_capability = - #managesieve_notify_capability = - - # The maximum number of compile errors that are returned to the client upon - # script upload or script verification. - #managesieve_max_compile_errors = 5 - - # Refer to 90-sieve.conf for script quota configuration and configuration of - # Sieve execution limits. -} -]]> - - - - = 2.1.4) : %v.%u - # Dovecot v0.99.x : %v.%u - # tpop3d : %Mf - # - # Note that Outlook 2003 seems to have problems with %v.%u format which was - # Dovecot's default, so if you're building a new server it would be a good - # idea to change this. %08Xu%08Xv should be pretty fail-safe. - # - #pop3_uidl_format = %08Xu%08Xv - - # Permanently save UIDLs sent to POP3 clients, so pop3_uidl_format changes - # won't change those UIDLs. Currently this works only with Maildir. - #pop3_save_uidl = no - - # What to do about duplicate UIDLs if they exist? - # allow: Show duplicates to clients. - # rename: Append a temporary -2, -3, etc. counter after the UIDL. - #pop3_uidl_duplicates = allow - - # POP3 logout format string: - # %i - total number of bytes read from client - # %o - total number of bytes sent to client - # %t - number of TOP commands - # %p - number of bytes sent to client as a result of TOP command - # %r - number of RETR commands - # %b - number of bytes sent to client as a result of RETR command - # %d - number of deleted messages - # %m - number of messages (before deletion) - # %s - mailbox size in bytes (before deletion) - # %u - old/new UIDL hash. may help finding out if UIDLs changed unexpectedly - pop3_logout_format = in=%i out=%o top=%t/%p retr=%r/%b del=%d/%m size=%s - - # Maximum number of POP3 connections allowed for a user from each IP address. - # NOTE: The username is compared case-sensitively. - #mail_max_userip_connections = 10 - - # Space separated list of plugins to load (default is global mail_plugins). - mail_plugins = $mail_plugins quota - - # Workarounds for various client bugs: - # outlook-no-nuls: - # Outlook and Outlook Express hang if mails contain NUL characters. - # This setting replaces them with 0x80 character. - # oe-ns-eoh: - # Outlook Express and Netscape Mail breaks if end of headers-line is - # missing. This option simply sends it if it's missing. - # The list is space-separated. - #pop3_client_workarounds = -} -]]> - - - - See sieve_before fore executing scripts before the user's personal - # script. - #sieve_default = /var/lib/dovecot/sieve/default.sieve - - # Directory for :personal include scripts for the include extension. This - # is also where the ManageSieve service stores the user's scripts. - sieve_dir = ~/sieve - - # Directory for :global include scripts for the include extension. - #sieve_global_dir = - - # Path to a script file or a directory containing script files that need to be - # executed before the user's script. If the path points to a directory, all - # the Sieve scripts contained therein (with the proper .sieve extension) are - # executed. The order of execution within a directory is determined by the - # file names, using a normal 8bit per-character comparison. Multiple script - # file or directory paths can be specified by appending an increasing number. - #sieve_before = - #sieve_before2 = - #sieve_before3 = (etc...) - - # Identical to sieve_before, only the specified scripts are executed after the - # user's script (only when keep is still in effect!). Multiple script file or - # directory paths can be specified by appending an increasing number. - #sieve_after = - #sieve_after2 = - #sieve_after2 = (etc...) - - # Which Sieve language extensions are available to users. By default, all - # supported extensions are available, except for deprecated extensions or - # those that are still under development. Some system administrators may want - # to disable certain Sieve extensions or enable those that are not available - # by default. This setting can use '+' and '-' to specify differences relative - # to the default. For example `sieve_extensions = +imapflags' will enable the - # deprecated imapflags extension in addition to all extensions were already - # enabled by default. - #sieve_extensions = +notify +imapflags - - # Which Sieve language extensions are ONLY available in global scripts. This - # can be used to restrict the use of certain Sieve extensions to administrator - # control, for instance when these extensions can cause security concerns. - # This setting has higher precedence than the `sieve_extensions' setting - # (above), meaning that the extensions enabled with this setting are never - # available to the user's personal script no matter what is specified for the - # `sieve_extensions' setting. The syntax of this setting is similar to the - # `sieve_extensions' setting, with the difference that extensions are - # enabled or disabled for exclusive use in global scripts. Currently, no - # extensions are marked as such by default. - #sieve_global_extensions = - - # The Pigeonhole Sieve interpreter can have plugins of its own. Using this - # setting, the used plugins can be specified. Check the Dovecot wiki - # (wiki2.dovecot.org) or the pigeonhole website - # (http://pigeonhole.dovecot.org) for available plugins. - #sieve_plugins = - - # The separator that is expected between the :user and :detail - # address parts introduced by the subaddress extension. This may - # also be a sequence of characters (e.g. '--'). The current - # implementation looks for the separator from the left of the - # localpart and uses the first one encountered. The :user part is - # left of the separator and the :detail part is right. This setting - # is also used by Dovecot's LMTP service. - #recipient_delimiter = + - - # The maximum size of a Sieve script. The compiler will refuse to compile any - # script larger than this limit. If set to 0, no limit on the script size is - # enforced. - #sieve_max_script_size = 1M - - # The maximum number of actions that can be performed during a single script - # execution. If set to 0, no limit on the total number of actions is enforced. - #sieve_max_actions = 32 - - # The maximum number of redirect actions that can be performed during a single - # script execution. If set to 0, no redirect actions are allowed. - #sieve_max_redirects = 4 - - # The maximum number of personal Sieve scripts a single user can have. If set - # to 0, no limit on the number of scripts is enforced. - # (Currently only relevant for ManageSieve) - #sieve_quota_max_scripts = 0 - - # The maximum amount of disk storage a single user's scripts may occupy. If - # set to 0, no limit on the used amount of disk storage is enforced. - # (Currently only relevant for ManageSieve) - #sieve_quota_max_storage = 0 -} -]]> - - - + //service[@type='mail']/general/commands[@index=1] +