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Run your own E-Mail Autoconfig/Autodiscovery/Mobileconfig server for multiple domains

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mdec

Multi Domain Email Confugration

Problem and requirements

Adding a new mail account to your mail client is always way more pleasant when the client autodetects all the settings for incoming and outgoing server, the port, which SSL method to use and so on. All big providers like e.g. GMail have this, but most of the time when you run your own mailserver this gets left behind because it's probably not as much of a deal when you just run your own mailserver for youself and run a hand full of devices that never change. But when you host mail for friends and family or are like me and run a small hosting business where have have mails hosted for customers, you spend a lot of your time telling people how to configure a mailclient. This get's especially challenging when they use a client you have never touched yourself and don't know where all the settings are. Therefore I wanted a relatively simple solution that is capable of handling multiple domains. I know there exist some scripts/tools but they are either only good for a single domain or have to many features that I don't need and are therefore harder to setup (AutoMX looks like good but they need a database which I don't want to maintain just for email autodiscovery)

mdec setup

Todo..

DNS

Single domain setup

If you want to use mdec for a single domain, let's say example.com, you need to add two DNS records (A,AAAA or CNAME doesn't matter) which point to a webserver:

  • autoconfig.example.com
  • autodiscover.example.com Then you need to get a SSL certificate for autodiscover.example.com. Now scroll down to Webserver setup and configure the webserver to serve the XML files.

Multi domain setup

Here comes the actual fun part. Lets say you host emails both for example.com and awesome.org. Like in the example above you need one domain, lets call it the main domain, which has the actual webserver runnig which serves the mdec tool. We will use example.com as our main domain for this example. Configure these two DNS records:

  • autoconfig.example.com
  • autodiscover.example.com

Now for awesome.org (and every other domain) we also need to add two records, but the nice part is, that no matter how many domains we host, we neither have to touch the dns of our main domain, touch the webserver config or get any additional SSL certificates. Neat!

You just need these two records:

  • CNAME for autoconfig.awesome.org which points to autoconfig.example.com
  • SRV record for _autodiscover._tcp.awesome.org with the value 10 0 443 autodiscover.example.com

We can use a simple CNAME for autoconfig because it's plain HTTP so the webserver will serve our content no matter with which domain we make a request. The problem is that autodiscover on the other hand requires HTTPS, so if we would also just use a CNAME for the autodiscover domain, we ould need to have a valid SSL certificate for every domain we host on the webserver which serves mdec. Nowadays with fancy webserves like traefik and caddy which can auto-issue new Let's Encrypt certificate for new domains, this theoretically isn't much of a problem anymore but I still wanted to keep things simple and have a bunch of certificates just for a single autodiscover requests of a new email client seems bloated so I went with the SRV record method. This way we can tell the client which requested the autodiscovery service that it's actually hosted on autodiscover.example.com. This way we get proper redirect to our main domain and only need a single certificate and the webserver only needs to listen on the main domain.

Webserver setup

Todo...

Configuration

mdec is managed via the config.yaml file. There are some global settings to define the listening address of the tool and the log level as well as a entry called domains. This key contains a key/value pair of domain names, namely the domains you host on your mailserver. Because when hosting multiple domains on the same mailerver most of the settings will be the same, therefore there is a special entry with the key default. This entry defines the fallback values for all domains that are not explicitly defined in the file and also gets merged with all explicitly defined domain entries, so if a domain only has one different value, you just need to define it and all the other values gets inherited from the default entry.

Supported protocols

Like everywhere else in IT we have many competing standards. I tried to cover all of the important ones so this tools works for all major desktop and mobile clients. All information below is to my best knowledge and if something is wrong I am happy for issues of pull requests!

Autoconfig

This is the standard developed by Mozilla and is used e.g. in Thunderbird. Autoconfig tries to contact http://autoconfig.<your-emaildomain> and requests an XML file from /mail/config-v1.1.xml while providing the emailaddres they requested via the emailaddress GET-Parameter. They request only plain HTTP and don't accept a redirect to https so you need to deliver it plain.

Documentation for the file format can be found in the Mozilla Wiki

Autodiscover

This was the old standard invented by Microsoft in e.g. Outlook. From what I know this is no longer used since 2016. There this is not implemented here.

Autodiscover V2

This is the successor to the old Autodiscover protocol. But apparantlt only supports Office365 and no longer plain IMAP or POP3. Therefore this can't be used for selfhosted mail servers. Thanks Microsoft!

Mobileconfig

Todo...

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