# Copyright (C) 2008-2017 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc. # # This file is part of GNU Mailman. # # GNU Mailman is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under # the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free # Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) # any later version. # # GNU Mailman is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT # ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or # FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for # more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with # GNU Mailman. If not, see . # This file contains the Debian configuration for mailman. It uses ini-style # formats under the lazr.config regime to define all system configuration # options. See for details. [mailman] # This address is the "site owner" address. Certain messages which must be # delivered to a human, but which can't be delivered to a list owner (e.g. a # bounce from a list owner), will be sent to this address. It should point to # a human. site_owner: user@example.com # This is the local-part of an email address used in the From field whenever a # message comes from some entity to which there is no natural reply recipient. # Mailman will append '@' and the host name of the list involved. This # address must not bounce and it must not point to a Mailman process. noreply_address: noreply # The default language for this server. default_language: en # Membership tests for posting purposes are usually performed by looking at a # set of headers, passing the test if any of their values match a member of # the list. Headers are checked in the order given in this variable. The # value From_ means to use the envelope sender. Field names are case # insensitive. This is a space separate list of headers. sender_headers: from from_ reply-to sender # Mail command processor will ignore mail command lines after designated max. email_commands_max_lines: 10 # Default length of time a pending request is live before it is evicted from # the pending database. pending_request_life: 3d # How long should files be saved before they are evicted from the cache? cache_life: 7d # A callable to run with no arguments early in the initialization process. # This runs before database initialization. pre_hook: # A callable to run with no arguments late in the initialization process. # This runs after adapters are initialized. post_hook: # Which paths.* file system layout to use. # You should not change this variable. layout: debian # Can MIME filtered messages be preserved by list owners? filtered_messages_are_preservable: no # How should text/html parts be converted to text/plain when the mailing list # is set to convert HTML to plaintext? This names a command to be called, # where the substitution variable $filename is filled in by Mailman, and # contains the path to the temporary file that the command should read from. # The command should print the converted text to stdout. html_to_plain_text_command: /usr/bin/lynx -dump $filename # Specify what characters are allowed in list names. Characters outside of # the class [-_.+=!$*{}~0-9a-z] matched case insensitively are never allowed, # but this specifies a subset as the only allowable characters. This must be # a valid character class regexp or the effect on list creation is # unpredictable. listname_chars: [-_.0-9a-z] [shell] # `mailman shell` (also `withlist`) gives you an interactive prompt that you # can use to interact with an initialized and configured Mailman system. Use # --help for more information. This section allows you to configure certain # aspects of this interactive shell. # Customize the interpreter prompt. prompt: >>> # Banner to show on startup. banner: Welcome to the GNU Mailman shell # Use IPython as the shell, which must be found on the system. Valid values # are `no`, `yes`, and `debug` where the latter is equivalent to `yes` except # that any import errors will be displayed to stderr. use_ipython: no # Set this to allow for command line history if readline is available. This # can be as simple as $var_dir/history.py to put the file in the var directory. history_file: [paths.debian] # Important directories for Mailman operation. These are defined here so that # different layouts can be supported. For example, a developer layout would # be different from a FHS layout. Most paths are based off the var_dir, and # often just setting that will do the right thing for all the other paths. # You might also have to set spool_dir though. # # Substitutions are allowed, but must be of the form $var where 'var' names a # configuration variable in the paths.* section. Substitutions are expanded # recursively until no more $-variables are present. Beware of infinite # expansion loops! # # This is the root of the directory structure that Mailman will use to store # its run-time data. var_dir: /var/lib/mailman3 # This is where the Mailman queue files directories will be created. queue_dir: $var_dir/queue # This is the directory containing the Mailman 'runner' and 'master' commands # if set to the string '$argv', it will be taken as the directory containing # the 'mailman' command. bin_dir: /usr/lib/mailman3/bin # All list-specific data. list_data_dir: $var_dir/lists # Directory where log files go. log_dir: /var/log/mailman3 # Directory for system-wide locks. lock_dir: $var_dir/locks # Directory for system-wide data. data_dir: $var_dir/data # Cache files. cache_dir: $var_dir/cache # Directory for configuration files and such. etc_dir: /etc/mailman3 # Directory containing Mailman plugins. ext_dir: $var_dir/ext # Directory where the default IMessageStore puts its messages. messages_dir: $var_dir/messages # Directory for archive backends to store their messages in. Archivers should # create a subdirectory in here to store their files. archive_dir: $var_dir/archives # Root directory for site-specific template override files. template_dir: $var_dir/templates # There are also a number of paths to specific file locations that can be # defined. For these, the directory containing the file must already exist, # or be one of the directories created by Mailman as per above. # # This is where PID file for the master runner is stored. pid_file: /run/mailman3/master.pid # Lock file. lock_file: $lock_dir/master.lck [database] # The class implementing the IDatabase. class: mailman.database.sqlite.SQLiteDatabase #class: mailman.database.mysql.MySQLDatabase #class: mailman.database.postgresql.PostgreSQLDatabase # Use this to set the Storm database engine URL. You generally have one # primary database connection for all of Mailman. List data and most rosters # will store their data in this database, although external rosters may access # other databases in their own way. This string supports standard # 'configuration' substitutions. url: sqlite:///$DATA_DIR/mailman.db #url: mysql+pymysql://mailman3:mmpass@localhost/mailman3?charset=utf8&use_unicode=1 #url: postgres://mailman3:mmpass@localhost/mailman3 debug: no [logging.debian] # This defines various log settings. The options available are: # # - level -- Overrides the default level; this may be any of the # standard Python logging levels, case insensitive. # - format -- Overrides the default format string # - datefmt -- Overrides the default date format string # - path -- Overrides the default logger path. This may be a relative # path name, in which case it is relative to Mailman's LOG_DIR, # or it may be an absolute path name. You cannot change the # handler class that will be used. # - propagate -- Boolean specifying whether to propagate log message from this # logger to the root "mailman" logger. You cannot override # settings for the root logger. # # In this section, you can define defaults for all loggers, which will be # prefixed by 'mailman.'. Use subsections to override settings for specific # loggers. The names of the available loggers are: # # - archiver -- All archiver output # - bounce -- All bounce processing logs go here # - config -- Configuration issues # - database -- Database logging (SQLAlchemy and Alembic) # - debug -- Only used for development # - error -- All exceptions go to this log # - fromusenet -- Information related to the Usenet to Mailman gateway # - http -- Internal wsgi-based web interface # - locks -- Lock state changes # - mischief -- Various types of hostile activity # - runner -- Runner process start/stops # - smtp -- Successful SMTP activity # - smtp-failure -- Unsuccessful SMTP activity # - subscribe -- Information about leaves/joins # - vette -- Message vetting information format: %(asctime)s (%(process)d) %(message)s datefmt: %b %d %H:%M:%S %Y propagate: no level: info path: mailman.log [webservice] # The hostname at which admin web service resources are exposed. hostname: mail.example.com # The port at which the admin web service resources are exposed. port: 8001 # Whether or not requests to the web service are secured through SSL. use_https: no # Whether or not to show tracebacks in an HTTP response for a request that # raised an exception. show_tracebacks: yes # The API version number for the current (highest) API. api_version: 3.1 # The administrative username. admin_user: restadmin # The administrative password. admin_pass: censored [mta] # The class defining the interface to the incoming mail transport agent. #incoming: mailman.mta.exim4.LMTP incoming: mailman.mta.postfix.LMTP # The callable implementing delivery to the outgoing mail transport agent. # This must accept three arguments, the mailing list, the message, and the # message metadata dictionary. outgoing: mailman.mta.deliver.deliver # How to connect to the outgoing MTA. If smtp_user and smtp_pass is given, # then Mailman will attempt to log into the MTA when making a new connection. smtp_host: mail.example.com smtp_port: 25 smtp_user: smtp_pass: # Where the LMTP server listens for connections. Use 127.0.0.1 instead of # localhost for Postfix integration, because Postfix only consults DNS # (e.g. not /etc/hosts). lmtp_host: 127.0.0.1 lmtp_port: 8024 # Where can we find the mail server specific configuration file? The path can # be either a file system path or a Python import path. If the value starts # with python: then it is a Python import path, otherwise it is a file system # path. File system paths must be absolute since no guarantees are made about # the current working directory. Python paths should not include the trailing # .cfg, which the file must end with. #configuration: python:mailman.config.exim4 configuration: python:mailman.config.postfix # The following lines are specific to mailing lists archiving using # HyperKitty. They require 'python3-mailman-hyperkitty' to be installed # and will produce errors otherwise. # # If you don't want to use HyperKitty, please comment them out. [archiver.hyperkitty] class: mailman_hyperkitty.Archiver enable: yes configuration: /etc/mailman3/mailman-hyperkitty.cfg