WebMUM is not compatible with the new Mailserver-HowTo!, but we will try to implement the changes for the release of version 1.0.0.
WebMUM is a web frontend based on PHP which helps you to manage e-mail server via MySQL. This software is licensed under the MIT license.
This project is currently developed and managed by ohartl and together with the contributes. Founder of this project is ThomasLeister, a passionate blogger specialized topics like linux, open-source, servers etc.
Feel free to send in issues and pull requests, your support for this project is much appreciated!
Clone the WebMUM Repository to your webserver's virtual host root directory:
git clone https://github.com/ohartl/webmum
A update / upgrade guide can be found here.
Now configure your webserver. URL rewriting to index.php is required.
Nginx config examples following, but you still need to change domain and path in config as explained here.
With subdirectory webmum/
in URL (e.g. http://mydomain.tld/webmum/
):
server {
listen 80;
server_name mydomain.tld;
root /var/www;
index index.html index.php;
location ~ \.php$ {
fastcgi_pass 127.0.0.1:9000;
fastcgi_index index.php;
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME $document_root$fastcgi_script_name;
include fastcgi_params;
}
location /webmum {
try_files $uri $uri/ /webmum/index.php?$args;
}
# protect the codebase by denying direct access
location ^~ /webmum/include/php {
deny all;
return 403;
}
location ^~ /webmum/config {
deny all;
return 403;
}
}
Without subdirectory in URL (e.g. http://webmum.mydomain.tld/
):
server {
listen 80;
server_name webmum.mydomain.tld;
root /var/www/webmum;
index index.html index.php;
location ~ \.php$ {
fastcgi_pass 127.0.0.1:9000;
fastcgi_index index.php;
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME $document_root$fastcgi_script_name;
include fastcgi_params;
}
location / {
try_files $uri $uri/ /index.php?$args;
}
# protect the codebase by denying direct access
location ^~ /include/php {
deny all;
return 403;
}
location ^~ /config {
deny all;
return 403;
}
}
Apache config examples following, but you still need to change domain and path in config as explained here.
Please note: mod_rewrite must be enabled for URL rewriting:
sudo a2enmod rewrite
With subdirectory webmum/
in URL (e.g. http://mydomain.tld/webmum/
):
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName domain.tld
DocumentRoot /var/www/domain.tld
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteRule ^\/webmum/(.*)\.css$ /webmum/$1.css [L]
RewriteRule ^\/webmum/(.*)$ /webmum/index.php [L,QSA]
</VirtualHost>
Without subdirectory in URL (e.g. http://webmum.mydomain.tld/
):
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName webmum.domain.tld
DocumentRoot /var/www/domain.tld/webmum
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteRule (.*)\.css$ $1.css [L]
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ /index.php [L,QSA]
</VirtualHost>
Access to the codebase is denied with a .htaccess
file, that can be found in /include/php
.
Configure WebMUM via the configuration file at config/config.inc.php
.
At first the database access has to be configured under the config key mysql
.
Check if you've got the same database schema as configured in the config key schema
.
If you want to use your "mailbox_limit" column to limit the size of your users' mailboxes, just enable mailbox limit in the options.
'options' => array(
...
'enable_mailbox_limits' => true,
...
),
WebMUM will then show a new field "Mailbox limit" in the frontend.
As mailservers can only process a single source address for redirects the database table for aliases / redirects can only hold a single source address in a row. WebMum will, if you enabled the multiple source redirect support, do some magic so there is only a single address in a row even though multiple addresses where entered. To make this work another column in the database table is required, which holds an identifier for the list of source addresses, so they can be edited like normal redirects.
By default you can only redirect a single address to a single or multiple destinations. If you want to enable support for redirecting multiple source addresses to a destination, just enable it in the options:
'options' => array(
...
'enable_multi_source_redirects' => true,
...
),
And add the following column to your database table for aliases / redirects:
ALTER TABLE `aliases` ADD COLUMN `multi_source` VARCHAR(32) NULL DEFAULT NULL;
WebMUM will then show a larger field for source addresses in the frontend and you can not list emails in source field.
If you share your mailserver with others, host their domains and they should be able to manage their domains, but not all domains on that mailserver then this is the right option for you.
You have to add that user to the admins
array in your configuration and enable admin domain limits in the options:
'options' => array(
...
'enable_admin_domain_limits' => true,
...
),
also you have to make an entry in the admin_domain_limits
array, for example peter@his.tld
should be able to manage his domains his.tld
and his-company.tld
then configure the following:
'admin_domain_limits' => array(
'peter@his.tld' => array('his.tld', 'his-company.tld'),
);
Admins that have been listed in admin_domain_limits
don't have access to the "Manage domains" pages, otherwise they could delete domains they are managing, but maybe someone else owns.
If you want to enable some users to create redirects on their own, either limited by a maximum number of redirects or unlimited, this is the right option for you. You have to enable this feature in the options:
'options' => array(
...
'enable_user_redirects' => true,
...
),
And add the following columns to your database tables for aliases / redirects and users:
ALTER TABLE `aliases` ADD COLUMN `is_created_by_user` INT(1) NOT NULL DEFAULT '0';
Note: By choosing a default value for the max_user_redirects
column on the users table, you can set the default state of user redirects for new users. 0
= unlimited, -1
= disabled and a number larger than 0 will limit user redirects.
ALTER TABLE `users` ADD COLUMN `max_user_redirects` INT(10) NOT NULL DEFAULT '-1';
The base_url
is the URL your WebMUM installation is accessible from outside, this also includes subdirectories if you installed it in a subdirectory for that specific domain.
'base_url' => 'http://localhost/webmum',
In the example above, WebMUM is located in a subdirectory named "webmum/". If your WebMUM installation is directly accessible from a domain (has its own domain), then set the base_url
to something like this:
'base_url' => 'http://webmum.mydomain.tld',
Only users with one of the specified email addresses will have access to the administrator's dashboard and will be able to create, edit and delete users, domains and redirects.
'admins' = array(
'admin@domain.tld',
);
Admin email accounts must exist in the virtual user database on your own server. (=> an e-mail account on a foreign server won't give you access!). You can then login into the admin dashboard with that e-mail address and the corresponding password.
'password' => array(
...
'min_length' => 8,
...
),
When logging is enabled, WebMUM will write messages into a file "webmum.log" in a specified directory (e.g. when a login attempt fails).
Enable logging by setting it to enabled in the options:
'options' => array(
...
'enable_logging' => true,
...
),
... and set a log path where the PHP user has permission to write the log file:
'log_path' => '/var/www/webmum/log/',
"Login-failed-messages" have the following scheme:
Dec 19 13:00:19: WebMUM login failed for IP 127.0.0.1
If you want to use Fail2Ban with WebMUM, the filter has to be:
[Definition]
failregex = ^(.*)\: WebMUM login failed for IP <HOST>$
'options' => array(
...
'enable_validate_aliases_source_domain' => true,
...
),
Choose delimiter between multiple email addresses: comma, semicolon or new line separated.
Tip: new line is helpful for long lists of addresses.
'frontend_options' => array(
// Separator for email lists
'email_separator_text' => ', ', // possible values: ', ' (default), '; ', PHP_EOL (newline)
'email_separator_form' => ',', // possible values: ',' (default), ';', PHP_EOL (newline)
),
The input for addresses can be separated by ,
, ;
, :
, |
, newline
and combinations since all of them will result in a valid list of addresses in database, magic.
If you cloned WebMUM into your filesystem via git clone https://github.com/ohartl/webmum
:
git stash
git pull origin master
git stash pop
... and you are ready to go. Git might complain about conflicting files - you will have to resolve the merge conflict manually then.
If you downloaded WebMUM as a ZIP package, you have to update WebMUM manually.
After every update: Please check if your config.inc.php fits the current requirements by comparing your version of the file with the config.inc.php in the repository.
By default WebMUM uses the SHA-512
hash algorithm for passwords. You can also choose between the alternatives SHA-256
or BLOWFISH
in the config.
'password' => array(
...
'hash_algorithm' => 'SHA-512', // Supported algorithms: SHA-512, SHA-256, BLOWFISH
...
),
Webserver rewrites have to be enabled on your server, because WebMUM does not use real URLs for the frontend, but virtual URLs based on URL rewriting. When rewriting fails, you receive a 404 error message.