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260 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
Using an external reverse proxy
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===============================
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One of Mailu's use cases is as part of a larger services platform, where maybe
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other Web services are available than just Mailu Webmail and Admin interfaces.
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In such a configuration, one would usually run a frontend reverse proxy to serve all
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Web contents based on criteria like the requested hostname (virtual hosts)
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and/or the requested path.
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The Mailu Admin Web frontend is disabled in the default setup for security reasons,
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it is however expected that most users will enable it at some point. Also, due
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to the Docker Compose configuration structure, it is impossible for us to facilitate
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disabling the Web frontend with a configuration variable. This guide was written to
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help users setup such an architecture.
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There are basically three options, from the most to the least recommended one:
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- `have Mailu Web frontend listen locally and use your own Web frontend on top of it`_
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- `use Traefik in another container as central system-reverse-proxy`_
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- `override Mailu Web frontend configuration`_
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All options will require that you modify the ``docker-compose.yml`` and ``mailu.env`` file.
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Mailu must also be configured with the information what header is used by the reverse proxy for passing the remote client IP.
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This is configured in the mailu.env file. See the :ref:`configuration reference <reverse_proxy_headers>` for more information.
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Have Mailu Web frontend listen locally
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--------------------------------------
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The simplest and safest option is to modify the port forwards for Mailu Web frontend and have your own frontend point there.
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For instance, in the ``front`` section of Mailu ``docker-compose.yml``, use local ports 8080 and 8443 respectively for HTTP and HTTPS:
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.. code-block:: yaml
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front:
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# build: nginx
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image: mailu/nginx:$VERSION
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restart: always
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env_file: .env
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ports:
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- "127.0.0.1:8080:80"
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- "127.0.0.1:8443:443"
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...
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volumes:
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- "$ROOT/certs:/certs"
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Then on your own frontend, point to these local ports. In practice, you only need to point to the HTTPS port
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(as the HTTP port simply redirects there). Here is an example Nginx configuration:
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.. code-block:: nginx
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server {
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listen 443;
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server_name mymailhost.tld;
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# [...] here goes your standard configuration
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location / {
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proxy_set_header Host $host;
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proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
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proxy_pass https://localhost:8443;
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}
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}
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.. code-block:: docker
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#mailu.env file
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REAL_IP_HEADER=X-Real-IP
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REAL_IP_FROM=x.x.x.x,y.y.y.y.y
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#x.x.x.x,y.y.y.y.y is the static IP address your reverse proxy uses for connecting to Mailu.
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Because the admin interface is served as ``/admin``, the Webmail as ``/webmail``, the single sign on page as ``/sso``, webdav as ``/webdav``, the client-autoconfiguration and the static files endpoint as ``/static``, you may also want to use a single virtual host and serve other applications (still Nginx):
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.. code-block:: nginx
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server {
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# [...] here goes your standard configuration
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location ~* ^/(admin|sso|static|webdav|webmail|(apple\.)?mobileconfig|(\.well\-known/autoconfig/)?mail/|Autodiscover/Autodiscover) {
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proxy_set_header Host $host;
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proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
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proxy_pass https://localhost:8443;
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}
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location /main_app {
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proxy_pass https://some-host;
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}
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location /other_app {
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proxy_pass https://some-other-host;
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}
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location /local_app {
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root /path/to/your/files;
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}
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location / {
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return 301 $scheme://$host/main_app;
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}
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}
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.. note:: Please don’t add a ``/`` at the end of the location pattern or all your redirects will fail with 404 because the ``/`` would be missing, and you would have to add it manually to move on
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.. code-block:: docker
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#mailu.env file
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REAL_IP_HEADER=X-Real-IP
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REAL_IP_FROM=x.x.x.x,y.y.y.y.y
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#x.x.x.x,y.y.y.y.y is the static IP address your reverse proxy uses for connecting to Mailu.
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Finally, you might want to serve the admin interface on a separate virtual host but not expose the admin container
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directly (have your own HTTPS virtual hosts on top of Mailu, one public for the Webmail and one internal for administration for instance).
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Here is an example configuration :
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.. code-block:: nginx
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server {
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listen <public_ip>:443;
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server_name external.example.com;
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# [...] here goes your standard configuration
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location /webmail {
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proxy_set_header Host $host;
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proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
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proxy_pass https://localhost:8443/webmail;
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}
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}
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server {
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listen <internal_ip>:443;
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server_name internal.example.com;
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# [...] here goes your standard configuration
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location /admin {
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proxy_set_header Host $host;
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proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
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proxy_pass https://localhost:8443/admin;
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proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
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}
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}
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.. code-block:: docker
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#mailu.env file
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REAL_IP_HEADER=X-Real-IP
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REAL_IP_FROM=x.x.x.x,y.y.y.y.y
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#x.x.x.x,y.y.y.y.y is the static IP address your reverse proxy uses for connecting to Mailu.
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Depending on how you access the front server, you might want to add a ``proxy_redirect`` directive to your ``location`` blocks:
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.. code-block:: nginx
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proxy_redirect https://localhost https://example.com;
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This will stop redirects (301 and 302) sent by the Webmail, nginx front and admin interface from sending you to ``localhost``.
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.. _traefik_proxy:
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Traefik as reverse proxy
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------------------------
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`Traefik`_ is a popular reverse-proxy aimed at containerized systems.
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As such, many may wish to integrate Mailu into a system which already uses Traefik as its sole ingress/reverse-proxy.
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As the ``mailu/front`` container uses Nginx not only for ``HTTP`` forwarding, but also for the mail-protocols like ``SMTP``, ``IMAP``, etc
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, we need to keep this container around even when using another ``HTTP`` reverse-proxy. Furthermore, Traefik is neither able to
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forward non-HTTP, nor can it easily forward HTTPS-to-HTTPS.
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This, however, means 3 things:
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- ``mailu/front`` needs to listen internally on ``HTTP`` rather than ``HTTPS``
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- ``mailu/front`` is not exposed to the outside world on ``HTTP``
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- ``mailu/front`` still needs ``SSL`` certificates (here, we assume ``letsencrypt``) for a well-behaved mail service
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This makes the setup with Traefik a bit harder: Traefik saves its certificates in a proprietary *JSON* file, which is not readable
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by Nginx in the ``front``-container. To solve this, your ``acme.json`` needs to be exposed to the host or a ``docker-volume``.
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It will then be read by a script in another container, which will dump the certificates as ``PEM`` files, readable for
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Nginx. The ``front`` container will automatically reload Nginx whenever these certificates change.
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To set this up, first set ``TLS_FLAVOR=mail`` in your ``.env``. This tells ``mailu/front`` not to try to request certificates using ``letsencrypt``,
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but to read provided certificates, and use them only for mail-protocols, not for ``HTTP``.
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Next, in your ``docker-compose.yml``, comment out the ``port`` lines of the ``front`` section for port ``…:80`` and ``…:443``.
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Add the respective Traefik labels for your domain/configuration, like
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.. code-block:: yaml
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labels:
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- "traefik.enable=true"
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- "traefik.port=80"
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- "traefik.frontend.rule=Host:$TRAEFIK_DOMAIN"
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.. note:: Please don’t forget to add ``TRAEFIK_DOMAIN=[...]`` TO YOUR ``.env``
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If your Traefik is configured to automatically request certificates from *letsencrypt*, then you’ll have a certificate
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for ``mail.your.example.com`` now. However, ``mail.your.example.com`` might only be the location where you want the Mailu web-interfaces
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to live — your mail should be sent/received from ``your.example.com``, and this is the ``DOMAIN`` in your ``.env``?
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To support that use-case, Traefik can request ``SANs`` for your domain. The configuration for this will depend on your Traefik version.
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Mailu must also be configured with the information what header is used by the reverse proxy for passing the remote
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client IP. This is configured in mailu.env:
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.. code-block:: docker
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#mailu.env file
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REAL_IP_HEADER=X-Real-Ip
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REAL_IP_FROM=x.x.x.x,y.y.y.y.y
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#x.x.x.x,y.y.y.y.y is the static IP address your reverse proxy uses for connecting to Mailu.
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For more information see the :ref:`configuration reference <reverse_proxy_headers>` for more information.
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Traefik 2.x using labels configuration
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Add the appropriate labels for your domain(s) to the ``front`` container in ``docker-compose.yml``.
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.. code-block:: yaml
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services:
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front:
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labels:
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# Enable TLS
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- "traefik.http.routers.mailu-secure.tls"
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# Your main domain
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- "traefik.http.routers.mailu-secure.tls.domains[0].main=your.example.com"
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# Optional SANs for your main domain
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- "traefik.http.routers.mailu-secure.tls.domains[0].sans=mail.your.example.com,webmail.your.example.com,smtp.your.example.com"
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# Optionally add other domains
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- "traefik.http.routers.mailu-secure.tls.domains[1].main=mail.other.example.com"
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- "traefik.http.routers.mailu-secure.tls.domains[1].sans=mail2.other.example.com,mail3.other.example.com"
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# Your ACME certificate resolver
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- "traefik.http.routers.mailu-secure.tls.certResolver=foo"
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Of course, be sure to define the Certificate Resolver ``foo`` in the static configuration as well.
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Alternatively, you can define SANs in the Traefik static configuration using routers, or in the static configuration using entrypoints.
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Refer to the Traefik documentation for more details.
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.. _`Traefik`: https://traefik.io/
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Override Mailu configuration
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----------------------------
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If you do not have the resources for running a separate reverse proxy, you could override Mailu reverse proxy configuration by using :ref:`an override<override-label>`.
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Simply store your configuration file (Nginx format), in ``/mailu/overrides/nginx.conf``.
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All ``*.conf`` files will be included in the main server block of Mailu in nginx which listens on port 80/443.
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Add location blocks for any services that must be proxied.
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You can also download the example configuration files:
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- :download:`compose/traefik/docker-compose.yml`
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- :download:`compose/traefik/traefik.toml`
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.. _have Mailu Web frontend listen locally and use your own Web frontend on top of it: #have-mailu-web-frontend-listen-locally
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.. _use Traefik in another container as central system-reverse-proxy: #traefik-as-reverse-proxy
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.. _override Mailu Web frontend configuration: #override-mailu-configuration
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