A previous version of this tutorial was written by Justin Ellingwood
Postfix is a popular open-source Mail Transfer Agent (MTA) that can be used to route and deliver email on a Linux system. It is estimated that around 25% of public mail servers on the internet run Postfix.
In this guide, you’ll learn how to install and configure Postfix on an Ubuntu 20.04 server. Then, you’ll test that Postfix is able to correctly route mail by installing s-nail
, a Mail User Agent (MUA), also known as an email client.
Note that the goal of this tutorial is to help you get Postfix up and running quickly with only some bare-bones email functionality. You won’t have a full featured email server by the end of this guide, but you will have some of the foundational components of such a setup to help you get started.
Setting up and maintaining your own mail server is complicated and time-consuming. For most users, it’s more practical to instead rely on a paid mail service. If you’re considering running your own mail server, we encourage you to review this article on why you may not want to do so.
If you’re sure you want to follow this guide to install and configure Postfix, then you must first have the following:
sudo
privileges and a firewall configured with UFW. You can follow our Ubuntu 20.04 initial server setup guide to set this up.Note that this tutorial assumes that you are configuring a host that has the FQDN of mail.example.com
. Wherever necessary, be sure to change example.com
or mail.example.com
to reflect your own FQDN.
Postfix is included in Ubuntu’s default repositories, so you can install it with APT.
To begin, update your local apt
package cache:
- sudo apt update
Then install the postfix
package with the following command. Note that here we pass the DEBIAN_PRIORITY=low
environmental variable into this installation command. This will cause the installation process to prompt you to configure some additional options:
- sudo DEBIAN_PRIORITY=low apt install postfix
This installation process will open a series of interactive prompts. For the purposes of this tutorial, use the following information to fill in your prompts:
mail.example.com
. You will likely want to set the system mail name to example.com
so that, given the username user1
, Postfix will use the address user1@example.com
.root@
and postmaster@
. Use your primary account for this. In this example case, sammy.0
disables any size restriction.+
will work for this tutorial.To be explicit, these are the settings used in this guide:
example.com
(not mail.example.com
)$myhostname, example.com, mail.example.com, localhost.example.com, localhost
127.0.0.0/8 [::ffff:127.0.0.0]/104 [::1]/128
0
+
Note: If you need to ever return to change these settings, you can do so by typing:
- sudo dpkg-reconfigure postfix
The prompts will be pre-populated with your previous responses.
When the installation process finishes, you’re ready to make a few updates to your Postfix configuration.
Now you can adjust some settings that the package installation process didn’t prompt you for. Many of Postfix’s configuration settings are defined in the /etc/postfix/main.cf
file. Rather than editing this file directly, you can use Postfix’s postconf
command to query or set configuration settings.
To begin, set the location for your non-root Ubuntu user’s mailbox. In this guide, we’ll use the Maildir format, which separates messages into individual files that are then moved between directories based on user action. The alternative option that isn’t covered in this guide is the mbox format, which stores all messages within a single file.
Set the home_mailbox
variable to Maildir/
. Later, you will create a directory structure under that name within your user’s home directory. Configure home_mailbox
by typing:
- sudo postconf -e 'home_mailbox= Maildir/'
Next, set the location of the virtual_alias_maps
table, which maps arbitrary email accounts to Linux system accounts. Run the following command, which maps the table location to a hash database file named /etc/postfix/virtual
:
- sudo postconf -e 'virtual_alias_maps= hash:/etc/postfix/virtual'
Now that you’ve defined the location of the virtual maps file in your main.cf
file, you can create the file itself and begin mapping email accounts to user accounts on your Linux system. Create the file with your preferred text editor; in this example, we’ll use nano
:
- sudo nano /etc/postfix/virtual
List any addresses that you wish to accept email for, followed by a whitespace and the Linux user you’d like that mail delivered to.
For example, if you would like to accept email at contact@example.com
and admin@example.com
and would like to have those emails delivered to the sammy Linux user, you could set up your file like this:
contact@example.com sammy
admin@example.com sammy
After you’ve mapped all of the addresses to the appropriate server accounts, save and close the file. If you used nano
, do this by pressing CTRL + X
, Y
, then ENTER
.
Apply the mapping by typing:
- sudo postmap /etc/postfix/virtual
Restart the Postfix process to be sure that all of your changes have been applied:
- sudo systemctl restart postfix
Assuming you followed the prerequisite Initial Server Setup guide, you will have configured a firewall with UFW. This firewall will block external connections to services on your server by default unless those connections are explicitly allowed, so you’ll have to add a firewall rule to allow an exception for Postfix.
You can allow connections to the service by typing:
- sudo ufw allow Postfix
With that, Postfix is configured and ready to accept external connections. However, you aren’t yet ready to test it out with a mail client. Before you can install a client and use it to interact with the mail being delivered to your server, you’ll need to make a few changes to your Ubuntu server’s setup.
In order to interact with the mail being delivered, this step will walk you through the process of installing the s-nail
package. This is a feature-rich variant of the BSD xmail
client which can handle the Maildir format correctly.
Before installing the client, though, it would be prudent to make sure your MAIL
environment variable is set correctly. s-nail
will look for this variable to figure out where to find mail for your user.
To ensure that the MAIL
variable is set regardless of how you access your account — whether through ssh
, su
, su -
, or sudo
, for example — you’ll need to set the variable in the /etc/bash.bashrc
file and add it to a file within /etc/profile.d
to make sure it is set for all users by default.
To add the variable to these files, type:
- echo 'export MAIL=~/Maildir' | sudo tee -a /etc/bash.bashrc | sudo tee -a /etc/profile.d/mail.sh
To read the variable into your current session, source the /etc/profile.d/mail.sh
file:
- source /etc/profile.d/mail.sh
With that complete, install the s-nail
email client with APT:
- sudo apt install s-nail
Before running the client, there are a few settings you need to adjust. Open the /etc/s-nail.rc
file in your editor:
- sudo nano /etc/s-nail.rc
At the bottom of the file, add the following options:
. . .
set emptystart
set folder=Maildir
set record=+sent
Here’s what these lines do:
set emptystart
: allows the client to open even with an empty inboxset folder=Maildir
: sets the Maildir
directory to the internal folder
variableset record=+sent
creates a sent
mbox file for storing sent mail within whichever directory is set as the folder
variable, in this case Maildir
Save and close the file when you are finished. You’re now ready to initialize your system’s Maildir structure.
A quick way to create the Maildir structure within your home directory is to send yourself an email with the s-nail
command. Because the sent
file will only be available once the Maildir is created, you should disable writing to it for this initial email. Do this by passing the -Snorecord
option.
Send the email by piping a string to the s-nail
command. Adjust the command to mark your Linux user as the recipient:
- echo 'init' | s-nail -s 'init' -Snorecord sammy
Note: You may get the following response:
OutputCan't canonicalize "/home/sammy/Maildir"
This is normal and may only appear when sending this first message.
You can can check to make sure the directory was created by looking for your ~/Maildir
directory:
- ls -R ~/Maildir
You will see the directory structure has been created and that a new message file is in the ~/Maildir/new
directory:
Output/home/sammy/Maildir/:
cur new tmp
/home/sammy/Maildir/cur:
/home/sammy/Maildir/new:
1463177269.Vfd01I40e4dM691221.mail.example.com
/home/sammy/Maildir/tmp:
Now that the directory structure has been created, you’re ready to test out the s-nail
client by viewing the init
message you sent and sending a message to an external email address.
To open the client, run the s-nail
command:
- s-nail
In your console, you’ll see a rudimentary inbox with the init
message waiting:
Outputs-nail version v14.9.15. Type `?' for help
"/home/sammy/Maildir": 1 message 1 new
>N 1 sammy@example.com 2020-05-19 15:40 14/392 init
Press ENTER
to display the message:
Output[-- Message 1 -- 14 lines, 369 bytes --]:
From sammy@example.com Tue May 19 15:40:48 2020
Date: Tue, 19 May 2020 15:40:48 +0000
To: sammy@example.com
Subject: init
Message-Id: <20160513220749.A278F228D9@mail.example.com>
From: sammy@example.com
init
You can get back to the message list by typing h
, and then ENTER
:
- h
Output>R 1 sammy@example.com 2020-05-19 15:40 14/392 init
Notice that the message now has a state of R
, indicating that it’s been read.
Since this message isn’t very useful, you can delete it by pressing d
, and then ENTER
:
- d
To get back to the terminal, type q
and then ENTER
:
- q
As a final test, check whether s-nail
is able to correctly send email messages. To do this, you can pipe the contents of a text file into the s-nail
process, like you did with the init
message you sent in the previous step.
Begin by writing a test message in a text editor:
- nano ~/test_message
Inside, enter some text you’d like to send:
Hello,
This is a test. Please confirm receipt!
Save and close the file after writing your message.
Then, use the cat
command to pipe the message to the s-nail
process. You can do so with the following example, which uses these options:
-s
: This defines the subject line of the email message-r
: An optional change to the “From:” field of the email. By default, the Linux user you are logged in as will be used to populate this field. The -r
option allows you to override this with a valid address, such as one of those you defined in the /etc/postfix/virtual
file. To illustrate, the following command uses contact@example.com
Also, be sure to change user@email.com
to a valid email address which you have access to:
- cat ~/test_message | s-nail -s 'Test email subject line' -r contact@example.com user@email.com
Then, navigate to the inbox for the email address to which you sent the message. You will see your message waiting there almost immediately.
Note: If the message isn’t in your inbox, it may have been delivered to your Spam folder.
You can view your sent messages within your s-nail
client. Start the interactive client again:
- s-nail
From the email client, view your sent messages by typing:
- file +sent
You’ll see output like this:
Output+[/home/sammy/Maildir/]sent: 1 message 1 new
▸N 1 contact@example.com 2020-05-19 15:47 12/297 Test email subject line
You can manage sent mail using the same commands you use for incoming mail.
You now have Postfix configured on your Ubuntu 20.04 server. Managing email servers can be a tough task for new system administrators, but with this configuration, you should have enough MTA email functionality to get yourself started.
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As others mentioned, cant get test mails to work and nothing appears. Also it was noted that SMTP could be disabled for new accounts.
Step I’m stuck at: ls -R ~/Maildir
mailq shows this connection timed-out error:
-Queue ID- --Size-- ----Arrival Time---- -Sender/Recipient------- 811D513BD4C 373 Mon Jan 4 17:04:12 root@xxx.com (connect to alt2.gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com[74.125.137.26]:25: Connection timed out)
I’ve done up to this stage: $echo ‘init’ | s-nail -s ‘init’ -Snorecord sammy
But I get the following: ls: cannot access ‘/home/sammy/Maildir’: No such file or directory
Please note that when I created a new user I literally used the same name “Sammy” (as in the tutorial)
stuck at step 3 when I type echo ‘init’ | s-nail -s ‘init’ -Snorecord relaxslow and enter it shows nothing and next I type ls -R ~/Maildir it gives error msg ls: cannot access ‘/home/relaxslow/Maildir’: No such file or directory
can you please tell me the reason
As many have angrily noted in the comment section of the older 18.04 article, I too failed to send email to my default Gmail address after following this tutorial. Here is an excerpt from my
/var/log/mail.log
, domains and email addresses replaced.The error “Our system has detected an unusual rate of unsolicited mail originating from your IP address” is rather weird because this is the first mail ever sent from my Droplet. Maybe the IP has been previously been a source of spam but I think insufficient configuration is the most probable cause. No one in the older article seemed to be able to provide a sounding fix to this issue. I hope DO can.
This comment has been deleted
1)
It didn’t work for me (postfix 550 5.1.1 “User doesn’t exist”). So I removed this step and remove it in /var/postfix/main.cf
2)
It didn’t work either, so I create the folded by hand:
and I checked the permissions and it worked.
Also
3) While I opened the firewall but I also opened the firewall of my virtual machine (IP port 25)
4) I added the next entries to the DNS:
changing the IP and the domain for the right values.
tnX for guide but i get this error
E: Package ‘postfix’ has no installation candidate
i did sudo apt update still same error what now?
Like a lot of people, I was having issues getting this to work. Maildir/ was not being created, running
$s_nail
was outputtinguser@ip-xx-xx-xx-xx:/$ s-nail s-nail: /home/user/Maildir: Is a directory
I eventually got this to work, by not using
sudo
to restart postfix, instead I usedsystemctl restart Postfix
and authenticated with my user password. This then started postfix under the correct user, which then allowed it to read the config file and initiate the maildir/ under the correct user.I also agree with mattkeaveney in that procmail should be disabled in the initial set up of postfix.
Same issue
echo 'init' | s-nail -s 'init' -Snorecord sammy
doesn’t create Maildir structureI’ve to create it manually:
mkdir -p ~/Maildir/{cur,new,tmp}
Hello, If the MailDir mailbox has not been created, try to leave a space at the end before “/”