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nixpkgs/nixos/modules/services/monitoring/parsedmarc.xml

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<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xml:id="module-services-parsedmarc">
<title>parsedmarc</title>
<para>
<link xlink:href="https://domainaware.github.io/parsedmarc/">parsedmarc</link>
is a service which parses incoming
<link xlink:href="https://dmarc.org/">DMARC</link> reports and
stores or sends them to a downstream service for further analysis.
In combination with Elasticsearch, Grafana and the included Grafana
dashboard, it provides a handy overview of DMARC reports over time.
</para>
<section xml:id="module-services-parsedmarc-basic-usage">
<title>Basic usage</title>
<para>
A very minimal setup which reads incoming reports from an external
email address and saves them to a local Elasticsearch instance
looks like this:
</para>
<programlisting language="bash">
services.parsedmarc = {
enable = true;
settings.imap = {
host = &quot;imap.example.com&quot;;
user = &quot;alice@example.com&quot;;
password = &quot;/path/to/imap_password_file&quot;;
watch = true;
};
provision.geoIp = false; # Not recommended!
};
</programlisting>
<para>
Note that GeoIP provisioning is disabled in the example for
simplicity, but should be turned on for fully functional reports.
</para>
</section>
<section xml:id="local-mail">
<title>Local mail</title>
<para>
Instead of watching an external inbox, a local inbox can be
automatically provisioned. The recipients name is by default set
to <literal>dmarc</literal>, but can be configured in
<link xlink:href="options.html#opt-services.parsedmarc.provision.localMail.recipientName">services.parsedmarc.provision.localMail.recipientName</link>.
You need to add an MX record pointing to the host. More
concretely: for the example to work, an MX record needs to be set
up for <literal>monitoring.example.com</literal> and the complete
email address that should be configured in the domains dmarc
policy is <literal>dmarc@monitoring.example.com</literal>.
</para>
<programlisting language="bash">
services.parsedmarc = {
enable = true;
provision = {
localMail = {
enable = true;
hostname = monitoring.example.com;
};
geoIp = false; # Not recommended!
};
};
</programlisting>
</section>
<section xml:id="grafana-and-geoip">
<title>Grafana and GeoIP</title>
<para>
The reports can be visualized and summarized with parsedmarcs
official Grafana dashboard. For all views to work, and for the
data to be complete, GeoIP databases are also required. The
following example shows a basic deployment where the provisioned
Elasticsearch instance is automatically added as a Grafana
datasource, and the dashboard is added to Grafana as well.
</para>
<programlisting language="bash">
services.parsedmarc = {
enable = true;
provision = {
localMail = {
enable = true;
hostname = url;
};
grafana = {
datasource = true;
dashboard = true;
};
};
};
# Not required, but recommended for full functionality
services.geoipupdate = {
settings = {
AccountID = 000000;
LicenseKey = &quot;/path/to/license_key_file&quot;;
};
};
services.grafana = {
enable = true;
addr = &quot;0.0.0.0&quot;;
domain = url;
rootUrl = &quot;https://&quot; + url;
protocol = &quot;socket&quot;;
security = {
adminUser = &quot;admin&quot;;
adminPasswordFile = &quot;/path/to/admin_password_file&quot;;
secretKeyFile = &quot;/path/to/secret_key_file&quot;;
};
};
services.nginx = {
enable = true;
recommendedTlsSettings = true;
recommendedOptimisation = true;
recommendedGzipSettings = true;
recommendedProxySettings = true;
upstreams.grafana.servers.&quot;unix:/${config.services.grafana.socket}&quot; = {};
virtualHosts.${url} = {
root = config.services.grafana.staticRootPath;
enableACME = true;
forceSSL = true;
locations.&quot;/&quot;.tryFiles = &quot;$uri @grafana&quot;;
locations.&quot;@grafana&quot;.proxyPass = &quot;http://grafana&quot;;
};
};
users.users.nginx.extraGroups = [ &quot;grafana&quot; ];
</programlisting>
</section>
</chapter>