On first run, Postfix will refuse to start if it's started before
Mailman is up, because it'll try to read the map files generated
Mailman the first time it's started, and they won't exist yet. To fix
this, make sure Postfix isn't started until after Mailman is up if
they're both activated at the same time.
Consider a service that generates postfix lookup tables with
postmap(1), like Mailman. It needs the Postfix configuration file to
exist, but Postfix qmgr needs all the lookup tables its configured
with to exist before it starts. So the service that runs postmap
needs to run after the Postfix configuration and directory structure
is generated, but before Postfix itself is started. To enable this,
we split Postfix into two units: a oneshot unit that sets up the
configuration, and a longrun unit that supervises the Postfix
daemons. The postmap services can then be inserted in between these
two units.
* nixos/opensmtpd: Add missing brackets in config
Without this commit, you end up missing the sendmail suid wrapper,
because the "program" attribute would not override the right thing.
* Update nixos/modules/services/mail/opensmtpd.nix
Co-authored-by: Sandro <sandro.jaeckel@gmail.com>
Nullmailer expects that this directory exists (see
073f4e9c5d/doc/nullmailer-send.8 (L185)).
When it doesn't and an email cannot be sent due to a permanent failure
or has been in the queue longer than queuelifetime (7 days), message
"Can't rename file: No such file or directory" starts appearing in the
log and nullmailer never sends "Could not send message" notification.
This means that the user may never learn that his email was not
delivered.
Without this change, mailman-settings.service is not guaranteed to
complete before dependent services. This can lead to various errors
like:
mailman-web-setup.service: Changing to the requested working directory failed: No such file or directory
Postfix has started outputting an error on startup that it can't parse
the compatibility level 9999.
Instead, just set the compatibility level to be identical to the current
version, which seems to be the (new) intent for the compatibility level.
An empty list results in no CapabilityBoundingSet at all, an empty
string however will set `CapabilityBoundingSet=`, which represents a
closed set.
Related: #120617
An empty list results in no CapabilityBoundingSet at all, an empty
string however will set `CapabilityBoundingSet=`, which represents a
closed set.
Related: #120617