config | ||
examples | ||
imap-core | ||
lib | ||
.eslintrc | ||
.gitignore | ||
api.js | ||
Gruntfile.js | ||
imap.js | ||
indexes.yaml | ||
LICENSE | ||
lmtp.js | ||
logger.js | ||
logo.txt | ||
package.json | ||
pop3.js | ||
README.md | ||
server.js | ||
worker.js |
Agent Wild Duck
Wild Duck is a distributed IMAP/POP3 server built with Node.js, MongoDB and Redis. Node.js runs the application, MongoDB is used as the mail store and Redis is used for ephemeral actions like publish/subscribe, locking and caching.
NB! Wild Duck is currently in beta. Use it on your own responsibility.
Distributed means that Wild Duck uses a distributed database (sharded+replicated MongoDB) as a backend for storing all data, including emails. Wild Duck instances are stateless, you can have multiple IMAP server instances running and a client can connect to any of these. Wild Duck uses a write ahead log to keep IMAP sessions in sync.
Usage
Assuming you have MongoDB and Redis running somewhere.
Step 1. Get the code from github
$ git clone git://github.com/wildduck-email/wildduck.git
$ cd wildduck
Step 2. Install dependencies
Install dependencies from npm
$ npm install --production
Step 3. Run the server
To use the default config file, run the following:
node server.js
Or if you want to override default configuration options with your own, run the following (custom config file is merged with the default, so specify only these values that you want to change):
node server.js --config=/etc/wildduck.toml
For additional config options, see the wild-config documentation.
Step 4. Create an user account
See see below for details about creating new user accounts
Step 5. Use an IMAP/POP3 client to log in
Any IMAP or POP3 client will do. Use the credentials from step 4. to log in.
Goals of the Project
- Build a scalable and distributed IMAP/POP3 server that uses clustered database instead of single machine file system as mail store
- Allow using internationalized email addresses
- Provide Gmail-like features like pushing sent messages automatically to Sent Mail folder or notifying about messages moved to Junk folder so these could be marked as spam
- Provide parsed mailbox and message data over HTTP. This should make creating webmail interfaces super easy, no need to parse RFC822 messages to get text content or attachments
FAQ
Does it work?
Yes, it does. You can run the server and get working IMAP and POP3 servers for mail store, LMTP server for pushing messages to the mail store and HTTP API server to create new users. All handled by Node.js, MongoDB and Redis, no additional dependencies needed. Provided services can be disabled and enabled one by one so, for example you could process just IMAP in one host and LMTP in another.
What are the killer features?
- Stateless. Start as many instances as you want. You can start multiple Wild Duck instances in different machines and as long as they share the same MongoDB and Redis settings, users can connect to any instances. This is very different from the traditional IMAP servers where a single user always needs to connect (or be proxied) to the same IMAP server. Wild Duck keeps all required state information in MongoDB, so it does not matter which IMAP instance you use.
- Centralized logging which allows modern features like 2FA, application specific passwords, authentication scopes, revoking authentication tokens, audit logging and even profile files to auto configure Apple email clients without providing master password
- Works on any OS including Windows. At least if you get MongoDB and Redis running first.
- Focus on internationalization, ie. supporting email addresses with non-ascii characters
- De-duplication of attachments. If the same attachment is referenced by different messages then only a single copy of the attachment is stored. Attachment is stored in the encoded form (eg. encoded in base64) to not break any signatures so the resulting encoding must match as well.
- Access messages both using IMAP and HTTP API. The latter serves parsed data, so no need to fetch RFC822 messages and parse out html, plaintext content or attachments. It is super easy to create a webmail interface on top of this.
- Build in address labels: username+label@example.com is delivered to username@example.com
- Super easy to tweak. The entire codebase is pure JavaScript, so there's nothing to compile or anything platform specific. If you need to tweak something then change the code, restart the app and you're ready to go. If it works on one machine then most probably it works in every other machine as well.
Isn't it bad to use a database as a mail store?
Yes, historically it has been considered a bad practice to store emails in a database. And for a good reason. The data model of relational databases like MySQL does not work well with tree like structures (email mime tree) or large blobs (email source).
Notice the word "relational"? In fact document stores like MongoDB work very well with emails. Document store is great for storing tree-like structures and while GridFS is not as good as "real" object storage, it is good enough for storing the raw parts of the message. Additionally there's nothing too GridFS specific, so (at least in theory) it could be replaced with any object store.
Here's a list of alternative email/IMAP servers that also use a database for storing email messages:
- DBMail (IMAP)
- Archiveopteryx (IMAP)
- ElasticInbox (POP3)
How does it work?
Whenever a message is received Wild Duck parses it into a tree-like structure based on the MIME tree and stores this tree to MongoDB. Attachments are removed from the tree and stored separately in GridStore. If a message needs to be loaded then Wild Duck fetches the tree structure first and, if needed, loads attachments from GridStore and then compiles it back into the original RFC822 message. The result should be identical to the original messages unless the original message used unix newlines, these might be partially replaced with windows newlines.
Wild Duck tries to keep minimal state for sessions (basically just a list of currently known UIDs and latest MODSEQ value) to be able to distribute sessions between different hosts. Whenever a mailbox is opened the entire message list is loaded as an array of UID values. The first UID in the array element points to the message #1 in IMAP, second one points to message #2 etc.
Actual update data (information about new and deleted messages, flag updates and such) is stored to a journal log and an update beacon is propagated through Redis pub/sub whenever something happens. If a session detects that there have been some changes in the current mailbox and it is possible to notify the user about it (eg. a NOOP call was made), journaled log is loaded from the database and applied to the UID array one action at a time. Once all journaled updates have applied then the result should match the latest state. If it is not possible to notify the user (eg a FETCH call was made), then journal log is not loaded and the user continues to see the old state.
E-Mail Protocol support
Wild Duck IMAP server supports the following IMAP standards:
- The entire IMAP4rev1 suite with some minor differences from the spec. See below for IMAP Protocol Differences for a complete list
- IDLE (RFC2177) – notfies about new and deleted messages and also about flag updates
- CONDSTORE (RFC4551) and ENABLE (RFC5161) – supports most of the spec, except metadata stuff which is ignored
- STARTTLS (RFC2595)
- NAMESPACE (RFC2342) – minimal support, just lists the single user namespace with hierarchy separator
- UNSELECT (RFC3691)
- UIDPLUS (RFC4315)
- SPECIAL-USE (RFC6154)
- ID (RFC2971)
- MOVE (RFC6851)
- AUTHENTICATE PLAIN (RFC4959) and SASL-IR
- APPENDLIMIT (RFC7889) – maximum global allowed message size is advertised in CAPABILITY listing
- UTF8=ACCEPT (RFC6855) – this also means that Wild Duck natively supports unicode email usernames. For example андрис@уайлддак.орг is a valid email address that is hosted by a test instance of Wild Duck
- QUOTA (RFC2087) – Quota size is global for an account, using a single quota root. Be aware that quota size does not mean actual byte storage in disk, it is calculated as the sum of the RFC822 sources of stored messages. Actual disk usage is larger as there are database overhead per every message.
- COMPRESS=DEFLATE (RFC4978) – Compress traffic between the client and the server
Wild Duck more or less passes the ImapTest. Common errors that arise in the test are unknown labels (Wild Duck doesn't send unsolicited FLAGS
updates even though it does send unsolicited FETCH FLAGS
updates) and sometimes NO for STORE
(messages deleted in one session can not be updated in another).
POP3 Support
In addition to the required POP3 commands (RFC1939) Wild Duck supports the following extensions:
- UIDL
- USER
- PASS
- SASL PLAIN
- PIPELINING
- TOP
POP3 command behaviors
All changes to messages like deleting messages or marking messages as seen are stored in storage only in the UPDATE stage (eg. after calling QUIT). Until then the changes are preserved in memory only. This also means that if a message is downloaded but QUIT is not issued then the message does not get marked as Seen.
LIST
POP3 listing displays the newest 250 messages in INBOX (configurable)
UIDL
Wild Duck uses message _id
value (24 byte hex) as the unique ID. If a message is moved from one mailbox to another then it might re-appear in the listing.
RETR
If a messages is downloaded by a client this message gets marked as Seen
DELE
If a messages is deleted by a client this message gets marked as Seen and moved to Trash folder
HTTP API
NB! The HTTP API is being re-designed, do not build apps against the current API for now
Users, mailboxes and messages can be managed with HTTP requests against Wild Duck API
TODO:
- Expose counters (seen/unseen messages, message count in mailbox etc.)
- Search messages
- Expose journal updates through WebSocket or similar
POST /user/create
Creates a new user.
Arguments
- username is the username of the user. This is not an email address but authentication username, use only letters and numbers
- password is the password for the user
- quota (optional) is the maximum storage in bytes allowed for this user. If not set then the default value is used
- retention (optional) is the default retention time in ms for mailboxes. Messages in Trash and Junk folders have a maximum retention time of 30 days.
Example
curl -XPOST "http://localhost:8080/user/create" -H 'content-type: application/json' -d '{
"username": "testuser",
"password": "secretpass"
}'
The response for successful operation should look like this:
{
"success": true,
"username": "testuser"
}
After you have created an user you can use these credentials to log in to the IMAP server. To be able to receive mail for that user you need to register an email address.
POST /user/address/create
Creates a new email address alias for an existing user. You can use internationalized email addresses like андрис@уайлддак.орг.
Arguments
- username is the username
- address is the email address to use as an alias for this user
- main (either true or false, defaults to false) indicates that this is the default address for that user
First added address becomes main by default
Example
curl -XPOST "http://localhost:8080/user/address/create" -H 'content-type: application/json' -d '{
"username": "testuser",
"address": "user@example.com"
}'
The response for successful operation should look like this:
{
"success": true,
"username": "testuser",
"address": "user@example.com"
}
After you have registered a new address then LMTP maildrop server starts accepting mail for it and store the messages to the users mailbox.
POST /user/quota
Updates maximum allowed quota for an user
Arguments
- username is the username of the user to modify
- quota (optional) is the maximum storage in bytes allowed for this user
- recipients (optional) is the maximum sending recipients per 24h allowed for this user. Assumes ZoneMTA with zonemta-wildduck plugin
- forwards (optional) is the maximum forwarded recipients per 24h allowed for this user.
At least one limit value must be set
Example
curl -XPOST "http://localhost:8080/user/quota" -H 'content-type: application/json' -d '{
"username": "testuser",
"quota": 1234567,
"recipients": 500
}'
The response for successful operation should look like this:
{
"success": true,
"username": "testuser",
"quota": 1234567,
"recipients": 500
}
Quota changes apply immediately.
POST /user/quota/reset
Recalculates used storage for an user. Use this when it seems that quota counters for an user do not match with reality.
Arguments
- username is the username of the user to check
Example
curl -XPOST "http://localhost:8080/user/quota/reset" -H 'content-type: application/json' -d '{
"username": "testuser"
}'
The response for successful operation should look like this:
{
"success": true,
"username": "testuser",
"previousStorageUsed": 1000,
"storageUsed": 800
}
Be aware though that this method is not atomic and should be done only if quota counters are way off.
POST /user/password
Updates password for an user
Arguments
- username is the username of the user to modify
- password is the new password for the user
Example
curl -XPOST "http://localhost:8080/user/password" -H 'content-type: application/json' -d '{
"username": "testuser",
"password": "newpass"
}'
The response for successful operation should look like this:
{
"success": true,
"username": "testuser"
}
Password change applies immediately.
GET /user
Returns user information including quota usage and registered addresses
Arguments
- username is the username of the user to modify
Example
curl "http://localhost:8080/user?username=testuser"
The response for successful operation should look like this:
{
"success": true,
"username": "testuser",
"quota": 1234567,
"storageUsed": 1822,
"recipients": 500,
"recipientsLimited": false,
"recipientsSent": 47,
"recipientsTtl": 3392,
"addresses": [
{
"id": "58d8fccb645b0deb23d6c37d",
"address": "user@example.com",
"main": true,
"created": "2017-03-27T11:51:39.639Z"
}
]
}
Where
- recipients – is the count of maximum recipients for 24 hour period (starts with the first message)
- recipientsLimited – if true then sending is currently disabled as recipient limit has been reached
- recipientsSent – how many recipients has been used in the current 24 hour period
- recipientsTtl – seconds until the end of current period
Recipient limits assume that messages are sent using ZoneMTA with zonemta-wildduck plugin, otherwise the counters are not updated.
Message filtering
The filtering system is subject to change with the API updates. Most probably the filters are going to reside in separate collection and not as part of the user object.
Wild Duck has built-in message filtering in LMTP server. This is somewhat similar to Sieve even though the filters are not scripts.
Filters are configuration objects stored in the filters
array of the users object.
Example filter
{
// identifier for this filter
id: ObjectId('abcdefghij...'),
// query to check messages against
query: {
// message must match all filter rules for the filter actions to apply
// all values are case insensitive
headers: {
// partial string match against decoded From: header
from: 'sender@example.com',
// partial string match against decoded To: header
to: 'recipient@example.com',
// partial string match against decoded Subject: header
subject: 'Väga tõrges'
},
// partial string match (case insensitive) against decoded plaintext message
text: 'Mõigu ristis oli mis?',
// positive: must have attachments, negative: no attachments
ha: 1,
// positive: larger than size, negative: smaller than abs(size)
size: 10
},
// what to do if the filter query matches the message
action: {
// mark message as seen
seen: true,
// mark message as flagged
flag: true,
// set mailbox ID
mailbox: 'aaaaa', // must be ObjectID!
// positive spam, negative ham
spam: 1,
// if true, delete message
delete: false
}
}
NB! If you do not care about an action field then do not set it, otherwise matches from other filters do not apply
Sharding
Shard the following collections by these keys:
sh.enableSharding('wildduck');
sh.shardCollection('wildduck.messages', { mailbox: 1, uid: 1 });
sh.shardCollection('wildduck.threads', { user: 'hashed' });
sh.shardCollection('wildduck.attachments.files', { 'metadata.h': 'hashed' });
sh.shardCollection('wildduck.attachments.chunks', { files_id: 'hashed' });
Attachments collections might reside in a different database than default. Modify sharding namespaces accordingly (and do not forget to enable sharding for the attachments database)
IMAP Protocol Differences
This is a list of known differences from the IMAP specification. Listed differences are either intentional or are bugs that became features.
\Recent
flags is not implemented and most probably never will be (RFC3501 2.3.2.)RENAME
does not touch subfolders which is against the spec (RFC3501 6.3.5. If the name has inferior hierarchical names, then the inferior hierarchical names MUST also be renamed.). Wild Duck stores all folders using flat hierarchy, the "/" separator is fake and only used for listing mailboxes- Unsolicited
FLAGS
responses (RFC3501 7.2.6.) andPERMANENTFLAGS
are not sent (except for as part ofSELECT
andEXAMINE
responses). Wild Duck notifies about flag updates only with unsolicited FETCH updates. - Wild Duck responds with
NO
forSTORE
if matching messages were deleted in another session CHARSET
argument for theSEARCH
command is ignored (RFC3501 6.4.4.)- Metadata arguments for
SEARCH MODSEQ
are ignored (RFC7162 3.1.5.). You can define<entry-name>
and<entry-type-req>
values but these are not used for anything SEARCH TEXT
andSEARCH BODY
both use MongoDB $text index against decoded plaintext version of the message. RFC3501 assumes that it should be a string match either against full message (TEXT
) or body section (BODY
).- What happens when FETCH is called for messages that were deleted in another session? Not sure, need to check
Any other differences are most probably real bugs and unintentional.
Testing
Create an email account and use your IMAP client to connect to it. To send mail to this account, run the example script:
node examples/push-mail.js username@example.com
This should "deliver" a new message to the INBOX of username@example.com by using the built-in LMTP maildrop interface. If your email client is connected then you should promptly see the new message.
Outbound SMTP
Use ZoneMTA with the ZoneMTA-WildDuck plugin. This gives you an outbound SMTP server that uses Wild Duck accounts for authentication.
Inbound SMTP
Use Haraka with queue/lmtp plugin. Wild Duck specific recipient processing plugin coming soon!
Future considerations
- Add interoperability with current servers, for example by fetching authentication data from MySQL
- Optimize FETCH queries to load only partial data for BODY subparts
- Parse incoming message into the mime tree as a stream. Currently the entire message is buffered in memory before being parsed.
- CPU usage seems a bit too high, there is probably a ton of profiling to do
- Maybe allow some kind of message manipulation through plugins?
- Wild Duck does not plan to be the most feature-rich IMAP client in the world. Most IMAP extensions are useless because there aren't too many clients that are able to benefit from these extensions. There are a few extensions though that would make sense to be added to Wild Duck:
License
Wild Duck Mail Agent is licensed under the European Union Public License 1.1.