Virtual Domains *************** What are virtual domains? ========================= Virtual domains means hosting a service for more than one domain on a single server. Cyrus IMAP has the ability to host IMAP/POP mailboxes for multiple domains (for example: "test@cyrusisgreat.org" and "test@ilovecyrus.com") on a single server or Murder. Cyrus needs to know which domain to use when a mailbox is accessed. There are two ways in which Cyrus can determine the domain: Fully qualified userid The client logs in with a userid containing the domain in which the user belongs (for example: "test@cyrusisgreat.org" or "test@ilovecyrus.com") IP address The server looks up the domain based on the IP address of the receiving interface (useful for servers with multiple NICs or those using IP aliasing) If the "virtdomains" option is set to "off" (or "no", "0", "false"), Cyrus does not know or care about domains, and only ever considers the local part of email addresses. This configuration is never recommended, but is currently the default. If the "virtdomains" option is set to "userid", then only the fully qualified userid is used. This is the only recommended configuration for new deployments, and in the future may become the default or only option. Existing deployments should strongly consider migrating towards this configuration. If the "virtdomains" option is set to "on" (or "yes", "1", "true"), Cyrus uses both mechanisms to work out the domain (with the fully qualified userid taking precedence). This configuration is not recommended. Note: If you are providing calendaring services, you MUST use the "virtdomains: userid" configuration. Calendaring services require a consistent single authoritative fully-qualified email address for each user in order to function, and this is the only configuration that provides it.The "virtdomains: off" and "virtdomains: on" configurations both allow users' domains to be changed from outside of Cyrus without Cyrus knowing about it, which fundamentally breaks calendaring. These configurations are only suitable for IMAP-only deployments. Concepts ======== Everyone is in a domain It's best to think of every user as existing inside a domain. Unqualified users are technically inside the "defaultdomain". Names can be qualified Global admins can reference mailboxes and IDs by qualified names. That is, for any given mailbox command, you can add "@domain" to the end of the mailbox name. Here are some examples: * "cyradm> create user/lukecage@example.net" - create a user * "cyradm> create user/mercedesknight@example.net" - create another user * "cyradm> setquota user/lukecage@example.net 50000" - define a quota * "cyradm> setaclmailbox user/lukecage@example.net mercedesknight@example.net read" - give Mercedes Knight read access to Luke Cage's mailbox * "cyradm> listmailbox *@example.net" - list all mailboxes in the example.net domain Each mailbox exists in only one domain Domains are mutually exclusive Users only have access to mailboxes within their own domain (intra- domain). The following example will not work: "setacl user/mercedesknight@herdomain.com lukecage@hisdomain.com read". Global and Domain admins The Cyrus virtual domains implementation supports per-domain administrators as well as global (inter-domain) administrators. Domain-specific administrators are specified with a fully qualified userid in the "admins" option (e.g., "admin@example.net") and only have access to mailboxes in the associated domain. Global administrators are specified with unqualified userids. MOST OF THIS SHOULD BE IN DEPLOYMENT GUIDE? Quick Start =========== * Add "virtdomains: userid" to imapd.conf(5) * Add a "defaultdomain" entry to imapd.conf(5) * Use cyradm (as a global or domain admin) to create mailboxes for each domain. Configuration ============= Support for virtual domains is enabled by turning on the "virtdomains" option in imapd.conf(5). When upgrading from a single domain installation to a virtual domain installation, the name of the existing domain (domain of the server hostname) should be specified using the "defaultdomain" option in imapd.conf(5). This allows users to continue to access their mailboxes using unqualified userids. For example, if the primary IP address on your server resolves to 'www.xxx.yyy.zzz', then set "defaultdomain" to 'xxx.yyy.zzz'. Even for new installations, set the "defaultdomain" to the "real" domain of the server (domain of its primary hostname). See Administrators for further discussion. Here is a sample "imapd.conf" with a minimal set of configuration options: configdirectory: /var/imap partition-default: /var/spool/cyrus admins: admin lukecage.admin@hisdomain.com mercedesknight.admin@herdomain.net virtdomains: yes defaultdomain: exampleisp.net This example has three domains: exampleisp.net, hisdomain.com, and herdomain.net. "admin" can administer all three domains, while "lukecage.admin@hisdomain.com" and "mercedesknight.admin@herdomain.net" can only administer their respective domains. Everyday users should not be administrators. In the above example, Mercedes Knight and Luke Cage have separate administrative accounts for their domains. Multiple IP Addresses --------------------- In order to use a multiple IP address configuration, the server must be able to do a reverse lookup on the IP address to determine the hostname of the receiving interface. For example: 192.168.0.1 -> mail.example.com 192.168.0.2 -> mail.example.net 192.168.0.3 -> mail.foo.bar Once the server obtains the fully qualified hostname of the interface, it removes the localpart (i.e., 'mail') and uses the remainder as the domain for any user that logs in. This address to hostname mapping would usually be done via DNS, "/etc/hosts", NIS, etc. Configuration of the various naming services is beyond the scope of this document. Delivering mail --------------- To deliver mail to your virtual domains, configure your MTA so that the envelope recipient (RCPT TO) passed to "lmtpd" is fully qualified with the correct domain. Configuring Sendmail ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Follow the basic configuration instructions. Some items to be aware of: * It is easiest to use the mailertable to route mail to Cyrus, rather than adding the domain to the local-host-names file ($w). This prevents Sendmail from changing the domain name to the local host name. "example.com cyrusv2:/var/imap/socket/lmtp" * You'll have to use the Cyrus mailer in LMTP mode, and you'll have to change the mailer flags so that it provides the full domain while communicating via LMTP. Specifically these changes: "S=EnvFromSMTP/HdrFromSMTP, R=EnvToSMTP" Mail Clients ------------ The only changes you'll need to make to mail clients is to change usernames to the fully qualified domain names, i.e., "user@example.com". The "user%example.com" form of userid is also supported. Users in the default domain will not need to reconfigure their clients (as unqualified userids are assumed to be in the default domain). Administrators -------------- The Cyrus virtual domains implementation supports per-domain administrators as well as "global" (inter-domain) administrators. Domain-specific administrators are specified with a fully qualified userid in the "admins" option (e.g., "admin@example.net") and only have access to mailboxes in the associated domain. Mailbox names should be specified in the same fashion as on a single domain configuration. Global administrators are specified with an unqualified userid in the "admins" option and have access to *any* mailbox on the server. Because global admins use unqualified userids, they belong to the "defaultdomain". As a result, you CANNOT have a global admin without specifying a "defaultdomain". Note that when trying to login as a global admin to a multi-homed server from a remote machine, it might be necessary to fully qualify the userid with the "defaultdomain". Global admins must use "mailbox@domain" syntax when specifying mailboxes outside of the "defaultdomain". Examples (using "cyradm"): To create a new INBOX for user 'test' in "defaultdomain": cm user/test To create a new INBOX for user 'test' in domain 'example.com': cm user/test@example.com To list all mailboxes in domain 'example.com': lm *@example.com