# Copyright (C) 2008-2017 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc.
#
# This file is part of GNU Mailman.
#
# GNU Mailman is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
# the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
# Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option)
# any later version.
#
# GNU Mailman is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
# ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License for
# more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
# GNU Mailman.  If not, see .
# This file contains the Debian configuration for mailman.  It uses ini-style
# formats under the lazr.config regime to define all system configuration
# options.  See  for details.
[mailman]
# This address is the "site owner" address.  Certain messages which must be
# delivered to a human, but which can't be delivered to a list owner (e.g. a
# bounce from a list owner), will be sent to this address.  It should point to
# a human.
site_owner: ${site_owner_email}
# This is the local-part of an email address used in the From field whenever a
# message comes from some entity to which there is no natural reply recipient.
# Mailman will append '@' and the host name of the list involved.  This
# address must not bounce and it must not point to a Mailman process.
noreply_address: noreply
# The default language for this server.
default_language: de
# Membership tests for posting purposes are usually performed by looking at a
# set of headers, passing the test if any of their values match a member of
# the list.  Headers are checked in the order given in this variable.  The
# value From_ means to use the envelope sender.  Field names are case
# insensitive.  This is a space separate list of headers.
sender_headers: from from_ reply-to sender
# Mail command processor will ignore mail command lines after designated max.
email_commands_max_lines: 10
# Default length of time a pending request is live before it is evicted from
# the pending database.
pending_request_life: 3d
# How long should files be saved before they are evicted from the cache?
cache_life: 7d
# A callable to run with no arguments early in the initialization process.
# This runs before database initialization.
pre_hook:
# A callable to run with no arguments late in the initialization process.
# This runs after adapters are initialized.
post_hook:
# Which paths.* file system layout to use.
# You should not change this variable.
layout: debian
# Can MIME filtered messages be preserved by list owners?
filtered_messages_are_preservable: no
# How should text/html parts be converted to text/plain when the mailing list
# is set to convert HTML to plaintext?  This names a command to be called,
# where the substitution variable $filename is filled in by Mailman, and
# contains the path to the temporary file that the command should read from.
# The command should print the converted text to stdout.
html_to_plain_text_command: /usr/bin/lynx -dump $filename
# Specify what characters are allowed in list names.  Characters outside of
# the class [-_.+=!$*{}~0-9a-z] matched case insensitively are never allowed,
# but this specifies a subset as the only allowable characters.  This must be
# a valid character class regexp or the effect on list creation is
# unpredictable.
listname_chars: [-_.0-9a-z]
[shell]
# `mailman shell` (also `withlist`) gives you an interactive prompt that you
# can use to interact with an initialized and configured Mailman system.  Use
# --help for more information.  This section allows you to configure certain
# aspects of this interactive shell.
# Customize the interpreter prompt.
prompt: >>>
# Banner to show on startup.
banner: Welcome to the GNU Mailman shell
# Use IPython as the shell, which must be found on the system.  Valid values
# are `no`, `yes`, and `debug` where the latter is equivalent to `yes` except
# that any import errors will be displayed to stderr.
use_ipython: no
# Set this to allow for command line history if readline is available.  This
# can be as simple as $var_dir/history.py to put the file in the var directory.
history_file:
[paths.debian]
# Important directories for Mailman operation.  These are defined here so that
# different layouts can be supported.   For example, a developer layout would
# be different from a FHS layout.  Most paths are based off the var_dir, and
# often just setting that will do the right thing for all the other paths.
# You might also have to set spool_dir though.
#
# Substitutions are allowed, but must be of the form $var where 'var' names a
# configuration variable in the paths.* section.  Substitutions are expanded
# recursively until no more $-variables are present.  Beware of infinite
# expansion loops!
#
# This is the root of the directory structure that Mailman will use to store
# its run-time data.
var_dir: /var/lib/mailman3
# This is where the Mailman queue files directories will be created.
queue_dir: $var_dir/queue
# This is the directory containing the Mailman 'runner' and 'master' commands
# if set to the string '$argv', it will be taken as the directory containing
# the 'mailman' command.
bin_dir: /usr/lib/mailman3/bin
# All list-specific data.
list_data_dir: $var_dir/lists
# Directory where log files go.
log_dir: /var/log/mailman3
# Directory for system-wide locks.
lock_dir: $var_dir/locks
# Directory for system-wide data.
data_dir: $var_dir/data
# Cache files.
cache_dir: $var_dir/cache
# Directory for configuration files and such.
etc_dir: /etc/mailman3
# Directory containing Mailman plugins.
ext_dir: $var_dir/ext
# Directory where the default IMessageStore puts its messages.
messages_dir: $var_dir/messages
# Directory for archive backends to store their messages in.  Archivers should
# create a subdirectory in here to store their files.
archive_dir: $var_dir/archives
# Root directory for site-specific template override files.
template_dir: $var_dir/templates
# There are also a number of paths to specific file locations that can be
# defined.  For these, the directory containing the file must already exist,
# or be one of the directories created by Mailman as per above.
#
# This is where PID file for the master runner is stored.
pid_file: /run/mailman3/master.pid
# Lock file.
lock_file: $lock_dir/master.lck
[database]
# The class implementing the IDatabase.
class: mailman.database.sqlite.SQLiteDatabase
#class: mailman.database.mysql.MySQLDatabase
#class: mailman.database.postgresql.PostgreSQLDatabase
# Use this to set the Storm database engine URL.  You generally have one
# primary database connection for all of Mailman.  List data and most rosters
# will store their data in this database, although external rosters may access
# other databases in their own way.  This string supports standard
# 'configuration' substitutions.
url: sqlite:///$DATA_DIR/mailman.db
#url: mysql+pymysql://mailman3:mmpass@localhost/mailman3?charset=utf8&use_unicode=1
#url: postgresql://mailman3:mmpass@localhost/mailman3
debug: no
[logging.debian]
# This defines various log settings.  The options available are:
#
# - level     -- Overrides the default level; this may be any of the
#                standard Python logging levels, case insensitive.
# - format    -- Overrides the default format string
# - datefmt   -- Overrides the default date format string
# - path      -- Overrides the default logger path.  This may be a relative
#                path name, in which case it is relative to Mailman's LOG_DIR,
#                or it may be an absolute path name.  You cannot change the
#                handler class that will be used.
# - propagate -- Boolean specifying whether to propagate log message from this
#                logger to the root "mailman" logger.  You cannot override
#                settings for the root logger.
#
# In this section, you can define defaults for all loggers, which will be
# prefixed by 'mailman.'.  Use subsections to override settings for specific
# loggers.  The names of the available loggers are:
#
# - archiver        --  All archiver output
# - bounce          --  All bounce processing logs go here
# - config          --  Configuration issues
# - database        --  Database logging (SQLAlchemy and Alembic)
# - debug           --  Only used for development
# - error           --  All exceptions go to this log
# - fromusenet      --  Information related to the Usenet to Mailman gateway
# - http            --  Internal wsgi-based web interface
# - locks           --  Lock state changes
# - mischief        --  Various types of hostile activity
# - runner          --  Runner process start/stops
# - smtp            --  Successful SMTP activity
# - smtp-failure    --  Unsuccessful SMTP activity
# - subscribe       --  Information about leaves/joins
# - vette           --  Message vetting information
format: %(asctime)s (%(process)d) %(message)s
datefmt: %b %d %H:%M:%S %Y
propagate: no
level: info
path: mailman.log
[webservice]
# The hostname at which admin web service resources are exposed.
hostname: localhost
# The port at which the admin web service resources are exposed.
port: 8001
# Whether or not requests to the web service are secured through SSL.
use_https: no
# Whether or not to show tracebacks in an HTTP response for a request that
# raised an exception.
show_tracebacks: yes
# The API version number for the current (highest) API.
api_version: 3.1
# The administrative username.
admin_user: restadmin
# The administrative password.
admin_pass: ${api_password}
[mta]
# The class defining the interface to the incoming mail transport agent.
#incoming: mailman.mta.exim4.LMTP
incoming: mailman.mta.postfix.LMTP
# The callable implementing delivery to the outgoing mail transport agent.
# This must accept three arguments, the mailing list, the message, and the
# message metadata dictionary.
outgoing: mailman.mta.deliver.deliver
# How to connect to the outgoing MTA.  If smtp_user and smtp_pass is given,
# then Mailman will attempt to log into the MTA when making a new connection.
smtp_host: 127.0.0.1
smtp_port: 25
smtp_user:
smtp_pass:
# Where the LMTP server listens for connections.  Use 127.0.0.1 instead of
# localhost for Postfix integration, because Postfix only consults DNS
# (e.g. not /etc/hosts).
lmtp_host: 127.0.0.1
lmtp_port: 8024
# Where can we find the mail server specific configuration file?  The path can
# be either a file system path or a Python import path.  If the value starts
# with python: then it is a Python import path, otherwise it is a file system
# path.  File system paths must be absolute since no guarantees are made about
# the current working directory.  Python paths should not include the trailing
# .cfg, which the file must end with.
#configuration: python:mailman.config.exim4
configuration: python:mailman.config.postfix