Podman
Introduction
Podman is a daemonless container engine for developing, managing, and running OCI Containers on your Linux System.
About Support for Podman
Please note that Podman is not officially supported as DMS is built and verified on top of the Docker Engine. This content is entirely community supported. If you find errors, please open an issue and provide a PR.
About this Guide
This guide was tested with Fedora 34 using systemd
and firewalld
. Moreover, it requires Podman version >= 3.2. You may be able to substitute dnf
- Fedora's package manager - with others such as apt
.
About Security
Running podman in rootless mode requires additional modifications in order to keep your mailserver secure. Make sure to read the related documentation.
Installation in Rootfull Mode
While using Podman, you can just manage docker-mailserver as what you did with Docker. Your best friend setup.sh
includes the minimum code in order to support Podman since it's 100% compatible with the Docker CLI.
The installation is basically the same. Podman v3.2 introduced a RESTful API that is 100% compatible with the Docker API, so you can use docker-compose with Podman easily. Install Podman and docker-compose with your package manager first.
sudo dnf install podman docker-compose
Then enable podman.socket
using systemctl
.
systemctl enable --now podman.socket
This will create a unix socket locate under /run/podman/podman.sock
, which is the entrypoint of Podman's API. Now, configure docker-mailserver and start it.
export DOCKER_HOST="unix:///run/podman/podman.sock"
docker-compose up -d mailserver
docker-compose ps
You should see that docker-mailserver is running now.
Self-start in Rootfull Mode
Podman is daemonless, that means if you want docker-mailserver self-start while boot up the system, you have to generate a systemd file with Podman CLI.
podman generate systemd mailserver > /etc/systemd/system/mailserver.service
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl enable --now mailserver.service
Installation in Rootless Mode
Running rootless containers is one of Podman's major features. But due to some restrictions, deploying docker-mailserver in rootless mode is not as easy compared to rootfull mode.
- a rootless container is running in a user namespace so you cannot bind ports lower than 1024
- a rootless container's systemd file can only be placed in folder under
~/.config
- a rootless container can result in an open relay, make sure to read the security section.
Also notice that Podman's rootless mode is not about running as a non-root user inside the container, but about the mapping of (normal, non-root) host users to root inside the container.
Warning
In order to make rootless DMS work we must modify some settings in the Linux system, it requires some basic linux server knowledge so don't follow this guide if you not sure what this guide is talking about. Podman rootfull mode and Docker are still good and security enough for normal daily usage.
First, enable podman.socket
in systemd's userspace with a non-root user.
systemctl enable --now --user podman.socket
The socket file should be located at /var/run/user/$(id -u)/podman/podman.sock
. Then, modify docker-compose.yml
to make sure all ports are bindings are on non-privileged ports.
services:
mailserver:
ports:
- "10025:25" # SMTP (explicit TLS => STARTTLS)
- "10143:143" # IMAP4 (explicit TLS => STARTTLS)
- "10465:465" # ESMTP (implicit TLS)
- "10587:587" # ESMTP (explicit TLS => STARTTLS)
- "10993:993" # IMAP4 (implicit TLS)
Then, setup your mailserver.env
file follow the documentation and use docker-compose to start the container.
export DOCKER_HOST="unix:///var/run/user/$(id -u)/podman/podman.sock"
docker-compose up -d mailserver
docker-compose ps
Security in Rootless Mode
In rootless mode, podman resolves all incoming IPs as localhost, which results in an open gateway in the default configuration. There are two workarounds to fix this problem, both of which have their own drawbacks.
Enforce authentication from localhost
The PERMIT_DOCKER
variable in the mailserver.env
file allows to specify trusted networks that do not need to authenticate. If the variable is left empty, only requests from localhost and the container IP are allowed, but in the case of rootless podman any IP will be resolved as localhost. Setting PERMIT_DOCKER=none
enforces authentication also from localhost, which prevents sending unauthenticated emails.
Use the slip4netns network driver
The second workaround is slightly more complicated because the docker-compose.yml
has to be modified.
As shown in the fail2ban section the slirp4netns
network driver has to be enabled.
This network driver enables podman to correctly resolve IP addresses but it is not compatible with
user defined networks which might be a problem depending on your setup.
Rootless Podman requires adding the value slirp4netns:port_handler=slirp4netns
to the --network
CLI option, or network_mode
setting in your docker-compose.yml
.
You must also add the ENV NETWORK_INTERFACE=tap0
, because Podman uses a hard-coded interface name for slirp4netns
.
Example
services:
mailserver:
network_mode: "slirp4netns:port_handler=slirp4netns"
environment:
- NETWORK_INTERFACE=tap0
...
Note
podman-compose
is not compatible with this configuration.
Self-start in Rootless Mode
Generate a systemd file with the Podman CLI.
podman generate systemd mailserver > ~/.config/systemd/user/mailserver.service
systemctl --user daemon-reload
systemctl enable --user --now mailserver.service
Systemd's user space service is only started when a specific user logs in and stops when you log out. In order to make it to start with the system, we need to enable linger with loginctl
loginctl enable-linger <username>
Remember to run this command as root user.
Port Forwarding
When it comes to forwarding ports using firewalld
, see https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/8/html/securing_networks/using-and-configuring-firewalld_securing-networks#port-forwarding_using-and-configuring-firewalld for more information.
firewall-cmd --permanent --add-forward-port=port=<25|143|465|587|993>:proto=<tcp>:toport=<10025|10143|10465|10587|10993>
...
# After you set all ports up.
firewall-cmd --reload
Notice that this will only open the access to the external client. If you want to access privileges port in your server, do this:
firewall-cmd --permanent --direct --add-rule <ipv4|ipv6> nat OUTPUT 0 -p <tcp|udp> -o lo --dport <25|143|465|587|993> -j REDIRECT --to-ports <10025|10143|10465|10587|10993>
...
# After you set all ports up.
firewall-cmd --reload
Just map all the privilege port with non-privilege port you set in docker-compose.yml before as root user.