Mail server

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Revision as of 15:50, 14 July 2019 by Gary (talk | contribs) (Security)
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A mail server (hereinafter, the Server) is any digital construct that is located in a computer network under its distinguishable hostname in order to accept, analyze, adjust, clarify, and transfer electronic mail messages (or, simply, emails) from email clients to mail exchangers (MX hosts) and vice versa.

The Server can also refer to mail server software. More broadly, email software may refer to all the software utilized for email clients, the Servers, or mail exchangers.


Features

Protocols

To communicate with:
  1. Mail exchangers, all the Servers use the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP).
  2. Email clients, the Servers use a variety of protocols, most commonly, POP3 and/or IMAP.

Functions

With regard to:
  • Outgoing messages, the Servers may be designed to:
    1. Accept messages from email clients.
    2. Analyze messages looking for their inconsistencies and/or missing data.
    3. Adjust messages while correcting inconsistencies and/or adding the missing data.
    4. Transfer messages to mail exchangers.
  • Incoming messages, the Servers may be designed to:
    1. Accept messages from mail exchangers.
    2. Analyze messages looking for their inconsistencies and/or missing data.
    3. Add information about the found inconsistencies and/or missing data to the messages. This information may further be used by email clients to combat spam.
    4. Transfer messages to email clients.

Hosting

To communicate with email clients and mail exchangers, the Servers shall be located between those two.
  1. Email clients are hosted at either:
    • End-user devices such as a mail app on a cell phone; or
    • Mail service provider such as Gmail locations.
  2. The Servers are hosted by local computing devices that are connected to the Internet. On the one side, they can be colocated with email clients, especially if the email client is hosted by a mail service provider. On another side, the Server can can colocated with mail exchangers when the mail service provider is an Internet service provider (ISP). Unix-based operating systems include the Server in their bundles, so do some end-user applications such as MediaWiki, Moodle, and Redmine. At the same time, the Servers can also be hosted separately from email clients and mail exchangers.
  3. Mail exchangers are hosted by Internet service providers (ISPs), who also run DNS resolvers, which provide mail exchangers with DNS records.

Agents

Best practices

Software

General comparison

General comparison of the actively-developed Servers
Category Features Courier Dovecot Exim MS Exchange Postfix
Legal properties Ownership OSS OSS OSS Proprietary OSS
Developer Sam Varshavchik Timo Sirainen, contributors Community Microsoft Wietse Venema, contributors
License GPL MIT-L, LGPLv2 GPL Unknown IBM-PL, EPL
Latest release 1.0.8 2.3.5 4.92 2019 RTM 3.4.6
History 6/8/2019 3/5/2019 2/10/2019 10/22/2018 06/29/2019
Introduction 2000 2002 1995 1996 1998
OS Linux/Unix Yes Yes Yes No Yes
Windows No No No Yes No
Technology properties Description Full-stack mail server best known for its IMAP server component IMAP and POP3 server SMTP server Full-stack mail and calendar server SMTP server
Database No Yes Yes via ESE Yes
File system maildir maildir, mbox, dbox Own Own Own
Webmail Yes No No Yes No
Category Features Courier Dovecot Exim MS Exchange Postfix

Communication protocols

Communication protocols supported by the popular Clients
Category Features Courier Dovecot Exim MS Exchange Postfix
Transfer SMTP Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Access IMAP Yes Yes via Dovecot, etc. Yes via Dovecot, etc.
POP3 Yes Yes via Dovecot, etc. Yes via Dovecot, etc.
Compatibility IPv6 Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Category Features Courier Dovecot Exim MS Exchange Postfix

Access

Access features in the popular Clients
Category Features Courier Dovecot Exim MS Exchange Postfix
Protocols LDAP Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
SMTP AUTH Yes No Yes Yes Yes
POP before SMTP Yes via DRAC plugin Yes Unknown No
APOP Yes Yes Yes Yes No
Mechanisms APOP and SASL Managed by Courier authentication library which can use PAM, Userdb, PostgreSQL, MySQL, and EXTERNAL. Not an SMTP server, but offers Dovecot SASL to MTAs: ANONYMOUS, PLAIN, LOGIN, CRAM-MD5, DIGEST-MD5, SCRAM-SHA1, EXTERNAL, GSSAPI, NTLM, OTP, SKEY, RPA. Cyrus SASL, Dovecot SASL, GNU SASL, CRAM-MD5, Heimdal GSSAPI, PLAIN, LOGIN, SPA LOGIN, NTLM Supports all Cyrus SASL authentication methods except for APOP.
Other PAM, MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite, Kerberos 5, proxied IMAP auth, getpwent, shadow, SIA, BSDauth, Vpopmail.
Support Filesystem Yes Yes Yes No Yes
Database Yes Yes Yes No Yes
Category Features Courier Dovecot Exim MS Exchange Postfix

Security

Security features in the popular Clients
Category Features Courier Dovecot Exim MS Exchange Postfix
SSL/TLS support SMTP over TLS Yes No Yes Yes Yes
POP over TLS Yes Yes No Yes No
SSL Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Security features other than SSL/TLS IMAP IDLE Yes Yes via Dovecot, etc. Yes via Dovecot, etc.
DANE No Unknown Yes Unknown Yes
Filtering Sieve maildrop Yes Yes Unknown No
Category Features Courier Dovecot Exim MS Exchange Postfix

Antispam

Security features in the popular Clients
Category Features Courier Dovecot Exim MS Exchange Postfix
Listings DNSBL Yes No Yes Yes Yes
SURBL Yes Yes No Yes No
Spamtraps Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Greylisting Yes Yes via Dovecot, etc. Yes via Dovecot, etc.
Analysis-based SPF No Unknown Yes Unknown Yes
DKIM Sieve maildrop Yes Yes Unknown No
DMARC Sieve maildrop Yes Yes Unknown No
Manipulation-based Tarpit maildrop Yes Yes Unknown No
Bayesian filters maildrop Yes Yes Unknown No
Regular expressions maildrop Yes Yes Unknown No
Embedded Antivirus maildrop Yes Yes Unknown No
Embedded Antispam
Category Features Courier Dovecot Exim MS Exchange Postfix

Other notable software