/etc/courier/imapd is in courier-imap 4.15-1.6.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 | ##VERSION: $Id: 2013-08-19 16:39:41 -0400 9c45d9ad13fdf439d44d7443ae75da15ea0223ed$
#
# imapd created from imapd.dist by sysconftool
#
# Do not alter lines that begin with ##, they are used when upgrading
# this configuration.
#
# Copyright 1998 - 2008 Double Precision, Inc. See COPYING for
# distribution information.
#
# This configuration file sets various options for the Courier-IMAP server
# when used with the couriertcpd server.
# A lot of the stuff here is documented in the manual page for couriertcpd.
#
# NOTE - do not use \ to split long variable contents on multiple lines.
# This will break the default imapd.rc script, which parses this file.
#
##NAME: ADDRESS:0
#
# Address to listen on, can be set to a single IP address.
#
# ADDRESS=127.0.0.1
ADDRESS=0
##NAME: PORT:1
#
# Port numbers that connections are accepted on. The default is 143,
# the standard IMAP port.
#
# Multiple port numbers can be separated by commas. When multiple port
# numbers are used it is possible to select a specific IP address for a
# given port as "ip.port". For example, "127.0.0.1.900,192.68.0.1.900"
# accepts connections on port 900 on IP addresses 127.0.0.1 and 192.68.0.1
# The previous ADDRESS setting is a default for ports that do not have
# a specified IP address.
PORT=143
##NAME: AUTHSERVICE:0
#
# It's possible to authenticate using a different 'service' parameter
# depending on the connection's port. This only works with authentication
# modules that use the 'service' parameter, such as PAM. Example:
#
# AUTHSERVICE143=imap
# AUTHSERVICE993=imaps
##NAME: MAXDAEMONS:0
#
# Maximum number of IMAP servers started
#
MAXDAEMONS=40
##NAME: MAXPERIP:0
#
# Maximum number of connections to accept from the same IP address
MAXPERIP=20
##NAME: PIDFILE:0
#
# File where couriertcpd will save its process ID
#
PIDFILE=/var/run/courier/imapd.pid
##NAME: TCPDOPTS:0
#
# Miscellaneous couriertcpd options that shouldn't be changed.
#
TCPDOPTS="-nodnslookup -noidentlookup"
##NAME: LOGGEROPTS:0
#
# courierlogger(1) options.
#
LOGGEROPTS="-name=imapd"
##NAME: DEFDOMAIN:0
#
# Optional default domain. If the username does not contain the
# first character of DEFDOMAIN, then it is appended to the username.
# If DEFDOMAIN and DOMAINSEP are both set, then DEFDOMAIN is appended
# only if the username does not contain any character from DOMAINSEP.
# You can set different default domains based on the the interface IP
# address using the -access and -accesslocal options of couriertcpd(1).
#DEFDOMAIN="@example.com"
##NAME: IMAP_CAPABILITY:1
#
# IMAP_CAPABILITY specifies what most of the response should be to the
# CAPABILITY command.
#
# If you have properly configured Courier to use CRAM-MD5, CRAM-SHA1, or
# CRAM-SHA256 authentication (see INSTALL), set IMAP_CAPABILITY as follows:
#
# IMAP_CAPABILITY="IMAP4rev1 UIDPLUS CHILDREN NAMESPACE THREAD=ORDEREDSUBJECT THREAD=REFERENCES SORT QUOTA AUTH=CRAM-MD5 AUTH=CRAM-SHA1 AUTH=CRAM-SHA256 IDLE"
#
IMAP_CAPABILITY="IMAP4rev1 UIDPLUS CHILDREN NAMESPACE THREAD=ORDEREDSUBJECT THREAD=REFERENCES SORT QUOTA IDLE"
##NAME: KEYWORDS_CAPABILITY:0
#
# IMAP_KEYWORDS=1 enables custom IMAP keywords. Set this option to 0 to
# disable custom keywords.
#
# IMAP_KEYWORDS=2 also enables custom IMAP keywords, but uses a slower
# algorithm. Use this setting if keyword-related problems occur when
# multiple IMAP clients are updating keywords on the same message.
IMAP_KEYWORDS=1
##NAME: ACL_CAPABILITY:0
#
# IMAP_ACL=1 enables IMAP ACL extension. Set this option to 0 to
# disable ACL capabilities announce.
IMAP_ACL=1
##NAME: SMAP1_CAPABILITY:0
#
# EXPERIMENTAL
#
# To enable the experimental "Simple Mail Access Protocol" extensions,
# uncomment the following setting.
#
# SMAP_CAPABILITY=SMAP1
##NAME: IMAP_CAPABILITY_ORIG:2
#
# For use by webadmin
IMAP_CAPABILITY_ORIG="IMAP4rev1 UIDPLUS CHILDREN NAMESPACE THREAD=ORDEREDSUBJECT THREAD=REFERENCES SORT QUOTA AUTH=CRAM-MD5 AUTH=CRAM-SHA1 AUTH=CRAM-SHA256 IDLE"
##NAME: IMAP_PROXY:0
#
# Enable proxying. See README.proxy
IMAP_PROXY=0
##NAME: PROXY_HOSTNAME:0
#
# Override value from gethostname() when checking if a proxy connection is
# required.
#
# PROXY_HOSTNAME=
##NAME: IMAP_PROXY_FOREIGN:0
#
# Proxying to non-Courier servers. Re-sends the CAPABILITY command after
# logging in to the remote server. May not work with all IMAP clients.
IMAP_PROXY_FOREIGN=0
##NAME: IMAP_IDLE_TIMEOUT:0
#
# This setting controls how often
# the server polls for changes to the folder, in IDLE mode (in seconds).
IMAP_IDLE_TIMEOUT=60
##NAME: IMAP_MAILBOX_SANITY_CHECK:0
#
# Sanity check -- make sure home directory and maildir's ownership matches
# the IMAP server's effective uid and gid
IMAP_MAILBOX_SANITY_CHECK=1
##NAME: IMAP_CAPABILITY_TLS:0
#
# The following setting will advertise SASL PLAIN authentication after
# STARTTLS is established. If you want to allow SASL PLAIN authentication
# with or without TLS then just comment this out, and add AUTH=PLAIN to
# IMAP_CAPABILITY
IMAP_CAPABILITY_TLS="$IMAP_CAPABILITY AUTH=PLAIN"
##NAME: IMAP_TLS_ORIG:0
#
# For use by webadmin
IMAP_CAPABILITY_TLS_ORIG="$IMAP_CAPABILITY_ORIG AUTH=PLAIN"
##NAME: IMAP_DISABLETHREADSORT:0
#
# Set IMAP_DISABLETHREADSORT to disable the THREAD and SORT commands -
# server side sorting and threading.
#
# Those capabilities will still be advertised, but the server will reject
# them. Set this option if you want to disable all the extra load from
# server-side threading and sorting. Not advertising those capabilities
# will simply result in the clients reading the entire folder, and sorting
# it on the client side. That will still put some load on the server.
# advertising these capabilities, but rejecting the commands, will stop this
# silliness.
#
IMAP_DISABLETHREADSORT=0
##NAME: IMAP_CHECK_ALL_FOLDERS:0
#
# Set IMAP_CHECK_ALL_FOLDERS to 1 if you want the server to check for new
# mail in every folder. Not all IMAP clients use the IMAP's new mail
# indicator, but some do. Normally new mail is checked only in INBOX,
# because it is a comparatively time consuming operation, and it would be
# a complete waste of time unless mail filters are used to deliver
# mail directly to folders.
#
# When IMAP clients are used which support new mail indication, and when
# mail filters are used to sort incoming mail into folders, setting
# IMAP_CHECK_ALL_FOLDERS to 1 will allow IMAP clients to announce new
# mail in folders. Note that this will result in slightly more load on the
# server.
#
IMAP_CHECK_ALL_FOLDERS=0
##NAME: IMAP_OBSOLETE_CLIENT:0
#
# Set IMAP_OBSOLETE_CLIENT if your IMAP client expects \\NoInferiors to mean
# what \\HasNoChildren really means.
IMAP_OBSOLETE_CLIENT=0
##NAME: IMAP_UMASK:0
#
# IMAP_UMASK sets the umask of the server process. The value of IMAP_UMASK is
# simply passed to the "umask" command. The default value is 022.
#
# This feature is mostly useful for shared folders, where the file permissions
# of the messages may be important.
IMAP_UMASK=022
##NAME: IMAP_ULIMITD:0
#
# IMAP_ULIMITD sets the maximum size of the data segment of the server
# process. The value of IMAP_ULIMITD is simply passed to the "ulimit -d"
# command (or ulimit -v). The argument to ulimi sets the upper limit on the
# size of the data segment of the server process, in kilobytes. The default
# value of 65536 sets a very generous limit of 64 megabytes, which should
# be more than plenty for anyone.
#
# This feature is used as an additional safety check that should stop
# any potential denial-of-service attacks that exploit any kind of
# a memory leak to exhaust all the available memory on the server.
# It is theoretically possible that obscenely huge folders will also
# result in the server running out of memory when doing server-side
# sorting (by my calculations you have to have at least 100,000 messages
# in a single folder, for that to happen).
IMAP_ULIMITD=131072
##NAME: IMAP_USELOCKS:0
#
# Setting IMAP_USELOCKS to 1 will use dot-locking to support concurrent
# multiple access to the same folder. This incurs slight additional
# overhead. Concurrent multiple access will still work without this setting,
# however occasionally a minor race condition may result in an IMAP client
# downloading the same message twice, or a keyword update will fail.
#
# IMAP_USELOCKS=1 is strongly recommended when shared folders are used.
IMAP_USELOCKS=1
##NAME: IMAP_SHAREDINDEXFILE:0
#
# The index of all accessible folders. Do not change this setting unless
# you know what you're doing. See README.sharedfolders for additional
# information.
IMAP_SHAREDINDEXFILE=/etc/courier/shared/index
##NAME: IMAP_ENHANCEDIDLE:0
#
# If Courier was compiled with the File Alteration Monitor, setting
# IMAP_ENHANCEDIDLE to 1 enables enhanced IDLE mode, where multiple
# clients may open the same folder concurrently, and receive updates to
# folder contents in realtime. See the imapd(8) man page for additional
# information.
#
# IMPORTANT: IMAP_USELOCKS *MUST* also be set to 1, and IDLE must be included
# in the IMAP_CAPABILITY list.
#
IMAP_ENHANCEDIDLE=0
##NAME: IMAP_TRASHFOLDERNAME:0
#
# The name of the magic trash Folder. For MSOE compatibility,
# you can set IMAP_TRASHFOLDERNAME="Deleted Items".
#
# IMPORTANT: If you change this, you must also change IMAP_EMPTYTRASH
IMAP_TRASHFOLDERNAME=Trash
##NAME: IMAP_EMPTYTRASH:0
#
# The following setting is optional, and causes messages from the given
# folder to be automatically deleted after the given number of days.
# IMAP_EMPTYTRASH is a comma-separated list of folder:days. The default
# setting, below, purges 7 day old messages from the Trash folder.
# Another useful setting would be:
#
# IMAP_EMPTYTRASH=Trash:7,Sent:30
#
# This would also delete messages from the Sent folder (presumably copies
# of sent mail) after 30 days. This is a global setting that is applied to
# every mail account, and is probably useful in a controlled, corporate
# environment.
#
# Important: the purging is controlled by CTIME, not MTIME (the file time
# as shown by ls). It is perfectly ordinary to see stuff in Trash that's
# a year old. That's the file modification time, MTIME, that's displayed.
# This is generally when the message was originally delivered to this
# mailbox. Purging is controlled by a different timestamp, CTIME, which is
# changed when the file is moved to the Trash folder (and at other times too).
#
# You might want to disable this setting in certain situations - it results
# in a stat() of every file in each folder, at login and logout.
#
IMAP_EMPTYTRASH=Trash:7
##NAME: IMAP_MOVE_EXPUNGE_TO_TRASH:0
#
# Set IMAP_MOVE_EXPUNGE_TO_TRASH to move expunged messages to Trash. This
# effectively allows an undo of message deletion by fishing the deleted
# mail from trash. Trash can be manually expunged as usually, and mail
# will get automatically expunged from Trash according to IMAP_EMPTYTRASH.
#
# NOTE: shared folders are still expunged as usual. Shared folders are
# not affected.
#
IMAP_MOVE_EXPUNGE_TO_TRASH=0
##NAME: IMAP_LOG_DELETIONS:0
#
#
# Set IMAP_LOG_DELETIONS to log all message deletions to syslog.
#
# IMAP_LOG_DELETIONS=1
##NAME: IMAPDEBUGFILE:0
#
# IMAPDEBUGFILE="imaplog.dat"
#
# Generate diagnostic logging of IMAP commands.
#
# Set this globally, restart the server. Touch this file in an account's
# maildir directory, and Courier-IMAP will append all IMAP commands received
# for new sessions for this account. NOTE: existing IMAP sessions are not
# affected, only new IMAP logins.
##NAME: OUTBOX:0
#
# The next set of options deal with the "Outbox" enhancement.
# Uncomment the following setting to create a special folder, named
# INBOX.Outbox
#
# OUTBOX=.Outbox
##NAME: SENDMAIL:0
#
# If OUTBOX is defined, mail can be sent via the IMAP connection by copying
# a message to the INBOX.Outbox folder. For all practical matters,
# INBOX.Outbox looks and behaves just like any other IMAP folder. If this
# folder doesn't exist it must be created by the IMAP mail client, just
# like any other IMAP folder. The kicker: any message copied or moved to
# this folder is will be E-mailed by the Courier-IMAP server, by running
# the SENDMAIL program. Therefore, messages copied or moved to this
# folder must be well-formed RFC-2822 messages, with the recipient list
# specified in the To:, Cc:, and Bcc: headers. Courier-IMAP relies on
# SENDMAIL to read the recipient list from these headers (and delete the Bcc:
# header) by running the command "$SENDMAIL -oi -t -f $SENDER", with the
# message piped on standard input. $SENDER will be the return address
# of the message, which is set by the authentication module.
#
# DO NOT MODIFY SENDMAIL, below, unless you know what you're doing.
#
SENDMAIL=/usr/sbin/sendmail
##NAME: HEADERFROM:0
#
# For administrative and oversight purposes, the return address, $SENDER
# will also be saved in the X-IMAP-Sender mail header. This header gets
# added to the sent E-mail (but it doesn't get saved in the copy of the
# message that's saved in the folder)
#
# WARNING - By enabling OUTBOX above, *every* IMAP mail client will receive
# the magic OUTBOX treatment. Therefore advance LARTing is in order for
# _all_ of your lusers, until every one of them is aware of this. Otherwise if
# OUTBOX is left at its default setting - a folder name that might be used
# accidentally - some people may be in for a rude surprise. You can redefine
# the name of the magic folder by changing OUTBOX, above. You should do that
# and pick a less-obvious name. Perhaps brand it with your organizational
# name ( OUTBOX=.WidgetsAndSonsOutbox )
HEADERFROM=X-IMAP-Sender
##NAME: ID_FIELDS:0
#
# Have the server be polite, and identify its version to the client. The client
# must be logged in before the server will identify itself. Additionally,
# the client will mutually supply its own software version, and the server will
# log it.
#
# Although the server's banner message identifies itself, in free-form manner,
# this the ID IMAP extension, for clients to log.
#
# IMAP_ID_FIELDS is the sum of the following values:
#
# 1 - identify the version of the IMAP server
# 2 - identify the operating system (if available)
# 4 - identify the operating system release (if available)
#
# A value of 0 identifies the server software only.
#
# Uncomment this setting to enable the IMAP ID extension. One reason you might
# want to enable it is to log the clients' software version. Enabling this
# setting will mutually log the client's software, in the system logs.
#
# IMAP_ID_FIELDS=0
##NAME: OUTBOX_MULTIPLE_SEND:0
#
# Remove the following comment to allow a COPY of more than one message to
# the Outbox, at a time.
#
# OUTBOX_MULTIPLE_SEND=1
##NAME: IMAPDSTART:0
#
# IMAPDSTART is not used directly. Rather, this is a convenient flag to
# be read by your system startup script in /etc/rc.d, like this:
#
# . /etc/courier/imapd
#
# case x$IMAPDSTART in
# x[yY]*)
# /usr/lib/courier/imapd.rc start
# ;;
# esac
#
# The default setting is going to be NO, so you'll have to manually flip
# it to yes.
IMAPDSTART=YES
##NAME: MAILDIRPATH:0
#
# MAILDIRPATH - directory name of the maildir directory.
#
MAILDIRPATH=Maildir
|