On Mon, Jan 14, 2019 at 01:03:19PM +0100, Flipchan wrote: > Seems like it adds "\^J" to the username , i base64 encode it using: > echo "user" | base64 > > Log from smtpd -dv -T smtp : > http://dpaste.com/0CAVJFF.txt >
honestly, i'm confused by what you're doing can you setup a temporary account, with a temporary password, authenticate to it using a regular MUA (whichever you want, just don't auth manually), then trash the account and send us logs that aren't doctored ? > On January 14, 2019 9:41:42 AM GMT+01:00, Gilles Chehade <gil...@poolp.org> > wrote: > >On Sat, Jan 12, 2019 at 05:36:11PM +0100, Flipchan wrote: > >> Hey, am tryin to upgrade my opensmtpd > >> email server running on openbsd 6.3 towards a new one on 6.4, > >> i have used a simple config with the new syntax: > >> cat /etc/mail/smtpd.conf > >> > >> table aliases file:/etc/mail/aliases > >> > >> #table other-relays file:/etc/mail/other-relays > >> > >> pki mail.example.com cert "/etc/ssl/mail.example.com.crt" > >> pki mail.example.com key "/etc/ssl/private/mail.example.com.key" > >> > >> listen on lo0 > >> listen on vio0 port 587 hostname example.com tls-require pki > >mail.example.com auth mask-source > >> listen on vio0 port 25 hostname example.com tls pki mail.example.com > >> > >> action "mbox" mbox alias <aliases> > >> action "relay" relay > >> > >> match for local action "mbox" > >> match for any action "relay" > >> match from any for domain example.com action "mbox" > >> > >> > >> i cant login with a users regular username and passwd which is weird. > > > >> In the documentation it says that it is suppose to take regular user > >creds if not a table is defined which it is not. > >> https://man.openbsd.org/smtpd.conf#listen_on > >> > >> "Users are authenticated against either their own normal login > >credentials or a credentials table authtable, the format of which is > >described in table(5)." > >> > >> Does anyone know what im doing wrong here? > >> > >> maillog: > >> Jan 12 16:47:49 host smtpd[95842]: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX smtp connected > >address=ip host=ip Jan 12 16:47:49 host > >> smtpd[95842]: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX smtp starttls address=ip host=ip > >ciphers="version=TLSv1.2, cipher=ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384, bits=256" > >Jan 12 16:47:49 host > >> smtpd[95842]: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX smtp authentication user=user > >address=ip host=ip result=permfail Jan 12 16:47:49 host > >> smtpd[95842]: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX smtp failed-command address=ip host=ip > >command="AUTH PLAIN (...)" result="535 Authentication failed" Jan 12 > >16:47:49 host > >> smtpd[95842]: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX smtp authentication user=user > >address=ip host=ip result=permfail Jan 12 16:47:50 host > >> smtpd[95842]: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX smtp failed-command address=ip host=ip > >command="AUTH LOGIN (password)" result="535 Authentication failed" > >> > > > >Hi, > > > >First of all, it should read mask-src and not mask-source, otherwise > >the > >auth keyword is assuming a table containing literal string > >"mask-source" > >and this will cause authentication to fail. > > > >A good method to troubleshoot, is to run smtpd in trace mode: > > > > smtpd -dv -T smtp > > > >create a test user with a temporary password, so you can share the > >trace > >output here and we can try to figure out what's wrong ... but likely > >the > >mask-source issue is the cause here. > > > > > >-- > >Gilles Chehade @poolpOrg > > > >https://www.poolp.org tip me: > >https://paypal.me/poolpOrg > > -- > Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity. -- Gilles Chehade @poolpOrg https://www.poolp.org tip me: https://paypal.me/poolpOrg