> On Jun 17, 2024, at 6:30 PM, Peter via Postfix-users 
> <postfix-users@postfix.org> wrote:
> 
>> On 17/06/2024 17:28, Paul Schmehl wrote:
>>> How do you set up roundcube to not use authentication? I really don’t need 
>>> it since it’s on the same machine as the mail server. What config options 
>>> do I need to use?
> 
> To be honest, you still likely want authentication.  Keep in mind that you 
> don't need to authenticate as a single user for roundcube but rather you can 
> have roundcube pass authentication through from it's own user login and 
> therefore support multiple users while also allowing postfix to support those 
> same multiple users and see their individual logins. The point of this is 
> that you can then use settings such as smtpd_sender_login_maps and 
> reject_sender_login_mismatch in postfix to control individual users from 
> roundcube.
> 
> http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#smtpd_sender_login_maps
> http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#reject_sender_login_mismatch

The problem is neither tls nor ssl worked. No matter what config I used, 
roundcube would always through an error. If I used $config['smtp_host'] = 
‘tls;//www.stovebolt.com'; or I used $config['smtp_host'] = 
’ssl;//www.stovebolt.com'; roundcube would error out saying it couldn’t connect 
to the server. If I removed them and used only the FQHN, it errored out saying 
the postfix doesn’t support authentication.

I thought maybe it might be a cert issue (I was using a self-signed cert), so I 
switched to a letsencrypt cert, but that made no difference. No matter what I 
did, roundcube refused to send mail.

Paul Schmehl
paul.schm...@gmail.com
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