ahbl is no longer being maintained and has been configured to return a
positive value for every host. This means I get a cron warning every
day reporting that my mailserver is in ircbl.ahbl.org and
dnsbl.ahbl.org.
lukecyca/check-rbl#1 has removed ahbl from the blacklists that it
checks. This just pulls in that change.
Unfortunately, ansible's get_url won't update files which have been
downloaded already unless you set force=yes, which will cause ansible to
pull down the file from github on every single run, which isn't really
acceptable. I have filed ansible/ansible-modules-core#625 to ask that
get_url redownload if and only if the sha256sum differs. In the
meantime, you have to manually delete /opt/check-rbl.pl before rerunning
ansible to pull in the update. However, at least this will work fine
for new installs.
Related to #338 (though I don't know if it truly fixes it).
* Postfix: Trusty comes with postgresql 9.3, not 9.1
* owncloud 6.0.1 is part of the distribution, doesn't require opensuse repository
* owncloud requires libapache2-mod-php5
* uses prosody repository that matches the ansible_distribution_release (trusty, wheezy, etc)
The previous behaviour relied on managesieve copying over the
.dovecot.sieve file into the user's directory. I found this to be
particularly fragile. For instance, re-deploying roundcube without
dovecot could overwrite the .dovecot.sieve symlink and break
managesieve.
A better approach is to use the global sieve configuration that
roundcube provides and not mess with dovecot's files directly.
Fixes issue #8. Adds new variable mail_header_privacy, on by default.
Installs postfix-pcre unconditionally, and then copies the pcre file
over and adds the header check to main.cf based on the variable value.
“this header replacement works great, but it logs that the replacement
has been done, which means that you are storing this information,
unless you are anonymizing your logs”
Remove all configuration for MySQL and configure PostgreSQL as the main
database.
All *_mysql_* options have been changed to *_db_* options.
Postgres requires the database user to have a password in order to
connect via localhost. The db_admin_password option is used to set the
password of the admin user (usually postgres).