postfixadmin
5M+
Postfix Admin - web based administration interface for Postfix mail servers.
docker pull postfixadmin
Maintained by:
Postfix Admin
Where to get help:
the Docker Community Slack, Server Fault, Unix & Linux, or Stack Overflow
Dockerfile
links3.3.15-apache
, 3.3-apache
, 3-apache
, apache
, 3.3.15
, 3.3
, 3
, latest
3.3.15-fpm-alpine
, 3.3-fpm-alpine
, 3-fpm-alpine
, fpm-alpine
Where to file issues:
https://github.com/postfixadmin/docker/issues
Supported architectures: (more info)amd64
, arm32v5
, arm32v6
, arm32v7
, arm64v8
, i386
, mips64le
, ppc64le
, riscv64
, s390x
Published image artifact details:
repo-info repo's repos/postfixadmin/
directory (history)
(image metadata, transfer size, etc)
Image updates:
official-images repo's library/postfixadmin
label
official-images repo's library/postfixadmin
file (history)
Source of this description:
docs repo's postfixadmin/
directory (history)
Postfix Admin is a web based interface to configure and manage a Postfix based email server for many users. Features include support for virtual domains and aliases, quotas, and vacation/out-of-the-office messages. It requires PHP, Postfix and one of MySQL, PostgreSQL or SQLite.
If you do not have a config.local.php, then we fall back to look for environment variables to generate one.
$ docker run -e POSTFIXADMIN_DB_TYPE=mysqli \
-e POSTFIXADMIN_DB_HOST=whatever \
-e POSTFIXADMIN_DB_USER=user \
-e POSTFIXADMIN_DB_PASSWORD=topsecret \
-e POSTFIXADMIN_DB_NAME=postfixadmin \
--name some-postfixadmin \
postfixadmin
POSTFIXADMIN_DB_TYPE
can be one of :
Note: An SQLite database is not recommend but used as a fallback if you do not have a config.local.php and do not specify the above variables. Do not forget to add a volume for the SQLite path.
You can also specify a POSTFIXADMIN_SETUP_PASSWORD
environment variable.
If you'd like to be able to access the instance from the host without the container's IP, standard port mappings can be used:
$ docker run -e POSTFIXADMIN_DB_TYPE=mysqli \
-e POSTFIXADMIN_DB_HOST=whatever \
-e POSTFIXADMIN_DB_USER=user \
-e POSTFIXADMIN_DB_PASSWORD=topsecret \
-e POSTFIXADMIN_DB_NAME=postfixadmin \
--name some-postfixadmin \
-p 8080:80
postfixadmin
Then, access it via http://localhost:8080
or http://host-ip:8080
in a browser.
$ docker run -v /local/path/to/config.local.php:/var/www/html/config.local.php \
--name some-postfixadmin \
-p 8080:80 \
postfixadmin
... via docker-compose
or docker stack deploy
Example docker-compose.yml
for postfixadmin
:
version: '3'
services:
db:
image: mysql:8.0
restart: always
environment:
MYSQL_RANDOM_ROOT_PASSWORD: 1
MYSQL_DATABASE: postfixadmin
MYSQL_USER: postfixadmin
MYSQL_PASSWORD: example
postfixadmin:
depends_on:
- db
image: postfixadmin
ports:
- 8000:80
restart: always
environment:
POSTFIXADMIN_DB_TYPE: mysqli
POSTFIXADMIN_DB_HOST: db
POSTFIXADMIN_DB_USER: postfixadmin
POSTFIXADMIN_DB_NAME: postfixadmin
POSTFIXADMIN_DB_PASSWORD: example
Run docker stack deploy -c stack.yml postfixadmin (or docker-compose -f stack.yml up), wait for it to initialize completely, and visit http://swarm-ip:8080, http://localhost:8080, or http://host-ip:8080 (as appropriate).
The postfixadmin
images come in many flavors, each designed for a specific use case.
postfixadmin:<version>
This is the defacto image. If you are unsure about what your needs are, you probably want to use this one. It is designed to be used both as a throw away container (mount your source code and start the container to start your app), as well as the base to build other images off of.
This starts an Apache webserver with PHP, so you can use postfixadmin
out of the box.
This image starts only a PHP FPM container. Use this variant if you already have a seperate webserver.
This image has a very small footprint. It is based on Alpine Linux and starts only a PHP FPM process. Use this variant if you already have a seperate webserver. If you need more tools, that are not available on Alpine Linux, use the fpm
image instead.
View license information for the software contained in this image.
As with all Docker images, these likely also contain other software which may be under other licenses (such as Bash, etc from the base distribution, along with any direct or indirect dependencies of the primary software being contained).
Some additional license information which was able to be auto-detected might be found in the repo-info
repository's postfixadmin/
directory.
As for any pre-built image usage, it is the image user's responsibility to ensure that any use of this image complies with any relevant licenses for all software contained within.
Docker Official Images are a curated set of Docker open source and drop-in solution repositories.
These images have clear documentation, promote best practices, and are designed for the most common use cases.