Courier Authentication Library The Courier Authentication Library is a required component that must be set up before installing other Courier packages: the Courier Mail Server or its components (Courier-IMAP, SqWebMail, or maildrop). The authentication library used to be included as a part of these packages, it is now a standalone library. Upgrading from older versions of Courier packages that used to include this authentication library internally should be as simple as: ./configure make make install make install-migrate make install-configure Requirements The Courier authentication library should not have any more requirements than the older Courier packages it used to be a part of. There may be an exception on some less-common platforms. They may require some additional stuff to be loaded before courier-authlib can be installed. This is because courier-authlib now uses libtool, which is a new requirement. Courier-authlib now uses shared libraries in the place of separate authdaemond binaries in the previous versions. Some less-common platforms may require additional software to be installed because of that, see INSTALL for more information. The pluses This new, self-sustaining Courier authentication library offers the following benefits: * Upgrading from Courier-IMAP or SqWebMail to the full Courier package does not require authentication re-configuration. * Consolidated documentation. Instructions for setting up MySQL, PostgreSQL, and the rest, are currently duplicated twice, making it a maintenance pain. Now, the documentation will be in one place, and can be easily improved, and overhauled. There will be an initial hump to ride over, to reconcile the minor differences in the authentication documentation in Courier, Courier-IMAP, and SqWebMail. Going forward, though, everything will be in one place. * The authentication API appears to be fairly stable and robust. It will not be necessary to update the courier-authlib package with every upgrade. Updates to courier-authlib are expected to be very infrequent. * There is a small minority of established systems that use the standalone SqWebMail and Courier-IMAP packages. The consolidated courier-authlib library will, as a bonus, provide an official way to use only one set of config files, in this configuration. The minuses I can only see one possible drawback. Only the daemonized configuration will now be possible. This new version of the Courier authentication library is, for all intents and purposes, the daemonized configuration of the previous authentication library. The non-daemonized version of the authentication library is no longer implemented. That code has been removed for the simple reason that it can no longer be implemented, as a standalone library. It's been clearly shown that the daemonized configuration is the more flexible configuration, and is the only way to go. The daemonized configuration was the default configuration for several years. I can only see the following minuses from losing the non-daemonized configuration. I believe the minuses are greatly outranked by the pluses. * There are some third party configuration libraries that only work in a non-daemonized configuration. I'm aware of one such library, vmailmgr. Unless it's been updated to work in daemonized mode, it will no longer work. * There are also some other third-party hacks that also only work in a non-daemonized configuration. There's at least one relay-after-imap or relay-after-pop hack for qmail, that only works in a daemonized configuration. I believe that relay-after-X hacks have been obsolete for several years now. Every mail client worth mentioning these days implemented authenticated SMTP, and the relay-after-X hacks need to go. Currently, there are also some borderline configurations possible in a non-daemonized configuration, such as using different authentication modules completely for imap and pop3, or different authentication modules for non-encrypted and encrypted connections. This will no longer be possible, but I doubt that there's any valid reason to use such an unusual setup. Testing The 'make install-migrate' command tries to import the authentication configuration from any existing installed Courier package. The configuration files for courier-authlib will end up in /usr/local/lib/courier-authlib/etc/authlib. The existing Courier packages don't really know how to use courier-authlib just yet. This will be the next step. However, after installing courier-authlib you should be able to do some rudimentary testing by running 'authdaemond start' (where authdaemond is what's in the /usr/local/lib/courier-authlib/sbin directory). The following commands should now work (make sure the authdaemond and authtest programs are the ones from /usr/local/lib/courier-authlib/sbin directory, and not any existing Courier directory): authtest userid authtest userid password authtest userid password newpassword authenumerate The first command displays the account's home directory, userid, groupid, and other related data. The second command verifies whether the password is valid, or not. The third command changes the password on the account (be careful with that). The goal is that everything should work automatically. In some cases, it might be necessary to modify the new authdaemonrc configuration file (unlike all othe configuration files, the install-migrate script won't copy the existing authdaemonrc, a new one will be installed). Manually edit it, and remove all authentication modules that are not needed, leaving only the actual ones that are used. Debugging To generate additional debugging messages, edit the authdaemond startup script (installed in /usr/local/bin by default), and add the following to the script: DEBUG_LOGIN=2 export DEBUG_LOGIN Debugging messages from the authentication daemon processes will be sent to the syslog facility, and recorded in whatever log file syslog is configured to use (usually /var/log/messages or /var/log/maillog).