mailcow + Nginx Proxy Manager Certificate Sync
Documentation for the self-hosted mailcow mail server and the automated certificate pipeline that feeds it Let's Encrypt certs issued by Nginx Proxy Manager (NPM).
Table of Contents
- Overview
- Why this setup
- Hosts
- Architecture
- Components
- Verification
- Gotchas
- Outbound mail relay via SMTP2GO
- DNS records
- Monitoring
- Migration / rebuild notes
Overview
NPM is the single source of truth for the Let's Encrypt certificate covering
mail.wittenberger.us. mailcow consumes that certificate for all mail
protocols (SMTP, IMAP, POP3, ManageSieve) plus its web UI, instead of running
its own ACME client.
Because NPM and mailcow run on separate hosts, the certificate is
distributed via a two-host push → deploy chain over SSH, each side driven by
its own systemd timer.
Why this setup
- Centralizes all Let's Encrypt issuance/renewal in NPM (single place to manage and audit certs).
- mailcow's internal ACME is disabled (
SKIP_LETS_ENCRYPT=y), so there is no second ACME client competing for the same hostname. - The mail protocols and the web UI all present the same valid cert.
Hosts
| Role | Host | Address |
|---|---|---|
| Cert source (NPM) | NGX-Homepage | - |
| mailcow (consumer) | mailcow | 10.10.14.229 |
Architecture
[NGX-Homepage] [mailcow host]
NPM npm-5 cert /home/certsync/incoming/ (staging)
| |
| push-mailcow-cert.sh | deploy-staged-cert.sh
| (rsync -azL over SSH) ───────────────────►| validate → copy → reload
| |
└─ systemd: mailcow-cert-push.timer └─ systemd: mailcow-cert-deploy.timer
03:00 / 15:00 03:15 / 15:15
The deploy timer runs ~15 minutes after the push so the file is staged before deployment.
Components
1. Push script (NPM host)
Path: /root/push-mailcow-cert.sh on NGX-Homepage (runs as root)
- Source cert:
/etc/nginx/letsencrypt/live/npm-5/- NPM names its cert directories by internal ID (
npm-N), not by hostname. Identify the correct one by matching subject/SAN:for d in /etc/nginx/letsencrypt/live/npm-*; do echo "=== $d ===" openssl x509 -noout -subject -ext subjectAltName -in "$d/cert.pem" 2>/dev/null done
- NPM names its cert directories by internal ID (
- Compares the source cert's SHA-256 fingerprint against a local state file
(
/var/lib/mailcow-cert-push/last_fp) and pushes only when it changes. - Transfers
fullchain.pemandprivkey.pemwithrsync -azLto the mailcow staging dir.
-Lis required. Let's Encrypt'slive/directory contains symlinks intoarchive/. Without-L(--copy-links), rsync copies the symlinks, which dangle on the destination.-Lfollows them and copies the real files.
2. SSH transport
- Dedicated user
certsyncon the mailcow host; staging dir/home/certsync/incoming. - Dedicated ed25519 key
mailcow_certsync(private key on NPM host, public key incertsync'sauthorized_keys). - The
authorized_keysentry is restricted with a forced command andrestrictso the key can only perform the rsync receive - no shell:command="rsync --server -logDtpre.iLsfxCIvu . /home/certsync/incoming/",restrict ssh-ed25519 AAAA... mailcow-cert-push rsyncmust be installed on both hosts.
3. Deploy script (mailcow host)
Path: /opt/mailcow-dockerized/deploy-staged-cert.sh on mailcow (runs as root)
- Cert/key match check (algorithm-agnostic). Compares the public key derived
from the cert against the one derived from the key:
This works for RSA, ECDSA, and Ed25519. (A
openssl x509 -in fullchain.pem -noout -pubkey | openssl md5 openssl pkey -in privkey.pem -pubout | openssl md5-modulusbased check is RSA-only and fails on the ECDSA / EC-384 cert used here.) - Confirms the cert covers
mail.wittenberger.us. - SHA-256 change-detection - deploys and reloads only on change.
- Installs into
data/assets/ssl/cert.pem(0644) andkey.pem(0600). - Reloads
postfix-mailcow,dovecot-mailcow,nginx-mailcow.
4. mailcow configuration
In /opt/mailcow-dockerized/mailcow.conf:
| Setting | Value | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
SKIP_LETS_ENCRYPT |
y |
mailcow's internal ACME client disabled. |
ENABLE_SSL_SNI |
y |
Per-domain SNI certs (see gotcha below). |
mailcow's "bring your own certificate" mode reads
data/assets/ssl/cert.pem and data/assets/ssl/key.pem. Do not symlink -
the files must be real copies.
5. Scheduling (systemd timers)
| Host | Units | Schedule |
|---|---|---|
| NGX-Homepage | mailcow-cert-push.{service,timer} |
03:00 / 15:00 |
| mailcow | mailcow-cert-deploy.{service,timer} |
03:15 / 15:15 |
Both timers use Persistent=true so a host that was powered off catches up on
next boot.
Push timer (/etc/systemd/system/mailcow-cert-push.timer):
[Timer]
OnCalendar=*-*-* 03,15:00:00
Persistent=true
RandomizedDelaySec=300
Deploy timer (/etc/systemd/system/mailcow-cert-deploy.timer):
[Timer]
OnCalendar=*-*-* 03,15:15:00
Persistent=true
RandomizedDelaySec=180
Verification
# Timers: confirm active, last/next run
systemctl list-timers '*cert*' --no-pager
# Served cert ON THE WIRE - the real source of truth (not the file on disk)
openssl s_client -connect mail.wittenberger.us:993 -servername mail.wittenberger.us \
</dev/null 2>/dev/null | openssl x509 -noout -fingerprint -sha256 -enddate -subject
# Deployed file on the mailcow host
openssl x509 -noout -fingerprint -sha256 -enddate \
-in /opt/mailcow-dockerized/data/assets/ssl/cert.pem
# Source cert on NGX-Homepage
openssl x509 -noout -fingerprint -sha256 -enddate \
-in /etc/nginx/letsencrypt/live/npm-5/cert.pem
When healthy, all three SHA-256 fingerprints match.
Manual dry run (tests the exact path the timers use):
# NGX-Homepage
sudo systemctl start mailcow-cert-push.service
journalctl -u mailcow-cert-push.service --no-pager -n 20
# mailcow
sudo systemctl start mailcow-cert-deploy.service
journalctl -u mailcow-cert-deploy.service --no-pager -n 20
With an unchanged cert these report "nothing to do" - which confirms change-detection is working.
Gotchas
- Symlinks - use
rsync -azL; without-Lthe cert lands as a dangling symlink and the deploy reports "no staged cert." - ECDSA vs RSA - validate with public-key comparison, not
-modulus(modulus is RSA-only; the cert here is EC-384). - SNI subdir - with
ENABLE_SSL_SNI=y, mailcow may serve a per-domain cert fromdata/assets/ssl/mail.wittenberger.us/ahead of the top-levelcert.pem. Always verify the served cert withopenssl s_client, not just the file on disk. - Reload vs restart - container
reloadpicks up the new cert on the current version. If a future version doesn't, restart instead:docker compose restart postfix-mailcow dovecot-mailcow nginx-mailcow - Egress firewall - the mailcow host runs default-deny outbound; outbound SSH (port 22) to the relevant host must be explicitly allowed.
Outbound mail relay via SMTP2GO
This mailcow instance runs on residential internet, where outbound port 25 is typically blocked by the ISP and the IP has no PTR/rDNS control - both of which make direct MTA-to-MTA delivery unreliable. Outbound mail is therefore relayed through SMTP2GO, which provides a reputable sending IP with proper SPF, DKIM, and reverse DNS.
Relay parameters
| Setting | Value |
|---|---|
| Smarthost | mail.smtp2go.com |
| Port (in use) | 2525 (STARTTLS) |
| Alt ports | 25, 80, 587, 8025 (STARTTLS) / 465, 8465, 443 (implicit TLS) |
| Auth | Username + password (created in SMTP2GO UI) |
| Encryption | TLS (STARTTLS on 2525) |
Credentials are managed in the SMTP2GO dashboard under SMTP Users.
Configuration in mailcow
Configure the relay through the mailcow admin UI (do not hand-edit Postfix config inside the container - mailcow regenerates it):
- Log in to the mailcow web UI as admin.
- Navigate to Configuration → Routing → Sender-Dependent Transports (or Configuration → Configuration & Details → Routing → Transports, depending on the mailcow version).
- Add a transport:
- Host:
mail.smtp2go.com - Port:
2525 - Username: the SMTP2GO SMTP user (from the SMTP2GO dashboard)
- Password: the SMTP2GO SMTP user's password
- TLS: enabled (STARTTLS)
- Host:
- Either set the transport as the default for outbound mail, or assign it to specific sender domains via Sender-Dependent Transports.
mailcow stores these settings in its database and regenerates Postfix's
main.cf / transport / sasl_passwd automatically - no manual Postfix edits
required.
Firewall
The mailcow host runs default-deny outbound. Allow outbound 2525/tcp to SMTP2GO:
sudo ufw allow out 2525/tcp comment 'mailcow outbound SMTP delivery to SMTP2GO'
sudo ufw reload
Allowing outbound 25/465/587 in addition is reasonable so the relay parameters can be changed without revisiting the firewall.
Verification
Send a test message from a mailbox on this server to an external address (e.g. a Gmail account). Then:
- Check mailcow's logs to confirm the message was handed off to SMTP2GO:
Look for a
docker compose logs --tail=200 postfix-mailcow | grep -i smtp2gorelay=mail.smtp2go.com[...]:2525line and astatus=sent. - Check the recipient inbox. Examine the message headers - the
Received:chain should show SMTP2GO's infrastructure as the immediate upstream. - Confirm SPF/DKIM/DMARC pass in the receiving side's headers
(
Authentication-Results:). SMTP2GO supplies the sending IP's SPF; you must publish CNAME/TXT records as instructed in the SMTP2GO dashboard so that DKIM signs as your domain.
DNS records required for proper authentication
SMTP2GO will generate per-domain CNAME records (DKIM, return-path, tracking) to add to your authoritative DNS. After publishing them and verifying in the SMTP2GO dashboard, outbound mail relayed through SMTP2GO will pass SPF, DKIM, and DMARC at the recipient.
Note: the relay is independent of the cert-sync pipeline. mailcow's certificate (managed via the NPM sync described above) secures inbound connections from mail clients to this server. The SMTP2GO relay handles outbound delivery and uses SMTP2GO's own TLS certificate.
DNS records
Mail-relevant authoritative DNS records published for wittenberger.us (managed
in Cloudflare). Non-mail records (web services, other subdomains) are
intentionally out of scope here.
Mail delivery & host identity
| Type | Name | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| MX | wittenberger.us |
mail.wittenberger.us (pri 10) |
Single MX → this server. |
| PTR | 76.18.50.104.in-addr.arpa |
mail.wittenberger.us |
Reverse DNS for the mail host IP. |
| CNAME | autoconfig.wittenberger.us |
mail.wittenberger.us |
Thunderbird-style client autoconfig. |
| CNAME | autodiscover.wittenberger.us |
mail.wittenberger.us |
Outlook/Exchange-style autodiscover. |
| SRV | _autodiscover._tcp.wittenberger.us |
0 443 mail.wittenberger.us |
SRV-based autodiscover hint. |
Authentication - SPF / DKIM / DMARC
SPF (wittenberger.us TXT):
v=spf1 a mx a:mail.wittenberger.us -all
a/mx/a:mail.wittenberger.us- authorizes this mail server's own IP for direct outbound from the root domain.-all- hard fail for anything else claiming to bewittenberger.us.
No
include:for SMTP2GO is required here. Outbound mail relayed through SMTP2GO uses the branded return-pathem1378202.wittenberger.us(CNAME →return.smtp2go.net) as the envelope-from. SPF for relayed mail is therefore checked againstem1378202.wittenberger.us, which resolves via CNAME to SMTP2GO's SPF, which authorizes their sending IPs. Because the envelope is on a subdomain ofwittenberger.us, DMARC's relaxed alignment (aspf=r) accepts it. The root SPF stays tightly scoped, and the relay traffic passes via the branded subdomain - that is by design.
DKIM - two signing identities are in play:
| Selector | Record | Used by |
|---|---|---|
dkim |
dkim._domainkey (TXT, RSA pubkey inline) |
mailcow (signs at handoff, before relay) |
s1378202 |
s1378202._domainkey → CNAME dkim.smtp2go.net |
SMTP2GO (re-signs at delivery) |
dkim is the locally-managed mailcow DKIM key. The full public key value lives
in DNS - treat that as the source of truth, not this document.
s1378202 is SMTP2GO's per-account selector; the CNAME delegates DKIM lookups
to SMTP2GO's infrastructure so the relay can sign outbound mail with a key
aligned to wittenberger.us. Do not delete this CNAME - removing it breaks
DKIM-aligned signing through the relay and DMARC will fail (because of
p=reject).
A companion CNAME at em1378202.wittenberger.us → return.smtp2go.net provides
the branded return-path / bounce domain so envelope-from (MAIL FROM) for
relayed mail is on a subdomain of wittenberger.us, enabling SPF alignment for
relayed mail.
DMARC (_dmarc.wittenberger.us TXT):
v=DMARC1; p=reject; rua=mailto:6a8f859ff0524737b1db07b99ff7f30c@dmarc-reports.cloudflare.net,mailto:noreply-dmarc@wittenberger.us; ruf=mailto:noreply-dmarc@wittenberger.us; rf=afrf; sp=reject; fo=0; pct=100; ri=86400; adkim=r; aspf=r
p=reject/sp=reject- recipients should reject failing mail at the parent and all subdomains.adkim=r/aspf=r- relaxed alignment for both DKIM and SPF.rua/ruf- aggregate and forensic reports.
With
p=reject, any auth misalignment causes immediate rejection at strict receivers (Gmail, Microsoft). Audit DMARC aggregate reports periodically to catch silent breakage.
Inbound SMTP / DANE
| Type | Name | Value |
|---|---|---|
| TLSA | _25._tcp.mail.wittenberger.us |
3 1 1 6699fbd6da62e72ea001aeb33f526785e1bae0104c0c74f416ba7d3673284fe5 |
DANE TLSA record for inbound SMTP on port 25, pinning the certificate's public
key (3 = DANE-EE, 1 = SPKI, 1 = SHA-256 - i.e. SHA-256 of the
end-entity cert's public-key info).
Why this stays stable across renewals: the hash pins the public key, not the certificate itself. NPM's ACME client reuses the same keypair across renewals (only the cert's signature and validity dates change on each renewal), so the SPKI hash - and therefore the TLSA record - remains valid indefinitely.
To verify the published TLSA still matches the deployed cert:
openssl x509 -in /opt/mailcow-dockerized/data/assets/ssl/cert.pem \
-noout -pubkey | openssl pkey -pubin -outform DER | sha256sum
The hash output must match the third field of the published TLSA record. Worth spot-checking after major changes (cert pipeline modifications, NPM upgrades, manual cert reissue with a forced new key).
When TLSA would need updating
If the keypair ever changes - which would happen if NPM is reconfigured to generate a new key on renewal, the cert is manually reissued with a new CSR, or you migrate the cert pipeline - then TLSA must be rotated. The safe overlap pattern:
- Publish a new TLSA record (with the new SPKI hash) alongside the existing one.
- Wait at least the old record's TTL for DNS caches to see both.
- Deploy the new cert.
- Remove the old TLSA record only after delivery is observed against the new.
Never have zero matching TLSA records during a rotation - that's a hard delivery failure for DANE-validating senders.
Monitoring
The chain fails silently - a script erroring on a timer only logs to journald. Recommended safeguards:
- A Wazuh rule watching
mailcow-cert-deploy.servicefor non-zero exit /ERROR. - A periodic check that the served cert on
:993is not within N days of expiry, alerting if a renewal hasn't propagated.
Migration / rebuild notes
The cert-sync host-level components are part of host provisioning, not mailcow data:
certsyncuser + restricted SSH keydeploy-staged-cert.sh- both
systemdunits
These are not carried by mailcow backup/restore or cold-standby sync. If the mailcow host is rebuilt or replaced (including an IP-reuse cutover to a new VM), recreate these on the new host and confirm both timers are active before relying on automated renewal.