doveadm-sync - Dovecot's two-way mailbox synchronization utility
doveadm-backup - Dovecot's one-way mailbox synchronization utility
doveadm [-Dv] sync [-u
user|-A|-F file] [-S socket_path]
[-1fPRU] [-l secs] [-r rawlog path]
[-m mailbox] [-g mailbox guid] [-n
namespace|-N] [-x exclude] [-a all
mailbox] [-s state] [-T secs] [-t
start date] [-e end date] [-O sync flag]
[-I max size] -d|destination
doveadm [-Dv] backup [-u
user|-A|-F file] [-S socket_path]
[-fPRU] [-l secs] [-r rawlog path]
[-m mailbox] [-g mailbox guid] [-n
namespace|-N] [-x exclude] [-a all
mailbox] [-s state] [-T secs] [-t
start date] [-e end date] [-O sync flag]
[-I max size] -d|destination
dsync is Dovecot's mailbox synchronization utility. It can be used
for several different use cases: Two-way synchronization of mailboxes,
creating backups of mails, and convert mailboxes from/to different mailbox
formats. All of these can be used within the same server or between
different servers (via ssh(1) or tcp connections). Remote mailboxes
can be accessed also via IMAP protocol, which allows using dsync for mailbox
migration purposes.
You can run dsync in one of three modes:
- doveadm backup performs one-way synchronization. If there are any
changes in the destination they will be deleted, so the destination will
look exactly like the source.
- doveadm sync performs two-way synchronization. It merges all
changes without losing anything. Both the mailboxes will end up looking
identical after the synchronization is finished.
- doveadm sync -1 performs one-way synchronization, but it merges the
changes in destination without deleting anything. This doesn't currently
work perfectly, so its use should be limited. Its main purpose is that
during mailbox migration you can run doveadm backup multiple times,
then switch mails to be delivered to the new mailbox and run doveadm
sync -1 once more to transfer any last new mails from the old
mailbox.
- The one-way algorithm is the same as two-way dsync algorithm except the
source account is not modified. It fetches the message's GUID (Global
UID), which is used to identify any conflicting UIDs in messages. As long
as the source and destination side has matching UID<->GUID mapping,
those emails are assumed to be synced correctly. Only after the first
mismatch will changes begin.
- Example: Source mailbox has messages UID 1..5; source mailbox is sync'd
using doveadm backup to the destination. Subsequently, UID 6 is
delivered to the source mailbox and UID 1 is expunged from the destination
mailbox. In this example, UID 1 is kept removed (in destination) because
UID 1..5 have identical Date+Message-ID headers. UID 6 is not seen in
destination so it's copied.
- If both source and destination have UID 6, but the messages are different,
the headers don't match and both the messages are kept in the destination
but they're given new UIDs 7 and 8 just to be sure any client didn't get
confused about what UID 6 actually was. Thus, one-way sync begins to
quickly diverge from the source mailbox once changes start to occur on
either side; one-way sync should therefore normally only be used within a
short period of time after a doveadm backup or doveadm sync
command was used to synchronize the mailboxes.
There are also three different synchronization algorithms:
- Full synchronization (-f parameter) scans through all the messages in all
the mailboxes. This guarantees that everything will be synchronized, but
it's unnecessarily slow for incremental synchronization.
- Fast synchronization (default) first attempts to find mailboxes that have
changed, and synchronize only those. This is done by checking the
mailboxes' metadata (NEXTUID and HIGHESTMODSEQ). Usually this works fine,
especially with one-way synchronization, but if both sides do exactly the
same number of changes, the metadata may end up containing the same values
even if the changes were different.
- Stateful synchronization (-s parameter) is the most efficient way to
synchronize mailboxes. It relies on having the earlier dsync run's state
saved somewhere and being passed to the next dsync run. Based on this
state dsync can send only the changes that happened after the previous
dsync run. As long as the state or the mailboxes aren't corrupted this
algorithm should work perfectly. The replicator process uses this
internally to perform most of the synchronization.
The syncing is done as perfectly as possible: an IMAP or a POP3
client shouldn't be able to notice any differences between the two
mailboxes. Two-way syncing means that it's safe to do any kind of
modifications in both sides, and dsync will merge the changes without losing
any changes done on either side. This is possible because dsync can access
Dovecot's index logs that keep track of changes. It's of course possible to
have conflicts during merging, these are resolved in a safe way. See the
dsync design document for more information.
dsync uses the same configuration files as the rest of Dovecot
(via doveconf(1) binary). The entire configuration can be changed by
giving -c parameter to another configuration file, or using -o parameter to
override specific settings. When executing a remote dsync program it works
the same way: it uses its own local configuration.
dsync can be run completely standalone. It doesn't require any
Dovecot server processes to be running, except when using -u parameter to do
a userdb lookup from auth process.
dsync can sync either one or multiple users using the -u or -A
parameters. For continuous replication you can use the Dovecot replicator
process, which automatically runs dsync whenever messages have changed.
Global doveadm(1) options:
- -D
- Enables verbosity and debug messages.
- -o setting=value
- Overrides the configuration setting from
/etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf and from the userdb with the given
value. In order to override multiple settings, the -o option
may be specified multiple times.
- -v
- Enables verbosity, including progress counter.
Command specific options:
- -A
- If the -A option is present, the command will be performed
for all users. Using this option in combination with system users from
userdb { driver = passwd } is not recommended, because it contains
also users with a lower UID than the one configured with the
first_valid_uid setting.
When the SQL userdb module is used make sure that the
iterate_query setting in /etc/dovecot/dovecot-sql.conf.ext
matches your database layout. When using the LDAP userdb module, make
sure that the iterate_attrs and iterate_filter settings in
/etc/dovecot/dovecot-ldap.conf.ext match your LDAP schema.
Otherwise doveadm(1) will be unable to iterate over all
users.
- -F file
- Execute the command for all the users in the file. This is
similar to the -A option, but instead of getting the list of users
from the userdb, they are read from the given file. The file
contains one username per line.
- -1
- Do one-way synchronization instead of two-way synchronization.
- -f
- Do full synchronization.
- -N
- Synchronize all the available namespaces. By default only namespaces that
don't have explicit location setting are synchronized.
- -P
- Run a doveadm-purge(1) for the destination (remote) storage after
synchronization.
- -R
- Do a reverse sync. Normally, messages would be pushed from the local
system to the destination (remote). This option reverses the flow, and
will instead pull messages from the remote to the local storage.
- -S socket_path
- The option's argument is either an absolute path to a local UNIX domain
socket, or a hostname and port (hostname:port), in order to
connect a remote host via a TCP socket.
This allows an administrator to execute doveadm(1) mail
commands through the given socket.
- -T secs
- Specify the time in seconds, how long doveadm(1) should wait for
stalled I/O operations. The default timeout is 600 seconds.
- -U
- This is used internally by replicator to have dsync notify it when the
synchronization is finished.
- -d
- Use the default destination, which is looked up from the mail_replica
userdb extra field.
- -g mailbox_guid
- Same as -m, but find the mailbox to be synchronized by its GUID instead of
by name.
- -l secs
- Lock the dsync for this user. Wait for maximum secs before giving
up. This parameter should be used to avoid broken synchronization if it's
possible that dsync is being run concurrently for the same user.
- -m mailbox
- Synchronize only this mailbox name.
- -n namespace
- Synchronize only the specified namespace. This parameter can be used
multiple times.
- -a all mailbox
- Name for the "All mails" virtual mailbox. If specified, mails
are attempted to be copied from this mailbox instead of being saved
separately. This may reduce the total disk space usage as well as disk
IO.
- -t start date
- Skip any mails whose received-timestamp is older than the specified
time.
- -e end date
- Skip any mails whose received-timestamp is newer than the specified
time.
- -O sync flag
- Sync only mails that have the specified flag. If the flag name begins with
"-", sync all mails except the ones with the specified
flag.
- -I max size
- Skip any mails larger than the specified size.
- -r rawlog_path
- Running dsync remotely, write the remote input/output traffic to the
specified log file.
- -s previous_state
- Use stateful synchronization. If the previous state is unknown, use an
empty string. The new state is always printed to standard output.
- -u user/mask
- Run the command only for the given user. It's also possible
to use '*' and '?' wildcards (e.g. -u *@example.org).
When neither the -A option, nor the -F file
option, nor the -u user was specified, the
command will be executed with the environment of the currently
logged in user.
- -x mailbox_mask
- Exclude the specified mailbox name/mask. The mask may contain
"?" and "*" wildcards. The mask can also
be a special-use name (e.g. \Trash). This parameter can be used multiple
times.
- destination
- This argument specifies the synchronized destination. It can be one
of:
- location
- Same as mail_location setting, e.g. maildir:~/Maildir
- remote:login@host
- Uses dsync_remote_cmd setting to connect to the remote host
(usually via ssh)
- remoteprefix:login@host
- This is the same as remote, except "user@domain\n" is sent
before dsync protocol starts. This allows implementing a trusted wrapper
script that runs doveadm dsync-server by reading the username from the
first line.
- tcp:host[:port]
- Connects to remote doveadm server via TCP. The default port is specified
by doveadm_port setting.
- tcps:host[:port]
- This is the same as tcp, but with SSL.
- command [arg1 [, arg2, ...]]
- Runs a local command that connects its standard input & output to a
dsync server.
dsync will exit with one of the following values:
- 0
- Synchronization was done perfectly.
- 2
- Synchronization was done without errors, but some changes couldn't be
done, so the mailboxes aren't perfectly synchronized. Running dsync again
usually fixes this. Typically this occurs for message modification
sequences with newly created mailboxes. It can also occur if one of the
mailboxes change during the syncing.
- 1, >2
- Synchronization failed.
Synchronize mailboxes with a remote server. Any errors are written
to stderr.
doveadm sync -u username@example.com remote:server-replica.example.com
If you need more complex parameters to ssh, you can use e.g.:
doveadm sync -u username@example.com ssh -i id_dsa.dovecot \
mailuser@example.com doveadm dsync-server -u username@example.com
Assuming that the mail_location setting in
/etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-mail.conf is set to: mail_location =
mdbox:~/mdbox, a logged in system user may convert her/his mails from
its Maildir in her/his home directory to the mdbox mailbox format. The user
has to execute the command:
doveadm sync maildir:~/Maildir
If you want to do this without any downtime, you can do the
conversion one user at a time. Initially:
- Configuration uses mail_location = maildir:~/Maildir
- Set up the possibility of doing per-user mail location using userdb
extra fields.
Then for each user:
- 1.
- Run doveadm sync once to do the initial conversion.
- 2.
- Run doveadm sync again, because the initial conversion could have
taken a while and new changes could have occurred during it. This second
time only applies changes, so it should be fast.
- 3.
- Update mail extra field in userdb to mdbox:~/mdbox. If you're using
auth cache, you need to flush it, e.g. doveadm auth cache
flush.
- 4.
- Wait for a few seconds and then kill (doveadm kick) the user's all
existing imap and pop3 sessions (that are still using maildir).
- 5.
- Run doveadm sync once more to apply final changes that were
possibly done. After this there should be no changes to Maildir, because
the user's mail location has been changed and all existing processes using
it have been killed.
Once all users have been converted, you can set the default
mail_location to mdbox and remove the per-user mail locations from
userdb.
Report bugs, including doveconf -n output, to the Dovecot
Mailing List <dovecot@dovecot.org>. Information about reporting bugs
is available at: http://dovecot.org/bugreport.html