The TLSRPT protocol is defined in RFC 8460. With this, an email receiving domain can publish a policy in DNS to request daily summary reports for successful and failed TLS connections to that domain. Support for TLSRPT was added in Postfix 3.10.
A policy example looks like this:
_smtp._tls.example.com. IN TXT "v=TLSRPTv1; rua=mailto:smtp-tls-report@example.com"
Translation: email sending systems are requested to generate daily summaries of successful and failed SMTP over TLS connections to domain example.com, and to report those summaries via email to the specified address. Instead of mailto:, a policy may specify an https: destination.
The high-level diagram shows how Postfix reports summaries to domains that publish a TLSRPT policy.
Postfix SMTP and
TLS client engines--> TLSRPT client library --> TLSRPT report generator --> Email or HTTP summary
When Postfix TLSRPT support is enabled (with "smtp_tlsrpt_enable = yes"), the Postfix SMTP and TLS clients engines will generate "success" and "failure" events, and will pass those events to a TLSRPT client library and report generator that are maintained by sys4. The Postfix implementation supports both DANE (Postfix built-in) and MTA-STS (through an smtp_tls_policy_maps plug-in).
The Postfix smtp(8) client process implements the SMTP client engine. With "smtp_tls_connection_reuse = no", the smtp(8) client process also implements the TLS client engine. With "smtp_tls_connection_reuse = yes", the smtp(8) client process delegates TLS processing to a Postfix tlsproxy(8) process. Either way, Postfix will generate the exact same TLSRPT events.
These instructions assume that you build Postfix from source code as described in the INSTALL document. Some modification may be required if you build Postfix from a vendor-specific source package.
The Postfix TLSRPT client builds on a TLSRPT client library whose source code can be obtained from:
The library is typically installed as a header file in /usr/local/include/tlsrpt.h and an object library in /usr/local/lib/libtlsrpt.a or /usr/local/lib/libtlsrpt.so. The actual pathnames will depend on OS platform conventions.
In order to build Postfix with TLSRPT support, you will need to add compiler options -DUSE_TLSRPT (to build with TLSRPT support), and -I (with the directory containing the tlsrpt.h header file), and you will need to add linker options to link with the TLSRPT client library, for example:
make -f Makefile.init makefiles \ "CCARGS=-DUSE_TLSRPT -I/usr/local/include" \ "AUXLIBS=-L/usr/local/lib -ltlsrpt"
Then, just run 'make'.
Note: if your build command line already has CCARGS or AUXLIBS options, then simply append the above options to the existing CCARGS or AUXLIBS values.
After installing Postfix TLSRPT support, you can enable TLSRPT support in main.cf like this:
smtp_tlsrpt_enable = yes smtp_tlsrpt_socket_name = /path/to/socket
The smtp_tlsrpt_socket_name parameter specifies an absolute pathname, or a pathname that is relative to $queue_directory.
Note: the socket location is still to be determined. A good socket location would be under $queue_directory, for example: (smtp_tlsrpt_socket_name = run/tlsrpt/tlsrpt.sock or smtp_tlsrpt_socket_name = var/run/tlsrpt/tlsrpt.sock). Such names will work with and without Postfix chroot support. Do not specify a location under a directory (private, public, ...) that is already used by Postfix programs. Only Postfix programs should create sockets there.
For obvious reasons, RFC 8460 suggests not to enforce strict TLS security when sending daily success/failure summaries via email. Postfix currently does not have a mechanism to request this when submitting an email message. For initial tests a transport map may take care of this.
/etc/postfix/main.cf: transport_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/transport   /etc/postfix/transport: /^\Qsts-reports@gmail.com\E$/ allow-plaintext /^\Qsmtp-tls-report@sys4.de\E$/ allow-plaintext ...   /etc/postfix/master.cf: allow-plaintext .. .. .. .. .. .. .. smtp -o smtp_tls_security_level=may -o smtp_tls_policy_maps=
The ^ and $ prevent false matches, and the \Q and \E disable special characters.
Postfix supports MTA-STS though an smtp_tls_policy_maps policy plugin. Postfix expects a response with the usual security level and matching requirements, plus any applicable name=value attributes described below. Specify { name = value } when a value may contain whitespace.
Note 1: Postfix 3.10 and later will accept these attributes in an MTA-STS response even if TLSRPT support is disabled (at build time or run time). With TLSRPT support turned off, Postfix will use the ttl and policy_failure attributes, and will ignore the attributes that are used only for TLSRPT.
Note 2: It is an error to specify these attributes for a non-STS policy.
The examples in the table apply to the MTA-STS policy example given in https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8460#section-4.5.
policy_type=type
Specify sts or no-policy-found.
policy_domain=name
The domain that the MTA-STS policy applies to.
policy_ttl=time
How long (in seconds) a Postfix SMTP client process will cache the MTA-STS plugin response.
{ policy_string = value }
Specify one policy_string instance for each MTA-STS policy feature, enclosed inside "{" and "}" to protect whitespace in attribute values.
Example:
{ policy_string = version: STSv1 } { policy_string = mode: testing } ...
This form ignores whitespace after the opening "{", around the "=", and before the closing "}".
mx_host_pattern=pattern
Specify one mx_host_pattern instance for each "mx:" feature in the MTA-STS policy.
Example:
mx_host_pattern=mx1.example.com mx_host_pattern=mx2.example.com ...
policy_failure=type
If specified, forces MTA-STS policy enforcement to fail with the indicated error, even if a server certificate would satisfy conventional PKI constraints.
Valid errors are sts-policy-fetch-error, sts-policy-invalid, sts-webpki-invalid, or the less informative validation-failure.
Example:
policy_failure=sts-webpki-invalid
The Postfix TLSRPT implementation reports at most one final TLS handshake status (either 'success' or 'failure') per connection. Postfix TLSRPT cannot report a failure and then later report a final status of 'success' for that same connection. The reason is that it's too complicated to filter TLS errors and to report error details from the TLS engine back to the SMTP protocol engine. It just is not how Postfix works internally.
The Postfix TLSRPT implementation reports only TLS handshake success or failure. It does not report failure to connect, or connections that break after a successful TLS handshake.