When the following is true:

  • User attempts to create an account
  • Instance has “require registration application” enabled
  • Instance’s email is not working/unavailable

the application seems to get lost, the user never receives an email (even after email functionality is restored), nor can that email/username be used going forward to re-submit the account creation request.

Additionally, since the user never verifies their email, the instance admin never gets a registration application.

It’s not currently an issue for me, however, would it be possible to delete these ghost users? If you lookup the profile/username in the database, you can view it via the web UI, but the only options appear to be either blocking the user or banning them. It might be good to be able to completely delete the accounts, no?

  • jaxOPA
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    1 year ago

    Awesome, that’s super helpful, thank you!

    I guess I’ll also look into an SMTP relay. That could be useful I guess.

    • Freeman@lemmy.pub
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      1 year ago

      In my tshooting today, i dont think it will help. I think the error is hitting in the lemmy app container, and not getting passed to my postfix relay. So even if i say…setup postfix as a dedicated relay (which I have done plenty of), not sure it would help.

      I put more here: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy-ansible/issues/105

      I was actually testing email, when I stumbled on this. When i tried another account with the same address I got an error that the address already exists. Prompting me to go cleanup my DB and use something else to test email realy (forgotten passwords in my case).

      • tool@r.rosettast0ned.com
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        1 year ago

        It’s because the postfix docker container is not connected to a docker network that has access to the “lemmy” or “lemmy-ui” container, it’s being connected to the “default” docker network. I submitted a pull request for it here that should fix it.

        To make it work in the meantime:

        1. cd into the Lemmy install directory and run docker compose down

        2. Edit docker-compose.yml in the same directory, and in the postfix section, put this just below the postfix: line:

           networks:
             - lemmyinternal
             - lemmyexternalproxy
          
        3. Run docker compose up -d

        The indentation of that code is very important. Your postfix section should look like this when it’s done:

        postfix indentation

        That should connect the “postfix” container in to a docker network that can communicate with the “lemmy” and “lemmy” UI containers. There’s another bug in the default config that doesn’t assign a hostname to all the containers, but it doesn’t always manifest all the time. You can fix that by making sure each service has a hostname assigned to it, like hostname: lemmy, hostname: lemmy-ui, hostname: postfix etc in the respective service’s section of the service: section of the docker compose file.

        • Freeman@lemmy.pub
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          1 year ago

          yep that did the trick.

          Heres what I am now using for postfix. This will output logs to ./volumes/postfix/mail.log so its easily parsable as well. May be worth adding it to your PR.

          Docker at this depth is a bit new to me. Curious. Why does it need to be bound to the lemmyinternal and lemmyexternalproxy nets, and not just internal?

          • tool@r.rosettast0ned.com
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            1 year ago

            Docker at this depth is a bit new to me. Curious. Why does it need to be bound to the lemmyinternal and lemmyexternalproxy nets, and not just internal?

            Because the “lemmyinternal” network is set as an internal type network in the Docker compose file, which is exactly what it sounds like: internal-only. Postfix wouldn’t have a way to egress to the WAN if not connected to the “lemmyexternal” network, so the initial connection step to send the mail from the “lemmy” container would work, but postfix sending it would fail, as it doesn’t have a route out to the Internet.

            • Freeman@lemmy.pub
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              1 year ago

              Makes sense. Thanks for the quick explainer (and especially for the tip in the first place.

              Just getting logs in a format I’m used to out of docker had me on a bit of a tangent.

        • cowleggies@xcore.social
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          1 year ago

          I get an error that the network ‘lemmyinternal’ doesn’t exist when making this change in docker-compose.yml - anything I’m missing?

            • cowleggies@xcore.social
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              1 year ago

              Thanks! Somehow missed that in the original post - that worked but I am now seeing “email_not_sent” when trying to test forgot password, how can I get to the postfix log to see what the issue is?

      • jaxOPA
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        1 year ago

        My problem with email was a transient issue in resolving “smtp.sendgrid.net” inside my Kubernetes cluster.

        I think setting up a relay would resolve the issue for me, but I’m not sure.

        Saying that, I thought I had resolved the issue, but I didn’t get an email notification for your reply. I don’t think my SMTP issues are fixed lol.

        • Freeman@lemmy.pub
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          1 year ago

          I would bet if you set a /etc/hosts record for smtp.sendgrid.net that may help within the lemmy app container.

          Because Im not using a relay that may be a problem. Frankly i think the app just has a bug. I dont use email much so i just closed registration and called it a day for now. May continue troubleshooting.

          You CAN setup a relay though gmail with sasl but i would use a throwaway account if its a big instance.

          • jaxOPA
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            1 year ago

            I changed Kubernetes’ coredns config to forward *.sendgrid.net to 1.1.1.1 rather than my internal Pi-Hole servers, which did seem to help a bit.

            Haven’t tried since updating to 0.18.0, so it could be an internal issue as well.

      • jaxOPA
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        1 year ago

        I’m using Kubernetes, not docker compose, so this doesn’t exactly apply to my implementation.