# Incoming email integration Zulip's incoming email gateway integration makes it possible to send messages into Zulip by sending an email. It's highly recommended because it enables: - When users reply to one of Zulip's message notification emails from their email client, the reply can go directly into Zulip. - Integrating third-party services that can send email notifications into Zulip. See the [integration documentation](https://zulip.com/integrations/doc/email) for details. Once this integration is configured, each channel will have a special email address displayed on the channel settings page. Emails sent to that address will be delivered into the channel. There are two ways to configure Zulip's email gateway: 1. Local delivery (recommended): A postfix server runs on the Zulip server and passes the emails directly to Zulip. 1. Polling: A cron job running on the Zulip server checks an IMAP inbox (`username@example.com`) every minute for new emails. The local delivery configuration is preferred for production because it supports nicer looking email addresses and has no cron delay. The polling option is convenient for testing/developing this feature because it doesn't require a public IP address, setting up MX records in DNS, or adjusting firewalls. :::{note} Incoming emails are rate-limited, with the following limits: - 50 emails per minute. - 120 emails per 5 minutes. - 600 emails per hour. ::: ## Local delivery setup Zulip's Puppet configuration provides everything needed to run this integration; you just need to enable and configure it as follows. The main decision you need to make is what email domain you want to use for the gateway; for this discussion we'll use `emaildomain.example.com`. The email addresses used by the gateway will look like `foo@emaildomain.example.com`, so we recommend using `EXTERNAL_HOST` here. We will use `hostname.example.com` as the hostname of the Zulip server (this will usually also be the same as `EXTERNAL_HOST`, unless you are using an [HTTP reverse proxy][reverse-proxy]). 1. Using your DNS provider, create a DNS MX (mail exchange) record configuring email for `emaildomain.example.com` to be processed by `hostname.example.com`. You can check your work using this command: ```console $ dig +short emaildomain.example.com -t MX 1 hostname.example.com ``` 1. If you have a network firewall enabled, configure it to allow incoming access to port 25 on the Zulip server from the public internet. Other mail servers will need to use it to deliver emails to Zulip. 1. Log in to your Zulip server; the remaining steps all happen there. 1. Add `, zulip::postfix_localmail` to `puppet_classes` in `/etc/zulip/zulip.conf`. A typical value after this change is: ```ini puppet_classes = zulip::profile::standalone, zulip::postfix_localmail ``` 1. If `hostname.example.com` is different from `emaildomain.example.com`, add a section to `/etc/zulip/zulip.conf` on your Zulip server like this: ```ini [postfix] mailname = emaildomain.example.com ``` This tells postfix to expect to receive emails at addresses ending with `@emaildomain.example.com`, overriding the default of `@hostname.example.com`. It will also identify itself as `emaildomain.example.com` on any outgoing emails it sends. 1. Run `/home/zulip/deployments/current/scripts/zulip-puppet-apply` (and answer `y`) to apply your new `/etc/zulip/zulip.conf` configuration to your Zulip server. 1. Edit `/etc/zulip/settings.py`, and set `EMAIL_GATEWAY_PATTERN` to `"%s@emaildomain.example.com"`. 1. Restart your Zulip server with `/home/zulip/deployments/current/scripts/restart-server`. Congratulations! The integration should be fully operational. [reverse-proxy]: reverse-proxies.md ## Polling setup 1. Create an email account dedicated to Zulip's email gateway messages. We assume the address is of the form `username@example.com`. The email provider needs to support the standard model of delivering emails sent to `username+stuff@example.com` to the `username@example.com` inbox. 1. Edit `/etc/zulip/settings.py`, and set `EMAIL_GATEWAY_PATTERN` to `"username+%s@example.com"`. 1. Set up IMAP for your email account and obtain the authentication details. ([Here's how it works with Gmail](https://support.google.com/mail/answer/7126229?hl=en)) 1. Configure IMAP access in the appropriate Zulip settings: - Login and server connection details in `/etc/zulip/settings.py` in the email gateway integration section (`EMAIL_GATEWAY_LOGIN` and others). - Password in `/etc/zulip/zulip-secrets.conf` as `email_gateway_password`. 1. Test your configuration by sending emails to the target email account and then running the Zulip tool to poll that inbox: ```bash su zulip -c '/home/zulip/deployments/current/manage.py email_mirror' ``` 1. Once everything is working, install the cron job which will poll the inbox every minute for new messages using the tool you tested in the last step: ```bash cd /home/zulip/deployments/current/ sudo cp puppet/zulip/files/cron.d/email-mirror /etc/cron.d/ ``` Congratulations! The integration should be fully operational.