Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Postfix: The Definitive Guide Foreword Preface
Audience Organization Conventions Used in This Book Comments and Questions Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
1.1. Postfix Origins and Philosophy 1.2. Email and the Internet
1.2.1. Email Components 1.2.2. Major Email Protocols
1.2.2.1. SMTP and email submission 1.2.2.2. POP/IMAP and mailbox access
1.3. The Role of Postfix 1.4. Postfix Security
1.4.1. Modular Design 1.4.2. Shells and Processes 1.4.3. Security by Design
1.5. Additional Information and How to Obtain Postfix
2. Prerequisites
2.1. Unix Topics
2.1.1. Login Names and UID Numbers 2.1.2. Pseudo-Accounts 2.1.3. Standard Input/Standard Output 2.1.4. The Superuser 2.1.5. Command Prompts 2.1.6. Long Lines 2.1.7. ManPages
2.2. Email Topics
2.2.1. RFCs 2.2.2. Email Agents 2.2.3. The Postmaster 2.2.4. Reject or Bounce 2.2.5. Envelope Addresses and Message Headers 2.2.6. Local Parts of Email Addresses 2.2.7. Email Message Format
2.2.7.1. RFC 2822 messages
2.2.8. The SMTP Protocol
3. Postfix Architecture
3.1. Postfix Components 3.2. How Messages Enter the Postfix System
3.2.1. Local Email Submission 3.2.2. Email from the Network 3.2.3. Postfix Email Notifications 3.2.4. Email Forwarding
3.3. The Postfix Queue 3.4. Mail Delivery
3.4.1. Local Delivery 3.4.2. Virtual Alias Messages 3.4.3. Virtual Mailbox Messages 3.4.4. Relay Messages 3.4.5. Other Messages 3.4.6. Other Delivery Agents
3.4.6.1. Delivery via LMTP 3.4.6.2. Pipe delivery
3.5. Tracing a Message Through Postfix
4. General Configuration and Administration
4.1. Starting Postfix the First Time 4.2. Configuration Files
4.2.1. The main.cf Configuration File
4.2.1.1. Line continuation 4.2.1.2. Configuration variables 4.2.1.3. Multiple values
4.2.2. Lookup Tables
4.2.2.1. Lookup table format 4.2.2.2. Database formats 4.2.2.3. Search order 4.2.2.4. Lookup tables and simple lists 4.2.2.5. Regular expression tables
4.2.3. Other Formats 4.2.4. Alias Files
4.2.4.1. Locating aliases 4.2.4.2. Building alias database files 4.2.4.3. Alias file format 4.2.4.4. Alias restrictions 4.2.4.5. Important aliases
4.3. Important Configuration Considerations
4.3.1. Configuring Your MTA Identity
4.3.1.1. myhostname and mydomain 4.3.1.2. myorigin 4.3.1.3. mydestination
4.3.2. Relay Control
4.3.2.1. Restricting relay access 4.3.2.2. SMTP authentication 4.3.2.3. Dynamic IP solutions 4.3.2.4. Certificate authentication
4.4. Administration
4.4.1. Logging 4.4.2. Starting, Stopping, and Reloading Postfix 4.4.3. Running Postfix at System Startup
4.4.3.1. Do it yourself
4.4.4. Queue Management
4.5. master.cf 4.6. Receiving Limits 4.7. Rewriting Addresses
4.7.1. Canonical Addresses 4.7.2. Masquerading Hostnames 4.7.3. Relocated Users 4.7.4. Unknown Users
4.8. chroot 4.9. Documentation
5. Queue Management
5.1. How qmgr Works
5.1.1. Deferred Mail 5.1.2. Queue Scheduling 5.1.3. Message Delivery 5.1.4. Corrupt Messages 5.1.5. Error Notifications
5.2. Queue Tools
5.2.1. Listing the Queue 5.2.2. Deleting Messages 5.2.3. Holding Messages 5.2.4. Requeuing Messages 5.2.5. Displaying Messages 5.2.6. Flushing Messages
6. Email and DNS
6.1. DNS Overview 6.2. Email Routing 6.3. Postfix and DNS
6.3.1. DNS and Sending Mail
6.3.1.1. Configuration options 6.3.1.2. Reverse PTR records
6.3.2. DNS and Receiving Mail
6.4. Common Problems
7. Local Delivery and POP/IMAP
7.1. Postfix Delivery Transports 7.2. Message Store Formats
7.2.1. The Mbox Format 7.2.2. The Maildir Format 7.2.3. Mbox Versus Maildir
7.3. Local Delivery
7.3.1. .forward Files 7.3.2. Alias Deliveries 7.3.3. Mailbox Delivery
7.4. POP and IMAP
7.4.1. POP Versus IMAP 7.4.2. Postfix and POP/IMAP Servers
7.5. Local Mail Transfer Protocol
7.5.1. Postfix and Cyrus IMAP 7.5.2. A Postfix and Cyrus IMAP Example
8. Hosting Multiple Domains
8.1. Shared Domains with System Accounts 8.2. Separate Domains with System Accounts 8.3. Separate Domains with Virtual Accounts
8.3.1. Mailbox File Ownership 8.3.2. Virtual Aliases 8.3.3. Catchall Addresses
8.3.3.1. Virtual mailbox catchall 8.3.3.2. Virtual alias catchall
8.4. Separate Message Store 8.5. Delivery to Commands
8.5.1. Configuring a Virtual Auto-Responder 8.5.2. Configuring a Virtual Mailing List Manager
9. Mail Relaying
9.1. Backup MX
9.1.1. Relay Recipients 9.1.2. Fast Flushing
9.2. Transport Maps
9.2.1. Postponing Mail Delivery
9.2.1.1. Deferring mail relay 9.2.1.2. Deferring delivery
9.3. Inbound Mail Gateway 9.4. Outbound Mail Relay 9.5. UUCP, Fax, and Other Deliveries
10. Mailing Lists
10.1. Simple Mailing Lists
10.1.1. Mailing-List Owners 10.1.2. Separate List Files 10.1.3. Additional Alias Files 10.1.4. Creating a Simple Mailing List 10.1.5. Testing Your List
10.2. Mailing-List Managers
10.2.1. Majordomo
10.2.1.1. Creating a Majordomo list 10.2.1.2. Potential problems
10.2.2. Mailman
10.2.2.1. Creating a Mailman list
11. Blocking Unsolicited Bulk Email
11.1. The Nature of Spam 11.2. The Problem of Spam 11.3. Open Relays 11.4. Spam Detection
11.4.1. Client-Based Spam Detection
11.4.1.1. DNS-based blacklists
11.4.2. Content-Based Spam Detection 11.4.3. Detection Difficulties
11.5. Anti-Spam Actions 11.6. Postfix Configuration 11.7. Client-Detection Rules
11.7.1. The SMTP Conversation (Briefly) 11.7.2. Listing Restrictions
11.7.2.1. How restrictions work 11.7.2.2. Testing new restrictions 11.7.2.3. A simple example
11.7.3. Restriction Definitions
11.7.3.1. Access maps 11.7.3.2. Other client-checking restrictions 11.7.3.3. Strict syntax restrictions 11.7.3.4. DNS restrictions 11.7.3.5. Real-time blacklists 11.7.3.6. Generic restrictions
11.7.4. Tracing a Restriction List
11.8. Strict Syntax Parameters 11.9. Content-Checking
11.9.1. Content Checking Configuration 11.9.2. Content Checking Actions 11.9.3. Comparing Patterns
11.10. Customized Restriction Classes
11.10.1. Sample Restriction Classes
11.11. Postfix Anti-Spam Example
12. SASL Authentication
12.1. SASL Overview
12.1.1. Choosing an Authentication Mechanism 12.1.2. Choosing an Authentication Framework
12.2. Postfix and SASL 12.3. Configuring Postfix for SASL
12.3.1. Specifying a Framework
12.3.1.1. Unix passwords 12.3.1.2. SASL passwords
12.3.2. Configuring Postfix
12.3.2.1. Enabling SASL 12.3.2.2. Preventing sender spoofing 12.3.2.3. Permitting authenticated users 12.3.2.4. Specifying mechanisms
12.3.3. Configuration Summary
12.4. Testing Your Authentication Configuration 12.5. SMTP Client Authentication
12.5.1. Procedure to Enable SMTP Client Authentication
13. Transport Layer Security
13.1. Postfix and TLS 13.2. TLS Certificates
13.2.1. Becoming a CA 13.2.2. Generating Server Certificates 13.2.3. Installing CA Certificates 13.2.4. Postfix/TLS Configuration 13.2.5. Postfix/TLS Configuration Summary 13.2.6. Requiring Client-Side Certificates
13.2.6.1. Creating client certificates 13.2.6.2. Configuring client-side certificate authentication
13.2.7. Configuring TLS/SMTP Client
14. Content Filtering
14.1. Command-Based Filtering
14.1.1. Configuration
14.2. Daemon-Based Filtering
14.2.1. Configuration
14.2.1.1. Creating a pseudoaccount 14.2.1.2. Installing a content filter 14.2.1.3. Configuring additional Postfix components 14.2.1.4. Turning on filtering
14.2.2. Daemon-Based Filter Example
14.3. Other Considerations
15. External Databases
15.1. MySQL
15.1.1. MySQL Configuration
15.1.1.1. MySQL parameters
15.1.2. MySQL Example
15.1.2.1. Configuring local_recipient_maps 15.1.2.2. Configuring alias_maps 15.1.2.3. Configuring virtual domains
15.2. LDAP
15.2.1. LDAP Configuration 15.2.2. LDAP Example
15.2.2.1. Configuring local_recipient_maps 15.2.2.2. Configuring transport_maps
A. Configuration Parameters
A.1. Postfix Parameter Reference
2bounce_notice_recipient access_map_reject_code alias_maps allow_mail_to_files allow_percent_hack alternate_config_directories append_at_myorigin authorized_verp_clients berkeley_db_read_buffer_size biff body_checks_size_limit bounce_service_name canonical_maps command_directory command_time_limit content_filter daemon_timeout debug_peer_list default_destination_concurrency_limit default_extra_recipient_limit default_process_limit default_recipient_limit default_verp_delimiters defer_service_name delay_notice_recipient deliver_lock_attempts disable_dns_lookups disable_mime_output_conversion disable_vrfy_command double_bounce_sender empty_address_recipient error_service_name export_environment fallback_relay fast_flush_domains fast_flush_refresh_time fork_attempts forward_expansion_filter hash_queue_depth header_address_token_limit header_size_limit home_mailbox ignore_mx_lookup_error in_flow_delay initial_destination_concurrency ipc_idle line_length_limit lmtp_connect_timeout lmtp_data_init_timeout lmtp_lhlo_timeout lmtp_quit_timeout lmtp_rset_timeout lmtp_tcp_port local_destination_concurrency_limit local_recipient_maps luser_relay mail_owner mail_spool_directory mailbox_command mailbox_delivery_lock mailbox_transport manpage_directory masquerade_domains max_idle maximal_backoff_time message_size_limit mime_header_checks minimal_backoff_time mydomain mynetworks myorigin newaliases_path notify_classes parent_domain_matches_subdomains pickup_service_name process_id_directory proxy_interfaces qmgr_clog_warn_time qmgr_message_active_limit qmgr_message_recipient_minimum qmqpd_error_delay queue_directory queue_run_delay rbl_reply_maps recipient_canonical_maps reject_code relay_domains_reject_code relay_transport relocated_maps resolve_dequoted_address sample_directory sendmail_path setgid_group showq_service_name smtp_bind_address smtp_data_done_timeout smtp_data_xfer_timeout smtp_destination_recipient_limit smtp_helo_timeout smtp_mail_timeout smtp_pix_workaround_delay_time smtp_quit_timeout smtp_rcpt_timeout smtp_skip_5xx_greeting smtpd_banner smtpd_data_restrictions smtpd_error_sleep_time smtpd_expansion_filter smtpd_helo_required smtpd_history_flush_threshold smtpd_noop_commands smtpd_recipient_limit smtpd_restriction_classes smtpd_soft_error_limit soft_bounce strict_7bit_headers strict_8bitmime_body strict_rfc821_envelopes swap_bangpath syslog_name transport_retry_time undisclosed_recipients_header unknown_client_reject_code unknown_local_recipient_reject_code unknown_virtual_alias_reject_code verp_delimiter_filter virtual_alias_maps virtual_mailbox_base virtual_mailbox_limit virtual_mailbox_maps virtual_transport
B. Postfix Commands C. Compiling and Installing Postfix
C.1. Obtaining Postfix C.2. Postfix Compiling Primer
C.2.1. Compiler Options C.2.2. Linker Options
C.3. Building Postfix
C.3.1. Customizing Your Build C.3.2. Modifying Postfix Defaults
C.4. Installation
C.4.1. Upgrading
C.5. Compiling Add-on Packages
C.5.1. Cyrus SASL C.5.2. TLS C.5.3. MySQL C.5.4. LDAP
C.6. Common Problems
C.6.1. Compile Time C.6.2. Runtime
C.7. Wrapping Things Up
D. Frequently Asked Questions Index About the Author Colophon Copyright
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion