canonical(5) - NetBSD Manual Pages

CANONICAL(5)                                                      CANONICAL(5)




NAME
canonical - format of Postfix canonical table
SYNOPSIS
postmap /etc/postfix/canonical postmap -q "string" /etc/postfix/canonical postmap -q - /etc/postfix/canonical <inputfile
DESCRIPTION
The optional canonical table specifies an address mapping for local and non-local addresses. The mapping is used by the cleanup(8) daemon. The address mapping is recursive. Normally, the canonical table is specified as a text file that serves as input to the postmap(1) command. The result, an indexed file in dbm or db format, is used for fast searching by the mail system. Execute the command postmap /etc/postfix/canonical in order to rebuild the indexed file after changing the text file. When the table is provided via other means such as NIS, LDAP or SQL, the same lookups are done as for ordinary indexed files. Alternatively, the table can be provided as a regular-expression map where patterns are given as regular expressions. In that case, the lookups are done in a slightly different way as described below. The canonical mapping affects both message header addresses (i.e. addresses that appear inside messages) and message envelope addresses (for example, the addresses that are used in SMTP protocol commands). Think Sendmail rule set S3, if you like. Typically, one would use the canonical table to replace login names by Firstname.Lastname, or to clean up addresses produced by legacy mail systems. The canonical mapping is not to be confused with virtual domain sup- port. Use the virtual(5) map for that purpose. The canonical mapping is not to be confused with local aliasing. Use the aliases(5) map for that purpose.
TABLE FORMAT
The input format for the postmap(1) command is as follows: pattern result When pattern matches a mail address, replace it by the corre- sponding result. blank lines and comments Empty lines and whitespace-only lines are ignored, as are lines whose first non-whitespace character is a `#'. multi-line text A logical line starts with non-whitespace text. A line that starts with whitespace continues a logical line. With lookups from indexed files such as DB or DBM, or from networked tables such as NIS, LDAP or SQL, patterns are tried in the order as listed below: user@domain address user@domain is replaced by address. This form has the highest precedence. This is useful to clean up addresses produced by legacy mail systems. It can also be used to produce Firstname.Lastname style addresses, but see below for a simpler solution. user address user@site is replaced by address when site is equal to $myori- gin, when site is listed in $mydestination, or when it is listed in $inet_interfaces. This form is useful for replacing login names by Firstname.Last- name. @domain address Every address in domain is replaced by address. This form has the lowest precedence. In all the above forms, when address has the form @otherdomain, the result is the same user in otherdomain.
ADDRESS EXTENSION
When a mail address localpart contains the optional recipient delimiter (e.g., user+foo@domain), the lookup order becomes: user+foo@domain, user@domain, user+foo, user, and @domain. An unmatched address exten- sion (+foo) is propagated to the result of table lookup.
REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
This section describes how the table lookups change when the table is given in the form of regular expressions. For a description of regular expression lookup table syntax, see regexp_table(5) or pcre_table(5). Each pattern is a regular expression that is applied to the entire address being looked up. Thus, user@domain mail addresses are not bro- ken up into their user and @domain constituent parts, nor is user+foo broken up into user and foo. Patterns are applied in the order as specified in the table, until a pattern is found that matches the search string. Results are the same as with indexed file lookups, with the additional feature that parenthesized substrings from the pattern can be interpo- lated as $1, $2 and so on.
BUGS
The table format does not understand quoting conventions.
CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
The following main.cf parameters are especially relevant to this topic. See the Postfix main.cf file for syntax details and for default values. Use the postfix reload command after a configuration change. canonical_maps List of canonical mapping tables. recipient_canonical_maps Address mapping lookup table for envelope and header recipient addresses. sender_canonical_maps Address mapping lookup table for envelope and header sender addresses. canonicalize_envelope_recipient By default (recipient address) canonicalization is applied even to the envelope recipient. To prevent delivery loops when using external canonical addresses, while still having recipient head- ers rewritten to the canonical addresses, set this to 'no'. Other parameters of interest: inet_interfaces The network interface addresses that this system receives mail on. You need to stop and start Postfix when this parameter changes. masquerade_classes List of address classes subject to masquerading: zero or more of envelope_sender, envelope_recipient, header_sender, header_recipient. masquerade_domains List of domains that hide their subdomain structure. masquerade_exceptions List of user names that are not subject to address masquerading. mydestination List of domains that this mail system considers local. myorigin The domain that is appended to locally-posted mail. owner_request_special Give special treatment to owner-xxx and xxx-request addresses.
SEE ALSO
cleanup(8) canonicalize and enqueue mail postmap(1) create mapping table virtual(5) virtual domain mapping pcre_table(5) format of PCRE tables regexp_table(5) format of POSIX regular expression tables
LICENSE
The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
AUTHOR(S)
Wietse Venema IBM T.J. Watson Research P.O. Box 704 Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA CANONICAL(5)

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