POSTMAP
Section: User Commands (1)
Page Index
NAME
postmap
-
Postfix lookup table management
SYNOPSIS
postmap [
-bfFhimnNoprsuUvw] [
-c config_dir]
[
-d key] [
-q key]
[
file_type:]
file_name ...
DESCRIPTION
The
postmap(1) command creates or queries one or more Postfix
lookup tables, or updates an existing one.
If the result files do not exist they will be created with the
same group and other read permissions as their source file.
While the table update is in progress, signal delivery is
postponed, and an exclusive, advisory, lock is placed on the
entire table, in order to avoid surprises in spectator
processes.
INPUT FILE FORMAT
The format of a lookup table input file is as follows:
- •
-
A table entry has the form
key whitespace value
- •
-
Empty lines and whitespace-only lines are ignored, as
are lines whose first non-whitespace character is a `#'.
- •
-
A logical line starts with non-whitespace text. A line that
starts with whitespace continues a logical line.
The key and value are processed as is, except that
surrounding white space is stripped off. Whitespace in lookup
keys is supported as of Postfix 3.2.
When the -F option is given, the value must
specify one or more filenames separated by comma and/or
whitespace; postmap(1) will concatenate the file
content (with a newline character inserted between files)
and will store the base64-encoded result instead of the
value.
When the key specifies email address information, the
localpart should be enclosed with double quotes if required
by RFC 5322. For example, an address localpart that contains
";", or a localpart that starts or ends with ".".
By default the lookup key is mapped to lowercase to make
the lookups case insensitive; as of Postfix 2.3 this case
folding happens only with tables whose lookup keys are
fixed-case strings such as btree:, dbm: or hash:. With
earlier versions, the lookup key is folded even with tables
where a lookup field can match both upper and lower case
text, such as regexp: and pcre:. This resulted in loss of
information with $number substitutions.
COMMAND-LINE ARGUMENTS
- -b
-
Enable message body query mode. When reading lookup keys
from standard input with "-q -", process the input
as if it is an email message in RFC 5322 format. Each line
of body content becomes one lookup key.
By default, the -b option starts generating lookup
keys at the first non-header line, and stops when the end
of the message is reached.
To simulate body_checks(5) processing, enable MIME
parsing with -m. With this, the -b option
generates no body-style lookup keys for attachment MIME
headers and for attached message/* headers.
NOTE: with "smtputf8_enable = yes", the -b option
option disables UTF-8 syntax checks on query keys and
lookup results. Specify the -U option to force UTF-8
syntax checks anyway.
This feature is available in Postfix version 2.6 and later.
- -c config_dir
-
Read the main.cf configuration file in the named directory
instead of the default configuration directory.
- -d key
-
Search the specified maps for key and remove one entry per map.
The exit status is zero when the requested information was found.
If a key value of - is specified, the program reads key
values from the standard input stream. The exit status is zero
when at least one of the requested keys was found.
- -f
-
Do not fold the lookup key to lower case while creating or querying
a table.
With Postfix version 2.3 and later, this option has no
effect for regular expression tables. There, case folding
is controlled by appending a flag to a pattern.
- -F
-
When querying a map, or listing a map, base64-decode each
value. When creating a map from source file, process each
value as a list of filenames, concatenate the content of
those files, and store the base64-encoded result instead
of the value (see INPUT FORMAT for details).
- -h
-
Enable message header query mode. When reading lookup keys
from standard input with "-q -", process the input
as if it is an email message in RFC 5322 format. Each
logical header line becomes one lookup key. A multi-line
header becomes one lookup key with one or more embedded
newline characters.
By default, the -h option generates lookup keys until
the first non-header line is reached.
To simulate header_checks(5) processing, enable MIME
parsing with -m. With this, the -h option also
generates header-style lookup keys for attachment MIME
headers and for attached message/* headers.
NOTE: with "smtputf8_enable = yes", the -b option
option disables UTF-8 syntax checks on query keys and
lookup results. Specify the -U option to force UTF-8
syntax checks anyway.
This feature is available in Postfix version 2.6 and later.
- -i
-
Incremental mode. Read entries from standard input and do not
truncate an existing database. By default, postmap(1) creates
a new database from the entries in file_name.
- -m
-
Enable MIME parsing with "-b" and "-h".
This feature is available in Postfix version 2.6 and later.
- -N
-
Include the terminating null character that terminates lookup keys
and values. By default, postmap(1) does whatever is
the default for
the host operating system.
- -n
-
Don't include the terminating null character that terminates lookup
keys and values. By default, postmap(1) does whatever
is the default for
the host operating system.
- -o
-
Do not release root privileges when processing a non-root
input file. By default, postmap(1) drops root privileges
and runs as the source file owner instead.
- -p
-
Do not inherit the file access permissions from the input file
when creating a new file. Instead, create a new file with default
access permissions (mode 0644).
- -q key
-
Search the specified maps for key and write the first value
found to the standard output stream. The exit status is zero
when the requested information was found.
Note: this performs a single query with the key as specified,
and does not make iterative queries with substrings of the
key as described for access(5), canonical(5), transport(5),
virtual(5) and other Postfix table-driven features.
If a key value of - is specified, the program reads key
values from the standard input stream and writes one line of
key value output for each key that was found. The exit
status is zero when at least one of the requested keys was found.
- -r
-
When updating a table, do not complain about attempts to update
existing entries, and make those updates anyway.
- -s
-
Retrieve all database elements, and write one line of
key value output for each element. The elements are
printed in database order, which is not necessarily the same
as the original input order.
This feature is available in Postfix version 2.2 and later,
and is not available for all database types.
- -u
-
Disable UTF-8 support. UTF-8 support is enabled by default
when "smtputf8_enable = yes". It requires that keys and
values are valid UTF-8 strings.
- -U
-
With "smtputf8_enable = yes", force UTF-8 syntax checks
with the -b and -h options.
- -v
-
Enable verbose logging for debugging purposes. Multiple -v
options make the software increasingly verbose.
- -w
-
When updating a table, do not complain about attempts to update
existing entries, and ignore those attempts.
Arguments:
- file_type
-
The database type. To find out what types are supported, use
the "postconf -m" command.
The postmap(1) command can query any supported file type,
but it can create only the following file types:
-
- btree
-
The output file is a btree file, named file_name.db.
This is available on systems with support for db databases.
- cdb
-
The output consists of one file, named file_name.cdb.
This is available on systems with support for cdb databases.
- dbm
-
The output consists of two files, named file_name.pag and
file_name.dir.
This is available on systems with support for dbm databases.
- hash
-
The output file is a hashed file, named file_name.db.
This is available on systems with support for db databases.
- fail
-
A table that reliably fails all requests. The lookup table
name is used for logging only. This table exists to simplify
Postfix error tests.
- sdbm
-
The output consists of two files, named file_name.pag and
file_name.dir.
This is available on systems with support for sdbm databases.
When no file_type is specified, the software uses the database
type specified via the default_database_type configuration
parameter.
- file_name
-
The name of the lookup table source file when rebuilding a database.
DIAGNOSTICS
Problems are logged to the standard error stream and to
syslogd(8) or
postlogd(8).
No output means that no problems were detected. Duplicate entries are
skipped and are flagged with a warning.
postmap(1) terminates with zero exit status in case of success
(including successful "postmap -q" lookup) and terminates
with non-zero exit status in case of failure.
ENVIRONMENT
- MAIL_CONFIG
-
Directory with Postfix configuration files.
- MAIL_VERBOSE
-
Enable verbose logging for debugging purposes.
CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
The following
main.cf parameters are especially relevant to
this program.
The text below provides only a parameter summary. See
postconf(5) for more details including examples.
- berkeley_db_create_buffer_size (16777216)
-
The per-table I/O buffer size for programs that create Berkeley DB
hash or btree tables.
- berkeley_db_read_buffer_size (131072)
-
The per-table I/O buffer size for programs that read Berkeley DB
hash or btree tables.
- config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
-
The default location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf
configuration files.
- default_database_type (see 'postconf -d' output)
-
The default database type for use in newaliases(1), postalias(1)
and postmap(1) commands.
- import_environment (see 'postconf -d' output)
-
The list of environment parameters that a privileged Postfix
process will import from a non-Postfix parent process, or name=value
environment overrides.
- smtputf8_enable (yes)
-
Enable preliminary SMTPUTF8 support for the protocols described
in RFC 6531..6533.
- syslog_facility (mail)
-
The syslog facility of Postfix logging.
- syslog_name (see 'postconf -d' output)
-
A prefix that is prepended to the process name in syslog
records, so that, for example, "smtpd" becomes "prefix/smtpd".
SEE ALSO
postalias(1), create/update/query alias database
postconf(1), supported database types
postconf(5), configuration parameters
postlogd(8), Postfix logging
syslogd(8), system logging
README FILES
Use "
postconf readme_directory" or
"
postconf html_directory" to locate this information.
DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
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
Wietse Venema
Google, Inc.
111 8th Avenue
New York, NY 10011, USA