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15
16<h1><img src="postfix-logo.jpg" width="203" height="98" ALT="">Postfix Standard Configuration Examples</h1>
17
18<hr>
19
20<h2>Purpose of this document</h2>
21
22<p> This document presents a number of typical Postfix configurations.
23This document should be reviewed after you have followed the basic
24configuration steps as described in the BASIC_CONFIGURATION_README
25document. In particular, do not proceed here if you don't already
26have Postfix working for local mail submission and for local mail
27delivery. </p>
28
29<p> The first part of this document presents standard configurations
30that each solve one specific problem. </p>
31
32<ul>
33
34<li><a href="#stand_alone">Postfix on a stand-alone Internet host</a>
35
36<li><a href="#null_client">Postfix on a null client</a>
37
38<li><a href="#local_network">Postfix on a local network</a>
39
40<li><a href="#firewall">Postfix email firewall/gateway</a>
41
42</ul>
43
44<p> The second part of this document presents additional configurations
45for hosts in specific environments. </p>
46
47<ul>
48
49<li><a href="#some_local">Delivering some but not all accounts locally</a>
50
51<li><a href="#intranet">Running Postfix behind a firewall</a>
52
53<li><a href="#backup">Configuring Postfix as primary or backup MX host for a remote
54site</a>
55
56<li><a href="#dialup">Postfix on a dialup machine</a>
57
58<li><a href="#fantasy">Postfix on hosts without a real
59Internet hostname</a>
60
61</ul>
62
63<h2><a name="stand_alone">Postfix on a stand-alone Internet host</a></h2>
64
65<p> Postfix should work out of the box without change on a stand-alone
66machine that has direct Internet access.  At least, that is how
67Postfix installs when you download the Postfix source code via
68http://www.postfix.org/. </p>
69
70<p> You can use the command "<b>postconf -n</b>" to find out what
71settings are overruled by your main.cf. Besides a few pathname
72settings, few parameters should be set on a stand-alone box, beyond
73what is covered in the BASIC_CONFIGURATION_README document: </p>
74
75<blockquote>
76<pre>
77/etc/postfix/main.cf:
78    # Optional: send mail as user@domainname instead of user@hostname.
79    #myorigin = $mydomain
80
81    # Optional: specify NAT/proxy external address.
82    #proxy_interfaces = 1.2.3.4
83
84    # Alternative 1: don't relay mail from other hosts.
85    mynetworks_style = host
86    relay_domains =
87
88    # Alternative 2: relay mail from local clients only.
89    # mynetworks = 192.168.1.0/28
90    # relay_domains =
91</pre>
92</blockquote>
93
94<p> See also the section "<a href="#fantasy">Postfix on hosts without
95a real Internet hostname</a>" if this is applicable to your configuration.
96</p>
97
98<h2><a name="null_client">Postfix on a null client</a></h2>
99
100<p> A null client is a machine that can only send mail. It receives no
101mail from the network, and it does not deliver any mail locally. A
102null client typically uses POP, IMAP or NFS for mailbox access. </p>
103
104<p> In this example we assume that the Internet domain name is
105"example.com" and that the machine is named "nullclient.example.com".
106As usual, the examples show only parameters that are not left at
107their default settings. </p>
108
109<blockquote>
110<pre>
1111 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
1122     myorigin = $mydomain
1133     relayhost = $mydomain
1144     inet_interfaces = loopback-only
1155     local_transport = error:local delivery is disabled
1166
1177 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
1188     Comment out the local delivery agent entry
119</pre>
120</blockquote>
121
122<p> Translation: </p>
123
124<ul>
125
126<li> <p> Line 2: Send mail as "user@example.com" (instead of
127"user@nullclient.example.com"), so that nothing ever has a reason
128to send mail to "user@nullclient.example.com". </p>
129
130<li> <p> Line 3: Forward all mail to the mail server that is
131responsible for the "example.com" domain. This prevents mail from
132getting stuck on the null client if it is turned off while some
133remote destination is unreachable. </p>
134
135<li> <p> Line 4: Do not accept mail from the network. </p>
136
137<li> <p> Lines 5-8: Disable local mail delivery. All mail goes to
138the mail server as specified in line 3.  </p>
139
140</ul>
141
142<h2><a name="local_network">Postfix on a local network</a></h2>
143
144<p> This section describes a local area network environment of one
145main server and multiple other systems that send and receive email.
146As usual we assume that the Internet domain name is "example.com".
147All systems are configured to send mail as "user@example.com", and
148all systems receive mail for "user@hostname.example.com".  The main
149server also receives mail for "user@example.com". We call this
150machine by the name of mailhost.example.com. </p>
151
152<p> A drawback of sending mail as "user@example.com" is that mail
153for "root" and other system accounts is also sent to the central
154mailhost. See the section "<a href="#some_local">Delivering some
155but not all accounts locally</a>" below for possible solutions.
156</p>
157
158<p> As usual, the examples show only parameters that are not left
159at their default settings. </p>
160
161<p> First we present the non-mailhost configuration, because it is
162the simpler one. This machine sends mail as "user@example.com" and
163is final destination for "user@hostname.example.com". </p>
164
165<blockquote>
166<pre>
1671 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
1682     myorigin = $mydomain
1693     mynetworks = 127.0.0.0/8 10.0.0.0/24
1704     relay_domains =
1715     # Optional: forward all non-local mail to mailhost
1726     #relayhost = $mydomain
173</pre>
174</blockquote>
175
176<p> Translation: </p>
177
178<ul>
179
180<li> <p> Line 2: Send mail as "user@example.com". </p>
181
182<li> <p> Line 3: Specify the trusted networks. </p>
183
184<li> <p> Line 4: This host does not relay mail from untrusted networks. </p>
185
186<li> <p> Line 6: This is needed if no direct Internet access is
187available.  See also below, "<a href="#firewall">Postfix behind
188a firewall</a>". </p>
189
190</ul>
191
192<p> Next we present the mailhost configuration.  This machine sends
193mail as "user@example.com" and is final destination for
194"user@hostname.example.com" as well as "user@example.com". </p>
195
196<blockquote>
197<pre>
198 1 DNS:
199 2     example.com    IN    MX  10 mailhost.example.com.
200 3
201 4 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
202 5     myorigin = $mydomain
203 6     mydestination = $myhostname localhost.$mydomain localhost $mydomain
204 7     mynetworks = 127.0.0.0/8 10.0.0.0/24
205 8     relay_domains =
206 9     # Optional: forward all non-local mail to firewall
20710     #relayhost = [firewall.example.com]
208</pre>
209</blockquote>
210
211<p> Translation: </p>
212
213<ul>
214
215<li> <p> Line 2: Send mail for the domain "example.com" to the
216machine mailhost.example.com.  Remember to specify the "." at the
217end of the line. </p>
218
219<li> <p> Line 5: Send mail as "user@example.com". </p>
220
221<li> <p> Line 6: This host is the final mail destination for the
222"example.com" domain, in addition to the names of the machine
223itself. </p>
224
225<li> <p> Line 7: Specify the trusted networks. </p>
226
227<li> <p> Line 8: This host does not relay mail from untrusted networks. </p>
228
229<li> <p> Line 10: This is needed only when the mailhost has to
230forward non-local mail via a mail server on a firewall.  The
231<tt>[]</tt> forces Postfix to do no MX record lookups. </p>
232
233</ul>
234
235<p> In an environment like this, users access their mailbox in one
236or more of the following ways:
237
238<ul>
239
240<li> <p> Mailbox access via NFS or equivalent.  </p>
241
242<li> <p> Mailbox access via POP or IMAP. </p>
243
244<li> <p> Mailbox on the user's preferred machine. </p>
245
246</ul>
247
248<p> In the latter case, each user has an alias on the mailhost that
249forwards mail to her preferred machine: </p>
250
251<blockquote>
252<pre>
253/etc/aliases:
254    joe:    joe@joes.preferred.machine
255    jane:   jane@janes.preferred.machine
256</pre>
257</blockquote>
258
259<p> On some systems the alias database is not in /etc/aliases.  To
260find out the location for your system, execute the command "<b>postconf
261alias_maps</b>". </p>
262
263<p> Execute the command "<b>newaliases</b>" whenever you change
264the aliases file.  </p>
265
266<h2><a name="firewall">Postfix email firewall/gateway</a></h2>
267
268<p> The idea is to set up a Postfix email firewall/gateway that
269forwards mail for "example.com" to an inside gateway machine but
270rejects mail for "anything.example.com". There is only one problem:
271with "relay_domains = example.com", the firewall normally also
272accepts mail for "anything.example.com".  That would not be right.
273</p>
274
275<p> Note: this example requires Postfix version 2.0 and later. To find
276out what Postfix version you have, execute the command "<b>postconf
277mail_version</b>". </p>
278
279<p> The solution is presented in multiple parts. This first part
280gets rid of local mail delivery on the firewall, making the firewall
281harder to break. </p>
282
283<blockquote>
284<pre>
2851 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
2862     myorigin = example.com
2873     mydestination =
2884     local_recipient_maps =
2895     local_transport = error:local mail delivery is disabled
2906
2917 /etc/postfix/master.cf:
2928     Comment out the local delivery agent
293</pre>
294</blockquote>
295
296<p> Translation: </p>
297
298<ul>
299
300<li> <p> Line 2: Send mail from this machine as "user@example.com",
301so that no reason exists to send mail to "user@firewall.example.com".
302</p>
303
304<li> <p> Lines 3-8: Disable local mail delivery on the firewall
305machine. </p>
306
307</ul>
308
309<p> For the sake of technical correctness the firewall must be able
310to receive mail for postmaster@[firewall ip address]. Reportedly,
311some things actually expect this ability to exist. The second part
312of the solution therefore adds support for postmaster@[firewall ip
313address], and as a bonus we do abuse@[firewall ip address] as well.
314All the mail to these two accounts is forwarded to an inside address.
315</p>
316
317<blockquote>
318<pre>
3191 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
3202     virtual_alias_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/virtual
3213
3224 /etc/postfix/virtual:
3235     postmaster      postmaster@example.com
3246     abuse           abuse@example.com
325</pre>
326</blockquote>
327
328<p> Translation: </p>
329
330<ul>
331
332<li> <p> Because mydestination is empty (see the previous example),
333only address literals matching $inet_interfaces or $proxy_interfaces
334are deemed local.  So "localpart@[a.d.d.r]" can be matched as simply
335"localpart" in canonical(5) and virtual(5). This avoids the need to
336specify firewall IP addresses into Postfix configuration files. </p>
337
338</ul>
339
340<p> The last part of the solution does the email forwarding, which
341is the real purpose of the firewall email function. </p>
342
343<blockquote>
344<pre>
345 1 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
346 2     mynetworks = 127.0.0.0/8 12.34.56.0/24
347 3     relay_domains = example.com
348 4     parent_domain_matches_subdomains =
349 5         debug_peer_list smtpd_access_maps
350 6     smtpd_recipient_restrictions =
351 7         permit_mynetworks reject_unauth_destination
352 8
353 9     relay_recipient_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/relay_recipients
35410     transport_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/transport
35511
35612 /etc/postfix/relay_recipients:
35713     user1@example.com   x
35814     user2@example.com   x
35915      . . .
36016
36117 /etc/postfix/transport:
36218     example.com   smtp:[inside-gateway.example.com]
363</pre>
364</blockquote>
365
366<p> Translation: </p>
367
368<ul>
369
370<li><p> Lines 1-7: Accept mail from local systems in $mynetworks,
371and accept mail from outside for "user@example.com" but not for
372"user@anything.example.com". The magic is in lines 4-5. </p>
373
374<li> <p> Lines 9, 12-14: Define the list of valid addresses in the
375"example.com" domain that can receive mail from the Internet. This
376prevents the mail queue from filling up with undeliverable
377MAILER-DAEMON messages. If you can't maintain a list of valid
378recipients then you must specify "relay_recipient_maps =" (that
379is, an empty value), or you must specify an "@example.com  x"
380wild-card in the relay_recipients table. </p>
381
382<li> <p> Lines 10, 17-18: Route mail for "example.com" to the inside
383gateway machine. The <tt>[]</tt> forces Postfix to do no MX lookup.
384</p>
385
386</ul>
387
388<p>Specify <b>dbm</b> instead of <b>hash</b> if your system uses
389<b>dbm</b> files instead of <b>db</b> files. To find out what lookup
390tables Postfix supports, use the command "<b>postconf -m</b>".  </p>
391
392<p> Execute the command "<b>postmap /etc/postfix/relay_recipients</b>"
393whenever you change the relay_recipients table. </p>
394
395<p> Execute the command "<b>postmap /etc/postfix/transport</b>"
396whenever you change the transport table. </p>
397
398<p> In some installations, there may be separate instances of Postfix
399processing inbound and outbound mail on a multi-homed firewall. The
400inbound Postfix instance has an SMTP server listening on the external
401firewall interface, and the outbound Postfix instance has an SMTP server
402listening on the internal interface. In such a configuration is it is
403tempting to configure $inet_interfaces in each instance with just the
404corresponding interface address. </p>
405
406<p> In most cases, using inet_interfaces in this way will not work,
407because as documented in the $inet_interfaces reference manual, the
408smtp(8) delivery agent will also use the specified interface address
409as the source address for outbound connections and will be unable to
410reach hosts on "the other side" of the firewall. The symptoms are that
411the firewall is unable to connect to hosts that are in fact up. See the
412inet_interfaces parameter documentation for suggested work-arounds.</p>
413
414<h2><a name="some_local">Delivering some but not all accounts
415locally</a></h2>
416
417<p> A drawback of sending mail as "user@example.com" (instead of
418"user@hostname.example.com") is that mail for "root" and other
419system accounts is also sent to the central mailhost.  In order to
420deliver such accounts locally, you can set up virtual aliases as
421follows:  </p>
422
423<blockquote>
424<pre>
4251 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
4262     virtual_alias_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/virtual
4273
4284 /etc/postfix/virtual:
4295     root     root@localhost
4306     . . .
431</pre>
432</blockquote>
433
434<p> Translation: </p>
435
436<ul>
437
438<li> <p> Line 5: As described in the virtual(5) manual page, the
439bare name "root" matches "root@site" when "site" is equal to
440$myorigin, when "site" is listed in $mydestination, or when it
441matches $inet_interfaces or $proxy_interfaces. </p>
442
443</ul>
444
445<h2><a name="intranet">Running Postfix behind a firewall</a></h2>
446
447<p> The simplest way to set up Postfix on a host behind a firewalled
448network is to send all mail to a gateway host, and to let that mail
449host take care of internal and external forwarding. Examples of that
450are shown in the <a href="#local_network">local area network</a>
451section above. A more sophisticated approach is to send only external
452mail to the gateway host, and to send intranet mail directly.
453That's what Wietse does at work.  </p>
454
455<p> Note: this example requires Postfix version 2.0 and later. To find
456out what Postfix version you have, execute the command "<b>postconf
457mail_version</b>". </p>
458
459<p> The following example presents additional configuration. You
460need to combine this with basic configuration information as
461discussed the first half of this document. </p>
462
463<blockquote>
464<pre>
465 1 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
466 2     transport_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/transport
467 3     relayhost =
468 4     # Optional for a machine that isn't "always on"
469 5     #fallback_relay = [gateway.example.com]
470 6
471 7 /etc/postfix/transport:
472 8     # Internal delivery.
473 9     example.com      :
47410     .example.com     :
47511     # External delivery.
47612     *                smtp:[gateway.example.com]
477</pre>
478</blockquote>
479
480<p> Translation: </p>
481
482<ul>
483
484<li> <p> Lines 2, 7-12: Request that intranet mail is delivered
485directly, and that external mail is given to a gateway. Obviously,
486this example assumes that the organization uses DNS MX records
487internally.  The <tt>[]</tt> forces Postfix to do no MX lookup.
488</p>
489
490<li> <p> Line 3: IMPORTANT: do not specify a relayhost in main.cf.
491</p>
492
493<li> <p> Line 5: This prevents mail from being stuck in the queue
494when the machine is turned off.  Postfix tries to deliver mail
495directly, and gives undeliverable mail to a gateway.  </p>
496
497</ul>
498
499<p> Specify <b>dbm</b> instead of <b>hash</b> if your system uses
500<b>dbm</b> files instead of <b>db</b> files. To find out what lookup
501tables Postfix supports, use the command "<b>postconf -m</b>". </p>
502
503<p> Execute the command "<b>postmap /etc/postfix/transport</b>" whenever
504you edit the transport table. </p>
505
506<h2><a name="backup">Configuring Postfix as primary or backup MX host for a remote site</a></h2>
507
508<p> This section presents additional configuration. You need to
509combine this with basic configuration information as discussed the
510first half of this document. </p>
511
512<p> When your system is SECONDARY MX host for a remote site this
513is all you need: </p>
514
515<blockquote>
516<pre>
517 1 DNS:
518 2     the.backed-up.domain.tld        IN      MX 100 your.machine.tld.
519 3
520 4 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
521 5     relay_domains = . . . the.backed-up.domain.tld
522 6     smtpd_recipient_restrictions =
523 7         permit_mynetworks reject_unauth_destination
524 8
525 9     # You must specify your NAT/proxy external address.
52610     #proxy_interfaces = 1.2.3.4
52711
52812     relay_recipient_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/relay_recipients
52913
53014 /etc/postfix/relay_recipients:
53115     user1@the.backed-up.domain.tld   x
53216     user2@the.backed-up.domain.tld   x
53317      . . .
534</pre>
535</blockquote>
536
537<p> When your system is PRIMARY MX host for a remote site you
538need the above, plus: </p>
539
540<blockquote>
541<pre>
54218 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
54319     transport_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/transport
54420
54521 /etc/postfix/transport:
54622     the.backed-up.domain.tld       relay:[their.mail.host.tld]
547</pre>
548</blockquote>
549
550<p> Important notes:
551
552<ul>
553
554<li><p>Do not list the.backed-up.domain.tld in mydestination.</p>
555
556<li><p>Do not list the.backed-up.domain.tld in virtual_alias_domains.</p>
557
558<li><p>Do not list the.backed-up.domain.tld in virtual_mailbox_domains.</p>
559
560<li> <p> Lines 1-7: Forward mail from the Internet for
561"the.backed-up.domain.tld" to the primary MX host for that domain.
562</p>
563
564<li> <p> Line 10: This is a must if Postfix receives mail via a
565NAT relay or proxy that presents a different IP address to the
566world than the local machine. </p>
567
568<li> <p> Lines 12-16: Define the list of valid addresses in the
569"the.backed-up.domain.tld" domain.  This prevents your mail queue
570from filling up with undeliverable MAILER-DAEMON messages. If you
571can't maintain a list of valid recipients then you must specify
572"relay_recipient_maps =" (that is, an empty value), or you must
573specify an "@the.backed-up.domain.tld  x" wild-card in the
574relay_recipients table. </p>
575
576<li> <p> Line 22: The <tt>[]</tt> forces Postfix to do no MX lookup. </p>
577
578</ul>
579
580<p> Specify <b>dbm</b> instead of <b>hash</b> if your system uses
581<b>dbm</b> files instead of <b>db</b> files. To find out what lookup
582tables Postfix supports, use the command "<b>postconf -m</b>". </p>
583
584<p> Execute the command "<b>postmap /etc/postfix/transport</b>"
585whenever you change the transport table. </p>
586
587<p> NOTE for Postfix &lt; 2.2: Do not use the fallback_relay feature
588when relaying mail
589for a backup or primary MX domain. Mail would loop between the
590Postfix MX host and the fallback_relay host when the final destination
591is unavailable. </p>
592
593<ul>
594
595<li> In main.cf specify "<tt>relay_transport = relay</tt>",
596
597<li> In master.cf specify "<tt>-o fallback_relay =</tt>" at the
598end of the <tt>relay</tt> entry.
599
600<li> In transport maps, specify "<tt>relay:<i>nexthop...</i></tt>"
601as the right-hand side for backup or primary MX domain entries.
602
603</ul>
604
605<p> These are default settings in Postfix version 2.2 and later.
606</p>
607
608<h2><a name="dialup">Postfix on a dialup machine</a></h2>
609
610<p> This section applies to dialup connections that are down most
611of the time. For dialup connections that are up 24x7, see the <a
612href="#local_network">local area network</a> section above.  </p>
613
614<p> This section presents additional configuration. You need to
615combine this with basic configuration information as discussed the
616first half of this document. </p>
617
618<p> If you do not have your own hostname and IP address (usually
619with dialup, cable TV or DSL connections) then you should also
620study the section on "<a href="#fantasy">Postfix on hosts without
621a real Internet hostname</a>".  </p>
622
623<ul>
624
625<li> Route all outgoing mail to your network provider.
626
627<p> If your machine is disconnected most of the time, there isn't
628a lot of opportunity for Postfix to deliver mail to hard-to-reach
629corners of the Internet. It's better to give the mail to a machine
630that is connected all the time. In the example below, the <tt>[]</tt>
631prevents Postfix from trying to look up DNS MX records.  </p>
632
633<pre>
634/etc/postfix/main.cf:
635    relayhost = [smtprelay.someprovider.com]
636</pre>
637
638<li> <p><a name="spontaneous_smtp">Disable spontaneous SMTP mail
639delivery (if using on-demand dialup IP only).</a> </p>
640
641<p> Normally, Postfix attempts to deliver outbound mail at its convenience.
642If your machine uses on-demand dialup IP, this causes your system
643to place a telephone call whenever you submit new mail, and whenever
644Postfix retries to deliver delayed mail. To prevent such telephone
645calls from being placed, disable spontaneous SMTP mail deliveries. </p>
646
647<pre>
648/etc/postfix/main.cf:
649    defer_transports = smtp (Only for on-demand dialup IP hosts)
650</pre>
651
652<li> <p>Disable SMTP client DNS lookups (dialup LAN only).</p>
653
654<pre>
655/etc/postfix/main.cf:
656    disable_dns_lookups = yes (Only for on-demand dialup IP hosts)
657</pre>
658
659<li> Flush the mail queue whenever the Internet link is established.
660
661<p> Put the following command into your PPP or SLIP dialup scripts: </p>
662
663<pre>
664/usr/sbin/sendmail -q (whenever the Internet link is up)
665</pre>
666
667<p> The exact location of the Postfix sendmail command is system-specific.
668Use the command "<b>postconf sendmail_path</b>" to find out where the
669Postfix sendmail command is located on your machine. </p>
670
671<p> In order to find out if the mail queue is flushed, use something
672like: </p>
673
674<pre>
675#!/bin/sh
676
677# Start mail deliveries.
678/usr/sbin/sendmail -q
679
680# Allow deliveries to start.
681sleep 10
682
683# Loop until all messages have been tried at least once.
684while mailq | grep '^[^ ]*\*' &gt;/dev/null
685do
686    sleep 10
687done
688</pre>
689
690<p> If you have disabled <a href="#spontaneous_smtp">spontaneous
691SMTP mail delivery</a>, you also need to run the "<b>sendmail -q</b>"
692command every now and then while the dialup link is up, so that
693newly-posted mail is flushed from the queue. </p>
694
695</ul>
696
697<h2><a name="fantasy">Postfix on hosts without a real Internet
698hostname</a></h2>
699
700<p> This section is for hosts that don't have their own Internet
701hostname.  Typically these are systems that get a dynamic IP address
702via DHCP or via dialup. Postfix will let you send and receive mail
703just fine between accounts on a machine with a fantasy name. However,
704you cannot use a fantasy hostname in your email address when sending
705mail into the Internet, because no-one would be able to reply to
706your mail. In fact, more and more sites refuse mail addresses with
707non-existent domain names. </p>
708
709<p> Note: the following information is Postfix version dependent.
710To find out what Postfix version you have, execute the command
711"<b>postconf mail_version</b>". </p>
712
713<h3>Solution 1: Postfix version 2.2 and later </h3>
714
715<p> Postfix 2.2 uses the generic(5) address mapping to replace
716local fantasy email addresses by valid Internet addresses.  This
717mapping happens ONLY when mail leaves the machine; not when you
718send mail between users on the same machine. </p>
719
720<p> The following example presents additional configuration. You
721need to combine this with basic configuration information as
722discussed the first half of this document. </p>
723
724<blockquote>
725<pre>
7261 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
7272     smtp_generic_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/generic
7283
7294 /etc/postfix/generic:
7305     his@localdomain.local             hisaccount@hisisp.example
7316     her@localdomain.local             heraccount@herisp.example
7327     @localdomain.local                hisaccount+local@hisisp.example
733</pre>
734</blockquote>
735
736<p> When mail is sent to a remote host via SMTP: </p>
737
738<ul>
739
740<li> <p> Line 5 replaces <i>his@localdomain.local</i> by his ISP
741mail address, </p>
742
743<li> <p> Line 6 replaces <i>her@localdomain.local</i> by her ISP
744mail address, and </p>
745
746<li> <p> Line 7 replaces other local addresses by his ISP account,
747with an address extension of +<i>local</i> (this example assumes
748that the ISP supports "+" style address extensions). </p>
749
750</ul>
751
752<p>Specify <b>dbm</b> instead of <b>hash</b> if your system uses
753<b>dbm</b> files instead of <b>db</b> files. To find out what lookup
754tables Postfix supports, use the command "<b>postconf -m</b>".  </p>
755
756<p> Execute the command "<b>postmap /etc/postfix/generic</b>"
757whenever you change the generic table. </p>
758
759<h3>Solution 2: Postfix version 2.1 and earlier </h3>
760
761<p> The solution with older Postfix systems is to use valid
762Internet addresses where possible, and to let Postfix map valid
763Internet addresses to local fantasy addresses. With this, you can
764send mail to the Internet and to local fantasy addresses, including
765mail to local fantasy addresses that don't have a valid Internet
766address of their own.</p>
767
768<p> The following example presents additional configuration. You
769need to combine this with basic configuration information as
770discussed the first half of this document. </p>
771
772<blockquote>
773<pre>
774 1 /etc/postfix/main.cf:
775 2     myhostname = hostname.localdomain
776 3     mydomain = localdomain
777 4
778 5     canonical_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/canonical
779 6
780 7     virtual_alias_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/virtual
781 8
782 9 /etc/postfix/canonical:
78310     your-login-name    your-account@your-isp.com
78411
78512 /etc/postfix/virtual:
78613     your-account@your-isp.com       your-login-name
787</pre>
788</blockquote>
789
790<p> Translation: </p>
791
792<ul>
793
794<li> <p> Lines 2-3: Substitute your fantasy hostname here. Do not
795use a domain name that is already in use by real organizations
796on the Internet. See RFC 2606 for examples of domain
797names that are guaranteed not to be owned by anyone. </p>
798
799<li> <p> Lines 5, 9, 10: This provides the mapping from
800"your-login-name@hostname.localdomain" to "your-account@your-isp.com".
801This part is required. </p>
802
803<li> <p> Lines 7, 12, 13: Deliver mail for "your-account@your-isp.com"
804locally, instead of sending it to the ISP. This part is not required
805but is convenient.
806
807</ul>
808
809<p>Specify <b>dbm</b> instead of <b>hash</b> if your system uses
810<b>dbm</b> files instead of <b>db</b> files. To find out what lookup
811tables Postfix supports, use the command "<b>postconf -m</b>".  </p>
812
813<p> Execute the command "<b>postmap /etc/postfix/canonical</b>"
814whenever you change the canonical table. </p>
815
816<p> Execute the command "<b>postmap /etc/postfix/virtual</b>"
817whenever you change the virtual table. </p>
818
819</body>
820
821</html>
822