GSP
Quick Navigator

Search Site

Unix VPS
A - Starter
B - Basic
C - Preferred
D - Commercial
MPS - Dedicated
Previous VPSs
* Sign Up! *

Support
Contact Us
Online Help
Handbooks
Domain Status
Man Pages

FAQ
Virtual Servers
Pricing
Billing
Technical

Network
Facilities
Connectivity
Topology Map

Miscellaneous
Server Agreement
Year 2038
Credits
 

USA Flag

 

 

Man Pages
VIRTUAL(5) FreeBSD File Formats Manual VIRTUAL(5)

virtual - Postfix virtual alias table format

postmap /usr/local/etc/postfix/virtual
postmap -q "string" /usr/local/etc/postfix/virtual
postmap -q - /usr/local/etc/postfix/virtual <inputfile


The optional virtual(5) alias table rewrites recipient addresses for all local, all virtual, and all remote mail destinations. This is unlike the aliases(5) table which is used only for local(8) delivery. Virtual aliasing is recursive, and is implemented by the Postfix cleanup(8) daemon before mail is queued.

The main applications of virtual aliasing are:

  • To redirect mail for one address to one or more addresses.
  • To implement virtual alias domains where all addresses are aliased to addresses in other domains.

    Virtual alias domains are not to be confused with the virtual mailbox domains that are implemented with the Postfix virtual(8) mail delivery agent. With virtual mailbox domains, each recipient address can have its own mailbox.

Virtual aliasing is applied only to recipient envelope addresses, and does not affect message headers. Use canonical(5) mapping to rewrite header and envelope addresses in general.

Normally, the virtual(5) alias 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 /usr/local/etc/postfix/virtual" to rebuild an indexed file after changing the corresponding 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, or lookups can be directed to a TCP-based server. In those case, the lookups are done in a slightly different way as described below under "REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES" or "TCP-BASED TABLES".


The search string is folded to lowercase before database lookup. As of Postfix
  2.3, the search string is not case folded with database types such as regexp:
  or pcre: whose lookup fields can match both upper and lower case.


The input format for the postmap(1) command is as follows:
pattern address, address, ...
When pattern matches a mail address, replace it by the corresponding address.
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, each user@domain query produces a sequence
  of query patterns as described below.

Each query pattern is sent to each specified lookup table before trying the next query pattern, until a match is found.

user@domain address, address, ...
Redirect mail for user@domain to address. This form has the highest precedence.
user address, address, ...
Redirect mail for user@site to address when site is equal to $myorigin, when site is listed in $mydestination, or when it is listed in $inet_interfaces or $proxy_interfaces.

This functionality overlaps with the functionality of the local aliases(5) database. The difference is that virtual(5) mapping can be applied to non-local addresses.

@domain address, address, ...
Redirect mail for other users in domain to address. This form has the lowest precedence.

Note: @domain is a wild-card. With this form, the Postfix SMTP server accepts mail for any recipient in domain, regardless of whether that recipient exists. This may turn your mail system into a backscatter source: Postfix first accepts mail for non-existent recipients and then tries to return that mail as "undeliverable" to the often forged sender address.

To avoid backscatter with mail for a wild-card domain, replace the wild-card mapping with explicit 1:1 mappings, or add a reject_unverified_recipient restriction for that domain:

    smtpd_recipient_restrictions =
        ...
        reject_unauth_destination
        check_recipient_access
            inline:{example.com=reject_unverified_recipient}
    unverified_recipient_reject_code = 550
    

In the above example, Postfix may contact a remote server if the recipient is aliased to a remote address.


The lookup result is subject to address rewriting:
  • When the result has the form @otherdomain, the result becomes the same user in otherdomain. This works only for the first address in a multi-address lookup result.
  • When "append_at_myorigin=yes", append "@$myorigin" to addresses without "@domain".
  • When "append_dot_mydomain=yes", append ".$mydomain" to addresses without ".domain".


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.

The propagate_unmatched_extensions parameter controls whether an unmatched address extension (+foo) is propagated to the result of a table lookup.


Besides virtual aliases, the virtual alias table can also be used to implement
  virtual alias domains. With a virtual alias domain, all recipient addresses
  are aliased to addresses in other domains.

Virtual alias domains are not to be confused with the virtual mailbox domains that are implemented with the Postfix virtual(8) mail delivery agent. With virtual mailbox domains, each recipient address can have its own mailbox.

With a virtual alias domain, the virtual domain has its own user name space. Local (i.e. non-virtual) usernames are not visible in a virtual alias domain. In particular, local aliases(5) and local mailing lists are not visible as localname@virtual-alias.domain.

Support for a virtual alias domain looks like:

/usr/local/etc/postfix/main.cf:
    virtual_alias_maps = hash:$config_directory/virtual

Note: some systems use dbm databases instead of hash. See the output from "postconf -m" for available database types.

/usr/local/etc/postfix/virtual:
    virtual-alias.domain    anything (right-hand content does not matter)
    postmaster@virtual-alias.domain postmaster
    user1@virtual-alias.domain      address1
    user2@virtual-alias.domain      address2, address3

The virtual-alias.domain anything entry is required for a virtual alias domain. Without this entry, mail is rejected with "relay access denied", or bounces with "mail loops back to myself".

Do not specify virtual alias domain names in the main.cf mydestination or relay_domains configuration parameters.

With a virtual alias domain, the Postfix SMTP server accepts mail for known-user@virtual-alias.domain, and rejects mail for unknown-user@virtual-alias.domain as undeliverable.

Instead of specifying the virtual alias domain name via the virtual_alias_maps table, you may also specify it via the main.cf virtual_alias_domains configuration parameter. This latter parameter uses the same syntax as the main.cf mydestination configuration parameter.


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 broken 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 interpolated as $1, $2 and so on.


This section describes how the table lookups change when lookups are directed to
  a TCP-based server. For a description of the TCP client/server lookup
  protocol, see tcp_table(5). This feature is available in Postfix 2.5
  and later.

Each lookup operation uses the entire address once. Thus, user@domain mail addresses are not broken up into their user and @domain constituent parts, nor is user+foo broken up into user and foo.

Results are the same as with indexed file lookups.


The table format does not understand quoting conventions.


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.
virtual_alias_maps ($virtual_maps)
Optional lookup tables that alias specific mail addresses or domains to other local or remote addresses.
virtual_alias_domains ($virtual_alias_maps)
Postfix is the final destination for the specified list of virtual alias domains, that is, domains for which all addresses are aliased to addresses in other local or remote domains.
propagate_unmatched_extensions (canonical, virtual)
What address lookup tables copy an address extension from the lookup key to the lookup result.

Other parameters of interest:

inet_interfaces (all)
The network interface addresses that this mail system receives mail on.
mydestination ($myhostname, localhost.$mydomain, localhost)
The list of domains that are delivered via the $local_transport mail delivery transport.
myorigin ($myhostname)
The domain name that locally-posted mail appears to come from, and that locally posted mail is delivered to.
owner_request_special (yes)
Enable special treatment for owner-listname entries in the aliases(5) file, and don't split owner-listname and listname-request address localparts when the recipient_delimiter is set to "-".
proxy_interfaces (empty)
The network interface addresses that this mail system receives mail on by way of a proxy or network address translation unit.

cleanup(8), canonicalize and enqueue mail
postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
postconf(5), configuration parameters
canonical(5), canonical address mapping


Use "postconf readme_directory" or "postconf
  html_directory" to locate this information.
ADDRESS_REWRITING_README, address rewriting guide
DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
VIRTUAL_README, domain hosting guide


The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.

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

Search for    or go to Top of page |  Section 5 |  Main Index

Powered by GSP Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface.
Output converted with ManDoc.