Provided by: postfix-ldap_3.8.1-2ubuntu0.2_amd64 bug

NAME

       ldap_table - Postfix LDAP client configuration

SYNOPSIS

       postmap -q "string" ldap:/etc/postfix/filename

       postmap -q - ldap:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile

DESCRIPTION

       The  Postfix mail system uses optional tables for address rewriting or mail routing. These
       tables are usually in dbm or db format.

       Alternatively, lookup tables can be specified as LDAP databases.

       In order to use LDAP lookups, define an LDAP source as a  lookup  table  in  main.cf,  for
       example:

           alias_maps = ldap:/etc/postfix/ldap-aliases.cf

       The file /etc/postfix/ldap-aliases.cf has the same format as the Postfix main.cf file, and
       can specify the parameters described below. An example is given at the end of this manual.

       This configuration method is available with  Postfix  version  2.1  and  later.   See  the
       section "OBSOLETE MAIN.CF PARAMETERS" below for older Postfix versions.

       For details about LDAP SSL and STARTTLS, see the section on SSL and STARTTLS below.

LIST MEMBERSHIP

       When  using  LDAP  to  store  lists  such  as $mynetworks, $mydestination, $relay_domains,
       $local_recipient_maps, etc., it is important to understand that the table must store  each
       list  member  as a separate key. The table lookup verifies the *existence* of the key. See
       "Postfix lists versus tables" in the DATABASE_README document for a discussion.

       Do NOT  create  tables  that  return  the  full  list  of  domains  in  $mydestination  or
       $relay_domains etc., or IP addresses in $mynetworks.

       DO  create  tables with each matching item as a key and with an arbitrary value. With LDAP
       databases it is not uncommon to return the key itself.

       For example, NEVER do this in a map defining $mydestination:

           query_filter = domain=*
           result_attribute = domain

       Do this instead:

           query_filter = domain=%s
           result_attribute = domain

GENERAL LDAP PARAMETERS

       In the text below, default values are given in parentheses.  Note:  don't  use  quotes  in
       these  variables; at least, not until the Postfix configuration routines understand how to
       deal with quoted strings.

       server_host (default: localhost)
              The name of the host running the LDAP server, e.g.

                  server_host = ldap.example.com

              Depending on the LDAP client library you're using, it should be possible to specify
              multiple  servers  here, with the library trying them in order should the first one
              fail. It should also be possible to give each server in the list a  different  port
              (overriding server_port below), by naming them like

                  server_host = ldap.example.com:1444

              With  OpenLDAP,  a  (list of) LDAP URLs can be used to specify both the hostname(s)
              and the port(s):

                  server_host = ldap://ldap.example.com:1444
                              ldap://ldap2.example.com:1444

              All LDAP URLs accepted by the OpenLDAP library are supported, including connections
              over  UNIX  domain  sockets,  and LDAP SSL (the last one provided that OpenLDAP was
              compiled with support for SSL):

                  server_host = ldapi://%2Fsome%2Fpath
                              ldaps://ldap.example.com:636

       server_port (default: 389)
              The port the LDAP server listens on, e.g.

                  server_port = 778

       timeout (default: 10 seconds)
              The number of seconds a search can take before timing out, e.g.

                  timeout = 5

       search_base (No default; you must configure this)
              The RFC2253 base DN at which to conduct the search, e.g.

                  search_base = dc=your, dc=com

              With Postfix 2.2 and later this parameter supports the following '%' expansions:

              %%     This is replaced by a literal '%' character.

              %s     This is replaced by the input key.  RFC 2253 quoting is used  to  make  sure
                     that the input key does not add unexpected metacharacters.

              %u     When  the input key is an address of the form user@domain, %u is replaced by
                     the (RFC 2253) quoted local part of the address.  Otherwise, %u is  replaced
                     by  the  entire  search  string.   If  the localpart is empty, the search is
                     suppressed and returns no results.

              %d     When the input key is an address of the form user@domain, %d is replaced  by
                     the  (RFC 2253) quoted domain part of the address.  Otherwise, the search is
                     suppressed and returns no results.

              %[SUD] For the search_base parameter,  the  upper-case  equivalents  of  the  above
                     expansions  behave  identically  to their lower-case counter-parts. With the
                     result_format parameter  (previously  called  result_filter  see  the  OTHER
                     OBSOLETE  FEATURES  section  and  below),  they  expand to the corresponding
                     components of input key rather than the result value.

              %[1-9] The patterns  %1,  %2,  ...  %9  are  replaced  by  the  corresponding  most
                     significant  component  of  the  input  key's  domain.  If  the input key is
                     user@mail.example.com, then %1 is com, %2 is example and %3 is mail. If  the
                     input  key  is  unqualified  or  does  not  have enough domain components to
                     satisfy all the specified patterns, the search is suppressed and returns  no
                     results.

       query_filter (default: mailacceptinggeneralid=%s)
              The  RFC2254  filter used to search the directory, where %s is a substitute for the
              address Postfix is trying to resolve, e.g.

                  query_filter = (&(mail=%s)(paid_up=true))

              This parameter supports the following '%' expansions:

              %%     This is replaced by a literal '%' character. (Postfix 2.2 and later).

              %s     This is replaced by the input key.  RFC 2254 quoting is used  to  make  sure
                     that the input key does not add unexpected metacharacters.

              %u     When  the input key is an address of the form user@domain, %u is replaced by
                     the (RFC 2254) quoted local part of the address.  Otherwise, %u is  replaced
                     by  the  entire  search  string.   If  the localpart is empty, the search is
                     suppressed and returns no results.

              %d     When the input key is an address of the form user@domain, %d is replaced  by
                     the  (RFC 2254) quoted domain part of the address.  Otherwise, the search is
                     suppressed and returns no results.

              %[SUD] The  upper-case  equivalents  of  the  above  expansions   behave   in   the
                     query_filter  parameter  identically to their lower-case counter-parts. With
                     the result_format parameter (previously called result_filter see  the  OTHER
                     OBSOLETE  FEATURES  section  and  below),  they  expand to the corresponding
                     components of input key rather than the result value.

                     The above %S, %U and %D expansions are available with Postfix 2.2 and later.

              %[1-9] The patterns  %1,  %2,  ...  %9  are  replaced  by  the  corresponding  most
                     significant  component  of  the  input  key's  domain.  If  the input key is
                     user@mail.example.com, then %1 is com, %2 is example and %3 is mail. If  the
                     input  key  is  unqualified  or  does  not  have enough domain components to
                     satisfy all the specified patterns, the search is suppressed and returns  no
                     results.

                     The above %1, ..., %9 expansions are available with Postfix 2.2 and later.

              The  "domain"  parameter  described  below  limits  the  input keys to addresses in
              matching domains. When the  "domain"  parameter  is  non-empty,  LDAP  queries  for
              unqualified  addresses  or  addresses  in  non-matching  domains are suppressed and
              return no results.

              NOTE: DO NOT put quotes around the query_filter parameter.

       result_format (default: %s)
              Called result_filter in Postfix releases prior to 2.2.  Format template applied  to
              result  attributes.  Most  commonly used to append (or prepend) text to the result.
              This parameter supports the following '%' expansions:

              %%     This is replaced by a literal '%' character. (Postfix 2.2 and later).

              %s     This is replaced by the value of the result attribute. When result is  empty
                     it is skipped.

              %u     When the result attribute value is an address of the form user@domain, %u is
                     replaced by the local part of the address. When  the  result  has  an  empty
                     localpart it is skipped.

              %d     When  a  result attribute value is an address of the form user@domain, %d is
                     replaced by the domain part of the  attribute  value.  When  the  result  is
                     unqualified it is skipped.

              %[SUD1-9]
                     The  upper-case  and  decimal  digit expansions interpolate the parts of the
                     input key rather than the  result.  Their  behavior  is  identical  to  that
                     described  with  query_filter, and in fact because the input key is known in
                     advance, lookups whose key does not contain all the information specified in
                     the result template are suppressed and return no results.

                     The  above  %S, %U, %D and %1, ..., %9 expansions are available with Postfix
                     2.2 and later.

              For example, using "result_format  =  smtp:[%s]"  allows  one  to  use  a  mailHost
              attribute  as  the basis of a transport(5) table. After applying the result format,
              multiple values are concatenated as comma separated  strings.  The  expansion_limit
              and  size_limit  parameters  explained  below  allow  one to restrict the number of
              values in the result, which is especially useful for  maps  that  should  return  a
              single value.

              The default value %s specifies that each attribute value should be used as is.

              This  parameter  was  called  result_filter in Postfix releases prior to 2.2. If no
              "result_format" is specified, the value of "result_filter"  will  be  used  instead
              before  resorting  to  the  default  value.  This  provides  compatibility with old
              configuration files.

              NOTE: DO NOT put quotes around the result format!

       domain (default: no domain list)
              This is a list of domain names, paths to files,  or  "type:table"  databases.  When
              specified,  only  fully  qualified  search  keys with a *non-empty* localpart and a
              matching domain are eligible for lookup: 'user' lookups, bare  domain  lookups  and
              "@domain"  lookups  are not performed. This can significantly reduce the query load
              on the LDAP server.

                  domain = postfix.org, hash:/etc/postfix/searchdomains

              It is best not to use LDAP to store the domains eligible for LDAP lookups.

              NOTE: DO NOT define this parameter for local(8) aliases.

              This feature is available in Postfix 1.0 and later.

       result_attribute (default: maildrop)
              The attribute(s) Postfix will read from  any  directory  entries  returned  by  the
              lookup, to be resolved to an email address.

                  result_attribute = mailbox, maildrop

              Don't  rely  on the default value ("maildrop"). Set the result_attribute explicitly
              in all ldap table configuration  files.  This  is  particularly  relevant  when  no
              result_attribute  is  applicable,  e.g. cases in which leaf_result_attribute and/or
              terminal_result_attribute are used  instead.  The  default  value  is  harmless  if
              "maildrop" is also listed as a leaf or terminal result attribute, but it is best to
              not leave this to chance.

       special_result_attribute (default: empty)
              The attribute(s) of directory entries that can contain DNs or RFC 2255  LDAP  URLs.
              If  found,  a recursive search is performed to retrieve the entry referenced by the
              DN, or the entries matched by the URL query.

                  special_result_attribute = memberdn

              DN recursion retrieves the same result_attributes as the main query, including  the
              special attributes for further recursion.

              URL  processing  retrieves  only those attributes that are included in both the URL
              definition and as result attributes (ordinary, special, leaf or  terminal)  in  the
              Postfix  table  definition.   If  the  URL  lists any of the table's special result
              attributes, these are retrieved and used recursively. A URL that does  not  specify
              any  attribute  selection,  is  equivalent  (RFC  2255)  to  a URL that selects all
              attributes, in which case the selected attributes will be the full  set  of  result
              attributes in the Postfix table.

              If  an LDAP URL attribute-descriptor or the corresponding Postfix LDAP table result
              attribute (but not both)  uses  RFC  2255  sub-type  options  ("attr;option"),  the
              attribute  requested  from the LDAP server will include the sub-type option. In all
              other cases, the  URL  attribute  and  the  table  attribute  must  match  exactly.
              Attributes  with  options  in both the URL and the Postfix table are requested only
              when the options are identical. LDAP attribute-descriptor options are  very  rarely
              used,  most  LDAP  users  will  not  need  to concern themselves with this level of
              nuanced detail.

       terminal_result_attribute (default: empty)
              When one or more terminal result attributes are found in an LDAP entry,  all  other
              result attributes are ignored and only the terminal result attributes are returned.
              This is useful for delegating expansion of group members to a particular  host,  by
              using  an  optional "maildrop" attribute on selected groups to route the group to a
              specific host, where the group is expanded, possibly via  mailing-list  manager  or
              other special processing.

                  result_attribute =
                  terminal_result_attribute = maildrop

              When using terminal and/or leaf result attributes, the result_attribute is best set
              to an empty value when it is not used, or else explicitly set to the desired value,
              even if it is the default value "maildrop".

              This feature is available with Postfix 2.4 or later.

       leaf_result_attribute (default: empty)
              When  one or more special result attributes are found in a non-terminal (see above)
              LDAP entry, leaf result attributes are excluded from the expansion of  that  entry.
              This  is  useful when expanding groups and the desired mail address attribute(s) of
              the member objects obtained via DN or URI recursion are also present in  the  group
              object.  To  only  return  the  attribute  values from the leaf objects and not the
              containing group, add the attribute to the leaf_result_attribute list, and not  the
              result_attribute  list,  which  is  always  expanded.  Note,  the  default value of
              "result_attribute" is not empty, you may want to set it explicitly empty when using
              "leaf_result_attribute"  to  expand  the group to a list of member DN addresses. If
              groups have both member DN references AND  attributes  that  hold  multiple  string
              valued  rfc822 addresses, then the string attributes go in "result_attribute".  The
              attributes that represent the email addresses of objects referenced via  a  DN  (or
              LDAP URI) go in "leaf_result_attribute".

                  result_attribute = memberaddr
                  special_result_attribute = memberdn
                  terminal_result_attribute = maildrop
                  leaf_result_attribute = mail

              When using terminal and/or leaf result attributes, the result_attribute is best set
              to an empty value when it is not used, or else explicitly set to the desired value,
              even if it is the default value "maildrop".

              This feature is available with Postfix 2.4 or later.

       scope (default: sub)
              The LDAP search scope: sub, base, or one.  These translate into LDAP_SCOPE_SUBTREE,
              LDAP_SCOPE_BASE, and LDAP_SCOPE_ONELEVEL.

       bind (default: yes)
              Whether or how to bind to the LDAP server. Newer LDAP implementations don't require
              clients to bind, which saves time. Example:

                  # Don't bind
                  bind = no
                  # Use SIMPLE bind
                  bind = yes
                  # Use SASL bind
                  bind = sasl

              Postfix  versions prior to 2.8 only support "bind = no" which means don't bind, and
              "bind = yes" which means do a SIMPLE bind.  Postfix 2.8  and  later  also  supports
              "bind  = SASL" when compiled with LDAP SASL support as described in LDAP_README, it
              also adds the synonyms "bind = none" and "bind = simple" for "bind = no" and  "bind
              = yes" respectively. See the SASL section below for additional parameters available
              with "bind = sasl".

              If you do need to bind, you might consider configuring Postfix to  connect  to  the
              local  machine  on  a  port  that's an SSL tunnel to your LDAP server. If your LDAP
              server doesn't natively support SSL, put a tunnel  (wrapper,  proxy,  whatever  you
              want  to  call  it)  on  that  system  too.  This  should prevent the password from
              traversing the network in the clear.

       bind_dn (default: empty)
              If you do have to bind, do it with this distinguished name. Example:

                  bind_dn = uid=postfix, dc=your, dc=com
              With "bind = sasl" (see above) the DN may be optional  for  some  SASL  mechanisms,
              don't specify a DN if not needed.

       bind_pw (default: empty)
              The  password  for  the  distinguished  name  above.  If  you have to use this, you
              probably want to make the map configuration file readable only by the Postfix user.
              When  using the obsolete ldap:ldapsource syntax, with map parameters in main.cf, it
              is not possible to securely store the bind password. This is because main.cf  needs
              to  be  world  readable  to  allow  local  accounts to submit mail via the sendmail
              command. Example:

                  bind_pw = postfixpw
              With "bind = sasl"  (see  above)  the  password  may  be  optional  for  some  SASL
              mechanisms, don't specify a password if not needed.

       cache (IGNORED with a warning)

       cache_expiry (IGNORED with a warning)

       cache_size (IGNORED with a warning)
              The  above  parameters  are NO LONGER SUPPORTED by Postfix.  Cache support has been
              dropped from OpenLDAP as of release 2.1.13.

       recursion_limit (default: 1000)
              A limit on the nesting depth of DN and URL special result attribute evaluation. The
              limit must be a non-zero positive number.

       expansion_limit (default: 0)
              A limit on the total number of result elements returned (as a comma separated list)
              by a lookup against the map.  A setting of zero disables the  limit.  Lookups  fail
              with  a  temporary  error if the limit is exceeded.  Setting the limit to 1 ensures
              that lookups do not return multiple values.

       size_limit (default: $expansion_limit)
              A limit on the number of LDAP entries returned by any single LDAP search  performed
              as  part of the lookup. A setting of 0 disables the limit.  Expansion of DN and URL
              references involves nested LDAP queries, each of which is separately  subjected  to
              this limit.

              Note:  even  a single LDAP entry can generate multiple lookup results, via multiple
              result attributes and/or multi-valued result attributes. This limit  caps  the  per
              search  resource  utilization on the LDAP server, not the final multiplicity of the
              lookup result. It is analogous to the "-z" option of "ldapsearch".

       dereference (default: 0)
              When to dereference LDAP aliases. (Note that  this  has  nothing  do  with  Postfix
              aliases.)   The   permitted  values  are  those  legal  for  the  OpenLDAP/UM  LDAP
              implementations:

              0      never

              1      when searching

              2      when locating the base object for the search

              3      always

              See ldap.h or the ldap_open(3) or ldapsearch(1) man pages for more information. And
              if  you're using an LDAP package that has other possible values, please bring it to
              the attention of the postfix-users@postfix.org mailing list.

       chase_referrals (default: 0)
              Sets (or clears) LDAP_OPT_REFERRALS (requires LDAP version 3 support).

       version (default: 3)
              Specifies the LDAP protocol version to use.

       debuglevel (default: 0)
              What level to set for debugging in the OpenLDAP libraries.

LDAP SASL PARAMETERS

       If you're using the OpenLDAP libraries compiled with SASL support, Postfix 2.8  and  later
       built  with LDAP SASL support as described in LDAP_README can authenticate to LDAP servers
       via SASL.

       This enables authentication to  the  LDAP  server  via  mechanisms  other  than  a  simple
       password.  The  added flexibility has a cost: it is no longer practical to set an explicit
       timeout on the duration of an LDAP bind operation. Under  adverse  conditions,  whether  a
       SASL  bind times out, or if it does, the duration of the timeout is determined by the LDAP
       and SASL libraries.

       It is best to use tables that use SASL binds via  proxymap(8),  this  way  the  requesting
       process  can  time-out  the  proxymap  request.  This  also  lets  you  tailer the process
       environment by overriding the  proxymap(8)  import_environment  setting  in  master.cf(5).
       Special  environment settings may be needed to configure GSSAPI credential caches or other
       SASL mechanism specific options. The GSSAPI credentials used for LDAP lookups may need  to
       be  different  than  say  those used for the Postfix SMTP client to authenticate to remote
       servers.

       Using SASL mechanisms requires LDAP protocol version 3, the default protocol version is  2
       for backwards compatibility. You must set "version = 3" in addition to "bind = sasl".

       The following parameters are relevant to using LDAP with SASL

       sasl_mechs (default: empty)
              Space separated list of SASL mechanism(s) to try.

       sasl_realm (default: empty)
              SASL Realm to use, if applicable.

       sasl_authz_id (default: empty)
              The SASL authorization identity to assert, if applicable.

       sasl_minssf (default: 0)
              The minimum required sasl security factor required to establish a connection.

LDAP SSL AND STARTTLS PARAMETERS

       If  you're  using the OpenLDAP libraries compiled with SSL support, Postfix can connect to
       LDAP SSL servers and can issue the STARTTLS command.

       LDAP SSL service can be requested by using a LDAP SSL URL in the server_host parameter:

           server_host = ldaps://ldap.example.com:636

       STARTTLS can be turned on with the start_tls parameter:

           start_tls = yes

       Both forms require LDAP protocol version 3, which has to be set explicitly with:

           version = 3

       If any of the Postfix programs  querying  the  map  is  configured  in  master.cf  to  run
       chrooted,  all the certificates and keys involved have to be copied to the chroot jail. Of
       course, the private keys should only be readable by the user "postfix".

       The following parameters are relevant to LDAP SSL and STARTTLS:

       start_tls (default: no)
              Whether or not to issue STARTTLS upon connection to the  server.   Don't  set  this
              with  LDAP  SSL  (the SSL session is setup automatically when the TCP connection is
              opened).

       tls_ca_cert_dir (No default; set either this or tls_ca_cert_file)
              Directory containing X509 Certification Authority certificates in PEM format  which
              are  to  be recognized by the client in SSL/TLS connections. The files each contain
              one CA certificate.  The files are looked up by the CA  subject  name  hash  value,
              which  must  hence be available. If more than one CA certificate with the same name
              hash value exist, the extension must  be  different  (e.g.  9d66eef0.0,  9d66eef0.1
              etc).  The  search is performed in the ordering of the extension number, regardless
              of other properties of the certificates. Use the c_rehash utility (from the OpenSSL
              distribution) to create the necessary links.

       tls_ca_cert_file (No default; set either this or tls_ca_cert_dir)
              File  containing  the X509 Certification Authority certificates in PEM format which
              are to be recognized by the client  in  SSL/TLS  connections.  This  setting  takes
              precedence over tls_ca_cert_dir.

       tls_cert (No default; you must set this)
              File  containing  client's  X509  certificate  to be used by the client in SSL/ TLS
              connections.

       tls_key (No default; you must set this)
              File containing the private key corresponding to the above tls_cert.

       tls_require_cert (default: no)
              Whether or not to request server's X509 certificate and  check  its  validity  when
              establishing SSL/TLS connections.  The supported values are no and yes.

              With no, the server certificate trust chain is not checked, but with OpenLDAP prior
              to 2.1.13, the name in the server certificate must  still  match  the  LDAP  server
              name.  With  OpenLDAP  2.0.0  to 2.0.11 the server name is not necessarily what you
              specified, rather it is determined (by reverse lookup) from the IP address  of  the
              LDAP  server  connection.  With  OpenLDAP  prior  to 2.0.13, subjectAlternativeName
              extensions in the LDAP server certificate are ignored: the server name  must  match
              the  subject  CommonName.  The  no  setting  corresponds  to  the  never  value  of
              TLS_REQCERT in LDAP client configuration files.

              Don't use TLS with OpenLDAP 2.0.x (and especially with x <= 11) if  you  can  avoid
              it.

              With  yes,  the  server  certificate  must  be  issued  by a trusted CA, and not be
              expired. The LDAP  server  name  must  match  one  of  the  name(s)  found  in  the
              certificate  (see  above  for OpenLDAP library version dependent behavior). The yes
              setting corresponds to the demand value of TLS_REQCERT in LDAP client configuration
              files.

              The  "try" and "allow" values of TLS_REQCERT have no equivalents here. They are not
              available with OpenLDAP 2.0, and in any case have questionable security properties.
              Either you want TLS verified LDAP connections, or you don't.

              The  yes  value  only  works correctly with Postfix 2.5 and later, or with OpenLDAP
              2.0. Earlier Postfix releases or later OpenLDAP releases don't work  together  with
              this  setting. Support for LDAP over TLS was added to Postfix based on the OpenLDAP
              2.0 API.

       tls_random_file (No default)
              Path of a file to obtain random bits from when /dev/[u]random is not available,  to
              be used by the client in SSL/TLS connections.

       tls_cipher_suite (No default)
              Cipher suite to use in SSL/TLS negotiations.

EXAMPLE

       Here's  a  basic  example  for  using  LDAP  to  look up local(8) aliases.  Assume that in
       main.cf, you have:

           alias_maps = hash:/etc/aliases,
                   ldap:/etc/postfix/ldap-aliases.cf

       and in ldap:/etc/postfix/ldap-aliases.cf you have:

           server_host = ldap.example.com
           search_base = dc=example, dc=com

       Upon receiving mail for a local address "ldapuser" that isn't found  in  the  /etc/aliases
       database,  Postfix  will search the LDAP server listening at port 389 on ldap.example.com.
       It will bind anonymously, search for any directory  entries  whose  mailacceptinggeneralid
       attribute  is  "ldapuser", read the "maildrop" attributes of those found, and build a list
       of their maildrops, which will be treated as RFC822 addresses to which the message will be
       delivered.

OBSOLETE MAIN.CF PARAMETERS

       For backwards compatibility with Postfix version 2.0 and earlier, LDAP parameters can also
       be defined in main.cf.  Specify as LDAP source a name that doesn't begin with a slash or a
       dot.   The  LDAP parameters will then be accessible as the name you've given the source in
       its definition, an underscore, and the name of the parameter.  For example, if the map  is
       specified  as  "ldap:ldapsource",  the  "server_host"  parameter below would be defined in
       main.cf as "ldapsource_server_host".

       Note: with this form, the passwords for the LDAP sources are written in main.cf, which  is
       normally  world-readable.   Support  for  this  form  will  be removed in a future Postfix
       version.

OTHER OBSOLETE FEATURES

       result_filter (No default)
              For backwards compatibility with the pre 2.2 LDAP clients,  result_filter  can  for
              now  be  used  instead of result_format, when the latter parameter is not also set.
              The new name better reflects the function  of  the  parameter.  This  compatibility
              interface may be removed in a future release.

SEE ALSO

       postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
       postconf(5), configuration parameters
       mysql_table(5), MySQL lookup tables
       pgsql_table(5), PostgreSQL lookup tables

README FILES

       Use "postconf readme_directory" or "postconf html_directory" to locate this information.
       DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
       LDAP_README, Postfix LDAP client guide

LICENSE

       The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.

AUTHOR(S)

       Carsten  Hoeger,  Hery  Rakotoarisoa,  John  Hensley, Keith Stevenson, LaMont Jones, Liviu
       Daia, Manuel Guesdon, Mike Mattice, Prabhat  K  Singh,  Sami  Haahtinen,  Samuel  Tardieu,
       Victor Duchovni, and many others.

                                                                                    LDAP_TABLE(5)