Provided by: postfix_3.9.0-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       postconf - Postfix configuration parameters

SYNOPSIS

       postconf parameter ...

       postconf -e "parameter=value" ...

DESCRIPTION

       The  Postfix main.cf configuration file specifies parameters that control the operation of
       the Postfix mail  system.  Typically  the  file  contains  only  a  small  subset  of  all
       parameters; parameters not specified are left at their default values.

       The general format of the main.cf file is as follows:

       •      Each  logical  line has the form "parameter = value".  Whitespace around the "=" is
              ignored, as is whitespace at the end of a logical line.

       •      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.

       •      A parameter value may refer to other parameters.

              •      The expressions "$name" and "${name}"  are  recursively  replaced  with  the
                     value  of  the  named  parameter.  The  parameter  name  must  contain  only
                     characters from the  set  [a-zA-Z0-9_].  An  undefined  parameter  value  is
                     replaced with the empty value.

              •      The  expressions  "${name?value}"  and  "${name?{value}}"  are replaced with
                     "value" when "$name" is non-empty. The  parameter  name  must  contain  only
                     characters from the set [a-zA-Z0-9_]. These forms are supported with Postfix
                     versions >= 2.2 and >= 3.0, respectively.

              •      The expressions "${name:value}"  and  "${name:{value}}"  are  replaced  with
                     "value"  when  "$name"  is  empty.  The  parameter  name  must  contain only
                     characters from the set [a-zA-Z0-9_]. These forms are supported with Postfix
                     versions >= 2.2 and >= 3.0, respectively.

              •      The  expression  "${name?{value1}:{value2}}"  is replaced with "value1" when
                     "$name" is non-empty, and with "value2" when "$name" is empty.  The "{}"  is
                     required  for  "value1",  optional  for  "value2".  The  parameter name must
                     contain only characters from the set [a-zA-Z0-9_].  This form  is  supported
                     with Postfix versions >= 3.0.

              •      The  first  item inside "${...}" may be a relational expression of the form:
                     "{value3}  ==  {value4}".  Besides  the  "=="  (equality)  operator  Postfix
                     supports  "!="  (inequality),  "<",  "<=",  ">=", and ">". The comparison is
                     numerical when both operands are all digits,  otherwise  the  comparison  is
                     lexicographical. These forms are supported with Postfix versions >= 3.0.

              •      Each  "value"  is  subject  to  recursive  named  parameter  and  relational
                     expression evaluation, except where noted.

              •      Whitespace before or after each "{value}" is ignored.

              •      Specify "$$" to produce a single "$" character.

              •      The legacy form "$(...)" is equivalent to the preferred form "${...}".

       •      When the same parameter is defined  multiple  times,  only  the  last  instance  is
              remembered.

       •      Otherwise, the order of main.cf parameter definitions does not matter.

       The  remainder  of this document is a description of all Postfix configuration parameters.
       Default values are shown after the parameter name in parentheses, and  can  be  looked  up
       with the "postconf -d" command.

       Note:  this  is  not  an  invitation  to make changes to Postfix configuration parameters.
       Unnecessary changes can impair the operation of the mail system.

2bounce_notice_recipient (default: postmaster)

       The recipient of undeliverable mail that cannot be returned to the sender.   This  feature
       is enabled with the notify_classes parameter.

access_map_defer_code (default: 450)

       The  numerical  Postfix  SMTP  server  response  code for an access(5) map "defer" action,
       including "defer_if_permit" or "defer_if_reject". Prior to Postfix 2.6,  the  response  is
       hard-coded as "450".

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

access_map_reject_code (default: 554)

       The numerical Postfix SMTP server response code for an access(5) map "reject" action.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

address_verify_cache_cleanup_interval (default: 12h)

       The  amount  of  time  between  verify(8) address verification database cleanup runs. This
       feature requires that  the  database  supports  the  "delete"  and  "sequence"  operators.
       Specify a zero interval to disable database cleanup.

       After each database cleanup run, the verify(8) daemon logs the number of entries that were
       retained and dropped. A cleanup run is logged as  "partial"  when  the  daemon  terminates
       early after "postfix reload", "postfix stop", or no requests for $max_idle seconds.

       Specify  a  non-negative  time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is h (hours).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7.

address_verify_default_transport (default: $default_transport)

       Overrides the default_transport parameter setting for address verification probes.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_local_transport (default: $local_transport)

       Overrides the local_transport parameter setting for address verification probes.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_map (default: see postconf -d output)

       Lookup  table for persistent address verification status storage.  The table is maintained
       by the verify(8) service, and is opened before the process releases privileges.

       The lookup table is persistent by default (Postfix 2.7 and later).  Specify an empty table
       name  to  keep  the information in volatile memory which is lost after "postfix reload" or
       "postfix stop". This is the default with Postfix version 2.6 and earlier.

       Specify a location in a file system that  will  not  fill  up.  If  the  database  becomes
       corrupted,  the  world comes to an end. To recover, delete (NOT: truncate) the file and do
       "postfix reload".

       Postfix daemon processes do not use root privileges when opening this  file  (Postfix  2.5
       and later).  The file must therefore be stored under a Postfix-owned directory such as the
       data_directory.  As a migration aid, an attempt to  open  the  file  under  a  non-Postfix
       directory is redirected to the Postfix-owned data_directory, and a warning is logged.

       Examples:

       address_verify_map = hash:/var/lib/postfix/verify
       address_verify_map = btree:/var/lib/postfix/verify

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_negative_cache (default: yes)

       Enable  caching  of  failed  address  verification  probe  results.   When this feature is
       enabled, the cache may pollute quickly with  garbage.   When  this  feature  is  disabled,
       Postfix will generate an address probe for every lookup.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_negative_expire_time (default: 3d)

       The time after which a failed probe expires from the address verification cache.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is d (days).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_negative_refresh_time (default: 3h)

       The time after which a failed address verification probe needs to be refreshed.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is h (hours).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_pending_request_limit (default: see postconf -d output)

       A  safety  limit that prevents address verification requests from overwhelming the Postfix
       queue. By default, the number of pending requests is limited to 1/4 of  the  active  queue
       maximum  size  (qmgr_message_active_limit).  The  queue  manager  enforces  the  limit  by
       tempfailing requests that exceed the  limit.  This  affects  only  unknown  addresses  and
       inactive addresses that have expired, because the verify(8) daemon automatically refreshes
       an active address before it expires.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.1 and later.

address_verify_poll_count (default: normal: 3, overload: 1)

       How many  times  to  query  the  verify(8)  service  for  the  completion  of  an  address
       verification request in progress.

       By  default,  the  Postfix SMTP server polls the verify(8) service up to three times under
       non-overload conditions, and only once when under overload.  With Postfix version 2.5  and
       earlier, the SMTP server always polls the verify(8) service up to three times by default.

       Specify  1  to  implement  a  crude  form  of greylisting, that is, always defer the first
       delivery request for a new address.

       Examples:

       # Postfix <= 2.6 default
       address_verify_poll_count = 3
       # Poor man's greylisting
       address_verify_poll_count = 1

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_poll_delay (default: 3s)

       The delay between queries for  the  completion  of  an  address  verification  request  in
       progress.

       The default polling delay is 3 seconds.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_positive_expire_time (default: 31d)

       The time after which a successful probe expires from the address verification cache.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is d (days).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_positive_refresh_time (default: 7d)

       The  time  after which a successful address verification probe needs to be refreshed.  The
       address verification status is not updated when the probe fails (optimistic caching).

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is d (days).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_relay_transport (default: $relay_transport)

       Overrides the relay_transport parameter setting for address verification probes.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_relayhost (default: $relayhost)

       Overrides  the  relayhost  parameter  setting  for  address  verification   probes.   This
       information can be overruled with the transport(5) table.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_sender (default: $double_bounce_sender)

       The sender address to use in address verification probes; prior to Postfix 2.5 the default
       was "postmaster". To avoid problems with address probes  that  are  sent  in  response  to
       address  probes,  the Postfix SMTP server excludes the probe sender address from all SMTPD
       access blocks.

       Specify an empty value (address_verify_sender =) or <> if you want to use the null  sender
       address.  Beware,  some  sites  reject  mail  from  <>, even though RFCs require that such
       addresses be accepted.

       Examples:

       address_verify_sender = <>
       address_verify_sender = postmaster@mydomain

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_sender_dependent_default_transport_maps (default:

       $sender_dependent_default_transport_maps)
       Overrides   the  sender_dependent_default_transport_maps  parameter  setting  for  address
       verification probes.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.

address_verify_sender_dependent_relayhost_maps (default: $sender_dependent_relayhost_maps)

       Overrides the sender_dependent_relayhost_maps parameter setting for  address  verification
       probes.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

address_verify_sender_ttl (default: 0s)

       The  time  between  changes  in  the  time-dependent portion of address verification probe
       sender addresses. The time-dependent portion is appended to the localpart of  the  address
       specified with the address_verify_sender parameter. This feature is ignored when the probe
       sender addresses is the null sender, i.e. the address_verify_sender value is empty or <>.

       Historically, the probe sender address was fixed. This has caused such addresses to end up
       on spammer mailing lists, and has resulted in wasted network and processing resources.

       To  enable time-dependent probe sender addresses, specify a non-zero time value. Specify a
       value of at least several hours, to avoid problems  with  senders  that  use  greylisting.
       Avoid nice TTL values, to make the result less predictable.

       Specify  a  non-negative  time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.9 and later.

address_verify_service_name (default: verify)

       The  name of the verify(8) address verification service. This service maintains the status
       of sender and/or recipient address verification probes, and generates probes on request by
       other Postfix processes.

address_verify_transport_maps (default: $transport_maps)

       Overrides the transport_maps parameter setting for address verification probes.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

address_verify_virtual_transport (default: $virtual_transport)

       Overrides the virtual_transport parameter setting for address verification probes.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

alias_database (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  alias  databases  for  local(8)  delivery  that are updated with "newaliases" or with
       "sendmail -bi".

       This is a separate configuration parameter because  not  all  the  tables  specified  with
       $alias_maps have to be local files.

       Examples:

       alias_database = hash:/etc/aliases
       alias_database = hash:/etc/mail/aliases

alias_maps (default: see postconf -d output)

       Optional lookup tables with aliases that apply only to local(8) recipients; this is unlike
       virtual_alias_maps that apply to all recipients: local(8), virtual, and remote.  The table
       format  and  lookups  are  documented  in  aliases(5).  For an overview of Postfix address
       manipulations see the ADDRESS_REWRITING_README document.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will  be  searched in the specified order until a match is found.  Note: these lookups are
       recursive.

       The default list is system dependent.  On systems with NIS, the default is to  search  the
       local alias database, then the NIS alias database.

       If  you  change  the alias database, run "postalias /etc/aliases" (or wherever your system
       stores the mail alias file), or simply run "newaliases" to build the necessary DBM  or  DB
       file.

       The  local(8)  delivery  agent  disallows  regular  expression  substitution of $1 etc. in
       alias_maps, because that would open a security hole.

       The local(8) delivery agent will silently ignore requests to use  the  proxymap(8)  server
       within  alias_maps.  Instead  it will open the table directly. Before Postfix version 2.2,
       the local(8) delivery agent will terminate with a fatal error.

       Examples:

       alias_maps = hash:/etc/aliases, nis:mail.aliases
       alias_maps = hash:/etc/aliases

allow_mail_to_commands (default: alias, forward)

       Restrict local(8) mail delivery to external commands.  The default is to disallow delivery
       to  "|command"  in  :include:   files  (see  aliases(5)  for  the  text  that defines this
       terminology).

       Specify zero or more of: alias,  forward  or  include,  in  order  to  allow  commands  in
       aliases(5), .forward files or in :include:  files, respectively.

       Example:

       allow_mail_to_commands = alias,forward,include

allow_mail_to_files (default: alias, forward)

       Restrict local(8) mail delivery to external files. The default is to disallow "/file/name"
       destinations  in  :include:   files  (see  aliases(5)  for  the  text  that  defines  this
       terminology).

       Specify  zero  or  more  of:  alias,  forward  or  include, in order to allow "/file/name"
       destinations in aliases(5), .forward files and in :include:  files, respectively.

       Example:

       allow_mail_to_files = alias,forward,include

allow_min_user (default: no)

       Allow a sender or recipient address to have `-' as the first character.  By default,  this
       is  not  allowed,  to  avoid  accidents  with software that passes email addresses via the
       command line. Such software would not be able to distinguish a malicious  address  from  a
       bona  fide  command-line option. Although this can be prevented by inserting a "--" option
       terminator into the command line, this is difficult to enforce consistently and globally.

       As of Postfix version 2.5,  this  feature  is  implemented  by  trivial-rewrite(8).   With
       earlier  versions  this  feature  was  implemented by qmgr(8) and was limited to recipient
       addresses only.

allow_percent_hack (default: yes)

       Enable the rewriting of the form "user%domain"  to  "user@domain".   This  is  enabled  by
       default.

       Note: as of Postfix version 2.2, message header address rewriting happens only when one of
       the following conditions is true:

       •      The message is received with the Postfix sendmail(1) command,

       •      The   message   is    received    from    a    network    client    that    matches
              $local_header_rewrite_clients,

       •      The  message  is  received  from  the network, and the remote_header_rewrite_domain
              parameter specifies a non-empty value.

       To get the behavior before Postfix version 2.2,  specify  "local_header_rewrite_clients  =
       static:all".

       Example:

       allow_percent_hack = no

allow_srv_lookup_fallback (default: no)

       When SRV record lookup fails or no SRV record exists, fall back to MX or IP address lookup
       as if SRV record lookup was not enabled.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.8 and later.

allow_untrusted_routing (default: no)

       Forward mail  with  sender-specified  routing  (user[@%!]remote[@%!]site)  from  untrusted
       clients to destinations matching $relay_domains.

       By  default,  this feature is turned off.  This closes a nasty open relay loophole where a
       backup MX host can be tricked into forwarding junk mail to a primary MX  host  which  then
       spams it out to the world.

       This  parameter  also  controls  if  non-local addresses with sender-specified routing can
       match Postfix access tables. By  default,  such  addresses  cannot  match  Postfix  access
       tables, because the address is ambiguous.

alternate_config_directories (default: empty)

       A  list  of  non-default  Postfix configuration directories that may be specified with "-c
       config_directory" on the command line (in the case of sendmail(1), with the "-C"  option),
       or via the MAIL_CONFIG environment parameter.

       This  list  must  be  specified  in  the default Postfix main.cf file, and will be used by
       set-gid Postfix commands such as postqueue(1) and postdrop(1).

       Specify absolute pathnames, separated by comma or space.  Note:  $name  expansion  is  not
       supported.

always_add_missing_headers (default: no)

       Always  add  (Resent-) From:, To:, Date: or Message-ID: headers when not present.  Postfix
       2.6 and later add these headers only when clients match  the  local_header_rewrite_clients
       parameter setting.  Earlier Postfix versions always add these headers; this may break DKIM
       signatures that cover non-existent headers.  The  undisclosed_recipients_header  parameter
       setting determines whether a To: header will be added.

always_bcc (default: empty)

       Optional  address  that receives a "blind carbon copy" of each message that is received by
       the Postfix mail system.

       Note: with Postfix 2.3 and later the BCC address is added as  if  it  was  specified  with
       NOTIFY=NONE.  The  sender  will  not be notified when the BCC address is undeliverable, as
       long as all down-stream software implements RFC 3461.

       Note: with Postfix 2.2 and earlier the sender will be notified when  the  BCC  address  is
       undeliverable.

       Note:  automatic  BCC  recipients  are produced only for new mail.  To avoid mailer loops,
       automatic BCC recipients are not generated after  Postfix  forwards  mail  internally,  or
       after Postfix generates mail itself.

anvil_rate_time_unit (default: 60s)

       The time unit over which client connection rates and other rates are calculated.

       This  feature is implemented by the anvil(8) service which is available in Postfix version
       2.2 and later.

       The default interval is relatively short. Because of the high frequency  of  updates,  the
       anvil(8)  server uses volatile memory only. Thus, information is lost whenever the process
       terminates.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

anvil_status_update_time (default: 600s)

       How  frequently  the  anvil(8)  connection  and  rate  limiting  server  logs  peak  usage
       information.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

append_at_myorigin (default: yes)

       With  locally  submitted  mail,  append  the string "@$myorigin" to mail addresses without
       domain   information.    With    remotely    submitted    mail,    append    the    string
       "@$remote_header_rewrite_domain" instead.

       Note  1:  this feature is enabled by default and must not be turned off.  Postfix does not
       support domain-less addresses.

       Note 2: with Postfix version 2.2, message header address rewriting happens only  when  one
       of the following conditions is true:

       •      The message is received with the Postfix sendmail(1) command,

       •      The    message    is    received    from    a    network    client   that   matches
              $local_header_rewrite_clients,

       •      The message is received from  the  network,  and  the  remote_header_rewrite_domain
              parameter specifies a non-empty value.

       To  get  the  behavior before Postfix version 2.2, specify "local_header_rewrite_clients =
       static:all".

append_dot_mydomain (default: Postfix >= 3.0: no, Postfix < 3.0: yes)

       With locally submitted mail, append the string ".$mydomain"  to  addresses  that  have  no
       ".domain"    information.    With    remotely    submitted   mail,   append   the   string
       ".$remote_header_rewrite_domain" instead.

       Note 1: When disabled (Postfix 3.0 and later), users will not be  able  to  send  mail  to
       "user@partialdomainname" but will have to specify full domain names instead.

       Note  2:  with Postfix version 2.2, message header address rewriting happens only when one
       of the following conditions is true:

       •      The message is received with the Postfix sendmail(1) command,

       •      The   message   is    received    from    a    network    client    that    matches
              $local_header_rewrite_clients,

       •      The  message  is  received  from  the network, and the remote_header_rewrite_domain
              parameter specifies a non-empty value.

       To get the behavior before Postfix version 2.2,  specify  "local_header_rewrite_clients  =
       static:all".

application_event_drain_time (default: 100s)

       How  long  the postkick(1) command waits for a request to enter the Postfix daemon process
       input buffer before giving up.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

authorized_flush_users (default: static:anyone)

       List of users who are authorized to flush the queue.

       By default, all users are allowed to flush the queue.  Access is  always  granted  if  the
       invoking  user  is the super-user or the $mail_owner user.  Otherwise, the real UID of the
       process is looked up in the system password file,  and  access  is  granted  only  if  the
       corresponding  login  name  is  on  the  access  list.  The username "unknown" is used for
       processes whose real UID is not found in the password file.

       Specify a list of user names, "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns, separated  by  commas
       and/or  whitespace.  The  list is matched left to right, and the search stops on the first
       match. A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by its contents; a "type:table" lookup table  is
       matched  when  a  name matches a lookup key (the lookup result is ignored).  Continue long
       lines by starting the next line with whitespace. Specify "!pattern" to exclude a name from
       the list. The form "!/file/name" is supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

authorized_mailq_users (default: static:anyone)

       List of users who are authorized to view the queue.

       By  default,  all  users  are  allowed to view the queue.  Access is always granted if the
       invoking user is the super-user or the $mail_owner user.  Otherwise, the real UID  of  the
       process  is  looked  up  in  the  system  password file, and access is granted only if the
       corresponding login name is on the access  list.   The  username  "unknown"  is  used  for
       processes whose real UID is not found in the password file.

       Specify  a  list of user names, "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns, separated by commas
       and/or whitespace. The list is matched left to right, and the search stops  on  the  first
       match.  A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by its contents; a "type:table" lookup table is
       matched when a name matches a lookup key (the lookup result is  ignored).   Continue  long
       lines by starting the next line with whitespace. Specify "!pattern" to exclude a user name
       from the list. The form "!/file/name" is supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

authorized_submit_users (default: static:anyone)

       List of users who are authorized to submit mail with the sendmail(1) command (and with the
       privileged postdrop(1) helper command).

       By  default, all users are allowed to submit mail.  Otherwise, the real UID of the process
       is looked up in the system password file, and access is granted only if the  corresponding
       login name is on the access list.  The username "unknown" is used for processes whose real
       UID is not found in the password file. To deny mail submission access to all users specify
       an empty list.

       Specify  a  list of user names, "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns, separated by commas
       and/or whitespace. The list is matched left to right, and the search stops  on  the  first
       match.  A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by its contents; a "type:table" lookup table is
       matched when a name matches a lookup key (the lookup result is  ignored).   Continue  long
       lines by starting the next line with whitespace. Specify "!pattern" to exclude a user name
       from the list. The form "!/file/name" is supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       Example:

       authorized_submit_users = !www, static:all

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

authorized_verp_clients (default: $mynetworks)

       What remote SMTP clients are allowed to specify the XVERP command.  This command  requests
       that mail be delivered one recipient at a time with a per recipient return address.

       By default, only trusted clients are allowed to specify XVERP.

       This  parameter was introduced with Postfix version 1.1.  Postfix version 2.1 renamed this
       parameter to smtpd_authorized_verp_clients and changed the default to none.

       Specify a list of network/netmask patterns, separated by  commas  and/or  whitespace.  The
       mask  specifies  the  number  of  bits in the network part of a host address. You can also
       specify hostnames or .domain names (the initial dot causes the domain to  match  any  name
       below  it),  "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns.  A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by
       its contents; a "type:table" lookup table is matched when a table entry matches  a  lookup
       string (the lookup result is ignored).  Continue long lines by starting the next line with
       whitespace. Specify "!pattern" to exclude an address or network block from the  list.  The
       form "!/file/name" is supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       Note:   IP   version   6   address   information  must  be  specified  inside  []  in  the
       authorized_verp_clients value, and in files specified with  "/file/name".   IP  version  6
       addresses  contain  the ":" character, and would otherwise be confused with a "type:table"
       pattern.

backwards_bounce_logfile_compatibility (default: yes)

       Produce additional bounce(8) logfile records that can be read by Postfix  versions  before
       2.0. The current and more extensible "name = value" format is needed in order to implement
       more sophisticated functionality.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

berkeley_db_create_buffer_size (default: 16777216)

       The per-table I/O buffer size for programs that create Berkeley DB hash or  btree  tables.
       Specify a byte count.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

berkeley_db_read_buffer_size (default: 131072)

       The  per-table  I/O  buffer  size for programs that read Berkeley DB hash or btree tables.
       Specify a byte count.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

best_mx_transport (default: empty)

       Where the Postfix SMTP client should deliver mail when it detects a "mail  loops  back  to
       myself"  error  condition. This happens when the local MTA is the best SMTP mail exchanger
       for a destination  not  listed  in  $mydestination,  $inet_interfaces,  $proxy_interfaces,
       $virtual_alias_domains,  or $virtual_mailbox_domains.  By default, the Postfix SMTP client
       returns such mail as undeliverable.

       Specify, for example, "best_mx_transport = local" to pass the mail from the  Postfix  SMTP
       client to the local(8) delivery agent. You can specify any message delivery "transport" or
       "transport:nexthop" that is defined in the master.cf file.  See  the  transport(5)  manual
       page for the syntax and meaning of "transport" or "transport:nexthop".

       However,  this feature is expensive because it ties up a Postfix SMTP client process while
       the local(8) delivery agent is doing its work. It is more efficient (for Postfix) to  list
       all hosted domains in a table or database.

biff (default: yes)

       Whether or not to use the local biff service.  This service sends "new mail" notifications
       to users who have requested new mail notification with the UNIX command "biff y".

       For compatibility reasons this feature  is  on  by  default.   On  systems  with  lots  of
       interactive  users,  the  biff service can be a performance drain.  Specify "biff = no" in
       main.cf to disable.

body_checks (default: empty)

       Optional lookup tables for content inspection as specified in  the  body_checks(5)  manual
       page.

       Note:  with Postfix versions before 2.0, these rules inspect all content after the primary
       message headers.

body_checks_size_limit (default: 51200)

       How much text in a message body segment (or attachment, if you prefer to use that term) is
       subjected to body_checks inspection.  The amount of text is limited to avoid scanning huge
       attachments.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

bounce_notice_recipient (default: postmaster)

       The recipient of postmaster notifications with the message headers of  mail  that  Postfix
       did not deliver and of SMTP conversation transcripts of mail that Postfix did not receive.
       This feature is enabled with the notify_classes parameter.

bounce_queue_lifetime (default: 5d)

       Consider a bounce message as undeliverable, when delivery fails with  a  temporary  error,
       and  the  time in the queue has reached the bounce_queue_lifetime limit.  By default, this
       limit is the same as for regular mail.

       Specify a non-negative time value (an integral value plus an  optional  one-letter  suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is d (days).

       Specify 0 when mail delivery should be tried only once.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

bounce_service_name (default: bounce)

       The name of the bounce(8) service. This service maintains  a  record  of  failed  delivery
       attempts and generates non-delivery notifications.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

bounce_size_limit (default: 50000)

       The  maximal  amount of original message text that is sent in a non-delivery notification.
       Specify a byte count.  A message  is  returned  as  either  message/rfc822  (the  complete
       original)  or  as  text/rfc822-headers  (the  headers only).  With Postfix version 2.4 and
       earlier, a message is always returned as message/rfc822 and is truncated when  it  exceeds
       the size limit.

       Notes:

       •      If  you  increase this limit, then you should increase the mime_nesting_limit value
              proportionally.

       •      Be careful when making changes.  Excessively large values will result in  the  loss
              of non-delivery notifications, when a bounce message size exceeds a local or remote
              MTA's message size limit.

bounce_template_file (default: empty)

       Pathname of a configuration file  with  bounce  message  templates.   These  override  the
       built-in  templates of delivery status notification (DSN) messages for undeliverable mail,
       delayed mail, successful delivery, or delivery verification.  The  bounce(5)  manual  page
       describes how to edit and test template files.

       Template  message  body  text  may  contain  $name  references  to  Postfix  configuration
       parameters. The result of $name expansion can be previewed with  "postconf  -b  file_name"
       before the file is placed into the Postfix configuration directory.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

broken_sasl_auth_clients (default: no)

       Enable interoperability with remote SMTP clients that implement an obsolete version of the
       AUTH command (RFC 4954). Examples of such clients are MicroSoft Outlook Express version  4
       and MicroSoft Exchange version 5.0.

       Specify  "broken_sasl_auth_clients  =  yes"  to  have  Postfix advertise AUTH support in a
       non-standard way.

canonical_classes (default: envelope_sender, envelope_recipient, header_sender, header_recipient)


       What  addresses are subject to canonical_maps address mapping.  By default, canonical_maps
       address mapping is applied to envelope sender  and  recipient  addresses,  and  to  header
       sender and header recipient addresses.

       Specify    one   or   more   of:   envelope_sender,   envelope_recipient,   header_sender,
       header_recipient

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

canonical_maps (default: empty)

       Optional address mapping lookup tables for message headers and envelopes. The  mapping  is
       applied  to  both  sender  and  recipient  addresses, in both envelopes and in headers, as
       controlled with the canonical_classes parameter. This is typically used to clean up  dirty
       addresses  from legacy mail systems, or to replace login names by Firstname.Lastname.  The
       table format and lookups are documented  in  canonical(5).  For  an  overview  of  Postfix
       address manipulations see the ADDRESS_REWRITING_README document.

       Specify  zero  or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or comma. Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.  Note: these  lookups  are
       recursive.

       If  you  use this feature, run "postmap /etc/postfix/canonical" to build the necessary DBM
       or DB file after every change. The changes will become visible after a minute or so.   Use
       "postfix reload" to eliminate the delay.

       Note:  with  Postfix version 2.2, message header address mapping happens only when message
       header address rewriting is enabled:

       •      The message is received with the Postfix sendmail(1) command,

       •      The   message   is    received    from    a    network    client    that    matches
              $local_header_rewrite_clients,

       •      The  message  is  received  from  the network, and the remote_header_rewrite_domain
              parameter specifies a non-empty value.

       To get the behavior before Postfix version 2.2,  specify  "local_header_rewrite_clients  =
       static:all".

       Examples:

       canonical_maps = dbm:/etc/postfix/canonical
       canonical_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/canonical

cleanup_replace_stray_cr_lf (default: yes)

       Replace  each  stray  <CR> or <LF> character in message content with a space character, to
       prevent outbound SMTP smuggling, and to make the evaluation of Postfix-added DKIM or other
       signatures independent from how a remote mail server handles such characters.

       SMTP  does  not  allow  such  characters  unless they are part of a <CR><LF> sequence, and
       different mail systems handle such stray characters in an implementation-dependent manner.
       Stray <CR> or <LF> characters could be used for outbound SMTP smuggling, where an attacker
       uses a Postfix server to send message content with  a  non-standard  End-of-DATA  sequence
       that triggers inbound SMTP smuggling at a remote SMTP server.

       The  replacement happens before all other content management, and before Postfix may add a
       DKIM etc. signature; if the signature were created first, the replacement could invalidate
       the signature.

       In  addition to preventing SMTP smuggling, replacing stray <CR> or <LF> characters ensures
       that the result of signature validation by later mail system will not depend on  how  that
       mail system handles those stray characters in an implementation-dependent manner.

       This feature is available in Postfix >= 3.9, 3.8.5, 3.7.10, 3.6.14, and 3.5.24.

cleanup_service_name (default: cleanup)

       The  name  of  the  cleanup(8)  service. This service rewrites addresses into the standard
       form, and performs canonical(5) address mapping and virtual(5) aliasing.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

command_directory (default: see postconf -d output)

       The location of all postfix administrative commands.

command_execution_directory (default: empty)

       The local(8) delivery agent working directory for delivery to external commands.   Failure
       to change directory causes the delivery to be deferred.

       The  command_execution_directory  value  is not subject to Postfix configuration parameter
       $name   expansion.   Instead,   the   following   $name    expansions    are    done    on
       command_execution_directory before the directory is used. Expansion happens in the context
       of the delivery request.  The result of $name expansion is filtered with the character set
       that is specified with the execution_directory_expansion_filter parameter.

       $user  The recipient's username.

       $shell The recipient's login shell pathname.

       $home  The recipient's home directory.

       $recipient
              The full recipient address.

       $extension
              The optional recipient address extension.

       $domain
              The recipient domain.

       $local The entire recipient localpart.

       $recipient_delimiter
              The  address  extension  delimiter that was found in the recipient address (Postfix
              2.11 and later), or the system-wide recipient address extension delimiter  (Postfix
              2.10 and earlier).

       ${name?value}

       ${name?{value}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value when $name is non-empty.

       ${name:value}

       ${name:{value}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value when $name is empty.

       ${name?{value1}:{value2}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value1 when $name is non-empty, value2 otherwise.

       Instead of $name you can also specify ${name} or $(name).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

command_expansion_filter (default: see postconf -d output)

       Restrict  the  characters  that  the local(8) delivery agent allows in $name expansions of
       $mailbox_command and $command_execution_directory.  Characters outside the allowed set are
       replaced by underscores.

command_time_limit (default: 1000s)

       Time  limit for delivery to external commands. This limit is used by the local(8) delivery
       agent, and is the default time limit for delivery by the pipe(8) delivery agent.

       Note: if you set this time limit to a large value you must update the  global  ipc_timeout
       parameter as well.

compatibility_level (default: 0)

       A  safety  net that causes Postfix to run with backwards-compatible default settings after
       an upgrade to a newer Postfix version.

       With backwards compatibility turned on (the main.cf compatibility_level value is less than
       the  Postfix  built-in  value), Postfix looks for settings that are left at their implicit
       default value, and logs a message when a backwards-compatible default setting is required.

           using backwards-compatible default setting name=value
               to [accept a specific client request]

           using backwards-compatible default setting name=value
               to [enable specific Postfix behavior]

       See COMPATIBILITY_README for specific message details. If such a message is logged in  the
       context   of   a   legitimate   request,   the   system   administrator  should  make  the
       backwards-compatible setting permanent in main.cf or master.cf, for example:

           # postconf name=value
           # postfix reload

       When no more backwards-compatible settings need to be made  permanent,  the  administrator
       should  turn  off  backwards  compatibility by updating the compatibility_level setting in
       main.cf:

           # postconf compatibility_level=N
           # postfix reload

       For N specify the number that is logged in your postfix(1) warning message:

           warning: To disable backwards compatibility use "postconf
               compatibility_level=N" and "postfix reload"

       Starting with Postfix version 3.6, the compatibility level in the above warning message is
       the  Postfix  version that introduced the last incompatible change. The level is formatted
       as major.minor.patch, where patch  is  usually  omitted  and  defaults  to  zero.  Earlier
       compatibility levels are 0, 1 and 2.

       NOTE:  this  also  introduces  support for the "<level", "<=level", and other operators to
       compare compatibility levels.  With the standard operators "<", "<=", etc.,  compatibility
       level "3.10" would be smaller than "3.9" which is undesirable.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

config_directory (default: see postconf -d output)

       The default location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf configuration files. This can be
       overruled via the following mechanisms:

       •      The MAIL_CONFIG environment variable (daemon processes and commands).

       •      The "-c" command-line option (commands only).

       With Postfix commands that run with set-gid privileges, a config_directory override either
       requires  root  privileges,  or  it  requires  that  the  directory  is  listed  with  the
       alternate_config_directories parameter in the default main.cf file.

confirm_delay_cleared (default: no)

       After sending a "your message is delayed" notification, inform the sender when  the  delay
       clears  up.  This  can result in a sudden burst of notifications at the end of a prolonged
       network outage, and is therefore disabled by default.

       See also: delay_warning_time.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

connection_cache_protocol_timeout (default: 5s)

       Time limit for connection cache connect, send or receive operations.  The  time  limit  is
       enforced in the client.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

connection_cache_service_name (default: scache)

       The name of the scache(8) connection cache service.  This service maintains a limited pool
       of cached sessions.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

connection_cache_status_update_time (default: 600s)

       How frequently the scache(8) server logs usage statistics with connection  cache  hit  and
       miss rates for logical destinations and for physical endpoints.

connection_cache_ttl_limit (default: 2s)

       The maximal time-to-live value that the scache(8) connection cache server allows. Requests
       that specify a larger TTL will be stored with the maximum allowed TTL. The purpose of this
       additional control is to protect the infrastructure against careless people. The cache TTL
       is already bounded by $max_idle.

content_filter (default: empty)

       After  the   message   is   queued,   send   the   entire   message   to   the   specified
       transport:destination.  The  transport  name  specifies the first field of a mail delivery
       agent definition in master.cf; the syntax of the next-hop destination is described in  the
       manual  page of the corresponding delivery agent.  More information about external content
       filters is in the Postfix FILTER_README file.

       Notes:

       •      This setting has lower precedence than a FILTER action  that  is  specified  in  an
              access(5), header_checks(5) or body_checks(5) table.

       •      The  meaning of an empty next-hop filter destination is version dependent.  Postfix
              2.7 and later will use the recipient domain; earlier versions will use $myhostname.
              Specify  "default_filter_nexthop  = $myhostname" for compatibility with Postfix 2.6
              or  earlier,  or  specify  a  content_filter  value  with  an   explicit   next-hop
              destination.

cyrus_sasl_config_path (default: empty)

       Search  path for Cyrus SASL application configuration files, currently used only to locate
       the $smtpd_sasl_path.conf file.  Specify zero or more directories  separated  by  a  colon
       character, or an empty value to use Cyrus SASL's built-in search path.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later when compiled with Cyrus SASL 2.1.22 or
       later.

daemon_directory (default: see postconf -d output)

       The directory with Postfix support programs and daemon  programs.   These  should  not  be
       invoked directly by humans. The directory must be owned by root.

daemon_table_open_error_is_fatal (default: no)

       How  a  Postfix  daemon  process  handles  errors  while  opening  lookup  tables: gradual
       degradation or immediate termination.

        no  (default)
              Gradual degradation: a daemon process logs a message of type "error" and  continues
              execution   with  reduced  functionality.  Features  that  do  not  depend  on  the
              unavailable table will work normally, while features that depend on the table  will
              result in a type "warning" message.
              When the notify_classes parameter value contains the "data" class, the Postfix SMTP
              server and client will report transcripts of sessions with an error because a table
              is unavailable.

        yes  (historical behavior)
              Immediate  termination: a daemon process logs a type "fatal" message and terminates
              immediately.  This option  reduces  the  number  of  possible  code  paths  through
              Postfix, and may therefore be slightly more secure than the default.

       For  the  sake  of  sanity,  the number of type "error" messages is limited to 13 over the
       lifetime of a daemon process.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.9 and later.

daemon_timeout (default: 18000s)

       How much time a Postfix daemon  process  may  take  to  handle  a  request  before  it  is
       terminated by a built-in watchdog timer.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

data_directory (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  directory  with  Postfix-writable  data  files  (for  example:  caches, pseudo-random
       numbers).  This directory must be owned by the mail_owner account, and must not be  shared
       with non-Postfix software.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

debug_peer_level (default: 2)

       The increment in verbose logging level when a nexthop destination, remote client or server
       name or network address matches a pattern given with the debug_peer_list parameter.

       Per-nexthop debug logging is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

debug_peer_list (default: empty)

       Optional list of nexthop destination, remote client or  server  name  or  network  address
       patterns  that,  if  matched,  cause  the  verbose logging level to increase by the amount
       specified in $debug_peer_level.

       Per-nexthop debug logging is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

       Specify domain names, network/netmask  patterns,  "/file/name"  patterns  or  "type:table"
       lookup tables. The right-hand side result from "type:table" lookups is ignored.

       Pattern   matching   of  domain  names  is  controlled  by  the  presence  or  absence  of
       "debug_peer_list" in the parent_domain_matches_subdomains parameter value.

       Examples:

       debug_peer_list = 127.0.0.1
       debug_peer_list = example.com

debugger_command (default: empty)

       The external command to execute when a Postfix daemon  program  is  invoked  with  the  -D
       option.

       Use  "command .. & sleep 5" so that the debugger can attach before the process marches on.
       If you use an X-based debugger, be sure to set up  your  XAUTHORITY  environment  variable
       before starting Postfix.

       Note:  the  command  is  subject  to  $name  expansion, before it is passed to the default
       command interpreter. Specify "$$" to produce a single "$" character.

       Example:

       debugger_command =
           PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin
           ddd $daemon_directory/$process_name $process_id & sleep 5

default_database_type (default: see postconf -d output)

       The default database type for use in newaliases(1), postalias(1) and postmap(1)  commands.
       On many UNIX systems the default type is either dbm or hash. The default setting is frozen
       when the Postfix system is built.

       Examples:

       default_database_type = hash
       default_database_type = dbm

default_delivery_slot_cost (default: 5)

       How often the Postfix queue manager's scheduler is allowed  to  preempt  delivery  of  one
       message with another.

       Each  transport  maintains a so-called "available delivery slot counter" for each message.
       One message can be preempted by another one when the other message can be delivered  using
       no  more  delivery  slots  (i.e., invocations of delivery agents) than the current message
       counter has accumulated (or will eventually accumulate - see about slot loans below). This
       parameter  controls  how  often  the  counter  is  incremented  -  it  happens  after each
       default_delivery_slot_cost recipients have been delivered.

       The cost of 0 is used to disable the preempting scheduling completely.  The minimum  value
       the  scheduling  algorithm  can  use  is  2  -  use it if you want to maximize the message
       throughput rate. Although there is no maximum, it doesn't make much sense  to  use  values
       above say 50.

       The  only  reason  why the value of 2 is not the default is the way this parameter affects
       the delivery of mailing-list mail. In the worst case, delivery can take somewhere  between
       (cost+1/cost)  and (cost/cost-1) times more than if the preemptive scheduler was disabled.
       The default value of 5 turns out to provide reasonable message response times while making
       sure  the  mailing-list deliveries are not extended by more than 20-25 percent even in the
       worst case.

       Use transport_delivery_slot_cost to specify a transport-specific override, where transport
       is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Examples:

       default_delivery_slot_cost = 0
       default_delivery_slot_cost = 2

default_delivery_slot_discount (default: 50)

       The default value for transport-specific _delivery_slot_discount settings.

       This  parameter  speeds  up  the  moment  when a message preemption can happen. Instead of
       waiting until the full amount of delivery slots required is available, the preemption  can
       happen   when   transport_delivery_slot_discount  percent  of  the  required  amount  plus
       transport_delivery_slot_loan still remains to be accumulated.  Note that the  full  amount
       will still have to be accumulated before another preemption can take place later.

       Use  transport_delivery_slot_discount  to  specify  a  transport-specific  override, where
       transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

default_delivery_slot_loan (default: 3)

       The default value for transport-specific _delivery_slot_loan settings.

       This parameter speeds up the moment when a  message  preemption  can  happen.  Instead  of
       waiting  until the full amount of delivery slots required is available, the preemption can
       happen  when  transport_delivery_slot_discount  percent  of  the  required   amount   plus
       transport_delivery_slot_loan  still  remains to be accumulated.  Note that the full amount
       will still have to be accumulated before another preemption can take place later.

       Use transport_delivery_slot_loan to specify a transport-specific override, where transport
       is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

default_delivery_status_filter (default: empty)

       Optional  filter  to replace the delivery status code or explanatory text of successful or
       unsuccessful deliveries.  This does not allow the replacement of a successful status  code
       (2.X.X) with an unsuccessful status code (4.X.X or 5.X.X) or vice versa.

       Note:  the  (smtp|lmtp)_delivery_status_filter  is  applied  only once per recipient: when
       delivery is successful, when delivery is rejected with 5XX, or  when  there  are  no  more
       alternate  MX  or  A  destinations.  Use smtp_reply_filter or lmtp_reply_filter to inspect
       responses for all delivery attempts.

       The following parameters can be used to implement a filter for specific  delivery  agents:
       lmtp_delivery_status_filter,   local_delivery_status_filter,  pipe_delivery_status_filter,
       smtp_delivery_status_filter or virtual_delivery_status_filter.  These  parameters  support
       the same filter syntax as described here.

       Specify  zero  or  more "type:table" lookup table names, separated by comma or whitespace.
       For each successful or unsuccessful delivery to a recipient, the tables are queried in the
       specified order with one line of text that is structured as follows:

           enhanced-status-code SPACE explanatory-text

       The first table match wins. The lookup result must have the same structure as the query, a
       successful status code (2.X.X)  must  be  replaced  with  a  successful  status  code,  an
       unsuccessful  status  code  (4.X.X  or 5.X.X) must be replaced with an unsuccessful status
       code, and the explanatory text field must be non-empty. Other results  will  result  in  a
       warning.

       Example  1:  convert  specific  soft  TLS errors into hard errors, by overriding the first
       number in the enhanced status code.

           /etc/postfix/main.cf:
               smtp_delivery_status_filter = pcre:/etc/postfix/smtp_dsn_filter

           /etc/postfix/smtp_dsn_filter:
               /^4(\.\d+\.\d+ TLS is required, but host \S+ refused to start TLS: .+)/
                   5$1
               /^4(\.\d+\.\d+ TLS is required, but was not offered by host .+)/
                   5$1
               # Do not change the following into hard bounces. They may
               # result from a local configuration problem.
               # 4.\d+.\d+ TLS is required, but our TLS engine is unavailable
               # 4.\d+.\d+ TLS is required, but unavailable
               # 4.\d+.\d+ Cannot start TLS: handshake failure

       Example 2: censor the per-recipient delivery status text so that it does  not  reveal  the
       destination  command  or filename when a remote sender requests confirmation of successful
       delivery.

           /etc/postfix/main.cf:
               local_delivery_status_filter = pcre:/etc/postfix/local_dsn_filter

           /etc/postfix/local_dsn_filter:
               /^(2\S+ delivered to file).+/    $1
               /^(2\S+ delivered to command).+/ $1

       Notes:

       •      This feature will NOT override the soft_bounce safety net.

       •      This feature will change the enhanced status code and text that is  logged  to  the
              maillog  file,  and  that  is  reported  to  the sender in delivery confirmation or
              non-delivery notifications.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

default_destination_concurrency_failed_cohort_limit (default: 1)

       How many pseudo-cohorts must suffer connection or  handshake  failure  before  a  specific
       destination is considered unavailable (and further delivery is suspended). Specify zero to
       disable this feature. A destination's pseudo-cohort failure count is  reset  each  time  a
       delivery completes without connection or handshake failure for that specific destination.

       A pseudo-cohort is the number of deliveries equal to a destination's delivery concurrency.

       Use  transport_destination_concurrency_failed_cohort_limit to specify a transport-specific
       override, where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5. The default setting is compatible  with  earlier
       Postfix versions.

default_destination_concurrency_limit (default: 20)

       The  default  maximal  number of parallel deliveries to the same destination.  This is the
       default limit for delivery via the  lmtp(8),  pipe(8),  smtp(8)  and  virtual(8)  delivery
       agents.   With a per-destination recipient limit > 1, a destination is a domain, otherwise
       it is a recipient.

       Use transport_destination_concurrency_limit  to  specify  a  transport-specific  override,
       where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

default_destination_concurrency_negative_feedback (default: 1)

       The  per-destination  amount  of  delivery concurrency negative feedback, after a delivery
       completes with a connection or handshake failure. Feedback values are in  the  range  0..1
       inclusive.  With  negative  feedback,  concurrency  is  decremented  at the beginning of a
       sequence of length 1/feedback. This is unlike  positive  feedback,  where  concurrency  is
       incremented at the end of a sequence of length 1/feedback.

       As  of  Postfix version 2.5, negative feedback cannot reduce delivery concurrency to zero.
       Instead, a destination is marked  dead  (further  delivery  suspended)  after  the  failed
       pseudo-cohort   count   reaches  $default_destination_concurrency_failed_cohort_limit  (or
       $transport_destination_concurrency_failed_cohort_limit).  To make the scheduler completely
       immune  to  connection  or  handshake  failures,  specify a zero feedback value and a zero
       failed pseudo-cohort limit.

       Specify one of the following forms:

       number

       number / number
              Constant feedback. The value must be in the  range  0..1  inclusive.   The  default
              setting   of   "1"  is  compatible  with  Postfix  versions  before  2.5,  where  a
              destination's delivery concurrency is throttled down to zero (and further  delivery
              suspended) after a single failed pseudo-cohort.

       number / concurrency
              Variable  feedback of "number / (delivery concurrency)".  The number must be in the
              range  0..1  inclusive.  With  number  equal  to  "1",  a  destination's   delivery
              concurrency is decremented by 1 after each failed pseudo-cohort.

       A pseudo-cohort is the number of deliveries equal to a destination's delivery concurrency.

       Use  transport_destination_concurrency_negative_feedback  to  specify a transport-specific
       override, where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5. The default setting is compatible  with  earlier
       Postfix versions.

default_destination_concurrency_positive_feedback (default: 1)

       The  per-destination  amount  of  delivery concurrency positive feedback, after a delivery
       completes without connection or handshake failure. Feedback values are in the  range  0..1
       inclusive.   The  concurrency  increases  until  it  reaches  the  per-destination maximal
       concurrency limit. With positive feedback, concurrency is incremented  at  the  end  of  a
       sequence  with  length  1/feedback. This is unlike negative feedback, where concurrency is
       decremented at the start of a sequence of length 1/feedback.

       Specify one of the following forms:

       number

       number / number
              Constant feedback.  The value must be in the  range  0..1  inclusive.  The  default
              setting   of   "1"  is  compatible  with  Postfix  versions  before  2.5,  where  a
              destination's delivery concurrency doubles after each successful pseudo-cohort.

       number / concurrency
              Variable feedback of "number / (delivery concurrency)".  The number must be in  the
              range   0..1  inclusive.  With  number  equal  to  "1",  a  destination's  delivery
              concurrency is incremented by 1 after each successful pseudo-cohort.

       A pseudo-cohort is the number of deliveries equal to a destination's delivery concurrency.

       Use transport_destination_concurrency_positive_feedback to  specify  a  transport-specific
       override, where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

default_destination_rate_delay (default: 0s)

       The  default amount of delay that is inserted between individual message deliveries to the
       same destination and over the same message delivery transport. Specify a non-zero value to
       rate-limit those message deliveries to at most one per $default_destination_rate_delay.

       The resulting behavior depends on the value of the corresponding per-destination recipient
       limit.

       •      With a corresponding per-destination recipient limit > 1, the rate delay  specifies
              the time between deliveries to the same domain.  Different domains are delivered in
              parallel, subject to the process limits specified in master.cf.

       •      With a corresponding per-destination recipient limit equal to  1,  the  rate  delay
              specifies  the  time between deliveries to the same recipient. Different recipients
              are delivered in parallel, subject to the process limits specified in master.cf.

       To enable the delay, specify a non-zero time value (an integral  value  plus  an  optional
       one-letter suffix that specifies the time unit).

       Time  units:  s  (seconds),  m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w (weeks). The default time
       unit is s (seconds).

       NOTE: the delay is enforced by the queue manager. The delay timer state does  not  survive
       "postfix reload" or "postfix stop".

       Use  transport_destination_rate_delay  to  specify  a  transport-specific  override, where
       transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       NOTE:      with      a       non-zero       _destination_rate_delay,       specify       a
       transport_destination_concurrency_failed_cohort_limit  of  10  or  more to prevent Postfix
       from deferring all mail for the same destination after only one  connection  or  handshake
       error.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

default_destination_recipient_limit (default: 50)

       The  default maximal number of recipients per message delivery.  This is the default limit
       for delivery via the lmtp(8), pipe(8), smtp(8) and virtual(8) delivery agents.

       Setting this parameter to a value of 1 affects email deliveries as follows:

       •      It changes the meaning of the corresponding per-destination concurrency limit, from
              concurrency  of deliveries to the same domain into concurrency of deliveries to the
              same recipient.  Different recipients are delivered in  parallel,  subject  to  the
              process limits specified in master.cf.

       •      It  changes  the  meaning of the corresponding per-destination rate delay, from the
              delay between deliveries to the same domain into the delay  between  deliveries  to
              the same recipient.  Again, different recipients are delivered in parallel, subject
              to the process limits specified in master.cf.

       •      It changes the meaning of other corresponding per-destination settings in a similar
              manner, from settings for delivery to the same domain into settings for delivery to
              the same recipient.

       Use transport_destination_recipient_limit to specify a transport-specific override,  where
       transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

default_extra_recipient_limit (default: 1000)

       The  default  value  for  the extra per-transport limit imposed on the number of in-memory
       recipients.  This extra recipient space is reserved for the cases when the  Postfix  queue
       manager's  scheduler  preempts  one  message  with  another  and suddenly needs some extra
       recipient slots for the chosen message in order to avoid performance degradation.

       Use  transport_extra_recipient_limit  to  specify  a  transport-specific  override,  where
       transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

default_filter_nexthop (default: empty)

       When  a  content_filter  or FILTER request specifies no explicit next-hop destination, use
       $default_filter_nexthop instead; when that value is empty, use the domain in the recipient
       address.   Specify  "default_filter_nexthop  = $myhostname" for compatibility with Postfix
       version  2.6  and  earlier,  or  specify  an  explicit  next-hop  destination  with   each
       content_filter value or FILTER action.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.

default_minimum_delivery_slots (default: 3)

       How  many  recipients  a  message must have in order to invoke the Postfix queue manager's
       scheduling algorithm at all.  Messages which would never accumulate  at  least  this  many
       delivery slots (subject to slot cost parameter as well) are never preempted.

       Use  transport_minimum_delivery_slots  to  specify  a  transport-specific  override, where
       transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

default_privs (default: nobody)

       The default rights used by the local(8) delivery agent for delivery to an external file or
       command.  These rights are used when delivery is requested from an aliases(5) file that is
       owned by root, or when delivery is done on behalf of root. DO  NOT  SPECIFY  A  PRIVILEGED
       USER OR THE POSTFIX OWNER.

default_process_limit (default: 100)

       The  default  maximal number of Postfix child processes that provide a given service. This
       limit can be overruled for specific services in the master.cf file.

default_rbl_reply (default: see postconf -d output)

       The default Postfix SMTP server response template for a request that  is  rejected  by  an
       RBL-based  restriction. This template can be overruled by specific entries in the optional
       rbl_reply_maps lookup table.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

       The template does not support Postfix configuration parameter $name substitution. Instead,
       it supports exactly one level of $name substitution for the following attributes:

       $client
              The client hostname and IP address, formatted as name[address].

       $client_address
              The client IP address.

       $client_name
              The  client  hostname  or  "unknown".  See  reject_unknown_client_hostname for more
              details.

       $reverse_client_name
              The   client   hostname   from   address->name   lookup,   or    "unknown".     See
              reject_unknown_reverse_client_hostname for more details.

       $helo_name
              The hostname given in HELO or EHLO command or empty string.

       $rbl_class
              The denylisted entity type: Client host, Helo command, Sender address, or Recipient
              address.

       $rbl_code
              The numerical SMTP  response  code,  as  specified  with  the  maps_rbl_reject_code
              configuration  parameter.  Note:  The numerical SMTP response code is required, and
              must appear at the start of the reply. With Postfix  version  2.3  and  later  this
              information may be followed by an RFC 3463 enhanced status code.

       $rbl_domain
              The RBL domain where $rbl_what is denylisted.

       $rbl_reason
              The reason why $rbl_what is denylisted, or an empty string.

       $rbl_what
              The  entity  that  is  denylisted  (an IP address, a hostname, a domain name, or an
              email address whose domain was denylisted).

       $recipient
              The recipient address or <> in case of the null address.

       $recipient_domain
              The recipient domain or empty string.

       $recipient_name
              The recipient address localpart or <> in case of null address.

       $sender
              The sender address or <> in case of the null address.

       $sender_domain
              The sender domain or empty string.

       $sender_name
              The sender address localpart or <> in case of the null address.

       ${name?value}

       ${name?{value}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value when $name is non-empty.

       ${name:value}

       ${name:{value}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value when $name is empty.

       ${name?{value1}:{value2}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value1 when $name is non-empty, value2 otherwise.

       Instead of $name you can also specify ${name} or $(name).

       Note: when an enhanced status code is specified in an RBL reply template, it is subject to
       modification.   The  following transformations are needed when the same RBL reply template
       is used for client, helo, sender, or recipient access restrictions.

       •      When rejecting a sender address, the Postfix SMTP server will transform a recipient
              DSN  status  (e.g., 4.1.1-4.1.6) into the corresponding sender DSN status, and vice
              versa.

       •      When rejecting non-address information (such as the HELO command  argument  or  the
              client  hostname/address),  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  will  transform a sender or
              recipient DSN status into a generic non-address DSN status (e.g., 4.0.0).

default_recipient_limit (default: 20000)

       The default per-transport upper limit on the number of in-memory recipients.  These limits
       take  priority  over  the  global  qmgr_message_recipient_limit after the message has been
       assigned  to  the  respective  transports.   See  also  default_extra_recipient_limit  and
       qmgr_message_recipient_minimum.

       Use transport_recipient_limit to specify a transport-specific override, where transport is
       the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

default_recipient_refill_delay (default: 5s)

       The default per-transport maximum  delay  between  refilling  recipients.   When  not  all
       message  recipients fit into memory at once, keep loading more of them at least once every
       this many seconds.  This is used to make sure the recipients  are  refilled  in  a  timely
       manner even when $default_recipient_refill_limit is too high for too slow deliveries.

       Use  transport_recipient_refill_delay  to  specify  a  transport-specific  override, where
       transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.4 and later.

default_recipient_refill_limit (default: 100)

       The default per-transport limit on the number of recipients refilled at  once.   When  not
       all message recipients fit into memory at once, keep loading more of them in batches of at
       least this many at a time.  See also $default_recipient_refill_delay, which may result  in
       recipient batches lower than this when this limit is too high for too slow deliveries.

       Use  transport_recipient_refill_limit  to  specify  a  transport-specific  override, where
       transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.4 and later.

default_transport (default: smtp)

       The default mail delivery transport and next-hop destination for the default domain class:
       recipient  domains  that do not match $mydestination, $inet_interfaces, $proxy_interfaces,
       $virtual_alias_domains, $virtual_mailbox_domains, or $relay_domains. This information will
       not  be  used  when  sender_dependent_default_transport_maps  returns a result, and may be
       overridden with the transport(5) table.

       For recipient domains in the default domain class:

       •      In order of  decreasing  precedence,  the  delivery  transport  is  taken  from  1)
              $transport_maps, 2) $sender_dependent_default_transport_maps or $default_transport.

       •      In  order  of  decreasing  precedence,  the  nexthop  destination  is taken from 1)
              $transport_maps, 2) $sender_dependent_default_transport_maps or $default_transport,
              3) $sender_dependent_relayhost_maps or $relayhost or the recipient domain.

       Specify  a  string  of  the  form transport:nexthop, where transport is the name of a mail
       delivery transport defined in master.cf.  The :nexthop destination is optional; its syntax
       is  documented in the manual page of the corresponding delivery agent. In the case of SMTP
       or LMTP, specify one or more destinations separated by comma or whitespace  (with  Postfix
       3.5 and later).

       Example:

       default_transport = uucp:relayhostname

default_transport_rate_delay (default: 0s)

       The  default  amount  of delay that is inserted between individual message deliveries over
       the same message delivery transport, regardless of destination. Specify a  non-zero  value
       to rate-limit those message deliveries to at most one per $default_transport_rate_delay.

       Use  transport_transport_rate_delay  to  specify  a transport-specific override, where the
       initial transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Example: throttle outbound SMTP mail to at most 3 deliveries per minute.

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           smtp_transport_rate_delay = 20s

       To enable the delay, specify a non-zero time value (an integral  value  plus  an  optional
       one-letter suffix that specifies the time unit).

       Time  units:  s  (seconds),  m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w (weeks). The default time
       unit is s (seconds).

       NOTE: the delay is enforced by the queue manager.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.1 and later.

default_verp_delimiters (default: +=)

       The two default VERP delimiter characters. These are used when no explicit delimiters  are
       specified  with  the  SMTP  XVERP  command  or with the "sendmail -XV" command-line option
       (Postfix  2.2  and  earlier:  -V).  Specify   characters   that   are   allowed   by   the
       verp_delimiter_filter setting.

       This feature is available in Postfix 1.1 and later.

defer_code (default: 450)

       The  numerical  Postfix  SMTP  server  response  code when a remote SMTP client request is
       rejected by the "defer" restriction.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

defer_service_name (default: defer)

       The name of the defer service. This service is implemented by  the  bounce(8)  daemon  and
       maintains a record of failed delivery attempts and generates non-delivery notifications.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

defer_transports (default: empty)

       The  names  of  message  delivery  transports  that should not deliver mail unless someone
       issues "sendmail -q" or equivalent. Specify zero or more  mail  delivery  transport  names
       that appear in the first field of master.cf.

       Example:

       defer_transports = smtp

delay_logging_resolution_limit (default: 2)

       The maximal number of digits after the decimal point when logging sub-second delay values.
       Specify a number in the range 0..6.

       Large delay values are rounded off to an integral number of seconds;  delay  values  below
       the  delay_logging_resolution_limit  are  logged  as  "0", and delay values under 100s are
       logged with at most two-digit precision.

       The format of the "delays=a/b/c/d" logging is as follows:

       •      a = time from message arrival to last active queue entry

       •      b = time from last active queue entry to connection setup

       •      c = time in connection setup, including DNS, EHLO and STARTTLS

       •      d = time in message transmission

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

delay_notice_recipient (default: postmaster)

       The recipient of postmaster notifications with the message headers of mail that cannot  be
       delivered within $delay_warning_time time units.

       See also: delay_warning_time, notify_classes.

delay_warning_time (default: 0h)

       The  time  after  which  the sender receives a copy of the message headers of mail that is
       still queued. The confirm_delay_cleared parameter controls sender  notification  when  the
       delay clears up.

       To  enable this feature, specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional
       one-letter suffix that specifies the time unit).

       Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w (weeks).   The  default  time
       unit is h (hours).

       See also: delay_notice_recipient, notify_classes, confirm_delay_cleared.

deliver_lock_attempts (default: 20)

       The maximal number of attempts to acquire an exclusive lock on a mailbox file or bounce(8)
       logfile.

deliver_lock_delay (default: 1s)

       The time between attempts to acquire an exclusive lock on  a  mailbox  file  or  bounce(8)
       logfile.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

destination_concurrency_feedback_debug (default: no)

       Make the queue manager's feedback algorithm verbose for performance analysis purposes.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

detect_8bit_encoding_header (default: yes)

       Automatically  detect  8BITMIME  body  content  by  looking  at Content-Transfer-Encoding:
       message headers; historically, this behavior was hard-coded to be "always on".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

disable_dns_lookups (default: no)

       Disable DNS lookups in the Postfix SMTP and LMTP clients. When disabled, hosts are  looked
       up  with the getaddrinfo() system library routine which normally also looks in /etc/hosts.
       As of Postfix 2.11, this parameter is deprecated; use smtp_dns_support_level instead.

       DNS lookups are enabled by default.

disable_mime_input_processing (default: no)

       Turn off MIME processing while receiving mail. This means that  no  special  treatment  is
       given  to  Content-Type:  message  headers,  and  that  all text after the initial message
       headers is considered to be part of the message body.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

       Mime input processing is enabled by default, and is needed  in  order  to  recognize  MIME
       headers in message content.

disable_mime_output_conversion (default: no)

       Disable  the  conversion  of  8BITMIME  format  to 7BIT format.  Mime output conversion is
       needed when the destination does not advertise 8BITMIME support.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

disable_verp_bounces (default: no)

       Disable sending one bounce report per recipient.

       The default, one per recipient, is what ezmlm needs.

       This feature is available in Postfix 1.1 and later.

disable_vrfy_command (default: no)

       Disable the SMTP VRFY command. This stops some techniques used to harvest email addresses.

       Example:

       disable_vrfy_command = no

dns_ncache_ttl_fix_enable (default: no)

       Enable a workaround for future libc incompatibility. The  Postfix  implementation  of  RFC
       2308 negative reply caching relies on the promise that res_query() and res_search() invoke
       res_send(), which returns the server  response  in  an  application  buffer  even  if  the
       requested  record  does  not  exist.  If this promise is broken, specify "yes" to enable a
       workaround for DNS reputation lookups.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.1 and later.

dnsblog_reply_delay (default: 0s)

       A debugging aid to artificially delay DNS responses.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

dnsblog_service_name (default: dnsblog)

       The name of  the  dnsblog(8)  service  entry  in  master.cf.  This  service  performs  DNS
       allow/denylist lookups.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

dnssec_probe (default: ns:.)

       The  DNS query type (default: "ns") and DNS query name (default: ".") that Postfix may use
       to determine whether DNSSEC validation is available.

       Background: DNSSEC validation is needed  for  Postfix  DANE  support;  this  ensures  that
       Postfix  receives  TLSA  records  with  secure  TLS  server  certificate info. When DNSSEC
       validation is unavailable, mail deliveries using opportunistic DANE will not be  protected
       by  server certificate info in TLSA records, and mail deliveries using mandatory DANE will
       not be made at all.

       By default, a Postfix process will send a DNSSEC probe after 1) the  process  made  a  DNS
       query  that requested DNSSEC validation, 2) the process did not receive a DNSSEC validated
       response to this query or to an earlier query, and 3) the process did not already  send  a
       DNSSEC probe.

       When  the  DNSSEC  probe  has  no  response, or when the response is not DNSSEC validated,
       Postfix logs a warning that DNSSEC validation may be unavailable.

       Example:

       warning: DNSSEC validation may be unavailable
       warning: reason: dnssec_probe 'ns:.' received a response that is not DNSSEC validated
       warning: reason: dnssec_probe 'ns:.' received no response: Server failure

       Possible reasons why DNSSEC validation may be unavailable:

       •      The local /etc/resolv.conf file specifies a DNS resolver  that  does  not  validate
              DNSSEC  signatures  (that's  $queue_directory/etc/resolv.conf when a Postfix daemon
              runs in a chroot jail).

       •      The local system library does not pass on the "DNSSEC validated" bit to Postfix, or
              Postfix does not know how to ask the library to do that.

       By  default,  the  DNSSEC  probe  asks for the DNS root zone NS records, because resolvers
       should always have that information cached. If Postfix runs on a  network  where  the  DNS
       root  zone  is  not reachable, specify a different probe, or specify an empty dnssec_probe
       value to disable the feature.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.6 and later. It was backported to Postfix  versions
       3.5.9, 3.4.19, 3.3.16. 3.2.21.

dont_remove (default: 0)

       Don't  remove  queue  files  and save them to the "saved" mail queue.  This is a debugging
       aid.  To inspect the envelope information and content of a Postfix  queue  file,  use  the
       postcat(1) command.

double_bounce_sender (default: double-bounce)

       The  sender address of postmaster notifications that are generated by the mail system. All
       mail to this address is silently discarded, in order to terminate mail bounce loops.

duplicate_filter_limit (default: 1000)

       The maximal number of addresses remembered by the address duplicate filter for  aliases(5)
       or virtual(5) alias expansion, or for showq(8) queue displays.

empty_address_default_transport_maps_lookup_key (default: <>)

       The sender_dependent_default_transport_maps search string that will be used instead of the
       null sender address.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.

empty_address_local_login_sender_maps_lookup_key (default: <>)

       The lookup key to be used in local_login_sender_maps tables, instead of  the  null  sender
       address.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

empty_address_recipient (default: MAILER-DAEMON)

       The  recipient  of  mail  addressed  to  the  null  address.  Postfix does not accept such
       addresses in SMTP commands, but they may  still  be  created  locally  as  the  result  of
       configuration or software error.

empty_address_relayhost_maps_lookup_key (default: <>)

       The  sender_dependent_relayhost_maps  search  string that will be used instead of the null
       sender address.

       This  feature  is  available  in  Postfix  2.5   and   later.   With   earlier   versions,
       sender_dependent_relayhost_maps lookups were skipped for the null sender address.

enable_errors_to (default: no)

       Report  mail  delivery  errors  to  the address specified with the non-standard Errors-To:
       message header, instead of the envelope sender  address  (this  feature  is  removed  with
       Postfix  version  2.2,  is  turned  off by default with Postfix version 2.1, and is always
       turned on with older Postfix versions).

enable_idna2003_compatibility (default: no)

       Enable 'transitional' compatibility between IDNA2003 and IDNA2008, when  converting  UTF-8
       domain  names  to/from  the  ASCII  form  that  is used for DNS lookups. Specify "yes" for
       compatibility with Postfix <= 3.1 (not recommended). This affects the conversion of domain
       names   that   contain   for   example   the   German   sz   and   the  Greek  zeta.   See
       http://unicode.org/cldr/utility/idna.jsp for more examples.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.2 and later.

enable_long_queue_ids (default: no)

       Enable long, non-repeating, queue IDs (queue file names).  The  benefit  of  non-repeating
       names  is  simpler  logfile  analysis  and easier queue migration (there is no need to run
       "postsuper" to change queue file names that don't match their message file inode number).

       Note: see below for how to convert long queue file names to Postfix <= 2.8.

       Changing the parameter value to "yes" has the following effects:

       •      Existing queue file names are not affected.

       •      New queue files are created with names such as 3Pt2mN2VXxznjll.  These are  encoded
              in a 52-character alphabet that contains digits (0-9), upper-case letters (B-Z) and
              lower-case letters (b-z). For safety reasons the vowels (AEIOUaeiou)  are  excluded
              from  the  alphabet.   The  name  format  is:  6 or more characters for the time in
              seconds, 4 characters for the time in microseconds, the 'z'; the remainder  is  the
              file inode number encoded in the first 51 characters of the 52-character alphabet.

       •      New messages have a Message-ID header with queueID@myhostname.

       •      The  mailq  (postqueue  -p)  output  has  a  wider  Queue ID column.  The number of
              whitespace-separated fields is not changed.

       •      The hash_queue_depth algorithm uses the first characters of the queue file creation
              time  in  microseconds,  after  conversion  into  hexadecimal  representation. This
              produces the same queue hashing behavior as if the queue file name was created with
              "enable_long_queue_ids = no".

       Changing the parameter value to "no" has the following effects:

       •      Existing  long  queue  file  names  are  renamed  to  the short form (while running
              "postfix reload" or "postsuper").

       •      New queue files are created with names  such  as  C3CD21F3E90  from  a  hexadecimal
              alphabet  that  contains digits (0-9) and upper-case letters (A-F). The name format
              is: 5 characters for the time in microseconds; the  remainder  is  the  file  inode
              number.

       •      New messages have a Message-ID header with YYYYMMDDHHMMSS.queueid@myhostname, where
              YYYYMMDDHHMMSS are the year, month, day, hour, minute and second.

       •      The mailq (postqueue -p) output has the same format as with Postfix <= 2.8.

       •      The hash_queue_depth algorithm uses the first characters of the  queue  file  name,
              with the hexadecimal representation of the file creation time in microseconds.

       Before  migration  to  Postfix <= 2.8, the following commands are required to convert long
       queue file names into short names:

       # postfix stop
       # postconf enable_long_queue_ids=no
       # postsuper

       Repeat the postsuper command until it reports no more queue file name changes.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.9 and later.

enable_original_recipient (default: yes)

       Enable support for the original recipient address after  an  address  is  rewritten  to  a
       different address (for example with aliasing or with canonical mapping).

       The original recipient address is used as follows:

       Final delivery
              With "enable_original_recipient = yes", the original recipient address is stored in
              the X-Original-To message header. This header may be used  to  distinguish  between
              different recipients that share the same mailbox.

       Recipient deduplication
              With  "enable_original_recipient  =  yes", the cleanup(8) daemon performs duplicate
              recipient elimination based on the content of (original recipient,  maybe-rewritten
              recipient)  pairs.   Otherwise,  the cleanup(8) daemon performs duplicate recipient
              elimination based only on the maybe-rewritten recipient address.

       Note: with Postfix <= 3.2 the "setting  enable_original_recipient  =  no"  breaks  address
       verification  for  addresses that are aliased or otherwise rewritten (Postfix is unable to
       store the address verification  result  under  the  original  probe  destination  address;
       instead, it can store the result only under the rewritten address).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later. Postfix version 2.0 behaves as if this
       parameter is always set to yes.  Postfix versions before  2.0  have  no  support  for  the
       original recipient address.

enable_threaded_bounces (default: no)

       Enable non-delivery, success, and delay notifications that link to the original message by
       including a References: and In-Reply-To: header with the original Message-ID value.  There
       are advantages and disadvantages to consider.

        advantage
              This  allows  mail  readers  to  present a delivery status notification in the same
              email thread as the original message.

        disadvantage
              This makes it easy for users to mistakenly  delete  the  whole  email  thread  (all
              related messages), instead of deleting only the non-delivery notification.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

error_notice_recipient (default: postmaster)

       The  recipient of postmaster notifications about mail delivery problems that are caused by
       policy, resource, software or protocol errors.  These notifications are enabled  with  the
       notify_classes parameter.

error_service_name (default: error)

       The  name  of  the  error(8)  pseudo  delivery  agent. This service always returns mail as
       undeliverable.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

execution_directory_expansion_filter (default: see postconf -d output)

       Restrict the characters that the local(8) delivery agent allows  in  $name  expansions  of
       $command_execution_directory.    Characters  outside  the  allowed  set  are  replaced  by
       underscores.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

expand_owner_alias (default: no)

       When delivering to an alias "aliasname" that has an "owner-aliasname" companion alias, set
       the  envelope  sender  address to the expansion of the "owner-aliasname" alias.  Normally,
       Postfix sets the envelope sender address to the name of the "owner-aliasname" alias.

export_environment (default: see postconf -d output)

       The list of environment variables that  a  Postfix  process  will  export  to  non-Postfix
       processes. The TZ variable is needed for sane time keeping on System-V-ish systems.

       Specify a list of names and/or name=value pairs, separated by whitespace or comma. Specify
       "{ name=value }" to protect whitespace or comma in parameter values (whitespace after  the
       opening  "{" and before the closing "}" is ignored). The form name=value is supported with
       Postfix version 2.1 and later; the use of {} is supported with Postfix 3.0 and later.

       Example:

       export_environment = TZ PATH=/bin:/usr/bin

extract_recipient_limit (default: 10240)

       The maximal number of recipient addresses that Postfix will extract from  message  headers
       when mail is submitted with "sendmail -t".

       This feature was removed in Postfix version 2.1.

fallback_relay (default: empty)

       Optional  list  of  relay  hosts  for  SMTP  destinations  that can't be found or that are
       unreachable. With Postfix 2.3 this parameter is renamed to smtp_fallback_relay.

       By default, mail is returned to the sender when a destination is not found,  and  delivery
       is deferred when a destination is unreachable.

       The  fallback  relays  must  be  SMTP  destinations.  Specify  a  domain, host, host:port,
       [host]:port, [address] or [address]:port; the form [host] turns off MX  lookups.   If  you
       specify multiple SMTP destinations, Postfix will try them in the specified order.

       Note:  before  Postfix 2.2, do not use the fallback_relay feature when relaying mail for a
       backup or primary MX domain.  Mail  would  loop  between  the  Postfix  MX  host  and  the
       fallback_relay host when the final destination is unavailable.

       •      In main.cf specify "relay_transport = relay",

       •      In  master.cf  specify  "-o fallback_relay =" (i.e., empty) at the end of the relay
              entry.

       •      In transport maps, specify "relay:nexthop..."  as the right-hand side for backup or
              primary MX domain entries.

       Postfix  version  2.2  and  later will not use the fallback_relay feature for destinations
       that it is MX host for.

fallback_transport (default: empty)

       Optional message delivery transport that the local(8) delivery agent should use for  names
       that are not found in the aliases(5) or UNIX password database.

       The precedence of local(8) delivery features from high to low is: aliases, .forward files,
       mailbox_transport_maps,    mailbox_transport,    mailbox_command_maps,    mailbox_command,
       home_mailbox,   mail_spool_directory,   fallback_transport_maps,   fallback_transport  and
       luser_relay.

fallback_transport_maps (default: empty)

       Optional lookup tables with per-recipient message delivery transports for recipients  that
       the local(8) delivery agent could not find in the aliases(5) or UNIX password database.

       The precedence of local(8) delivery features from high to low is: aliases, .forward files,
       mailbox_transport_maps,    mailbox_transport,    mailbox_command_maps,    mailbox_command,
       home_mailbox,   mail_spool_directory,   fallback_transport_maps,   fallback_transport  and
       luser_relay.

       For safety  reasons,  this  feature  does  not  allow  $number  substitutions  in  regular
       expression maps.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

fast_flush_domains (default: $relay_domains)

       Optional  list  of  destinations  that are eligible for per-destination logfiles with mail
       that is queued to those destinations.

       By default, Postfix maintains "fast flush" logfiles only for destinations that the Postfix
       SMTP  server  is  willing  to  relay  to  (i.e.  the  default  is:  "fast_flush_domains  =
       $relay_domains"; see the relay_domains parameter in the postconf(5) manual).

       Specify a list of hosts or domains, "/file/name" patterns or "type:table"  lookup  tables,
       separated by commas and/or whitespace.  Continue long lines by starting the next line with
       whitespace. A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by  its  contents;  a  "type:table"  lookup
       table is matched when the domain or its parent domain appears as lookup key.

       Pattern   matching   of  domain  names  is  controlled  by  the  presence  or  absence  of
       "fast_flush_domains" in the parent_domain_matches_subdomains parameter value.

       Specify "fast_flush_domains =" (i.e., empty) to disable the feature altogether.

fast_flush_purge_time (default: 7d)

       The time after which an empty per-destination "fast flush" logfile is deleted.

       You can specify the time as a number, or as a number followed by a letter  that  indicates
       the  time  unit: s=seconds, m=minutes, h=hours, d=days, w=weeks.  The default time unit is
       days.

fast_flush_refresh_time (default: 12h)

       The time after which a non-empty but unread per-destination "fast flush" logfile needs  to
       be  refreshed.   The  contents  of  a  logfile are refreshed by requesting delivery of all
       messages listed in the logfile.

       You can specify the time as a number, or as a number followed by a letter  that  indicates
       the  time  unit: s=seconds, m=minutes, h=hours, d=days, w=weeks.  The default time unit is
       hours.

fault_injection_code (default: 0)

       Force specific internal tests to fail, to test the handling of errors that  are  difficult
       to reproduce otherwise.

flush_service_name (default: flush)

       The name of the flush(8) service. This service maintains per-destination logfiles with the
       queue file names of mail that is queued for those destinations.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

force_mime_input_conversion (default: no)

       Convert body content that claims to be 8-bit into quoted-printable, before  header_checks,
       body_checks, Milters, and before after-queue content filters. This feature does not affect
       messages that are sent into smtpd_proxy_filter.

       The typical use case is an MTA  that  applies  this  conversion  before  signing  outbound
       messages, so that the signatures will remain valid when a message is later delivered to an
       MTA that does not announce 8BITMIME support, or when  a  message  line  exceeds  the  SMTP
       length limit.

       This feature is available in Postfix >= 3.9.

fork_attempts (default: 5)

       The maximal number of attempts to fork() a child process.

fork_delay (default: 1s)

       The delay between attempts to fork() a child process.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

forward_expansion_filter (default: see postconf -d output)

       Restrict  the  characters  that  the local(8) delivery agent allows in $name expansions of
       $forward_path.  Characters outside the allowed set are replaced by underscores.

forward_path (default: see postconf -d output)

       The local(8) delivery agent search list for finding a .forward  file  with  user-specified
       delivery methods. The first file that is found is used.

       The  forward_path value is not subject to Postfix configuration parameter $name expansion.
       Instead, the following $name  expansions  are  done  on  forward_path  before  the  search
       actually  happens.   The result of $name expansion is filtered with the character set that
       is specified with the forward_expansion_filter parameter.

       $user  The recipient's username.

       $shell The recipient's login shell pathname.

       $home  The recipient's home directory.

       $recipient
              The full recipient address.

       $extension
              The optional recipient address extension.

       $domain
              The recipient domain.

       $local The entire recipient localpart.

       $recipient_delimiter
              The address extension delimiter that was found in the  recipient  address  (Postfix
              2.11  and later), or the 'first' delimiter specified with the system-wide recipient
              address extension delimiter (Postfix  3.5.22,  3.6.12,  3.7.8,  3.8.3  and  later).
              Historically, this was always the system-wide recipient address extension delimiter
              (Postfix 2.10 and earlier).

       ${name?value}

       ${name?{value}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value when $name is non-empty.

       ${name:value}

       ${name:{value}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value when $name is empty.

       ${name?{value1}:{value2}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value1 when $name is non-empty, value2 otherwise.

       Instead of $name you can also specify ${name} or $(name).

       Examples:

       forward_path = /var/forward/$user
       forward_path =
           /var/forward/$user/.forward$recipient_delimiter$extension,
           /var/forward/$user/.forward

frozen_delivered_to (default: yes)

       Update  the  local(8)  delivery  agent's  idea   of   the   Delivered-To:   address   (see
       prepend_delivered_header) only once, at the start of a delivery attempt; do not update the
       Delivered-To: address while expanding aliases or .forward files.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and  later.  With  older  Postfix  releases,  the
       behavior  is  as  if  this parameter is set to "no". The old setting can be expensive with
       deeply nested aliases or .forward files. When  an  alias  or  .forward  file  changes  the
       Delivered-To:  address,  it  ties up one queue file and one cleanup process instance while
       mail is being forwarded.

hash_queue_depth (default: 1)

       The number of subdirectory levels for queue directories listed with  the  hash_queue_names
       parameter. Queue hashing is implemented by creating one or more levels of directories with
       one-character names.  Originally, these directory names were equal to the first characters
       of  the  queue file name, with the hexadecimal representation of the file creation time in
       microseconds.

       With long queue file names, queue hashing produces the same results as with  short  names.
       The  file  creation  time  in  microseconds  is converted into hexadecimal form before the
       result is used for queue hashing.  The base 16  encoding  gives  finer  control  over  the
       number  of  subdirectories  than  is possible with the base 52 encoding of long queue file
       names.

       After changing the hash_queue_names or hash_queue_depth  parameter,  execute  the  command
       "postfix reload".

hash_queue_names (default: deferred, defer)

       The names of queue directories that are split across multiple subdirectory levels.

       Before  Postfix  version  2.2, the default list of hashed queues was significantly larger.
       Claims about improvements in file system technology suggest that hashing of  the  incoming
       and  active  queues is no longer needed. Fewer hashed directories speed up the time needed
       to restart Postfix.

       After changing the hash_queue_names or hash_queue_depth  parameter,  execute  the  command
       "postfix reload".

header_address_token_limit (default: 10240)

       The maximal number of address tokens are allowed in an address message header. Information
       that exceeds the limit is discarded.  The limit is enforced by the cleanup(8) server.

header_checks (default: empty)

       Optional lookup tables for content inspection of  primary  non-MIME  message  headers,  as
       specified in the header_checks(5) manual page.

header_from_format (default: standard)

       The  format  of the Postfix-generated From: header. This setting affects the appearance of
       'full name' information when a local program such as /bin/mail submits a message without a
       From: header through the Postfix sendmail(1) command.

       Specify one of the following:

       standard (default)
              Produce  a  header  formatted as "From: name <address>".  This is the default as of
              Postfix 3.3.

       obsolete
              Produce a header formatted as "From: address (name)". This is the behavior prior to
              Postfix 3.3.

       Notes:

       •      Postfix  generates  the format "From: address" when name information is unavailable
              or the envelope sender address is empty. This is the  same  behavior  as  prior  to
              Postfix 3.3.

       •      In the standard form, the name will be quoted if it contains specials as defined in
              RFC 5322, or the "!%" address operators.

       •      The Postfix sendmail(1) command gets name  information  from  the  -F  command-line
              option, from the NAME environment variable, or from the UNIX password file.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.3 and later.

header_size_limit (default: 102400)

       The  maximal  amount  of  memory  in  bytes  for storing a message header.  If a header is
       larger, the excess is discarded.  The limit is enforced by the cleanup(8) server.

helpful_warnings (default: yes)

       Log warnings about problematic configuration settings, and provide helpful suggestions.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

home_mailbox (default: empty)

       Optional pathname of a mailbox file relative to a local(8) user's home directory.

       Specify a pathname ending in "/" for qmail-style delivery.

       The precedence of local(8) delivery features from high to low is: aliases, .forward files,
       mailbox_transport_maps,    mailbox_transport,    mailbox_command_maps,    mailbox_command,
       home_mailbox,  mail_spool_directory,   fallback_transport_maps,   fallback_transport   and
       luser_relay.

       Examples:

       home_mailbox = Mailbox
       home_mailbox = Maildir/

hopcount_limit (default: 50)

       The  maximal  number  of Received:  message headers that is allowed in the primary message
       headers. A message that exceeds the limit is bounced, in order to stop a mailer loop.

html_directory (default: see postconf -d output)

       The location of Postfix HTML files that describe how to  build,  configure  or  operate  a
       specific Postfix subsystem or feature.

ignore_mx_lookup_error (default: no)

       Ignore  DNS  MX  lookups  that  produce  no response.  By default, the Postfix SMTP client
       defers delivery and tries again after some delay.  This behavior is required by  the  SMTP
       standard.

       Specify  "ignore_mx_lookup_error  =  yes"  to  force  a  DNS A record lookup instead. This
       violates the SMTP standard and can result in mis-delivery of mail.

ignore_srv_lookup_error (default: no)

       When SRV record lookup fails, fall back to MX or IP address lookup as if SRV record lookup
       was not enabled.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.8 and later.

import_environment (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  list  of  environment  variables that a privileged Postfix process will import from a
       non-Postfix parent process, or name=value environment overrides.   Unprivileged  utilities
       will  enforce  the  name=value  overrides,  but  otherwise  will  not change their process
       environment.  Examples of relevant environment variables:

       TZ     May be needed for sane time keeping on most System-V-ish systems.

       DISPLAY
              Needed for debugging Postfix daemons with an X-windows debugger.

       XAUTHORITY
              Needed for debugging Postfix daemons with an X-windows debugger.

       MAIL_CONFIG
              Needed to make "postfix -c" work.

       POSTLOG_SERVICE
              Needed to make "maillog_file" work during daemon process initialization.

       POSTLOG_HOSTNAME
              Needed to make "maillog_file" work during daemon process initialization.

       Specify a list of names and/or name=value pairs, separated by whitespace or comma. Specify
       "{ name=value }" to protect whitespace or comma in environment variable values (whitespace
       after the opening "{" and before the closing "}"  is  ignored).  The  form  name=value  is
       supported  with Postfix version 2.1 and later; the use of {} is supported with Postfix 3.0
       and later.

in_flow_delay (default: 1s)

       Time to pause before accepting a new message, when the message arrival  rate  exceeds  the
       message delivery rate. This feature is turned on by default (it's disabled on SCO UNIX due
       to an SCO bug).

       With the default 100 Postfix SMTP server process limit, "in_flow_delay =  1s"  limits  the
       mail inflow to 100 messages per second above the number of messages delivered per second.

       Specify 0 to disable the feature. Valid delays are 0..10.

inet_interfaces (default: all)

       The  local  network  interface  addresses  that this mail system receives mail on. Specify
       "all" to receive mail on all network interfaces (default), "loopback-only" to receive mail
       on  loopback network interfaces only (Postfix version 2.2 and later), or zero or more IPv4
       or IPv6 addresses (IPv6 is supported in Postfix version 2.2 and later). The parameter also
       controls whether Postfix will accept mail for user@[ip.address], and prevents Postfix from
       delivering mail to a host that has equal or larger MX preference.  Specify an empty  value
       if  Postfix  does  not  receive mail over the network, or if all network listeners have an
       explicit IP address in master.cf.

       Note 1: you need to stop and start Postfix when this parameter changes.

       Note 2: address information may be enclosed inside [], but this form is not required here.

       When smtp_bind_address and/or smtp_bind_address6 are not  specified,  the  inet_interfaces
       setting  may  constrain  the  source IP address for an outbound SMTP or LMTP connection as
       described below.

       The following text is specific to SMTP and IPv4. The same reasoning applies  to  the  IPv6
       protocol,  and  to the Postfix LMTP client. To disable IPv4 or IPv6 support in the Postfix
       SMTP and LMTP client, use inet_protocols.

       •      When inet_interfaces specifies one  IPv4  address,  and  that  is  not  a  loopback
              address,  the Postfix SMTP client uses that as the source address for outbound IPv4
              connections.

       •      Otherwise, the Postfix SMTP client does not constrain the source IPv4 address,  and
              connects  using  a system-chosen source IPv4 address. This includes the cases where
              inet_interfaces is empty, where it specifies all, or  where  it  contains  no  IPv4
              address, one IPv4 address that is a loopback address, or multiple IPv4 addresses.

       A Postfix SMTP client may fail to reach some remote SMTP servers when the client source IP
       address  is  constrained  explicitly  with  smtp_bind_address  or  smtp_bind_address6,  or
       implicitly with inet_interfaces. This can happen when Postfix runs on a multi-homed system
       such as a firewall, the Postfix SMTP source  client  IP  address  is  constrained  to  one
       specific network interface, and the remote SMTP server must be reached through a different
       interface. Setting smtp_bind_address to 0.0.0.0 avoids the potential problem for IPv4, and
       setting smtp_bind_address6 to :: solves the problem for IPv6.

       A better solution for multi-homed systems is to leave inet_interfaces at the default value
       and instead use explicit IP addresses in the  master.cf  SMTP  server  definitions.   This
       preserves  the  Postfix  SMTP  client's  loop detection, by ensuring that each side of the
       firewall knows that the other IP address is still the same host. Setting  $inet_interfaces
       to  a  single IPv4 and/or IPV6 address is primarily useful with virtual hosting of domains
       on secondary IP addresses, when each IP address serves  a  different  domain  (and  has  a
       different $myhostname setting).

       See  also  the  proxy_interfaces  parameter,  for  network addresses that are forwarded to
       Postfix by way of a proxy or address translator.

       Examples:

       inet_interfaces = all (DEFAULT)
       inet_interfaces = loopback-only (Postfix version 2.2 and later)
       inet_interfaces = 127.0.0.1
       inet_interfaces = 127.0.0.1, [::1] (Postfix version 2.2 and later)
       inet_interfaces = 192.168.1.2, 127.0.0.1

inet_protocols (default: see 'postconf -d' output)

       The Internet protocols Postfix will attempt to use when making or  accepting  connections.
       Specify one or more of "ipv4" or "ipv6", separated by whitespace or commas. The form "all"
       is equivalent to "ipv4, ipv6"  or  "ipv4",  depending  on  whether  the  operating  system
       implements IPv6.

       With Postfix 2.8 and earlier the default is "ipv4". For backwards compatibility with these
       releases, the Postfix 2.9 and later upgrade procedure appends an explicit  "inet_protocols
       =  ipv4"  setting  to  main.cf  when  no  explicit  setting is present. This compatibility
       workaround will be phased out as IPv6 deployment becomes more common.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

       Note: you MUST stop and start Postfix after changing this parameter.

       On systems that pre-date IPV6_V6ONLY support (RFC 3493), an IPv6 server will  also  accept
       IPv4  connections,  even  when  IPv4  is turned off with the inet_protocols parameter.  On
       systems with IPV6_V6ONLY support, Postfix will use separate server sockets  for  IPv6  and
       IPv4, and each will accept only connections for the corresponding protocol.

       When  IPv4  support  is enabled via the inet_protocols parameter, Postfix will look up DNS
       type A records, and will convert IPv4-in-IPv6  client  IP  addresses  (::ffff:1.2.3.4)  to
       their  original  IPv4  form  (1.2.3.4).   The  latter  is  needed  on  hosts that pre-date
       IPV6_V6ONLY support (RFC 3493).

       When IPv6 support is enabled via the inet_protocols parameter, Postfix will  do  DNS  type
       AAAA record lookups.

       When  both  IPv4  and  IPv6  support  are enabled, the Postfix SMTP client will choose the
       protocol as specified with the smtp_address_preference parameter. Postfix versions  before
       2.8 attempt to connect via IPv6 before attempting to use IPv4.

       Examples:

       inet_protocols = ipv4
       inet_protocols = all (DEFAULT)
       inet_protocols = ipv6
       inet_protocols = ipv4, ipv6

info_log_address_format (default: external)

       The email address form that will be used in non-debug logging (info, warning, etc.). As of
       Postfix 3.5 when an address localpart contains spaces or  other  special  characters,  the
       localpart will be quoted, for example:

               from=<"name with spaces"@example.com>

       Older Postfix versions would log the internal (unquoted) form:

               from=<name with spaces@example.com>

       The  external  and  internal  forms are identical for the vast majority of email addresses
       that contain no spaces or other special characters in the localpart.

       The logging in external form is consistent with the address  form  that  Postfix  3.2  and
       later  prefer for most table lookups. This is therefore the more useful form for non-debug
       logging.

       Specify "info_log_address_format = internal" for backwards compatibility.

       Postfix uses the unquoted form internally,  because  an  attacker  can  specify  an  email
       address  in  different  forms  by  playing  games with quotes and backslashes. An attacker
       should not be able to use such games to circumvent Postfix access policies.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.5 and later.

initial_destination_concurrency (default: 5)

       The  initial  per-destination  concurrency  level  for  parallel  delivery  to  the   same
       destination.   With  per-destination  recipient  limit  >  1,  a  destination is a domain,
       otherwise it is a recipient.

       Use transport_initial_destination_concurrency to specify  a  transport-specific  override,
       where  transport  is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport (Postfix 2.5 and
       later).

       Warning: with concurrency of 1, one bad message can be enough to block all mail to a site.

internal_mail_filter_classes (default: empty)

       What categories of Postfix-generated mail are subject to before-queue  content  inspection
       by  non_smtpd_milters,  header_checks  and  body_checks.   Specify  zero  or  more  of the
       following, separated by whitespace or comma.

       bounce Inspect the content of delivery status notifications.

       notify Inspect the content  of  postmaster  notifications  by  the  smtp(8)  and  smtpd(8)
              processes.

       NOTE:  It's  generally  not  safe  to enable content inspection of Postfix-generated email
       messages. The user is warned.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

invalid_hostname_reject_code (default: 501)

       The numerical Postfix SMTP server response code when  the  client  HELO  or  EHLO  command
       parameter is rejected by the reject_invalid_helo_hostname restriction.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

ipc_idle (default: version dependent)

       The  time after which a client closes an idle internal communication channel.  The purpose
       is to allow Postfix daemon processes to terminate voluntarily after they become idle. This
       is used, for example, by the Postfix address resolving and rewriting clients.

       With Postfix 2.4 the default value was reduced from 100s to 5s.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

ipc_timeout (default: 3600s)

       The  time  limit  for  sending  or  receiving  information  over an internal communication
       channel.  The purpose is to break out  of  deadlock  situations.  If  the  time  limit  is
       exceeded the software aborts with a fatal error.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

ipc_ttl (default: 1000s)

       The  time  after  which  a  client  closes  an active internal communication channel.  The
       purpose is to allow Postfix daemon processes to terminate voluntarily after reaching their
       client  limit.   This is used, for example, by the Postfix address resolving and rewriting
       clients.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

known_tcp_ports (default: lmtp=24, smtp=25, smtps=submissions=465, submission=587)

       Optional setting that avoids lookups  in  the  services(5)  database.   This  feature  was
       implemented to address inconsistencies in the name of the port "465" service. The ABNF is:

           known_tcp_ports = empty | name-to-port *("," name-to-port)
           name-to-port = 1*(service-name "=') port-number

       The  comma  is required. Whitespace is optional but it cannot appear inside a service name
       or port number.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

line_length_limit (default: 2048)

       Upon input, long lines are chopped up into pieces of at most this length;  upon  delivery,
       long lines are reconstructed.

lmdb_map_size (default: 16777216)

       The  initial  OpenLDAP  LMDB  database  size limit in bytes.  Each time a database becomes
       full, its size limit is doubled.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later.

lmtp_address_preference (default: ipv6)

       The LMTP-specific version of the  smtp_address_preference  configuration  parameter.   See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

lmtp_address_verify_target (default: rcpt)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_address_verify_target configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

lmtp_assume_final (default: no)

       When a remote LMTP server announces no DSN support, assume that the server performs  final
       delivery,  and  send  "delivered"  delivery status notifications instead of "relayed". The
       default setting is backwards compatible to avoid the infinitesimal possibility of breaking
       existing LMTP-based content filters.

lmtp_balance_inet_protocols (default: yes)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_balance_inet_protocols configuration parameter. See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.3 and later.

lmtp_bind_address (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_bind_address configuration parameter.  See there for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_bind_address6 (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific  version  of the smtp_bind_address6 configuration parameter.  See there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_bind_address_enforce (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_bind_address_enforce  configuration  parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.7 and later.

lmtp_body_checks (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific  version of the smtp_body_checks configuration parameter. See there for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

lmtp_cache_connection (default: yes)

       Keep Postfix LMTP client connections open for up  to  $max_idle  seconds.  When  the  LMTP
       client receives a request for the same connection the connection is reused.

       This  parameter is available in Postfix version 2.2 and earlier.  With Postfix version 2.3
       and later,  see  lmtp_connection_cache_on_demand,  lmtp_connection_cache_destinations,  or
       lmtp_connection_reuse_time_limit.

       The  effectiveness  of  cached connections will be determined by the number of remote LMTP
       servers in use, and the concurrency limit specified for the Postfix  LMTP  client.  Cached
       connections are closed under any of the following conditions:

       •      The  Postfix  LMTP client idle time limit is reached.  This limit is specified with
              the Postfix max_idle configuration parameter.

       •      A delivery request specifies a different destination than the one currently cached.

       •      The per-process limit on the number of delivery requests is reached.  This limit is
              specified with the Postfix max_use configuration parameter.

       •      Upon  the onset of another delivery request, the remote LMTP server associated with
              the current session does not respond to the RSET command.

       Most of these limitations have been with the Postfix connection cache that is shared among
       multiple LMTP client programs.

lmtp_cname_overrides_servername (default: yes)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_cname_overrides_servername configuration parameter.
       See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_connect_timeout (default: 0s)

       The Postfix LMTP client time limit for completing a  TCP  connection,  or  zero  (use  the
       operating  system  built-in  time  limit).   When  no  connection  can  be made within the
       deadline, the LMTP client tries the next address on the mail exchanger list.

       Specify a non-negative time value (an integral value plus an  optional  one-letter  suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       Example:

       lmtp_connect_timeout = 30s

lmtp_connection_cache_destinations (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific  version  of   the   smtp_connection_cache_destinations   configuration
       parameter.  See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_connection_cache_on_demand (default: yes)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_connection_cache_on_demand configuration parameter.
       See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_connection_cache_time_limit (default: 2s)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_connection_cache_time_limit configuration parameter.
       See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_connection_reuse_count_limit (default: 0)

       The   LMTP-specific   version   of   the  smtp_connection_reuse_count_limit  configuration
       parameter.  See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later.

lmtp_connection_reuse_time_limit (default: 300s)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_connection_reuse_time_limit configuration parameter.
       See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_data_done_timeout (default: 600s)

       The  Postfix LMTP client time limit for sending the LMTP ".", and for receiving the remote
       LMTP server response.  When no response is received within  the  deadline,  a  warning  is
       logged that the mail may be delivered multiple times.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

lmtp_data_init_timeout (default: 120s)

       The  Postfix  LMTP  client time limit for sending the LMTP DATA command, and for receiving
       the remote LMTP server response.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

lmtp_data_xfer_timeout (default: 180s)

       The Postfix LMTP client time limit  for  sending  the  LMTP  message  content.   When  the
       connection  stalls  for  more  than $lmtp_data_xfer_timeout the LMTP client terminates the
       transfer.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

lmtp_defer_if_no_mx_address_found (default: no)

       The  LMTP-specific  version   of   the   smtp_defer_if_no_mx_address_found   configuration
       parameter.  See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_delivery_status_filter (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_delivery_status_filter configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

lmtp_destination_concurrency_limit (default: $default_destination_concurrency_limit)

       The maximal number of parallel deliveries to the same destination  via  the  lmtp  message
       delivery  transport.  This  limit  is  enforced by the queue manager. The message delivery
       transport name is the first field in the entry in the master.cf file.

lmtp_destination_recipient_limit (default: $default_destination_recipient_limit)

       The maximal number of recipients per message for the lmtp message delivery transport. This
       limit  is  enforced by the queue manager. The message delivery transport name is the first
       field in the entry in the master.cf file.

       Setting   this   parameter   to   a    value    of    1    changes    the    meaning    of
       lmtp_destination_concurrency_limit  from  concurrency  per  domain  into  concurrency  per
       recipient.

lmtp_discard_lhlo_keyword_address_maps (default: empty)

       Lookup tables, indexed by the remote LMTP server address, with case insensitive  lists  of
       LHLO  keywords (pipelining, starttls, auth, etc.) that the Postfix LMTP client will ignore
       in the LHLO response  from  a  remote  LMTP  server.  See  lmtp_discard_lhlo_keywords  for
       details.    The    table    is    not   indexed   by   hostname   for   consistency   with
       smtpd_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_discard_lhlo_keywords (default: empty)

       A case insensitive list of LHLO keywords  (pipelining,  starttls,  auth,  etc.)  that  the
       Postfix LMTP client will ignore in the LHLO response from a remote LMTP server.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

       Notes:

       •      Specify the silent-discard pseudo keyword to prevent this action from being logged.

       •      Use  the  lmtp_discard_lhlo_keyword_address_maps  feature  to discard LHLO keywords
              selectively.

lmtp_dns_reply_filter (default: empty)

       Optional filter for Postfix LMTP client DNS lookup results.  See smtp_dns_reply_filter for
       details including an example.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

lmtp_dns_resolver_options (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific  version of the smtp_dns_resolver_options configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

lmtp_dns_support_level (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of  the  smtp_dns_support_level  configuration  parameter.   See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later.

lmtp_enforce_tls (default: no)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_enforce_tls configuration parameter.  See there for
       details.

       This feature is deprecated as of Postfix 3.9. Specify lmtp_tls_security_level instead.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_fallback_relay (default: empty)

       Optional list of relay hosts for LMTP  destinations  that  can't  be  found  or  that  are
       unreachable.  In main.cf elements are separated by whitespace or commas.

       By  default,  mail is returned to the sender when a destination is not found, and delivery
       is deferred when a destination is unreachable.

       The fallback relays must be TCP destinations, specified without a leading "inet:"  prefix.
       Specify a host or host:port.  Since MX lookups do not apply with LMTP, there is no need to
       use the "[host]" or "[host]:port" forms.   If  you  specify  multiple  LMTP  destinations,
       Postfix will try them in the specified order.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.1 and later.

lmtp_generic_maps (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_generic_maps configuration parameter.  See there for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_header_checks (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_header_checks configuration parameter. See there for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

lmtp_host_lookup (default: dns)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_host_lookup configuration parameter.  See there for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_lhlo_name (default: $myhostname)

       The hostname to send in the LMTP LHLO command.

       The default value is the machine  hostname.   Specify  a  hostname  or  [ip.add.re.ss]  or
       [ip:v6:add:re::ss].

       This  information  can be specified in the main.cf file for all LMTP clients, or it can be
       specified in the master.cf file for a specific client, for example:

           /etc/postfix/master.cf:
               mylmtp ... lmtp -o lmtp_lhlo_name=foo.bar.com

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_lhlo_timeout (default: 300s)

       The Postfix LMTP client time limit for sending the LHLO command,  and  for  receiving  the
       initial remote LMTP server response.

       Time  units:  s  (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w (weeks).  The default time
       unit is s (seconds).

lmtp_line_length_limit (default: 998)

       The LMTP-specific version of  the  smtp_line_length_limit  configuration  parameter.   See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_mail_timeout (default: 300s)

       The  Postfix  LMTP  client time limit for sending the MAIL FROM command, and for receiving
       the remote LMTP server response.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

lmtp_mime_header_checks (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of  the  smtp_mime_header_checks  configuration  parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

lmtp_min_data_rate (default: 500)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_min_data_rate configuration parameter. See there for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.7 and later.

lmtp_mx_address_limit (default: 5)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_mx_address_limit configuration parameter.  See there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_mx_session_limit (default: 2)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_mx_session_limit configuration parameter.  See there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_nested_header_checks (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_nested_header_checks  configuration  parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

lmtp_per_record_deadline (default: no)

       The  LMTP-specific  version  of the smtp_per_record_deadline configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.9 and later.

lmtp_per_request_deadline (default: no)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_per_request_deadline  configuration  parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.7 and later.

lmtp_pix_workaround_delay_time (default: 10s)

       The  LMTP-specific  version of the smtp_pix_workaround_delay_time configuration parameter.
       See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_pix_workaround_maps (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_pix_workaround_maps  configuration  parameter.   See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.4 and later.

lmtp_pix_workaround_threshold_time (default: 500s)

       The   LMTP-specific   version   of  the  smtp_pix_workaround_threshold_time  configuration
       parameter.  See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_pix_workarounds (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_pix_workaround configuration parameter.   See  there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.4 and later.

lmtp_quit_timeout (default: 300s)

       The  Postfix  LMTP  client  time limit for sending the QUIT command, and for receiving the
       remote LMTP server response.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

lmtp_quote_rfc821_envelope (default: yes)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_quote_rfc821_envelope configuration parameter.   See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_randomize_addresses (default: yes)

       The  LMTP-specific  version  of the smtp_randomize_addresses configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_rcpt_timeout (default: 300s)

       The Postfix LMTP client time limit for sending the RCPT TO command, and for receiving  the
       remote LMTP server response.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

lmtp_reply_filter (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_reply_filter configuration parameter.  See there for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.

lmtp_rset_timeout (default: 20s)

       The Postfix LMTP client time limit for sending the RSET command,  and  for  receiving  the
       remote  LMTP  server  response.  The LMTP client sends RSET in order to finish a recipient
       address probe, or to verify that a cached connection is still alive.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

lmtp_sasl_auth_cache_name (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_sasl_auth_cache_name configuration  parameter.   See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

lmtp_sasl_auth_cache_time (default: 90d)

       The  LMTP-specific  version of the smtp_sasl_auth_cache_time configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

lmtp_sasl_auth_enable (default: no)

       Enable SASL authentication in the Postfix LMTP client.

lmtp_sasl_auth_soft_bounce (default: yes)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_sasl_auth_soft_bounce configuration parameter.   See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

lmtp_sasl_mechanism_filter (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_sasl_mechanism_filter configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_sasl_password_maps (default: empty)

       Optional Postfix LMTP client lookup tables with one username:password entry  per  host  or
       domain.   If a remote host or domain has no username:password entry, then the Postfix LMTP
       client will not attempt to authenticate to the remote host.

lmtp_sasl_password_result_delimiter (default: :)

       The  LMTP-specific  version  of  the   smtp_sasl_password_result_delimiter   configuration
       parameter.  See there for details.

lmtp_sasl_path (default: empty)

       Implementation-specific   information   that   is  passed  through  to  the  SASL  plug-in
       implementation that is selected with lmtp_sasl_type.  Typically this specifies the name of
       a configuration file or rendezvous point.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_sasl_security_options (default: noplaintext, noanonymous)

       SASL  security  options;  as  of Postfix 2.3 the list of available features depends on the
       SASL client implementation that is selected with lmtp_sasl_type.

       The following security features are defined for the cyrus client SASL implementation:

       noplaintext
              Disallow authentication methods that use plaintext passwords.

       noactive
              Disallow authentication  methods  that  are  vulnerable  to  non-dictionary  active
              attacks.

       nodictionary
              Disallow authentication methods that are vulnerable to passive dictionary attacks.

       noanonymous
              Disallow anonymous logins.

       Example:

       lmtp_sasl_security_options = noplaintext

lmtp_sasl_tls_security_options (default: $lmtp_sasl_security_options)

       The  LMTP-specific  version of the smtp_sasl_tls_security_options configuration parameter.
       See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_sasl_tls_verified_security_options (default: $lmtp_sasl_tls_security_options)

       The LMTP-specific version  of  the  smtp_sasl_tls_verified_security_options  configuration
       parameter.  See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_sasl_type (default: cyrus)

       The  SASL  plug-in  type  that the Postfix LMTP client should use for authentication.  The
       available types are listed with the "postconf -A" command.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_send_dummy_mail_auth (default: no)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_send_dummy_mail_auth configuration  parameter.   See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.9 and later.

lmtp_send_xforward_command (default: no)

       Send  an  XFORWARD  command  to  the remote LMTP server when the LMTP LHLO server response
       announces XFORWARD support.  This allows an  lmtp(8)  delivery  agent,  used  for  content
       filter  message  injection,  to  forward  the name, address, protocol and HELO name of the
       original client to the content filter and downstream LMTP server.  Before you  change  the
       value to yes, it is best to make sure that your content filter supports this command.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

lmtp_sender_dependent_authentication (default: no)

       The   LMTP-specific  version  of  the  smtp_sender_dependent_authentication  configuration
       parameter.  See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_skip_5xx_greeting (default: yes)

       The LMTP-specific version of  the  smtp_skip_5xx_greeting  configuration  parameter.   See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_skip_quit_response (default: no)

       Wait for the response to the LMTP QUIT command.

lmtp_starttls_timeout (default: 300s)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_starttls_timeout configuration parameter.  See there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tcp_port (default: 24)

       The default TCP port that the Postfix LMTP client connects to.  Specify  a  symbolic  name
       (see services(5)) or a numeric port.

lmtp_tls_CAfile (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific  version of the smtp_tls_CAfile configuration parameter.  See there for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_CApath (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_CApath configuration parameter.  See  there  for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_block_early_mail_reply (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_block_early_mail_reply configuration parameter.
       See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.

lmtp_tls_cert_file (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_cert_file configuration  parameter.   See  there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_chain_files (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific  version of the smtp_tls_chain_files configuration parameter. See there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

lmtp_tls_ciphers (default: medium)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_ciphers configuration parameter. See  there  for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

lmtp_tls_connection_reuse (default: no)

       The  LMTP-specific  version  of the smtp_tls_connection_reuse configuration parameter. See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

lmtp_tls_dcert_file (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_dcert_file configuration parameter.   See  there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_dkey_file (default: $lmtp_tls_dcert_file)

       The  LMTP-specific  version  of the smtp_tls_dkey_file configuration parameter.  See there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_eccert_file (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_eccert_file configuration parameter.  See  there
       for details.

       This  feature  is  available in Postfix 2.6 and later, when Postfix is compiled and linked
       with OpenSSL 1.0.0 or later.

lmtp_tls_eckey_file (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_eckey_file configuration parameter.   See  there
       for details.

       This  feature  is  available in Postfix 2.6 and later, when Postfix is compiled and linked
       with OpenSSL 1.0.0 or later.

lmtp_tls_enable_rpk (default: yes)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_enable_rpk configuration parameter.   See  there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.9 and later.

lmtp_tls_enforce_peername (default: yes)

       The  LMTP-specific  version of the smtp_tls_enforce_peername configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_exclude_ciphers (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers  configuration  parameter.   See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_fingerprint_cert_match (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_fingerprint_cert_match configuration parameter.
       See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

lmtp_tls_fingerprint_digest (default: see postconf -d output)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_fingerprint_digest configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

lmtp_tls_force_insecure_host_tlsa_lookup (default: no)

       The  LMTP-specific  version  of the smtp_tls_force_insecure_host_tlsa_lookup configuration
       parameter.  See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later.

lmtp_tls_key_file (default: $lmtp_tls_cert_file)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_key_file configuration parameter.  See there for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_loglevel (default: 0)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_loglevel configuration parameter.  See there for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers (default: medium)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers configuration parameter.   See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers (default: empty)

       The   LMTP-specific   version   of  the  smtp_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers  configuration
       parameter.  See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_mandatory_protocols (default: see 'postconf -d' output)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols configuration parameter. See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_note_starttls_offer (default: no)

       The  LMTP-specific  version  of  the smtp_tls_note_starttls_offer configuration parameter.
       See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_per_site (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_per_site configuration parameter.  See there for
       details.

       This feature is deprecated as of Postfix 3.9. Specify lmtp_tls_policy_maps instead.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_policy_maps (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific  version of the smtp_tls_policy_maps configuration parameter. See there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_protocols (default: see 'postconf -d' output)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_protocols configuration parameter. See there for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

lmtp_tls_scert_verifydepth (default: 9)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_scert_verifydepth configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_secure_cert_match (default: nexthop)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_secure_cert_match configuration  parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_security_level (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific  version  of  the smtp_tls_security_level configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_servername (default: empty)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_servername configuration  parameter.  See  there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

lmtp_tls_session_cache_database (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_session_cache_database configuration parameter.
       See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_session_cache_timeout (default: 3600s)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_session_cache_timeout  configuration  parameter.
       See there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_trust_anchor_file (default: empty)

       The  LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_trust_anchor_file configuration parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later.

lmtp_tls_verify_cert_match (default: hostname)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_verify_cert_match configuration  parameter.  See
       there for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_tls_wrappermode (default: no)

       The  LMTP-specific  version of the smtp_tls_wrappermode configuration parameter. See there
       for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

lmtp_use_tls (default: no)

       The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_use_tls  configuration  parameter.   See  there  for
       details.

       This feature is deprecated as of Postfix 3.9. Specify lmtp_tls_security_level instead.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

lmtp_xforward_timeout (default: 300s)

       The Postfix LMTP client time limit for sending the XFORWARD command, and for receiving the
       remote LMTP server response.

       In case of problems the client does NOT try the next address on the mail exchanger list.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

local_command_shell (default: empty)

       Optional shell program  for  local(8)  delivery  to  non-Postfix  commands.   By  default,
       non-Postfix  commands  are  executed  directly;  commands  are  given to the default shell
       (typically, /bin/sh) only when they  contain  shell  meta  characters  or  shell  built-in
       commands.

       "sendmail's  restricted  shell"  (smrsh) is what most people will use in order to restrict
       what programs can be run  from  e.g.  .forward  files  (smrsh  is  part  of  the  Sendmail
       distribution).

       Note:  when  a shell program is specified, it is invoked even when the command contains no
       shell built-in commands or meta characters.

       Example:

       local_command_shell = /some/where/smrsh -c
       local_command_shell = /bin/bash -c

local_delivery_status_filter (default: $default_delivery_status_filter)

       Optional filter for the local(8) delivery agent to change the status code  or  explanatory
       text  of  successful  or  unsuccessful deliveries.  See default_delivery_status_filter for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

local_destination_concurrency_limit (default: 2)

       The maximal number of parallel deliveries via the local mail  delivery  transport  to  the
       same  recipient  (when  "local_destination_recipient_limit  = 1") or the maximal number of
       parallel deliveries to the same local domain  (when  "local_destination_recipient_limit  >
       1").  This  limit is enforced by the queue manager. The message delivery transport name is
       the first field in the entry in the master.cf file.

       A low limit of 2 is recommended, just in case someone has an expensive shell command in  a
       .forward  file  or in an alias (e.g., a mailing list manager).  You don't want to run lots
       of those at the same time.

local_destination_recipient_limit (default: 1)

       The maximal number of  recipients  per  message  delivery  via  the  local  mail  delivery
       transport.  This  limit  is  enforced by the queue manager. The message delivery transport
       name is the first field in the entry in the master.cf file.

       Setting   this   parameter   to    a    value    >    1    changes    the    meaning    of
       local_destination_concurrency_limit  from  concurrency  per recipient into concurrency per
       domain.

local_header_rewrite_clients (default: permit_inet_interfaces)

       Rewrite or add message headers in mail from these clients, updating  incomplete  addresses
       with the domain name in $myorigin or $mydomain, and adding missing headers.

       See  the  append_at_myorigin  and append_dot_mydomain parameters for details of how domain
       names are appended to incomplete addresses.

       See remote_header_rewrite_domain to optionally rewrite or add message headers in mail from
       other clients.

       Specify a list of zero or more of the following:

       permit_inet_interfaces
              Append the domain name in $myorigin or $mydomain when the client IP address matches
              $inet_interfaces. This is enabled by default.

       permit_mynetworks
              Append the domain name in $myorigin or $mydomain when the client IP address matches
              any network or network address listed in $mynetworks. This setting will not prevent
              remote mail header address rewriting when mail from a remote client is forwarded by
              a neighboring system.

       permit_sasl_authenticated
              Append  the  domain  name in $myorigin or $mydomain when the client is successfully
              authenticated via the RFC 4954 (AUTH) protocol.

       permit_tls_clientcerts
              Append the domain name in $myorigin or $mydomain when the remote  SMTP  client  TLS
              certificate fingerprint or public key fingerprint (Postfix 2.9 and later) is listed
              in $relay_clientcerts.  The fingerprint digest algorithm is  configurable  via  the
              smtpd_tls_fingerprint_digest  parameter (hard-coded as md5 prior to Postfix version
              2.5).
              The default algorithm is sha256 with Postfix >= 3.6 and the compatibility_level set
              to  3.6  or  higher.  With  Postfix  <=  3.5,  the  default  algorithm is md5.  The
              best-practice  algorithm  is  now  sha256.  Recent  advances   in   hash   function
              cryptanalysis  have  led  to  md5  and  sha1  being  deprecated in favor of sha256.
              However, as long as there are no known "second pre-image" attacks against the older
              algorithms,  their  use  in  this  context, though not recommended, is still likely
              safe.

       permit_tls_all_clientcerts
              Append the domain name in $myorigin or $mydomain when the remote  SMTP  client  TLS
              certificate  is  successfully  verified,  regardless of whether it is listed on the
              server, and regardless of the certifying authority.

       check_address_map type:table

       type:table
              Append the domain name in $myorigin or $mydomain when the client IP address matches
              the  specified lookup table.  The lookup result is ignored, and no subnet lookup is
              done. This is suitable for, e.g., pop-before-smtp lookup tables.

       Examples:

       The Postfix < 2.2 backwards compatible setting: always rewrite message headers, and always
       append my own domain to incomplete header addresses.

           local_header_rewrite_clients = static:all

       The  purist  (and default) setting: rewrite headers only in mail from Postfix sendmail and
       in SMTP mail from this machine.

           local_header_rewrite_clients = permit_inet_interfaces

       The intermediate setting: rewrite header  addresses  and  append  $myorigin  or  $mydomain
       information  only  with mail from Postfix sendmail, from local clients, or from authorized
       SMTP clients.

       Note: this setting will not prevent remote mail header address rewriting when mail from  a
       remote client is forwarded by a neighboring system.

           local_header_rewrite_clients = permit_mynetworks,
               permit_sasl_authenticated permit_tls_clientcerts
               check_address_map hash:/etc/postfix/pop-before-smtp

local_login_sender_maps (default: static:*)

       A  list  of lookup tables that are searched by the UNIX login name, and that return a list
       of allowed envelope sender patterns separated by space or comma. These sender patterns are
       enforced  by  the  Postfix postdrop(1) command. The default is backwards-compatible: every
       user may specify any sender envelope address.

       When no UNIX login name is available, the postdrop(1) command will prepend "uid:"  to  the
       numerical UID and use that instead.

       This feature ignores address extensions in the user-specified envelope sender address.

       The  following  sender  patterns  are  special;  these  cannot be used as part of a longer
       pattern.

        *     This pattern allows any envelope sender address.

        <>    This   pattern   allows   the   empty   envelope   sender    address.    See    the
              empty_address_local_login_sender_maps_lookup_key configuration parameter.

        @domain
              This pattern allows an envelope sender address when the '@' and domain part match.

       Examples:

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           # Allow root and postfix full control, anyone else can only
           # send mail as themselves. Use "uid:" followed by the numerical
           # UID when the UID has no entry in the UNIX password file.
           local_login_sender_maps =
               inline:{ { root = * }, { postfix = * } },
               pcre:/etc/postfix/login_senders

       /etc/postfix/login_senders:
          # Allow both the bare username and the user@domain forms.
           /(.+)/ $1 $1@example.com

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

local_recipient_maps (default: proxy:unix:passwd.byname $alias_maps)

       Lookup  tables  with  all  names  or addresses of local recipients: a recipient address is
       local when its  domain  matches  $mydestination,  $inet_interfaces  or  $proxy_interfaces.
       Specify  @domain  as  a  wild-card  for  domains  that do not have a valid recipient list.
       Technically, tables listed with $local_recipient_maps are used as lists: Postfix needs  to
       know  only  if  a lookup string is found or not, but it does not use the result from table
       lookup.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       If  this  parameter  is  non-empty (the default), then the Postfix SMTP server will reject
       mail for unknown local users. Other Postfix  interfaces  may  still  accept  an  "unknown"
       recipient.

       To   turn   off   local   recipient   checking   in   the  Postfix  SMTP  server,  specify
       "local_recipient_maps =" (i.e. empty).

       The default setting assumes that you use the default  Postfix  local  delivery  agent  for
       local delivery. You need to update the local_recipient_maps setting if:

       •      You redefine the local delivery agent in master.cf.

       •      You redefine the "local_transport" setting in main.cf.

       •      You  use the "luser_relay", "mailbox_transport", or "fallback_transport" feature of
              the Postfix local(8) delivery agent.

       Details are described in the LOCAL_RECIPIENT_README file.

       Beware: if the Postfix SMTP server runs chrooted, you need to access the passwd  file  via
       the proxymap(8) service, in order to overcome chroot access restrictions. The alternative,
       maintaining a copy of the system password file in the chroot jail is not practical.

       Examples:

       local_recipient_maps =

local_transport (default: local:$myhostname)

       The default mail delivery transport and next-hop destination for final delivery to domains
       listed with mydestination, and for [ipaddress] destinations that match $inet_interfaces or
       $proxy_interfaces.  This information can be overruled with the transport(5) table.

       By default, local mail is delivered to the transport called "local",  which  is  just  the
       name of a service that is defined the master.cf file.

       Specify  a  string  of  the  form transport:nexthop, where transport is the name of a mail
       delivery transport defined in master.cf.  The :nexthop destination is optional; its syntax
       is documented in the manual page of the corresponding delivery agent.

       Beware:  if  you  override  the  default  local delivery agent then you need to review the
       LOCAL_RECIPIENT_README document, otherwise the SMTP  server  may  reject  mail  for  local
       recipients.

luser_relay (default: empty)

       Optional  catch-all  destination  for  unknown  local(8) recipients.  By default, mail for
       unknown  recipients  in   domains   that   match   $mydestination,   $inet_interfaces   or
       $proxy_interfaces is returned as undeliverable.

       The  luser_relay  value is not subject to Postfix configuration parameter $name expansion.
       Instead, the following $name expansions are done:

       $domain
              The recipient domain.

       $extension
              The recipient address extension.

       $home  The recipient's home directory.

       $local The entire recipient address localpart.

       $recipient
              The full recipient address.

       $recipient_delimiter
              The address extension delimiter that was found in the  recipient  address  (Postfix
              2.11  and later), or the system-wide recipient address extension delimiter (Postfix
              2.10 and earlier).

       $shell The recipient's login shell.

       $user  The recipient username.

       ${name?value}

       ${name?{value}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value when $name is non-empty.

       ${name:value}

       ${name:{value}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value when $name is empty.

       ${name?{value1}:{value2}} (Postfix >= 3.0)
              Expands to value1 when $name is non-empty, value2 otherwise.

       Instead of $name you can also specify ${name} or $(name).

       Note: luser_relay works only for the Postfix local(8) delivery agent.

       Note: if you use this feature for accounts not in the UNIX password file,  then  you  must
       specify  "local_recipient_maps  =" (i.e. empty) in the main.cf file, otherwise the Postfix
       SMTP server will reject mail for non-UNIX accounts with "User unknown in  local  recipient
       table".

       Examples:

       luser_relay = $user@other.host
       luser_relay = $local@other.host
       luser_relay = admin+$local

mail_name (default: Postfix)

       The  mail system name that is displayed in Received: headers, in the SMTP greeting banner,
       and in bounced mail.

mail_owner (default: postfix)

       The UNIX system account that owns the Postfix queue and  most  Postfix  daemon  processes.
       Specify  the  name  of an unprivileged user account that does not share a user or group ID
       with other accounts, and that owns  no  other  files  or  processes  on  the  system.   In
       particular, don't specify nobody or daemon.  PLEASE USE A DEDICATED USER ID AND GROUP ID.

       When  this  parameter  value is changed you need to re-run "postfix set-permissions" (with
       Postfix version 2.0 and earlier: "/etc/postfix/post-install set-permissions".

mail_release_date (default: see postconf -d output)

       The Postfix release date, in "YYYYMMDD" format.

mail_spool_directory (default: see postconf -d output)

       The directory where local(8) UNIX-style mailboxes are kept. The default setting depends on
       the system type. Specify a name ending in / for maildir-style delivery.

       Note:  maildir  delivery  is  done  with  the privileges of the recipient.  If you use the
       mail_spool_directory setting  for  maildir  style  delivery,  then  you  must  create  the
       top-level maildir directory in advance. Postfix will not create it.

       Examples:

       mail_spool_directory = /var/mail
       mail_spool_directory = /var/spool/mail

mail_version (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  version  of  the  mail  system.  Stable  releases  are  named major.minor.patchlevel.
       Experimental releases also include the release date. The version string can  be  used  in,
       for example, the SMTP greeting banner.

mailbox_command (default: empty)

       Optional  external  command  that  the  local(8)  delivery  agent  should  use for mailbox
       delivery.  The command is run with the user ID and the primary group ID privileges of  the
       recipient.   Exception: command delivery for root executes with $default_privs privileges.
       This is not a problem, because 1) mail for root should always be aliased to  a  real  user
       and 2) don't log in as root, use "su" instead.

       The following environment variables are exported to the command:

       CLIENT_ADDRESS
              Remote client network address. Available in Postfix version 2.2 and later.

       CLIENT_HELO
              Remote client EHLO command parameter. Available in Postfix version 2.2 and later.

       CLIENT_HOSTNAME
              Remote client hostname. Available in Postfix version 2.2 and later.

       CLIENT_PROTOCOL
              Remote client protocol. Available in Postfix version 2.2 and later.

       DOMAIN The domain part of the recipient address.

       ENVID  The optional RFC 3461 envelope ID. Available in Postfix version 3.9 and later

       EXTENSION
              The optional address extension.

       HOME   The recipient home directory.

       LOCAL  The recipient address localpart.

       LOGNAME
              The recipient's username.

       ORIGINAL_RECIPIENT
              The entire recipient address, before any address rewriting or aliasing.

       RECIPIENT
              The full recipient address.

       SASL_METHOD
              SASL  authentication  method specified in the remote client AUTH command. Available
              in Postfix version 2.2 and later.

       SASL_SENDER
              SASL sender address specified in the remote client MAIL FROM command. Available  in
              Postfix version 2.2 and later.

       SASL_USER
              SASL  username  specified  in the remote client AUTH command.  Available in Postfix
              version 2.2 and later.

       SENDER The full sender address.

       SHELL  The recipient's login shell.

       USER   The recipient username.

       Unlike other Postfix  configuration  parameters,  the  mailbox_command  parameter  is  not
       subjected  to  $name substitutions. This is to make it easier to specify shell syntax (see
       example below).

       If you can, avoid shell meta  characters  because  they  will  force  Postfix  to  run  an
       expensive  shell  process.  If you're delivering via "procmail" then running a shell won't
       make a noticeable difference in the total cost.

       Note: if you use the mailbox_command feature to deliver mail system-wide, you must set  up
       an alias that forwards mail for root to a real user.

       The precedence of local(8) delivery features from high to low is: aliases, .forward files,
       mailbox_transport_maps,    mailbox_transport,    mailbox_command_maps,    mailbox_command,
       home_mailbox,   mail_spool_directory,   fallback_transport_maps,   fallback_transport  and
       luser_relay.

       Examples:

       mailbox_command = /some/where/procmail
       mailbox_command = /some/where/procmail -a "$EXTENSION"
       mailbox_command = /some/where/maildrop -d "$USER"
               -f "$SENDER" "$EXTENSION"

mailbox_command_maps (default: empty)

       Optional lookup tables with per-recipient external commands to use  for  local(8)  mailbox
       delivery.  Behavior is as with mailbox_command.

       The precedence of local(8) delivery features from high to low is: aliases, .forward files,
       mailbox_transport_maps,    mailbox_transport,    mailbox_command_maps,    mailbox_command,
       home_mailbox,   mail_spool_directory,   fallback_transport_maps,   fallback_transport  and
       luser_relay.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

mailbox_delivery_lock (default: see postconf -d output)

       How  to  lock  a  UNIX-style  local(8)  mailbox before attempting delivery.  For a list of
       available file locking methods, use the "postconf -l" command.

       This setting is ignored with maildir style delivery,  because  such  deliveries  are  safe
       without explicit locks.

       Note:  The  dotlock  method requires that the recipient UID or GID has write access to the
       parent directory of the mailbox file.

       Note: the default setting of this parameter is system dependent.

mailbox_size_limit (default: 51200000)

       The maximal size of any local(8) individual mailbox or maildir file, or zero  (no  limit).
       In  fact,  this  limits  the  size  of  any  file  that is written to upon local delivery,
       including files written by external commands that are executed by  the  local(8)  delivery
       agent. The value cannot exceed LONG_MAX (typically, a 32-bit or 64-bit signed integer).

       This limit must not be smaller than the message size limit.

mailbox_transport (default: empty)

       Optional  message  delivery  transport  that  the  local(8)  delivery agent should use for
       mailbox delivery to all local recipients, whether or not they are found in the UNIX passwd
       database.

       The precedence of local(8) delivery features from high to low is: aliases, .forward files,
       mailbox_transport_maps,    mailbox_transport,    mailbox_command_maps,    mailbox_command,
       home_mailbox,   mail_spool_directory,   fallback_transport_maps,   fallback_transport  and
       luser_relay.

mailbox_transport_maps (default: empty)

       Optional lookup tables with per-recipient message delivery transports to use for  local(8)
       mailbox delivery, whether or not the recipients are found in the UNIX passwd database.

       The precedence of local(8) delivery features from high to low is: aliases, .forward files,
       mailbox_transport_maps,    mailbox_transport,    mailbox_command_maps,    mailbox_command,
       home_mailbox,   mail_spool_directory,   fallback_transport_maps,   fallback_transport  and
       luser_relay.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       For  safety  reasons,  this  feature  does  not  allow  $number  substitutions  in regular
       expression maps.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

maillog_file (default: empty)

       The name of an optional logfile that is written by the  Postfix  postlogd(8)  service.  An
       empty  value  selects  logging  to syslogd(8).  Specify "/dev/stdout" to select logging to
       standard output. Stdout logging requires that Postfix is started with "postfix start-fg".

       Note 1: The maillog_file parameter value must contain a prefix that is specified with  the
       maillog_file_prefixes parameter.

       Note  2:  Some Postfix non-daemon programs may still log information to syslogd(8), before
       they have processed their configuration parameters and command-line options.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

maillog_file_compressor (default: gzip)

       The program to run after rotating $maillog_file with "postfix logrotate". The  command  is
       run with the rotated logfile name as its first argument.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

maillog_file_permissions (default: 0600)

       The  file  access  permissions that will be set when the file $maillog_file is created for
       the first time, or when the file is created after an existing file is rotated. Specify one
       of:  0600  (only  super-user  read/write access), 0640 (adds 'group' read access), or 0644
       (also adds 'other' read access). The leading '0' is optional.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.9 and later.

maillog_file_prefixes (default: /var, /dev/stdout)

       A list of allowed prefixes for a maillog_file value. This is a safety feature  to  contain
       the  damage  from  a  single  configuration  mistake.  Specify one or more prefix strings,
       separated by comma or whitespace.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

maillog_file_rotate_suffix (default: %Y%m%d-%H%M%S)

       The format of the suffix to append to $maillog_file while rotating the file with  "postfix
       logrotate".  See  strftime(3) for syntax. The default suffix, YYYYMMDD-HHMMSS, allows logs
       to be rotated frequently.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

mailq_path (default: see postconf -d output)

       Sendmail compatibility feature that  specifies  where  the  Postfix  mailq(1)  command  is
       installed. This command can be used to list the Postfix mail queue.

manpage_directory (default: see postconf -d output)

       Where the Postfix manual pages are installed.

maps_rbl_domains (default: empty)

       Obsolete feature: use the reject_rbl_client feature instead.

maps_rbl_reject_code (default: 554)

       The  numerical  Postfix  SMTP  server  response  code when a remote SMTP client request is
       blocked  by  the  reject_rbl_client,   reject_rhsbl_client,   reject_rhsbl_reverse_client,
       reject_rhsbl_sender or reject_rhsbl_recipient restriction.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

masquerade_classes (default: envelope_sender, header_sender, header_recipient)

       What addresses are subject to address masquerading.

       By  default,  address  masquerading is limited to envelope sender addresses, and to header
       sender and header recipient addresses.  This allows you to use address masquerading  on  a
       mail gateway while still being able to forward mail to users on individual machines.

       Specify   zero   or   more   of:   envelope_sender,   envelope_recipient,   header_sender,
       header_recipient

masquerade_domains (default: empty)

       Optional list of  domains  whose  subdomain  structure  will  be  stripped  off  in  email
       addresses.

       The list is processed left to right, and processing stops at the first match.  Thus,

           masquerade_domains = foo.example.com example.com

       strips    "user@any.thing.foo.example.com"    to    "user@foo.example.com",   but   strips
       "user@any.thing.else.example.com" to "user@example.com".

       A domain name prefixed with ! means do not masquerade this domain or its subdomains. Thus,

           masquerade_domains = !foo.example.com example.com

       does not change "user@any.thing.foo.example.com"  or  "user@foo.example.com",  but  strips
       "user@any.thing.else.example.com" to "user@example.com".

       Note:  with  Postfix  version  2.2,  message header address masquerading happens only when
       message header address rewriting is enabled:

       •      The message is received with the Postfix sendmail(1) command,

       •      The   message   is    received    from    a    network    client    that    matches
              $local_header_rewrite_clients,

       •      The  message  is  received  from  the network, and the remote_header_rewrite_domain
              parameter specifies a non-empty value.

       To get the behavior before Postfix version 2.2,  specify  "local_header_rewrite_clients  =
       static:all".

       Example:

       masquerade_domains = $mydomain

masquerade_exceptions (default: empty)

       Optional  list  of  user  names  that are not subjected to address masquerading, even when
       their addresses match $masquerade_domains.

       By default, address masquerading makes no exceptions.

       Specify a list of user names, "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns, separated  by  commas
       and/or  whitespace.  The  list is matched left to right, and the search stops on the first
       match. A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by its contents; a "type:table" lookup table  is
       matched  when  a  name matches a lookup key (the lookup result is ignored).  Continue long
       lines by starting the next line with whitespace. Specify "!pattern" to exclude a name from
       the list. The form "!/file/name" is supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       Examples:

       masquerade_exceptions = root, mailer-daemon
       masquerade_exceptions = root

master_service_disable (default: empty)

       Selectively  disable master(8) listener ports by service type or by service name and type.
       Specify a list of service types ("inet", "unix", "fifo", or "pass") or "name/type" tuples,
       where "name" is the first field of a master.cf entry and "type" is a service type. As with
       other Postfix matchlists, a search stops  at  the  first  match.   Specify  "!pattern"  to
       exclude a service from the list. By default, all master(8) listener ports are enabled.

       Note:  this  feature  does  not support "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns, nor does it
       support wildcards such as "*" or "all". This is intentional.

       Examples:

       # With Postfix 2.6..2.10 use '.' instead of '/'.
       # Turn on all master(8) listener ports (the default).
       master_service_disable =
       # Turn off only the main SMTP listener port.
       master_service_disable = smtp/inet
       # Turn off all TCP/IP listener ports.
       master_service_disable = inet
       # Turn off all TCP/IP listener ports except "foo".
       master_service_disable = !foo/inet, inet

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

max_idle (default: 100s)

       The maximum amount of time that an idle Postfix  daemon  process  waits  for  an  incoming
       connection before terminating voluntarily.  This parameter is ignored by the Postfix queue
       manager and by other long-lived Postfix daemon processes.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

max_use (default: 100)

       The maximal number of incoming connections that a  Postfix  daemon  process  will  service
       before  terminating  voluntarily.   This parameter is ignored by the Postfix queue manager
       and by other long-lived Postfix daemon processes.

maximal_backoff_time (default: 4000s)

       The maximal time between attempts to deliver a deferred message.

       This parameter should be set to a value greater than or  equal  to  $minimal_backoff_time.
       See also $queue_run_delay.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

maximal_queue_lifetime (default: 5d)

       Consider  a  message as undeliverable, when delivery fails with a temporary error, and the
       time in the queue has reached the maximal_queue_lifetime limit.

       Specify a non-negative time value (an integral value plus an  optional  one-letter  suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is d (days).

       Specify 0 when mail delivery should be tried only once.

message_drop_headers (default: bcc, content-length, resent-bcc, return-path)

       Names  of  message  headers  that  the  cleanup(8)  daemon  will  remove  after   applying
       header_checks(5)  and  before  invoking  Milter  applications.   The  default  setting  is
       compatible with Postfix < 3.0.

       Specify a list of header names, separated by comma or  space.   Names  are  matched  in  a
       case-insensitive  manner.  The list of supported header names is limited only by available
       memory.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

message_reject_characters (default: empty)

       The set of characters that Postfix will reject  in  message  content.   The  usual  C-like
       escape  sequences are recognized: \a \b \f \n \r \t \v \ddd (up to three octal digits) and
       \\.

       Note 1: this feature does not recognize text that requires MIME decoding. It inspects  raw
       message content, just like header_checks and body_checks.

       Note 2: this feature is disabled with "receive_override_options = no_header_body_checks".

       Example:

       message_reject_characters = \0

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

message_size_limit (default: 10240000)

       The  maximal size in bytes of a message, including envelope information.  The value cannot
       exceed LONG_MAX (typically, a 32-bit or 64-bit signed integer).

       Note: be careful when making changes.  Excessively small values will result in the loss of
       non-delivery  notifications,  when a bounce message size exceeds the local or remote MTA's
       message size limit.

message_strip_characters (default: empty)

       The set of characters that Postfix will remove from message  content.   The  usual  C-like
       escape  sequences are recognized: \a \b \f \n \r \t \v \ddd (up to three octal digits) and
       \\.

       Note 1: this feature does not recognize text that requires MIME decoding. It inspects  raw
       message content, just like header_checks and body_checks.

       Note 2: this feature is disabled with "receive_override_options = no_header_body_checks".

       Example:

       message_strip_characters = \0

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

meta_directory (default: see 'postconf -d' output)

       The  location  of  non-executable  files that are shared among multiple Postfix instances,
       such as postfix-files, dynamicmaps.cf, and the multi-instance template files main.cf.proto
       and   master.cf.proto.    This   directory  should  contain  only  Postfix-related  files.
       Typically, the meta_directory parameter has  the  same  default  as  the  config_directory
       parameter (/etc/postfix or /usr/local/etc/postfix).

       For  backwards  compatibility  with  Postfix versions 2.6..2.11, specify "meta_directory =
       $daemon_directory"  in  main.cf  before  installing  or  upgrading  Postfix,  or   specify
       "meta_directory  =  /path/name"  on the "make makefiles", "make install" or "make upgrade"
       command line.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

milter_command_timeout (default: 30s)

       The time limit for sending an SMTP command to a Milter (mail filter) application, and  for
       receiving the response.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_connect_macros (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  macros that are sent to Milter (mail filter) applications after completion of an SMTP
       connection. See MILTER_README for a list of available macro names and their meanings.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_connect_timeout (default: 30s)

       The time limit for connecting to a Milter (mail filter) application, and  for  negotiating
       protocol options.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_content_timeout (default: 300s)

       The  time limit for sending message content to a Milter (mail filter) application, and for
       receiving the response.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_data_macros (default: see postconf -d output)

       The macros that are sent to version 4 or higher Milter (mail  filter)  applications  after
       the  SMTP  DATA  command.  See MILTER_README for a list of available macro names and their
       meanings.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_default_action (default: tempfail)

       The default action when a Milter (mail filter) response is unavailable (for  example,  bad
       Postfix configuration or Milter failure). Specify one of the following:

       accept Proceed as if the mail filter was not present.

       reject Reject all further commands in this session with a permanent status code.

       tempfail
              Reject all further commands in this session with a temporary status code.

       quarantine
              Like  "accept",  but freeze the message in the "hold" queue. Available with Postfix
              2.6 and later.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_end_of_data_macros (default: see postconf -d output)

       The macros  that  are  sent  to  Milter  (mail  filter)  applications  after  the  message
       end-of-data. See MILTER_README for a list of available macro names and their meanings.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_end_of_header_macros (default: see postconf -d output)

       The macros that are sent to Milter (mail filter) applications after the end of the message
       header. See MILTER_README for a list of available macro names and their meanings.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

milter_header_checks (default: empty)

       Optional lookup tables for content inspection of message  headers  that  are  produced  by
       Milter  applications.   See the header_checks(5) manual page available actions. Currently,
       PREPEND is not implemented.

       The following example sends all mail that is marked as SPAM to a  spam  handling  machine.
       Note that matches are case-insensitive by default.

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           milter_header_checks = pcre:/etc/postfix/milter_header_checks

       /etc/postfix/milter_header_checks:
           /^X-SPAM-FLAG:\s+YES/ FILTER mysmtp:sanitizer.example.com:25

       The  milter_header_checks  mechanism  could  also be used for allowlisting. For example it
       could be used to skip heavy content inspection for DKIM-signed mail  from  known  friendly
       domains.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7, and as an optional patch for Postfix 2.6.

milter_helo_macros (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  macros that are sent to Milter (mail filter) applications after the SMTP HELO or EHLO
       command. See MILTER_README for a list of available macro names and their meanings.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_macro_daemon_name (default: $myhostname)

       The {daemon_name} macro value for Milter (mail filter)  applications.   See  MILTER_README
       for a list of available macro names and their meanings.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_macro_defaults (default: empty)

       Optional  list  of  name=value pairs that specify default values for arbitrary macros that
       Postfix may send to Milter applications.   These  defaults  are  used  when  there  is  no
       corresponding information from the message delivery context.

       Specify name=value or {name=value} pairs separated by comma or whitespace.  Enclose a pair
       in "{}" when a value contains comma or whitespace (this form ignores whitespace after  the
       enclosing "{", around the "=", and before the enclosing "}").

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.1 and later.

milter_macro_v (default: $mail_name $mail_version)

       The  {v}  macro value for Milter (mail filter) applications.  See MILTER_README for a list
       of available macro names and their meanings.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_mail_macros (default: see postconf -d output)

       The macros that are sent to Milter (mail filter) applications after  the  SMTP  MAIL  FROM
       command. See MILTER_README for a list of available macro names and their meanings.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_protocol (default: 6)

       The mail filter protocol version and optional protocol extensions for communication with a
       Milter application; prior to Postfix 2.6 the default protocol is  2.  Postfix  sends  this
       version  number during the initial protocol handshake.  It should match the version number
       that is expected by the mail filter application (or by its Milter library).

       Protocol versions:

       2      Use Sendmail 8 mail filter protocol version 2 (default with Sendmail  version  8.11
              .. 8.13 and Postfix version 2.3 ..  2.5).

       3      Use Sendmail 8 mail filter protocol version 3.

       4      Use Sendmail 8 mail filter protocol version 4.

       6      Use  Sendmail  8 mail filter protocol version 6 (default with Sendmail version 8.14
              and Postfix version 2.6).

       Protocol extensions:

       no_header_reply
              Specify this when the Milter application will not reply for each individual message
              header.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_rcpt_macros (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  macros  that  are  sent  to  Milter (mail filter) applications after the SMTP RCPT TO
       command. See MILTER_README for a list of available macro names and their meanings.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

milter_unknown_command_macros (default: see postconf -d output)

       The macros that are sent to version 3 or higher Milter (mail filter) applications after an
       unknown  SMTP  command.   See  MILTER_README for a list of available macro names and their
       meanings.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

mime_boundary_length_limit (default: 2048)

       The maximal length of MIME multipart boundary strings. The MIME  processor  is  unable  to
       distinguish    between    boundary   strings   that   do   not   differ   in   the   first
       $mime_boundary_length_limit characters.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

mime_header_checks (default: $header_checks)

       Optional lookup tables  for  content  inspection  of  MIME  related  message  headers,  as
       described in the header_checks(5) manual page.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

mime_nesting_limit (default: 100)

       The  maximal  recursion  level  that the MIME processor will handle.  Postfix refuses mail
       that is nested deeper than the specified limit.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

minimal_backoff_time (default: 300s)

       The minimal time between attempts to deliver a deferred message; prior to Postfix 2.4  the
       default value was 1000s.

       This  parameter also limits the time an unreachable destination is kept in the short-term,
       in-memory, destination status cache.

       This parameter should  be  set  greater  than  or  equal  to  $queue_run_delay.  See  also
       $maximal_backoff_time.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

multi_instance_directories (default: empty)

       An  optional  list  of  non-default  Postfix  configuration directories; these directories
       belong to additional Postfix  instances  that  share  the  Postfix  executable  files  and
       documentation  with  the  default  Postfix  instance, and that are started, stopped, etc.,
       together with the default Postfix instance.  Specify a  list  of  pathnames  separated  by
       comma or whitespace.

       When  $multi_instance_directories is empty, the postfix(1) command runs in single-instance
       mode and operates on a single Postfix instance only.  Otherwise,  the  postfix(1)  command
       runs  in  multi-instance  mode  and  invokes the multi-instance manager specified with the
       multi_instance_wrapper parameter. The multi-instance manager in turn  executes  postfix(1)
       commands    for    the    default    instance   and   for   all   Postfix   instances   in
       $multi_instance_directories.

       Currently, this parameter setting is ignored except for the default main.cf file.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

multi_instance_enable (default: no)

       Allow this Postfix instance to be started, stopped, etc., by a multi-instance manager.  By
       default,  new  instances are created in a safe state that prevents them from being started
       inadvertently.  This parameter is reserved for the multi-instance manager.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

multi_instance_group (default: empty)

       The  optional  instance  group  name  of  this  Postfix  instance.  A   group   identifies
       closely-related  Postfix  instances that the multi-instance manager can start, stop, etc.,
       as a unit.  This parameter is reserved for the multi-instance manager.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

multi_instance_name (default: empty)

       The optional instance name of this Postfix instance. This name becomes  also  the  default
       value for the syslog_name parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

multi_instance_wrapper (default: empty)

       The  pathname of a multi-instance manager command that the postfix(1) command invokes when
       the multi_instance_directories parameter value is non-empty. The pathname may be  followed
       by  initial command arguments separated by whitespace; shell metacharacters such as quotes
       are not supported in this context.

       The postfix(1) command invokes the manager command with the postfix(1) non-option  command
       arguments  on the manager command line, and with all installation configuration parameters
       exported into the manager command process environment. The manager command in turn invokes
       the  postfix(1)  command  for individual Postfix instances as "postfix -c config_directory
       command".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

multi_recipient_bounce_reject_code (default: 550)

       The numerical Postfix SMTP server response code when  a  remote  SMTP  client  request  is
       blocked by the reject_multi_recipient_bounce restriction.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

mydestination (default: $myhostname, localhost.$mydomain, localhost)

       The  list  of domains that are delivered via the $local_transport mail delivery transport.
       By default this is the Postfix local(8) delivery agent which looks up  all  recipients  in
       /etc/passwd   and  /etc/aliases.  The  SMTP  server  validates  recipient  addresses  with
       $local_recipient_maps and rejects non-existent recipients. See also the local domain class
       in the ADDRESS_CLASS_README file.

       The  default  mydestination  value  specifies names for the local machine only.  On a mail
       domain gateway, you should also include $mydomain.

       The  $local_transport  delivery  method  is  also   selected   for   mail   addressed   to
       user@[the.net.work.address]  of  the  mail  system  (the  IP  addresses specified with the
       inet_interfaces and proxy_interfaces parameters).

       Warnings:

       •      Do not specify  the  names  of  virtual  domains  -  those  domains  are  specified
              elsewhere. See VIRTUAL_README for more information.

       •      Do  not  specify  the names of domains that this machine is backup MX host for. See
              STANDARD_CONFIGURATION_README for how to set up backup MX hosts.

       •      By default, the Postfix SMTP server rejects mail for recipients not listed with the
              local_recipient_maps  parameter.   See  the postconf(5) manual for a description of
              the local_recipient_maps and unknown_local_recipient_reject_code parameters.

       Specify a list of host or domain names, "/file/name" or "type:table"  patterns,  separated
       by  commas  and/or  whitespace.  A  "/file/name"  pattern  is  replaced by its contents; a
       "type:table" lookup table is matched when a name matches a lookup key (the  lookup  result
       is ignored).  Continue long lines by starting the next line with whitespace.

       Examples:

       mydestination = $myhostname, localhost.$mydomain $mydomain
       mydestination = $myhostname, localhost.$mydomain www.$mydomain, ftp.$mydomain

mydomain (default: see postconf -d output)

       The internet domain name of this mail system.  The default is to use $myhostname minus the
       first component, or "localdomain" (Postfix 2.3 and later).  $mydomain is used as a default
       value for many other configuration parameters.

       Example:

       mydomain = domain.tld

myhostname (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  internet  hostname  of  this  mail  system. The default is to use the fully-qualified
       domain name (FQDN) from gethostname(), or to use the non-FQDN  result  from  gethostname()
       and  append  ".$mydomain".   $myhostname  is  used  as  a  default  value  for  many other
       configuration parameters.

       Example:

       myhostname = host.example.com

mynetworks (default: see postconf -d output)

       The list of "trusted" remote SMTP clients that have more privileges than "strangers".

       In particular, "trusted" SMTP clients are allowed to relay mail through Postfix.  See  the
       smtpd_relay_restrictions parameter description in the postconf(5) manual.

       You  can specify the list of "trusted" network addresses by hand or you can let Postfix do
       it for you (which is the default).  See the description of the mynetworks_style  parameter
       for more information.

       If you specify the mynetworks list by hand, Postfix ignores the mynetworks_style setting.

       Specify  a  list  of  network  addresses  or network/netmask patterns, separated by commas
       and/or whitespace. Continue long lines by starting the next line with whitespace.

       The netmask specifies the number of bits in the network part of a host address.   You  can
       also specify "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns.  A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by
       its contents; a "type:table" lookup table is matched when a table entry matches  a  lookup
       string (the lookup result is ignored).

       The  list  is  matched  left  to  right, and the search stops on the first match.  Specify
       "!pattern" to exclude an address or network block from the list. The form "!/file/name" is
       supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       Note  1:  Pattern  matching  of  domain  names is controlled by the presence or absence of
       "mynetworks" in the parent_domain_matches_subdomains parameter value.

       Note 2: IP version 6 address information must be specified inside  []  in  the  mynetworks
       value,  and  in files specified with "/file/name".  IP version 6 addresses contain the ":"
       character, and would otherwise be confused with a "type:table" pattern.

       Note 3: CIDR ranges cannot be specified in hash tables.  Use cidr tables  if  CIDR  ranges
       are used.

       Examples:

       mynetworks = 127.0.0.0/8 168.100.189.0/28
       mynetworks = !192.168.0.1, 192.168.0.0/28
       mynetworks = 127.0.0.0/8 168.100.189.0/28 [::1]/128 [2001:240:587::]/64
       mynetworks = $config_directory/mynetworks
       mynetworks = hash:/etc/postfix/network_table
       mynetworks = cidr:/etc/postfix/network_table.cidr

mynetworks_style (default: Postfix >= 3.0: host, Postfix < 3.0: subnet)

       The  method  to generate the default value for the mynetworks parameter.  This is the list
       of trusted networks for relay access control etc.

       •      Specify "mynetworks_style = host"  when  Postfix  should  "trust"  only  the  local
              machine.

       •      Specify "mynetworks_style = subnet" when Postfix should "trust" remote SMTP clients
              in the same IP subnetworks as the local machine.  On Linux,  this  works  correctly
              only with interfaces specified with the "ifconfig" or "ip" command.

       •      Specify  "mynetworks_style = class" when Postfix should "trust" remote SMTP clients
              in the same IP class A/B/C networks as the local machine.  Caution: this may  cause
              Postfix  to  "trust"  your entire provider's network.  Instead, specify an explicit
              mynetworks list by hand, as described with the mynetworks configuration parameter.

myorigin (default: $myhostname)

       The domain name that locally-posted mail appears to come from,  and  that  locally  posted
       mail is delivered to. The default, $myhostname, is adequate for small sites.  If you run a
       domain with multiple machines, you should (1) change this to $mydomain and (2)  set  up  a
       domain-wide alias database that aliases each user to user@that.users.mailhost.

       Example:

       myorigin = $mydomain

nested_header_checks (default: $header_checks)

       Optional  lookup  tables  for  content  inspection of non-MIME message headers in attached
       messages, as described in the header_checks(5) manual page.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

newaliases_path (default: see postconf -d output)

       Sendmail compatibility feature that specifies the location of the  newaliases(1)  command.
       This command can be used to rebuild the local(8) aliases(5) database.

non_fqdn_reject_code (default: 504)

       The  numerical  Postfix  SMTP  server  reply code when a client request is rejected by the
       reject_non_fqdn_helo_hostname,   reject_non_fqdn_sender    or    reject_non_fqdn_recipient
       restriction.

non_smtpd_milters (default: empty)

       A  list  of  Milter  (mail  filter) applications for new mail that does not arrive via the
       Postfix smtpd(8) server. This includes local submission via the sendmail(1) command  line,
       new  mail  that  arrives via the Postfix qmqpd(8) server, and old mail that is re-injected
       into the queue with "postsuper -r".  Specify space  or  comma  as  a  separator.  See  the
       MILTER_README document for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

notify_classes (default: resource, software)

       The  list  of  error  classes  that  are  reported  to  the  postmaster.  These postmaster
       notifications do not replace user notifications. The default is to report  only  the  most
       serious  problems. The paranoid may wish to turn on the policy (UCE and mail relaying) and
       protocol error (broken mail software) reports.

       NOTE: postmaster notifications may contain confidential information such as SASL passwords
       or  message  content.   It  is  the  system  administrator's  responsibility to treat such
       information with care.

       The error classes are:

       bounce (also implies 2bounce)
              Send the postmaster copies of the headers of bounced mail, and send transcripts  of
              SMTP  sessions  when  Postfix rejects mail. The notification is sent to the address
              specified  with  the  bounce_notice_recipient  configuration  parameter   (default:
              postmaster).

       2bounce
              Send  undeliverable bounced mail to the postmaster. The notification is sent to the
              address  specified  with  the  2bounce_notice_recipient   configuration   parameter
              (default: postmaster).

       data   Send  the  postmaster  a  transcript  of  the  SMTP session with an error because a
              critical data file was  unavailable.  The  notification  is  sent  to  the  address
              specified   with   the  error_notice_recipient  configuration  parameter  (default:
              postmaster).
              This feature is available in Postfix 2.9 and later.

       delay  Send the postmaster copies of the headers of delayed mail (see delay_warning_time).
              The  notification  is sent to the address specified with the delay_notice_recipient
              configuration parameter (default: postmaster).

       policy Send the postmaster a transcript of the SMTP session  when  a  client  request  was
              rejected because of (UCE) policy. The notification is sent to the address specified
              with the error_notice_recipient configuration parameter (default: postmaster).

       protocol
              Send the postmaster a transcript of the SMTP session in case of  client  or  server
              protocol  errors.  The  notification  is  sent  to  the  address specified with the
              error_notice_recipient configuration parameter (default: postmaster).

       resource
              Inform the postmaster  of  mail  not  delivered  due  to  resource  problems.   The
              notification  is  sent  to  the  address  specified with the error_notice_recipient
              configuration parameter (default: postmaster).

       software
              Inform the postmaster  of  mail  not  delivered  due  to  software  problems.   The
              notification  is  sent  to  the  address  specified with the error_notice_recipient
              configuration parameter (default: postmaster).

       Examples:

       notify_classes = bounce, delay, policy, protocol, resource, software
       notify_classes = 2bounce, resource, software

openssl_path (default: openssl)

       The location of the OpenSSL command line program openssl(1).  This is used by the "postfix
       tls"   command   to   create  private  keys,  certificate  signing  requests,  self-signed
       certificates, and to compute public key digests for DANE TLSA records.  In  multi-instance
       environments,  this  parameter  is always determined from the configuration of the default
       Postfix instance.

       Example:

           /etc/postfix/main.cf:
               # NetBSD pkgsrc:
               openssl_path = /usr/pkg/bin/openssl
               # Local build:
               openssl_path = /usr/local/bin/openssl

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.1 and later.

owner_request_special (default: 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 "-".  This feature is useful for mailing lists.

parent_domain_matches_subdomains (default: see postconf -d output)

       A list of Postfix features where the pattern  "example.com"  also  matches  subdomains  of
       example.com,  instead  of  requiring  an explicit ".example.com" pattern.  This is planned
       backwards compatibility:   eventually,  all  Postfix  features  are  expected  to  require
       explicit ".example.com" style patterns when you really want to match subdomains.

       The following Postfix feature names are supported.

       Postfix version 1.0 and later
              debug_peer_list,    fast_flush_domains,    mynetworks,   permit_mx_backup_networks,
              relay_domains, transport_maps

       Postfix version 1.1 and later
              qmqpd_authorized_clients, smtpd_access_maps,

       Postfix version 2.8 and later
              postscreen_access_list

       Postfix version 3.0 and later
              smtpd_client_event_limit_exceptions

permit_mx_backup_networks (default: empty)

       Restrict the use of the permit_mx_backup SMTP access feature to only domains whose primary
       MX  hosts  match  the listed networks.  The parameter value syntax is the same as with the
       mynetworks parameter; note, however, that the default value is empty.

       Pattern  matching  of  domain  names  is  controlled  by  the  presence  or   absence   of
       "permit_mx_backup_networks" in the parent_domain_matches_subdomains parameter value.

pickup_service_name (default: pickup)

       The  name  of the pickup(8) service. This service picks up local mail submissions from the
       Postfix maildrop queue.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

pipe_delivery_status_filter (default: $default_delivery_status_filter)

       Optional filter for the pipe(8) delivery agent to  change  the  delivery  status  code  or
       explanatory     text     of     successful     or     unsuccessful     deliveries.     See
       default_delivery_status_filter for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

plaintext_reject_code (default: 450)

       The numerical Postfix SMTP server  response  code  when  a  request  is  rejected  by  the
       reject_plaintext_session restriction.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

postlog_service_name (default: postlog)

       The  name  of  the  postlogd(8)  service entry in master.cf.  This service appends logfile
       records to the file specified with the maillog_file parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

postlogd_watchdog_timeout (default: 10s)

       How much time a postlogd(8) process may take to process a request before it is  terminated
       by  a  built-in  watchdog timer. This is a safety mechanism that prevents postlogd(8) from
       becoming non-responsive due to a bug in Postfix itself or in system software.  This  limit
       cannot be set under 10s.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

postmulti_control_commands (default: reload flush)

       The  postfix(1)  commands  that  the  postmulti(1)  instance  manager  treats as "control"
       commands, that operate on running instances. For these commands,  disabled  instances  are
       skipped.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

postmulti_start_commands (default: start)

       The postfix(1) commands that the postmulti(1) instance manager treats as "start" commands.
       For these commands, disabled instances are "checked" rather than "started", and failure to
       "start" a member instance of an instance group will abort the start-up of later instances.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

postmulti_stop_commands (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  postfix(1) commands that the postmulti(1) instance manager treats as "stop" commands.
       For these commands, disabled instances are skipped, and enabled instances are processed in
       reverse order.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

postscreen_access_list (default: permit_mynetworks)

       Permanent allow/denylist for remote SMTP client IP addresses.  postscreen(8) searches this
       list  immediately  after  a  remote  SMTP  client   connects.    Specify   a   comma-   or
       whitespace-separated  list  of  commands  (in  upper  or lower case) or lookup tables. The
       search stops upon the first command that fires for the client IP address.

        permit_mynetworks
              Allowlist the client and terminate the search if  the  client  IP  address  matches
              $mynetworks.   Do  not  subject  the client to any before/after 220 greeting tests.
              Pass the connection immediately to a Postfix SMTP server process.
              Pattern matching of domain names is  controlled  by  the  presence  or  absence  of
              "postscreen_access_list" in the parent_domain_matches_subdomains parameter value.

        type:table
              Query  the  specified  lookup  table.  Each  table lookup result is an access list,
              except that access lists inside a table cannot specify type:table entries.
              To discourage the use of  hash,  btree,  etc.  tables,  there  is  no  support  for
              substring matching like smtpd(8). Use CIDR tables instead.

        permit
              Allowlist  the  client  and  terminate the search. Do not subject the client to any
              before/after 220 greeting tests. Pass the connection immediately to a Postfix  SMTP
              server process.

        reject
              Denylist  the  client  and  terminate  the search. Subject the client to the action
              configured with the postscreen_denylist_action configuration parameter.

        dunno All postscreen(8) access lists implicitly have this command at the end.
              When  dunno is executed inside a lookup table, return from  the  lookup  table  and
              evaluate the next command.
              When   dunno  is executed outside a lookup table, terminate the search, and subject
              the client to the configured before/after 220 greeting tests.

       Example:

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           postscreen_access_list = permit_mynetworks,
               cidr:/etc/postfix/postscreen_access.cidr
           # Postfix < 3.6 use postscreen_blacklist_action.
           postscreen_denylist_action = enforce

       /etc/postfix/postscreen_access.cidr:
           # Rules are evaluated in the order as specified.
           # Denylist 192.168.* except 192.168.0.1.
           192.168.0.1         dunno
           192.168.0.0/16      reject

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_allowlist_interfaces (default: static:all)

       A list of local postscreen(8) server IP addresses  where  a  non-allowlisted  remote  SMTP
       client  can  obtain  postscreen(8)'s  temporary  allowlist status. This status is required
       before the client can talk to a Postfix SMTP server process.  By  default,  a  client  can
       obtain postscreen(8)'s allowlist status on any local postscreen(8) server IP address.

       When   postscreen(8)   listens   on   both   primary   and   backup   MX   addresses,  the
       postscreen_allowlist_interfaces  parameter  can  be  configured  to  give  the   temporary
       allowlist  status  only  when  a client connects to a primary MX address. Once a client is
       allowlisted it can talk to a Postfix SMTP  server  on  any  address.  Thus,  clients  that
       connect  only  to  backup  MX  addresses  will never become allowlisted, and will never be
       allowed to talk to a Postfix SMTP server process.

       Specify a list of network addresses  or  network/netmask  patterns,  separated  by  commas
       and/or  whitespace. The netmask specifies the number of bits in the network part of a host
       address. Continue long lines by starting the next line with whitespace.

       You can also specify "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns.   A  "/file/name"  pattern  is
       replaced  by  its  contents;  a  "type:table"  lookup  table is matched when a table entry
       matches a lookup string (the lookup result is ignored).

       The list is matched left to right, and the  search  stops  on  the  first  match.  Specify
       "!pattern" to exclude an address or network block from the list.

       Note:   IP   version   6   address   information  must  be  specified  inside  []  in  the
       postscreen_allowlist_interfaces value, and  in  files  specified  with  "/file/name".   IP
       version  6  addresses  contain  the  ":" character, and would otherwise be confused with a
       "type:table" pattern.

       Example:

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           # Don't allowlist connections to the backup IP address.
           # Postfix < 3.6 use postscreen_whitelist_interfaces.
           postscreen_allowlist_interfaces = !168.100.189.8, static:all

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

       Available as postscreen_whitelist_interfaces in Postfix 2.9 - 3.5.

postscreen_bare_newline_action (default: ignore)

       The action that postscreen(8) takes when  a  remote  SMTP  client  sends  a  bare  newline
       character,  that  is,  a  newline  not  preceded  by  carriage return.  Specify one of the
       following:

       ignore Ignore the failure of this test. Allow other tests to complete.  Do not repeat this
              test  before  the  result  from some other test expires.  This option is useful for
              testing and collecting statistics without blocking mail permanently.

       enforce
              Allow other tests to complete. Reject attempts to deliver  mail  with  a  550  SMTP
              reply,  and  log  the helo/sender/recipient information.  Repeat this test the next
              time the client connects.

       drop   Drop the connection immediately with a 521 SMTP reply. Repeat this  test  the  next
              time the client connects.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_bare_newline_enable (default: no)

       Enable  "bare  newline"  SMTP  protocol tests in the postscreen(8) server. These tests are
       expensive: a remote SMTP client must disconnect after it passes the test,  before  it  can
       talk to a real Postfix SMTP server.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_bare_newline_ttl (default: 30d)

       The  amount  of  time that postscreen(8) remembers that a client IP address passed a "bare
       newline" SMTP protocol test, before it address is required to pass that  test  again.  The
       default  is  long  because  a remote SMTP client must disconnect after it passes the test,
       before it can talk to a real Postfix SMTP server.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is d (days).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_blacklist_action (default: ignore)

       Renamed to postscreen_denylist_action in Postfix 3.6.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 - 3.5.

postscreen_cache_cleanup_interval (default: 12h)

       The amount of time between postscreen(8) cache cleanup runs.  Cache cleanup increases  the
       load  on  the  cache  database  and  should  therefore not be run frequently. This feature
       requires that the cache database supports the "delete" and "sequence" operators.   Specify
       a zero interval to disable cache cleanup.

       After  each  cache  cleanup  run, the postscreen(8) daemon logs the number of entries that
       were retained and dropped. A cleanup run is logged as "partial" when the daemon terminates
       early after "postfix reload", "postfix stop", or no requests for $max_idle seconds.

       Specify  a  non-negative  time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is h (hours).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_cache_map (default: btree:$data_directory/postscreen_cache)

       Persistent storage for the postscreen(8) server decisions.

       To   share   a   postscreen(8)   cache   between  multiple  postscreen(8)  instances,  use
       "postscreen_cache_map = proxy:btree:/path/to/file".  This requires Postfix version 2.9  or
       later; earlier proxymap(8) implementations don't support cache cleanup. For an alternative
       approach see the memcache_table(5) manpage.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_cache_retention_time (default: 7d)

       The amount of time that postscreen(8) will cache  an  expired  temporary  allowlist  entry
       before  it is removed. This prevents clients from being logged as "NEW" just because their
       cache entry expired an hour ago. It also prevents the cache from filling up  with  clients
       that passed some deep protocol test once and never came back.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is d (days).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_client_connection_count_limit (default: $smtpd_client_connection_count_limit)

       How  many  simultaneous  connections  any  remote  SMTP client is allowed to have with the
       postscreen(8) daemon. By default, this limit is the same as with the Postfix SMTP  server.
       Note  that  the  triage  process  can  take  several  seconds,  with  the  time  spent  in
       postscreen_greet_wait delay, and with the time spent talking to the postscreen(8) built-in
       dummy SMTP protocol engine.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_command_count_limit (default: 20)

       The  limit  on  the total number of commands per SMTP session for postscreen(8)'s built-in
       SMTP protocol engine.  This SMTP engine defers or rejects all attempts  to  deliver  mail,
       therefore  there  is no need to enforce separate limits on the number of junk commands and
       error commands.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_command_filter (default: $smtpd_command_filter)

       A mechanism to transform commands from remote SMTP clients.  See smtpd_command_filter  for
       further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

postscreen_command_time_limit (default: normal: 300s, overload: 10s)

       The  time limit to read an entire command line with postscreen(8)'s built-in SMTP protocol
       engine.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_denylist_action (default: ignore)

       The action that postscreen(8) takes when a remote SMTP client  is  permanently  denylisted
       with the postscreen_access_list parameter.  Specify one of the following:

       ignore (default)
              Ignore  this result. Allow other tests to complete.  Repeat this test the next time
              the client connects.  This option is useful for testing and  collecting  statistics
              without blocking mail.

       enforce
              Allow  other  tests  to  complete.  Reject attempts to deliver mail with a 550 SMTP
              reply, and log the helo/sender/recipient information.  Repeat this  test  the  next
              time the client connects.

       drop   Drop  the  connection  immediately with a 521 SMTP reply. Repeat this test the next
              time the client connects.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

       Available as postscreen_blacklist_action in Postfix 2.8 - 3.5.

postscreen_disable_vrfy_command (default: $disable_vrfy_command)

       Disable the SMTP VRFY command in the postscreen(8) daemon.  See  disable_vrfy_command  for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps (default: $smtpd_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps)

       Lookup  tables,  indexed by the remote SMTP client address, with case insensitive lists of
       EHLO keywords (pipelining, starttls, auth, etc.) that the postscreen(8)  server  will  not
       send  in  the  EHLO  response to a remote SMTP client. See smtpd_discard_ehlo_keywords for
       details.  The table is not searched by hostname for robustness reasons.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

postscreen_discard_ehlo_keywords (default: $smtpd_discard_ehlo_keywords)

       A case insensitive list of EHLO keywords  (pipelining,  starttls,  auth,  etc.)  that  the
       postscreen(8)  server  will  not  send  in  the EHLO response to a remote SMTP client. See
       smtpd_discard_ehlo_keywords for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

postscreen_dnsbl_action (default: ignore)

       The action that postscreen(8) takes when a remote SMTP client's combined  DNSBL  score  is
       equal  to  or  greater  than  a  threshold (as defined with the postscreen_dnsbl_sites and
       postscreen_dnsbl_threshold parameters).  Specify one of the following:

       ignore (default)
              Ignore the failure of this test. Allow other tests to complete.  Repeat  this  test
              the  next  time  the  client  connects.   This  option  is  useful  for testing and
              collecting statistics without blocking mail.

       enforce
              Allow other tests to complete. Reject attempts to deliver  mail  with  a  550  SMTP
              reply,  and  log  the helo/sender/recipient information.  Repeat this test the next
              time the client connects.

       drop   Drop the connection immediately with a 521 SMTP reply. Repeat this  test  the  next
              time the client connects.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_dnsbl_allowlist_threshold (default: 0)

       Allow a remote SMTP client to skip "before" and "after 220 greeting" protocol tests, based
       on its combined DNSBL score as defined with the postscreen_dnsbl_sites parameter.

       Specify  a  negative  value  to  enable  this  feature.   When   a   client   passes   the
       postscreen_dnsbl_allowlist_threshold  without  having  failed  other tests, all pending or
       disabled tests are flagged as completed with an expiration time based  on  the  DNS  reply
       TTL.   When  a  test  was already completed, its expiration time is updated if it was less
       than the value  based  on  the  DNS  reply  TTL.  See  also  postscreen_dnsbl_max_ttl  and
       postscreen_dnsbl_min_ttl.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

       Available as postscreen_dnsbl_whitelist_threshold in Postfix 2.11 - 3.5.

postscreen_dnsbl_max_ttl (default: ${postscreen_dnsbl_ttl?{$postscreen_dnsbl_ttl}:{1}}h)

       The  maximum amount of time that postscreen(8) remembers that a client IP address passed a
       DNS-based reputation test, before it is required to pass that test again. If the DNS reply
       specifies  a  shorter  TTL  value, that value will be used unless it would be smaller than
       postscreen_dnsbl_min_ttl.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is h (hours).

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.1. The default setting is backwards-compatible with
       older Postfix versions.

postscreen_dnsbl_min_ttl (default: 60s)

       The  minimum amount of time that postscreen(8) remembers that a client IP address passed a
       DNS-based reputation test, before it is required to pass that test again. If the DNS reply
       specifies  a  larger  TTL  value,  that  value will be used unless it would be larger than
       postscreen_dnsbl_max_ttl.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.1.

postscreen_dnsbl_reply_map (default: empty)

       A mapping from an actual DNSBL domain name which includes a secret password, to the  DNSBL
       domain  name  that  postscreen  will  reply with when it rejects mail.  When no mapping is
       found, the actual DNSBL domain will be used.

       For maximal stability it is best to use a file that is read into  memory  such  as  pcre:,
       regexp:  or  texthash:  (texthash:  is similar to hash:, except a) there is no need to run
       postmap(1) before the file can be used, and b) texthash: does not detect changes after the
       file is read).

       Example:

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           postscreen_dnsbl_reply_map = texthash:/etc/postfix/dnsbl_reply

       /etc/postfix/dnsbl_reply:
          secret.zen.spamhaus.org      zen.spamhaus.org

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_dnsbl_sites (default: empty)

       Optional  list  of  patterns  with DNS allow/denylist domains, filters and weight factors.
       When the list is non-empty, the dnsblog(8)  daemon  will  query  these  domains  with  the
       reversed  IP  addresses  of  remote  SMTP  clients,  and postscreen(8) will update an SMTP
       client's DNSBL score with each non-error reply as described below.

       Caution: when postscreen rejects mail, its SMTP response contains the DNSBL  domain  name.
       Use  the postscreen_dnsbl_reply_map feature to hide "password" information in DNSBL domain
       names.

       When a  client's  score  is  equal  to  or  greater  than  the  threshold  specified  with
       postscreen_dnsbl_threshold,  postscreen(8)  can  drop  the connection with the remote SMTP
       client.

       Specify a list of domain=filter*weight patterns, separated by comma or whitespace.

       •      When a pattern specifies no "=filter", postscreen(8) will use any  non-error  DNSBL
              query  result.   Otherwise,  postscreen(8)  will  use only DNSBL query results that
              match the filter. The filter has the form d.d.d.d, where each d is a number,  or  a
              pattern inside [] that contains one or more ";"-separated numbers or number..number
              ranges.

       •      When a pattern specifies no "*weight", the weight of the pattern is 1.   Otherwise,
              the weight must be an integral number.  Specify a negative number for allowlisting.

       •      When  a  pattern  matches  one or more DNSBL query results, postscreen(8) adds that
              pattern's weight once to the remote SMTP client's DNSBL score.

       Examples:

       To use example.com as a high-confidence blocklist, and to block mail with example.net  and
       example.org only when both agree:

       postscreen_dnsbl_threshold = 2
       postscreen_dnsbl_sites = example.com*2, example.net, example.org

       To filter only DNSBL replies containing 127.0.0.4:

       postscreen_dnsbl_sites = example.com=127.0.0.4

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_dnsbl_threshold (default: 1)

       The  inclusive  lower bound for blocking a remote SMTP client, based on its combined DNSBL
       score as defined with the postscreen_dnsbl_sites parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_dnsbl_timeout (default: 10s)

       The time limit for DNSBL or DNSWL lookups. This is  separate  from  the  timeouts  in  the
       dnsblog(8) daemon which are defined by system resolver(3) routines.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0.

postscreen_dnsbl_ttl (default: 1h)

       The  amount  of  time  that  postscreen(8)  remembers  that  a  client IP address passed a
       DNS-based reputation test, before it is required to pass that test again.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is h (hours).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8-3.0. It was replaced by  postscreen_dnsbl_max_ttl
       in Postfix 3.1.

postscreen_dnsbl_whitelist_threshold (default: 0)

       Renamed to postscreen_dnsbl_allowlist_threshold in Postfix 3.6.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 - 3.5.

postscreen_enforce_tls (default: $smtpd_enforce_tls)

       Mandatory  TLS: announce STARTTLS support to remote SMTP clients, and require that clients
       use TLS encryption.  See smtpd_postscreen_enforce_tls for details.

       This   feature   is   available   in   Postfix   2.8   and   later.     Preferably,    use
       postscreen_tls_security_level instead.

postscreen_expansion_filter (default: see postconf -d output)

       List  of  characters  that are permitted in postscreen_reject_footer attribute expansions.
       See smtpd_expansion_filter for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

postscreen_forbidden_commands (default: $smtpd_forbidden_commands)

       List of commands that  the  postscreen(8)  server  considers  in  violation  of  the  SMTP
       protocol.  See smtpd_forbidden_commands for syntax, and postscreen_non_smtp_command_action
       for possible actions.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_greet_action (default: ignore)

       The action that postscreen(8) takes when a remote  SMTP  client  speaks  before  its  turn
       within  the  time  specified with the postscreen_greet_wait parameter.  Specify one of the
       following:

       ignore (default)
              Ignore the failure of this test. Allow other tests to complete.  Repeat  this  test
              the  next  time  the  client  connects.   This  option  is  useful  for testing and
              collecting statistics without blocking mail.

       enforce
              Allow other tests to complete. Reject attempts to deliver  mail  with  a  550  SMTP
              reply,  and  log  the helo/sender/recipient information.  Repeat this test the next
              time the client connects.

       drop   Drop the connection immediately with a 521 SMTP reply. Repeat this  test  the  next
              time the client connects.

       In either case, postscreen(8) will not allowlist the remote SMTP client IP address.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_greet_banner (default: $smtpd_banner)

       The  text  in the optional "220-text..." server response that postscreen(8) sends ahead of
       the real Postfix SMTP server's "220 text..." response, in an attempt to confuse  bad  SMTP
       clients  so  that  they  speak  before  their turn (pre-greet).  Specify an empty value to
       disable this feature.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_greet_ttl (default: 1d)

       The amount of time that postscreen(8) remembers that a client IP address passed a PREGREET
       test,  before  it  is  required  to pass that test again. The default is relatively short,
       because a good client can immediately talk to a real Postfix SMTP server.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is d (days).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_greet_wait (default: normal: 6s, overload: 2s)

       The amount of time that postscreen(8) will wait for an  SMTP  client  to  send  a  command
       before  its turn, and for DNS blocklist lookup results to arrive (default: up to 2 seconds
       under stress, up to 6 seconds otherwise).

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_helo_required (default: $smtpd_helo_required)

       Require that a remote SMTP client sends HELO or EHLO before commencing a MAIL transaction.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_non_smtp_command_action (default: drop)

       The action that postscreen(8) takes when a remote SMTP client sends non-SMTP  commands  as
       specified with the postscreen_forbidden_commands parameter.  Specify one of the following:

       ignore Ignore the failure of this test. Allow other tests to complete.  Do not repeat this
              test before the result from some other test expires.  This  option  is  useful  for
              testing and collecting statistics without blocking mail permanently.

       enforce
              Allow  other  tests  to  complete.  Reject attempts to deliver mail with a 550 SMTP
              reply, and log the helo/sender/recipient information.  Repeat this  test  the  next
              time the client connects.

       drop   Drop  the  connection  immediately with a 521 SMTP reply. Repeat this test the next
              time the client connects. This action is the same as with the Postfix SMTP server's
              smtpd_forbidden_commands feature.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_non_smtp_command_enable (default: no)

       Enable  "non-SMTP command" tests in the postscreen(8) server. These tests are expensive: a
       client must disconnect after it passes the test, before it can talk to a real Postfix SMTP
       server.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_non_smtp_command_ttl (default: 30d)

       The  amount  of  time  that  postscreen(8)  remembers  that  a  client IP address passed a
       "non_smtp_command" SMTP protocol test, before it is required to pass that test again.  The
       default  is  long because a client must disconnect after it passes the test, before it can
       talk to a real Postfix SMTP server.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is d (days).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_pipelining_action (default: enforce)

       The action that postscreen(8) takes when a remote  SMTP  client  sends  multiple  commands
       instead  of sending one command and waiting for the server to respond.  Specify one of the
       following:

       ignore Ignore the failure of this test. Allow other tests to complete.  Do not repeat this
              test  before  the  result  from some other test expires.  This option is useful for
              testing and collecting statistics without blocking mail permanently.

       enforce
              Allow other tests to complete. Reject attempts to deliver  mail  with  a  550  SMTP
              reply,  and  log  the helo/sender/recipient information.  Repeat this test the next
              time the client connects.

       drop   Drop the connection immediately with a 521 SMTP reply. Repeat this  test  the  next
              time the client connects.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_pipelining_enable (default: no)

       Enable  "pipelining"  SMTP  protocol  tests  in  the postscreen(8) server. These tests are
       expensive: a good client must disconnect after it passes the test, before it can talk to a
       real Postfix SMTP server.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_pipelining_ttl (default: 30d)

       The  amount  of  time  that  postscreen(8)  remembers  that  a  client IP address passed a
       "pipelining" SMTP protocol test, before it is  required  to  pass  that  test  again.  The
       default  is long because a good client must disconnect after it passes the test, before it
       can talk to a real Postfix SMTP server.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is d (days).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_post_queue_limit (default: $default_process_limit)

       The number of clients that can be waiting for service from  a  real  Postfix  SMTP  server
       process. When this queue is full, all clients will receive a 421 response.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_pre_queue_limit (default: $default_process_limit)

       The number of non-allowlisted clients that can be waiting for a decision whether they will
       receive service from a real Postfix SMTP server process. When  this  queue  is  full,  all
       non-allowlisted clients will receive a 421 response.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_reject_footer (default: $smtpd_reject_footer)

       Optional  information  that  is appended after a 4XX or 5XX postscreen(8) server response.
       See smtpd_reject_footer for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

postscreen_reject_footer_maps (default: $smtpd_reject_footer_maps)

       Optional lookup table for information that is appended after a 4XX  or  5XX  postscreen(8)
       server response. See smtpd_reject_footer_maps for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

postscreen_tls_security_level (default: $smtpd_tls_security_level)

       The  SMTP  TLS  security  level  for  the  postscreen(8) server; when a non-empty value is
       specified,   this   overrides   the    obsolete    parameters    postscreen_use_tls    and
       postscreen_enforce_tls. See smtpd_tls_security_level for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

postscreen_upstream_proxy_protocol (default: empty)

       The  name  of the proxy protocol used by an optional before-postscreen proxy agent. When a
       proxy agent is used, this protocol conveys local and remote address and port  information.
       Specify  "postscreen_upstream_proxy_protocol  =  haproxy"  to enable the haproxy protocol;
       version 2 is supported with Postfix 3.5 and later.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.10 and later.

postscreen_upstream_proxy_timeout (default: 5s)

       The    time    limit     for     the     proxy     protocol     specified     with     the
       postscreen_upstream_proxy_protocol parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.10 and later.

postscreen_use_tls (default: $smtpd_use_tls)

       Opportunistic  TLS:  announce  STARTTLS support to remote SMTP clients, but do not require
       that clients use TLS encryption.

       This   feature   is   available   in   Postfix   2.8   and   later.     Preferably,    use
       postscreen_tls_security_level instead.

postscreen_watchdog_timeout (default: 10s)

       How  much time a postscreen(8) process may take to respond to a remote SMTP client command
       or to perform a cache operation before it is terminated  by  a  built-in  watchdog  timer.
       This is a safety mechanism that prevents postscreen(8) from becoming non-responsive due to
       a bug in Postfix itself or in system software.  To  avoid  false  alarms  and  unnecessary
       cache corruption this limit cannot be set under 10s.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

postscreen_whitelist_interfaces (default: static:all)

       Renamed to postscreen_allowlist_interfaces in Postfix 3.6.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.9 - 3.5.

prepend_delivered_header (default: command, file, forward)

       The  message  delivery  contexts  where  the  Postfix  local(8)  delivery agent prepends a
       Delivered-To:  message header with the address  that  the  mail  was  delivered  to.  This
       information is used for mail delivery loop detection.

       By  default,  the  Postfix  local  delivery  agent  prepends  a  Delivered-To: header when
       forwarding mail and when delivering  to  file  (mailbox)  and  command.  Turning  off  the
       Delivered-To: header when forwarding mail is not recommended.

       Specify zero or more of forward, file, or command.

       Example:

       prepend_delivered_header = forward

process_id (read-only)

       The process ID of a Postfix command or daemon process.

process_id_directory (default: pid)

       The  location  of  Postfix  PID  files  relative to $queue_directory.  This is a read-only
       parameter.

process_name (read-only)

       The process name of a Postfix command or daemon process.

propagate_unmatched_extensions (default: canonical, virtual)

       What address lookup tables copy an address extension from the lookup  key  to  the  lookup
       result.

       For  example,  with a virtual(5) mapping of "joe@example.com => joe.user@example.net", the
       address "joe+foo@example.com" would rewrite to "joe.user+foo@example.net".

       Specify zero or more of canonical, virtual, alias,  forward,  include  or  generic.  These
       cause  address  extension  propagation with canonical(5), virtual(5), and aliases(5) maps,
       with local(8) .forward  and  :include:  file  lookups,  and  with  smtp(8)  generic  maps,
       respectively.

       Note:  enabling this feature for types other than canonical and virtual is likely to cause
       problems when mail is forwarded to other sites, especially with mail that  is  sent  to  a
       mailing list exploder address.

       Examples:

       propagate_unmatched_extensions = canonical, virtual, alias,
               forward, include
       propagate_unmatched_extensions = canonical, virtual

proxy_interfaces (default: empty)

       The  remote network interface addresses that this mail system receives mail on by way of a
       proxy or network address translation unit.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

       You must specify your "outside" proxy/NAT addresses when your system is a backup  MX  host
       for  other  domains, otherwise mail delivery loops will happen when the primary MX host is
       down.

       Example:

       proxy_interfaces = 1.2.3.4

proxy_read_maps (default: see postconf -d output)

       The lookup tables that the proxymap(8) server is  allowed  to  access  for  the  read-only
       service.

       Specify  zero  or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or comma.  Table
       references that don't begin with proxy: are ignored.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

proxy_write_maps (default: see postconf -d output)

       The lookup tables that the proxymap(8) server is allowed  to  access  for  the  read-write
       service.  Postfix-owned  local  database  files  should  be stored under the Postfix-owned
       data_directory.  Table references that don't begin with proxy: are ignored.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

proxymap_service_name (default: proxymap)

       The name of the proxymap  read-only  table  lookup  service.   This  service  is  normally
       implemented by the proxymap(8) daemon.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

proxywrite_service_name (default: proxywrite)

       The  name  of  the  proxywrite  read-write table lookup service.  This service is normally
       implemented by the proxymap(8) daemon.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

qmgr_clog_warn_time (default: 300s)

       The minimal delay between warnings that a specific destination is clogging up the  Postfix
       active queue. Specify 0 to disable.

       Specify  a  non-negative  time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is enabled with the helpful_warnings parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

qmgr_daemon_timeout (default: 1000s)

       How  much  time  a Postfix queue manager process may take to handle a request before it is
       terminated by a built-in watchdog timer.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

qmgr_fudge_factor (default: 100)

       Obsolete feature: the percentage of delivery resources that a busy mail system will use up
       for delivery of a large mailing  list message.

       This  feature  exists  only  in  the oqmgr(8) old queue manager. The current queue manager
       solves the problem in a better way.

qmgr_ipc_timeout (default: 60s)

       The time limit for the queue manager to send  or  receive  information  over  an  internal
       communication  channel.   The  purpose is to break out of deadlock situations. If the time
       limit is exceeded the software either retries or aborts the operation.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

qmgr_message_active_limit (default: 20000)

       The maximal number of messages in the active queue.

qmgr_message_recipient_limit (default: 20000)

       The maximal number of recipients held in memory by the  Postfix  queue  manager,  and  the
       maximal size of the short-term, in-memory "dead" destination status cache.

qmgr_message_recipient_minimum (default: 10)

       The  minimal  number of in-memory recipients for any message. This takes priority over any
       other in-memory recipient limits (i.e., the global  qmgr_message_recipient_limit  and  the
       per transport _recipient_limit) if necessary. The minimum value allowed for this parameter
       is 1.

qmqpd_authorized_clients (default: empty)

       What remote QMQP clients are allowed to connect to the Postfix QMQP server port.

       By default, no client is allowed to use the service. This is because the QMQP server  will
       relay mail to any destination.

       Specify a list of client patterns. A list pattern specifies a host name, a domain name, an
       internet address, or a network/mask pattern, where the mask specifies the number  of  bits
       in  the  network part.  When a pattern specifies a file name, its contents are substituted
       for the file name; when a pattern is a "type:table" table specification, table  lookup  is
       used instead.

       Patterns  are  separated  by  whitespace  and/or  commas.  In order to reverse the result,
       precede a pattern with an exclamation point (!). The form "!/file/name" is supported  only
       in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       Pattern   matching   of  domain  names  is  controlled  by  the  presence  or  absence  of
       "qmqpd_authorized_clients" in the parent_domain_matches_subdomains parameter value.

       Example:

       qmqpd_authorized_clients = !192.168.0.1, 192.168.0.0/24

qmqpd_client_port_logging (default: no)

       Enable logging of the remote QMQP client port in addition to the hostname and IP  address.
       The logging format is "host[address]:port".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

qmqpd_error_delay (default: 1s)

       How  long the Postfix QMQP server will pause before sending a negative reply to the remote
       QMQP client. The purpose is to slow down confused or malicious clients.

       Specify a non-negative time value (an integral value plus an  optional  one-letter  suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

qmqpd_timeout (default: 300s)

       The time limit for sending or receiving information over the network.  If a read or  write
       operation blocks for more than $qmqpd_timeout seconds the Postfix QMQP server gives up and
       disconnects.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

queue_directory (default: see postconf -d output)

       The location of the Postfix top-level queue directory.  This  is  the  root  directory  of
       Postfix daemon processes that run chrooted.

queue_file_attribute_count_limit (default: 100)

       The  maximal number of (name=value) attributes that may be stored in a Postfix queue file.
       The limit is enforced by the cleanup(8) server.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

queue_minfree (default: 0)

       The minimal amount of free space in bytes in the queue  file  system  that  is  needed  to
       receive  mail.   This  is  currently  used by the Postfix SMTP server to decide if it will
       accept any mail at all.

       By default, the Postfix SMTP server rejects MAIL FROM commands when  the  amount  of  free
       space  is less than 1.5*$message_size_limit (Postfix version 2.1 and later).  To specify a
       higher minimum  free  space  limit,  specify  a  queue_minfree  value  that  is  at  least
       1.5*$message_size_limit.

       With  Postfix  versions  2.0  and earlier, a queue_minfree value of zero means there is no
       minimum required amount of free space.

queue_run_delay (default: 300s)

       The time between deferred queue scans by the queue  manager;  prior  to  Postfix  2.4  the
       default value was 1000s.

       This  parameter  should  be  set  less  than  or  equal to $minimal_backoff_time. See also
       $maximal_backoff_time.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

queue_service_name (default: qmgr)

       The name of the qmgr(8) service. This service manages  the  Postfix  queue  and  schedules
       delivery requests.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

rbl_reply_maps (default: empty)

       Optional  lookup  tables  with  RBL  response templates. The tables are indexed by the RBL
       domain name. By  default,  Postfix  uses  the  default  template  as  specified  with  the
       default_rbl_reply configuration parameter. See there for a discussion of the syntax of RBL
       reply templates.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

readme_directory (default: see postconf -d output)

       The location of Postfix README files that describe how to build, configure  or  operate  a
       specific Postfix subsystem or feature.

receive_override_options (default: empty)

       Enable  or  disable  recipient validation, built-in content filtering, or address mapping.
       Typically, these are specified in master.cf as command-line arguments  for  the  smtpd(8),
       qmqpd(8) or pickup(8) daemons.

       Specify  zero or more of the following options.  The options override main.cf settings and
       are either implemented by  smtpd(8),  qmqpd(8),  or  pickup(8)  themselves,  or  they  are
       forwarded to the cleanup server.

       no_unknown_recipient_checks
              Do  not  try  to  reject  unknown recipients (SMTP server only).  This is typically
              specified AFTER an external content filter.

       no_address_mappings
              Disable  canonical  address  mapping,  virtual   alias   map   expansion,   address
              masquerading,  and  automatic BCC (blind carbon-copy) recipients. This is typically
              specified BEFORE an external content filter.

       no_header_body_checks
              Disable header/body_checks. This is typically specified AFTER an  external  content
              filter.

       no_milters
              Disable  Milter  (mail  filter)  applications. This is typically specified AFTER an
              external content filter.

       Note: when the "BEFORE content filter" receive_override_options setting  is  specified  in
       the  main.cf  file, specify the "AFTER content filter" receive_override_options setting in
       master.cf (and vice versa).

       Examples:

       receive_override_options =
           no_unknown_recipient_checks, no_header_body_checks
       receive_override_options = no_address_mappings

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

recipient_bcc_maps (default: empty)

       Optional BCC (blind carbon-copy) address lookup  tables,  indexed  by  envelope  recipient
       address.   The  BCC address (multiple results are not supported) is added when mail enters
       from outside of Postfix.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       The table search order is as follows:

       •      Look  up  the  "user+extension@domain.tld"  address  including the optional address
              extension.

       •      Look up the "user@domain.tld" address without the optional address extension.

       •      Look up the "user+extension" address local part when the  recipient  domain  equals
              $myorigin, $mydestination, $inet_interfaces or $proxy_interfaces.

       •      Look  up  the "user" address local part when the recipient domain equals $myorigin,
              $mydestination, $inet_interfaces or $proxy_interfaces.

       •      Look up the "@domain.tld" part.

       Note: with Postfix 2.3 and later the BCC address is added as  if  it  was  specified  with
       NOTIFY=NONE.  The  sender  will  not be notified when the BCC address is undeliverable, as
       long as all down-stream software implements RFC 3461.

       Note: with Postfix 2.2 and earlier the sender will unconditionally be  notified  when  the
       BCC address is undeliverable.

       Note:  automatic  BCC  recipients  are produced only for new mail.  To avoid mailer loops,
       automatic BCC recipients are not generated after  Postfix  forwards  mail  internally,  or
       after Postfix generates mail itself.

       Example:

       recipient_bcc_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/recipient_bcc

       After a change, run "postmap /etc/postfix/recipient_bcc".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

recipient_canonical_classes (default: envelope_recipient, header_recipient)

       What  addresses  are  subject  to  recipient_canonical_maps  address mapping.  By default,
       recipient_canonical_maps address mapping is applied to envelope recipient  addresses,  and
       to header recipient addresses.

       Specify one or more of: envelope_recipient, header_recipient

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

recipient_canonical_maps (default: empty)

       Optional  address  mapping lookup tables for envelope and header recipient addresses.  The
       table format and lookups are documented in canonical(5).

       Note: $recipient_canonical_maps is processed before $canonical_maps.

       Example:

       recipient_canonical_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/recipient_canonical

recipient_delimiter (default: empty)

       The set of characters that can separate an  email  address  localpart,  user  name,  or  a
       .forward  file  name from its extension.  For example, with "recipient_delimiter = +", the
       software tries user+foo@example.com before trying user@example.com, user+foo before trying
       user, and .forward+foo before trying .forward.

       More  formally, an email address localpart or user name is separated from its extension by
       the first character that matches the recipient_delimiter set. The delimiter character  and
       extension may then be used to generate an extended .forward file name. This implementation
       recognizes one delimiter character and one extension per email address localpart or  email
       address.  With  Postfix  2.10  and  earlier,  the  recipient_delimiter  specifies a single
       character.

       See  canonical(5),  local(8),   relocated(5)   and   virtual(5)   for   the   effects   of
       recipient_delimiter on lookups in aliases, canonical, virtual, and relocated maps, and see
       the propagate_unmatched_extensions parameter for propagating an extension from  one  email
       address to another.

       When     used    in    command_execution_directory,    forward_path,    or    luser_relay,
       ${recipient_delimiter} is replaced with the actual recipient delimiter that was  found  in
       the  recipient  email address (Postfix 2.11 and later), or it is replaced with the main.cf
       recipient_delimiter parameter value (Postfix 2.10 and earlier).

       The recipient_delimiter is not  applied  to  the  mailer-daemon  address,  the  postmaster
       address,  or  the  double-bounce  address.  With the default "owner_request_special = yes"
       setting, the recipient_delimiter is  also  not  applied  to  addresses  with  the  special
       "owner-" prefix or the special "-request" suffix.

       Examples:

       # Handle Postfix-style extensions.
       recipient_delimiter = +

       # Handle both Postfix and qmail extensions (Postfix 2.11 and later).
       recipient_delimiter = +-

       # Use .forward for mail without address extension, and for mail with
       # an unrecognized address extension.
       forward_path = $home/.forward${recipient_delimiter}${extension},
           $home/.forward

reject_code (default: 554)

       The  numerical  Postfix  SMTP  server  response  code when a remote SMTP client request is
       rejected by the "reject" restriction.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

reject_tempfail_action (default: defer_if_permit)

       The Postfix SMTP server's action when a reject-type restriction fails due to  a  temporary
       error condition. Specify "defer" to defer the remote SMTP client request immediately. With
       the default "defer_if_permit" action, the  Postfix  SMTP  server  continues  to  look  for
       opportunities  to reject mail, and defers the client request only if it would otherwise be
       accepted.

       For        finer        control,        see:         unverified_recipient_tempfail_action,
       unverified_sender_tempfail_action,           unknown_address_tempfail_action,          and
       unknown_helo_hostname_tempfail_action.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

relay_clientcerts (default: empty)

       List of tables with remote SMTP client-certificate fingerprints or public key fingerprints
       (Postfix  2.9  and  later)  for  which  the Postfix SMTP server will allow access with the
       permit_tls_clientcerts feature.  The fingerprint digest algorithm is configurable via  the
       smtpd_tls_fingerprint_digest parameter (hard-coded as md5 prior to Postfix version 2.5).

       The default algorithm is sha256 with Postfix >= 3.6 and the compatibility_level set to 3.6
       or higher. With Postfix <= 3.5, the default algorithm is md5.  The best-practice algorithm
       is  now  sha256.  Recent  advances in hash function cryptanalysis have led to md5 and sha1
       being deprecated in favor of sha256.  However, as long  as  there  are  no  known  "second
       pre-image"  attacks  against  the  older algorithms, their use in this context, though not
       recommended, is still likely safe.

       Postfix lookup tables are in the form of (key, value) pairs.  Since we only need the  key,
       the   value   can   be   chosen   freely,   e.g.    the   name   of   the  user  or  host:
       D7:04:2F:A7:0B:8C:A5:21:FA:31:77:E1:41:8A:EE:80 lutzpc.at.home

       Example:

       relay_clientcerts = hash:/etc/postfix/relay_clientcerts

       For more fine-grained control, use check_ccert_access to select an  appropriate  access(5)
       policy for each client.  See RESTRICTION_CLASS_README.

       This feature is available with Postfix version 2.2.

relay_destination_concurrency_limit (default: $default_destination_concurrency_limit)

       The  maximal  number  of parallel deliveries to the same destination via the relay message
       delivery transport. This limit is enforced by the  queue  manager.  The  message  delivery
       transport name is the first field in the entry in the master.cf file.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

relay_destination_recipient_limit (default: $default_destination_recipient_limit)

       The  maximal  number  of  recipients per message for the relay message delivery transport.
       This limit is enforced by the queue manager. The message delivery transport  name  is  the
       first field in the entry in the master.cf file.

       Setting    this    parameter    to    a    value    of    1   changes   the   meaning   of
       relay_destination_concurrency_limit from  concurrency  per  domain  into  concurrency  per
       recipient.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

relay_domains (default: Postfix >= 3.0: empty, Postfix < 3.0: $mydestination)

       What  destination  domains  (and  subdomains  thereof) this system will relay mail to. For
       details  about  how  the  relay_domains  value  is  used,  see  the  description  of   the
       permit_auth_destination and reject_unauth_destination SMTP recipient restrictions.

       Domains  that  match  $relay_domains are delivered with the $relay_transport mail delivery
       transport. The SMTP server validates recipient addresses  with  $relay_recipient_maps  and
       rejects  non-existent  recipients.  See  also  the  relay  domains  address  class  in the
       ADDRESS_CLASS_README file.

       Note: Postfix will not automatically forward mail for domains that  list  this  system  as
       their  primary  or backup MX host. See the permit_mx_backup restriction in the postconf(5)
       manual page.

       Specify a list of host or domain  names,  "/file/name"  patterns  or  "type:table"  lookup
       tables,  separated  by commas and/or whitespace.  Continue long lines by starting the next
       line with whitespace. A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by its contents;  a  "type:table"
       lookup  table  is matched when a (parent) domain appears as lookup key. Specify "!pattern"
       to exclude a domain from the list. The form "!/file/name" is  supported  only  in  Postfix
       version 2.4 and later.

       Pattern   matching   of  domain  names  is  controlled  by  the  presence  or  absence  of
       "relay_domains" in the parent_domain_matches_subdomains parameter value.

relay_domains_reject_code (default: 554)

       The numerical Postfix SMTP server response code when a client request is rejected  by  the
       reject_unauth_destination recipient restriction.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

relay_recipient_maps (default: empty)

       Optional  lookup tables with all valid addresses in the domains that match $relay_domains.
       Specify @domain as a wild-card for domains that have no valid recipient list, and become a
       source  of  backscatter  mail:  Postfix  accepts spam for non-existent recipients and then
       floods  innocent  people  with  undeliverable  mail.   Technically,  tables  listed   with
       $relay_recipient_maps  are used as lists: Postfix needs to know only if a lookup string is
       found or not, but it does not use the result from the table lookup.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       If  this  parameter is non-empty, then the Postfix SMTP server will reject mail to unknown
       relay users. This feature is off by default.

       See also the relay domains address class in the ADDRESS_CLASS_README file.

       Example:

       relay_recipient_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/relay_recipients

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

relay_transport (default: relay)

       The default mail delivery transport and next-hop destination for the relay domain  address
       class: recipient domains that match $relay_domains.

       For recipient domains in the relay domain address class:

       •      In  order of decreasing precedence, the message delivery transport is taken from 1)
              $transport_maps, 2) $relay_transport.

       •      In order of decreasing  precedence,  the  nexthop  destination  is  taken  from  1)
              $transport_maps,   2)   $relay_transport,  3)  $sender_dependent_relayhost_maps  or
              $relayhost or the recipient domain.

       Specify a string of the form transport:nexthop, where transport is  the  name  of  a  mail
       delivery transport defined in master.cf.  The :nexthop destination is optional; its syntax
       is documented in the manual page of the corresponding delivery agent.

       See also the relay domains address class in the ADDRESS_CLASS_README file.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

relayhost (default: empty)

       The next-hop destination(s) for non-local mail; takes precedence over non-local domains in
       recipient   addresses.  This  information  will  not  be  used  when  the  sender  matches
       $sender_dependent_relayhost_maps.

       In order of decreasing precedence:

       •      For  recipient  domains  in  the  relay  domain  address  class  (domains  matching
              $relay_domains),  the  nexthop  destination  is  taken  from 1) $transport_maps, 2)
              $relay_transport,  3)  $sender_dependent_relayhost_maps  or   $relayhost   or   the
              recipient domain.

       •      For  recipient  domains  in  the  default domain address class (domains that do not
              match $mydestination, $inet_interfaces, $proxy_interfaces,  $virtual_alias_domains,
              $virtual_mailbox_domains, or $relay_domains), the nexthop destination is taken from
              1)     $transport_maps,     2)     $sender_dependent_default_transport_maps      or
              $default_transport,   3)  $sender_dependent_relayhost_maps  or  $relayhost  or  the
              recipient domain.

       On an intranet, specify the organizational domain name. If your internal DNS  uses  no  MX
       records, specify the name of the intranet gateway host instead.

       In  the  case  of  SMTP delivery, specify one or more destinations in the form of a domain
       name,     hostname,     hostname:service,     [hostname]:service,     [hostaddress]     or
       [hostaddress]:service, separated by comma or whitespace.  The form [hostname] turns off MX
       or SRV lookups. Multiple destinations  are  supported  in  Postfix  3.5  and  later.  Each
       destination is tried in the specified order.

       If you're connected via UUCP, see the UUCP_README file for useful information.

       Examples:

       relayhost = $mydomain
       relayhost = [gateway.example.com]
       relayhost = mail1.example:587, mail2.example:587
       relayhost = [an.ip.add.ress]

relocated_maps (default: empty)

       Optional  lookup  tables  with new contact information for users or domains that no longer
       exist.  The table format and lookups are documented in relocated(5).

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       If  you  use this feature, run "postmap /etc/postfix/relocated" to build the necessary DBM
       or DB file after change, then "postfix reload" to make the changes visible.

       Examples:

       relocated_maps = dbm:/etc/postfix/relocated
       relocated_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/relocated

remote_header_rewrite_domain (default: empty)

       Rewrite   or   add   message   headers   in   mail   from   remote    clients    if    the
       remote_header_rewrite_domain  parameter  value is non-empty, updating incomplete addresses
       with the domain  specified  in  the  remote_header_rewrite_domain  parameter,  and  adding
       missing headers.

       The local_header_rewrite_clients parameter controls what clients Postfix considers local.

       Examples:

       The  safe setting: append "domain.invalid" to incomplete header addresses from remote SMTP
       clients, so that those addresses cannot be confused with local addresses.

           remote_header_rewrite_domain = domain.invalid

       The default, purist, setting: don't rewrite headers from remote clients at all.

           remote_header_rewrite_domain =

require_home_directory (default: no)

       Require that a  local(8)  recipient's  home  directory  exists  before  mail  delivery  is
       attempted.  By  default  this  test  is  disabled.  It can be useful for environments that
       import  home  directories  to  the  mail  server  (IMPORTING  HOME  DIRECTORIES   IS   NOT
       RECOMMENDED).

reset_owner_alias (default: no)

       Reset  the  local(8)  delivery  agent's idea of the owner-alias attribute, when delivering
       mail to a child alias that does not have its own owner alias.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and  later.  With  older  Postfix  releases,  the
       behavior is as if this parameter is set to "yes".

       As  documented  in  aliases(5), when an alias name has a companion alias named owner-name,
       this will replace the envelope sender address, so that delivery errors will be reported to
       the  owner  alias  instead  of  the  sender. This configuration is recommended for mailing
       lists.

       A less known property of the owner alias is that it  also  forces  the  local(8)  delivery
       agent  to  write  local  and  remote  addresses  from alias expansion to a new queue file,
       instead of attempting to deliver mail to local addresses as soon as they come out of alias
       expansion.

       Writing  local  addresses  from  alias  expansion  to  a  new queue file allows for robust
       handling of temporary delivery errors: errors with one local  member  have  no  effect  on
       deliveries  to  other members of the list.  On the other hand, delivery to local addresses
       as soon as they come out of alias expansion is fragile: a temporary error with  one  local
       address  from  alias expansion will cause the entire alias to be expanded repeatedly until
       the error goes away, or until the message expires in the queue.  In that case,  a  problem
       with one list member results in multiple message deliveries to other list members.

       The  default behavior of Postfix 2.8 and later is to keep the owner-alias attribute of the
       parent alias, when delivering mail to a child alias that  does  not  have  its  own  owner
       alias.  Then,  local  addresses from that child alias will be written to a new queue file,
       and a temporary error with one local address will not affect  delivery  to  other  mailing
       list members.

       Unfortunately, older Postfix releases reset the owner-alias attribute when delivering mail
       to a child alias that does not have its own owner alias. To be precise, this  resets  only
       the  decision to create a new queue file, not the decision to override the envelope sender
       address. The local(8) delivery agent then attempts to deliver local addresses as  soon  as
       they  come  out  of  child  alias  expansion.  If delivery to any address from child alias
       expansion fails with a temporary error condition, the entire mailing list may be  expanded
       repeatedly  until  the  mail expires in the queue, resulting in multiple deliveries of the
       same message to mailing list members.

resolve_dequoted_address (default: yes)

       Resolve a recipient address safely instead of correctly, by looking inside quotes.

       By default, the Postfix address resolver does not quote the address localpart as  per  RFC
       822,  so  that additional @ or % or !  operators remain visible. This behavior is safe but
       it is also technically incorrect.

       If you specify "resolve_dequoted_address = no", then the Postfix resolver  will  not  know
       about  additional  @ etc. operators in the address localpart. This opens opportunities for
       obscure mail relay attacks with user@domain@domain addresses when Postfix provides  backup
       MX service for Sendmail systems.

resolve_null_domain (default: no)

       Resolve  an  address  that  ends  in  the  "@"  null  domain as if the local hostname were
       specified, instead of rejecting the address as invalid.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.  Earlier versions always  resolve  the
       null domain as the local hostname.

       The  Postfix SMTP server uses this feature to reject mail from or to addresses that end in
       the "@" null domain, and from addresses that rewrite into a form that ends in the "@" null
       domain.

resolve_numeric_domain (default: no)

       Resolve  "user@ipaddress"  as  "user@[ipaddress]",  instead  of  rejecting  the address as
       invalid.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

respectful_logging (default: see 'postconf -d' output)

       Avoid  logging  that  implies  white  is  better  than  black.  Instead  use  'allowlist',
       'denylist', and variations of those words.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

rewrite_service_name (default: rewrite)

       The  name  of  the  address rewriting service. This service rewrites addresses to standard
       form and resolves them to a (delivery method, next-hop host, recipient) triple.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

sample_directory (default: /etc/postfix)

       The name of the directory with example Postfix configuration files.  Starting with Postfix
       2.1, these files have been replaced with the postconf(5) manual page.

send_cyrus_sasl_authzid (default: no)

       When authenticating to a remote SMTP or LMTP server with the default setting "no", send no
       SASL authoriZation ID (authzid); send only the SASL authentiCation ID (authcid)  plus  the
       authcid's password.

       The  non-default  setting  "yes"  enables  the  behavior of older Postfix versions.  These
       always send  a  SASL  authzid  that  is  equal  to  the  SASL  authcid,  but  this  causes
       interoperability problems with some SMTP servers.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.4.4 and later.

sender_based_routing (default: no)

       This  parameter  should not be used. It was replaced by sender_dependent_relayhost_maps in
       Postfix version 2.3.

sender_bcc_maps (default: empty)

       Optional BCC (blind  carbon-copy)  address  lookup  tables,  indexed  by  envelope  sender
       address.   The  BCC address (multiple results are not supported) is added when mail enters
       from outside of Postfix.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       The table search order is as follows:

       •      Look  up  the  "user+extension@domain.tld"  address  including the optional address
              extension.

       •      Look up the "user@domain.tld" address without the optional address extension.

       •      Look up the "user+extension" address local  part  when  the  sender  domain  equals
              $myorigin, $mydestination, $inet_interfaces or $proxy_interfaces.

       •      Look  up  the  "user"  address  local part when the sender domain equals $myorigin,
              $mydestination, $inet_interfaces or $proxy_interfaces.

       •      Look up the "@domain.tld" part.

       Note: with Postfix 2.3 and later the BCC address is added as  if  it  was  specified  with
       NOTIFY=NONE.  The  sender  will  not be notified when the BCC address is undeliverable, as
       long as all down-stream software implements RFC 3461.

       Note: with Postfix 2.2 and earlier the sender will be notified when  the  BCC  address  is
       undeliverable.

       Note:  automatic  BCC  recipients  are produced only for new mail.  To avoid mailer loops,
       automatic BCC recipients are not generated after  Postfix  forwards  mail  internally,  or
       after Postfix generates mail itself.

       Example:

       sender_bcc_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/sender_bcc

       After a change, run "postmap /etc/postfix/sender_bcc".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

sender_canonical_classes (default: envelope_sender, header_sender)

       What  addresses  are  subject  to  sender_canonical_maps  address  mapping.   By  default,
       sender_canonical_maps address mapping is applied to  envelope  sender  addresses,  and  to
       header sender addresses.

       Specify one or more of: envelope_sender, header_sender

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

sender_canonical_maps (default: empty)

       Optional  address  mapping  lookup  tables  for envelope and header sender addresses.  The
       table format and lookups are documented in canonical(5).

       Example:   you   want   to   rewrite   the   SENDER   address    "user@ugly.example"    to
       "user@pretty.example",  while  still  being  able  to  send  mail to the RECIPIENT address
       "user@ugly.example".

       Note: $sender_canonical_maps is processed before $canonical_maps.

       Example:

       sender_canonical_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/sender_canonical

sender_dependent_default_transport_maps (default: empty)

       A sender-dependent override for the global default_transport parameter setting. The tables
       are  searched  by  the  envelope  sender  address  and  @domain.  A lookup result of DUNNO
       terminates the search without overriding the global default_transport  parameter  setting.
       This information is overruled with the transport(5) table.

       This  setting affects only the default domain address class (recipient domains that do not
       match   $mydestination,   $inet_interfaces,   $proxy_interfaces,   $virtual_alias_domains,
       $virtual_mailbox_domains, or $relay_domains):

       •      In  order  of  decreasing  precedence,  the  delivery  transport  is  taken from 1)
              $transport_maps, 2) $sender_dependent_default_transport_maps or $default_transport.

       •      In order of decreasing  precedence,  the  nexthop  destination  is  taken  from  1)
              $transport_maps, 2) $sender_dependent_default_transport_maps or $default_transport,
              3) $sender_dependent_relayhost_maps or $relayhost or the recipient domain.

       Note: this overrides default_transport, not transport_maps,  and  therefore  the  expected
       syntax is that of default_transport, not the syntax of transport_maps.  Specifically, this
       does not support the transport_maps syntax for null transport, null nexthop, or null email
       addresses.

       Specify  zero  or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or comma. Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       For safety  reasons,  this  feature  does  not  allow  $number  substitutions  in  regular
       expression maps.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.

sender_dependent_relayhost_maps (default: empty)

       A  sender-dependent  override  for  the global relayhost parameter setting. The tables are
       searched by the envelope sender address and @domain. A lookup result of  DUNNO  terminates
       the  search  without  overriding  the  global relayhost parameter setting (Postfix 2.6 and
       later).

       In order of decreasing precedence:

       •      For  recipient  domains  in  the  relay  domain  address  class  (domains  matching
              $relay_domains),  the  nexthop  destination  is  taken  from 1) $transport_maps, 2)
              $relay_transport,  3)  $sender_dependent_relayhost_maps  or   $relayhost   or   the
              recipient domain.

       •      For  recipient  domains  in  the  default domain address class (domains that do not
              match mydestination, $inet_interfaces,  $proxy_interfaces,  $virtual_alias_domains,
              $virtual_mailbox_domains, $relay_domains), the nexthop destination is taken from 1)
              $transport_maps, 2) $sender_dependent_default_transport_maps or $default_transport,
              3) $sender_dependent_relayhost_maps or $relayhost or the recipient domain.

       Specify  zero  or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or comma. Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       For safety  reasons,  this  feature  does  not  allow  $number  substitutions  in  regular
       expression maps.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

sendmail_fix_line_endings (default: always)

       Controls  how  the  Postfix  sendmail  command  converts  email  message line endings from
       <CR><LF> into UNIX format (<LF>).

       always Always convert message lines ending in <CR><LF>. This setting is the  default  with
              Postfix 2.9 and later.

       strict Convert  message  lines  ending  in  <CR><LF>  only if the first input line ends in
              <CR><LF>. This setting is backwards-compatible with Postfix 2.8 and earlier.

       never  Never  convert  message  lines  ending  in  <CR><LF>.  This  setting   exists   for
              completeness only.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.9 and later.

sendmail_path (default: see postconf -d output)

       A  Sendmail  compatibility  feature that specifies the location of the Postfix sendmail(1)
       command. This command can be used to submit mail into the Postfix queue.

service_name (read-only)

       The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process. This can be  used  to  distinguish
       the logging from different services that use the same program name.

       Example master.cf entries:

       # Distinguish inbound MTA logging from submission and smtps logging.
       smtp      inet  n       -       n       -       -       smtpd
       submission inet n       -       n       -       -       smtpd
           -o syslog_name=postfix/$service_name
       smtps     inet  n       -       n       -       -       smtpd
           -o syslog_name=postfix/$service_name

       # Distinguish outbound MTA logging from inbound relay logging.
       smtp      unix  -       -       n       -       -       smtp
       relay     unix  -       -       n       -       -       smtp
           -o syslog_name=postfix/$service_name

service_throttle_time (default: 60s)

       How  long  the  Postfix  master(8)  waits  before  forking  a  server  that  appears to be
       malfunctioning.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

setgid_group (default: postdrop)

       The group ownership of set-gid Postfix commands and of group-writable Postfix directories.
       When  this  parameter  value is changed you need to re-run "postfix set-permissions" (with
       Postfix version 2.0 and earlier: "/etc/postfix/post-install set-permissions".

shlib_directory (default: see 'postconf -d' output)

       The location of Postfix dynamically-linked libraries (libpostfix-*.so),  and  the  default
       location  of  Postfix database plugins (postfix-*.so) that have a relative pathname in the
       dynamicmaps.cf  file.   The  shlib_directory  parameter  defaults  to  "no"  when  Postfix
       dynamically-linked  libraries and database plugins are disabled at compile time, otherwise
       it typically defaults to /usr/lib/postfix or /usr/local/lib/postfix.

       Notes:

       •      The directory specified with shlib_directory should  contain  only  Postfix-related
              files.  Postfix  dynamically-linked  libraries  and  database plugins should not be
              installed in a "public"  system  directory  such  as  /usr/lib  or  /usr/local/lib.
              Linking   Postfix   dynamically-linked  library  files  or  database  plugins  into
              non-Postfix programs is not supported.  Postfix  dynamically-linked  libraries  and
              database  plugins implement a Postfix-internal API that changes without maintaining
              compatibility.

       •      You can change the shlib_directory value after Postfix is built. However,  you  may
              have to run ldconfig or equivalent to prevent Postfix programs from failing because
              the libpostfix-*.so files are not found.  No ldconfig command is needed if you keep
              the libpostfix-*.so files in the compiled-in default $shlib_directory location.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

show_user_unknown_table_name (default: yes)

       Display the name of the recipient table in the "User unknown" responses.  The extra detail
       makes troubleshooting easier but also reveals information that is nobody else's business.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

showq_service_name (default: showq)

       The name of the showq(8) service. This service produces mail queue status reports.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

smtp_address_preference (default: any)

       The address type ("ipv6", "ipv4" or "any") that the Postfix SMTP client  will  try  first,
       when  a destination has IPv6 and IPv4 addresses with equal MX preference. This feature has
       no effect unless the inet_protocols setting enables both IPv4 and IPv6.

       Postfix SMTP client address preference has  evolved.  With  Postfix  2.8  the  default  is
       "ipv6"; earlier implementations are hard-coded to prefer IPv6 over IPv4.

       Notes for mail delivery between sites that have both IPv4 and IPv6 connectivity:

       •      The setting "smtp_address_preference = ipv6" is unsafe.  All deliveries will suffer
              delays during an IPv6 outage, even while the destination is  still  reachable  over
              IPv4.  Mail  may  be  stuck  in  the  queue with Postfix versions < 3.3 that do not
              implement  "smtp_balance_inet_protocols".  For   similar   reasons,   the   setting
              "smtp_address_preference = ipv4" is also unsafe.

       •      The   setting   "smtp_address_preference   =   any"   is   safe.   With  this,  and
              "smtp_balance_inet_protocols = yes" (the default), only  half  of  deliveries  will
              suffer  delays  if there is an outage that affects IPv6 or IPv4, as long as it does
              not affect both.

       •      The setting "smtp_address_preference = ipv4" is not a solution for  remote  servers
              that  flag email received over IPv6 as more 'spammy' (the client IPv6 address has a
              bad or missing PTR or AAAA record, bad network neighbors, etc.). Instead, configure
              Postfix  to  receive  mail  over  both IPv4 and IPv6, and to deliver mail over only
              IPv4.

                  /etc/postfix/main.cf:
                      inet_protocols = all

                  /etc/postfix/master.cf
                      smtp ...other fields... smtp -o inet_protocols=ipv4

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

smtp_address_verify_target (default: rcpt)

       In the context of email address verification, the  SMTP  protocol  stage  that  determines
       whether  an email address is deliverable.  Specify one of "rcpt" or "data".  The latter is
       needed with remote SMTP servers  that  reject  recipients  after  the  DATA  command.  Use
       transport_maps to apply this feature selectively:

           /etc/postfix/main.cf:
               transport_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/transport

           /etc/postfix/transport:
               smtp-domain-that-verifies-after-data    smtp-data-target:
               lmtp-domain-that-verifies-after-data    lmtp-data-target:

           /etc/postfix/master.cf:
               smtp-data-target    unix    -    -    n    -    -    smtp
                   -o smtp_address_verify_target=data
               lmtp-data-target    unix    -    -    n    -    -    lmtp
                   -o lmtp_address_verify_target=data

       Unselective  use  of  the "data" target does no harm, but will result in unnecessary "lost
       connection after DATA" events at remote SMTP/LMTP servers.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

smtp_always_send_ehlo (default: yes)

       Always send EHLO at the start of an SMTP session.

       With "smtp_always_send_ehlo = no", the Postfix SMTP client sends EHLO only when  the  word
       "ESMTP"  appears  in  the  server  greeting banner (example: 220 spike.porcupine.org ESMTP
       Postfix).

smtp_balance_inet_protocols (default: yes)

       When a remote destination resolves to a combination of IPv4  and  IPv6  addresses,  ensure
       that  the  Postfix  SMTP  client  can  try  both  address  types  before  it runs into the
       smtp_mx_address_limit.

       This avoids an interoperability problem when a  destination  resolves  to  primarily  IPv6
       addresses,  the  smtp_address_limit feature eliminates most or all IPv4 addresses, and the
       destination is not reachable over IPv6.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.3 and later.

smtp_bind_address (default: empty)

       An optional numerical network address that the Postfix SMTP client  should  bind  to  when
       making an IPv4 connection.

       This  can be specified in the main.cf file for all SMTP clients, or it can be specified in
       the master.cf file for a specific client, for example:

           /etc/postfix/master.cf:
               smtp ... smtp -o smtp_bind_address=11.22.33.44

       See smtp_bind_address_enforce for how  Postfix  should  handle  errors  (Postfix  3.7  and
       later).

       Note  1: when inet_interfaces specifies no more than one IPv4 address, and that address is
       a non-loopback address, it is automatically used as the smtp_bind_address.  This  supports
       virtual IP hosting, but can be a problem on multi-homed firewalls. See the inet_interfaces
       documentation for more detail.

       Note 2: address information may be enclosed inside [], but this form is not required here.

smtp_bind_address6 (default: empty)

       An optional numerical network address that the Postfix SMTP client  should  bind  to  when
       making an IPv6 connection.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

       This  can be specified in the main.cf file for all SMTP clients, or it can be specified in
       the master.cf file for a specific client, for example:

           /etc/postfix/master.cf:
               smtp ... smtp -o smtp_bind_address6=1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8

       See smtp_bind_address_enforce for how  Postfix  should  handle  errors  (Postfix  3.7  and
       later).

       Note  1: when inet_interfaces specifies no more than one IPv6 address, and that address is
       a non-loopback address, it is automatically used as the smtp_bind_address6.  This supports
       virtual IP hosting, but can be a problem on multi-homed firewalls. See the inet_interfaces
       documentation for more detail.

       Note 2: address information may be enclosed inside [], but this form  is  not  recommended
       here.

smtp_bind_address_enforce (default: no)

       Defer  delivery  when  the  Postfix  SMTP  client  cannot  apply  the smtp_bind_address or
       smtp_bind_address6 setting. By default, the Postfix SMTP  client  will  continue  delivery
       after logging a warning.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.7 and later.

smtp_body_checks (default: empty)

       Restricted  body_checks(5)  tables for the Postfix SMTP client.  These tables are searched
       while mail is being delivered.  Actions that change the delivery time or  destination  are
       not available.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

smtp_cname_overrides_servername (default: version dependent)

       When  the  remote  SMTP  servername is a DNS CNAME, replace the servername with the result
       from CNAME expansion for  the  purpose  of  logging,  SASL  password  lookup,  TLS  policy
       decisions,   or   TLS   certificate   verification.   The   value   "no"  hardens  Postfix
       smtp_tls_per_site hostname-based policies against false hostname information in DNS  CNAME
       records,  and  makes  SASL  password  file  lookups  more predictable. This is the default
       setting as of Postfix 2.3.

       When DNS CNAME records are validated with secure  DNS  lookups  (smtp_dns_support_level  =
       dnssec),  they  are  always  allowed  to  override  the above servername (Postfix 2.11 and
       later).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2.9 and later.

smtp_connect_timeout (default: 30s)

       The Postfix SMTP client time limit for completing a  TCP  connection,  or  zero  (use  the
       operating system built-in time limit).

       When no connection can be made within the deadline, the Postfix SMTP client tries the next
       address on the mail exchanger list. Specify 0 to disable the time limit (i.e. use whatever
       timeout is implemented by the operating system).

       Specify  a  non-negative  time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

smtp_connection_cache_destinations (default: empty)

       Permanently  enable  SMTP  connection  caching  for the specified destinations.  With SMTP
       connection caching, a connection is not closed immediately  after  completion  of  a  mail
       transaction.      Instead,     the     connection    is    kept    open    for    up    to
       $smtp_connection_cache_time_limit seconds.  This allows connections to be reused for other
       deliveries, and can improve mail delivery performance.

       Specify a comma or white space separated list of destinations or pseudo-destinations:

       •      if  mail  is  sent  without  a relay host: a domain name (the right-hand side of an
              email address, without the [] around a numeric IP address),

       •      if mail is sent via a relay host: a relay host name (without [] or non-default  TCP
              port), as specified in main.cf or in the transport map,

       •      if mail is sent via a UNIX-domain socket: a pathname (without the unix: prefix),

       •      a /file/name with domain names and/or relay host names as defined above,

       •      a  "type:table"  with  domain  names and/or relay host names on the left-hand side.
              The right-hand side result from "type:table" lookups is ignored.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_connection_cache_on_demand (default: yes)

       Temporarily enable SMTP connection caching while a destination has a high volume  of  mail
       in the active queue.  With SMTP connection caching, a connection is not closed immediately
       after completion of a mail transaction.  Instead, the connection is kept open  for  up  to
       $smtp_connection_cache_time_limit seconds.  This allows connections to be reused for other
       deliveries, and can improve mail delivery performance.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_connection_cache_time_limit (default: 2s)

       When SMTP connection caching is enabled, the amount of time that  an  unused  SMTP  client
       socket  is kept open before it is closed.  Do not specify larger values without permission
       from the remote sites.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_connection_reuse_count_limit (default: 0)

       When SMTP connection caching is enabled, the number of times that an SMTP session  may  be
       reused  before  it  is  closed,  or  zero  (no  limit).   With a reuse count limit of N, a
       connection is used up to N+1 times.

       NOTE: This feature is unsafe. When a high-volume destination has  multiple  inbound  MTAs,
       then  the slowest inbound MTA will attract the most connections to that destination.  This
       limitation does not exist with the smtp_connection_reuse_time_limit feature.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11.

smtp_connection_reuse_time_limit (default: 300s)

       The amount of time during which Postfix will use an SMTP connection repeatedly.  The timer
       starts  when  the connection is initiated (i.e. it includes the connect, greeting and helo
       latency, in addition to the latencies of subsequent mail delivery transactions).

       This feature addresses a performance stability problem  with  remote  SMTP  servers.  This
       problem is not specific to Postfix: it can happen when any MTA sends large amounts of SMTP
       email to a site that has multiple MX hosts.

       The problem starts when one of a set of MX hosts  becomes  slower  than  the  rest.   Even
       though  SMTP clients connect to fast and slow MX hosts with equal probability, the slow MX
       host ends up with more simultaneous inbound connections than the faster MX hosts,  because
       the slow MX host needs more time to serve each client request.

       The  slow  MX  host becomes a connection attractor.  If one MX host becomes N times slower
       than the rest, it dominates mail delivery latency unless there are more  than  N  fast  MX
       hosts  to  counter  the  effect. And if the number of MX hosts is smaller than N, the mail
       delivery latency becomes effectively that of the slowest MX  host  divided  by  the  total
       number of MX hosts.

       The  solution  uses connection caching in a way that differs from Postfix version 2.2.  By
       limiting the amount of time during which a connection can be used repeatedly  (instead  of
       limiting  the  number  of  deliveries  over  that  connection),  Postfix not only restores
       fairness in the distribution of simultaneous connections across a set of MX hosts, it also
       favors deliveries over connections that perform well, which is exactly what we want.

       The default reuse time limit, 300s, is comparable to the various smtp transaction timeouts
       which are fair estimates of maximum excess latency for a slow delivery.  Note  that  hosts
       may  accept  thousands  of messages over a single connection within the default connection
       reuse time limit. This number is much larger than the default Postfix version 2.2 limit of
       10  messages  per  cached  connection.  It may prove necessary to lower the limit to avoid
       interoperability issues with MTAs that exhibit bugs when many messages are delivered via a
       single  connection.  A lower reuse time limit risks losing the benefit of connection reuse
       when the average connection and mail delivery latency exceeds the reuse time limit.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_data_done_timeout (default: 600s)

       The Postfix SMTP client time limit for sending the SMTP ".", and for receiving the  remote
       SMTP server response.

       When no response is received within the deadline, a warning is logged that the mail may be
       delivered multiple times.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

smtp_data_init_timeout (default: 120s)

       The Postfix SMTP client time limit for sending the SMTP DATA command,  and  for  receiving
       the remote SMTP server response.

       Time  units:  s  (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w (weeks).  The default time
       unit is s (seconds).

smtp_data_xfer_timeout (default: 180s)

       The Postfix SMTP client time limit  for  sending  the  SMTP  message  content.   When  the
       connection  makes  no  progress  for more than $smtp_data_xfer_timeout seconds the Postfix
       SMTP client terminates the transfer.

       Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w (weeks).   The  default  time
       unit is s (seconds).

smtp_defer_if_no_mx_address_found (default: no)

       Defer mail delivery when no MX record resolves to an IP address.

       The  default  (no) is to return the mail as undeliverable. With older Postfix versions the
       default was to keep trying to deliver the mail until someone fixed the MX record or  until
       the mail was too old.

       Note:  the  Postfix  SMTP  client always ignores MX records with equal or worse preference
       than the local MTA itself.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtp_delivery_status_filter (default: $default_delivery_status_filter)

       Optional filter for the smtp(8) delivery agent to  change  the  delivery  status  code  or
       explanatory     text     of     successful     or     unsuccessful     deliveries.     See
       default_delivery_status_filter for details.

       NOTE: This feature modifies Postfix SMTP client error or non-error messages  that  may  or
       may  not be derived from remote SMTP server responses.  In contrast, the smtp_reply_filter
       feature modifies remote SMTP server responses only.

smtp_destination_concurrency_limit (default: $default_destination_concurrency_limit)

       The maximal number of parallel deliveries to the same destination  via  the  smtp  message
       delivery  transport.  This  limit  is  enforced by the queue manager. The message delivery
       transport name is the first field in the entry in the master.cf file.

smtp_destination_recipient_limit (default: $default_destination_recipient_limit)

       The maximal number of recipients per message for the smtp message delivery transport. This
       limit  is  enforced by the queue manager. The message delivery transport name is the first
       field in the entry in the master.cf file.

       Setting   this   parameter   to   a    value    of    1    changes    the    meaning    of
       smtp_destination_concurrency_limit  from  concurrency  per  domain  into  concurrency  per
       recipient.

smtp_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps (default: empty)

       Lookup tables, indexed by the remote SMTP server address, with case insensitive  lists  of
       EHLO  keywords (pipelining, starttls, auth, etc.) that the Postfix SMTP client will ignore
       in the EHLO response  from  a  remote  SMTP  server.  See  smtp_discard_ehlo_keywords  for
       details.    The    table    is    not   indexed   by   hostname   for   consistency   with
       smtpd_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_discard_ehlo_keywords (default: empty)

       A  case  insensitive  list  of  EHLO  keywords (pipelining, starttls, auth, etc.) that the
       Postfix SMTP client will ignore in the EHLO response from a remote SMTP server.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

       Notes:

       •      Specify the silent-discard pseudo keyword to prevent this action from being logged.

       •      Use the smtp_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps feature  to  discard  EHLO  keywords
              selectively.

smtp_dns_reply_filter (default: empty)

       Optional  filter  for Postfix SMTP client DNS lookup results.  Specify zero or more lookup
       tables.  The lookup tables are searched in the given order for a match with the DNS lookup
       result, converted to the following form:

           name ttl class type preference value

       The class field is always "IN", the preference field exists only for MX records, the names
       of hosts, domains, etc.  end in ".", and those names are in ASCII form (xn--mumble form in
       the case of UTF8 names).

       When a match is found, the table lookup result specifies an action.  By default, the table
       query and the action name are case-insensitive.  Currently,  only  the  IGNORE  action  is
       implemented.

       Notes:

       •      Postfix  DNS  reply  filters  have  no  effect  on  implicit  DNS  lookups  through
              nsswitch.conf or equivalent mechanisms.

       •      The Postfix SMTP/LMTP client uses smtp_dns_reply_filter  and  lmtp_dns_reply_filter
              only  to  discover  a  remote  SMTP  or LMTP service (record types MX, A, AAAA, and
              TLSA).    These   lookups   are   also   made    to    implement    the    features
              reject_unverified_sender and reject_unverified_recipient.

       •      The  Postfix SMTP/LMTP client defers mail delivery when a filter removes all lookup
              results from a successful query.

       •      Postfix SMTP server uses smtpd_dns_reply_filter only to look up MX,  A,  AAAA,  and
              TXT    records    to    implement    the   features   reject_unknown_helo_hostname,
              reject_unknown_sender_domain,  reject_unknown_recipient_domain,  reject_rbl_*,  and
              reject_rhsbl_*.

       •      The  Postfix  SMTP  server  logs  a  warning  or defers mail delivery when a filter
              removes all lookup results from a successful query.

       Example: ignore Google AAAA records in Postfix SMTP client  DNS  lookups,  because  Google
       sometimes hard-rejects mail from IPv6 clients with valid PTR etc. records.

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           smtp_dns_reply_filter = pcre:/etc/postfix/smtp_dns_reply_filter

       /etc/postfix/smtp_dns_reply_filter:
           # /domain ttl IN AAAA address/ action, all case-insensitive.
           # Note: the domain name ends in ".".
           /^\S+\.google\.com\.\s+\S+\s+\S+\s+AAAA\s+/ IGNORE

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

smtp_dns_resolver_options (default: empty)

       DNS  Resolver  options for the Postfix SMTP client.  Specify zero or more of the following
       options, separated by comma or whitespace.  Option names are case-sensitive. Some  options
       refer to domain names that are specified in the file /etc/resolv.conf or equivalent.

       res_defnames
              Append the current domain name to single-component names (those that do not contain
              a "." character). This  can  produce  incorrect  results,  and  is  the  hard-coded
              behavior prior to Postfix 2.8.

       res_dnsrch
              Search for host names in the current domain and in parent domains. This can produce
              incorrect results and is therefore not recommended.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

smtp_dns_support_level (default: empty)

       Level of DNS support in the Postfix SMTP client.  With  "smtp_dns_support_level"  left  at
       its  empty  default value, the legacy "disable_dns_lookups" parameter controls whether DNS
       is enabled in the Postfix SMTP client, otherwise the legacy parameter is ignored.

       Specify one of the following:

       disabled
              Disable DNS lookups.  No MX lookups are performed and hostname to  address  lookups
              are  unconditionally  "native".   This  setting  is  not appropriate for hosts that
              deliver mail to the public Internet.   Some  obsolete  how-to  documents  recommend
              disabling  DNS  lookups  in  some  configurations with content_filters.  This is no
              longer required and strongly discouraged.

       enabled
              Enable DNS lookups.  Nexthop destination domains  not  enclosed  in  "[]"  will  be
              subject   to   MX   lookups.    If   "dns"   and   "native"  are  included  in  the
              "smtp_host_lookup" parameter value, DNS will be queried first to resolve MX-host  A
              records, followed by "native" lookups if no answer is found in DNS.

       dnssec Enable  DNSSEC  lookups.   The  "dnssec" setting differs from the "enabled" setting
              above in the following ways:

       •      Any  MX  lookups   will   set   RES_USE_DNSSEC   and   RES_USE_EDNS0   to   request
              DNSSEC-validated   responses.   If   the   MX   response  is  DNSSEC-validated  the
              corresponding hostnames are considered validated.

       •      The address lookups of validated hostnames are also validated, (provided of  course
              "smtp_host_lookup" includes "dns", see below).

       •      Temporary  failures  in  DNSSEC-enabled  hostname-to-address  resolution  block any
              "native" lookups.  Additional "native" lookups  only  happen  when  DNSSEC  lookups
              hard-fail (NODATA or NXDOMAIN).

       The  Postfix  SMTP  client  considers non-MX "[nexthop]" and "[nexthop]:port" destinations
       equivalent to statically-validated MX records of the form "nexthop.   IN  MX  0  nexthop."
       Therefore, with "dnssec" support turned on, validated hostname-to-address lookups apply to
       the nexthop domain of any "[nexthop]" or "[nexthop]:port" destination.  This is also  true
       for  LMTP  "inet:host"  and  "inet:host:port"  destinations,  as  LMTP hostnames are never
       subject to MX lookups.

       The "dnssec" setting is recommended only if you plan to use  the  dane  or  dane-only  TLS
       security  level,  otherwise  enabling  DNSSEC  support  in  Postfix  offers  no additional
       security.  Postfix  DNSSEC  support  relies  on  an  upstream  recursive  nameserver  that
       validates  DNSSEC  signatures.   Such  a  DNS  server  will  always  filter out forged DNS
       responses, even when Postfix itself is not configured to use DNSSEC.

       When using Postfix DANE support the "smtp_host_lookup" parameter should include "dns",  as
       DANE is not applicable to hosts resolved via "native" lookups.

       As  mentioned  above, Postfix is not a validating stub resolver; it relies on the system's
       configured DNSSEC-validating recursive nameserver to perform all DNSSEC validation.  Since
       this  nameserver's  DNSSEC-validated  responses  will  be  fully  trusted,  it is strongly
       recommended that the MTA host have a local DNSSEC-validating recursive caching  nameserver
       listening  on  a  loopback  address, and be configured to use only this nameserver for all
       lookups.  Otherwise, Postfix may remain subject to man-in-the-middle  attacks  that  forge
       responses from the recursive nameserver

       DNSSEC  support  requires  a  version  of Postfix compiled against a reasonably-modern DNS
       resolver(3) library that implements the RES_USE_DNSSEC and RES_USE_EDNS0 resolver options.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later.

smtp_enforce_tls (default: no)

       Enforcement mode: require that remote SMTP servers use TLS encryption, and never send mail
       in  the  clear.   This  also  requires  that  the  remote SMTP server hostname matches the
       information in the remote server certificate, and that the remote SMTP server  certificate
       was  issued by a CA that is trusted by the Postfix SMTP client. If the certificate doesn't
       verify or the hostname doesn't match, delivery is deferred and mail stays in the queue.

       The  server  hostname  is  matched  against  all  names  provided  as  dNSNames   in   the
       SubjectAlternativeName.   If  no  dNSNames  are specified, the CommonName is checked.  The
       behavior may be changed with the smtp_tls_enforce_peername option.

       This option is useful only if you are definitely  sure  that  you  will  only  connect  to
       servers  that  support RFC 2487 _and_ that provide valid server certificates.  Typical use
       is for clients that send all their email to a dedicated mailhub.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2  and  later.  With  Postfix  2.3  and  later  use
       smtp_tls_security_level instead.

smtp_fallback_relay (default: $fallback_relay)

       Optional  list  of  relay  destinations  that will be used when an SMTP destination is not
       found, or when delivery fails due to a non-permanent error. With Postfix 2.2  and  earlier
       this parameter is called fallback_relay.

       By  default,  smtp_fallback_relay  is  empty,  mail  is  returned  to  the  sender  when a
       destination is not found, and delivery is deferred after it fails due to  a  non-permanent
       error.

       With bulk email deliveries, it can be beneficial to run the fallback relay MTA on the same
       host, so that it can reuse the sender IP address.  This  speeds  up  deliveries  that  are
       delayed by IP-based reputation systems (greylist, etc.).

       The  fallback  relays  must  be  SMTP  destinations.  Specify  a  domain, host, host:port,
       [host]:port, [address] or [address]:port; the form [host] turns off MX  lookups.   If  you
       specify multiple SMTP destinations, Postfix will try them in the specified order.

       To  prevent  mailer  loops  between  MX hosts and fall-back hosts, Postfix version 2.2 and
       later will not use the fallback relays for destinations that it is MX host  for  (assuming
       DNS lookup is turned on).

smtp_generic_maps (default: empty)

       Optional  lookup  tables  that  perform  address  rewriting  in  the  Postfix SMTP client,
       typically to transform a locally valid address into a globally valid address when  sending
       mail  across  the  Internet.   This is needed when the local machine does not have its own
       Internet domain name, but uses something like localdomain.local instead.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       The  table  format  and  lookups  are  documented in generic(5); examples are shown in the
       ADDRESS_REWRITING_README and STANDARD_CONFIGURATION_README documents.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_header_checks (default: empty)

       Restricted header_checks(5) tables for the Postfix SMTP client.  These tables are searched
       while  mail  is being delivered.  Actions that change the delivery time or destination are
       not available.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

smtp_helo_name (default: $myhostname)

       The hostname to send in the SMTP HELO or EHLO command.

       The default value is the machine hostname.  Specify a hostname or [ip.add.re.ss].

       This information can be specified in the main.cf file for all SMTP clients, or it  can  be
       specified in the master.cf file for a specific client, for example:

           /etc/postfix/master.cf:
               mysmtp ... smtp -o smtp_helo_name=foo.bar.com

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

smtp_helo_timeout (default: 300s)

       The Postfix SMTP client time limit for sending the HELO or EHLO command, and for receiving
       the initial remote SMTP server response.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

smtp_host_lookup (default: dns)

       What mechanisms the Postfix SMTP client uses  to  look  up  a  host's  IP  address.   This
       parameter  is  ignored  when  DNS  lookups  are  disabled  (see:  disable_dns_lookups  and
       smtp_dns_support_level).  The "dns" mechanism is always tried before "native" if both  are
       listed.

       Specify one of the following:

       dns    Hosts can be found in the DNS (preferred).

       native Use the native naming service only (nsswitch.conf, or equivalent mechanism).

       dns, native
              Use the native service for hosts not found in the DNS.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtp_line_length_limit (default: 998)

       The  maximal length of message header and body lines that Postfix will send via SMTP. This
       limit does not include the <CR><LF> at the end of each line.  Longer lines are  broken  by
       inserting  "<CR><LF><SPACE>",  to minimize the damage to MIME formatted mail. Specify zero
       to disable this limit.

       The Postfix limit of 998 characters not including <CR><LF> is  consistent  with  the  SMTP
       limit  of  1000 characters including <CR><LF>.  The Postfix limit was 990 with Postfix 2.8
       and earlier.

smtp_mail_timeout (default: 300s)

       The Postfix SMTP client time limit for sending the MAIL FROM command,  and  for  receiving
       the remote SMTP server response.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

smtp_mime_header_checks (default: empty)

       Restricted  mime_header_checks(5)  tables  for  the  Postfix SMTP client. These tables are
       searched while mail is  being  delivered.   Actions  that  change  the  delivery  time  or
       destination are not available.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

smtp_min_data_rate (default: 500)

       The minimum plaintext data transfer rate in bytes/second for DATA requests, when deadlines
       are enabled with smtp_per_request_deadline.  After a write operation transfers N plaintext
       message  bytes  (possibly  after  TLS  encryption), and after the DATA request deadline is
       decremented by the elapsed time of that write operation,  the  DATA  request  deadline  is
       incremented  by  N/smtp_min_data_rate  seconds.   However,  the  deadline  will  never  be
       incremented beyond the time limit specified with smtp_data_xfer_timeout.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.7 and later.

smtp_mx_address_limit (default: 5)

       The maximal number of MX (mail exchanger) IP addresses that can result from  Postfix  SMTP
       client  mail  exchanger  lookups,  or  zero (no limit). Prior to Postfix version 2.3, this
       limit was disabled by default.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtp_mx_session_limit (default: 2)

       The maximal number of SMTP sessions per delivery request before the  Postfix  SMTP  client
       gives  up  or  delivers  to  a  fall-back relay host, or zero (no limit). This restriction
       ignores sessions that fail to complete the SMTP initial handshake (Postfix version 2.2 and
       earlier)  or  that  fail  to  complete the EHLO and TLS handshake (Postfix version 2.3 and
       later).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtp_nested_header_checks (default: empty)

       Restricted nested_header_checks(5) tables for the Postfix SMTP client.  These  tables  are
       searched  while  mail  is  being  delivered.   Actions  that  change  the delivery time or
       destination are not available.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

smtp_never_send_ehlo (default: no)

       Never send EHLO at the start of  an  SMTP  session.  See  also  the  smtp_always_send_ehlo
       parameter.

smtp_per_record_deadline (default: no)

       Change the behavior of the smtp_*_timeout time limits, from a time limit per read or write
       system call, to a time limit to send or receive a complete record (an SMTP  command  line,
       SMTP  response line, SMTP message content line, or TLS protocol message).  This limits the
       impact from hostile peers that trickle data one byte at a time.

       Note: when per-record deadlines are enabled, a short timeout may cause problems  with  TLS
       over very slow network connections.  The reasons are that a TLS protocol message can be up
       to 16 kbytes long (with TLSv1), and that an entire TLS protocol message must  be  sent  or
       received within the per-record deadline.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.9-3.6. With older Postfix releases, the behavior is
       as if this parameter is set to "no". Postfix 3.7 and later use smtp_per_request_deadline.

smtp_per_request_deadline (default: no)

       Change the behavior of the smtp_*_timeout time limits, from a time limit per plaintext  or
       TLS  read  or write call, to a combined time limit for sending a complete SMTP request and
       for receiving a complete SMTP response. The deadline limits only the  time  spent  waiting
       for  plaintext  or  TLS  read  or  write  calls, not time spent elsewhere. The per-request
       deadline limits the impact from hostile peers that trickle data one byte at a time.

       See smtp_min_data_rate for how the per-request deadline is managed during the DATA phase.

       Note: when per-request deadlines are enabled, a short time limit may cause  problems  with
       TLS  over  very slow network connections. The reason is that a TLS protocol message can be
       up to 16 kbytes long (with TLSv1), and  that  an  entire  TLS  protocol  message  must  be
       transferred within the per-request deadline.

       This   feature   is  available  in  Postfix  3.7  and  later.  A  weaker  feature,  called
       smtp_per_record_deadline, is available with Postfix 2.9-3.6.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.7 and later.

smtp_pix_workaround_delay_time (default: 10s)

       How long the Postfix SMTP client pauses before sending ".<CR><LF>" in order to work around
       the PIX firewall "<CR><LF>.<CR><LF>" bug.

       Choosing  too  short  a time makes this workaround ineffective when sending large messages
       over slow network connections.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

smtp_pix_workaround_maps (default: empty)

       Lookup tables, indexed by the remote SMTP server address, with per-destination workarounds
       for  CISCO  PIX  firewall bugs.  The table is not indexed by hostname for consistency with
       smtp_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.4 and later.

smtp_pix_workaround_threshold_time (default: 500s)

       How long a message must be queued before the Postfix SMTP client turns on the PIX firewall
       "<CR><LF>.<CR><LF>" bug workaround for delivery through firewalls with "smtp  fixup"  mode
       turned on.

       Specify  a  non-negative  time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       By  default,  the  workaround  is  turned  off  for  mail that is queued for less than 500
       seconds. In other words, the workaround is normally turned  off  for  the  first  delivery
       attempt.

       Specify  0  to  enable  the PIX firewall "<CR><LF>.<CR><LF>" bug workaround upon the first
       delivery attempt.

smtp_pix_workarounds (default: disable_esmtp, delay_dotcrlf)

       A list that specifies zero  or  more  workarounds  for  CISCO  PIX  firewall  bugs.  These
       workarounds  are implemented by the Postfix SMTP client. Workaround names are separated by
       comma or space, and are case insensitive.  This parameter setting can  be  overruled  with
       per-destination smtp_pix_workaround_maps settings.

       delay_dotcrlf
              Insert  a  delay  before  sending ".<CR><LF>" after the end of the message content.
              The    delay    is    subject    to    the    smtp_pix_workaround_delay_time    and
              smtp_pix_workaround_threshold_time parameter settings.

       disable_esmtp
              Disable all extended SMTP commands: send HELO instead of EHLO.

       This  feature  is  available  in Postfix 2.4 and later. The default settings are backwards
       compatible with earlier Postfix versions.

smtp_quit_timeout (default: 300s)

       The Postfix SMTP client time limit for sending the QUIT command,  and  for  receiving  the
       remote SMTP server response.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

smtp_quote_rfc821_envelope (default: yes)

       Quote  addresses  in Postfix SMTP client MAIL FROM and RCPT TO commands as required by RFC
       5321. This includes putting quotes around an address localpart that ends in ".".

       The default is to comply with RFC 5321. If you have to send mail to a broken SMTP  server,
       configure a special SMTP client in master.cf:

           /etc/postfix/master.cf:
               broken-smtp . . . smtp -o smtp_quote_rfc821_envelope=no

       and  route mail for the destination in question to the "broken-smtp" message delivery with
       a transport(5) table.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtp_randomize_addresses (default: yes)

       Randomize the order of equal-preference MX host addresses.  This is a performance  feature
       of the Postfix SMTP client.

smtp_rcpt_timeout (default: 300s)

       The Postfix SMTP client time limit for sending the SMTP RCPT TO command, and for receiving
       the remote SMTP server response.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

smtp_reply_filter (default: empty)

       A mechanism to transform replies from remote SMTP servers one line at a time.  This  is  a
       last-resort  tool  to  work  around  server  replies  that break interoperability with the
       Postfix SMTP client.  Other uses involve fault injection to  test  Postfix's  handling  of
       invalid responses.

       Notes:

       •      In  the  case  of  a multi-line reply, the Postfix SMTP client uses the final reply
              line's numerical SMTP reply code and enhanced status code.

       •      The numerical SMTP reply code (XYZ) takes precedence over the enhanced status  code
              (X.Y.Z).   When  the enhanced status code initial digit differs from the SMTP reply
              code initial digit, or when no enhanced status code is present,  the  Postfix  SMTP
              client uses a generic enhanced status code (X.0.0) instead.

       Specify  the name of a "type:table" lookup table. The search string is a single SMTP reply
       line as received from the remote SMTP  server,  except  that  the  trailing  <CR><LF>  are
       removed.  When the lookup succeeds, the result replaces the single SMTP reply line.

       Examples:

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           smtp_reply_filter = pcre:/etc/postfix/reply_filter

       /etc/postfix/reply_filter:
           # Transform garbage into "250-filler..." so that it looks like
           # one line from a multi-line reply. It does not matter what we
           # substitute here as long it has the right syntax.  The Postfix
           # SMTP client will use the final line's numerical SMTP reply
           # code and enhanced status code.
           !/^([2-5][0-9][0-9]($|[- ]))/ 250-filler for garbage

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7.

smtp_rset_timeout (default: 20s)

       The  Postfix  SMTP  client  time limit for sending the RSET command, and for receiving the
       remote SMTP server response. The SMTP client sends RSET in order  to  finish  a  recipient
       address probe, or to verify that a cached session is still usable.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtp_sasl_auth_cache_name (default: empty)

       An  optional  table  to prevent repeated SASL authentication failures with the same remote
       SMTP server hostname, username and password. Each  table  (key,  value)  pair  contains  a
       server  name,  a  username and password, and the full server response. This information is
       stored when a remote SMTP server rejects an authentication attempt with a 535 reply  code.
       As  long  as  the  smtp_sasl_password_maps information does not change, and as long as the
       smtp_sasl_auth_cache_name information does not expire (see smtp_sasl_auth_cache_time)  the
       Postfix SMTP client avoids SASL authentication attempts with the same server, username and
       password,   and   instead   bounces   or   defers   mail   as    controlled    with    the
       smtp_sasl_auth_soft_bounce configuration parameter.

       Use     a     per-destination     delivery     concurrency     of    1    (for    example,
       "smtp_destination_concurrency_limit  =  1",  "relay_destination_concurrency_limit  =   1",
       etc.), otherwise multiple delivery agents may experience a login failure at the same time.

       The  table  must be accessed via the proxywrite service, i.e. the map name must start with
       "proxy:". The table should be stored under the directory specified with the data_directory
       parameter.

       This feature uses cryptographic hashing to protect plain-text passwords, and requires that
       Postfix is compiled with TLS support.

       Example:

       smtp_sasl_auth_cache_name = proxy:btree:/var/lib/postfix/sasl_auth_cache

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

smtp_sasl_auth_cache_time (default: 90d)

       The maximal age of an smtp_sasl_auth_cache_name entry before it is removed.

       Specify a non-negative time value (an integral value plus an  optional  one-letter  suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is d (days).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

smtp_sasl_auth_enable (default: no)

       Enable SASL authentication in the Postfix SMTP  client.   By  default,  the  Postfix  SMTP
       client uses no authentication.

       Example:

       smtp_sasl_auth_enable = yes

smtp_sasl_auth_soft_bounce (default: yes)

       When  a  remote  SMTP  server rejects a SASL authentication request with a 535 reply code,
       defer mail delivery instead of returning mail as undeliverable. The  latter  behavior  was
       hard-coded prior to Postfix version 2.5.

       Note:  the  setting "yes" overrides the global soft_bounce parameter, but the setting "no"
       does not.

       Example:

       # Default as of Postfix 2.5
       smtp_sasl_auth_soft_bounce = yes
       # The old hard-coded default
       smtp_sasl_auth_soft_bounce = no

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

smtp_sasl_mechanism_filter (default: empty)

       If non-empty, a Postfix SMTP client filter for the remote SMTP server's  list  of  offered
       SASL  mechanisms.   Different  client  and  server  implementations  may support different
       mechanism lists; by default, the Postfix SMTP client will use the intersection of the two.
       smtp_sasl_mechanism_filter specifies an optional third mechanism list to intersect with.

       Specify  mechanism  names,  "/file/name"  patterns  or  "type:table"  lookup  tables.  The
       right-hand side result from "type:table" lookups is ignored. Specify "!pattern" to exclude
       a  mechanism  name  from  the  list.  The  form "!/file/name" is supported only in Postfix
       version 2.4 and later.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

       Examples:

       smtp_sasl_mechanism_filter = plain, login
       smtp_sasl_mechanism_filter = /etc/postfix/smtp_mechs
       smtp_sasl_mechanism_filter = !gssapi, !login, static:rest

smtp_sasl_password_maps (default: empty)

       Optional Postfix SMTP client lookup tables with one username:password  entry  per  sender,
       remote  hostname  or next-hop domain. Per-sender lookup is done only when sender-dependent
       authentication is enabled.  If no username:password entry is found, then the Postfix  SMTP
       client will not attempt to authenticate to the remote host.

       Use  smtp_sasl_password_result_delimiter  to  specify  an  alternative  separator  between
       username and password.

       The Postfix SMTP client opens the lookup table before going to chroot  jail,  so  you  can
       leave the password file in /etc/postfix.

       Specify  zero  or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or comma. Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

smtp_sasl_password_result_delimiter (default: :)

       The delimiter between username and password in sasl_passwd_maps  lookup  results.  Specify
       one non-whitespace character that does not appear in the username.

       This feature is available in Postfix >= 3.9.

smtp_sasl_path (default: empty)

       Implementation-specific  information  that  the  Postfix SMTP client passes through to the
       SASL  plug-in  implementation  that  is  selected  with  smtp_sasl_type.   Typically  this
       specifies the name of a configuration file or rendezvous point.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_sasl_security_options (default: noplaintext, noanonymous)

       Postfix  SMTP  client  SASL  security  options;  as  of  Postfix 2.3 the list of available
       features depends on the SASL client implementation that is selected with smtp_sasl_type.

       The following security features are defined for the cyrus client SASL implementation:

       Specify zero or more of the following:

       noplaintext
              Disallow methods that use plaintext passwords.

       noactive
              Disallow methods subject to active (non-dictionary) attack.

       nodictionary
              Disallow methods subject to passive (dictionary) attack.

       noanonymous
              Disallow methods that allow anonymous authentication.

       mutual_auth
              Only allow methods that provide mutual  authentication  (not  available  with  SASL
              version 1).

       Example:

       smtp_sasl_security_options = noplaintext

smtp_sasl_tls_security_options (default: $smtp_sasl_security_options)

       The  SASL  authentication  security  options  that  the  Postfix  SMTP client uses for TLS
       encrypted SMTP sessions.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_sasl_tls_verified_security_options (default: $smtp_sasl_tls_security_options)

       The SASL authentication security options  that  the  Postfix  SMTP  client  uses  for  TLS
       encrypted SMTP sessions with a verified server certificate.

       When  mail  is  sent to the public MX host for the recipient's domain, server certificates
       are by default optional, and delivery proceeds even if certificate verification fails. For
       delivery via a submission service that requires SASL authentication, it may be appropriate
       to send plaintext passwords only when the connection to the server is  strongly  encrypted
       and the server identity is verified.

       The  smtp_sasl_tls_verified_security_options  parameter  makes  it possible to only enable
       plaintext mechanisms when a secure connection  to  the  server  is  available.  Submission
       servers  subject to this policy must either have verifiable certificates or offer suitable
       non-plaintext SASL mechanisms.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

smtp_sasl_type (default: cyrus)

       The SASL plug-in type that the Postfix SMTP client should  use  for  authentication.   The
       available types are listed with the "postconf -A" command.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_send_dummy_mail_auth (default: no)

       Whether   or   not   to   append  the  "AUTH=<>"  option  to  the  MAIL  FROM  command  in
       SASL-authenticated SMTP sessions. The default is not to send this, to avoid problems  with
       broken   remote   SMTP   servers.    Before   Postfix   2.9   the   behavior   is   as  if
       "smtp_send_dummy_mail_auth = yes".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.9 and later.

smtp_send_xforward_command (default: no)

       Send the non-standard  XFORWARD  command  when  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  EHLO  response
       announces XFORWARD support.

       This  allows a Postfix SMTP delivery agent, used for injecting mail into a content filter,
       to forward the name, address, protocol and HELO name of the original client to the content
       filter  and  downstream  queuing  SMTP  server.  This can produce more useful logging than
       localhost[127.0.0.1] etc.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtp_sender_dependent_authentication (default: no)

       Enable sender-dependent authentication in the Postfix SMTP client; this is available  only
       with  SASL  authentication,  and disables SMTP connection caching to ensure that mail from
       different senders will use the appropriate credentials.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_skip_4xx_greeting (default: yes)

       Skip SMTP servers that greet with a 4XX status code (go away, try again later).

       By  default,  the  Postfix  SMTP  client  moves  on  the  next  mail  exchanger.   Specify
       "smtp_skip_4xx_greeting = no" if Postfix should defer delivery immediately.

       This  feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and earlier.  Later Postfix versions always skip
       remote SMTP servers that greet with a 4XX status code.

smtp_skip_5xx_greeting (default: yes)

       Skip remote SMTP servers that greet with a 5XX status code.

       By  default,  the  Postfix  SMTP  client  moves  on  the  next  mail  exchanger.   Specify
       "smtp_skip_5xx_greeting  = no" if Postfix should bounce the mail immediately. Caution: the
       latter behavior appears to contradict RFC 2821.

smtp_skip_quit_response (default: yes)

       Do not wait for the response to the SMTP QUIT command.

smtp_starttls_timeout (default: 300s)

       Time limit for Postfix SMTP client write  and  read  operations  during  TLS  startup  and
       shutdown handshake procedures.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tcp_port (default: smtp)

       The  default  TCP  port that the Postfix SMTP client connects to.  Specify a symbolic name
       (see services(5)) or a numeric port.

smtp_tls_CAfile (default: empty)

       A file containing CA certificates of root CAs trusted to sign either  remote  SMTP  server
       certificates  or  intermediate  CA  certificates.  These are loaded into memory before the
       smtp(8) client enters the chroot jail. If the number of trusted roots is  large,  consider
       using  smtp_tls_CApath  instead, but note that the latter directory must be present in the
       chroot jail if the smtp(8) client is chrooted. This file may also be used to  augment  the
       client  certificate  trust  chain, but it is best to include all the required certificates
       directly in $smtp_tls_cert_file (or, Postfix >= 3.4 $smtp_tls_chain_files).

       Specify "smtp_tls_CAfile  =  /path/to/system_CA_file"  to  use  ONLY  the  system-supplied
       default Certification Authority certificates.

       Specify "tls_append_default_CA = no" to prevent Postfix from appending the system-supplied
       default CAs and trusting third-party certificates.

       Example:

       smtp_tls_CAfile = /etc/postfix/CAcert.pem

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tls_CApath (default: empty)

       Directory with PEM format Certification  Authority  certificates  that  the  Postfix  SMTP
       client  uses  to  verify  a  remote  SMTP  server certificate.  Don't forget to create the
       necessary "hash" links with, for example, "$OPENSSL_HOME/bin/c_rehash /etc/postfix/certs".

       To use this option in chroot mode, this directory (or a copy) must be  inside  the  chroot
       jail.

       Specify  "smtp_tls_CApath  = /path/to/system_CA_directory" to use ONLY the system-supplied
       default Certification Authority certificates.

       Specify "tls_append_default_CA = no" to prevent Postfix from appending the system-supplied
       default CAs and trusting third-party certificates.

       Example:

       smtp_tls_CApath = /etc/postfix/certs

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tls_block_early_mail_reply (default: no)

       Try   to   detect   a  mail  hijacking  attack  based  on  a  TLS  protocol  vulnerability
       (CVE-2009-3555), where an attacker prepends malicious HELO, MAIL, RCPT, DATA commands to a
       Postfix  SMTP  client TLS session.  The attack would succeed with non-Postfix SMTP servers
       that reply to the malicious HELO, MAIL, RCPT, DATA commands after negotiating the  Postfix
       SMTP client TLS session.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7.

smtp_tls_cert_file (default: empty)

       File  with  the  Postfix  SMTP  client  RSA certificate in PEM format.  This file may also
       contain the Postfix SMTP client private RSA key, and these may be the same as the  Postfix
       SMTP  server  RSA  certificate  and  key  file.   With Postfix >= 3.4 the preferred way to
       configure client keys and certificates is via the "smtp_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       Do not configure client certificates unless you must present client  TLS  certificates  to
       one or more servers. Client certificates are not usually needed, and can cause problems in
       configurations that work well without them. The recommended setting is to let the defaults
       stand:

           smtp_tls_cert_file =
           smtp_tls_key_file =
           smtp_tls_eccert_file =
           smtp_tls_eckey_file =
           # Obsolete DSA parameters
           smtp_tls_dcert_file =
           smtp_tls_dkey_file =
           # Postfix >= 3.4 interface
           smtp_tls_chain_files =

       The best way to use the default settings is to comment out the above parameters in main.cf
       if present.

       To enable remote SMTP servers to verify the Postfix SMTP client certificate,  the  issuing
       CA  certificates  must  be  made  available to the server. You should include the required
       certificates in the client certificate  file,  the  client  certificate  first,  then  the
       issuing CA(s) (bottom-up order).

       Example:  the  certificate  for "client.example.com" was issued by "intermediate CA" which
       itself has a certificate issued by  "root  CA".   As  the  "root"  super-user  create  the
       client.pem file with:

           # umask 077
           # cat client_key.pem client_cert.pem intermediate_CA.pem > chain.pem

       If  you  also  want to verify remote SMTP server certificates issued by these CAs, you can
       add the CA certificates to the smtp_tls_CAfile, in which case it is not necessary to  have
       them in the smtp_tls_cert_file, smtp_tls_dcert_file (obsolete) or smtp_tls_eccert_file.

       A certificate supplied here must be usable as an SSL client certificate and hence pass the
       "openssl verify -purpose sslclient ..." test.

       Example:

       smtp_tls_cert_file = /etc/postfix/chain.pem

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tls_chain_files (default: empty)

       List of one or more PEM files, each holding one or more private keys directly followed  by
       a  corresponding  certificate  chain.   The  file  names  are  separated  by commas and/or
       whitespace.  This parameter obsoletes the legacy algorithm-specific  key  and  certificate
       file settings.  When this parameter is non-empty, the legacy parameters are ignored, and a
       warning is logged if any are also non-empty.

       With the proliferation of multiple private key  algorithms-which,  as  of  OpenSSL  1.1.1,
       include  DSA  (obsolete),  RSA, ECDSA, Ed25519 and Ed448-it is increasingly impractical to
       use separate parameters to configure the key and certificate  chain  for  each  algorithm.
       Therefore, Postfix now supports storing multiple keys and corresponding certificate chains
       in a single file or in a set of files.

       Each key must appear immediately before the corresponding certificate, optionally followed
       by  additional issuer certificates that complete the certificate chain for that key.  When
       multiple files are specified, they are equivalent to a single file  that  is  concatenated
       from  those  files  in  the  given  order.   Thus,  while  a  key  must always precede its
       certificate and issuer chain, it can be in a separate file, so long as that file is listed
       immediately  before the file that holds the corresponding certificate chain.  Once all the
       files are concatenated, the sequence of PEM objects must be: key1, cert1, [chain1],  key2,
       cert2, [chain2], ..., keyN, certN, [chainN].

       Storing  the  private  key  in  the  same  file  as  the corresponding certificate is more
       reliable.  With the key and certificate in separate files, there is a chance  that  during
       key  rollover  a  Postfix  process  might load a private key and certificate from separate
       files that don't match.  Various operational errors may even result in a persistent broken
       configuration in which the certificate does not match the private key.

       The file or files must contain at most one key of each type.  If, for example, two or more
       RSA keys and corresponding chains are listed, depending on the version of  OpenSSL  either
       only  the last one will be used or a configuration error may be detected.  Note that while
       "Ed25519" and "Ed448"  are  considered  separate  algorithms,  the  various  ECDSA  curves
       (typically  one  of  prime256v1,  secp384r1  or  secp521r1)  are  considered  as different
       parameters of a single "ECDSA" algorithm, so it is not  presently  possible  to  configure
       keys for more than one ECDSA curve.

       Example (separate files for each key and corresponding certificate chain):

           /etc/postfix/main.cf:
               smtp_tls_chain_files =
                   ${config_directory}/ed25519.pem,
                   ${config_directory}/ed448.pem,
                   ${config_directory}/rsa.pem

           /etc/postfix/ed25519.pem:
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MC4CAQAwBQYDK2VwBCIEIEJfbbO4BgBQGBg9NAbIJaDBqZb4bC4cOkjtAH+Efbz3
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIBKzCB3qADAgECAhQaw+rflRreYuUZBp0HuNn/e5rMZDAFBgMrZXAwFDESMBAG
               ...
               nC0egv51YPDWxEHom4QA

               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
           /etc/postfix/ed448.pem:
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MEcCAQAwBQYDK2VxBDsEOQf+m0P+G0qi+NZ0RolyeiE5zdlPQR8h8y4jByBifpIe
               LNler7nzHQJ1SLcOiXFHXlxp/84VZuh32A==
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIBdjCB96ADAgECAhQSv4oP972KypOZPNPF4fmsiQoRHzAFBgMrZXEwFDESMBAG
               ...
               pQcWsx+4J29e6YWH3Cy/CdUaexKP4RPCZDrPX7bk5C2BQ+eeYOxyThMA

               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
           /etc/postfix/rsa.pem:
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MIIEvQIBADANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAASCBKcwggSjAgEAAoIBAQDc4QusgkahH9rL
               ...
               ahQkZ3+krcaJvDSMgvu0tDc=
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIC+DCCAeCgAwIBAgIUIUkrbk1GAemPCT8i9wKsTGDH7HswDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEL
               ...
               Rirz15HGVNTK8wzFd+nulPzwUo6dH2IU8KazmyRi7OGvpyrMlm15TRE2oyE=

               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
       Example (all keys and certificates in a single file):

           /etc/postfix/main.cf:
               smtp_tls_chain_files = ${config_directory}/chains.pem

           /etc/postfix/chains.pem:
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MC4CAQAwBQYDK2VwBCIEIEJfbbO4BgBQGBg9NAbIJaDBqZb4bC4cOkjtAH+Efbz3
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIBKzCB3qADAgECAhQaw+rflRreYuUZBp0HuNn/e5rMZDAFBgMrZXAwFDESMBAG
               ...
               nC0egv51YPDWxEHom4QA
               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MEcCAQAwBQYDK2VxBDsEOQf+m0P+G0qi+NZ0RolyeiE5zdlPQR8h8y4jByBifpIe
               LNler7nzHQJ1SLcOiXFHXlxp/84VZuh32A==
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIBdjCB96ADAgECAhQSv4oP972KypOZPNPF4fmsiQoRHzAFBgMrZXEwFDESMBAG
               ...
               pQcWsx+4J29e6YWH3Cy/CdUaexKP4RPCZDrPX7bk5C2BQ+eeYOxyThMA
               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MIIEvQIBADANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAASCBKcwggSjAgEAAoIBAQDc4QusgkahH9rL
               ...
               ahQkZ3+krcaJvDSMgvu0tDc=
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIC+DCCAeCgAwIBAgIUIUkrbk1GAemPCT8i9wKsTGDH7HswDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEL
               ...
               Rirz15HGVNTK8wzFd+nulPzwUo6dH2IU8KazmyRi7OGvpyrMlm15TRE2oyE=

               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

smtp_tls_cipherlist (default: empty)

       Obsolete  Postfix  <  2.3  control  for  the  Postfix SMTP client TLS cipher list. As this
       feature applies to all TLS security levels, it is easy to create interoperability problems
       by  choosing  a non-default cipher list. Do not use a non-default TLS cipher list on hosts
       that deliver email to the public Internet: you will be unable to  send  email  to  servers
       that  only  support  the  ciphers  you exclude. Using a restricted cipher list may be more
       appropriate for an internal MTA, where one can exert some control over  the  TLS  software
       and settings of the peer servers.

       Note: do not use "" quotes around the parameter value.

       This  feature  is  available  in  Postfix version 2.2. It is not used with Postfix 2.3 and
       later; use smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers instead.

smtp_tls_ciphers (default: medium)

       The minimum TLS cipher grade that the Postfix SMTP client will use with opportunistic  TLS
       encryption.  Cipher  types  listed  in smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers are excluded from the base
       definition of the selected cipher grade.   The  default  value  is  "medium"  for  Postfix
       releases after the middle of 2015, "export" for older releases.

       When  TLS  is  mandatory  the  cipher  grade  is chosen via the smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers
       configuration parameter, see  there  for  syntax  details.  See  smtp_tls_policy_maps  for
       information on how to configure ciphers on a per-destination basis.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later. With earlier Postfix releases only the
       smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers parameter is implemented, and  opportunistic  TLS  always  uses
       "export" or better (i.e. all) ciphers.

smtp_tls_connection_reuse (default: no)

       Try  to  make multiple deliveries per TLS-encrypted connection.  This uses the tlsproxy(8)
       service to encrypt an SMTP connection, uses the scache(8) service to save that connection,
       and relies on hints from the qmgr(8) daemon.

       See "Client-side TLS connection reuse" for background details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

smtp_tls_dane_insecure_mx_policy (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  TLS  policy  for  MX  hosts  with  "secure" TLSA records when the nexthop destination
       security level is dane, but the MX record was found via  an  "insecure"  MX  lookup.   The
       choices are:

       may    The TLSA records will be ignored and TLS will be optional.  If the MX host does not
              appear to support STARTTLS, or the STARTTLS handshake fails, mail may  be  sent  in
              the clear.

       encrypt
              The  TLSA  records will signal a requirement to use TLS.  While TLS encryption will
              be required, authentication will not be performed.

       dane   The TLSA records will be used just as with "secure"  MX  records.   TLS  encryption
              will  be  required,  and,  if  at  least  one  of  the  TLSA  records  is "usable",
              authentication will be required.  When authentication succeeds, it will  be  logged
              only as "Trusted", not "Verified", because the MX host name could have been forged.
              The  default  setting  for Postfix >= 3.6 is "dane" with "smtp_tls_security_level =
              dane", otherwise "may". This behavior was backported  to  Postfix  versions  3.5.9,
              3.4.19,  3.3.16.  3.2.21.   With  earlier  Postfix versions the default setting was
              always "dane".

       Though with "insecure" MX  records  an  active  attacker  can  compromise  SMTP  transport
       security  by  returning  forged  MX  records,  such attacks are "tamper-evident" since any
       forged MX hostnames will be recorded in the mail logs.  Attackers who place a  high  value
       on staying hidden may be deterred from forging MX records.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.1 and later. The may policy is backwards-compatible
       with earlier Postfix versions.

smtp_tls_dcert_file (default: empty)

       File with the Postfix SMTP client DSA certificate in  PEM  format.   This  file  may  also
       contain the Postfix SMTP client private DSA key.  The DSA algorithm is obsolete and should
       not be used.

       See the discussion under smtp_tls_cert_file for more details.

       Example:

       smtp_tls_dcert_file = /etc/postfix/client-dsa.pem

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tls_dkey_file (default: $smtp_tls_dcert_file)

       File with the Postfix SMTP client DSA private  key  in  PEM  format.   This  file  may  be
       combined   with   the   Postfix   SMTP   client   DSA   certificate  file  specified  with
       $smtp_tls_dcert_file. The DSA algorithm is obsolete and should not be used.

       The private key must be accessible without a pass-phrase, i.e. it must not  be  encrypted.
       File  permissions  should grant read-only access to the system superuser account ("root"),
       and no access to anyone else.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tls_eccert_file (default: empty)

       File with the Postfix SMTP client ECDSA certificate in PEM format.   This  file  may  also
       contain  the Postfix SMTP client ECDSA private key.  With Postfix >= 3.4 the preferred way
       to configure client keys and certificates is via the "smtp_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       See the discussion under smtp_tls_cert_file for more details.

       Example:

       smtp_tls_eccert_file = /etc/postfix/ecdsa-ccert.pem

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later, when Postfix is  compiled  and  linked
       with OpenSSL 1.0.0 or later.

smtp_tls_eckey_file (default: $smtp_tls_eccert_file)

       File  with  the  Postfix  SMTP  client  ECDSA private key in PEM format.  This file may be
       combined  with  the  Postfix  SMTP  client   ECDSA   certificate   file   specified   with
       $smtp_tls_eccert_file.  With Postfix >= 3.4 the preferred way to configure client keys and
       certificates is via the "smtp_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       The private key must be accessible without a pass-phrase, i.e. it must not  be  encrypted.
       File  permissions  should grant read-only access to the system superuser account ("root"),
       and no access to anyone else.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later, when Postfix is  compiled  and  linked
       with OpenSSL 1.0.0 or later.

smtp_tls_enable_rpk (default: no)

       Request  that  remote  SMTP  servers  send  an  RFC7250 raw public key instead of an X.509
       certificate. This feature and the enable_rpk policy attribute are ignored when there is no
       raw public key support in the local TLS implementation.

       •      At  the  "may", "encrypt" and "fingerprint" security levels, with parameter setting
              "smtp_tls_enable_rpk = yes" or with "enable_rpk =  yes"  in  a  policy  entry,  the
              Postfix SMTP client will indicate in the TLS handshake that it prefers to receive a
              raw server public key, but it will still accept a server public key certificate.

       •      At the "fingerprint" security level, with parameter setting "smtp_tls_enable_rpk  =
              yes"  or  with "enable_rpk = yes" in a policy entry, server authentication based on
              certificate fingerprints becomes more fragile.  Even if the server private key  and
              certificate  remain  unchanged,  the  remote  SMTP  server  will  fail  fingerprint
              authentication (won't match the configured list of  fingerprints)  when  it  starts
              sending  a raw public key instead of a certificate, after its TLS implementation is
              updated with raw public key support.  Therefore, DO NOT enable raw public  keys  to
              remote  destinations  authenticated by server certificate fingerprints.  You should
              enable raw public keys only for servers matched via their public key fingerprint.

       •      At the "verify" and "secure"  security  levels,  the  Postfix  SMTP  client  always
              ignores   the  parameter  setting  smtp_tls_enable_rpk  or  the  enable_rpk  policy
              attribute.

       •      At the opportunistic "dane" security level, the Postfix  SMTP  client  ignores  the
              parameter  setting  smtp_tls_enable_rpk  or the enable_rpk policy attribute (but it
              will respect them when it falls back to the "may" or  "encrypt"  level).  When  all
              valid  TLSA records specify only server public keys (no certificates) and the local
              TLS implementation supports raw public keys, the client will indicate  in  the  TLS
              handshake  that  it prefers to receive a raw public key, but it will still accept a
              public key certificate.

       •      At the mandatory "dane-only" security level, the Postfix SMTP client always ignores
              the  parameter setting smtp_tls_enable_rpk or the enable_rpk policy attribute. When
              all valid TLSA records specify only server public keys (no  certificates)  and  the
              local  TLS implementation supports raw public keys, the client will indicate in the
              TLS handshake that it prefers to receive a raw public key, but it will still accept
              a public key certificate.

       The  Postfix SMTP client is always willing to send raw public keys to servers that solicit
       them when a client certificate is configured and the local TLS implementation supports raw
       public keys.

       Sample commands to compute certificate and public key SHA256 digests:

       # SHA256 digest of the first certificate in "cert.pem"
       $ openssl x509 -in cert.pem -outform DER | openssl dgst -sha256 -c

       # SHA256 digest of the SPKI of the first certificate in "cert.pem"
       $ openssl x509 -in cert.pem -pubkey -noout |
           openssl pkey -pubin -outform DER | openssl dgst -sha256 -c

       # SHA256 digest of the SPKI of the first private key in "pkey.pem"
       $ openssl pkey -in pkey.pem -pubout -outform DER |
           openssl dgst -sha256 -c

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.9 and later.

smtp_tls_enforce_peername (default: yes)

       With  mandatory  TLS  encryption, require that the remote SMTP server hostname matches the
       information in the remote SMTP server certificate.  As of RFC 2487  the  requirements  for
       hostname checking for MTA clients are not specified.

       This  option  can be set to "no" to disable strict peer name checking. This setting has no
       effect on sessions that are controlled via the smtp_tls_per_site table.

       Disabling the hostname verification can make sense in a closed environment  where  special
       CAs   are   created.    If  not  used  carefully,  this  option  opens  the  danger  of  a
       "man-in-the-middle" attack (the CommonName of this attacker will be logged).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2  and  later.  With  Postfix  2.3  and  later  use
       smtp_tls_security_level instead.

smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers (default: empty)

       List of ciphers or cipher types to exclude from the Postfix SMTP client cipher list at all
       TLS security levels. This is not an OpenSSL cipherlist, it is a simple list  separated  by
       whitespace  and/or  commas. The elements are a single cipher, or one or more "+" separated
       cipher properties, in which case only ciphers matching all the properties are excluded.

       Examples (some of these will cause problems):

           smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers = aNULL
           smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers = MD5, DES
           smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers = DES+MD5
           smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers = AES256-SHA, DES-CBC3-MD5
           smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers = kEDH+aRSA

       The first setting disables anonymous ciphers. The next setting disables ciphers  that  use
       the  MD5  digest  algorithm  or  the  (single)  DES encryption algorithm. The next setting
       disables ciphers that use MD5 and DES together.  The next setting disables the two ciphers
       "AES256-SHA"  and  "DES-CBC3-MD5".  The  last  setting disables ciphers that use "EDH" key
       exchange with RSA authentication.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_tls_fingerprint_cert_match (default: empty)

       List of acceptable remote SMTP server certificate fingerprints for the  "fingerprint"  TLS
       security   level   (smtp_tls_security_level   =  fingerprint).  At  this  security  level,
       Certification Authorities are not used, and  certificate  expiration  times  are  ignored.
       Instead,  server  certificates  are verified directly via their certificate fingerprint or
       public key fingerprint (Postfix 2.9 and later). The fingerprint is a message digest of the
       server   certificate   (or   public  key).  The  digest  algorithm  is  selected  via  the
       smtp_tls_fingerprint_digest parameter.

       The colons between each pair of nibbles in the fingerprint value are optional (Postfix  >=
       3.6). These were required in earlier Postfix releases.

       When  an  smtp_tls_policy_maps table entry specifies the "fingerprint" security level, any
       "match" attributes  in  that  entry  specify  the  list  of  valid  fingerprints  for  the
       corresponding destination. Multiple fingerprints can be combined with a "|" delimiter in a
       single match attribute, or multiple match attributes can be employed.

       Example:  Certificate  fingerprint  verification  with  internal  mailhub.   Two  matching
       fingerprints   are  listed.  The  relayhost  may  be  multiple  physical  hosts  behind  a
       load-balancer,  each  with  its  own  private/public  key  and  self-signed   certificate.
       Alternatively,  a  single  relayhost  may  be  in the process of switching from one set of
       private/public keys to another, and both keys are trusted just prior to the transition.

           relayhost = [mailhub.example.com]
           smtp_tls_security_level = fingerprint
           smtp_tls_fingerprint_digest = sha256
           smtp_tls_fingerprint_cert_match =
               cd:fc:d8:db:f8:c4:82:96:6c:...:28:71:e8:f5:8d:a5:0d:9b:d4:a6
               dd:5c:ef:f5:c3:bc:64:25:36:...:99:36:06:ce:40:ef:de:2e:ad:a4

       Example: Certificate fingerprint verification  with  selected  destinations.   As  in  the
       example above, we show two matching fingerprints:

           /etc/postfix/main.cf:
               smtp_tls_policy_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/tls_policy
               smtp_tls_fingerprint_digest = sha256

           /etc/postfix/tls_policy:
               example.com fingerprint
                   match=51:e9:af:2e:1e:40:1f:...:64:0a:30:35:2d:09:16:31:5a:eb:82:76
                   match=b6:b4:72:34:e2:59:cd:...:c2:ca:63:0d:4d:cc:2c:7d:84:de:e6:2f

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

smtp_tls_fingerprint_digest (default: see postconf -d output)

       The   message   digest   algorithm  used  to  construct  remote  SMTP  server  certificate
       fingerprints.  At  the  "fingerprint"  TLS  security  level   (smtp_tls_security_level   =
       fingerprint),  the  server  certificate  is  verified by directly matching its certificate
       fingerprint or its public key fingerprint (Postfix 2.9 and later). The fingerprint is  the
       message digest of the server certificate (or its public key) using the selected algorithm.
       With a digest algorithm resistant to "second pre-image" attacks, it  is  not  feasible  to
       create  a  new public key and a matching certificate (or public/private key-pair) that has
       the same fingerprint.

       The default algorithm is sha256 with Postfix >= 3.6 and the compatibility_level set to 3.6
       or higher. With Postfix <= 3.5, the default algorithm is md5.

       The  best-practice algorithm is now sha256. Recent advances in hash function cryptanalysis
       have led to md5 and sha1 being deprecated in favor of sha256.  However, as long  as  there
       are  no  known  "second pre-image" attacks against the older algorithms, their use in this
       context, though not recommended, is still likely safe.

       While additional digest algorithms are often  available  with  OpenSSL's  libcrypto,  only
       those  used  by  libssl in SSL cipher suites are available to Postfix.  You'll likely find
       support for md5, sha1, sha256 and sha512.

       To find the fingerprint of a specific certificate file, with a specific digest  algorithm,
       run:

           $ openssl x509 -noout -fingerprint -digest -in certfile.pem

       The text to the right of the "=" sign is the desired fingerprint.  For example:

           $ openssl x509 -noout -fingerprint -sha256 -in cert.pem
           SHA256 Fingerprint=D4:6A:AB:19:24:...:BB:A6:CB:66:82:C0:8E:9B:EE:29:A8:1A

       To  extract  the public key fingerprint from an X.509 certificate, you need to extract the
       public key from the certificate and compute the appropriate  digest  of  its  DER  (ASN.1)
       encoding.  With OpenSSL the "-pubkey" option of the "x509" command extracts the public key
       always in "PEM" format. We pipe the result to another OpenSSL command  that  converts  the
       key to DER and then to the "dgst" command to compute the fingerprint.

       The  actual  command  to transform the key to DER format depends on the version of OpenSSL
       used. As of OpenSSL 1.0.0, the "pkey" command supports all key types.

           # OpenSSL >= 1.0 with SHA-256 fingerprints.
           $ openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -pubkey |
               openssl pkey -pubin -outform DER |
               openssl dgst -sha256 -c
           (stdin)= 64:3f:1f:f6:e5:1e:d4:2a:56:...:fc:09:1a:61:98:b5:bc:7c:60:58

       The Postfix SMTP server and client log the peer (leaf)  certificate  fingerprint  and  the
       public key fingerprint when the TLS loglevel is 2 or higher.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

smtp_tls_force_insecure_host_tlsa_lookup (default: no)

       Lookup the associated DANE TLSA RRset even when a hostname is not an alias and its address
       records lie in an unsigned zone.  This is unlikely to ever yield DNSSEC validated results,
       since  child  zones  of  unsigned zones are also unsigned in the absence of DLV or locally
       configured non-root trust-anchors.  We anticipate that such mechanisms will  not  be  used
       for  just  the  "_tcp"  subdomain  of  a  host.  Suppressing the TLSA RRset lookup reduces
       latency and avoids potential interoperability problems with nameservers for unsigned zones
       that are not prepared to handle the new TLSA RRset.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11.

smtp_tls_key_file (default: $smtp_tls_cert_file)

       File  with  the  Postfix  SMTP  client  RSA  private  key in PEM format.  This file may be
       combined  with  the  Postfix   SMTP   client   RSA   certificate   file   specified   with
       $smtp_tls_cert_file.   With  Postfix >= 3.4 the preferred way to configure client keys and
       certificates is via the "smtp_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       The private key must be accessible without a pass-phrase, i.e. it must not  be  encrypted.
       File  permissions  should grant read-only access to the system superuser account ("root"),
       and no access to anyone else.

       Example:

       smtp_tls_key_file = $smtp_tls_cert_file

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tls_loglevel (default: 0)

       Enable additional Postfix SMTP client logging of TLS activity.  Each  logging  level  also
       includes the information that is logged at a lower logging level.

              0 Disable logging of TLS activity.

              1  Log  only  a  summary message on TLS handshake completion - no logging of remote
              SMTP server certificate  trust-chain  verification  errors  if  server  certificate
              verification  is  not  required.   With  Postfix  2.8  and earlier, log the summary
              message and unconditionally log trust-chain verification errors.

              2 Also enable verbose logging  in  the  Postfix  TLS  library,  log  session  cache
              operations, and enable OpenSSL logging of the progress of the SSL handshake.

              3 Also log the hexadecimal and ASCII dump of the TLS negotiation process.

              4 Also log the hexadecimal and ASCII dump of complete transmission after STARTTLS.

       Do not use "smtp_tls_loglevel = 2" or higher except in case of problems. Use of loglevel 4
       is strongly discouraged.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers (default: medium)

       The minimum TLS cipher grade that the Postfix SMTP client  will  use  with  mandatory  TLS
       encryption.   The  default value "medium" is suitable for most destinations with which you
       may want to enforce TLS, and is beyond the reach of  today's  cryptanalytic  methods.  See
       smtp_tls_policy_maps  for  information  on  how  to configure ciphers on a per-destination
       basis.

       The following cipher grades are supported:

       high   Enable only "HIGH" grade OpenSSL ciphers.  This setting may be appropriate when all
              mandatory  TLS  destinations  (e.g.  when  all mail is routed to a suitably capable
              relayhost) support at least one "HIGH" grade cipher. The underlying  cipherlist  is
              specified  via  the  tls_high_cipherlist  configuration  parameter,  which  you are
              strongly encouraged not to change.

       medium Enable "MEDIUM" grade or better OpenSSL  ciphers.   The  underlying  cipherlist  is
              specified  via  the  tls_medium_cipherlist  configuration  parameter, which you are
              strongly encouraged not to change.

       null   Enable only the  "NULL"  OpenSSL  ciphers,  these  provide  authentication  without
              encryption.  This setting is only appropriate in the rare case that all servers are
              prepared to use NULL ciphers (not normally enabled in  TLS  servers).  A  plausible
              use-case  is an LMTP server listening on a UNIX-domain socket that is configured to
              support  "NULL"  ciphers.  The  underlying  cipherlist   is   specified   via   the
              tls_null_cipherlist  configuration parameter, which you are strongly encouraged not
              to change.

       low    Enable "LOW" grade or stronger OpenSSL ciphers.  In  Postfix  >=  3.8  this  cipher
              grade  is  always identical to "medium".  Recent versions of OpenSSL do not support
              any "LOW" grade ciphers.  In earlier Postfix releases the underlying cipherlist was
              specified  via  the  tls_low_cipherlist  configuration  parameter,  which  you  are
              strongly encouraged not to change.  This obsolete cipher grade SHOULD NOT be used.

       export Enable "EXPORT" grade or stronger OpenSSL ciphers.  In Postfix >= 3.8  this  cipher
              grade  is  always identical to "medium".  Recent versions of OpenSSL do not support
              any "EXPORT" grade ciphers.  In earlier Postfix releases the underlying  cipherlist
              was  specified via the tls_export_cipherlist configuration parameter, which you are
              strongly encouraged not to change.  This obsolete cipher grade SHOULD NOT be used.

       The underlying cipherlists for grades other than "null"  include  anonymous  ciphers,  but
       these  are  automatically  filtered out if the Postfix SMTP client is configured to verify
       server certificates.  You are very unlikely to need to take any steps to exclude anonymous
       ciphers,  they  are  excluded  automatically  as necessary.  If you must exclude anonymous
       ciphers at the "may" or "encrypt" security levels, when the Postfix SMTP client  does  not
       need  or  use  peer  certificates,  set  "smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers  =  aNULL".  To exclude
       anonymous ciphers only when TLS is  enforced,  set  "smtp_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers  =
       aNULL".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers (default: empty)

       Additional  list of ciphers or cipher types to exclude from the Postfix SMTP client cipher
       list at mandatory TLS security levels. This list  works  in  addition  to  the  exclusions
       listed with smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers (see there for syntax details).

       Starting  with  Postfix  2.6,  the  mandatory  cipher  exclusions  can  be  specified on a
       per-destination basis via the TLS policy "exclude" attribute. See smtp_tls_policy_maps for
       notes and examples.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols (default: see postconf -d output)

       TLS  protocols  that  the  Postfix SMTP client will use with mandatory TLS encryption.  In
       main.cf the values are separated by whitespace, commas or  colons.  In  the  policy  table
       "protocols"  attribute  (see  smtp_tls_policy_maps)  the only valid separator is colon. An
       empty value means allow all protocols.

       The  valid  protocol  names  (see  SSL_get_version(3))  are  "SSLv2",  "SSLv3",   "TLSv1",
       "TLSv1.1",  "TLSv1.2"  and  "TLSv1.3".   Starting  with  Postfix 3.6, the default value is
       ">=TLSv1", which sets TLS 1.0 as the lowest supported TLS protocol  version  (see  below).
       Older releases use the "!" exclusion syntax, also described below.

       As  of Postfix 3.6, the preferred way to limit the range of acceptable protocols is to set
       a lowest acceptable TLS protocol version and/or a highest acceptable TLS protocol version.
       To  set  the  lower  bound  include an element of the form: ">=version" where version is a
       either one of the TLS protocol names listed above, or a hexadecimal  number  corresponding
       to  the  desired TLS protocol version (0301 for TLS 1.0, 0302 for TLS 1.1, etc.).  For the
       upper bound, use "<=version".  There must be  no  whitespace  between  the  ">="  or  "<="
       symbols and the protocol name or number.

       Hexadecimal  protocol numbers make it possible to specify protocol bounds for TLS versions
       that are known to OpenSSL, but might not be known to Postfix.  They cannot  be  used  with
       the  legacy  exclusion  syntax.   Leading  "0"  or  "0x"  prefixes  are supported, but not
       required.  Therefore, "301", "0301", "0x301" and "0x0301" are all equivalent  to  "TLSv1".
       Hexadecimal  versions  unknown to OpenSSL will fail to set the upper or lower bound, and a
       warning will be logged.  Hexadecimal versions should only be used when Postfix  is  linked
       with  some  future version of OpenSSL that supports TLS 1.4 or later, but Postfix does not
       yet support a symbolic name for that protocol version.

       Hexadecimal example (Postfix >= 3.6):

           # Allow only TLS 1.2 through (hypothetical) TLS 1.4, once supported
           # in some future version of OpenSSL (presently a warning is logged).
           smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols = >=TLSv1.2, <=0305
           # Allow only TLS 1.2 and up:
           smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols = >=0x0303

       With Postfix < 3.6 there is no support for a minimum or maximum version, and the  protocol
       range  is  configured  via  protocol  exclusions.   To  require  at  least  TLS  1.0,  set
       "smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols = !SSLv2, !SSLv3". Listing the protocols to include,  rather
       than  the  protocols  to exclude, is supported, but not recommended.  The exclusion syntax
       more accurately matches the underlying OpenSSL interface.

       When using the exclusion syntax, take care to ensure that the range of protocols supported
       by  the  Postfix SMTP client is contiguous.  When a protocol version is enabled, disabling
       any higher version implicitly disables all versions above that higher version.  Thus,  for
       example:

           smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols = !SSLv2, !SSLv3, !TLSv1.1

       also disables any protocol versions higher than TLSv1.1 leaving only "TLSv1" enabled.

       Support  for  "TLSv1.3"  was  introduced  in  OpenSSL  1.1.1.  Disabling this protocol via
       "!TLSv1.3" is supported since Postfix 3.4 (or patch releases >= 3.0.14, 3.1.10, 3.2.7  and
       3.3.2).

       While  the  vast  majority of SMTP servers with DANE TLSA records now support at least TLS
       1.2, a few still only support TLS 1.0.  If you use "dane" or "dane-only" it is best not to
       disable  TLSv1,  except  perhaps  via the policy table for destinations which you are sure
       will support "TLSv1.2".

       See the documentation of  the  smtp_tls_policy_maps  parameter  and  TLS_README  for  more
       information about security levels.

       Example:
       # Preferred syntax with Postfix >= 3.6:
       smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols = >=TLSv1.2, <=TLSv1.3
       # Legacy syntax:
       smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols = !SSLv2, !SSLv3, !TLSv1, !TLSv1.1

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_tls_note_starttls_offer (default: no)

       Log  the  hostname  of  a remote SMTP server that offers STARTTLS, when TLS is not already
       enabled for that server.

       The logfile record looks like:

       postfix/smtp[pid]:  Host offered STARTTLS: [name.of.host]

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tls_per_site (default: empty)

       Optional lookup tables  with  the  Postfix  SMTP  client  TLS  usage  policy  by  next-hop
       destination  and  by  remote  SMTP  server  hostname.  When both lookups succeed, the more
       specific per-site policy (NONE, MUST, etc.) overrides the less specific one (MAY), and the
       more  secure  per-site  policy  (MUST,  etc.)  overrides the less secure one (NONE).  With
       Postfix 2.3 and later smtp_tls_per_site is strongly discouraged: use  smtp_tls_policy_maps
       instead.

       Use  of  the bare hostname as the per-site table lookup key is discouraged. Always use the
       full destination nexthop (enclosed in [] with a  possible  ":port"  suffix).  A  recipient
       domain or MX-enabled transport next-hop with no port suffix may look like a bare hostname,
       but is still a suitable destination.

       Specify a next-hop destination or server hostname on the left-hand side; no wildcards  are
       allowed.  The  next-hop  destination  is  either  the recipient domain, or the destination
       specified with a transport(5) table,  the  relayhost  parameter,  or  the  relay_transport
       parameter.  On the right hand side specify one of the following keywords:

       NONE   Don't  use  TLS  at  all. This overrides a less specific MAY lookup result from the
              alternate host or next-hop lookup  key,  and  overrides  the  global  smtp_use_tls,
              smtp_enforce_tls, and smtp_tls_enforce_peername settings.

       MAY    Try  to  use  TLS  if  the  server  announces support, otherwise use an unencrypted
              connection; after a failed TLS handshake or TLS session, fall back to plaintext  if
              the  message  has spent minimal_backoff_time in the mail queue. This level has less
              precedence than a more specific result (including NONE) from the alternate host  or
              next-hop  lookup  key,  and  has  less  precedence  than  the  more specific global
              "smtp_enforce_tls = yes" or "smtp_tls_enforce_peername = yes".

       MUST_NOPEERMATCH
              Require TLS encryption, but do not require that the  remote  SMTP  server  hostname
              matches  the  information in the remote SMTP server certificate, or that the server
              certificate was issued by a trusted CA. This overrides a less secure NONE or a less
              specific  MAY  lookup  result  from  the alternate host or next-hop lookup key, and
              overrides the global smtp_use_tls, smtp_enforce_tls  and  smtp_tls_enforce_peername
              settings.

       MUST   Require  TLS  encryption,  require that the remote SMTP server hostname matches the
              information in the remote SMTP server certificate, and require that the remote SMTP
              server certificate was issued by a trusted CA. This overrides a less secure NONE or
              MUST_NOPEERMATCH or a less specific MAY lookup result from the  alternate  host  or
              next-hop  lookup  key,  and overrides the global smtp_use_tls, smtp_enforce_tls and
              smtp_tls_enforce_peername settings.

       The above keywords correspond to the "none", "may", "encrypt" and "verify" security levels
       for  the  new  smtp_tls_security_level  parameter introduced in Postfix 2.3. Starting with
       Postfix   2.3,   and   independently   of   how   the    policy    is    specified,    the
       smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers  and  smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols  parameters  apply  when TLS
       encryption is mandatory. Connections for which encryption is optional typically enable all
       "export" grade and better ciphers (see smtp_tls_ciphers and smtp_tls_protocols).

       As  long  as  no  secure DNS lookup mechanism is available, false hostnames in MX or CNAME
       responses can change the server hostname that Postfix  uses  for  TLS  policy  lookup  and
       server certificate verification. Even with a perfect match between the server hostname and
       the server certificate, there is no guarantee that  Postfix  is  connected  to  the  right
       server.  See TLS_README (Closing a DNS loophole with obsolete per-site TLS policies) for a
       possible work-around.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2  and  later.  With  Postfix  2.3  and  later  use
       smtp_tls_policy_maps instead.

smtp_tls_policy_maps (default: empty)

       Optional  lookup  tables  with  the  Postfix  SMTP  client TLS security policy by next-hop
       destination;  when  a  non-empty  value  is  specified,  this   overrides   the   obsolete
       smtp_tls_per_site  parameter.   See  TLS_README  for  a  more  detailed  discussion of TLS
       security levels.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       The  TLS  policy  table  is  indexed by the full next-hop destination, which is either the
       recipient  domain,  or  the  verbatim  next-hop  specified   in   the   transport   table,
       $local_transport,   $virtual_transport,   $relay_transport   or  $default_transport.  This
       includes any enclosing square brackets and any non-default destination server port suffix.
       The LMTP socket type prefix (inet: or unix:) is not included in the lookup key.

       Only  the  next-hop  domain, or $myhostname with LMTP over UNIX-domain sockets, is used as
       the nexthop name for certificate verification. The port and any enclosing square  brackets
       are used in the table lookup key, but are not used for server name verification.

       When the lookup key is a domain name without enclosing square brackets or any :port suffix
       (typically the recipient domain), and the full domain is not found in the table,  just  as
       with  the  transport(5)  table,  the  parent domain starting with a leading "." is matched
       recursively. This allows one to specify a security policy for a recipient domain  and  all
       its sub-domains.

       The  lookup  result is a security level, followed by an optional list of whitespace and/or
       comma separated name=value attributes that override  related  main.cf  settings.  The  TLS
       security levels in order of increasing security are:

       none   No TLS. No additional attributes are supported at this level.

       may    Opportunistic  TLS.  Since  sending  in the clear is acceptable, demanding stronger
              than default TLS security merely reduces interoperability. The optional  "ciphers",
              "exclude", and "protocols" attributes (available for opportunistic TLS with Postfix
              >=  2.6)  and  "connection_reuse"  attribute  (Postfix   >=   3.4)   override   the
              "smtp_tls_ciphers",     "smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers",    "smtp_tls_protocols",    and
              "smtp_tls_connection_reuse" configuration parameters. In the policy table, multiple
              ciphers,  protocols  or  excluded ciphers must be separated by colons, as attribute
              values may not contain whitespace  or  commas.   At  this  level  and  higher,  the
              optional  "servername"  attribute  (available  with  Postfix  >= 3.4) overrides the
              global "smtp_tls_servername" parameter, enabling per-destination  configuration  of
              the  SNI  extension  sent  to  the  remote  SMTP server.  The optional "enable_rpk"
              attribute (Postfix >= 3.9) overrides  the  main.cf  smtp_tls_enable_rpk  parameter.
              When  opportunistic  TLS  handshakes  fail, Postfix retries the connection with TLS
              disabled.   This  allows  mail  delivery  to  sites  with   non-interoperable   TLS
              implementations.

       encrypt
              Mandatory  TLS  encryption. Mail is delivered only if the remote SMTP server offers
              STARTTLS and the TLS handshake succeeds. At this level  and  higher,  the  optional
              "protocols" attribute overrides the main.cf smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols parameter,
              the optional "ciphers" attribute overrides the  main.cf  smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers
              parameter,  the optional "exclude" attribute (Postfix >= 2.6) overrides the main.cf
              smtp_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers parameter, and the  optional  "connection_reuse"
              attribute   (Postfix   >=  3.4)  overrides  the  main.cf  smtp_tls_connection_reuse
              parameter. In the policy table, multiple ciphers,  protocols  or  excluded  ciphers
              must  be  separated  by  colons,  as attribute values may not contain whitespace or
              commas.  The optional "enable_rpk" attribute (Postfix >= 3.9) overrides the main.cf
              smtp_tls_enable_rpk parameter.

       dane   Opportunistic  DANE  TLS.   The TLS policy for the destination is obtained via TLSA
              records in DNSSEC.  If no TLSA records are found, the effective security level used
              is  may.   If  TLSA  records are found, but none are usable, the effective security
              level is encrypt.  When usable TLSA  records  are  obtained  for  the  remote  SMTP
              server,  the  server  certificate must match the TLSA records.  RFC 7672 (DANE) TLS
              authentication and DNSSEC support is available with Postfix  2.11  and  later.  The
              optional  "connection_reuse"  attribute  (Postfix  >=  3.4)  overrides  the main.cf
              smtp_tls_connection_reuse parameter.  When the effective  security  level  used  is
              may, the optional "ciphers", "exclude", and "protocols" attributes (Postfix >= 2.6)
              override     the      "smtp_tls_ciphers",      "smtp_tls_exclude_ciphers",      and
              "smtp_tls_protocols"  configuration  parameters.  When the effective security level
              used is encrypt, the optional  "ciphers",  "exclude",  and  "protocols"  attributes
              (Postfix      >=      2.6)      override      the     "smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers",
              "smtp_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers",      and       "smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols"
              configuration parameters.

       dane-only
              Mandatory  DANE  TLS.   The  TLS  policy  for  the destination is obtained via TLSA
              records in DNSSEC.  If no TLSA records are found, or none are usable, no connection
              is  made  to the server.  When usable TLSA records are obtained for the remote SMTP
              server, the server certificate must match the TLSA records.  RFC  7672  (DANE)  TLS
              authentication  and  DNSSEC  support  is available with Postfix 2.11 and later. The
              optional "ciphers", "exclude", and "protocols" attributes (Postfix >= 2.6) override
              the    "smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers",    "smtp_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers",   and
              "smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols"    configuration    parameters.     The     optional
              "connection_reuse"    attribute    (Postfix   >=   3.4)   overrides   the   main.cf
              smtp_tls_connection_reuse parameter.

       fingerprint
              Certificate fingerprint verification. Available with Postfix 2.5 and later. At this
              security  level,  there  are  no trusted Certification Authorities. The certificate
              trust chain, expiration date, ... are not checked.  Instead,  the  optional  policy
              table  "match"  attribute,  or  else  the  main.cf  smtp_tls_fingerprint_cert_match
              parameter, lists the  certificate  fingerprints  or  the  public  key  fingerprints
              (Postfix  2.9  and  later)  of acceptable server certificates. The digest algorithm
              used to calculate the fingerprint is selected  by  the  smtp_tls_fingerprint_digest
              parameter.  Multiple  fingerprints can be combined with a "|" delimiter in a single
              match attribute, or multiple match attributes can be employed. The ":" character is
              not used as a delimiter as it occurs between each pair of fingerprint (hexadecimal)
              digits. The optional "ciphers", "exclude", and "protocols" attributes  (Postfix  >=
              2.6)             override             the             "smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers",
              "smtp_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers",      and       "smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols"
              configuration  parameters.  The  optional  "connection_reuse" attribute (Postfix >=
              3.4) overrides  the  main.cf  smtp_tls_connection_reuse  parameter.   The  optional
              "enable_rpk"  attribute  (Postfix >= 3.9) overrides the main.cf smtp_tls_enable_rpk
              parameter.

       verify Mandatory TLS verification.  Mail is delivered only if the TLS handshake  succeeds,
              the  remote  SMTP  server certificate chain can be validated, and a DNS name in the
              certificate matches the specified match criteria. At this security  level,  DNS  MX
              lookups  are  presumed  to  be  secure  enough, and the name verified in the server
              certificate is potentially  obtained  via  unauthenticated  DNS  MX  lookups.   The
              optional   "match"   attribute  overrides  the  main.cf  smtp_tls_verify_cert_match
              parameter. In the policy table, multiple match  patterns  and  strategies  must  be
              separated  by  colons.   In  practice explicit control over matching is more common
              with the "secure" policy, described below. The optional "ciphers",  "exclude",  and
              "protocols"  attributes (Postfix >= 2.6) override the "smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers",
              "smtp_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers",      and       "smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols"
              configuration  parameters.  With Postfix >= 2.11 the optional "tafile" policy table
              attribute  modifies  trust  chain  verification  in  the   same   manner   as   the
              "smtp_tls_trust_anchor_file"  parameter.  The  "tafile"  attribute may be specified
              multiple times to load multiple trust-anchor files. The optional "connection_reuse"
              attribute   (Postfix   >=  3.4)  overrides  the  main.cf  smtp_tls_connection_reuse
              parameter.

       secure Secure certificate verification. Mail  is  delivered  only  if  the  TLS  handshake
              succeeds, the remote SMTP server certificate chain can be validated, and a DNS name
              in the certificate matches the specified match criteria.  At this  security  level,
              DNS MX lookups, though potentially used to determine the candidate next-hop gateway
              IP addresses, are not presumed to be secure enough for TLS  peername  verification.
              Instead,  the  default name verified in the server certificate is obtained directly
              from the next-hop, or is explicitly specified via the  optional  "match"  attribute
              which  overrides  the  main.cf  smtp_tls_secure_cert_match parameter. In the policy
              table, multiple match patterns and strategies must be  separated  by  colons.   The
              match  attribute  is  most  useful  when multiple domains are supported by a common
              server: the policy entries for additional domains specify matching  rules  for  the
              primary  domain  certificate.  While  transport  table  overrides  that  route  the
              secondary domains to the primary nexthop also allow secure verification, they  risk
              delivery  to  the wrong destination when domains change hands or are re-assigned to
              new gateways. With the "match" attribute approach, routing is  not  perturbed,  and
              mail  is  deferred  if verification of a new MX host fails. The optional "ciphers",
              "exclude",   and   "protocols"   attributes   (Postfix   >=   2.6)   override   the
              "smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers",       "smtp_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers",       and
              "smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols" configuration parameters. With Postfix >=  2.11  the
              "tafile"  attribute optionally modifies trust chain verification in the same manner
              as the "smtp_tls_trust_anchor_file"  parameter.   The  "tafile"  attribute  may  be
              specified  multiple  times  to  load  multiple  trust-anchor  files.  The  optional
              "connection_reuse"   attribute   (Postfix   >=   3.4)   overrides    the    main.cf
              smtp_tls_connection_reuse parameter.

       Example:

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           smtp_tls_policy_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/tls_policy
           # Postfix 2.5 and later.
           #
           # The default digest is sha256 with Postfix >= 3.6 and
           # compatibility level >= 3.
           #
           smtp_tls_fingerprint_digest = sha256

       /etc/postfix/tls_policy:
           example.edu                 none
           example.mil                 may
           example.gov                 encrypt protocols=TLSv1
           example.com                 verify ciphers=high
           example.net                 secure
           .example.net                secure match=.example.net:example.net
           [mail.example.org]:587      secure match=nexthop
           # Postfix 2.5 and later
           [thumb.example.org]          fingerprint
               match=b6:b4:72:34:e2:59:cd:...:c2:ca:63:0d:4d:cc:2c:7d:84:de:e6:2f
               match=51:e9:af:2e:1e:40:1f:...:64:0a:30:35:2d:09:16:31:5a:eb:82:76

       Note:    The    "hostname"    strategy   if   listed   in   a   non-default   setting   of
       smtp_tls_secure_cert_match or in the "match" attribute in the policy table can render  the
       "secure"  level  vulnerable  to  DNS  forgery.  Do  not  use  the  "hostname" strategy for
       secure-channel configurations in environments where DNS security is not assured.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_tls_protocols (default: see 'postconf -d' output)

       TLS protocols that the Postfix SMTP client will use with opportunistic TLS encryption.  In
       main.cf  the  values  are  separated  by whitespace, commas or colons. In the policy table
       "protocols" attribute (see smtp_tls_policy_maps) the only valid separator  is  colon.   An
       empty value means allow all protocols.

       The   valid  protocol  names  (see  SSL_get_version(3))  are  "SSLv2",  "SSLv3",  "TLSv1",
       "TLSv1.1", "TLSv1.2" and "TLSv1.3".  Starting with  Postfix  3.6,  the  default  value  is
       ">=TLSv1",  which  sets  TLS 1.0 as the lowest supported TLS protocol version (see below).
       Older releases use the "!" exclusion syntax, also described below.

       As of Postfix 3.6, the preferred way to limit the range of acceptable protocols is to  set
       the  lowest  acceptable  TLS  protocol  version and/or the highest acceptable TLS protocol
       version.  To set the lower bound include an element of the form: ">=version" where version
       is  either  one  of  the  TLS  protocol  names  listed  above,  or  a  hexadecimal  number
       corresponding to the desired TLS protocol version (0301 for TLS 1.0,  0302  for  TLS  1.1,
       etc.).   For  the  upper  bound, use "<=version".  There must be no whitespace between the
       ">=" or "<=" symbols and the protocol name or number.

       Hexadecimal protocol numbers make it possible to specify protocol bounds for TLS  versions
       that  are  known  to OpenSSL, but might not be known to Postfix.  They cannot be used with
       the legacy exclusion syntax.   Leading  "0"  or  "0x"  prefixes  are  supported,  but  not
       required.   Therefore,  "301", "0301", "0x301" and "0x0301" are all equivalent to "TLSv1".
       Hexadecimal versions unknown to OpenSSL will fail to set the upper or lower bound,  and  a
       warning  will  be logged.  Hexadecimal versions should only be used when Postfix is linked
       with some future version of OpenSSL that supports TLS 1.4 or later, but Postfix  does  not
       yet support a symbolic name for that protocol version.

       Hexadecimal example (Postfix >= 3.6):

           # Allow only TLS 1.0 through (hypothetical) TLS 1.4, once supported
           # in some future version of OpenSSL (presently a warning is logged).
           smtp_tls_protocols = >=TLSv1, <=0305
           # Allow only TLS 1.0 and up:
           smtp_tls_protocols = >=0x0301

       With  Postfix < 3.6 there is no support for a minimum or maximum version, and the protocol
       range  is  configured  via  protocol  exclusions.   To  require  at  least  TLS  1.0,  set
       "smtp_tls_protocols  =  !SSLv2,  !SSLv3".   Listing  the protocols to include, rather than
       protocols to exclude,  is  supported,  but  not  recommended.   The  exclusion  form  more
       accurately matches the underlying OpenSSL interface.

       When  using  the  exclusion  syntax,  take  care  to  ensure  that  the range of protocols
       advertised by an SSL/TLS client is  contiguous.   When  a  protocol  version  is  enabled,
       disabling  any  higher version implicitly disables all versions above that higher version.
       Thus, for example:

           smtp_tls_protocols = !SSLv2, !SSLv3, !TLSv1.1
       also disables any protocols version higher than TLSv1.1 leaving only "TLSv1" enabled.

       Support for "TLSv1.3" was introduced  in  OpenSSL  1.1.1.   Disabling  this  protocol  via
       "!TLSv1.3"  is supported since Postfix 3.4 (or patch releases >= 3.0.14, 3.1.10, 3.2.7 and
       3.3.2).

       Example:
       # Preferred syntax with Postfix >= 3.6:
       smtp_tls_protocols = >=TLSv1, <=TLSv1.3
       # Legacy syntax:
       smtp_tls_protocols = !SSLv2, !SSLv3

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

smtp_tls_scert_verifydepth (default: 9)

       The verification depth for remote SMTP server certificates. A depth of 1 is sufficient  if
       the issuing CA is listed in a local CA file.

       The  default  verification depth is 9 (the OpenSSL default) for compatibility with earlier
       Postfix behavior. Prior to Postfix 2.5, the default value was 5, but  the  limit  was  not
       actually  enforced.  If  you have set this to a lower non-default value, certificates with
       longer trust chains may now fail to verify. Certificate chains with 1 or 2 CAs are common,
       deeper chains are more rare and any number between 5 and 9 should suffice in practice. You
       can choose a lower number if, for example, you trust certificates directly  signed  by  an
       issuing CA but not any CAs it delegates to.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tls_secure_cert_match (default: nexthop, dot-nexthop)

       How  the Postfix SMTP client verifies the server certificate peername for the "secure" TLS
       security level. In a "secure" TLS policy table ($smtp_tls_policy_maps) entry the  optional
       "match" attribute overrides this main.cf setting.

       This  parameter  specifies  one  or  more  patterns  or  strategies  separated  by commas,
       whitespace or colons.  In  the  policy  table  the  only  valid  separator  is  the  colon
       character.

       For  a  description  of the pattern and strategy syntax see the smtp_tls_verify_cert_match
       parameter. The "hostname" strategy should be avoided in this context, as in the absence of
       a  secure  global  DNS, using the results of MX lookups in certificate verification is not
       immune to active (man-in-the-middle) attacks on DNS.

       Sample main.cf setting:

           smtp_tls_secure_cert_match = nexthop

       Sample policy table override:

           example.net     secure match=example.com:.example.com
           .example.net    secure match=example.com:.example.com

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_tls_security_level (default: empty)

       The default SMTP TLS security level for the Postfix SMTP client.  When a  non-empty  value
       is  specified,  this overrides the obsolete parameters smtp_use_tls, smtp_enforce_tls, and
       smtp_tls_enforce_peername; when no value is specified for smtp_tls_enforce_peername or the
       obsolete parameters, the default SMTP TLS security level is none.

       Specify one of the following security levels:

       none   No  TLS.  TLS  will  not  be  used  unless  enabled  for  specific destinations via
              smtp_tls_policy_maps.

       may    Opportunistic TLS. Use TLS  if  this  is  supported  by  the  remote  SMTP  server,
              otherwise  use plaintext; after a failed TLS handshake or TLS session, fall back to
              plaintext if the message has spent minimal_backoff_time in the  mail  queue.  Since
              sending  in  the  clear is acceptable, demanding stronger than default TLS security
              merely reduces interoperability.  The "smtp_tls_ciphers"  and  "smtp_tls_protocols"
              (Postfix  >=  2.6)  configuration parameters provide control over the protocols and
              cipher grade used with opportunistic TLS.  With earlier releases the  opportunistic
              TLS  cipher  grade  is  always  "export"  and  no protocols are disabled.  When TLS
              handshakes fail, the connection is retried with TLS  disabled.   This  allows  mail
              delivery to sites with non-interoperable TLS implementations.

       encrypt
              Mandatory  TLS  encryption.  Since  a  minimum level of security is intended, it is
              reasonable to be specific about sufficiently secure protocol versions and  ciphers.
              At     this     security    level    and    higher,    the    main.cf    parameters
              smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols  and  smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers   specify   the   TLS
              protocols  and minimum cipher grade which the administrator considers secure enough
              for mandatory encrypted sessions. This security level is not an appropriate default
              for systems delivering mail to the Internet.

       dane   Opportunistic DANE TLS.  At this security level, the TLS policy for the destination
              is obtained via DNSSEC.  For TLSA policy to be in effect, the destination  domain's
              containing  DNS  zone must be signed and the Postfix SMTP client's operating system
              must be configured to send its DNS queries to a recursive DNS  nameserver  that  is
              able  to  validate  the  signed  records.   Each  MX host's DNS zone should also be
              signed, and should publish DANE TLSA (RFC 7672) records that specify  how  that  MX
              host's  TLS  certificate is to be verified.  TLSA records do not preempt the normal
              SMTP MX host selection algorithm, if some MX hosts support TLSA and others do  not,
              TLS  security will vary from delivery to delivery.  It is up to the domain owner to
              configure their MX hosts and their DNS sensibly.  To  configure  the  Postfix  SMTP
              client  for  DNSSEC  lookups  see  the documentation for the smtp_dns_support_level
              main.cf parameter.  When DNSSEC-validated TLSA records are not found the  effective
              tls security level is "may".  When TLSA records are found, but are all unusable the
              effective security level  is  "encrypt".   For  purposes  of  protocol  and  cipher
              selection,  the  "dane"  security  level is treated like a "mandatory" TLS security
              level, and weak ciphers and  protocols  are  disabled.   Since  DANE  authenticates
              server  certificates  the  "aNULL" cipher-suites are transparently excluded at this
              level, no need to configure this manually.  RFC 7672 (DANE) TLS  authentication  is
              available with Postfix 2.11 and later.

       dane-only
              Mandatory  DANE  TLS.  This is just like "dane" above, but DANE TLSA authentication
              is required.  There is no fallback to "may" or  "encrypt"  when  TLSA  records  are
              missing  or unusable.  RFC 7672 (DANE) TLS authentication is available with Postfix
              2.11 and later.

       fingerprint
              Certificate fingerprint verification.  At this security level, there are no trusted
              Certification Authorities.  The certificate trust chain, expiration date, etc., are
              not checked.  Instead,  the  smtp_tls_fingerprint_cert_match  parameter  lists  the
              certificate  fingerprint  or  public key fingerprint (Postfix 2.9 and later) of the
              valid server certificate. The digest algorithm used to calculate the fingerprint is
              selected  by  the smtp_tls_fingerprint_digest parameter. Available with Postfix 2.5
              and later.

       verify Mandatory TLS verification. At this security level, DNS MX lookups are  trusted  to
              be  secure  enough,  and  the  name  verified  in the server certificate is usually
              obtained    indirectly    via    unauthenticated    DNS     MX     lookups.     The
              smtp_tls_verify_cert_match  parameter  controls how the server name is verified. In
              practice explicit control over matching is  more  common  at  the  "secure"  level,
              described  below.  This  security  level  is not an appropriate default for systems
              delivering mail to the Internet.

       secure Secure-channel TLS.  At this security level, DNS  MX  lookups,  though  potentially
              used  to  determine the candidate next-hop gateway IP addresses, are not trusted to
              be secure enough for TLS peername verification. Instead, the default name  verified
              in  the server certificate is obtained from the next-hop domain as specified in the
              smtp_tls_secure_cert_match configuration parameter. The default  matching  rule  is
              that  a  server certificate matches when its name is equal to or is a sub-domain of
              the nexthop domain. This security level is not an appropriate default  for  systems
              delivering mail to the Internet.

       Examples:

       # No TLS. Formerly: smtp_use_tls=no and smtp_enforce_tls=no.
       smtp_tls_security_level = none

       # Opportunistic TLS.
       smtp_tls_security_level = may
       # Do not tweak opportunistic ciphers or protocols unless it is essential
       # to do so (if a security vulnerability is found in the SSL library that
       # can be mitigated by disabling a particular protocol or raising the
       # cipher grade).
       smtp_tls_ciphers = medium
       smtp_tls_protocols = >=TLSv1
       # Legacy (Postfix < 3.6) syntax:
       smtp_tls_protocols = !SSLv2, !SSLv3

       # Mandatory (high-grade) TLS encryption.
       smtp_tls_security_level = encrypt
       smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers = high

       # Authenticated TLS 1.2 or better matching the nexthop domain or a
       # subdomain.
       smtp_tls_security_level = secure
       smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers = high
       smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols = >=TLSv1.2
       smtp_tls_secure_cert_match = nexthop, dot-nexthop

       # Certificate fingerprint verification (Postfix >= 2.5).
       # The CA-less "fingerprint" security level only scales to a limited
       # number of destinations. As a global default rather than a per-site
       # setting, this is practical only when mail for all recipients is sent
       # to a central mail hub.
       relayhost = [mailhub.example.com]
       smtp_tls_security_level = fingerprint
       smtp_tls_mandatory_protocols = >=TLSv1.2
       smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers = high
       smtp_tls_fingerprint_cert_match =
           3D:95:34:51:...:40:99:C0:C1
           EC:3B:2D:B0:...:A3:9D:72:F6

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_tls_servername (default: empty)

       Optional  name  to  send to the remote SMTP server in the TLS Server Name Indication (SNI)
       extension.  The SNI extension is always on when DANE is used to authenticate  the  server,
       and  in  that  case the SNI name sent is the one required by RFC7672 and this parameter is
       ignored.

       Some SMTP servers use the received SNI name to select an appropriate certificate chain  to
       present  to the client.  While this may improve interoperability with such servers, it may
       reduce interoperability with other servers that choose to abort the connection  when  they
       don't  have  a  certificate  chain configured for the requested name.  Such servers should
       select a default  certificate  chain  and  continue  the  handshake,  but  some  may  not.
       Therefore, absent DANE, no SNI name is sent by default.

       The  SNI  name  must  be  either  a  valid DNS hostname, or else one of the special values
       hostname or nexthop, which select  either  the  remote  hostname  or  the  nexthop  domain
       respectively.   DNS  names  for SNI must be in A-label (punycode) form.  Invalid DNS names
       log a configuration error warning and mail delivery is deferred.

       Except when using a relayhost to forward all email, the only  sensible  non-empty  main.cf
       setting  for  this  parameter is hostname.  Other non-empty values are only practical on a
       per-destination basis via the servername attribute of the Postfix TLS policy table.   When
       in doubt, leave this parameter empty, and configure per-destination SNI as needed.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

smtp_tls_session_cache_database (default: empty)

       Name  of the file containing the optional Postfix SMTP client TLS session cache. Specify a
       database type that supports enumeration, such as btree  or  sdbm;  there  is  no  need  to
       support  concurrent  access.  The file is created if it does not exist. The smtp(8) daemon
       does not use this parameter directly, rather the cache is implemented  indirectly  in  the
       tlsmgr(8)  daemon. This means that per-smtp-instance master.cf overrides of this parameter
       are not effective.  Note that each of the cache databases supported by  tlsmgr(8)  daemon:
       $smtpd_tls_session_cache_database,  $smtp_tls_session_cache_database (and with Postfix 2.3
       and later $lmtp_tls_session_cache_database), needs to be stored separately. It is  not  at
       this time possible to store multiple caches in a single database.

       Note: dbm databases are not suitable. TLS session objects are too large.

       As of version 2.5, Postfix no longer uses root privileges when opening this file. The file
       should now be stored under the  Postfix-owned  data_directory.  As  a  migration  aid,  an
       attempt  to open the file under a non-Postfix directory is redirected to the Postfix-owned
       data_directory, and a warning is logged.

       Example:

       smtp_tls_session_cache_database = btree:/var/lib/postfix/smtp_scache

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tls_session_cache_timeout (default: 3600s)

       The expiration time of Postfix SMTP client TLS session cache information.  A cache cleanup
       is   performed   periodically   every  $smtp_tls_session_cache_timeout  seconds.  As  with
       $smtp_tls_session_cache_database, this parameter is implemented in  the  tlsmgr(8)  daemon
       and therefore per-smtp-instance master.cf overrides are not possible.

       As  of  Postfix 2.11 this setting cannot exceed 100 days.  If set <= 0, session caching is
       disabled.  If set to a positive value less than 2 minutes, the minimum value of 2  minutes
       is used instead.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtp_tls_trust_anchor_file (default: empty)

       Zero  or  more PEM-format files with trust-anchor certificates and/or public keys.  If the
       parameter is not empty the root CAs in CAfile and CApath are no longer  trusted.   Rather,
       the  Postfix  SMTP  client  will  only  trust  certificate-chains  signed  by  one  of the
       trust-anchors contained in the chosen files.  The specified trust-anchor certificates  and
       public  keys  are not subject to expiration, and need not be (self-signed) root CAs.  They
       may, if desired, be intermediate certificates. Therefore, these certificates also  may  be
       found  "in  the  middle"  of  the trust chain presented by the remote SMTP server, and any
       untrusted issuing parent certificates will  be  ignored.   Specify  a  list  of  pathnames
       separated by comma or whitespace.

       Whether  specified  in  main.cf,  or on a per-destination basis, the trust-anchor PEM file
       must be accessible to the Postfix SMTP client in  the  chroot  jail  if  applicable.   The
       trust-anchor  file  should  contain  only  certificates  and  public  keys, no private key
       material, and must be readable  by  the  non-privileged  $mail_owner  user.   This  allows
       destinations to be bound to a set of specific CAs or public keys without trusting the same
       CAs for all destinations.

       The main.cf parameter supports single-purpose Postfix installations that send  mail  to  a
       fixed  set of SMTP peers.  At most sites, if trust-anchor files are used at all, they will
       be specified on a per-destination basis via the "tafile" attribute  of  the  "verify"  and
       "secure" levels in smtp_tls_policy_maps.

       The  underlying  mechanism is in support of RFC 7672 (DANE TLSA), which defines mechanisms
       for an SMTP client MTA to securely determine server TLS certificates via DNS.

       If you want your trust anchors to be public keys, with OpenSSL you can  extract  a  single
       PEM public key from a PEM X.509 file containing a single certificate, as follows:

           $ openssl x509 -in cert.pem -out ta-key.pem -noout -pubkey

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later.

smtp_tls_verify_cert_match (default: hostname)

       How  the Postfix SMTP client verifies the server certificate peername for the "verify" TLS
       security level. In a "verify" TLS policy table ($smtp_tls_policy_maps) entry the  optional
       "match" attribute overrides this main.cf setting.

       This  parameter  specifies  one  or  more  patterns  or  strategies  separated  by commas,
       whitespace or colons.  In  the  policy  table  the  only  valid  separator  is  the  colon
       character.

       Patterns specify domain names, or domain name suffixes:

       example.com
              Match  the example.com domain, i.e. one of the names in the server certificate must
              be example.com.  Upper and lower case distinctions are ignored.

       .example.com
              Match subdomains of the example.com  domain,  i.e.  match  a  name  in  the  server
              certificate that consists of a non-zero number of labels followed by a .example.com
              suffix. Case distinctions are ignored.

       Strategies specify a transformation from the next-hop domain to the expected name  in  the
       server certificate:

       nexthop
              Match  against  the  next-hop  domain, which is either the recipient domain, or the
              transport next-hop configured for the domain stripped of any optional  socket  type
              prefix,  enclosing  square  brackets  and  trailing  port.  When MX lookups are not
              suppressed, this is the original nexthop domain prior to the  MX  lookup,  not  the
              result  of  the  MX lookup. For LMTP delivery via UNIX-domain sockets, the verified
              next-hop name is $myhostname.  This strategy is suitable for use with the  "secure"
              policy. Case is ignored.

       dot-nexthop
              As  above,  but  match server certificate names that are subdomains of the next-hop
              domain. Case is ignored.

       hostname
              Match against the hostname of the server, often obtained via an unauthenticated DNS
              MX  lookup.  For  LMTP  delivery  via  UNIX-domain  sockets,  the  verified name is
              $myhostname. This matches the verification strategy of the "MUST"  keyword  in  the
              obsolete  smtp_tls_per_site  table,  and  is  suitable  for  use  with the "verify"
              security level. When the next-hop name is enclosed in square brackets  to  suppress
              MX  lookups, the "hostname" strategy is the same as the "nexthop" strategy. Case is
              ignored.

       Sample main.cf setting:

       smtp_tls_verify_cert_match = hostname, nexthop, dot-nexthop

       Sample policy table override:

       example.com     verify  match=hostname:nexthop
       .example.com    verify  match=example.com:.example.com:hostname

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtp_tls_wrappermode (default: no)

       Request that the Postfix SMTP client connects using the SUBMISSIONS/SMTPS protocol instead
       of using the STARTTLS command.

       This mode requires "smtp_tls_security_level = encrypt" or stronger.

       Example: deliver all remote mail via a provider's server "mail.example.com".

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           # Client-side SMTPS requires "encrypt" or stronger.
           smtp_tls_security_level = encrypt
           smtp_tls_wrappermode = yes
           # The [] suppress MX lookups.
           relayhost = [mail.example.com]:465

       More examples are in TLS_README, including examples for older Postfix versions.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

smtp_use_tls (default: no)

       Opportunistic  mode:  use  TLS  when  a  remote  SMTP  server  announces STARTTLS support,
       otherwise send the mail in the clear. Beware: some SMTP servers offer STARTTLS even if  it
       is not configured.  With Postfix < 2.3, if the TLS handshake fails, and no other server is
       available, delivery is deferred and mail stays in the queue. If this is a concern for you,
       use the smtp_tls_per_site feature instead.

       This  feature  is  available  in  Postfix  2.2  and  later. With Postfix 2.3 and later use
       smtp_tls_security_level instead.

smtp_xforward_timeout (default: 300s)

       The Postfix SMTP client time limit for sending the XFORWARD command, and for receiving the
       remote SMTP server response.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtpd_authorized_verp_clients (default: $authorized_verp_clients)

       What  remote SMTP clients are allowed to specify the XVERP command.  This command requests
       that mail be delivered one recipient at a time with a per recipient return address.

       By default, no clients are allowed to specify XVERP.

       This parameter was renamed with Postfix  version  2.1.  The  default  value  is  backwards
       compatible with Postfix version 2.0.

       Specify  a  list  of  network/netmask patterns, separated by commas and/or whitespace. The
       mask specifies the number of bits in the network part of a  host  address.  You  can  also
       specify  hostnames  or  .domain names (the initial dot causes the domain to match any name
       below it),  "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns.  A "/file/name" pattern is replaced  by
       its  contents;  a "type:table" lookup table is matched when a table entry matches a lookup
       string (the lookup result is ignored).  Continue long lines by starting the next line with
       whitespace.  Specify  "!pattern" to exclude an address or network block from the list. The
       form "!/file/name" is supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       Note:  IP  version  6  address  information  must  be   specified   inside   []   in   the
       smtpd_authorized_verp_clients value, and in files specified with "/file/name".  IP version
       6 addresses contain the ":" character, and would otherwise be confused with a "type:table"
       pattern.

smtpd_authorized_xclient_hosts (default: empty)

       What  remote  SMTP clients are allowed to use the XCLIENT feature.  This command overrides
       remote SMTP client information that is  used  for  access  control.  Typical  use  is  for
       SMTP-based  content  filters, fetchmail-like programs, or SMTP server access rule testing.
       See the XCLIENT_README document for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       By default, no clients are allowed to specify XCLIENT.

       Specify a list of network/netmask patterns, separated by  commas  and/or  whitespace.  The
       mask  specifies  the  number  of  bits in the network part of a host address. You can also
       specify hostnames or .domain names (the initial dot causes the domain to  match  any  name
       below  it),  "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns.  A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by
       its contents; a "type:table" lookup table is matched when a table entry matches  a  lookup
       string (the lookup result is ignored).  Continue long lines by starting the next line with
       whitespace. Specify "!pattern" to exclude an address or network block from the  list.  The
       form "!/file/name" is supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       Note:   IP   version   6   address   information  must  be  specified  inside  []  in  the
       smtpd_authorized_xclient_hosts value,  and  in  files  specified  with  "/file/name".   IP
       version  6  addresses  contain  the  ":" character, and would otherwise be confused with a
       "type:table" pattern.

smtpd_authorized_xforward_hosts (default: empty)

       What remote SMTP clients are allowed to use the XFORWARD feature.  This  command  forwards
       information  that  is  used  to  improve logging after SMTP-based content filters. See the
       XFORWARD_README document for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       By default, no clients are allowed to specify XFORWARD.

       Specify a list of network/netmask patterns, separated by  commas  and/or  whitespace.  The
       mask  specifies  the  number  of  bits in the network part of a host address. You can also
       specify hostnames or .domain names (the initial dot causes the domain to  match  any  name
       below  it),  "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns.  A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by
       its contents; a "type:table" lookup table is matched when a table entry matches  a  lookup
       string (the lookup result is ignored).  Continue long lines by starting the next line with
       whitespace. Specify "!pattern" to exclude an address or network block from the  list.  The
       form "!/file/name" is supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       Note:   IP   version   6   address   information  must  be  specified  inside  []  in  the
       smtpd_authorized_xforward_hosts value, and  in  files  specified  with  "/file/name".   IP
       version  6  addresses  contain  the  ":" character, and would otherwise be confused with a
       "type:table" pattern.

smtpd_banner (default: $myhostname ESMTP $mail_name)

       The text that follows the 220 status code in the SMTP greeting banner. Some people like to
       see the mail version advertised. By default, Postfix shows no version.

       You  MUST  specify  $myhostname  at  the  start  of the text. This is required by the SMTP
       protocol.

       Example:

       smtpd_banner = $myhostname ESMTP $mail_name ($mail_version)

smtpd_client_auth_rate_limit (default: 0)

       The maximal number of AUTH commands that any client is allowed to send to this service per
       time unit, regardless of whether or not Postfix actually accepts those commands.  The time
       unit is specified with the anvil_rate_time_unit configuration parameter.

       By default, there is no limit on the number of AUTH commands that a client may send.

       To disable this feature, specify a limit of 0.

       WARNING: The purpose of this feature is to limit abuse. It must not be  used  to  regulate
       legitimate mail traffic.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.1 and later.

smtpd_client_connection_count_limit (default: 50)

       How  many  simultaneous  connections  any  client  is allowed to make to this service.  By
       default, the limit is set to half the default process limit value.

       To disable this feature, specify a limit of 0.

       WARNING: The purpose of this feature is to limit abuse. It must not be  used  to  regulate
       legitimate mail traffic.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_client_connection_rate_limit (default: 0)

       The  maximal  number  of connection attempts any client is allowed to make to this service
       per time unit.  The time unit is specified  with  the  anvil_rate_time_unit  configuration
       parameter.

       By default, a client can make as many connections per time unit as Postfix can accept.

       To disable this feature, specify a limit of 0.

       WARNING:  The  purpose  of this feature is to limit abuse. It must not be used to regulate
       legitimate mail traffic.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

       Example:

       smtpd_client_connection_rate_limit = 1000

smtpd_client_event_limit_exceptions (default: $mynetworks)

       Clients that are  excluded  from  smtpd_client_*_count/rate_limit  restrictions.  See  the
       mynetworks parameter description for the parameter value syntax.

       By  default,  clients  in trusted networks are excluded. Specify a list of network blocks,
       hostnames or .domain names (the initial dot causes the domain to match any name below it).

       Note:  IP  version  6  address  information  must  be   specified   inside   []   in   the
       smtpd_client_event_limit_exceptions  value,  and in files specified with "/file/name".  IP
       version 6 addresses contain the ":" character, and would  otherwise  be  confused  with  a
       "type:table" pattern.

       Pattern   matching   of  domain  names  is  controlled  by  the  presence  or  absence  of
       "smtpd_client_event_limit_exceptions" in  the  parent_domain_matches_subdomains  parameter
       value (Postfix 3.0 and later).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_client_ipv4_prefix_length (default: 32)

       Aggregate  smtpd_client_*_count  and smtpd_client_*_rate statistics by IPv4 network blocks
       with the specified network prefix. Aggregation uses fewer anvil(8) resources  to  maintain
       counters. By default, aggregation is disabled for IPv4.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.8 and later.

smtpd_client_ipv6_prefix_length (default: 84)

       Aggregate  smtpd_client_*_count  and smtpd_client_*_rate statistics by IPv6 network blocks
       with the specified network prefix.  Aggregation  uses  fewer  the  anvil(8)  resources  to
       maintain counters. By default, aggregation is enabled for IPv6.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.8 and later.

smtpd_client_message_rate_limit (default: 0)

       The maximal number of message delivery requests that any client is allowed to make to this
       service per time unit, regardless  of  whether  or  not  Postfix  actually  accepts  those
       messages.   The  time  unit  is  specified  with  the  anvil_rate_time_unit  configuration
       parameter.

       By default, a client can send as many message delivery requests per time unit  as  Postfix
       can accept.

       To disable this feature, specify a limit of 0.

       WARNING:  The  purpose  of this feature is to limit abuse. It must not be used to regulate
       legitimate mail traffic.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

       Example:

       smtpd_client_message_rate_limit = 1000

smtpd_client_new_tls_session_rate_limit (default: 0)

       The maximal number of new (i.e., uncached) TLS sessions  that  a  remote  SMTP  client  is
       allowed to negotiate with this service per time unit.  The time unit is specified with the
       anvil_rate_time_unit configuration parameter.

       By default, a remote SMTP client can negotiate as many new TLS sessions per time  unit  as
       Postfix can accept.

       To disable this feature, specify a limit of 0. Otherwise, specify a limit that is at least
       the per-client concurrent session  limit,  or  else  legitimate  client  sessions  may  be
       rejected.

       WARNING:  The  purpose  of this feature is to limit abuse. It must not be used to regulate
       legitimate mail traffic.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

       Example:

       smtpd_client_new_tls_session_rate_limit = 100

smtpd_client_port_logging (default: no)

       Enable logging of the remote SMTP client port in addition to the hostname and IP  address.
       The logging format is "host[address]:port".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

smtpd_client_recipient_rate_limit (default: 0)

       The  maximal  number  of  recipient  addresses  that any client is allowed to send to this
       service per time unit, regardless  of  whether  or  not  Postfix  actually  accepts  those
       recipients.   The  time  unit  is  specified  with  the anvil_rate_time_unit configuration
       parameter.

       By default, a client can send as many recipient addresses per time  unit  as  Postfix  can
       accept.

       To disable this feature, specify a limit of 0.

       WARNING:  The  purpose  of this feature is to limit abuse. It must not be used to regulate
       legitimate mail traffic.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

       Example:

       smtpd_client_recipient_rate_limit = 1000

smtpd_client_restrictions (default: empty)

       Optional restrictions that the Postfix SMTP server applies in  the  context  of  a  client
       connection  request.   See SMTPD_ACCESS_README, section "Delayed evaluation of SMTP access
       restriction lists" for a discussion of evaluation context and time.

       The default is to allow all connection requests.

       Specify a list of restrictions, separated by  commas  and/or  whitespace.   Continue  long
       lines by starting the next line with whitespace.  Restrictions are applied in the order as
       specified; the first restriction that matches wins.

       The following restrictions are specific to  client  hostname  or  client  network  address
       information.

       check_ccert_access type:table
              By  default  use  the  remote SMTP client certificate fingerprint or the public key
              fingerprint (Postfix 2.9 and later) as the lookup key for the  specified  access(5)
              database;  with  Postfix  version  2.2,  also  require  that the remote SMTP client
              certificate  is  verified  successfully.   The  fingerprint  digest  algorithm   is
              configurable  via  the  smtpd_tls_fingerprint_digest  parameter  (hard-coded as md5
              prior to Postfix version 2.5).  This feature requires "smtpd_tls_ask_ccert  =  yes"
              and is available with Postfix version 2.2 and later.
              The default algorithm is sha256 with Postfix >= 3.6 and the compatibility_level set
              to 3.6 or higher.  With  Postfix  <=  3.5,  the  default  algorithm  is  md5.   The
              best-practice   algorithm   is   now  sha256.  Recent  advances  in  hash  function
              cryptanalysis have led to md5  and  sha1  being  deprecated  in  favor  of  sha256.
              However, as long as there are no known "second pre-image" attacks against the older
              algorithms, their use in this context, though  not  recommended,  is  still  likely
              safe.
              Alternatively, check_ccert_access accepts an explicit search order (Postfix 3.5 and
              later). The default search order as described above corresponds with:
              check_ccert_access   {   type:table,    {    search_order    =    cert_fingerprint,
              pubkey_fingerprint } }
              The commas are optional.

       check_client_access type:table
              Search the specified access database for the client hostname or IP address. See the
              access(5) manual page for details.

       check_client_a_access type:table
              Search the specified access(5)  database  for  the  IP  addresses  for  the  client
              hostname,  and  execute  the  corresponding  action.  Note: a result of "OK" is not
              allowed for safety reasons. Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude  specific  hosts
              from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

       check_client_mx_access type:table
              Search  the  specified access(5) database for the MX hosts for the client hostname,
              and execute the corresponding action.  If no MX record is found, look up A or  AAAA
              records,  just  like  the  Postfix SMTP client would. Note: a result of "OK" is not
              allowed for safety reasons. Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude  specific  hosts
              from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.

       check_client_ns_access type:table
              Search  the  specified  access(5)  database  for  the  DNS  servers  for the client
              hostname, and execute the corresponding action.  Note: a  result  of  "OK"  is  not
              allowed  for  safety reasons. Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude specific hosts
              from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.

       check_reverse_client_hostname_access type:table
              Search the specified access database for the unverified reverse client hostname  or
              IP  address.  See the access(5) manual page for details.  Note: a result of "OK" is
              not allowed for safety reasons.  Instead, use DUNNO in order  to  exclude  specific
              hosts from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

       check_reverse_client_hostname_a_access type:table
              Search  the  specified  access(5)  database for the IP addresses for the unverified
              reverse client hostname, and execute the corresponding action.  Note: a  result  of
              "OK"  is  not  allowed  for safety reasons.  Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude
              specific hosts from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

       check_reverse_client_hostname_mx_access type:table
              Search the specified access(5) database for the MX hosts for the unverified reverse
              client  hostname,  and execute the corresponding action.  If no MX record is found,
              look up A or AAAA records, just like the Postfix SMTP client would.  Note: a result
              of  "OK" is not allowed for safety reasons.  Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude
              specific hosts from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.

       check_reverse_client_hostname_ns_access type:table
              Search the specified access(5) database for the  DNS  servers  for  the  unverified
              reverse  client  hostname, and execute the corresponding action.  Note: a result of
              "OK" is not allowed for safety reasons.  Instead, use DUNNO  in  order  to  exclude
              specific hosts from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.

       check_sasl_access type:table
              Use  the  remote  SMTP  client  SASL  user name as the lookup key for the specified
              access(5) database. The lookup key has  the  form  "username@domainname"  when  the
              smtpd_sasl_local_domain    parameter    value    is    non-empty.     Unlike    the
              check_client_access feature, check_sasl_access does not perform matches  of  parent
              domains  or  IP subnet ranges.  This feature is available with Postfix version 2.11
              and later.

       permit_inet_interfaces
              Permit the request when the client IP address matches $inet_interfaces.

       permit_mynetworks
              Permit the request when the client  IP  address  matches  any  network  or  network
              address listed in  $mynetworks.

       permit_sasl_authenticated
              Permit  the  request when the client is successfully authenticated via the RFC 4954
              (AUTH) protocol.

       permit_tls_all_clientcerts
              Permit  the  request  when  the  remote  SMTP  client   certificate   is   verified
              successfully.   This  option  must  be  used  only  if  a  special  CA  issues  the
              certificates and only this CA is listed as a trusted CA. Otherwise, clients with  a
              third-party    certificate    would    also   be   allowed   to   relay.    Specify
              "tls_append_default_CA = no" when the trusted CA is specified with smtpd_tls_CAfile
              or  smtpd_tls_CApath, to prevent Postfix from appending the system-supplied default
              CAs.  This feature requires "smtpd_tls_ask_ccert  =  yes"  and  is  available  with
              Postfix version 2.2 and later.

       permit_tls_clientcerts
              Permit  the  request  when the remote SMTP client certificate fingerprint or public
              key fingerprint (Postfix 2.9 and  later)  is  listed  in  $relay_clientcerts.   The
              fingerprint  digest  algorithm is configurable via the smtpd_tls_fingerprint_digest
              parameter (hard-coded as md5 prior to Postfix version 2.5).  This feature  requires
              "smtpd_tls_ask_ccert = yes" and is available with Postfix version 2.2 and later.
              The default algorithm is sha256 with Postfix >= 3.6 and the compatibility_level set
              to 3.6 or higher.  With  Postfix  <=  3.5,  the  default  algorithm  is  md5.   The
              best-practice   algorithm   is   now  sha256.  Recent  advances  in  hash  function
              cryptanalysis have led to md5  and  sha1  being  deprecated  in  favor  of  sha256.
              However, as long as there are no known "second pre-image" attacks against the older
              algorithms, their use in this context, though  not  recommended,  is  still  likely
              safe.

       reject_rbl_client rbl_domain=d.d.d.d
              Reject  the  request  when the reversed client network address is listed with the A
              record "d.d.d.d" under rbl_domain (Postfix version 2.1 and later only).   Each  "d"
              is  a  number,  or  a  pattern  inside "[]" that contains one or more ";"-separated
              numbers or number..number ranges (Postfix version 2.8 and later).  If no "=d.d.d.d"
              is specified, reject the request when the reversed client network address is listed
              with any A record under rbl_domain.
              The  maps_rbl_reject_code  parameter  specifies  the  response  code  for  rejected
              requests  (default:   554),  the default_rbl_reply  parameter specifies the default
              server reply, and  the  rbl_reply_maps   parameter  specifies  tables  with  server
              replies indexed by rbl_domain.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

       permit_dnswl_client dnswl_domain=d.d.d.d
              Accept  the  request  when the reversed client network address is listed with the A
              record "d.d.d.d" under dnswl_domain.  Each "d" is a number,  or  a  pattern  inside
              "[]"  that contains one or more ";"-separated numbers or number..number ranges.  If
              no "=d.d.d.d" is specified, accept the request when  the  reversed  client  network
              address is listed with any A record under dnswl_domain.
              For  safety,  permit_dnswl_client  is  silently  ignored  when  it  would  override
              reject_unauth_destination.  The result is  DEFER_IF_REJECT  when  allowlist  lookup
              fails.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

       reject_rhsbl_client rbl_domain=d.d.d.d
              Reject  the  request when the client hostname is listed with the A record "d.d.d.d"
              under rbl_domain (Postfix version 2.1 and later only).  Each "d" is a number, or  a
              pattern   inside   "[]"   that  contains  one  or  more  ";"-separated  numbers  or
              number..number ranges (Postfix  version  2.8  and  later).   If  no  "=d.d.d.d"  is
              specified,  reject the request when the client hostname is listed with any A record
              under rbl_domain. See the reject_rbl_client description above  for  additional  RBL
              related  configuration  parameters.   This  feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and
              later; with Postfix version 2.8 and later, reject_rhsbl_reverse_client will usually
              produce better results.

       permit_rhswl_client rhswl_domain=d.d.d.d
              Accept  the  request when the client hostname is listed with the A record "d.d.d.d"
              under rhswl_domain.  Each "d" is a number, or a pattern inside "[]"  that  contains
              one  or  more  ";"-separated  numbers or number..number ranges. If no "=d.d.d.d" is
              specified, accept the request when the client hostname is listed with any A  record
              under rhswl_domain.
              Caution: client name allowlisting is fragile, since the client name lookup can fail
              due to temporary outages.  Client name allowlisting should be used only  to  reduce
              false  positives  in  e.g.   DNS-based  blocklists,  and not for making access rule
              exceptions.
              For  safety,  permit_rhswl_client  is  silently  ignored  when  it  would  override
              reject_unauth_destination.   The  result  is  DEFER_IF_REJECT when allowlist lookup
              fails.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

       reject_rhsbl_reverse_client rbl_domain=d.d.d.d
              Reject the request when the unverified reverse client hostname is listed with the A
              record  "d.d.d.d" under rbl_domain.  Each "d" is a number, or a pattern inside "[]"
              that contains one or more ";"-separated numbers or number..number  ranges.   If  no
              "=d.d.d.d"  is  specified,  reject  the  request when the unverified reverse client
              hostname is listed with any A record under rbl_domain.  See  the  reject_rbl_client
              description  above  for  additional  RBL  related  configuration  parameters.  This
              feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

       reject_unknown_client_hostname (with Postfix < 2.3: reject_unknown_client)
              Reject the request when 1) the client IP address->name mapping  fails,  or  2)  the
              name->address  mapping  fails,  or  3) the name->address mapping does not match the
              client IP address.
              This is a  stronger  restriction  than  the  reject_unknown_reverse_client_hostname
              feature, which triggers only under condition 1) above.
              The  unknown_client_reject_code  parameter specifies the response code for rejected
              requests (default: 450). The reply is always  450  in  case  the  address->name  or
              name->address lookup failed due to a temporary problem.

       reject_unknown_reverse_client_hostname
              Reject the request when the client IP address has no address->name mapping.
              This is a weaker restriction than the reject_unknown_client_hostname feature, which
              requires not only that the address->name and name->address mappings exist, but also
              that the two mappings reproduce the client IP address.
              The  unknown_client_reject_code  parameter specifies the response code for rejected
              requests (default: 450).  The reply is always 450 in case the address->name  lookup
              failed due to a temporary problem.
              This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

       In  addition,  you  can use any of the following generic restrictions.  These restrictions
       are applicable in any SMTP command context.

       check_policy_service servername
              Query the  specified  policy  server.  See  the  SMTPD_POLICY_README  document  for
              details. This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       defer  Defer  the  request.  The  client  is  told to try again later. This restriction is
              useful at the end of a restriction list, to make the default policy explicit.
              The defer_code parameter specifies the SMTP server reply code (default: 450).

       defer_if_permit
              Defer the request if some later restriction would result in an explicit or implicit
              PERMIT  action.  This is useful when a denylisting feature fails due to a temporary
              problem.  This feature is available in Postfix version 2.1 and later.

       defer_if_reject
              Defer the request if some later restriction would result in a REJECT action.   This
              is  useful  when  an  allowlisting  feature fails due to a temporary problem.  This
              feature is available in Postfix version 2.1 and later.

       permit Permit the request. This restriction is useful at the end of a restriction list, to
              make the default policy explicit.

       reject_multi_recipient_bounce
              Reject  the  request  when the envelope sender is the null address, and the message
              has multiple envelope recipients. This usage has rare but legitimate  applications:
              under  certain conditions, multi-recipient mail that was posted with the DSN option
              NOTIFY=NEVER may be forwarded with the null sender address.
              Note: this restriction can only work reliably when used in  smtpd_data_restrictions
              or  smtpd_end_of_data_restrictions,  because  the total number of recipients is not
              known at an earlier stage of the SMTP conversation.  Use at  the  RCPT  stage  will
              only reject the second etc.  recipient.
              The  multi_recipient_bounce_reject_code  parameter  specifies the response code for
              rejected requests (default:  550).  This feature is available in  Postfix  2.1  and
              later.

       reject_plaintext_session
              Reject  the  request  when the connection is not encrypted. This restriction should
              not be used before the client has had a chance to  negotiate  encryption  with  the
              AUTH or STARTTLS commands.
              The  plaintext_reject_code  parameter  specifies  the  response  code  for rejected
              requests (default:  450).  This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

       reject_unauth_pipelining
              Reject the request when the client sends SMTP commands ahead of time  where  it  is
              not  allowed,  or when the client sends SMTP commands ahead of time without knowing
              that Postfix actually supports ESMTP command pipelining. This stops mail from  bulk
              mail  software  that  improperly uses ESMTP command pipelining in order to speed up
              deliveries.
              With Postfix 2.6 and later, the SMTP server sets a  per-session  flag  whenever  it
              detects  illegal  pipelining,  including  pipelined  HELO  or  EHLO  commands.  The
              reject_unauth_pipelining feature simply tests whether the flag was set at any point
              in time during the session.
              With  older Postfix versions, reject_unauth_pipelining checks the current status of
              the input read queue, and its usage is  not  recommended  in  contexts  other  than
              smtpd_data_restrictions.

       reject Reject the request. This restriction is useful at the end of a restriction list, to
              make  the  default  policy  explicit.   The  reject_code  configuration   parameter
              specifies the response code for rejected requests (default: 554).

       sleep seconds
              Pause  for the specified number of seconds and proceed with the next restriction in
              the list, if any. This may stop zombie mail when used as:
              /etc/postfix/main.cf:
                  smtpd_client_restrictions =
                      sleep 1, reject_unauth_pipelining
                  smtpd_delay_reject = no
              This feature is available in Postfix 2.3.

       warn_if_reject
              A safety net for testing. When "warn_if_reject"  is  placed  before  a  reject-type
              restriction,  access  table  query,  or  check_policy_service  query,  this  logs a
              "reject_warning" message  instead  of  rejecting  a  request  (when  a  reject-type
              restriction  fails  due  to a temporary error, this logs a "reject_warning" message
              for any implicit "defer_if_permit" actions that would normally  prevent  mail  from
              being  accepted  by  some  later access restriction). This feature has no effect on
              defer_if_reject restrictions.

       Other restrictions that are valid in this context:

       •      SMTP   command   specific   restrictions   that    are    described    under    the
              smtpd_helo_restrictions,  smtpd_sender_restrictions or smtpd_recipient_restrictions
              parameters.  When  helo,  sender  or  recipient  restrictions  are   listed   under
              smtpd_client_restrictions,  they  have effect only with "smtpd_delay_reject = yes",
              so that $smtpd_client_restrictions is evaluated at the time of the RCPT TO command.

       Example:

       smtpd_client_restrictions = permit_mynetworks, reject_unknown_client_hostname

smtpd_command_filter (default: empty)

       A mechanism to transform commands from remote SMTP clients.  This is a last-resort tool to
       work  around  client  commands  that  break interoperability with the Postfix SMTP server.
       Other uses involve fault injection to test Postfix's handling of invalid commands.

       Specify the name of a "type:table" lookup table. The search string is the SMTP command  as
       received  from  the  remote  SMTP  client, except that initial whitespace and the trailing
       <CR><LF> are removed.  The result value is executed by the Postfix SMTP server.

       There is no need to use smtpd_command_filter for the following cases:

       •      Use "resolve_numeric_domain = yes" to accept "user@ipaddress".

       •      Postfix already accepts the correct form "user@[ipaddress]". Use virtual_alias_maps
              or canonical_maps to translate these into domain names if necessary.

       •      Use    "strict_rfc821_envelopes    =    no"   to   accept   "RCPT   TO:<User   Name
              <user@example.com>>". Postfix will ignore the "User Name" part and deliver  to  the
              <user@example.com> address.

       Examples of problems that can be solved with the smtpd_command_filter feature:

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           smtpd_command_filter = pcre:/etc/postfix/command_filter

       /etc/postfix/command_filter:
           # Work around clients that send malformed HELO commands.
           /^HELO\s*$/ HELO domain.invalid

           # Work around clients that send empty lines.
           /^\s*$/     NOOP

           # Work around clients that send RCPT TO:<'user@domain'>.
           # WARNING: do not lose the parameters that follow the address.
           /^(RCPT\s+TO:\s*<)'([^[:space:]]+)'(>.*)/     $1$2$3

           # Append XVERP to MAIL FROM commands to request VERP-style delivery.
           # See VERP_README for more information on how to use Postfix VERP.
           /^(MAIL\s+FROM:\s*<listname@example\.com>.*)/   $1 XVERP

           # Bounce-never mail sink. Use notify_classes=bounce,resource,software
           # to send bounced mail to the postmaster (with message body removed).
           /^(RCPT\s+TO:\s*<.*>.*)\s+NOTIFY=\S+(.*)/     $1 NOTIFY=NEVER$2
           /^(RCPT\s+TO:.*)/                             $1 NOTIFY=NEVER

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7.

smtpd_data_restrictions (default: empty)

       Optional  access  restrictions  that the Postfix SMTP server applies in the context of the
       SMTP DATA command.  See SMTPD_ACCESS_README, section "Delayed evaluation  of  SMTP  access
       restriction lists" for a discussion of evaluation context and time.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

       Specify  a  list  of  restrictions,  separated by commas and/or whitespace.  Continue long
       lines by starting the next line with whitespace.  Restrictions are applied in the order as
       specified; the first restriction that matches wins.

       The following restrictions are valid in this context:

       •      Generic  restrictions that can be used in any SMTP command context, described under
              smtpd_client_restrictions.

       •      SMTP  command  specific  restrictions  described  under  smtpd_client_restrictions,
              smtpd_helo_restrictions, smtpd_sender_restrictions or smtpd_recipient_restrictions.

       •      However, no recipient information is available in the case of multi-recipient mail.
              Acting on only one recipient would be misleading, because any decision will  affect
              all  recipients  equally.  Acting  on  all recipients would require a possibly very
              large amount of memory, and would also be  misleading  for  the  reasons  mentioned
              before.

       Examples:

       smtpd_data_restrictions = reject_unauth_pipelining
       smtpd_data_restrictions = reject_multi_recipient_bounce

smtpd_delay_open_until_valid_rcpt (default: yes)

       Postpone  the start of an SMTP mail transaction until a valid RCPT TO command is received.
       Specify "no" to create a mail transaction as soon as the Postfix SMTP  server  receives  a
       valid MAIL FROM command.

       With  sites that reject lots of mail, the default setting reduces the use of disk, CPU and
       memory resources. The downside is that rejected recipients are logged with NOQUEUE instead
       of a mail transaction ID. This complicates the logfile analysis of multi-recipient mail.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_delay_reject (default: yes)

       Wait   until   the   RCPT   TO   command   before  evaluating  $smtpd_client_restrictions,
       $smtpd_helo_restrictions and $smtpd_sender_restrictions, or wait until  the  ETRN  command
       before evaluating $smtpd_client_restrictions and $smtpd_helo_restrictions.

       This  feature  is turned on by default because some clients apparently mis-behave when the
       Postfix SMTP server rejects commands before RCPT TO.

       The default setting has one major benefit: it allows  Postfix  to  log  recipient  address
       information when rejecting a client name/address or sender address, so that it is possible
       to find out whose mail is being rejected.

smtpd_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps (default: empty)

       Lookup tables, indexed by the remote SMTP client address, with case insensitive  lists  of
       EHLO  keywords  (pipelining,  starttls,  auth, etc.) that the Postfix SMTP server will not
       send in the EHLO response to a remote SMTP  client.  See  smtpd_discard_ehlo_keywords  for
       details.  The tables are not searched by hostname for robustness reasons.

       Specify  zero  or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or comma. Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_discard_ehlo_keywords (default: empty)

       A case insensitive list of EHLO keywords  (pipelining,  starttls,  auth,  etc.)  that  the
       Postfix SMTP server will not send in the EHLO response to a remote SMTP client.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

       Notes:

       •      Specify the silent-discard pseudo keyword to prevent this action from being logged.

       •      Use  the  smtpd_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps  feature to discard EHLO keywords
              selectively.

smtpd_dns_reply_filter (default: empty)

       Optional filter for Postfix SMTP server DNS lookup results.  See smtp_dns_reply_filter for
       details including an example.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

smtpd_end_of_data_restrictions (default: empty)

       Optional  access  restrictions  that the Postfix SMTP server applies in the context of the
       SMTP END-OF-DATA command.  See SMTPD_ACCESS_README, section "Delayed  evaluation  of  SMTP
       access restriction lists" for a discussion of evaluation context and time.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

       See smtpd_data_restrictions for details and limitations.

smtpd_enforce_tls (default: no)

       Mandatory  TLS: announce STARTTLS support to remote SMTP clients, and require that clients
       use TLS encryption.  According to RFC  2487  this  MUST  NOT  be  applied  in  case  of  a
       publicly-referenced SMTP server.  This option is therefore off by default.

       Note 1: "smtpd_enforce_tls = yes" implies "smtpd_tls_auth_only = yes".

       Note  2:  when  invoked  via  "sendmail  -bs",  Postfix  will  never offer STARTTLS due to
       insufficient privileges to access the server private key. This is intended behavior.

       This feature is deprecated as of Postfix 3.9. Specify smtpd_tls_security_level instead.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2  and  later.  With  Postfix  2.3  and  later  use
       smtpd_tls_security_level instead.

smtpd_error_sleep_time (default: 1s)

       With Postfix version 2.1 and later: the SMTP server response delay after a client has made
       more than $smtpd_soft_error_limit errors, and fewer than  $smtpd_hard_error_limit  errors,
       without delivering mail.

       With  Postfix  version 2.0 and earlier: the SMTP server delay before sending a reject (4xx
       or 5xx) response, when the client  has  made  fewer  than  $smtpd_soft_error_limit  errors
       without  delivering mail. When the client has made $smtpd_soft_error_limit or more errors,
       delay   all   responses   with   the   larger   of   (number   of   errors)   seconds   or
       $smtpd_error_sleep_time.

       Specify  a  non-negative  time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

smtpd_etrn_restrictions (default: empty)

       Optional restrictions that the Postfix SMTP server applies in the context of a client ETRN
       command.  See SMTPD_ACCESS_README, section "Delayed evaluation of SMTP access  restriction
       lists" for a discussion of evaluation context and time.

       The  Postfix  ETRN  implementation  accepts  only  destinations  that are eligible for the
       Postfix "fast flush" service. See the ETRN_README file for details.

       Specify a list of restrictions, separated by  commas  and/or  whitespace.   Continue  long
       lines by starting the next line with whitespace.  Restrictions are applied in the order as
       specified; the first restriction that matches wins.

       The following restrictions are specific to the domain name information received  with  the
       ETRN command.

       check_etrn_access type:table
              Search  the  specified access database for the ETRN domain name.  See the access(5)
              manual page for details.

       Other restrictions that are valid in this context:

       •      Generic restrictions that can be used in any SMTP command context, described  under
              smtpd_client_restrictions.

       •      SMTP  command  specific  restrictions described under smtpd_client_restrictions and
              smtpd_helo_restrictions.

       Example:

       smtpd_etrn_restrictions = permit_mynetworks, reject

smtpd_expansion_filter (default: see postconf -d output)

       What characters are allowed in $name expansions of RBL reply templates. Characters not  in
       the  allowed  set  are  replaced by "_".  Use C like escapes to specify special characters
       such as whitespace.

       The smtpd_expansion_filter value is not subject to Postfix configuration  parameter  $name
       expansion.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

smtpd_forbid_bare_newline (default: Postfix >= 3.9: normalize)

       Reject  or  restrict  input  lines  from  an  SMTP  client that end in <LF> instead of the
       standard <CR><LF>. Such line endings are commonly allowed with  UNIX-based  SMTP  servers,
       but  they violate RFC 5321, and allowing such line endings can make a server vulnerable to
       SMTP smuggling.

       Specify one of the following values (case does not matter):

       normalize (default for Postfix >= 3.9)
              Require the standard  End-of-DATA  sequence  <CR><LF>.<CR><LF>.   Otherwise,  allow
              command  or message content lines ending in the non-standard <LF>, and process them
              as if the client sent the standard <CR><LF>.
              This maintains compatibility with many legitimate  SMTP  client  applications  that
              send  a  mix  of  standard  and non-standard line endings, but will fail to receive
              email from client implementations that do  not  terminate  DATA  content  with  the
              standard End-of-DATA sequence <CR><LF>.<CR><LF>.
              Such clients can be excluded with smtpd_forbid_bare_newline_exclusions.

       note   Same  as  "normalize",  but  also  notes in the log whether the Postfix SMTP server
              received any lines with "bare <LF>". The information is  formatted  as  "disconnect
              from  name[address]  ...   notes=bare_lf".  The notes value is expected to become a
              list of comma-separated names.
              This feature is available in Postfix 3.9 and later.

       yes    Compatibility alias for normalize.

       reject Require the standard End-of-DATA sequence <CR><LF>.<CR><LF>. Reject  a  command  or
              message  content  when a line contains bare <LF>, log a "bare <LF> received" error,
              and reply with the SMTP status code in $smtpd_forbid_bare_newline_reject_code.
              This will reject email from SMTP clients that send any  non-standard  line  endings
              such as web applications, netcat, or load balancer health checks.
              This  will  also  reject  email  from  services  that  use  BDAT  to send MIME text
              containing a bare newline (RFC 3030 Section 3 requires canonical  MIME  format  for
              text message types, defined in RFC 2045 Sections 2.7 and 2.8).
              Such  clients can be excluded with smtpd_forbid_bare_newline_exclusions (or, in the
              case   of   BDAT   violations,   BDAT   can   be    selectively    disabled    with
              smtpd_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps,      or     globally     disabled     with
              smtpd_discard_ehlo_keywords).

       no (default for Postfix < 3.9)
              Do not require the standard End-of-DATA sequence <CR><LF>.<CR><LF>. Always  process
              a  bare  <LF>  as  if  the  client  sent  <CR><LF>.  This option is fully backwards
              compatible, but is not recommended for an Internet-facing SMTP server,  because  it
              is vulnerable to  SMTP smuggling.

       Recommended settings:

           # Require the standard End-of-DATA sequence <CR><LF>.<CR><LF>.
           # Otherwise, allow bare <LF> and process it as if the client sent
           # <CR><LF>.
           #
           # This maintains compatibility with many legitimate SMTP client
           # applications that send a mix of standard and non-standard line
           # endings, but will fail to receive email from client implementations
           # that do not terminate DATA content with the standard End-of-DATA
           # sequence <CR><LF>.<CR><LF>.
           #
           # Such clients can be allowlisted with smtpd_forbid_bare_newline_exclusions.
           # The example below allowlists SMTP clients in trusted networks.
           #
           smtpd_forbid_bare_newline = normalize
           smtpd_forbid_bare_newline_exclusions = $mynetworks

       Alternative:

           # Reject input lines that contain <LF> and log a "bare <LF> received"
           # error. Require that input lines end in <CR><LF>, and require the
           # standard End-of-DATA sequence <CR><LF>.<CR><LF>.
           #
           # This will reject email from SMTP clients that send any non-standard
           # line endings such as web applications, netcat, or load balancer
           # health checks.
           #
           # This will also reject email from services that use BDAT to send
           # MIME text containing a bare newline (RFC 3030 Section 3 requires
           # canonical MIME format for text message types, defined in RFC 2045
           # Sections 2.7 and 2.8).
           #
           # Such clients can be allowlisted with smtpd_forbid_bare_newline_exclusions.
           # The example below allowlists SMTP clients in trusted networks.
           #
           smtpd_forbid_bare_newline = reject
           smtpd_forbid_bare_newline_exclusions = $mynetworks
           #
           # Alternatively, in the case of BDAT violations, BDAT can be selectively
           # disabled with smtpd_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps, or globally
           # disabled with smtpd_discard_ehlo_keywords.
           #
           # smtpd_discard_ehlo_keyword_address_maps = cidr:/path/to/file
           # /path/to/file:
           #     10.0.0.0/24 chunking, silent-discard
           # smtpd_discard_ehlo_keywords = chunking, silent-discard

       This  feature  with  settings yes and no is available in Postfix 3.8.4, 3.7.9, 3.6.13, and
       3.5.23. Additionally, the settings reject, and normalize are  available  with  Postfix  >=
       3.9, 3.8.5, 3.7.10, 3.6.14, and 3.5.24.

smtpd_forbid_bare_newline_exclusions (default: $mynetworks)

       Exclude  the  specified  clients  from smtpd_forbid_bare_newline enforcement. This setting
       uses the same syntax and parent-domain matching behavior as mynetworks.

       This feature is available in Postfix >= 3.9, 3.8.4, 3.7.9, 3.6.13, and 3.5.23.

smtpd_forbid_bare_newline_reject_code (default: 550)

       The  numerical  Postfix  SMTP  server  response  code  when  rejecting  a   request   with
       "smtpd_forbid_bare_newline = reject".  Specify a 5XX status code (521 to disconnect).

       This feature is available in Postfix >= 3.9, 3.8.5, 3.7.10, 3.6.14, and 3.5.24.

smtpd_forbid_unauth_pipelining (default: Postfix >= 3.9: yes)

       Disconnect  remote  SMTP  clients  that  violate  RFC  2920  (or  5321) command pipelining
       constraints. The server replies with "554 5.5.0 Error: SMTP protocol synchronization"  and
       logs  the  unexpected  remote  SMTP  client input. This feature is enabled by default with
       Postfix >= 3.9. Specify "smtpd_forbid_unauth_pipelining = no" to disable.

       This feature is available in Postfix >= 3.9, 3.8.1, 3.7.6, 3.6.10, and 3.5.20.

smtpd_forbidden_commands (default: CONNECT GET POST regexp:{{/^[^A-Z]/ Bogus}})

       List of commands that cause the Postfix SMTP server to immediately terminate  the  session
       with  a  221  code. This can be used to disconnect clients that obviously attempt to abuse
       the system. In addition to the commands listed in this parameter, commands that follow the
       "Label:" format of message headers will also cause a disconnect. With Postfix versions 3.6
       and earlier, the default value is "CONNECT GET POST".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

       Support  for  inline  regular  expressions  was  added  in  Postfix   version   3.7.   See
       regexp_table(5) for a description of the syntax and features.

smtpd_hard_error_limit (default: normal: 20, overload: 1)

       The  maximal  number  of errors a remote SMTP client is allowed to make without delivering
       mail. The Postfix SMTP server disconnects when the limit is reached. Normally the  default
       limit  is  20,  but it changes under overload to just 1. With Postfix 2.5 and earlier, the
       SMTP server always allows up to 20 errors by default.  Valid values are greater than zero.

smtpd_helo_required (default: no)

       Require that a remote SMTP client introduces itself with the HELO or EHLO  command  before
       sending the MAIL command or other commands that require EHLO negotiation.

       Example:

       smtpd_helo_required = yes

smtpd_helo_restrictions (default: empty)

       Optional restrictions that the Postfix SMTP server applies in the context of a client HELO
       command.  See SMTPD_ACCESS_README, section "Delayed evaluation of SMTP access  restriction
       lists" for a discussion of evaluation context and time.

       The default is to permit everything.

       Note:  specify  "smtpd_helo_required  =  yes"  to  fully enforce this restriction (without
       "smtpd_helo_required = yes", a client  can  simply  skip  smtpd_helo_restrictions  by  not
       sending HELO or EHLO).

       Specify  a  list  of  restrictions,  separated by commas and/or whitespace.  Continue long
       lines by starting the next line with whitespace.  Restrictions are applied in the order as
       specified; the first restriction that matches wins.

       The following restrictions are specific to the hostname information received with the HELO
       or EHLO command.

       check_helo_access type:table
              Search the specified access(5) database for the HELO or EHLO hostname, and  execute
              the  corresponding  action.   Note:  specify  "smtpd_helo_required  = yes" to fully
              enforce this restriction (without "smtpd_helo_required = yes", a client can  simply
              skip check_helo_access by not sending HELO or EHLO).

       check_helo_a_access type:table
              Search  the  specified access(5) database for the IP addresses for the HELO or EHLO
              hostname, and execute the corresponding action.  Note 1: a result of  "OK"  is  not
              allowed  for  safety reasons. Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude specific hosts
              from denylists.  Note 2: specify "smtpd_helo_required = yes" to fully enforce  this
              restriction  (without  "smtpd_helo_required  =  yes",  a  client  can  simply  skip
              check_helo_a_access by not sending HELO or EHLO).  This  feature  is  available  in
              Postfix 3.0 and later.

       check_helo_mx_access type:table
              Search  the  specified  access(5)  database  for  the MX hosts for the HELO or EHLO
              hostname, and execute the corresponding action.  If no MX record is found, look  up
              A  or  AAAA  records, just like the Postfix SMTP client would.  Note 1: a result of
              "OK" is not allowed for safety reasons. Instead, use  DUNNO  in  order  to  exclude
              specific  hosts  from  denylists.   Note  2: specify "smtpd_helo_required = yes" to
              fully enforce this restriction (without "smtpd_helo_required = yes", a  client  can
              simply  skip  check_helo_mx_access  by  not sending HELO or EHLO).  This feature is
              available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       check_helo_ns_access type:table
              Search the specified access(5) database for the DNS servers for the  HELO  or  EHLO
              hostname,  and  execute  the corresponding action.  Note 1: a result of "OK" is not
              allowed for safety reasons. Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude  specific  hosts
              from  denylists.  Note 2: specify "smtpd_helo_required = yes" to fully enforce this
              restriction  (without  "smtpd_helo_required  =  yes",  a  client  can  simply  skip
              check_helo_ns_access  by  not  sending  HELO or EHLO). This feature is available in
              Postfix 2.1 and later.

       reject_invalid_helo_hostname (with Postfix < 2.3: reject_invalid_hostname)
              Reject the request when the HELO or EHLO  hostname  is  malformed.   Note:  specify
              "smtpd_helo_required   =   yes"   to   fully   enforce  this  restriction  (without
              "smtpd_helo_required = yes", a client can simply skip  reject_invalid_helo_hostname
              by not sending HELO or EHLO).
              The  invalid_hostname_reject_code specifies the response code for rejected requests
              (default: 501).

       reject_non_fqdn_helo_hostname (with Postfix < 2.3: reject_non_fqdn_hostname)
              Reject the request when the HELO or EHLO hostname is not in fully-qualified  domain
              or address literal form, as required by the RFC. Note: specify "smtpd_helo_required
              = yes" to fully enforce this restriction (without "smtpd_helo_required  =  yes",  a
              client can simply skip reject_non_fqdn_helo_hostname by not sending HELO or EHLO).
              The  non_fqdn_reject_code  parameter  specifies  the  response  code  for  rejected
              requests (default: 504).

       reject_rhsbl_helo rbl_domain=d.d.d.d
              Reject the request when the HELO or EHLO hostname  is  listed  with  the  A  record
              "d.d.d.d"  under  rbl_domain  (Postfix  version 2.1 and later only).  Each "d" is a
              number, or a pattern inside "[]" that contains one or more ";"-separated numbers or
              number..number  ranges  (Postfix  version  2.8  and  later).   If  no "=d.d.d.d" is
              specified, reject the request when the HELO or EHLO hostname is listed with  any  A
              record  under  rbl_domain. See the reject_rbl_client description for additional RBL
              related configuration parameters.  Note: specify  "smtpd_helo_required  =  yes"  to
              fully  enforce  this restriction (without "smtpd_helo_required = yes", a client can
              simply skip reject_rhsbl_helo by  not  sending  HELO  or  EHLO).  This  feature  is
              available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

       reject_unknown_helo_hostname (with Postfix < 2.3: reject_unknown_hostname)
              Reject the request when the HELO or EHLO hostname has no DNS A or MX record.
              The  reply  is  specified with the unknown_hostname_reject_code parameter (default:
              450) or unknown_helo_hostname_tempfail_action (default: defer_if_permit).  See  the
              respective parameter descriptions for details.
              Note:  specify  "smtpd_helo_required  =  yes"  to  fully  enforce  this restriction
              (without   "smtpd_helo_required   =   yes",    a    client    can    simply    skip
              reject_unknown_helo_hostname by not sending HELO or EHLO).

       Other restrictions that are valid in this context:

       •      Generic  restrictions that can be used in any SMTP command context, described under
              smtpd_client_restrictions.

       •      Client  hostname  or  network  address  specific   restrictions   described   under
              smtpd_client_restrictions.

       •      SMTP  command  specific  restrictions  described under smtpd_sender_restrictions or
              smtpd_recipient_restrictions.  When sender or  recipient  restrictions  are  listed
              under  smtpd_helo_restrictions,  they  have  effect only with "smtpd_delay_reject =
              yes", so that $smtpd_helo_restrictions is evaluated at the  time  of  the  RCPT  TO
              command.

       Examples:

       smtpd_helo_restrictions = permit_mynetworks, reject_invalid_helo_hostname
       smtpd_helo_restrictions = permit_mynetworks, reject_unknown_helo_hostname

smtpd_history_flush_threshold (default: 100)

       The  maximal  number  of  lines  in  the  Postfix SMTP server command history before it is
       flushed upon receipt of EHLO, RSET, or end of DATA.

smtpd_junk_command_limit (default: normal: 100, overload: 1)

       The number of junk commands (NOOP, VRFY, ETRN or RSET) that a remote SMTP client can  send
       before  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  starts  to  increment the error counter with each junk
       command.  The junk command  count  is  reset  after  mail  is  delivered.   See  also  the
       smtpd_error_sleep_time  and smtpd_soft_error_limit configuration parameters.  Normally the
       default limit is 100, but it changes under overload  to  just  1.  With  Postfix  2.5  and
       earlier, the SMTP server always allows up to 100 junk commands by default.

smtpd_log_access_permit_actions (default: empty)

       Enable  logging of the named "permit" actions in SMTP server access lists (by default, the
       SMTP server logs "reject" actions but not "permit" actions).  This feature does not affect
       conditional actions such as "defer_if_permit".

       Specify  a list of "permit" action names, "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns, separated
       by commas and/or whitespace. The list is matched left to right, and the  search  stops  on
       the first match. A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by its contents; a "type:table" lookup
       table is matched when a name  matches  a  lookup  key  (the  lookup  result  is  ignored).
       Continue  long  lines  by  starting  the  next line with whitespace. Specify "!pattern" to
       exclude a name from the list.

       Examples:

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           # Log all "permit" actions.
           smtpd_log_access_permit_actions = static:all

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           # Log "permit_dnswl_client" only.
           smtpd_log_access_permit_actions = permit_dnswl_client

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.10 and later.

smtpd_milter_maps (default: empty)

       Lookup tables with Milter settings per remote SMTP client IP address.  The  lookup  result
       overrides the smtpd_milters setting, and has the same syntax.

       Note:  lookup  tables  cannot  return  empty responses. Specify a lookup result of DISABLE
       (case does not matter) to indicate that Milter support should be disabled.

       Example to disable Milters for local clients:

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           smtpd_milter_maps = cidr:/etc/postfix/smtpd_milter_map
           smtpd_milters = inet:host:port, { inet:host:port, ... }, ...

       /etc/postfix/smtpd_milter_map:
           # Disable Milters for local clients.
           127.0.0.0/8    DISABLE
           192.168.0.0/16 DISABLE
           ::/64          DISABLE
           2001:db8::/32  DISABLE

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.2 and later.

smtpd_milters (default: empty)

       A list of Milter (mail filter) applications for new mail  that  arrives  via  the  Postfix
       smtpd(8)  server.  Specify space or comma as separator. See the MILTER_README document for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_min_data_rate (default: 500)

       The minimum plaintext data transfer rate in bytes/second for DATA and BDAT requests,  when
       deadlines  are enabled with smtpd_per_request_deadline. After a read operation transfers N
       plaintext message bytes (possibly after TLS  decryption),  and  after  the  DATA  or  BDAT
       request  deadline  is  decremented by the elapsed time of that read operation, the DATA or
       BDAT request deadline  is  incremented  by  N/smtpd_min_data_rate  seconds.  However,  the
       deadline will never be incremented beyond the time limit specified with smtpd_timeout.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.7 and later.

smtpd_noop_commands (default: empty)

       List  of commands that the Postfix SMTP server replies to with "250 Ok", without doing any
       syntax checks and without changing state.  This list overrides any commands built into the
       Postfix SMTP server.

smtpd_null_access_lookup_key (default: <>)

       The lookup key to be used in SMTP access(5) tables instead of the null sender address.

smtpd_peername_lookup (default: yes)

       Attempt  to  look up the remote SMTP client hostname, and verify that the name matches the
       client IP address. A client name is set to "unknown"  when  it  cannot  be  looked  up  or
       verified,  or when name lookup is disabled.  Turning off name lookup reduces delays due to
       DNS lookup and increases the maximal inbound delivery rate.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_per_record_deadline (default: normal: no, overload: yes)

       Change the behavior of the smtpd_timeout and smtpd_starttls_timeout time  limits,  from  a
       time  limit  per  read or write system call, to a time limit to send or receive a complete
       record (an SMTP command line, SMTP response  line,  SMTP  message  content  line,  or  TLS
       protocol  message).   This limits the impact from hostile peers that trickle data one byte
       at a time.

       Note: when per-record deadlines are enabled, a short timeout may cause problems  with  TLS
       over very slow network connections.  The reasons are that a TLS protocol message can be up
       to 16 kbytes long (with TLSv1), and that an entire TLS protocol message must  be  sent  or
       received within the per-record deadline.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.9-3.6. With older Postfix releases, the behavior is
       as if this parameter is set to "no". Postfix 3.7 and later use smtpd_per_request_deadline.

smtpd_per_request_deadline (default: normal: no, overload: yes)

       Change the behavior of the smtpd_timeout and smtpd_starttls_timeout time  limits,  from  a
       time limit per plaintext or TLS read or write call, to a combined time limit for receiving
       a complete SMTP request and for sending a complete SMTP response. The deadline limits only
       the time spent waiting for plaintext or TLS read or write calls, not time spent elsewhere.
       The per-request deadline limits the impact from hostile peers that trickle data  one  byte
       at a time.

       See  smtpd_min_data_rate  for  how the per-request deadline is managed during the DATA and
       BDAT phase.

       Note: when per-request deadlines are enabled, a short time limit may cause  problems  with
       TLS  over  very slow network connections. The reason is that a TLS protocol message can be
       up to 16 kbytes long (with TLSv1), and  that  an  entire  TLS  protocol  message  must  be
       transferred within the per-request deadline.

       This   feature   is  available  in  Postfix  3.7  and  later.  A  weaker  feature,  called
       smtpd_per_record_deadline, is available with Postfix 2.9-3.6. With older Postfix releases,
       the behavior is as if this parameter is set to "no".

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.7 and later.

smtpd_policy_service_default_action (default: 451 4.3.5 Server configuration problem)

       The  default action when an SMTPD policy service request fails.  Specify "DUNNO" to behave
       as if the failed  SMTPD policy service request was not sent, and  to  continue  processing
       other access restrictions, if any.

       Limitations:

       •      This  parameter  may  specify  any  value that would be a valid SMTPD policy server
              response (or access(5) map lookup result).  An access(5) map or  policy  server  in
              this  parameter  value  may need to be declared in advance with a restriction_class
              setting.

       •      If the specified action invokes another check_policy_service request, that  request
              will have the built-in default action.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

smtpd_policy_service_max_idle (default: 300s)

       The time after which an idle SMTPD policy service connection is closed.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtpd_policy_service_max_ttl (default: 1000s)

       The time after which an active SMTPD policy service connection is closed.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtpd_policy_service_policy_context (default: empty)

       Optional  information  that  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  specifies in the "policy_context"
       attribute of a policy service request (originally, to  share  the  same  service  endpoint
       among multiple check_policy_service clients).

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.1 and later.

smtpd_policy_service_request_limit (default: 0)

       The  maximal  number  of requests per SMTPD policy service connection, or zero (no limit).
       Once a connection reaches this limit, the connection is closed and the next  request  will
       be  sent  over  a new connection. This is a workaround to avoid error-recovery delays with
       policy servers that cannot maintain a persistent connection.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

smtpd_policy_service_retry_delay (default: 1s)

       The delay between attempts to resend a failed SMTPD  policy  service  request.  Specify  a
       value greater than zero.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

smtpd_policy_service_timeout (default: 100s)

       The  time  limit for connecting to, writing to, or receiving from a delegated SMTPD policy
       server.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtpd_policy_service_try_limit (default: 2)

       The maximal number of attempts to send an SMTPD policy service request before  giving  up.
       Specify a value greater than zero.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

smtpd_proxy_ehlo (default: $myhostname)

       How the Postfix SMTP server announces itself to the proxy filter.  By default, the Postfix
       hostname is used.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtpd_proxy_filter (default: empty)

       The hostname and TCP port of the mail filtering proxy server.  The proxy receives all mail
       from  the  Postfix SMTP server, and is supposed to give the result to another Postfix SMTP
       server process.

       Specify "host:port" or "inet:host:port" for a  TCP  endpoint,  or  "unix:pathname"  for  a
       UNIX-domain endpoint. The host can be specified as an IP address or as a symbolic name; no
       MX lookups are done.  When no "host"  or  "host:"  is  specified,  the  local  machine  is
       assumed.  Pathname interpretation is relative to the Postfix queue directory.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       The "inet:" and "unix:" prefixes are available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_proxy_options (default: empty)

       List  of options that control how the Postfix SMTP server communicates with a before-queue
       content filter. Specify zero or more of the following, separated by comma or whitespace.

       speed_adjust
              Do not connect to a before-queue content filter until an entire  message  has  been
              received.  This  reduces  the  number  of  simultaneous before-queue content filter
              processes.

       NOTE 1: A filter must not selectively reject  recipients  of  a  multi-recipient  message.
       Rejecting all recipients is OK, as is accepting all recipients.

       NOTE   2:   This   feature   increases   the   minimum  amount  of  free  queue  space  by
       $message_size_limit. The extra space is needed to save the message to a temporary file.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.

smtpd_proxy_timeout (default: 100s)

       The time limit for connecting to a proxy filter and for sending or receiving  information.
       When  a  connection  fails  the  client  gets  a generic error message while more detailed
       information is logged to the maillog file.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtpd_recipient_limit (default: 1000)

       The maximal number of recipients that the Postfix SMTP server accepts per message delivery
       request.

smtpd_recipient_overshoot_limit (default: 1000)

       The  number  of  recipients  that  a  remote  SMTP  client can send in excess of the limit
       specified with $smtpd_recipient_limit, before  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  increments  the
       per-session error count for each excess recipient.

smtpd_recipient_restrictions (default: see postconf -d output)

       Optional restrictions that the Postfix SMTP server applies in the context of a client RCPT
       TO command, after smtpd_relay_restrictions.   See  SMTPD_ACCESS_README,  section  "Delayed
       evaluation  of  SMTP  access restriction lists" for a discussion of evaluation context and
       time.

       With Postfix versions before 2.10, the rules for relay permission and spam  blocking  were
       combined  under  smtpd_recipient_restrictions, resulting in error-prone configuration.  As
       of   Postfix   2.10,   relay   permission   rules   are   preferably   implemented    with
       smtpd_relay_restrictions,    so   that   a   permissive   spam   blocking   policy   under
       smtpd_recipient_restrictions will no longer result in a permissive mail relay policy.

       For backwards compatibility, sites that migrate from Postfix versions before 2.10 can  set
       smtpd_relay_restrictions  to the empty value, and use smtpd_recipient_restrictions exactly
       as before.

       IMPORTANT:  Either  the  smtpd_relay_restrictions  or   the   smtpd_recipient_restrictions
       parameter  must specify at least one of the following restrictions. Otherwise Postfix will
       refuse to receive mail:

           reject, reject_unauth_destination

           defer, defer_if_permit, defer_unauth_destination

       Specify a list of restrictions, separated by  commas  and/or  whitespace.   Continue  long
       lines by starting the next line with whitespace.  Restrictions are applied in the order as
       specified; the first restriction that matches wins.

       The following restrictions are specific to the recipient address that is received with the
       RCPT TO command.

       check_recipient_access type:table
              Search  the  specified  access(5)  database  for  the resolved RCPT TO address, and
              execute the corresponding action.

       check_recipient_a_access type:table
              Search the specified access(5) database for  the  IP  addresses  for  the  RCPT  TO
              domain,  and  execute  the  corresponding  action.   Note:  a result of "OK" is not
              allowed for safety reasons. Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude  specific  hosts
              from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

       check_recipient_mx_access type:table
              Search  the  specified  access(5) database for the MX hosts for the RCPT TO domain,
              and execute the corresponding action.  If no MX record is found, look up A or  AAAA
              records,  just  like  the  Postfix SMTP client would. Note: a result of "OK" is not
              allowed for safety reasons. Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude  specific  hosts
              from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       check_recipient_ns_access type:table
              Search the specified access(5) database for the DNS servers for the RCPT TO domain,
              and execute the corresponding action.  Note: a result of "OK" is  not  allowed  for
              safety  reasons.  Instead,  use  DUNNO  in  order  to  exclude  specific hosts from
              denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       permit_auth_destination
              Permit the request when one of the following is true:

       •      Postfix is a mail forwarder: the resolved RCPT TO domain matches $relay_domains  or
              a   subdomain  thereof,  and  the  address  contains  no  sender-specified  routing
              (user@elsewhere@domain),

       •      Postfix  is  the  final  destination:  the  resolved   RCPT   TO   domain   matches
              $mydestination,  $inet_interfaces,  $proxy_interfaces,  $virtual_alias_domains,  or
              $virtual_mailbox_domains, and the  address  contains  no  sender-specified  routing
              (user@elsewhere@domain).

       permit_mx_backup
              Permit  the  request  when  the  local  mail  system is a backup MX for the RCPT TO
              domain,   or   when   the   domain    is    an    authorized    destination    (see
              permit_auth_destination for definition).

       •      Safety:  permit_mx_backup  does  not  accept  addresses  that have sender-specified
              routing information (example: user@elsewhere@domain).

       •      Safety: permit_mx_backup can be vulnerable to mis-use when access is not restricted
              with permit_mx_backup_networks.

       •      Safety:  as  of Postfix version 2.3, permit_mx_backup no longer accepts the address
              when the local mail system is a primary MX for the  recipient  domain.   Exception:
              permit_mx_backup  accepts  the  address when it specifies an authorized destination
              (see permit_auth_destination for definition).

       •      Limitation: mail may be rejected in case of a temporary  DNS  lookup  problem  with
              Postfix prior to version 2.0.

       reject_non_fqdn_recipient
              Reject  the  request  when  the  RCPT  TO address specifies a domain that is not in
              fully-qualified domain form, as required by the RFC.
              The  non_fqdn_reject_code  parameter  specifies  the  response  code  for  rejected
              requests (default: 504).

       reject_rhsbl_recipient rbl_domain=d.d.d.d
              Reject  the  request  when the RCPT TO domain is listed with the A record "d.d.d.d"
              under rbl_domain (Postfix version 2.1 and later only).  Each "d" is a number, or  a
              pattern   inside   "[]"   that  contains  one  or  more  ";"-separated  numbers  or
              number..number ranges  (Postfix  version  2.8  and  later).  If  no  "=d.d.d.d"  is
              specified,  reject  the request when the RCPT TO domain is listed with any A record
              under rbl_domain.
              The  maps_rbl_reject_code  parameter  specifies  the  response  code  for  rejected
              requests  (default:  554);  the  default_rbl_reply  parameter specifies the default
              server reply; and the rbl_reply_maps parameter specifies tables with server replies
              indexed by rbl_domain.  This feature is available in Postfix version 2.0 and later.

       reject_unauth_destination
              Reject the request unless one of the following is true:

       •      Postfix  is a mail forwarder: the resolved RCPT TO domain matches $relay_domains or
              a    subdomain    thereof,    and    contains    no    sender-specified     routing
              (user@elsewhere@domain),

       •      Postfix   is   the   final   destination:  the  resolved  RCPT  TO  domain  matches
              $mydestination,  $inet_interfaces,  $proxy_interfaces,  $virtual_alias_domains,  or
              $virtual_mailbox_domains,     and     contains    no    sender-specified    routing
              (user@elsewhere@domain).
              The relay_domains_reject_code parameter specifies the response  code  for  rejected
              requests (default: 554).

       defer_unauth_destination
              Reject  the  same requests as reject_unauth_destination, with a non-permanent error
              code.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.10 and later.

       reject_unknown_recipient_domain
              Reject the request when Postfix is not final destination for the recipient  domain,
              and  the  RCPT  TO domain has 1) no DNS MX and no DNS A record or 2) a malformed MX
              record such as a record with a zero-length MX hostname  (Postfix  version  2.3  and
              later).
              The  reply  is  specified  with the unknown_address_reject_code parameter (default:
              450), unknown_address_tempfail_action (default: defer_if_permit), or  556  (nullmx,
              Postfix 3.0 and later). See the respective parameter descriptions for details.

       reject_unlisted_recipient (with Postfix version 2.0: check_recipient_maps)
              Reject  the  request  when  the  RCPT TO address is not listed in the list of valid
              recipients for its domain class. See the smtpd_reject_unlisted_recipient  parameter
              description for details.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       reject_unverified_recipient
              Reject the request when mail to the RCPT TO address is known to bounce, or when the
              recipient address destination is not reachable.  Address  verification  information
              is  managed  by  the verify(8) server; see the ADDRESS_VERIFICATION_README file for
              details.
              The unverified_recipient_reject_code parameter  specifies  the  numerical  response
              code  when  an  address is known to bounce (default: 450, change it to 550 when you
              are confident that it is safe to do so).
              The unverified_recipient_defer_code parameter specifies the numerical response code
              when an address probe failed due to a temporary problem (default: 450).
              The  unverified_recipient_tempfail_action  parameter  specifies  the  action  after
              address probe failure due to a temporary problem (default: defer_if_permit).
              This feature breaks for aliased addresses  with  "enable_original_recipient  =  no"
              (Postfix <= 3.2).
              This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       Other restrictions that are valid in this context:

       •      Generic  restrictions that can be used in any SMTP command context, described under
              smtpd_client_restrictions.

       •      SMTP  command  specific  restrictions  described  under  smtpd_client_restrictions,
              smtpd_helo_restrictions and smtpd_sender_restrictions.

       Example:

       # The Postfix before 2.10 default mail relay policy. Later Postfix
       # versions implement this preferably with smtpd_relay_restrictions.
       smtpd_recipient_restrictions = permit_mynetworks, reject_unauth_destination

smtpd_reject_footer (default: empty)

       Optional information that is appended after each Postfix SMTP server 4XX or 5XX response.

       The  following  example  uses "\c" at the start of the template (supported in Postfix 2.10
       and later) to suppress the line break between the reply text and  the  footer  text.  With
       earlier  Postfix  versions,  the  footer text always begins on a new line, and the "\c" is
       output literally.

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           smtpd_reject_footer = \c. For assistance, call 800-555-0101.
            Please provide the following information in your problem report:
            time ($localtime), client ($client_address) and server
            ($server_name).

       Server response:

           550-5.5.1 <user@example> Recipient address rejected: User
           unknown. For assistance, call 800-555-0101. Please provide the
           following information in your problem report: time (Jan 4 15:42:00),
           client (192.168.1.248) and server (mail1.example.com).

       Note: the above text is meant to make it easier to find the Postfix logfile records for  a
       failed  SMTP  session.  The text itself is not logged to the Postfix SMTP server's maillog
       file.

       Be sure to keep the text as short as possible. Long text may be  truncated  before  it  is
       logged to the remote SMTP client's maillog file, or before it is returned to the sender in
       a delivery status notification.

       The template text is not subject  to  Postfix  configuration  parameter  $name  expansion.
       Instead,  this  feature  supports a limited number of $name attributes in the footer text.
       These attributes are replaced with their current value for the SMTP session.

       Note: specify $$name in footer  text  that  is  looked  up  from  regexp:  or  pcre:-based
       smtpd_reject_footer_maps,  otherwise  the  Postfix server will not use the footer text and
       will log a warning instead.

       client_address
              The Client IP address that is logged in the maillog file.

       client_port
              The client TCP port that is logged in the maillog file.

       localtime
              The server local time (Mmm dd hh:mm:ss) that is logged in the maillog file.

       server_name
              The server's myhostname value.  This attribute is made  available  for  sites  with
              multiple  MTAs (perhaps behind a load-balancer), where the server name can help the
              server support team to quickly find the right log files.

       Notes:

       •      NOT  SUPPORTED  are  other  attributes  such  as  sender,  recipient,  or   main.cf
              parameters.

       •      For safety reasons, text that does not match $smtpd_expansion_filter is censored.

       This  feature  supports the two-character sequence \n as a request for a line break in the
       footer text. Postfix automatically inserts after each  line  break  the  three-digit  SMTP
       reply code (and optional enhanced status code) from the original Postfix reject message.

       To   work   around   mail  software  that  mis-handles  multi-line  replies,  specify  the
       two-character sequence \c at the start of the template.  This suppresses  the  line  break
       between the reply text and the footer text (Postfix 2.10 and later).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

smtpd_reject_footer_maps (default: empty)

       Lookup  tables,  indexed  by  the  complete  Postfix SMTP server 4xx or 5xx response, with
       reject footer templates. See smtpd_reject_footer for details.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

smtpd_reject_unlisted_recipient (default: yes)

       Request  that  the  Postfix SMTP server rejects mail for unknown recipient addresses, even
       when no explicit reject_unlisted_recipient access restriction is specified. This  prevents
       the Postfix queue from filling up with undeliverable MAILER-DAEMON messages.

       An  address  is  considered  "unknown"  when  1)  it  does not match a virtual(5) alias or
       canonical(5) mapping, and 2) the address is  not  valid  for  its  address  class.  For  a
       definition of class-based address validation, see ADDRESS_CLASS_README.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtpd_reject_unlisted_sender (default: no)

       Request that the Postfix SMTP server rejects mail from unknown sender addresses, even when
       no explicit reject_unlisted_sender access restriction is specified. This can slow down  an
       explosion of forged mail from worms or viruses.

       An  address  is  considered  "unknown"  when  1)  it  does not match a virtual(5) alias or
       canonical(5) mapping, and 2) the address is  not  valid  for  its  address  class.  For  a
       definition of class-based address validation, see ADDRESS_CLASS_README.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtpd_relay_before_recipient_restrictions (default: see postconf -d output)

       Evaluate   smtpd_relay_restrictions  before  smtpd_recipient_restrictions.   Historically,
       smtpd_relay_restrictions was evaluated after  smtpd_recipient_restrictions,  contradicting
       documented behavior.

       Background:  the  smtpd_relay_restrictions feature is primarily designed to enforce a mail
       relaying policy, while smtpd_recipient_restrictions is primarily designed to enforce  spam
       blocking  policy.  Both  are  evaluated  while  replying  to the RCPT TO command, and both
       support the same features.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

smtpd_relay_restrictions (default: permit_mynetworks, permit_sasl_authenticated,

       defer_unauth_destination)
       Access  restrictions  for  mail  relay control that the Postfix SMTP server applies in the
       context   of   the   RCPT   TO   command,   before   smtpd_recipient_restrictions.     See
       SMTPD_ACCESS_README,  section  "Delayed evaluation of SMTP access restriction lists" for a
       discussion of evaluation context and time.

       With Postfix versions before 2.10, the rules for relay permission and spam  blocking  were
       combined  under  smtpd_recipient_restrictions, resulting in error-prone configuration.  As
       of   Postfix   2.10,   relay   permission   rules   are   preferably   implemented    with
       smtpd_relay_restrictions,    so   that   a   permissive   spam   blocking   policy   under
       smtpd_recipient_restrictions will no longer result in a permissive mail relay policy.

       For backwards compatibility, sites that migrate from Postfix versions before 2.10 can  set
       smtpd_relay_restrictions  to the empty value, and use smtpd_recipient_restrictions exactly
       as before.

       By default, the Postfix SMTP server accepts:

       •      Mail from clients whose IP address matches $mynetworks, or:

       •      Mail from clients who are SASL authenticated, or:

       •      Mail to remote destinations that match $relay_domains, except  for  addresses  that
              contain sender-specified routing (user@elsewhere@domain), or:

       •      Mail  to  local  destinations  that  match  $inet_interfaces  or $proxy_interfaces,
              $mydestination, $virtual_alias_domains, or $virtual_mailbox_domains.

       IMPORTANT:  Either  the  smtpd_relay_restrictions  or   the   smtpd_recipient_restrictions
       parameter  must specify at least one of the following restrictions. Otherwise Postfix will
       refuse to receive mail:

           reject, reject_unauth_destination

           defer, defer_if_permit, defer_unauth_destination

       Specify a list of restrictions, separated by  commas  and/or  whitespace.   Continue  long
       lines  by  starting the next line with whitespace.  The same restrictions are available as
       documented under smtpd_recipient_restrictions.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.10 and later.

smtpd_restriction_classes (default: empty)

       User-defined aliases for groups of access restrictions. The aliases can  be  specified  in
       smtpd_recipient_restrictions  etc.,  and  on  the  right-hand  side of a Postfix access(5)
       table.

       One  major  application  is  for  implementing  per-recipient  UCE   control.    See   the
       RESTRICTION_CLASS_README document for other examples.

smtpd_sasl_application_name (default: smtpd)

       The  application  name  that  the Postfix SMTP server uses for SASL server initialization.
       This controls the name of the  SASL  configuration  file.  The  default  value  is  smtpd,
       corresponding to a SASL configuration file named smtpd.conf.

       This  feature  is  available  in  Postfix  2.1 and 2.2. With Postfix 2.3 it was renamed to
       smtpd_sasl_path.

smtpd_sasl_auth_enable (default: no)

       Enable SASL authentication in the Postfix SMTP server. By default, the Postfix SMTP server
       does not use authentication.

       If a remote SMTP client is authenticated, the permit_sasl_authenticated access restriction
       can be used to permit relay access, like this:

           # With Postfix 2.10 and later, the mail relay policy is
           # preferably specified under smtpd_relay_restrictions.
           smtpd_relay_restrictions =
               permit_mynetworks, permit_sasl_authenticated, ...

       # With Postfix before 2.10, the relay policy can be
       # specified only under smtpd_recipient_restrictions.
       smtpd_recipient_restrictions =
           permit_mynetworks, permit_sasl_authenticated, ...

       To reject all SMTP connections from unauthenticated clients, specify "smtpd_delay_reject =
       yes" (which is the default) and use:

           smtpd_client_restrictions = permit_sasl_authenticated, reject

       See the SASL_README file for SASL configuration and operation details.

smtpd_sasl_authenticated_header (default: no)

       Report the SASL authenticated user name in the smtpd(8) Received message header.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_sasl_exceptions_networks (default: empty)

       What remote SMTP clients the Postfix SMTP server will not offer AUTH support to.

       Some  clients  (Netscape  4  at  least) have a bug that causes them to require a login and
       password whenever AUTH is offered, whether it's necessary or not.  To  work  around  this,
       specify, for example, $mynetworks to prevent Postfix from offering AUTH to local clients.

       Specify  a  list  of  network/netmask patterns, separated by commas and/or whitespace. The
       mask specifies the number of bits in the network part of a  host  address.  You  can  also
       specify  "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns.  A "/file/name" pattern is replaced by its
       contents; a "type:table" lookup table is matched when  a  table  entry  matches  a  lookup
       string (the lookup result is ignored).  Continue long lines by starting the next line with
       whitespace. Specify "!pattern" to exclude an address or network block from the list.   The
       form "!/file/name" is supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       Note:   IP   version   6   address   information  must  be  specified  inside  []  in  the
       smtpd_sasl_exceptions_networks value,  and  in  files  specified  with  "/file/name".   IP
       version  6  addresses  contain  the  ":" character, and would otherwise be confused with a
       "type:table" pattern.

       Example:

       smtpd_sasl_exceptions_networks = $mynetworks

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

smtpd_sasl_local_domain (default: empty)

       The name of the Postfix SMTP server's local SASL authentication realm.

       By default, the local authentication realm name is the null string.

       Examples:

       smtpd_sasl_local_domain = $mydomain
       smtpd_sasl_local_domain = $myhostname

smtpd_sasl_mechanism_filter (default: !external, static:rest)

       If non-empty, a filter for the SASL mechanism names that  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  will
       announce  in  the EHLO response. By default, the Postfix SMTP server will not announce the
       EXTERNAL mechanism, because Postfix support for that is not implemented.

       Specify mechanism names, "/file/name" patterns, or "type:table" lookup  tables,  separated
       by  comma  or whitespace. The right-hand side result from "type:table" lookups is ignored.
       Specify "!pattern" to exclude a mechanism name from the list.

       Examples:

       smtpd_sasl_mechanism_filter = !external, !gssapi, static:rest
       smtpd_sasl_mechanism_filter = login, plain
       smtpd_sasl_mechanism_filter = /etc/postfix/smtpd_mechs

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.6 and later.

smtpd_sasl_path (default: smtpd)

       Implementation-specific information that the Postfix SMTP server  passes  through  to  the
       SASL  plug-in  implementation  that  is  selected  with  smtpd_sasl_type.   Typically this
       specifies the name of a configuration file or rendezvous point.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later. In  earlier  releases  it  was  called
       smtpd_sasl_application_name.

smtpd_sasl_response_limit (default: 12288)

       The  maximum  length of a SASL client's response to a server challenge.  When the client's
       "initial response" is longer than the normal limit for SMTP commands, the client must omit
       its  initial response, and wait for an empty server challenge; it can then send what would
       have been its "initial response" as a response to the  empty  server  challenge.   RFC4954
       requires  the  server  to  accept  client  responses  up  to  at  least  12288  octets  of
       base64-encoded text.  The default value is therefore also the minimum value  accepted  for
       this parameter.

       This   feature   is   available   in   Postfix   3.4   and   later.   Prior  versions  use
       "line_length_limit", which may need to be raised to accommodate larger  client  responses,
       as  may  be  needed with GSSAPI authentication of Windows AD users who are members of many
       groups.

smtpd_sasl_security_options (default: noanonymous)

       Postfix SMTP server SASL security options;  as  of  Postfix  2.3  the  list  of  available
       features depends on the SASL server implementation that is selected with smtpd_sasl_type.

       The following security features are defined for the cyrus server SASL implementation:

       Restrict  what authentication mechanisms the Postfix SMTP server will offer to the client.
       The list of available authentication mechanisms is system dependent.

       Specify zero or more of the following:

       noplaintext
              Disallow methods that use plaintext passwords.

       noactive
              Disallow methods subject to active (non-dictionary) attack.

       nodictionary
              Disallow methods subject to passive (dictionary) attack.

       noanonymous
              Disallow methods that allow anonymous authentication.

       forward_secrecy
              Only allow methods that support forward secrecy (Dovecot only).

       mutual_auth
              Only allow methods that provide mutual authentication  (not  available  with  Cyrus
              SASL version 1).

       By default, the Postfix SMTP server accepts plaintext passwords but not anonymous logins.

       Warning:  it appears that clients try authentication methods in the order as advertised by
       the server (e.g., PLAIN ANONYMOUS CRAM-MD5) which means  that  if  you  disable  plaintext
       passwords, clients will log in anonymously, even when they should be able to use CRAM-MD5.
       So, if you disable  plaintext  logins,  disable  anonymous  logins  too.   Postfix  treats
       anonymous login as no authentication.

       Example:

       smtpd_sasl_security_options = noanonymous, noplaintext

smtpd_sasl_service (default: smtp)

       The  service name that is passed to the SASL plug-in that is selected with smtpd_sasl_type
       and smtpd_sasl_path.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later. Prior versions behave as if "smtp" is
       specified.

smtpd_sasl_tls_security_options (default: $smtpd_sasl_security_options)

       The  SASL  authentication  security  options  that  the  Postfix  SMTP server uses for TLS
       encrypted SMTP sessions.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_sasl_type (default: cyrus)

       The SASL plug-in type that the Postfix SMTP server  should  use  for  authentication.  The
       available types are listed with the "postconf -a" command.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_sender_login_maps (default: empty)

       Optional lookup table with the SASL login names that own the sender (MAIL FROM) addresses.

       Specify  zero  or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or comma. Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.  With lookups from indexed
       files  such as DB or DBM, or from networked tables such as NIS, LDAP or SQL, the following
       search operations are done with a sender address of user@domain:

       1) user@domain
              This table lookup is always done and has the highest precedence.

       2) user
              This table lookup is done only when the domain part of the sender  address  matches
              $myorigin, $mydestination, $inet_interfaces or $proxy_interfaces.

       3) @domain
              This table lookup is done last and has the lowest precedence.

       In all cases the result of table lookup must be either "not found" or a list of SASL login
       names separated by comma and/or whitespace.

smtpd_sender_restrictions (default: empty)

       Optional restrictions that the Postfix SMTP server applies in the context of a client MAIL
       FROM  command.   See  SMTPD_ACCESS_README,  section  "Delayed  evaluation  of  SMTP access
       restriction lists" for a discussion of evaluation context and time.

       The default is to permit everything.

       Specify a list of restrictions, separated by  commas  and/or  whitespace.   Continue  long
       lines by starting the next line with whitespace.  Restrictions are applied in the order as
       specified; the first restriction that matches wins.

       The following restrictions are specific to the sender address received with the MAIL  FROM
       command.

       check_sender_access type:table
              Search  the specified access(5) database for the MAIL FROM address, and execute the
              corresponding action.

       check_sender_a_access type:table
              Search the specified access(5) database for the IP  addresses  for  the  MAIL  FROM
              domain,  and  execute  the  corresponding  action.   Note:  a result of "OK" is not
              allowed for safety reasons. Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude  specific  hosts
              from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

       check_sender_mx_access type:table
              Search  the specified access(5) database for the MX hosts for the MAIL FROM domain,
              and execute the corresponding action.  If no MX record is found, look up A or  AAAA
              records,  just  like  the  Postfix SMTP client would. Note: a result of "OK" is not
              allowed for safety reasons. Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude  specific  hosts
              from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       check_sender_ns_access type:table
              Search  the  specified  access(5)  database  for  the DNS servers for the MAIL FROM
              domain, and execute the corresponding action.   Note:  a  result  of  "OK"  is  not
              allowed  for  safety reasons. Instead, use DUNNO in order to exclude specific hosts
              from denylists.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       reject_authenticated_sender_login_mismatch
              Reject the request when the client is authenticated with SASL, but either the  MAIL
              FROM  address  is not listed in $smtpd_sender_login_maps, or the SASL login name is
              not an owner for that address.
              This prevents an authenticated client from using a MAIL FROM address that  they  do
              not explicitly own.
              This feature is available in Postfix version 2.1 and later.

       reject_known_sender_login_mismatch
              When  the  client is authenticated with SASL, reject the request when the MAIL FROM
              address is listed in $smtpd_sender_login_maps, but the SASL login name  is  not  an
              owner for that address.
              When  the  client  is  not authenticated with SASL, reject the request when SASL is
              enabled, and the MAIL FROM address is listed in $smtpd_sender_login_maps.
              This protects any MAIL FROM address that  is  listed  in  $smtpd_sender_login_maps,
              while still allowing a client to use any unlisted MAIL FROM address.
              This feature is available in Postfix version 2.11 and later.

       reject_non_fqdn_sender
              Reject  the  request  when  the MAIL FROM address specifies a domain that is not in
              fully-qualified domain form as required by the RFC.
              The  non_fqdn_reject_code  parameter  specifies  the  response  code  for  rejected
              requests (default: 504).

       reject_rhsbl_sender rbl_domain=d.d.d.d
              Reject  the request when the MAIL FROM domain is listed with the A record "d.d.d.d"
              under rbl_domain (Postfix version 2.1 and later only).  Each "d" is a number, or  a
              pattern   inside   "[]"   that  contains  one  or  more  ";"-separated  numbers  or
              number..number ranges  (Postfix  version  2.8  and  later).  If  no  "=d.d.d.d"  is
              specified, reject the request when the MAIL FROM domain is listed with any A record
              under rbl_domain.
              The  maps_rbl_reject_code  parameter  specifies  the  response  code  for  rejected
              requests  (default:   554);  the  default_rbl_reply parameter specifies the default
              server reply; and the rbl_reply_maps parameter specifies tables with server replies
              indexed by rbl_domain.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

       reject_sender_login_mismatch
              As       of       Postfix       2.1,       this      is      an      alias      for
              "reject_authenticated_sender_login_mismatch,
              reject_unauthenticated_sender_login_mismatch".

       reject_unauthenticated_sender_login_mismatch
              Reject  the  request  when  SASL  is  enabled,  the  MAIL FROM address is listed in
              $smtpd_sender_login_maps, but the client is not authenticated with SASL.
              With SASL enabled, this prevents an unauthenticated client from using any MAIL FROM
              address that is listed in $smtpd_sender_login_maps.
              This feature is available in Postfix version 2.1 and later.

       reject_unknown_sender_domain
              Reject  the  request  when  Postfix  is  not  the  final destination for the sender
              address, and the MAIL FROM domain has 1) no DNS MX and no DNS A  record,  or  2)  a
              malformed  MX  record  such  as  a  record  with a zero-length MX hostname (Postfix
              version 2.3 and later).
              The reply is specified with  the  unknown_address_reject_code  parameter  (default:
              450),  unknown_address_tempfail_action  (default: defer_if_permit), or 550 (nullmx,
              Postfix 3.0 and later). See the respective parameter descriptions for details.

       reject_unlisted_sender
              Reject the request when the MAIL FROM address is not listed in the  list  of  valid
              recipients  for  its  domain  class. See the smtpd_reject_unlisted_sender parameter
              description for details.  This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       reject_unverified_sender
              Reject the request when mail to the MAIL FROM address is known to bounce,  or  when
              the  sender address destination is not reachable.  Address verification information
              is managed by the verify(8) server; see the  ADDRESS_VERIFICATION_README  file  for
              details.
              The  unverified_sender_reject_code  parameter specifies the numerical response code
              when an address is known to bounce (default: 450, change  into  550  when  you  are
              confident that it is safe to do so).
              The  unverified_sender_defer_code  specifies  the  numerical  response code when an
              address probe failed due to a temporary problem (default: 450).
              The unverified_sender_tempfail_action parameter specifies the action after  address
              probe failure due to a temporary problem (default: defer_if_permit).
              This  feature  breaks  for  aliased addresses with "enable_original_recipient = no"
              (Postfix <= 3.2).
              This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

       Other restrictions that are valid in this context:

       •      Generic restrictions that can be used in any SMTP command context, described  under
              smtpd_client_restrictions.

       •      SMTP  command  specific  restrictions described under smtpd_client_restrictions and
              smtpd_helo_restrictions.

       •      SMTP command specific restrictions  described  under  smtpd_recipient_restrictions.
              When  recipient  restrictions are listed under smtpd_sender_restrictions, they have
              effect only with "smtpd_delay_reject = yes", so that $smtpd_sender_restrictions  is
              evaluated at the time of the RCPT TO command.

       Examples:

       smtpd_sender_restrictions = reject_unknown_sender_domain
       smtpd_sender_restrictions = reject_unknown_sender_domain,
           check_sender_access hash:/etc/postfix/access

smtpd_service_name (default: smtpd)

       The  internal  service  that  postscreen(8)  hands off allowed connections to. In a future
       version there may be different classes of SMTP service.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8.

smtpd_soft_error_limit (default: 10)

       The number of errors a remote SMTP client is  allowed  to  make  without  delivering  mail
       before the Postfix SMTP server slows down all its responses.

       •      With   Postfix   version   2.1   and   later,   when   the   error   count   is   >
              $smtpd_soft_error_limit,  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  delays   all   responses   by
              $smtpd_error_sleep_time.

       •      With   Postfix   versions   2.0   and   earlier,   when   the   error  count  is  >
              $smtpd_soft_error_limit, the Postfix SMTP server delays all responses by the larger
              of (number of errors) seconds or $smtpd_error_sleep_time.

       •      With   Postfix   versions   2.0   and   earlier,   when   the  error  count  is  <=
              $smtpd_soft_error_limit, the Postfix SMTP server delays 4XX and  5XX  responses  by
              $smtpd_error_sleep_time.

smtpd_starttls_timeout (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  time  limit  for Postfix SMTP server write and read operations during TLS startup and
       shutdown handshake procedures. The  current  default  value  is  stress-dependent.  Before
       Postfix version 2.8, it was fixed at 300s.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_timeout (default: normal: 300s, overload: 10s)

       When  the  Postfix SMTP server wants to send an SMTP server response, how long the Postfix
       SMTP server will wait for an underlying network write operation to complete; and when  the
       Postfix  SMTP server Postfix wants to receive an SMTP client request, how long the Postfix
       SMTP server will wait for an underlying  network  read  operation  to  complete.  See  the
       smtpd_per_request_deadline  for  how this time limit may be enforced (with Postfix 2.9-3.6
       see smtpd_per_record_deadline).

       Normally the default limit is 300s, but it  changes  under  overload  to  just  10s.  With
       Postfix 2.5 and earlier, the SMTP server always uses a time limit of 300s by default.

       Note:  if  you set SMTP time limits to very large values you may have to update the global
       ipc_timeout parameter.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

smtpd_tls_CAfile (default: empty)

       A file containing (PEM format) CA certificates of root CAs trusted to sign  either  remote
       SMTP  client  certificates  or intermediate CA certificates.  These are loaded into memory
       before the smtpd(8) server enters the chroot jail. If  the  number  of  trusted  roots  is
       large, consider using smtpd_tls_CApath instead, but note that the latter directory must be
       present in the chroot jail if the smtpd(8) server is chrooted. This file may also be  used
       to  augment the server certificate trust chain, but it is best to include all the required
       certificates directly in the server certificate file.

       Specify "smtpd_tls_CAfile =  /path/to/system_CA_file"  to  use  ONLY  the  system-supplied
       default Certification Authority certificates.

       Specify "tls_append_default_CA = no" to prevent Postfix from appending the system-supplied
       default CAs and trusting third-party certificates.

       By  default  (see  smtpd_tls_ask_ccert),  client  certificates  are  not  requested,   and
       smtpd_tls_CAfile  should  remain  empty.  If  you  do make use of client certificates, the
       distinguished names (DNs) of the Certification Authorities listed in smtpd_tls_CAfile  are
       sent  to  the  remote  SMTP  client  in  the client certificate request message. MUAs with
       multiple client certificates may use the list of preferred  Certification  Authorities  to
       select  the correct client certificate.  You may want to put your "preferred" CA or CAs in
       this file, and install other trusted CAs in $smtpd_tls_CApath.

       Example:

       smtpd_tls_CAfile = /etc/postfix/CAcert.pem

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_CApath (default: empty)

       A directory containing (PEM format) CA certificates of root CAs  trusted  to  sign  either
       remote  SMTP  client certificates or intermediate CA certificates. Do not forget to create
       the   necessary   "hash"   links   with,    for    example,    "$OPENSSL_HOME/bin/c_rehash
       /etc/postfix/certs".  To  use  smtpd_tls_CApath in chroot mode, this directory (or a copy)
       must be inside the chroot jail.

       Specify "smtpd_tls_CApath = /path/to/system_CA_directory" to use ONLY the  system-supplied
       default Certification Authority certificates.

       Specify "tls_append_default_CA = no" to prevent Postfix from appending the system-supplied
       default CAs and trusting third-party certificates.

       By  default  (see  smtpd_tls_ask_ccert),  client  certificates  are  not  requested,   and
       smtpd_tls_CApath   should   remain   empty.   In  contrast  to  smtpd_tls_CAfile,  DNs  of
       Certification Authorities installed in $smtpd_tls_CApath are not included  in  the  client
       certificate  request  message.  MUAs with multiple client certificates may use the list of
       preferred Certification Authorities to select the correct  client  certificate.   You  may
       want  to  put  your  "preferred" CA or CAs in $smtpd_tls_CAfile, and install the remaining
       trusted CAs in $smtpd_tls_CApath.

       Example:

       smtpd_tls_CApath = /etc/postfix/certs

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_always_issue_session_ids (default: yes)

       Force the Postfix SMTP server to issue a TLS session id, even when TLS session caching  is
       turned  off  (smtpd_tls_session_cache_database is empty). This behavior is compatible with
       Postfix < 2.3.

       With Postfix 2.3 and later the Postfix SMTP server can disable session id generation  when
       TLS  session  caching  is turned off. This keeps remote SMTP clients from caching sessions
       that almost certainly cannot be re-used.

       By default, the Postfix SMTP server always generates TLS session ids. This works around  a
       known  defect  in  mail  client  applications  such  as  MS  Outlook, and may also prevent
       interoperability issues with other MTAs.

       Example:

       smtpd_tls_always_issue_session_ids = no

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_tls_ask_ccert (default: no)

       Ask a remote SMTP client  for  a  client  certificate.  This  information  is  needed  for
       certificate based mail relaying with, for example, the permit_tls_clientcerts feature.

       Some clients such as Netscape will either complain if no certificate is available (for the
       list of CAs in $smtpd_tls_CAfile) or will offer multiple  client  certificates  to  choose
       from. This may be annoying, so this option is "off" by default.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_auth_only (default: no)

       When TLS encryption is optional in the Postfix SMTP server, do not announce or accept SASL
       authentication over unencrypted connections.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_ccert_verifydepth (default: 9)

       The verification depth for remote SMTP client certificates. A depth of 1 is sufficient  if
       the issuing CA is listed in a local CA file.

       The  default  verification depth is 9 (the OpenSSL default) for compatibility with earlier
       Postfix behavior. Prior to Postfix 2.5, the default value was 5, but  the  limit  was  not
       actually  enforced.  If  you have set this to a lower non-default value, certificates with
       longer trust chains may now fail to verify. Certificate chains with 1 or 2 CAs are common,
       deeper chains are more rare and any number between 5 and 9 should suffice in practice. You
       can choose a lower number if, for example, you trust certificates directly  signed  by  an
       issuing CA but not any CAs it delegates to.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_cert_file (default: empty)

       File  with  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  RSA certificate in PEM format.  This file may also
       contain the Postfix SMTP server private RSA key.  With Postfix >= 3.4 the preferred way to
       configure server keys and certificates is via the "smtpd_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       Public  Internet  MX  hosts without certificates signed by a "reputable" CA must generate,
       and  be  prepared  to  present  to  most  clients,  a  self-signed  or  private-CA  signed
       certificate.  The  client  will  not  be able to authenticate the server, but unless it is
       running Postfix 2.3 or similar software, it will still insist on a server certificate.

       For servers that are not public Internet MX hosts, Postfix supports configurations with no
       certificates.  This  entails  the  use  of  just  the anonymous TLS ciphers, which are not
       supported by typical SMTP clients. Since some clients may not  fall  back  to  plain  text
       after  a  TLS  handshake failure, a certificate-less Postfix SMTP server will be unable to
       receive email from some TLS-enabled clients. To avoid accidental  configurations  with  no
       certificates,  Postfix  enables  certificate-less  operation  only  when the administrator
       explicitly sets "smtpd_tls_cert_file = none". This ensures that new  Postfix  SMTP  server
       configurations will not accidentally enable TLS without certificates.

       Note  that  server  certificates  are not optional in TLS 1.3. To run without certificates
       you'd  have   to   disable   the   TLS   1.3   protocol   by   including   '!TLSv1.3'   in
       "smtpd_tls_protocols"  and  perhaps  also  "smtpd_tls_mandatory_protocols".  It is simpler
       instead to  just  configure  a  certificate  chain.   Certificate-less  operation  is  not
       recommended.

       Both RSA and DSA certificates are supported.  When both types are present, the cipher used
       determines which certificate will be presented to the client.  For  Netscape  and  OpenSSL
       clients without special cipher choices the RSA certificate is preferred.

       To  enable a remote SMTP client to verify the Postfix SMTP server certificate, the issuing
       CA certificates must be made available to the client.  You  should  include  the  required
       certificates  in  the  server  certificate  file,  the  server certificate first, then the
       issuing CA(s) (bottom-up order).

       Example: the certificate for "server.example.com" was issued by  "intermediate  CA"  which
       itself   has   a  certificate  of  "root  CA".   Create  the  server.pem  file  with  "cat
       server_cert.pem intermediate_CA.pem root_CA.pem > server.pem".

       If you also want to verify client certificates issued by these CAs, you  can  add  the  CA
       certificates  to  the  smtpd_tls_CAfile, in which case it is not necessary to have them in
       the smtpd_tls_cert_file, smtpd_tls_dcert_file (obsolete) or smtpd_tls_eccert_file.

       A certificate supplied here must be usable as an SSL server certificate and hence pass the
       "openssl verify -purpose sslserver ..." test.

       Example:

       smtpd_tls_cert_file = /etc/postfix/server.pem

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_chain_files (default: empty)

       List  of one or more PEM files, each holding one or more private keys directly followed by
       a corresponding certificate  chain.   The  file  names  are  separated  by  commas  and/or
       whitespace.   This  parameter  obsoletes the legacy algorithm-specific key and certificate
       file settings.  When this parameter is non-empty, the legacy parameters are ignored, and a
       warning is logged if any are also non-empty.

       With  the  proliferation  of  multiple  private key algorithms-which, as of OpenSSL 1.1.1,
       include DSA (obsolete), RSA, ECDSA, Ed25519 and Ed448-it is  increasingly  impractical  to
       use  separate  parameters  to  configure the key and certificate chain for each algorithm.
       Therefore, Postfix now supports storing multiple keys and corresponding certificate chains
       in a single file or in a set of files.

       Each key must appear immediately before the corresponding certificate, optionally followed
       by additional issuer certificates that complete the certificate chain for that key.   When
       multiple  files  are  specified, they are equivalent to a single file that is concatenated
       from those files in  the  given  order.   Thus,  while  a  key  must  always  precede  its
       certificate and issuer chain, it can be in a separate file, so long as that file is listed
       immediately before the file that holds the corresponding certificate chain.  Once all  the
       files  are concatenated, the sequence of PEM objects must be: key1, cert1, [chain1], key2,
       cert2, [chain2], ..., keyN, certN, [chainN].

       Storing the private key in  the  same  file  as  the  corresponding  certificate  is  more
       reliable.   With  the key and certificate in separate files, there is a chance that during
       key rollover a Postfix process might load a private  key  and  certificate  from  separate
       files that don't match.  Various operational errors may even result in a persistent broken
       configuration in which the certificate does not match the private key.

       The file or files must contain at most one key of each type.  If, for example, two or more
       RSA  keys  and corresponding chains are listed, depending on the version of OpenSSL either
       only the last one will be used or a configuration error may be detected.  Note that  while
       "Ed25519"  and  "Ed448"  are  considered  separate  algorithms,  the  various ECDSA curves
       (typically one  of  prime256v1,  secp384r1  or  secp521r1)  are  considered  as  different
       parameters  of  a  single  "ECDSA" algorithm, so it is not presently possible to configure
       keys for more than one ECDSA curve.

       RSA is still the most widely supported algorithm.  Presently (late 2018), ECDSA support is
       common, but not yet universal, and Ed25519 and Ed448 support is mostly absent.  Therefore,
       an RSA key should generally be configured, along with any additional keys  for  the  other
       algorithms when desired.

       Example (separate files for each key and corresponding certificate chain):

           /etc/postfix/main.cf:
               smtpd_tls_chain_files =
                   ${config_directory}/ed25519.pem,
                   ${config_directory}/ed448.pem,
                   ${config_directory}/rsa.pem

           /etc/postfix/ed25519.pem:
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MC4CAQAwBQYDK2VwBCIEIEJfbbO4BgBQGBg9NAbIJaDBqZb4bC4cOkjtAH+Efbz3
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIBKzCB3qADAgECAhQaw+rflRreYuUZBp0HuNn/e5rMZDAFBgMrZXAwFDESMBAG
               ...
               nC0egv51YPDWxEHom4QA

               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
           /etc/postfix/ed448.pem:
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MEcCAQAwBQYDK2VxBDsEOQf+m0P+G0qi+NZ0RolyeiE5zdlPQR8h8y4jByBifpIe
               LNler7nzHQJ1SLcOiXFHXlxp/84VZuh32A==
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIBdjCB96ADAgECAhQSv4oP972KypOZPNPF4fmsiQoRHzAFBgMrZXEwFDESMBAG
               ...
               pQcWsx+4J29e6YWH3Cy/CdUaexKP4RPCZDrPX7bk5C2BQ+eeYOxyThMA

               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
           /etc/postfix/rsa.pem:
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MIIEvQIBADANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAASCBKcwggSjAgEAAoIBAQDc4QusgkahH9rL
               ...
               ahQkZ3+krcaJvDSMgvu0tDc=
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIC+DCCAeCgAwIBAgIUIUkrbk1GAemPCT8i9wKsTGDH7HswDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEL
               ...
               Rirz15HGVNTK8wzFd+nulPzwUo6dH2IU8KazmyRi7OGvpyrMlm15TRE2oyE=

               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
       Example (all keys and certificates in a single file):

           /etc/postfix/main.cf:
               smtpd_tls_chain_files = ${config_directory}/chains.pem

           /etc/postfix/chains.pem:
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MC4CAQAwBQYDK2VwBCIEIEJfbbO4BgBQGBg9NAbIJaDBqZb4bC4cOkjtAH+Efbz3
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIBKzCB3qADAgECAhQaw+rflRreYuUZBp0HuNn/e5rMZDAFBgMrZXAwFDESMBAG
               ...
               nC0egv51YPDWxEHom4QA
               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MEcCAQAwBQYDK2VxBDsEOQf+m0P+G0qi+NZ0RolyeiE5zdlPQR8h8y4jByBifpIe
               LNler7nzHQJ1SLcOiXFHXlxp/84VZuh32A==
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIBdjCB96ADAgECAhQSv4oP972KypOZPNPF4fmsiQoRHzAFBgMrZXEwFDESMBAG
               ...
               pQcWsx+4J29e6YWH3Cy/CdUaexKP4RPCZDrPX7bk5C2BQ+eeYOxyThMA
               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
               -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
               MIIEvQIBADANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAASCBKcwggSjAgEAAoIBAQDc4QusgkahH9rL
               ...
               ahQkZ3+krcaJvDSMgvu0tDc=
               -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
               -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
               MIIC+DCCAeCgAwIBAgIUIUkrbk1GAemPCT8i9wKsTGDH7HswDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEL
               ...
               Rirz15HGVNTK8wzFd+nulPzwUo6dH2IU8KazmyRi7OGvpyrMlm15TRE2oyE=

               -----END CERTIFICATE-----
       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

smtpd_tls_cipherlist (default: empty)

       Obsolete  Postfix < 2.3 control for the Postfix SMTP server TLS cipher list. It is easy to
       create interoperability problems by choosing a non-default  cipher  list.  Do  not  use  a
       non-default TLS cipherlist for MX hosts on the public Internet. Clients that begin the TLS
       handshake, but are unable to agree on a common cipher, may not be able to send  any  email
       to the SMTP server. Using a restricted cipher list may be more appropriate for a dedicated
       MSA or an internal mailhub, where one can exert some control over  the  TLS  software  and
       settings of the connecting clients.

       Note: do not use "" quotes around the parameter value.

       This  feature  is  available with Postfix version 2.2. It is not used with Postfix 2.3 and
       later; use smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers instead.

smtpd_tls_ciphers (default: medium)

       The minimum TLS cipher grade that the Postfix SMTP server will use with opportunistic  TLS
       encryption.  Cipher  types  listed in smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers are excluded from the base
       definition of the selected cipher grade.   The  default  value  is  "medium"  for  Postfix
       releases after the middle of 2015, "export" for older releases.

       When  TLS  is  mandatory  the  cipher  grade is chosen via the smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers
       configuration parameter, see there for syntax details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later. With earlier Postfix releases only the
       smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers  parameter  is  implemented, and opportunistic TLS always uses
       "export" or better (i.e. all) ciphers.

smtpd_tls_dcert_file (default: empty)

       File with the Postfix SMTP server DSA certificate in  PEM  format.   This  file  may  also
       contain the Postfix SMTP server private DSA key.  The DSA algorithm is obsolete and should
       not be used.

       See the discussion under smtpd_tls_cert_file for more details.

       Example:

       smtpd_tls_dcert_file = /etc/postfix/server-dsa.pem

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_dh1024_param_file (default: empty)

       File with DH parameters that the Postfix  SMTP  server  should  use  with  non-export  EDH
       ciphers.

       With  Postfix >= 3.7, built with OpenSSL version is 3.0.0 or later, if the parameter value
       is either empty or "auto", then the DH parameter selection is  delegated  to  the  OpenSSL
       library,  which selects appropriate parameters based on the TLS handshake.  This choice is
       likely to be the most interoperable with SMTP clients using  various  TLS  libraries,  and
       custom  local parameters are no longer recommended when using Postfix >= 3.7 built against
       OpenSSL 3.0.0.

       The best-practice choice of parameters uses a 2048-bit prime.  This is fine,  despite  the
       historical  "1024"  in  the  parameter name.  Do not be tempted to use much larger values,
       performance degrades quickly, and you may also cease to interoperate with some  mainstream
       SMTP  clients.   As  of Postfix 3.1, the compiled-in default prime is 2048-bits, and it is
       not  strictly  necessary,  though  perhaps  somewhat  beneficial  to  generate  custom  DH
       parameters.

       Instead  of using the exact same parameter sets as distributed with other TLS packages, it
       is more secure to generate your own set of parameters with something  like  the  following
       commands:

           openssl dhparam -out /etc/postfix/dh2048.pem 2048
           openssl dhparam -out /etc/postfix/dh1024.pem 1024
           # As of Postfix 3.6, export-grade 512-bit DH parameters are no longer
           # supported or needed.
           openssl dhparam -out /etc/postfix/dh512.pem 512

       It  is  safe  to  share the same DH parameters between multiple Postfix instances.  If you
       prefer, you can generate separate parameters for each instance.

       If you want to take maximal advantage of  ciphers  that  offer  forward  secrecy  see  the
       Getting  started  section  of  FORWARD_SECRECY_README.   The  full  document  conveniently
       presents all information about Postfix "perfect" forward secrecy  support  in  one  place:
       what  forward  secrecy  is,  how  to  tweak  settings, and what you can expect to see when
       Postfix uses ciphers with forward secrecy.

       Example:

       smtpd_tls_dh1024_param_file = /etc/postfix/dh2048.pem

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_dh512_param_file (default: empty)

       File with DH parameters that the Postfix SMTP server  should  use  with  export-grade  EDH
       ciphers.  The default SMTP server cipher grade is "medium" with Postfix releases after the
       middle of 2015, and as a result export-grade cipher suites are by default not used.

       With Postfix >= 3.6 export-grade Diffie-Hellman key exchange is no longer  supported,  and
       this parameter is silently ignored.

       See also the discussion under the smtpd_tls_dh1024_param_file configuration parameter.

       Example:

       smtpd_tls_dh512_param_file = /etc/postfix/dh_512.pem

       This  feature  is  available  in  Postfix 2.2 and later, but is ignored in Postfix 3.6 and
       later.

smtpd_tls_dkey_file (default: $smtpd_tls_dcert_file)

       File with the Postfix SMTP server DSA private  key  in  PEM  format.   This  file  may  be
       combined   with   the   Postfix   SMTP   server   DSA   certificate  file  specified  with
       $smtpd_tls_dcert_file. The DSA algorithm is obsolete and should not be used.

       The private key must be accessible without a pass-phrase, i.e. it must not  be  encrypted.
       File  permissions  should grant read-only access to the system superuser account ("root"),
       and no access to anyone else.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_eccert_file (default: empty)

       File with the Postfix SMTP server ECDSA certificate in PEM format.   This  file  may  also
       contain  the Postfix SMTP server private ECDSA key.  With Postfix >= 3.4 the preferred way
       to configure server keys and certificates is via the "smtpd_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       See the discussion under smtpd_tls_cert_file for more details.

       Example:

       smtpd_tls_eccert_file = /etc/postfix/ecdsa-scert.pem

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later, when Postfix is  compiled  and  linked
       with OpenSSL 1.0.0 or later.

smtpd_tls_eckey_file (default: $smtpd_tls_eccert_file)

       File  with  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  ECDSA private key in PEM format.  This file may be
       combined  with  the  Postfix  SMTP  server   ECDSA   certificate   file   specified   with
       $smtpd_tls_eccert_file.   With  Postfix  >= 3.4 the preferred way to configure server keys
       and certificates is via the "smtpd_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       The private key must be accessible without a pass-phrase, i.e. it must not  be  encrypted.
       File  permissions  should grant read-only access to the system superuser account ("root"),
       and no access to anyone else.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later, when Postfix is  compiled  and  linked
       with OpenSSL 1.0.0 or later.

smtpd_tls_eecdh_grade (default: see postconf -d output)

       The Postfix SMTP server security grade for ephemeral elliptic-curve Diffie-Hellman (EECDH)
       key exchange.   As of Postfix 3.6, the value of this  parameter  is  always  ignored,  and
       Postfix behaves as though the auto value (described below) was chosen.

       The available choices are:

       auto   Use  the  most preferred curve that is supported by both the client and the server.
              This setting requires Postfix >= 3.2 compiled and linked  with  OpenSSL  >=  1.0.2.
              This  is  the default setting under the above conditions (and the only setting used
              with Postfix >= 3.6).

       none   Don't use EECDH. Ciphers based on EECDH key exchange will be disabled. This is  the
              default in Postfix versions 2.6 and 2.7.

       strong Use  EECDH  with  approximately  128 bits of security at a reasonable computational
              cost. This is the default in Postfix versions 2.8-3.5.

       ultra  Use EECDH with approximately 192 bits of security at  computational  cost  that  is
              approximately twice as high as 128 bit strength ECC.

       If  you  want  to  take  maximal  advantage  of ciphers that offer forward secrecy see the
       Getting  started  section  of  FORWARD_SECRECY_README.   The  full  document  conveniently
       presents  all  information  about  Postfix "perfect" forward secrecy support in one place:
       what forward secrecy is, how to tweak settings, and  what  you  can  expect  to  see  when
       Postfix uses ciphers with forward secrecy.

       This  feature  is  available in Postfix 2.6 and later, when it is compiled and linked with
       OpenSSL 1.0.0 or later on platforms where EC algorithms have  not  been  disabled  by  the
       vendor.

smtpd_tls_enable_rpk (default: no)

       Request  that  remote  SMTP  clients  send  an  RFC7250 raw public key instead of an X.509
       certificate, when asking for or requiring client authentication. This feature  is  ignored
       when there is no raw public key support in the local TLS implementation.

       The  Postfix  SMTP  server  will  log a warning when "smtpd_tls_enable_rpk = yes", but the
       remote SMTP client sends a certificate, the certificate's public key fingerprint does  not
       match  a  check_ccert_access  table,  while  the  certificate  fingerprint  does  match  a
       check_ccert_access table. The remote SMTP client would lose access when it starts  sending
       a  raw  public  key instead of a certificate, after its TLS implementation is updated with
       raw public key support.

       The Postfix SMTP server always sends a  raw  public  key  instead  of  a  certificate,  if
       solicited  by  the remote SMTP client and the local TLS implementation supports raw public
       keys. If the client sends a  server  name  indication  with  an  SNI  TLS  extension,  and
       tls_server_sni_maps  is  configured,  the  server  will  extract a raw public key from the
       indicated certificate.

       Sample commands to compute certificate and public key SHA256 digests:

       # SHA256 digest of the first certificate in "cert.pem"
       $ openssl x509 -in cert.pem -outform DER | openssl dgst -sha256 -c

       # SHA256 digest of the SPKI of the first certificate in "cert.pem"
       $ openssl x509 -in cert.pem -pubkey -noout |
           openssl pkey -pubin -outform DER | openssl dgst -sha256 -c

       # SHA256 digest of the SPKI of the first private key in "pkey.pem"
       $ openssl pkey -in pkey.pem -pubout -outform DER |
           openssl dgst -sha256 -c

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.9 and later.

smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers (default: empty)

       List of ciphers or cipher types to exclude from the SMTP server cipher  list  at  all  TLS
       security  levels.  Excluding  valid  ciphers  can create interoperability problems. DO NOT
       exclude ciphers unless it is essential to do so. This is not an OpenSSL cipherlist; it  is
       a  simple list separated by whitespace and/or commas. The elements are a single cipher, or
       one or more "+" separated cipher properties, in which case only ciphers matching  all  the
       properties are excluded.

       Examples (some of these will cause problems):

           smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers = aNULL
           smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers = MD5, DES
           smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers = DES+MD5
           smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers = AES256-SHA, DES-CBC3-MD5
           smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers = kEDH+aRSA

       The  first  setting disables anonymous ciphers. The next setting disables ciphers that use
       the MD5 digest algorithm or the  (single)  DES  encryption  algorithm.  The  next  setting
       disables ciphers that use MD5 and DES together.  The next setting disables the two ciphers
       "AES256-SHA" and "DES-CBC3-MD5". The last setting disables  ciphers  that  use  "EDH"  key
       exchange with RSA authentication.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_tls_fingerprint_digest (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  message  digest algorithm to construct remote SMTP client-certificate fingerprints or
       public  key  fingerprints   (Postfix   2.9   and   later)   for   check_ccert_access   and
       permit_tls_clientcerts.

       The default algorithm is sha256 with Postfix >= 3.6 and the compatibility_level set to 3.6
       or higher. With Postfix <= 3.5, the default algorithm is md5.

       The best-practice algorithm is now sha256. Recent advances in hash function  cryptanalysis
       have  led  to md5 and sha1 being deprecated in favor of sha256.  However, as long as there
       are no known "second pre-image" attacks against the older algorithms, their  use  in  this
       context, though not recommended, is still likely safe.

       While  additional  digest  algorithms  are  often available with OpenSSL's libcrypto, only
       those used by libssl in SSL cipher suites are available to Postfix.   You'll  likely  find
       support for md5, sha1, sha256 and sha512.

       To  find the fingerprint of a specific certificate file, with a specific digest algorithm,
       run:

           $ openssl x509 -noout -fingerprint -digest -in certfile.pem

       The text to the right of "=" sign is the desired fingerprint.  For example:

           $ openssl x509 -noout -fingerprint -sha256 -in cert.pem
           SHA256 Fingerprint=D4:6A:AB:19:24:...:A6:CB:66:82:C0:8E:9B:EE:29:A8:1A

       To extract the public key fingerprint from an X.509 certificate, you need to  extract  the
       public  key  from  the  certificate  and compute the appropriate digest of its DER (ASN.1)
       encoding. With OpenSSL the "-pubkey" option of the "x509" command extracts the public  key
       always  in  "PEM"  format. We pipe the result to another OpenSSL command that converts the
       key to DER and then to the "dgst" command to compute the fingerprint.

       Example:

           $ openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -pubkey |
               openssl pkey -pubin -outform DER |
               openssl dgst -sha256 -c
           (stdin)= 64:3f:1f:f6:e5:1e:d4:2a:56:8b:fc:09:1a:61:98:b5:bc:7c:60:58

       The Postfix SMTP server and client log the peer (leaf) certificate fingerprint and  public
       key fingerprint when the TLS loglevel is 2 or higher.

       Example: client-certificate access table, with sha256 fingerprints:

           /etc/postfix/main.cf:
               smtpd_tls_fingerprint_digest = sha256
               smtpd_client_restrictions =
                   check_ccert_access hash:/etc/postfix/access,
                   reject
           /etc/postfix/access:
               # Action folded to next line...
               AF:88:7C:AD:51:95:6F:36:96:...:01:FB:2E:48:CD:AB:49:25:A2:3B
                   OK
               85:16:78:FD:73:6E:CE:70:E0:...:5F:0D:3C:C8:6D:C4:2C:24:59:E1
                   permit_auth_destination

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

smtpd_tls_key_file (default: $smtpd_tls_cert_file)

       File  with  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  RSA  private  key in PEM format.  This file may be
       combined  with  the  Postfix   SMTP   server   RSA   certificate   file   specified   with
       $smtpd_tls_cert_file.   With Postfix >= 3.4 the preferred way to configure server keys and
       certificates is via the "smtpd_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       The private key must be accessible without a pass-phrase, i.e. it must not  be  encrypted.
       File  permissions  should grant read-only access to the system superuser account ("root"),
       and no access to anyone else.

smtpd_tls_loglevel (default: 0)

       Enable additional Postfix SMTP server logging of TLS activity.  Each  logging  level  also
       includes the information that is logged at a lower logging level.

              0 Disable logging of TLS activity.

              1  Log  only  a  summary message on TLS handshake completion - no logging of client
              certificate trust-chain verification errors if client certificate  verification  is
              not  required.   With  Postfix  2.8  and  earlier,  log  the  summary message, peer
              certificate summary information and unconditionally  log  trust-chain  verification
              errors.

              2  Also  enable  verbose  logging  in  the  Postfix  TLS library, log session cache
              operations, and enable OpenSSL logging of the progress of the SSL handshake.

              3 Also log hexadecimal and ASCII dump of TLS negotiation process.

              4 Also log hexadecimal and ASCII dump of complete transmission after STARTTLS.

       Do not use "smtpd_tls_loglevel = 2" or higher except in case of problems. Use of  loglevel
       4 is strongly discouraged.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers (default: medium)

       The  minimum  TLS  cipher  grade  that the Postfix SMTP server will use with mandatory TLS
       encryption. The default grade ("medium") is sufficiently  strong  that  any  benefit  from
       globally  restricting  TLS  sessions  to  a  more  stringent  grade  is likely negligible,
       especially given the fact that many  implementations  still  do  not  offer  any  stronger
       ("high"  grade)  ciphers,  while  those  that do, will always use "high" grade ciphers. So
       insisting on "high" grade ciphers is generally counter-productive.  Allowing  "export"  or
       "low"  ciphers  is typically not a good idea, as systems limited to just these are limited
       to obsolete browsers. No known SMTP clients fail to  support  at  least  one  "medium"  or
       "high" grade cipher.

       The following cipher grades are supported:

       high   Enable  only  "HIGH"  grade OpenSSL ciphers. The underlying cipherlist is specified
              via  the  tls_high_cipherlist  configuration  parameter,  which  you  are  strongly
              encouraged to not change.

       medium Enable  "MEDIUM"  grade  or  stronger  OpenSSL ciphers. These use 128-bit or longer
              symmetric bulk-encryption keys. This is the default minimum strength for  mandatory
              TLS    encryption.    The    underlying    cipherlist    is   specified   via   the
              tls_medium_cipherlist configuration parameter, which you  are  strongly  encouraged
              not to change.

       null   Enable  only  the  "NULL"  OpenSSL  ciphers,  these  provide authentication without
              encryption.  This setting is only appropriate in the rare case that all clients are
              prepared  to use NULL ciphers (not normally enabled in TLS clients). The underlying
              cipherlist is specified via the tls_null_cipherlist configuration parameter,  which
              you are strongly encouraged not to change.

       low    Enable  "LOW"  grade  or  stronger  OpenSSL ciphers.  In Postfix >= 3.8 this cipher
              grade is always identical to "medium".  Recent versions of OpenSSL do  not  support
              any "LOW" grade ciphers.  In earlier Postfix releases the underlying cipherlist was
              specified  via  the  tls_low_cipherlist  configuration  parameter,  which  you  are
              strongly encouraged not to change.  This obsolete cipher grade SHOULD NOT be used.

       export Enable  "EXPORT"  grade or stronger OpenSSL ciphers.  In Postfix >= 3.8 this cipher
              grade is always identical to "medium".  Recent versions of OpenSSL do  not  support
              any  "EXPORT" grade ciphers.  In earlier Postfix releases the underlying cipherlist
              was specified via the tls_export_cipherlist configuration parameter, which you  are
              strongly encouraged not to change.  This obsolete cipher grade SHOULD NOT be used.

       Cipher  types  listed  in smtpd_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers or smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers
       are excluded from the base definition of the selected cipher grade. See  smtpd_tls_ciphers
       for cipher controls that apply to opportunistic TLS.

       The  underlying  cipherlists  for  grades other than "null" include anonymous ciphers, but
       these are automatically filtered out if the server is configured to ask  for  remote  SMTP
       client certificates.  You are very unlikely to need to take any steps to exclude anonymous
       ciphers, they are excluded automatically as  required.   If  you  must  exclude  anonymous
       ciphers   even   when   Postfix   does   not   need   or   use   peer   certificates,  set
       "smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers = aNULL".  To  exclude  anonymous  ciphers  only  when  TLS  is
       enforced, set "smtpd_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers = aNULL".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers (default: empty)

       Additional  list of ciphers or cipher types to exclude from the Postfix SMTP server cipher
       list at mandatory TLS security levels.  This list works  in  addition  to  the  exclusions
       listed with smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers (see there for syntax details).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_tls_mandatory_protocols (default: see postconf -d output)

       TLS  protocols  accepted by the Postfix SMTP server with mandatory TLS encryption.  If the
       list is empty, the server supports all available TLS protocol versions.  A non-empty value
       is  a  list  of  protocol  names to include or exclude, separated by whitespace, commas or
       colons.

       The  valid  protocol  names  (see  SSL_get_version(3))  are  "SSLv2",  "SSLv3",   "TLSv1",
       "TLSv1.1",  "TLSv1.2"  and  "TLSv1.3".   Starting  with  Postfix 3.6, the default value is
       ">=TLSv1", which sets TLS 1.0 as the lowest supported TLS protocol  version  (see  below).
       Older releases use the "!" exclusion syntax, also described below.

       As  of Postfix 3.6, the preferred way to limit the range of acceptable protocols is to set
       the lowest acceptable TLS protocol version and/or  the  highest  acceptable  TLS  protocol
       version.  To set the lower bound include an element of the form: ">=version" where version
       is a either one  of  the  TLS  protocol  names  listed  above,  or  a  hexadecimal  number
       corresponding  to  the  desired  TLS protocol version (0301 for TLS 1.0, 0302 for TLS 1.1,
       etc.).  For the upper bound, use "<=version".  There must be  no  whitespace  between  the
       ">=" or "<=" symbols and the protocol name or number.

       Hexadecimal  protocol numbers make it possible to specify protocol bounds for TLS versions
       that are known to OpenSSL, but might not be known to Postfix.  They cannot  be  used  with
       the  legacy  exclusion  syntax.   Leading  "0"  or  "0x"  prefixes  are supported, but not
       required.  Therefore, "301", "0301", "0x301" and "0x0301" are all equivalent  to  "TLSv1".
       Hexadecimal  versions  unknown to OpenSSL will fail to set the upper or lower bound, and a
       warning will be logged.  Hexadecimal versions should only be used when Postfix  is  linked
       with  some  future version of OpenSSL that supports TLS 1.4 or later, but Postfix does not
       yet support a symbolic name for that protocol version.

       Hexadecimal example (Postfix >= 3.6):

           # Allow only TLS 1.2 through (hypothetical) TLS 1.4, once supported
           # in some future version of OpenSSL (presently a warning is logged).
           smtpd_tls_mandatory_protocols = >=TLSv1.2, <=0305
           # Allow only TLS 1.2 and up:
           smtpd_tls_mandatory_protocols = >=0x0303

       With Postfix < 3.6 there is no support for a minimum or maximum version, and the  protocol
       range  is  configured  via  protocol  exclusions.   To  require  at  least  TLS  1.0,  set
       "smtpd_tls_mandatory_protocols = !SSLv2,  !SSLv3".   Listing  the  protocols  to  include,
       rather  than  protocols to exclude, is supported, but not recommended.  The exclusion form
       more accurately matches the underlying OpenSSL interface.

       Support for "TLSv1.3" was introduced  in  OpenSSL  1.1.1.   Disabling  this  protocol  via
       "!TLSv1.3"  is supported since Postfix 3.4 (or patch releases >= 3.0.14, 3.1.10, 3.2.7 and
       3.3.2).

       Example:

       # Preferred syntax with Postfix >= 3.6:
       smtpd_tls_mandatory_protocols = >=TLSv1.2, <=TLSv1.3
       # Legacy syntax:
       smtpd_tls_mandatory_protocols = !SSLv2, !SSLv3, !TLSv1, !TLSv1.1

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_tls_protocols (default: see 'postconf -d' output)

       TLS protocols accepted by the Postfix SMTP server with opportunistic  TLS  encryption.  If
       the  list  is empty, the server supports all available TLS protocol versions.  A non-empty
       value is a list of protocol names to include or exclude, separated by  whitespace,  commas
       or colons.

       The   valid  protocol  names  (see  SSL_get_version(3))  are  "SSLv2",  "SSLv3",  "TLSv1",
       "TLSv1.1", "TLSv1.2" and "TLSv1.3".  Starting with  Postfix  3.6,  the  default  value  is
       ">=TLSv1",  which  sets  TLS 1.0 as the lowest supported TLS protocol version (see below).
       Older releases use the "!" exclusion syntax, also described below.

       As of Postfix 3.6, the preferred way to limit the range of acceptable protocols is to  set
       the  lowest  acceptable  TLS  protocol  version and/or the highest acceptable TLS protocol
       version.  To set the lower bound include an element of the form: ">=version" where version
       is  a  either  one  of  the  TLS  protocol  names  listed  above,  or a hexadecimal number
       corresponding to the desired TLS protocol version (0301 for TLS 1.0,  0302  for  TLS  1.1,
       etc.).   For  the  upper  bound, use "<=version".  There must be no whitespace between the
       ">=" or "<=" symbols and the protocol name or number.

       Hexadecimal protocol numbers make it possible to specify protocol bounds for TLS  versions
       that  are  known  to OpenSSL, but might not be known to Postfix.  They cannot be used with
       the legacy exclusion syntax.   Leading  "0"  or  "0x"  prefixes  are  supported,  but  not
       required.   Therefore,  "301", "0301", "0x301" and "0x0301" are all equivalent to "TLSv1".
       Hexadecimal versions unknown to OpenSSL will fail to set the upper or lower bound,  and  a
       warning  will  be logged.  Hexadecimal versions should only be used when Postfix is linked
       with some future version of OpenSSL that supports TLS 1.4 or later, but Postfix  does  not
       yet support a symbolic name for that protocol version.

       Hexadecimal example (Postfix >= 3.6):

           # Allow only TLS 1.0 through (hypothetical) TLS 1.4, once supported
           # in some future version of OpenSSL (presently a warning is logged).
           smtpd_tls_protocols = >=TLSv1, <=0305
           # Allow only TLS 1.0 and up:
           smtpd_tls_protocols = >=0x0301

       With  Postfix < 3.6 there is no support for a minimum or maximum version, and the protocol
       range  is  configured  via  protocol  exclusions.   To  require  at  least  TLS  1.0,  set
       "smtpd_tls_protocols  =  !SSLv2,  !SSLv3".   Listing the protocols to include, rather than
       protocols to exclude,  is  supported,  but  not  recommended.   The  exclusion  form  more
       accurately matches the underlying OpenSSL interface.

       Support  for  "TLSv1.3"  was  introduced  in  OpenSSL  1.1.1.  Disabling this protocol via
       "!TLSv1.3" is supported since Postfix 3.4 (or patch releases >= 3.0.14, 3.1.10, 3.2.7  and
       3.3.2).

       Example:
       # Preferred syntax with Postfix >= 3.6:
       smtpd_tls_protocols = >=TLSv1, <=TLSv1.3
       # Legacy syntax:
       smtpd_tls_protocols = !SSLv2, !SSLv3

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

smtpd_tls_received_header (default: no)

       Request  that  the  Postfix  SMTP  server produces Received:  message headers that include
       information about the protocol and  cipher  used,  as  well  as  the  remote  SMTP  client
       CommonName  and client certificate issuer CommonName.  This is disabled by default, as the
       information may be modified in transit through other mail servers.  Only information  that
       was recorded by the final destination can be trusted.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_req_ccert (default: no)

       With  mandatory  TLS encryption, require a trusted remote SMTP client certificate in order
       to allow TLS connections to proceed.  This option implies "smtpd_tls_ask_ccert = yes".

       When TLS encryption is optional, this setting is ignored with a  warning  written  to  the
       mail log.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_security_level (default: empty)

       The  SMTP  TLS  security  level  for  the  Postfix  SMTP server; when a non-empty value is
       specified, this overrides the obsolete  parameters  smtpd_use_tls  and  smtpd_enforce_tls.
       This parameter is ignored with "smtpd_tls_wrappermode = yes".

       Specify one of the following security levels:

       none   TLS will not be used.

       may    Opportunistic  TLS:  announce  STARTTLS  support to remote SMTP clients, but do not
              require that clients use TLS encryption.

       encrypt
              Mandatory TLS encryption: announce STARTTLS support to  remote  SMTP  clients,  and
              require  that  clients  use  TLS encryption. According to RFC 2487 this MUST NOT be
              applied in case of a publicly-referenced SMTP server. Instead, this  option  should
              be used only on dedicated servers.

       Note  1:  the  "fingerprint",  "verify"  and  "secure" levels are not supported here.  The
       Postfix SMTP server logs a warning and uses "encrypt"  instead.   To  verify  remote  SMTP
       client   certificates,  see  TLS_README  for  a  discussion  of  the  smtpd_tls_ask_ccert,
       smtpd_tls_req_ccert, and permit_tls_clientcerts features.

       Note   2:   The   parameter   setting   "smtpd_tls_security_level   =   encrypt"   implies
       "smtpd_tls_auth_only = yes".

       Note  3:  when  invoked  via  "sendmail  -bs",  Postfix  will  never offer STARTTLS due to
       insufficient privileges to access the server private key. This is intended behavior.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

smtpd_tls_session_cache_database (default: empty)

       Name of the file containing the optional Postfix SMTP server TLS session cache. Specify  a
       database  type  that  supports  enumeration,  such  as  btree or sdbm; there is no need to
       support concurrent access.  The file is created if it does not exist. The smtpd(8)  daemon
       does  not  use  this parameter directly, rather the cache is implemented indirectly in the
       tlsmgr(8) daemon. This means that per-smtpd-instance master.cf overrides of this parameter
       are  not  effective.  Note that each of the cache databases supported by tlsmgr(8) daemon:
       $smtpd_tls_session_cache_database, $smtp_tls_session_cache_database (and with Postfix  2.3
       and  later  $lmtp_tls_session_cache_database), needs to be stored separately. It is not at
       this time possible to store multiple caches in a single database.

       Note: dbm databases are not suitable. TLS session objects are too large.

       As of version 2.5, Postfix no longer uses root privileges when opening this file. The file
       should  now  be  stored  under  the  Postfix-owned  data_directory. As a migration aid, an
       attempt to open the file under a non-Postfix directory is redirected to the  Postfix-owned
       data_directory, and a warning is logged.

       As  of Postfix 2.11 the preferred mechanism for session resumption is RFC 5077 TLS session
       tickets, which don't require server-side storage.  Consequently, for Postfix >= 2.11  this
       parameter  should generally be left empty.  TLS session tickets require an OpenSSL library
       (at least version 0.9.8h) that provides full support for this  TLS  extension.   See  also
       smtpd_tls_session_cache_timeout.

       Example:

       smtpd_tls_session_cache_database = btree:/var/lib/postfix/smtpd_scache

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_tls_session_cache_timeout (default: 3600s)

       The  expiration time of Postfix SMTP server TLS session cache information. A cache cleanup
       is  performed  periodically  every  $smtpd_tls_session_cache_timeout  seconds.   As   with
       $smtpd_tls_session_cache_database,  this  parameter is implemented in the tlsmgr(8) daemon
       and therefore per-smtpd-instance master.cf overrides are not possible.

       As of Postfix 2.11 this setting cannot exceed 100 days.  If set <= 0, session  caching  is
       disabled,  not  just  via  the  database, but also via RFC 5077 TLS session tickets, which
       don't require server-side storage.  If set to a positive value less than  2  minutes,  the
       minimum  value  of  2  minutes  is  used  instead.  TLS session tickets require an OpenSSL
       library (at least version 0.9.8h) that provides full support for this TLS extension.

       Specify a non-negative time value (an integral value plus an  optional  one-letter  suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later, and updated  for  TLS  session  ticket
       support in Postfix 2.11.

smtpd_tls_wrappermode (default: no)

       Run the Postfix SMTP server in TLS "wrapper" mode, instead of using the STARTTLS command.

       If  you  want to support this service, enable a special port in master.cf, and specify "-o
       smtpd_tls_wrappermode=yes" on the SMTP server's command line. Port 465 (submissions/smtps)
       is reserved for this purpose.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

smtpd_upstream_proxy_protocol (default: empty)

       The  name of the proxy protocol used by an optional before-smtpd proxy agent. When a proxy
       agent is used, this protocol conveys  local  and  remote  address  and  port  information.
       Specify  "smtpd_upstream_proxy_protocol = haproxy" to enable the haproxy protocol; version
       2 is supported with Postfix 3.5 and later.

       NOTE:  To  use  the  nginx  proxy  with  smtpd(8),  enable  the  XCLIENT   protocol   with
       smtpd_authorized_xclient_hosts.  This  supports  SASL  authentication  in  the proxy agent
       (Postfix 2.9 and later).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.10 and later.

smtpd_upstream_proxy_timeout (default: 5s)

       The time limit for the proxy protocol  specified  with  the  smtpd_upstream_proxy_protocol
       parameter.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.10 and later.

smtpd_use_tls (default: no)

       Opportunistic  TLS:  announce  STARTTLS support to remote SMTP clients, but do not require
       that clients use TLS encryption.

       Note: when  invoked  via  "sendmail  -bs",  Postfix  will  never  offer  STARTTLS  due  to
       insufficient privileges to access the server private key. This is intended behavior.

       This feature is deprecated as of Postfix 3.9. Specify smtpd_tls_security_level instead.

       This  feature  is  available  in  Postfix  2.2  and  later. With Postfix 2.3 and later use
       smtpd_tls_security_level instead.

smtputf8_autodetect_classes (default: sendmail, verify)

       Detect that a message requires SMTPUTF8 support for the  specified  mail  origin  classes.
       This  is  a  workaround  to  avoid  chicken-and-egg  problems  during the initial SMTPUTF8
       roll-out in environments with pre-existing mail flows that contain UTF8. Those mail  flows
       should not break because Postfix suddenly refuses to deliver such mail to down-stream MTAs
       that don't announce SMTPUTF8 support.

       The problem is that Postfix cannot rely solely on the sender's declaration that a  message
       requires  SMTPUTF8  support,  because  UTF8 may be introduced during local processing (for
       example,  the  client  hostname  in  Postfix's  Received:  header,  adding  @$myorigin  or
       .$mydomain  to  an  incomplete  address, address rewriting, alias expansion, automatic BCC
       recipients, local forwarding, and changes made by header checks or Milter applications).

       For now, the default is to enable  "SMTPUTF8  required"  autodetection  only  for  Postfix
       sendmail  command-line  submissions and address verification probes.  This may change once
       SMTPUTF8 support achieves world domination.  However, sites  that  add  UTF8  content  via
       local  processing  (see  above)  should  autodetect  the need for SMTPUTF8 support for all
       email.

       Specify one or more of the following:

        sendmail
              Submission with the Postfix sendmail(1) command.

        smtpd Mail received with the smtpd(8) daemon.

        qmqpd Mail received with the qmqpd(8) daemon.

        forward
              Local forwarding or aliasing.  When a message is received with "SMTPUTF8 required",
              then the forwarded (aliased) message always has "SMTPUTF8 required".

        bounce
              Submission  by  the  bounce(8)  daemon.   When a message is received with "SMTPUTF8
              required", then the delivery status notification always has "SMTPUTF8 required".

        notify
              Postmaster notification from the smtp(8) or smtpd(8) daemon.

        verify
              Address verification probe from the verify(8) daemon.

        all   Enable SMTPUTF8 autodetection for all mail.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

smtputf8_enable (default: yes)

       Enable preliminary SMTPUTF8 support for the protocols described in RFC 6531, RFC 6532, and
       RFC 6533. This requires that Postfix is built to support these protocols.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

soft_bounce (default: no)

       Safety  net  to  keep  mail  queued  that would otherwise be returned to the sender.  This
       parameter disables locally-generated bounces, changes the handling of  negative  responses
       from remote servers, content filters or plugins, and prevents the Postfix SMTP server from
       rejecting mail permanently by changing 5xx reply codes into 4xx.  However, soft_bounce  is
       no cure for address rewriting mistakes or mail routing mistakes.

       Note:  "soft_bounce  =  yes"  is  in some cases implemented by modifying server responses.
       Therefore, the response that Postfix logs  may  differ  from  the  response  that  Postfix
       actually sends or receives.

       Example:

       soft_bounce = yes

stale_lock_time (default: 500s)

       The  time  after  which  a  stale exclusive mailbox lockfile is removed.  This is used for
       delivery to file or mailbox.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

stress (default: empty)

       This feature is documented in the STRESS_README document.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

strict_7bit_headers (default: no)

       Reject mail with 8-bit text in message headers.  This  blocks  mail  from  poorly  written
       applications.

       This  feature should not be enabled on a general purpose mail server, because it is likely
       to reject legitimate email.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

strict_8bitmime (default: no)

       Enable both strict_7bit_headers and strict_8bitmime_body.

       This feature should not be enabled on a general purpose mail server, because it is  likely
       to reject legitimate email.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

strict_8bitmime_body (default: no)

       Reject  8-bit  message  body  text  without 8-bit MIME content encoding information.  This
       blocks mail from poorly written applications.

       Unfortunately, this also rejects majordomo approval requests  when  the  included  request
       contains  valid  8-bit  MIME  mail,  and  it rejects bounces from mailers that do not MIME
       encapsulate 8-bit content (for example,  bounces  from  qmail  or  from  old  versions  of
       Postfix).

       This  feature should not be enabled on a general purpose mail server, because it is likely
       to reject legitimate email.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

strict_mailbox_ownership (default: yes)

       Defer delivery when a mailbox file is not owned by its recipient.  The default setting  is
       not backwards compatible.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5.3 and later.

strict_mime_encoding_domain (default: no)

       Reject  mail  with  invalid  Content-Transfer-Encoding:  information  for the message/* or
       multipart/* MIME content types.  This blocks mail from poorly written software.

       This feature should not be enabled on a general  purpose  mail  server,  because  it  will
       reject mail after a single violation.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

strict_rfc821_envelopes (default: no)

       Require  that  addresses received in SMTP MAIL FROM and RCPT TO commands are enclosed with
       <>, and that those addresses do not contain RFC 822 style comments or phrases.  This stops
       mail from poorly written software.

       By  default,  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  accepts  RFC 822 syntax in MAIL FROM and RCPT TO
       addresses.

strict_smtputf8 (default: no)

       Enable stricter enforcement of the SMTPUTF8 protocol. The Postfix SMTP server accepts UTF8
       sender or recipient addresses only when the client requests an SMTPUTF8 mail transaction.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

sun_mailtool_compatibility (default: no)

       Obsolete  SUN  mailtool  compatibility  feature.  Instead,  use  "mailbox_delivery_lock  =
       dotlock".

swap_bangpath (default: yes)

       Enable the rewriting of "site!user" into "user@site".  This is necessary if  your  machine
       is connected to UUCP networks.  It is enabled by default.

       Note:  with Postfix version 2.2, message header address rewriting happens only when one of
       the following conditions is true:

       •      The message is received with the Postfix sendmail(1) command,

       •      The   message   is    received    from    a    network    client    that    matches
              $local_header_rewrite_clients,

       •      The  message  is  received  from  the network, and the remote_header_rewrite_domain
              parameter specifies a non-empty value.

       To get the behavior before Postfix version 2.2,  specify  "local_header_rewrite_clients  =
       static:all".

       Example:

       swap_bangpath = no

syslog_facility (default: mail)

       The  syslog  facility of Postfix logging. Specify a facility as defined in syslog.conf(5).
       The default facility is "mail".

       Warning: a non-default syslog_facility setting takes effect only after a  Postfix  process
       has  completed  initialization.   Errors during process initialization will be logged with
       the default facility.  Examples are errors while parsing the command line  arguments,  and
       errors while accessing the Postfix main.cf configuration file.

syslog_name (default: see postconf -d output)

       A  prefix  that  is prepended to the process name in syslog records, so that, for example,
       "smtpd" becomes "prefix/smtpd".

       Warning: a non-default syslog_name setting takes effect only after a Postfix  process  has
       completed  initialization.  Errors  during  process initialization will be logged with the
       default name. Examples are errors while parsing the command  line  arguments,  and  errors
       while accessing the Postfix main.cf configuration file.

tcp_windowsize (default: 0)

       An optional workaround for routers that break TCP window scaling.  Specify a value > 0 and
       < 65536 to enable this feature.  With  Postfix  TCP  servers  (smtpd(8),  qmqpd(8)),  this
       feature is implemented by the Postfix master(8) daemon.

       To change this parameter without stopping Postfix, you need to first terminate all Postfix
       TCP servers:

           # postconf -e master_service_disable=inet
           # postfix reload

       This immediately terminates all processes that  accept  network  connections.   Next,  you
       enable Postfix TCP servers with the updated tcp_windowsize setting:

           # postconf -e tcp_windowsize=65535 master_service_disable=
           # postfix reload

       If you skip these steps with a running Postfix system, then the tcp_windowsize change will
       work only for Postfix TCP clients (smtp(8), lmtp(8)).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

tls_append_default_CA (default: no)

       Append the system-supplied  default  Certification  Authority  certificates  to  the  ones
       specified  with  *_tls_CApath or *_tls_CAfile.  The default is "no"; this prevents Postfix
       from  trusting  third-party  certificates  and   giving   them   relay   permission   with
       permit_tls_all_clientcerts.

       This  feature  is  available  in  Postfix 2.4.15, 2.5.11, 2.6.8, 2.7.2 and later versions.
       Specify "tls_append_default_CA = yes"  for  backwards  compatibility,  to  avoid  breaking
       certificate verification with sites that don't use permit_tls_all_clientcerts.

tls_config_file (default: default)

       Optional  configuration  file  with  baseline  OpenSSL  settings.   OpenSSL  loads any SSL
       settings  found  in  the  configuration  file  for  the  selected  application  name  (see
       tls_config_name)  or else the built-in application name "openssl_conf" when no application
       name is specified, or no corresponding configuration section is present.

       With OpenSSL releases 1.1.1 and  1.1.1a,  applications  (including  Postfix)  can  neither
       specify  an  alternative  configuration  file, nor avoid loading the default configuration
       file.

       With OpenSSL 1.1.1b or later, this parameter may be set to one of:

       default (default)
              Load the system-wide "openssl.cnf" configuration file.

       none (recommended, OpenSSL 1.1.1b or later only)
              This setting disables loading of  the system-wide "openssl.cnf" file.

       /absolute-path (OpenSSL 1.1.1b or later only)
              Load the configuration file specified by /absolute-path.  With this setting  it  is
              an error for the file to not contain any settings for the selected tls_config_name.
              There is no fallback to the default "openssl_conf" name.

       Failures in processing of the built-in default configuration file, are  silently  ignored.
       Any  errors in loading a non-default configuration file are detected by Postfix, and cause
       TLS support to be disabled.

       The OpenSSL configuration file format is not documented here, beyond giving two examples.

       Example: Default settings for all applications.

           # The name 'openssl_conf' is the default application name
           # The section name to the right of the '=' sign is arbitrary,
           # any name will do, so long as it refers to the desired section.
           #
           # The name 'system_default' selects the settings applied internally
           # by the SSL library as part of SSL object creation.  Applications
           # can then apply any additional settings of their choice.
           #
           # In this example, TLS versions prior to 1.2 are disabled by default.
           #
           openssl_conf = system_wide_settings
           [system_wide_settings]
           ssl_conf = ssl_library_settings
           [ssl_library_settings]
           system_default = initial_ssl_settings
           [initial_ssl_settings]
           MinProtocol = TLSv1.2

       Example: Custom settings for an application named "postfix".

           # The mapping from an application name to the corresponding configuration
           # section must appear near the top of the file, (in what is sometimes called
           # the "default section") prior to the start of any explicitly named
           # "[sections]".  The named sections can appear in any order and don't nest.
           #
           postfix = postfix_settings
           [postfix_settings]
           ssl_conf = postfix_ssl_settings
           [postfix_ssl_settings]
           system_default = baseline_postfix_settings
           [baseline_postfix_settings]
           MinProtocol = TLSv1

       This feature is available in Postfix >= 3.9, 3.8.1, 3.7.6, 3.6.10, and 3.5.20.

tls_config_name (default: empty)

       The application name passed by Postfix to OpenSSL library initialization functions.   This
       name  is  used  to select the desired configuration "section" in the OpenSSL configuration
       file specified via the tls_config_file parameter.  When empty, or when the  selected  name
       is not present in the configuration file, the default application name ("openssl_conf") is
       used as a fallback.

       This feature is available in Postfix >= 3.9.

tls_daemon_random_bytes (default: 32)

       The number of pseudo-random bytes that an smtp(8) or smtpd(8) process  requests  from  the
       tlsmgr(8) server in order to seed its internal pseudo random number generator (PRNG).  The
       default of 32 bytes (equivalent to 256 bits)  is  sufficient  to  generate  a  128bit  (or
       168bit) session key.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

tls_dane_digest_agility (default: on)

       Configure RFC7671 DANE TLSA digest algorithm agility.  Do not change this setting from its
       default value.

       See Section 8 of RFC7671 for correct key rotation procedures.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 through 3.1.  Postfix 3.2 and later ignore  this
       configuration parameter and behave as though it were set to "on".

tls_dane_digests (default: sha512 sha256)

       DANE TLSA (RFC 6698, RFC 7671, RFC 7672) resource-record "matching type" digest algorithms
       in descending preference order.  All the specified algorithms must  be  supported  by  the
       underlying  OpenSSL  library, otherwise the Postfix SMTP client will not support DANE TLSA
       security.

       Specify a list of digest names separated by commas and/or whitespace.   Each  digest  name
       may  be  followed by an optional "=<number>" suffix.  For example, "sha512" may instead be
       specified as "sha512=2" and "sha256" may instead be specified as "sha256=1".  The optional
       number                  must                  match                 the                 <a
       href="https://www.iana.org/assignments/dane-parameters/dane-parameters.xhtml#matching-types"
       >IANA  assigned  TLSA  matching type number the algorithm in question.  Postfix will check
       this constraint for the algorithms it knows about.  Additional  matching  type  algorithms
       registered  with  IANA  can  be added with explicit numbers provided they are supported by
       OpenSSL.

       Invalid list elements are logged with a warning and disable DANE support.  TLSA  RRs  that
       specify digests not included in the list are ignored with a warning.

       Note: It is unwise to omit sha256 from the digest list.  This digest algorithm is the only
       mandatory to implement digest algorithm in RFC 6698, and  many  servers  are  expected  to
       publish  TLSA  records  with  just  sha256 digests.  Unless one of the standard digests is
       seriously compromised and servers have had ample time to update  their  TLSA  records  you
       should  not  omit  any  standard  digests,  just  arrange  them in order from strongest to
       weakest.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later.

tls_dane_trust_anchor_digest_enable (default: yes)

       Enable support for RFC 6698 (DANE TLSA) DNS records that contain digests of  trust-anchors
       with certificate usage "2".  Do not change this setting from its default value.

       This  feature  is available in Postfix 2.11 through 3.1.  It has been withdrawn in Postfix
       3.2, as trust-anchor TLSA records  are  now  widely  used  and  have  proved  sufficiently
       reliable.  Postfix 3.2 and later ignore this configuration parameter and behaves as though
       it were set to "yes".

tls_disable_workarounds (default: see postconf -d output)

       List or bit-mask of OpenSSL bug work-arounds to disable.

       The OpenSSL toolkit includes a set of  work-arounds  for  buggy  SSL/TLS  implementations.
       Applications,  such  as  Postfix,  that  want to maximize interoperability ask the OpenSSL
       library to enable the full set of recommended work-arounds.

       From time to time, it is discovered that a  work-around  creates  a  security  issue,  and
       should  no  longer be used. If upgrading OpenSSL to a fixed version is not an option or an
       upgrade is not available in a timely manner, or in  closed  environments  where  no  buggy
       clients  or  servers  exist,  it  may be appropriate to disable some or all of the OpenSSL
       interoperability work-arounds. This parameter specifies which bug work-arounds to disable.

       If the value of the parameter is a hexadecimal long integer starting with  "0x",  the  bug
       work-arounds  corresponding  to  the  bits  specified  in  its  value are removed from the
       SSL_OP_ALL work-around bit-mask (see openssl/ssl.h and  SSL_CTX_set_options(3)).  You  can
       specify  more  bits  than  are  present in SSL_OP_ALL, excess bits are ignored. Specifying
       0xFFFFFFFF disables all bug-workarounds on a 32-bit system. This should also be sufficient
       on  64-bit systems, until OpenSSL abandons support for 32-bit systems and starts using the
       high 32 bits of a 64-bit bug-workaround mask.

       Otherwise, the parameter is a white-space or comma separated list of  specific  named  bug
       work-arounds chosen from the list below. It is possible that your OpenSSL version includes
       new bug work-arounds added after your Postfix source code was last updated, in  that  case
       you can only disable one of these via the hexadecimal syntax above.

       CRYPTOPRO_TLSEXT_BUG
              New with GOST support in OpenSSL 1.0.0.

       DONT_INSERT_EMPTY_FRAGMENTS
              See SSL_CTX_set_options(3)

       LEGACY_SERVER_CONNECT
              See SSL_CTX_set_options(3)

       MICROSOFT_BIG_SSLV3_BUFFER
              See SSL_CTX_set_options(3)

       MICROSOFT_SESS_ID_BUG
              See SSL_CTX_set_options(3)

       MSIE_SSLV2_RSA_PADDING
              also  aliased  as  CVE-2005-2969.  Postfix 2.8 disables this work-around by default
              with OpenSSL versions that may predate the fix. Fixed in OpenSSL 0.9.7h and OpenSSL
              0.9.8a.

       NETSCAPE_CHALLENGE_BUG
              See SSL_CTX_set_options(3)

       NETSCAPE_REUSE_CIPHER_CHANGE_BUG
              also  aliased  as  CVE-2010-4180.  Postfix 2.8 disables this work-around by default
              with OpenSSL versions that may predate the fix. Fixed in OpenSSL 0.9.8q and OpenSSL
              1.0.0c.

       SSLEAY_080_CLIENT_DH_BUG
              See SSL_CTX_set_options(3)

       SSLREF2_REUSE_CERT_TYPE_BUG
              See SSL_CTX_set_options(3)

       TLS_BLOCK_PADDING_BUG
              See SSL_CTX_set_options(3)

       TLS_D5_BUG
              See SSL_CTX_set_options(3)

       TLS_ROLLBACK_BUG
              See  SSL_CTX_set_options(3).   This  is disabled in OpenSSL 0.9.7 and later. Nobody
              should still be using 0.9.6!

       TLSEXT_PADDING
              Postfix >= 3.4. See SSL_CTX_set_options(3).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tls_eecdh_auto_curves (default: see postconf -d output)

       The prioritized list of elliptic curves supported by the Postfix SMTP client  and  server.
       These curves are used by the Postfix SMTP server when "smtpd_tls_eecdh_grade = auto".  The
       selected curves must be implemented by OpenSSL and be standardized for  use  in  TLS  (RFC
       8422).   It  is  unwise to list only "bleeding-edge" curves supported by a small subset of
       clients.  The default list is suitable for most users.

       Postfix skips curve names that are unknown to OpenSSL, or  that  are  known  but  not  yet
       implemented.   This  makes  it  possible to "anticipate" support for curves that should be
       used once they become available.  In particular, in some OpenSSL  versions,  the  new  RFC
       8031  curves "X25519" and "X448" may be known by name, but ECDH support for either or both
       may be missing.  These curves may appear in the default  value  of  this  parameter,  even
       though they'll only be usable with later versions of OpenSSL.

       See  also  the  "tls_ffdhe_auto_groups"  parameter, which supports customizing the list of
       FFDHE groups enabled with TLS 1.3.  That setting is  introduced  with  Postfix  3.8,  when
       built against OpenSSL 3.0 or later.

       This  feature  is  available in Postfix 3.2 and later, when it is compiled and linked with
       OpenSSL 1.0.2 or later on platforms where EC algorithms have  not  been  disabled  by  the
       vendor.

tls_eecdh_strong_curve (default: prime256v1)

       The  elliptic curve used by the Postfix SMTP server for sensibly strong ephemeral ECDH key
       exchange. This curve is used by the Postfix  SMTP  server  when  "smtpd_tls_eecdh_grade  =
       strong".  The  phrase "sensibly strong" means approximately 128-bit security based on best
       known attacks. The  selected  curve  must  be  implemented  by  OpenSSL  (as  reported  by
       ecparam(1)  with  the  "-list_curves"  option)  and be one of the curves listed in Section
       5.1.1 of RFC 8422. You should not generally  change  this  setting.   Remote  SMTP  client
       implementations  must  support  this  curve  for  EECDH key exchange to take place.  It is
       unwise to choose only "bleeding-edge" curves supported by only a small subset of clients.

       The default "strong" curve is rated in NSA  Suite  B  for  information  classified  up  to
       SECRET.

       Note:  elliptic  curve  names  are  poorly  standardized;  different  standards groups are
       assigning different names to the same underlying curves.  The curve with  the  X9.62  name
       "prime256v1" is also known under the SECG name "secp256r1", but OpenSSL does not recognize
       the latter name.

       If you want to take maximal advantage of  ciphers  that  offer  forward  secrecy  see  the
       Getting  started  section  of  FORWARD_SECRECY_README.   The  full  document  conveniently
       presents all information about Postfix "perfect" forward secrecy  support  in  one  place:
       what  forward  secrecy  is,  how  to  tweak  settings, and what you can expect to see when
       Postfix uses ciphers with forward secrecy.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later, when it is compiled  and  linked  with
       OpenSSL  1.0.0  or  later  on  platforms where EC algorithms have not been disabled by the
       vendor.

tls_eecdh_ultra_curve (default: secp384r1)

       The elliptic curve used by the Postfix SMTP server for maximally strong ephemeral ECDH key
       exchange.  This  curve  is  used  by the Postfix SMTP server when "smtpd_tls_eecdh_grade =
       ultra". The phrase "maximally strong" means approximately 192-bit security based  on  best
       known  attacks.   This additional strength comes at a significant computational cost, most
       users should instead set "smtpd_tls_eecdh_grade = strong".  The  selected  curve  must  be
       implemented  by  OpenSSL (as reported by ecparam(1) with the "-list_curves" option) and be
       one of the curves listed in Section 5.1.1 of RFC 8422. You  should  not  generally  change
       this  setting.   Remote  SMTP client implementations must support this curve for EECDH key
       exchange to take place.  It is unwise to choose only "bleeding-edge" curves  supported  by
       only a small subset of clients.

       This  default  "ultra"  curve is rated in NSA Suite B for information classified up to TOP
       SECRET.

       If you want to take maximal advantage of  ciphers  that  offer  forward  secrecy  see  the
       Getting  started  section  of  FORWARD_SECRECY_README.   The  full  document  conveniently
       presents all information about Postfix "perfect" forward secrecy  support  in  one  place:
       what  forward  secrecy  is,  how  to  tweak  settings, and what you can expect to see when
       Postfix uses ciphers with forward secrecy.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later, when it is compiled  and  linked  with
       OpenSSL  1.0.0  or  later  on  platforms where EC algorithms have not been disabled by the
       vendor.

tls_export_cipherlist (default: see postconf -d output)

       The OpenSSL cipherlist for "export" or higher grade ciphers.  Ignored as of  Postfix  3.8.
       In  earlier  Postfix  releases  this  defined  the  meaning  of  the  "export"  setting in
       smtpd_tls_ciphers,             smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers,              smtp_tls_ciphers,
       smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers,  lmtp_tls_ciphers,  and  lmtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers.   You are
       strongly encouraged not to change this setting.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

tls_fast_shutdown_enable (default: yes)

       A workaround for implementations that hang Postfix while  shutting  down  a  TLS  session,
       until  Postfix times out. With this enabled, Postfix will not wait for the remote TLS peer
       to respond to a TLS 'close' notification. This behavior is  recommended  for  TLSv1.0  and
       later.

tls_ffdhe_auto_groups (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  prioritized list of finite-field Diffie-Hellman ephemeral (FFDHE) key exchange groups
       supported by the Postfix SMTP client and server.  OpenSSL 3.0 adds support for  FFDHE  key
       agreement  in  TLS  1.3.  In OpenSSL 1.1.1, TLS 1.3 was only supported with elliptic-curve
       based key agreement.  The "tls_ffdhe_auto_groups" parameter makes it possible to configure
       the  list of FFDHE groups that the Postfix client or server will enable in OpenSSL 3.0 and
       up.  This parameter has no effect when Postfix is built against earlier OpenSSL versions.

       The default list of FFDHE groups that Postfix enables in OpenSSL 3.0 and up includes  just
       the  2048  and  3072-bit groups.  Stronger FFDHE groups perform poorly and EC groups are a
       much better choice for the same security level.  Postfix  ignores  group  names  that  are
       unknown  to  OpenSSL,  or  that  are  known but not yet implemented.  The FFDHE groups are
       largely a backup, in case some peer does not support EC key exchange, or EC  key  exchange
       needs to be disabled for some pressing reason.

       Setting  this  parameter  empty  disables  FFDHE  support  in  TLS 1.3.  Whether FFDHE key
       agreement is enabled in TLS 1.2 and earlier depends on whether any of the  "kDHE"  ciphers
       are included in the cipherlist.

       Conversely,  setting  "tls_eecdh_auto_curves"  empty  disables TLS 1.3 EC key agreement in
       OpenSSL  3.0  and  later.   Note  that  at  least  one  of   "tls_eecdh_auto_curves"   and
       "tls_ffdhe_auto_groups"  must  be non-empty, this is required by OpenSSL 3.0.  If both are
       inadvertently set empty, Postfix will fall back to the compiled-in defaults.

       All the default groups and EC curves should sufficiently  strong  to  make  "pruning"  the
       defaults unwise.  At a minimum, "X25519" and "P-256" (a.k.a. "prime256v1") should be among
       the enabled EC curves, while "dhe2048" and "dhe3072" should be among the FFDHE groups.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.8 and later, when it is compiled  and  linked  with
       OpenSSL 3.0 or later.

tls_high_cipherlist (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  OpenSSL  cipherlist  for "high" grade ciphers. This defines the meaning of the "high"
       setting    in    smtpd_tls_ciphers,     smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers,     smtp_tls_ciphers,
       smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers,  lmtp_tls_ciphers,  and  lmtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers.  You  are
       strongly encouraged not to change this setting.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

tls_legacy_public_key_fingerprints (default: no)

       A temporary migration aid for sites that  use  certificate  public-key  fingerprints  with
       Postfix  2.9.0..2.9.5,  which  use an incorrect algorithm. This parameter has no effect on
       the certificate fingerprint support that is available since Postfix 2.2.

       Specify "tls_legacy_public_key_fingerprints = yes" temporarily, pending a  migration  from
       configuration  files  with  incorrect  Postfix  2.9.0..2.9.5 certificate public-key finger
       prints, to the correct fingerprints used by Postfix  2.9.6  and  later.   To  compute  the
       correct certificate public-key fingerprints, see TLS_README.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.9.6 and later.

tls_low_cipherlist (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  OpenSSL cipherlist for "low" or higher grade ciphers.  Ignored as of Postfix 3.8.  In
       earlier  Postfix  releases  this  defined  the   meaning   of   the   "low"   setting   in
       smtpd_tls_ciphers,              smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers,             smtp_tls_ciphers,
       smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers,  lmtp_tls_ciphers,  and  lmtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers.  You  are
       strongly encouraged not to change this setting.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

tls_medium_cipherlist (default: see postconf -d output)

       The  OpenSSL  cipherlist for "medium" or higher grade ciphers. This defines the meaning of
       the "medium" setting in smtpd_tls_ciphers, smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers,  smtp_tls_ciphers,
       smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers, lmtp_tls_ciphers, and lmtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers.  This is the
       default cipherlist for mandatory TLS encryption in the TLS client (with anonymous  ciphers
       disabled  when  verifying  server  certificates).   This  is  the  default  cipherlist for
       opportunistic TLS with Postfix releases after  the  middle  of  2015.   You  are  strongly
       encouraged not to change this setting.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

tls_null_cipherlist (default: eNULL:!aNULL)

       The  OpenSSL  cipherlist  for  "NULL"  grade  ciphers  that provide authentication without
       encryption. This defines the meaning of the "null" setting in smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers,
       smtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers  and  lmtp_tls_mandatory_ciphers.   You are strongly encouraged
       not to change this setting.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.3 and later.

tls_preempt_cipherlist (default: no)

       With SSLv3 and later, use the Postfix SMTP server's cipher preference order instead of the
       remote client's cipher preference order.

       By  default, the OpenSSL server selects the client's most preferred cipher that the server
       supports. With SSLv3 and later, the server may choose its own most preferred  cipher  that
       is  supported  (offered)  by  the  client.  Setting "tls_preempt_cipherlist = yes" enables
       server cipher preferences.

       While server cipher selection may in some cases lead to a more secure or performant cipher
       choice,  there is some risk of interoperability issues. In the past, some SSL clients have
       listed lower priority ciphers that they did not implement correctly. If the server chooses
       a  cipher that the client prefers less, it may select a cipher whose client implementation
       is  flawed.  Most  notably  Windows  2003   Microsoft   Exchange   servers   have   flawed
       implementations  of DES-CBC3-SHA, which OpenSSL considers stronger than RC4-SHA.  Enabling
       server cipher-suite  selection  may  create  interoperability  issues  with  Windows  2003
       Microsoft Exchange clients.

       This  feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later, in combination with OpenSSL 0.9.7 and
       later.

tls_random_bytes (default: 32)

       The number of bytes that tlsmgr(8) reads  from  $tls_random_source  when  (re)seeding  the
       in-memory  pseudo  random number generator (PRNG) pool. The default of 32 bytes (256 bits)
       is good enough for 128bit symmetric keys.  If using EGD or a device file, a maximum of 255
       bytes is read.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

tls_random_exchange_name (default: see postconf -d output)

       Name  of  the  pseudo  random  number  generator  (PRNG)  state file that is maintained by
       tlsmgr(8). The file is created when it does not exist, and its length  is  fixed  at  1024
       bytes.

       As  of version 2.5, Postfix no longer uses root privileges when opening this file, and the
       default   file   location    was    changed    from    ${config_directory}/prng_exch    to
       ${data_directory}/prng_exch.   As  a  migration  aid,  an attempt to open the file under a
       non-Postfix directory is redirected to the Postfix-owned data_directory, and a warning  is
       logged.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

tls_random_prng_update_period (default: 3600s)

       The  time  between  attempts  by  tlsmgr(8)  to save the state of the pseudo random number
       generator (PRNG) to the file specified with $tls_random_exchange_name.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

tls_random_reseed_period (default: 3600s)

       The maximal time between attempts by tlsmgr(8) to  re-seed  the  in-memory  pseudo  random
       number  generator  (PRNG)  pool from external sources.  The actual time between re-seeding
       attempts is calculated using the PRNG, and is between 0 and the time specified.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

tls_random_source (default: see postconf -d output)

       The external entropy source for the in-memory tlsmgr(8)  pseudo  random  number  generator
       (PRNG)  pool.  Be  sure to specify a non-blocking source.  If this source is not a regular
       file, the entropy source type must be prepended:   egd:/path/to/egd_socket  for  a  source
       with EGD compatible socket interface, or dev:/path/to/device for a device file.

       Note:  on  OpenBSD  systems  specify  dev:/dev/arandom when dev:/dev/urandom gives timeout
       errors.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.

tls_server_sni_maps (default: empty)

       Optional lookup tables that map names received from remote SMTP clients via the TLS Server
       Name  Indication  (SNI)  extension  to  the appropriate keys and certificate chains.  This
       parameter is implemented in the Postfix TLS library, and applies to both smtpd(8) and  the
       SMTP server mode of tlsproxy(8).

       When  this  parameter  is  non-empty,  the  Postfix  SMTP  server  enables  SNI  extension
       processing, and logs SNI values that are invalid or don't match an entry in the  specified
       tables.   When  an  entry  does  match,  the  SNI name is logged as part of the connection
       summary at log levels 1 and higher.

       The lookup key is either the verbatim SNI domain name or an ancestor domain prefixed  with
       a leading dot.  For internationalized domains, the lookup key must be in IDNA 2008 A-label
       form (as required in the TLS SNI extension).

       The syntax of the lookup value is the same as with the smtp_tls_chain_files parameter (see
       there for additional details), but here scoped to just TLS connections in which the client
       sends a matching SNI domain name.

       Example:

           /etc/postfix/main.cf:
               #
               # The indexed SNI table must be created with "postmap -F"
               #
               indexed = ${default_database_type}:${config_directory}/
               tls_server_sni_maps = ${indexed}sni

           /etc/postfix/sni:
               #
               # The example.com domain has both an RSA and ECDSA certificate
               # chain.  The chain files MUST start with the private key,
               # with the certificate chain next, starting with the leaf
               # (server) certificate, and then the issuer certificates.
               #
               example.com /etc/postfix/sni-chains/rsa2048.example.com.pem,
                           /etc/postfix/sni-chains/ecdsa-p256.example.com.pem
               #
               # The example.net domain has a wildcard certificate, and two
               # additional DNS names.  So its certificate chain is also used
               # with any subdomain, plus the additional names.
               #
               example.net /etc/postfix/sni-chains/example.net.pem
               .example.net /etc/postfix/sni-chains/example.net.pem
               example.info /etc/postfix/sni-chains/example.net.pem
               example.org /etc/postfix/sni-chains/example.net.pem

       Note that the SNI lookup tables should also have entries for the domains  that  correspond
       to  the  Postfix  SMTP  server's default certificate(s). This ensures that the remote SMTP
       client's TLS SNI extension gets a positive response when it specifies one of  the  Postfix
       SMTP  server's  default  domains, and ensures that the Postfix SMTP server will not log an
       SNI name mismatch for such a domain.  The Postfix SMTP server's default  certificates  are
       then  only  used  when the client sends no SNI or when it sends SNI with a domain that the
       server knows no certificate(s) for.

       The mapping from an SNI domain name to a certificate chain  is  indirect.   In  the  input
       source  files  for  "cdb",  "hash",  "btree" or other tables that are converted to on-disk
       indexed files via postmap(1), the value specified for each key is  a  list  of  filenames.
       When postmap(1) is used with the -F option, the generated table stores for each lookup key
       the base64-encoded contents of the associated files.  When  querying  tables  via  postmap
       -Fq,  the  table  value is decoded from base64, yielding the original file content, plus a
       new line.

       With "regexp",  "pcre",  "inline",  "texthash",  "static"  and  similar  tables  that  are
       interpreted at run-time, and don't have a separate source format, the table value is again
       a list files, that are loaded into memory when the table is opened.

       With tables whose content is managed outside of Postfix, such as LDAP, MySQL,  PostgreSQL,
       socketmap  and  tcp,  the  value  must  be  a  concatenation  of  the desired PEM keys and
       certificate chains, that is then further encoded to yield  a  single-line  base64  string.
       Creation  of  such tables and secure storage (the value includes private key material) are
       outside the responsibility of Postfix.

       With "socketmap" and "tcp" the data will be transmitted in the  clear,  and  there  is  no
       query access control, so these are generally unsuitable for storing SNI chains.  With LDAP
       and SQL, you should restrict read access and use TLS to  protect  the  sensitive  data  in
       transit.

       Typically  there  is  only one private key and its chain of certificates starting with the
       "leaf" certificate  corresponding  to  that  key,  and  continuing  with  the  appropriate
       intermediate issuer CA certificates, with each certificate ideally followed by its issuer.
       Servers that have keys and certificates for more than one algorithm (e.g.  both an RSA key
       and  an  ECDSA  key,  or even RSA, ECDSA and Ed25519) can use multiple chains concatenated
       together, with the key always listed before the corresponding certificates.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tls_session_ticket_cipher (default: Postfix >= 3.0: aes-256-cbc, Postfix < 3.0: aes-128-cbc)

       Algorithm used to encrypt RFC5077 TLS session tickets.  This algorithm must use CBC  mode,
       have  a  128-bit  block  size,  and  must have a key length between 128 and 256 bits.  The
       default is aes-256-cbc.  Overriding  the  default  to  choose  a  different  algorithm  is
       discouraged.

       Setting  this  parameter empty disables session ticket support in the Postfix SMTP server.
       Another way to disable session ticket support is via the tls_ssl_options parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

tls_ssl_options (default: empty)

       List or bit-mask of OpenSSL options to enable.

       The OpenSSL toolkit provides a set of options that applications can  enable  to  tune  the
       OpenSSL  behavior.   Some of these work around bugs in other implementations and are on by
       default.  You can use the tls_disable_workarounds parameter to selectively disable some or
       all   of   the   bug   work-arounds,   making   OpenSSL   more   strict  at  the  cost  of
       non-interoperability with SSL clients or servers that exhibit the bugs.

       Other options are off by default, and typically enable or disable features rather than bug
       work-arounds.   These may be turned on (with care) via the tls_ssl_options parameter.  The
       value is a white-space or comma separated list of  named  options  chosen  from  the  list
       below.  The names are not case-sensitive, you can use lower-case if you prefer.  The upper
       case values below match the corresponding macro name in the ssl.h  header  file  with  the
       SSL_OP_  prefix  removed.   It  is possible that your OpenSSL version includes new options
       added after your Postfix source code was last updated, in that case you  can  only  enable
       one of these via the hexadecimal syntax below.

       You  should  only  enable  features  via the hexadecimal mask when the need to control the
       feature is critical (to deal with  a  new  vulnerability  or  a  serious  interoperability
       problem).  Postfix DOES NOT promise backwards compatible behavior with respect to the mask
       bits.  A feature enabled via the mask in one release may be enabled by other  means  in  a
       later  release,  and the mask bit will then be ignored.  Therefore, use of the hexadecimal
       mask is only a temporary measure until a new Postfix or OpenSSL release provides a  better
       solution.

       If  the  value  of  the  parameter  is  a hexadecimal long integer starting with "0x", the
       options corresponding to the bits specified in its value are  enabled  (see  openssl/ssl.h
       and  SSL_CTX_set_options(3)).  You can only enable options not already controlled by other
       Postfix settings.  For example, you cannot  disable  protocols  or  enable  server  cipher
       preference.   Do  not  attempt  to  enable  all features by specifying 0xFFFFFFFF, this is
       unlikely to be a good idea.  Some bug work-arounds are also valid here, allowing  them  to
       be re-enabled if/when they're no longer enabled by default.  The supported values include:

       ENABLE_MIDDLEBOX_COMPAT
              Postfix >= 3.4. See SSL_CTX_set_options(3).

       LEGACY_SERVER_CONNECT
              See SSL_CTX_set_options(3).

       NO_TICKET
              Enabled  by default when needed in fully-patched Postfix >= 2.7.  Not needed at all
              for Postfix >= 2.11, unless for some reason you do not want to support TLS  session
              resumption.  Best not set explicitly.  See SSL_CTX_set_options(3).

       NO_COMPRESSION
              Disable  SSL  compression even if supported by the OpenSSL library.  Compression is
              CPU-intensive, and compression before encryption does not always improve security.

       NO_RENEGOTIATION
              Postfix >= 3.4.  This can reduce  opportunities  for  a  potential  CPU  exhaustion
              attack.  See SSL_CTX_set_options(3).

       NO_SESSION_RESUMPTION_ON_RENEGOTIATION
              Postfix >= 3.4. See SSL_CTX_set_options(3).

       PRIORITIZE_CHACHA
              Postfix >= 3.4. See SSL_CTX_set_options(3).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later.

tls_wildcard_matches_multiple_labels (default: yes)

       Match multiple DNS labels with "*" in wildcard certificates.

       Some  mail  service  providers prepend the customer domain name to a base domain for which
       they have a wildcard TLS certificate.  For example, the MX records for example.com  hosted
       by example.net may be:

           example.com. IN MX 0 example.com.mx1.example.net.
           example.com. IN MX 0 example.com.mx2.example.net.

       and the TLS certificate may be for "*.example.net". The "*" then corresponds with multiple
       labels in the mail server  domain  name.   While  multi-label  wildcards  are  not  widely
       supported,  and  are  not  blessed  by  any  standard,  there  is  little  to be gained by
       disallowing their use in this context.

       Notes:

       •      In a certificate name, the "*" is special only when it is used as the first label.

       •      While Postfix (2.11 or later) can match "*" with multiple domain name labels, other
              implementations likely will not.

       •      Earlier  Postfix implementations behave as if "tls_wildcard_matches_multiple_labels
              = no".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later.

tlsmgr_service_name (default: tlsmgr)

       The name of the tlsmgr(8) service entry in master.cf. This service maintains  TLS  session
       caches and other information in support of TLS.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.11 and later.

tlsproxy_client_CAfile (default: $smtp_tls_CAfile)

       A  file  containing  CA  certificates of root CAs trusted to sign either remote TLS server
       certificates or intermediate CA certificates.  See smtp_tls_CAfile for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_CApath (default: $smtp_tls_CApath)

       Directory  with  PEM  format  Certification  Authority  certificates  that   the   Postfix
       tlsproxy(8) client uses to verify a remote TLS server certificate. See smtp_tls_CApath for
       further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_cert_file (default: $smtp_tls_cert_file)

       File  with  the  Postfix  tlsproxy(8)  client  RSA  certificate   in   PEM   format.   See
       smtp_tls_cert_file  for  further  details.  The preferred way to configure tlsproxy client
       keys and certificates is via the "tlsproxy_client_chain_files" parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_chain_files (default: $smtp_tls_chain_files)

       Files with the Postfix tlsproxy(8) client keys and certificate chains in PEM  format.  See
       smtp_tls_chain_files for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_dcert_file (default: $smtp_tls_dcert_file)

       File   with   the   Postfix   tlsproxy(8)  client  DSA  certificate  in  PEM  format.  See
       smtp_tls_dcert_file for further details. DSA is obsolete and should not be used.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_dkey_file (default: $smtp_tls_dkey_file)

       File  with  the  Postfix  tlsproxy(8)  client  DSA  private  key  in   PEM   format.   See
       smtp_tls_dkey_file for further details. DSA is obsolete and should not be used.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_eccert_file (default: $smtp_tls_eccert_file)

       File   with   the  Postfix  tlsproxy(8)  client  ECDSA  certificate  in  PEM  format.  See
       smtp_tls_eccert_file for further details. The preferred way to configure  tlsproxy  client
       keys and certificates is via the "tlsproxy_client_chain_files" parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_eckey_file (default: $smtp_tls_eckey_file)

       File   with  the  Postfix  tlsproxy(8)  client  ECDSA  private  key  in  PEM  format.  See
       smtp_tls_eckey_file for further details.  The preferred way to configure  tlsproxy  client
       keys and certificates is via the "tlsproxy_client_chain_files" parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_enforce_tls (default: $smtp_enforce_tls)

       Enforcement  mode: require that SMTP servers use TLS encryption.  See smtp_enforce_tls for
       further details. Use tlsproxy_client_security_level instead.

       This feature is deprecated  as  of  Postfix  3.9.  Specify  tlsproxy_client_security_level
       instead.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_fingerprint_digest (default: $smtp_tls_fingerprint_digest)

       The message digest algorithm used to construct remote TLS server certificate fingerprints.
       See smtp_tls_fingerprint_digest for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_key_file (default: $smtp_tls_key_file)

       File  with  the  Postfix  tlsproxy(8)  client  RSA  private  key  in   PEM   format.   See
       smtp_tls_key_file for further details. The preferred way to configure tlsproxy client keys
       and certificates is via the "tlsproxy_client_chain_files" parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_level (default: $smtp_tls_security_level)

       The   default   TLS   security   level   for   the   Postfix   tlsproxy(8)   client.   See
       smtp_tls_security_level for further details.

       This    feature   is   available   in   Postfix   3.4   -   3.6.   It   was   renamed   to
       tlsproxy_client_security_level in Postfix 3.7.

tlsproxy_client_loglevel (default: $smtp_tls_loglevel)

       Enable  additional   Postfix   tlsproxy(8)   client   logging   of   TLS   activity.   See
       smtp_tls_loglevel for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_loglevel_parameter (default: smtp_tls_loglevel)

       The name of the parameter that provides the tlsproxy_client_loglevel value.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_per_site (default: $smtp_tls_per_site)

       Optional  lookup  tables  with the Postfix tlsproxy(8) client TLS usage policy by next-hop
       destination and by remote TLS server hostname.  See smtp_tls_per_site for further details.

       This feature is deprecated as of Postfix 3.9. Specify tlsproxy_client_policy_maps instead.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_policy (default: $smtp_tls_policy_maps)

       Optional lookup tables with the Postfix tlsproxy(8) client TLS security policy by next-hop
       destination. See smtp_tls_policy_maps for further details.

       This    feature   is   available   in   Postfix   3.4   -   3.6.   It   was   renamed   to
       tlsproxy_client_policy_maps in Postfix 3.7.

tlsproxy_client_policy_maps (default: $smtp_tls_policy_maps)

       Optional lookup tables with the Postfix tlsproxy(8) client TLS security policy by next-hop
       destination. See smtp_tls_policy_maps for further details.

       This   feature   is  available  in  Postfix  3.7  and  later.  It  was  previously  called
       tlsproxy_client_policy.

tlsproxy_client_scert_verifydepth (default: $smtp_tls_scert_verifydepth)

       The verification depth for remote TLS server certificates.  See smtp_tls_scert_verifydepth
       for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_client_security_level (default: $smtp_tls_security_level)

       The   default   TLS   security   level   for   the   Postfix   tlsproxy(8)   client.   See
       smtp_tls_security_level for further details.

       This  feature  is  available  in  Postfix  3.7  and  later.  It  was   previously   called
       tlsproxy_client_level.

tlsproxy_client_use_tls (default: $smtp_use_tls)

       Opportunistic  mode:  use TLS when a remote server announces TLS support. See smtp_use_tls
       for further details. Use tlsproxy_client_security_level instead.

       This feature is deprecated  as  of  Postfix  3.9.  Specify  tlsproxy_client_security_level
       instead.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_enforce_tls (default: $smtpd_enforce_tls)

       Mandatory  TLS: announce STARTTLS support to remote SMTP clients, and require that clients
       use    TLS    encryption.    See    smtpd_enforce_tls    for    further    details.    Use
       tlsproxy_tls_security_level instead.

       This feature is deprecated as of Postfix 3.9. Specify tlsproxy_tls_security_level instead.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_service_name (default: tlsproxy)

       The  name  of  the tlsproxy(8) service entry in master.cf. This service performs plaintext
       <=> TLS ciphertext conversion.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_CAfile (default: $smtpd_tls_CAfile)

       A file containing (PEM format) CA certificates of root CAs trusted to sign  either  remote
       SMTP  client  certificates  or  intermediate  CA  certificates.   See smtpd_tls_CAfile for
       further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_CApath (default: $smtpd_tls_CApath)

       A directory containing (PEM format) CA certificates of root CAs  trusted  to  sign  either
       remote  SMTP client certificates or intermediate CA certificates. See smtpd_tls_CApath for
       further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_always_issue_session_ids (default: $smtpd_tls_always_issue_session_ids)

       Force the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server to issue a TLS session  id,  even  when  TLS  session
       caching is turned off. See smtpd_tls_always_issue_session_ids for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_ask_ccert (default: $smtpd_tls_ask_ccert)

       Ask  a  remote  SMTP  client for a client certificate. See smtpd_tls_ask_ccert for further
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_ccert_verifydepth (default: $smtpd_tls_ccert_verifydepth)

       The verification depth for remote SMTP client certificates. A depth of 1 is sufficient  if
       the  issuing  CA is listed in a local CA file. See smtpd_tls_ccert_verifydepth for further
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_cert_file (default: $smtpd_tls_cert_file)

       File with the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server RSA certificate in PEM  format.   This  file  may
       also  contain the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server private RSA key.  See smtpd_tls_cert_file for
       further details.  With Postfix >= 3.4 the preferred way to configure tlsproxy server  keys
       and certificates is via the "tlsproxy_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_chain_files (default: $smtpd_tls_chain_files)

       Files  with  the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server keys and certificate chains in PEM format. See
       smtpd_tls_chain_files for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.4 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_ciphers (default: $smtpd_tls_ciphers)

       The  minimum  TLS  cipher  grade  that  the  Postfix  tlsproxy(8)  server  will  use  with
       opportunistic TLS encryption. See smtpd_tls_ciphers for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_dcert_file (default: $smtpd_tls_dcert_file)

       File  with  the  Postfix  tlsproxy(8) server DSA certificate in PEM format.  This file may
       also contain the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server private DSA key.  DSA is obsolete  and  should
       not be used.  See smtpd_tls_dcert_file for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_dh1024_param_file (default: $smtpd_tls_dh1024_param_file)

       File with DH parameters that the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server should use with non-export EDH
       ciphers. See smtpd_tls_dh1024_param_file for further details.

       This feature is deprecated as of Postfix 3.9. Do not specify.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_dh512_param_file (default: $smtpd_tls_dh512_param_file)

       File with DH parameters that the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server should use  with  export-grade
       EDH  ciphers. See smtpd_tls_dh512_param_file for further details.  The default SMTP server
       cipher grade is "medium" with Postfix releases after the middle of 2015, and as  a  result
       export-grade cipher suites are by default not used.

       With  Postfix  >= 3.6 export-grade Diffie-Hellman key exchange is no longer supported, and
       this parameter is silently ignored.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_dkey_file (default: $smtpd_tls_dkey_file)

       File with the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server DSA private key in PEM format.  This file may  be
       combined  with  the  Postfix  tlsproxy(8)  server  DSA  certificate  file  specified  with
       $smtpd_tls_dcert_file.  DSA is obsolete and should not be used.   See  smtpd_tls_dkey_file
       for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_eccert_file (default: $smtpd_tls_eccert_file)

       File  with  the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server ECDSA certificate in PEM format.  This file may
       also contain the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server private ECDSA key.  See  smtpd_tls_eccert_file
       for  further  details.  With Postfix >= 3.4 the preferred way to configure tlsproxy server
       keys and certificates is via the "tlsproxy_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_eckey_file (default: $smtpd_tls_eckey_file)

       File with the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server ECDSA private key in PEM format.  This  file  may
       be  combined  with  the  Postfix  tlsproxy(8) server ECDSA certificate file specified with
       $smtpd_tls_eccert_file.  See smtpd_tls_eckey_file for further details.   With  Postfix  >=
       3.4  the  preferred  way  to  configure  tlsproxy  server keys and certificates is via the
       "tlsproxy_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_eecdh_grade (default: $smtpd_tls_eecdh_grade)

       The Postfix tlsproxy(8) server security grade for ephemeral elliptic-curve  Diffie-Hellman
       (EECDH) key exchange. See smtpd_tls_eecdh_grade for further details.

       This feature is deprecated as of Postfix 3.9. Do not specify.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_enable_rpk (default: $smtpd_tls_enable_rpk)

       Request  that  remote  SMTP  clients  send  an  RFC7250 raw public key instead of an X.509
       certificate, when asking or requiring client authentication. See $smtpd_tls_enable_rpk for
       details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.9 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_exclude_ciphers (default: $smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers)

       List  of ciphers or cipher types to exclude from the tlsproxy(8) server cipher list at all
       TLS security levels. See smtpd_tls_exclude_ciphers for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_fingerprint_digest (default: $smtpd_tls_fingerprint_digest)

       The message digest algorithm to construct remote SMTP client-certificate fingerprints. See
       smtpd_tls_fingerprint_digest for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_key_file (default: $smtpd_tls_key_file)

       File  with the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server RSA private key in PEM format.  This file may be
       combined  with  the  Postfix  tlsproxy(8)  server  RSA  certificate  file  specified  with
       $smtpd_tls_cert_file.   See  smtpd_tls_key_file  for further details.  With Postfix >= 3.4
       the preferred  way  to  configure  tlsproxy  server  keys  and  certificates  is  via  the
       "tlsproxy_tls_chain_files" parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_loglevel (default: $smtpd_tls_loglevel)

       Enable  additional Postfix tlsproxy(8) server logging of TLS activity.  Each logging level
       also  includes  the  information  that  is  logged  at  a   lower   logging   level.   See
       smtpd_tls_loglevel for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_mandatory_ciphers (default: $smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers)

       The  minimum  TLS cipher grade that the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server will use with mandatory
       TLS encryption. See smtpd_tls_mandatory_ciphers for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers (default: $smtpd_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers)

       Additional list of ciphers or cipher types to exclude from the tlsproxy(8)  server  cipher
       list  at  mandatory  TLS  security  levels.   See  smtpd_tls_mandatory_exclude_ciphers for
       further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_mandatory_protocols (default: $smtpd_tls_mandatory_protocols)

       The SSL/TLS protocols accepted by  the  Postfix  tlsproxy(8)  server  with  mandatory  TLS
       encryption.  If  the  list  is  empty,  the server supports all available SSL/TLS protocol
       versions.  See smtpd_tls_mandatory_protocols for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_protocols (default: $smtpd_tls_protocols)

       List of TLS protocols that the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server will  exclude  or  include  with
       opportunistic TLS encryption. See smtpd_tls_protocols for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_req_ccert (default: $smtpd_tls_req_ccert)

       With  mandatory  TLS encryption, require a trusted remote SMTP client certificate in order
       to allow TLS connections to proceed.  See smtpd_tls_req_ccert for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_security_level (default: $smtpd_tls_security_level)

       The SMTP TLS security level for the Postfix tlsproxy(8) server; when a non-empty value  is
       specified, this overrides the obsolete parameters smtpd_use_tls and smtpd_enforce_tls. See
       smtpd_tls_security_level for further details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_tls_session_cache_timeout (default: $smtpd_tls_session_cache_timeout)

       Obsolete expiration time of Postfix tlsproxy(8)  server  TLS  session  cache  information.
       Since  the  cache  is  shared  with  smtpd(8)  and managed by tlsmgr(8), there is only one
       expiration  time  for  the  SMTP  server  cache  shared  by  all  three  services,  namely
       smtpd_tls_session_cache_timeout.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_use_tls (default: $smtpd_use_tls)

       Opportunistic  TLS:  announce  STARTTLS support to remote SMTP clients, but do not require
       that  clients  use  TLS  encryption.  See   smtpd_use_tls   for   further   details.   Use
       tlsproxy_tls_security_level instead.

       This feature is deprecated as of Postfix 3.9. Specify tlsproxy_tls_security_level instead.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later.

tlsproxy_watchdog_timeout (default: 10s)

       How  much  time a tlsproxy(8) process may take to process local or remote I/O before it is
       terminated by a built-in watchdog  timer.   This  is  a  safety  mechanism  that  prevents
       tlsproxy(8)  from  becoming  non-responsive  due  to  a bug in Postfix itself or in system
       software.  To avoid false alarms and unnecessary cache corruption this limit cannot be set
       under 10s.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.8 and later

trace_service_name (default: trace)

       The  name  of  the  trace service. This service is implemented by the bounce(8) daemon and
       maintains a record of mail deliveries and produces a mail  delivery  report  when  verbose
       delivery is requested with "sendmail -v".

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

transport_delivery_slot_cost (default: $default_delivery_slot_cost)

       A  transport-specific  override  for the default_delivery_slot_cost parameter value, where
       transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note: transport_delivery_slot_cost parameters will  not  show  up  in  "postconf"  command
       output  before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation applies to many parameters whose name
       is a combination of a master.cf  service  name  and  a  built-in  suffix  (in  this  case:
       "_delivery_slot_cost").

transport_delivery_slot_discount (default: $default_delivery_slot_discount)

       A  transport-specific  override  for  the  default_delivery_slot_discount parameter value,
       where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note: transport_delivery_slot_discount parameters will not show up in  "postconf"  command
       output  before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation applies to many parameters whose name
       is a combination of a master.cf  service  name  and  a  built-in  suffix  (in  this  case:
       "_delivery_slot_discount").

transport_delivery_slot_loan (default: $default_delivery_slot_loan)

       A  transport-specific  override  for the default_delivery_slot_loan parameter value, where
       transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note: transport_delivery_slot_loan parameters will  not  show  up  in  "postconf"  command
       output  before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation applies to many parameters whose name
       is a combination of a master.cf  service  name  and  a  built-in  suffix  (in  this  case:
       "_delivery_slot_loan").

transport_destination_concurrency_failed_cohort_limit (default:

       $default_destination_concurrency_failed_cohort_limit)
       A transport-specific override for the  default_destination_concurrency_failed_cohort_limit
       parameter value, where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note:  some transport_destination_concurrency_failed_cohort_limit parameters will not show
       up in "postconf" command output before Postfix version 2.9.  This  limitation  applies  to
       many  parameters  whose  name  is a combination of a master.cf service name and a built-in
       suffix (in this case: "_destination_concurrency_failed_cohort_limit").

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

transport_destination_concurrency_limit (default: $default_destination_concurrency_limit)

       A transport-specific  override  for  the  default_destination_concurrency_limit  parameter
       value, where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note:   some  transport_destination_concurrency_limit  parameters  will  not  show  up  in
       "postconf" command output before Postfix version 2.9.  This  limitation  applies  to  many
       parameters  whose  name is a combination of a master.cf service name and a built-in suffix
       (in this case: "_destination_concurrency_limit").

transport_destination_concurrency_negative_feedback (default:

       $default_destination_concurrency_negative_feedback)
       A  transport-specific  override  for the default_destination_concurrency_negative_feedback
       parameter value, where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note: some transport_destination_concurrency_negative_feedback parameters will not show up
       in  "postconf" command output before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation applies to many
       parameters whose name is a combination of a master.cf service name and a  built-in  suffix
       (in this case: "_destination_concurrency_negative_feedback").

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

transport_destination_concurrency_positive_feedback (default:

       $default_destination_concurrency_positive_feedback)
       A transport-specific override  for  the  default_destination_concurrency_positive_feedback
       parameter value, where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note: some transport_destination_concurrency_positive_feedback parameters will not show up
       in "postconf" command output before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation applies to  many
       parameters  whose  name is a combination of a master.cf service name and a built-in suffix
       (in this case: "_destination_concurrency_positive_feedback").

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

transport_destination_rate_delay (default: $default_destination_rate_delay)

       A transport-specific override  for  the  default_destination_rate_delay  parameter  value,
       where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note:  some  transport_destination_rate_delay  parameters  will  not show up in "postconf"
       command output before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation  applies  to  many  parameters
       whose  name  is  a  combination of a master.cf service name and a built-in suffix (in this
       case: "_destination_rate_delay").

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

transport_destination_recipient_limit (default: $default_destination_recipient_limit)

       A transport-specific override for the default_destination_recipient_limit parameter value,
       where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note: some transport_destination_recipient_limit parameters will not show up in "postconf"
       command output before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation  applies  to  many  parameters
       whose  name  is  a  combination of a master.cf service name and a built-in suffix (in this
       case: "_destination_recipient_limit").

transport_extra_recipient_limit (default: $default_extra_recipient_limit)

       A transport-specific override for the default_extra_recipient_limit parameter value, where
       transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note:  transport_extra_recipient_limit  parameters  will not show up in "postconf" command
       output before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation applies to many parameters whose  name
       is  a  combination  of  a  master.cf  service  name  and  a built-in suffix (in this case:
       "_extra_recipient_limit").

transport_initial_destination_concurrency (default: $initial_destination_concurrency)

       A transport-specific override for  the  initial_destination_concurrency  parameter  value,
       where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note:  some  transport_initial_destination_concurrency  parameters  will  not  show  up in
       "postconf" command output before Postfix version 2.9.  This  limitation  applies  to  many
       parameters  whose  name is a combination of a master.cf service name and a built-in suffix
       (in this case: "_initial_destination_concurrency").

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.5 and later.

transport_maps (default: empty)

       Optional  lookup  tables  with  mappings  from  recipient  address  to  (message  delivery
       transport, next-hop destination).  See transport(5) for syntax details.

       This  information  may override the message delivery transport and/or next-hop destination
       that  are   specified   with   $local_transport,   $virtual_transport,   $relay_transport,
       $default_transport,              $sender_dependent_relayhost_maps,             $relayhost,
       $sender_dependent_default_transport_maps, or the recipient domain.

       Specify zero or more "type:table" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or comma.  Tables
       will  be  searched in the specified order until a match is found.  If you use this feature
       with local files, run "postmap /etc/postfix/transport" after making a change.

       Pattern  matching  of  domain  names  is  controlled  by  the  presence  or   absence   of
       "transport_maps" in the parent_domain_matches_subdomains parameter value.

       For safety reasons, as of Postfix 2.3 this feature does not allow $number substitutions in
       regular expression maps.

       Examples:

       transport_maps = dbm:/etc/postfix/transport
       transport_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/transport

transport_minimum_delivery_slots (default: $default_minimum_delivery_slots)

       A transport-specific override  for  the  default_minimum_delivery_slots  parameter  value,
       where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note:  transport_minimum_delivery_slots  parameters will not show up in "postconf" command
       output before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation applies to many parameters whose  name
       is  a  combination  of  a  master.cf  service  name  and  a built-in suffix (in this case:
       "_minimum_delivery_slots").

transport_recipient_limit (default: $default_recipient_limit)

       A transport-specific override  for  the  default_recipient_limit  parameter  value,  where
       transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note:  some  transport_recipient_limit  parameters  will not show up in "postconf" command
       output before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation applies to many parameters whose  name
       is  a  combination  of  a  master.cf  service  name  and  a built-in suffix (in this case:
       "_recipient_limit").

transport_recipient_refill_delay (default: $default_recipient_refill_delay)

       A transport-specific override  for  the  default_recipient_refill_delay  parameter  value,
       where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note:  transport_recipient_refill_delay  parameters will not show up in "postconf" command
       output before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation applies to many parameters whose  name
       is  a  combination  of  a  master.cf  service  name  and  a built-in suffix (in this case:
       "_recipient_refill_delay").

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.4 and later.

transport_recipient_refill_limit (default: $default_recipient_refill_limit)

       A transport-specific override  for  the  default_recipient_refill_limit  parameter  value,
       where transport is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Note:  transport_recipient_refill_limit  parameters will not show up in "postconf" command
       output before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation applies to many parameters whose  name
       is  a  combination  of  a  master.cf  service  name  and  a built-in suffix (in this case:
       "_recipient_refill_limit").

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.4 and later.

transport_retry_time (default: 60s)

       The time between attempts by the Postfix queue manager to contact a malfunctioning message
       delivery transport.

       Specify  a  non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix that
       specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours),  d  (days),  w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

transport_time_limit (default: $command_time_limit)

       A  transport-specific override for the command_time_limit parameter value, where transport
       is the master.cf name of the message delivery transport.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       Note: transport_time_limit parameters will not show up in "postconf" command output before
       Postfix  version  2.9.   This  limitation  applies  to  many  parameters  whose  name is a
       combination  of  a  master.cf  service  name  and  a  built-in  suffix  (in   this   case:
       "_time_limit").

transport_transport_rate_delay (default: $default_transport_rate_delay)

       A  transport-specific override for the default_transport_rate_delay parameter value, where
       the initial transport in the parameter name is the master.cf name of the message  delivery
       transport.

       Specify  a  non-negative  time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter suffix
       that specifies the time unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days),
       w (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

       Note:  transport_transport_rate_delay  parameters  will  not show up in "postconf" command
       output before Postfix version 2.9.  This limitation applies to many parameters whose  name
       is  a  combination  of  a  master.cf  service  name  and  a built-in suffix (in this case:
       "_transport_rate_delay").

trigger_timeout (default: 10s)

       The time limit for sending a trigger to a Postfix daemon (for example,  the  pickup(8)  or
       qmgr(8) daemon). This time limit prevents programs from getting stuck when the mail system
       is under heavy load.

       Specify a non-zero time value (an integral value plus an optional one-letter  suffix  that
       specifies  the  time  unit).  Time units: s (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days), w
       (weeks).  The default time unit is s (seconds).

undisclosed_recipients_header (default: see postconf -d output)

       Message header that the Postfix cleanup(8) server inserts when a message contains  no  To:
       or  Cc:  message  header.  With  Postfix  2.8  and later, the default value is empty. With
       Postfix 2.4-2.7, specify an empty value to disable this feature.

       Example:

       # Default value before Postfix 2.8.
       # Note: the ":" and ";" are both required.
       undisclosed_recipients_header = To: undisclosed-recipients:;

unknown_address_reject_code (default: 450)

       The numerical response code when the Postfix SMTP server rejects  a  sender  or  recipient
       address  because  its  domain  is  unknown.   This is one of the possible replies from the
       restrictions reject_unknown_sender_domain and reject_unknown_recipient_domain.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

unknown_address_tempfail_action (default: $reject_tempfail_action)

       The    Postfix    SMTP    server's    action    when    reject_unknown_sender_domain    or
       reject_unknown_recipient_domain  fail  due to a temporary error condition. Specify "defer"
       to defer the remote SMTP client request immediately. With  the  default  "defer_if_permit"
       action,  the  Postfix  SMTP server continues to look for opportunities to reject mail, and
       defers the client request only if it would otherwise be accepted.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

unknown_client_reject_code (default: 450)

       The numerical Postfix SMTP server response code when a client without  valid  address  <=>
       name  mapping  is  rejected  by  the  reject_unknown_client_hostname restriction. The SMTP
       server always replies with 450 when the mapping failed due to a temporary error condition.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

unknown_helo_hostname_tempfail_action (default: $reject_tempfail_action)

       The Postfix  SMTP  server's  action  when  reject_unknown_helo_hostname  fails  due  to  a
       temporary  error  condition.  Specify  "defer"  to  defer  the  remote SMTP client request
       immediately. With the default "defer_if_permit" action, the Postfix SMTP server  continues
       to  look  for opportunities to reject mail, and defers the client request only if it would
       otherwise be accepted.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

unknown_hostname_reject_code (default: 450)

       The numerical Postfix SMTP server response code when the hostname specified with the  HELO
       or EHLO command is rejected by the reject_unknown_helo_hostname restriction.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

unknown_local_recipient_reject_code (default: 550)

       The  numerical  Postfix  SMTP  server response code when a recipient address is local, and
       $local_recipient_maps specifies a list of lookup tables that does not match the recipient.
       A  recipient address is local when its domain matches $mydestination, $proxy_interfaces or
       $inet_interfaces.

       The default setting is 550 (reject mail) but it is safer to initially use 450  (try  again
       later) so you have time to find out if your local_recipient_maps settings are OK.

       Example:

       unknown_local_recipient_reject_code = 450

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

unknown_relay_recipient_reject_code (default: 550)

       The   numerical   Postfix  SMTP  server  reply  code  when  a  recipient  address  matches
       $relay_domains, and relay_recipient_maps specifies a list of lookup tables that  does  not
       match the recipient address.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

unknown_virtual_alias_reject_code (default: 550)

       The    Postfix    SMTP    server   reply   code   when   a   recipient   address   matches
       $virtual_alias_domains, and $virtual_alias_maps specifies a list  of  lookup  tables  that
       does not match the recipient address.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

unknown_virtual_mailbox_reject_code (default: 550)

       The    Postfix    SMTP    server   reply   code   when   a   recipient   address   matches
       $virtual_mailbox_domains, and $virtual_mailbox_maps specifies a list of lookup tables that
       does not match the recipient address.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

unverified_recipient_defer_code (default: 450)

       The  numerical  Postfix SMTP server response when a recipient address probe fails due to a
       temporary error condition.

       Unlike elsewhere in Postfix, you can specify 250 in order to accept the address anyway.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

unverified_recipient_reject_code (default: 450)

       The numerical Postfix SMTP server response when a recipient address  is  rejected  by  the
       reject_unverified_recipient restriction.

       Unlike elsewhere in Postfix, you can specify 250 in order to accept the address anyway.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

unverified_recipient_reject_reason (default: empty)

       The  Postfix  SMTP server's reply when rejecting mail with reject_unverified_recipient. Do
       not include the numeric SMTP reply code or the  enhanced  status  code.  By  default,  the
       response includes actual address verification details.

       Example:

       unverified_recipient_reject_reason = Recipient address lookup failed

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

unverified_recipient_tempfail_action (default: $reject_tempfail_action)

       The Postfix SMTP server's action when reject_unverified_recipient fails due to a temporary
       error condition. Specify "defer" to defer the remote SMTP client request immediately. With
       the  default  "defer_if_permit"  action,  the  Postfix  SMTP  server continues to look for
       opportunities to reject mail, and defers the client request only if it would otherwise  be
       accepted.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

unverified_sender_defer_code (default: 450)

       The numerical Postfix SMTP server response code when a sender address probe fails due to a
       temporary error condition.

       Unlike elsewhere in Postfix, you can specify 250 in order to accept the address anyway.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

unverified_sender_reject_code (default: 450)

       The numerical Postfix SMTP server response code when a recipient address  is  rejected  by
       the reject_unverified_sender restriction.

       Unlike elsewhere in Postfix, you can specify 250 in order to accept the address anyway.

       Do not change this unless you have a complete understanding of RFC 5321.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

unverified_sender_reject_reason (default: empty)

       The  Postfix SMTP server's reply when rejecting mail with reject_unverified_sender. Do not
       include the numeric SMTP reply code or the enhanced status code. By default, the  response
       includes actual address verification details.

       Example:

       unverified_sender_reject_reason = Sender address lookup failed

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

unverified_sender_tempfail_action (default: $reject_tempfail_action)

       The  Postfix  SMTP  server's action when reject_unverified_sender fails due to a temporary
       error condition. Specify "defer" to defer the remote SMTP client request immediately. With
       the  default  "defer_if_permit"  action,  the  Postfix  SMTP  server continues to look for
       opportunities to reject mail, and defers the client request only if it would otherwise  be
       accepted.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.6 and later.

use_srv_lookup (default: empty)

       Enables  discovery  for  the specified service(s) using DNS SRV records. For example, with
       "use_srv_lookup = submission" and "relayhost = example.com:submission", the  Postfix  SMTP
       client will look up DNS SRV records for _submission._tcp.example.com, and will relay email
       through the hosts and ports that are specified  with  those  records.  See  RFC  2782  for
       details of the host selection process.

       Specify  zero  or more service names separated by comma and/or whitespace. Any name in the
       services(5) database may be specified, though in practice  only  submission,  submissions,
       and smtp make sense.

       When  SRV  record  lookup is enabled with use_srv_lookup, you can enclose a domain name in
       "[]" to force IP address lookup instead of SRV record lookup.

       Example 1: MUA-to-MTA submission using SRV record lookup for the "submission" service  for
       domain  "example.com".  This uses the default SMTP delivery agent with STARTTLS, and looks
       up SRV records for "_submission._tcp.example.com".

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           use_srv_lookup = submission
           relayhost = example.com:submission
           smtp_tls_security_level = may
           ...see SASL_README for sasl configuration...

       Example 2: MUA-to-MTA submission using SRV record lookup for the "submissions" service for
       domain  "example.org".  This  uses  a  dedicated  SMTP  delivery agent (smtp-wraptls) with
       tls_wrappermode turned on, and looks up SRV records for "_submissions._tcp.example.org".

       Note: specify the older name "smtps" instead of "submissions" when a provider has DNS  SRV
       records like "_smtps._tcp.example.org" instead of "_submissions._tcp.example.org".

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           use_srv_lookup = submissions
           default_transport = smtp-wraptls:example.org:submissions
           ...see SASL_README for sasl configuration...

       /etc/postfix/master.cf:
           smtp-wraptls   unix   ...   ...   ...   ...   ...   smtp
               -o { smtp_tls_wrappermode = yes }
               -o { smtp_tls_security_level = encrypt }

       Example 3: Sender-dependent selection for a combination of MUA-to-MTA submission services.
       This combines examples 1 and 2 with examples of how to disable SRV and look up IP  address
       records  for  "smtp-relay.example.net" and "smtp-relay.other.example".  Again, specify the
       older name "smtps" instead of "submissions" when a  provider  has  DNS  SRV  records  like
       "_smtps._tcp.example.org" instead of "_submissions._tcp.example.org".

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           use_srv_lookup = submission, submissions
           sender_dependent_default_transport_maps = inline:{
               # Destinations that support SRV record lookup.
               { user1@example.com = smtp:example.com:submission }
               { user2@example.org = smtp-wraptls:example.org:submissions }
               # Use [destination] to force IP address lookups.
               { user3@example.net = smtp:[smtp-relay.example.net]:submission }
               { user4@other.example =
                     smtp-wraptls:[smtp-relay.other.example]:submissions } }
           ...see SASL_README for sasl configuration...

       Example  4:  MTA-to-MTA  traffic,  using  SRV  record lookup for the SMTP service. This is
       useful for Postfix tests, and may be useful in environments where  ports  are  dynamically
       assigned to servers.

       /etc/postfix/main.cf:
           use_srv_lookup = smtp
           # Fall back to MX record lookup when SRV records are unavailable.
           #allow_srv_lookup_fallback = yes
           #ignore_srv_lookup_error = yes

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.8 and later.

verp_delimiter_filter (default: -=+)

       The  characters  Postfix  accepts  as VERP delimiter characters on the Postfix sendmail(1)
       command line and in SMTP commands.

       This feature is available in Postfix 1.1 and later.

virtual_alias_address_length_limit (default: 1000)

       The maximal length of an email address after virtual alias expansion.  This stops  virtual
       aliasing loops that increase the address length exponentially.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

virtual_alias_domains (default: $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.
       The  SMTP  server  validates  recipient  addresses  with  $virtual_alias_maps  and rejects
       non-existent  recipients.   See   also   the   virtual   alias   domain   class   in   the
       ADDRESS_CLASS_README file

       This  feature  is  available  in  Postfix  2.0  and  later. The default value is backwards
       compatible with Postfix version 1.1.

       The default value is $virtual_alias_maps so  that  you  can  keep  all  information  about
       virtual  alias  domains  in  one  place.  If you have many users, it is better to separate
       information that changes more frequently (virtual  address  ->  local  or  remote  address
       mapping) from information that changes less frequently (the list of virtual domain names).

       Specify  a  list of host or domain names, "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns, separated
       by commas and/or whitespace. A  "/file/name"  pattern  is  replaced  by  its  contents;  a
       "type:table" lookup table is matched when a table entry matches a host or domain name (the
       lookup result is ignored).  Continue long lines by starting the next line with whitespace.
       Specify  "!pattern" to exclude a host or domain name from the list. The form "!/file/name"
       is supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

       See also the VIRTUAL_README and ADDRESS_CLASS_README documents for further information.

       Example:

       virtual_alias_domains = virtual1.tld virtual2.tld

virtual_alias_expansion_limit (default: 1000)

       The maximal number of addresses that virtual alias expansion produces from  each  original
       recipient.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

virtual_alias_maps (default: $virtual_maps)

       Optional  lookup  tables with aliases that apply to all recipients: local(8), virtual, and
       remote; this is unlike alias_maps that apply  only  to  local(8)  recipients.   The  table
       format  and  lookups  are  documented  in  virtual(5).  For an overview of Postfix address
       manipulations see the ADDRESS_REWRITING_README document.

       This feature is available in Postfix  2.0  and  later.  The  default  value  is  backwards
       compatible with Postfix version 1.1.

       Specify  zero  or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or comma. Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.  Note: these  lookups  are
       recursive.

       If  you  use  this  feature  with  indexed files, run "postmap /etc/postfix/virtual" after
       changing the file.

       Examples:

       virtual_alias_maps = dbm:/etc/postfix/virtual
       virtual_alias_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/virtual

virtual_alias_recursion_limit (default: 1000)

       The maximal nesting depth of virtual alias expansion.  Currently the  recursion  limit  is
       applied  only  to  the left branch of the expansion graph, so the depth of the tree can in
       the worst case reach the sum of the expansion and recursion limits.  This  may  change  in
       the future.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.

virtual_delivery_status_filter (default: $default_delivery_status_filter)

       Optional  filter  for  the virtual(8) delivery agent to change the delivery status code or
       explanatory    text     of     successful     or     unsuccessful     deliveries.      See
       default_delivery_status_filter for details.

       This feature is available in Postfix 3.0 and later.

virtual_destination_concurrency_limit (default: $default_destination_concurrency_limit)

       The  maximal number of parallel deliveries to the same destination via the virtual message
       delivery transport. This limit is enforced by the  queue  manager.  The  message  delivery
       transport name is the first field in the entry in the master.cf file.

virtual_destination_recipient_limit (default: $default_destination_recipient_limit)

       The  maximal  number of recipients per message for the virtual message delivery transport.
       This limit is enforced by the queue manager. The message delivery transport  name  is  the
       first field in the entry in the master.cf file.

       Setting    this    parameter    to    a    value    of    1   changes   the   meaning   of
       virtual_destination_concurrency_limit from concurrency per  domain  into  concurrency  per
       recipient.

virtual_gid_maps (default: empty)

       Lookup tables with the per-recipient group ID for virtual(8) mailbox delivery.

       This  parameter is specific to the virtual(8) delivery agent.  It does not apply when mail
       is delivered with a different mail delivery program.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       In  a  lookup  table,  specify  a left-hand side of "@domain.tld" to match any user in the
       specified domain that does not have a specific "user@domain.tld" entry.

       When a recipient address has an  optional  address  extension  (user+foo@domain.tld),  the
       virtual(8)  delivery  agent looks up the full address first, and when the lookup fails, it
       looks up the unextended address (user@domain.tld).

       Note 1: for security reasons, the virtual(8) delivery agent disallows  regular  expression
       substitution  of  $1  etc.  in regular expression lookup tables, because that would open a
       security hole.

       Note 2: for security reasons, the virtual(8) delivery agent will silently ignore  requests
       to  use  the  proxymap(8)  server. Instead it will open the table directly. Before Postfix
       version 2.2, the virtual(8) delivery agent will terminate with a fatal error.

virtual_mailbox_base (default: empty)

       A prefix that the  virtual(8)  delivery  agent  prepends  to  all  pathname  results  from
       $virtual_mailbox_maps  table  lookups.   This is a safety measure to ensure that an out of
       control map doesn't litter the file system  with  mailboxes.   While  virtual_mailbox_base
       could be set to "/", this setting isn't recommended.

       This  parameter is specific to the virtual(8) delivery agent.  It does not apply when mail
       is delivered with a different mail delivery program.

       Example:

       virtual_mailbox_base = /var/mail

virtual_mailbox_domains (default: $virtual_mailbox_maps)

       Postfix is the final destination for the specified list of domains; mail is delivered  via
       the $virtual_transport mail delivery transport.  By default this is the Postfix virtual(8)
       delivery agent.  The SMTP server validates recipient addresses with  $virtual_mailbox_maps
       and  rejects  mail for non-existent recipients.  See also the virtual mailbox domain class
       in the ADDRESS_CLASS_README file.

       This parameter expects the same syntax as the mydestination configuration parameter.

       This feature is available in Postfix  2.0  and  later.  The  default  value  is  backwards
       compatible with Postfix version 1.1.

virtual_mailbox_limit (default: 51200000)

       The maximal size in bytes of an individual virtual(8) mailbox or maildir file, or zero (no
       limit).

       This parameter is specific to the virtual(8) delivery agent.  It does not apply when  mail
       is delivered with a different mail delivery program.

virtual_mailbox_lock (default: see postconf -d output)

       How  to  lock  a  UNIX-style virtual(8) mailbox before attempting delivery.  For a list of
       available file locking methods, use the "postconf -l" command.

       This parameter is specific to the virtual(8) delivery agent.  It does not apply when  mail
       is delivered with a different mail delivery program.

       This  setting  is  ignored  with  maildir style delivery, because such deliveries are safe
       without application-level locks.

       Note 1: the dotlock method requires that the recipient UID or GID has write access to  the
       parent directory of the recipient's mailbox file.

       Note 2: the default setting of this parameter is system dependent.

virtual_mailbox_maps (default: empty)

       Optional   lookup   tables   with   all   valid   addresses  in  the  domains  that  match
       $virtual_mailbox_domains.

       Specify zero or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or  comma.  Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       In  a  lookup  table,  specify  a left-hand side of "@domain.tld" to match any user in the
       specified domain that does not have a specific "user@domain.tld" entry.

       With the default "virtual_mailbox_domains =  $virtual_mailbox_maps",  lookup  tables  also
       need  entries  with  a  left-hand  side  of "domain.tld" to satisfy virtual_mailbox_domain
       lookups (the right-hand side is required but will not be used).

       The remainder of this text is specific to the virtual(8)  delivery  agent.   It  does  not
       apply when mail is delivered with a different mail delivery program.

       The  virtual(8)  delivery  agent  uses  this table to look up the per-recipient mailbox or
       maildir pathname.  If the lookup result ends in a slash ("/"), maildir-style  delivery  is
       carried  out,  otherwise  the  path is assumed to specify a UNIX-style mailbox file.  Note
       that $virtual_mailbox_base is unconditionally prepended to this path.

       When a recipient address has an  optional  address  extension  (user+foo@domain.tld),  the
       virtual(8)  delivery  agent looks up the full address first, and when the lookup fails, it
       looks up the unextended address (user@domain.tld).

       Note 1: for security reasons, the virtual(8) delivery agent disallows  regular  expression
       substitution  of  $1  etc.  in regular expression lookup tables, because that would open a
       security hole.

       Note 2: for security reasons, the virtual(8) delivery agent will silently ignore  requests
       to  use  the  proxymap(8)  server. Instead it will open the table directly. Before Postfix
       version 2.2, the virtual(8) delivery agent will terminate with a fatal error.

virtual_maps (default: empty)

       Optional lookup tables with a) names of domains for which all  addresses  are  aliased  to
       addresses in other local or remote domains, and b) addresses that are aliased to addresses
       in other local or remote domains.  Available before  Postfix  version  2.0.  With  Postfix
       version  2.0  and  later, this is replaced by separate controls: virtual_alias_domains and
       virtual_alias_maps.

virtual_minimum_uid (default: 100)

       The minimum user ID value that the virtual(8) delivery agent  accepts  as  a  result  from
       $virtual_uid_maps  table lookup.  Returned values less than this will be rejected, and the
       message will be deferred.

       This parameter is specific to the virtual(8) delivery agent.  It does not apply when  mail
       is delivered with a different mail delivery program.

virtual_transport (default: virtual)

       The default mail delivery transport and next-hop destination for final delivery to domains
       listed  with  $virtual_mailbox_domains.   This  information  can  be  overruled  with  the
       transport(5) table.

       Specify  a  string  of  the  form transport:nexthop, where transport is the name of a mail
       delivery transport defined in master.cf.  The :nexthop destination is optional; its syntax
       is documented in the manual page of the corresponding delivery agent.

       This feature is available in Postfix 2.0 and later.

virtual_uid_maps (default: empty)

       Lookup tables with the per-recipient user ID that the virtual(8) delivery agent uses while
       writing to the recipient's mailbox.

       This parameter is specific to the virtual(8) delivery agent.  It does not apply when  mail
       is delivered with a different mail delivery program.

       Specify  zero  or more "type:name" lookup tables, separated by whitespace or comma. Tables
       will be searched in the specified order until a match is found.

       In a lookup table, specify a left-hand side of "@domain.tld" to  match  any  user  in  the
       specified domain that does not have a specific "user@domain.tld" entry.

       When  a  recipient  address  has  an optional address extension (user+foo@domain.tld), the
       virtual(8) delivery agent looks up the full address first, and when the lookup  fails,  it
       looks up the unextended address (user@domain.tld).

       Note  1:  for security reasons, the virtual(8) delivery agent disallows regular expression
       substitution of $1 etc. in regular expression lookup tables, because  that  would  open  a
       security hole.

       Note  2: for security reasons, the virtual(8) delivery agent will silently ignore requests
       to use the proxymap(8) server. Instead it will open the  table  directly.  Before  Postfix
       version 2.2, the virtual(8) delivery agent will terminate with a fatal error.

SEE ALSO

       postconf(1), Postfix configuration parameter maintenance
       master(5), Postfix daemon configuration maintenance

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

       Viktor Dukhovni

                                                                                      POSTCONF(5)