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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-06 01:46:30 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-06 01:46:30 +0000 |
commit | b5896ba9f6047e7031e2bdee0622d543e11a6734 (patch) | |
tree | fd7b460593a2fee1be579bec5697e6d887ea3421 /man/man5/mysql_table.5 | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | postfix-upstream.tar.xz postfix-upstream.zip |
Adding upstream version 3.4.23.upstream/3.4.23upstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'man/man5/mysql_table.5')
-rw-r--r-- | man/man5/mysql_table.5 | 425 |
1 files changed, 425 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/man/man5/mysql_table.5 b/man/man5/mysql_table.5 new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6475318 --- /dev/null +++ b/man/man5/mysql_table.5 @@ -0,0 +1,425 @@ +.TH MYSQL_TABLE 5 +.ad +.fi +.SH NAME +mysql_table +\- +Postfix MySQL client configuration +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.na +.nf +\fBpostmap \-q "\fIstring\fB" mysql:/etc/postfix/\fIfilename\fR + +\fBpostmap \-q \- mysql:/etc/postfix/\fIfilename\fB <\fIinputfile\fR +.SH DESCRIPTION +.ad +.fi +The Postfix mail system uses optional tables for address +rewriting or mail routing. These tables are usually in +\fBdbm\fR or \fBdb\fR format. + +Alternatively, lookup tables can be specified as MySQL databases. +In order to use MySQL lookups, define a MySQL source as a lookup +table in main.cf, for example: +.nf + alias_maps = mysql:/etc/mysql\-aliases.cf +.fi + +The file /etc/postfix/mysql\-aliases.cf has the same format as +the Postfix main.cf file, and can specify the parameters +described below. +.SH "LIST MEMBERSHIP" +.na +.nf +.ad +.fi +When using SQL to store lists such as $mynetworks, +$mydestination, $relay_domains, $local_recipient_maps, +etc., it is important to understand that the table must +store each list member as a separate key. The table lookup +verifies the *existence* of the key. See "Postfix lists +versus tables" in the DATABASE_README document for a +discussion. + +Do NOT create tables that return the full list of domains +in $mydestination or $relay_domains etc., or IP addresses +in $mynetworks. + +DO create tables with each matching item as a key and with +an arbitrary value. With SQL databases it is not uncommon to +return the key itself or a constant value. +.SH "MYSQL PARAMETERS" +.na +.nf +.ad +.fi +.IP "\fBhosts\fR" +The hosts that Postfix will try to connect to and query from. +Specify \fIunix:\fR for UNIX domain sockets, \fIinet:\fR for TCP +connections (default). Example: +.nf + hosts = host1.some.domain host2.some.domain:port + hosts = unix:/file/name +.fi + +The hosts are tried in random order, with all connections over +UNIX domain sockets being tried before those over TCP. The +connections are automatically closed after being idle for about +1 minute, and are re\-opened as necessary. Postfix versions 2.0 +and earlier do not randomize the host order. + +NOTE: if you specify localhost as a hostname (even if you +prefix it with \fIinet:\fR), MySQL will connect to the default +UNIX domain socket. In order to instruct MySQL to connect to +localhost over TCP you have to specify +.nf + hosts = 127.0.0.1 +.fi +.IP "\fBuser, password\fR" +The user name and password to log into the mysql server. +Example: +.nf + user = someone + password = some_password +.fi +.IP "\fBdbname\fR" +The database name on the servers. Example: +.nf + dbname = customer_database +.fi +.IP "\fBquery\fR" +The SQL query template used to search the database, where \fB%s\fR +is a substitute for the address Postfix is trying to resolve, +e.g. +.nf + query = SELECT replacement FROM aliases WHERE mailbox = '%s' +.fi + +By default, every query must return a result set (instead +of storing its results in a table); with "\fBrequire_result_set += no\fR" (Postfix 3.2 and later), the absence of a result +set is treated as "not found". + +This parameter supports the following '%' expansions: +.RS +.IP "\fB%%\fR" +This is replaced by a literal '%' character. +.IP "\fB%s\fR" +This is replaced by the input key. +SQL quoting is used to make sure that the input key does not +add unexpected metacharacters. +.IP "\fB%u\fR" +When the input key is an address of the form user@domain, \fB%u\fR +is replaced by the SQL quoted local part of the address. +Otherwise, \fB%u\fR is replaced by the entire search string. +If the localpart is empty, the query is suppressed and returns +no results. +.IP "\fB%d\fR" +When the input key is an address of the form user@domain, \fB%d\fR +is replaced by the SQL quoted domain part of the address. +Otherwise, the query is suppressed and returns no results. +.IP "\fB%[SUD]\fR" +The upper\-case equivalents of the above expansions behave in the +\fBquery\fR parameter identically to their lower\-case counter\-parts. +With the \fBresult_format\fR parameter (see below), they expand the +input key rather than the result value. +.IP "\fB%[1\-9]\fR" +The patterns %1, %2, ... %9 are replaced by the corresponding +most significant component of the input key's domain. If the +input key is \fIuser@mail.example.com\fR, then %1 is \fBcom\fR, +%2 is \fBexample\fR and %3 is \fBmail\fR. If the input key is +unqualified or does not have enough domain components to satisfy +all the specified patterns, the query is suppressed and returns +no results. +.RE +.IP +The \fBdomain\fR parameter described below limits the input +keys to addresses in matching domains. When the \fBdomain\fR +parameter is non\-empty, SQL queries for unqualified addresses +or addresses in non\-matching domains are suppressed +and return no results. + +This parameter is available with Postfix 2.2. In prior releases +the SQL query was built from the separate parameters: +\fBselect_field\fR, \fBtable\fR, \fBwhere_field\fR and +\fBadditional_conditions\fR. The mapping from the old parameters +to the equivalent query is: + +.nf + SELECT [\fBselect_field\fR] + FROM [\fBtable\fR] + WHERE [\fBwhere_field\fR] = '%s' + [\fBadditional_conditions\fR] +.fi + +The '%s' in the \fBWHERE\fR clause expands to the escaped search string. +With Postfix 2.2 these legacy parameters are used if the \fBquery\fR +parameter is not specified. + +NOTE: DO NOT put quotes around the query parameter. +.IP "\fBresult_format (default: \fB%s\fR)\fR" +Format template applied to result attributes. Most commonly used +to append (or prepend) text to the result. This parameter supports +the following '%' expansions: +.RS +.IP "\fB%%\fR" +This is replaced by a literal '%' character. +.IP "\fB%s\fR" +This is replaced by the value of the result attribute. When +result is empty it is skipped. +.IP "\fB%u\fR +When the result attribute value is an address of the form +user@domain, \fB%u\fR is replaced by the local part of the +address. When the result has an empty localpart it is skipped. +.IP "\fB%d\fR" +When a result attribute value is an address of the form +user@domain, \fB%d\fR is replaced by the domain part of +the attribute value. When the result is unqualified it +is skipped. +.IP "\fB%[SUD1\-9]\fR" +The upper\-case and decimal digit expansions interpolate +the parts of the input key rather than the result. Their +behavior is identical to that described with \fBquery\fR, +and in fact because the input key is known in advance, queries +whose key does not contain all the information specified in +the result template are suppressed and return no results. +.RE +.IP +For example, using "result_format = smtp:[%s]" allows one +to use a mailHost attribute as the basis of a transport(5) +table. After applying the result format, multiple values +are concatenated as comma separated strings. The expansion_limit +and parameter explained below allows one to restrict the number +of values in the result, which is especially useful for maps that +must return at most one value. + +The default value \fB%s\fR specifies that each result value should +be used as is. + +This parameter is available with Postfix 2.2 and later. + +NOTE: DO NOT put quotes around the result format! +.IP "\fBdomain (default: no domain list)\fR" +This is a list of domain names, paths to files, or +dictionaries. When specified, only fully qualified search +keys with a *non\-empty* localpart and a matching domain +are eligible for lookup: 'user' lookups, bare domain lookups +and "@domain" lookups are not performed. This can significantly +reduce the query load on the MySQL server. +.nf + domain = postfix.org, hash:/etc/postfix/searchdomains +.fi + +It is best not to use SQL to store the domains eligible +for SQL lookups. + +This parameter is available with Postfix 2.2 and later. + +NOTE: DO NOT define this parameter for local(8) aliases, +because the input keys are always unqualified. +.IP "\fBexpansion_limit (default: 0)\fR" +A limit on the total number of result elements returned +(as a comma separated list) by a lookup against the map. +A setting of zero disables the limit. Lookups fail with a +temporary error if the limit is exceeded. Setting the +limit to 1 ensures that lookups do not return multiple +values. +.IP "\fBoption_file\fR" +Read options from the given file instead of the default my.cnf +location. This reads options from the \fB[client]\fR option +group, optionally followed by options from the group given +with \fBoption_group\fR. +.sp +This parameter is available with Postfix 2.11 and later. +.IP "\fBoption_group (default: Postfix >=3.2: client, <= 3.1: empty)\fR" +Read options from the given group of the mysql options file, +after reading options from the \fB[client]\fR group. +.sp +Postfix 3.2 and later read \fB[client]\fR option group +settings by default. To disable this specify no \fBoption_file\fR +and specify "\fBoption_group =\fR" (i.e. an empty value). +.sp +Postfix 3.1 and earlier don't read \fB[client]\fR option +group settings unless a non\-empty \fBoption_file\fR or +\fBoption_group\fR value are specified. To enable this, +specify, for example, "\fBoption_group = client\fR". +.sp +This parameter is available with Postfix 2.11 and later. +.IP "\fBrequire_result_set (default: yes)\fR" +If "\fByes\fR", require that every query returns a result +set. If "\fBno\fR", treat the absence of a result set as +"not found". +.sp +This parameter is available with Postfix 3.2 and later. +.IP "\fBtls_cert_file\fR" +File containing client's X509 certificate. +.sp +This parameter is available with Postfix 2.11 and later. +.IP "\fBtls_key_file\fR" +File containing the private key corresponding to \fBtls_cert_file\fR. +.sp +This parameter is available with Postfix 2.11 and later. +.IP "\fBtls_CAfile\fR" +File containing certificates for all of the X509 Certification +Authorities the client will recognize. Takes precedence over +\fBtls_CApath\fR. +.sp +This parameter is available with Postfix 2.11 and later. +.IP "\fBtls_CApath\fR" +Directory containing X509 Certification Authority certificates +in separate individual files. +.sp +This parameter is available with Postfix 2.11 and later. +.IP "\fBtls_verify_cert (default: no)\fR" +Verify that the server's name matches the common name in the +certificate. +.sp +This parameter is available with Postfix 2.11 and later. +.SH "USING MYSQL STORED PROCEDURES" +.na +.nf +.ad +.fi +Postfix 3.2 and later support calling a stored procedure +instead of using a SELECT statement in the query, e.g. + +.nf + \fBquery\fR = CALL lookup('%s') +.fi + +The previously described '%' expansions can be used in the +parameter(s) to the stored procedure. + +By default, every stored procedure call must return a result +set, i.e. every code path must execute a SELECT statement +that returns a result set (instead of storing its results +in a table). With "\fBrequire_result_set = no\fR", the +absence of a result set is treated as "not found". + +A stored procedure must not return multiple result sets. +That is, there must be no code path that executes multiple +SELECT statements that return a result (instead of storing +their results in a table). + +The following is an example of a stored procedure returning +a single result set: + +.nf +CREATE [DEFINER=`user`@`host`] PROCEDURE +`lookup`(IN `param` VARCHAR(255)) + READS SQL DATA + SQL SECURITY INVOKER + BEGIN + select goto from alias where address=param; + END +.fi +.SH "OBSOLETE MAIN.CF PARAMETERS" +.na +.nf +.ad +.fi +For compatibility with other Postfix lookup tables, MySQL +parameters can also be defined in main.cf. In order to do that, +specify as MySQL source a name that doesn't begin with a slash +or a dot. The MySQL parameters will then be accessible as the +name you've given the source in its definition, an underscore, +and the name of the parameter. For example, if the map is +specified as "mysql:\fImysqlname\fR", the parameter "hosts" +would be defined in main.cf as "\fImysqlname\fR_hosts". + +Note: with this form, the passwords for the MySQL sources are +written in main.cf, which is normally world\-readable. Support +for this form will be removed in a future Postfix version. +.SH "OBSOLETE QUERY INTERFACE" +.na +.nf +.ad +.fi +This section describes an interface that is deprecated as +of Postfix 2.2. It is replaced by the more general \fBquery\fR +interface described above. If the \fBquery\fR parameter +is defined, the legacy parameters described here ignored. +Please migrate to the new interface as the legacy interface +may be removed in a future release. + +The following parameters can be used to fill in a +SELECT template statement of the form: + +.nf + SELECT [\fBselect_field\fR] + FROM [\fBtable\fR] + WHERE [\fBwhere_field\fR] = '%s' + [\fBadditional_conditions\fR] +.fi + +The specifier %s is replaced by the search string, and is +escaped so if it contains single quotes or other odd characters, +it will not cause a parse error, or worse, a security problem. +.IP "\fBselect_field\fR" +The SQL "select" parameter. Example: +.nf + \fBselect_field\fR = forw_addr +.fi +.IP "\fBtable\fR" +The SQL "select .. from" table name. Example: +.nf + \fBtable\fR = mxaliases +.fi +.IP "\fBwhere_field\fR +The SQL "select .. where" parameter. Example: +.nf + \fBwhere_field\fR = alias +.fi +.IP "\fBadditional_conditions\fR +Additional conditions to the SQL query. Example: +.nf + \fBadditional_conditions\fR = AND status = 'paid' +.fi +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.na +.nf +postmap(1), Postfix lookup table maintenance +postconf(5), configuration parameters +ldap_table(5), LDAP lookup tables +pgsql_table(5), PostgreSQL lookup tables +sqlite_table(5), SQLite lookup tables +.SH "README FILES" +.na +.nf +.ad +.fi +Use "\fBpostconf readme_directory\fR" or +"\fBpostconf html_directory\fR" to locate this information. +.na +.nf +DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview +MYSQL_README, Postfix MYSQL client guide +.SH "LICENSE" +.na +.nf +.ad +.fi +The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software. +.SH HISTORY +.ad +.fi +MySQL support was introduced with Postfix version 1.0. +.SH "AUTHOR(S)" +.na +.nf +Original implementation by: +Scott Cotton, Joshua Marcus +IC Group, Inc. + +Further enhancements by: +Liviu Daia +Institute of Mathematics of the Romanian Academy +P.O. BOX 1\-764 +RO\-014700 Bucharest, ROMANIA + +Stored\-procedure support by John Fawcett. + +Wietse Venema +Google, Inc. +111 8th Avenue +New York, NY 10011, USA |