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diff --git a/proto/CONNECTION_CACHE_README.html b/proto/CONNECTION_CACHE_README.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7ffd7bb --- /dev/null +++ b/proto/CONNECTION_CACHE_README.html @@ -0,0 +1,308 @@ +<!doctype html public "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> + +<html> + +<head> + +<title>Postfix Connection Cache </title> + +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=us-ascii"> + +</head> + +<body> + +<h1><img src="postfix-logo.jpg" width="203" height="98" ALT="">Postfix Connection Cache </h1> + +<hr> + +<h2>Introduction</h2> + +<p> This document describes the Postfix connection cache implementation, +which is available with Postfix version 2.2 and later. </p> + +<p> See <a href="TLS_README.html#client_tls_reuse">Client-side TLS +connection reuse</a> for how this connection cache is used to +implement multiple deliveries per TLS-encrypted connection. </p> + +<p> Topics covered in this document: </p> + +<ul> + +<li><a href="#summary"> What SMTP connection caching can do for you</a> + +<li><a href="#implementation"> Connection cache implementation</a> + +<li><a href="#configuration"> Connection cache configuration</a> + +<li><a href="#safety">Connection cache safety mechanisms </a> + +<li><a href="#limitations">Connection cache limitations</a> + +<li><a href="#statistics">Connection cache statistics</a> + +</ul> + +<h2><a name="summary">What SMTP connection caching can do for +you</a></h2> + +<p> With SMTP connection caching, Postfix can deliver multiple +messages over the same SMTP connection. By default, Postfix 2.2 +reuses an SMTP connection automatically when a destination has +high volume of mail in the active queue. </p> + +<p> SMTP Connection caching is a performance feature. Whether or not +it actually improves performance depends on the conditions: </p> + +<ul> + +<li> <p> SMTP Connection caching can greatly improve performance +when delivering mail to a destination with multiple mail servers, +because it can help Postfix to skip over a non-responding server. +</p> + +<li> <p> Otherwise, the benefits of SMTP connection caching are +minor: it eliminates the latency of the TCP handshake (SYN, SYN+ACK, +ACK), plus the latency of the SMTP initial handshake (220 greeting, +EHLO command, EHLO response). + +<li> <p> SMTP Connection caching gives no gains with respect to +SMTP session tear-down. The Postfix smtp(8) client normally does +not wait for the server's reply to the QUIT command, and it never +waits for the TCP final handshake to complete. </p> + +<li> <p> SMTP Connection caching introduces some overhead: the +client needs to send an RSET command to find out if a connection +is still usable, before it can send the next MAIL FROM command. +This introduces one additional round-trip delay. </p> + +</ul> + +<p> For other potential issues with SMTP connection caching, see +the discussion of <a href="#limitations">limitations</a> at the end +of this document. </p> + +<h2><a name="implementation">Connection cache implementation</a></h2> + +<p> For an overview of how Postfix delivers mail, see the Postfix +architecture OVERVIEW document. </p> + +<p> The Postfix connection cache is shared among Postfix mail +delivering processes. This maximizes the opportunity to reuse an +open connection. Other MTAs such as Sendmail or exim have a +non-shared connection cache. Here, a connection can be reused only +by the mail delivering process that creates the connection. To get +the same performance improvement as with a shared connection cache, +non-shared connections need to be kept open for a longer time. </p> + +<p> The scache(8) server, introduced with Postfix version 2.2, +maintains the shared connection cache. With Postfix version 2.2, +only the smtp(8) client has support to access this cache. </p> + +<blockquote> + +<table> + +<tr> <td> </td> <td> <tt> /-- </tt> </td> <td align="center" +colspan="3" bgcolor="#f0f0ff"> smtp(8) </td> <td colspan="2"> <tt> +--> </tt> Internet </td> </tr> + +<tr> <td align="center" bgcolor="#f0f0ff"> qmgr(8) </td> <td> </td> +<td align="center" rowspan="3"> </td> <td align="center" +rowspan="3"><tt>|<br>|<br>|<br>|<br>v</tt></td> <td> </td> +</tr> + +<tr> <td> </td> <td> <tt> \-- </tt> </td> <td align="center" +colspan="2" bgcolor="#f0f0ff"> smtp(8) </td> <td align="left"> <tt> +--> </tt> Internet </td> </tr> + +<tr> <td colspan="3"> </td> <td align="center"><tt>^<br>|</tt></td> +<td> </td> </tr> + +<tr> <td colspan="3"> </td> <td align="center" colspan="3" +bgcolor="#f0f0ff"> scache(8) </td> </tr> + +</table> + +</blockquote> + +<p> When SMTP connection caching is enabled (see next section), the +smtp(8) client does not disconnect after a mail transaction, but +gives the connection to the scache(8) server which keeps the +connection open for a limited amount of time. </p> + +<p> After handing over the open connection to the scache(8) server, +the smtp(8) client continues with some other mail delivery request. +Meanwhile, any smtp(8) client process can ask the scache(8) server +for that cached connection and reuse it for mail delivery. </p> + +<p> The connection cache can be searched by destination domain name +(the right-hand side of the recipient address) and by the IP address +of the host at the other end of the connection. This allows Postfix +to reuse a connection even when the remote host is mail server for +domains with different names. </p> + +<h2><a name="configuration">Connection cache configuration </a></h2> + +<p> The Postfix smtp(8) client supports two connection caching +strategies: </p> + +<ul> + +<li> <p> On-demand connection caching. This is enabled by default, +and is controlled with the smtp_connection_cache_on_demand configuration +parameter. When this feature is enabled, the Postfix smtp(8) client +automatically saves a connection to the connection cache when a +destination has a high volume of mail in the active queue. </p> + +<p> Example: </p> + +<blockquote> + +<pre> +/etc/postfix/main.cf: + smtp_connection_cache_on_demand = yes +</pre> + +</blockquote> + +<li> <p> Per-destination connection caching. This is enabled by +explicitly listing specific destinations with the +smtp_connection_cache_destinations configuration parameter. After +completing delivery to a selected destination, the Postfix smtp(8) +client <i>always</i> saves the connection to the connection cache. +</p> + +<p> Specify a comma or white space separated list of destinations +or pseudo-destinations: </p> + +<ul> + +<li> <p> 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), </p> + +<li> <p> if mail is sent via a relay host: a relay host name (without +the [] or non-default TCP port), as specified in main.cf or in the +transport map, </p> + +<li> <p> a /file/name with domain names and/or relay host names as +defined above, </p> + +<li> <p> 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. </p> + +</ul> + +<p> Examples: </p> + +<blockquote> + +<pre> +/etc/postfix/main.cf: + smtp_connection_cache_destinations = $relayhost + smtp_connection_cache_destinations = hotmail.com, ... + smtp_connection_cache_destinations = static:all (<i>not recommended</i>) +</pre> + +</blockquote> + +</ul> + +<h2><a name="safety">Connection cache safety mechanisms </a></h2> + +<p> Connection caching must be used wisely. It is anti-social to +keep an unused SMTP connection open for a significant amount of +time, and it is unwise to send huge numbers of messages through +the same connection. In order to avoid problems with SMTP connection +caching, Postfix implements the following safety mechanisms: </p> + +<ul> + +<li> <p> The Postfix scache(8) server keeps a connection open for +only a limited time. The time limit is specified with the +smtp_connection_cache_time_limit and with the connection_cache_ttl_limit +configuration parameters. This prevents anti-social behavior. </p> + +<li> <p> The Postfix smtp(8) client reuses a session for only a +limited number of times. This avoids triggering bugs in implementations +that do not correctly handle multiple deliveries per session. </p> + +<p> As of Postfix 2.3 connection reuse is preferably limited with +the smtp_connection_reuse_time_limit parameter. In addition, Postfix +2.11 provides smtp_connection_reuse_count_limit to limit how many +times a connection may be reused, but this feature is unsafe as it +introduces a "fatal attractor" failure mode (when a destination has +multiple inbound MTAs, the slowest inbound MTA will attract most +connections from Postfix to that destination). </p> + +<p> Postfix 2.3 logs the use count of multiply-used connections, +as shown in the following example: </p> + +<blockquote> +<pre> +Nov 3 16:04:31 myname postfix/smtp[30840]: 19B6B2900FE: +to=<wietse@test.example.com>, orig_to=<wietse@test>, +relay=mail.example.com[1.2.3.4], <b>conn_use=2</b>, delay=0.22, +delays=0.04/0.01/0.05/0.1, dsn=2.0.0, status=sent (250 2.0.0 Ok) +</pre> +</blockquote> + +<li> <p> The connection cache explicitly labels each cached connection +with destination domain and IP address information. A connection +cache lookup succeeds only when the correct information is specified. +This prevents mis-delivery of mail. </p> + +</ul> + +<h2><a name="limitations">Connection cache limitations</a></h2> + +<p> Postfix SMTP connection caching conflicts with certain applications: +</p> + +<ul> + +<li> <p> With Postfix versions < 3.4, the Postfix shared connection +cache cannot be used with TLS, because an open TLS connection can +be reused only in the process that creates it. For this reason, +the Postfix smtp(8) client historically always closed the connection +after completing an attempt to deliver mail over TLS.</p> + +<li> <p> Postfix connection caching currently does not support +multiple SASL accounts per mail server. Specifically, Postfix +connection caching assumes that a SASL credential is valid for all +hostnames or domain names that deliver via the same mail server IP +address and TCP port, and assumes that the SASL credential does not +depend on the message originator. </p> + +</ul> + + +<h2><a name="statistics">Connection cache statistics </a></h2> + +<p> The scache(8) connection cache server logs statistics about the +peak cache size and the cache hit rates. This information is logged +every connection_cache_status_update_time seconds, when the process +terminates after the maximal idle time is exceeded, or when Postfix +is reloaded. </p> + +<ul> + +<li> <p> Hit rates for connection cache lookups by domain will tell +you how useful connection caching is. </p> + +<li> <p> Connection cache lookups by network address will always +fail, unless you're sending mail to different domains that share +the same MX hosts. </p> + +<li> <p> No statistics are logged when no attempts are made to +access the connection cache. </p> + +</ul> + + +</body> + +</html> |