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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-07 16:18:56 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-07 16:18:56 +0000
commitb7c15c31519dc44c1f691e0466badd556ffe9423 (patch)
treef944572f288bab482a615e09af627d9a2b6727d8 /html/lmdb_table.5.html
parentInitial commit. (diff)
downloadpostfix-upstream/3.7.10.tar.xz
postfix-upstream/3.7.10.zip
Adding upstream version 3.7.10.upstream/3.7.10upstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
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+<!doctype html public "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
+<html> <head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
+<title> Postfix manual - lmdb_table(5) </title>
+</head> <body> <pre>
+LMDB_TABLE(5) LMDB_TABLE(5)
+
+<b>NAME</b>
+ lmdb_table - Postfix LMDB adapter
+
+<b>SYNOPSIS</b>
+ <b>postmap <a href="lmdb_table.5.html">lmdb</a>:/etc/postfix/</b><i>filename</i>
+ <b>postmap -i <a href="lmdb_table.5.html">lmdb</a>:/etc/postfix/</b><i>filename</i> &lt;<i>inputfile</i>
+
+ <b>postmap -d "</b><i>key</i><b>" <a href="lmdb_table.5.html">lmdb</a>:/etc/postfix/</b><i>filename</i>
+ <b>postmap -d - <a href="lmdb_table.5.html">lmdb</a>:/etc/postfix/</b><i>filename</i> &lt;<i>inputfile</i>
+
+ <b>postmap -q "</b><i>key</i><b>" <a href="lmdb_table.5.html">lmdb</a>:/etc/postfix/</b><i>filename</i>
+ <b>postmap -q - <a href="lmdb_table.5.html">lmdb</a>:/etc/postfix/</b><i>filename</i> &lt;<i>inputfile</i>
+
+<b>DESCRIPTION</b>
+ The Postfix LMDB adapter provides access to a persistent, mem-
+ ory-mapped, key-value store. The database size is limited only by the
+ size of the memory address space (typically 31 or 47 bits on 32-bit or
+ 64-bit CPUs, respectively) and by the available file system space.
+
+<b>REQUESTS</b>
+ The LMDB adapter supports all Postfix lookup table operations. This
+ makes LMDB suitable for Postfix address rewriting, routing, access
+ policies, caches, or any information that can be stored under a fixed
+ lookup key.
+
+ When a transaction fails due to a full database, Postfix resizes the
+ database and retries the transaction.
+
+ Postfix table lookups may generate partial search keys such as domain
+ names without one or more subdomains, network addresses without one or
+ more least-significant octets, or email addresses without the local-
+ part, address extension or domain portion. This behavior is also found
+ with, for example, <a href="DATABASE_README.html#types">btree</a>:, <a href="DATABASE_README.html#types">hash</a>:, or <a href="ldap_table.5.html">ldap</a>: tables.
+
+ Changes to an LMDB database do not trigger an automatic daemon restart,
+ and do not require a daemon restart with "<b>postfix reload</b>".
+
+<b>RELIABILITY</b>
+ LMDB's copy-on-write architecture provides safe updates, at the cost of
+ using more space than some other flat-file databases. Read operations
+ are memory-mapped for speed. Write operations are not memory-mapped to
+ avoid silent corruption due to stray pointer bugs.
+
+ Multiple processes can safely update an LMDB database without serializ-
+ ing requests through the <a href="proxymap.8.html">proxymap(8)</a> service. This makes LMDB suitable
+ as a shared cache for <a href="verify.8.html">verify(8)</a> or <a href="postscreen.8.html">postscreen(8)</a> services.
+
+<b>SYNCHRONIZATION</b>
+ The Postfix LMDB adapter does not use LMDB's built-in locking scheme,
+ because that would require world-writable lockfiles and would violate
+ the Postfix security model. Instead, Postfix uses fcntl(2) locks with
+ whole-file granularity. Programs that use LMDB's built-in locking pro-
+ tocol will corrupt a Postfix LMDB database or will read garbage.
+
+ Every Postfix LMDB database read or write transaction must be protected
+ from start to end with a shared or exclusive fcntl(2) lock. A writer
+ may atomically downgrade an exclusive lock to a shared lock, but it
+ must hold an exclusive lock while opening another write transaction.
+
+ Note that fcntl(2) locks do not protect transactions within the same
+ process against each other. If a program cannot avoid making simulta-
+ neous database requests, then it must protect its transactions with
+ in-process locks, in addition to the per-process fcntl(2) locks.
+
+<b>CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS</b>
+ Short-lived programs automatically pick up changes to <a href="postconf.5.html">main.cf</a>. With
+ long-running daemon programs, Use the command "<b>postfix reload</b>" after a
+ configuration change.
+
+ <b><a href="postconf.5.html#lmdb_map_size">lmdb_map_size</a> (16777216)</b>
+ The initial OpenLDAP LMDB database size limit in bytes.
+
+<b>SEE ALSO</b>
+ <a href="postconf.1.html">postconf(1)</a>, Postfix supported lookup tables
+ <a href="postmap.1.html">postmap(1)</a>, Postfix lookup table maintenance
+ <a href="postconf.5.html">postconf(5)</a>, configuration parameters
+
+<b>README FILES</b>
+ <a href="DATABASE_README.html">DATABASE_README</a>, Postfix lookup table overview
+ <a href="LMDB_README.html">LMDB_README</a>, Postfix OpenLDAP LMDB howto
+
+<b>LICENSE</b>
+ The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
+
+<b>HISTORY</b>
+ LMDB support was introduced with Postfix version 2.11.
+
+<b>AUTHOR(S)</b>
+ Howard Chu
+ Symas Corporation
+
+ 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
+
+ LMDB_TABLE(5)
+</pre> </body> </html>