Sponsored Content
Special Forums IP Networking Configuring POSTFIX to receive emails only from localhost Post 302252034 by mojoman on Tuesday 28th of October 2008 04:13:18 PM
Old 10-28-2008
Configuring POSTFIX to receive emails only from localhost

Hello,

I am new to POSTFIX.

My manager has asked me to configure POSTFIX running on a server to accept mail only from itself(localhost). Can someone tell me how I can go about doing this?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Configuring my PostFix Mail Server

Hi folks! I have a Postfix email server running on my MacOs x box. I would like to customize this automatic message to portuguese language: ============ This is the Postfix program at host myserver.com. I'm sorry to have to inform you that the message returned below could not... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: fundidor
4 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Please help with Postfix config issue - How to allow remote Exchange server to relay to my postfix

Hi guys One of our clients have a problem with sending email to a certain domain. No matter what we try, the mails just dont get delivered. What I did then, is created a new connector on their Exchange server, pointing all mail sent to their client at "domain1" to relay to our Postfix mail... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: wbdevilliers
0 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Help Configuring Postfix for no-relaying

Hi, I have read a lot of manuals and man pages yet I am still confused so I thought I would ask this forum for some help. I need to configure my postfix to accept email for certain domains. And it should not be allowed to deliver emails from another emails! So I did the following: ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mojoman
1 Replies

4. Programming

Is it possible to receive emails from my computer?

Could someone help me receive emails sent to my ip address with a c program? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Errigour
5 Replies

5. Red Hat

Postfix: emails addressed to multiple smart hosts

Hi, I am in process of setting up a SMTP server on RHEL 6 using Postfix. I am stuck at one point so any help would be appreciated. I have configured my xsender to use this new SMTP server as its mail server. If I send any emails addressed TO example.com the SMTP server should use the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: max29583
0 Replies

6. Solaris

Configuring Centralized Solaris Server to Receive Syslogs

Hello, I am new to Solaris. However, I was able to configure the Syslog server on Solaris. I am using a windows client to send logs to my Solaris syslog server. this is working fine. however, I have 23 servers which are sending their logs to the syslog server and it is very difficult to read all... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ravmohun
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Need an help in configuring Postfix mail relay server

Hello, We have 2 servers, server A and Server B in same domain. I have already configured the Serevr A to send an email to the internet (outside domain) by opening the port 25 to the internet. Now I need to send an email to the outside domain from Server B using server A. I have opened the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sathishbabu89
1 Replies

8. AIX

Not able to receive emails after job execution

Hi, we've configured mail on DB2 data studio DSWC console. (gave mail relay server details) it used to work fine. like whenever we schedule backup jobs from DB2 side, we used to get emails after job completion. for some reason, it stopped working now. Please see the below info messges... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: aaron8667
8 Replies

9. Red Hat

I need help configuring postfix mail server within AWS

I am trying to setup the postfix email server on Redhat Linux 6.5 running as an EC2 instance in AWS. I can do reverse port mapping to open a port from our internal network to the AWS linux server, so we should be able to get to our mail server, even though it is a one way path from our internal ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: gandolf989
1 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Issues sending emails using PostFix Mail Server

I'm unable to send email from my Linux server despite SMTP port 25 Active and Listening. # hostname TechX I checked the mail log ( /var/log/maillog ) and found the below error. I'm sharing all the ".cf" files seen in the error log. 1. # more /etc/postfix/main.cf # postfix... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
0 Replies
POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)						File Formats Manual						POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)

NAME
postfix-wrapper - Postfix multi-instance API DESCRIPTION
Support for managing multiple Postfix instances is available as of version 2.6. Instances share executable files and documentation, but have their own directories for configuration, queue and data files. This document describes how the familiar "postfix start" etc. user interface can be used to manage one or multiple Postfix instances, and gives details of an API to coordinate activities between the postfix(1) command and a multi-instance manager program. With multi-instance support, the default Postfix instance is always required. This instance is identified by the config_directory parame- ter's default value. GENERAL OPERATION
Multi-instance support is backwards compatible: when you run only one Postfix instance, commands such as "postfix start" will not change behavior at all. Even with multiple Postfix instances, you can keep using the same postfix commands in boot scripts, upgrade procedures, and other places. The commands do more work, but humans are not forced to learn new tricks. For example, to start all Postfix instances, use: # postfix start Other postfix(1) commands also work as expected. For example, to find out what Postfix instances exist in a multi-instance configuration, use: # postfix status This enumerates the status of all Postfix instances within a multi-instance configuration. MANAGING AN INDIVIDUAL POSTFIX INSTANCE
To manage a specific Postfix instance, specify its configuration directory on the postfix(1) command line: # postfix -c /path/to/config_directory command Alternatively, the postfix(1) command accepts the instance's configuration directory via the MAIL_CONFIG environment variable (the -c com- mand-line option has higher precedence). Otherwise, the postfix(1) command will operate on all Postfix instances. ENABLING
POSTFIX(1) MULTI-INSTANCE MODE By default, the postfix(1) command operates in single-instance mode. In this mode the command invokes the postfix-script file directly (currently installed in the daemon directory). This file contains the commands that start or stop one Postfix instance, that upgrade the configuration of one Postfix instance, and so on. When the postfix(1) command operates in multi-instance mode as discussed below, the command needs to execute start, stop, etc. commands for each Postfix instance. This multiplication of commands is handled by a multi-instance manager program. Turning on postfix(1) multi-instance mode goes as follows: in the default Postfix instance's main.cf file, 1) specify the pathname of a multi-instance manager program with the multi_instance_wrapper parameter; 2) populate the multi_instance_directories parameter with the configuration directory pathnames of additional Postfix instances. For example: /etc/postfix/main.cf: multi_instance_wrapper = $daemon_directory/postfix-wrapper multi_instance_directories = /etc/postfix-test The $daemon_directory/postfix-wrapper file implements a simple manager and contains instructions for creating Postfix instances by hand. The postmulti(1) command provides a more extensive implementation including support for life-cycle management. The multi_instance_directories and other main.cf parameters are listed below in the CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS section. In multi-instance mode, the postfix(1) command invokes the $multi_instance_wrapper command instead of the postfix-script file. This multi- instance manager in turn executes the postfix(1) command in single-instance mode for each Postfix instance. To illustrate the main ideas behind multi-instance operation, below is an example of a simple but useful multi-instance manager implementa- tion: #!/bin/sh : ${command_directory?"do not invoke this command directly"} POSTCONF=$command_directory/postconf POSTFIX=$command_directory/postfix instance_dirs=`$POSTCONF -h multi_instance_directories | sed 's/,/ /'` || exit 1 err=0 for dir in $config_directory $instance_dirs do case "$1" in stop|abort|flush|reload|drain) test "`$POSTCONF -c $dir -h multi_instance_enable`" = yes || continue;; start) test "`$POSTCONF -c $dir -h multi_instance_enable`" = yes || { $POSTFIX -c $dir check || err=$? continue };; esac $POSTFIX -c $dir "$@" || err=$? done exit $err PER-INSTANCE MULTI-INSTANCE MANAGER CONTROLS Each Postfix instance has its own main.cf file with parameters that control how the multi-instance manager operates on that instance. This section discusses the most important settings. The setting "multi_instance_enable = yes" allows the multi-instance manager to start (stop, etc.) the corresponding Postfix instance. For safety reasons, this setting is not the default. The default setting "multi_instance_enable = no" is useful for manual testing with "postfix -c /path/name start" etc. The multi-instance manager will not start such an instance, and it will skip commands such as "stop" or "flush" that require a running Postfix instance. The multi-instance manager will execute commands such as "check", "set-permissions" or "upgrade-configuration", and it will replace "start" by "check" so that problems will be reported even when the instance is disabled. MAINTAINING SHARED AND NON-SHARED FILES Some files are shared between Postfix instances, such as executables and manpages, and some files are per-instance, such as configuration files, mail queue files, and data files. See the NON-SHARED FILES section below for a list of per-instance files. Before Postfix multi-instance support was implemented, the executables, manpages, etc., have always been maintained as part of the default Postfix instance. With multi-instance support, we simply continue to do this. Specifically, a Postfix instance will not check or update shared files when that instance's config_directory value is listed with the default main.cf file's multi_instance_directories parameter. The consequence of this approach is that the default Postfix instance should be checked and updated before any other instances. MULTI-INSTANCE API SUMMARY Only the multi-instance manager implements support for the multi_instance_enable configuration parameter. The multi-instance manager will start only Postfix instances whose main.cf file has "multi_instance_enable = yes". A setting of "no" allows a Postfix instance to be tested by hand. The postfix(1) command operates on only one Postfix instance when the -c option is specified, or when MAIL_CONFIG is present in the process environment. This is necessary to terminate recursion. Otherwise, when the multi_instance_directories parameter value is non-empty, the postfix(1) command executes the command specified with the multi_instance_wrapper parameter, instead of executing the commands in postfix-script. The multi-instance manager skips commands such as "stop" or "reload" that require a running Postfix instance, when an instance does not have "multi_instance_enable = yes". This avoids false error messages. The multi-instance manager replaces a "start" command by "check" when a Postfix instance's main.cf file does not have "multi_instance_enable = yes". This substitution ensures that problems will be reported even when the instance is disabled. No Postfix command or script will update or check shared files when its config_directory value is listed in the default main.cf's multi_instance_directories parameter value. Therefore, the default instance should be checked and updated before any Postfix instances that depend on it. Set-gid commands such as postdrop(1) and postqueue(1) effectively append the multi_instance_directories parameter value to the legacy alternate_config_directories parameter value. The commands use this information to determine whether a -c option or MAIL_CONFIG environment setting specifies a legitimate value. The legacy alternate_config_directories parameter remains necessary for non-default Postfix instances that are running different versions of Postfix, or that are not managed together with the default Postfix instance. ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
MAIL_CONFIG When present, this forces the postfix(1) command to operate only on the specified Postfix instance. This environment variable is exported by the postfix(1) -c option, so that postfix(1) commands in descendant processes will work correctly. CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
The text below provides only a parameter summary. See postconf(5) for more details. multi_instance_directories (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. multi_instance_wrapper (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. multi_instance_name (empty) The optional instance name of this Postfix instance. multi_instance_group (empty) The optional instance group name of this Postfix instance. multi_instance_enable (no) Allow this Postfix instance to be started, stopped, etc., by a multi-instance manager. NON-SHARED FILES config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output) The default location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf configuration files. data_directory (see 'postconf -d' output) The directory with Postfix-writable data files (for example: caches, pseudo-random numbers). queue_directory (see 'postconf -d' output) The location of the Postfix top-level queue directory. SEE ALSO
postfix(1) Postfix control program postmulti(1) full-blown multi-instance manager $daemon_directory/postfix-wrapper simple multi-instance manager 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 POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:25 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy