I did the same here. No problems. 

Sent from my iPad

> On 25 Nov 2015, at 9:20 p.m., Steve Jenkins <st...@stevejenkins.com> wrote:
> 
> I've been living with the backwards-compatible warnings on postfix reloads 
> for a while, and figured today was the day to turn them off.
> 
> Here's what I'm always seeing:
> 
> # postfix reload
> postfix: Postfix is running with backwards-compatible default settings
> postfix: See http://www.postfix.org/COMPATIBILITY_README.html for details
> postfix: To disable backwards compatibility use "postconf 
> compatibility_level=2" and "postfix reload"
> postfix/postfix-script: refreshing the Postfix mail system
> 
> According to http://www.postfix.org/COMPATIBILITY_README.html, "The safety 
> net will log a warning whenever a "new" default setting could have an 
> negative effect on your mail flow."
> 
> Inspecting my logs, I'm not seeing any of the five messages mentioned in that 
> README, so I feel safe changing the compatibility level to "2" as recommended 
> by the warning above.
> 
> But doing so yields the following messages after the reload:
> 
> postfix: warning: smtputf8_enable is true, but EAI support is not compiled in
> postfix/postlog: warning: smtputf8_enable is true, but EAI support is not 
> compiled in
> postfix/postfix-script: refreshing the Postfix mail system
> postsuper: warning: smtputf8_enable is true, but EAI support is not compiled 
> in
> 
> Doing a postconf smtputf8_enable=no and reloading makes all the warnings 
> stop, and things seem to be operating normally.
> 
> Did I do the right thing? Or should I have re-compiled Postfix with smtputf8 
> support (I build my own Postfix binaries) and gone with the new default?
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> SJ
> 

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