* Stefan Foerster cite+postfix-us...@incertum.net:
While I agree that it is totally obvious that table are re-read as
soon as a new proxymap(8) process is spawned, on a resonably busy
system, this won't happen too often. So getting a definitive answer on
that one would still be helpful.
Has
Ralf Hildebrandt:
* Stefan Foerster cite+postfix-us...@incertum.net:
While I agree that it is totally obvious that table are re-read as
soon as a new proxymap(8) process is spawned, on a resonably busy
system, this won't happen too often. So getting a definitive answer on
that one would
On Thu, Jul 15, 2010 at 02:31:36PM -0400, Wietse Venema wrote:
Also, only use proxymap for IPC based tables (ldap, mysql, pgsql, tcp, ...),
do not use proxymap for indexed files, cidr tables, pcre/regexp tables,
It depends on what the trade-offs are. I know of one user with
very
Victor Duchovni:
On Thu, Jul 15, 2010 at 02:31:36PM -0400, Wietse Venema wrote:
Also, only use proxymap for IPC based tables (ldap, mysql, pgsql, tcp,
...),
do not use proxymap for indexed files, cidr tables, pcre/regexp tables,
It depends on what the trade-offs are. I
On Thu, Jul 15, 2010 at 03:37:02PM -0400, Wietse Venema wrote:
One might suggest that CIDR is not a good fit for this even if stored
just once, an IPC based server that walks trees rather than lists
would be far more suitable...
I agree that the Postfix CIDR implementation achieves
Two questions regarding proxymap:
1. Is a single proxymap(8) process able to handle multiple lookup
tables? I.e., taking the example from the manpage, modifying it to
mysql = proxy:mysql:/etc/postfix/
virtual_alias_maps =${mysql}virtual_alias_maps.cf
virtual_alias_domains =
Stefan Foerster put forth on 6/20/2010 5:16 AM:
Two questions regarding proxymap:
1. Is a single proxymap(8) process able to handle multiple lookup
tables? I.e., taking the example from the manpage, modifying it to
For read maps, yes. And even better, one process will do multiple map types.
Two questions regarding proxymap:
1. Is a single proxymap(8) process able to handle multiple lookup
tables? I.e., taking the example from the manpage, modifying it to
mysql = proxy:mysql:/etc/postfix/
virtual_alias_maps =${mysql}virtual_alias_maps.cf
virtual_alias_domains =
* Stan Hoeppner s...@hardwarefreak.com:
Stefan Foerster put forth on 6/20/2010 5:16 AM:
and furthermore assuming a limit of 40 proxymap(8) processes defined
in master.cf, will this result in 40 or 80 connections to the
database?
I have no idea on this one. The whole point of proxymap is
Stefan Foerster:
Two questions regarding proxymap:
1. Is a single proxymap(8) process able to handle multiple lookup
tables? I.e., taking the example from the manpage, modifying it to
mysql = proxy:mysql:/etc/postfix/
virtual_alias_maps =${mysql}virtual_alias_maps.cf
* Wietse Venema wie...@porcupine.org:
Stefan Foerster:
Two questions regarding proxymap:
1. Is a single proxymap(8) process able to handle multiple lookup
tables? I.e., taking the example from the manpage, modifying it to
mysql = proxy:mysql:/etc/postfix/
virtual_alias_maps
Stefan Foerster:
This depends on the query load. When a client needs proxymap service
it is either helped by an existing proxymap process that is idle,
or else it is helped by a new proxymap process. In the first case
it will share the table with other proxymap clients.
As a follow-up:
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