On Tue, 3 Feb 2015 17:06:14 +1300
Jeremy Bowen jer...@smartpoint.co.nz wrote:
From here it looks like I need to initially add the following lines
to master.cf:
filterunix - n n - 10 pipe
flags=Rq user=filter null_sender=
argv=/usr/local/bin/myscript
This one is a bit off-topic however I'm hoping that someone has come
across something similar and can point me in the right direction.
I would like to try to intercept certain outgoing emails which have an
attachment matching a particular set of criteria and then, on-the-fly,
rename the
On Mon, 02 Feb 2015 14:42:47 -0600
Noel Jones njo...@megan.vbhcs.org wrote:
On 2/2/2015 2:28 PM, Jeremy Bowen wrote:
I would like to try to intercept certain outgoing emails which have
an attachment matching a particular set of criteria and then,
on-the-fly, rename the attachment
On Tue, 3 Feb 2015 11:21:17 +1300
Jeremy Bowen jer...@smartpoint.co.nz wrote:
I think I can do what I need to accomplish more accurately
efficiently with sed and procmail. I'm just not quite sure how I
would go about configuring postfix to make this operate on outgoing
mail. Any advice ?
OK
First up, please see the output from postconf -n appended below.
I have just had to quickly rebuild a failed server and get it back into
production. I have got basic
functionality up and running but I've had to reconstruct the configuration as
backups were incomplete
(yeah I know!) It is now
Just a quick request for advice on filtering incoming email.
About 12+ years ago on a system which has long since retired, I remember
having a problem with WINMAIL.DAT attachments in emails. The solution
used some combination of tools which, from memory, included
things like tnefclean and
Hi all
I have a virtual alias which currently forwards to a list of email
addresses however this is getting unwieldy. (This is one address
amongst a bunch of other virtual aliases on multiple virtual domains).
virtual_alias_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/virtual
eg.
/etc/postfix/virtual contains:
Hi All
I'm probably missing something really obvious but I can't see what I'm
doing wrong.
I have a server which I wish to use to host both my primary domain (eg.
example.com) and several virtual domains (virtual1.com, virtual2.com
etc.).
I'm running Postfix v2.3.3 on CentOS 5 (This is the
On 10/11/2010, Victor Duchovni victor.ducho...@morganstanley.com
wrote:
Avoid confusing yourself with localpart-only addresses on the RHS of
address lookup tables. Given your myorigin setting, Make that:
@example.com jer...@example.com
j...@virtual1.com j...@example.com
Hi
I'm running Postfix v2.5.6 which I compiled myself from unmodified sources.
(postconf -d
appended below)
I have a small server handling 5 domains and I'm having trouble with one of my
virtual domains
wrt recipient verification.
Mail to 4 of the domains behaves correctly and is either
Eero Volotinen wrote:
Jeremy Bowen wrote:
Hi
I'm running Postfix v2.5.6 which I compiled myself from unmodified
sources. (postconf -d appended below)
I have a small server handling 5 domains and I'm having trouble with
one of my virtual domains wrt recipient verification.
Why you even
Barney Desmond wrote:
2009/11/15 Jeremy Bowen jer...@smartpoint.co.nz:
I'm running Postfix v2.5.6 which I compiled myself from unmodified
sources. (postconf -d appended below)
Anyway, you need to post the output of `postconf -n` (settings that are
non-default) -
read the help
I have a prolem with the new domain I added to the server and it is this
new domain which is doing verification probes to my ISP.
So, you need to add that domain to mydestination= parameter?
It's added to my vdomains file as per:
virtual_mailbox_domains = /etc/postfix/vdomains
(And Yes, I've
On 11/15/2009, (Wietse Venema) wie...@porcupine.org wrote:
If you specify /etc/postfix/vdomains then postmap is not required,
and some parts of Postfix never find out that the file has changed
until postfix reload.
postmap is required with, for example, hash:/etc/postfix/vdomains
instead of
On 11/15/2009, Eero Volotinen eero.voloti...@iki.fi wrote:
virtual_mailbox_domains ($virtual_mailbox_maps)
Postfix is final destination for the specified list
of domains; mail is delivered via the $vir-
tual_transport mail delivery transport.
On 11/15/2009, Jeremy Bowen jer...@smartpoint.co.nz wrote:
On 11/15/2009, (Wietse Venema) wie...@porcupine.org wrote:
You configured one domain in a different manner than the four domains.
To convince yourself, you could add a sixth domain (such as
example.com) and see how Postfix tries to handle
On 11/15/2009, (Wietse Venema) wie...@porcupine.org wrote:
You configured one domain in a different manner than the four domains.
To convince yourself, you could add a sixth domain (such as
example.com) and see how Postfix tries to handle it.
OK, Just added example.com to /etc/postfix/vdomains.
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