# DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE. EDIT THE MAIN.CF FILE INSTEAD. THE STUFF # HERE JUST SERVES AS AN EXAMPLE. # # This file contains example settings of Postfix configuration # parameters that control virtual alias database lookups. # This file describes configuration settings that can be used for # virtual aliasing and for implementing VIRTUAL ALIAS DOMAINS (domains # for which all addresses are aliased to addresses in other domains). # For details, see the virtual(5) manual page. # # If you need VIRTUAL MAILBOX DOMAINS (domains where each virtual # address can have its own mailbox), then you should use the virtual(8) # delivery agent instead. For details, see the VIRTUAL_README file. # The virtual_alias_maps parameter specifies optional lookup tables to # alias specific addresses or even complete domains to another # address. This is typically used to implement virtual domain support. # # By default, no address aliasing is done. # # If you use this feature, run "postmap /etc/postfix/virtual" to # build the necessary DBM or DB file after change. # # It may take a minute or so before the change becomes visible. # Use "postfix reload" to eliminate the delay. # #virtual_alias_maps = dbm:/etc/postfix/virtual #virtual_alias_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/virtual #virtual_alias_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/virtual, nis:virtual #virtual_alias_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/virtual, netinfo:/virtual virtual_alias_maps = # The virtual_alias_domains parameter specifies the names of virtual # alias domains, that is, domains for which all addresses are aliased # to addresses in other domains. # # By default, this is set to $virtual_alias_maps so that you can keep # all information about virtual alias domains in one place. If # you have many users, it is better to separate information that # changes more frequently (virtual address -> local or remote address # mapping) from information that changes less frequently (the list # of virtual domain names). # # Specify a list of host or domain names, /file/name or type:table # patterns, separated by commas and/or whitespace. A /file/name # pattern is replaced by its contents; a type:table is matched when # a name matches a lookup key (the right-hand side is ignored). # Continue long lines by starting the next line with whitespace. # #virtual_alias_domains = virtual1.tld virtual2.tld virtual_alias_domains = $virtual_alias_maps