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CANONICAL(5)                                         CANONICAL(5)

<b>NAME</b>
       canonical - format of Postfix canonical table

<b>SYNOPSIS</b>
       <b>postmap</b> <b>/etc/postfix/canonical</b>

       <b>postmap</b> <b>-q</b> <b>"</b><i>string</i><b>"</b> <b>/etc/postfix/canonical</b>

       <b>postmap</b> <b>-q</b> <b>-</b> <b>/etc/postfix/canonical</b> &lt;<i>inputfile</i>

<b>DESCRIPTION</b>
       The  optional <b>canonical</b> table specifies an address mapping
       for local and non-local addresses. The mapping is used  by
       the  <a href="cleanup.8.html"><b>cleanup</b>(8)</a> daemon.  The address mapping is recursive.

       Normally, the <b>canonical</b> table is specified as a text  file
       that  serves  as  input  to  the  <a href="postmap.1.html"><b>postmap</b>(1)</a> command.  The
       result, an indexed file in <b>dbm</b> or <b>db</b> format, is  used  for
       fast  searching  by  the  mail system. Execute the command
       <b>postmap</b> <b>/etc/postfix/canonical</b> in  order  to  rebuild  the
       indexed file after changing the text file.

       When  the  table  is provided via other means such as NIS,
       LDAP or SQL, the same lookups are  done  as  for  ordinary
       indexed files.

       Alternatively,  the  table  can  be provided as a regular-
       expression map where patterns are given as regular expres-
       sions.  In  that  case, the lookups are done in a slightly
       different way as described below.

       The  <b>canonical</b>  mapping  affects   both   message   header
       addresses (i.e. addresses that appear inside messages) and
       message envelope addresses  (for  example,  the  addresses
       that  are  used in SMTP protocol commands). Think Sendmail
       rule set <b>S3</b>, if you like.

       Typically, one would use the <b>canonical</b>  table  to  replace
       login   names   by  <i>Firstname.Lastname</i>,  or  to  clean  up
       addresses produced by legacy mail systems.

       The <b>canonical</b> mapping is not to be confused  with  <i>virtual</i>
       <i>domain</i> support. Use the <a href="virtual.5.html"><b>virtual</b>(5)</a> map for that purpose.

       The  <b>canonical</b>  mapping  is  not to be confused with local
       aliasing.  Use the <a href="aliases.5.html"><b>aliases</b>(5)</a> map for that purpose.

<b>TABLE</b> <b>FORMAT</b>
       The format of the <b>canonical</b> table is as follows:

       <i>pattern</i> <i>result</i>
              When <i>pattern</i> matches a mail address, replace it  by
              the corresponding <i>result</i>.

       blank lines and comments
              Empty  lines and whitespace-only lines are ignored,
              as are lines whose first  non-whitespace  character
              is a `#'.

       multi-line text
              A  logical  line starts with non-whitespace text. A
              line that starts with whitespace continues a  logi-
              cal line.

       With lookups from indexed files such as DB or DBM, or from
       networked tables such as NIS, LDAP or  SQL,  patterns  are
       tried in the order as listed below:

       <i>user</i>@<i>domain</i> <i>address</i>
              <i>user</i>@<i>domain</i>  is  replaced by <i>address</i>. This form has
              the highest precedence.

              This is useful to clean up  addresses  produced  by
              legacy  mail  systems.  It can also be used to pro-
              duce <i>Firstname.Lastname</i> style  addresses,  but  see
              below for a simpler solution.

       <i>user</i> <i>address</i>
              <i>user</i>@<i>site</i> is replaced by <i>address</i> when <i>site</i> is equal
              to $<b>myorigin</b>, when <i>site</i> is  listed  in  $<b>mydestina-</b>
              <b>tion</b>, or when it is listed in $<b>inet</b><i>_</i><b>interfaces</b>.

              This  form  is  useful for replacing login names by
              <i>Firstname.Lastname</i>.

       @<i>domain</i> <i>address</i>
              Every address in <i>domain</i>  is  replaced  by  <i>address</i>.
              This form has the lowest precedence.

       In  all the above forms, when <i>address</i> has the form @<i>other-</i>
       <i>domain</i>, the result is the same user in <i>otherdomain</i>.

<b>ADDRESS</b> <b>EXTENSION</b>
       When a mail address localpart contains the optional recip-
       ient  delimiter  (e.g., <i>user+foo</i>@<i>domain</i>), the lookup order
       becomes: <i>user+foo</i>@<i>domain</i>, <i>user</i>@<i>domain</i>, <i>user+foo</i>, <i>user</i>, and
       @<i>domain</i>.   An unmatched address extension (<i>+foo</i>) is propa-
       gated to the result of table lookup.

<b>REGULAR</b> <b>EXPRESSION</b> <b>TABLES</b>
       This section describes how the table lookups  change  when
       the table is given in the form of regular expressions. For
       a description of regular expression lookup  table  syntax,
       see <a href="regexp_table.5.html"><b>regexp</b><i>_</i><b>table</b>(5)</a> or <a href="pcre_table.5.html"><b>pcre</b><i>_</i><b>table</b>(5)</a>.

       Each  pattern  is  a regular expression that is applied to
       the entire address being looked up. Thus, <i>user@domain</i> mail
       addresses  are  not  broken up into their <i>user</i> and <i>@domain</i>
       constituent parts, nor is <i>user+foo</i> broken up into <i>user</i> and
       <i>foo</i>.

       Patterns  are  applied  in  the  order as specified in the
       table, until a pattern is found that  matches  the  search
       string.

       Results  are  the  same as with indexed file lookups, with
       the additional feature that parenthesized substrings  from
       the pattern can be interpolated as <b>$1</b>, <b>$2</b> and so on.

<b>BUGS</b>
       The  table format does not understand quoting conventions.

<b>CONFIGURATION</b> <b>PARAMETERS</b>
       The following <b>main.cf</b> parameters are  especially  relevant
       to  this  topic.  See  the Postfix <b>main.cf</b> file for syntax
       details and for default values.  Use  the  <b>postfix</b>  <b>reload</b>
       command after a configuration change.

       <b>canonical</b><i>_</i><b>maps</b>
              List of canonical mapping tables.

       <b>recipient</b><i>_</i><b>canonical</b><i>_</i><b>maps</b>
              Address  mapping  lookup  table  for  envelope  and
              header recipient addresses.

       <b>sender</b><i>_</i><b>canonical</b><i>_</i><b>maps</b>
              Address  mapping  lookup  table  for  envelope  and
              header sender addresses.

       Other parameters of interest:

       <b>inet</b><i>_</i><b>interfaces</b>
              The  network  interface  addresses that this system
              receives mail on.  You need to stop and start Post-
              fix when this parameter changes.

       <b>masquerade</b><i>_</i><b>classes</b>
              List  of  address  classes subject to masquerading:
              zero or more of  <b>envelope</b><i>_</i><b>sender</b>,  <b>envelope</b><i>_</i><b>recipi-</b>
              <b>ent</b>, <b>header</b><i>_</i><b>sender</b>, <b>header</b><i>_</i><b>recipient</b>.

       <b>masquerade</b><i>_</i><b>domains</b>
              List  of  domains  that hide their subdomain struc-
              ture.

       <b>masquerade</b><i>_</i><b>exceptions</b>
              List of user names that are not subject to  address
              masquerading.

       <b>mydestination</b>
              List  of  domains  that  this mail system considers
              local.

       <b>myorigin</b>
              The domain that is appended to locally-posted mail.

       <b>owner</b><i>_</i><b>request</b><i>_</i><b>special</b>
              Give special treatment to <b>owner-</b><i>xxx</i> and <i>xxx</i><b>-request</b>
              addresses.

<b>SEE</b> <b>ALSO</b>
       <a href="cleanup.8.html">cleanup(8)</a> canonicalize and enqueue mail
       <a href="postmap.1.html">postmap(1)</a> create mapping table
       <a href="virtual.5.html">virtual(5)</a> virtual domain mapping
       <a href="pcre_table.5.html">pcre_table(5)</a> format of PCRE tables
       <a href="regexp_table.5.html">regexp_table(5)</a> format of POSIX regular expression tables

<b>LICENSE</b>
       The Secure Mailer license must be  distributed  with  this
       software.

<b>AUTHOR(S)</b>
       Wietse Venema
       IBM T.J. Watson Research
       P.O. Box 704
       Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA

                                                     CANONICAL(5)
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