| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files |
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E.g., ldap.fripost.org, ntp.fripost.org, etc. (Ideally the DNS zone
would be provisioned by ansible, too.) It's a bit unclear how to index
the subdomains (mx{1,2,3}, etc), though.
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Which might be caused by slow LDAP lookups in transport_maps. Instead,
we alias each addresses for which we want a custom transport to a
dedicated "dummy" domain, and use a static (CDB) transport_maps to map
said domains to their transport; the receiver can then use canonical(8)
to restore the original envelope recipient. Since the alias resolution
is performed by cleanup(8), which can run in parallel with other
instances, it should decongestion bottlenecks under heavy loads.
So far only the MX:es have been decongestioned. The list manager and
the MDA should be treated as well.
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We introduce a limitation on the domain-aliases: they can't have
children (e.g., lists or users) any longer.
The whole alias resolution, including catch-alls and domain aliases, is
now done in 'virtual_alias_maps'. We stop the resolution by returning a
dummy alias A -> A for mailboxes, before trying the catch-all maps.
We're still using transport_maps for lists. If it turns out to be a
bottleneck due to the high-latency coming from LDAP maps, (and the fact
that there is a single qmgr(8) daemon), we could rewrite lists to a
dummy subdomain and use a static transport_maps instead:
virtual_alias_maps:
mylist@example.org -> mylist#example.org@mlmmj.localhost.localdomain
transport_maps:
mlmmj.localhost.localdomain mlmmj:
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It has to be performed last, to give a chance to be accepted as a
regular mailbox.
We introduce a new, dedicated, smtpd daemon whose only purpose is to
resolve catch-alls.
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Instead, we pretend that lists are valid users (via a match in the
mailbox_transport_maps) but choose a different transport (with the same
request in transport_maps).
The advantage is that we get rid of the ugly hack for list transport…
A minor drawback is that we now have two LDAP lookups instead of one for
non local addresses (ie, everything but reserved addresses). Hopefully
the requests are cached; but even if they aren't, querying a local LDAP
server is supposed to be cheap.
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Other abreviations are upper case.
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