LDAP_TABLE(5)                                                    LDAP_TABLE(5)

NAME
       ldap_table - Postfix LDAP client configuration

SYNOPSIS
       postmap -q "string" ldap:/etc/postfix/filename

       postmap -q - ldap:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile

DESCRIPTION
       The  Postfix  mail system uses optional tables for address rewriting or
       mail routing. These tables are usually in dbm or db format.

       Alternatively, lookup tables can be specified as LDAP databases.

       In order to use LDAP lookups, define an LDAP source as a  lookup  table
       in main.cf, for example:

           alias_maps = ldap:/etc/postfix/ldap-aliases.cf

       The  file /etc/postfix/ldap-aliases.cf has the same format as the Post-
       fix main.cf file, and can specify the parameters  described  below.  An
       example is given at the end of this manual.

       This  configuration  method  is  available with Postfix version 2.1 and
       later.  See the section "OBSOLETE MAIN.CF PARAMETERS" below  for  older
       Postfix versions.

       For  details  about  LDAP  SSL and STARTTLS, see the section on SSL and
       STARTTLS below.

LIST MEMBERSHIP
       When using LDAP to store lists  such  as  $mynetworks,  $mydestination,
       $relay_domains,  $local_recipient_maps, etc., it is important to under-
       stand that the table must store each list member as a separate key. The
       table  lookup  verifies  the *existence* of the key. See "Postfix lists
       versus tables" in the DATABASE_README document for a discussion.

       Do NOT create tables that return the full list of domains in  $mydesti-
       nation or $relay_domains etc., or IP addresses in $mynetworks.

       DO create tables with each matching item as a key and with an arbitrary
       value. With LDAP databases it is not uncommon to return the key itself.

       For example, NEVER do this in a map defining $mydestination:

           query_filter = domain=*
           result_attribute = domain

       Do this instead:

           query_filter = domain=%s
           result_attribute = domain

GENERAL LDAP PARAMETERS
       In  the  text  below,  default  values are given in parentheses.  Note:
       don't use quotes in these variables; at least, not  until  the  Postfix
       configuration routines understand how to deal with quoted strings.

       server_host (default: localhost)
              The name of the host running the LDAP server, e.g.

                  server_host = ldap.example.com

              Depending  on the LDAP client library you're using, it should be
              possible to specify multiple servers here, with the library try-
              ing  them  in order should the first one fail. It should also be
              possible to give each server in the list a different port (over-
              riding server_port below), by naming them like

                  server_host = ldap.example.com:1444

              NOTE:  if  "server_host"  specifies  a load balancer, specify it
              multiple times in the "server_host" line, so  that  the  Postfix
              LDAP  client  will  reconnect  immediately  after an LDAP server
              failure.

              With OpenLDAP, a (list of) LDAP URLs can be used to specify both
              the hostname(s) and the port(s):

                  server_host = ldap://ldap.example.com:1444
                              ldap://ldap2.example.com:1444

              All  LDAP  URLs  accepted by the OpenLDAP library are supported,
              including connections over UNIX domain  sockets,  and  LDAP  SSL
              (the  last  one provided that OpenLDAP was compiled with support
              for SSL):

                  server_host = ldapi://%2Fsome%2Fpath
                              ldaps://ldap.example.com:636

       server_port (default: 389)
              The port the LDAP server listens on, e.g.

                  server_port = 778

       timeout (default: 10 seconds)
              The number of seconds a search can take before timing out,  e.g.

                  timeout = 5

       search_base (No default; you must configure this)
              The RFC2253 base DN at which to conduct the search, e.g.

                  search_base = dc=your, dc=com

              With Postfix 2.2 and later this parameter supports the following
              '%' expansions:

              %%     This is replaced by a literal '%' character.

              %s     This is replaced by the input key.  RFC 2253  quoting  is
                     used  to  make sure that the input key does not add unex-
                     pected metacharacters.

              %u     When the input key is an address of the form user@domain,
                     %u is replaced by the (RFC 2253) quoted local part of the
                     address.  Otherwise, %u is replaced by the entire  search
                     string.   If  the  localpart is empty, the search is sup-
                     pressed and returns no results.

              %d     When the input key is an address of the form user@domain,
                     %d  is  replaced  by the (RFC 2253) quoted domain part of
                     the address.  Otherwise, the  search  is  suppressed  and
                     returns no results.

              %[SUD] For the search_base parameter, the upper-case equivalents
                     of the  above  expansions  behave  identically  to  their
                     lower-case  counter-parts. With the result_format parame-
                     ter (previously called result_filter see the OTHER  OBSO-
                     LETE FEATURES section and below), they expand to the cor-
                     responding components of input key rather than the result
                     value.

              %[1-9] The  patterns  %1,  %2, ... %9 are replaced by the corre-
                     sponding most significant component of  the  input  key's
                     domain.  If  the input key is user@mail.example.com, then
                     %1 is com, %2 is example and %3 is mail. If the input key
                     is  unqualified or does not have enough domain components
                     to satisfy all the specified patterns, the search is sup-
                     pressed and returns no results.

       query_filter (default: mailacceptinggeneralid=%s)
              The  RFC2254  filter used to search the directory, where %s is a
              substitute for the address Postfix is trying to resolve, e.g.

                  query_filter = (&(mail=%s)(paid_up=true))

              This parameter supports the following '%' expansions:

              %%     This is replaced by a literal '%' character. (Postfix 2.2
                     and later).

              %s     This  is  replaced by the input key.  RFC 2254 quoting is
                     used to make sure that the input key does not  add  unex-
                     pected metacharacters.

              %u     When the input key is an address of the form user@domain,
                     %u is replaced by the (RFC 2254) quoted local part of the
                     address.   Otherwise, %u is replaced by the entire search
                     string.  If the localpart is empty, the  search  is  sup-
                     pressed and returns no results.

              %d     When the input key is an address of the form user@domain,
                     %d is replaced by the (RFC 2254) quoted  domain  part  of
                     the  address.   Otherwise,  the  search is suppressed and
                     returns no results.

              %[SUD] The upper-case equivalents of the above expansions behave
                     in   the  query_filter  parameter  identically  to  their
                     lower-case counter-parts. With the result_format  parame-
                     ter  (previously called result_filter see the OTHER OBSO-
                     LETE FEATURES section and below), they expand to the cor-
                     responding components of input key rather than the result
                     value.

                     The above %S, %U and %D  expansions  are  available  with
                     Postfix 2.2 and later.

              %[1-9] The  patterns  %1,  %2, ... %9 are replaced by the corre-
                     sponding most significant component of  the  input  key's
                     domain.  If  the input key is user@mail.example.com, then
                     %1 is com, %2 is example and %3 is mail. If the input key
                     is  unqualified or does not have enough domain components
                     to satisfy all the specified patterns, the search is sup-
                     pressed and returns no results.

                     The above %1, ..., %9 expansions are available with Post-
                     fix 2.2 and later.

              The "domain" parameter described below limits the input keys  to
              addresses  in  matching  domains. When the "domain" parameter is
              non-empty, LDAP queries for unqualified addresses  or  addresses
              in non-matching domains are suppressed and return no results.

              NOTE: DO NOT put quotes around the query_filter parameter.

       result_format (default: %s)
              Called  result_filter  in Postfix releases prior to 2.2.  Format
              template applied to result attributes.  Most  commonly  used  to
              append  (or prepend) text to the result. This parameter supports
              the following '%' expansions:

              %%     This is replaced by a literal '%' character. (Postfix 2.2
                     and later).

              %s     This  is  replaced  by the value of the result attribute.
                     When result is empty it is skipped.

              %u     When the result attribute value is an address of the form
                     user@domain,  %u  is  replaced  by  the local part of the
                     address. When the result has an  empty  localpart  it  is
                     skipped.

              %d     When  a  result attribute value is an address of the form
                     user@domain, %d is replaced by the  domain  part  of  the
                     attribute  value.  When  the  result is unqualified it is
                     skipped.

              %[SUD1-9]
                     The upper-case and decimal digit  expansions  interpolate
                     the  parts of the input key rather than the result. Their
                     behavior is identical to that described  with  query_fil-
                     ter,  and  in  fact  because  the  input  key is known in
                     advance, lookups whose  key  does  not  contain  all  the
                     information  specified  in  the  result template are sup-
                     pressed and return no results.

                     The above %S, %U, %D  and  %1,  ...,  %9  expansions  are
                     available with Postfix 2.2 and later.

              For example, using "result_format = smtp:[%s]" allows one to use
              a mailHost attribute as the basis of a transport(5) table. After
              applying  the result format, multiple values are concatenated as
              comma separated  strings.  The  expansion_limit  and  size_limit
              parameters  explained  below allow one to restrict the number of
              values in the result, which is especially useful for  maps  that
              should return a single value.

              The  default value %s specifies that each attribute value should
              be used as is.

              This parameter was  called  result_filter  in  Postfix  releases
              prior  to  2.2. If no "result_format" is specified, the value of
              "result_filter" will be used instead  before  resorting  to  the
              default  value.  This provides compatibility with old configura-
              tion files.

              NOTE: DO NOT put quotes around the result format!

       domain (default: no domain list)
              This is a list of domain names, paths to files, or  "type:table"
              databases. When specified, only fully qualified search keys with
              a *non-empty* localpart and a matching domain are  eligible  for
              lookup:  'user'  lookups,  bare  domain  lookups  and  "@domain"
              lookups are not performed. This  can  significantly  reduce  the
              query load on the LDAP server.

                  domain = postfix.org, hash:/etc/postfix/searchdomains

              It  is  best  not  to use LDAP to store the domains eligible for
              LDAP lookups.

              NOTE: DO NOT define this parameter for local(8) aliases.

              This feature is available in Postfix 1.0 and later.

       result_attribute (default: maildrop)
              The attribute(s) Postfix will read from  any  directory  entries
              returned by the lookup, to be resolved to an email address.

                  result_attribute = mailbox, maildrop

              Don't   rely   on   the  default  value  ("maildrop").  Set  the
              result_attribute explicitly  in  all  ldap  table  configuration
              files. This is particularly relevant when no result_attribute is
              applicable, e.g. cases  in  which  leaf_result_attribute  and/or
              terminal_result_attribute are used instead. The default value is
              harmless if "maildrop" is also listed  as  a  leaf  or  terminal
              result attribute, but it is best to not leave this to chance.

       special_result_attribute (default: empty)
              The  attribute(s)  of  directory entries that can contain DNs or
              RFC 2255 LDAP URLs. If found, a recursive search is performed to
              retrieve  the entry referenced by the DN, or the entries matched
              by the URL query.

                  special_result_attribute = memberdn

              DN recursion retrieves the same result_attributes  as  the  main
              query, including the special attributes for further recursion.

              URL processing retrieves only those attributes that are included
              in both the URL definition and as result  attributes  (ordinary,
              special,  leaf or terminal) in the Postfix table definition.  If
              the URL lists any of  the  table's  special  result  attributes,
              these  are  retrieved  and used recursively. A URL that does not
              specify any attribute selection, is equivalent (RFC 2255)  to  a
              URL  that  selects  all  attributes,  in which case the selected
              attributes will be the full set  of  result  attributes  in  the
              Postfix table.

              If an LDAP URL attribute-descriptor or the corresponding Postfix
              LDAP table  result  attribute  (but  not  both)  uses  RFC  2255
              sub-type  options  ("attr;option"), the attribute requested from
              the LDAP server will include the sub-type option. In  all  other
              cases,  the  URL  attribute  and  the table attribute must match
              exactly. Attributes with options in both the URL and the Postfix
              table  are  requested  only when the options are identical. LDAP
              attribute-descriptor options are very  rarely  used,  most  LDAP
              users  will  not  need  to concern themselves with this level of
              nuanced detail.

       terminal_result_attribute (default: empty)
              When one or more terminal result attributes are found in an LDAP
              entry, all other result attributes are ignored and only the ter-
              minal result attributes are returned. This is useful  for  dele-
              gating expansion of group members to a particular host, by using
              an optional "maildrop" attribute on selected groups to route the
              group  to a specific host, where the group is expanded, possibly
              via mailing-list manager or other special processing.

                  result_attribute =
                  terminal_result_attribute = maildrop

              When  using  terminal  and/or  leaf   result   attributes,   the
              result_attribute  is  best  set to an empty value when it is not
              used, or else explicitly set to the desired value, even if it is
              the default value "maildrop".

              This feature is available with Postfix 2.4 or later.

       leaf_result_attribute (default: empty)
              When  one  or  more  special  result  attributes  are found in a
              non-terminal (see above) LDAP entry, leaf result attributes  are
              excluded  from  the expansion of that entry. This is useful when
              expanding groups and the desired mail  address  attribute(s)  of
              the  member  objects  obtained  via DN or URI recursion are also
              present in the group object. To only return the attribute values
              from  the  leaf  objects  and  not the containing group, add the
              attribute  to  the  leaf_result_attribute  list,  and  not   the
              result_attribute  list,  which  is  always  expanded.  Note, the
              default value of "result_attribute" is not empty, you  may  want
              to set it explicitly empty when using "leaf_result_attribute" to
              expand the group to a list of member  DN  addresses.  If  groups
              have both member DN references AND attributes that hold multiple
              string valued rfc822 addresses, then the string attributes go in
              "result_attribute".   The  attributes  that  represent the email
              addresses of objects referenced via a DN (or  LDAP  URI)  go  in
              "leaf_result_attribute".

                  result_attribute = memberaddr
                  special_result_attribute = memberdn
                  terminal_result_attribute = maildrop
                  leaf_result_attribute = mail

              When   using   terminal   and/or  leaf  result  attributes,  the
              result_attribute is best set to an empty value when  it  is  not
              used, or else explicitly set to the desired value, even if it is
              the default value "maildrop".

              This feature is available with Postfix 2.4 or later.

       scope (default: sub)
              The LDAP search scope: sub, base, or one.  These translate  into
              LDAP_SCOPE_SUBTREE, LDAP_SCOPE_BASE, and LDAP_SCOPE_ONELEVEL.

       bind (default: yes)
              Whether  or how to bind to the LDAP server. Newer LDAP implemen-
              tations don't require clients to bind, which saves  time.  Exam-
              ple:

                  # Don't bind
                  bind = no
                  # Use SIMPLE bind
                  bind = yes
                  # Use SASL bind
                  bind = sasl

              Postfix  versions  prior  to  2.8 only support "bind = no" which
              means don't bind, and "bind = yes" which means do a SIMPLE bind.
              Postfix  2.8 and later also supports "bind = SASL" when compiled
              with LDAP SASL support as described in LDAP_README, it also adds
              the  synonyms  "bind = none" and "bind = simple" for "bind = no"
              and "bind = yes" respectively. See the SASL  section  below  for
              additional parameters available with "bind = sasl".

              If  you  do need to bind, you might consider configuring Postfix
              to connect to the local machine on a port that's an  SSL  tunnel
              to  your  LDAP server. If your LDAP server doesn't natively sup-
              port SSL, put a tunnel (wrapper, proxy,  whatever  you  want  to
              call  it)  on  that system too. This should prevent the password
              from traversing the network in the clear.

       bind_dn (default: empty)
              If you do have to bind, do  it  with  this  distinguished  name.
              Example:

                  bind_dn = uid=postfix, dc=your, dc=com
              With  "bind  = sasl" (see above) the DN may be optional for some
              SASL mechanisms, don't specify a DN if not needed.

       bind_pw (default: empty)
              The password for the distinguished name above. If  you  have  to
              use  this,  you probably want to make the map configuration file
              readable only by the  Postfix  user.  When  using  the  obsolete
              ldap:ldapsource  syntax,  with  map parameters in main.cf, it is
              not possible to  securely  store  the  bind  password.  This  is
              because  main.cf  needs  to  be  world  readable  to allow local
              accounts to submit mail via the sendmail command. Example:

                  bind_pw = postfixpw
              With "bind = sasl" (see above) the password may be optional  for
              some SASL mechanisms, don't specify a password if not needed.

       cache (IGNORED with a warning)

       cache_expiry (IGNORED with a warning)

       cache_size (IGNORED with a warning)
              The  above parameters are NO LONGER SUPPORTED by Postfix.  Cache
              support has been dropped from OpenLDAP as of release 2.1.13.

       recursion_limit (default: 1000)
              A limit on the nesting  depth  of  DN  and  URL  special  result
              attribute evaluation. The limit must be a non-zero positive num-
              ber.

       expansion_limit (default: 0)
              A limit on the total number of result elements  returned  (as  a
              comma separated list) by a lookup against the map.  A setting of
              zero disables the limit. Lookups fail with a temporary error  if
              the  limit  is  exceeded.   Setting  the limit to 1 ensures that
              lookups do not return multiple values.

       size_limit (default: $expansion_limit)
              A limit on the number of LDAP entries  returned  by  any  single
              LDAP search performed as part of the lookup. A setting of 0 dis-
              ables the limit.  Expansion of DN and  URL  references  involves
              nested  LDAP  queries,  each of which is separately subjected to
              this limit.

              Note: even a single LDAP  entry  can  generate  multiple  lookup
              results,  via  multiple  result  attributes  and/or multi-valued
              result attributes. This limit caps the per search resource  uti-
              lization  on  the LDAP server, not the final multiplicity of the
              lookup  result.  It  is  analogous  to  the   "-z"   option   of
              "ldapsearch".

       dereference (default: 0)
              When to dereference LDAP aliases. (Note that this has nothing do
              with Postfix aliases.) The permitted values are those legal  for
              the OpenLDAP/UM LDAP implementations:

              0      never

              1      when searching

              2      when locating the base object for the search

              3      always

              See  ldap.h  or  the ldap_open(3) or ldapsearch(1) man pages for
              more information. And if you're using an LDAP package  that  has
              other  possible  values, please bring it to the attention of the
              postfix-users@postfix.org mailing list.

       chase_referrals (default: 0)
              Sets (or clears) LDAP_OPT_REFERRALS  (requires  LDAP  version  3
              support).

       version (default: 2)
              Specifies the LDAP protocol version to use.

       debuglevel (default: 0)
              What level to set for debugging in the OpenLDAP libraries.

LDAP SASL PARAMETERS
       If  you're  using  the  OpenLDAP  libraries compiled with SASL support,
       Postfix 2.8 and later built with LDAP  SASL  support  as  described  in
       LDAP_README can authenticate to LDAP servers via SASL.

       This  enables  authentication  to  the LDAP server via mechanisms other
       than a simple password. The added flexibility has  a  cost:  it  is  no
       longer  practical to set an explicit timeout on the duration of an LDAP
       bind operation. Under adverse conditions, whether  a  SASL  bind  times
       out,  or  if  it does, the duration of the timeout is determined by the
       LDAP and SASL libraries.

       It is best to use tables that use SASL binds via proxymap(8), this  way
       the  requesting  process  can  time-out the proxymap request. This also
       lets you tailer the process environment by overriding  the  proxymap(8)
       import_environment  setting  in  master.cf(5). Special environment set-
       tings may be needed to configure GSSAPI credential caches or other SASL
       mechanism  specific  options.  The  GSSAPI  credentials  used  for LDAP
       lookups may need to be different than say those used  for  the  Postfix
       SMTP client to authenticate to remote servers.

       Using  SASL  mechanisms  requires  LDAP protocol version 3, the default
       protocol version is 2 for backwards compatibility. You must  set  "ver-
       sion = 3" in addition to "bind = sasl".

       The following parameters are relevant to using LDAP with SASL

       sasl_mechs (default: empty)
              Space separated list of SASL mechanism(s) to try.

       sasl_realm (default: empty)
              SASL Realm to use, if applicable.

       sasl_authz_id (default: empty)
              The SASL authorization identity to assert, if applicable.

       sasl_minssf (default: 0)
              The  minimum required sasl security factor required to establish
              a connection.

LDAP SSL AND STARTTLS PARAMETERS
       If you're using the OpenLDAP libraries compiled with SSL support, Post-
       fix can connect to LDAP SSL servers and can issue the STARTTLS command.

       LDAP SSL service can be requested by  using  a  LDAP  SSL  URL  in  the
       server_host parameter:

           server_host = ldaps://ldap.example.com:636

       STARTTLS can be turned on with the start_tls parameter:

           start_tls = yes

       Both forms require LDAP protocol version 3, which has to be set explic-
       itly with:

           version = 3

       If any of the Postfix programs querying the map is configured  in  mas-
       ter.cf  to run chrooted, all the certificates and keys involved have to
       be copied to the chroot jail. Of course, the private keys  should  only
       be readable by the user "postfix".

       The following parameters are relevant to LDAP SSL and STARTTLS:

       start_tls (default: no)
              Whether  or not to issue STARTTLS upon connection to the server.
              Don't set this with LDAP SSL (the SSL session is setup automati-
              cally when the TCP connection is opened).

       tls_ca_cert_dir (No default; set either this or tls_ca_cert_file)
              Directory  containing  X509 Certification Authority certificates
              in PEM format which are  to  be  recognized  by  the  client  in
              SSL/TLS  connections. The files each contain one CA certificate.
              The files are looked up by the CA subject name hash value, which
              must  hence  be  available. If more than one CA certificate with
              the same name hash value exist, the extension must be  different
              (e.g.  9d66eef0.0,  9d66eef0.1  etc). The search is performed in
              the ordering of the extension number, regardless of other  prop-
              erties  of  the certificates. Use the c_rehash utility (from the
              OpenSSL distribution) to create the necessary links.

       tls_ca_cert_file (No default; set either this or tls_ca_cert_dir)
              File containing the X509 Certification Authority certificates in
              PEM  format  which are to be recognized by the client in SSL/TLS
              connections. This setting takes precedence over tls_ca_cert_dir.

       tls_cert (No default; you must set this)
              File  containing  client's  X509  certificate  to be used by the
              client in SSL/ TLS connections.

       tls_key (No default; you must set this)
              File containing the  private  key  corresponding  to  the  above
              tls_cert.

       tls_require_cert (default: no)
              Whether  or  not  to request server's X509 certificate and check
              its validity when establishing SSL/TLS  connections.   The  sup-
              ported values are no and yes.

              With  no, the server certificate trust chain is not checked, but
              with OpenLDAP prior to 2.1.13, the name in the  server  certifi-
              cate  must still match the LDAP server name. With OpenLDAP 2.0.0
              to 2.0.11 the server name is not necessarily what you specified,
              rather  it is determined (by reverse lookup) from the IP address
              of the LDAP server connection. With OpenLDAP  prior  to  2.0.13,
              subjectAlternativeName extensions in the LDAP server certificate
              are ignored: the server name must match the subject  CommonName.
              The  no setting corresponds to the never value of TLS_REQCERT in
              LDAP client configuration files.

              Don't use TLS with OpenLDAP 2.0.x (and especially with x <=  11)
              if you can avoid it.

              With yes, the server certificate must be issued by a trusted CA,
              and not be expired. The LDAP server name must match one  of  the
              name(s) found in the certificate (see above for OpenLDAP library
              version dependent behavior). The yes setting corresponds to  the
              demand  value of TLS_REQCERT in LDAP client configuration files.

              The "try" and "allow" values of TLS_REQCERT have no  equivalents
              here.  They are not available with OpenLDAP 2.0, and in any case
              have questionable security properties. Either you want TLS veri-
              fied LDAP connections, or you don't.

              The  yes  value only works correctly with Postfix 2.5 and later,
              or with OpenLDAP 2.0. Earlier Postfix releases or later OpenLDAP
              releases don't work together with this setting. Support for LDAP
              over TLS was added to Postfix based on the OpenLDAP 2.0 API.

       tls_random_file (No default)
              Path of a file to obtain random bits from when /dev/[u]random is
              not  available, to be used by the client in SSL/TLS connections.

       tls_cipher_suite (No default)
              Cipher suite to use in SSL/TLS negotiations.

EXAMPLE
       Here's a basic example for using LDAP  to  look  up  local(8)  aliases.
       Assume that in main.cf, you have:

           alias_maps = hash:/etc/aliases,
                   ldap:/etc/postfix/ldap-aliases.cf

       and in ldap:/etc/postfix/ldap-aliases.cf you have:

           server_host = ldap.example.com
           search_base = dc=example, dc=com

       Upon  receiving mail for a local address "ldapuser" that isn't found in
       the /etc/aliases database, Postfix will search the LDAP server  listen-
       ing  at port 389 on ldap.example.com.  It will bind anonymously, search
       for any directory entries  whose  mailacceptinggeneralid  attribute  is
       "ldapuser",  read the "maildrop" attributes of those found, and build a
       list of their maildrops, which will be treated as RFC822  addresses  to
       which the message will be delivered.

OBSOLETE MAIN.CF PARAMETERS
       For  backwards compatibility with Postfix version 2.0 and earlier, LDAP
       parameters can also be defined in main.cf.  Specify as  LDAP  source  a
       name  that  doesn't  begin  with a slash or a dot.  The LDAP parameters
       will then be accessible as the name you've given the source in its def-
       inition, an underscore, and the name of the parameter.  For example, if
       the map is specified as "ldap:ldapsource", the "server_host"  parameter
       below would be defined in main.cf as "ldapsource_server_host".

       Note: with this form, the passwords for the LDAP sources are written in
       main.cf, which is normally world-readable.  Support for this form  will
       be removed in a future Postfix version.

OTHER OBSOLETE FEATURES
       result_filter (No default)
              For  backwards  compatibility  with  the  pre  2.2 LDAP clients,
              result_filter can for now be used instead of result_format, when
              the  latter  parameter  is  not  also  set.  The new name better
              reflects the  function  of  the  parameter.  This  compatibility
              interface may be removed in a future release.

SEE ALSO
       postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
       postconf(5), configuration parameters
       mysql_table(5), MySQL lookup tables
       pgsql_table(5), PostgreSQL lookup tables

README FILES
       DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
       LDAP_README, Postfix LDAP client guide

LICENSE
       The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.

AUTHOR(S)
       Carsten Hoeger, Hery Rakotoarisoa, John Hensley, Keith Stevenson,  LaM-
       ont  Jones,  Liviu Daia, Manuel Guesdon, Mike Mattice, Prabhat K Singh,
       Sami Haahtinen, Samuel Tardieu, Victor Duchovni, and many others.

                                                                 LDAP_TABLE(5)