table(5) — Linux manual page
TABLE(5) File Formats Manual TABLE(5)
NAME
table — format description for smtpd tables
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents the file format for the various tables
used in the smtpd(8) mail daemon.
The format described here applies to tables as defined in
smtpd.conf(5).
TABLE TYPES
There are two types of tables: lists and mappings. A list
consists of a series of values, while a mapping consists of a
series of keys and their associated values. The following
illustrates how to declare them as static tables:
table mylist { value1, value2, value3 }
table mymapping { key1 = value1, key2 = value2, key3 = value3 }
When using a ‘file’ table, a list will be written with each value
on a line by itself.
value1
value2
value3
A mapping will be written with each key and value on a line,
whitespace and an optional colon separating both columns:
key1: value1
key2 value2
key3 value3
Blank lines, leading and trailing spaces and tabs are ignored.
Lines whose first non-space character is a hash mark (‘#’) are
comments and are ignored. To force the parsing of a file table
as a list rather than a mapping, use this special comment:
# @list
A file table can be converted to a Berkeley database using the
makemap(8) utility with no syntax change.
Tables using a ‘file’ or Berkeley DB backend will be referenced
as follows:
table name file:/path/to/file
table name db:/path/to/file.db
Aliasing tables
Aliasing tables are mappings that associate a recipient to one or
many destinations. They can be used in two contexts: primary
domain aliases and virtual domain mapping.
action name method alias <table>
action name method virtual <table>
In a primary domain context, the key is the user part of the
recipient address, whilst the value is one or many recipients as
described in aliases(5):
user1 otheruser
user2 otheruser1,otheruser2
user3 otheruser@example.com
In a virtual domain context, the key is either a user part, a
full email address or a catch-all, following selection rules
described in smtpd.conf(5), and the value is one or many
recipients as described in aliases(5):
user1 otheruser
user2@example.org otheruser1,otheruser2
@example.org otheruser@example.com
@ catchall@example.com
The following directive shares the same table format, but with a
different meaning. Here, the user is allowed to send mail from
the listed addresses:
listen on interface auth [...] senders <table>
Domain tables
Domain tables are simple lists of domains or hosts.
match for domain <table> action name
match helo <table> [...] action name
In that context, the list of domains will be matched against the
recipient domain or against the HELO name advertised by the
sending host, respectively. For ‘static’, ‘file’ and dbopen(3)
backends, a wildcard may be used so the domain table may contain:
example.org
*.example.org
Credentials tables
Credentials tables are mappings of credentials. They can be used
in two contexts:
listen on interface tls [...] auth <table>
action name relay host relay-url auth <table>
In a listener context, the credentials are a mapping of username
and encrypted passwords:
user1 $2b$10$hIJ4QfMcp.90nJwKqGbKM.MybArjHOTpEtoTV.DgLYAiThuoYmTSe
user2 $2b$10$bwSmUOBGcZGamIfRuXGTvuTo3VLbPG9k5yeKNMBtULBhksV5KdGsK
The passwords are to be encrypted using the smtpctl(8) encrypt
subcommand.
In a relay context, the credentials are a mapping of labels and
username:password pairs:
label1 user:password
The label must be unique and is used as a selector for the proper
credentials when multiple credentials are valid for a single
destination. The password is not encrypted as it must be
provided to the remote host.
Netaddr tables
Netaddr tables are lists of IPv4 and IPv6 network addresses.
They can only be used in the following context:
match from src <table> action name
When used as a "from source", the address of a client is compared
to the list of addresses in the table until a match is found.
A netaddr table can contain exact addresses or netmasks, and
looks as follow:
192.168.1.1
[::1]
192.168.1.0/24
IPv6 addresses must be enclosed in square brackets.
Userinfo tables
Userinfo tables are used in rule context to specify an alternate
userbase, mapping virtual users to local system users by UID, GID
and home directory.
action name method userbase <table>
A userinfo table looks as follows:
joe 1000:100:/home/virtual/joe
jack 1000:100:/home/virtual/jack
In this example, both joe and jack are virtual users mapped to
the local system user with UID 1000 and GID 100, but different
home directories. These directories may contain a forward(5)
file. This can be used in conjunction with an alias table that
maps an email address or the domain part to the desired virtual
username. For example:
joe@example.org joe
jack@example.com jack
Source tables
Source tables are lists of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. They can
only be used in the following context:
action name relay src <table>
Successive queries to the source table will return the elements
one by one.
A source table looks as follow:
192.168.1.2
192.168.1.3
[::1]
[::2]
IPv6 address must be enclosed in square brackets.
Mailaddr tables
Mailaddr tables are lists of email addresses. They can be used
in the following contexts:
match mail-from <table> action name
match rcpt-to <table> action name
A mailaddr entry is used to match an email address against a
username, a domain or a full email address. A "*" wildcard may
be used in part of the domain name.
A mailaddr table looks as follow:
user
@domain
user@domain
user@*.domain
Addrname tables
Addrname tables are used to map IP addresses to hostnames. They
can be used in both listen context and relay context:
listen on interface hostnames <table>
action name relay helo-src <table>
In listen context, the table is used to look up the server name
to advertise depending on the local address of the socket on
which a connection is accepted. In relay context, the table is
used to determine the hostname for the HELO sequence of the SMTP
protocol, depending on the local address used for the outgoing
connection.
The format is a mapping from inet4 or inet6 addresses to
hostnames:
[::1] localhost
127.0.0.1 localhost
88.190.23.165 www.opensmtpd.org
IPv6 addresses must be enclosed in square brackets.
SEE ALSO
smtpd.conf(5), makemap(8), smtpd(8)
COLOPHON
This page is part of the OpenSMTPD (a FREE implementation of the
server-side SMTP protocol) project. Information about the
project can be found at https://www.opensmtpd.org/. If you have
a bug report for this manual page, see
⟨https://github.com/OpenSMTPD/OpenSMTPD/issues⟩. This page was
obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨https://github.com/OpenSMTPD/OpenSMTPD.git⟩ on 2024-06-14. (At
that time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in
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