I did review the http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#authorized_submit_users page and it mentions that patterns can be negated, here are the relevant strings of the docs I thought applicable to this case.

    Specify a list of user names, "/file/name" or "type:table" patterns ...
    Specify "!pattern" to exclude a user name from the list.
The form "!/file/name" is supported only in Postfix version 2.4 and later.

If patterns aren't supported, thank you for setting me straight, I was just hoping to avoid building a script to regularly re/create the nosend file. Should I submit a bug report for a documentation change to make this point more clearly?

As for the "authorized_submit_users=!unix:group.byname=badUnixGroup" syntax, I found an OLD example in a mailing list, not the manpage-docs, I was trying to show what I was attempting.

There are no 'untrusted' users, but in this case we need this functionality for software-testing accounts which has in the past repeatedly spammed a large group of people when 3rd-party utilities that call mutt/sendmail/etc when certain error conditions occurred. We thought about disabling Postfix entirely for all users, but in this case, we would miss out on other more necessary alerts from other users/utilities on that box.





On 5/30/2012 7:24 PM, /dev/rob0 wrote:
On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 05:05:16PM -0400, JLP wrote:
Originally, I was trying to make "smtpd_sender_restrictions"
work, but Noel Jones (thanks again!) clued-me into the
config-option "authorized_submit_users" when using the sendmail
(or derivative) binaries.  I tried unsuccessfully making some
form of unix:group.byname work like these options:
     authorized_submit_users=!unix:group.byname, static:all
     authorized_submit_users=!unix:group.byname=badUnixGroup, static:all

Short of creating a cronjob-script to regularly re/create a HASH
file of disallowed users in the Unix group, is there something
obvious I am missing?
You missed the postconf(5) manual, specifically the description of
authorized_submit_users. Negation can apply to a /file/name but not
to a type:table lookup.

http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#authorized_submit_users

You'll want to make your list, e.g., /etc/postfix/nosend, and then
negate the list:

     authorized_submit_users=!/etc/postfix/nosend, static:all

Two bits of general advice:

You might want to save a link in your browser to your
$html_directory. Everything is in there; no need to guess. I don't
see any reference to your "unix:group.byname=badUnixGroup" syntax,
therefore I'd assume that it is not implemented.

Having untrusted shell users on a machine is a bad idea. If you
cannot trust them to honor your mail policies, can you trust them to
refrain from other nefarious activities?

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