On Sep 22, 2014, at 2:43 PM, Viktor Dukhovni <postfix-us...@dukhovni.org> wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 01:29:37PM -0500, Noel Jones wrote: > >> My thought: there are popular distros that have set this explicitly >> to "no" for years, and yet we get very few questions here where the >> artificial "no" setting causes a problem. So in a sense it's already >> been tested for us. > > Thanks. [ Anyone else with strong preferences in either direction? ] > > Note, there is a difference between starting with a different > default (and building a configuration that works with that) and > having the default change on a system with an existing configuration > that relies on the previous behaviour. > > So yes, append_dot_mydomain=no has proved usable, but migration > from "yes" to "no" may require updating aliases files and the like > at sites that relied on the previous default or they can of course > simply set "append_dot_mydomain = yes" as part of the upgrade. I have no strong feelings either way, but the alias case is a great example of possible breakage. While I assume this would be pointed out in the release notes, I would think a log message on startup would be a great way to notify the folks that tend not to thoroughly examine the release notes. I know when I get lazy with an upgrade, I do always tail the maillog when restarting, and thats probably (hopefully?) common admin behavior, even amongst the rushed devops admins of the world. A Warn: append_dot_mydomain default behavior has changed from yes to no, please examine main.cf message or similar would certainly get my attention. $0.02 and all… Charles > > -- > Viktor.