Thanks Bill. Yes I then realised it must be the case that the binaries were
compiled with different defaults. Just had initially assumed they would be the
same. Explains why I was seeing what I was seeing.
I would strip out all the OSX Server stuff, but as my long term intention is
not to keep
On 2023-07-10 at 12:42:24 UTC-0400 (Mon, 10 Jul 2023 17:42:24 +0100)
Ken Gillett via Postfix-users
is rumored to have said:
From where is postconf getting its information? Does it have a config
directory hard coded?
Yes. Note:
# strings
/Applications/Server.app/Contents/ServerRoot/usr/sbin
Apart from /usr/sbin/postconf, I also found:-
/Applications/Server.app/Contents/ServerRoot/usr/sbin/postconf
Running the latter gives entirely different output from the former and
according to that, the changes to the main.cf I've made have been incorporated.
So I need to check the resu
On Mon, Jul 10, 2023 at 04:56:31PM +0100, Ken Gillett via Postfix-users wrote:
> Ok, so logged in on Mac and used the Server admin tool to change a
> setting (added a relay host). The main.cf in
> /Library/Server/Mail/Config/postfix was updated. So that's what MacOS
> thinks is the config dir as w
Ok, so logged in on Mac and used the Server admin tool to change a setting
(added a relay host). The main.cf in /Library/Server/Mail/Config/postfix was
updated. So that's what MacOS thinks is the config dir as well as the actual
running 'master' process.
However, postconf -n does not list the
Aha. Had not tried that (hadn't seen that as a config. parameter).
postconf -d config_directory => config_directory = /etc/postfix
So, despite the process itself saying it's using one directory, postconf
reports a different one, the default.
How would different postconf files account f
Thanks for all that and from Viktor. It was occurring to me that the hard coded
parameters in question (as Viktor mentioned) get their info from the hardware
at runtime. So that explains my question regarding that.
I have been looking at postconf -d, -p and -n as I understand what they purport
On 2023-07-10 at 05:34:44 UTC-0400 (Mon, 10 Jul 2023 10:34:44 +0100)
Ken Gillett via Postfix-users
is rumored to have said:
It is many years since I set up postfix on my Mac server and it's use
is now purely for local email, i.e. users on home network. However I
have some issues with this and
On Mon, Jul 10, 2023 at 09:17:52AM -0400, Viktor Dukhovni via Postfix-users
wrote:
> > First of all, changes I have made in main.cf are not being used.
> > AFAICT I am editing the main.cf that is used:-
> >
> > ps ax | grep master => master -c /Library/Server/Mail/Config/postfix
>
> Yes, wi
On Mon, Jul 10, 2023 at 10:34:44AM +0100, Ken Gillett via Postfix-users wrote:
> First of all, changes I have made in main.cf are not being used.
> AFAICT I am editing the main.cf that is used:-
>
> ps ax | grep master => master -c /Library/Server/Mail/Config/postfix
Yes, with "-c" the pro
Ken Gillett via Postfix-users:
> What does 'postconf -d' show?
"postconf -d config_directory" shows where the postconf command looks for
main.cf (and master.cf).
The settings in mainl.cf then determine the location of other Postfix
program and data files.
It would be worthwhile to find out if t
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