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POSTFIX-LOGWATCH(1)					   POSTFIX-LOGWATCH(1)

NAME
       postfix-logwatch - A Postfix log parser and analysis utility

SYNOPSIS
       postfix-logwatch [options] [logfile ...]

DESCRIPTION
       The  postfix-logwatch(1)	 utility is a Postfix MTA log parser that pro‐
       duces summaries, details, and statistics	 regarding  the	 operation  of
       Postfix.

       This utility can be used as a standalone program, or as a Logwatch fil‐
       ter module to produce Postfix summary and detailed reports from	within
       Logwatch.

       Postfix-logwatch	 is  able to produce a wide range of reports with data
       grouped and sorted as much as possible to reduce	 noise	and  highlight
       patterns.   Brief  summary  reports provide a quick overview of general
       Postfix operations and message delivery, calling out warnings that  may
       require	attention.   Detailed reports provide easy to scan, hierarchi‐
       cally-arranged and organized information, with as much or little detail
       as desired.

       Postfix-logwatch	 outputs two principal sections: a Summary section and
       a Detailed section.  For readability and quick scanning, all  event  or
       hit  counts appear in the left column, followed by brief description of
       the event type, and finally additional statistics or count  representa‐
       tions may appear in the rightmost column.

       The following segment from a sample Summary report illustrates:

	   ****** Summary ********************************************

		 81   *Warning: Connection rate limit reached (anvil)
		146   Warned

	     68.310M  Bytes accepted			    71,628,177
	     97.645M  Bytes delivered			   102,388,245
	   ========   ================================================

	       3464   Accepted					41.44%
	       4895   Rejected					58.56%
	   --------   ------------------------------------------------
	       8359   Total				       100.00%
	   ========   ================================================

       The report warns that anvil's connection rate was hit 81 times, a Post‐
       fix access check WARN action was logged	146  times,  and  a  total  of
       68.310 megabytes (71,628,177 bytes) were accepted into the Postfix sys‐
       tem, delivering 97.645 megabytes of data (due to multiple  recipients).
       The Accepted and Rejected lines show that Postfix accepted 3464 (41.44%
       of the total messages) and rejected 4895 (the remaining 58.56%) of  the
       8359 total messages (temporary rejects show up elsewhere).

       There are dozens of sub-sections available in the Detailed report, each
       of whose output can be controlled in various  ways.   Each  sub-section
       attempts to group and present the most meaningful data at superior lev‐
       els, while pushing less useful or noisy data towards  inferior  levels.
       The  goal is to provide as much benefit as possible from smart grouping
       of data, to allow faster report scanning, pattern  identification,  and
       problem	solving.   Data is always sorted in descending order by count,
       and then numerically by IP address or alphabetically as appropriate.

       The following MX errors segment from a sample  Detailed	report	illus‐
       trates the basic hierarchical level structure of postfix-logwatch:

	   ****** Detailed *******************************************

		261   MX errors --------------------------------------
		261	 Unable to look up MX host
		222	    Host not found
		 73	       foolishspammer.local
		 60	       completely.bogus.domain.example
		 11	       friend.example.com
		 39	    No address associated with hostname
		 23	       dummymx.sample.net
		 16	       pushn.spam.sample.com

       The postfix-logwatch utility reads from STDIN or from the named Postfix
       logfile.	 Multiple logfile arguments may be specified,  each  processed
       in  order.  The user running postfix-logwatch must have read permission
       on each named log file.

   Options
       The options listed below	 affect	 the  operation	 of  postfix-logwatch.
       Options specified later on the command line override earlier ones.  Any
       option may be abbreviated to an unambiguous length.

       -f config_file
       --config_file config_file
	      Use an alternate configuration file config_file instead  of  the
	      default.	This option may be used more than once.	 Multiple con‐
	      figuration files will be processed in the order presented on the
	      command line.  See CONFIGURATION FILE below.

       --debug keywords
	      Output  debug  information  during the operation of postfix-log‐
	      watch.  The parameter keywords is one or	more  comma  or	 space
	      separated	 keywords.   To obtain the list of valid keywords, use
	      --debug xxx where xxx is any invalid keyword.

       --[no]delays
	      Enables (disables) output	 of  the  message  delays  percentiles
	      report.	The  delays  percentiles  report shows percentiles for
	      each of the 4 delivery latency times reported by Postfix (avail‐
	      able in version 2.3 and later) in the form delays=a/b/c/d, where
	      a is the amount of time before the active queue  (includes  time
	      for  previous delivery attempts and time in the deferred queue),
	      b is the amount of time in the active queue up to delivery agent
	      handoff,	c  is  the  amount  of	time  spent making connections
	      (including DNS, HELO and TLS) and d is the amount of time	 spent
	      delivering  the  message.	  The total delay shown comes from the
	      delay= field in a message delivery log line.

	      Note: This report may consume a large amount of memory;  if  you
	      have no use for it, disable the delays report.

       --delays_percentiles p1 [p2 ...]
	      Specifies	 the percentiles to be used in the message delays per‐
	      centiles report.	The percentiles p1, p2, ... range  from	 0  to
	      100,  inclusively.   The	order  of the list is not sorted - the
	      report will output the percentiles  columns  in  the  order  you
	      specify.

       --detail level
	      Sets  the	 maximum  detail  level for postfix-logwatch to level.
	      This option is global,  overriding  any  other  output  limiters
	      described below.

	      The  postfix-logwatch  utility  produces	a  Summary  section, a
	      Detailed section, and additional report  sections.   With	 level
	      less than 5, postfix-logwatch will produce only the Summary sec‐
	      tion.  At level 5 and above, the Detailed section, and any addi‐
	      tional  report  sections are candidates for output.  Each incre‐
	      mental increase in level generates one  additional  hierarchical
	      sub-level	 of  output in the Detailed section of the report.  At
	      level 10, all levels are output.	Lines that exceed the  maximum
	      report  width  (specified	 with  max_report_width)  will be cut.
	      Setting level to 11 will prevent lines in the report from	 being
	      cut (see also --line_style).

       --help Print  usage  information	 and a brief description about command
	      line options.

       --ignore_service pattern
	      Ignore log lines that contain the	 postfix  service  name	 post‐
	      fix/service.  The parameter service is a regular expression.

	      Note: if you use parenthesis in your regular expression, be sure
	      they are cloistering and not capturing: use  (?:pattern) instead
	      of (pattern).

       --ipaddr_width width
	      Specifies	 that IP addresses in address/hostname pairs should be
	      printed with a field width of width characters.  Increasing  the
	      default may be useful for systems using long IPv6 addresses.

       -l limiter=levelspec
       --limit limiter=levelspec
	      Sets the level limiter limiter with the specification levelspec.

       --line_style style
	      Specifies	 how  to  handle  long report lines.  Three styles are
	      available: full, truncate, and wrap.  Setting style to full will
	      prevent  cutting	lines to max_report_width; this is what occurs
	      when detail is 11	 or  higher.   When  style  is	truncate  (the
	      default),	  long	 lines	 will	be   truncated	 according  to
	      max_report_width.	 Setting style to wrap will wrap lines	longer
	      than  max_report_width  such that left column hit counts are not
	      obscured.	 This option takes  precedence	over  the  line	 style
	      implied  by  the	detail level.  The options --full, --truncate,
	      and --wrap are synonyms.

       --[no]long_queue_ids
	      Enables (disables) interpretation of long queue IDs  in  Postfix
	      (>= 2.9) logs.

       --nodetail
	      Disables	the Detailed section of the report, and all supplemen‐
	      tal reports.  This option provides  a  convenient	 mechanism  to
	      quickly  disable	all  sections under the Detailed report, where
	      subsequent command line options may re-enable one or  more  sec‐
	      tions to create specific reports.

       --[no]summary

       --show_summary
	      Enables  (disables) displaying of the the Summary section of the
	      report.  The variable Posfix_Show_Summary in used in a  configu‐
	      ration file.

       --recipient_delimiter delimiter
	      Split  email  delivery  addresses	 using the recipient delimiter
	      character delimiter.  This should generally  match  the  recipi‐
	      ent_delimiter  specified	in the Postfix parameter file main.cf,
	      or the default value indicated in postconf  -d  recipient_delim‐
	      iter.   This  is	very useful for obtaining per-alias statistics
	      when a recipient delimeter is used for mail delivery.

       --reject_reply_patterns r1 [r2 ...]
	      Specifies the list of  reject  reply  patterns  used  to	create
	      reject  groups.	Each  entry  in	 the  list r1 [r2 ...] must be
	      either a three character regular expression reply	 code  of  the
	      form [45][0-9.][0-9.], or the word "Warn".  The "." in the regu‐
	      lar expression is a literal dot which matches any	 reject	 reply
	      subcode;	this  wildcarding  allows  creation  of	 broad rejects
	      groups.  List order is preserved, in that reject reports will be
	      output  in  the same order as the entries in the list.  Specific
	      reject reply codes will take priority  over  wildcard  patterns,
	      regardless of the list order.

	      The  default  list is "5.. 4.. Warn", which creates three groups
	      of rejects: permanent rejects, temporary	reject	failures,  and
	      reject warnings (as in warn_if_reject).

	      This  feature  allows, for example, distinguishing 421 transmis‐
	      sion channel closures from 45x errors (eg. 450 mailbox  unavail‐
	      able,  451  local	 processing errors, 452 insufficient storage).
	      Such a grouping would be configured with the list: "421 4..  5..
	      Warn".  See RFC 2821 for more information about reply codes.

	      See  also	 CONFIGURATION	FILE regarding using reject_reply_pat‐
	      terns within a configuration file.

       --[no]sect_vars
       --show_sect_vars boolean
	      Enables (disables) supplementing	each  Detailed	section	 title
	      with  the	 name  of that section's level limiter.	 The name dis‐
	      played is the command line option (or configuration  file	 vari‐
	      able)  used to limit that section's output.  With the large num‐
	      ber of level limiters available in postfix-logwatch, this a con‐
	      venient  mechanism  for  determining exactly which level limiter
	      affects a section.

       --syslog_name namepat
	      Specifies the syslog service name that postfix-logwatch uses  to
	      match  syslog  lines.  Only log lines whose service name matches
	      the perl regular expression namepat will be used by postfix-log‐
	      watch;  all  non-matching	 lines	are silently ignored.  This is
	      useful when a pre-installed Postfix package uses	a  name	 other
	      than  the	 default (postfix), or when multiple Postfix instances
	      are in use and per-instance reporting is desired.

	      The pattern namepat should match the  syslog_name	 configuration
	      parameter	 specified  in the Postfix parameter file main.cf, the
	      master control file master.cf, or the default value as indicated
	      by the output of postconf -d syslog_name.

	      Note: if you use parenthesis in your regular expression, be sure
	      they are cloistering and not capturing: use  (?:pattern) instead
	      of (pattern).

       --[no]unknown
       --show_unknown boolean
	      Enables  (disables)  display  of	the  postfix-generated name of
	      'unknown' in formated IP/hostname	 pairs	in  Detailed  reports.
	      Default: enabled.

       --version
	      Print postfix-logwatch version information.

   Level Limiters
       The  output  of every section in the Detailed report is controlled by a
       level limiter.  The name of the level limiter variable will  be	output
       when  the  sect_vars  option is set.  Level limiters are set either via
       command line in standalone mode with --limit limiter=levelspec  option,
       or  via	configuration  file variable $postfix_limiter=levelspec.  Each
       limiter requires a levelspec argument,  which  is  described  below  in
       LEVEL CONTROL.

       The list of level limiters is shown below.

       There  are several level limiters that control reject sub-sections (eg.
       rejectbody, rejectsender, etc.).	 Because the list of  reject  variants
       is  not	known until runtime after reject_reply_patterns is seen, these
       reject limiters are shown below generically, with the prefix  ###.   To
       use one of these reject limiters, substitute ### with one of the reject
       reply codes in effect, replacing each dot with  an  x  character.   For
       example,	 using	the  default  reject_reply_patterns  list  of "5.. 4..
       Warn", three rejectbody	variants  are  valid:  --limit	5xxrejectbody,
       --limit	4xxrejectbody  and  --limit warnrejectbody.  As a convenience,
       you may entirely eliminate the ### prefix, and  instead	use  the  bare
       rejectXXX option, and all reject level limiter variations will be auto-
       generated based on the reject_reply_patterns list.   For	 example,  the
       command line segment:

	   ... --reject_reply_patterns "421 5.." \
		   --limit rejectrbl="1:10:"

       would automatically become:

	   ... --reject_reply_patterns "421 5.." \
		   --limit 421rejectrbl="1:10:" --limit 5xxrejectrbl="1:10:"

       See reject_reply_patterns above, and comments in the configuration file
       postfix-logwatch.conf.

       [ THIS SECTION IS NOT YET COMPLETE ]

       AttrError
	      Errors obtaining attribute data from service.
       BCCed  Messages that triggered access, header_checks or body_checks BCC
	      action. (postfix 2.6 experimental branch)
       BounceLocal
       BounceRemote
	      Local and remote bounces.	 A bounce is considered a local bounce
	      if the relay was one of none, local, virtual, avcheck,  maildrop
	      or 127.0.0.1.
       ByIpRejects
	      Regrouping  by  client  host  IP	address of all 5xx (permanent)
	      reject variants.
       CommunicationError
	      Postfix errors talking to one of its services.
       Anvil  Anvil rate or concurrency limits.
       ConnectionInbound
	      Connections made to the smtpd server.
       ConnectionLostInbound
	      Connections lost to the smtpd server.
       ConnectionLostOutbound
	      Connections lost during smtp communications with remote MTA.
       ConnectToFailure
	      Failures reported by smtp when connecting to remote MTA.
       DatabaseGeneration
	      Warnings noted when binary database map  file  requires  postmap
	      update from newer source file.
       Deferrals
       Deferred
	      Message delivery deferrals.  A single deferred message will have
	      one or more deferrals many times.
       Deliverable
	      Address verification indicates recipient address is deliverable.
       Delivered
	      Number of messages handed-off to a delivery agent such as	 local
	      or virtual.
       Discarded
	      Messages	that  triggered	 access,  header_checks or body_checks
	      DISCARD action.
       DNSError
	      Any one of several errors encounted during DNS lookups.
       EnvelopeSenderDomains
	      List of sending domains.	(2  levels:  envelope  sender  domain,
	      localpart)
       EnvelopeSenders
	      List of envelope senders.	 (1 level: envelope sender)
       Error  Postfix general error messages.
       FatalConfigError
	      Fatal main.cf or master.cf configuration errors.
       FatalError
	      Postfix general fatal messages.
       Filtered
	      Messages	that  triggered	 access,  header_checks or body_checks
	      FILTER action.
       Forwarded
	      Messages forwarded by MDA for one address class to another  (eg.
	      local -> virtual).
       HeloError
	      XXXXXXXXXXX
       Hold   Messages	that were placed on hold by postsuper, or triggered by
	      access, header_checks or body_checks HOLD action.
       HostnameValidationError
	      Invalid hostname detected.
       HostnameVerification
	      Lookup of hostname does not map back to the IP of the peer  (ie.
	      the  remote system connecting to smtpd).	Also known as forward-
	      confirmed reverse DNS (FCRDNS).  When the reverse	 name  has  no
	      DNS  entry, the message "host not found, try again" is included;
	      otherwise, it is not (e.g. when the reverse has some IP address,
	      but not the one Postfix expects).
       IllegalAddrSyntax
	      Illegal syntax in an email address provided during the MAIL FROM
	      or RCPT TO dialog.
       LdapError
	      Any LDAP errors during LDAP lookup.
       MailerLoop
	      An MX lookup for the best mailer to use to  deliver  mail	 would
	      result in a sending to ourselves.
       MapProblem
	      Problem with an access table map that needs correcting.
       MessageWriteError
	      Postfix  encountered  an	error  when trying to create a message
	      file somewhere in the spool directory.
       NumericHostname
	      A hostname was found that was numeric, instead of alphabetic.
       PanicError
	      Postfix general panic messages.
       PixWorkaround
	      Workarounds were enabled to avoid remote Cisco  PIX  SMTP	 "fix‐
	      ups".
       PolicydWeight
	      Summarization of policyweight/policydweight results.
       PolicySpf
	      Summarization of PolicySPF results.
       Postgrey
	      Summarization of Postgrey results.
       Postscreen
	      Summarization of 2.7's postscreen and verify services.
       DNSBLog
	      Summarization of 2.7's dnsblog service.
       Prepended
	      Messages	that  triggered	 header_checks	or body_checks PREPEND
	      action.
       ProcessExit
	      Postfix services that exited unexpectedly.
       ProcessLimit
	      A Postfix service has reached or exceeded the maximum number  of
	      processes allowed.
       QueueWriteError
	      Problems writing a Postfix queue file.
       RblError
	      Lookup errors for RBLs.
       Redirected
	      Messages that triggered access, header_checks or body_checks RE‐
	      DIRECT action.
       ###RejectBody
	      Messages that triggered body_checks REJECT action.
       ###RejectClient
	      Messages	   rejected	by     client	  access      controls
	      (smtpd_client_restrictions).
       ###RejectConfigError
	      Message rejected due to server configuration errors.
       ###RejectContent
	      Messages rejected by message_reject_characters.
       ###RejectData
	      Messages	 rejected   at	 DATA	stage	in  SMTP  conversation
	      (smtpd_data_restrictions).
       ###RejectEtrn
	      Messages	rejected  at   ETRN   stage   in   SMTP	  conversation
	      (smtpd_etrn_restrictions).
       ###RejectHeader
	      Messages that triggered header_checks REJECT action.
       ###RejectHelo
	      Messages	rejected  at  HELO/EHLO	 stage	in  SMTP  conversation
	      (smtpd_helo_restrictions).
       ###RejectInsufficientSpace
	      Messages rejected due to insufficient storage space.
       ###RejectLookupFailure
	      Messages rejected due to temporary DNS lookup failures.
       ###RejectMilter
	      Milter rejects.  No reject reply code  is	 available  for	 these
	      rejects,	but  an extended 5.7.1 DSN is provided.	 These rejects
	      are forced into the generic 5xx rejects group.  If you  redefine
	      reject_reply_patterns  such that it does not contain the pattern
	      5.., milter rejects will not be output.
       ###RejectRbl
	      Messages rejected by an RBL hit.
       ###RejectRecip
	      Messages rejected by recipient  access  controls	(smtpd_recipi‐
	      ent_restrictions).
       ###RejectRelay
	      Messages rejected by relay access controls.
       ###RejectSender
	      Messages	    rejected	 by	sender	   access     controls
	      (smtpd_sender_restrictions).
       ###RejectSize
	      Messages rejected due to excessive message size.
       ###RejectUnknownClient
	      Messages rejected by unknown client access controls.
       ###RejectUnknownReverseClient
	      Messages rejected by unknown reverse client access controls.
       ###RejectUnknownUser
	      Messages rejected by unknown user access controls.
       ###RejectUnverifiedClient
	      Messages rejected by unverified client access controls.
       ###RejectVerify
	      Messages rejected dueo to address verification failures.
       Replaced
	      Messages that triggered  header_checks  or  body_checks  REPLACE
	      action.
       ReturnedToSender
	      Messages	returned  to  sender  due  to exceeding queue lifetime
	      (maximal_queue_lifetime).
       SaslAuth
	      SASL authentication successes, includes SASL  method,  username,
	      and sender when present.
       SaslAuthFail
	      SASL authentication failures.
       Sent   Messages sent via the SMTP delivery agent.
       SentLmtp
	      Messages sent via the LMTP delivery agent.
       SmtpConversationError
	      Errors during the SMTP/ESMTP dialog.
       SmtpProtocolViolation
	      Protocol violation during the SMTP/ESMTP dialog.
       StartupError
	      Errors during Postfix server startup.
       TimeoutInbound
	      Connections to smtpd that timed out.
       TlsClientConnect
	      TLS client connections.
       TlsOffered
	      TLS communication offerred.
       TlsServerConnect
	      TLS server connections.
       TlsUnverified
	      Unverified TLS connections.
       Undeliverable
	      Address  verification  indicates recipient address is undeliver‐
	      able.
       Warn   Messages that triggered  access,	header_checks  or  body_checks
	      WARN action.
       WarnConfigError
	      Warnings regarding Postfix configuration errors.
       WarningsOther
	      Postfix general warning messages.

LEVEL CONTROL
       The  Detailed  section  of  the report consists of a number of sub-sec‐
       tions, each of which is controlled  both	 globally  and	independently.
       Two  settings  influence	 the output provided in the Detailed report: a
       global detail level (specified with --detail) which has final (big ham‐
       mer) output-limiting control over the Detailed section, and sub-section
       specific detail settings (small hammer), which allow  further  limiting
       of  the output for a sub-section.  Each sub-section may be limited to a
       specific depth level, and each sub-level may be limited with top	 N  or
       threshold limits.  The levelspec argument to each of the level limiters
       listed above is used to accomplish this.

       It is probably best to continue explanation of sub-level limiting  with
       the  following well-known outline-style hierarchy, and some basic exam‐
       ples:

	   level 0
	      level 1
		 level 2
		    level 3
		       level 4
		       level 4
		 level 2
		    level 3
		       level 4
		       level 4
		       level 4
		    level 3
		       level 4
		    level 3
	      level 1
		 level 2
		    level 3
		       level 4

       The simplest form of output limiting  suppresses	 all  output  below  a
       specified  level.   For example, a levelspec set to "2" shows only data
       in levels 0 through 2.  Think of this as collapsing  each  sub-level  2
       item, thus hiding all inferior levels (3, 4, ...), to yield:

	   level 0
	      level 1
		 level 2
		 level 2
	      level 1
		 level 2

       Sometimes  the  volume  of  output in a section is too great, and it is
       useful to suppress any data that does not exceed	 a  certain  threshold
       value.	Consider a dictionary spam attack, which produces very lengthy
       lists of hit-once recipient email or IP addresses.  Each	 sub-level  in
       the  hierarchy can be threshold-limited by setting the levelspec appro‐
       priately.  Setting levelspec to the value "2::5" will suppress any data
       at level 2 that does not exceed a hit count of 5.

       Perhaps	producing a top N list, such as top 10 senders, is desired.  A
       levelspec of "3:10:" limits level 3 data to only the top 10 hits.

       With those simple examples out of the way, a levelspec is defined as  a
       whitespace- or comma-separated list of one or more of the following:

       l      Specifies	 the  maximum level to be output for this sub-section,
	      with a range from 0 to 10.  if l is 0, no levels will be output,
	      effectively  disabling  the sub-section (level 0 data is already
	      provided in the Summary report, so level	1  is  considered  the
	      first  useful level in the Detailed report).  Higher values will
	      produce output up to and including the specified level.

       l.n    Same as above, with the addition that n  limits  this  section's
	      level  1	output to the top n items.  The value for n can be any
	      integer greater than 1.  (This form of limiting has less utility
	      than  the	 syntax shown below. It is provided for backwards com‐
	      patibility; users are encouraged to use the syntax below).

       l:n:t  This triplet specifies level l, top n, and minimum threshold  t.
	      Each  of the values are integers, with l being the level limiter
	      as described above, n being a top n limiter for the level l, and
	      t	 being	the  threshold limiter for level l.  When both n and t
	      are specified, n has priority, allowing top n lists  (regardless
	      of  threshold  value).  If the value of l is omitted, the speci‐
	      fied values for n and/or t are used for all levels available  in
	      the sub-section.	This permits a simple form of wildcarding (eg.
	      place minimum threshold limits on all  levels).	However,  spe‐
	      cific  limiters  always  override	 wildcard limiters.  The first
	      form of level limiter may be included in levelspec  to  restrict
	      output, regardless of how many triplets are present.

       All  three forms of limiters are effective only when postfix-logwatch's
       detail level is 5 or greater (the Detailed  section  is	not  activated
       until detail is at least 5).

       See the EXAMPLES section for usage scenarios.

CONFIGURATION FILE
       Postfix-logwatch	 can  read configuration settings from a configuration
       file.  Essentially, any command line option can be placed into  a  con‐
       figuration file, and these settings are read upon startup.

       Because	postfix-logwatch can run either standalone or within Logwatch,
       to minimize confusion, postfix-logwatch inherits Logwatch's  configura‐
       tion file syntax requirements and conventions.  These are:

       ·   White space lines are ignored.

       ·   Lines beginning with # are ignored

       ·   Settings are of the form:

		   option = value

       ·   Spaces or tabs on either side of the = character are ignored.

       ·   Any value protected in double quotes will be case-preserved.

       ·   All	other  content	is  reduced to lowercase (non-preserving, case
	   insensitive).

       ·   All postfix-logwatch configuration settings must be	prefixed  with
	   "$postfix_" or postfix-logwatch will ignore them.

       ·   When	 running  under Logwatch, any values not prefixed with "$post‐
	   fix_" are consumed by Logwatch; it only passes to  postfix-logwatch
	   (via environment variable) settings it considers valid.

       ·   The	values	True  and Yes are converted to 1, and False and No are
	   converted to 0.

       ·   Order of settings is not  preserved	within	a  configuration  file
	   (since  settings  are passed by Logwatch via environment variables,
	   which have no defined order).

       To include a command line option in a configuration  file,  prefix  the
       command line option name with the word "$postfix_".  The following con‐
       figuration file setting and command line option are equivalent:

	       $postfix_Line_Style = Truncate

	       --line_style Truncate

       Level limiters are also prefixed with $postfix_,	 but  on  the  command
       line are specified with the --limit option:

	       $postfix_Sent = 2

	       --limit Sent=2

       The  order  of  command	line options and configuration file processing
       occurs as follows: 1) The default configuration	file  is  read	if  it
       exists  and  no --config_file was specified on a command line.  2) Con‐
       figuration files are read and processed in the order found on the  com‐
       mand  line.   3)	 Command line options override any options already set
       either via command line or from any configuration file.

       Command line options are interpreted when they are seen on the  command
       line,  and  later  options  will	 override previously set options.  The
       notable exception is with limiter variables, which are  interpreted  in
       the  order found, but only after all other options have been processed.
       This allows --reject_reply_patterns to determine the  dynamic  list  of
       the various reject limiters.

       See also --reject_reply_patterns.

EXIT STATUS
       The  postfix-logwatch  utility exits with a status code of 0, unless an
       error occurred, in which case a non-zero exit status is returned.

EXAMPLES
   Running Standalone
       Note: postfix-logwatch reads its log data from one or more named	 Post‐
       fix  log	 files, or from STDIN.	For brevity, where required, the exam‐
       ples below use the word file  as	 the  command  line  argument  meaning
       /path/to/postfix.log.   Obviously you will need to substitute file with
       the appropriate path.

       To run postfix-logwatch in standalone mode, simply run:

	   postfix-logwatch file

       A complete list of options and basic usage is available via:

	   postfix-logwatch --help

       To print a summary only report of Postfix log data:

	   postfix-logwatch --detail 1 file

       To produce a summary report and a one-level detail report for May 25th:

	   grep 'May 25' file | postfix-logwatch --detail 5

       To produce only a top 10 list of Sent email domains, the summary report
       and  detailed  reports are first disabled.  Since commands line options
       are read and enabled left-to-right, the Sent section is	re-enabled  to
       level 1 with a level 1 top 10 limiter:

	   postfix-logwatch --nosummary --nodetail --limit sent='1 1:10:' file

       The  following command and its sample output shows a more complex level
       limiter example.	 The command gives the top 3 Sent email addresses from
       the top 5 domains, in addition, all level 3 items with a hit count of 2
       or less are suppressed (in the Sent sub-section,	 this  happens	to  be
       email's	Original  To  address).	 Ellipses indicate top N or threshold-
       limited data:

	   postfix-logwatch --nosummary --nodetail \
		   --limit sent '1:5: 2:3: 3::2' file

	   1762	  Sent via SMTP -----------------------------------
	    352	     example.com
	    310		joe
	    255		   joe.bob@virtdomain.example.com
	      7		   info@virtdomain.example.com
	     21		pooryoda3
	     11		hot93uh
			...
	    244	     sample.net
	     97		buzz
	     26		leroyjones
	     14		sally
			...
	    152	     example.net
	     40		jim_jameson
	     23		sam_sampson
	     19		paul_paulson
			...
	     83	     sample.us
	     44		root
	     39		jenny1
	     69	     dom3.example.us
	     10		kay
	      7		ron
	      6		mrsmith
			...
		     ...

       The next command uses both reject_reply_patterns and level limiters  to
       see  421 RBL rejects, threshold-limiting level 2 output to hits greater
       than 5 (level 2 in the  Reject  RBL  sub-section	 is  the  client's  IP
       address	/  hostname  pair).   This makes for a very nice RBL offenders
       list, shown in the sample output (note  the  use	 of  the  unambiguous,
       abbreviated command line option reject_reply_pat):

	   postfix-logwatch --reject_reply_pat '421 4.. 5.. Warn' \
		   --nosummary --nodetail --limit 421rejectrbl='2 2::5' file

	   300	 421 Reject RBL ---------------------------------------
	   243	    zen.spamhaus.org=127.0.0.2
	   106	       10.0.0.129	129.0.0.example.com
	    41	       192.168.10.70	hostx10.sample.net
	    40	       192.168.42.39	hostz42.sample.net
	    15	       10.1.1.152	dsl-10-1-1-152.example.us
	    14	       10.10.10.122	mail122.sample.com
	     7	       192.168.3.44	smalltime-spammer.example.com
		       ...
	    48	    zen.spamhaus.org=127.0.0.4
	    17	       10.29.124.92	10-29-124-92.adsl-static.sample.us
		       ...
	     8	    zen.spamhaus.org=127.0.0.11
		       ...
	     1	    zen.spamhaus.org=127.0.0.10
		       ...

   Running within Logwatch
       Note:  Logwatch	versions  prior to 7.3.6, unless configured otherwise,
       required the --print option to  print  to  STDOUT  instead  of  sending
       reports	via  email.  Since version 7.3.6, STDOUT is the default output
       destination, and the --print option has been replaced by --output  std‐
       out.  Check your configuration to determine where report output will be
       directed, and add the appropriate option to the commands below.

       To print a summary report for today's Postfix log data:

	   logwatch --service postfix --range today --detail 1

       To print a report for today's Postfix log data, with one level
       of detail in the Detailed section:

	   logwatch --service postfix --range today --detail 5

       To print a report for yesterday, with  two  levels  of  detail  in  the
       Detailed section:

	   logwatch --service postfix --range yesterday --detail 6

       To  print  a report from Dec 12th through Dec 14th, with four levels of
       detail in the Detailed section:

	   logwatch --service postfix --range \
		   'between 12/12 and 12/14' --detail 8

       To print a report for today, with all levels of detail:

	   logwatch --service postfix --range today --detail 10

       Same as above, but leaves long lines uncut:

	   logwatch --service postfix --range today --detail 11

ENVIRONMENT
       The postfix-logwatch program uses  the  following  (automatically  set)
       environment variables when running under Logwatch:

       LOGWATCH_DETAIL_LEVEL
	      This  is	the  detail  level specified with the Logwatch command
	      line argument --detail or the Detail setting in the ...conf/ser‐
	      vices/postfix.conf configuration file.

       LOGWATCH_DEBUG
	      This is the debug level specified with the Logwatch command line
	      argument --debug.

       postfix_xxx
	      The Logwatch program passes all settings postfix_xxx in the con‐
	      figuration  file	...conf/services/postfix.conf  to  the postfix
	      filter (which is	actually  named	 .../scripts/services/postfix)
	      via environment variable.

FILES
   Standalone mode
       /usr/local/bin/postfix-logwatch
	      The postfix-logwatch program

       /usr/local/etc/postfix-logwatch/postfix-logwatch.conf
	      The postfix-logwatch configuration file in standalone mode

   Logwatch mode
       /etc/logwatch/scripts/services/postfix
	      The Logwatch postfix filter

       /etc/logwatch/conf/services/postfix.conf
	      The Logwatch postfix filter configuration file

SEE ALSO
       logwatch(8), system log analyzer and reporter

README FILES
       README, an overview of postfix-logwatch
       Changes, the version change list history
       Bugs, a list of the current bugs or other inadequacies
       Makefile, the rudimentary installer
       LICENSE, the usage and redistribution licensing terms

LICENSE
       Covered under the included MIT/X-Consortium License:
       http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php

AUTHOR(S)
       Mike Cappella

       The original postfix Logwatch filter was written by Kenneth Porter, and
       has had many contributors over the years.  They are entirely not
       responsible for any errors, problems or failures since the current
       author's hands have touched the source code.

							   POSTFIX-LOGWATCH(1)
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