Sorry the mistake was only in my example.. pardon me. The transport file has no 
@ prefix in my configuration. (And if I disable the tcp table the transport 
file works like expected).



Jeroen Geilman <jer...@adaptr.nl> schrieb:
>On 11/09/2013 02:33 PM, Simon Effenberg wrote:
>> On Sat, 09 Nov 2013 14:21:51 +0100
>> Jeroen Geilman <jer...@adaptr.nl> wrote:
>>
>>> On 11/9/2013 2:13 PM, Simon Effenberg wrote:
>>>> On Sat, 9 Nov 2013 07:54:30 -0500 (EST)
>>>> wie...@porcupine.org (Wietse Venema) wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> transport_maps can use hash tables AND tcp tables. transport_maps
>>>>> queries each table in the specified order, and stops when a result
>>>>> is found. When no result is found, Postfix uses default_transport.
>>>>>
>>>>>   Wietse-
>>>>
>>>> I got this but so it's impossible to do something like that:
>>>>
>>>> main.cf:
>>>>     transport_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/transport,
>tcp:[127.0.0.1]:2527
>>>>
>>>> transport:
>>>>
>>>>     @domain1.tld smtp:[internal.relay]
>>>>     @domain2.tld smtp:[external.relay]
>>>>
>>>> master.cf:
>>>>     127.0.0.1:2527 inet n n n - 0 spawn
>>>>       user=nobody argv=/etc/postfix/random.rb
>>>>
>>>> random.rb:
>>>>     #!/usr/bin/env ruby
>>>>
>>>>     TRANSPORTS = [ 'smtp1:', 'smtp2:', 'smtp3:' ]
>>>>
>>>>     while line = STDIN.readline
>>>>       puts "200 #{TRANSPORTS[rand(TRANSPORTS.size)]}"
>>>>     end
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> If I'll try to send a mail to "x...@domain1.tld" this won't use
>>>> smtp:[internal.relay] but one of 'smtp1:', 'smpt2:' or 'smtp3:'
>>>>
>>> No. x...@domain1.tld matches the first line in
>/etc/postfix/transport.
>>>
>>> You seem terminally confused about how maps are used.
>>> Each map type has specific documentation on how it is queried, but
>no
>>> map determines WHEN it is queried. You define that in
>transport_maps.
>> That's not how it works in my 2.9 postfix version.. trivial-rewrite
>is
>> doing the following (regarding to -vv logs):
>>
>> 1. search for x...@domain1.tld
>>
>>    1. in transport which has NO match
>>    2. asking the tcp_table which HAS a match
>
>This is incorrect.
>
>As documented:
>
>*TABLE SEARCH ORDER*
>        With lookups from indexed files such as DB or DBM, or from
>        networked tables such as NIS, LDAP or  SQL,  patterns  are
>        tried in the order as listed below:
>
>        /user+extension@domain transport/:/nexthop/
>               Deliver   mail  for/user+extension@domain/   through
>               /transport/  to/nexthop/.
>
>        /user@domain transport/:/nexthop/
>               Deliver mail for/user@domain/  through/transport/   to
>               /nexthop/.
>
>  *       **domain transport**:**nexthop*
>               Deliver  mail  for/domain/  through/transport/  to/nex-/
>               /thop/.
>
>        /.domain transport/:/nexthop/
>               Deliver mail for any subdomain  of/domain/   through
>               /transport/   to/nexthop/.  This applies only when the
>string*transport_maps 
><http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#transport_maps>*  is not 
>listed  in  the*par 
><http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#parent_domain_matches_subdomains>-*
>*ent_domain_matches_subdomains 
><http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#parent_domain_matches_subdomains>*
>   configuration  set-
>               ting.  Otherwise, a domain name matches itself  and
>               its subdomains.
>
>        ***  /transport/:/nexthop/
>               The  special pattern***  represents any address (i.e.
>               it functions  as  the  wild-card  pattern,  and  is
>               unique to Postfix transport tables).
>
>
>@domain.tld will never match anything in transport(5).
>
>Your transport map is incorrectly formed.
>
>-- 
>J.

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