Author Topic: postfix fails to start after yesterday's update  (Read 3790 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline
*
postfix fails to start after yesterday's update
« on: February 20, 2020, 09:43:07 AM »
Hi!

After yesterday's update:
postfix.x86_64    2:3.4.7-1.el7    cwp

Postfix fails to start here:
Quote
/bin/systemctl start postfix.service
Job for postfix.service failed because the control process exited with error code. See "systemctl status postfix.service" and "journalctl -xe" for details.

systemctl status postfix.service returns the following two errors:
Quote
Unable to create missing queue directories
Postfix integrity check failed!

After a rollback of the last yum update, it works again. Rollback via:
yum history
then check what the newest ID is, and then
yum history undo <ID>

This returned to postfix-2.10.1-7.el7.x86_64, which is quite a big version jump.
I guess that Postfix 3.4.7 requires a different configuration than Postfix-2.10.1.

Any ideas how to find out what's going wrong? The logs don't tell me what queue directories couldn't be created.

Here are the changes I made to the default postfix configuration to use procmail to filter and deliver mails:

Quote
yum install procmail
chmod g+s /usr/bin/procmail
nano /etc/postfix/main.cf
Change virtual_transport = dovecot to:
virtual_transport = virtualprocmail:dummy
virtualprocmail_destination_recipient_limit = 1

nano /etc/postfix/master.cf
#
# procmail LDA
virtualprocmail unix - n n - - pipe flags=DRXhuq user=redacteduser
  argv=/usr/bin/procmail -m E_SENDER=$sender E_RECIPIENT=$recipient ER_USER=$user ER_DOMAIN=$domain ER_DETAIL=$extension NEXTHOP=$nexthop /etc/procmailrc

nano /etc/procmailrc
SHELL=/bin/bash
LOGFILE=/var/log/procmail.log
DEFAULT=/var/vmail/${ER_DOMAIN}/${ER_USER}
MAILDIR=/var/vmail/${ER_DOMAIN}/${ER_USER}
DELIVER="/usr/lib/dovecot/deliver -d $LOGNAME"
INCLUDERC=/home/redacteduser/.procmailrc
:0 w
| $DELIVER
HOST=end_of_processing

nano /etc/postfix/virtual
support@redacted.com redacteduser

service postfix restart