SCACHE(8postfix)
NAME
scache - Postfix shared connection cache server
SYNOPSIS
scache [generic Postfix daemon options]
DESCRIPTION
The scache(8) server maintains a shared multi-connection cache. This
information can be used by, for example, Postfix SMTP clients or other
Postfix delivery agents.
The connection cache is organized into logical destination names, physical endpoint names, and connections.
As a specific example, logical SMTP destinations specify (transport,
domain, port), and physical SMTP endpoints specify (transport, IP
address, port). An SMTP connection may be saved after a successful
mail transaction.
In the general case, one logical destination may refer to zero or more
physical endpoints, one physical endpoint may be referenced by zero or
more logical destinations, and one endpoint may refer to zero or more
connections.
The exact syntax of a logical destination or endpoint name is application dependent; the scache(8) server does not care. A connection is
stored as a file descriptor together with application-dependent information that is needed to re-activate a connection object. Again, the
scache(8) server is completely unaware of the details of that information.
All information is stored with a finite time to live (ttl). The connection cache daemon terminates when no client is connected for
max_idle time units.
This server implements the following requests:
- save_endp ttl endpoint endpoint_properties file_descriptor
- Save the specified file descriptor and connection property data under the specified endpoint name. The endpoint properties are used by the client to re-activate a passivated connection object.
- find_endp endpoint
- Look up cached properties and a cached file descriptor for the specified endpoint.
- save_dest ttl destination destination_properties endpoint
- Save the binding between a logical destination and an endpoint under the destination name, together with destination specific connection properties. The destination properties are used by the client to re-activate a passivated connection object.
- find_dest destination
- Look up cached destination properties, cached endpoint properties, and a cached file descriptor for the specified logical destination.
SECURITY
The scache(8) server is not security-sensitive. It does not talk to the
network, and it does not talk to local users. The scache(8) server can
run chrooted at fixed low privilege.
The scache(8) server is not a trusted process. It must not be used to
store information that is security sensitive.
DIAGNOSTICS
Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8).
BUGS
The session cache cannot be shared among multiple machines.
When a connection expires from the cache, it is closed without the
appropriate protocol specific handshake.
CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
Changes to main.cf are picked up automatically as scache(8) processes
run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
to speed up a change.
The text below provides only a parameter summary. See postconf(5) for
more details including examples.
RESOURCE CONTROLS
- connection_cache_ttl_limit (2s)
- The maximal time-to-live value that the scache(8) connection cache server allows.
- connection_cache_status_update_time (600s)
- How frequently the scache(8) server logs usage statistics with connection cache hit and miss rates for logical destinations and for physical endpoints.
MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
- config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
- The default location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf configuration files.
- daemon_timeout (18000s)
- How much time a Postfix daemon process may take to handle a request before it is terminated by a built-in watchdog timer.
- ipc_timeout (3600s)
- The time limit for sending or receiving information over an internal communication channel.
- max_idle (100s)
- The maximum amount of time that an idle Postfix daemon process waits for an incoming connection before terminating voluntarily.
- process_id (read-only)
- The process ID of a Postfix command or daemon process.
- process_name (read-only)
- The process name of a Postfix command or daemon process.
- syslog_facility (mail)
- The syslog facility of Postfix logging.
- syslog_name (see 'postconf -d' output)
- The mail system name that is prepended to the process name in syslog records, so that "smtpd" becomes, for example, "postfix/smtpd".
SEE ALSO
smtp(8), SMTP client
postconf(5), configuration parameters
master(8), process manager
syslogd(8), system logging
README FILES
Use "postconf readme_directory" or "postconf html_directory" to locate
this information.
CONNECTION_CACHE_README, Postfix connection cache
LICENSE
The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
HISTORY
This service was introduced with Postfix version 2.2.
AUTHOR(S)
- Wietse Venema
IBM T.J. Watson Research
P.O. Box 704
Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA