Provided by: logwatch_7.7-1ubuntu1_all bug

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 produces summaries, details, and
       statistics regarding the operation of Postfix.

       This utility can be used as a standalone program, or as a  Logwatch  filter  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, hierarchically-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 representations 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 Postfix access check WARN action was
       logged 146 times, and a total of 68.310 megabytes (71,628,177  bytes)  were  accepted  into  the  Postfix
       system,  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
       levels, 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 illustrates 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  configuration  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-logwatch.  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  (available  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 percentiles 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  section.   At
              level  5  and  above,  the Detailed section, and any additional report sections are candidates for
              output.  Each incremental 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 postfix/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 supplemental 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 sections to create specific reports.

       --[no]summary

       --show_summary
              Enables   (disables)  displaying  of  the  the  Summary  section  of  the  report.   The  variable
              postfix_Show_Summary in used in a configuration file.

       --recipient_delimiter delimiter
              Split email delivery addresses using the recipient delimiter  character  delimiter.   This  should
              generally  match  the  recipient_delimiter specified in the Postfix parameter file main.cf, or the
              default value indicated in postconf -d recipient_delimiter.  This is  very  useful  for  obtaining
              per-alias statistics when a recipient delimiter 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 regular 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 transmission channel closures from 45x errors
              (eg. 450 mailbox unavailable, 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_patterns 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 displayed is the command line option (or configuration file variable) used to
              limit that section's output.  With the large  number  of  level  limiters  available  in  postfix-
              logwatch,  this  a  convenient  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-
              logwatch; 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 encountered 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 "fixups".
       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 REDIRECT 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_recipient_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 offered.
       TlsServerConnect
              TLS server connections.
       TlsUnverified
              Unverified TLS connections.
       Undeliverable
              Address verification indicates recipient address is undeliverable.
       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-sections, 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 hammer) 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 examples:

           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 appropriately.  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 compatibility; 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 specified
              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,  specific
              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 configuration 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 configuration 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 "$postfix_" 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 configuration 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)
       Configuration  files  are  read  and  processed  in the order found on the command 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 Postfix log files, or from  STDIN.   For
       brevity,  where  required,  the  examples  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 stdout.  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/services/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   configuration   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.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)