Postfix Source Code
Postfix was released under the IBM Public
License. All Postfix source code is signed with Wietse's PGP key. See
ftp://ftp.porcupine.org/mirrors/project-history/postfix/ for
a more extensive archive of stable and experimental tarballs. Postfix 2.5 stable release See below for past stable releases. Stable releases do not change except for bugfixes and for
portability fixes. New features are tested out in experimental
releases (see below). Stable releases are called "Postfix a.b.c", where a is the major
release number, b is the minor release number, and c is the patchlevel. Source code changes since Postfix Version 2.5.0. Postfix 2.5 stable release candidate Release candidates are made available so that people can
adopt fixes before a new Postfix stable release comes out. The
code may still change as new defects are discovered. Postfix 2.6 experimental release New features are tested in experimental releases. They become
part of the next official release once the code has not changed
for a significant amount of time. Although this code is still
subject to change, it runs on all of Wietse's systems so it is
production quality. Experimental releases are called "Postfix a.b-yyyymmdd", where
a.b is the next official Postfix release and yyyymmdd is the release
date. Postfix 2.4 Postfix 2.4 Patchlevel 7 Source code | PGP signature |
Release notes |
Change log Patch
07
06
05
04
03
02
01 Patch (PGP signature )
to add stress-adaptive behavior to the SMTP server. When some mail
flood keeps all server ports busy, this feature can be used to
quickly drop connections from clients that make errors, and to
reduce the time that Postfix waits for a client command. This may
delay some legitimate deliveries, but it will allow you to still
keep some mail flowing. After the mail flood ends, Postfix reverts
to its normal behavior.
Postfix 2.3 Postfix 2.3 Patchlevel 14 Source code | PGP signature |
Release notes |
Change log Patch
14
13
12
11
10
09
08
07
06
05
04
03
02
01 Patch (PGP signature )
to add stress-adaptive behavior to the SMTP server. When some mail
flood keeps all server ports busy, this feature can be used to
quickly drop connections from clients that make errors, and to
reduce the time that Postfix waits for a client command. This may
delay some legitimate deliveries, but it will allow you to still
keep some mail flowing. After the mail flood ends, Postfix reverts
to its normal behavior.
Postfix 2.2 Postfix 2.1 Postfix 2.0 Postfix 1.1 Postfix 1.0 Postfix 0.9 Postfix 0.8
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