DOKK / manpages / debian 12 / opensmtpd-extras / table-passwd.5.en
TABLE_PASSWD(5) File Formats Manual TABLE_PASSWD(5)

table_passwdformat description for smtpd passwd tables

This manual page documents the file format of "passwd" tables used by the smtpd(8) mail daemon.

The format described here applies to tables as defined in smtpd.conf(5).

A "passwd" table stores information regarding local users. The information is encoded using the traditional passwd(5) format and allows the sharing of a user database across different software supporting this format.

The table is used by smtpd(8) when authenticating a user or when user information such as user-id or home directory is required for a delivery.

A "passwd" table consists of a flat file containing the user entries, each one on a line by itself, with fields separated by a colon:

gilles:*:1000:1000:Gilles:/home/gilles:/sbin/nologin
eric:*:1001:1001:Eric:/home/eric:/sbin/nologin
chl:*:1002:1002:Charles:/home/chl:/sbin/nologin

Besides the first username field and depending on the table type, fields are optional and might be empty. The gecos and the shell field are not used and ignored.

If the table is used for authentication, the second field should contain a password encrypted using the crypt(3) function. Such passwords can be generated using the encrypt(1) utility or smtpctl(8) encrypt command.

If the table is used for user information, user-id, group-id, and home directory fields are required.

In favor of supporting shared authentication with the Dovecot Passwd-file format, extra fields after the last shell field are allowed (and ignored).

passwd(5), smtpd.conf(5), smtpctl(8), smtpd(8)

The first version of table_passwd was written in 2013.

table_passwd was initially written by Gilles Chehade <gilles@poolp.org> and further improved by Joerg Jung <jung@openbsd.org>.

February 4, 2014 Debian