From a2691821561e5bb5f08c58352088314911d7eb0f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Wietse Z Venema Date: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 00:00:00 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] postfix-3.10-20240930 --- postfix/HISTORY | 15 ++++++++- postfix/html/access.5.html | 36 ++++++++++----------- postfix/html/anvil.8.html | 30 ++++++++--------- postfix/html/bounce.5.html | 20 ++++++------ postfix/html/bounce.8.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/canonical.5.html | 30 ++++++++--------- postfix/html/cidr_table.5.html | 22 ++++++------- postfix/html/defer.8.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/discard.8.html | 20 ++++++------ postfix/html/dnsblog.8.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/error.8.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/flush.8.html | 24 +++++++------- postfix/html/generic.5.html | 34 ++++++++++---------- postfix/html/header_checks.5.html | 34 ++++++++++---------- postfix/html/ldap_table.5.html | 24 +++++++------- postfix/html/lmdb_table.5.html | 22 ++++++------- postfix/html/lmtp.8.html | 50 ++++++++++++++--------------- postfix/html/mailq.1.html | 36 ++++++++++----------- postfix/html/makedefs.1.html | 8 ++--- postfix/html/master.5.html | 12 +++---- postfix/html/master.8.html | 22 ++++++------- postfix/html/memcache_table.5.html | 22 ++++++------- postfix/html/mongodb_table.5.html | 16 ++++----- postfix/html/mysql_table.5.html | 24 +++++++------- postfix/html/newaliases.1.html | 36 ++++++++++----------- postfix/html/nisplus_table.5.html | 16 ++++----- postfix/html/oqmgr.8.html | 46 +++++++++++++------------- postfix/html/pcre_table.5.html | 26 +++++++-------- postfix/html/pgsql_table.5.html | 20 ++++++------ postfix/html/pickup.8.html | 24 +++++++------- postfix/html/pipe.8.html | 26 +++++++-------- postfix/html/postalias.1.html | 20 ++++++------ postfix/html/postcat.1.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/postconf.1.html | 20 ++++++------ postfix/html/postdrop.1.html | 20 ++++++------ postfix/html/postfix-tls.1.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/postfix-wrapper.5.html | 24 +++++++------- postfix/html/postfix.1.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/postkick.1.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/postlock.1.html | 24 +++++++------- postfix/html/postlog.1.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/postlogd.8.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/postmap.1.html | 22 ++++++------- postfix/html/postmulti.1.html | 26 +++++++-------- postfix/html/postqueue.1.html | 28 ++++++++-------- postfix/html/postscreen.8.html | 46 +++++++++++++------------- postfix/html/postsuper.1.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/posttls-finger.1.html | 14 ++++---- postfix/html/proxymap.8.html | 24 +++++++------- postfix/html/qmgr.8.html | 48 +++++++++++++-------------- postfix/html/qmqp-sink.1.html | 10 +++--- postfix/html/qmqp-source.1.html | 10 +++--- postfix/html/qmqpd.8.html | 34 ++++++++++---------- postfix/html/qshape.1.html | 12 +++---- postfix/html/regexp_table.5.html | 26 +++++++-------- postfix/html/relocated.5.html | 28 ++++++++-------- postfix/html/scache.8.html | 26 +++++++-------- postfix/html/sendmail.1.html | 36 ++++++++++----------- postfix/html/showq.8.html | 20 ++++++------ postfix/html/smtp-sink.1.html | 12 +++---- postfix/html/smtp-source.1.html | 12 +++---- postfix/html/smtp.8.html | 50 ++++++++++++++--------------- postfix/html/socketmap_table.5.html | 24 +++++++------- postfix/html/spawn.8.html | 24 +++++++------- postfix/html/sqlite_table.5.html | 20 ++++++------ postfix/html/tcp_table.5.html | 24 +++++++------- postfix/html/tlsmgr.8.html | 28 ++++++++-------- postfix/html/trace.8.html | 18 +++++------ postfix/html/transport.5.html | 28 ++++++++-------- postfix/html/trivial-rewrite.8.html | 32 +++++++++--------- postfix/html/verify.8.html | 32 +++++++++--------- postfix/html/virtual.5.html | 32 +++++++++--------- postfix/html/virtual.8.html | 44 ++++++++++++------------- postfix/proto/stop.spell-history | 2 ++ postfix/src/global/mail_version.h | 2 +- postfix/src/smtpd/smtpd_check.c | 12 +++---- 76 files changed, 910 insertions(+), 897 deletions(-) diff --git a/postfix/HISTORY b/postfix/HISTORY index fe7f369f5..641de0ecb 100644 --- a/postfix/HISTORY +++ b/postfix/HISTORY @@ -28322,9 +28322,22 @@ Apologies for any names omitted. case with lower case, and after replacing spaces with underscores. File: mantools/man2html. - Cleanaup (no code change): regenerate all man-style pages + Cleanup (no code change): regenerate all man-style pages so that the parameter summaries at the end match the text in postconf(5). This also updates embedded man-style comments in Postfix source code. Files: mantools/man2html, proto/aliases, cleanup/cleanup.c, local/local.c, smtpd/smtpd.c, tlsproxy/tlsproxy.c. + +20240930 + + Bugfix (defect introduced: Postfix 2.9, date 20111218): + with "smtpd_sasl_auth_enable = no", info received with + XCLIENT LOGIN was ignored by permit_sasl_authenticated. + Problem reported by Antonin Verrier. The fix was to REMOVE + a test and to rely solely on the sasl_mechanism property + which is always null when a remote SMTP client is not + authenticated. File: src/smtpd/smtpd_check.c. + + Cleanup (no code change): regenerated HTML manpages that + weren't updated because of a simplistic make(1) dependency. diff --git a/postfix/html/access.5.html b/postfix/html/access.5.html index 4d9cc2b0a..5ab271111 100644 --- a/postfix/html/access.5.html +++ b/postfix/html/access.5.html @@ -7,17 +7,17 @@
 ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        access - Postfix SMTP server access table
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap /etc/postfix/access
 
        postmap -q "string" /etc/postfix/access
 
        postmap -q - /etc/postfix/access <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        This  document  describes access control on remote SMTP client informa-
        tion: host names, network addresses, and envelope sender  or  recipient
        addresses;   it  is  implemented  by  the  Postfix  SMTP  server.   See
@@ -39,13 +39,13 @@ ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
        a  slightly  different way as described below under "REGULAR EXPRESSION
        TABLES" or "TCP-BASED TABLES".
 
-CASE FOLDING
+CASE FOLDING
        The search string is folded to lowercase before database lookup. As  of
        Postfix  2.3,  the search string is not case folded with database types
        such as regexp: or pcre: whose lookup fields can match both  upper  and
        lower case.
 
-TABLE FORMAT
+TABLE FORMAT
        The input format for the postmap(1) command is as follows:
 
        pattern action
@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
               A  logical  line  starts  with  non-whitespace text. A line that
               starts with whitespace continues a logical line.
 
-EMAIL ADDRESS PATTERNS IN INDEXED TABLES
+EMAIL ADDRESS PATTERNS IN INDEXED TABLES
        With lookups from indexed files such as DB or DBM,  or  from  networked
        tables  such  as  NIS,  LDAP or SQL, patterns are tried in the order as
        listed below:
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
        addresses. The value is specified with the smtpd_null_access_lookup_key
        parameter in the Postfix main.cf file.
 
-EMAIL ADDRESS EXTENSION
+EMAIL ADDRESS EXTENSION
        When a mail address localpart contains the optional recipient delimiter
        (e.g., user+foo@domain), the  lookup  order  becomes:  user+foo@domain,
        user@domain, domain, user+foo@, and user@.
@@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
 
               IPv6 support is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.
 
-ACCEPT ACTIONS
+ACCEPT ACTIONS
        OK     Accept the address etc. that matches the pattern.
 
        all-numerical
@@ -159,7 +159,7 @@ ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
 
        For other accept actions, see "OTHER ACTIONS" below.
 
-REJECT ACTIONS
+REJECT ACTIONS
        Postfix  version 2.3 and later support enhanced status codes as defined
        in RFC 3463.  When no code is specified at the beginning  of  the  text
        below, Postfix inserts a default enhanced status code of "5.7.1" in the
@@ -226,7 +226,7 @@ ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
 
        For other reject actions, see "OTHER ACTIONS" below.
 
-OTHER ACTIONS
+OTHER ACTIONS
        restriction...
               Apply    the   named   UCE   restriction(s)   (permit,   reject,
               reject_unauth_destination, and so on).
@@ -343,7 +343,7 @@ ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
 
               This feature is available in Postfix 2.1 and later.
 
-ENHANCED STATUS CODES
+ENHANCED STATUS CODES
        Postfix version 2.3 and later support enhanced status codes as  defined
        in  RFC  3463.   When an enhanced status code is specified in an access
        table, it is subject to modification. The following transformations are
@@ -360,7 +360,7 @@ ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
               Postfix  SMTP  server  will  transform a sender or recipient DSN
               status into a generic non-address DSN status (e.g., 4.0.0).
 
-REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
+REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
        This section describes how the table lookups change when the  table  is
        given  in the form of regular expressions. For a description of regular
        expression lookup table syntax, see regexp_table(5) or pcre_table(5).
@@ -379,7 +379,7 @@ ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
        feature that parenthesized substrings from the pattern can be  interpo-
        lated as $1, $2 and so on.
 
-TCP-BASED TABLES
+TCP-BASED TABLES
        This  section  describes  how the table lookups change when lookups are
        directed  to  a  TCP-based  server.  For  a  description  of  the   TCP
        client/server  lookup  protocol, see tcp_table(5).  This feature is not
@@ -394,7 +394,7 @@ ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
 
        Actions are the same as with indexed file lookups.
 
-EXAMPLE
+EXAMPLE
        The  following example uses an indexed file, so that the order of table
        entries does not matter. The example permits access by  the  client  at
        address 1.2.3.4 but rejects all other clients in 1.2.3.0/24. Instead of
@@ -412,20 +412,20 @@ ACCESS(5)                                                            ACCESS(5)
        Execute  the  command  "postmap  /etc/postfix/access" after editing the
        file.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        The table format does not understand quoting conventions.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        smtpd(8), SMTP server
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        transport(5), transport:nexthop syntax
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        SMTPD_ACCESS_README, built-in SMTP server access control
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/anvil.8.html b/postfix/html/anvil.8.html
index 2ce53aded..56f1cacde 100644
--- a/postfix/html/anvil.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/anvil.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 ANVIL(8)                                                              ANVIL(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        anvil - Postfix session count and request rate control
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        anvil [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  anvil(8) server maintains statistics about client connec-
        tion counts or client request rates. This information can  be  used  to
        defend against clients that hammer a server with either too many simul-
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ ANVIL(8)                                                              ANVIL(8)
 
            status=0
 
-MESSAGE RATE CONTROL
+MESSAGE RATE CONTROL
        To register a message delivery request send the  following  request  to
        the anvil(8) server:
 
@@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ ANVIL(8)                                                              ANVIL(8)
            status=0
            rate=number
 
-RECIPIENT RATE CONTROL
+RECIPIENT RATE CONTROL
        To  register  a  recipient  request  send  the following request to the
        anvil(8) server:
 
@@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ ANVIL(8)                                                              ANVIL(8)
            status=0
            rate=number
 
-TLS SESSION NEGOTIATION RATE CONTROL
+TLS SESSION NEGOTIATION RATE CONTROL
        The  features  described in this section are available with Postfix 2.3
        and later.
 
@@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ ANVIL(8)                                                              ANVIL(8)
            status=0
            rate=number
 
-AUTH RATE CONTROL
+AUTH RATE CONTROL
        To register an AUTH request send the following request to the  anvil(8)
        server:
 
@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ ANVIL(8)                                                              ANVIL(8)
            status=0
            rate=number
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The anvil(8) server does not talk to the network or to local users, and
        can run chrooted at fixed low privilege.
 
@@ -134,7 +134,7 @@ ANVIL(8)                                                              ANVIL(8)
        clients.  To reduce memory usage, reduce the time unit over which state
        is kept.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
        Upon  exit, and every anvil_status_update_time seconds, the server logs
@@ -143,7 +143,7 @@ ANVIL(8)                                                              ANVIL(8)
        In order to avoid unnecessary overhead, no measurements  are  done  for
        activity that isn't concurrency limited or rate limited.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        Systems behind network address translating routers or proxies appear to
        have the same client address and can run into connection  count  and/or
        rate limits falsely.
@@ -159,7 +159,7 @@ ANVIL(8)                                                              ANVIL(8)
        service  should  always register connect/disconnect events even when it
        does not explicitly limit them.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        On low-traffic mail systems, changes to main.cf are picked up automati-
        cally  as  anvil(8) processes run for only a limited amount of time. On
        other mail systems, use the command "postfix  reload"  to  speed  up  a
@@ -214,18 +214,18 @@ ANVIL(8)                                                              ANVIL(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        smtpd(8), Postfix SMTP server
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        master(5), generic daemon options
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        TUNING_README, performance tuning
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        The anvil service is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/bounce.5.html b/postfix/html/bounce.5.html
index e9850b692..7a756aacd 100644
--- a/postfix/html/bounce.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/bounce.5.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 BOUNCE(5)                                                            BOUNCE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        bounce - Postfix bounce message template format
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        bounce_template_file = /etc/postfix/bounce.cf
 
        postconf -b [template_file]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  bounce(8)  server  produces  delivery status notification
        (DSN) messages for undeliverable mail, delayed mail, successful  deliv-
        ery or address verification requests.
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ BOUNCE(5)                                                            BOUNCE(5)
        plate  file,  followed  by the specific details of bounce template for-
        mats.
 
-GENERAL PROCEDURE
+GENERAL PROCEDURE
        To create a customized bounce template file, create a temporary copy of
        the file /etc/postfix/bounce.cf.default and edit the temporary file.
 
@@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ BOUNCE(5)                                                            BOUNCE(5)
        /etc/postfix/main.cf:
            bounce_template_file = /etc/postfix/bounce.cf
 
-TEMPLATE FILE FORMAT
+TEMPLATE FILE FORMAT
        The template file can specify templates for failed mail, delayed  mail,
        successful  delivery  or for address verification.  These templates are
        named  failure_template,  delay_template,  success_template  and   ver-
@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ BOUNCE(5)                                                            BOUNCE(5)
        Examples of all templates can be found in the file bounce.cf.default in
        the Postfix configuration directory.
 
-TEMPLATE HEADER FORMAT
+TEMPLATE HEADER FORMAT
        The first portion of a bounce template consists  of  optional  template
        headers.   Some become message headers in the delivery status notifica-
        tion; some control the formatting of  that  notification.  Headers  not
@@ -137,7 +137,7 @@ BOUNCE(5)                                                            BOUNCE(5)
        o      Template message headers must contain ASCII characters only, and
               must not contain ASCII null characters.
 
-TEMPLATE MESSAGE TEXT FORMAT
+TEMPLATE MESSAGE TEXT FORMAT
        The second portion of a bounce template consists of  message  text.  As
        the  above  example  shows,  template  message text may contain main.cf
        $parameters. Besides the parameters that are defined  in  main.cf,  the
@@ -180,14 +180,14 @@ BOUNCE(5)                                                            BOUNCE(5)
               needed because Postfix appends ASCII text after the message tem-
               plate when it sends a delivery status notification.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        bounce(8), Postfix delivery status notifications
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        The Postfix bounce template format was originally developed by  Nicolas
        Riendeau.
 
diff --git a/postfix/html/bounce.8.html b/postfix/html/bounce.8.html
index ba2ced94e..33ffe62f8 100644
--- a/postfix/html/bounce.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/bounce.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        bounce - Postfix delivery status reports
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        bounce [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The bounce(8) daemon maintains per-message log files with delivery sta-
        tus information. Each log file is named after the queue  file  that  it
        corresponds  to,  and  is  kept in a queue subdirectory named after the
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        This  is  used by clients that cannot retry transactions by themselves,
        and that depend on retry logic in their own client.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 822 (ARPA Internet Text Messages)
        RFC 2045 (Format of Internet Message Bodies)
        RFC 2822 (Internet Message Format)
@@ -51,10 +51,10 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        RFC 6532 (Internationalized Message Format)
        RFC 6533 (Internationalized Delivery Status Notifications)
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are picked up automatically, as bounce(8)  processes
        run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
        to speed up a change.
@@ -166,12 +166,12 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        header_from_format (standard)
               The format of the Postfix-generated From: header.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix/bounce/* non-delivery records
        /var/spool/postfix/defer/* non-delivery records
        /var/spool/postfix/trace/* delivery status records
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        bounce(5), bounce message template format
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
@@ -180,7 +180,7 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/canonical.5.html b/postfix/html/canonical.5.html
index d0512977c..d768ec0bc 100644
--- a/postfix/html/canonical.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/canonical.5.html
@@ -7,17 +7,17 @@
   
 CANONICAL(5)                                                      CANONICAL(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        canonical - Postfix canonical table format
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap /etc/postfix/canonical
 
        postmap -q "string" /etc/postfix/canonical
 
        postmap -q - /etc/postfix/canonical <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  optional canonical(5) table specifies an address mapping for local
        and non-local addresses. The mapping is used by the cleanup(8)  daemon,
        before  mail  is  stored into the queue.  The address mapping is recur-
@@ -59,13 +59,13 @@ CANONICAL(5)                                                      CANONICAL(5)
        port  or  with  local  aliasing.  To change the destination but not the
        headers, use the virtual(5) or aliases(5) map instead.
 
-CASE FOLDING
+CASE FOLDING
        The search string is folded to lowercase before database lookup. As  of
        Postfix  2.3,  the search string is not case folded with database types
        such as regexp: or pcre: whose lookup fields can match both  upper  and
        lower case.
 
-TABLE FORMAT
+TABLE FORMAT
        The input format for the postmap(1) command is as follows:
 
        pattern address
@@ -80,7 +80,7 @@ CANONICAL(5)                                                      CANONICAL(5)
               A  logical  line  starts  with  non-whitespace text. A line that
               starts with whitespace continues a logical line.
 
-TABLE SEARCH ORDER
+TABLE SEARCH ORDER
        With lookups from indexed files such as DB or DBM,  or  from  networked
        tables  such  as  NIS,  LDAP  or SQL, each user@domain query produces a
        sequence of query patterns as described below.
@@ -130,7 +130,7 @@ CANONICAL(5)                                                      CANONICAL(5)
               In the above example, Postfix may contact a remote server if the
               recipient is rewritten to a remote address.
 
-RESULT ADDRESS REWRITING
+RESULT ADDRESS REWRITING
        The lookup result is subject to address rewriting:
 
        o      When  the  result  has the form @otherdomain, the result becomes
@@ -142,7 +142,7 @@ CANONICAL(5)                                                      CANONICAL(5)
        o      When "append_dot_mydomain=yes", append ".$mydomain" to addresses
               without ".domain".
 
-ADDRESS EXTENSION
+ADDRESS EXTENSION
        When a mail address localpart contains the optional recipient delimiter
        (e.g.,  user+foo@domain),  the  lookup  order becomes: user+foo@domain,
        user@domain, user+foo, user, and @domain.
@@ -151,7 +151,7 @@ CANONICAL(5)                                                      CANONICAL(5)
        unmatched address extension (+foo) is propagated to the result of table
        lookup.
 
-REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
+REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
        This section describes how the table lookups change when the  table  is
        given  in the form of regular expressions. For a description of regular
        expression lookup table syntax, see regexp_table(5) or pcre_table(5).
@@ -168,7 +168,7 @@ CANONICAL(5)                                                      CANONICAL(5)
        feature  that parenthesized substrings from the pattern can be interpo-
        lated as $1, $2 and so on.
 
-TCP-BASED TABLES
+TCP-BASED TABLES
        This section describes how the table lookups change  when  lookups  are
        directed   to  a  TCP-based  server.  For  a  description  of  the  TCP
        client/server lookup protocol, see tcp_table(5).  This feature  is  not
@@ -180,10 +180,10 @@ CANONICAL(5)                                                      CANONICAL(5)
 
        Results are the same as with indexed file lookups.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        The table format does not understand quoting conventions.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The  following  main.cf  parameters  are especially relevant.  The text
        below provides only a  parameter  summary.  See  postconf(5)  for  more
        details including examples.
@@ -257,17 +257,17 @@ CANONICAL(5)                                                      CANONICAL(5)
               remote_header_rewrite_domain parameter, and adding missing head-
               ers.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        cleanup(8), canonicalize and enqueue mail
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        virtual(5), virtual aliasing
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        ADDRESS_REWRITING_README, address rewriting guide
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/cidr_table.5.html b/postfix/html/cidr_table.5.html
index 24c458e92..94982018c 100644
--- a/postfix/html/cidr_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/cidr_table.5.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 CIDR_TABLE(5)                                                    CIDR_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        cidr_table - format of Postfix CIDR tables
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" cidr:/etc/postfix/filename
 
        postmap -q - cidr:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix mail system uses optional lookup tables.  These tables are
        usually in dbm or db format.  Alternatively, lookup tables can be spec-
        ified in CIDR (Classless Inter-Domain Routing) form. In this case, each
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ CIDR_TABLE(5)                                                    CIDR_TABLE(5)
        To test lookup tables, use the "postmap -q" command as described in the
        SYNOPSIS above.
 
-TABLE FORMAT
+TABLE FORMAT
        The general form of a Postfix CIDR table is:
 
        pattern     result
@@ -73,11 +73,11 @@ CIDR_TABLE(5)                                                    CIDR_TABLE(5)
               A  logical  line  starts  with  non-whitespace text. A line that
               starts with whitespace continues a logical line.
 
-TABLE SEARCH ORDER
+TABLE SEARCH ORDER
        Patterns are applied in the order as specified in the  table,  until  a
        pattern is found that matches the search string.
 
-ADDRESS PATTERN SYNTAX
+ADDRESS PATTERN SYNTAX
        Postfix  CIDR  tables  are  pattern-based.  A  pattern is either a net-
        work_address which requires an exact match, or  a  network_address/pre-
        fix_length  where  the  prefix_length  part specifies the length of the
@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ CIDR_TABLE(5)                                                    CIDR_TABLE(5)
        Note:  address information may be enclosed inside "[]" but this form is
        not required.
 
-INLINE SPECIFICATION
+INLINE SPECIFICATION
        The contents of a table may be specified in the table name (Postfix 3.7
        and later).  The basic syntax is:
 
@@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ CIDR_TABLE(5)                                                    CIDR_TABLE(5)
        Note: if a rule contains $, specify $$ to keep Postfix from  trying  to
        do $name expansion as it evaluates a parameter value.
 
-EXAMPLE SMTPD ACCESS MAP
+EXAMPLE SMTPD ACCESS MAP
        /etc/postfix/main.cf:
            smtpd_client_restrictions = ... cidr:/etc/postfix/client.cidr ...
 
@@ -134,15 +134,15 @@ CIDR_TABLE(5)                                                    CIDR_TABLE(5)
            2001:db8::1             OK
            2001:db8::/32           REJECT
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        regexp_table(5), format of regular expression tables
        pcre_table(5), format of PCRE tables
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        CIDR table support was introduced with Postfix version 2.1.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/defer.8.html b/postfix/html/defer.8.html
index ba2ced94e..33ffe62f8 100644
--- a/postfix/html/defer.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/defer.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        bounce - Postfix delivery status reports
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        bounce [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The bounce(8) daemon maintains per-message log files with delivery sta-
        tus information. Each log file is named after the queue  file  that  it
        corresponds  to,  and  is  kept in a queue subdirectory named after the
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        This  is  used by clients that cannot retry transactions by themselves,
        and that depend on retry logic in their own client.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 822 (ARPA Internet Text Messages)
        RFC 2045 (Format of Internet Message Bodies)
        RFC 2822 (Internet Message Format)
@@ -51,10 +51,10 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        RFC 6532 (Internationalized Message Format)
        RFC 6533 (Internationalized Delivery Status Notifications)
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are picked up automatically, as bounce(8)  processes
        run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
        to speed up a change.
@@ -166,12 +166,12 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        header_from_format (standard)
               The format of the Postfix-generated From: header.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix/bounce/* non-delivery records
        /var/spool/postfix/defer/* non-delivery records
        /var/spool/postfix/trace/* delivery status records
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        bounce(5), bounce message template format
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
@@ -180,7 +180,7 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/discard.8.html b/postfix/html/discard.8.html
index 8ab442cfb..801688f98 100644
--- a/postfix/html/discard.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/discard.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 DISCARD(8)                                                          DISCARD(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        discard - Postfix discard mail delivery agent
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        discard [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix discard(8) delivery agent processes delivery requests from
        the queue manager. Each  request  specifies  a  queue  file,  a  sender
        address,  a next-hop destination that is treated as the reason for dis-
@@ -29,20 +29,20 @@ DISCARD(8)                                                          DISCARD(8)
 
        Delivery status reports are sent to the trace(8) daemon as appropriate.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The  discard(8)  mailer  is not security-sensitive. It does not talk to
        the network, and can be run chrooted at fixed low privilege.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 3463 (Enhanced Status Codes)
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
        Depending on the setting of the notify_classes parameter, the  postmas-
        ter is notified of bounces and of other trouble.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes  to main.cf are picked up automatically as discard(8) processes
        run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
        to speed up a change.
@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ DISCARD(8)                                                          DISCARD(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        bounce(8), delivery status reports
        error(8), Postfix error delivery agent
@@ -109,10 +109,10 @@ DISCARD(8)                                                          DISCARD(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        This service was introduced with Postfix version 2.2.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/dnsblog.8.html b/postfix/html/dnsblog.8.html
index 2028fa167..f930bf143 100644
--- a/postfix/html/dnsblog.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/dnsblog.8.html
@@ -7,18 +7,18 @@
   
 DNSBLOG(8)                                                          DNSBLOG(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        dnsblog - Postfix DNS allow/denylist logger
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        dnsblog [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  dnsblog(8)  server  implements an ad-hoc DNS allow/denylist lookup
        service. This may eventually be replaced by an UDP client that is built
        directly into the postscreen(8) server.
 
-PROTOCOL
+PROTOCOL
        With   each   connection,   the   dnsblog(8)   server  receives  a  DNS
        allow/denylist domain name, an IP  address,  and  an  ID.   If  the  IP
        address  is  listed under the DNS allow/denylist, the dnsblog(8) server
@@ -29,10 +29,10 @@ DNSBLOG(8)                                                          DNSBLOG(8)
        reply, or a negative reply that contains no SOA record.   Finally,  the
        dnsblog(8) server closes the connection.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are picked up automatically, as dnsblog(8) processes
        run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
        to speed up a change.
@@ -77,16 +77,16 @@ DNSBLOG(8)                                                          DNSBLOG(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        smtpd(8), Postfix SMTP server
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        This service was introduced with Postfix version 2.8.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/error.8.html b/postfix/html/error.8.html
index c82bc69e0..521f5e61e 100644
--- a/postfix/html/error.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/error.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 ERROR(8)                                                              ERROR(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        error - Postfix error/retry mail delivery agent
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        error [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  error(8)  delivery agent processes delivery requests from
        the queue manager. Each  request  specifies  a  queue  file,  a  sender
        address,  the reason for non-delivery (specified as the next-hop desti-
@@ -30,20 +30,20 @@ ERROR(8)                                                              ERROR(8)
        Delivery status reports are sent to the bounce(8), defer(8) or trace(8)
        daemon as appropriate.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The  error(8) mailer is not security-sensitive. It does not talk to the
        network, and can be run chrooted at fixed low privilege.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 3463 (Enhanced Status Codes)
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
        Depending on the setting of the notify_classes parameter, the  postmas-
        ter is notified of bounces and of other trouble.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes  to  main.cf  are picked up automatically as error(8) processes
        run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
        to speed up a change.
@@ -112,7 +112,7 @@ ERROR(8)                                                              ERROR(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        bounce(8), delivery status reports
        discard(8), Postfix discard delivery agent
@@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ ERROR(8)                                                              ERROR(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/flush.8.html b/postfix/html/flush.8.html
index 150979634..728cb749b 100644
--- a/postfix/html/flush.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/flush.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 FLUSH(8)                                                              FLUSH(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        flush - Postfix fast flush server
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        flush [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The flush(8) server maintains a record of deferred mail by destination.
        This information is used to improve the performance of  the  SMTP  ETRN
        request,   and  of  its  command-line  equivalent,  "sendmail  -qR"  or
@@ -56,15 +56,15 @@ FLUSH(8)                                                              FLUSH(8)
 
        purge  Do a refresh for all per-destination logfiles.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The  flush(8) server is not security-sensitive. It does not talk to the
        network, and it does not talk to local users.  The  fast  flush  server
        can run chrooted at fixed low privilege.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        Fast flush logfiles are truncated only after a "send" request, not when
        mail is actually delivered, and therefore can  accumulate  outdated  or
        redundant data. In order to maintain sanity, "refresh" must be executed
@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ FLUSH(8)                                                              FLUSH(8)
        destination  because  such  mail  typically  only has recipients in one
        domain.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are picked up automatically  as  flush(8)  processes
        run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
        to speed up a change.
@@ -144,10 +144,10 @@ FLUSH(8)                                                              FLUSH(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix/flush, "fast flush" logfiles.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        smtpd(8), SMTP server
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
@@ -156,13 +156,13 @@ FLUSH(8)                                                              FLUSH(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        ETRN_README, Postfix ETRN howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        This service was introduced with Postfix version 1.0.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/generic.5.html b/postfix/html/generic.5.html
index c1a8a30e4..03a3b7bd1 100644
--- a/postfix/html/generic.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/generic.5.html
@@ -7,17 +7,17 @@
   
 GENERIC(5)                                                          GENERIC(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        generic - Postfix generic table format
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap /etc/postfix/generic
 
        postmap -q "string" /etc/postfix/generic
 
        postmap -q - /etc/postfix/generic <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The optional generic(5) table specifies an address mapping that applies
        when mail is delivered. This is the opposite of  canonical(5)  mapping,
        which applies when mail is received.
@@ -48,13 +48,13 @@ GENERIC(5)                                                          GENERIC(5)
        a slightly different way as described below under  "REGULAR  EXPRESSION
        TABLES" or "TCP-BASED TABLES".
 
-CASE FOLDING
+CASE FOLDING
        The  search string is folded to lowercase before database lookup. As of
        Postfix 2.3, the search string is not case folded with  database  types
        such  as  regexp: or pcre: whose lookup fields can match both upper and
        lower case.
 
-TABLE FORMAT
+TABLE FORMAT
        The input format for the postmap(1) command is as follows:
 
        pattern result
@@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ GENERIC(5)                                                          GENERIC(5)
               A logical line starts with  non-whitespace  text.  A  line  that
               starts with whitespace continues a logical line.
 
-TABLE SEARCH ORDER
+TABLE SEARCH ORDER
        With  lookups  from  indexed files such as DB or DBM, or from networked
        tables such as NIS, LDAP or SQL,  each  user@domain  query  produces  a
        sequence of query patterns as described below.
@@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ GENERIC(5)                                                          GENERIC(5)
               Replace other addresses in domain by address.  This form has the
               lowest precedence.
 
-RESULT ADDRESS REWRITING
+RESULT ADDRESS REWRITING
        The lookup result is subject to address rewriting:
 
        o      When the result has the form @otherdomain,  the  result  becomes
@@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ GENERIC(5)                                                          GENERIC(5)
        o      When "append_dot_mydomain=yes", append ".$mydomain" to addresses
               without ".domain".
 
-ADDRESS EXTENSION
+ADDRESS EXTENSION
        When a mail address localpart contains the optional recipient delimiter
        (e.g., user+foo@domain), the  lookup  order  becomes:  user+foo@domain,
        user@domain, user+foo, user, and @domain.
@@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ GENERIC(5)                                                          GENERIC(5)
        unmatched address extension (+foo) is propagated to the result of table
        lookup.
 
-REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
+REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
        This  section  describes how the table lookups change when the table is
        given in the form of regular expressions. For a description of  regular
        expression lookup table syntax, see regexp_table(5) or pcre_table(5).
@@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ GENERIC(5)                                                          GENERIC(5)
        feature that parenthesized substrings from the pattern can be  interpo-
        lated as $1, $2 and so on.
 
-TCP-BASED TABLES
+TCP-BASED TABLES
        This  section  describes  how the table lookups change when lookups are
        directed  to  a  TCP-based  server.  For  a  description  of  the   TCP
        client/server  lookup  protocol,  see  tcp_table(5).   This  feature is
@@ -140,7 +140,7 @@ GENERIC(5)                                                          GENERIC(5)
 
        Results are the same as with indexed file lookups.
 
-EXAMPLE
+EXAMPLE
        The following shows a generic mapping with an indexed file.  When  mail
        is  sent to a remote host via SMTP, this replaces his@localdomain.local
        by his ISP mail address, replaces her@localdomain.local by her ISP mail
@@ -161,10 +161,10 @@ GENERIC(5)                                                          GENERIC(5)
        find  out  what  tables  your system supports use the command "postconf
        -m".
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        The table format does not understand quoting conventions.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The following main.cf parameters are  especially  relevant.   The  text
        below  provides  only  a  parameter  summary.  See postconf(5) for more
        details including examples.
@@ -204,20 +204,20 @@ GENERIC(5)                                                          GENERIC(5)
               name-request  address localparts when the recipient_delimiter is
               set to "-".
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        smtp(8), Postfix SMTP client
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        ADDRESS_REWRITING_README, address rewriting guide
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        STANDARD_CONFIGURATION_README, configuration examples
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        A genericstable feature appears in the Sendmail MTA.
 
        This feature is available in Postfix 2.2 and later.
diff --git a/postfix/html/header_checks.5.html b/postfix/html/header_checks.5.html
index 579437f5e..422e12d70 100644
--- a/postfix/html/header_checks.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/header_checks.5.html
@@ -7,10 +7,10 @@
   
 HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        header_checks - Postfix built-in content inspection
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        header_checks = pcre:/etc/postfix/header_checks
        mime_header_checks = pcre:/etc/postfix/mime_header_checks
        nested_header_checks = pcre:/etc/postfix/nested_header_checks
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
        postmap -q "string" pcre:/etc/postfix/filename
        postmap -q - pcre:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        This  document describes access control on the content of message head-
        ers and message body lines; it is implemented by the Postfix cleanup(8)
        server  before  mail  is  queued.   See access(5) for access control on
@@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
        archives. See the documents referenced below in the README  FILES  sec-
        tion if you need more sophisticated content analysis.
 
-FILTERS WHILE RECEIVING MAIL
+FILTERS WHILE RECEIVING MAIL
        Postfix  implements  the  following  four  built-in  content inspection
        classes while receiving mail:
 
@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
               With Postfix versions before 2.0, all content after the  initial
               message headers is treated as body content.
 
-FILTERS AFTER RECEIVING MAIL
+FILTERS AFTER RECEIVING MAIL
        Postfix  supports  a  subset of the built-in content inspection classes
        after the message is received:
 
@@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
 
               This feature is available in Postfix 2.7 and later.
 
-FILTERS WHILE DELIVERING MAIL
+FILTERS WHILE DELIVERING MAIL
        Postfix  supports  all four content inspection classes while delivering
        mail via SMTP.
 
@@ -98,12 +98,12 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
        smtp_body_checks (default: empty)
               These features are available in Postfix 2.5 and later.
 
-COMPATIBILITY
+COMPATIBILITY
        With Postfix version 2.2 and earlier specify "postmap -fq" to  query  a
        table  that  contains  case sensitive patterns. By default, regexp: and
        pcre: patterns are case insensitive.
 
-TABLE FORMAT
+TABLE FORMAT
        This document assumes that header and body_checks rules  are  specified
        in  the  form  of Postfix regular expression lookup tables. Usually the
        best performance is obtained with pcre (Perl Compatible Regular Expres-
@@ -145,13 +145,13 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
               A pattern/action line starts with non-whitespace  text.  A  line
               that starts with whitespace continues a logical line.
 
-TABLE SEARCH ORDER
+TABLE SEARCH ORDER
        For  each  line of message input, the patterns are applied in the order
        as specified in the table. When a pattern is  found  that  matches  the
        input  line,  the  corresponding  action  is executed and then the next
        input line is inspected.
 
-TEXT SUBSTITUTION
+TEXT SUBSTITUTION
        Substitution of substrings from the matched expression into the  action
        string  is  possible using the conventional Perl syntax ($1, $2, etc.).
        The macros in the result string may need to be written as ${n} or  $(n)
@@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
        the expression does not match,  substitutions  are  not  available  for
        negated patterns.
 
-ACTIONS
+ACTIONS
        Action  names  are  case  insensitive. They are shown in upper case for
        consistency with other Postfix documentation.
 
@@ -369,7 +369,7 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
               useful  for  debugging and for testing a pattern before applying
               more drastic actions.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        Empty lines never match, because some map types mis-behave when given a
        zero-length  search string.  This limitation may be removed for regular
        expression tables in a future release.
@@ -395,7 +395,7 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
        before  they  are  deleted.  Examples   are:   Bcc:,   Content-Length:,
        Return-Path:.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        body_checks (empty)
               Optional  lookup  tables  for content inspection as specified in
               the body_checks(5) manual page.
@@ -422,7 +422,7 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
        disable_mime_input_processing (no)
               Turn off MIME processing while receiving mail.
 
-EXAMPLES
+EXAMPLES
        Header pattern to block attachments with bad file name extensions.  For
        convenience, the PCRE /x flag is specified, so that there is no need to
        collapse the pattern into a single line of text.  The  purpose  of  the
@@ -450,7 +450,7 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
            /^<iframe src=(3D)?cid:.* height=(3D)?0 width=(3D)?0>$/
                REJECT IFRAME vulnerability exploit
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        cleanup(8), canonicalize and enqueue Postfix message
        pcre_table(5), format of PCRE lookup tables
        regexp_table(5), format of POSIX regular expression tables
@@ -461,13 +461,13 @@ HEADER_CHECKS(5)                                              HEADER_CHECKS(5)
        RFC 2045, base64 and quoted-printable encoding rules
        RFC 2047, message header encoding for non-ASCII text
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        CONTENT_INSPECTION_README, Postfix content inspection overview
        BUILTIN_FILTER_README, Postfix built-in content inspection
        BACKSCATTER_README, blocking returned forged mail
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/ldap_table.5.html b/postfix/html/ldap_table.5.html
index d200cd5b3..e7cc7e737 100644
--- a/postfix/html/ldap_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/ldap_table.5.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 LDAP_TABLE(5)                                                    LDAP_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        ldap_table - Postfix LDAP client configuration
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" ldap:/etc/postfix/filename
 
        postmap -q - ldap:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  mail system uses optional tables for address rewriting or
        mail routing. These tables are usually in dbm or db format.
 
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ LDAP_TABLE(5)                                                    LDAP_TABLE(5)
        For  details  about  LDAP  SSL and STARTTLS, see the section on SSL and
        STARTTLS below.
 
-LIST MEMBERSHIP
+LIST MEMBERSHIP
        When using LDAP to store lists  such  as  $mynetworks,  $mydestination,
        $relay_domains,  $local_recipient_maps, etc., it is important to under-
        stand that the table must store each list member as a separate key. The
@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ LDAP_TABLE(5)                                                    LDAP_TABLE(5)
            query_filter = domain=%s
            result_attribute = domain
 
-GENERAL LDAP PARAMETERS
+GENERAL LDAP PARAMETERS
        In  the  text  below,  default  values are given in parentheses.  Note:
        don't use quotes in these variables; at least, not  until  the  Postfix
        configuration routines understand how to deal with quoted strings.
@@ -484,7 +484,7 @@ LDAP_TABLE(5)                                                    LDAP_TABLE(5)
        debuglevel (default: 0)
               What level to set for debugging in the OpenLDAP libraries.
 
-LDAP SASL PARAMETERS
+LDAP SASL PARAMETERS
        If you're using the OpenLDAP  libraries  compiled  with  SASL  support,
        Postfix  2.8  and  later  built  with LDAP SASL support as described in
        LDAP_README can authenticate to LDAP servers via SASL.
@@ -524,7 +524,7 @@ LDAP_TABLE(5)                                                    LDAP_TABLE(5)
               The minimum required sasl security factor required to  establish
               a connection.
 
-LDAP SSL AND STARTTLS PARAMETERS
+LDAP SSL AND STARTTLS PARAMETERS
        If you're using the OpenLDAP libraries compiled with SSL support, Post-
        fix can connect to LDAP SSL servers and can issue the STARTTLS command.
 
@@ -621,7 +621,7 @@ LDAP_TABLE(5)                                                    LDAP_TABLE(5)
        tls_cipher_suite (No default)
               Cipher suite to use in SSL/TLS negotiations.
 
-EXAMPLE
+EXAMPLE
        Here's  a  basic  example  for  using LDAP to look up local(8) aliases.
        Assume that in main.cf, you have:
 
@@ -654,7 +654,7 @@ LDAP_TABLE(5)                                                    LDAP_TABLE(5)
        main.cf,  which is normally world-readable.  Support for this form will
        be removed in a future Postfix version.
 
-OTHER OBSOLETE FEATURES
+OTHER OBSOLETE FEATURES
        result_filter (No default)
               For backwards compatibility  with  the  pre  2.2  LDAP  clients,
               result_filter can for now be used instead of result_format, when
@@ -662,17 +662,17 @@ LDAP_TABLE(5)                                                    LDAP_TABLE(5)
               reflects  the  function  of  the  parameter.  This compatibility
               interface may be removed in a future release.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        mysql_table(5), MySQL lookup tables
        pgsql_table(5), PostgreSQL lookup tables
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        LDAP_README, Postfix LDAP client guide
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/lmdb_table.5.html b/postfix/html/lmdb_table.5.html
index ab73d5a4e..ce7c233a1 100644
--- a/postfix/html/lmdb_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/lmdb_table.5.html
@@ -7,10 +7,10 @@
   
 LMDB_TABLE(5)                                                    LMDB_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        lmdb_table - Postfix LMDB adapter
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap lmdb:/etc/postfix/filename
        postmap -i lmdb:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
@@ -20,13 +20,13 @@ LMDB_TABLE(5)                                                    LMDB_TABLE(5)
        postmap -q "key" lmdb:/etc/postfix/filename
        postmap -q - lmdb:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  LMDB  adapter  provides  access  to  a  persistent,  mem-
        ory-mapped, key-value store.  The database size is limited only by  the
        size  of the memory address space (typically 31 or 47 bits on 32-bit or
        64-bit CPUs, respectively) and by the available file system space.
 
-REQUESTS
+REQUESTS
        The LMDB adapter supports all Postfix lookup  table  operations.   This
        makes  LMDB  suitable  for  Postfix  address rewriting, routing, access
        policies, caches, or any information that can be stored under  a  fixed
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ LMDB_TABLE(5)                                                    LMDB_TABLE(5)
        Changes to an LMDB database do not trigger an automatic daemon restart,
        and do not require a daemon restart with "postfix reload".
 
-RELIABILITY
+RELIABILITY
        LMDB's copy-on-write architecture provides safe updates, at the cost of
        using more space than some other flat-file databases.  Read  operations
        are memory-mapped for speed.  Write operations are not memory-mapped to
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ LMDB_TABLE(5)                                                    LMDB_TABLE(5)
        ing requests through the proxymap(8) service.  This makes LMDB suitable
        as a shared cache for verify(8) or postscreen(8) services.
 
-SYNCHRONIZATION
+SYNCHRONIZATION
        The Postfix LMDB adapter does not use LMDB's built-in  locking  scheme,
        because  that  would require world-writable lockfiles and would violate
        the Postfix security model.  Instead, Postfix uses fcntl(2) locks  with
@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ LMDB_TABLE(5)                                                    LMDB_TABLE(5)
        neous  database  requests,  then  it must protect its transactions with
        in-process locks, in addition to the per-process fcntl(2) locks.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Short-lived programs automatically pick up changes  to  main.cf.   With
        long-running  daemon programs, Use the command "postfix reload" after a
        configuration change.
@@ -79,19 +79,19 @@ LMDB_TABLE(5)                                                    LMDB_TABLE(5)
        lmdb_map_size (16777216)
               The initial OpenLDAP LMDB database size limit in bytes.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postconf(1), Postfix supported lookup tables
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table maintenance
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        LMDB_README, Postfix OpenLDAP LMDB howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        LMDB support was introduced with Postfix version 2.11.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/lmtp.8.html b/postfix/html/lmtp.8.html
index 77820ea5b..96eac7890 100644
--- a/postfix/html/lmtp.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/lmtp.8.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        smtp, lmtp - Postfix SMTP+LMTP client
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        smtp [generic Postfix daemon options] [flags=DORX]
 
        lmtp [generic Postfix daemon options] [flags=DORX]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The Postfix SMTP+LMTP client implements the SMTP and LMTP mail delivery
        protocols. It processes message delivery requests from the  queue  man-
        ager.  Each  request specifies a queue file, a sender address, a domain
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        that have a high volume of mail in the active queue. Connection caching
        can be enabled permanently for specific destinations.
 
-SMTP SERVER LOOKUP
+SMTP SERVER LOOKUP
        The  Postfix  SMTP  client  supports multiple destinations separated by
        comma or whitespace (Postfix 3.5 and later).  Each destination is tried
        in the specified order.
@@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               specified service (default: smtp). An IPv6 address must be  for-
               matted as [ipv6:address].
 
-LMTP SERVER LOOKUP
+LMTP SERVER LOOKUP
        The  Postfix  LMTP  client  supports multiple destinations separated by
        comma or whitespace (Postfix 3.5 and later).  Each destination is tried
        in the specified order.
@@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               (default:   lmtp).    An  IPv6  address  must  be  formatted  as
               [ipv6:address].
 
-SINGLE-RECIPIENT DELIVERY
+SINGLE-RECIPIENT DELIVERY
        By default, the Postfix SMTP+LMTP  client  delivers  mail  to  multiple
        recipients  per delivery request. This is undesirable when prepending a
        Delivered-to: or X-Original-To: message header. To prevent Postfix from
@@ -112,7 +112,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        in  the  Postfix main.cf file, where transport is the name in the first
        column of the Postfix master.cf entry for this mail delivery service.
 
-COMMAND ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
+COMMAND ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
        flags=DORX (optional)
               Optional message processing flags.
 
@@ -147,12 +147,12 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
 
                      This feature is available as of Postfix 3.5.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The SMTP+LMTP client is moderately security-sensitive. It talks to SMTP
        or LMTP servers and to DNS servers on the network. The SMTP+LMTP client
        can be run chrooted at fixed low privilege.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 821 (SMTP protocol)
        RFC 822 (ARPA Internet Text Messages)
        RFC 1651 (SMTP service extensions)
@@ -175,7 +175,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        RFC 6533 (Internationalized Delivery Status Notifications)
        RFC 7672 (SMTP security via opportunistic DANE TLS)
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems  and  transactions  are  logged  to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
        Corrupted message files are marked so that the queue manager  can  move
        them to the corrupt queue for further inspection.
@@ -183,14 +183,14 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        Depending  on the setting of the notify_classes parameter, the postmas-
        ter is notified of bounces, protocol problems, and of other trouble.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        SMTP and LMTP connection reuse for TLS (without  closing  the  SMTP  or
        LMTP connection) is not supported before Postfix 3.4.
 
        SMTP  and LMTP connection reuse assumes that SASL credentials are valid
        for all destinations that map onto the same IP address and TCP port.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Postfix versions 2.3 and later implement the SMTP and LMTP client  with
        the  same program, and choose the protocol and configuration parameters
        based on the process name, smtp or lmtp.
@@ -206,7 +206,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        The text below provides only a parameter summary. See  postconf(5)  for
        more details including examples.
 
-COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
+COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
        ignore_mx_lookup_error (no)
               Ignore DNS MX lookups that produce no response.
 
@@ -422,7 +422,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               to MX or IP address lookup as  if  SRV  record  lookup  was  not
               enabled.
 
-MIME PROCESSING CONTROLS
+MIME PROCESSING CONTROLS
        Available in Postfix version 2.0 and later:
 
        disable_mime_output_conversion (no)
@@ -434,14 +434,14 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        mime_nesting_limit (100)
               The maximal recursion level that the MIME processor will handle.
 
-EXTERNAL CONTENT INSPECTION CONTROLS
+EXTERNAL CONTENT INSPECTION CONTROLS
        Available in Postfix version 2.1 and later:
 
        smtp_send_xforward_command (no)
               Send the non-standard XFORWARD command  when  the  Postfix  SMTP
               server EHLO response announces XFORWARD support.
 
-SASL AUTHENTICATION CONTROLS
+SASL AUTHENTICATION CONTROLS
        smtp_sasl_auth_enable (no)
               Enable SASL authentication in the Postfix SMTP client.
 
@@ -506,7 +506,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               The delimiter between username and password in  sasl_passwd_maps
               lookup results.
 
-STARTTLS SUPPORT CONTROLS
+STARTTLS SUPPORT CONTROLS
        Detailed  information  about STARTTLS configuration may be found in the
        TLS_README document.
 
@@ -758,7 +758,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               reuse a previously-negotiated  TLS  session  (there  is  no  new
               information to report).
 
-OBSOLETE STARTTLS CONTROLS
+OBSOLETE STARTTLS CONTROLS
        The  following  configuration  parameters  exist for compatibility with
        Postfix versions before 2.3. Support for these will  be  removed  in  a
        future release.
@@ -785,7 +785,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               Obsolete  Postfix  < 2.3 control for the Postfix SMTP client TLS
               cipher list.
 
-RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        smtp_connect_timeout (30s)
               The Postfix SMTP client time limit for completing a TCP  connec-
               tion, or zero (use the operating system built-in time limit).
@@ -921,7 +921,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               ient_limit parameter value, where  transport  is  the  master.cf
               name of the message delivery transport.
 
-SMTPUTF8 CONTROLS
+SMTPUTF8 CONTROLS
        Preliminary SMTPUTF8 support is introduced with Postfix 3.0.
 
        smtputf8_enable (yes)
@@ -939,7 +939,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               IDNA2008, when converting UTF-8 domain names to/from  the  ASCII
               form that is used for DNS lookups.
 
-TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
+TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
        debug_peer_level (2)
               The  increment  in verbose logging level when a nexthop destina-
               tion, remote client or server name or network address matches  a
@@ -964,7 +964,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        notify_classes (resource, software)
               The list of error classes that are reported to the postmaster.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        best_mx_transport (empty)
               Where the Postfix  SMTP  client  should  deliver  mail  when  it
               detects a "mail loops back to myself" error condition.
@@ -1097,7 +1097,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               Defer  delivery  when  the  Postfix SMTP client cannot apply the
               smtp_bind_address or smtp_bind_address6 setting.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        generic(5), output address rewriting
        header_checks(5), message header content inspection
        body_checks(5), body parts content inspection
@@ -1111,11 +1111,11 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        SASL_README, Postfix SASL howto
        TLS_README, Postfix STARTTLS howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/mailq.1.html b/postfix/html/mailq.1.html
index bf6051d2c..3977355eb 100644
--- a/postfix/html/mailq.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/mailq.1.html
@@ -7,10 +7,10 @@
   
 SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        sendmail - Postfix to Sendmail compatibility interface
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        sendmail [option ...] [recipient ...]
 
        mailq
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
        newaliases
        sendmail -I
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The Postfix sendmail(1) command implements the Postfix to Sendmail com-
        patibility interface.  For the  sake  of  compatibility  with  existing
        applications,  some  Sendmail  command-line  options are recognized but
@@ -283,7 +283,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               Log mailer traffic. Use the debug_peer_list and debug_peer_level
               configuration parameters instead.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        By design, this program is not set-user (or group) id.  It is  prepared
        to handle message content from untrusted, possibly remote, users.
 
@@ -318,11 +318,11 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               mail(1)  command  options,  by  specifying an email address that
               starts with "-".
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8), and to  the  standard
        error stream.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with Postfix configuration files.
 
@@ -336,19 +336,19 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
        NAME   The sender full name. This is used only with messages that  have
               no From: message header. See also the -F option above.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The  following  main.cf parameters are especially relevant to this pro-
        gram.  The text below provides only  a  parameter  summary.  See  post-
        conf(5) for more details including examples.
 
-COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
+COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
        Available with Postfix 2.9 and later:
 
        sendmail_fix_line_endings (always)
               Controls how the Postfix sendmail command converts email message
               line endings from <CR><LF> into UNIX format (<LF>).
 
-TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
+TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
        The DEBUG_README file gives examples of how to troubleshoot  a  Postfix
        system.
 
@@ -367,7 +367,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               verbose logging level to increase by  the  amount  specified  in
               $debug_peer_level.
 
-ACCESS CONTROLS
+ACCESS CONTROLS
        Available in Postfix version 2.2 and later:
 
        authorized_flush_users (static:anyone)
@@ -381,7 +381,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               mail(1) command (and with the privileged postdrop(1) helper com-
               mand).
 
-RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        bounce_size_limit (50000)
               The  maximal  amount  of original message text that is sent in a
               non-delivery notification.
@@ -400,7 +400,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               The  time  between  deferred  queue  scans by the queue manager;
               prior to Postfix 2.4 the default value was 1000s.
 
-FAST FLUSH CONTROLS
+FAST FLUSH CONTROLS
        The ETRN_README file describes configuration and operation details  for
        the Postfix "fast flush" service.
 
@@ -408,7 +408,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               Optional list of destinations that are eligible for per-destina-
               tion logfiles with mail that is queued to those destinations.
 
-VERP CONTROLS
+VERP CONTROLS
        The VERP_README file describes configuration and operation  details  of
        Postfix support for variable envelope return path addresses.
 
@@ -419,7 +419,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               The  characters  Postfix accepts as VERP delimiter characters on
               the Postfix sendmail(1) command line and in SMTP commands.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        alias_database (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The alias databases for local(8) delivery that are updated  with
               "newaliases" or with "sendmail -bi".
@@ -483,11 +483,11 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               the  default  Postfix  instance,  and that are started, stopped,
               etc., together with the default Postfix instance.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix, mail queue
        /etc/postfix, configuration files
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        pickup(8), mail pickup daemon
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        smtpd(8), SMTP server
@@ -500,14 +500,14 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README_FILES
+README_FILES
        Use "postconf readme_directory" or "postconf html_directory" to  locate
        this information.
        DEBUG_README, Postfix debugging howto
        ETRN_README, Postfix ETRN howto
        VERP_README, Postfix VERP howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/makedefs.1.html b/postfix/html/makedefs.1.html
index 3d66aa648..49615066e 100644
--- a/postfix/html/makedefs.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/makedefs.1.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 MAKEDEFS(1)                                                        MAKEDEFS(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        makedefs - Postfix makefile configuration utility
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        make makefiles name=value...
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  makedefs command identifies the compilation environment, and emits
        macro definitions on the standard output stream that can  be  prepended
        to  template  Makefiles.   These macros implement an internal interface
@@ -202,7 +202,7 @@ MAKEDEFS(1)                                                        MAKEDEFS(1)
               Specifies non-default gcc compiler warning options for use  when
               "make" is invoked in a source subdirectory only.
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/master.5.html b/postfix/html/master.5.html
index 48f9cec49..ee0c2d57f 100644
--- a/postfix/html/master.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/master.5.html
@@ -7,10 +7,10 @@
   
 MASTER(5)                                                            MASTER(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        master - Postfix master process configuration file format
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  mail  system  is  implemented by small number of (mostly)
        client commands that are invoked by users, and by a  larger  number  of
        services that run in the background.
@@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ MASTER(5)                                                            MASTER(5)
        After changing master.cf you must execute "postfix  reload"  to  reload
        the configuration.
 
-SYNTAX
+SYNTAX
        The general format of the master.cf file is as follows:
 
        o      Empty  lines and whitespace-only lines are ignored, as are lines
@@ -249,15 +249,15 @@ MASTER(5)                                                            MASTER(5)
                      together with any leading or trailing whitespace  in  the
                      remaining text.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        master(8), process manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        BASIC_CONFIGURATION_README, basic configuration
        DEBUG_README, Postfix debugging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/master.8.html b/postfix/html/master.8.html
index de0f9a553..a673b5d50 100644
--- a/postfix/html/master.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/master.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 MASTER(8)                                                            MASTER(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        master - Postfix master process
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        master [-Dditvw] [-c config_dir] [-e exit_time]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  master(8) daemon is the resident process that runs Postfix daemons
        on demand: daemons to send or receive messages via the network, daemons
        to  deliver  mail locally, etc.  These daemons are created on demand up
@@ -92,12 +92,12 @@ MASTER(8)                                                            MASTER(8)
               one  would  terminate only the master ("postfix stop") and allow
               running processes to finish what they are doing.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems are reported to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).  The exit status is
        non-zero  in case of problems, including problems while initializing as
        a master daemon process in the background.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_DEBUG
               After initialization, start a debugger  as  specified  with  the
               debugger_command configuration parameter in the main.cf configu-
@@ -106,13 +106,13 @@ MASTER(8)                                                            MASTER(8)
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with Postfix configuration files.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Unlike most Postfix daemon processes, the  master(8)  server  does  not
        automatically  pick  up  changes  to  main.cf. Changes to master.cf are
        never picked up automatically.  Use the "postfix reload" command  after
        a configuration change.
 
-RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        default_process_limit (100)
               The  default maximal number of Postfix child processes that pro-
               vide a given service.
@@ -135,7 +135,7 @@ MASTER(8)                                                            MASTER(8)
               Selectively disable master(8) listener ports by service type  or
               by service name and type.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The  default  location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf con-
               figuration files.
@@ -192,7 +192,7 @@ MASTER(8)                                                            MASTER(8)
               Optional setting that avoids lookups in  the  services(5)  data-
               base.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        To  expand  the directory names below into their actual values, use the
        command "postconf config_directory" etc.
 
@@ -201,7 +201,7 @@ MASTER(8)                                                            MASTER(8)
        $queue_directory/pid/master.pid, master lock file.
        $data_directory/master.lock, master lock file.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        verify(8), address verification
        master(5), master.cf configuration file syntax
@@ -209,7 +209,7 @@ MASTER(8)                                                            MASTER(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/memcache_table.5.html b/postfix/html/memcache_table.5.html
index 73c013fa4..5202477d2 100644
--- a/postfix/html/memcache_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/memcache_table.5.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)                                            MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        memcache_table - Postfix memcache client configuration
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" memcache:/etc/postfix/filename
 
        postmap -q - memcache:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  mail system uses optional tables for address rewriting or
        mail routing. These tables are usually in dbm or db format.
 
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)                                            MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)
        sequence (first/next) operations. The  sequence  operation  requires  a
        backup database that supports the operation.
 
-MEMCACHE MAIN PARAMETERS
+MEMCACHE MAIN PARAMETERS
        memcache (default: inet:localhost:11211)
               The  memcache  server  (note: singular) that Postfix will try to
               connect to.  For a TCP server  specify  "inet:"  followed  by  a
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)                                            MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)
               greater  than  30 days (2592000 seconds) specifies absolute UNIX
               time. Smaller values are relative to the time of the update.
 
-MEMCACHE KEY PARAMETERS
+MEMCACHE KEY PARAMETERS
        key_format (default: %s)
               Format of the lookup and update keys that the  Postfix  memcache
               client  sends to the memcache server.  By default, these are the
@@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)                                            MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)
 
                   domain = example.com, hash:/etc/postfix/searchdomains
 
-MEMCACHE ERROR CONTROLS
+MEMCACHE ERROR CONTROLS
        data_size_limit (default: 10240)
               The maximal memcache reply data length in bytes.
 
@@ -180,7 +180,7 @@ MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)                                            MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)
               The time limit for sending a memcache command and for  receiving
               a memcache reply.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        The  Postfix  memcache  client  cannot  be  used for security-sensitive
        tables such as alias_maps (these may contain "|command and "/file/name"
        destinations),  or virtual_uid_maps, virtual_gid_maps and virtual_mail-
@@ -195,18 +195,18 @@ MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)                                            MEMCACHE_TABLE(5)
        ttl parameter discussions  in  the  MEMCACHE  MAIN  PARAMETERS  section
        above.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        MEMCACHE_README, Postfix memcache client guide
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        Memcache support was introduced with Postfix version 2.9.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/mongodb_table.5.html b/postfix/html/mongodb_table.5.html
index b7434f2f9..342e50ddc 100644
--- a/postfix/html/mongodb_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/mongodb_table.5.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 MONGODB_TABLE(5)                                              MONGODB_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        mongodb_table - Postfix MongoDB client configuration
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" mongodb:/etc/postfix/filename
 
        postmap -q - mongodb:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  mail system uses optional tables for address rewriting or
        mail routing. These tables are usually in dbm or db format.
 
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ MONGODB_TABLE(5)                                              MONGODB_TABLE(5)
        unprivileged  postfix  user (specified with the Postfix mail_owner con-
        figuration parameter).
 
-MONGODB PARAMETERS
+MONGODB PARAMETERS
        uri    The URI of mongo server/cluster that Postfix will try to connect
               to and query from. Please see
               https://www.mongodb.com/docs/manual/reference/connection-string/
@@ -185,18 +185,18 @@ MONGODB_TABLE(5)                                              MONGODB_TABLE(5)
        mally world-readable, and '$' in a mongodb parameter setting  needs  to
        be written as '$$'.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table maintenance
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        MONGODB_README, Postfix MONGODB client guide
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        MongoDB support was introduced with Postfix version 3.9.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/mysql_table.5.html b/postfix/html/mysql_table.5.html
index 5761b26e4..009b90e39 100644
--- a/postfix/html/mysql_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/mysql_table.5.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 MYSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  MYSQL_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        mysql_table - Postfix MySQL client configuration
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" mysql:/etc/postfix/filename
 
        postmap -q - mysql:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  mail system uses optional tables for address rewriting or
        mail routing. These tables are usually in dbm or db format.
 
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ MYSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  MYSQL_TABLE(5)
        The file /etc/postfix/mysql-aliases.cf has the same format as the Post-
        fix main.cf file, and can specify the parameters described below.
 
-LIST MEMBERSHIP
+LIST MEMBERSHIP
        When  using  SQL  to  store  lists such as $mynetworks, $mydestination,
        $relay_domains, $local_recipient_maps, etc., it is important to  under-
        stand that the table must store each list member as a separate key. The
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ MYSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  MYSQL_TABLE(5)
        value.  With  SQL databases it is not uncommon to return the key itself
        or a constant value.
 
-MYSQL PARAMETERS
+MYSQL PARAMETERS
        hosts  The hosts that Postfix will try to connect to  and  query  from.
               Specify unix: for UNIX domain sockets, inet: for TCP connections
               (default).  Examples:
@@ -258,7 +258,7 @@ MYSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  MYSQL_TABLE(5)
 
               This parameter is available with Postfix 3.2 and later.
 
-TLS-RELATED SETTINGS
+TLS-RELATED SETTINGS
        See      https://dev.mysql.com/doc/c-api/en/mysql-options.html       or
        https://mariadb.com/kb/en/mysql_optionsv/ for details of the underlying
        MYSQL_OPT_SSL_* features.
@@ -297,7 +297,7 @@ MYSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  MYSQL_TABLE(5)
 
               This parameter is available with Postfix 2.11 and later.
 
-USING MYSQL STORED PROCEDURES
+USING MYSQL STORED PROCEDURES
        Postfix  3.2  and  later  support calling a stored procedure instead of
        using a SELECT statement in the query, e.g.
 
@@ -340,7 +340,7 @@ MYSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  MYSQL_TABLE(5)
        in  main.cf,  which  is normally world-readable.  Support for this form
        will be removed in a future Postfix version.
 
-OBSOLETE QUERY INTERFACE
+OBSOLETE QUERY INTERFACE
        This section describes an interface that is deprecated  as  of  Postfix
        2.2.  It  is  replaced  by  the  more general query interface described
        above. If  the  query  parameter  is  defined,  the  legacy  parameters
@@ -374,21 +374,21 @@ MYSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  MYSQL_TABLE(5)
               Additional conditions to the SQL query. Example:
                   additional_conditions = AND status = 'paid'
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table maintenance
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        ldap_table(5), LDAP lookup tables
        pgsql_table(5), PostgreSQL lookup tables
        sqlite_table(5), SQLite lookup tables
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        MYSQL_README, Postfix MYSQL client guide
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        MySQL support was introduced with Postfix version 1.0.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/newaliases.1.html b/postfix/html/newaliases.1.html
index bf6051d2c..3977355eb 100644
--- a/postfix/html/newaliases.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/newaliases.1.html
@@ -7,10 +7,10 @@
   
 SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        sendmail - Postfix to Sendmail compatibility interface
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        sendmail [option ...] [recipient ...]
 
        mailq
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
        newaliases
        sendmail -I
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The Postfix sendmail(1) command implements the Postfix to Sendmail com-
        patibility interface.  For the  sake  of  compatibility  with  existing
        applications,  some  Sendmail  command-line  options are recognized but
@@ -283,7 +283,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               Log mailer traffic. Use the debug_peer_list and debug_peer_level
               configuration parameters instead.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        By design, this program is not set-user (or group) id.  It is  prepared
        to handle message content from untrusted, possibly remote, users.
 
@@ -318,11 +318,11 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               mail(1)  command  options,  by  specifying an email address that
               starts with "-".
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8), and to  the  standard
        error stream.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with Postfix configuration files.
 
@@ -336,19 +336,19 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
        NAME   The sender full name. This is used only with messages that  have
               no From: message header. See also the -F option above.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The  following  main.cf parameters are especially relevant to this pro-
        gram.  The text below provides only  a  parameter  summary.  See  post-
        conf(5) for more details including examples.
 
-COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
+COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
        Available with Postfix 2.9 and later:
 
        sendmail_fix_line_endings (always)
               Controls how the Postfix sendmail command converts email message
               line endings from <CR><LF> into UNIX format (<LF>).
 
-TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
+TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
        The DEBUG_README file gives examples of how to troubleshoot  a  Postfix
        system.
 
@@ -367,7 +367,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               verbose logging level to increase by  the  amount  specified  in
               $debug_peer_level.
 
-ACCESS CONTROLS
+ACCESS CONTROLS
        Available in Postfix version 2.2 and later:
 
        authorized_flush_users (static:anyone)
@@ -381,7 +381,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               mail(1) command (and with the privileged postdrop(1) helper com-
               mand).
 
-RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        bounce_size_limit (50000)
               The  maximal  amount  of original message text that is sent in a
               non-delivery notification.
@@ -400,7 +400,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               The  time  between  deferred  queue  scans by the queue manager;
               prior to Postfix 2.4 the default value was 1000s.
 
-FAST FLUSH CONTROLS
+FAST FLUSH CONTROLS
        The ETRN_README file describes configuration and operation details  for
        the Postfix "fast flush" service.
 
@@ -408,7 +408,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               Optional list of destinations that are eligible for per-destina-
               tion logfiles with mail that is queued to those destinations.
 
-VERP CONTROLS
+VERP CONTROLS
        The VERP_README file describes configuration and operation  details  of
        Postfix support for variable envelope return path addresses.
 
@@ -419,7 +419,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               The  characters  Postfix accepts as VERP delimiter characters on
               the Postfix sendmail(1) command line and in SMTP commands.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        alias_database (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The alias databases for local(8) delivery that are updated  with
               "newaliases" or with "sendmail -bi".
@@ -483,11 +483,11 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               the  default  Postfix  instance,  and that are started, stopped,
               etc., together with the default Postfix instance.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix, mail queue
        /etc/postfix, configuration files
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        pickup(8), mail pickup daemon
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        smtpd(8), SMTP server
@@ -500,14 +500,14 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README_FILES
+README_FILES
        Use "postconf readme_directory" or "postconf html_directory" to  locate
        this information.
        DEBUG_README, Postfix debugging howto
        ETRN_README, Postfix ETRN howto
        VERP_README, Postfix VERP howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/nisplus_table.5.html b/postfix/html/nisplus_table.5.html
index 2928b6c29..6d5c1549c 100644
--- a/postfix/html/nisplus_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/nisplus_table.5.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 NISPLUS_TABLE(5)                                              NISPLUS_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        nisplus_table - Postfix NIS+ client
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" "nisplus:[name=%s];name.name."
 
        postmap -q - "nisplus:[name=%s];name.name." <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix mail system uses optional lookup tables.  These tables are
        usually in dbm or db format.  Alternatively, lookup tables can be spec-
        ified as NIS+ databases.
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ NISPLUS_TABLE(5)                                              NISPLUS_TABLE(5)
        To test Postfix NIS+ lookup tables, use the  "postmap  -q"  command  as
        described in the SYNOPSIS above.
 
-QUERY SYNTAX
+QUERY SYNTAX
        Most  of the NIS+ query is specified via the NIS+ map name. The general
        format of a Postfix NIS+ map name is as follows:
 
@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ NISPLUS_TABLE(5)                                              NISPLUS_TABLE(5)
               column that provides the lookup result.  When  no  ":column"  is
               specified the first column (1) is used.
 
-EXAMPLE
+EXAMPLE
        A NIS+ aliases map might be queried as follows:
 
            alias_maps = dbm:/etc/mail/aliases,
@@ -57,13 +57,13 @@ NISPLUS_TABLE(5)                                              NISPLUS_TABLE(5)
 
        This queries the local aliases file before the NIS+ file.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/oqmgr.8.html b/postfix/html/oqmgr.8.html
index e24fbce46..42ecb2b55 100644
--- a/postfix/html/oqmgr.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/oqmgr.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        oqmgr - old Postfix queue manager
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        oqmgr [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  oqmgr(8)  daemon  awaits the arrival of incoming mail and arranges
        for its delivery via Postfix delivery processes.  The actual mail rout-
        ing  strategy is delegated to the trivial-rewrite(8) daemon.  This pro-
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
        carded.   This  stops  potential  loops  caused by undeliverable bounce
        notifications.
 
-MAIL QUEUES
+MAIL QUEUES
        The oqmgr(8) daemon maintains the following queues:
 
        incoming
@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
        hold   Messages that are kept "on hold" are  kept  here  until  someone
               sets them free.
 
-DELIVERY STATUS REPORTS
+DELIVERY STATUS REPORTS
        The oqmgr(8) daemon keeps an eye on per-message delivery status reports
        in the following directories. Each status report file has the same name
        as the corresponding message file:
@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
        The  oqmgr(8)  daemon is responsible for asking the bounce(8), defer(8)
        or trace(8) daemons to send delivery reports.
 
-STRATEGIES
+STRATEGIES
        The queue manager implements a variety of strategies for either opening
        queue files (input) or for message delivery (output).
 
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
               taining  a  short-term,  in-memory  list of unreachable destina-
               tions.
 
-TRIGGERS
+TRIGGERS
        On an idle system, the queue manager waits for the arrival  of  trigger
        events, or it waits for a timer to go off. A trigger is a one-byte mes-
        sage.  Depending on the message received, the  queue  manager  performs
@@ -133,18 +133,18 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
        deferred queue run, one would request A F D; in  order  to  notify  the
        queue manager of the arrival of new mail one would request I.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 3463 (Enhanced status codes)
        RFC 3464 (Delivery status notifications)
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The  oqmgr(8) daemon is not security sensitive. It reads single-charac-
        ter messages from untrusted local users, and thus may be susceptible to
        denial  of  service  attacks.  The oqmgr(8) daemon does not talk to the
        outside world, and it can be run at fixed low privilege in  a  chrooted
        environment.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems  and  transactions are logged to the syslogd(8) or postlogd(8)
        daemon.  Corrupted message files are saved to  the  corrupt  queue  for
        further inspection.
@@ -152,12 +152,12 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
        Depending  on the setting of the notify_classes parameter, the postmas-
        ter is notified of bounces and of other trouble.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        A single queue manager process has to compete for disk access with mul-
        tiple front-end processes such as cleanup(8). A sudden burst of inbound
        mail can negatively impact outbound delivery rates.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are not picked up automatically, as  oqmgr(8)  is  a
        persistent process. Use the command "postfix reload" after a configura-
        tion change.
@@ -167,7 +167,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
 
        In the text below, transport is the first field in a master.cf entry.
 
-COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
+COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
        Available before Postfix version 2.5:
 
        allow_min_user (no)
@@ -181,7 +181,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
               next-hop  destination, use $default_filter_nexthop instead; when
               that value is empty, use the domain in the recipient address.
 
-ACTIVE QUEUE CONTROLS
+ACTIVE QUEUE CONTROLS
        qmgr_clog_warn_time (300s)
               The minimal delay between warnings that a  specific  destination
               is clogging up the Postfix active queue.
@@ -194,7 +194,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
               queue manager, and the maximal size of the short-term, in-memory
               "dead" destination status cache.
 
-DELIVERY CONCURRENCY CONTROLS
+DELIVERY CONCURRENCY CONTROLS
        qmgr_fudge_factor (100)
               Obsolete  feature:  the  percentage of delivery resources that a
               busy mail system will use up for delivery  of  a  large  mailing
@@ -259,7 +259,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
               Make  the queue manager's feedback algorithm verbose for perfor-
               mance analysis purposes.
 
-RECIPIENT SCHEDULING CONTROLS
+RECIPIENT SCHEDULING CONTROLS
        default_destination_recipient_limit (50)
               The default maximal number of recipients per message delivery.
 
@@ -269,7 +269,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
               ient_limit  parameter  value,  where  transport is the master.cf
               name of the message delivery transport.
 
-OTHER RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+OTHER RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        minimal_backoff_time (300s)
               The minimal time between attempts to deliver a deferred message;
               prior to Postfix 2.4 the default value was 1000s.
@@ -322,7 +322,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
               the parameter name is the master.cf name of the message delivery
               transport.
 
-SAFETY CONTROLS
+SAFETY CONTROLS
        qmgr_daemon_timeout (1000s)
               How much time a Postfix queue manager process may take to handle
               a request before it is terminated by a built-in watchdog  timer.
@@ -337,7 +337,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
               A safety limit that prevents address verification requests  from
               overwhelming the Postfix queue.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The  default  location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf con-
               figuration files.
@@ -387,7 +387,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
               The  email  address  form that will be used in non-debug logging
               (info, warning, etc.).
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix/incoming, incoming queue
        /var/spool/postfix/active, active queue
        /var/spool/postfix/deferred, deferred queue
@@ -395,7 +395,7 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
        /var/spool/postfix/defer, non-delivery status
        /var/spool/postfix/trace, delivery status
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        trivial-rewrite(8), address routing
        bounce(8), delivery status reports
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
@@ -404,10 +404,10 @@ OQMGR(8)                                                              OQMGR(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        QSHAPE_README, Postfix queue analysis
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/pcre_table.5.html b/postfix/html/pcre_table.5.html
index 1e036447f..d2da2b2cd 100644
--- a/postfix/html/pcre_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/pcre_table.5.html
@@ -7,10 +7,10 @@
   
 PCRE_TABLE(5)                                                    PCRE_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        pcre_table - format of Postfix PCRE tables
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" pcre:/etc/postfix/filename
 
        postmap -q - pcre:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ PCRE_TABLE(5)                                                    PCRE_TABLE(5)
 
        postmap -bmq - pcre:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  mail  system  uses optional tables for address rewriting,
        mail routing, or access control. These tables are usually in dbm or  db
        format.
@@ -40,12 +40,12 @@ PCRE_TABLE(5)                                                    PCRE_TABLE(5)
        This driver can be built  with  the  pcre2  library  (Postfix  3.7  and
        later), or with the legacy pcre library (all Postfix versions).
 
-COMPATIBILITY
+COMPATIBILITY
        With  Postfix  version 2.2 and earlier specify "postmap -fq" to query a
        table that contains case sensitive patterns. Patterns are case insensi-
        tive by default.
 
-TABLE FORMAT
+TABLE FORMAT
        The general form of a PCRE table is:
 
        /pattern/flags result
@@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ PCRE_TABLE(5)                                                    PCRE_TABLE(5)
 
               This feature is not supported with PCRE2.
 
-SEARCH ORDER
+SEARCH ORDER
        Patterns  are  applied  in the order as specified in the table, until a
        pattern is found that matches the input string.
 
@@ -159,7 +159,7 @@ PCRE_TABLE(5)                                                    PCRE_TABLE(5)
        ken up into their user and domain constituent parts,  nor  is  user+foo
        broken up into user and foo.
 
-TEXT SUBSTITUTION
+TEXT SUBSTITUTION
        Substitution  of  substrings  (text  that matches patterns inside "()")
        from the matched expression into the result string  is  requested  with
        $1,  $2,  etc.;  specify  $$  to  produce a $ character as output.  The
@@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ PCRE_TABLE(5)                                                    PCRE_TABLE(5)
        the  expression  does  not  match,  substitutions are not available for
        negated patterns.
 
-INLINE SPECIFICATION
+INLINE SPECIFICATION
        The contents of a table may be specified in the table name (Postfix 3.7
        and later).  The basic syntax is:
 
@@ -198,7 +198,7 @@ PCRE_TABLE(5)                                                    PCRE_TABLE(5)
        able metacharacters such as '.' in the $name expansion. Otherwise,  the
        pattern may have unexpected matches.
 
-EXAMPLE SMTPD ACCESS MAP
+EXAMPLE SMTPD ACCESS MAP
        # Protect your outgoing majordomo exploders
        /^(?!owner-)(.*)-outgoing@(.*)/ 550 Use ${1}@${2} instead
 
@@ -212,23 +212,23 @@ PCRE_TABLE(5)                                                    PCRE_TABLE(5)
         550 This user is a funny one. You really don't want to send mail to
         them as it only makes their head spin.
 
-EXAMPLE HEADER FILTER MAP
+EXAMPLE HEADER FILTER MAP
        /^Subject: make money fast/     REJECT
        /^To: friend@public\.com/       REJECT
 
-EXAMPLE BODY FILTER MAP
+EXAMPLE BODY FILTER MAP
        # First skip over base 64 encoded text to save CPU cycles.
        # Requires PCRE version 3.
        ~^[[:alnum:]+/]{60,}$~          OK
 
        # Put your own body patterns here.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        regexp_table(5), format of POSIX regular expression tables
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/pgsql_table.5.html b/postfix/html/pgsql_table.5.html
index 04eb91690..14db55e30 100644
--- a/postfix/html/pgsql_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/pgsql_table.5.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 PGSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  PGSQL_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        pgsql_table - Postfix PostgreSQL client configuration
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" pgsql:/etc/postfix/filename
 
        postmap -q - pgsql:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  mail system uses optional tables for address rewriting or
        mail routing. These tables are usually in dbm or db format.
 
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ PGSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  PGSQL_TABLE(5)
        The file /etc/postfix/pgsql-aliases.cf has the same format as the Post-
        fix main.cf file, and can specify the parameters described below.
 
-LIST MEMBERSHIP
+LIST MEMBERSHIP
        When  using  SQL  to  store  lists such as $mynetworks, $mydestination,
        $relay_domains, $local_recipient_maps, etc., it is important to  under-
        stand that the table must store each list member as a separate key. The
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ PGSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  PGSQL_TABLE(5)
        value.  With  SQL databases it is not uncommon to return the key itself
        or a constant value.
 
-PGSQL PARAMETERS
+PGSQL PARAMETERS
        hosts  The hosts that Postfix will try to connect to  and  query  from.
               Besides  a  postgresql://  connection URI, this setting supports
               the historical forms unix:/pathname for UNIX-domain sockets  and
@@ -235,7 +235,7 @@ PGSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  PGSQL_TABLE(5)
        written in main.cf, which is normally world-readable.  Support for this
        form will be removed in a future Postfix version.
 
-OBSOLETE QUERY INTERFACES
+OBSOLETE QUERY INTERFACES
        This section describes query interfaces that are deprecated as of Post-
        fix 2.2.  Please migrate to the new query interface as the  old  inter-
        faces are slated to be phased out.
@@ -286,21 +286,21 @@ PGSQL_TABLE(5)                                                  PGSQL_TABLE(5)
               Additional conditions to the SQL query. Example:
                   additional_conditions = AND status = 'paid'
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        ldap_table(5), LDAP lookup tables
        mysql_table(5), MySQL lookup tables
        sqlite_table(5), SQLite lookup tables
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        PGSQL_README, Postfix PostgreSQL client guide
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        PgSQL support was introduced with Postfix version 2.1.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/pickup.8.html b/postfix/html/pickup.8.html
index b032e7ff2..8f664a33f 100644
--- a/postfix/html/pickup.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/pickup.8.html
@@ -7,22 +7,22 @@
   
 PICKUP(8)                                                            PICKUP(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        pickup - Postfix local mail pickup
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        pickup [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  pickup(8)  daemon  waits  for hints that new mail has been dropped
        into the maildrop directory, and feeds it into the  cleanup(8)  daemon.
        Ill-formatted files are deleted without notifying the originator.  This
        program expects to be run from the master(8) process manager.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        None. The pickup(8) daemon does not interact with the outside world.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The pickup(8) daemon is moderately security  sensitive.  It  runs  with
        fixed  low  privilege  and can run in a chrooted environment.  However,
        the program reads files from potentially hostile users.  The  pickup(8)
@@ -30,16 +30,16 @@ PICKUP(8)                                                            PICKUP(8)
        for reading, and does not actually touch any data that is sent  to  its
        public service endpoint.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        The  pickup(8)  daemon  copies mail from file to the cleanup(8) daemon.
        It could avoid message copying overhead by sending  a  file  descriptor
        instead  of  file  data, but then the already complex cleanup(8) daemon
        would have to deal with unfiltered user data.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        As the pickup(8) daemon is a relatively long-running process, up to  an
        hour  may  pass  before a main.cf change takes effect.  Use the command
        "postfix reload" command to speed up a change.
@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ PICKUP(8)                                                            PICKUP(8)
        The text below provides only a parameter summary. See  postconf(5)  for
        more details including examples.
 
-CONTENT INSPECTION CONTROLS
+CONTENT INSPECTION CONTROLS
        content_filter (empty)
               After  the  message  is  queued,  send the entire message to the
               specified transport:destination.
@@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ PICKUP(8)                                                            PICKUP(8)
               Enable or disable recipient validation, built-in content filter-
               ing, or address mapping.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The  default  location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf con-
               figuration files.
@@ -104,7 +104,7 @@ PICKUP(8)                                                            PICKUP(8)
               The email address form that will be used  in  non-debug  logging
               (info, warning, etc.).
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        cleanup(8), message canonicalization
        sendmail(1), Sendmail-compatible interface
        postdrop(1), mail posting agent
@@ -114,7 +114,7 @@ PICKUP(8)                                                            PICKUP(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/pipe.8.html b/postfix/html/pipe.8.html
index c22b91e5f..cccafcf13 100644
--- a/postfix/html/pipe.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/pipe.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 PIPE(8)                                                                PIPE(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        pipe - Postfix delivery to external command
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        pipe [generic Postfix daemon options] command_attributes...
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The pipe(8) daemon processes requests from the Postfix queue manager to
        deliver messages to external commands.  This program expects to be  run
        from the master(8) process manager.
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ PIPE(8)                                                                PIPE(8)
        again  at  a  later  time.  Delivery  status  reports  are  sent to the
        bounce(8), defer(8) or trace(8) daemon as appropriate.
 
-SINGLE-RECIPIENT DELIVERY
+SINGLE-RECIPIENT DELIVERY
        Some destinations cannot handle more than one  recipient  per  delivery
        request.   Examples   are   pagers   or  fax  machines.   In  addition,
        multi-recipient delivery is undesirable when prepending a Delivered-to:
@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ PIPE(8)                                                                PIPE(8)
        column  of  the  Postfix  master.cf  entry  for the pipe-based delivery
        transport.
 
-COMMAND ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
+COMMAND ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
        The external command attributes are given in the master.cf file at  the
        end of a service definition.  The syntax is as follows:
 
@@ -353,10 +353,10 @@ PIPE(8)                                                                PIPE(8)
                      This information is modified by the u flag for case fold-
                      ing.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 3463 (Enhanced status codes)
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Command exit status  codes  are  expected  to  follow  the  conventions
        defined in <sysexits.h>.  Exit status 0 means normal successful comple-
        tion.
@@ -376,12 +376,12 @@ PIPE(8)                                                                PIPE(8)
        Corrupted message files are marked so that the queue manager  can  move
        them to the corrupt queue for further inspection.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        This  program needs a dual personality 1) to access the private Postfix
        queue and IPC mechanisms, and 2) to execute external  commands  as  the
        specified user. It is therefore security sensitive.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are picked up automatically as pipe(8) processes run
        for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"  to
        speed up a change.
@@ -389,7 +389,7 @@ PIPE(8)                                                                PIPE(8)
        The  text  below provides only a parameter summary. See postconf(5) for
        more details including examples.
 
-RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        In the text below, transport is the first field in a master.cf entry.
 
        transport_time_limit ($command_time_limit)
@@ -411,7 +411,7 @@ PIPE(8)                                                                PIPE(8)
               ient_limit  parameter  value,  where  transport is the master.cf
               name of the message delivery transport.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The default location of the Postfix main.cf and  master.cf  con-
               figuration files.
@@ -487,7 +487,7 @@ PIPE(8)                                                                PIPE(8)
               The  email  address  form that will be used in non-debug logging
               (info, warning, etc.).
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        bounce(8), delivery status reports
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
@@ -496,7 +496,7 @@ PIPE(8)                                                                PIPE(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postalias.1.html b/postfix/html/postalias.1.html
index 7b6180234..3f899c67e 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postalias.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postalias.1.html
@@ -7,14 +7,14 @@
   
 POSTALIAS(1)                                                      POSTALIAS(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postalias - Postfix alias database maintenance
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postalias [-Nfinoprsuvw] [-c config_dir] [-d key] [-q key]
                [file_type:]file_name ...
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  postalias(1)  command creates or queries one or more Postfix alias
        databases, or updates an existing one. The input and output  file  for-
        mats  are  expected  to  be compatible with Sendmail version 8, and are
@@ -155,7 +155,7 @@ POSTALIAS(1)                                                      POSTALIAS(1)
               The name of the alias database source file when creating a data-
               base.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems are logged to the standard error stream and to  syslogd(8)  or
        postlogd(8).  No output means that no problems were detected. Duplicate
        entries are skipped and are flagged with a warning.
@@ -164,14 +164,14 @@ POSTALIAS(1)                                                      POSTALIAS(1)
        (including  successful  "postalias  -q"  lookup)  and  terminates  with
        non-zero exit status in case of failure.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with Postfix configuration files.
 
        MAIL_VERBOSE
               Enable verbose logging for debugging purposes.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The following main.cf parameters are especially relevant to  this  pro-
        gram.
 
@@ -219,10 +219,10 @@ POSTALIAS(1)                                                      POSTALIAS(1)
        lmdb_map_size (16777216)
               The initial OpenLDAP LMDB database size limit in bytes.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 822 (ARPA Internet Text Messages)
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        aliases(5), format of alias database input file.
        local(8), Postfix local delivery agent.
        postconf(1), supported database types
@@ -232,10 +232,10 @@ POSTALIAS(1)                                                      POSTALIAS(1)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postcat.1.html b/postfix/html/postcat.1.html
index 319c0d90a..0f7fac36c 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postcat.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postcat.1.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 POSTCAT(1)                                                          POSTCAT(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postcat - show Postfix queue file contents
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postcat [-bdefhnoqv] [-c config_dir] [files...]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  postcat(1)  command  prints  the  contents  of  the named files in
        human-readable form. The files are expected to be in Postfix queue file
        format.  If  no  files  are  specified on the command line, the program
@@ -70,14 +70,14 @@ POSTCAT(1)                                                          POSTCAT(1)
        -v     Enable verbose  logging  for  debugging  purposes.  Multiple  -v
               options make the software increasingly verbose.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems are reported to the standard error stream.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with Postfix configuration files.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The  following  main.cf parameters are especially relevant to this pro-
        gram.
 
@@ -96,13 +96,13 @@ POSTCAT(1)                                                          POSTCAT(1)
        queue_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The location of the Postfix top-level queue directory.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix, Postfix queue directory
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postconf(5), Postfix configuration
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postconf.1.html b/postfix/html/postconf.1.html
index a8444a2df..2a43544e3 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postconf.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postconf.1.html
@@ -7,10 +7,10 @@
   
 POSTCONF(1)                                                        POSTCONF(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postconf - Postfix configuration utility
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
    Managing main.cf:
 
        postconf [-dfhHnopqvx] [-c config_dir] [-C class,...] [parameter ...]
@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ POSTCONF(1)                                                        POSTCONF(1)
 
        postconf -a|-A|-l|-m [-v] [-c config_dir]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        By default, the postconf(1) command displays the values of main.cf con-
        figuration  parameters,  and  warns  about possible mis-typed parameter
        names (Postfix 2.9 and later).  The command  can  also  change  main.cf
@@ -526,14 +526,14 @@ POSTCONF(1)                                                        POSTCONF(1)
               This  feature  is  available with Postfix 2.6 and later. Support
               for -M was added with Postfix 2.11.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems are reported to the standard error stream.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with Postfix configuration files.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The following main.cf parameters are especially relevant to  this  pro-
        gram.
 
@@ -547,19 +547,19 @@ POSTCONF(1)                                                        POSTCONF(1)
        bounce_template_file (empty)
               Pathname  of a configuration file with bounce message templates.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /etc/postfix/main.cf, Postfix configuration parameters
        /etc/postfix/master.cf, Postfix master daemon configuration
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        bounce(5), bounce template file format
        master(5), master.cf configuration file syntax
        postconf(5), main.cf configuration file syntax
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postdrop.1.html b/postfix/html/postdrop.1.html
index bc4293a37..553ad5d71 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postdrop.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postdrop.1.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 POSTDROP(1)                                                        POSTDROP(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postdrop - Postfix mail posting utility
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postdrop [-rv] [-c config_dir]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  postdrop(1)  command  creates a file in the maildrop directory and
        copies its standard input to the file.
 
@@ -32,18 +32,18 @@ POSTDROP(1)                                                        POSTDROP(1)
               options  make  the  software increasingly verbose. As of Postfix
               2.3, this option is available for the super-user only.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The command is designed to run with set-group ID privileges, so that it
        can write to the maildrop queue directory and so that it can connect to
        Postfix daemon processes.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Fatal errors: malformed input, I/O error, out of memory.  Problems  are
        logged  to  syslogd(8) or postlogd(8) and to the standard error stream.
        When the input is incomplete, or when the process receives a HUP,  INT,
        QUIT or TERM signal, the queue file is deleted.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory  with the main.cf file. In order to avoid exploitation
               of set-group ID privileges, a non-standard directory is  allowed
@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ POSTDROP(1)                                                        POSTDROP(1)
 
               o      The command is invoked by the super-user.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The following main.cf parameters are especially relevant to  this  pro-
        gram.   The  text  below  provides  only a parameter summary. See post-
        conf(5) for more details including examples.
@@ -110,16 +110,16 @@ POSTDROP(1)                                                        POSTDROP(1)
               The  set of characters that can separate an email address local-
               part, user name, or a .forward file name from its extension.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix/maildrop, maildrop queue
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        sendmail(1), compatibility interface
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postfix-tls.1.html b/postfix/html/postfix-tls.1.html
index f59920726..ca93b5358 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postfix-tls.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postfix-tls.1.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 POSTFIX-TLS(1)                                                  POSTFIX-TLS(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postfix-tls - Postfix TLS management
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postfix tls subcommand
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  "postfix  tls subcommand" feature enables opportunistic TLS in the
        Postfix SMTP client or server, and manages Postfix SMTP server  private
        keys and certificates.
@@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ POSTFIX-TLS(1)                                                  POSTFIX-TLS(1)
               The  default  keyfile  list  consists of the two supported algo-
               rithms rsa and ecdsa.
 
-AUXILIARY COMMANDS
+AUXILIARY COMMANDS
        all-default-client
               Exit with status 0 (success) if all SMTP client TLS settings are
               at their default values.  Otherwise, exit with a non-zero status.
@@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ POSTFIX-TLS(1)                                                  POSTFIX-TLS(1)
               postfix tls all-default-server &&
                       postfix tls enable-server
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The "postfix tls subcommand" feature reads  or  updates  the  following
        configuration parameters.
 
@@ -221,17 +221,17 @@ POSTFIX-TLS(1)                                                  POSTFIX-TLS(1)
               The  external  entropy source for the in-memory tlsmgr(8) pseudo
               random number generator (PRNG) pool.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        master(8) Postfix master program
        postfix(1) Postfix administrative interface
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        TLS_README, Postfix TLS configuration and operation
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        The "postfix tls" command was introduced with Postfix version 3.1.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postfix-wrapper.5.html b/postfix/html/postfix-wrapper.5.html
index a75472c63..787dff2e4 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postfix-wrapper.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postfix-wrapper.5.html
@@ -7,10 +7,10 @@
   
 POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)                                          POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postfix-wrapper - Postfix multi-instance API
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        Support for managing multiple Postfix instances is available as of ver-
        sion 2.6. Instances share executable files and documentation, but  have
        their own directories for configuration, queue and data files.
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)                                          POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)
        required.  This  instance is identified by the config_directory parame-
        ter's default value.
 
-GENERAL OPERATION
+GENERAL OPERATION
        Multi-instance support is backwards compatible: when you run  only  one
        Postfix  instance,  commands  such  as  "postfix start" will not change
        behavior at all.
@@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)                                          POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)
        This  enumerates  the  status  of  all  Postfix  instances   within   a
        multi-instance configuration.
 
-MANAGING AN INDIVIDUAL POSTFIX INSTANCE
+MANAGING AN INDIVIDUAL POSTFIX INSTANCE
        To manage a specific Postfix instance, specify its configuration direc-
        tory on the postfix(1) command line:
 
@@ -127,7 +127,7 @@ POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)                                          POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)
 
               exit $err
 
-PER-INSTANCE MULTI-INSTANCE MANAGER CONTROLS
+PER-INSTANCE MULTI-INSTANCE MANAGER CONTROLS
        Each Postfix instance has its own main.cf  file  with  parameters  that
        control how the multi-instance manager operates on that instance.  This
        section discusses the most important settings.
@@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)                                          POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)
        "check" so that problems will be reported even  when  the  instance  is
        disabled.
 
-MAINTAINING SHARED AND NON-SHARED FILES
+MAINTAINING SHARED AND NON-SHARED FILES
        Some  files  are  shared between Postfix instances, such as executables
        and manpages, and some files are per-instance,  such  as  configuration
        files, mail queue files, and data files.  See the NON-SHARED FILES sec-
@@ -163,7 +163,7 @@ POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)                                          POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)
        The  consequence  of this approach is that the default Postfix instance
        should be checked and updated before any other instances.
 
-MULTI-INSTANCE API SUMMARY
+MULTI-INSTANCE API SUMMARY
        Only  the   multi-instance   manager   implements   support   for   the
        multi_instance_enable  configuration parameter. The multi-instance man-
        ager  will  start  only  Postfix  instances  whose  main.cf  file   has
@@ -205,14 +205,14 @@ POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)                                          POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)
        Postfix, or that are not managed  together  with  the  default  Postfix
        instance.
 
-ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
+ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
        MAIL_CONFIG
               When present, this forces the postfix(1) command to operate only
               on the specified Postfix instance. This environment variable  is
               exported  by  the  postfix(1) -c option, so that postfix(1) com-
               mands in descendant processes will work correctly.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The text below provides only a parameter summary. See  postconf(5)  for
        more details.
 
@@ -238,7 +238,7 @@ POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)                                          POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)
               Allow  this  Postfix instance to be started, stopped, etc., by a
               multi-instance manager.
 
-NON-SHARED FILES
+NON-SHARED FILES
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The default location of the Postfix main.cf and  master.cf  con-
               figuration files.
@@ -250,12 +250,12 @@ POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)                                          POSTFIX-WRAPPER(5)
        queue_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The location of the Postfix top-level queue directory.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postfix(1) Postfix control program
        postmulti(1) full-blown multi-instance manager
        $daemon_directory/postfix-wrapper simple multi-instance manager
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postfix.1.html b/postfix/html/postfix.1.html
index a6ede786f..cfe871ba0 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postfix.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postfix.1.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 POSTFIX(1)                                                          POSTFIX(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postfix - Postfix control program
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postfix [-Dv] [-c config_dir] command
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        This  command  is  reserved  for the superuser. To submit mail, use the
        Postfix sendmail(1) command.
 
@@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ POSTFIX(1)                                                          POSTFIX(1)
        -v     Enable  verbose  logging  for  debugging  purposes.  Multiple -v
               options make the software increasingly verbose.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        The postfix(1) command  exports  the  following  environment  variables
        before executing the postfix-script file:
 
@@ -167,7 +167,7 @@ POSTFIX(1)                                                          POSTFIX(1)
        POSTLOG_HOSTNAME
               The hostname to prepend to internal logging.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The following main.cf configuration parameters are exported as environ-
        ment variables with the same names:
 
@@ -303,7 +303,7 @@ POSTFIX(1)                                                          POSTFIX(1)
        postlog_service_name (postlog)
               The name of the postlogd(8) service entry in master.cf.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        Prior  to Postfix version 2.6, all of the following files were in $con-
        fig_directory. Some files are now in $daemon_directory or  $meta_direc-
        tory  so  that they can be shared among multiple instances that run the
@@ -319,7 +319,7 @@ POSTFIX(1)                                                          POSTFIX(1)
        $meta_directory/dynamicmaps.cf, plug-in database clients
        $meta_directory/postfix-files, file/directory permissions
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        Commands:
        postalias(1), create/update/query alias database
        postcat(1), examine Postfix queue file
@@ -401,7 +401,7 @@ POSTFIX(1)                                                          POSTFIX(1)
        Other:
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        OVERVIEW, overview of Postfix commands and processes
        BASIC_CONFIGURATION_README, Postfix basic configuration
        ADDRESS_REWRITING_README, Postfix address rewriting
@@ -409,7 +409,7 @@ POSTFIX(1)                                                          POSTFIX(1)
        CONTENT_INSPECTION_README, Postfix content inspection
        QSHAPE_README, Postfix queue analysis
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postkick.1.html b/postfix/html/postkick.1.html
index 9ca7c59f1..c19b5e77c 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postkick.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postkick.1.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 POSTKICK(1)                                                        POSTKICK(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postkick - kick a Postfix service
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postkick [-c config_dir] [-v] class service request
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  postkick(1)  command sends request to the specified service over a
        local transport channel.  This command makes Postfix private IPC acces-
        sible for use in, for example, shell scripts.
@@ -39,17 +39,17 @@ POSTKICK(1)                                                        POSTKICK(1)
        request
               A string. The list of valid requests is service-specific.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to the standard error stream.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with Postfix configuration files.
 
        MAIL_VERBOSE
               Enable verbose logging for debugging purposes.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The  following  main.cf parameters are especially relevant to this pro-
        gram.  The text below provides only  a  parameter  summary.  See  post-
        conf(5) for more details including examples.
@@ -70,16 +70,16 @@ POSTKICK(1)                                                        POSTKICK(1)
        queue_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The location of the Postfix top-level queue directory.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix/private, private class endpoints
        /var/spool/postfix/public, public class endpoints
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        qmgr(8), queue manager trigger protocol
        pickup(8), local pickup daemon
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postlock.1.html b/postfix/html/postlock.1.html
index 9750f9bc7..1b81f874b 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postlock.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postlock.1.html
@@ -7,14 +7,14 @@
   
 POSTLOCK(1)                                                        POSTLOCK(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postlock - lock mail folder and execute command
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postlock [-c config_dir] [-l lock_style]
                [-v] file command...
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  postlock(1)  command locks file for exclusive access, and executes
        command. The locking method is compatible with the  Postfix  UNIX-style
        local delivery agent.
@@ -41,29 +41,29 @@ POSTLOCK(1)                                                        POSTLOCK(1)
               access.   The  command is executed directly, i.e. without inter-
               pretation by a shell command interpreter.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        The result status is 75 (EX_TEMPFAIL) when postlock(1) could  not  per-
        form  the  requested operation.  Otherwise, the exit status is the exit
        status from the command.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        With remote file systems, the ability to acquire a lock does not neces-
        sarily  eliminate access conflicts. Avoid file access by processes run-
        ning on different machines.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with Postfix configuration files.
 
        MAIL_VERBOSE
               Enable verbose logging for debugging purposes.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The following main.cf parameters are especially relevant to  this  pro-
        gram.   The  text  below  provides  only a parameter summary. See post-
        conf(5) for more details including examples.
 
-LOCKING CONTROLS
+LOCKING CONTROLS
        deliver_lock_attempts (20)
               The maximal number of attempts to acquire an exclusive lock on a
               mailbox file or bounce(8) logfile.
@@ -80,14 +80,14 @@ POSTLOCK(1)                                                        POSTLOCK(1)
               How  to  lock  a  UNIX-style  local(8) mailbox before attempting
               delivery.
 
-RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        fork_attempts (5)
               The maximal number of attempts to fork() a child process.
 
        fork_delay (1s)
               The delay between attempts to fork() a child process.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The default location of the Postfix main.cf and  master.cf  con-
               figuration files.
@@ -97,10 +97,10 @@ POSTLOCK(1)                                                        POSTLOCK(1)
               process will  import  from  a  non-Postfix  parent  process,  or
               name=value environment overrides.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postlog.1.html b/postfix/html/postlog.1.html
index 617b78b0a..b8ac9858e 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postlog.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postlog.1.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 POSTLOG(1)                                                          POSTLOG(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postlog - Postfix-compatible logging utility
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postlog [-iv] [-c config_dir] [-p priority] [-t tag] [text...]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  postlog(1)  command implements a Postfix-compatible logging inter-
        face for use in, for example, shell scripts.
 
@@ -48,17 +48,17 @@ POSTLOG(1)                                                          POSTLOG(1)
        -v     Enable  verbose  logging  for  debugging  purposes.  Multiple -v
               options make the software increasingly verbose.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The postlog(1) command is designed to run with set-groupid  privileges,
        so  that  it can connect to the postlogd(8) daemon process (Postfix 3.7
        and later; earlier  implementations  of  this  command  must  not  have
        set-groupid or set-userid permissions).
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with the main.cf file.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The  following  main.cf parameters are especially relevant to this pro-
        gram.
 
@@ -97,15 +97,15 @@ POSTLOG(1)                                                          POSTLOG(1)
               $maillog_file is created for the first time, or when the file is
               created after an existing file is rotated.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        The postlog(1) command was introduced with Postfix version 3.4.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postlogd.8.html b/postfix/html/postlogd.8.html
index e0a72af8d..ff75597b8 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postlogd.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postlogd.8.html
@@ -7,17 +7,17 @@
   
 POSTLOGD(8)                                                        POSTLOGD(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postlogd - Postfix internal log server
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postlogd [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        This program logs events on behalf of Postfix programs when the maillog
        configuration parameter specifies a non-empty value.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        Non-daemon Postfix programs don't know that  they  should  log  to  the
        internal  logging  service  before  they  have  processed  command-line
        options and main.cf parameters. These programs still log earlier events
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ POSTLOGD(8)                                                        POSTLOGD(8)
        mission. Do not set this permission on programs other than postdrop(1),
        postqueue(1) and (Postfix >= 3.7) postlog(1).
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are not picked up automatically, because postlogd(8)
        terminates only after reaching the max_idle time limit.  Use  the  com-
        mand "postfix reload" to speed up a change.
@@ -75,19 +75,19 @@ POSTLOGD(8)                                                        POSTLOGD(8)
               $maillog_file is created for the first time, or when the file is
               created after an existing file is rotated.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README_FILES
+README_FILES
        Use "postconf readme_directory" or "postconf html_directory" to  locate
        this information.
        MAILLOG_README, Postfix logging to file or stdout
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        This service was introduced with Postfix version 3.4.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postmap.1.html b/postfix/html/postmap.1.html
index 371af308b..6b39877ee 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postmap.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postmap.1.html
@@ -7,14 +7,14 @@
   
 POSTMAP(1)                                                          POSTMAP(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postmap - Postfix lookup table management
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap [-bfFhimnNoprsuUvw] [-c config_dir] [-d key] [-q key]
                [file_type:]file_name ...
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  postmap(1)  command  creates or queries one or more Postfix lookup
        tables, or updates an existing one.
 
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ POSTMAP(1)                                                          POSTMAP(1)
        and an exclusive, advisory, lock is placed  on  the  entire  table,  in
        order to avoid surprises in spectator processes.
 
-INPUT FILE FORMAT
+INPUT FILE FORMAT
        The format of a lookup table input file is as follows:
 
        o      A table entry has the form
@@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ POSTMAP(1)                                                          POSTMAP(1)
        regexp: and pcre:. This resulted in loss of  information  with  $number
        substitutions.
 
-COMMAND-LINE ARGUMENTS
+COMMAND-LINE ARGUMENTS
        -b     Enable  message  body  query mode. When reading lookup keys from
               standard input with "-q -", process the input as  if  it  is  an
               email  message  in  RFC  5322 format.  Each line of body content
@@ -235,7 +235,7 @@ POSTMAP(1)                                                          POSTMAP(1)
               The name of the lookup table source file when rebuilding a data-
               base.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems are logged to the standard error stream and to  syslogd(8)  or
        postlogd(8).  No output means that no problems were detected. Duplicate
        entries are skipped and are flagged with a warning.
@@ -244,14 +244,14 @@ POSTMAP(1)                                                          POSTMAP(1)
        ing  successful  "postmap -q" lookup) and terminates with non-zero exit
        status in case of failure.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with Postfix configuration files.
 
        MAIL_VERBOSE
               Enable verbose logging for debugging purposes.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The following main.cf parameters are especially relevant to  this  pro-
        gram.   The  text  below  provides  only a parameter summary. See post-
        conf(5) for more details including examples.
@@ -293,17 +293,17 @@ POSTMAP(1)                                                          POSTMAP(1)
        lmdb_map_size (16777216)
               The initial OpenLDAP LMDB database size limit in bytes.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postalias(1), create/update/query alias database
        postconf(1), supported database types
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postmulti.1.html b/postfix/html/postmulti.1.html
index 8ef57cf4a..60988c922 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postmulti.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postmulti.1.html
@@ -7,10 +7,10 @@
   
 POSTMULTI(1)                                                      POSTMULTI(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postmulti - Postfix multi-instance manager
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
    Enabling multi-instance management:
 
        postmulti -e init [-v]
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ POSTMULTI(1)                                                      POSTMULTI(1)
 
        postmulti -e assign [-v] -i name [-I name] [-G group]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  postmulti(1) command allows a Postfix administrator to manage mul-
        tiple Postfix instances on a single host.
 
@@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ POSTMULTI(1)                                                      POSTMULTI(1)
        Each  mode  of  operation  has its own command syntax. For this reason,
        each mode is documented in separate sections below.
 
-BACKGROUND
+BACKGROUND
        A  multi-instance  configuration  consists  of  one   primary   Postfix
        instance,  and  one  or  more  secondary  instances whose configuration
        directory pathnames are recorded  in  the  primary  instance's  main.cf
@@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ POSTMULTI(1)                                                      POSTMULTI(1)
        See the MULTI_INSTANCE_README tutorial for a more  detailed  discussion
        of multi-instance management with postmulti(1).
 
-ITERATOR MODE
+ITERATOR MODE
        In  iterator mode, postmulti performs the same operation on all Postfix
        instances in turn.
 
@@ -143,7 +143,7 @@ POSTMULTI(1)                                                      POSTMULTI(1)
        -v     Enable verbose  logging  for  debugging  purposes.  Multiple  -v
               options make the software increasingly verbose.
 
-LIFE-CYCLE MANAGEMENT MODE
+LIFE-CYCLE MANAGEMENT MODE
        With  the -e option postmulti(1) can be used to add or delete a Postfix
        instance, and to  manage  the  multi-instance  status  of  an  existing
        instance.
@@ -301,7 +301,7 @@ POSTMULTI(1)                                                      POSTMULTI(1)
        -v     Enable  verbose  logging  for  debugging  purposes.  Multiple -v
               options make the software increasingly verbose.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        The postmulti(1) command exports the  following  environment  variables
        before executing the requested command for a given instance:
 
@@ -311,7 +311,7 @@ POSTMULTI(1)                                                      POSTMULTI(1)
        MAIL_CONFIG
               The location of the configuration directory of the instance.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The  default  location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf con-
               figuration files.
@@ -374,22 +374,22 @@ POSTMULTI(1)                                                      POSTMULTI(1)
               (postfix-*.so) that have  a  relative  pathname  in  the  dynam-
               icmaps.cf file.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        $meta_directory/main.cf.proto, stock configuration file
        $meta_directory/master.cf.proto, stock configuration file
        $daemon_directory/postmulti-script, life-cycle helper program
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postfix(1), Postfix control program
        postfix-wrapper(5), Postfix multi-instance API
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        MULTI_INSTANCE_README, Postfix multi-instance management
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        The postmulti(1) command was introduced with Postfix version 2.6.
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postqueue.1.html b/postfix/html/postqueue.1.html
index 49f2ed554..5d9d95049 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postqueue.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postqueue.1.html
@@ -7,10 +7,10 @@
   
 POSTQUEUE(1)                                                      POSTQUEUE(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postqueue - Postfix queue control
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
    To flush the mail queue:
 
        postqueue [-v] [-c config_dir] -f
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ POSTQUEUE(1)                                                      POSTQUEUE(1)
 
        postqueue [-v] [-c config_dir] -p
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  postqueue(1)  command  implements  the  Postfix user interface for
        queue management.  It  implements  operations  that  are  traditionally
        available  via  the  sendmail(1) command.  See the postsuper(1) command
@@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ POSTQUEUE(1)                                                      POSTQUEUE(1)
               options make the software increasingly verbose.  As  of  Postfix
               2.3, this option is available for the super-user only.
 
-JSON OBJECT FORMAT
+JSON OBJECT FORMAT
        Each  JSON  object represents one queue file; it is emitted as a single
        text line followed by a newline character.
 
@@ -150,18 +150,18 @@ POSTQUEUE(1)                                                      POSTQUEUE(1)
                      delivery is in progress, or after the system was  stopped
                      before it could record the reason.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        This  program  is designed to run with set-group ID privileges, so that
        it can connect to Postfix daemon processes.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 7159 (JSON notation)
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8), and to  the  standard
        error stream.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory  with the main.cf file. In order to avoid exploitation
               of set-group ID privileges, a non-standard directory is  allowed
@@ -172,7 +172,7 @@ POSTQUEUE(1)                                                      POSTQUEUE(1)
 
               o      The command is invoked by the super-user.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The following main.cf parameters are especially relevant to  this  pro-
        gram.   The  text  below  provides  only a parameter summary. See post-
        conf(5) for more details including examples.
@@ -221,10 +221,10 @@ POSTQUEUE(1)                                                      POSTQUEUE(1)
        authorized_mailq_users (static:anyone)
               List of users who are authorized to view the queue.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix, mail queue
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        showq(8), list mail queue
        flush(8), fast flush service
@@ -233,13 +233,13 @@ POSTQUEUE(1)                                                      POSTQUEUE(1)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        ETRN_README, Postfix ETRN howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        The postqueue command was introduced with Postfix version 1.1.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/postscreen.8.html b/postfix/html/postscreen.8.html
index 9ab10b7e8..22ea8dea5 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postscreen.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postscreen.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postscreen - Postfix zombie blocker
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postscreen [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The Postfix postscreen(8) server provides additional protection against
        mail  server  overload.  One  postscreen(8)  process  handles  multiple
        inbound SMTP connections, and decides which clients may talk to a Post-
@@ -50,12 +50,12 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
        is to keep spambots away from Postfix SMTP server processes, while min-
        imizing overhead for legitimate traffic.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The postscreen(8) server is moderately security-sensitive.  It talks to
        untrusted clients on the network. The process can be  run  chrooted  at
        fixed low privilege.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 821 (SMTP protocol)
        RFC 1123 (Host requirements)
        RFC 1652 (8bit-MIME transport)
@@ -71,10 +71,10 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
        RFC 3463 (Enhanced Status Codes)
        RFC 5321 (SMTP protocol, including multi-line 220 banners)
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        The  postscreen(8)  built-in  SMTP  protocol  engine currently does not
        announce support for AUTH, XCLIENT or XFORWARD.  If you  need  to  make
        these  services  available  on port 25, then do not enable the optional
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
        mail. See POSTSCREEN_README, section "Tests after the 220  SMTP  server
        greeting", for a discussion.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes  to  main.cf  are not picked up automatically, as postscreen(8)
        processes may run for several hours.  Use the command "postfix  reload"
        after a configuration change.
@@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
        Other parameters always evaluate as if the stress  parameter  value  is
        the empty string.
 
-COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
+COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
        postscreen_command_filter ($smtpd_command_filter)
               A mechanism to transform commands from remote SMTP clients.
 
@@ -134,7 +134,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
        respectful_logging (see 'postconf -d' output)
               Avoid logging that implies white is better than black.
 
-TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
+TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
        postscreen_expansion_filter (see 'postconf -d' output)
               List     of     characters     that     are     permitted     in
               postscreen_reject_footer attribute expansions.
@@ -147,7 +147,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
               Safety  net to keep mail queued that would otherwise be returned
               to the sender.
 
-BEFORE-POSTSCREEN PROXY AGENT
+BEFORE-POSTSCREEN PROXY AGENT
        Available in Postfix version 2.10 and later:
 
        postscreen_upstream_proxy_protocol (empty)
@@ -169,7 +169,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
        postscreen_blacklist_action (ignore)
               Renamed to postscreen_denylist_action in Postfix 3.6.
 
-MAIL EXCHANGER POLICY TESTS
+MAIL EXCHANGER POLICY TESTS
        When postscreen(8) is configured to monitor all primary and  backup  MX
        addresses,  it can refuse to allowlist clients that connect to a backup
        MX address only. For small sites, this requires configuring primary and
@@ -182,7 +182,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
               non-allowlisted remote SMTP client  can  obtain  postscreen(8)'s
               temporary allowlist status.
 
-BEFORE 220 GREETING TESTS
+BEFORE 220 GREETING TESTS
        These  tests  are  executed  before the remote SMTP client receives the
        "220 servername" greeting. If no tests remain after the successful com-
        pletion  of  this phase, the client will be handed off immediately to a
@@ -259,7 +259,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
               greeting"  protocol  tests, based on its combined DNSBL score as
               defined with the postscreen_dnsbl_sites parameter.
 
-AFTER 220 GREETING TESTS
+AFTER 220 GREETING TESTS
        These tests are executed after the remote SMTP client receives the "220
        servername"  greeting.  If a client passes all tests during this phase,
        it will receive a 4XX response to  all  RCPT  TO  commands.  After  the
@@ -303,7 +303,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
               Enable  "pipelining"  SMTP  protocol  tests in the postscreen(8)
               server.
 
-CACHE CONTROLS
+CACHE CONTROLS
        postscreen_cache_cleanup_interval (12h)
               The amount of time between postscreen(8) cache cleanup runs.
 
@@ -345,7 +345,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
               address passed a "pipelining" SMTP protocol test, before  it  is
               required to pass that test again.
 
-RESOURCE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE CONTROLS
        line_length_limit (2048)
               Upon  input,  long  lines  are chopped up into pieces of at most
               this length; upon delivery, long lines are reconstructed.
@@ -377,7 +377,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
               remote  SMTP  client  command  or  to  perform a cache operation
               before it is terminated by a built-in watchdog timer.
 
-STARTTLS CONTROLS
+STARTTLS CONTROLS
        postscreen_tls_security_level ($smtpd_tls_security_level)
               The SMTP TLS security level for the postscreen(8) server; when a
               non-empty value is specified, this overrides the obsolete param-
@@ -386,7 +386,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
        tlsproxy_service_name (tlsproxy)
               The name of the tlsproxy(8) service entry in master.cf.
 
-OBSOLETE STARTTLS SUPPORT CONTROLS
+OBSOLETE STARTTLS SUPPORT CONTROLS
        These parameters are supported for compatibility with  smtpd(8)  legacy
        parameters.
 
@@ -398,7 +398,7 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
               Mandatory TLS: announce STARTTLS support to remote SMTP clients,
               and require that clients use TLS encryption.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The  default  location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf con-
               figuration files.
@@ -438,20 +438,20 @@ POSTSCREEN(8)                                                    POSTSCREEN(8)
               The email address form that will be used  in  non-debug  logging
               (info, warning, etc.).
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        smtpd(8), Postfix SMTP server
        tlsproxy(8), Postfix TLS proxy server
        dnsblog(8), DNS allow/denylist logger
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        POSTSCREEN_README, Postfix Postscreen Howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        This service was introduced with Postfix version 2.8.
 
        Many ideas in postscreen(8) were explored in earlier  work  by  Michael
diff --git a/postfix/html/postsuper.1.html b/postfix/html/postsuper.1.html
index cf0681adf..e5eef1f63 100644
--- a/postfix/html/postsuper.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/postsuper.1.html
@@ -7,17 +7,17 @@
   
 POSTSUPER(1)                                                      POSTSUPER(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        postsuper - Postfix superintendent
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postsuper [-psSv]
                [-c config_dir] [-d queue_id]
                [-e queue_id] [-f queue_id]
                [-h queue_id] [-H queue_id]
                [-r queue_id] [directory ...]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  postsuper(1)  command  does maintenance jobs on the Postfix queue.
        Use  of  the  command  is  restricted  to  the  superuser.    See   the
        postqueue(1)  command for unprivileged queue operations such as listing
@@ -238,7 +238,7 @@ POSTSUPER(1)                                                      POSTSUPER(1)
        -v     Enable verbose  logging  for  debugging  purposes.  Multiple  -v
               options make the software increasingly verbose.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems are reported to the standard error stream and to syslogd(8) or
        postlogd(8).
 
@@ -249,15 +249,15 @@ POSTSUPER(1)                                                      POSTSUPER(1)
        queue file name was fixed with -s. The report is written to  the  stan-
        dard error stream and to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with the main.cf file.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        Mail that is not sanitized by Postfix (i.e. mail in the maildrop queue)
        cannot be placed "on hold".
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The following main.cf parameters are especially relevant to  this  pro-
        gram.   The  text  below  provides  only a parameter summary. See post-
        conf(5) for more details including examples.
@@ -294,13 +294,13 @@ POSTSUPER(1)                                                      POSTSUPER(1)
        enable_long_queue_ids (no)
               Enable long, non-repeating, queue IDs (queue file names).
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        sendmail(1), Sendmail-compatible user interface
        postqueue(1), unprivileged queue operations
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/posttls-finger.1.html b/postfix/html/posttls-finger.1.html
index a1475ca8c..650c77980 100644
--- a/postfix/html/posttls-finger.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/posttls-finger.1.html
@@ -7,14 +7,14 @@
   
 POSTTLS-FINGER(1)                                            POSTTLS-FINGER(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        posttls-finger - Probe the TLS properties of an ESMTP or LMTP server.
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        posttls-finger [options] [inet:]domain[:port] [match ...]
        posttls-finger -S [options] unix:pathname [match ...]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        posttls-finger(1)  connects  to  the  specified destination and reports
        TLS-related information about the server. With SMTP, the destination is
        a  domainname;  with LMTP it is either a domainname prefixed with inet:
@@ -341,21 +341,21 @@ POSTTLS-FINGER(1)                                            POSTTLS-FINGER(1)
               is dane, or dane-only the match names are ignored, and hostname,
               nexthop strategies are used.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Read configuration parameters from a non-default location.
 
        MAIL_VERBOSE
               Same as -v option.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        smtp-source(1), SMTP/LMTP message source
        smtp-sink(1), SMTP/LMTP message dump
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        TLS_README, Postfix STARTTLS howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/proxymap.8.html b/postfix/html/proxymap.8.html
index a1f2f1895..5d3470946 100644
--- a/postfix/html/proxymap.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/proxymap.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 PROXYMAP(8)                                                        PROXYMAP(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        proxymap - Postfix lookup table proxy server
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        proxymap [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  proxymap(8)  server  provides read-only or read-write table lookup
        service to Postfix processes. These services are implemented with  dis-
        tinct service names: proxymap and proxywrite, respectively. The purpose
@@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ PROXYMAP(8)                                                        PROXYMAP(8)
        client  disconnects.  The  purpose  is  to  share tables among multiple
        client processes.
 
-SERVER PROCESS MANAGEMENT
+SERVER PROCESS MANAGEMENT
        proxymap(8) servers run under control by the Postfix master(8)  server.
        Each  server  can  handle  multiple simultaneous connections.  When all
        servers are busy while a client connects, the master(8) creates  a  new
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ PROXYMAP(8)                                                        PROXYMAP(8)
        exceeded.  Each server  terminates  after  serving  at  least  $max_use
        clients or after $max_idle seconds of idle time.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The  proxymap(8)  server  opens  only  tables that are approved via the
        proxy_read_maps or proxy_write_maps configuration parameters, does  not
        talk  to  users,  and  can run at fixed low privilege, chrooted or not.
@@ -123,10 +123,10 @@ PROXYMAP(8)                                                        PROXYMAP(8)
        where ownership of a file or directory does not match the  provider  of
        its content.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        The  proxymap(8)  server provides service to multiple clients, and must
        therefore not be used for tables that have high-latency lookups.
 
@@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ PROXYMAP(8)                                                        PROXYMAP(8)
        Tables  that  support  "sync  on  update"  should be safe (for example,
        Berkeley DB) as should tables that are implemented by a real DBMS.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        On busy mail systems a long time may pass before  proxymap(8)  relevant
        changes  to  main.cf are picked up. Use the command "postfix reload" to
        speed up a change.
@@ -195,17 +195,17 @@ PROXYMAP(8)                                                        PROXYMAP(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        master(5), generic daemon options
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        The proxymap service was introduced with Postfix 2.0.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/qmgr.8.html b/postfix/html/qmgr.8.html
index 068b25673..20cc1490e 100644
--- a/postfix/html/qmgr.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/qmgr.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        qmgr - Postfix queue manager
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        qmgr [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The qmgr(8) daemon awaits the arrival of incoming mail and arranges for
        its delivery via Postfix delivery processes.  The actual  mail  routing
        strategy  is  delegated to the trivial-rewrite(8) daemon.  This program
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
        carded.   This  stops  potential  loops  caused by undeliverable bounce
        notifications.
 
-MAIL QUEUES
+MAIL QUEUES
        The qmgr(8) daemon maintains the following queues:
 
        incoming
@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
        hold   Messages that are kept "on hold" are  kept  here  until  someone
               sets them free.
 
-DELIVERY STATUS REPORTS
+DELIVERY STATUS REPORTS
        The  qmgr(8) daemon keeps an eye on per-message delivery status reports
        in the following directories. Each status report file has the same name
        as the corresponding message file:
@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
        The qmgr(8) daemon is responsible for asking the bounce(8), defer(8) or
        trace(8) daemons to send delivery reports.
 
-STRATEGIES
+STRATEGIES
        The queue manager implements a variety of strategies for either opening
        queue files (input) or for message delivery (output).
 
@@ -103,7 +103,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
               delay  while  still  preserving  the correct per-message delays,
               using a sophisticated preemptive message scheduling.
 
-TRIGGERS
+TRIGGERS
        On an idle system, the queue manager waits for the arrival  of  trigger
        events, or it waits for a timer to go off. A trigger is a one-byte mes-
        sage.  Depending on the message received, the  queue  manager  performs
@@ -138,18 +138,18 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
        deferred queue run, one would request A F D; in  order  to  notify  the
        queue manager of the arrival of new mail one would request I.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 3463 (Enhanced status codes)
        RFC 3464 (Delivery status notifications)
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The qmgr(8) daemon is not security sensitive. It reads single-character
        messages from untrusted local users, and thus  may  be  susceptible  to
        denial of service attacks. The qmgr(8) daemon does not talk to the out-
        side world, and it can be run at fixed  low  privilege  in  a  chrooted
        environment.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems  and  transactions  are  logged  to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
        Corrupted message files are saved to  the  corrupt  queue  for  further
        inspection.
@@ -157,12 +157,12 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
        Depending  on the setting of the notify_classes parameter, the postmas-
        ter is notified of bounces and of other trouble.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        A single queue manager process has to compete for disk access with mul-
        tiple front-end processes such as cleanup(8). A sudden burst of inbound
        mail can negatively impact outbound delivery rates.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are not picked up automatically as qmgr(8) is a per-
        sistent process. Use the "postfix reload" command after a configuration
        change.
@@ -172,7 +172,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
 
        In the text below, transport is the first field in a master.cf entry.
 
-COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
+COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
        Available before Postfix version 2.5:
 
        allow_min_user (no)
@@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
               next-hop  destination, use $default_filter_nexthop instead; when
               that value is empty, use the domain in the recipient address.
 
-ACTIVE QUEUE CONTROLS
+ACTIVE QUEUE CONTROLS
        qmgr_clog_warn_time (300s)
               The minimal delay between warnings that a  specific  destination
               is clogging up the Postfix active queue.
@@ -240,7 +240,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
               ent_refill_delay parameter value, where transport  is  the  mas-
               ter.cf name of the message delivery transport.
 
-DELIVERY CONCURRENCY CONTROLS
+DELIVERY CONCURRENCY CONTROLS
        initial_destination_concurrency (5)
               The  initial  per-destination  concurrency  level  for  parallel
               delivery to the same destination.
@@ -300,7 +300,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
               Make  the queue manager's feedback algorithm verbose for perfor-
               mance analysis purposes.
 
-RECIPIENT SCHEDULING CONTROLS
+RECIPIENT SCHEDULING CONTROLS
        default_destination_recipient_limit (50)
               The default maximal number of recipients per message delivery.
 
@@ -310,7 +310,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
               ient_limit  parameter  value,  where  transport is the master.cf
               name of the message delivery transport.
 
-MESSAGE SCHEDULING CONTROLS
+MESSAGE SCHEDULING CONTROLS
        default_delivery_slot_cost (5)
               How often the Postfix queue manager's scheduler  is  allowed  to
               preempt delivery of one message with another.
@@ -347,7 +347,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
               parameter  value,  where  transport is the master.cf name of the
               message delivery transport.
 
-OTHER RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+OTHER RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        minimal_backoff_time (300s)
               The minimal time between attempts to deliver a deferred message;
               prior to Postfix 2.4 the default value was 1000s.
@@ -400,7 +400,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
               the parameter name is the master.cf name of the message delivery
               transport.
 
-SAFETY CONTROLS
+SAFETY CONTROLS
        qmgr_daemon_timeout (1000s)
               How much time a Postfix queue manager process may take to handle
               a request before it is terminated by a built-in watchdog  timer.
@@ -415,7 +415,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
               A safety limit that prevents address verification requests  from
               overwhelming the Postfix queue.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The  default  location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf con-
               figuration files.
@@ -465,7 +465,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
               The  email  address  form that will be used in non-debug logging
               (info, warning, etc.).
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix/incoming, incoming queue
        /var/spool/postfix/active, active queue
        /var/spool/postfix/deferred, deferred queue
@@ -473,7 +473,7 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
        /var/spool/postfix/defer, non-delivery status
        /var/spool/postfix/trace, delivery status
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        trivial-rewrite(8), address routing
        bounce(8), delivery status reports
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
@@ -482,11 +482,11 @@ QMGR(8)                                                                QMGR(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        SCHEDULER_README, scheduling algorithm
        QSHAPE_README, Postfix queue analysis
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/qmqp-sink.1.html b/postfix/html/qmqp-sink.1.html
index 3ef49452e..df9b85812 100644
--- a/postfix/html/qmqp-sink.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/qmqp-sink.1.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 QMQP-SINK(1)                                                      QMQP-SINK(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        qmqp-sink - parallelized QMQP test server
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        qmqp-sink [-46cv] [-x time] [inet:][host]:port backlog
 
        qmqp-sink [-46cv] [-x time] unix:pathname backlog
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        qmqp-sink listens on the named host (or address) and port.  It receives
        messages from the network and throws them away.  The purpose is to mea-
        sure QMQP client performance, not protocol compliance.  Connections can
@@ -44,10 +44,10 @@ QMQP-SINK(1)                                                      QMQP-SINK(1)
               Terminate  after time seconds. This is to facilitate memory leak
               testing.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        qmqp-source(1), QMQP message generator
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/qmqp-source.1.html b/postfix/html/qmqp-source.1.html
index fc511c564..9d989bcd5 100644
--- a/postfix/html/qmqp-source.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/qmqp-source.1.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 QMQP-SOURCE(1)                                                  QMQP-SOURCE(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        qmqp-source - parallelized QMQP test generator
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        qmqp-source [options] [inet:]host[:port]
 
        qmqp-source [options] unix:pathname
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        qmqp-source  connects  to the named host and TCP port (default 628) and
        sends one or more messages to it, either sequentially or  in  parallel.
        The  program  speaks  the  QMQP  protocol.   Connections can be made to
@@ -77,10 +77,10 @@ QMQP-SOURCE(1)                                                  QMQP-SOURCE(1)
               Wait  a fixed time between messages.  Suspending one thread does
               not affect other delivery threads.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        qmqp-sink(1), QMQP message dump
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/qmqpd.8.html b/postfix/html/qmqpd.8.html
index 55cbcdcda..9bdee711d 100644
--- a/postfix/html/qmqpd.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/qmqpd.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 QMQPD(8)                                                              QMQPD(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        qmqpd - Postfix QMQP server
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        qmqpd [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The Postfix QMQP server receives one message per connection.  Each mes-
        sage is piped through the cleanup(8) daemon, and  is  placed  into  the
        incoming queue as one single queue file.  The program expects to be run
@@ -22,15 +22,15 @@ QMQPD(8)                                                              QMQPD(8)
        The QMQP server implements one access policy:  only  explicitly  autho-
        rized client hosts are allowed to use the service.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The  QMQP  server  is  moderately  security-sensitive. It talks to QMQP
        clients and to DNS servers on the network. The QMQP server can  be  run
        chrooted at fixed low privilege.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        The  QMQP protocol provides only one server reply per message delivery.
        It is therefore not possible to reject individual recipients.
 
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ QMQPD(8)                                                              QMQPD(8)
        nent is longer than acceptable, Postfix replies immediately and  closes
        the connection. It is left up to the client to handle the situation.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes  to  main.cf are picked up automatically, as qmqpd(8) processes
        run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
        to speed up a change.
@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ QMQPD(8)                                                              QMQPD(8)
        The  text  below provides only a parameter summary. See postconf(5) for
        more details including examples.
 
-CONTENT INSPECTION CONTROLS
+CONTENT INSPECTION CONTROLS
        content_filter (empty)
               After the message is queued, send  the  entire  message  to  the
               specified transport:destination.
@@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ QMQPD(8)                                                              QMQPD(8)
               Enable or disable recipient validation, built-in content filter-
               ing, or address mapping.
 
-SMTPUTF8 CONTROLS
+SMTPUTF8 CONTROLS
        Preliminary SMTPUTF8 support is introduced with Postfix 3.0.
 
        smtputf8_enable (yes)
@@ -74,7 +74,7 @@ QMQPD(8)                                                              QMQPD(8)
               IDNA2008,  when  converting UTF-8 domain names to/from the ASCII
               form that is used for DNS lookups.
 
-RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        line_length_limit (2048)
               Upon input, long lines are chopped up into  pieces  of  at  most
               this length; upon delivery, long lines are reconstructed.
@@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ QMQPD(8)                                                              QMQPD(8)
               The  time  limit  for  sending or receiving information over the
               network.
 
-TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
+TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
        debug_peer_level (2)
               The increment in verbose logging level when a  nexthop  destina-
               tion,  remote client or server name or network address matches a
@@ -107,12 +107,12 @@ QMQPD(8)                                                              QMQPD(8)
               Safety  net to keep mail queued that would otherwise be returned
               to the sender.
 
-TARPIT CONTROLS
+TARPIT CONTROLS
        qmqpd_error_delay (1s)
               How long the Postfix QMQP server will  pause  before  sending  a
               negative reply to the remote QMQP client.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The  default  location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf con-
               figuration files.
@@ -168,20 +168,20 @@ QMQPD(8)                                                              QMQPD(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        http://cr.yp.to/proto/qmqp.html, QMQP protocol
        cleanup(8), message canonicalization
        master(8), process manager
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        QMQP_README, Postfix ezmlm-idx howto.
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        The qmqpd service was introduced with Postfix version 1.1.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/qshape.1.html b/postfix/html/qshape.1.html
index 26be5a31b..43c85fbef 100644
--- a/postfix/html/qshape.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/qshape.1.html
@@ -7,17 +7,17 @@
   
 QSHAPE(1)                                                            QSHAPE(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        qshape - Print Postfix queue domain and age distribution
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        qshape [-s] [-p] [-m min_subdomains]
                [-b bucket_count] [-t bucket_time]
                [-l] [-w terminal_width]
                [-N batch_msg_count] [-n batch_top_domains]
                [-c config_directory] [queue_name ...]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The qshape program helps the administrator understand the Postfix queue
        message distribution in time and by sender domain or recipient  domain.
        The program needs read access to the queue directories and queue files,
@@ -103,11 +103,11 @@ QSHAPE(1)                                                            QSHAPE(1)
               tory even if you want the default incoming and active queue dis-
               tribution.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        mailq(1), List all messages in the queue.
        QSHAPE_README Examples and background material.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        $config_directory/main.cf, Postfix installation parameters.
        $queue_directory/maildrop/, local submission directory.
        $queue_directory/incoming/, new message queue.
@@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ QSHAPE(1)                                                            QSHAPE(1)
        $queue_directory/active/, messages scheduled for delivery.
        $queue_directory/deferred/, messages postponed for later delivery.
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/regexp_table.5.html b/postfix/html/regexp_table.5.html
index 96e4b382c..ec617280a 100644
--- a/postfix/html/regexp_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/regexp_table.5.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 REGEXP_TABLE(5)                                                REGEXP_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        regexp_table - format of Postfix regular expression tables
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" regexp:/etc/postfix/filename
 
        postmap -q - regexp:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  mail  system  uses optional tables for address rewriting,
        mail routing, or access control. These tables are usually in dbm or  db
        format.
@@ -33,12 +33,12 @@ REGEXP_TABLE(5)                                                REGEXP_TABLE(5)
        terns,  and  "postmap -bmq - <file" for body_checks(5) (Postfix 2.6 and
        later).
 
-COMPATIBILITY
+COMPATIBILITY
        With Postfix version 2.2 and earlier specify "postmap -fq" to  query  a
        table that contains case sensitive patterns. Patterns are case insensi-
        tive by default.
 
-TABLE FORMAT
+TABLE FORMAT
        The general form of a Postfix regular expression table is:
 
        /pattern/flags result
@@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ REGEXP_TABLE(5)                                                REGEXP_TABLE(5)
               Toggles the extended expression syntax flag. By default, support
               for extended expression syntax is enabled.
 
-TABLE SEARCH ORDER
+TABLE SEARCH ORDER
        Patterns are applied in the order as specified in the  table,  until  a
        pattern is found that matches the input string.
 
@@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ REGEXP_TABLE(5)                                                REGEXP_TABLE(5)
        ken  up  into  their user and domain constituent parts, nor is user+foo
        broken up into user and foo.
 
-TEXT SUBSTITUTION
+TEXT SUBSTITUTION
        Substitution of substrings (text that  matches  patterns  inside  "()")
        from  the  matched  expression into the result string is requested with
        $1, $2, etc.; specify $$ to produce  a  $  character  as  output.   The
@@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ REGEXP_TABLE(5)                                                REGEXP_TABLE(5)
        the  expression  does  not  match,  substitutions are not available for
        negated patterns.
 
-INLINE SPECIFICATION
+INLINE SPECIFICATION
        The contents of a table may be specified in the table name (Postfix 3.7
        and later).  The basic syntax is:
 
@@ -155,7 +155,7 @@ REGEXP_TABLE(5)                                                REGEXP_TABLE(5)
        metacharacters such as '.' in the $name  expansion.  To  prevent  unex-
        pected matches, use a pcre: table, and specify \Q$name\E.
 
-EXAMPLE SMTPD ACCESS MAP
+EXAMPLE SMTPD ACCESS MAP
        # Disallow sender-specified routing. This is a must if you relay mail
        # for other domains.
        /[%!@].*[%!@]/       550 Sender-specified routing rejected
@@ -169,23 +169,23 @@ REGEXP_TABLE(5)                                                REGEXP_TABLE(5)
        /^(.*)-outgoing@(.*)$/  550 Use ${1}@${2} instead
        endif
 
-EXAMPLE HEADER FILTER MAP
+EXAMPLE HEADER FILTER MAP
        # These were once common in junk mail.
        /^Subject: make money fast/     REJECT
        /^To: friend@public\.com/       REJECT
 
-EXAMPLE BODY FILTER MAP
+EXAMPLE BODY FILTER MAP
        # First skip over base 64 encoded text to save CPU cycles.
        ~^[[:alnum:]+/]{60,}$~          OK
 
        # Put your own body patterns here.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        pcre_table(5), format of PCRE tables
        cidr_table(5), format of CIDR tables
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/relocated.5.html b/postfix/html/relocated.5.html
index 62a580a61..358e08746 100644
--- a/postfix/html/relocated.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/relocated.5.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 RELOCATED(5)                                                      RELOCATED(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        relocated - Postfix relocated table format
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap /etc/postfix/relocated
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  optional  relocated(5) table provides the information that is used
        in "user has moved to new_location" bounce messages.
 
@@ -34,13 +34,13 @@ RELOCATED(5)                                                      RELOCATED(5)
 
        Table lookups are case insensitive.
 
-CASE FOLDING
+CASE FOLDING
        The  search string is folded to lowercase before database lookup. As of
        Postfix 2.3, the search string is not case folded with  database  types
        such  as  regexp: or pcre: whose lookup fields can match both upper and
        lower case.
 
-TABLE FORMAT
+TABLE FORMAT
        The input format for the postmap(1) command is as follows:
 
        o      An entry has one of the following form:
@@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ RELOCATED(5)                                                      RELOCATED(5)
        o      A  logical  line  starts  with  non-whitespace text. A line that
               starts with whitespace continues a logical line.
 
-TABLE SEARCH ORDER
+TABLE SEARCH ORDER
        With lookups from indexed files such as DB or DBM,  or  from  networked
        tables  such  as  NIS,  LDAP or SQL, patterns are tried in the order as
        listed below:
@@ -73,12 +73,12 @@ RELOCATED(5)                                                      RELOCATED(5)
               Matches  other  addresses  in  domain.  This form has the lowest
               precedence.
 
-ADDRESS EXTENSION
+ADDRESS EXTENSION
        When a mail address localpart contains the optional recipient delimiter
        (e.g.,  user+foo@domain),  the  lookup  order becomes: user+foo@domain,
        user@domain, user+foo, user, and @domain.
 
-REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
+REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
        This section describes how the table lookups change when the  table  is
        given  in  the form of regular expressions or when lookups are directed
        to a TCP-based server. For a description of regular  expression  lookup
@@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ RELOCATED(5)                                                      RELOCATED(5)
        feature that parenthesized substrings from the pattern can be  interpo-
        lated as $1, $2 and so on.
 
-TCP-BASED TABLES
+TCP-BASED TABLES
        This  section  describes  how the table lookups change when lookups are
        directed  to  a  TCP-based  server.  For  a  description  of  the   TCP
        client/server  lookup  protocol,  see  tcp_table(5).   This  feature is
@@ -110,10 +110,10 @@ RELOCATED(5)                                                      RELOCATED(5)
 
        Results are the same as with indexed file lookups.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        The table format does not understand quoting conventions.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The following main.cf parameters are  especially  relevant.   The  text
        below  provides  only  a  parameter  summary.  See postconf(5) for more
        details including examples.
@@ -141,16 +141,16 @@ RELOCATED(5)                                                      RELOCATED(5)
               receives  mail  on by way of a proxy or network address transla-
               tion unit.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        trivial-rewrite(8), address resolver
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        ADDRESS_REWRITING_README, address rewriting guide
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/scache.8.html b/postfix/html/scache.8.html
index 932b99abd..a569795c5 100644
--- a/postfix/html/scache.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/scache.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 SCACHE(8)                                                            SCACHE(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        scache - Postfix shared connection cache server
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        scache [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+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.
@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ SCACHE(8)                                                            SCACHE(8)
               ties,  and  a  cached  file descriptor for the specified logical
               destination.
 
-SECURITY
+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.
@@ -73,16 +73,16 @@ SCACHE(8)                                                            SCACHE(8)
        The scache(8) server is not a trusted process. It must not be  used  to
        store information that is security sensitive.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-BUGS
+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
+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.
@@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ SCACHE(8)                                                            SCACHE(8)
        The text below provides only a parameter summary. See  postconf(5)  for
        more details including examples.
 
-RESOURCE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE CONTROLS
        connection_cache_ttl_limit (2s)
               The  maximal  time-to-live  value  that the scache(8) connection
               cache server allows.
@@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ SCACHE(8)                                                            SCACHE(8)
               connection cache hit and miss rates for logical destinations and
               for physical endpoints.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The default location of the Postfix main.cf and  master.cf  con-
               figuration files.
@@ -135,20 +135,20 @@ SCACHE(8)                                                            SCACHE(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        smtp(8), SMTP client
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        master(8), process manager
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        CONNECTION_CACHE_README, Postfix connection cache
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        This service was introduced with Postfix version 2.2.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/sendmail.1.html b/postfix/html/sendmail.1.html
index bf6051d2c..3977355eb 100644
--- a/postfix/html/sendmail.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/sendmail.1.html
@@ -7,10 +7,10 @@
   
 SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        sendmail - Postfix to Sendmail compatibility interface
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        sendmail [option ...] [recipient ...]
 
        mailq
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
        newaliases
        sendmail -I
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The Postfix sendmail(1) command implements the Postfix to Sendmail com-
        patibility interface.  For the  sake  of  compatibility  with  existing
        applications,  some  Sendmail  command-line  options are recognized but
@@ -283,7 +283,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               Log mailer traffic. Use the debug_peer_list and debug_peer_level
               configuration parameters instead.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        By design, this program is not set-user (or group) id.  It is  prepared
        to handle message content from untrusted, possibly remote, users.
 
@@ -318,11 +318,11 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               mail(1)  command  options,  by  specifying an email address that
               starts with "-".
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8), and to  the  standard
        error stream.
 
-ENVIRONMENT
+ENVIRONMENT
        MAIL_CONFIG
               Directory with Postfix configuration files.
 
@@ -336,19 +336,19 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
        NAME   The sender full name. This is used only with messages that  have
               no From: message header. See also the -F option above.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The  following  main.cf parameters are especially relevant to this pro-
        gram.  The text below provides only  a  parameter  summary.  See  post-
        conf(5) for more details including examples.
 
-COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
+COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
        Available with Postfix 2.9 and later:
 
        sendmail_fix_line_endings (always)
               Controls how the Postfix sendmail command converts email message
               line endings from <CR><LF> into UNIX format (<LF>).
 
-TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
+TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
        The DEBUG_README file gives examples of how to troubleshoot  a  Postfix
        system.
 
@@ -367,7 +367,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               verbose logging level to increase by  the  amount  specified  in
               $debug_peer_level.
 
-ACCESS CONTROLS
+ACCESS CONTROLS
        Available in Postfix version 2.2 and later:
 
        authorized_flush_users (static:anyone)
@@ -381,7 +381,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               mail(1) command (and with the privileged postdrop(1) helper com-
               mand).
 
-RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        bounce_size_limit (50000)
               The  maximal  amount  of original message text that is sent in a
               non-delivery notification.
@@ -400,7 +400,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               The  time  between  deferred  queue  scans by the queue manager;
               prior to Postfix 2.4 the default value was 1000s.
 
-FAST FLUSH CONTROLS
+FAST FLUSH CONTROLS
        The ETRN_README file describes configuration and operation details  for
        the Postfix "fast flush" service.
 
@@ -408,7 +408,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               Optional list of destinations that are eligible for per-destina-
               tion logfiles with mail that is queued to those destinations.
 
-VERP CONTROLS
+VERP CONTROLS
        The VERP_README file describes configuration and operation  details  of
        Postfix support for variable envelope return path addresses.
 
@@ -419,7 +419,7 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               The  characters  Postfix accepts as VERP delimiter characters on
               the Postfix sendmail(1) command line and in SMTP commands.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        alias_database (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The alias databases for local(8) delivery that are updated  with
               "newaliases" or with "sendmail -bi".
@@ -483,11 +483,11 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
               the  default  Postfix  instance,  and that are started, stopped,
               etc., together with the default Postfix instance.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix, mail queue
        /etc/postfix, configuration files
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        pickup(8), mail pickup daemon
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        smtpd(8), SMTP server
@@ -500,14 +500,14 @@ SENDMAIL(1)                                                        SENDMAIL(1)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README_FILES
+README_FILES
        Use "postconf readme_directory" or "postconf html_directory" to  locate
        this information.
        DEBUG_README, Postfix debugging howto
        ETRN_README, Postfix ETRN howto
        VERP_README, Postfix VERP howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/showq.8.html b/postfix/html/showq.8.html
index 8dfc9916c..737149dd3 100644
--- a/postfix/html/showq.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/showq.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 SHOWQ(8)                                                              SHOWQ(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        showq - list the Postfix mail queue
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        showq [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  showq(8) daemon reports the Postfix mail queue status.  The output
        is meant to be formatted by the postqueue(1) command,  as  it  emulates
        the Sendmail `mailq' command.
@@ -22,19 +22,19 @@ SHOWQ(8)                                                              SHOWQ(8)
        ruser. This mode of operation is used to emulate  the  `mailq'  command
        while the Postfix mail system is down.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The  showq(8)  daemon  can run in a chroot jail at fixed low privilege,
        and takes no input from the client. Its service port is  accessible  to
        local  untrusted  users, so the service can be susceptible to denial of
        service attacks.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        None. The showq(8) daemon does not interact with the outside world.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are picked up automatically  as  showq(8)  processes
        run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
        to speed up a change.
@@ -96,10 +96,10 @@ SHOWQ(8)                                                              SHOWQ(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix, queue directories
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        pickup(8), local mail pickup service
        cleanup(8), canonicalize and enqueue mail
        qmgr(8), queue manager
@@ -108,7 +108,7 @@ SHOWQ(8)                                                              SHOWQ(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/smtp-sink.1.html b/postfix/html/smtp-sink.1.html
index 4fcac7a5b..ac7ae4a16 100644
--- a/postfix/html/smtp-sink.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/smtp-sink.1.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 SMTP-SINK(1)                                                      SMTP-SINK(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        smtp-sink - parallelized SMTP/LMTP test server
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        smtp-sink [options] [inet:][host]:port backlog
 
        smtp-sink [options] unix:pathname backlog
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        smtp-sink  listens  on  the named host (or address) and port.  It takes
        SMTP messages from the network and throws them away.  The purpose is to
        measure client performance, not protocol compliance.
@@ -217,7 +217,7 @@ SMTP-SINK(1)                                                      SMTP-SINK(1)
               The  maximum  length  of  the  queue  of pending connections, as
               defined by the listen(2) system call.
 
-DUMP FILE FORMAT
+DUMP FILE FORMAT
        Each dumped message contains a sequence of text lines, terminated  with
        the newline character. The sequence of information is as follows:
 
@@ -272,10 +272,10 @@ SMTP-SINK(1)                                                      SMTP-SINK(1)
               time-stamp
                      A time stamp as defined in RFC 2822.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        smtp-source(1), SMTP/LMTP message generator
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/smtp-source.1.html b/postfix/html/smtp-source.1.html
index 63119715d..26a1be0b3 100644
--- a/postfix/html/smtp-source.1.html
+++ b/postfix/html/smtp-source.1.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 SMTP-SOURCE(1)                                                  SMTP-SOURCE(1)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        smtp-source - parallelized SMTP/LMTP test generator
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        smtp-source [options] [inet:]host[:port]
 
        smtp-source [options] unix:pathname
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        smtp-source  connects to the named host and TCP port (default: port 25)
        and sends one or more messages to it, either sequentially or in  paral-
        lel. The program speaks either SMTP (default) or LMTP.  Connections can
@@ -129,13 +129,13 @@ SMTP-SOURCE(1)                                                  SMTP-SOURCE(1)
        unix:pathname
               Connect to the UNIX-domain socket at pathname.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        No SMTP command pipelining support.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        smtp-sink(1), SMTP/LMTP message dump
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/smtp.8.html b/postfix/html/smtp.8.html
index 77820ea5b..96eac7890 100644
--- a/postfix/html/smtp.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/smtp.8.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        smtp, lmtp - Postfix SMTP+LMTP client
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        smtp [generic Postfix daemon options] [flags=DORX]
 
        lmtp [generic Postfix daemon options] [flags=DORX]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The Postfix SMTP+LMTP client implements the SMTP and LMTP mail delivery
        protocols. It processes message delivery requests from the  queue  man-
        ager.  Each  request specifies a queue file, a sender address, a domain
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        that have a high volume of mail in the active queue. Connection caching
        can be enabled permanently for specific destinations.
 
-SMTP SERVER LOOKUP
+SMTP SERVER LOOKUP
        The  Postfix  SMTP  client  supports multiple destinations separated by
        comma or whitespace (Postfix 3.5 and later).  Each destination is tried
        in the specified order.
@@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               specified service (default: smtp). An IPv6 address must be  for-
               matted as [ipv6:address].
 
-LMTP SERVER LOOKUP
+LMTP SERVER LOOKUP
        The  Postfix  LMTP  client  supports multiple destinations separated by
        comma or whitespace (Postfix 3.5 and later).  Each destination is tried
        in the specified order.
@@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               (default:   lmtp).    An  IPv6  address  must  be  formatted  as
               [ipv6:address].
 
-SINGLE-RECIPIENT DELIVERY
+SINGLE-RECIPIENT DELIVERY
        By default, the Postfix SMTP+LMTP  client  delivers  mail  to  multiple
        recipients  per delivery request. This is undesirable when prepending a
        Delivered-to: or X-Original-To: message header. To prevent Postfix from
@@ -112,7 +112,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        in  the  Postfix main.cf file, where transport is the name in the first
        column of the Postfix master.cf entry for this mail delivery service.
 
-COMMAND ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
+COMMAND ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
        flags=DORX (optional)
               Optional message processing flags.
 
@@ -147,12 +147,12 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
 
                      This feature is available as of Postfix 3.5.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The SMTP+LMTP client is moderately security-sensitive. It talks to SMTP
        or LMTP servers and to DNS servers on the network. The SMTP+LMTP client
        can be run chrooted at fixed low privilege.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 821 (SMTP protocol)
        RFC 822 (ARPA Internet Text Messages)
        RFC 1651 (SMTP service extensions)
@@ -175,7 +175,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        RFC 6533 (Internationalized Delivery Status Notifications)
        RFC 7672 (SMTP security via opportunistic DANE TLS)
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems  and  transactions  are  logged  to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
        Corrupted message files are marked so that the queue manager  can  move
        them to the corrupt queue for further inspection.
@@ -183,14 +183,14 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        Depending  on the setting of the notify_classes parameter, the postmas-
        ter is notified of bounces, protocol problems, and of other trouble.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        SMTP and LMTP connection reuse for TLS (without  closing  the  SMTP  or
        LMTP connection) is not supported before Postfix 3.4.
 
        SMTP  and LMTP connection reuse assumes that SASL credentials are valid
        for all destinations that map onto the same IP address and TCP port.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Postfix versions 2.3 and later implement the SMTP and LMTP client  with
        the  same program, and choose the protocol and configuration parameters
        based on the process name, smtp or lmtp.
@@ -206,7 +206,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        The text below provides only a parameter summary. See  postconf(5)  for
        more details including examples.
 
-COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
+COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
        ignore_mx_lookup_error (no)
               Ignore DNS MX lookups that produce no response.
 
@@ -422,7 +422,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               to MX or IP address lookup as  if  SRV  record  lookup  was  not
               enabled.
 
-MIME PROCESSING CONTROLS
+MIME PROCESSING CONTROLS
        Available in Postfix version 2.0 and later:
 
        disable_mime_output_conversion (no)
@@ -434,14 +434,14 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        mime_nesting_limit (100)
               The maximal recursion level that the MIME processor will handle.
 
-EXTERNAL CONTENT INSPECTION CONTROLS
+EXTERNAL CONTENT INSPECTION CONTROLS
        Available in Postfix version 2.1 and later:
 
        smtp_send_xforward_command (no)
               Send the non-standard XFORWARD command  when  the  Postfix  SMTP
               server EHLO response announces XFORWARD support.
 
-SASL AUTHENTICATION CONTROLS
+SASL AUTHENTICATION CONTROLS
        smtp_sasl_auth_enable (no)
               Enable SASL authentication in the Postfix SMTP client.
 
@@ -506,7 +506,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               The delimiter between username and password in  sasl_passwd_maps
               lookup results.
 
-STARTTLS SUPPORT CONTROLS
+STARTTLS SUPPORT CONTROLS
        Detailed  information  about STARTTLS configuration may be found in the
        TLS_README document.
 
@@ -758,7 +758,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               reuse a previously-negotiated  TLS  session  (there  is  no  new
               information to report).
 
-OBSOLETE STARTTLS CONTROLS
+OBSOLETE STARTTLS CONTROLS
        The  following  configuration  parameters  exist for compatibility with
        Postfix versions before 2.3. Support for these will  be  removed  in  a
        future release.
@@ -785,7 +785,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               Obsolete  Postfix  < 2.3 control for the Postfix SMTP client TLS
               cipher list.
 
-RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        smtp_connect_timeout (30s)
               The Postfix SMTP client time limit for completing a TCP  connec-
               tion, or zero (use the operating system built-in time limit).
@@ -921,7 +921,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               ient_limit parameter value, where  transport  is  the  master.cf
               name of the message delivery transport.
 
-SMTPUTF8 CONTROLS
+SMTPUTF8 CONTROLS
        Preliminary SMTPUTF8 support is introduced with Postfix 3.0.
 
        smtputf8_enable (yes)
@@ -939,7 +939,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               IDNA2008, when converting UTF-8 domain names to/from  the  ASCII
               form that is used for DNS lookups.
 
-TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
+TROUBLE SHOOTING CONTROLS
        debug_peer_level (2)
               The  increment  in verbose logging level when a nexthop destina-
               tion, remote client or server name or network address matches  a
@@ -964,7 +964,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        notify_classes (resource, software)
               The list of error classes that are reported to the postmaster.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        best_mx_transport (empty)
               Where the Postfix  SMTP  client  should  deliver  mail  when  it
               detects a "mail loops back to myself" error condition.
@@ -1097,7 +1097,7 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
               Defer  delivery  when  the  Postfix SMTP client cannot apply the
               smtp_bind_address or smtp_bind_address6 setting.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        generic(5), output address rewriting
        header_checks(5), message header content inspection
        body_checks(5), body parts content inspection
@@ -1111,11 +1111,11 @@ SMTP,(LMTP)                                                        SMTP,(LMTP)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        SASL_README, Postfix SASL howto
        TLS_README, Postfix STARTTLS howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/socketmap_table.5.html b/postfix/html/socketmap_table.5.html
index 4c9e96cc8..1ed39873d 100644
--- a/postfix/html/socketmap_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/socketmap_table.5.html
@@ -7,17 +7,17 @@
   
 SOCKETMAP_TABLE(5)                                          SOCKETMAP_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        socketmap_table - Postfix socketmap table lookup client
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" socketmap:inet:host:port:name
        postmap -q "string" socketmap:unix:pathname:name
 
        postmap -q - socketmap:inet:host:port:name <inputfile
        postmap -q - socketmap:unix:pathname:name <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  mail  system  uses optional tables for address rewriting,
        mail routing or policy lookup.
 
@@ -26,12 +26,12 @@ SOCKETMAP_TABLE(5)                                          SOCKETMAP_TABLE(5)
        name:name.  In both cases, name specifies the name field in a socketmap
        client request (see "REQUEST FORMAT" below).
 
-PROTOCOL
+PROTOCOL
        Socketmaps use a simple protocol: the client sends one request, and the
        server sends one reply.  Each request and each reply are  sent  as  one
        netstring object.
 
-REQUEST FORMAT
+REQUEST FORMAT
        The  socketmap  protocol supports only the lookup request.  The request
        has the following form:
 
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ SOCKETMAP_TABLE(5)                                          SOCKETMAP_TABLE(5)
        address  extension  or domain portion. This behavior is also found with
        cidr:, pcre:, and regexp: tables.
 
-REPLY FORMAT
+REPLY FORMAT
        The Postfix socketmap client requires that replies are not longer  than
        100000  characters (not including the netstring encapsulation). Replies
        must have the following form:
@@ -63,11 +63,11 @@ SOCKETMAP_TABLE(5)                                          SOCKETMAP_TABLE(5)
               The request failed. The reason,  if  non-empty,  is  descriptive
               text.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        This map cannot be used for security-sensitive information,
        because neither the connection nor the server are authenticated.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        http://cr.yp.to/proto/netstrings.txt, netstring definition
        postconf(1), Postfix supported lookup tables
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
@@ -75,16 +75,16 @@ SOCKETMAP_TABLE(5)                                          SOCKETMAP_TABLE(5)
        pcre_table(5), format of PCRE tables
        cidr_table(5), format of CIDR tables
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        The protocol limits are not yet configurable.
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        Socketmap support was introduced with Postfix version 2.10.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/spawn.8.html b/postfix/html/spawn.8.html
index 227aff4a5..6d4706c2b 100644
--- a/postfix/html/spawn.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/spawn.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 SPAWN(8)                                                              SPAWN(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        spawn - Postfix external command spawner
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        spawn [generic Postfix daemon options] command_attributes...
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  spawn(8) daemon provides the Postfix equivalent of inetd.  It lis-
        tens on a port as specified in the Postfix master.cf file and spawns an
        external  command whenever a connection is established.  The connection
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ SPAWN(8)                                                              SPAWN(8)
 
        This daemon expects to be run from the master(8) process manager.
 
-COMMAND ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
+COMMAND ATTRIBUTE SYNTAX
        The  external command attributes are given in the master.cf file at the
        end of a service definition.  The syntax is as follows:
 
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ SPAWN(8)                                                              SPAWN(8)
               out interpretation of shell meta characters by a  shell  command
               interpreter.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        In  order  to  enforce standard Postfix process resource controls, each
        spawn(8) daemon process runs only  one  external  command,  and  blocks
        until  the  command terminates or a time limit is reached.  As such, it
@@ -51,17 +51,17 @@ SPAWN(8)                                                              SPAWN(8)
        The  spawn(8)  daemon  is  expected to be replaced by a more structural
        solution.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        The spawn(8) daemon reports abnormal child exits.  Problems are  logged
        to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        This program needs root privilege in order to execute external commands
        as the specified user. It is therefore security sensitive.  However the
        spawn(8)  daemon  does not talk to the external command and thus is not
        vulnerable to data-driven attacks.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are picked up automatically  as  spawn(8)  processes
        run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
        to speed up a change.
@@ -72,13 +72,13 @@ SPAWN(8)                                                              SPAWN(8)
        In  the  text  below,  transport is the first field of the entry in the
        master.cf file.
 
-RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROL
+RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROL
        transport_time_limit ($command_time_limit)
               A transport-specific override for the command_time_limit parame-
               ter  value, where transport is the master.cf name of the message
               delivery transport.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS
+MISCELLANEOUS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The default location of the Postfix main.cf and  master.cf  con-
               figuration files.
@@ -128,13 +128,13 @@ SPAWN(8)                                                              SPAWN(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        master(8), process manager
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/sqlite_table.5.html b/postfix/html/sqlite_table.5.html
index 7c32d8cc7..08c48a43b 100644
--- a/postfix/html/sqlite_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/sqlite_table.5.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 SQLITE_TABLE(5)                                                SQLITE_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        sqlite_table - Postfix SQLite configuration
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" sqlite:/etc/postfix/filename
 
        postmap -q - sqlite:/etc/postfix/filename <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  mail system uses optional tables for address rewriting or
        mail routing. These tables are usually in dbm or db format.
 
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ SQLITE_TABLE(5)                                                SQLITE_TABLE(5)
        The file /etc/postfix/sqlite-aliases.cf has  the  same  format  as  the
        Postfix main.cf file, and can specify the parameters described below.
 
-LIST MEMBERSHIP
+LIST MEMBERSHIP
        When  using  SQL  to  store  lists such as $mynetworks, $mydestination,
        $relay_domains, $local_recipient_maps, etc., it is important to  under-
        stand that the table must store each list member as a separate key. The
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ SQLITE_TABLE(5)                                                SQLITE_TABLE(5)
        value.  With  SQL databases it is not uncommon to return the key itself
        or a constant value.
 
-SQLITE PARAMETERS
+SQLITE PARAMETERS
        dbpath The SQLite database file location. Example:
                   dbpath = customer_database
 
@@ -180,7 +180,7 @@ SQLITE_TABLE(5)                                                SQLITE_TABLE(5)
        example,  if the map is specified as "sqlite:sqlitename", the parameter
        "query" would be defined in main.cf as "sqlitename_query".
 
-OBSOLETE QUERY INTERFACE
+OBSOLETE QUERY INTERFACE
        This section describes an interface that is deprecated  as  of  Postfix
        2.2.  It  is  replaced  by  the  more general query interface described
        above.  If the  query  parameter  is  defined,  the  legacy  parameters
@@ -214,21 +214,21 @@ SQLITE_TABLE(5)                                                SQLITE_TABLE(5)
               Additional conditions to the SQL query. Example:
                   additional_conditions = AND status = 'paid'
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table maintenance
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        ldap_table(5), LDAP lookup tables
        mysql_table(5), MySQL lookup tables
        pgsql_table(5), PostgreSQL lookup tables
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        SQLITE_README, Postfix SQLITE howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        SQLite support was introduced with Postfix version 2.8.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/tcp_table.5.html b/postfix/html/tcp_table.5.html
index 7c6a9d9c6..d46892c85 100644
--- a/postfix/html/tcp_table.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/tcp_table.5.html
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   
 TCP_TABLE(5)                                                      TCP_TABLE(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        tcp_table - Postfix client/server table lookup protocol
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap -q "string" tcp:host:port
 
        postmap -q - tcp:host:port <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  Postfix  mail system uses optional tables for address rewriting or
        mail routing. These tables are usually in dbm or  db  format.  Alterna-
        tively, table lookups can be directed to a TCP server.
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ TCP_TABLE(5)                                                      TCP_TABLE(5)
        To test lookup tables, use the "postmap -q" command as described in the
        SYNOPSIS above.
 
-PROTOCOL DESCRIPTION
+PROTOCOL DESCRIPTION
        The TCP map class implements a very simple protocol: the client sends a
        request, and the server sends one reply. Requests and replies are  sent
        as  one  line of ASCII text, terminated by the ASCII newline character.
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ TCP_TABLE(5)                                                      TCP_TABLE(5)
 
        Send and receive operations must complete in 100 seconds.
 
-REQUEST FORMAT
+REQUEST FORMAT
        The tcp_table protocol supports only the lookup request.   The  request
        has the following form:
 
@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ TCP_TABLE(5)                                                      TCP_TABLE(5)
        address extension or domain portion. This behavior is also  found  with
        cidr:, pcre:, and regexp: tables.
 
-REPLY FORMAT
+REPLY FORMAT
        Each  reply specifies a status code and text. Replies must be no longer
        than 4096 characters including the newline terminator.
 
@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ TCP_TABLE(5)                                                      TCP_TABLE(5)
               The request was successful. In the case of a lookup request, the
               text contains an encoded version of the requested data.
 
-ENCODING
+ENCODING
        In  request  and  reply  parameters, the character %, each non-printing
        character, and each whitespace character must be replaced by %XX, where
        XX is the corresponding ASCII hexadecimal character value. The hexadec-
@@ -73,27 +73,27 @@ TCP_TABLE(5)                                                      TCP_TABLE(5)
        encoding  as  long  as  the reply is guaranteed to not contain the % or
        NEWLINE character.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        Do not use TCP lookup  tables  for  security  critical  purposes.   The
        client-server connection is not protected and the server is not authen-
        ticated.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        Only the lookup method is currently implemented.
 
        The client does not hang up when the connection  is  idle  for  a  long
        time.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        regexp_table(5), format of regular expression tables
        pcre_table(5), format of PCRE tables
        cidr_table(5), format of CIDR tables
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/tlsmgr.8.html b/postfix/html/tlsmgr.8.html
index 48d8a4034..a5f877c64 100644
--- a/postfix/html/tlsmgr.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/tlsmgr.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 TLSMGR(8)                                                            TLSMGR(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        tlsmgr - Postfix TLS session cache and PRNG manager
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        tlsmgr [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  tlsmgr(8)  manages  the Postfix TLS session caches.  It stores and
        retrieves cache entries on request by smtpd(8) and  smtp(8)  processes,
        and periodically removes entries that have expired.
@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ TLSMGR(8)                                                            TLSMGR(8)
        when  the process terminates, and reads the exchange file when initial-
        izing its PRNG.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The tlsmgr(8) is not security-sensitive. The code  that  maintains  the
        external  and  internal  PRNG  pools  does not "trust" the data that it
        manipulates, and the code that maintains the TLS session cache does not
@@ -50,14 +50,14 @@ TLSMGR(8)                                                            TLSMGR(8)
        to open a cache file under a non-Postfix directory is redirected to the
        Postfix-owned data_directory, and a warning is logged.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        There is no automatic means to limit the number of entries in  the  TLS
        session caches and/or the size of the TLS cache files.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes  to  main.cf are not picked up automatically, because tlsmgr(8)
        is a persistent processes.  Use the command "postfix  reload"  after  a
        configuration change.
@@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ TLSMGR(8)                                                            TLSMGR(8)
        The  text  below provides only a parameter summary. See postconf(5) for
        more details including examples.
 
-TLS SESSION CACHE
+TLS SESSION CACHE
        lmtp_tls_loglevel (0)
               The LMTP-specific version of the smtp_tls_loglevel configuration
               parameter.
@@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ TLSMGR(8)                                                            TLSMGR(8)
               The expiration time of Postfix SMTP  server  TLS  session  cache
               information.
 
-PSEUDO RANDOM NUMBER GENERATOR
+PSEUDO RANDOM NUMBER GENERATOR
        tls_random_source (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The  external  entropy source for the in-memory tlsmgr(8) pseudo
               random number generator (PRNG) pool.
@@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ TLSMGR(8)                                                            TLSMGR(8)
               in-memory pseudo random number generator (PRNG) pool from exter-
               nal sources.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The  default  location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf con-
               figuration files.
@@ -155,7 +155,7 @@ TLSMGR(8)                                                            TLSMGR(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        smtp(8), Postfix SMTP client
        smtpd(8), Postfix SMTP server
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
@@ -164,13 +164,13 @@ TLSMGR(8)                                                            TLSMGR(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        TLS_README, Postfix TLS configuration and operation
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        This service was introduced with Postfix version 2.2.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/trace.8.html b/postfix/html/trace.8.html
index ba2ced94e..33ffe62f8 100644
--- a/postfix/html/trace.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/trace.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        bounce - Postfix delivery status reports
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        bounce [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The bounce(8) daemon maintains per-message log files with delivery sta-
        tus information. Each log file is named after the queue  file  that  it
        corresponds  to,  and  is  kept in a queue subdirectory named after the
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        This  is  used by clients that cannot retry transactions by themselves,
        and that depend on retry logic in their own client.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 822 (ARPA Internet Text Messages)
        RFC 2045 (Format of Internet Message Bodies)
        RFC 2822 (Internet Message Format)
@@ -51,10 +51,10 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        RFC 6532 (Internationalized Message Format)
        RFC 6533 (Internationalized Delivery Status Notifications)
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are picked up automatically, as bounce(8)  processes
        run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
        to speed up a change.
@@ -166,12 +166,12 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        header_from_format (standard)
               The format of the Postfix-generated From: header.
 
-FILES
+FILES
        /var/spool/postfix/bounce/* non-delivery records
        /var/spool/postfix/defer/* non-delivery records
        /var/spool/postfix/trace/* delivery status records
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        bounce(5), bounce message template format
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
@@ -180,7 +180,7 @@ BOUNCE(8)                                                            BOUNCE(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/transport.5.html b/postfix/html/transport.5.html
index b6e7f276b..bbe740bd5 100644
--- a/postfix/html/transport.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/transport.5.html
@@ -7,17 +7,17 @@
   
 TRANSPORT(5)                                                      TRANSPORT(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        transport - Postfix transport table format
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap /etc/postfix/transport
 
        postmap -q "string" /etc/postfix/transport
 
        postmap -q - /etc/postfix/transport <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The   optional  transport(5)  table  specifies  a  mapping  from  email
        addresses to message delivery  transports  and  next-hop  destinations.
        Message  delivery  transports  such as local or smtp are defined in the
@@ -66,13 +66,13 @@ TRANSPORT(5)                                                      TRANSPORT(5)
        a slightly different way as described below under  "REGULAR  EXPRESSION
        TABLES" or "TCP-BASED TABLES".
 
-CASE FOLDING
+CASE FOLDING
        The  search string is folded to lowercase before database lookup. As of
        Postfix 2.3, the search string is not case folded with  database  types
        such  as  regexp: or pcre: whose lookup fields can match both upper and
        lower case.
 
-TABLE FORMAT
+TABLE FORMAT
        The input format for the postmap(1) command is as follows:
 
        pattern result
@@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ TRANSPORT(5)                                                      TRANSPORT(5)
        The result is of the form transport:nexthop and specifies how or  where
        to deliver mail. This is described in section "RESULT FORMAT".
 
-TABLE SEARCH ORDER
+TABLE SEARCH ORDER
        With  lookups  from  indexed files such as DB or DBM, or from networked
        tables such as NIS, LDAP or SQL, patterns are tried  in  the  order  as
        listed below:
@@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ TRANSPORT(5)                                                      TRANSPORT(5)
        Note 2: user@domain or user+extension@domain  lookup  is  available  in
        Postfix 2.0 and later.
 
-RESULT FORMAT
+RESULT FORMAT
        The  lookup  result  is  of  the form transport:nexthop.  The transport
        field specifies a mail delivery transport such as smtp  or  local.  The
        nexthop field specifies where and how to deliver mail.
@@ -155,7 +155,7 @@ TRANSPORT(5)                                                      TRANSPORT(5)
        A null transport field with non-null nexthop field does not modify  the
        transport information.
 
-EXAMPLES
+EXAMPLES
        In  order  to  deliver internal mail directly, while using a mail relay
        for all other mail, specify a null entry for internal destinations  (do
        not change the delivery transport or the nexthop information) and spec-
@@ -213,7 +213,7 @@ TRANSPORT(5)                                                      TRANSPORT(5)
 
        This causes all mail for user@anything.example.com to be bounced.
 
-REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
+REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
        This section describes how the table lookups change when the  table  is
        given  in the form of regular expressions. For a description of regular
        expression lookup table syntax, see regexp_table(5) or pcre_table(5).
@@ -230,7 +230,7 @@ TRANSPORT(5)                                                      TRANSPORT(5)
        of $1 etc. in regular expression lookup tables, because that could open
        a security hole (Postfix version 2.3 and later).
 
-TCP-BASED TABLES
+TCP-BASED TABLES
        This section describes how the table lookups change  when  lookups  are
        directed   to  a  TCP-based  server.  For  a  description  of  the  TCP
        client/server lookup protocol, see tcp_table(5).  This feature  is  not
@@ -242,7 +242,7 @@ TRANSPORT(5)                                                      TRANSPORT(5)
 
        Results are the same as with indexed file lookups.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The  following  main.cf  parameters  are especially relevant.  The text
        below provides only a  parameter  summary.  See  postconf(5)  for  more
        details including examples.
@@ -259,18 +259,18 @@ TRANSPORT(5)                                                      TRANSPORT(5)
               Optional  lookup  tables with mappings from recipient address to
               (message delivery transport, next-hop destination).
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        trivial-rewrite(8), rewrite and resolve addresses
        master(5), master.cf file format
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        ADDRESS_REWRITING_README, address rewriting guide
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        FILTER_README, external content filter
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/trivial-rewrite.8.html b/postfix/html/trivial-rewrite.8.html
index 7b1e3e355..5b2221dca 100644
--- a/postfix/html/trivial-rewrite.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/trivial-rewrite.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)                                          TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        trivial-rewrite - Postfix address rewriting and resolving daemon
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        trivial-rewrite [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  trivial-rewrite(8)  daemon processes three types of client service
        requests:
 
@@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)                                          TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)
        verify sender address
               Resolve the address for address verification purposes.
 
-SERVER PROCESS MANAGEMENT
+SERVER PROCESS MANAGEMENT
        The trivial-rewrite(8) servers run under control by  the  Postfix  mas-
        ter(8)  server.   Each  server can handle multiple simultaneous connec-
        tions.  When all servers are busy while a client connects,  the  master
@@ -65,18 +65,18 @@ TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)                                          TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)
        after  serving  at least $max_use clients of after $max_idle seconds of
        idle time.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        None. The command does not interact with the outside world.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The trivial-rewrite(8) daemon is not security sensitive.   By  default,
        this  daemon  does  not talk to remote or local users.  It can run at a
        fixed low privilege in a chrooted environment.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        On busy mail systems a long time  may  pass  before  a  main.cf  change
        affecting  trivial-rewrite(8)  is  picked  up. Use the command "postfix
        reload" to speed up a change.
@@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)                                          TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)
        The text below provides only a parameter summary. See  postconf(5)  for
        more details including examples.
 
-COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
+COMPATIBILITY CONTROLS
        resolve_dequoted_address (yes)
               Resolve  a  recipient  address  safely  instead of correctly, by
               looking inside quotes.
@@ -108,7 +108,7 @@ TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)                                          TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)
               Allow  a  sender  or  recipient address to have `-' as the first
               character.
 
-ADDRESS REWRITING CONTROLS
+ADDRESS REWRITING CONTROLS
        myorigin ($myhostname)
               The domain name that locally-posted mail appears to  come  from,
               and that locally posted mail is delivered to.
@@ -140,7 +140,7 @@ TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)                                          TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)
               remote_header_rewrite_domain parameter, and adding missing head-
               ers.
 
-ROUTING CONTROLS
+ROUTING CONTROLS
        The  following is applicable to Postfix version 2.0 and later.  Earlier
        versions do not have support for:  virtual_transport,  relay_transport,
        virtual_alias_domains, virtual_mailbox_domains or proxy_interfaces.
@@ -201,7 +201,7 @@ TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)                                          TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)
               A  sender-dependent  override  for  the global default_transport
               parameter setting.
 
-ADDRESS VERIFICATION CONTROLS
+ADDRESS VERIFICATION CONTROLS
        Postfix version 2.1 introduces sender and recipient  address  verifica-
        tion.  This feature is implemented by sending probe email messages that
        are not actually delivered.  By default,  address  verification  probes
@@ -247,7 +247,7 @@ TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)                                          TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)
               Overrides the sender_dependent_default_transport_maps  parameter
               setting for address verification probes.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The  default  location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf con-
               figuration files.
@@ -306,7 +306,7 @@ TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)                                          TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        transport(5), transport table format
        relocated(5), format of the "user has moved" table
@@ -314,11 +314,11 @@ TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)                                          TRIVIAL-REWRITE(8)
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        ADDRESS_CLASS_README, Postfix address classes howto
        ADDRESS_VERIFICATION_README, Postfix address verification
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/verify.8.html b/postfix/html/verify.8.html
index 8e8b451d3..8254a7ceb 100644
--- a/postfix/html/verify.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/verify.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 VERIFY(8)                                                            VERIFY(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        verify - Postfix address verification server
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        verify [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The  verify(8)  address  verification server maintains a record of what
        recipient addresses are known to be deliverable or undeliverable.
 
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ VERIFY(8)                                                            VERIFY(8)
               status  is  unknown, a probe is sent and an "in progress" status
               is returned.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The address verification server is not security-sensitive. It does  not
        talk  to  the network, and it does not talk to local users.  The verify
        server can run chrooted at fixed low privilege.
@@ -58,10 +58,10 @@ VERIFY(8)                                                            VERIFY(8)
        directory  is  redirected  to  the  Postfix-owned data_directory, and a
        warning is logged.
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Problems and transactions are logged to syslogd(8) or postlogd(8).
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        Address verification probe messages add additional traffic to the  mail
        queue.    Recipient   verification  may  cause  an  increased  load  on
        down-stream servers in the case of a dictionary attack or  a  flood  of
@@ -72,7 +72,7 @@ VERIFY(8)                                                            VERIFY(8)
        an  end and human intervention is needed. This violates a basic Postfix
        principle.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are not picked up automatically, as  verify(8)  pro-
        cesses are long-lived. Use the command "postfix reload" after a config-
        uration change.
@@ -80,7 +80,7 @@ VERIFY(8)                                                            VERIFY(8)
        The text below provides only a parameter summary. See  postconf(5)  for
        more details including examples.
 
-PROBE MESSAGE CONTROLS
+PROBE MESSAGE CONTROLS
        address_verify_sender ($double_bounce_sender)
               The  sender address to use in address verification probes; prior
               to Postfix 2.5 the default was "postmaster".
@@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ VERIFY(8)                                                            VERIFY(8)
               The time  between  changes  in  the  time-dependent  portion  of
               address verification probe sender addresses.
 
-CACHE CONTROLS
+CACHE CONTROLS
        address_verify_map (see 'postconf -d' output)
               Lookup table for persistent address verification status storage.
 
@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ VERIFY(8)                                                            VERIFY(8)
               The amount of time between verify(8) address verification  data-
               base cleanup runs.
 
-PROBE MESSAGE ROUTING CONTROLS
+PROBE MESSAGE ROUTING CONTROLS
        By  default, probe messages are delivered via the same route as regular
        messages.  The following parameters can be used  to  override  specific
        message routing mechanisms.
@@ -163,7 +163,7 @@ VERIFY(8)                                                            VERIFY(8)
               Overrides the sender_dependent_default_transport_maps  parameter
               setting for address verification probes.
 
-SMTPUTF8 CONTROLS
+SMTPUTF8 CONTROLS
        Preliminary SMTPUTF8 support is introduced with Postfix 3.0.
 
        smtputf8_autodetect_classes (sendmail, verify)
@@ -177,7 +177,7 @@ VERIFY(8)                                                            VERIFY(8)
               IDNA2008,  when  converting UTF-8 domain names to/from the ASCII
               form that is used for DNS lookups.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The default location of the Postfix main.cf and  master.cf  con-
               figuration files.
@@ -211,20 +211,20 @@ VERIFY(8)                                                            VERIFY(8)
        service_name (read-only)
               The master.cf service name of a Postfix daemon process.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        smtpd(8), Postfix SMTP server
        cleanup(8), enqueue Postfix message
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        ADDRESS_VERIFICATION_README, address verification howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        This service was introduced with Postfix version 2.1.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/virtual.5.html b/postfix/html/virtual.5.html
index 798e644a7..bb9ff9968 100644
--- a/postfix/html/virtual.5.html
+++ b/postfix/html/virtual.5.html
@@ -7,17 +7,17 @@
   
 VIRTUAL(5)                                                          VIRTUAL(5)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        virtual - Postfix virtual alias table format
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        postmap /etc/postfix/virtual
 
        postmap -q "string" /etc/postfix/virtual
 
        postmap -q - /etc/postfix/virtual <inputfile
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The optional virtual(5) alias table (virtual_alias_maps) applies to all
        recipients: local(8), virtual, and remote.  This feature is implemented
        in  the  Postfix cleanup(8) daemon before mail is queued.  These tables
@@ -61,13 +61,13 @@ VIRTUAL(5)                                                          VIRTUAL(5)
        a  slightly  different way as described below under "REGULAR EXPRESSION
        TABLES" or "TCP-BASED TABLES".
 
-CASE FOLDING
+CASE FOLDING
        The search string is folded to lowercase before database lookup. As  of
        Postfix  2.3,  the search string is not case folded with database types
        such as regexp: or pcre: whose lookup fields can match both  upper  and
        lower case.
 
-TABLE FORMAT
+TABLE FORMAT
        The input format for the postmap(1) command is as follows:
 
        pattern address, address, ...
@@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ VIRTUAL(5)                                                          VIRTUAL(5)
               A  logical  line  starts  with  non-whitespace text. A line that
               starts with whitespace continues a logical line.
 
-TABLE SEARCH ORDER
+TABLE SEARCH ORDER
        With lookups from indexed files such as DB or DBM,  or  from  networked
        tables  such  as  NIS,  LDAP  or SQL, each user@domain query produces a
        sequence of query patterns as described below.
@@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ VIRTUAL(5)                                                          VIRTUAL(5)
               In the above example, Postfix may contact a remote server if the
               recipient is aliased to a remote address.
 
-RESULT ADDRESS REWRITING
+RESULT ADDRESS REWRITING
        The lookup result is subject to address rewriting:
 
        o      When  the  result  has the form @otherdomain, the result becomes
@@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ VIRTUAL(5)                                                          VIRTUAL(5)
        o      When "append_dot_mydomain=yes", append ".$mydomain" to addresses
               without ".domain".
 
-ADDRESS EXTENSION
+ADDRESS EXTENSION
        When a mail address localpart contains the optional recipient delimiter
        (e.g., user+foo@domain), the  lookup  order  becomes:  user+foo@domain,
        user@domain, user+foo, user, and @domain.
@@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ VIRTUAL(5)                                                          VIRTUAL(5)
        unmatched address extension (+foo) is propagated to the result of a ta-
        ble lookup.
 
-VIRTUAL ALIAS DOMAINS
+VIRTUAL ALIAS DOMAINS
        Besides  virtual  aliases,  the virtual alias table can also be used to
        implement virtual alias domains.  With  a  virtual  alias  domain,  all
        recipient addresses are aliased to addresses in other domains.
@@ -195,7 +195,7 @@ VIRTUAL(5)                                                          VIRTUAL(5)
        tual_alias_domains configuration parameter.  This latter parameter uses
        the same syntax as the main.cf mydestination configuration parameter.
 
-REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
+REGULAR EXPRESSION TABLES
        This section describes how the table lookups change when the  table  is
        given  in the form of regular expressions. For a description of regular
        expression lookup table syntax, see regexp_table(5) or pcre_table(5).
@@ -212,7 +212,7 @@ VIRTUAL(5)                                                          VIRTUAL(5)
        feature  that parenthesized substrings from the pattern can be interpo-
        lated as $1, $2 and so on.
 
-TCP-BASED TABLES
+TCP-BASED TABLES
        This section describes how the table lookups change  when  lookups  are
        directed   to  a  TCP-based  server.  For  a  description  of  the  TCP
        client/server lookup  protocol,  see  tcp_table(5).   This  feature  is
@@ -224,10 +224,10 @@ VIRTUAL(5)                                                          VIRTUAL(5)
 
        Results are the same as with indexed file lookups.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        The table format does not understand quoting conventions.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        The following main.cf parameters are especially relevant to this topic.
        See the Postfix main.cf file for syntax details and for default values.
        Use the "postfix reload" command after a configuration change.
@@ -273,18 +273,18 @@ VIRTUAL(5)                                                          VIRTUAL(5)
               receives  mail  on by way of a proxy or network address transla-
               tion unit.
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        cleanup(8), canonicalize and enqueue mail
        postmap(1), Postfix lookup table manager
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        canonical(5), canonical address mapping
 
-README FILES
+README FILES
        ADDRESS_REWRITING_README, address rewriting guide
        DATABASE_README, Postfix lookup table overview
        VIRTUAL_README, domain hosting guide
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
 AUTHOR(S)
diff --git a/postfix/html/virtual.8.html b/postfix/html/virtual.8.html
index c6995c0ab..299eec1b6 100644
--- a/postfix/html/virtual.8.html
+++ b/postfix/html/virtual.8.html
@@ -7,13 +7,13 @@
   
 VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
 
-NAME
+NAME
        virtual - Postfix virtual domain mail delivery agent
 
-SYNOPSIS
+SYNOPSIS
        virtual [generic Postfix daemon options]
 
-DESCRIPTION
+DESCRIPTION
        The virtual(8) delivery agent is designed for virtual mail hosting ser-
        vices. Originally based on the Postfix local(8)  delivery  agent,  this
        agent  looks  up  recipients  with  map lookups of their full recipient
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
        forwarding, out-of-office notifications, etc., must be  configured  via
        virtual_alias maps or via similar lookup mechanisms.
 
-MAILBOX LOCATION
+MAILBOX LOCATION
        The mailbox location is controlled by the virtual_mailbox_base and vir-
        tual_mailbox_maps  configuration  parameters  (see  below).   The  vir-
        tual_mailbox_maps   table  is  indexed  by  the  recipient  address  as
@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
 
        where recipient is the full recipient address.
 
-UNIX MAILBOX FORMAT
+UNIX MAILBOX FORMAT
        When the mailbox location does not end in /, the message  is  delivered
        in  UNIX  mailbox format.   This format stores multiple messages in one
        textfile.
@@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
        progress. In case of problems, an attempt is made to truncate the mail-
        box to its original length.
 
-QMAIL MAILDIR FORMAT
+QMAIL MAILDIR FORMAT
        When  the mailbox location ends in /, the message is delivered in qmail
        maildir format. This format stores one message per file.
 
@@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
        By  definition,  maildir format does not require application-level file
        locking during mail delivery or retrieval.
 
-MAILBOX OWNERSHIP
+MAILBOX OWNERSHIP
        Mailbox ownership  is  controlled  by  the  virtual_uid_maps  and  vir-
        tual_gid_maps  lookup tables, which are indexed with the full recipient
        address. Each table provides a string with the numerical user and group
@@ -73,12 +73,12 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
        The  virtual_minimum_uid  parameter  imposes a lower bound on numerical
        user ID values that may be specified in any virtual_uid_maps.
 
-CASE FOLDING
+CASE FOLDING
        All delivery decisions are  made  using  the  full  recipient  address,
        folded  to  lower  case. See also the next section for a few exceptions
        with optional address extensions.
 
-TABLE SEARCH ORDER
+TABLE SEARCH ORDER
        Normally, a lookup table is specified as a text  file  that  serves  as
        input  to the postmap(1) command. The result, an indexed file in dbm or
        db format, is used for fast searching by the mail system.
@@ -104,7 +104,7 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
        where patterns are given as regular expressions. In that case, only the
        full recipient address is given to the regular-expression map.
 
-SECURITY
+SECURITY
        The  virtual(8) delivery agent is not security sensitive, provided that
        the lookup tables with recipient user/group  ID  information  are  ade-
        quately protected. This program is not designed to run chrooted.
@@ -118,10 +118,10 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
        Postfix  version  2.2, the virtual delivery agent will terminate with a
        fatal error.
 
-STANDARDS
+STANDARDS
        RFC 822 (ARPA Internet Text Messages)
 
-DIAGNOSTICS
+DIAGNOSTICS
        Mail bounces when the recipient has no mailbox or when the recipient is
        over  disk  quota.  In  all  other  problem cases, mail for an existing
        recipient is deferred and a warning is logged.
@@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
        Depending on the setting of the notify_classes parameter, the  postmas-
        ter is notified of bounces and of other trouble.
 
-BUGS
+BUGS
        This  delivery agent supports address extensions in email addresses and
        in lookup table keys, but does not propagate address extension informa-
        tion to the result of table lookup.
@@ -142,7 +142,7 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
        attributes. In order to avoid the inconvenience  of  maintaining  three
        tables, use an LDAP or MYSQL database.
 
-CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
+CONFIGURATION PARAMETERS
        Changes to main.cf are picked up automatically, as virtual(8) processes
        run for only a limited amount of time. Use the command "postfix reload"
        to speed up a change.
@@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
        The  text  below provides only a parameter summary. See postconf(5) for
        more details including examples.
 
-MAILBOX DELIVERY CONTROLS
+MAILBOX DELIVERY CONTROLS
        virtual_mailbox_base (empty)
               A prefix that the virtual(8)  delivery  agent  prepends  to  all
               pathname results from $virtual_mailbox_maps table lookups.
@@ -188,7 +188,7 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
               Defer  delivery  when a mailbox file is not owned by its recipi-
               ent.
 
-LOCKING CONTROLS
+LOCKING CONTROLS
        virtual_mailbox_lock (see 'postconf -d' output)
               How to lock a UNIX-style virtual(8)  mailbox  before  attempting
               delivery.
@@ -205,7 +205,7 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
               The  time  after  which  a  stale  exclusive mailbox lockfile is
               removed.
 
-RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
+RESOURCE AND RATE CONTROLS
        virtual_mailbox_limit (51200000)
               The maximal size in bytes of an individual virtual(8) mailbox or
               maildir file, or zero (no limit).
@@ -222,7 +222,7 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
               The maximal number of recipients per  message  for  the  virtual
               message delivery transport.
 
-MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
+MISCELLANEOUS CONTROLS
        config_directory (see 'postconf -d' output)
               The  default  location of the Postfix main.cf and master.cf con-
               figuration files.
@@ -286,22 +286,22 @@ VIRTUAL(8)                                                          VIRTUAL(8)
               The  email  address  form that will be used in non-debug logging
               (info, warning, etc.).
 
-SEE ALSO
+SEE ALSO
        qmgr(8), queue manager
        bounce(8), delivery status reports
        postconf(5), configuration parameters
        postlogd(8), Postfix logging
        syslogd(8), system logging
 
-README_FILES
+README_FILES
        Use "postconf readme_directory" or
        "postconf html_directory" to locate this information.
        VIRTUAL_README, domain hosting howto
 
-LICENSE
+LICENSE
        The Secure Mailer license must be distributed with this software.
 
-HISTORY
+HISTORY
        This delivery agent was originally based on the Postfix local  delivery
        agent.  Modifications mainly consisted of removing code that either was
        not  applicable  or  that  was  not  safe  in  this  context:  aliases,
diff --git a/postfix/proto/stop.spell-history b/postfix/proto/stop.spell-history
index 0b5f5be48..45d00e6c2 100644
--- a/postfix/proto/stop.spell-history
+++ b/postfix/proto/stop.spell-history
@@ -83,3 +83,5 @@ Dilyan
 Palauzov
 pkgconf
 testfiles
+Antonin
+Verrier
diff --git a/postfix/src/global/mail_version.h b/postfix/src/global/mail_version.h
index 83a850805..fcd31a85a 100644
--- a/postfix/src/global/mail_version.h
+++ b/postfix/src/global/mail_version.h
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@
   * Patches change both the patchlevel and the release date. Snapshots have no
   * patchlevel; they change the release date only.
   */
-#define MAIL_RELEASE_DATE	"20240928"
+#define MAIL_RELEASE_DATE	"20240930"
 #define MAIL_VERSION_NUMBER	"3.10"
 
 #ifdef SNAPSHOT
diff --git a/postfix/src/smtpd/smtpd_check.c b/postfix/src/smtpd/smtpd_check.c
index 607c6be7c..41b91a1d9 100644
--- a/postfix/src/smtpd/smtpd_check.c
+++ b/postfix/src/smtpd/smtpd_check.c
@@ -4680,13 +4680,11 @@ static int generic_checks(SMTPD_STATE *state, ARGV *restrictions,
 			 cpp[1], CHECK_RELAY_DOMAINS);
 	} else if (strcasecmp(name, PERMIT_SASL_AUTH) == 0) {
 #ifdef USE_SASL_AUTH
-	    if (smtpd_sasl_is_active(state)) {
-		status = permit_sasl_auth(state,
-					  SMTPD_CHECK_OK, SMTPD_CHECK_DUNNO);
-		if (status == SMTPD_CHECK_OK)
-		    status = smtpd_acl_permit(state, name, SMTPD_NAME_CLIENT,
-					      state->namaddr, NO_PRINT_ARGS);
-	    }
+	    status = permit_sasl_auth(state,
+				      SMTPD_CHECK_OK, SMTPD_CHECK_DUNNO);
+	    if (status == SMTPD_CHECK_OK)
+		status = smtpd_acl_permit(state, name, SMTPD_NAME_CLIENT,
+					  state->namaddr, NO_PRINT_ARGS);
 #endif
 	} else if (strcasecmp(name, PERMIT_TLS_ALL_CLIENTCERTS) == 0) {
 	    status = permit_tls_clientcerts(state, 1);