CDB (Constant DataBase) is an indexed file format designed by Daniel Bernstein. CDB is optimized exclusively for read access and guarantees that each record will be read in at most two disk accesses. This is achieved by forgoing support for incremental updates: no single-record inserts or deletes are supported. CDB databases can be modified only by rebuilding them completely from scratch, hence the "constant" qualifier in the name.
Postfix CDB databases are specified as "cdb:name", where name specifies the CDB file name without the ".cdb" suffix (another suffix, ".tmp", is used temporarily while a CDB file is under construction). CDB databases are maintained with the postmap(1) or postalias(1) command. The DATABASE_README document has general information about Postfix databases.
CDB support is available with Postfix 2.2 and later releases. This document describes how to build Postfix with CDB support.
Postfix is compatible with two CDB implementations:
The original cdb library from Daniel Bernstein, available from http://cr.yp.to/cdb.html, and
tinycdb (version 0.5 and later) from Michael Tokarev, available from http://www.corpit.ru/mjt/tinycdb.html.
Tinycdb is preferred, since it is a bit faster, has additional useful functionality and is much simpler to use.
To build Postfix after you have installed tinycdb, use something like:
% make tidy % CDB=../../../tinycdb-0.5 % make -f Makefile.init makefiles "CCARGS=-DHAS_CDB -I$CDB" \ "AUXLIBS=$CDB/libcdb.a" % make
Alternatively, for the D.J.B. version of CDB:
% make tidy % CDB=../../../cdb-0.75 % make -f Makefile.init makefiles "CCARGS=-DHAS_CDB -I$CDB" \ "AUXLIBS=$CDB/cdb.a $CDB/alloc.a $CDB/buffer.a $CDB/unix.a $CDB/byte.a" % make
After Postfix has been built with cdb support, you can use "cdb" tables wherever you can use read-only "hash", "btree" or "dbm" tables. However, the "postmap -i" (incremental record insertion) and "postmap -d" (incremental record deletion) command-line options are not available. For the same reason the "cdb" map type cannot be used to store the persistent address verification cache for the verify(8) service, or to store TLS session information for the tlsmgr(8) service.