Once a message has reached the incoming queue the next step is to deliver it. The figure shows the main components of the Postfix mail delivery apparatus. For an explanation of the symbols, click on the icon in the upper left-hand corner of this page.
The queue manager maintains a separate deferred queue for mail that cannot be delivered, so that a large mail backlog will not slow down normal queue accesses.
The queue manager maintains a small active queue with just the few messages that it has opened for delivery. The active queue acts as a limited window on the potentially much larger incoming or deferred queues. The small active queue prevents the queue manager from running out of memory under heavy load.
Optionally, the queue manager bounces mail for recipients that are listed in the relocated table. This table contains contact information for users or even entire domains that no longer exist.
Together with the sendmail mail posting agent, the local delivery agent implements the familiar Sendmail user interface.
The local delivery agent has hooks for alternative forms of local delivery: you can configure it to deliver to mailbox files in user home directories, and you can even configure it to delegate mailbox delivery to an external command such as the popular procmail program.