The information in database files is accessed for use in the RHS of rules. This is the syntax:
$(name key
$)
The
key
is looked up in the database whose symbolic name (as declared with the
K
configuration command) is
name
(see
Section 33.3
) If the
key
is found, the entire expression, including the
$(
and
$)
, is replaced with the value from the database entry for that
key
. Any
suffix
, as specified with the
-a
switch (see
Section 33.3.4.2
) in the
K
configuration declaration for
name
, is appended to the data. If the
key
is not found, the entire expression is replaced with
key
. If the
$)
is omitted, all tokens up to but excluding the tab and comment, or end-of-line if there is no comment, are taken as the key. To illustrate one use for
$(
and
$)
, see the following rule:
R$- . uucp $: $( uucp $1.uucp $)
and the following
K
command:
Kuucp hash /etc/uucp.db
This associates the symbolic name
uucp
with a
hash
class file called
/etc/uucp.db
. If the
uucp.db
database contained entries like this:
lady.uucp lady.localuucp sonya.uucp sonya.localuucp
then a workspace of
lady.uucp
would match the LHS, so the RHS would look up
$1.uucp
(thus
lady.uucp
) in the
uucp.db
database. Because
lady.uucp
is found, the entire
$(
to
$)
RHS expression is replaced with
lady.localuucp
from the database. Any UUCP hosts other than
lady
or
sonya
would not be found in the database, so the RHS expression would become the original workspace, unchanged.
Note that the entire RHS is prefixed with a
$:
. This prevents
sendmail
from re-testing with the LHS after the RHS rewrite. If this prefix were omitted, endless looping could occur.
Also note that the
-a
switch of the
K
command can be used to simplify the writing of this rule. For example:
Kuucp dbm-a.localuucp
/etc/uuhosts
The
-a
switch tells
sendmail
to append the text
.localuucp
to all successful lookups. Thus the preceding database can be simplified to look like this:
lady.uucp lady sonya.uucp sonya
But the preceding rule remains the same:
R$- . uucp $: $( uucp $1.uucp $)
Beyond the simply macros and positional operators that we have shown, the
key
part can use other operators and forms of macros. For example, delayed expansion macros may be useful:
R$&s $: $( uucp $&s $)
Here, the sender's host is looked up to see whether it is a UUCP host. The
$&
prefix (see
Section 31.5.3, "Use Value as Is with $&"
) prevents the
s
macro from being expanded as the configuration file is read. Instead, its value will change with each piece of mail that is processed.
Additional examples of database lookups are given with the individual class descriptions at the end of this chapter.
V8
sendmail
offers the
$:
operator as an alternative to the
-a
switch (or for use in conjunction with it). The
$:
operator, when it stands between the
$(
and
$)
, specifies a default to use instead of the
key
, should a lookup fail:
R$- . uucp $: $( uucp $1 $: $1.uucp $)
Here, the
$-
part of the LHS is looked up in the
uucp
database. If it is found, the
$(
to
$)
of the RHS expression is replaced by the data from that database. If it is not found, the
$:
causes the expression to be replaced with the
$-
LHS part and a
.uucp
suffix (
$1.uucp
).
This version of our rule further simplifies the contents of the database file. With this rule, the database file would contain information such as the following:
lady lady sonya sonya
The
-a
is still used as before to append a
.localuucp
to each successful match.
Kuucp dbm -a.localuucp /etc/uuhosts
In the RHS expression the
$:
must follow the
key
or it loses its special meaning:
$(name key
$:default
$)
If the
$:
default
wrongly precedes the
key
, it is used as the key, lookups fail, and replacements are not as expected. If the
$:
is present but the
default
is missing, a failed lookup returns an empty workspace.
For more complex database substitutions, V8
sendmail
offers the
$@
operator for use in the RHS with the
$(
and
$)
expression. There may be multiple
$@
prefixed texts between the
key
and the
$:
(if present) or the
$)
.
$(name key
$@text1
$@text2
$:default
$)
Each
$@
text
expression is numbered by position (from left to right):
$(name key
$@text1
$@text2
$:default
$) 1 2
In this numbering scheme the
key
is always number 0, even if no
$@
's are listed.
These numbers correspond to literal
%
digit
expressions in the data portion of the database. For example:
lady %0!%1@%2
When a lookup of the
key
in the RHS of the rule is successful, the returned value is examined for
%
digit
expressions. Each such expression is replaced by its corresponding
$@
text
from the rule. In the case of the above database,
%0
would be replaced with
lady
(the
key
),
%1
with
text1
, and
%2
with
text2
.
To illustrate, consider the above database entry and the following rule:
R$- @ $-.uucp $: $(uucp $2 $@$1 $@mailhost $:$1.$2.uucp $)
If the workspace contains the address
[email protected]
, the LHS matches. The RHS rewrites only once because it is prefixed with the
$:
operator. The expression between the
$(
and
$)
causes the second
$-
from the LHS (the
$2
, the
key
) to be looked up in the database whose symbolic name is
uucp
. Since
$2
references
lady
from the workspace,
lady
is found and the data (
%0!%1@%2
) are used to rewrite. The
%0
is replaced by
lady
(the
key
via
$2
). The
text
for the first
$@
(
$1
or
joe
) then replaces the
%1
. Then the second
text
for the second
$@
(
mailhost
) replaces the
%2
. Thus the address
[email protected]
is rewritten to become
lady!joe@mailhost
.
If a different host, other than
lady
, appeared in the workspace, this RHS would use the
$:
default
part. Thus the address
[email protected]
would become (via the
$:$1.$2.uucp
)
[email protected]
. That is, any address that is not found in the database would remain unchanged.
If there are more
$@
text
expressions in the RHS than there are numbers in the value, the excess
$@
text
parts are ignored. If a
%
digit
in the data references a nonexistent
$@
text
, it is simply removed during the rewrite.
All
$@
text
expressions must lie between the
key
and the
$:
default
(if present). If any follow the
$:
default
, they become part of the default and cease to reference any
%
digits
.
The special database class called
host
can be declared to modify name-server lookups with
$[
and
$]
. The special symbolic name and class pair,
host
and
host
, is declared for use with the
$(
and
$)
operators, like this:
Khost host-a.
The
-a
switch was discussed earlier in this chapter. Here, it is sufficient to note how it is used in resolving fully qualified domain names with the
$[
and
$]
operators in the RHS of rules. Under V8
sendmail
,
$[
and
$]
are a special case of the following database lookup:
$(hostfoo
$)
A successful match will ordinarily append a dot to a successfully resolved hostname.
When a
host
class is declared with the
K
command, any suffix of the
-a
replaces the dot as the character or characters added. [4] For example:
[4] This happens only for V2 and higher configuration files. Below that level, the dot is not appended unless it is specifically added by the
-a
of theK
command.
$[ foo $] found so rewritten as foo.domain. Khost host -a $[ foo $] found so rewritten as foo.domain Khost host -a.yes $[ foo $] found so rewritten as foo.domain.yes
The first line above shows the default action of the
$[
and
$]
operators in the RHS of rules. If
foo
can be fully qualified, its fully qualified name becomes the rewritten value of the RHS and has a dot appended. The next two lines show the
-a
of
host host
with no suffix (note that with no suffix the
-a
is optional). In this configuration file, the fully qualified name has nothing (not even a dot) appended. The last two lines show a configuration file with a
.yes
as the suffix. This time, the fully qualified name has a
.yes
appended instead of the dot.