Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)

FreeBSD Manual Pages

  
 
  

home | help
MH-ALIAS(5)		      File Formats Manual		   MH-ALIAS(5)

NAME
       mh-alias	- format of nmh	email-address alias files

DESCRIPTION
       Each line of an nmh alias file takes one	of the following forms:

	    alias : address-group

	    alias ; address-group

	    < alias-file

	    ; |	: | # comment

       where:

	    address-group  := address-list
			   |  <	file

	    address-list   := address
			   |  address-list, address

       Continuation  lines end with "\"	followed by a newline character.  This
       also applies to comment lines.  Thus, the line following	 a  "\"-termi-
       nated comment line is a continuation of that comment line.

       Alias-file and file are Unix file names.	 Alias file contents are case-
       insensitive, with the exception of filesystem path names.

       If the line starts with a "<", the file named after the "<" is read for
       more  alias definitions.	 The reading is	done recursively, so a "<" may
       occur in	the beginning of an alias file with the	expected results.

       If the address-group starts with	a "<", the file	named after the	"<" is
       read and	its contents are added to the address-list for the alias.

       In match, a trailing "*"	on an alias will match just about anything ap-
       propriate.

       An approximation	of the way aliases are resolved	at posting time	is:

       1)     Build a list of all addresses from the message to	be  delivered,
	      eliminating duplicate addresses.

       2)     For  those addresses in the message that have no host specified,
	      perform alias resolution.

       3)     For each line in the alias file, compare "alias" against all  of
	      the  existing addresses.	If a match, remove the matched "alias"
	      from the address list, and add each new address in the  address-
	      group to the address list	if it is not already on	the list.  The
	      alias  itself  is	 not  usually output, rather the address-group
	      that the alias maps to is	output instead.	 If "alias" is	termi-
	      nated with a ";" instead of a ":", then both the "alias" and the
	      address  are output in the correct format	(with the alias	quoted
	      if necessary and the address wrapped in <>).

       Since the mh-alias file is read line by line, forward references	 work,
       but backward references are not recognized.

   Example Alias File
	    </usr/local/etc/nmh/BBoardAliases
	    sgroup: fred, fear,	freida
	    fred: frated@UCI.example
	    b-people: Blind List: bill,	betty
	    Unix-committee: <unix.aliases
	    news.*: news

       The  first  line	says that more aliases should immediately be read from
       the file	/usr/local/etc/nmh/BBoardAliases.  Next, "sgroup"  is  defined
       as an alias for three names, and	one of them, "fred", is	a forward ref-
       erence to another alias for "frated@UCI.example".

       The  alias  "b-people"  is  a  blind  list which	includes the addresses
       "bill" and "betty"; the message will be delivered to  those  addresses,
       but  the	 message  header  will	show only "Blind List: ;" (not the ad-
       dresses).  The alias must not be	terminated with, or contain,  a	 semi-
       colon.	Note that blind	lists are not supported	with the sendmail/pipe
       mail transport method.

       The definition  of  "Unix-committee"  is	 given	by  reading  the  file
       unix.aliases in the user's nmh directory.

       Lastly, "news.anything" is aliased to "news"; the full stop is just an-
       other literal character.

PROFILE	COMPONENTS
       Aliasfile:	   Default alias file.

FILES
       /usr/local/etc/nmh/MailAliases
			   System-wide default alias file.

SEE ALSO
       ali(1), send(1),	whom(1), getgrent(3), getpwent(3), post(8)

BUGS
       Although	 the  forward-referencing  semantics of	mh-alias files prevent
       recursion, the alias-file directive may defeat this.  Since the	number
       of  file	 descriptors is	finite,	such infinite recursion	will terminate
       with a meaningless diagnostic when all the fds are used up.

       Earlier versions	of this	man page showed	a semicolon at the end of  the
       blind  list  example.   That  caused  the preceding alias to not	be ex-
       panded.	There must not be a semicolon at the end of,  or  within,  the
       address	group  of a blind list.	 post will append the semicolon	to the
       blind list name.

nmh-1.8+dev			  2014-04-18			   MH-ALIAS(5)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=mh-alias&sektion=5&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+14.3.quarterly>

home | help