1MH-ALIAS(5) File Formats Manual MH-ALIAS(5)
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6 mh-alias - format of nmh email-address alias files
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9 Each line of an nmh alias file takes one of the following forms:
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11 alias : address-group
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13 alias ; address-group
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15 < alias-file
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17 ; | : | # comment
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19 where:
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21 address-group := address-list
22 | < file
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24 address-list := address
25 | address-list, address
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27 Continuation lines end with “\” followed by a newline character. This
28 also applies to comment lines. Thus, the line following a “\”-termi‐
29 nated comment line is a continuation of that comment line.
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31 Alias-file and file are Unix file names. Alias file contents are case-
32 insensitive, with the exception of filesystem path names.
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34 If the line starts with a “<”, the file named after the “<” is read for
35 more alias definitions. The reading is done recursively, so a “<” may
36 occur in the beginning of an alias file with the expected results.
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38 If the address-group starts with a “<”, the file named after the “<” is
39 read and its contents are added to the address-list for the alias.
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41 In match, a trailing “*” on an alias will match just about anything
42 appropriate.
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44 An approximation of the way aliases are resolved at posting time is:
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46 1) Build a list of all addresses from the message to be delivered,
47 eliminating duplicate addresses.
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49 2) For those addresses in the message that have no host specified,
50 perform alias resolution.
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52 3) For each line in the alias file, compare “alias” against all of
53 the existing addresses. If a match, remove the matched “alias”
54 from the address list, and add each new address in the address-
55 group to the address list if it is not already on the list. The
56 alias itself is not usually output, rather the address-group
57 that the alias maps to is output instead. If “alias” is termi‐
58 nated with a “;” instead of a “:”, then both the “alias” and the
59 address are output in the correct format (with the alias quoted
60 if necessary and the address wrapped in <>).
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62 Since the mh-alias file is read line by line, forward references work,
63 but backward references are not recognized.
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65 Example Alias File
66 </etc/nmh/BBoardAliases
67 sgroup: fred, fear, freida
68 fred: frated@UCI.example
69 b-people: Blind List: bill, betty
70 Unix-committee: <unix.aliases
71 news.*: news
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73 The first line says that more aliases should immediately be read from
74 the file /etc/nmh/BBoardAliases. Next, “sgroup” is defined as an alias
75 for three names, and one of them, “fred”, is a forward reference to
76 another alias for “frated@UCI.example”.
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78 The alias “b-people” is a blind list which includes the addresses
79 “bill” and “betty”; the message will be delivered to those addresses,
80 but the message header will show only “Blind List: ;” (not the
81 addresses). The alias must not be terminated with, or contain, a semi‐
82 colon. Note that blind lists are not supported with the sendmail/pipe
83 mail transport method.
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85 The definition of “Unix-committee” is given by reading the file
86 unix.aliases in the user's nmh directory.
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88 Lastly, “news.anything” is aliased to “news”; the full stop is just
89 another literal character.
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92 Aliasfile: Default alias file.
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95 /etc/nmh/MailAliases
96 System-wide default alias file.
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99 ali(1), send(1), whom(1), getgrent(3), getpwent(3), post(8)
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102 Although the forward-referencing semantics of mh-alias files prevent
103 recursion, the alias-file directive may defeat this. Since the number
104 of file descriptors is finite, such infinite recursion will terminate
105 with a meaningless diagnostic when all the fds are used up.
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107 Earlier versions of this man page showed a semicolon at the end of the
108 blind list example. That caused the preceding alias to not be
109 expanded. There must not be a semicolon at the end of, or within, the
110 address group of a blind list. post will append the semicolon to the
111 blind list name.
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115nmh-1.7.1 2014-04-18 MH-ALIAS(5)