Sequences of rules are grouped together into rule sets. Each
set is similar to a subroutine.
A rule set is declared with
the S
command, which must begin a line in sendmail.cf.
For example:
S0
This begins the declaration of the rules that form rule set
number 0. Rule sets are numbered starting from 0.
[2]
Sets 0 through 5
[3]
are internally defined by sendmail
to have very specific purposes, as shown in
Table 8.1.
We'll expand on them throughout the rest of the tutorial.
Rule-set definitions may appear in any order in
the configuration file. For example, rule set S5
may be defined first,
followed by S2
and then S7
. The rule sets
are gathered when the sendmail.cf file is read and are then sorted
internally by sendmail.
[2] Beginning with V8.7, rule sets may have symbolic names too. We show this in Chapter 11, Rule Sets 1 and S=.
[3] Other rule sets may be used by future versions of sendmail, so avoid using rule sets 6 through 9.
Rule Set | Purpose |
---|---|
0 | Resolve a mail delivery agent |
1 | Process sender address |
2 | Process recipient address |
3 | Preprocess all addresses |
4 | Postprocess all addresses |
5 | Rewrite unaliased local users |
The client.cf file contains no rule-set definitions yet. To observe the effect of nonexistent rules, rerun sendmail on that file:
%./sendmail -Cclient.cf -bt
ADDRESS TEST MODE (ruleset 3 NOT automatically invoked) Enter <ruleset> <address> >
The -bt
command-line switch
causes sendmail to run in address-testing mode.
In this mode, sendmail waits for you to type a rule set and
an address.
[4]
It then shows you how the rule set rewrites
the address.
At the >
prompt, you can now enter an address by specifying
a rule-set number, then a space, and then a mail address:
[4] V8.7's rule-testing mode can do much more (see Section 38.1, "Overview").
>0 [email protected]
rewrite: ruleset 0 input: gw @ wash . dc . gov rewrite: ruleset 0 returns: gw @ wash . dc . gov >
The rule set specified is 0, but you can specify any number.
The rewrite:
word that begins each line of address-testing mode
output is there simply to distinguish rewriting lines when they are
mixed with other kinds of debugging output. The input
means that sendmail placed the address into the workspace
(more about this soon).
The returns
shows the result after the rule set has
rewritten that address on the basis of its rules.
The address that is fed to sendmail, [email protected]
,
is first split into parts (tokens) based on two sets of
separating characters. Both are defined internally.
One can be changed in your configuration file;
[5]
the other cannot:
[5] Prior to V8.7, the
o
macro was used in the configuration file to define different or more characters. Beginning with V8.7, theOperatorChars
option is used instead.
.:@[] you can change these ()<>,;\"\r\n you cannot change these
The two sets are combined into one, and the result is used to
separate the various parts of email addresses. The
address [email protected] is divided into seven tokens because
the @
and dot are both in the list of separation characters.
rewrite: ruleset 0 input: gw @ wash . dc . gov rewrite: ruleset 0 returns: gw @ wash . dc . gov
The input:
line shows seven tokens passed to rule
set 0. The returns:
line shows, since there is no rule set
0, that the undefined - pty) rule set returns those tokens unchanged.
If a rule set is undefined, the result is the same as if it were defined but had no rules associated with it. It is like a C language subroutine that contains nothing but a return statement. It does nothing and produces no errors.