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23.6 Pitfalls
The result of a subroutine call cannot be looked up directly in a
database map. Consider this RHS of a rule:
$(uucp $>96 $1 $) Here, the intention is to pass $1 to rule set 96
and then to look up the result in the uucp
database map. Instead, the literal value 96 and the value in
$1 are looked up together and fail first. Then
$1 is passed to rule set 96, and the result of
that subroutine call becomes the result of the RHS.
If you are running a Solaris 2.4 or earlier release of
Sun's operating system, your database files should
not live on tmpfs-mounted filesystems. File
locking was not implemented for tmpfs until
Solaris 2.5.
Avoid assuming that all K command switches mean
the same thing for all types. The ad hoc nature of database-type
submissions by outsiders makes that assumption perilous.
Not all initialization errors or lookup errors are reported. For some
of them you will see an indication of an error only if you use the
-d38.2 debugging switch (-d38.2).
The sendmail program automatically creates
certain database maps as it needs them. This is done without the need
to declare them with a K configuration command.
For example, consider the following mc
configuration line:
define(`ALIAS_FILE', `/etc/mail/aliases') When sendmail encounters this
AliasFile option (AliasFile),
it automatically creates the aliases.files
database map so that it can easily look up aliases.
sendmail automatically creates the following
database maps: aliases.files,
aliases.nis,
aliases.nisplus,
aliases.netinfo,
aliases.hesiod,
passwd.files, passwd.nis,
passwd.nisplus,
passwd.hesiod, and users.
You should avoid using these database maps in rule sets because they
are essentially internal to sendmail and can
change without notice.
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