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MAKEMAP(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual MAKEMAP(8)
NAME
makemap - create database maps for sendmail
SYNOPSIS
makemap [-C file] [-N] [-c cachesize] [-d] [-D commentchar] [-e] [-f]
[-l] [-o] [-r] [-s] [-t delim] [-u] [-v] maptype mapnam
DESCRIPTION
Makemap creates the database maps used by the keyed map lookups in
sendmail(8). It reads input from the standard input and outputs them
to the indicated mapname.
Depending on how it is compiled, makemap handles different database
formats, selected using the maptype parameter. They may be
dbm DBM format maps. This requires the ndbm(3) library.
btree B-Tree format maps. This requires the new Berkeley DB library.
hash Hash format maps. This also requires the Berkeley DB library.
cdb CDB (Constant DataBase) format maps. This requires the tinycdb
library.
implicit
The first available format in the following order: hash, dbm,
and cdb.
In all cases, makemap reads lines from the standard input consisting of
two words separated by white space. The first is the database key, the
second is the value. The value may contain ``%n'' strings to indicate
parameter substitution. Literal percents should be doubled (``%%'').
Blank lines and lines beginning with ``#'' are ignored.
Notice: do not use makemap to create the aliases data base, but
newaliases which puts a special token into the data base that is
required by sendmail.
If the TrustedUser option is set in the sendmail configuration file and
makemap is invoked as root, the generated files will be owned by the
specified TrustedUser.
Flags
-C Use the specified sendmail configuration file for looking up the
TrustedUser option.
-N Include the null byte that terminates strings in the map. This
must match the -N flag in the sendmail.cf ``K'' line.
-c Use the specified hash and B-Tree cache size.
-D Use to specify the character to use to indicate a comment (which
is ignored) instead of the default of '#'.
-d Allow duplicate keys in the map. This is only allowed on B-Tree
format maps. If two identical keys are read, they will both be
inserted into the map.
-l List supported map types.
-o Append to an old file. This allows you to augment an existing
file. Note: this might not be supported by all database types,
e.g., cdb.
-r Allow replacement of existing keys. Normally makemap complains
if you repeat a key, and does not do the insert.
-s Ignore safety checks on maps being created. This includes
checking for hard or symbolic links in world writable
directories.
-t Use the specified delimiter instead of white space (also for
dumping a map).
-u dump (unmap) the content of the database to standard output.
-v Verbosely print what it is doing.
Example
makemap hash /etc/mail/access < /etc/mail/access
SEE ALSO
sendmail(8), newaliases(1)
HISTORY
The makemap command appeared in 4.4BSD.
$Date: 2013-11-22 20:51:52 $ MAKEMAP(8)