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Previous: 31.2 Command-Line DefinitionsChapter 31
Defined Macros
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31.3 Configuration File Definitions

When sendmail reads the configuration file, macros that are declared in that file are assigned values. The configuration-file command that declares macros begins with the letter D. There may only be a single macro command per line. The form of the D macro configuration command is:

DXtext

The symbolic name of the macro (here, X) is a single-character or a multicharacter name (see Section 31.4, "Macro Names"):

DXtext             <- single-character name X
D{XXX}text         <- multicharacter name XXX

This must immediately follow the D with no intervening space. The value that is given to the macro is the text, consisting of all characters beginning with the first character following the name and including all characters up to the end of the line. Any indented lines that follow the definition are joined to that definition. When joined, the newline and indentation characters are retained. Consider the following three configuration lines:

DXsometext
        moretext
        moretext
    -^
    tabs

These are read and joined by sendmail to form the following text value for the macro named X:

sometext\n\tmoretext\n\tmoretext

The notation \n represents a newline character, and the notation \t represents a tab character.

If text is missing, the value assigned to the macro is that of an empty string; that is, a single byte that has a value of zero.

If both the name and the text are missing, the following error is printed, and that D configuration line is ignored: [5]

[5] Prior to V8 sendmail, a macro whose name was missing was given arbitrary garbage as a value. This caused the sendmail program to crash.

Name required for macro/class

31.3.1 Required Macros (V8.6 and earlier)

Table 31.2 shows the macro names that must (prior to V8.6) be given values in the configuration file.

Table 31.2: Required Macros
MacroDescriptionAs of V8.7
$eSection 34.8.65, SmtpGreetingMessage or $eThe SMTP greeting messageThe SmtpGreetingMessage option
$jaSection 31.10.20Official canonical hostnameAutomatically defined all V8
$lSection 34.8.72, UnixFromLine or $lUNIX From formatThe UnixFromLine option
$nSection 31.10.26Name used for error messagesAutomatically defined
$oSection 34.8.45, OperatorChars or $oDelimiter operator charactersThe OperatorChars option
$qSection 31.10.30, $qFormat of the sender's addressNo longer used

Each of these macros is described at the end of this chapter in Section 31.10. Prior to V8.7, failure to define a required macro could have resulted in unpredictable problems. Beginning with V8.7 sendmail, no macros are required. Some are predefined [6] for you by sendmail, and others have become options.

[6] But you still may need to declare an occasional macro in your configuration file to solve unusual problems.

31.3.2 Syntax of the Configuration File Macro's Text

The text of a macro's value in the configuration file may contain escaped control codes. Control codes are embedded by using a backslash escape notation. The backslash escape notations understood by sendmail are listed in Table 31.3.

Table 31.3: Special Characters Allowed in Macro Text
NotationPlaced in Text
\bBackspace character
\fFormfeed character
\nNewline character
\rCarriage-return character
\\Backslash character

All other escaped characters are taken as is. For example, the notation \X becomes a X, whereas the notation \b is converted to a backspace character (usually a CTRL-H). For example,

DXO\bc May\, 1996    becomes ->  O^Hc May, 1996

Here, the \b is translated into a backspace (^H) character, and the \, is translated into a lone comma character.

Note that prior to V8.8, the first comma and all characters following it were stripped from the text unless the comma was quoted or escaped. For example,

DXMay, 1996    becomes ->  May

Beginning with V8.8 sendmail, the comma is no longer special in defined macros.

Quoted text will have the quotation marks stripped. Only double quotation marks are recognized. Multiple parts of text may be quoted, or text may be quoted entirely.

Trailing spaces are automatically stripped. If you need to keep trailing spaces you need to quote them:

DX"1996 "

Leading space characters are retained in text whether they are quoted or not. Spaces are harmless provided that the macro is used only in rules (because spaces are token separators); but if the macro is used to define other macros, problems can arise. For example,

Dw ourhost
DH nlm.nih.gov
Dj $w.$H

Here, the text of the $w and $H macros is used to define the $j macro. The $j macro is used in the HELO SMTP command and in the Message-ID: header line. The value given to $j by the above is

   ourhost. nlm.nih.gov
 -^         -^
 two        a space
 spaces

Here, the value of $j should contain a correctly formed, fully qualified domain name. The unwanted spaces cause it to become incorrectly formed, which can cause mail to fail.


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