Chapter 23. The K (Database-Map) Configuration Command
Database maps can be used to look up information in databases, to perform transformations (such as dequoting), to perform computations, and to store values into macros. In their database role, they offer these advantages:
Information can be easily changed without having to restart sendmail because database information is external to the configuration file.
The sendmail program starts up faster because only the location of the information is stored at startup, not the information itself.
Rules are made more versatile because database information can be used in the RHS of rules. Class macros are still of use in the LHS.
To fully appreciate sendmail databases, consider
the only alternative, the F
configuration command. For example, mail that is sent via UUCP is a
typical application that requires lists of information:
FU /etc/mail/uuhosts
Here, the external file /etc/mail/uuhosts
contains a list of UUCP hosts connected to the local machine. If the
list rarely changes, the F
command is appropriate. On the other hand, if the list is volatile
and changes often, the F
command
has drawbacks. The file /etc/mail/uuhosts is
read only when the configuration file is processed. Any change to
that file is ignored by a running sendmail
(such as the daemon). To make the change effective, the daemon needs
to be restarted.
In such volatile situations, storing UUCP information in a database is preferred. A change to a database is immediately available ...
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