NAME
Mail::ExpandAliases - Expand aliases from /etc/aliases files
SYNOPSIS
use Mail::ExpandAliases;
my $ma = Mail::ExpandAliases->new("/etc/aliases");
my @list = $ma->expand("listname");
DESCRIPTION
I've looked for software to expand aliases from an alias file for a
while, but have never found anything adequate. In this day and age, few
public SMTP servers support EXPN, which makes alias expansion
problematic. This module, and the accompanying "expand-alias" script,
attempts to address that deficiency.
USAGE
Mail::ExpandAliases is an object oriented module, with a constructor
named "new":
my $ma = Mail::ExpandAliases->new("/etc/mail/aliases");
"new" takes the filename of an aliases file; if not supplied, or if the
file specified does not exist or is not readable, Mail::ExpandAliases
will look in a predetermined set of default locations and use the first
one found. See the section on "ALIAS FILE LOCATIONS", below, for details
on this search path and how to modify it.
Lookups are made using the "expand" method:
@aliases = $ma->expand("listname");
"expand" returns a list of expanded addresses, sorted alphabetically.
These expanded addresses are also expanded, whenever possible.
A non-expandible alias (no entry in the aliases file) expands to itself,
i.e., does not expand.
In scalar context, "expand" returns a reference to a list.
Note that Mail::ExpandAliases provides read-only access to the alias
file. If you are looking for read access, see Mail::Alias, which is a
more general interface to alias files.
Mail::ExpandAliases make a resonable attempt to handle aliases the way
"sendmail" does, including loop detection and support for escaped named.
See chapter 24, "Aliases", in *Sendmail*
() for full details about this
process.
ALIAS FILE LOCATIONS
Paths to the aliases file can be added globally at compile time:
use Mail::ExpandAliases qw(/etc/exim/aliases);
Alias file locations can also be specified to instances when they are
constructed:
my $ma = Mail::ExpandAliases->new("/etc/exim/aliases");
Alias file locations are stored in the package global
@POSSIBLE_ALIAS_FILES, which can be assigned to directly if you're not
impressed with encapsulation:
@Mail::ExpandAliases::POSSIBLE_ALIAS_FILES = ("/etc/aliases");
By default, @POSSIBLE_ALIAS_FILES contains /etc/aliases,
/etc/mail/aliases, /etc/postfix/aliases, and /etc/exim/aliases. If your
alias file is ones of these, the filename can be omitted from the
constructor; Mail::ExpandAliases will look in @POSSIBLE_ALIAS_FILES
until it finds a file that exists.
Note that it is not (necessarily) an error if none of these files
exists. An alias file can be added by passing a filename to the init()
method:
my $ma = Mail::ExpandAliases->new();
# Write a temporary aliases file in /tmp/aliases-$<
$ma->init("/tmp/aliases-$<");
Calling expand before setting an alias file will, of course, produce no
useful expansions.
If the constructor is called with the name of a file that exists but
cannot be opened, Mail::ExpandAliases will die with an error detailing
the problem.
BUGS / SHORTCOMINGS
If you were telnet mailhost 25, and the server had EXPN turned on, then
sendmail would read a user's .forward file. This software cannot do
that, and makes no attempt to. Only the invoking user's .forward file
should be readable (if any other user's .forward file was readable,
sendmail would not read it, making this feature useless), and the
invoking user should not need this module to read their own .forward
file.
Any other shortcomings, bugs, errors, or generally related complaints
and requests should be reported via the appropriate queue at
.
AUTHOR
darren chamberlain