Name
-T
Synopsis
When a resource is temporarily unavailable, it would be handy if sendmail indicated that unavailability when the database lookup fails. Consider NIS, for example. It can time out when a server is down briefly, but a failed lookup of a user’s login name need not cause a permanent failure under such a circumstance. Instead, something should be returned to show that it is only a temporary failure.
The -T
database switch was added with V8.10
sendmail to solve this problem. You use it to
define a suffix to add to the key for the returned failure value when
the problem is temporary. You might use it like this:
Kmailservers nis -T.Defer -o mailservers ... R $* <@ $+ > $* $: $1<@$2>$3 <$(mailservers $2 $: Fail $)> R $* <@ $+ > $* <$* . Defer> $# error $@ 4.2.2 $: "450 defer" ← handle failure here R $* <@ $+ > $* <Fail> $# error $@ 5.7.1 $: "550 reject" ← handle failure here R $* <@ $+ > $* <$+> $# smtp $@ $4 $: $1 < @ $2 > $3← OK, so send it...
Note that a permanent failure returns the failure alternative
indicated by the $
: operator (the
Fail
). But a temporary failure returns the suffix
defined by the -T
, appended to the original key
(the $2
), to form $2.Defer
.
Note that this definition of temporary failure is different from that
defined by the -D
database switch. With
-D
, database lookups are not done at all if the
DeliveryMode
option (DeliveryMode)
is set to defer
. Also note that this
-T
database switch affects only the return value. It does not affect the outcome of mail ...
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