$a

The origin date in RFC2822 format All versions

The $a macro holds the origin date of a mail message (the date and time that the original message was sent). It holds a date in ARPAnet format, defined in RFC2822, Pitfalls.

The sendmail program obtains that date in one of the following four ways:

  • When sendmail first begins to run, it presets several date-oriented macros internally to the current date and time. Among those are the macros $t, $d, $b, and $a.

  • Whenever sendmail collects information from the stored header of a message (whether after message collection, during processing of the queue, or when saving to the queue), it sets the value of $a. If a Posted-Date: header exists, the date from that line is used. Otherwise, if a Date: header exists, that date is used. Note that no check is made by sendmail to ensure that the date in $a is, indeed, in RFC2822 format. Of necessity, it must trust that the originating program has adhered to that standard.

  • When sendmail notifies the user of an error, it takes the origin date from $b (the current date in RFC2822 format) and places that value into $a.

$a is chiefly intended for use in configuration-file header definitions. It can also be used in delivery agent A= equates (argument vectors), although it is of little value in that case.

$a is transient. If defined in the configuration file or in the command line, that definition might be ignored by sendmail. Note that the $& prefix is necessary when you reference this macro in rules (that is, ...

Get sendmail, 4th Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.