# Select which methods you want to use in which order (ascending priority): # (a space separated list) # # - m_inmail search the database created by lbdb-fetchaddr(1) # - m_finger finger some hosts defined in variable M_FINGER_HOSTS # - m_passwd search the local /etc/passwd file. # - m_yppasswd search the NIS password database. # - m_nispasswd search the NIS+ password database. # - m_getent search the password database (whatever is configured). # - m_pgp2 search your PGP 2.* keyring # - m_pgp5 search your PGP 5.* keyring # - m_gpg search your GnuPG keyring # - m_fido search the Fido nodelist converted by nodelist2lbdb(1) # - m_abook query abook(1), the text based address book application. # - m_addr_email query addr-email(1) from addressbook Tk-program. # - m_muttalias search $MUTTALIAS_FILES for aliases. # - m_pine search pine(1) addressbook files for aliases. # - m_palm search your Palm addressbook file. # - m_gnomecard search your GnomeCard address database files. # - m_bbdb search your BBDB (big brother database). # - m_ldap query an LDAP server # - m_wanderlust search your wanderlust ~/.addresses file. # - m_osx_addressbook search the OS X addressbook (only available on OS X). # - m_evolution search in the Ximan Evolution addressbook. METHODS="m_inmail m_gpg m_abook m_muttalias" # If you want m_finger to ask other host then localhost, create a list here: # (a space separated list): #M_FINGER_HOSTS="master.debian.org va.debian.org localhost" # If it isn't possible to find out the correct mail domain name of # your system in /etc/mailname, by reading sendmail.cf, /etc/hostname # or /etc/HOSTNAME, you can specify it in the variable # MAIL_DOMAIN_NAME. This overrides all other mechanisms. # #MAIL_DOMAIN_NAME=does-not-exist.org # - m_muttalias query set of mutt alias files: # # Set MUTTALIAS_FILES below to list of files in MUTT_DIRECTORY that # contain mutt aliases. File names without leading slash will have # $MUTT_DIRECTORY (defaults to $HOME/.mutt or $HOME, if ~/.mutt does # not exist) prepended before the file name. Absolute file names # (beginning with /) will be taken direct. # MUTT_DIRECTORY="$HOME/.mutt" MUTTALIAS_FILES="aliases" # - m_pine search pine addressbook files for aliases: # # This module first inspects the variable PINERC. If it isn't set, the # default `/etc/pine.conf /etc/pine.conf.fixed .pinerc' is used. To # suppress inspecting the PINERC variable, set it to "no". It than # takes all address-book and global-address-book entries from these # pinerc files and adds the contents of the variable PINE_ADDRESSBOOKS # to the list, which defaults to `/etc/addressbook .addressbook'. Then # these addressbooks are searched for aliases. All filenames without # leading slash are searched in $HOME. # #PINERC="/etc/pine.conf /etc/pine.conf.fixed .pinerc" #PINE_ADDRESSBOOKS="/etc/addressbook .addressbook" # - m_wanderlust search your WanderLust addresses files: # # Set WANDERLUST_ADDRESSES below to point to your WanderLust address # book. If you don't set this variable, the default # ($HOME/.addresses) is used. # #WANDERLUST_ADDRESSES="$HOME/.addresses" # - m_palm search your Palm addressbook file: # # This module searches the Palm address database using the Palm::PDB # and Palm::Address Perl modules from CPAN. It searches in the # variable PALM_ADDRESS_DATABASE or if this isn't set in # $HOME/.jpilot/AddressDB.pdb. # #PALM_ADDRESS_DATABASE="$HOME/.jpilot/AddressDB.pdb" # - m_gnomecard search your GnomeCard address database files. # # This module searches for addresses in your GnomeCard database files. # The variable GNOMECARD_FILES is a whitespace separated list of # GnomeCard data files. If this variable isn't defined, the module # searches in $HOME/.gnome/GnomeCard for the GnomeCard database or at # least falls back to $HOME/.gnome/GnomeCard.gcrd. If a filename does # not start with a slash, it is prefixed with $HOME/. # #GNOMECARD_FILES="$HOME/.gnome/GnomeCard.gcrd" # - m_bbdb search your BBDB (big brother database). # # This module searches for addresses in your (X)Emacs BBDB (big # brother database). It doesn't access ~/.bbdb directly (yet) but # calls emacs(1) or xemacs(1) with a special mode to get the # information (so don't expect too much performance in this module). # You can configure the EMACS variable to tell this module which # emacsen to use. Otherwise it will fall back to emacs or xemacs. # #EMACS="emacs" # - m_ldap query an LDAP server. # # This module queries an LDAP server using the Net::LDAP Perl modules # from CPAN. It can be configured using an external resource file. You # can explicity define a LDAP query in this file or you can use one or # more of the predefined queries from the %ldap_server_db in this # file. For this you have to define the selected enties as a space # separated list in the the variable LDAP_NICKS. # LDAP_NICKS="debian bigfoot" # - m_abook query the abook(1) programm # # if you have more than one abook addressbook, use the ABOOK_FILES # variable. It contains a space separated list of all your files. # Default is $HOME/.abook/addressbook $HOME/.abook.addressbook # ABOOK_FILES="$HOME/.abook/friends $HOME/.abook/work" # - m_passwd search in /etc/passwd # # On a Debian system only the UIDs 1000-29999 are used for normal # users. Setting PASSWD_IGNORESYS to "true" implies that lbdbq # ignores and UID, which isn't in that range: #PASSWD_IGNORESYS=true # # If you want to use private modules set the MODULES_PATH to find them: # (a space separated list): # #MODULES_PATH="/usr/lib/lbdb $HOME/.lbdb/modules" # # Do you want the output to be sorted? # If you set this to "false" or "no", lbdbq won't sort the addresses # but returns them in reverse order (which means that the most recent # address in m_inmail database is first). # If you set this to "name", lbdbq sorts the output by real name. # If you set this to "comment", lbdbq sorts the output by comment (column 3). # If you set this to "address", lbdbq sorts the output by addresses # (that's the default). # SORT_OUTPUT=false # # Do you want to see duplicate mail addresses (with multiple real # names or different comment fields)? Default is "no". # #KEEP_DUPES=no