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yppasswd(1)

MAKEDBM(1M)  —  Silicon Graphics

NAME

makedbm − make a yellow pages dbm file

SYNOPSIS

makedbm [ −i yp_input_file ] [ −o yp_output_name ]
[ −d yp_domain_name ] [ −m yp_master_name ] infile outfile
makedbm [ −u dbmfilename ]

DESCRIPTION

makedbm takes infile and converts it to a pair of files in dbm(3X) format, namely outfile.pag and outfile.dir. Each line of the input file is converted to a single dbm record.  All characters up to the first tab or space form the key, and the rest of the line is the data.  If a line ends with \, then the data for that record is continued on to the next line.  It is left for the clients of the yellow pages to interpret #; makedbm does not itself treat it as a comment character.  infile can be −, in which case standard input is read. 

makedbm is meant to be used in generating dbm files for the yellow pages, and it generates a special entry with the key yp_last_modified, which is the date of infile (or the current time, if infile is −). 

OPTIONS

−i Create a special entry with the key yp_input_file.

−o Create a special entry with the key yp_output_name.

−d Create a special entry with the key yp_domain_name.

−m Create a special entry with the key yp_master_name. If no master host name is specified, yp_master_name will be set to the local host name. 

−u Undo a dbm file.  That is, print out a dbm file one entry per line, with a single space separating keys from values. 

EXAMPLE

It is easy to write shell scripts to convert standard files such as /etc/passwd to the key value form used by makedbm. For example,

 #!/bin/awk -f
 BEGIN { FS = ":"; OFS = "\t"; }
 { print $1, $0 }

takes the /etc/passwd file and converts it to a form that can be read by makedbm to make the yellow pages file passwd.byname. That is, the key is a username, and the value is the remaining line in the /etc/passwd file. 

SEE ALSO

yppasswd(1)

Version 3.6  —  December 20, 1987

Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026