/etc/lbdb.rc is in lbdb 0.40ubuntu1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 | #
# This is the main configuration file of the little brothers database lbdb
#
# Everything you configure here can be overridden by the users config
# file which can be found at
# ~/.lbdbrc
# ~/.lbdb/lbdbrc
# ~/.lbdb/rc
# (evaluated with ascending priority!)
#
# (c) 1999-2006 Roland Rosenfeld <roland@spinnaker.de>
#
# $Id: lbdb.rc.in,v 1.18 2006/10/14 12:10:42 roland Exp $
#
#
# 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.
# - m_vcf search a vcard (according to RFC2426) file.
METHODS="m_inmail m_passwd m_finger"
#
# 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=".muttrc .mail_aliases muttrc 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
# - m_vcf search in vcard files
#
# You have to define the vcard files space separated in $VCF_FILES to
# make this module work:
#VCF_FILES=$HOME/my.vcf
#
# 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 "reverse_comment", lbdbq sorts the output by comment
# but with reverse order (column 3).
# If you set this to "address", lbdbq sorts the output by addresses
# (that's the default).
#
#SORT_OUTPUT=address
#
# Do you want to see duplicate mail addresses (with multiple real
# names or different comment fields)? Default is "no".
#
#KEEP_DUPES=no
|