Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Electronic Mail Addressing
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Electronic Mail Addressing Post 302432832 by Action on Sunday 27th of June 2010 12:02:19 PM
Old 06-27-2010
Electronic Mail Addressing

"A Directory of Electronic Mail Addressing & Networks" by Donnalyn Frey and Rick Adams (O'Reilly & Associates, 1993), Xerox Grapevine, DECNET.
The book tells about lots of different ways to present an email address. What i know of are Internet (user@host), UUCP (host!user) and DECNET (host::user) styles. What are the others? Any examples? Or where to find them?

Thanks in advance
 

4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. IP Networking

IP Addressing with Digital Unix

I'm trying to set up an IP address on a Digital Unix box. I would like to know the commands in order to do so. thanks (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: lavelyj
5 Replies

2. IP Networking

Dual IP addressing

I have a Unix application server with an internet IP address on it for a gateway and a Unix web server with the Internet IP as well configured for its gateway. Now the problem I have is this: due to these gateways, the application server can't communicate with our internal LAN. Therefore, it... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ronny
2 Replies

3. Programming

Memory addressing question

Forgive me if this sounds like a newbie question. Any time you obtain a stack address from a pointer, what is this relative to by default? Is it the extra segment, the stack segment, what? How do you change change the relative positioning in memory? Thanks in advance (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: stevenswj
1 Replies

4. IP Networking

Addressing question

This is probably a stupid question but I am finding a tricky issue on my Solaris machines right now. I changed the hostname for my servers as requested by my superior. I had one server that lost it's entire network configuration when I rebooted. I reconfigured it with it's address and I can... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: lnxjenn
2 Replies
DECNET.CONF(5)							File Formats Manual						    DECNET.CONF(5)

NAME
/etc/decnet.proxy - DECnet proxy file DESCRIPTION
/etc/decnet.proxy is an ASCII file which contains mappings of remote DECnet users to local users. It is used by fal(8) when no username and password have been explicitly given to determine whether a user is allowed to access files and also whose files they will get access to. There is one entry per line, and each line has the following format: node::remoteuser localuser The field descriptions are: node The name or number of the remote node. If this is a name it must appear in decnet.conf(5) otherwise a DECnet node address should be used. This field is a regular expression: If you want to match a single nodename then you must use the anchors ^ and $ either side of the name. remoteuser a regular expression that may match one or more remote user names. If you want to match a single user then you must use the anchors ^ and $ either side of the name. localuser The name of a user on the local machine or a single asterisk (*) in which case the remote username will be substituted. Comments start with a hash mark and continue to the end of that line. They may be on a dedicated line or following an entry. EXAMPLE
#/etc/decnet.proxy # proxy configuration for fal. # ^tramp$::^test$ christine # Explicitly convert 'test' on tramp to 'christine' ^zaphod$::.* none # Disable proxies from zaphod (assuming you don't # have a user called 'none') .*::.* decnet # Like a default DECnet account .*::.* * # Equivalent to VMS *::* * proxy (make this last # if you use it) SEE ALSO
fal(8), decnet.conf(5) DECnet for Linux 8 August 2002 DECNET.CONF(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:15 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy