=head1 NAME domain - nnrpd domain resolver =head1 SYNOPSIS B B =head1 DESCRIPTION This program can be used in F to grant access based on the subdomain part of the remote hostname. In particular, it only returns success if the remote hostname ends in B. (A leading dot on B is optional; even without it, the argument must match on dot-separated boundaries). The "username" returned is whatever initial part of the remote hostname remains after B is removed. It is an error if there is no initial part (that is, if the remote hostname is I the specified B). =head1 EXAMPLE The following readers.conf(5) fragment grants access to hosts with internal domain names: auth internal { res: "domain .internal" default-domain: "example.com" } access internal { users: "*@example.com" newsgroups: example.* } Access is granted to the example.* groups for all connections from hosts that resolve to hostnames ending in C<.internal>; a connection from "foo.internal" would match access groups as "foo@example.com". =head1 BUGS It seems the code does not confirm that the matching part is actually at the end of the remote hostname (e.g., "domain: example.com" would match the remote host "foo.example.com.org" by ignoring the trailing ".org" part). Does this resolver actually provide any useful functionality not available by using wildcards in the readers.conf(5) I parameter? If so, the example above should reflect this functionality. =head1 HISTORY This documentation was written by Jeffrey M. Vinocur . $Id: domain.pod 5988 2002-12-12 23:02:14Z vinocur $ =head1 SEE ALSO nnrpd(8), readers.conf(5) =cut