4 .TH ALI %manext1% "%nmhdate%" MH.6.8 [%nmhversion%]
6 ali \- list mail aliases
13 .RB [ \-list " | " \-nolist ]
14 .RB [ \-normalize " | " \-nonormalize ]
15 .RB [ \-user " | " \-nouser ]
22 searches the named mail alias files for each of the given
24 It creates a list of addresses for those
26 and writes that list on standard output. If no arguments are given,
28 outputs all alias entries.
29 This can be used to check the format of the alias file for validity.
31 By default, when an aliases expands to multiple addresses, the addresses
32 are separated by commas and printed on as few lines as possible. If the
34 option is specified, then when an address expands to multiple
35 addresses, each address will appear on a separate line.
41 to perform its processing in
42 an inverted fashion: instead of listing the addresses that each given
45 will list the aliases that expand to each
51 try to track down the official hostname of the address.
53 The files specified by the profile entry
54 .RI \*(lq Aliasfile \*(rq
55 and any additional alias files given by the
58 switch will be read. Each
60 is processed as described in
66 .ta \w'%etcdir%/ExtraBigFileName 'u
67 ^$HOME/.mmh/profile~^The user profile
68 ^/etc/passwd~^List of users
69 ^/etc/group~^List of groups
72 .SH "PROFILE COMPONENTS"
76 .ta \w'ExtraBigProfileName 'u
77 ^Path:~^To determine the user's mail storage
78 ^Aliasfile:~^For a default alias file
99 is not entirely accurate, as it
100 does not replace local nicknames for hosts with their official site names.