1 DBM Libraries for use with Exim
2 -------------------------------
7 Exim uses direct-access (so-called "dbm") files for a number of different
8 purposes. These are files arranged so that the data they contain is indexed and
9 can quickly be looked up by quoting an appropriate key. They are used as
12 1. Exim keeps its "hints" databases in dbm files.
14 2. The configuration can specify that certain things (e.g. aliases) be looked
17 3. The configuration can contain expansion strings that involve lookups in dbm
20 4. The filter commands "mail" and "vacation" have a facility for replying only
21 once to each incoming address. The record of which addresses have already
22 received replies may be kept in a dbm file, depending on the configuration
23 option once_file_size.
25 The runtime configuration can be set up without specifying 2 or 3, but Exim
26 always requires the availability of a dbm library, for 1 (and 4 if configured
33 The original library that provided the dbm facility in Unix was called "dbm".
34 This seems to have been superseded quite some time ago by a new version called
35 "ndbm" which permits several dbm files to be open at once. Several operating
36 systems, including those from Sun, contain ndbm as standard.
38 A number of alternative libraries also exist, the most common of which seems to
39 be Berkeley DB (just called DB hereinafter). Release 1.85 was around for
40 some time, and various releases 2.x began to appear towards the end of 1997. In
41 November 1999, version 3.0 was released, and the ending of support for 2.7.7,
42 the last 2.x release, was announced for November 2000. (Support for 1.85 has
43 already ceased.) There were further 3.x releases, but by the end of 2001, the
44 current release was 4.0.14.
46 There are major differences in implementation and interface between the DB 1.x
47 and 2.x/3.x/4.x releases, and they are best considered as two independent dbm
48 libraries. Changes to the API were made for 3.0 and again for 3.1.
50 Another DBM library is the GNU library, gdbm, though this does not seem to be
53 Yet another dbm library is tdb (Trivial Data Base) which has come out of the
54 Samba project. The first releases seem to have been in mid-2000.
56 Some older Linux releases contain gdbm as standard, while others contain no dbm
57 library. More recent releases contain DB 1.85 or 2.x or later, and presumably
58 will track the development of the DB library. Some BSD versions of Unix include
59 DB 1.85 or later. All of the non-ndbm libraries except tdb contain
60 compatibility interfaces so that programs written to call the ndbm functions
61 should, in theory, work with them, but there are some potential pitfalls which
62 have caught out Exim users in the past.
64 Exim has been tested with ndbm, gdbm, DB 1.85, DB 2.x, DB 3.1, DB 4.0.14, and
65 tdb 1.0.2, in various different modes in some cases, and is believed to work
66 with all of them if it and they are properly configured.
68 I have considered the possibility of calling different dbm libraries for
69 different functions from a single Exim binary. However, because all bar one of
70 the libraries provide ndbm compatibility interfaces (and therefore the same
71 function names) it would require a lot of complicated, error-prone trickery to
72 achieve this. Exim therefore uses a single library for all its dbm activities.
74 However, Exim does also support cdb (Constant Data Base), an efficient file
75 arrangement for indexed data that does not change incrementally (for example,
76 alias files). This is independent of any dbm library and can be used alongside
83 The configuration option EXIMDB_LOCK_TIMEOUT controls how long Exim waits to
84 get a lock on a hints database. From version 1.80 onwards, Exim does not
85 attempt to take out a lock on an actual database file (this caused problems in
86 the past). Instead, it takes out an fcntl() lock on a separate file whose name
87 ends in ".lockfile". This ensures that Exim has exclusive access to the
88 database before even attempting to open it. Exim creates the lock file the
89 first time it needs it. It should never be removed.
95 The OS-specific configuration files that are used to build Exim specify the use
96 of Berkeley DB on those systems where it is known to be standard. In the
97 absence of any special configuration options, Exim uses the ndbm set of
98 functions to control its dbm databases. This should work with any of the dbm
99 libraries because those that are not ndbm have compatibility interfaces.
100 However, there is one awful pitfall:
102 Exim #includes a header file called ndbm.h which defines the functions and the
103 interface data block; gdbm and DB 1.x provide their own versions of this header
104 file, later DB versions do not. If it should happen that the wrong version of
105 nbdm.h is seen by Exim, it may compile without error, but fail to operate
106 correctly at runtime.
108 This situation can easily arise when more than one dbm library is installed on
109 a single host. For example, if you decide to use DB 1.x on a system where gdbm
110 is the standard library, unless you are careful in setting up the include
111 directories for Exim, it may see gdbm's ndbm.h file instead of DB's. The
112 situation is even worse with later versions of DB, which do not provide an
115 One way out of this for gdbm and any of the versions of DB is to configure Exim
116 to call the DBM library in its native mode instead of via the ndbm
117 compatibility interface, thus avoiding the use of ndbm.h. This is done by
118 setting the USE_DB configuration option if you are using Berkeley DB, or
119 USE_GDBM if you are using gdbm. This is the recommended approach.
125 The ndbm library holds its data in two files, with extensions .dir and .pag.
126 This makes atomic updating of, for example, alias files, difficult, because
127 simple renaming cannot be used without some risk. However, if your system has
128 ndbm installed, Exim should compile and run without any problems.
134 The gdbm library, when called via the ndbm compatibility interface, makes two
135 hard links to a single file, with extensions .dir and .pag. As mentioned above,
136 gdbm provides its own version of the ndbm.h header, and you must ensure that
137 this is seen by Exim rather than any other version. This is not likely to be a
138 problem if gdbm is the only dbm library on your system.
140 If gdbm is called via the native interface (by setting USE_GDBM in your
141 Local/Makefile), it uses a single file, with no extension on the name, and the
142 ndbm.h header is not required.
144 The gdbm library does its own locking of the single file that it uses. From
145 version 1.80 onwards, Exim locks on an entirely separate file before accessing
146 a hints database, so gdbm's locking should always succeed.
152 1.85 was the most widespread DB 1.x release; there is also a 1.86 bug-fix
153 release, but the belief is that the bugs it fixes will not affect Exim.
154 However, maintenance for 1.x releases has been phased out.
156 This dbm library can be called by Exim in one of two ways: via the ndbm
157 compatibility interface, or via its own native interface. There are two
158 advantages to doing the latter: (1) you don't run the risk of Exim's seeing the
159 "wrong" version of the ndbm.h header, as described above, and (2) the
160 performance is better. It is therefore recommended that you set USE_DB=yes in an
161 appropriate Local/Makefile-xxx file. (If you are compiling for just one OS, it
162 can go in Local/Makefile itself.)
164 When called via the compatibility interface, DB 1.x creates a single file with
165 a .db extension. When called via its native interface, no extension is added to
166 the file name handed to it.
168 DB 1.x does not do any locking of its own.
174 DB 2.x was released in 1997. It is a major re-implementation and its native
175 interface is incompatible with DB 1.x, though a compatibility interface was
176 introduced in DB 2.1.0, and there is also an ndbm.h compatibility interface.
178 Like 1.x, it can be called from Exim via the ndbm compatibility interface or
179 via its native interface, and once again setting USE_DB in order to get the
180 native interface is recommended. If USE_DB is *not* set, then you will have to
181 provide a suitable version of ndbm.h, because one does not come with the DB 2.x
182 distribution. A suitable version is:
184 /*************************************************
185 * ndbm.h header for DB 2.x *
186 *************************************************/
188 /* This header should replace any other version of ndbm.h when Berkeley DB
189 version 2.x is in use via the ndbm compatibility interface. Otherwise, any
190 extant version of ndbm.h may cause programs to misbehave. There doesn't seem
191 to be a version of ndbm.h supplied with DB 2.x, so I made this for myself.
193 Philip Hazel 12/Jun/97
196 #define DB_DBM_HSEARCH
201 When called via the compatibility interface, DB 2.x creates a single file with
202 a .db extension. When called via its native interface, no extension is added to
203 the file name handed to it.
205 DB 2.x does not do any automatic locking of its own; it does have a set of
206 functions for various forms of locking, but Exim does not use them.
212 DB 3.0 was released in November 1999 and 3.1 in June 2000. The 3.x series is a
213 development of the 2.x series and the above comments apply. Exim can
214 automatically distinguish between the different versions, so it copes with the
215 changes to the API without needing any special configuration.
217 When Exim creates a DBM file using DB 3.x (e.g. when creating one of its hints
218 databases), it specified the "hash" format. However, when it opens a DB 3 file
219 for reading only, it specifies "unknown". This means that it can read DB 3
220 files in other formats that are created by other programs.
226 The 4.x series is a development of the 2.x and 3.x series, and the above
233 tdb 1.0.2 was released in September 2000. Its origin is the database functions
234 that are used by the Samba project.
238 Testing Exim's dbm handling
239 ---------------------------
241 Because there have been problems with dbm file locking in the past, I built
242 some testing code for Exim's dbm functions. This is very much a lash-up, but it
243 is documented here so that anybody who wants to check that their configuration
244 is locking properly can do so. Now that Exim does the locking on an entirely
245 separate file, locking problems are much less likely, but this code still
246 exists, just in case. Proceed as follows:
248 . Build Exim in the normal way. This ensures that all the makesfiles etc. get
251 . From within the build directory, obey "make test_dbfn". This makes a binary
252 file called test_dbfn. If you are experimenting with different configurations
253 you *must* do "make makefile" after changing anything, before obeying "make
254 test_dbfn" again, because the make target for test_dbfn isn't integrated
255 with the making of the makefile.
257 . Identify a scratch directory where you have write access. Create a sub-
258 directory called "db" in the scratch directory.
260 . Type the command "test_dbfn <scratch-directory>". This will output some
261 general information such as
263 Exim's db functions tester: interface type is db (v2)
264 DBM library: Berkeley DB: Sleepycat Software: DB 2.1.0: (6/13/97)
272 . At this point you can type commands to open a dbm file and read and write
273 data in it. First type the command "open <name>", e.g. "open junk". The
274 response should look like this
276 opened DB file <scratch-directory>/db/junk: flags=102
281 The tester will have created a dbm file within the db directory of the
282 scratch directory. It will also have created a file with the extension
283 ".lockfile" in the same directory. Unlike Exim itself, it will not create
284 the db directory for itself if it does not exist.
286 . To test the locking, don't type anything more for the moment. You now need to
287 set up another process running the same test_dbfn command, e.g. from a
288 different logon to the same host. This time, when you attempt to open the
289 file it should fail after a minute with a timeout error because it is
292 . If the second process doesn't produce any error message, but gets back to the
293 > prompt, then the locking is not working properly.
295 . You can check that the second process gets the lock when the first process
296 releases it by exiting from the first process with ^D, q, or quit; or by
297 typing the command "close".
299 . There are some other commands available that are not related to locking:
303 write abcde the quick brown fox
305 writes a record to the database,
310 read and delete a record, respectively, and
314 scans the entire database. Note that the database is purely for testing the
315 dbm functions. It is *not* one of Exim's regular databases, and you should
316 not try running this testing program on any of Exim's real database
320 Last update: June 2002