/usr/man/cat.4/dtdtfile.4(/usr/man/cat.4/dtdtfile.4)
dtdtfile(4) DEVICES AND NETWORK INTERFACES dtdtfile(4)
NAME
dtdtfile - define the format and location of actions and
data type database files
SYNOPSIS
See dtactionfile(4) and dtdtsfile(4).
DESCRIPTION
The actions and data types database provides definitions for
the actions and data types TED clients recognize. Files
containing actions and data type definitions must end with
the .dt suffix. The database is constructed by reading all
files ending in the .dt suffix that are found in the search
path specified by the DTDATABASESEARCHPATH environment vari-
able.
The dttypes(1) utility is the tool that allows users to
examine and debug their database.
The DTDATABASESEARCHPATH environment variable contains a
comma-separated list of directories specified in
[host:]/path format. The host: portion is optional, but if
specified, /path is interpreted relative to host. In addi-
tion, host defines the DatabaseHost for records defined by
files in the /path directory. Otherwise, the DatabaseHost
is the same as the LocalHost. To allow for localized action
definitions, the data base search path supports the string
%L within the pathname string. The logic that parses DTDA-
TABASESEARCHPATH substitutes the value of the current locale
as stored in the LANG environment variable for the string %L
(or no characters if LANG is not set). Other uses of %
within the DTDATABASESEARCHPATH pathnames produce unspeci-
fied results. Directories can be set up for various
locales. Each directory contains localized action defini-
tions for a single locale. For examples, see the default
search path shown below. The local system administrator or
the user (in $HOME/.dtprofile) can modify the actual value
of the search path. The default search path includes the
following directories, searched in the following sequence:
$HOME/.dt/types/
personal user-defined database files
/etc/dt/appconfig/types/%L
locally defined language-specific database files
/etc/dt/appconfig/types/C
locally defined default database files
/usr/dt/appconfig/types/%L
language-specific database files
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dtdtfile(4) DEVICES AND NETWORK INTERFACES dtdtfile(4)
/usr/dt/appconfig/types/C
implementation-default database files
File Format
In addition to the version information, comments and vari-
able references described under other headings in this docu-
ment, these files may contain action and data type records,
as described in dtactionfile(4) and dtdtsfile(4).
Comments
Any line whose first non-space character is # is treated as
a comment line, and is ignored during the reading of the
database file.
Database Version
The database loader supports a version number, which indi-
cates the version of the database syntax used by a particu-
lar database file. If a database version number is not
specified, then the database loader assumes that the file
uses the version 1.0 syntax, described here. If a database
file specifies a version number, then it must be the first
non-blank, non-comment line in the database file; if the
version is specified anywhere else in the file, then an
error message is generated, and the remainder of that data-
base file is ignored. The database version number is speci-
fied using the following syntax:
set DtDbVersion=version_number
String Variables
Database entries can reference string variables that can be
set within the database file. The scope of a string vari-
able is restricted to only those record definitions within
the database file defining the string variable. A string
variable is defined using the following syntax:
set VariableName=variable_value
String variables are referenced using either of the standard
shell variable referencing syntaxes: $variable_name or
${variable_name}. A variable name can be made up of any of
the alphanumeric characters and the underscore.
Environment Variables
Database records may refer to environment variables, using
either of the standard shell variable referencing syntaxes:
$environment_variable or ${environment_variable}. If the
environment variable name conflicts with a string variable
name, the string variable takes precedence.
Line Continuation
Any field within a record can be continued onto another line
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dtdtfile(4) DEVICES AND NETWORK INTERFACES dtdtfile(4)
by ending the line with a \ character. The \ and any
<blank>s following the \ and preceding the newline are dis-
carded; leading <blank>s on the following line are preserved
in the continued field.
SEE ALSO
dtactionfile(4), dtdtsfile(4), dttypes(1).
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See also dtdtfile(4)
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