Apparently the -f option to hostname is not portable, and in fact it
does not seem to always behave reasonably in e.g. a chroot.
Python code originally due to Tomi [1], modified by yours truly.
[1]: id:m2lf9fbkug.fsf@guru.guru-group.fi
sed 's/^built_with[.]\(.*\)=.*$/built_with.\1=something/'
}
sed 's/^built_with[.]\(.*\)=.*$/built_with.\1=something/'
}
-notmuch_passwd_sanitize ()
+notmuch_passwd_sanitize()
- local user=$(id -un)
- local fqdn=$(hostname -f)
- local full_name=$(getent passwd $user | cut -d: -f 5 | cut -d, -f1)
- sed -e "s/$user/USERNAME/" -e "s/$fqdn/FQDN/" -e "s/$full_name/USER_FULL_NAME/"
+ ${NOTMUCH_PYTHON} -c'
+import os, sys, pwd, socket
+
+pw = pwd.getpwuid(os.getuid())
+user = pw.pw_name
+name = pw.pw_gecos.partition(",")[0]
+fqdn = socket.getfqdn()
+
+for l in sys.stdin:
+ l = l.replace(user, "USERNAME").replace(fqdn, "FQDN").replace(".(none)","").replace(name, "USER_FULL_NAME")
+ sys.stdout.write(l)
+'
}
notmuch_config_sanitize ()
}
notmuch_config_sanitize ()