3 @setfilename ../info/eudc
4 @settitle Emacs Unified Directory Client (EUDC) Manual
15 * EUDC: (eudc). A client for directory servers (LDAP, PH)
18 This file documents EUDC v1.30b
20 EUDC is part of Emacs.
22 EUDC is the Emacs Unified Directory Client, a common interface to
23 directory servers using various protocols such as LDAP or the CCSO white
24 pages directory system (PH/QI)
26 Copyright @copyright{} 1998, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
28 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim
29 copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and
30 this permission notice are preserved on all copies.
33 Permission is granted to process this file through TeX
34 and print the results, provided the printed document
35 carries a copying permission notice identical to this
36 one except for the removal of this paragraph (this
37 paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
40 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified
41 versions of this manual under the conditions for
42 verbatim copying and the terms of the ``GNU General
43 Public License'', and provided that the entire
44 resulting derived work is distributed under the terms
45 of a permission notice identical to this one.
47 Permission is granted to copy and distribute
48 translations of this manual into another language,
49 under the above conditions for modified versions,
50 except that this permission notice may be stated in a
51 translation approved by the Free Software Foundation.
56 @subtitle{The Emacs Unified Directory Client}
57 @author by Oscar Figueiredo
62 Copyright @copyright{} 1998, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
64 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim
65 copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and
66 this permission notice are preserved on all copies.
69 Permission is granted to process this file through TeX
70 and print the results, provided the printed document
71 carries a copying permission notice identical to this
72 one except for the removal of this paragraph (this
73 paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
77 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified
78 versions of this manual under the conditions for
79 verbatim copying and the terms of the ``GNU General
80 Public License'', and provided that the entire
81 resulting derived work is distributed under the terms
82 of a permission notice identical to this one.
84 Permission is granted to copy and distribute
85 translations of this manual into another language,
86 under the above conditions for modified versions,
87 except that this permission notice may be stated in a
88 translation approved by the Free Software Foundation.
92 @node Top, Overview, (dir), (dir)
93 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
96 This manual documents EUDC v1.30b, the Emacs Unified Directory Client.
98 A common interface to directory servers using various protocols such as
99 LDAP or the CCSO white pages directory system (PH/QI)
104 * Overview:: Summary of EUDC features
105 * Installation:: How to install EUDC
106 * Usage:: The various usage possibilities explained
107 * Credits:: Who's done what
115 @node Overview, Installation, Top, Top
116 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
119 EUDC, the Emacs Unified Directory Client, provides a common user
120 interface to access directory servers using different directory
123 Currently supported back-ends are:
127 LDAP, Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
131 BBDB, Big Brother's Insiduous Database
134 The main features of the EUDC interface are:
138 Queries using a customizable form
140 Inline query expansion (for instance you can expand a name
141 to an email address in a mail message buffer using a server as an
144 Multiple servers can be tried in turn until a match is found for an
147 Fast minibuffer queries for email addresses and phone numbers
149 Interface to BBDB to let you insert server records into your own BBDB database
150 (@pxref{Top,,BBDB,bbdb,BBDB Manual})
154 * LDAP:: What is LDAP ?
155 * CCSO PH/QI:: What is CCSO, PH, QI ?
156 * BBDB:: What is BBDB ?
161 @node LDAP, CCSO PH/QI, Overview, Overview
162 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
165 LDAP, Lightweight Directory Access Protocol, is a communication
166 protocol for directory applications defined in RFC 1777.
168 Quoted from RFC 1777:
171 [LDAP] is designed to provide access to the X.500 Directory while not
172 incurring the resource requirements of the Directory Access Protocol
173 (DAP). This protocol is specifically targeted at simple management
174 applications and browser applications that provide simple read/write
175 interactive access to the X.500 Directory, and is intended to be a
176 complement to the DAP itself.
179 LDAP servers usually store (but are not limited to) information about
180 people such as their name, phone number, email address, office
181 location, etc@enddots{} More information about LDAP can be found at
182 @url{http://www.openldap.org/}
184 EUDC requires external support to access LDAP directory servers
185 (@pxref{LDAP Requirements})
188 @node CCSO PH/QI, BBDB, LDAP, Overview
189 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
192 The Central Computing Services Office (CCSO) of the University of
193 Illinois at Urbana Champaign (UIUC) created and freely distributes a
194 directory system that is currently in use in more than 300 organizations
195 around the world. The system records information about people such as
196 their address, phone number, email, academic information or any other
197 details it was configured to.
199 The system consists of two parts: a database server traditionally called
200 @samp{qi} and a command-line client called @samp{ph}.
201 @url{ftp://uiarchive.cso.uiuc.edu/pub/packages/ph} is the main
202 distribution site. @url{http://www.uiuc.edu/cgi-bin/ph/lookup?Query=.}
203 provides a listing of the active @samp{qi} servers.
205 The original command-line @samp{ph} client that comes with the
206 @samp{ph/qi} distribution provides additional features like the
207 possibility to communicate with the server in login-mode which makes it
208 possible to change records in the database. This is not implemented in
212 @node BBDB, , CCSO PH/QI, Overview
213 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
216 BBDB is the Big Brother's Insiduous Database, a package for Emacs
217 originally written by Jamie Zawinski which provides rolodex-like
218 database functionality featuring tight integration with the Emacs mail
221 It is often used as an enhanced email address book.
223 EUDC considers BBDB as a directory server backend just like LDAP or
224 PH/QI servers though BBDB has no client/server protocol and thus always
225 resides locally on your machine. The point in this is not to offer an
226 alternate way to query your BBDB database (BBDB itself provides much
227 more flexible ways to do that) but rather to offer an interface to your
228 local directory that is consistent with the interface to external
229 directories (LDAP, PH/QI). This is particularly interesting when
230 performing queries on multiple servers.
232 EUDC also offers a means to insert results from directory queries into
233 your own local BBDB (@pxref{Creating BBDB Records})
235 @node Installation, Usage, Overview, Top
236 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
237 @chapter Installation
239 Add the following to your @file{.emacs} init file:
243 This will install EUDC at startup.
245 After installing EUDC you will find (the next time you launch Emacs) a
246 new @code{Directory Search} submenu in the @samp{Tools} menu that will
247 give you access to EUDC.
249 You may also find it useful to add the following to your @file{.emacs}
250 initialization file to add a shortcut for email address expansion in
251 email composition buffers (@pxref{Inline Query Expansion})
256 '(define-key message-mode-map [(control ?c) (tab)] 'eudc-expand-inline))
259 '(define-key mail-mode-map [(control ?c) (tab)] 'eudc-expand-inline))
263 * LDAP Requirements:: EUDC needs external support for LDAP
266 @node LDAP Requirements, , Installation, Installation
267 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
268 @section LDAP Requirements
270 LDAP support is added by means of @file{ldap.el} which is part of Emacs.
271 @file{ldap.el} needs an external command line utility named
272 @file{ldapsearch} which is available as part of LDAP toolkits. above.
277 (@url{http://www.openldap.org/})
279 University of Michigan's LDAP Client software
280 (@url{http://www.umich.edu/~dirsvcs/ldap/})
284 @node Usage, Credits, Installation, Top
285 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
288 This chapter describes the usage of EUDC. Most functions and
289 customization options are available through the @samp{Directory Search}
290 submenu of the @samp{Tools} submenu.
293 * Querying Servers:: How queries are performed and handled
294 * Query Form:: How to use and customize the query form
295 * Display of Query Results:: Controlling how query results are presented
296 * Inline Query Expansion:: How to use and customize inline queries
297 * The Server Hotlist:: How to use and manage the server hotlist
298 * Multi-server Queries:: How to query multiple servers sucessively
299 * Creating BBDB Records:: How to insert query results into your BBDB
300 * Server/Protocol Locals:: Customizing on a per server/protocol basis
304 @node Querying Servers, Query Form, Usage, Usage
305 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
306 @section Querying Servers
308 EUDC's basic functionality is to let you query a directory server and
309 return the results back to you. There are several things you may want
310 to customize in this process.
314 * Selecting a Server:: The first thing to do
315 * Return Attributes:: Configuring what the server should return
316 * Duplicate Attributes:: What to do when records have duplicate attributes
319 @node Selecting a Server, Return Attributes, Querying Servers, Querying Servers
320 @subsection Selecting a Server
322 Before doing any query you will need to set the directory server. You
323 need to specify the name of the host machine running the server software
324 and the protocol to use. If you do not set the server in any fashion,
325 EUDC will ask you for one when you make your first query.
327 You can set the server by selecting one from your hotlist of servers
328 (@pxref{The Server Hotlist}) available in the @samp{Server} submenu or
329 by selecting @samp{New Server} in that same menu.
331 LDAP servers generally require some configuration before you can perform
332 queries on them. In particular, the @dfn{search base} must be
333 configured. If the server you select has no configured search base then
334 EUDC will propose you to configure it at this point. A customization
335 buffer will be displayed where you can edit the search base and other
336 parameters for the server.
339 The name or IP address of the remote directory server. A TCP port number
340 may be specified by appending a colon and a number to the name of the
341 server. You will not need this unless your server runs on a port other
342 than the default (which depends on the protocol).
343 If the directory server resides on your own computer (which is the case
344 if you use the BBDB backend) then `localhost' is a reasonable value but
345 it will be ignored anyway.
348 @defvar eudc-protocol
349 The directory protocol to use to query the server. Currently supported
350 protocols in this version of EUDC are @code{ph}, @code{ldap} and @code{bbdb}.
353 @deffn Command eudc-set-server
354 This command accessible from @samp{Server} submenu lets you specify a
355 new directory server and protocol.
358 @node Return Attributes, Duplicate Attributes, Selecting a Server, Querying Servers
359 @subsection Return Attributes
361 Directory servers may be configured to return a default set of
362 attributes for each record matching a query if the query specifies none.
363 The variable @code{eudc-default-return-attributes} controls the return
364 attributes you want to see, if different from the server defaults.
366 @defvar eudc-default-return-attributes
367 A list of the default attributes to extract from directory entries. If
368 set to the symbol @code{all} then all available attributes are
369 returned. A value of @code{nil}, the default, means to return the
370 default attributes as configured in the server.
373 The server may return several matching records to a query. Some of the
374 records may however not contain all the attributes you requested. You can
375 discard those records.
377 @defopt eudc-strict-return-matches
378 If non-@code{nil}, entries that do not contain all the requested return
379 attributes are ignored. Default is @code{t}.
382 @node Duplicate Attributes, , Return Attributes, Querying Servers
383 @subsection Duplicate Attributes
385 Directory standards may authorize different instances of the same
386 attribute in a record. For instance the record of a person may contain
387 several email fields containing different email addresses. When using
388 a QI directory server this is difficult to distinguish from attributes
389 having multi-line values such as the postal address that may contain a
390 line for the street and another one for the zip code and city name. In
391 both cases, EUDC will consider the attribute duplicated.
393 EUDC has several methods to deal with duplicated attributes. The
394 available methods are:
398 Makes a list with the different values of the duplicate attribute. The
399 record is returned with only one instance of the attribute with a list
400 of all the different values as a value. This is the default method that
401 is used to handle duplicate fields for which no other method has been
404 Discards all the duplicate values of the field keeping only the first
407 Concatenates the different values using a newline as a separator. The
408 record keeps only one instance of the field the value of which is a
409 single multi-line string.
411 Duplicates the whole record into as many instances as there are different
412 values for the field. This is the default for the email field. Thus a
413 record containing 3 different email addresses is duplicated into three
414 different records each having a single email address. This is
415 particularly useful in combination with @code{select} as the method to
416 handle multiple matches in inline expansion queries (@pxref{Inline Query
417 Expansion}) because you are presented with the 3 addresses in a
421 Because a method may not be applicable to all fields, the variable
422 @code{eudc-duplicate-attribute-handling-method} lets you specify either a
423 default method for all fields or a method for each individual field.
425 @defvar eudc-duplicate-attribute-handling-method
426 A method to handle entries containing duplicate attributes. This is
427 either an alist @code{(@var{attr} . @var{method})} or a symbol
428 @var{method}. The alist form of the variable associates a method to an
429 individual attribute name, the second form specifies a method applicable
430 to all attribute names. Available methods are: @code{list},
431 @code{first}, @code{concat}, @code{duplicate} (see above). Defaults to
437 @node Query Form, Display of Query Results, Querying Servers, Usage
438 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
441 The simplest way to query your directory server is to use the query
442 form. You display the query form with the @samp{Query with Form} menu
443 item or by invoking the command @kbd{M-x eudc-query-form}. The attribute
444 names presented in this form are defined by the
445 @code{eudc-query-form-attributes} variable (unless a non-@code{nil}
446 argument is supplied to @code{eudc-query-form}).
448 Since the different directory protocols to which EUDC interfaces may
449 use different names for equivalent attributes, EUDC defines its own set
450 of attribute names and a mapping between these names and their
451 protocol-specific equivalent through the variable
452 @code{eudc-protocol-attributes-translation-alist}. Names currently
453 defined by EUDC are @code{name}, @code{firstname}, @code{email} and
456 @defvar eudc-query-form-attributes
457 A list of attributes presented in the query form. Attribute names in
458 this list should be either EUDC attribute names or valid attribute
459 names. You can get a list of valid attribute names for the current
460 protocol with the @samp{List Valid Attribute Names} menu item or the
461 @kbd{M-x eudc-get-attribute-list} command. Defaults to @code{name},
462 @code{email} and @code{phone}.
465 @deffn Command eudc-query-form get-fields-from-server
466 Display a form to query the directory server. If given a non-@code{nil}
467 argument the function first queries the server for the existing fields
468 and displays a corresponding form. Not all protocols may support a
469 non-@code{nil} argument here.
472 Since the names of the fields may not be explicit enough or adapted to
473 be directly displayed as prompt strings in the form, the variable
474 @code{eudc-user-attribute-names-alist} lets you define more explicit
475 names for directory attribute names. This variable is ignored if
476 @code{eudc-use-raw-directory-names} is non-@code{nil}.
478 @defvar eudc-user-attribute-names-alist
479 This is an alist of user-defined names for the directory attributes used in
480 query/response forms. Prompt strings for attributes that are not in this
481 alist are derived by splitting the attribute name at underscores and
482 capitalizing the individual words.
485 @defvar eudc-use-raw-directory-names
486 If non-@code{nil}, use attributes names as defined in the directory.
487 Otherwise, directory query/response forms display the user attribute
488 names defined in @code{eudc-user-attribute-names-alist}.
491 @node Display of Query Results, Inline Query Expansion, Query Form, Usage
492 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
493 @section Display of Query Results
495 Upon successful completion of a form query, EUDC will display a buffer
496 containing the results of the query.
498 The fields that are returned for each record
499 are controlled by @code{eudc-default-return-attributes} (@pxref{Return
502 The display of each individual field can be performed by an arbitrary
503 function which allows specific processing for binary values like images
504 or audio samples as well as values with computer semantics like URLs.
506 @defvar eudc-attribute-display-method-alist
507 An alist specifying methods to display attribute values. Each member of
508 the list is of the form @code{(@var{name} . @var{func})} where
509 @var{name} is a lowercased string naming a directory attribute
510 (translated according to @code{eudc-user-attribute-names-alist} if
511 @code{eudc-use-raw-directory-names} is non-nil) and @var{func} a
512 function that will be passed the corresponding attribute values for
516 This variable has protocol-local definitions (see @pxref{Server/Protocol
517 Locals}). For instance, it is defined as follows for LDAP:
520 (eudc-protocol-set 'eudc-attribute-display-method-alist
521 '(("jpegphoto" . eudc-display-jpeg-inline)
522 ("labeledurl" . eudc-display-url)
523 ("audio" . eudc-display-sound)
524 ("labeledurl" . eudc-display-url)
525 ("url" . eudc-display-url))
529 EUDC provides a set of built-in functions to display binary value types:
531 @defun eudc-display-generic-binary data
532 Display a button for unidentified binary @var{data}.
535 @defun eudc-display-url url
536 Display URL and make it clickable.
539 @defun eudc-display-sound data
540 Display a button to play the sound @var{data}.
543 @defun eudc-display-jpeg-inline data
544 Display the JPEG @var{data} inline at point if possible.
547 @defun eudc-display-jpeg-as-button data
548 Display a button for the JPEG @var{data}.
551 Right-clicking on a binary value button pops up a contextual menu with
552 options to process the value. Among these are saving the attribute
553 value to a file or sending it to an external viewer command. External
554 viewers should expect the value on their standard input and should
555 display it or perform arbitrary processing on it. Messages sent to
556 standard output are discarded. External viewers are listed in the
557 variable @code{eudc-external-viewers} which you can customize.
559 @defvar eudc-external-viewers
560 This is a list of viewer program specifications. Each specification is
561 a list whose first element is a string naming the viewer for unique
562 identification, the second element is the executable program which
563 should be invoked and the following elements are arguments that should
564 be passed to the program.
568 @node Inline Query Expansion, The Server Hotlist, Display of Query Results, Usage
569 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
570 @section Inline Query Expansion
572 Inline query expansion is a powerful method to get completion from your
573 directory server. The most common usage is for expanding names to email
574 addresses in mail message buffers. The expansion is performed by the
575 command @kbd{M-x eudc-expand-inline} which is available from the
576 @samp{Directory Search} menu but can also be conveniently bound to a key
577 shortcut (@pxref{Installation}) The operation is controlled by the
578 variables @code{eudc-inline-expansion-format},
579 @code{eudc-inline-query-format},
580 @code{eudc-expanding-overwrites-query} and
581 @code{eudc-multiple-match-handling-method}.
583 If the query fails for a server, other servers may be tried successively
584 until one of them finds a match (@pxref{Multi-server Queries}).
586 @deffn Command eudc-expand-inline replace-p
587 Query the server and expand the query string before point. The query
588 string consists of the buffer substring from the point back to the
589 preceding comma, colon or beginning of
590 line. @code{eudc-inline-query-format} controls how individual words
591 are mapped onto directory attribute names. After querying the server
592 for the given string, the expansion specified by
593 @code{eudc-inline-expansion-format} is inserted in the buffer at
594 point. If @var{replace-p} is @code{t} then this expansion replaces the
595 query string in the buffer. If @code{eudc-expanding-overwrites-query}
596 is non-@code{nil} then the meaning of @var{replace-p} is negated.
599 @defvar eudc-inline-query-format
600 Format of an inline expansion query.
601 This is actually a list of @var{format}s. A @var{format} is a list of
602 one or more EUDC attribute names. A @var{format} applies if it contains
603 as many attributes as individual words in the inline query string. If
604 several @var{format}s apply then they are tried in order until a match
605 is found. If @code{nil} all the words will be mapped onto the default
606 server/protocol attribute name (generally @code{name}).
608 For instance, use the following
610 (setq eudc-inline-query-format '((name)
614 to indicate that single word expansion queries are to be considered as
615 surnames and if no match is found then they should be tried as first
616 names. Inline queries consisting of two words are considered as
617 consisting of a first name followed by a surname. If the query consists
618 of more than two words, then the first one is considered as the first
619 name and the remaining words are all considered as surname constituents.
621 @var{format}s are in fact not limited to EUDC attribute names, you can
622 use server or protocol specific names in them. It may be safer if you
623 do so, to set the variable @code{eudc-inline-query-format} in a protocol
624 or server local fashion (see @pxref{Server/Protocol Locals}).
626 For instance you could use the following to match up to three words
627 against the @code{cn} attribute of LDAP servers:
629 (eudc-protocol-set 'eudc-inline-query-format
637 @defvar eudc-inline-expansion-format
638 This variable lets you control exactly what is inserted into the buffer
639 upon an inline expansion request. It is a list whose first element is a
640 string passed to @code{format}. Remaining elements are symbols
641 corresponding to directory attribute names. The corresponding attribute
642 values are passed as additional arguments to @code{format}. Default is
643 @code{("%s" email)} but you may want to consider a value like @code{("%s
647 @defvar eudc-multiple-match-handling-method
648 This variable controls what to do when multiple entries match a query
649 for an inline expansion. Possible values are:
652 The first match is considered as being the only one, the others are
655 A selection buffer pops up where you can choose a particular match. This
656 is the default value of the variable.
658 The expansion uses all records successively
660 An error is signaled. The expansion aborts.
664 Defaults to @code{select}
669 @node The Server Hotlist, Multi-server Queries, Inline Query Expansion, Usage
670 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
671 @section The Server Hotlist
673 EUDC lets you maintain a list of frequently used servers so that you
674 can easily switch from one to another. This hotlist appears in the
675 @samp{Server} submenu. You select a server in this list by clicking on
676 its name. You can add the current server to the list with the command
677 @kbd{M-x eudc-bookmark-current-server}. The list is contained in the variable
678 @code{eudc-server-hotlist} which is stored in and retrieved from the file
679 designated by @code{eudc-options-file}. EUDC also provides a facility to
680 edit the hotlist interactively (@pxref{The Hotlist Edit Buffer}).
682 The hotlist is also used to make queries on multiple servers
683 successively (@pxref{Multi-server Queries}). The order in which the
684 servers are tried is the order they appear in the hotlist, therefore it
685 is important to sort the hotlist appropriately.
687 @deffn Command eudc-bookmark-server server
688 Add @var{server} to the hotlist of servers
691 @deffn Command eudc-bookmark-current-server
692 Add the current server to the hotlist of servers
695 @defvar eudc-options-file
696 The name of a file where EUDC stores its internal variables
697 (the hotlist and the current server). EUDC will try to load
698 that file upon initialization so, if you choose a file name
699 different from the defaults @file{~/.eudc-options}, be sure to set this
700 variable to the appropriate value @emph{before} EUDC is itself
705 * The Hotlist Edit Buffer:: An interactive hotlist editing facility
708 @node The Hotlist Edit Buffer, , The Server Hotlist, The Server Hotlist
709 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
710 @subsection The Hotlist Edit Buffer
712 The hotlist edit buffer offers a means to manage a list of frequently
713 used servers. Commands are available in the context pop-up menu
714 generally bound to the right mouse button. Those commands also have
715 equivalent keybindings.
717 @deffn Command eudc-hotlist-add-server
719 Add a new server to the hotlist on the line after point
722 @deffn Command eudc-hotlist-delete-server
724 Delete the server on the line point is on
727 @deffn Command eudc-hotlist-select-server
729 Select the server the point is on as the current directory server for
733 @deffn Command eudc-hotlist-transpose-servers
735 Bubble up the server the point is on to the top of the list
738 @deffn Command eudc-hotlist-quit-edit
740 Save the changes and quit the hotlist edit buffer. Use @kbd{x} or
741 @kbd{M-x kill-buffer} to exit without saving.
745 @node Multi-server Queries, Creating BBDB Records, The Server Hotlist, Usage
746 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
747 @section Multi-server Queries
749 When using inline query expansion (@pxref{Inline Query Expansion}), EUDC
750 can try to query successively a sequence of directory servers until one
751 of them successfully finds a match for the query.
753 @defvar eudc-inline-expansion-servers
754 This variable controls which servers are tried and in which order when
755 trying to perform an inline query. Possible values are:
758 Only the current directory server is tried
760 The servers in the hotlist are tried in order until one finds a match
761 for the query or `eudc-max-servers-to-query' is reached
762 @item server-then-hotlist
763 The current server then the servers in the hotlist are tried in the
764 order they appear in the hotlist until one of them finds a match or
765 `eudc-max-servers-to-query' is reached. This is the default.
769 @defvar eudc-max-servers-to-query
770 This variable indicates the maximum number of servers to query when
771 performing a multi-server query. The default, @code{nil}, indicates
772 that all available servers should be tried.
777 @node Creating BBDB Records, Server/Protocol Locals, Multi-server Queries, Usage
778 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
779 @section Creating BBDB Records
781 With EUDC, you can automatically create BBDB records
782 (@pxref{Top,,BBDB,bbdb,BBDB Manual}) from records you get from a
783 directory server. You do this by moving point to the appropriate
784 record in a query result display buffer and invoking the command
785 @kbd{M-x eudc-insert-record-at-point-into-bbdb} with the
786 keyboard binding @kbd{b} @footnote{This keybinding does not actually
787 call @code{eudc-insert-record-at-point-into-bbdb} but uses
788 @code{eudc-try-bbdb-insert} instead.}, or with the menu. EUDC
789 cannot update an existing BBDB record and will signal an error if you
790 try to insert a record matching an existing one.
792 It is also possible to export to BBDB the whole batch of records
793 contained in the directory query result with the command
794 @kbd{M-x eudc-batch-export-records-to-bbdb}.
796 Because directory systems may not enforce a strict record format, local
797 server installations may use different attribute names and have
798 different ways to organize the information. Furthermore BBDB has its own
799 record structure. For these reasons converting a record from its
800 external directory format to the BBDB format is a highly customizable
803 @defvar eudc-bbdb-conversion-alist
804 The value of this variable should be a symbol naming an alist defining a
805 mapping between BBDB field names onto directory attribute names records.
806 This is a protocol-local variable and is initialized upon protocol
807 switch (@pxref{Server/Protocol Locals}) The alist is made of cells of the
808 form @code{(@var{bbdb-field} . @var{spec-or-list})}.
809 @var{bbdb-field} is the name of a field
810 that must be defined in your BBDB environment (standard field names are
811 @code{name}, @code{company}, @code{net}, @code{phone}, @code{address}
813 @var{spec-or-list} is either a single mapping specification or a list of
814 mapping specifications. Lists of mapping specifications are valid for
815 the @code{phone} and @code{address} BBDB fields only. @var{spec}s are
816 actually s-expressions which are evaluated as follows:
822 evaluates to the symbol value. Symbols corresponding to directory
823 attribute names present in the record evaluate to the value of the field
826 is evaluated as a function. The argument list may contain attribute
827 names which evaluate to the corresponding values in the record. The form
828 evaluation should return something appropriate for the particular
829 @var{bbdb-field} (see @code{bbdb-create-internal}).
830 @code{eudc-bbdbify-phone} and @code{eudc-bbdbify-address} are provided as
831 convenience functions to parse phones and addresses.
835 The default value of the PH-specific value of that variable is
836 @code{eudc-ph-bbdb-conversion-alist}:
841 (address . (eudc-bbdbify-address address "Address"))
842 (phone . ((eudc-bbdbify-phone phone "Phone")
843 (eudc-bbdbify-phone office_phone "Office Phone"))))
850 the @code{name} field of the BBDB record gets its value
851 from the @code{name} attribute of the directory record
853 the @code{net} field of the BBDB record gets its value
854 from the @code{email} attribute of the directory record
856 the @code{address} field of the BBDB record is obtained by parsing the
857 @code{address} attribute of the directory record with the function
858 @code{eudc-bbdbify-address}
860 two @code{phone} fields are created (when possible) in the BBDB record.
861 The first one has @cite{Phone} for location and its value is obtained by
862 parsing the @code{phone} attribute of the PH/QI record with the function
863 @code{eudc-bbdbify-phone}. The second one has @cite{Office Phone} for location
864 its value is obtained by parsing the @code{office_phone} attribute of the
865 PH/QI record with the function @code{eudc-bbdbify-phone}.
868 @defun eudc-bbdbify-phone phone location
869 This is a convenience function provided for use in
870 @code{eudc-bbdb-conversion-alist}. It parses @var{phone} into a vector
871 compatible with @code{bbdb-create-internal}. @var{phone} is either a string
872 supposedly containing a phone number or a list of such strings which are
873 concatenated. @var{location} is used as the phone location for BBDB.
876 @defun eudc-bbdbify-address addr location
877 This is a convenience function provided for use in
878 @code{eudc-bbdb-conversion-alist}. It parses @var{addr} into a vector
879 compatible with @code{bbdb-create-internal}. @var{addr} should be an
880 address string of no more than four lines or a list of lines. The last
881 line is searched for the zip code, city and state name. @var{location}
882 is used as the phone location for BBDB.
885 Note that only a subset of the attributes you selected with
886 @code{eudc-default-return-attributes} and that are actually displayed may
887 actually be inserted as part of the newly created BBDB record.
890 @node Server/Protocol Locals, , Creating BBDB Records, Usage
891 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
892 @section Server/Protocol Locals
894 EUDC can be customized independently for each server or directory
895 protocol. All variables can be given local bindings that are activated
896 when a particular server and/or protocol becomes active. This is much
897 like buffer-local bindings but on a per server or per protocol basis.
900 * Manipulating local bindings:: Functions to set and query local bindings
903 @node Manipulating local bindings, , Server/Protocol Locals, Server/Protocol Locals
904 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
905 @subsection Manipulating local bindings
907 EUDC offers functions that let you set and query variables on a per
908 server or per protocol basis.
910 The following predicates allow you to test the existence of
911 server/protocol local bindings for a particular variable.
913 @defun eudc-server-local-variable-p var
914 Return non-@code{nil} if @var{var} has server-local bindings
917 @defun eudc-protocol-local-variable-p var
918 Return non-@code{nil} if @var{var} has protocol-local bindings
921 The following functions allow you to set the value of a variable with
922 various degrees of localness.
924 @defun eudc-default-set var val
925 Set the EUDC default value of @var{var} to @var{val}.
926 The current binding of @var{var} (if local to the current server or
927 protocol) is not changed.
930 @defun eudc-protocol-set var val &optional protocol
931 Set the binding of @var{var} local to @var{protocol} to @var{val}. If
932 omitted, @var{protocol} defaults to the current value of
933 @code{eudc-protocol}. The current binding of @var{var} is changed only
934 if @var{protocol} is omitted.
937 @defun eudc-server-set var val &optional server
938 Set the binding of @var{var} local to @var{server} to @var{val}. If
939 omitted, @var{server} defaults to the current value of
940 @code{eudc-server}. The current binding of @var{var} is changed only if
941 @var{server} is omitted.
944 @defun eudc-set var val
945 Set the most local (server, protocol or default) binding of @var{var} to
946 @var{val}. The current binding of @var{var} is also set to @var{val}.
949 The following variables allow you to query the various bindings of a
950 variable (local or non-local).
952 @defun eudc-variable-default-value var
953 Return the default binding of @var{var} (outside of a particular server
954 or protocol local binding).
955 Return @code{unbound} if @var{var} has no EUDC default value.
958 @defun eudc-variable-protocol-value var &optional protocol
959 Return the value of @var{var} local to @var{protocol}. Return
960 @code{unbound} if @var{var} has no value local to @var{protocol}.
961 @var{protocol} defaults to @code{eudc-protocol}.
964 @defun eudc-variable-server-value var [server]
965 Return the value of @var{var} local to @var{server}.
966 Return @code{unbound} if @var{var} has no value local to @var{server}.
967 @var{server} defaults to @code{eudc-server}.
971 Changing a protocol-local or server-local value of a variable has no
972 effect on its current value. The following command is used to
973 synchronize the current values of variables with their local values
974 given the current @code{eudc-server} and @code{eudc-protocol}:
976 @defun eudc-update-local-variables
977 Update all EUDC variables according to their local settings.
982 @node Credits, Variables Index, Usage, Top
983 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
986 EUDC was written by Oscar Figueiredo based on @file{ph.el} by the
989 Thanks to Soren Dayton for his suggestions, his enthusiasm and his help
990 in testing and proofreading the code and docs of @file{ph.el}.
992 @node Variables Index, , Credits, Top
993 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
994 @unnumbered Variables Index
998 @setchapternewpage odd