Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting change mail sender in unix aix Post 302320656 by rakesh_pagadala on Thursday 28th of May 2009 01:34:17 PM
Old 05-28-2009
just try echo "hello world" | mailx -s "SUBJECT" abc@xyz.com
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

unix mail : sender/reply to

Im currently working on modifying a unix script called email maker which basically creates emails on a regular basis using the unix Mail. Question: Is there a way to changed the value of the reply to and sender fields? Can I hard code values on these fields? How? Thanks in advance. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: bong m
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

mail without sender's id!

I found a mail which confused me a lot! since it did not contain any information regarding the sender of that mail. Is it possible to do like this? First i thought there was something wrong with the mail server.. but the subject of that mail still confused "nobody". How is it possible? or can I do... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sskb
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Mail Sender

Hello All, My unix (AIX 5.2) login is robk, my MS Exchange user name is rkapfer. What I want to do is send mail as rkapfer while logged in (to unix) as robk. I'm currently doing uuencode <pdf> <pdf>|mail -s"Subject" <recipient> works fine except the recipient sees me as robk@xyz.com.... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: rkapfer
0 Replies

4. AIX

Change sender e-mail address

When sending emails to the outside world, aix present itself as d_prod@production1.pdc.itercom.org. This is causing some issue with our e-mail server. So we need to change the name to d_prod@itercom.org... Does any one know how this can be accomplished? Thank you (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cchiang12
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

[Solved] Mail::Sender Doubt

I am using the below code to send an email #!/usr/bin/perl sub BEGIN { unshift (@INC,'/opt/dev/common/mds/perlLib'); } use Mail::Sender; $sender = new Mail::Sender {smtp => 'xxx.xxx.x.xx', from => 'abc@xyz.xom'}; $sender->MailFile({to => 'abc@xyz.xom', subject => 'Here is... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: dahlia84
0 Replies

6. Red Hat

How to change sender email address in mail -s command

Just having trouble trying to figure out what the option is. When I do mail -s "Subject" someuser@example.com I can't seem to specify "from" or "sender" option as I need it for my task. I tried using --f or -f though it didn't work. Can someone please tell me what other option... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: rockf1bull
0 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to change the sender's name or E-mail address in mutt command

Can any one help me in this ??? How to change sender's name or email address in Mutt command??? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sarathi
4 Replies

8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Mail -s help ,change the sender to correct one

Hi expert I use mail -s "hello" bruce@sohu.com <kernel-img.conf send mail, it display the sender is lyang001@lyang001-OptiPlex-9010.corp.ad..com How can I change the sender to yanglei.fage@gmail.com to default ? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: yanglei_fage
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

To define a sender name in mail command

Hi, I am using the unix script to send a report on daily basis using the mail command. Here the sender name is appearing as myname i.e. chandru (userid@machine.unix.domain.com). Is there any way to change sender name as a user defined name? example i need to change it to SupportTeam... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: schandru
1 Replies

10. Red Hat

How to send mail with sender mail address and name?

Hi, I am trying to send a mail using "mail" command in unix. I wanted to give sender name and sender address. I tried different options ,but still it shows only mail address(No name). mail -s "Alert mail : Nothing running !!!" $email -- -F"Mail Alert" -fno-reply@alert.com But I am getting... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jaggy
4 Replies
postal-list(1)							      Postal							    postal-list(1)

NAME
postal-list - program to show how postal expands user names SYNOPSIS
postal-list user-list-filename conversion-filename DESCRIPTION
This program shows the expansion that the postal program uses on email addresses. This can be used to make sure that you're configuration files do what you expect them to, and can also be used to produce a list of user-names for an account creation script (in case you want to create a million test accounts in a conveniant fashion). The user-list-filename is the name of a file which contains a list of user's email addresses. This can be just user-names or fully quali- fied email addresses. The conversion-filename parameter will be the name of a file containing the conversions to apply to email addresses. Each line in the file can either be a comment (starting with "#") or is to contain two parameters. The first parameter is the regular expression. For each email that is to be sent a randomly selected user-name will be checked against all regular expressions, the first match will determine the translation that is to be applied. The translation will be the second parameter on the line. It will contain a number of "." characters specifying characters in the name that are not to be translated. To specify the translations a range of characters can be specified inside square brackets. For example to have every address starting with "a" have a character from "01234567890abc" as it's second character and a character from "xyz" as it's third character you would have the following: ^a .[0-9abc][xyz] RETURN CODES
0 No Error 1 Bad Parameters AUTHOR
This program, it's manual page, and the Debian package were written by Russell Coker <russell@coker.com.au>. AVAILABILITY
The source is available from http://doc.coker.com.au/projects/postal/ . See http://etbe.coker.com.au/category/benchmark for further information. SEE ALSO
postal(8),rabid(8),regex(7) russell@coker.com.au 0.70 postal-list(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:00 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy