10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I am having trouble getting mail to work on a red hat server. At first I was getting this message.
Diagnostic-Code: X-Postfix; delivery temporarily suspended: connect to :25: Connection refused
Then added the port to my firewall. Then I temporarily turned off selinux. I then copied this file... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cokedude
1 Replies
2. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello fellow forum members,
I have a script which returns a date (I can design the script to return the value in email), How can I design the script in AIX to invoke another shell script which performs some set of actions.
Procmail doesnt work in AIX. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ektubbe
4 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi All,
i have a folder in which we receive 6 files daily. the file name will be appended with date for ex : files that we receive on 1/9/2013 will be like file1_20130108.txt.zip
file1_20130108.txt
file2_20130108.txt.zip
file2_20130108.txt
file3_20130108.txt.zip
file3_20130108.txt
the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: mahesh300182
3 Replies
4. Solaris
Hi ,
I'm trying to send a mail from a sunOS machine that is within hp network to my email: eman.el-badawy@hp.com ,the user trying to send
is 'project',,but seems the mail address can not be resolved
checking /var/log/syslog i got the following:
Dec 25 14:34:02 svddev15 sendmail: ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Eman_in_forum
1 Replies
5. Red Hat
hi,
i'm having a post fix email server and clients are accessing with out client. Once client accessing email from LAN and from his Broad Band connection too. Once that user download mails from server on LAN, when he try to access the emails again from home using his Broad Band connection same... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: charitha rakkit
1 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi all,
My question is how can we grep the time of the mail which we receive in our inbox?
like if i get a mail tonight at 10 i should be able to grep the time of it tomorrow morning or someother day in 24 hr format....
how can we do that? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: smarty86
2 Replies
7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hello,
Getting an extra attachment when i send a mail using below code.
The body and the rest of the attachments look very fine.
The extra attachment to be exact has a name ATT00001.txt. :confused:
This is not part of my $attach_list.
BOUNDARY='------The Boundary-----'
print - "From:... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pgop
1 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
hello,
i have a file in which lines like this are to ve replaced with lines like
{172.29.1.55 mn55.mgmt.yuva.param # }should change to
{0.0.0.0 mn55.mgmt.yuva.param #noconn
Fallowing are the lines example lines are in a file in the same sequence to be converted :
172.29.1.49 ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pankajd
1 Replies
9. AIX
Greetings to all of you. I am a tad desperate here. I have found MANY articles scattered across the internet from google searches and unix.com searches for how to forward mail that say:
Create a ~/.forward file and put XXXX in it.
This is not what I need to do.
We have bunch of users... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: DennisC31
1 Replies
10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
hello! when issuing the mail command to see my received mail, i get this error:
(server)starla:/home/starla>mail
Warning: Too many letters, overflowing letters concatenated
msgcnt 27378 vxfs: mesg 001: vx_nospace - /dev/vg00/lvol4 file system full (1 block extent)
mail: no space for temp file... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: starla0316
0 Replies
post(8) System Manager's Manual post(8)
NAME
post - deliver a message
SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/mh/post [options] file
OPTIONS
Specifies a file that post should take aliases from. More than one file can be specified, each being preceded with the -alias option. The
post program automatically consults the system alias file, /usr/lib/mh/MailAliases. If there is an Aliasfile entry in your post also con-
sults the file named in that entry. Filters (re-formats) messages sent to blind copy recipients. Recipients named in the Bcc: field nor-
mally receive a new message which includes a copy of the message sent to the other recipients. If this option is specified, this copy of
the message is filtered according to the instructions in the named file. The default is -nofilter. Formats messages so as to conform to
ARPAnet Internet Message Format protocol. This is the default behavior. You can post from formatting messages in this way by using the
-noformat option. Prints a list of the valid options to this command. Adds a Message-ID: or Resent-Message-ID: field to the header.
Specifies the mail system over which mail is sent. The only value allowed is smtp, which is the standard mail system. Additional values
are supported only for use with other mail systems. Informs the user of each step of the posting/filing process. Allows the user to watch
the transport system's handling of the message (for example, local and fast delivery). Specifies the preferred length of the header compo-
nents that contain addresses.
The default settings for post are:
-alias /usr/lib/mh/MailAliases -format -nomsgid -mts smtp -noverbose -nowatch -width 72 -nofilter
DESCRIPTION
The program post is called by send(1) to deliver the message in the named file to local and remote users. In fact, all of the functions at-
tributed to send on its reference page are performed by post, with send acting as a relatively simple pre-processor. Thus, it is post which
parses the various header fields, appends From: and Date: lines, and interacts with the transport system.
Normally, post would not be called directly by the user.
It searches the To:, cc:, Bcc:, and Resent-xxx: header lines of the specified message for destination addresses, checks these addresses for
validity, and formats them so as to conform to ARPAnet Internet Message Format protocol (unless the -noformat option is set). This will
normally cause @local-site to be appended to each local destination address, as well as any local return addresses.
If a Bcc: field is encountered, the mail system will use its addresses for delivery. The Bcc: is removed from the message sent to original
recipients. The copied recipients will receive an entirely new message with a minimal set of headers. The mail system includes a copy of
the message sent to the original recipients in the body of the message.
This command consults the environment variable $SIGNATURE to determine the sender's personal name in constructing the From: line of the
message.
RESTRICTIONS
For this version, the -mts option only supports the value smtp. Additional values are supported for use only with other mail systems.
PROFILE COMPONENTS
The post command does not consult the user's
FILES
The system customization file. The program to process Fcc:s. The program to process Bcc:s. The system alias file.
SEE ALSO
Commands: comp(1), mhmail(1), send(1)
Files: mh-alias(4), mh-mail(4), mtstailor(4)
Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages (RFC 822)
post(8)