Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: To practice Unix at home
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers To practice Unix at home Post 302259371 by Amol_Dicholkar on Tuesday 18th of November 2008 12:47:06 AM
Old 11-18-2008
Hi,
Thanks a lot gentlemens, ur replies were really helpful, looking forward for ur replies if i m stuck sumwhere or if i can help in some or the other way.

Thanks,
Amol
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Hardware dummy trying to set up Unix workstation for Oracle at home for practice!

I have been planning to set up a Unix workstation at home to host an Oracle database just for database admin. practice. But I don't know enough about hardware to know whether this can be done on a regular desktop and the required hardware config. If anyone could kindly guide me in this mission I... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: tmanpakdee
4 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Unix Practice Website

Hi , If somebody knows, Please let me know where can I practice Unix commands and Shell scripts Online. I know www.cyberspace.org. But its very slow. Is there some website which is very fast. Even I have heard there are some websites where you pay just 2-3 dollors a month and connection is... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: satgur
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

practice tests- Unix Korn Shell Scripting

Hi, I am about to take certification for "Unix Korn Shell Scripting", which is conducted by brain bench. ( http://www.brainbench.com/xml/bb/common/testcenter/taketest.xml?testId=46) The test consists of 40 single and multiple choice questions that must be answered in 60 minutes. The pass mark... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: eswasas
0 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

how to practice unix in online without unix software

hi, im new to unix.i dont have unix software in my system. Is there any website is there to practice unix in online can u please any one help me...... thanks in advance (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: gowridoc
3 Replies

5. AIX

Need a UNIX terminal to practice... please help!!!

Is there a web site that i can go to and practice my UNIX commands on their browser (terminal mode) or a telnet service that i can login to for free? I don't have a LINUX/UNIX system at home or at work, yet i want to hone my skils. Thanks for all of your help, (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: abhishek27
5 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to run UNIX commands for practice in Windows 2000 OS?

How to run UNIX commands for practice in Windows 2000 OS? If you suggest to install Cygwin, please let me know the procedure to install, or else I feel happy if you suggest any stand alone app for running UNIX commands..:) (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Srikanthk
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Practice using Unix and lack of knowledge

So I have a Networking class at my university that involves learning the basic commands of unix (i.e. Chmod, cat, cp, ls, mv, rm, mkdir, rmdir, pwd, etc) and my professor had us download and install Solaris and PuTTY as a means of...I suppose practicing using/executing commands. However due to... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: bo74
7 Replies

8. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

How to practice unix commands on windows 7 machine

Hello, I am pretty new to UNIX and would like to know how i can run unix commands on a windows 7 machine. Basically, I want to practice running commands, created bash/awk/etc. scripts. I've read some things about cygwin, but it doesn't sound like it's exactly what I'm looking for. Any... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: tester213
4 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Practice UNIX on web Browser?

To practice SQL, there is a very good website called www.sqlfiddle.com no need of installing any external software, it can do almost anything in PL/SQL and Oracle. In a similar manner, is there a good website where i can practice Unix commands on a broswer? I mean, it should be able to execute... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Manjunath B
1 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Want to practice UNIX in real time servers

I have read enough books and know about all the basic commands in unix. I have practiced the same in my home. Now i want to real time work like scheduling cron in a real time server, creating alerts, application status check using unix etc.., I want to have a real time server acc to do this kind... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: gk1227
3 Replies
vacation(1)							   User Manuals 						       vacation(1)

NAME
vacation - reply to mail automatically SYNOPSIS
vacation [ -I | -i | -l ] [ -F ] vacation [ -j ] [ -a alias ] [ -f file ] [ -tN ] [ -r ] [ -? ] username DESCRIPTION
vacation automatically replies to incoming mail. The reply is contained in the file .vacation.msg in your home directory. The vacation program run interactively will create and/or edit a .vacation.msg file in your home directory. The old .vacation.msg will be backed up to .vacation.old file. Type vacation with no arguments. (See USAGE below.) For example, the message created by vacation is: Subject: away from my mail From: smith (via the vacation program) I will not be reading my mail for a while. Your mail regarding "$SUBJECT" will be read when I return. The .vacation.msg file should include a header with at least a `Subject:' line (it should not contain a `To:' line and need not contain a `From:' line, since these are generated automatically). The fields `From', `From:' and `Reply-To:' are evaluated in the following order: If there is a `Reply-To:', and the option -r is given, then its entry is accepted. Otherwise, the entry of the `From:' field is taken. Should this entry lack a complete domain address (e.g. user@site instead of user@site.domain), vacation evaluates the `From' field, converting the contained UUCP bang path into a domain style address. If this fails too, vacation gives up. If the string $SUBJECT appears in the .vacation.msg file, it is replaced with the subject of the original message when the reply is sent. No message is sent if the `To:' or the `Cc:' line does not list the user to whom the original message was sent or one of a number of aliases for them, if the initial From line includes one of the strings -request@, postmaster, uucp, mailer-daemon, mailer or -relay or if a `Precedence: bulk' or `Precedence: junk' or `Precedence: list' line is included in the header. The search for special senders is made case- independant. OPTIONS
-I Or -i initialize the .vacation.db file and start vacation. This should only be used on the command line, not in the .forward file. -F Force creation of .vacation.db even if the $HOME directory is identified as a NFS file system. Please note that the used data base is not portable between 32bit and 64bit architectures and also not portable between little and big endianess architectures even same bit-wide is used for. Therefore the initial creation of the .vacation.db should always happen on the server used for receiving mails for the specific user. -l List the content of the vacation database file including the address and the associated time of the last auto-response to that address. This should only be used on the command line, not in the .forward file. If the -I, -i or -l flag is not specified, and a user argument is given, vacation reads the first line from the standard input (for a `From:' line, no colon). If absent, it produces an error message. The following options may be specified: -a alias Indicate that alias is one of the valid aliases for the user running vacation, so that mail addressed to that alias generates a reply. -j Do not check whether the recipient appears in the `To:' or the `Cc:' line. Reply always. -tN Change the interval between repeat replies to the same sender. N is the number of days between replies. Default is one week. -r If there is a `Reply-To:' header, send the automatic reply to the address given there. Otherwise, use the `From:' entry. -f <file> use a different message file than the default, .vacation.msg . The path to this file is relative to the home directory of the user. -? issue short usage line. USAGE
The vacation, create a .forward file in your home directory containing a line of the form: username, "|/usr/bin/vacation username" where username is your login name. The original .forward will be backed up to .forward.old file. Then type in the command: vacation -I To stop vacation, remove the .forward file, or move it to a new name. If vacation is run with no arguments, it will create a new .vacation.msg file for you, using the editor specified by the VISUAL or EDITOR environment variable, or vi(1) if neither of those environment variables are set. If a .forward file is not present in your home direc- tory, it creates it for you, and automatically performs a `vacation -I' function, turning on vacation. FILES
$HOME/.forward $HOME/.vacation.msg A list of senders is kept in the file .vacation.db in your home directory. SEE ALSO
vi(1), sendmail(8) AUTHOR
vacation is Copyright (c) 1983 by Eric P. Allman, University of Berkeley, California, and Copyright (c) 1993 by Harald Milz (hm@seneca.ix.de). Tiny patches 1998 by Mark Seuffert (moak@pirate.de). Now maintained by Sean Rima (thecivvie@softhome.net) 3rd Berkeley Distribution March 2000 vacation(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:20 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy