My mailx installation is /usr/bin/mailx and it does not accept the -m switch. It might be because I am on Sun OS release 10.
As far as the definition of huge is concerned, it was a relative one in this context (Huge amongst the 15 of the SQL reports). The actual size of the zip file was around 350K and the original data file was around 5.6M.
I am not sure why it fails for this guy but works for the rest14 .
Thanks and Regards
-Nony
Last edited by Scott; 02-24-2010 at 04:54 PM..
Reason: Code tags
I have a unix script that compresses a .txt file using gzip command and then sends it by mail using uuencode.
This has been working fine for some time, but lately I've been experiencing some problems, as when I open the mail generated, I don't see the attachment, but instead I get a large amount... (8 Replies)
Hi All,
I am using unix's sendmail utility to send mails with attacments. I am using the uuencode command for attachments (zip).
When i send the mails to some account which is configured in the MS outook it opens/unzip the attachments with no problem.
But the same attachments seems to be... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm using uuencode to send out mail from unix to lotus notes,but i dont have any attachment to send out, I'm getting this message in the body of the mail
"Usage: uuencode remotedest"
however if i dont use uuencode I'm not able to send out mail
Please help
Thanks (1 Reply)
I tried using the fllowing command to attach and email a file but the issue is the attach file drops the carriage return or line feed and all the rows appears in single line.
uuencode file.txt file.txt | mail user@gmail.com
Any solution guys (3 Replies)
Hi All,
Is there anyway we can send files as an attachment? I tried running uuencode but its giving an error as below:
$ uuencode Z1.txt Z1.txt |mailx -s "hi" abc@abc.com
ksh: uuencode: not found.
Null message body; hope that's ok
When i gave which command then it says there is no... (18 Replies)
H All
I want to send attachment in mail but I dont have uuencode installed in AIX server,
there is any alternative way to send attachment in mail. (2 Replies)
Hello All,
I am using uuencode to attach multiple zip file in one email body. The file is send to multiple recipients. I use lotus notes and can view the attachments very well and so does the gmail and yahoo recipients.
Issue is with outlook users, they see attachment as garbage. This is the... (3 Replies)
Hi,
In my Linux am unable to send attachment to mail . Since pkgs for mutt and uuencode is not possible to install any other options for sending attachment will be useful.
Tried the below options but its not working.
mail -s "testmail" -a <filename> abc@mail.com
cat <filename>|mail -s... (4 Replies)
Hello all
I am on RHEL 6.4. I have been using my bash script which mails one .csv file after zipping (myfile.csv.zip)to my Lotus Notes ID. I use uuencode with mailx to do this. Here is my command - uuencode myfile.csv.zip myfile.csv.zip | mailx -s "Subject" mailid. This all works very cool. Now... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: krsnadasa
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT XFREE86
sysdef
sysdef(1M) System Administration Commands sysdef(1M)NAME
sysdef - output system definition
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/sysdef [-i] [-n namelist]
/usr/sbin/sysdef [-h] [-d] [-i] [-D]
DESCRIPTION
The sysdef utility outputs the current system definition in tabular form. It lists all hardware devices, as well as pseudo devices, system
devices, loadable modules, and the values of selected kernel tunable parameters.
It generates the output by analyzing the named bootable operating system file (namelist) and extracting the configuration information from
it.
The default system namelist is /dev/kmem.
OPTIONS -i Prints the configuration information from /dev/kmem. This is the default and only needs to be specified if the configura-
tion information from both /dev/kmem and the system file specified with the "-n namelist" option is needed.
-nnamelist Specifies a namelist other than the default (/dev/kmem). The namelist specified must be a valid bootable operating system.
-h Prints the identifier of the current host in hexadecimal. This numeric value is unique across all Sun hosts.
-d The output includes the configuration of system peripherals formatted as a device tree.
-D For each system peripheral in the device tree, display the name of the device driver used to manage the peripheral.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Sample output format
The following example displays the format of the sysdef -d output:
example% sysdef -d
Node 'SUNW,Ultra-5_10', unit #-1
Node 'packages', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'terminal-emulator', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'deblocker', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'obp-tftp', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'disk-label', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'SUNW,builtin-drivers', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'sun-keyboard', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'ufs-file-system', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'chosen', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'openprom', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'client-services', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'options', unit #0
Node 'aliases', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'memory', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'virtual-memory', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'pci', unit #0
Node 'pci', unit #0
Node 'ebus', unit #0
Node 'auxio', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'power', unit #0
Node 'SUNW,pll', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'se', unit #0 (no driver)
Node 'su', unit #0
Node 'su', unit #1
Node 'ecpp', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'fdthree', unit #0
Node 'eeprom', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'flashprom', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'SUNW,CS4231', unit #0 (no driver)
Node 'network', unit #0
Node 'SUNW,m64B', unit #0
Node 'ide', unit #0
Node 'disk', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'cdrom', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'sd', unit #1
Node 'dad', unit #1
Node 'pci', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'SUNW,UltraSPARC-IIi', unit #-1 (no driver)
Node 'pseudo', unit #0
[output truncated]
FILES
/dev/kmem default operating system image
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO hostid(1), prtconf(1M), nlist(3ELF), attributes(5)SunOS 5.10 4 Oct 2004 sysdef(1M)