HI,
I am pretty new to Unix...but here is 1 serious problem...atleast for me..:-)
now..the dead.letter file in /var/tmp has been growin continuously..n i dont know why..I ve even killed the sendmail process..but the dead.letter file keeps on increasin..Can anyone tell me where do I start... (6 Replies)
Hi all can you please help me what is dead.letter file ?
when it is created ? for the first time i have seen this file getting created in my current directory?
I am using SunOs.
Any IDEA ?? (2 Replies)
Sorry for this one ladies and gents, it's probably very easy but I don't know how to, sound familiar :-)
I'm using sendmail on a web server that sends some mail through forms, not many.
I've got sendmail configured to use our networks relay host and everything was working well.
The power... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have created a script that has some sql queries in it. It seem to work fine and e-mails me the output file but when i use this command 'col email format a20' it creates a dead.letter file and i never get the e-mail
I am using mailx -s command to send out the e-mail.
Any help would... (0 Replies)
Hi
The below script working when we are sending the html as attachment can u please guide how to send thesmae data in table form direct in the mail and not in mail attachment .
cat Employee.sql
SET VERIFY OFF
SET PAGESIZE 200
SET MARKUP HTML ON SPOOL ON PREFORMAT OFF ENTMAP ON -
HEAD... (0 Replies)
i have sun machines having solaris 9 & 10 OS . Now i need to send mail from the machines to my outlook account . I have the ip adress of OUTLOOK mail server. Now what are the setting i need to do in solaris machines so that i can use mailx or sendmail.
actually i am trying to automate the high... (2 Replies)
Hi Guys..
yesterday i purchased a VPS server and installed sendmail on ubuntu 12.4 with Webmin & Apache runing webserver
problem is..
i can send mail via webmin user interface account to anybody to out side to any domain and able to recieve any mail from any domain..
Now main... (2 Replies)
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
LEARN ABOUT V7
mail
MAIL(1) General Commands Manual MAIL(1)NAME
mail - send or receive mail among users
SYNOPSIS
mail person ...
mail [ -r ] [ -q ] [ -p ] [ -f file ]
DESCRIPTION
Mail with no argument prints a user's mail, message-by-message, in last-in, first-out order; the optional argument -r causes first-in,
first-out order. If the -p flag is given, the mail is printed with no questions asked; otherwise, for each message, mail reads a line from
the standard input to direct disposition of the message.
newline
Go on to next message.
d Delete message and go on to the next.
p Print message again.
- Go back to previous message.
s [ file ] ...
Save the message in the named files (`mbox' default).
w [ file ] ...
Save the message, without a header, in the named files (`mbox' default).
m [ person ] ...
Mail the message to the named persons (yourself is default).
EOT (control-D)
Put unexamined mail back in the mailbox and stop.
q Same as EOT.
x Exit, without changing the mailbox file.
!command
Escape to the Shell to do command.
? Print a command summary.
An interrupt stops the printing of the current letter. The optional argument -q causes mail to exit after interrupts without changing the
mailbox.
When persons are named, mail takes the standard input up to an end-of-file (or a line with just `.') and adds it to each person's `mail'
file. The message is preceded by the sender's name and a postmark. Lines that look like postmarks are prepended with `>'. A person is
usually a user name recognized by login(1). To denote a recipient on a remote system, prefix person by the system name and exclamation
mark (see uucp(1)).
The -f option causes the named file, e.g. `mbox', to be printed as if it were the mail file.
Each user owns his own mailbox, which is by default generally readable but not writable. The command does not delete an empty mailbox nor
change its mode, so a user may make it unreadable if desired.
When a user logs in he is informed of the presence of mail.
FILES
/usr/spool/mail/* mailboxes
/etc/passwd to identify sender and locate persons
mbox saved mail
/tmp/ma* temp file
dead.letter unmailable text
uux(1)SEE ALSO xsend(1), write(1), uucp(1)BUGS
There is a locking mechanism intended to prevent two senders from accessing the same mailbox, but it is not perfect and races are possible.
MAIL(1)