Is there a limit (255 chars?) on the command line??
I'm trying to copy some generated java & class files from one dir to another and ID the old & new versions by:
find . -name FFSFIXADminCallbackBean.java
I then do a copy and paste of the source and target -
$ cp -p source target
It... (7 Replies)
Hi Friends,
I am having a funny problem with grep. When I run
grep 'expr' file.txt
things work fine. But when try to get the line number using the -n option, i.e,
grep -n 'expr' file.txt
I get a message, "grep: 0652-226 Maximum line length of 2048 exceeded."
If the line has more than... (3 Replies)
Hello All,
I am trying to search one pattern across a file and then print it. But i need to delimit the search per line to 2 occurrences. How do i do that?
Regards. (9 Replies)
In the vi editor, there seems to be some limit on the number of characters could be allowed in single line. I tried a line with characters up to 1880. It worked. But when i tried with something of 5000 characters, it doesnt work. Any suggestions.
Thanks in advance! (2 Replies)
Hi
I would just like to ask if there is a way for UNIX to ignore/overcome the 255 character limit of the command line?
My problem is that I have a really long line of text from a file (300+ bytes) which i have to "echo" and process by adding commands like "sed" to the end of the line, like... (5 Replies)
Hi Experts,
I am executing multiple instances(in parallel) of perl script on HP-UX box.
OS is allocating substantial amount of CPU to these perl processes,resulting higher cpu utilization.
Glance always shows perl processes are occupying majority of the CPU resource. It is causing slower... (2 Replies)
I have a topic line in markdown that spans more than 80 characters that i need to add a line break. Markdown is simply treating the line break as a brand new line instead of continuing as a topic line.
Eg:
# This is a very long
line
Markdown interprets it as
This is a very long
line (4 Replies)
Hello Guys,
Is there a single line archive command to zip or tar log files which is larger than certain size limit ?
Do let me know if there is any.
Thanks (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: UnknownGuy
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
mailq
MAILQ(1) General Commands Manual MAILQ(1)NAME
mailq - print the mail queue
SYNOPSIS
mailq [-Ac] [-q...] [-v]
DESCRIPTION
Mailq prints a summary of the mail messages queued for future delivery.
The first line printed for each message shows the internal identifier used on this host for the message with a possible status character,
the size of the message in bytes, the date and time the message was accepted into the queue, and the envelope sender of the message. The
second line shows the error message that caused this message to be retained in the queue; it will not be present if the message is being
processed for the first time. The status characters are either * to indicate the job is being processed; X to indicate that the load is
too high to process the job; and - to indicate that the job is too young to process. The following lines show message recipients, one per
line.
Mailq is identical to ``sendmail -bp''.
The relevant options are as follows:
-Ac Show the mail submission queue specified in /etc/mail/submit.cf instead of the MTA queue specified in /etc/mail/sendmail.cf.
-qL Show the "lost" items in the mail queue instead of the normal queue items.
-qQ Show the quarantined items in the mail queue instead of the normal queue items.
-q[!]I substr
Limit processed jobs to those containing substr as a substring of the queue id or not when ! is specified.
-q[!]Q substr
Limit processed jobs to quarantined jobs containing substr as a substring of the quarantine reason or not when ! is specified.
-q[!]R substr
Limit processed jobs to those containing substr as a substring of one of the recipients or not when ! is specified.
-q[!]S substr
Limit processed jobs to those containing substr as a substring of the sender or not when ! is specified.
-v Print verbose information. This adds the priority of the message and a single character indicator (``+'' or blank) indicating
whether a warning message has been sent on the first line of the message. Additionally, extra lines may be intermixed with the
recipients indicating the ``controlling user'' information; this shows who will own any programs that are executed on behalf of this
message and the name of the alias this command expanded from, if any. Moreover, status messages for each recipient are printed if
available.
Several sendmail.cf options influence the behavior of the mailq utility: The number of items printed per queue group is restricted by
MaxQueueRunSize if that value is set. The status character * is not printed for some values of QueueSortOrder, e.g., filename, random,
modification, and none, unless a -q option is used to limit the processed jobs.
The mailq utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO sendmail(8)HISTORY
The mailq command appeared in 4.0BSD.
$Date: 2013-11-22 20:51:55 $ MAILQ(1)