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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers [SOLVED] awk: matching degenerate patterns Post 302706359 by heecha on Wednesday 26th of September 2012 02:30:19 PM
Old 09-26-2012
Ah, yes, now I see!

Thanks for your help, much appreciated.
 

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EXIQSUMM(8)                                                   System Manager's Manual                                                  EXIQSUMM(8)

NAME
exiqsumm - Summarising the queue SYNOPSIS
exiqsumm [-a] [-c] DESCRIPTION
The exiqsumm utility is a Perl script which reads the output of exim -bp and produces a summary of the messages on the queue. Thus, you use it by running a command such as exim -bp | exiqsumm The output consists of one line for each domain that has messages waiting for it, as in the following example: 3 2322 74m 66m msn.com.example This lists the number of messages for the domain, their total volume, and the length of time that the oldest and the newest messages have been waiting. By default the output is sorted on the domain name, but exiqsumm has the options -a and -c, which cause the output to be sorted by oldest message and by count of messages, respectively. The output of exim -bp contains the original addresses in the message, so this also applies to the output from exiqsumm. No domains from addresses generated by aliasing or forwarding are included (unless the "one_time" option of the redirect router has been used to convert them into 'top level' addresses). BUGS
This manual page needs a major re-work. If somebody knows better groff than us and has more experience in writing manual pages, any patches would be greatly appreciated. SEE ALSO
exim(8), /usr/share/doc/exim4-base/ AUTHOR
This manual page was stitched together from spec.txt by Andreas Metzler <ametzler at downhill.at.eu.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). March 26, 2003 EXIQSUMM(8)
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