I have used the forum to determine the format required to send attachments from hp-ux 11. the problem I have is that using mailx does not attach the file, but subsititing mailx for mail on the command line attaches the file but i'm not able to specify a subject?
The attachment has been convert... (3 Replies)
Hi ,
Whenever I try to mail to external email Id's ( like yahoo , gmail etc ) the attachment is getting corrupted.
In the script I am using the mailx option as follows:-
(cat $temp_mail; uuencode $temp_info_csv $temp_info_csv)|mailx -s "Report" -m $c_mail_id;
where $temp_mail is the... (1 Reply)
I don't want the attachment embedded in the mail. I would like a file attached.
When I do
mailx -s "Report, `date +'%D %r` " -r "Notifications" bob@bob.com < /usr/local/bin/myreport.log> /dev/null
It gets embedded in my email. I want a file attachment. How do I do that? (2 Replies)
Hi All,
Can anyone please provide the command for sending an mail with attachment using mailx command.
Thanks in Advance :)
Regards,
Siram. (3 Replies)
mailx with -m command sending emails with attachments correctly to all users except users who have email on microsoft exchange server. They are receiving attachments as garbled text in mail body (5 Replies)
Hi,
When i used below command, i am able to send mail
mailx -s "Testing mail working or not " babu.sudhakar@ymail.com"
but if i want send attachment with mail,which syntax i need to follow to send a file as attachment. (3 Replies)
We've been emailing uuencode'd PDF files as attachments with mailx for quite sometime with no problems. Recently we've expanded the volume and have intermittent problems with recipients unable to open the attachment. The same file can be successfully resent at a different time.
It's been... (1 Reply)
Hello, I am new to the Unix thing, and I am having trouble sending attachments via shell client putty through mailx.
The command I use is
$ mailx -s "Subject" user@blah.com < attachment.txt
but everytime I do that it would say Cannot open attachment.txt
I have the file save to my computer... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrobin20
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
uuencode
uuencode(n) encode/decoding a binary file uuencode(n)
NAME
uuencode - encode/decoding a binary file
SYNOPSIS
package require Tcl 8
package require uuencode ?1.0.1?
::uuencode::encode string
::uuencode::decode string
::uuencode::uuencode ?-name string? ?-mode octal? (-file filename | ?--? string)
::uuencode::uudecode (-file filename | ?--? string)
DESCRIPTION
This package provides a Tcl-only implementation of the uuencode(1) and uudecode(1) commands. This encoding packs binary data into printable
ASCII characters.
::uuencode::encode string
returns the uuencoded data. This will encode all the data passed in even if this is longer than the uuencode maximum line length. If
the number of input bytes is not a multiple of 3 then additional 0 bytes are added to pad the string.
::uuencode::decode string
Decodes the given encoded data. This will return any padding characters as well and it is the callers responsibility to deal with
handling the actual length of the encoded data. (see uuencode).
::uuencode::uuencode ?-name string? ?-mode octal? (-file filename | ?--? string)
::uuencode::uudecode (-file filename | ?--? string)
UUDecode a file or block of data. A file may contain more than one embedded file so the result is a list where each element is a
three element list of filename, mode value and data.
OPTIONS -filename name
Cause the uuencode or uudecode commands to read their data from the named file rather that taking a string parameter.
-name string
The uuencoded data header line contains the suggested file name to be used when unpacking the data. Use this option to change this
from the default of "data.dat".
-mode octal
The uuencoded data header line contains a suggested permissions bit pattern expressed as an octal string. To change the default of
0644 you can set this option. For instance, 0755 would be suitable for an executable. See chmod(1).
EXAMPLES
% set d [uuencode::encode "Hello World!"]
2&5L;&@5V]R;&0A
% uuencode::uudecode $d
Hello World!
% set d [uuencode::uuencode -name hello.txt "Hello World"]
begin 644 hello.txt
+2&5L;&@5V]R;&0`
`
end
% uuencode::uudecode $d
{hello.txt 644 {Hello World}}
KEYWORDS
encoding, uuencode
base64 1.0.1 uuencode(n)