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Full Discussion: Mailq regex match
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Mailq regex match Post 303004548 by jim mcnamara on Wednesday 4th of October 2017 10:17:29 AM
Old 10-04-2017
Code:
      BEGIN {err=0}
      mailq | awk ' /alerts/ {q_id=$1; next}
                   /quota/  {err=1;next }
                   (err==1) { print q_id, $(NF); err=0}'

Try that - what you need is to remember the queue id and then print it when you get the quota error, along with the last field on the last line of the message - email.

You can parse that last field however you want - I do not know if it is constant or not. Note: I assumed the lines I see in your example are indeed newlines. Not some weirdness line wrapping.
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SYSERRLST(3)						     Library Functions Manual						      SYSERRLST(3)

NAME
syserrlst, __errlst - read system error messages from file SYNOPSIS
char * syserrlst(err) int err; char * __errlst(err, path); int err; char *path; DESCRIPTION
Syserrlst(3) reads the error message string corresponding to err from the file /etc/syserrlst. __errlst(3) reads the error message string corresponding to err from the file path. The file path must be in the format described in syserrlst(5). NULL is returned if err is out of bounds (negative or greater than the highest message number in /etc/syserrlst or path) or if the error message file can not be opened. It is the responsibility of the caller (strerror(3)) to check for and properly handle the NULL return. RETURN VALUE
NULL if an error was encountered in opening the error message file, if the error was out of bounds, or if the file did not start with the correct magic number. Otherwise a char * is returned pointing to a static buffer containing the text of the error message. ERRORS
syserrlst(3) and __errlst(3) can return any of the errors for the open(2), lseek(2), or read(2) system calls. SEE ALSO
perror(3), strerror(3), syserrlst(5) HISTORY
syserrlst(3), and __errlst(3) were created for 2.11BSD with the aim of saving 2kb of Data space in programs which called perror(3), or str- error(3). BUGS
The information is stored in a static buffer. 3rd Berkeley Distribution March 26, 1996 SYSERRLST(3)
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