No content in the attached file when sending it via Mailx command on Solaris
Hi All,
I am trying to send a file using the Mailx command but when I receive the file I am getting an empty file. Below are the commands that I am using:
I get the file in the mail but when I open it , its empty, I can see the size of the file is also mentioned around 200Kb.
I am also getting a message like this in the mail body:
I have tried to send txt file, html file but still getting the same issue.
Moderator's Comments:
Please do wrap your samples/codes in CODE TAGS as per forum rules.
Hi,
I have tried to sent a mail with body and attachment. But the shell script got hanging while executing that command. The command is
"(cat body;uuencode att1.csv)|mailx -s "Production Monitoring Report(Unix Side)" milton.yesusundaram@patni.com"
where body is a file having a single line.... (2 Replies)
Hi
I want to sent attachment file which is 400mb size.(single file, not tar file)
is there any way that these kind of large files can be divided into small sizes and sent as attachments
thanks with anticipation (3 Replies)
Hi All,
Please help me regarding sending mails using mailx command in unix.
I will be glad if some one give me the sintax of this. I tried using the below but vain.
mailx -s 'Hi' 'xyz@abc.com'
Regards,
Manas (5 Replies)
Hi
I need help to send mail through mailx command . Currenlt my program is like
#!/bin/ksh -x
echo " " >> path.lst
MAIL_LIST='someone1@gamil.com someone2@gamil.com someone3@gamil.com'
cat path.lst | mailx -s "path loaction" $MAIL_LIST
echo "End"
exit 0
Its work fine . But i... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
OS:Red Hat Linux 4 86x64
Below is my shell script which is not sending mail to the mail recipient:
#!/bin/bash
export MAILLIST="xyz@yahoo.com"
cd <path_to_the_script_perf_report.sql>
sqlplus / as sysdba @perf_report.sql
if
then
cat <path_to_the_script/*MONTHLY*REPORT*.lst... (6 Replies)
How to embed a html file as subject in a mail sending from Linux box with uuencode or mailx or any other way?
we do not want the file as attachment, it should be embedded in the mail subject. (2 Replies)
How Can I send the content of a file in Expect? Do I have to use cat command in a way? if yes how? lets say my file is called 1.txt.
example:
expect "Enter command to send:" {send "???? \r"} ???? --> content of the file 1.txt (1 Reply)
Hi Friends,
Please help me with this problem.
I have a number of split files in a directory. each split files has pdf filenames in it. pdf files are also in the same directory.
I send a mail for each split files present in the directory with the pdf file mentioned in the file.
I have... (4 Replies)
I use uuencode in UNIX to send an attached .txt file to my e-mail.
The .txt file looks like this:
field_1;field_2;field_3
1;2;3
4;5;6
7;8;9
...
When the mail comes, with the attached file, it looks likt thuis:
field_1;field_2;field_3 ;1;2;3 ;4;5;6 ;7;8;9
The different lines are... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: katled
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSF1
fmt
fmt(1) General Commands Manual fmt(1)NAME
fmt - Formats mail messages prior to sending
SYNOPSIS
fmt [-width] file...
DESCRIPTION
The fmt command reads the input file or files, or standard input if no files are specified, and writes to standard output a version of the
input with lines of a length as close as possible to width columns. (Because fmt is internationalized software, the number of display col-
umns is not necessarily equivalent to the number of bytes.)
The fmt command both joins and splits lines to achieve the desired width, but words are never joined or split; spaces are always preserved,
and lines are split at spaces only. In effect, fmt ignores newline characters in the input and wraps words to make lines a close as possi-
ble to width columns, resulting in individual lines of varying length but a consistent (new) text width overall. Because blank lines are
always preserved, fmt does not merge paragraphs separated by blank lines.
If you specify more than one file, the files are concatenated as input to fmt. If you do not specify -width, the default line length is 72
columns. Spacing at the beginning of input lines is always preserved in the output.
The fmt command is generally used to format mail messages to improve their appearance before they are sent. It may also be useful, how-
ever, for other simple formatting tasks. For example, when you are using vi, you can use the command :%!fmt -60 to reformat your text so
that all lines are approximately 60 columns long.
NOTES
The fmt command is a fast, simple formatting program. Standard text editing programs are more appropriate than fmt for complex formatting
operations. Do not use the fmt command if the message contains embedded messages or preformatted information from other files. This com-
mand formats the heading information in embedded messages and may change the format of preformatted information.
EXAMPLES
file1 contains these lines:
Australia is an island-continent, home to many very interesting plants and animals.
To reformat this text to a narrower width, enter: fmt -30 file1
This results in the following, displayed on your screen: Australia is an island-continent, home to many very interesting plants and
animals.
To make file1 wider, enter: fmt -60 file1
This results in: Australia is an island-continent, home to many very interesting plants and animals. To format a message you have
created with the mailx editor, at the left margin enter: ~|fmt
After you enter the command, your message is formatted, in this case to the default line length of 72 columns, and the word continue
is displayed to indicate that you can enter more information or send your message.
SEE ALSO
Commands: mail(1), mailx(1), vi(1)fmt(1)