My root mail fills up very quickly because we have hundreds of remote printers and whenever a job is deleted, moved or a printer is down, up, sidways (jk) the queueing system drops root and email.
It fills up super fast and is causing a problem.
Rembak is the backend but i cannot find a way... (2 Replies)
Hi
I want to use mailx command to send a message included more than one file.
I tried to use uuencode in pipe but it could only generate one file.
I would avoid using an archive file :p
Thanks to read you.
Mathieu (2 Replies)
I have read through all documents in FAQ and have run into an issue with sending an email with body message text and an email attachment. I have included what I have thus far and I can get the message body to send in the email to work only. I cannot understand the uuencode even after I read the... (5 Replies)
Greetings all,
I'm pretty new to the use of mailx, having been using mutt most of the time. I'm interested to know how I can use mailx within a shell script to send out a formatted email with the following criterion:
1. My recipient's address is abcdef1000@gmail.com
2. The message body is... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
Think this is a pretty simple problem, but I've been thinking about it for a few days. Let's say that I'm going to have to output the contents of a file as the body of a mailx message.
I'll probably do this: cat <filename> | mailx <extra commands>
However, how do I go about doing... (1 Reply)
Hi Friends,
I have siebel installed in one of my aix machines and while opening a file it gives below error.
$ vi SmSiebelSSO.conf
History file has no read permission. q
Please note the file has rwxr-xr-x for oracle:dba and i am trying to open using oracle id itself which is the owner... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I need to create one KSH which will send mail to set of recipients using "mailx" command like below.
mailx -s "Test mail" "test@yahoo.com, test@gmail.com" <$output.txt
The recipients are in different domains (like yahoo, gmail, etc.).
My requirement is, if any mail is undelivered,... (1 Reply)
I am trying to run following script in ksh on darwin 11.4.2:
freeSpace=2469606195
spaceNeeded=200
] && echo "no space" || echo "space available"
] && echo "no space" || echo "space available"
"-lt" is giving wrong answer as "no space" Whereas '<' works fine. When I change the freespace... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sabitha
4 Replies
10. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators
An 'addition' to the "Homework & Classes" requirements..
As i am someone without paper, i just figured i got tempred reading such a question.
To avoid such 'feelings' in future, i'd be thankfull if the 'kind & definition of the course' would be required too.
As in (i dont know about proper... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sea
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
diff3
diff3(1) General Commands Manual diff3(1)Name
diff3 - 3-way differential file comparison
Syntax
diff3 [-ex3] file1 file2 file3
Description
The command compares three versions of a file, and publishes the ranges of text that disagree, flagged with the following codes:
==== all three files differ
====1 file1 is different
====2 file2 is different
====3 file3 is different
The type of change needed to convert a given range of a given file to some other is indicated in one of these ways:
f : n1 a Text is to be appended after line number n1 in file f, where f = 1, 2, or 3.
f : n1 , n2 c
Text is to be changed in the range line n1 to line n2. If n1 = n2, the range may be abbreviated to n1.
The original contents of the range follows immediately after a c indication. When the contents of two files are identical, the contents of
the lower-numbered file is suppressed.
Options-3 Produces an editor script containing the changes between file1 and file2 that are to be incorporated into file3.
-e Produces an editor script containing the changes between file2 and file3 that are to be incorporated into file1.
-x Produces an editor script containing the changes among all three files.
Examples
Under the -e option, publishes a script for the editor that incorporates into file1 all changes between file2 and file3 - that is, the
changes that would normally be flagged ==== and ====3. Option -x (-3) produces a script to incorporate only changes flagged ==== (====3).
The following command applies the resulting script to `file1':
(cat script; echo '1,$p') | ed - file1
Restrictions
Text lines that consist of a single `.' defeat -e.
Files
/tmp/d3?????
/usr/lib/diff3
See Alsocmp(1), comm(1), diff(1), dffmk(1), join(1), sccsdiff(1), uniq(1)diff3(1)