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     MAILATT(1)                                           MAILATT(1)



     NAME
          mail, rmail - send mail to users or read mail

     SYNOPSIS
          Sending mail:

          /bin/mail [ -oswt ] persons

          /bin/rmail [ -oswt ] persons

          Reading mail:

          mail [ -ehpqr ] [ -f file ] [ -F persons ]

     DESCRIPTION
          Sending mail:

          The command-line arguments that follow affect SENDING mail:

          -o   suppresses the address optimization facility.

          -s   suppresses the addition of a <new-line> at the top of
               the letter being sent.  See WARNINGS below.

          -w   causes a letter to be sent to a remote user without
               waiting for the completion of the remote transfer
               program.

          -t   causes a To: line to be added to the letter, showing
               the intended recipients.

          A person is usually a user name recognized by login(1).
          When persons are named, mail assumes a message is being sent
          (except in the case of the /-F option).  It reads from the
          standard input up to an end-of-file (control-d), or until it
          reads a line consisting of just a period. When either of
          those signals is received, mail adds the letter to the
          mailfile for each person.  A letter is a message preceded by
          a postmark.  The message is preceded by the sender's name
          and a postmark.  A postmark consists of one or more 'From'
          lines followed by a blank line (unless the -s argument was
          used).

          If a letter is found to be undeliverable, it is returned to
          the sender with diagnostics that indicate the location and
          nature of the failure.  If mail is interrupted during input,
          the file dead.letter is saved to allow editing and
          resending.  dead.letter is recreated every time it is
          needed, erasing any previous contents.

          rmail only permits the sending of mail; uucp(1C) uses rmail
          as a security precaution.



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     MAILATT(1)                                           MAILATT(1)



          If the local system has the Basic Networking Utilities
          installed, mail may be sent to a recipient on a remote
          system. Prefix person by the system name and exclamation
          point.  A series of system names separated by exclamation
          points can be used to direct a letter through an extended
          network.

          Reading Mail:

          The command-line arguments that follow affect READING mail:

          -e   causes mail not to be printed.  An exit value of 0 is
               returned if the user has mail; otherwise, an exit value
               of 1 is returned.
          -h   causes a window of headers to be displayed rather than
               the latest message.  The display is followed by the '?'
               prompt.
          -p   causes all messages to be printed without prompting for
               disposition.
          -q   causes mail to terminate after interrupts.  Normally an
               interrupt causes only the termination of the message
               being printed.
          -r   causes messages to be printed in first-in, first-out
               order.
          -ffile
               causes mail to use file (e.g., mbox) instead of the
               default mailfile.
          -Fpersons
               entered into an empty mailbox, causes all incoming mail
               to be forwarded to persons.

          mail, unless otherwise influenced by command-line arguments,
          prints a user's mail messages in last-in, first-out order.
          For each message, the user is prompted with a ?, and a line
          is read from the standard input.  The following commands are
          available to determine the disposition of the message:

          <new-line>, +, or n   Go on to next message.

          d, or dp              Delete message and go on to next
                                message.

          d #                   Delete message number #.  Do not go on
                                to next message.

          dq                    Delete message and quit mail.

          h                     Display a window of headers around
                                current message.

          h #                   Display header of message number #.




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     MAILATT(1)                                           MAILATT(1)



          h a                   Display headers of ALL messages in the
                                user's mailfile.

          h d                   Display headers of messages scheduled
                                for deletion.

          p                     Print current message again.

          -                     Print previous message.

          a                     Print message that arrived during the
                                mail session.

          #                     Print message number #.

          r [ users ]           Reply to the sender, and other
                                user(s), then delete the message.

          s [ files ]           Save message in the named files (mbox
                                is default).

          y                     Same as save.

          u [ # ]               Undelete message number # (default is
                                last read).

          w [ files ]           Save message, without its top-most
                                header, in the named files (mbox is
                                default).

          m [ persons ]         Mail the message to the named persons.

          q, or ctl-d           Put undeleted mail back in the
                                mailfile and quit mail.

          x                     Put all mail back in the mailfile
                                unchanged and exit mail.

          !command              Escape to the shell to do command.

          ?                     Print a command summary.

          When a user logs in, the presence of mail, if any, is
          indicated. Also, notification is made if new mail arrives
          while using mail.

          The mailfile may be manipulated in two ways to alter the
          function of mail.  The other permissions of the file may be
          read-write, read-only, or neither read nor write to allow
          different levels of privacy.  If changed to other than the
          default, the file will be preserved even when empty to
          perpetuate the desired permissions.  The file may also



     Page 3                                        (last mod. 8/20/87)





     MAILATT(1)                                           MAILATT(1)



          contain the first line:

               Forward to person

          which will cause all mail sent to the owner of the mailfile
          to be forwarded to person.  A "Forwarded by..." message is
          added to the header.  This is especially useful in a multi-
          machine environment to forward all of a person's mail to a
          single machine, and to keep the recipient informed if the
          mail has been forwarded.  Installation and removal of
          forwarding is done with the -F option.

          To forward all of one's mail to systema!user enter:

               mail -Fsystema!user

          To forward to more than one user enter:

               mail -F"user1,systema!user2,systema!systemb!user3"

          Note that when more than one user is specified, the whole
          list should be enclosed in double quotes so that it may all
          be interpreted as the operand of the -F option.  The list
          can be up to 1024 bytes; either commas or white space can be
          used to separate users.

          To remove forwarding enter:

               mail -F ""

          The pair of double quotes is mandatory to set a NULL
          argument for the -F option.

          In order for forwarding to work properly the mailfile should
          have "mail" as group ID, and the group permission should be
          read-write.

     FILES
          /etc/passwd       to identify sender and locate persons
          /usr/mail/user    incoming mail for user; i.e., the mailfile
          $HOME/mbox        saved mail
          $MAIL             variable containing path name of mailfile
          /tmp/ma*          temporary file
          /usr/mail/*.lock  lock for mail directory
          dead.letter       unmailable text

     SEE ALSO
          login(1), mailx(1), write(1).
          User's Guide.
          System Administrator's Guide.





     Page 4                                        (last mod. 8/20/87)





     MAILATT(1)                                           MAILATT(1)



     WARNING
          The "Forward to person" feature may result in a loop, if
          sys1!userb forwards to sys2!userb and sys2!userb forwards to
          sys1!userb.  The symptom is a message saying
          "unbounded...saved mail in dead.letter."

          The -s option should be used with caution.  It allows the
          text of a message to be interpreted as part of the postmark
          of the letter, possibly causing confusion to other mail
          programs.  To allow compatibility with mailx(1), if the
          first line of the message is "Subject:...", the addition of
          a <newline> is suppressed whether or not the -s option is
          used.

     BUGS
          Conditions sometimes result in a failure to remove a lock
          file.
          After an interrupt, the next message may not be printed;
          printing may be forced by typing a p.

     ORIGIN
          AT&T V.3

































     Page 5                                        (last mod. 8/20/87)



Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026