Museum

Home

Lab Overview

Retrotechnology Articles

Online Manuals

⇒ uuq(1N) — UTek 4.0

Media Vault

Software Library

Restoration Projects

Artifacts Sought

Related Articles

uucp(1n)

uux(1n)

uulog(1n)



UUQ(1N)                 COMMAND REFERENCE                 UUQ(1N)



NAME
     uuq - examine or manipulate the uucp queue

SYNOPSIS
     uuq [-l] [-h] [-ssystem] [-uuser] [-djobno] [-rsdir] [-
     bbaudrate]

DESCRIPTION
     The uuq command is used to examine (and possibly delete)
     entries in the uucp queue.

     When listing jobs, uuq uses a format reminiscent of ls(1).
     For the long format, information for each job listed
     includes job number, number of files to transfer, user who
     spooled the job, number of bytes to send, type of command
     requested (S for sending files, R for receiving files, X for
     remote uucp), and file or command desired.

OPTIONS
     -h Print only the summary lines for each system.  Summary
        lines give system name, number of jobs for the system,
        and total number of bytes to send.

     -l Specifies a long format listing.  The default is to list
        only the job numbers sorted across the page.

     -ssystem
        Limit output to jobs for systems whose system names begin
        with system.

     -uuser
        Limit output to jobs for users whose login names begin
        with user.

     -djobno
        Delete job number jobno (as obtained from a previous uuq
        command) from the uucp queue.

     -rsdir
        Look for files in the spooling directory sdir instead of
        the default directory.

     -bbaudrate
        Use baudrate to compute the transfer time instead of the
        default 800 baud.

FILES
     /usr/spool/uucp/C.*
                      Command files

     /usr/spool/uucp/D.*
                      Data files



Printed 4/6/89                                                  1





UUQ(1N)                 COMMAND REFERENCE                 UUQ(1N)



CAVEATS
     No information is available on work requested by the remote
     machine.

     The user who requests a remote uucp command is unknown.

     The command uuq -l can be horrendously slow.

SEE ALSO
     uucp(1n), uux(1n), and uulog(1n).













































Printed 4/6/89                                                  2





































































%%index%%
na:240,94;
sy:334,607;
de:941,647;
op:1588,1146;
fi:2734,232;
ca:3278,271;
se:3549,196;
%%index%%000000000121

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