|
|
1.1 ! root 1: .\" This file is automatically generated. Do not edit! ! 2: .TH MF 1 "April 22, 1986" MH [mh.6] ! 3: .UC 6 ! 4: .SH NAME ! 5: muinc, musift, uminc, umsift \- mail filters ! 6: .SH SYNOPSIS ! 7: .in +.5i ! 8: .ti -.5i ! 9: /usr/new/lib/mh/muinc ! 10: ! 11: .ti .5i ! 12: /usr/new/lib/mh/musift ! 13: \%[files\ ...] ! 14: ! 15: .ti .5i ! 16: /usr/new/lib/mh/uminc ! 17: ! 18: .ti .5i ! 19: /usr/new/lib/mh/umsift ! 20: \%[files\ ...] ! 21: .in -.5i ! 22: .SH DESCRIPTION ! 23: The mail filters ! 24: are a set of programs that filter mail from one format to another. ! 25: In particular, \fIUUCP\fR\- and \fIMMDF\fR\-style mail files are handled. ! 26: ! 27: \fImuinc\fR ! 28: filters mail from the user's \fIMMDF\fR maildrop into the user's \fIUUCP\fR ! 29: maildrop; ! 30: similarly, ! 31: \fIuminc\fR ! 32: filters mail from the user's \fIUUCP\fR maildrop into the user's \fIMMDF\fR ! 33: maildrop. ! 34: These two programs respect each system's maildrop locking protocols. ! 35: ! 36: \fImusift\fR ! 37: filters each file on the command line ! 38: (or the standard input if no arguments are given), ! 39: and places the result on the standard output in \fIUUCP\fR format. ! 40: The files (or standard input) are expected to be in \fIMMDF\fR format. ! 41: \fIumsift\fR ! 42: does the same thing filtering \fIUUCP\fR formatted files (or input), ! 43: and places the \fIMMDF\fR formatted result on the standard output. ! 44: No locking protocols are used by these programs. ! 45: ! 46: If the files aren't in the expected format, ! 47: the mail filters will try to recover. ! 48: In really bad cases, ! 49: you may lose big. ! 50: .Fi ! 51: ^/usr/spool/mail/~^UUCP spool area for maildrops ! 52: ^/usr/spool/mail/$USER~^Location of standard maildrop ! 53: .Pr ! 54: None ! 55: .Sa ! 56: \fIProposed Standard for Message Header Munging\fR (aka RFC\-886), ! 57: .br ! 58: inc(1) ! 59: .De ! 60: .Co ! 61: .Bu ! 62: Numerous; protocol translation is very difficult. ! 63: .En
This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.