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BSD 4.3reno
.\" Copyright (c) 1980 Regents of the University of California. .\" All rights reserved. The Berkeley software License Agreement .\" specifies the terms and conditions for redistribution. .\" .\" @(#)netmail.1 6.1 (Berkeley) 4/29/85 .\" .TH NETMAIL 1 "4/29/85" .UC 4 .ds s 1 .ds o 1 .SH NAME netmail \- read mail on a remote machine over the network .SH SYNOPSIS .B netmail [ .B \-l username ] [ .B \-p password ] [ .B \-c ] [ .B \-q ] [ .B \-n ] [ .B \-f ] [ machine:username ] .SH DESCRIPTION Mail is checked and/or read on the specified .I machine. If the machine specification is omitted, the default machine is used. The command has two distinct modes depending on whether the .B \-c option is specified. .PP If .B \-c is specified, the presence of mail is checked on the remote machine. No password is required so it can be put in C shell `.netrc' file. A message is written or mailed back (see .IR net (\*s)) if there is or is not any unread mail. .PP If the .B \-c option is not specified, mail is read and mailed back to the user. A password is required. Mail is also appended to the remote file .I `mbox' as a precaution. .PP The .B \-q option suppresses the message sent back if there is no mail. The options .B \-l, .B \-p, .B \-f, and .B \-n behave exactly as in .IR net (\*s). (The login name can be specified either with the .B \-l option or by `machine:username'.) .PP .I Netmail executes the .IR net (\*s) command. .PP Examples: .IP " netmail\ \-c\ X:uname" 30 checks if there is mail for `uname' on the X machine, no password required. .IP " netmail\ X:uname" 30 reads mail for `uname' on the X machine, mails it back, password is required. .SH AUTHOR Eric Schmidt .SH "SEE ALSO" net(\*s), netrm(\*s), netq(\*s), netlog(\*s), netcp(\*s), netlpr(\*s), netlogin(\*s), mail(\*o) .SH BUGS
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