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mailx(1)

mailx(1)                         User Commands                        mailx(1)



NAME
       mailx - interactive message processing system

SYNOPSIS
       mailx [-BdeHiInNURvV~] [-f [file | +folder]] [-T file]
            [-u user]


       mailx [-BdFintUv~] [-b bcc] [-c cc] [-h number]
            [-r address] [-s subject] recipient...


       /usr/bin/mail ...

DESCRIPTION
       The  mail  utilities listed above provide a comfortable, flexible envi‐
       ronment for sending and receiving mail messages electronically.


       When reading mail, the mail utilities provide  commands  to  facilitate
       saving,  deleting,  and  responding to messages. When sending mail, the
       mail utilities allow editing, reviewing and other modification  of  the
       message as it is entered.


       Incoming  mail  is  stored in a standard file for each user, called the
       mailbox for that user. When the mail utilities are called to read  mes‐
       sages,  the  mailbox is the default place to find them. As messages are
       read, they are marked to be moved to  a  secondary  file  for  storage,
       unless  specific action is taken, so that the messages need not be seen
       again. This secondary file is called the mbox and is  normally  located
       in  the  user's HOME directory (see MBOX in ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES for a
       description of this file). Messages can be  saved  in  other  secondary
       files  named  by  the  user.  Messages remain in a secondary file until
       forcibly removed.


       The user can access a secondary file by using the -f  option.  Messages
       in the secondary file can then be read or otherwise processed using the
       same Commands as in the primary mailbox. This gives rise  within  these
       pages to the notion of a current mailbox.

OPTIONS
       On  the command line options start with a dash (−). Any other arguments
       are taken to be destinations (recipients). If no recipients are  speci‐
       fied, mailx attempts to read messages from the mailbox.

       -B               Do not buffer standard input or standard output.


       -b bcc           Set  the  blind carbon copy list to bcc. bcc should be
                        enclosed in quotes if it contains more than one name.


       -c cc            Set the carbon copy list to cc. cc should be  enclosed
                        in quotes if it contains more than one name.


       -d               Turn on debugging output. (Neither particularly inter‐
                        esting nor recommended.)


       -e               Test for the presence of mail.  mailx  prints  nothing
                        and  exits  with  a successful return code if there is
                        mail to read.


       -F               Record the message in a file  named  after  the  first
                        recipient.  Overrides the record variable, if set (see
                        Internal Variables).


       -f [file]        Read messages from file instead of mailbox. If no file
                        is specified, the mbox is used.


       -f [+folder]     Use  the  file folder in the folder directory (same as
                        the folder command). The name  of  this  directory  is
                        listed in the folder variable.


       -H               Print header summary only.


       -h number        The number of network "hops" made so far. This is pro‐
                        vided for network software to avoid infinite  delivery
                        loops.  This option and its argument are passed to the
                        delivery program.


       -I               Include the newsgroup and article-id header lines when
                        printing  mail  messages.  This option requires the -f
                        option to be specified.


       -i               Ignore interrupts. See also ignore in  Internal  Vari‐
                        ables.


       -N               Do not print initial header summary.


       -n               Do  not initialize from the system default mailx.rc or
                        Mail.rc file. See USAGE.


       -r address       Use address as the return address  when  invoking  the
                        delivery  program.  All  tilde  commands are disabled.
                        This option and its argument is passed to the delivery
                        program.


       -s subject       Set  the  Subject  header  field  to  subject. subject
                        should be enclosed in quotes if it  contains  embedded
                        white space.


       -T file          Message-id and article-id header lines are recorded in
                        file after the message is read. This option also  sets
                        the -I option.


       -t               Scan  the  input  for  To:,  Cc:, and Bcc: fields. Any
                        recipients on the command line will be ignored.


       -U               Convert UUCP-style addresses  to  internet  standards.
                        Overrides the conv environment variable.


       -u user          Read  user's mailbox. This is only effective if user's
                        mailbox is not read protected.


       -V               Print the mailx version number and exit.


       -v               Pass the -v flag to sendmail(8).


       -~               Interpret tilde escapes in the input even if not read‐
                        ing from a tty.


OPERANDS
       The following operands are supported:

       recipient    Addressee of message.


USAGE
   Starting Mail
       At   startup   time,   mailx   executes   the   system   startup   file
       /etc/mail/mailx.rc.  If  invoked  as  Mail,  the  system  startup  file
       /etc/mail/Mail.rc is used instead.


       The system startup file sets up initial display options and alias lists
       and assigns values to some  internal  variables.  These  variables  are
       flags and valued parameters which are set and cleared using the set and
       unset commands. See Internal Variables.


       With the  following  exceptions,  regular  commands  are  legal  inside
       startup files: !, Copy, edit, followup, Followup, hold, mail, preserve,
       reply, Reply, shell, and visual. An error in the  startup  file  causes
       the remaining lines in the file to be ignored.


       After executing the system startup file, the mail utilities execute the
       optional personal startup file  $HOME/.mailrc,  wherein  the  user  can
       override  the  values  of  the  internal variables as set by the system
       startup file.


       If the -n option is specified, however, the mail utilities do not  exe‐
       cute the system startup file.


       Many system administrators include the commands

         set appenddeadletter
         unset replyall
         unset pipeignore



       in  the system startup files (to be compatible with past Solaris behav‐
       ior), but this does not meet standards requirements for mailx.  To  get
       standard  behavior for mailx, users should use the -n option or include
       the following commands in a personal startup file:

         unset appenddeadletter
         set replyall
         set pipeignore



       When reading mail, the mail utilities are in  command  mode.  A  header
       summary  of  the  first  several  messages  is displayed, followed by a
       prompt indicating the mail utilities can accept regular  commands  (see
       Commands  below).  When  sending  mail, the mail utilities are in input
       mode. If no subject is specified on the command line,  and  the  asksub
       variable is set, a prompt for the subject is printed.


       As  the message is typed, the mail utilities read the message and store
       it in a temporary file. Commands may be entered  by  beginning  a  line
       with the tilde (~) escape character followed by a single command letter
       and optional arguments. See Tilde Escapes for a summary of  these  com‐
       mands.

   Reading Mail
       Each  message is assigned a sequential number, and there is at any time
       the notion of a current message, marked by a right angle bracket (>) in
       the  header  summary.  Many  commands take an optional list of messages
       (message-list) to operate on. In most cases, the current message is set
       to  the  highest-numbered message in the list after the command is fin‐
       ished executing.


       The default for message-list is the current message. A message-list  is
       a list of message identifiers separated by spaces, which may include:

       n          Message number n.


       .          The current message.


       ^          The first undeleted message.


       $          The last message.


       *          All messages.


       +          The next undeleted message.


       −          The previous undeleted message.


       n−m        An inclusive range of message numbers.


       user       All messages from user.


       /string    All messages with string in the Subject line (case ignored).


       :c         All messages of type c, where c is one of:


                  d    deleted messages


                  n    new messages


                  o    old messages


                  r    read messages


                  u    unread messages

                  Notice  that  the  context of the command determines whether
                  this type of message specification makes sense.



       Other arguments are usually arbitrary strings whose  usage  depends  on
       the command involved. Filenames, where expected, are expanded using the
       normal shell conventions (see sh(1)). Special characters are recognized
       by certain commands and are documented with the commands below.

   Sending Mail
       Recipients  listed  on  the  command  line may be of three types: login
       names, shell commands, or alias groups. Login names may be any  network
       address,  including  mixed  network  addressing. If mail is found to be
       undeliverable, an attempt is made to return it to the sender's mailbox.
       If  the recipient name begins with a pipe symbol ( | ), the rest of the
       name is taken to be a shell command to pipe the message  through.  This
       provides  an  automatic interface with any program that reads the stan‐
       dard input. Groups are set by the alias command (see Commands below) or
       in  a  system  startup  file  (for example, $HOME/.mailrc). Aliases are
       lists of recipients of any type.

   Forwarding Mail
       To forward a specific message, include it in a message to  the  desired
       recipients  with  the ~f or ~m tilde escapes. See Tilde  Escapes below.
       To forward mail automatically, add a comma-separated list of  addresses
       for  additional recipients to the .forward file in your home directory.
       This is different from the format of the alias command, which  takes  a
       space-separated list instead. Note: Forwarding addresses must be valid,
       or the messages will "bounce." You cannot, for instance,  reroute  your
       mail  to  a  new host by forwarding it to your new address if it is not
       yet listed in the NIS aliases domain.

   Commands
       Regular commands are of the form

         [ command ] [ message-list ] [ arguments ]



       In input  mode,  commands  are  recognized  by  the  escape  character,
       tilde(~),  and lines not treated as commands are taken as input for the
       message. If no command is specified in command mode, next  is  assumed.
       The following is a complete list of mailx commands:

       !shell-command

           Escape to the shell. See SHELL in ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES.


       # comment

           NULL command (comment). Useful in mailrc files.


       =

           Print the current message number.


       ?

           Prints a summary of commands.


       alias alias name ...
       group alias name ...

           Declare  an  alias  for  the given names. The names are substituted
           when alias is used as a recipient. Useful in the mailrc file.  With
           no arguments, the command displays the list of defined aliases.



       alternates name ...

           Declare  a  list of alternate names for your login. When responding
           to a message, these names are removed from the list  of  recipients
           for  the  response.  With  no  arguments, print the current list of
           alternate names. See also allnet in Internal Variables.


       cd [directory]
       chdir [directory]

           Change directory. If directory is not specified, $HOME is used.



       copy [file]
       copy [message-list] file

           Copy messages to the file without marking the  messages  as  saved.
           Otherwise equivalent to the save command.



       Copy [message-list]

           Save  the  specified  messages in a file whose name is derived from
           the author of the message to be saved, without marking the messages
           as saved. Otherwise equivalent to the Save command.


       delete [message-list]

           Delete  messages  from  the  mailbox. If autoprint is set, the next
           message after the last one deleted is printed (see  Internal  Vari‐
           ables).


       discard [header-field...]
       ignore [header-field...]

           Suppress  printing  of  the specified header fields when displaying
           messages on the screen. Examples of header  fields  to  ignore  are
           Status  and  Received.  The fields are included when the message is
           saved, unless the alwaysignore variable is  set.  The  More,  Page,
           Print,  and  Type  commands  override this command. If no header is
           specified, the current list  of  header  fields  being  ignored  is
           printed. See also the undiscard and unignore commands.



       dp [message-list]
       dt [message-list]

           Delete  the  specified messages from the mailbox and print the next
           message after the last one deleted. Roughly equivalent to a  delete
           command followed by a print command.



       echo string ...

           Echo the given strings (like echo(1)).


       edit [message-list]

           Edit the given messages. Each message is placed in a temporary file
           and the program named by the EDITOR variable is invoked to edit  it
           (see ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES). Default editor is ed(1).


       exit
       xit

           Exit  from  mailx,  without  changing  the mailbox. No messages are
           saved in the mbox (see also quit).



       field [message-list] header-file

           Display the value of the header field in the specified message.


       file [file]
       folder [file]

           Quit from the current file of messages and read  in  the  specified
           file.  Several  special characters are recognized when used as file
           names:


           %        the current mailbox.


           %user    the mailbox for user.


           #        the previous mail file.


           &        the current mbox.


           +file    The named file in the  folder  directory  (listed  in  the
                    folder variable).

           With no arguments, print the name of the current mail file, and the
           number of messages and characters it contains.



       folders

           Print the names of the files in the directory  set  by  the  folder
           variable (see Internal Variables).


       Followup [message]

           Respond  to  a message, recording the response in a file whose name
           is derived from the author of the  message.  Overrides  the  record
           variable,  if  set. If the replyall variable is set, the actions of
           Followup and followup are reversed. See also  the  followup,  Save,
           and  Copy  commands  and  outfolder  in Internal Variables, and the
           Starting Mail section in USAGE above.


       followup [message-list]

           Respond to the first message in the message-list, sending the  mes‐
           sage to the author of each message in the message-list. The subject
           line is taken from the first message and the response  is  recorded
           in  a  file whose name is derived from the author of the first mes‐
           sage. If the replyall variable is set, the actions of followup  and
           Followup  are  reversed. See also the Followup, Save, and Copy com‐
           mands and outfolder in Internal Variables, and  the  Starting  Mail
           section in USAGE above.


       from [message-list]

           Print the header summary for the specified messages. If no messages
           are specified, print the header summary for the current message.


       group alias name ...
       alias alias name ...

           Declare an alias for the given names.  The  names  are  substituted
           when alias is used as a recipient. Useful in the mailrc file.



       headers [message]

           Print the page of headers which includes the message specified. The
           screen variable sets the number of headers per page  (see  Internal
           Variables). See also the z command.


       help

           Print a summary of commands.


       hold [message-list]
       preserve [message-list]

           Hold the specified messages in the mailbox.



       if s | r | t
       mail-commands

       else
       mail-commands

       endif

           Conditional execution, where s executes following mail-commands, up
           to an else or endif, if the program is in send mode, r  causes  the
           mail-commands to be executed only in receive mode, and t causes the
           mail-commands to be executed only if mailx is being run from a ter‐
           minal. Useful in the mailrc file.








       inc

           Incorporate  messages  that arrive while you are reading the system
           mailbox. The new messages are added to the message list in the cur‐
           rent mail session. This command does not commit changes made during
           the session, and prior messages are not renumbered.


       ignore [header-field ...]
       discard [header-field ...]

           Suppress printing of the specified header  fields  when  displaying
           messages  on  the  screen.  Examples of header fields to ignore are
           Status and Cc. All fields are included when the message  is  saved.
           The  More,  Page, Print and Type commands override this command. If
           no header is specified, the current list  of  header  fields  being
           ignored is printed. See also the undiscard and unignore commands.



       list

           Print all commands available. No explanation is given.


       load

           [message]  file The specified message is replaced by the message in
           the named file. file should contain a single mail message including
           mail headers (as saved by the save command).


       mail recipient...

           Mail a message to the specified recipients.


       Mail recipient

           Mail a message to the specified recipients, and record it in a file
           whose name is derived from the author of the message. Overrides the
           record  variable,  if  set. See also the Save and Copy commands and
           outfolder in Internal Variables.


       mbox [message-list]

           Arrange for the given messages to end up in the standard mbox  save
           file  when mailx terminates normally. See MBOX in ENVIRONMENT VARI‐
           ABLES for a description of this file. See also the  exit  and  quit
           commands.


       more [message-list]
       page [message-list]

           Print  the  specified  messages. If crt is set, the messages longer
           than the number of lines specified by the crt  variable  are  paged
           through  the  command  specified by the PAGER variable. The default
           command is pg(1) or if the bsdcompat variable is set,  the  default
           is  more(1).  See ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES. Same as the print and type
           commands.



       More [message-list]
       Page [message-list]

           Print the specified messages on the screen,  including  all  header
           fields. Overrides suppression of fields by the ignore command. Same
           as the Print and Type commands.



       new [message-list]
       New [message-list]
       unread [message-list]
       Unread

           [message-list] Take a message list and mark  each  message  as  not
           having been read.





       next [message]

           Go  to  the  next  message matching message. If message is not sup‐
           plied, this command finds the next message that was not deleted  or
           saved.  A message-list may be specified, but in this case the first
           valid message in the list is the only one used. This is useful  for
           jumping  to  the  next message from a specific user, since the name
           would be taken as a command in the absence of a real  command.  See
           the  discussion of message-list above for a description of possible
           message specifications.


       pipe [message-list] [shell-command]
       | [message-list] [shell-command]

           Pipe the message through the given shell-command.  The  message  is
           treated  as if it were read. If no arguments are given, the current
           message is piped through the command specified by the value of  the
           cmd variable. If the page variable is set, a form feed character is
           inserted after each message (see Internal Variables).



       preserve [message-list]
       hold [message-list]

           Preserve the specified messages in the mailbox.



       print [message-list]
       type [message-list]

           Print the specified messages. If crt is set,  the  messages  longer
           than  the  number  of lines specified by the crt variable are paged
           through the command specified by the PAGER  variable.  The  default
           command  is  pg(1) or if the bsdcompat variable is set, the default
           is more(1). See ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES. Same as the  more  and  page
           commands.



       Print [message-list]
       Type [message-list]

           Print  the  specified  messages on the screen, including all header
           fields. Overrides suppression of fields by the ignore command. Same
           as the More and Page commands.



       put [file]
       put [message-list] file

           Save  the specified message in the given file. Use the same conven‐
           tions as the print command for which header fields are ignored.



       Put [file]
       Put [message-list] file

           Save the specified message in the given file. Overrides suppression
           of fields by the ignore command.



       quit

           Exit from mailx, storing messages that were read in mbox and unread
           messages in the mailbox. Messages that have been  explicitly  saved
           in a file are deleted unless the keepsave variable is set.


       reply [message-list]
       respond [message-list]
       replysender [message-list]

           Send  a response to the author of each message in the message-list.
           The subject line is taken from the first message. If record is  set
           to  a  file,  a  copy  of  the  reply is added to that file. If the
           replyall  variable  is  set,  the  actions  of  Reply/Respond   and
           reply/respond are reversed. The replysender command is not affected
           by the replyall variable, but sends each reply only to  the  sender
           of each message. See the Starting Mail section in USAGE above.




       Reply [message]
       Respond [message]
       replyall [message]

           Reply  to  the specified message, including all other recipients of
           that message. If the variable record is set to a file,  a  copy  of
           the  reply added to that file. If the replyall variable is set, the
           actions  of  Reply/Respond  and  reply/respond  are  reversed.  The
           replyall  command  is  not  affected  by the replyall variable, but
           always sends the reply to all recipients of the  message.  See  the
           Starting Mail section in USAGE above.




       retain

           Add  the list of header fields named to the retained list. Only the
           header fields in the retain list are shown on  your  terminal  when
           you  print  a  message. All other header fields are suppressed. The
           set of retained fields specified by the  retain  command  overrides
           any  list  of  ignored  fields specified by the ignore command. The
           Type and Print commands can be used  to  print  a  message  in  its
           entirety.  If  retain  is  executed with no arguments, it lists the
           current set of retained fields.


       Save [message-list]

           Save the specified messages in a file whose name  is  derived  from
           the  author  of the first message. The name of the file is taken to
           be the author's name with all network addressing stripped off.  See
           also  the  Copy,  followup,  and Followup commands and outfolder in
           Internal Variables.


       save [file]
       save [message-list] file

           Save the specified messages in the given file. The file is  created
           if  it  does  not  exist. The file defaults to mbox. The message is
           deleted from the mailbox when mailx terminates unless  keepsave  is
           set (see also Internal Variables and the exit and quit commands).



       set
       set variable
       set variable=string
       set variable=number

           Define  a  variable.  To  assign  a value to variable, separate the
           variable name from the value by an '='  (there  must  be  no  space
           before  or  after the '='). A variable may be given a null, string,
           or numeric value. To embed SPACE characters within a value, enclose
           it in quotes.

           With  no arguments, set displays all defined variables and any val‐
           ues they might have. See Internal Variables for  a  description  of
           all predefined mail variables.





       shell

           Invoke  an  interactive  shell. See also SHELL in ENVIRONMENT VARI‐
           ABLES.


       size [message-list]

           Print the size in characters of the specified messages.


       source file

           Read commands from the given file and return to command mode.


       top [message-list]

           Print the top few lines of the specified messages. If the  toplines
           variable  is  set, it is taken as the number of lines to print (see
           Internal Variables). The default is 5.


       touch [message-list]

           Touch the specified messages. If any message in message-list is not
           specifically saved in a file, it is placed in the mbox, or the file
           specified in the MBOX environment variable,  upon  normal  termina‐
           tion. See exit and quit.


       Type [message-list]
       Print [message-list]

           Print  the  specified  messages on the screen, including all header
           fields. Overrides suppression of fields by the ignore command.



       type [message-list]
       print [message-list]

           Print the specified messages. If crt is set,  the  messages  longer
           than  the  number  of lines specified by the crt variable are paged
           through the command specified by the PAGER  variable.  The  default
           command is pg(1). See ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES.



       unalias [alias] ...
       ungroup [alias] ...

           Remove the definitions of the specified aliases.



       undelete [message-list]

           Restore  the specified deleted messages. Will only restore messages
           deleted in the current mail session. If autoprint is set, the  last
           message of those restored is printed (see Internal Variables).


       undiscard [header-field...]
       unignore [header-field...]

           Remove  the specified header fields from the list being ignored. If
           no header fields are specified, all header fields are removed  from
           the list being ignored.



       unretain [header-field...]

           Remove the specified header fields from the list being retained. If
           no header fields are specified, all header fields are removed  from
           the list being retained.


       unread [message-list]
       Unread [message-list]

           Same as ne (new) command.



       unset variable...

           Erase  the  specified  variables. If the variable was imported from
           the environment (that is, an environment variable or exported shell
           variable), it cannot be unset from within mailx.


       version

           Print the current version and release date of the mailx utility.


       visual [message-list]

           Edit  the  given  messages  with  a screen editor. Each messages is
           placed in a temporary file and the  program  named  by  the  VISUAL
           variable  is invoked to edit it (see ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES). Notice
           that the default visual editor is vi.


       write [message-list] file

           Write the given messages on the specified file,  minus  the  header
           and trailing blank line. Otherwise equivalent to the save command.


       xit
       exit

           Exit  from  mailx,  without  changing  the mailbox. No messages are
           saved in the mbox (see also quit).



       z[+|−]

           Scroll the header display forward or backward one screen−full.  The
           number  of  headers  displayed  is  set by the screen variable (see
           Internal Variables).


   Tilde Escapes
       The following tilde escape commands can be used when composing mail  to
       send.  These  may  be entered only from input mode, by beginning a line
       with the tilde escape character (~). See escape in  Internal  Variables
       for  changing  this  special  character.  The  escape  character can be
       entered as text by typing it twice.

       ~!shell-command

           Escape to the shell. If present, run shell-command.


       ~.

           Simulate end of file (terminate message input).


       ~:mail-command
       ~_mail-command

           Perform the command-level request. Valid only when sending  a  mes‐
           sage while reading mail.



       ~?

           Print a summary of tilde escapes.


       ~A

           Insert  the  autograph  string  Sign into the message (see Internal
           Variables).


       ~a

           Insert the autograph string sign into  the  message  (see  Internal
           Variables).


       ~b name ...

           Add the names to the blind carbon copy (Bcc) list. This is like the
           carbon copy (Cc) list, except that the names in the  Bcc  list  are
           not shown in the header of the mail message.


       ~c name ...

           Add the names to the carbon copy (Cc) list.


       ~d

           Read in the dead-letter file. See DEAD in ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES for
           a description of this file.


       ~e

           Invoke the editor on the partial message. See also EDITOR in  ENVI‐
           RONMENT VARIABLES.


       ~f [message-list]

           Forward  the  specified message, or the current message being read.
           Valid only when sending a message while reading mail. The  messages
           are inserted into the message without alteration (as opposed to the
           ~m escape).


       ~F [message-list]

           Forward the specified message, or the current message  being  read,
           including all header fields. Overrides the suppression of fields by
           the ignore command.


       ~h

           Prompt for Subject line and To, Cc, and Bcc lists. If the field  is
           displayed  with  an  initial  value, it may be edited as if you had
           just typed it.


       ~i variable

           Insert the value of the named variable into the text  of  the  mes‐
           sage. For example, ~A is equivalent to '~i Sign.' Environment vari‐
           ables set and exported in the shell are also accessible by ~i.


       ~m [message-list]

           Insert the listed messages, or the current message being read  into
           the  letter.  Valid only when sending a message while reading mail.
           The text of the message is shifted to the  right,  and  the  string
           contained  in the indentprefix variable is inserted as the leftmost
           characters of each line. If indentprefix is not set, a TAB  charac‐
           ter is inserted into each line.


       ~M [message-list]

           Insert  the  listed  messages,  or  the current message being read,
           including the header fields, into the letter. Valid only when send‐
           ing  a  message  while  reading  mail.  The  text of the message is
           shifted to the right, and the string contained in the  indentprefix
           variable  is  inserted  as the leftmost characters of each line. If
           indentprefix is not set, a TAB  character  is  inserted  into  each
           line. Overrides the suppression of fields by the ignore command.


       ~p

           Print the message being entered.


       ~q

           Quit from input mode by simulating an interrupt. If the body of the
           message is not null, the partial message is saved  in  dead-letter.
           See DEAD in ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES for a description of this file.


       ~R

           Mark message for return receipt.


       ~r file
       ~< file
       ~< ! shell-command

           Read in the specified file. If the argument begins with an exclama‐
           tion point (!), the rest of the string is  taken  as  an  arbitrary
           shell  command  and  is executed, with the standard output inserted
           into the message.




       ~s string ...

           Set the subject line to string.


       ~t name ...

           Add the given names to the To list.


       ~v

           Invoke a preferred  screen  editor  on  the  partial  message.  The
           default  visual  editor  is  vi(1).  See also VISUAL in ENVIRONMENT
           VARIABLES.


       ~w file

           Write the message into the given file, without the header.


       ~x

           Exit as with ~q except the message is not saved in dead-letter.


       ~| shell-command

           Pipe the body of the message through the  given  shell-command.  If
           the  shell-command  returns a successful exit status, the output of
           the command replaces the message.


   Internal Variables
       The following variables are internal variables. They  may  be  imported
       from  the  execution  environment  or  set using the set command at any
       time. The unset command may be used to erase variables.

       allnet

           All network names whose  last  component  (login  name)  match  are
           treated as identical. This causes the message-list message specifi‐
           cations to behave similarly. Disabled  by  default.  See  also  the
           alternates command and the metoo and fuzzymatch variables.


       alwaysignore

           Ignore  header fields with ignore everywhere, not just during print
           or type. Affects the save, Save, copy, Copy, top, pipe,  and  write
           commands, and the ~m and ~f tilde escapes. Enabled by default.


       append

           Upon  termination,  append  messages  to  the  end of the mbox file
           instead of prepending them. Although disabled by default, append is
           set in the system startup file (which can be suppressed with the -n
           command line option).


       appenddeadletter

           Append to the deadletter file rather than  overwrite  it.  Although
           disabled by default, appenddeadletter is frequently set in the sys‐
           tem startup file. See Starting Mail in USAGE above.


       askbcc

           Prompt for the Bcc list after the Subject is entered if it  is  not
           specified  on  the  command  line  with  the -b option. Disabled by
           default.


       askcc

           Prompt for the Cc list after the Subject is entered if  it  is  not
           specified  on  the  command  line  with  the -c option. Disabled by
           default.


       asksub

           Prompt for subject if it is not specified on the command line  with
           the -s option. Enabled by default.


       autoinc

           Automatically  incorporate new messages into the current session as
           they arrive. This has an affect similar to issuing the inc  command
           every  time  the  command prompt is displayed. Disabled by default,
           but autoinc is set in the default system startup file for mailx; it
           is not set for /usr/bin/Mail.


       autoprint

           Enable  automatic  printing  of  messages after delete and undelete
           commands. Disabled by default.


       bang

           Enable the special-casing of exclamation points (!) in shell escape
           command lines as in vi(1). Disabled by default.


       bsdcompat

           Set automatically if mailx is invoked as mail or Mail. Causes mailx
           to use /etc/mail/Mail.rc as the system startup  file.  Changes  the
           default pager to more(1).


       cmd=shell-command

           Set the default command for the pipe command. No default value.


       conv=conversion

           Convert uucp addresses to the specified address style, which can be
           either:


           internet    This requires a mail delivery program conforming to the
                       RFC822 standard for electronic mail addressing.


           optimize    Remove loops in uucp address paths (typically generated
                       by the reply command). No rerouting is performed;  mail
                       has no knowledge of UUCP routes or connections.

           Conversion  is disabled by default. See also sendmail(8) and the -U
           command-line option.


       crt[=number]

           Pipe messages having more than number  lines  through  the  command
           specified  by the value of the PAGER variable ( pg(1) or more(1) by
           default). If number is not specified, the current  window  size  is
           used. Disabled by default.


       debug

           Enable  verbose  diagnostics for debugging. Messages are not deliv‐
           ered. Disabled by default.


       dot

           Take a period on a line by itself, or EOF during input from a  ter‐
           minal  as  end-of-file.  Disabled by default, but dot is set in the
           system startup file (which can be suppressed with  the  -n  command
           line option).


       fcc

           By  default,  mailx  will  treat any address containing a slash (/)
           character as a local  send  to  file  address.  By  unsetting  this
           option, this behavior is disabled. Enabled by default.


       flipr

           Reverse the effect of the followup/Followup and reply/Reply command
           pairs. If both flipr and replyall are set, the effect is as if nei‐
           ther was set.


       from

           Extract  the  author  listed  in  the header summary from the From:
           header instead of the UNIX From line. Enabled by default.


       fuzzymatch

           The from command searches for messages from the  indicated  sender.
           By  default,  the full sender address must be specified. By setting
           this option, only a sub-string of the sender address need be speci‐
           fied. Disabled by default.


       escape=c

           Substitute  c  for  the  ~ escape character. Takes effect with next
           message sent.


       folder=directory

           The directory for saving standard mail files.  User-specified  file
           names  beginning with a plus (+) are expanded by preceding the file
           name with this directory name to obtain  the  real  file  name.  If
           directory  does  not  start with a slash (/), $HOME is prepended to
           it. There is no default for the folder variable. See also outfolder
           below.


       header

           Enable  printing of the header summary when entering mailx. Enabled
           by default.


       hold

           Preserve all messages that are  read  in  the  mailbox  instead  of
           putting them in the standard mbox save file. Disabled by default.


       ignore

           Ignore  interrupts while entering messages. Handy for noisy dial-up
           lines. Disabled by default.


       ignoreeof

           Ignore end-of-file during message input. Input must  be  terminated
           by  a period (.) on a line by itself or by the ~. command. See also
           dot above. Disabled by default.


       indentprefix=string

           When indentprefix is set, string is used  to  mark  indented  lines
           from messages included with ~m. The default is a TAB character.


       keep

           When  the  mailbox  is empty, truncate it to zero length instead of
           removing it. Disabled by default.


       iprompt=string

           The specified prompt string is displayed before each line on  input
           is requested when sending a message.


       keepsave

           Keep  messages  that  have been saved in other files in the mailbox
           instead of deleting them. Disabled by default.


       makeremote

           When replying to all recipients of a message, if  an  address  does
           not  include  a  machine  name, it is assumed to be relative to the
           sender of the message. Normally not needed when dealing with  hosts
           that support RFC822.


       metoo

           If  your  login  appears  as a recipient, do not delete it from the
           list. Disabled by default.


       mustbang

           Force all mail addresses to be in bang format.


       onehop

           When responding to a message that was originally  sent  to  several
           recipients, the other recipient addresses are normally forced to be
           relative to the originating author's machine for the response. This
           flag  disables  alteration  of the recipients' addresses, improving
           efficiency in a network where all machines can send directly to all
           other machines (that is, one hop away). Disabled by default.


       outfolder

           Locate  the files used to record outgoing messages in the directory
           specified by the folder variable unless the path name is  absolute.
           Disabled by default. See folder above and the Save, Copy, followup,
           and Followup commands.


       page

           Used with the pipe command to insert a form feed after each message
           sent through the pipe. Disabled by default.


       pipeignore

           Omit  ignored  header when outputting to the pipe command. Although
           disabled by default, pipeignore is frequently  set  in  the  system
           startup file. See Starting Mail in USAGE above.


       postmark

           Your  real  name  to  be  included in the From line of messages you
           send. By default this is derived from the  comment  field  in  your
           passwd(5) file entry.


       prompt=string

           Set  the command mode prompt to string. Default is "? ", unless the
           bsdcompat variable is set, then the default is "&".


       quiet

           Refrain from printing the opening message and version when entering
           mailx. Disabled by default.


       record=file

           Record  all  outgoing  mail  in file. Disabled by default. See also
           outfolder above.


       replyall

           Reverse the effect of the reply and Reply and followup and Followup
           commands. Although set by default, replayall is frequently unset in
           the system startup file. See  flipr  and  Starting  Mail  in  USAGE
           above.


       returnaddr=string

           The  default sender address is that of the current user. This vari‐
           able can be used to set the sender address to any arbitrary  value.
           Set with caution.


       save

           Enable  saving  of messages in dead-letter on interrupt or delivery
           error. See DEAD for a description of this file. Enabled by default.


       screen=number

           Sets the number of lines in a screen-full of headers for the  head‐
           ers command. number must be a positive number.

           The  default  is  set according to baud rate or window size. With a
           baud rate less than 1200, number defaults to 5,  if  baud  rate  is
           exactly  1200,  it  defaults  to 10. If you are in a window, number
           defaults to the default window size minus 4. Otherwise, the default
           is 20.


       sendmail=shell-command

           Alternate command for delivering messages. Note: In addition to the
           expected list of recipients, mail also passes the -i and -m,  flags
           to the command. Since these flags are not appropriate to other com‐
           mands, you may have to use a shell script that strips them from the
           arguments  list  before  invoking  the  desired command. Default is
           /usr/bin/rmail.


       sendwait

           Wait for background mailer to finish before returning. Disabled  by
           default.


       showname

           Causes  the  message  header display to show the sender's real name
           (if known) rather than their mail address. Disabled by default, but
           showname  is  set in the /etc/mail/mailx.rc system startup file for
           mailx.


       showto

           When displaying the header summary and the  message  is  from  you,
           print the recipient's name instead of the author's name.


       sign=string

           The variable inserted into the text of a message when the ~a (auto‐
           graph) command is given. No default (see also ~i in Tilde Escapes).

           `


       Sign=string

           The variable inserted into the text of a message when the  ~A  com‐
           mand is given. No default (see also ~i in Tilde Escapes).


       toplines=number

           The  number  of  lines  of  header  to  print with the top command.
           Default is 5.


       verbose

           Invoke sendmail(8) with the -v flag.


       translate

           The name of a program to  translate  mail  addresses.  The  program
           receives  mail addresses as arguments. The program produces, on the
           standard output, lines  containing  the  following  data,  in  this
           order:


               o      the postmark for the sender (see the postmark variable)


               o      translated  mail  addresses, one per line, corresponding
                      to the program's arguments. Each translated address will
                      replace  the  corresponding  address in the mail message
                      being sent.


               o      a line containing only y or n. if the  line  contains  y
                      the  user  will  be  asked  to  confirm that the message
                      should be sent.

           The translate program will be invoked for each mail message  to  be
           sent. If the program exits with a non-zero exit status, or fails to
           produce enough output, the message is not sent.


ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       See environ(7) for descriptions of the following environment  variables
       that  affect  the  execution  of  mailx: HOME, LANG, LC_CTYPE, LC_TIME,
       LC_MESSAGES, NLSPATH, and TERM.

       DEAD

           The name of the file in which to save partial letters  in  case  of
           untimely interrupt. Default is $HOME/dead.letter.


       EDITOR

           The  command to run when the edit or ~e command is used. Default is
           ed(1).


       LISTER

           The command (and options) to use when listing the contents  of  the
           folder directory. The default is ls(1).


       MAIL

           The  name of the initial mailbox file to read (in lieu of the stan‐
           dard system mailbox). The default is /var/mail/username .


       MAILRC

           The name of the startup file. Default is $HOME/.mailrc.


       MAILX_HEAD

           The specified string is included at the beginning of  the  body  of
           each message that is sent.


       MAILX_TAIL

           The  specified  string  is  included at the end of the body of each
           message that is sent.


       MBOX

           The name of the file to save messages which  have  been  read.  The
           exit  command  overrides  this function, as does saving the message
           explicitly in another file. Default is $HOME/mbox.


       PAGER

           The command to use as a filter for paginating output. This can also
           be  used to specify the options to be used. Default is pg(1), or if
           the bsdcompat variable is set, the default is more(1). See Internal
           Variables.


       SHELL

           The name of a preferred command interpreter. Default is sh(1).


       VISUAL

           The name of a preferred screen editor. Default is vi(1).


EXIT STATUS
       When  the  -e  option  is  specified,  the  following  exit  values are
       returned:

       0     Mail was found.


       >0    Mail was not found or an error occurred.



       Otherwise, the following exit values are returned:

       0     Successful completion. Notice that this status implies  that  all
             messages  were  sent, but it gives no assurances that any of them
             were actually delivered.


       >0    An error occurred


FILES
       $HOME/.mailrc

           personal startup file


       $HOME/mbox

           secondary storage file


       $HOME/.Maillock

           lock file to prevent multiple writers of system mailbox


       /etc/mail/mailx.rc

           optional system startup file for mailx only


       /etc/mail/Mail.rc

           BSD compatibility system-wide startup file  for  /usr/ucb/mail  and
           /usr/ucb/Mail


       /tmp/R[emqsx]*

           temporary files


       /usr/share/lib/mailx/mailx.help*

           help message files


       /var/mail/*

           post office directory


ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       tab()  box; cw(2.75i) |cw(2.75i) lw(2.75i) |lw(2.75i) ATTRIBUTE TYPEAT‐
       TRIBUTE VALUE _ Availabilitysystem/core-os _ Interface StabilityCommit‐
       ted _ StandardSee standards(7).


SEE ALSO
       echo(1),  ed(1),  ex(1), fmt(1), ls(1), mail(1), more(1), pg(1), sh(1),
       vacation(1), vi(1), aliases(5), passwd(5),  attributes(7),  environ(7),
       standards(7), newaliases(8), sendmail(8)

NOTES
       Where  shell-command  is  shown  as  valid,  arguments  are  not always
       allowed. Experimentation is recommended.


       Internal variables imported from the execution  environment  cannot  be
       unset.


       The  full  internet addressing is not fully supported by mailx. The new
       standards need some time to settle down.


       Replies do not always generate correct return addresses. Try  resending
       the errant reply with onehop set.


       mailx  does not lock your record file. So, if you use a record file and
       send two or more messages simultaneously, lines from the  messages  may
       be interleaved in the record file.


       The  format  for the alias command is a space-separated list of recipi‐
       ents, while  the  format  for  an  alias  in  either  the  .forward  or
       /etc/aliases is a comma-separated list.



Oracle Solaris 11.4               23 Jul 2020                         mailx(1)
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