.TH VACATION 1 .\" @(#)vacation.1 4.1 7/25/83 .SH NAME vacation \- return ``I am on vacation'' indication .SH SYNOPSIS .B vacation .B \-I .br .B vacation [ .BI \-t N ] user .SH DESCRIPTION .I Vacation returns a message to the sender of a message telling that you are on vacation. The intended use is in a .I \&.forward file. For example, your .I \&.forward file might have: .PP .ti +5 \eeric, "|vacation eric" .PP which would send messages to you (assuming your login name was eric) and send a message back to the sender. .PP .I Vacation expects a file .I \&.vacation.msg in your home directory containing a message to be sent back to each sender. For example, it might say: .PP .in +5 .nf I am on vacation until July 22. If you have something urgent, please contact Joe Kalash (IngVAX:kalash). --eric .fi .in -5 .PP This message will only be sent once a week to each unique sender. This timeout can be reset using the .B \-t flag; a trailing `s', `m', `h', `d', or `w' scales the number to seconds, minutes, hours, days, or weeks respectively. The people who have sent you messages are kept in the files .I \&.vacation.pag and .I \&.vacation.dir in your home directory. The .B \-I option initializes these files, and should be executed before you modify your .I \&.forward file. .PP If the .B \-I flag is not specified, .I vacation reads the first line from the standard input for a \s-1UNIX\s0-style ``From'' line to determine the sender. If this is not present, a nasty diagnostic is produced. .IR Sendmail (8) includes this automatically. .SH SEE\ ALSO sendmail(8)