.\" 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