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- From: uucpfaq@alphanet.ch (UUCP Faq Handler)
- Subject: alt.sys.amiga.uucp Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ 1/2) - AmigaUUCP general information
- Summary: AmigaUUCP installation, utilities and common problems.
- Message-ID: <CnDo8A.9EL@alphanet.ch>
- Sender: UUCP-Faq@alphanet.ch (UUCP-Faq handler)
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Date: Mon, 28 Mar 1994 14:00:09 GMT
- Expires: Tue, 5 Apr 1994 08:00:00 GMT
- Reply-To: UUCP-Faq@alphanet.ch
- Comment: This is an automated monthly posting, part 1 of 2.
- Organization: ALPHANET NF, Colombier (NE) - Switzerland
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-
- Archive-name: amiga/AmigaUUCP-FAQ/part1
-
-
- AMIGA-UUCP-FAQ version 2.A.2 [Posting 23]
- MONTHLY POSTING, last update Mar 21 12:52
- This FAQ is posted monthly (28th of month)
-
- author: Marc SCHAEFER, <schaefer@alphanet.ch>
- Bugs, typos, ideas to <UUCP-Faq@alphanet.ch>
- (ch stands for Switzerland)
-
- NOTE: The primary goal for this FAQ is to prevent questions from
- looping over and over. If you have new and interesting material, post
- it to alt.sys.amiga.uucp with "Addition to FAQ" somewhere in the
- subject. I will add it for the next "release". You may also send any
- ideas, changes, flames, typos to the address UUCP-Faq@alphanet.ch.
- They will be incorporated in the next release with your name in the
- CHANGES section as a reward :-)
-
- NOTE TO UUCP-BEGINNERS: Please take some of your time and READ the UUCP
- documentation. Most of the questions posted on a.s.a.u are related to
- manual pages. This FAQ contains also some information on common problems
- and utilities. Don't forget to get the FAQS from news.announce.newusers.
- You may also read UUMAN:Standards (for UUCP internals) and UUMAN:how2usenet.
-
-
- CHANGES FROM ORIGINAL MATT DILLON'S FAQ ARE NOTED WITH A (*).
-
- To skip to a topic, search for the roman numeral surrounded by
- parenthesis. For example, (I).
-
- FAQ.1 (this file)
- (*) 0. Changes from last posting
- (*) I. Introduction to alt.sys.amiga.uucp[.patches]
- II. Introduction to AmigaUUCP
- (*) III. Principal utilities
- IV. Constructing mail addresses
- V. Using DCRON
- VI. US domain clarification
-
- FAQ.2 (a different post)
- (*) VII. Common problems (new, please submit things to go in here).
- VIII. Using SENDMAIL directly.
- (*) IX. Other UUCP utilities.
- (*) X. How to get UUCP stuff ?
- (*) XI. BBS software supporting UUCP.
- (*) XII. Other UUCP implementations for AmigaOS.
- (*) XIII. Unresolved topics.
-
-
-
- (0) RECENT CHANGES TO THIS FILE
-
- Changes are listed below
-
- Cosmetical, None
-
- (I) INTRODUCTION TO ALT.SYS.AMIGA.UUCP[.PATCHES]
-
- (1) Configuration
-
- ALT.SYS.AMIGA.UUCP and ALT.SYS.AMIGA.UUCP.PATCHES are two newsgroups
- dedicated to the UUCP system for the Amiga microcomputer, AmigaUUCP.
- Both news groups are gatewayed to two mailing lists containing
- additional recipients who would otherwise not have access to the ALT
- groups. That is, posting to an alt group will automatically relay to
- the appropriate mailing list, and mailing to the mailing will
- automatically relay to the alt group.
-
- If you do not have ALT group access and are not on the mailing list,
- and would like to be on the mailing list, send your request to:
-
- amiga-uucp-request@idiom.berkeley.ca.us and/or
- amiga-uucp-patches-request@idiom.berkeley.ca.us
-
- To get off the mailing list, you can send your request to either
- address. Matt Dillon manually reads this alias. Note that you must provide a
- proper return address as part of your signature if you are a UUCP node
- so he can properly format your return address. If you are on the
- internet (i.e. have a fully domained address), it isn't a problem.
-
- TO POST ARTICLES VIA THE MAILING LIST, send email containing your
- posting to either of the following two addresses:
-
- amiga-uucp@idiom.berkeley.ca.us
- amiga-uucp-patches@idiom.berkeley.ca.us
-
- Sending email to either address causes it to be automatically posted to
- the alt.sys.amiga.uucp[.patches] newsgroup. You do not have to be on
- the mailing list to be able to post via the list.
-
- Report any problems to:
-
- amiga-uucp-owner@idiom.berkeley.ca.us
- amiga-uucp-patches-owner@idiom.berkeley.ca.us
-
-
- (2) Usage Of
-
- [Note: Original author is Matt Dillon. See next comment]
-
- The purpose of alt.sys.amiga.uucp is to convey the bulk of any
- discussion relating to AmigaUUCP. Discussion, bug reports, questions,
- etc...
-
- The purpose of alt.sys.amiga.uucp.patches is for the posting of any
- source code, scripts, or binaries relating to AmigaUUCP. Full
- distributions will NEVER be sent over alt.sys.amiga.uucp.patches.
- Anybody may post to alt.sys.amiga.uucp.patches and, in fact, it is best
- that any code you wish to submit to be merged into the master
- distribution that Matt Dillon keep be submitted to this newsgroup instead of to
- me personally.
-
- This will allow anybody to pick off the code and immediately implement
- it on their own system without waiting for the next master distribution.
-
- Matt Dillon will also use alt.sys.amiga.uucp.patches to post updates to the
- current master distribution, generally small to medium sized SHAR
- or uuencoded LHARC files. Matt Dillon personally would like to get a system
- together so multiple-source postings can be archived in a text form
- instead of a uuencoded form because all netnews is compressed anyway,
- and compressing uuencoded lharc files generally makes the result larger
- than the original instead of smaller.
-
- (3) BUG / ENHANCEMENT REPORTS
-
- [Note that the following text author is considered to be the
- current UUCP source maintainer which seems to be Michael B. Smith,
- mbs@adastra.cvl.va.us]
-
- The alt.sys.amiga.uucp and alt.sys.amiga.uucp.patches groups are fed
- through a filter when they reach my machine, and any bug or enhancement
- reports of a specific format will be automatically extracted and
- appended to my TODO file.
-
- To issue a bug report or enhancement request, use the following format:
-
- ##B unique-id
-
- <bug report goes here>
-
- ##
-
- Note that there are TWO '#'s. ##B stands for a bug report, ##E stands
- for an enhancement request. WARNING! The ##'s must begin a line, you
- CANNOT PRECEDE ## WITH WHITESPACE. Doing so will result in the filter
- passing the report by. For example, the ##B/## lines in the example
- above, not being flush with the left margin, will be ignored by my
- filter program.
-
- The unique-id should be a unique identifier for your bug report, for
- example, I might use '##B dillon.23'. Do NOT encode the date in
- the unique ID because my filter program will automatically extract
- the Date: and From: fields from the news message header. Matt Dillon will
- use the ID when refering to previous bug reports rather than posting
- the whole bug report.
-
- (4) This FAQ sheet
-
- If you have information you think would be useful on this FAQ sheet,
- please submit it to UUCP-Faq@alphanet.ch.
-
-
- (II) INTRODUCTION TO AmigaUUCP
-
- This section consists of a brief introduction to AmigaUUCP. It is not
- meant to describe installation of the distribution. Installation of
- the distribution is more involved and best served by the instructions
- that come with the distribution.
-
- AmigaUUCP was originally derived from GNU-UUCP and UUPC (was UUPC
- derived from GNU? I dunno). This was several years ago. It
- eventually fell into William Loftus's hands who molded it into a
- workable system for the Amiga. From there, about a year later, it fell
- into my hands and has since remained.
-
- What little GNU/UUPC code remains is in uucico, and even that is
- rapidly disappearing. AmigaUUCP is now almost entirely made up of code
- written after the original port to the Amiga. At this point, there is
- no comparison at all between the older GNU/UUPC stuff and the state of
- the art AmigaUUCP distribution.
-
- AmigaUUCP is a public domain project, though not properly in the public
- domain because all authors involved have maintained copyrights on the
- code. legally, this may not mean much, but it does give us a sense of
- security and more control over what is done with the code. Be that as
- it may, the entire distribution, source and all, is available to
- anybody who wants it. There are about a dozen principal authors and a
- few dozen contributors, not to mention the hundreds of people who have
- sent in helpful suggestions and bug reportrs.
-
- What is AmigaUUCP? Well, if you are reading this article then you have
- some idea how EMAIL and NETNEWS works ... AmigaUUCP is a set of
- utilities and documentation to implement an EMAIL/NETNEWS link directly
- on your amiga. All you need to do is find what is known as a 'feed'
- site who is willing to give you a UUCP connection, and, of course, a
- modem with which to communicate with that feed.
-
-
- (III) PRINCIPAL UTILITIES
-
- AmigaUUCP is made up of a plethora of utilities. Many of the utilities
- mimic their UNIX counterparts but it should be noted that none are
- really based on actual UNIX C code except for those sections still
- existing from the original GNU/UUPC port.
-
- Only the major utilities are listed below:
-
- UUCico
-
- UUCico is the workhorse of the system. It calls your feed site
- via the modem and transfers both outgoing and incoming mail and
- news. This mail and news will have been previously stored by
- you or your feed site.
-
- It has been updated a lot, mainly for reliability reasons. Last
- version is uucico_sd3.lha.
-
- Getty
-
- Getty handles incoming calls. It allows remote login (interactive
- and uucico logins).
-
- Sendmail/RMail
-
- Sendmail/RMail is the workhorse of the MAIL subsystem. The two
- utilities are actually the same executable just renamed and I
- will refer to them collectively as 'sendmail' from now on.
-
- Sendmail handles incoming mail, breaking it apart and sending it
- to the appropriate mailbox, or re-queueing it if it is simply
- passing through your system to another system down the line.
- Sendmail deals with any aliases you might have defined and also
- with any domains you have defined for routing email.
-
- Sendmail also handles, under the aegis of 'rmail', all incoming
- mail.
-
- RNews
-
- RNews handles all incoming news, including local news you send
- out. It breaks apart compressed batches and creates an individual
- file for each article in the UUNEWS: directory. It also creates
- a directory for each newsgroup. A lot of patches have been made
- to increase reliability, and speed.
-
- BatchNews
-
- Batchnews compresses and batches any news you have sent posted into
- a single batch file, making its transfer to your feed that much
- more efficient. Read the Newssetup.doc in the distribution for
- more information on how to set up news.
-
- DMail
- DMail is the amiga's mail shell. It scans your mail box and
- presents mail in an orderly fashion, allowing you to reply to
- the mail and do other operations.
-
- DNews
- DNews is the amiga's news reader. It is not quite as sophisticated
- as RN but is getting there. It sports an intuition windowing
- system to make it easy to scan through news.
-
- UUcp
- UUcp (the command) can be used to copy files from your local system
- to some of your neighbours. Note that the way it is implemented on
- the AmigaUUCP system is a little different than in Unix. In Unix, as
- soon as the uucp command has been executed, a copy of the implied file
- is done in a data file in the spool directory. Then uucico copies it
- to the other unix system that extracts the file from the data file.
- In AmigaUUCP, if sending the file is only read while UUCico is online,
- and that explains why if you UUCP a file which path is NOT authorized in
- the UULIB:Security file, there will be an error while online. This prevents
- the ability to forward the file to another host. However most of the time
- in UNIX, uucp is very restricted. AmigaUUCP does not allow directory-deep
- file send.
- For sending to a far site, BMS is more convenient.
-
-
- (IV) CONSTRUCTING MAIL ADDRESSES
-
- (1) GENERAL
-
- Unfortunately, the internet mail system is made up of a huge number
- of nearly incompatible networks. Mail addresses are constructed
- with various types of punctuation that mean various things .. indeed,
- some punctuation means one thing in one domain and another in another
- domain. I have found that the absolute best way to construct a mail
- address is either with the '@' format or with a '!' path.
-
- If your feed is a 'smart' host, any fully domained mail address can
- be replied to with simply:
-
- user@fubar.subdomain.subdomain....domain
-
- dillon@overload.Berkeley.CA.US
-
- Any address with dots in it is called a fully domained address.
- Unfortunately, there are a few exceptions... any address ending
- with .UUCP is *NOT* I repeat, *NOT* a domained address... it's
- a hack that some sendmails will add to properly route the mail
- internally. This hack generally extends to the From: field of
- an email message, and AmigaUUCP will do this, but not being a
- domain, you cannot SPECIFY a .UUCP trailer in the To: address.
- For example, my UUCP address is:
-
- uunet.uu.net!overload
-
- Note that there is NO .UUCP specification tacked on to overload.
- Note also that when you specify your UUCP address in your
- signature you should start with a fully domained machine name,
- *not* one ending with .UUCP.
-
- On other fronts, some unexperienced administrators will give their
- machines a full domain name without properly registering it. If
- you have not registered your domain with the proper authorities,
- DO NOT GIVE YOUR MACHINE A FULL DOMAIN.
-
- For example, when I first connected to my feed, which is uunet, I did
- not have a .US domain and so my machine name was simply 'overload'.
- After I registered in the .US domain I changed my machine name to its
- registered equivalent, 'overload.Berkeley.CA.US'.
-
- (2) BANG PATHS
-
- Nearly all the systems on the internet accept what are known as
- bang paths. There are only a few exceptions. One of the design
- decisions for AmigaUUCP was to convert all addresses into bang
- paths before sending them out. There have been one or two sites
- (so far) that have been unable to run AmigaUUCP because the feed
- they picked was running news software so old it did not recognize
- bang paths. To those sites I say: find a different feed, AmigaUUCP
- would become extremely messy were I to implement UNIX sendmail style
- address parsing.
-
- A bang path work by specifying the exact path your mail is to go along,
- in the following format:
-
- first_machine!machine!machine!users_machine!user
-
- Any machine name in the path may be a fully domained name. If you have
- a smart feed it will be able to optimize the path accordingly. For
- example, the bang path to me would normally be:
-
- uunet.uu.net!overload!dillon
-
- If your feed has a STUPID mailer, it may be necessary to use a bang
- path to get *past* your feed to a nearby site that has a SMART
- mailer. For example, lets say your feed is named 'fubar' and has
- a dumb mailer. Let us also say that the feed has a UUCP connection
- to 'harvard' which just happens to have a smart mailer. To get your
- message to me you might use:
-
- fubar!harvard!uunet.uu.net!overload!dillon
-
- your feed may or may not accept harvard's fully domained name, which is
- harvard.harvard.edu, it depends on how stupid your feed's mail system
- is. If it does, it makes more sense to use:
-
- fubar!harvard.harvard.edu!uunet.uu.net!overload!dillon
-
- (3) INTERNET DOMAINS VERSES UUCP MAP ENTRIES
-
- The internet domain system is based on domain servers, real time
- servers residing on known machines that know all the machines in a
- particular domain and how to get to them. When you send mail through
- an internet machine, like this (assuming you have a UUCP connection
- to UUNET):
-
- uunet!caps.ibm.com!user
-
- uunet (actually uunet.uu.net) will talk to the domain server for the
- .COM domain to find caps.ibm.com (a name I made up).
-
- UUCP works differently. While the internet is a real time network,
- UUCP is a batch network. UUCP has what is known as a MAP entry for
- every UUCP site that submits one. If you are a new UUCP site just
- connected to your feed, you should send a MAP entry to the appropriate
- administrator. A MAP entry is *NOT* a domain entry.
-
- The UUCP MAPS are used by machines on the USENET to find other machines
- on the USENET without the aid of domains. Not all machines on the
- USENET use MAPS to find some destination. uunet.uu.net does, so here
- is an example. I can send email from overload to (again, a made up
- name):
-
- uunet.uu.net!fubar!user
-
- Even if uunet does not talk directly to fubar.. assuming fubar has
- a MAP entry. uunet will search its maps to find the best path to
- reach fubar, and then route the mail accordingly. The actual route
- that uunet constructs might be: mcsun!gab!fubar!user
-
- If your feed is a machine that does NOT use maps, then you must
- specify an explicit bang path to get past your feed to a site
- that does. For example, lets say your feed is named 'char00'
- and has a dumb mailer, but connects to harvard.harvard.edu via
- UUCP. You want to email me. you can do it in two ways:
-
- char00!harvard!uunet.uu.net!overload!dillon.
-
- or
-
- char00!harvard!overload.Berkeley.CA.US!dillon
-
- But, since your mailer is dumb, you would not be able to use:
-
- char00!overload.Berkeley.CA.US!dillon
-
- If, on the otherhand, char00 is a SMART USENET mailer that uses the
- USENET MAPS (but still isn't on the internet itself), you can use:
-
- char00!overload!dillon
-
- Finally, if char00 is on the INTERNET, you can use:
-
- char00!overload.Berkeley.CA.US!dillon
-
-
- (4) WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS - BOUNCED EMAIL
-
- email will bounce for a variety of reasons. The fact that the
- global email system is made up of so many different types of mail
- systems causes lots of havoc... in many cases a system will munge
- the path you attempt to send email through by misinterpreting it
- or by attempting to 'optimize' it.
-
- When all else fails, and your attempt to reply to a piece of email
- bounces, you may have to construct the return address by hand. Several
- possibilities come to mind. You want to use the 'h' command from dmail
- to look at the actual mail headers (use dmail's help command to get
- full info on the header command).
-
- You want to look at both the original message that was sent to you,
- and the headers of your BOUNCED reply.
-
- -------- SAMPLE OF ORIGINAL MESSAGE -------
-
- From uunet!SASK.USask.CA!telepro!oliphant Fri, 28 Dec 90 13:04:57 PST
- Received: by overload.Berkeley.CA.US (V1.07/Amiga)
- id AA00000; Fri, 28 Dec 90 13:04:57 PST
- Received: from sask.usask.ca by uunet.UU.NET (5.61/1.14) with SMTP
- id AA22874; Fri, 28 Dec 90 01:30:48 -0500
- Received: from herald.USask.Ca by SASK.USask.CA with PMDF#10255; Fri, 28 Dec
- 1990 00:30 CST
- Received: by herald.USask.Ca (5.57/GLH-1.0); Fri, 28 Dec 90 00:30:06 -0600 id
- AA01058 for amiga-uucp-patches-request@overload.berkeley.ca.us
- Received: by telepro.UUCP (1.05D/Amiga) id AA04612; Thu, 27 Dec 90 21:25:00 CST
- Date: Thu, 27 Dec 90 21:25:00 CST
- Message-Id: <9012280325.AA04612@telepro.UUCP>
- X-Envelope-To: amiga-uucp-patches-request@overload.berkeley.ca.us
- From: uunet!SASK.USask.CA!telepro!oliphant (Mike Oliphant)
- To: amyuucp@sask.usask.ca
- Subject: Mailing list
-
- Please add me to amiga-uucp-patches.
-
- Thanks.
-
- --
- Mike Oliphant UUCP: alberta!herald!telepro!oliphant
- Internet: oliphant@telepro.uucp
-
- -------- ADDRESS I SENT MY RESPONSE TO ------
-
- uunet!SASK.USask.CA!telepro!oliphant
-
- -------- SAMPLE OF BOUNCE THAT CAME BACK TO ME -------
-
- From uunet!sask.usask.ca!postmaster Mon, 31 Dec 90 01:02:30 PST
- Received: by overload.Berkeley.CA.US (V1.07/Amiga)
- id AA00000; Mon, 31 Dec 90 01:02:30 PST
- Received: from sask.usask.ca by uunet.UU.NET (5.61/1.14) with SMTP
- id AA13985; Sat, 29 Dec 90 17:18:48 -0500
- Date: Sat, 29 Dec 1990 16:18 CST
- Message-Id: <B13C1C282040350C@SASK.USask.CA>
- X-Envelope-To: overload!dillon@uunet.UU.NET
- From: PMDF Mail Server <uunet!sask.usask.ca!Postmaster>
- To: overload!dillon
- Subject: Undeliverable mail: local delivery failure
-
- The message could not be delivered to:
-
- Addressee: telepro!oliphant
- Reason:
- %MAIL-E-LOGLINK, error creating network link to node TELEPRO
- -SYSTEM-F-NOSUCHNODE, remote node is unknown
-
- -------- END OF SAMPLE HEADERS --------------------
-
- So, why did my response fail? First, I have to tell you something
- about mail headers: Except for Received: headers, intervening
- systems can and will turn the standard headers into mush. That is,
- the 'From ' encapsulation, the From: header, the To: header, even
- the Reply-To: header might be modified by an intervening system.
-
- There are only two things that are not mushed. They are the Received:
- headers and the mail message itself - which might contain the sender's
- signature at the end. This is a good reason to always put your email
- address in your signature, and always base it at a known internet node
- so anybody can figure out how to get back to you.
-
- A Received: header is PREPENDED by *EVERY* site a piece of email goes
- through, and is NEVER modified by any other site. These headers tell
- you *exactly* how the mail was routed.
-
- If you look at the original message, you will note that one of
- the machines, probably SASK.USask.CA, modified the From: line in
- an attempt to optimize it:
-
- From: uunet!SASK.USask.CA!telepro!oliphant (Mike Oliphant)
-
- Note that, by the From: line, SASK.USask.CA talks directly to
- telepro. The 'From ' encapsulation was also modified, and there is
- no Reply-To: header.
-
- When I sent my reply to SASK using From:, the mail bounced because
- SASK was unable to find telepro ... if you look at the Received:
- lines you can see why ... because telepro talked to Herald before
- getting to Sask. It is amusing because SASK is probably the node
- that ripped out Herald's name in the From: and 'From ' lines in
- the first place.
-
- Also, take a look at Mike's signature line:
-
- Mike Oliphant UUCP: alberta!herald!telepro!oliphant
- Internet: oliphant@telepro.uucp
-
- Interesting, eh? The Internet: address is actually wrong (sorry Mike!)
- using .UUCP is not legal because it is not a proper domain. However,
- if you forward through an internet host that also uses the UUCP MAPS,
- and assuming mike is in the maps, the address *will* work.
-
- It's the first address that confirms our fears... mike shows telepro
- talking to herald. This combined with the knowledge we gained from
- the Received: lines tells us that the path:
-
- SASK.USask.CA!herald!telepro!oliphant
-
- Will work as a return address. When in doubt, trace the Received:
- headers to determine the return path.
-
- Sometimes a UUCP MAP entry will be incorrect, in which case using
- the Received: headers will be the ONLY way to reply to a message.
-
- There are some situations which are impossible to reply to ... if
- a message goes through a broken node that allows it to be propogated
- one way but not the other, even using the headers will not work.
-
- Also, some sites will attempt to optimize the path you specified. If
- SASK.USask.CA were to optimize the path:
-
- SASK.USask.CA!herald!telepro!oliphant
-
- To
-
- SASK.USask.CA!telepro!oliphant
-
- Before processing, the mail could fail due to SASK.USask.CA breaking
- itself. There are many nodes, especially gateways between networks,
- in this manner and there will be times when you will
- not be able to reply at all.
-
-
- (V) USING DCRON
-
- Many AmigaUUCP users leave their machines on 24 hours a day. With the
- advent of 2.0, and assuming the serial.device gets fixed, you can
- conceivably run your Amiga 24 hours a day under a heavy load for weeks
- without a crash.
-
- DCron is a program that runs in the background and executes other
- programs at intervals defined in S:CRONTAB. It is quite flexible..
- you can run a program or script at specific times of day, every X
- minutes, only on certain days of the week, or even only in certain
- months! I will not discuss the actual format, that can be looked
- up in UUMAN:DCron.
-
- There are two reasons to run DCron:
-
- (1) Maintenance.
-
- (2) Automatic polling. If you call a system on a regular basis and
- want to automate the process, you can run UUCico from DCron at
- specific times of the day.
-
- First maintenance. Programs like UUCico, Getty, DCron itself, and
- sendmail generate log files which, if left alone, would eventually fill
- up your disk. Also, if you are receiving NEWS, you need to delete
- expired articles. Due to the volume of news, not deleting old articles
- can fill up your HD very quickly.
-
- The TRIMFILES utility trims log files to a specified number of lines,
- default 100. I normally run TRIMFILES on the various log files
- once a day early in the morning. The S:CRONTAB entry I use is:
-
- # trim log files at 3:01 A.M.
- 1 3 * * * uucp:c/trimfile tmp:dcron.log uu:spool/logfile getty:logfile
-
- Note that the file paths will be somewhat different for your system.
-
- Second, keeping your UUNEWS: directory reasonable. The TRIMNEWS
- utility will handle this. TRIMNEWS scans your UULIB:Newsgroups file
- for the list of newsgroups, then scans each news group deleting
- articles over N days old, where N is specified in the Newsgroups file.
- A sample NewsGroups file might be:
-
- comp.sys.amiga 7
- comp.sys.amiga.tech 7
- comp.sys.amiga.programmer 7
- comp.sys.amiga.announce 7
- alt.sys.amiga.uucp 14
- alt.sys.amiga.uucp.patches 30
-
- Which essentially tells TRIMNEWS to delete all articles in
- comp.sys.amiga.* over 7 days old (7 days from reception), to delete all
- articles in alt.sys.amiga.uucp over 14 days old, and to delete all
- articles in alt.sys.amiga.uucp.patches over 30 days old.
-
- I normally run TRIMNEWS in the morning too, my S:CRONTAB file has:
-
- # run TRIMNEWS at 3:06 A.M.
- 6 3 * * * uucp:c/trimnews
-
- ---
-
- DCRON is also useful to control the modem configuration. You can run
- the Getty utility from DCron to turn off the modem speaker while you
- are asleep. I use DCRON for other things as well, such as to
- automatically revise UUNET's amiga-uucp[-patchces] mailing list
- whenever I make a local change, and to backup my hard disk. I also use
- it to post this sheet once a month.
-
-
- (VI) .US DOMAIN CLARIFICATION
-
- This is a clarification to the information on registering in a
- .US domain. It turns out that you can register in the .US
- domain even if your 'feed' node is NOT on the internet. What
- you need to do is find some node that IS on the internet that
- is willing to be an MX FORWARDER to your machine (via a path).
- This might prove difficult, but it is possible.
-
- END OF FAQ PART 1.
-
-