UNIX in a Nutshell: System V Edition

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Obsolete Commands
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uucp

uucp [options] [source!]file [destination!]file

Copy a file (or group of files) from the source to the destination. The source and destination can be remote systems. The destination file can be a directory.

Options

-c

Do not copy files to the spool directory (the default).

-C

Copy files to the spool directory for transfer.

-d

Make directories for the copy when they don't exist (the default).

-f

Do not make directories when they don't exist.

-gx

Set grade (priority) of job. x is typically a single letter or digit, where a and 1 give the highest transfer priority. Use uuglist to show values for x.

-j

Print the uucp job number.

-m

When copy is complete, send mail to person who issued uucp command.

-nuser

When copy is complete, send mail to (notify) user.

-r

Queue job, but don't start transfer program (uucico).

-sfile

Send transfer status to file (a full pathname); overrides -m. Solaris accepts but ignores this option for security reasons.

-xn

Debug at level n (0-9); higher numbers give more output.

Example

This shell script sends a compressed file to system orca:

$ cat send_it
#! /bin/sh
compress $1
uucp -C -n$2 -m $1.Z orca!/var/spool/uucppublic
uncompress $1

With -C, the transfer is made from a copy in the spool directory. (Normally, uucp gets the file from its original location, so you can't rename it or uncompress it until the call goes through.) The script also notifies the sender and the recipient when the transfer finishes. Here's a sample run:

send_it chapter1 bob


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